New Britain Herald Newspaper, August 28, 1917, Page 4

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, AUGUST 28, 1917. EENEY'S/™ Tigh Class Vaudeville and Screen Artists! AY MURRAY in THE PRIMROSE RING. o Today & Wed. “PATTY” ARBUCKLE in a 2-Reel Picture \LANCHE SWEET and HOS. MEEHAN in THE EXTRA FEATURES. AY & SATURDAY [E NEGLECTED WIFE THE HOUSE O'HITS ! % FOX’S % . TONIGHT ONE CAPRICE dvery Girl’'s Dream” barlic Chaplin “Shangied” L EEE—— 4JE DREWS and OTHERS ‘TOMORROW #t Big 14-Recl Double- Feature Show ! IEDA BARA Returned By Request in “Her Double Life” Alict;k Joyce ND IN hard the Brazen” THE SPY IS COMING” AT, News e A S s LYCEUM “LIGHT IN LYCEUM !!SEE THAT FIGHT ! ! “THE FLAME OF THE YUKON” With KENNETH HARLAN DOROTHY DALTON Your Last Chance Is Today TOMORROW and THURSDAY DARKNESS” BABY MCcALLISTER WORLD LIBRARY REVELATIONS into my heart as I heard Dr. Pettit telling me that he had keen eves where I was concerned. It had a tenseness of emotion I had heard in his voice before, and it told me more plainly than ever a truth I had tried long to disregard—that the young physician’s interest in me was something warmer than friendship. I tried to acquit myself of any blame for this condition of things, tried to tell myself that the man was wholly unwarranted in his feeling as far as any encouragement of mine was con- cered. Then my memary, always re- lentlessly accurate, brought back stray words and glances of mine, trivial and harmless enough in themselves, but which my conscience told me I never should have directed toward Dr. Pettit when I had any reason to suspect the nature of his feeling for me. I had salved my consscience before with the excuse that my wholly in- nocuous friendship with the young physician—if so slight an affair could be called a friendship—had been a chapter of accidents, most of them caused by Dicky’s neglect of me. Our meeting at the Madison Square Gar- den, as an instance, on the night of the president’s speech there, was a di- rect result of Dicky's desertion of me in the crowd in order to rescue Hdith the young art student from RAND HARTFORD. TEL, C. 1026 ALL WEEK DAVE MARION’S Own Company MATINEE DAILY AKE COMPOUNGE nd Concert Every Sunday Afternoon. ancing Wednesday and Sat- urday Evenings. . oller Coaster Boating, Bath- ing, Billiards usical Comedy at Theater. PIERCE & NORTON, Proprictors. RONG EVIDENCE Statement of This New Brit- ain Woman. kache is often kidney ache; ommon warning of serious kid- lls. Stitch in Time Saves Nine'— ‘t delay—use Doan's Kldney Summer pfit by the experience of Mrs. T. ley, 535 Stanley street. She says: e years ago a cold settled on my followed by sharp, darting . The pain bothered me mostly ht and I couldn’t rest com- H on account of it. When ¥ jed over or made a sudden move, in. would catch me and it was ke a thrust of a knife in my I finally used Doan’s Kidney and they gave me relief. I am without them in the house as are a very handy medicine to. of backache.” 1l dealers. Foster-Milburn 2atszMice FOR SALE BY New Britain, New Britain, New Britain, New Britain, Conn. Conn, Conn, Conn, Conn. Conn. Conn. Conn. Conn, Conn. Conn, on & Johnson, Hjerpe, w Brital Plainville, Kensington, Newington Jet. Plantsvill AND ALL GOOD DEALERS. N AND OMEN sed Kidney trouble preys upon the mind, discourages and lessens ambition; heauty, vigor and cheerfulnegs often disappears when the kidneys are out of order o For xood resuits use Dr. Kilmer's fnp-Root, the great kidney medicine. At gists In large and medium size bottles. ple size bottle by Parcel Post, also phiet ress Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, , 8nd enciose ten cents. When writing tion the New Britain Daily Herald. Fairfax, Virginia, whom, later, much cauee to distrust. The remembrance of Edith Fairfax brought another painful thought to my mind. Memory painted a faithful picture of the day I found the little kKodak print of her and Dicky in his chiffonnier drawer, and of the sharp temptation that came to me then to revenge myself upon Dickp by en- tering into a mild flirtation with Dr. Pettit. That my common sense had prevented me from ylelding to the temptation didn't save me from flush- ing shamefacedly as I thaught of that day. “Forgive me! I didn't mean to cause you embarrassment,” 1 heard the physician say, and the distress in his voice made me Tealize that he thought my painful flush was caused by his remark. I searched my brain wildly for something to disabuse his mind. “It wasn’t what you said,” I stam- mered, “in fact, you'll pardon me, but 1 was thinking of something else— something which worries me.” It was the literal truth and it served its purpose. I saw him draw back, of- fended for the moment at my fancied inattention, then he bent toward me again. . 