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NEW BRI TAIN DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY_, AUGUST 4, 1917. e ———— LAST APPEARANCE OF | - LILLIAN GISH IN PICTURES ouls Triumphant” SUNDAY THE FAMOUS Mollie King g N LIND MAN’S LUCK” | ! the sameé Author of “Kick In,” “The Iron Claw.” ! NEXT WEEK ! ALL STAR WEEK EENEY’S TONIGHT. | | ' Y —in ; Big Lasky Success. ." THE TIDES ! BARNEGAT» . s N ‘THE NEGLECTED oF WIFE” —_— HIGH CLASS VAUDEVILLE THE . HOUSE OF HITS FOX’S | Continuous Today | ALIGE _BRADY HE GIVORGE GAME’ Snappy Screen Version of Succesgful Comedy ’’Mile. Fifi.” “FATAL RING” Best Chapter Yet MANY OTHERS TOMORROW Mary Miles Minter IN SOMEWHERE IN AMERICA” s S ) AKE COMPOUNCE and Concert Every Sunday Afternoon. sncing Wednesday and Sat- urday Evenings. g oller Coaster Boating, Bath- ing, Billiards ‘usical Comedy at Summer Theater. PIERCE & NORTON, Proprietors. ———————— enu for Tomorrow | olls Breakfast Fruit Mush Scalloped oPtatoes Coffee Dinner Beef Soup Roast Leg Mutton Rice Croquette Green Corn Tomato Mayonnaise ‘Watermelon Coffee Supper Chees Toats Layer Cake | Lemon Float Coffee ast Mutton—In roasting mutton ten minutes for heatng through rom ten to twelve minutes to the @ if liked rare, fifteen minutes ound if desired well done. @it Mush—Pick over and prepare ruit according to its nature. Mash essary, and add one-haif of its "of boiling water and cook slowly “tender enough to press through Ve, Uso this instead of water in ing fariha. SUr in a little su- hnd mold ir wetted cups. Serve s As Much Your Duty to Saver E As It Is Ours STANLEY HORVITZ, OMETRIS OPTICIAN 327 MAIN SEREET ik WHOLE FAMILY USES THEM “Fruit-a-tives” Keeps Young And Oid In Splendid Health J. W. HAMMOND, Esa. ScorLAND, Aug. 25th. 1913 “Prnit-a-tives” are the only pill ‘manufactured, to my way of thinking. “They work completely, no griping whatever, and one is dplenty or any ordinary person at a dose. My wife was a martyr to Comstipation. We tried everything on the calendar with- out satisfaction, and spent large sums of money until we happened on “Fruit-a-tives’, I cannot say too snuch in their favor. We have used them in the family for about two years and we. would not use anything else as long as we can get “Frusr-a-T1ves”. J.W. HAMMOND. Those who have been relieved by «Fruit-a-tives” are proud and happy to tell a sick or ailing friend about these wonderfultabletsmadefmmfnnt}uices. “ Fruit-g-tives”, the celebrate: fl[mis medicine, has relieved more sufierers [from Stomack, Liver, Bowel, Kidney and Skin Troubles, than any other medicine ever discovered. soc. a box, 6 for $2.50, trial size 2sc, At all dealers or sent on receipt of rice by Fruit-a-tives Limited, ensburg, New York, MILITARY NOTE IN WOMEN’S HEADWEAR THE LAFAYETTE Cleverly, fashioned on the lines of the famous general’s cap, this chic turban of navy velvet promises to be one of the popular fall models. CUTICURA HEALED SKIN TROUBLES ThatCaused Itchingand Burn- ing and Loss of Sleep at Cost of $1.00. ‘‘My neck and ears were covered with een blisters. I thought I would go rantic with the pain which was terrible. Then the blisters turned into sore eruptions which were red and inflamed, and itched and burned so that when I scratched the blood came. I could not sleep or eat. ‘I tried all kinds of oint- N ments, salves, etc., butwith no effect, and I stood the-pain for twelve months. Then I used Cuticura Soap and Ointment, and found relief after twenty- four hours, and two cakes of Cuticura Soap and one box of Ointment healed me.” (Signed) Maurice Levinsky, 796 Pembroke St., Brid(fe rt, Conn. Cuticura Soap an (gi?nmem are not only wonderful healers but wonderful preventives of skin and scalp troubles 1f used exclusively. The Soap, for daily use in the toil€t, cleanses and puri- fies, the Ointment soothes and heals. For Free Sample Each by Return Mail address post-card: ‘‘Cuticura, Dept. R, Boston.”” Sold everywhere. | practically | on any ‘dog’ before him. ; o Quick-Acting The_speediest remedy for _sick headache, biliousness and adi- gestion is a dose or two of BEECHAM'S PILLS Sale of Any Medicine in the Worlds everywhere. Ia bexes, 10¢., 25c. i~ - = aes EVELATIONS Ry ADELE Why Madge Contrasts Dreams With Reality. Did vou see old Lil?" o first opportunity alone to give “Well! Dicky seized the he had to talk to vent to hio astonishment at Lillian's when he teased her. me sudden dignity ment. He had known her for so many years that their relations were those of older sister and younger brother. —Never before had she replied to his teasing and impu- dence with anything except laughing case. But when Robert Savarin's face had shadowed at Dicky's man- ner toward her, and his eves had | flashed their disapproval, she had drawn away from Dicky with dignity. “What do you suppose ever got into her?” Dicky demanded. ‘‘She never came any royal-touch-me-not airs over me before. She surely doesn’t stand in such awe of Savarin’s geniv? and reputation that she'd try to put And vet 1 can’t for the life of men imagine any What do you think?” ! had other reason. I saw with relief that Dicky h no suspicion of the real reason whicn e OF A WIFE GARRISON “carefully bit deep. T always have been proud of the fact that I earned my living as a teacher before T married, but I wor der sometimes if Dicky is not a little bit ashamed of it. 1 know that his shielded hothouse flower” to a “working girl,” although neither I was not surprised at his amaze- ] she nor Dicky had much more thaa the traditional penny to bless them- selves with. Dicky makes some ironical reference to my work-a-day, anything-but-shel- tered life before T met him. I think any wife will understand, however, that the thing which cut me deepest was the knowledge that Dicky had within him that which would make it possible for him to utter such taunts to me, no matter how anzry he might he. . o I am afraid, my expeflences with somewhat, for while a year ago [ would have been fairly ill for the rest of the day over speeches such as h> ¢f my mind as soon as possible. But sometimes there comes before my mind the picture of what I once hoped life with Dicky would be, con- had made Lillian draw away Wwith dignity from his teasing. Her ac- tion gave me food enough for thought without directing Dicky's Vvolatile mind into the same channel. I knew that if he ever found out that Lilliaa had cherished a romantic schoolgirl adoration for the artist—a girl's first love, in the old days—he could never resist teasing her about it. I resolved to create a diversion even at the risk of offending Dicky for the moment. Madge’s Ruse Succeeds. “I don’t think anything about Lil- lian.” I said, and purposely- made my tone weary and indifferent. “But I do think a great deal about your lan- guage. I wish you'd give up some of those atrocious expressions of yours, ‘putting on dog,’ for instance. You embarass me horribly ‘sometimes, es- pecially, when there are cultivated people like Robert Savarin within hearing.” My ruse succeeded beyond my ex- pectations. Dicky stared at me for a long moment while the color mounted to his forehead. Then the angry gleam which I know so well came into his eyes. “So sorry to have embarrassed the professor,” he said with most elab- orate irony. “I realize that my 'n- couth ways must distress so carefully shielded a hothouse flower as You have been. And. of course, Savarin's ears have been so delicately attuned to the little niceties of life for the last 15 years that one Qught to use great care not to shock his ‘cultivation.’ Don't worry, I'll try not to embar- rass you again. T'll make an excuse to go into town on this early traia, and I can manage So that something will happen to keep me from Lil's dinner tonight. You can entertain vour fascinating artist and bring him in to Lillian’s without fear of being embarrassed by vour slangy hua- band.” It Dicky had been a woman I should say that he “flounced” out of the room. No other word so ade- quately describes the manner in which he left it. I knew that he was thor- oughly angry, but I ventured no & ply to his cutting words, for if he did keep his word to go into town and avoid Lillian’s dinner it would he horribly embarrassing for me. ; Out of Mind. 1 did not know whether I felt more like laughing or crying as I sat down by the window after Dicky had left the room. .And while his childisn threats amused me In spite of my fear that he would carry them out, the memory of his allusion to me as a BY RUTH A friend of mine, doctor, has occasion to pass frequently through the poorest section of the city. One day when he was starting on his rounds he asked the Wants-to-be- Cynic if he could give him pennies for a dime. = “What's the big idea ™ nic, “The kids,” said the doctor. “You know the streets down there just swarm with them and I always like to have a supply of pennies on hand. 1 don’t know any way in the world you can give so much happiness and geét so much fun cheap as handing out penntes to those kids. Best cure for the blues, I know. One Kind of Preparedness. And he went off whistling and rat- tling the ten pennies in his trouser pockets. Do you like the doctor's prescrip- tion I do. I've tried it before in a small unsympathetic way; but here- after I'm not going to leave having the pennies to chance. Look back to your awn childhood and see what a.penny meant to you. Why it was an adventure, some- thing that turned a grey day to blue. Can’t you remember even at this dis- tance, individual pennies and their his- tory I can. How T Spent a Penny Once on a Time. There was the penny big brother offered for winning a race on stilts. I a asked the C. trasted with the reality, and my heart grows sick for my lost dreams. THE DIVORCE GAME AT FOX'S THEATER An extremely novel and entertain- ing photo- play is “The Divorce Game,” the five-part World feature in which Alice Brady stars tonight at Fox's. Taken from Leo Ditrichstein’s famous 'plot “Mlle. Fifi,”” and even brilliantly clever than that mightily successful stage play it has to do with the highly amusing finan- cial affairs of a voung married couple whose mothers refuse to support them. The loving pair decide to get a divorce as under the terms of the marriage settlement, considerable money will come into the girl's con- trol if she is divorced. But the mothers discover the subterfuge, and