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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, AUGUST 6, 1917, \ LYCEUM CHARLES RAY IN THE ‘. MILLIONAIRE | VAGRANT” 1 A Triangle Picture | (Do Yon Remember the | “Pinch Hitter’) s It Is One of the Most Interest- ing Pictures Ever Produced. ! COMING ! WM. S. HART EENEY’S HIGH CLASS . PHOTO- ’ PLAYS i and VAUDEVILLE BIG SHOW AT x ¥ Tonight & Tomorros SHE'S BACK VIRGINIA PEARSON “WRATH 0F LOVE” LOOKEE! Charlie Chaplin turned' By Popular mand in { “THE WOMANY!” t THE DREWS | FORD WEEKLY De- NEW BRITAIN CIRCUS DAY onday, Aug. 13 bberts’ Lots, Stanley St. ABSOLUTE PERFLCTION AND GEM SUPERB THE BIG WORLDS DI \DEM OF CELEBRATED CIRCUSKS 2 ELECTRIC-LIGHTED i Jpe BO-cent ticket admits t. Ve - iog. Children under 12 hllof e'::“;y" open at 1 and 7 P. M. for the in- o hlh of 1;!1 ‘l'E:l menagerie and orse fa reus. perfo at 2 and 8 . M. - Loorormances . REGAINS HEALTH Tells Everybody What Lydia E. Pinkham'’s Vegetable Compound did for Her. Chicago, Ill.—‘It gives me great pleasure to let others know that I im- proved in health with the first bot— tle of Lydia E. Pink- ham’s Vegetable Compound; after taking two bottles 1 am entirely well. Before taking it I could not do any | kind of work with- ut a pain in my gack as I suffered so much from in- flammation. I had headaches, was al- ways tired nné no appetite. Words cannot express my gratitude for the good your medicine has done me, and through-me to my family. I recom- mend Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound to all women sufierin% from female troubles, particularly to Danish women.”’—Mrs. META DAMGAARD-MAT- ZAN, 2187 Kimball Ave., Chicago, Ill. It is itively true that Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound has helped thous. of women who have been troubled with displacements, in- flammation, ulceration, tumors, irregu- larities, jodic pains, backache, that bearing down feeling, indigestion, and nervous prostration. RHEUNATICS Recommending “Neutrone Prescription 99 ” Since the introduction of ‘“Neutrone Prescription 99" Rheumatism suffer- ers no longer fear the changeable win- ter weather. This new combination has many heretofore incurables on its relieved list. “Neutrone Prescription 99" is dif- ferent from others in that it treats rheumatism as a disease of the blood and by its general action eliminating rheumatic conditions. Its effect is immediate as well as lasting without any depressing after effects. The whole system is benefitted— lame, stiff and inflamed joints disap- pear where other remedies have failed. It helps Nature restore the blood to its natural, healthy condition in its positive action, re-supplying what Na- ture fails to supply fast enough. Mail orders filled. 60c and $1.00 the bot- tle. Seltzer Drug Co., druggists everywhere. and leading KIDDIES NEVER FORGET Resinol the tested skin-treatment 1f you want to experiment on your skin, there are plenty of treatments to experiment with. But if you want something whose value has been proven by years and years of suc- cessful use, if you want a treatment that doclors prescribe constantly, that you #Anow contains nothing harsh or injurious, you will find it in Resinol Oint ed by Resinol Soap. It usually stopsif instantly, and rarely fails to clear away e of eczema or similar tor- ‘menting skin eruption. Resinal Ointment and Resinol Soap are sold by all druggists. Menu for Tomorrow Breakfast. Sliced Peaches Cereal and Milk Brofled Ham Gluten Gems. Coffee Lanch. Cold Sliced Ham French Fried Potatoes Blackberries Tea Dinner. Cabbage Soup Baked Spare Ribs 3rowned Potatoes Baked Corn Lettuce Cherry Poly Poly Coffee Gluten Gems—One pint gluten flour one pint milk, one egg, one fourth teaspoonful salt, two teaspoon- fuls baking powder. Mix the flour }and salt; beat the egg, add the milk tand stir into the dry mixture. Add !'the baking powder, beat well, fill | greased gem pans two-thirds full and bake n a quick oven. Cabbage Soup—Put one small chopped cabbage into saucepan, add two cupfuls water and cook till tender; press through a sieve. Melt four tablespoonfuls butter, add three slices onion, cook slowly five minutes, add two tablespoonfuls flour, two cupfuls scalded milk and cabbage