1 had had so “You Ask Me That!” ‘“Are you sure it isn’t something I can help?” he said, there was a tremor in his vaice that told me of some emotion held down with a hand -of steel. 1 shook my head: “hink carefully before you say that,” he returned. ‘“Let me tell yau something. If there 's any slightest way that I can be of service to you, 1 will change my plans and stay in the city for a while instead of leaving it permanently.” I looked up startled and dismayed. “You're leaving the city, permanent- 1y!” I repeated. “Why?" 1 regretted the question the moment it left my lips, for his eyes, as they met mine, held pain in them, and some- thipg else besides, something which caused me to drop my Own. “Why he Tepeated, thickly, there was a roughness in his which betrayed the momentary ‘un- clenching of the hand of steel. ‘‘You ask me that! Don't you know, can't you guess that I am leaving because 1 cannot bear 7 “What Country?” T interrupted him hastily, feverishly. Something within told me that he must not put his feeling into words. If he did that I never again would be aile to keep any casual assaciation of ours wholly in my own hands. There would always be present in my mind the memory of the impassioned words 1 knew only too well were trembling on his lips. “Please don’t tell me anything more of your reasons far leaving,” I said, and tried to divest my own voice of any emotion. “Tell me instead where you are going." “I'm not going anywhere,” he re- turned, steadily, *‘unless you tell me that there's no possibility of my aiding you by staying.” ““Truly, there’s nothing anyone can do for me,” I returned. “But I hope You aren't going far away,”’ I added, in “I'm afraid not.” and tone a tone I meant to make conventionally polite. ' “To South America,” he replied, la- conically. “South Americal” I exclaimed, ex- OF A WIFE By ADFLE GARRISON “What country Is Fate Playing Into the Loving Hands | citedly. of Dr. Pottit? He named the country in which my father was in such great danger! Something akin to remorse crept “EVERY GIRL'S DREAM” ATTRACTION AT FOX'S It is highly evident that that smfi- ing darling of the photo-play world has not yet reached the pinnacle of the magnificent success that is ahead of her, for her production, “Every which is the feature of the present Fox program, is vastly superior to anything that she has ever accom- plished before. As the little Dutch beauty in the first part of the pic- ture, she smiles her way into the hearts of everyone, and it is safe to say that, where she numbered her New Britain admirers by the score yesterday, she can count them by the hundreds today, permanent place in the everyone who saw her yesterday in “Every Girl's Dream.” The picture itself is a novelty from start to finish. Its story is new, and original, with a few twists in it that rank it among the best that havee come out of the ‘Willlam Fox studios for a long time. The scenery and photography are of the kind that would go far towards making a picture a success even with- cut so charming a star And Charlie Chaplin too. is adding to his foolish laurels with the ridicu- lous situations he gets himself into in “‘Shanghied,” something different frem all his other master-pieces of risibility. Mr. and Mrs. Sidneye Drew help things along considerably in their latest domestic skit, “The Hypichon- driac,” in which Sidney undertakes to cure Mrs. of her imaginary illnesses. Among the other features of the ex- cellent program is a most interest- ing issue of the entertaining and in- structive “Ford Weekly" Tomorrow brings in that big four- teen reel double-feature show, in which Theda Bara, Alice Joyce, and Harry Morey, three of filmdom’s most prominent stars, will appear. Miss Bara, upon the insistent reouest of many Fox patrons, who never tire of this immortal actress, returns in one of her most successful five-reel dramas, ‘“Her Double Life,” and the Joyce-Morey combination will be seen in their latest production, ‘‘Richard the Brazen.” work in her latest Girl's Dream,” for she has won a hearts of If food is oversalted, add a little sugar. “Gets-It,” 2 Drops, Corns Peel Off! For Cents Peel Off 25 Corns. “Gets-It”, the greatest corn discov- ery of any age, makes joy-walkers out of corn-limpers. It makes you feel like the Statue of Liberty. Buy a “liberty” bottle of “Gets-It” right «“It Will Come Off In One Complete Plece?!” now,—free yourself at once from all corn mise: It will peel off painless- 1y, in one complete piece, any corn, old or young, hard or soft, or between the toes, any callus, or any corn that has resisted everything