prevent its execution. Then, through circumstantial evidence, something occurs that makes the girl really want a divorce, but she is unabie now to convince her mother that she is in earnest. Many hilarious situations result hut in the end the elder per- sons foole@ and the young ones more are mother bitterly opposed his marriage ' And I notice that when Dicky have blunted my sensibilitics had just made, now I push them ot ! ~—— BLIND MAN'S LUCK | AT LYCEUM SUNDAY | Lillian Gish, who has long been a | screen favorite has retired from the | screen. She is one of the first of new | | stars of the ‘“‘youthful type” which ithe photo drama art has developed. , Her many friends should not fail to I see her last appearance in ‘“Soul's Triumphant” at the Lyceum tonight. The Sunday night concert at the Lyceum will feature *Mollie ' King,” in “Blina Man's Luck.” Miss King is one of the foremost screen stars, and has unusual ability besides great beauty to make firm her success. The story is exciting, concerning crook playing pitted against clever detectives, with an interesting mys tery as well. 1*°T% is directed by George Fitzmau- | rice, who made his reputation direct- ing such photoplays as “At Bay,” “New York,” “Kick In” and many others. 1" Next week will be “All Star Week” at the Lyceum, and you will long re- gret missing any of the bills. Such stars as Charles Ray (of Pinch Hitter Fame) and Jack Gardner, in a north- ! ern story. and Wm. S. Hart in “Wolf Lowry” will be among the many. There will be no increase in prices. F. HOPKINSON SMITH WROTE FILM SUCCESS Keeney patrons will have a final op- portunity to see the famous Lasky plcturization of F. Hopkinson Smith's equally famous novel, “The Tides of Barnegat,” this evening when the film will be offered at the feature of the photoplay Program. The piece was well received by a large audience last evening and it should attract another big crowd ténight. Blanche Sweet and a company of capable people interpret the roles. “The Neglected Wife" is also ta be a part of tonight's program. In addition to the film features the management offers three goad vaude- ville acts. The show is of high charac- ter and the audlence likes it. NO POISON SQUAD IN NAVY, SAYS FOOD BOSS get the money without the bother of , a divorce. The “Fatal Ring" serial, which has sprpng into instantaneous popularty among New Brftain theatergoers, grows more exciting as it acvelops, and the fourth chapter, “The Mes- sage on the Ring,” which is also on tonight’s program is without doub the most gripping that has vet been released The stunts that Pearl ‘White performs when she finds her- self a captive in the temple of the Violent God, and again in a China- town dive, are certainly worth going a long distance to see. The short comedy feature ridiculously funny adventure “Turks and Troubles,” American tramp finds himself a cap- tive in a Turkish harem, and is com- is a called in which an, pelled to don the garb of the Sultan’s ' and dance before his majesty. is a hit. News wife, The manner of his escape The latest issue of the Pathe also shown. Tomorrow's special feature will be an extraordiary five-part novelty “Somewhere in America,” in which charming Mary Miles Minter, one of the most popular young stars of the screen is featured. SIDE TALKS CAMERON sl oo Pennies won it and what do you suppose I did with it. Being smitten with a violent case of kindness to animals I gave it to a little boy who had some tadpoles in a bottle, to let them go. I, mind you, who was always before and after, a most energetic tadpole catcher. I can remember vividly how indignant big brother was. Once a girl in our school had her cousin to visit her. And every day in the week, so rumor ran, they each had a penny to spend. I didn't be- Heve it at the time. But I see now that I doubtless did her a grave in- Jjustice. She Asks for “A White Penny” True, a penny does not mean the same to a middle-class child of today that it did to you and me. Times have changed. I knaw a little four-year-old who is shrewd enough to spurn cop- pers and ask her aunts and uncles for “a white penny.” You cannot give the same thrill you used to feel by handing a penny to your nephew or niece or your own child. But the children to whom you can give in memory of the little wistful, eager child who vanished when you grew up are legion. Surely the van- ijshed child will smile when he sees their faces light up. And since his hiding place is in your own heart that will bring sunshine there, ADMIRAL SAMUEL MEGOWAN Rear Admiral Samuel McGowan, paymaster general of the navy, hav- ing charge of the purchase of navy supplies, issued an order calling for the enforcement of the most rigid in- spection and for the rejection of food that does not come up to the stand- ard. “Because adequate and satisfactory subsistence is the very foundation not only of real efficiency, but of disci- pline itself,” says the order, “there is no class of purchases for the naval service that needs to be more con- stantly watched than provisions, our men being no ‘poison squad,’ but hu- man beings and American citizens, for whom we stand in the relation of trustees in so far as