mixture; cook five minutes. Add salt Iund pepper, strain and serve. DANISH WOMAN | News REVELATIONS o~ For Theatergoers and Women Readers | “Tables Turned” on Lillian Underwood? Are the Dicky kept his word about going into town, leaving Robert Savarin for me to entertain. “Lil, vow'll have me on your hands up in town,” he announced. When he had zathered in the living room to bid Lillian good-by. “I am terribly sorry,” he turned to Robert Sav courteously, “but I have just received a most imperative message summon- ing me to my{studio. I must go into town on this early train. But I think youwll be safe in the hands of Mrs. Graham. She will take good care of you, I am sure.” He had the audacity to smile and to | bow in my direction, althoush T knew | that he was going into the city solely | hecause in a fit of anger.at me he had | declared that he would do so. Whether he would carry out his other threat, to devise some excuse for get- ting out of the dinner Lillian Under- wood was to give in the evening 1 had no means of knowing. 1 may have fancied it because of her behavior the night before, but as | I watched Lillian rowly I thought that she did not exactly like the ar- rangement which made Dicky her traveling companion to town. Over our telephone the day before she had made arrangements to give a dinner for Robert Savarin. With character- istic energy and efficiency she had planned so well that she did not need to go home until a few hours before the time scheduled for the affair. Her little entertainments to which invita- tions were sought eagerly were al- co-operation existing between Lillian and her big colored Betty, “the best cook in New York,” as Harry Under- wood used extravagantly to call her. Her First Real Love. She made no reply to Dicky’s an- nouncement, either being really busied in the fastening of little Marion’s cloak, or feigning to be, I could not tell which. I shrewdly suspected that the rea- son for her reluctance to have Dicky accompany her to the city was the same one that had actuated her sud- den funny little access of dignity at breakfast when she had drawn away with a touch of hauteur from his teasing, instead of tossing him an an- swer in kind—the fear of Robert Sav- arin’s disapproval. I wasn't quite sure that I liked this in Lillian, it seemed rather ridiculously in a wom- an of her vears and world’s ex- perience. And then, all in a moment as I looked at her, I read the answer to my enigma. Lillian had never yet ex- perienced the rapture of a real love. Her mad infatuation for Marion’s father, I knew from her own story, had burned itself out in bitter disil- lusionment before her honeymoon had waned. And her subsequent mar- riage to Harry Underwood after the sordid tragedy of her divorce from Morton had been the patching up of two nearly wrecked lives in a fairly comfortable “jog trot” existence. The real sercret, golden heart of her was still virginal, still athrill to the voice of the man whose personal- ity had first touched her heart. And she was like a young girl with her first lover in her unconscious dread of doing anything the man of her dreams might disapprove. Is Lillian Jealous. Dicky's forehead contracted into a frown as he, too, realized that Lillian was not overjoyed at the prospect of his accompanying her to the qity. I could have laughed outright at the ludicrousness of his dilemna. He was going into the city with Lillian on —— BY RUTH A woman told me the other day that she was tired of being unselfish because “it doesn’t pay.” A rather wasn't it? It set me to many kinds of are besides the real, simon pure, ruby rare article. Because Unselfishness Doesn’t Pay. In the first place there's that bar- zaining unselfishness (pardon mV abuse of the noble word) that this woman so aptly illustrated. Every now and then one hears people de- clare that they are through doing things for others because they find that others won't do as much for them. And vet if you had ventured to question if the things they were doing for others were unselfish since they were done in the hope of a re- turn they would surely have been hopping mad. And then there’'s the irritable un- selfishness that says to itself all the time: ‘“How unselfish I am. I don't believe many