New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 27, 1917, Page 4

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FOX*S? SUNDAY--MONDAY --TUESDAY of 'RpMANCE, XCITEMENT HEART- THROBS , PASSION, YAAND [T D IFFERENT " TONIGHT and TOMORROW ETHEL CLAYTON In the Season’s Biggest Success. “STOLEN PARADISE” FATAL RING—3rd Chapter le a word each day pays for a classified adv. in the Herald. You get results. That’s what you want. NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, JULY 27, LYCEUM Today and Tomorrow “THE MAN WHO | MADE GOOD” A Stirring Good ILuek Photo- play ADDED 0. Henry Story Lonesome Luke HERE MONDAY! KENNETH HARLAN with BESSIE LOVE, in ‘CHEERFUL GIVERS’ MAT. | NIGHT 5¢ | 10c No Increase in Prices. \ News For 1917. EASY WEEKLY PAYMENTS NO EXTRAS OF ANY KIND MARK DOWN Of Men’s and Women’s Clothing A Tremendous Reduction extends throughout the entire big store. WOOL SUITS AND COATS AT Formerly sold Every article of Spring and Summer wear must go at once. as high as $24.75. SUMMER DRESSES IN VOILES, LINEN, ETC. Formerly sold as high as $10.98 DRESSES IN TAFFETA, CREPE DE CHINE, ETC. Beautiful Dresses formerly up to $29.75. TUB SKIRTS .... $1.98 Speclals in Waists, Party SILK SKIRTS Dresses, Sports Dresses, KEENEY’S TONIGHT and SAT. VIVIAN MARTIN, IN “THE SCHOOL FOR HUSBANDS"” —o— NEGLECTED WIFE” (Twelfth Episode) e —0— OTHER GOOD FILMS “THE High Class Vaudeville HARTFORD’S LARGEST SPECIALTY SHOP CORNER CORNER MAIN and CHURCH STS,, Hartford PRE-INVENTORY SALE There are many odd lots of good desirable merchandisc that we must close out before we take inventory. This is your oportunity 20 purchase Crawford’s apparel at deeply reduccd prices. Every article is marked in plain figures. Original price on white tag. Inventory price on yellow tag. SUIT SHOP BARGAINS Almost overy desirable model shown this spring is represented ned in Poiret Twills,.Gaberdine, Gros de ILondres, Velour, \ Gunniburl, Bilk and Serge. All shades. Sizes up to and including i 08, x Lot 1 924,50, A Lot 2 $10.75, Lot 8 812.50, Iot 4 8 7.50, Suits marked as high as $65.00. Suits marked as high as $35.00. Suits' marked as high as $29.50. Suits marked as high as $25.00. COAT SHOP BARGAINS Our entire stock of Ooats is included in this sale. All of the latest utyles, best materials and make. 1ot 1 8 5.00, Coats marked 1ot 3 8§ 7.50, Coats marked Lot 8 $10.00, Coats marked Lot 4 $14.78, Coats marked Lot 5 $10.75, Coats marked Lot 6 $34.50, Coats marked DRESS SHOP BARGAINS Ou: lavge atock of Voile, Organdie, Jersey Silk, Crepe Cloth, Yinen, Shantung, Satin, Taffeta, Serge and Combination effccts are inciuded in this salo, % 5.00 for Dresses that $ 7.50 for Dresses that 810.00 for Dresses that 816,50 for Dresses that $10.75 for Dresses that as as as high as high as high as high as high as high $10.00. $15.00. $22.50. as $20.50. as $35.00. as $50.00. sold high sold high sold high sold high sold high WAIST SHOP BARGAINS Prices that will command attention. $2.98 for Crepe de Chine Blouses that were $3.98. $1.49 for Voile Walsts that were $2.98. 98c for Volle Waists that were $1.25. 89c for Middy Blouses that were $1.49. JUNIORS AND CHILDREN’S COAT BARGAINS A very good assortment of Coats to make a sclection from in Poplin, s(\rg(u Slllm.. Checks, Poiret Twills and Plaids. Sizes 6 to 19. ) for Coats that sold high as $ 7.98. s 4.50 for Coats that sold high as § 8.98 $ 6.50 for Coats that sold high as $10.f 8. $10.00 for Coats that sold high as $17.50. Many other departments not advertised where you will find reductions just as grea:, as as $10.00 $12.50. $17.50. $35.00. as as as $36.00. e ] 1LYCEUM OFFERS “MAN WHO MADE GOOD” feature, “The Man Who is one of those refresh- which keeps everyone in good humor, and makes one anxious for the suacess of the hero. It is the story of a young man who got his wife at a boarding house and then started out to take success by the horns. It tells of his struggles, and the many peculiar positions he encounters on the rocky road thereto. 