relates to the question of food. It is therefore di- rected that every effort to try on the navy any experiments or tests of any food product whatever shall be promptly suppressed. “No provisions will under any eir- cumstances get accepted if there be the least question as to purity or nu- in mind that doubtful food is food and will be treated as such.” Hats which match the boots and bag create a very good effect. Low separate collars for with street dresses are favored. — e e $100 Reward, $100 The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded disease that sclence has been able to cure in all its stages, and that is catarrh. Catarrh being greatly influenced by constitutional conditions requjres constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally and acts thru the Blood on the Mucous Surfaces of the System thereby de- stroying the foundation of the disease, glving the patient strength by building up the constitution and assisting na- ture In doing its work. The proprie- tors have so_much faith in the curative powers of Hall's Catarrh Cure that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address: F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, Ohio. Sold by all Druggists, 75c. wear News For Theatergoers and tritive value, it being constantly borne ' bad | qiite ea Women Readers e o e e IN BATCHES OF FIFTY, RECRUITS TAKE : OATH TO DEFEND UNITED STATES When recruits for the army have passed the physical and mental tests prescribed by the regulations they are sworn into the army and are there- upon considered fully entered into the nation’s service At one of the, east- ern forts, where this picture was taken, recruits in’ batches of fifty take the oath to uphold their country. Probably the same procedure.will be followed with all the men enlisted under the draft law. Househo!d Notes \ Growing children must be well fed. Succotash makes a good hot dish for supper. EVen blackberries will make a de- licious shortcake. it is Never put bread away until thoroughly cooled. Every utensil should have its own place in the kitchen. The lightness of pends on their beating. pancakes de- The sandwich, with a rich filling does not require butter. Small scraps of bread can be toasted in a corn popper. Bacon fat is almost as good as butter on.baked potatoes. Green peppers make a very good basis for a summer salad. a fabric which can be - dyed at home. possibly Linen No one can save too | much sweet corn for winter. Currants for jelly should be picked {on a dry, sunny day. It the kitchen range gets a spot of rust, use sand paper on it. A washable cptton rug is a com- fort in the up-to-date kitchen. Clean white enameled woodwork Avith whiting on a moist cloth. Every mouse should be regarded as an enemy to one’s household. in the house should . Every room be thoroughly aired once a day. Egg plant is delicious stewed, and for some people, more wholesome. Keep fresh vegetables in dry, dark, well-aired places if possible. A cloth wet with camphor will remove white spots from furniture. The long-handled dustpan 1is a great help to the modern housewife. Never allow the drain pipe of your refrigerator to become clogged. Corn scalloped is quite as deli- cious as other scalloped vegetables. Common potato salad may be gar- nished with peas and English wal- nuts. Use vinegar instead of thin paste, and the paste spoil. water to will not Radishes and cottage flavored with onion make salad. cheese a good Baked apples are far more whole- some and palatable:baked with the skins on. A small iron frying pan, such as is used for omelets, is best for frying pancakes. When canning apples to be made into pies or sauce, put them up with- out sugar. Ribbons are used on everything, even collars are made of them. Fads and Fashions } 3 Pleated skirts are in favor. Convertible collars are liked . Sashes are many and varied. Jade pendants are much liked. Fall hats are made of panne vel- vet. Apricot is the newest shade lingerie. for Blouses of citron color are fash-, ionable. Qonservative styles are prgmised for fall. Parasols are made of oddly figured silk. Beaded effects and silk tassels are favored. The shoes should match the color of the dress. Most hats of dark facing of white. color have a There is no sign of the nipped-in- at-the-waist styles. Jackets are so straight ,they are al- most exaggerated. Waists will match the dark suits they are wore with, Tailored serge dresses will be fashionable as ever. as, Children’s coats much like grown-upg’. are cut very Black velvet shot French millinery idea. with red is a ’ Long coats of Scotch mixtures are excellent for motoring. The crown of the old felt hat can be covered with ribbon. Silk stitching is a favorite dec- oration on tailored suits, A white gown worn with a black satin hat is excellent style. Linen callars and bright ties are surely fashionable. neck- chiffon sunny Green best for veils are now motor rides. the, In Coats of a ‘dressy” kind there is still a good deal of ripple. Pretty separate skirts are of silk with large polka dote. made Dresses of combined will be worn by school girls. materials Lustrous satin is very smart for simple gowns with long tunics.