people would be so un- selfish.” Such An Ugly Way to Live, And then there's the irritable un- selfishness that can never ‘‘renounce without being embittered.” I caught myself at that the other day. I was sending away an expensive present. It was something I had long wanted inconsistent statement, thinking about how unselfishness there ways given with an apparent absence ! of effort, a result which I knew for | the most part due to the wonderful ; o~ OF A WIFE By ADELE GARRISON purpose to annoy me. To have me see that she did not wish him to do so must have been most galling to him. Robert Savarin unconsciously add- ed fuel to the flame. “I am sure Mrs. Graham will take i the best of care of me,"” he said. “and 1 am very glad of the opportunity to | have an undisturbed talk with her. There are many things about which I :'wish to ask her advice.” Instinctively 1 knew . that the “many things” pertaining to Lillian that probably 1 should hear the other half of the romantic story told me by Lillian, of the friendship which had once existed hetween them. But neither Dicky nor Lillian could ibly know the subject about Mr. Savarin was to talk to me, and it was curious and amusing. to see the looks in their faces as they turned them toward us. I was not surprised to sce a resent- ful, angry look in Dicky's eyes. I . have had too many experiences with { his absolutely unreasoning, irritating jealousy of me not to recognize the premonitory symptoms. But what was my amazement to see distinct resentment in the eyes of Lillian Underwood as they rested upon me. I stified a laugh that was half a sob. This mew turn of things was tragically ludicrous. Without being ‘aware of it herself, Lillian Under- wood was jealous of Robert Savarin's ! friendship for me! {SECRET SERVICE IN PICTURE AT FOX'S po which Plots hy foreign spies and the thrilling detective work of the Amer- ican secret service keep the action of Virginia Pearson’'s latest produc- tion for Willlam Fox, “Wrath of Love,” always on the double quick. This up-to-the-minute drama will be shown at Fox's theater tonight. Roma Winet, the role played by Miss Pearson, is a well known au- thor. -She. marries a keen business man and is very happy until a girl friend is placed in her husband's care by Dave Blake, her fiance, when he is called to the front. Jealousy aris- ing from perfectly innocent situations which she misunderstands, wrecks her happiness and she is only saved from a desperate act by Blake's return. She then learns that the mysterious meetings between her husband and the girl were connected with Blake's operations as a secret service agent. Included in the cast are Louise Bate, Irving Cummings, Nellie Slattery and Frank Glendon. As a special added attraction, one of the funniest two-reelers that Charlie Chaplin has ever made, name- ly, “The Woman,” will be shown by popular demand as a return engage- ment on the same program. Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Drew and the popular Ford Weekly are among the other items of a thorouprly enjoyable show. Acting on the policy that the best way to make satisfied patrons is to give them a little more than their money’s worth, the management has secured as the feature for Wednesday and Thursday Beatrix Michelena’s great seven-part dramatic success, “The Woman Who Dared,” at the showing of which the same low Fox scale of prices will prevail. TAKE CENSUS OF NURSES. Boston, Aug. 6.—A committee of the Massachusetts state Nurse asso- ciation has begun a complete survey of the nursing resources of the state. Not only those already at work, but also persons undergoing training to become nurses, will be listed. SIDE TALKS CAMERON Her Idea of Unselfishness myself. And as I put my card in with the gift I found myself thinking bitterly, ‘I gave away silk and I wear cotton. And then I caught a glimpse of my own ugliness of spirit and had the decency to be ashamed. And of course there’s the nervous, fussy unselfishness that gives so of- ficiously that it makes the recipient uncomfortable. For instance the hostess who is continually at you with, “Now isn’t there something I can do for you?" “T am so afraid you aren’t comfortable,” etc., etc. Comeback Unselfishness. And then there’s what I call