1f you want to laugh heartily do not miss *Lonesome Luke” who is on the same program. He is one of the few original comedians on the same program, and the two reels of com- edy will keep you in uproar. Then there is another of the fa- mous O. Henry stories on the same Today's Made Good,” ing photopla bill. These, aside from their literary merit are exceedingly entertaining. Kenneth Harlan, who will appear with Bessie Love, in “Cheerful Giv- ers,” promises to bring out a number of “movie goers” who are “picking" their pictures. Kenneth will be a regular Lyceum star, and will appear in other pictures also, at this the- ater. LASKY PICTURIZES BIG STAGE SUCCESS Keeney's program for Friday and Saturday will have for its big film features l.asky’s picturization of “The School for Husbands,” with Vivian Martin playing the lead, and the twelfth episode in “The Neglected Wife” in which Ruth Roland is star- The Lasky film is founded on a great stage success and as a photo- play it is said to be intensely esting. There will also be the regular Uni- versal releases and some other good features, The Harmony Four, which tops the ,v:\udevllle bill, has a most entertain- ing singing specialty. ville and Pife affer a series of spectacular ac- robatic feats and Bartlett and Earle give a comic dialogue tat makes a favorable impression easily heals ki ‘The moment tnat Resinol Oint- ment touches itching skin the itch- ing usually stops and healing begins. That is why doctors prescribe it so successfully even in severe cases of eczema, ringworm, rashes, and many other tormenting, disfiguring skin diseases. Aided by warm baths with Resinol Soap, Resinol Ointment makes a sick skin or scalp healthy, quickly, easily and at little cost. Resinol Ointment and Soap at all druggists, inter- ; “CHARGE ACCOUNTS” FREE We NEVER make ANY ex- tra charge for the privilege of paying your bill in Easy Week- Iy Payments. This is a part of is it You May Enjoy One of Our $12, MEN'S SUITS $17, $18 Valces up to $25.00 our liberal service and ABSOLUTELY FREE. A Giesar Misca Q0T 695, MAIN STREEE HARTFORD Theatergoers and Women Readers A A A P e W N N REVELATIONS OF A WIFE By ADELE GARRISON How Lillian and Her Child Came to Madge’s House and Met Robert Savarin. “Oh, Auntie Madge! Auntie Madge! is that nice man who paints such splendid pictures here? Mother said he would be.” Marion Morton, Lillian's fairl-like little daughter fairly tumbled out of the taxicab into my arms, so excited was she in her demand to see Robert Savarin, the famous artist, who was our house guest, and of whom her mother evidently had told her. Dicky and I had gone down the steps of the veranda to meet Lillian, while Robert Savarin, who appeared to have been overtaken with an attack of his old painful shyness, stood back of us in the shelter of the doorway. But Marion's keen eyes spied him al- most at once, “Isn’t that him—I mean he?” she asked in what she apparently meant to be a whisper, but which was clearly audible to all of us. 1 smiled involuntarily at the child's correction of the case of the pronoun. Lillian evidently had been strenuously at work, for Marion’s English when she was restored to her mother was a copy of that of the various mailds who had taken care of her. Lillian, descending more sedately from the taxi with Dicky helping her, heard her small daughter’'s stage whis- per, and frowned reprovingly. Marion paid no attention to the frown, for she is a spoiled elf, although a most lov- able one, but peering past me, smiled engagingly at the artist. Marion's smile is something to re- member. Tt {is like her mother’s, sweet, frank and infectious. It would have drawn even a more diffident man than Robert Savarin from the shelter of the doorway. He came at once directly to her, land stooping, grasped the eager little hand $he held out to him. “How do you do, Miss Marion?" he said ,as formally as if he were ad- dressing a grown-up woman. “Did T hear you say you wished to see me? t “Yes, I'm so glad you're here!” Marion carolled. “Lots of times when 1 think I'm going to see people I've | heard about, they go away before I get there, and 1 was so afraid you | wouldn't be here after all. Wil you put me in a picture? My mother does sometimes, but then they're nat real pictures, she says, just things you get { checks for.” Hand in Hand. “Marion!” Lilllan’s voice held an imperious note which the child evi- dently recognized, for she checked her confidences. But she still kept her hand in that of the artist, and it was standing thus that Robert Sav- arin and Lillian Underwood met each other again. It was a moment tense with ex- citement for me. I knew what no one eclse did—that Lillilan had never