else you have ever used. Off it comes like magic. Guaranteed. All you need is 2 or 3 drops of “Gets-It”, that’s all. “Gets-It" is the only safe way in the world to treat a corn or callus. It's the sure way— the way that never fails. It is tried and true—used by millions. Never irritates the flesh or makes the toe sore. It always works; peels-corns- off-lifle-a-banana-skin. 25c a bottle is ‘all you need pay for “Gets-It” at any drug store, or sent on receipt of i\rlce by E. Lawrence & Co., Chicago, 1. Sold in New Britain and recom- mended as the world’s best corn rem- edy by Crowell’s Drug Store, Wm. N, 8chweitzer, J. P. Connors. Millions of bushels of Fruit are shamefully wasted every year ~ SAVE THE FRUIT CROP by preserving it ‘““Sweeten it with Domino’’ Granulated, Tablet, Powdered, Confectioners, Brown Sold in 2 and 5 Ib. cartons and in §, 10, 25 and 50 lb. cotton bags. LYCEUM OFFERS ‘FLAME OF THE YUKON’ Dorothy Dalton’s new starring ve- hicle, *“The Flame of the Yukon"”, a Triangle play by Monte M. Katterjohn, produced under the supervision of Thomas H. Ince, now at the Lyceum theater. 1t is during the period of '98, when the gold mad crowds pack the little town of Hope City, Alaska, Dorothy Dalton appears as the “Flame’ a har- Dy of the dance hall. Many thrilling episodes re enacted in the hall, where gamblers, miners and all types of men meet to try their luck with the roul- ette wheel. In one exciting scene “the Flame” succeeds in breaking the bank and getting the money that her sweet- heart has lost in a crooked game. An exact reproduction of the streets of Nome in the days of the gold rush is seen. Here a realistic fight takes place between Kenneth Harlan, as The Stranger, and Melbourne McDow- ell, as Black Jack Hovey. A company of nearly 300 people, including thirty Eskimos and their dog teams, enact their parts in this scene. Others in the cast are Margaret Thompson, Carl Ull- man and May Palmer. The play was directed by Charles Miller. How the innocent sometimes have to suffer for the gullty, is brought out in the Edison picture “Light in Dark- ness", featuring Shirley Mason and re- leased through Kieine-Edison-Selig- Essanay. How Ramsey Latham s made to “do his bit” in jail, how he meets a grl whom he takes for a soc- jal worker because of her kindly in- terest in him, but who in reality has been sentenced to prison for killing a man in defending herself from attack, and how they help each other to for get the past and to attain happine is skillfully told in this interesting pic- ture to be shown at the Lyceum thea- ter Wednesday and Thursday. ‘ Household Notes Never put food hot into the re- frigerator. Dates can be stuffed with quarterea apples. Kerosene oil will take paint stains off the hands. Before olling a floor be sure it is absolutely clean. Never take two steps in the kitchen if one will do Lean fishes are usually used for made dishes. If spinach is wilted let it in cold water to freshen. boiled or stand Fish should be eaten and when freshly caught. in season Only voung, tender vegetables shoudl be chosen for canning. All berries and small fruits should be handled in small quantities. Every kitchen drawer should have its supply of paraffin paper. Put a little vinegar in the water in which you boil fish and it will hold together better. The skins of plums can easily be removed by scalding, just as you would peaches. Egg stalns on table linen should be soaked out In cold water, not hot, be- fore washing. SIDE TALKS BY RUTH CAMERON The Unscrupulous Woman The business unscrupulougness of perfectly good women is a thing at which I continually marvel. The other day I heard this conver- sation between two women. The first, “What do vou suppose 1 dia I had on a pair of new silk stockings and I was reading and a mosquito bit my ankle and I rubbed it and rubbed it and all of a sudden I found I had rubbed through the silk.” The second, *“Take them right back. Tell them you got a hole in them the first time you wore them.” “But they will say I shouldn’t have rubbed them so hard.” The second, “Don’t tell them any- thing about that.” She Felt Some Qualms Of Conscience. The first, “I don’t know as I ought to do that.” The second, “But those stockings with a hole in the ankle are no good to you. You can't ever mend them so it won’t sho Could anything be more nalve than that entire sidestepping of the ques- tion whether it was the right thing to do, by bringing up the fact that the stockings were useless. That ap- parently justified in her mind the demand for & new pair. And They Weren't Either, If that conversation had been be- tween two very young girls I shouldn't Young Girls, have wondered. But the