the “comeback unselfishness,” that is that of the giver who gives over lavishly of time and strength and then holds it up against you that he (or more likely she) is overtired, and relieves her weary nerves by being irritable to you and making you feel to blame. I sometimes- think I prefer placid, selfish, happy people to variety. True unselfishness is the most beautiful thing in the world. And correspondingly rare. It is found oftenest in mothers, maiden aunts and once in a lifetime in a friend. And one ounce of it is worth a thousand pounds of the imitation variety. the this DIVIDUALITY IS | CAPTURED BY A MAID SMART LINES. Smoke gray poplin, banded by graduated strips of navy blue taffeta, makes this fetching frock cut with a corselet top, which is buttoned back on to the hip sections smocked at the top. “MILLIONAIRE VAG” AT THE LYCEUM Charles Ray, in The Millionaire Vagrant, is the Lyceum headline for today and tomorrow. He takes the part of a millionaire who makes a wager that he can live and flourish on a dollar a day earned in a sweat- shop. While in the slums he be- comes mixed up with officers who are attempting to arrest a girl on a trumped up charge. What results is a pretty romance with many in- teresting developments. Too much cannot be said for the ability of Charles Ray. He is abso- lutely in a class by himself for the characters he portrays. The pictures he appears in are classic, and one misses of one finest and most ab- sorbing pictures of the year by not seeing this one. Many picture lovers remember Ray's work in the “Pinch Hitter” show at the Lyceum a short time ago. The public is now aware that the famous ‘“Triangle” pictures are only to be seen at the Lyceum, and a wholesome entertainment is to be had at this theater at any perform- ance. Fads and Fashions ® White panne velvet promises to be in evidence in millinery this fall. The simpler the coat the more tention is given to collar and cuffs. It s extremely likely that dresses will be conservatively cut this fall. at- Small children have conventional animals embroidered on their frocks, Black velvet ribbon is used as belts for Little girls’ summer frocks. Checked collar, belt and cuffs make the child’s serge frock interesting. l Household Notes White or very pale shades of dress £00ds can be successfully dyed almost any color. If you have no screen and need one in an emergency, cover a clotheshorse with sheets. Fruit juices may be put up in cans ready to make into jelly at a conveni- WATCH OUR WINDOWS ONE DOLLAR A WEEK Will pay for these there will not be ANY ‘“extra” for any reason what- Note the '‘Big Reduc- ts—and charges cvel tions! SUITS $16.00 SUITS $20.00 SUITS $25.00 SUITS Now ... NOwW ... NOW ... $12.00 $16.00 $18.00 FULL MEN’S SHOES MEGESsAR Misch §rone 687-685 MAIN STREET LINE OF HARTFORD Vacationists!! Dont borrowd a pen to Write your summer letters. C arrz your ol — 2 - Yor el 0 EE> i Nne Cent a Word Each Day Pays for a Classified Adv. in the Herald. You Get Results That’s What You Want.~ ent season. Nowadays physicians advise a good vous and emaciated. In cooking very sour fruits, put in a very little salt, and much less su- gar will be necessary. Chilled water is generally safer than ice water—unless one is certain of the quality of the ice. ! It Is As Much Your Duty to Save Your Eyes bedtime meal for people who are ner- | As It Is Ours S. STANLEY HORVITZ, OPTOMETRIST ; OPTICIAN 327 MAIN STREET We Give Royal Gold Trading Stamps—Ask for Them {"”“" 3 Suggestions for Week of Aug. 6th to Aug. 11th Inclusive BIG 98¢ COMBINATION 5 lbs Granulated Sugar . 11b Elryad Coffee .............. 35¢c 1 box Salt 30 R. G. Stamps Free .......... 98¢c MILKS, Evaporated, all Standard Brands ta1 can 12¢ PURE LARD Old Dutch Cleanser a can 8c GOLD DUST 20c GRANDMOTHER’S OATS ....... UNEEDA BISCUIT Lrg Size Pkg pound 24c IYZI& Naptha T AsP SOAP CcoCoA a cake a can 17c .3 pkgs 25¢ DOUBLE TIP MATCHES ... CHEESE, Whole Milk 10 Stamps with 1 bot Extract . Free Dalivery on 50c Worth™ or Over 25¢ 50 Smmps with 1 can A&P Baking Powder ..50c 40 Stamps with 1 1b Tea 50 Stamps with 1 1b Ten - .0 800 Free City Delivery 8AM 2P M ‘Phone 135 PRI 0z 184 MAIN STREET, NEW BRITAIN, CONN, 1_We Give Rojal Gold Trading Siamps— Ask for Them )