forgotten the romantic adoration, the first girlish love she had secretly giv- en the artist, and but a short time ‘before Robert Savarin had unwitting- 1y betraved to me the interest which must have'been his for his little stu- dio friend in that long ago time. Why he had not tried to win her then I had no idea, but that he had cared for her T was very sure. 3 waited breathlessiy to see what these two, each ignorant of the other's feel- ings, would say or do. The Chill Between Them. But it was a mnst commonplace and conventional meeting, as I, with my experience of Lilllan’s poise, might have known it would be. As she spoke Marion’s name she advanced toward the artist and held out her hand. “I cannot hope that you will re- member me, Mr. Savarin,” she said brightly, “but I mean to recall my- | self to you just the same. Do you remember the girl in your friend Hoyt's office—"" He interrupted kLer eagerly. “Remember you!" he said re- proachfully. *I have never forgotten you, except in the vears that I forgot everything.”” ile shivered slightly at the remembrance of those terrible vears in which his life was a blank. “One of my reasons for coming to New York was to look you up, and you can imagine my delight at finding a photograph of you upon Mrs. Graham's mantei, and learning from her that you are her dearest friend.” Robert Savarin's eyes were shining, his lean, tanned face suffused with color as he spoke. There was no mistaking his earnestness, and into Lillian’s eyes there crept a look of happiness that gladdened me. What her answer would have been I do not know, for Dicky struck in abruptly: “These reunions are very touch- ing,” he drawled audaciously, ‘“but might I suggest that this one be staged in a less chilly place, say by the living room fire?” Lillian whirled, and with a quick deft movement boxed his ears before he could escape. “You will be disrespectful to my gray hairs, will you?" she said mer- rily, and I shrewdly suspected that she was glad of the diversion from the emotional stress of the moment before. “Come, Mr. Savarin, let us go into the house before this young villatn insults us further.” Savarin stepped to her side with alacrity, still holding Marion by the hand. The child slipped her other hand into that of her mother’s, and it was thus with the child between them that they entered the house. And in my heart there echoed tha cry, “Oh, that this may be prophec MRS, BURNHAM JAMAICA, N. Y, Suff s Cured by Medi. 5 cle:en%ecommended by Sister-in-law. Jamaica, N. Y.—*I suffered greatly with my head and mt::k bnglmche. was we zzy, ner- '"""“""“lll"l vous, with hot flashes and felt very 'miserable, as I was irregular for two years. One day 'when I was feeling unusually bad my sister-in-law came in and said, ‘I |Lydia E. Pinkham’s iCompound.” So T begln nking it and I am now in good health and am cured. I took the Com- pound three times a day after meal; and on retiring at night. Ialwayskeep a bottle in the house.”’—Mrs. L. N. BURNHAM, 295 South St., Jamaica, N. Y. ‘Women who recover their health nat- urally tell others what helped them. Some write and allow their names and photographs to be published with testi- monials. Many more tell their friends. ‘Write Lydia E. Pinkham Medi- cine Co. (confidential), Lynn, Mass., for anything you need to know about your ailmentas, NAGLE SANTTAmIUM HOSPITAJ. closs 1In- All physicians eatitled recoguition. Conducted solely by MARY X, NASLE, R. N dividual attention. 3 1 A friend of mine was reading a let- ter aloud to her mother. Some name was mentioned and her mother re- peated vaguely—"Ruth Martin? Who is she?” “Why don’t you remember, moth- er?” cried the daughter impatiently. ““You must remember.” “I can’t seem to,” said the mother anxfously. There was an almost haunted look on her face. She was evidently summoning her forces to make her mind work quickly as It once had—and knowing that she would fail. “Well I dont see how you can for- get. She’s that girl we met last summer at the Boardmans.” It was Pitiful to See Her “‘Oh yes, my dear,” sald the mother guiltily, “but,” with pathetic at- tempts at extenuation, “I didn’t know her first name was Ruth.” “Poor little mother! How I pitied ! her! Her daughter didn't mean to be cruel. Like all youth she just ‘‘didn’t realize.” You can hardly imagine a young person so hardhearted as to complain because an older person could not walk as fast as she could, could not play tennis, could not leap easily from rock to rock on the shore. Why then are so many young peo- ple impatient and irritable when the older folks cannot show the same nimbleness of mind as they? “STOLEN PARADISE” FOX’S BEST YET \A picture with a distinctly original turn is “The Stolen Paradise,” the un- usual five part drama in which Ethel Clayton, the popular screen star, is featured, and which heads the present Fox program. It is the story of a girl who, impersonating the woman he loves, marries a blind man. It is full of new situations and strong climaxes, and Miss Clayton lends her .talents to one af the few new plots of screen production. Among the other pictures on the same bill are the third episode of that rapid-fire serial, “The Fatal Ring,” and the latest issue of the Pathe News. [ “The Masque of Life,”” the gigantic spectacular masterpiece that begins its three day run Sunday, is a film so ab- solutely different that it is hard to classify. Many would call it a spec- tacle because of the treméndousness of the scenes, and the way in which ex- citement is created by the very mag- nitude of the situations. Mast spec- tacles of the past, however, have been weak in story, but one is a real, vital The Greater Chivalry and absorbing modern drama, with the picturesque and magnificent features as a background. The main story is a romance—that of a pretty little circus girl with whom a prince falls in love. He is forced into a royal marriage ,however, be- lieving his sweetheart to be dead, and becames & father." He does not meet her again until she rescues his baby from the grasp of an infuriated chim- panzee, on top of & 360 foot chimne; ‘The scenes on top of the chimney will make any audience hold its breath. Effects absolutely new to motion plo- tured have been obtained in the night scenes, while the great circus building is burning, and the gruesome views showing the burning lion cage are in contrast to the really beautiful ballet productian in an allegory woven into the film. For these scenes the en- SIDE TALKS CAMERON - They Would Remember That Age Slows the Mind. If they stopped to think, . they would realize that the years slow up the mind and the spirit as well as the body. The mind cannot move as quickly and as surely as it once did any more: than the feet can. How absurd to be impatient when the older folks forget, when they can- not think quickly, when they call things by their wrong names. They are not doing it wilfully, they don’t want to run the risk of your impa- tience, they are making just as much effort as you with your quick young mind. ; s The Chivairy of Old for Young One of The Beautiful Things of Life. The chivalry of man for woman, of strong for weak, of young for old iz one of the beautiful things of the spi- rit; one of the finest flowers of civi- lization. There is no way in which breeding more surely shows itself..: than in such chivalries. And they . must not be merely physical chival- ries either, but an all embracing pat- _ ience and forbearance for every kind of weakness and feebléness. W c‘———sm—' trua tire corps de ballet of the La Scala opera house in Milan were used. Throughout the entire seven thousand feet of the film there are spectacular incidents galore, and the story in- creases in its power, bringing the pic- ture to a logical conclusion at the last moment. The management has received many requésts to have “The Masque af Life" shown twice each evening during the engagement, to accommodate all wha wish to see it. Menu for Tomorrow Breakfast., Cereal and Milk Fried Cucumbers Sally Lunns Coffee Lunch, Corn in Tomato Shells Wafers Ri}spberr)' Shortcake Tea Dinner. Roast Beef Mashed Potatoes Creamed Carrots Peach Dumplings Coffee Fried Cucumbers—Pare and cut cumbers in slices. Pat dry on a cloth, dip at once into flour and drop into a little hot fat in a spider. When the under side is brown dust with salt before turning. Corn in Tomato Shells—Scrape tho pulp from a number of ears of corn and season this highly with salt and pepper. Allow a large tomato for each person. Cut a piece from tha stem aand scoop out the center and fill with the seasoned corn. Arrange on a shallow pan and bake about ha'f an hour in a moderate oven.

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