second speaker was a woman of about thirty- five, excellently educated and ex- tremely conscious about many things. She will not even go to a place where drinks are served because she says that countenances the business. And yet she would not hesitate to use unscrupulous methods of getting her money back for a pair of stockings she herself had spoiled. I Should Have Thought Her Word Sufficient. Here is another case. bred, sweet appearing woman on whose sense of honor I would have staked much, let a house to some ten- ants, giving them a two years' lease. The month after it was let she tried to sell it over their heads, calmly ex- plaining that her lawyer had told her a two yvears' lease didn't hold. I should have said that her word alone ‘would have been sufficient guarantee and here she was trying to avail her- self of some lawyer’'s quibble to break her bond. And yet she is one of the most refined, most well bred, most conscientious appearing women I ever met. Of course men are unscrupulous too, but not the kind of men ‘who otherwise represent the best breeding in the community. Trank goodness women are growing away from such upscrupulousness. But altogether too slowly! A very high | how Latham later marries this girl, i For Theaterdoers and Women Readers c e —~ — A Menu ior Tomorrow Breakfast Fruit Egg Cutlets Rye Meal Muffins Cofiee Lunch Cheese Pudding Lettuce Sandwiches Peach Ple Iced Tea Dinner Baked Trout Buttered Beets Mashed Potatoes Cucumbers au Gratin Caramel Ice Cream Coffee Cheese Pudding—Mix together in a basin half pound grated cheese, one teaspoonful flour, two tablespoonfuls breadcrumbs, salt and pepper to taste, add one cupful milk. one teaspoonful butter and two beaten egs. Mix and pour in buttered pudding dish, bake fifteen minutes in moderate oven. Serve hot. Caramel Ice Cream—Make a cus- tard with two cupfuls milk, one cup- ful ‘sugar, and yolks four eggs. When cool add one cupful caramelized su- gar, quarter teaspoonful salt and one tablespoonful vanilla. Freeze. 1 Fads and Fashions Velour hats are trimmed with cross stitch. Filet and Irish combinations. laces are new Some of the new jackets show un- even bottoms. | Hat pins will be important and of novel design. Plainted black satin skirts will be born with chemise waists of bright chiffon velvet. ‘Wide, curving brims are a feature of fall millinery. Low-bust corsets are more fash- ionable than ever. Pockets which are useful but not over-conspicuous are hinted at for coming tailored svlts. Waist of plain fabrit and skirt of | FELT LIKE A NEW PERSON After Taking Only One Box 0f “Fruit-a-tives” Easr Sarp HARBOUR, ®1t is with great pleasure that I write 1o tell you of the wonderful benefits 1 { have received from taking “Fruit-a- | tives”. For years, I was a dreadful sufferer from Constipation and Head- ackes, and’]1 was miserabic in every way. Nothing in the way of medicines seemed to help me. Then I finally tried “Fruit-a-tives”” and the effect was splendid. Afteritaking one box, I feel like a new person, to have relief from those sickening Headaches”. Mgs. MARTHA DEWOLFE. b0c. a box, 6 for $2.50, trial size, 25¢c. At all dealers or sent postpaid by Fruite a-tiveg Limited, Ogdensburg, N.Y. plaid makes a fashionable dress for the little girl. school Knitting bags are now being made of ribbon. Small ostrich tips trim some of the very chick hats. Jade and other green stones are favored for jewelry. The vamps of the latest Paris shoes are very short. The new, straight coaty of tailored suits show very charming straight lines. P————————— $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 requires 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, giving the patient strength by building up the constitution and assisting na- ture in dolng 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 lst of testimonials. T NEY & CO., Toledo, Address: T Dhio, rRists. T5c. (o} S0l AN Dy value. Wed. a. m. . value. Wed. a. m. .. Men’s Cotton Half Hose, in: value. Wed. a. m. ... 50c value. Wed. a. m. Coats. Women’s Percale Aprons, neatly made, 25¢ Women’s Dress Skirts, sport styles, Heavy Flannelette, fancy stripe and checks, 15c valve. Wed.a. m. ...........yard 12%5¢. Wed.a.m. ...............a pair Men’s Blue Chambray Work Shirts, 59¢ Women’s Fancy Lawn Kimonos, short ones, The Gurran Dry Goods Co. Extra Big Values Here for Wednesday Morning Sale Men’s Extra Heavy Flannelette Night Robes, silghtly soiled, $1.25 value. Wed. a. m. 49¢ Dr. Denton Sleeping Garments, soiled in stock room, assorted sizes, values up to 9Sc. tity restricted. Wed.a.m. ...... .... Quan- 49c > 15¢ 0$1.00 10c 8c 39c 25¢ blacks, worth Hundreds of Big Bargains, in odd Dres\ses, Suits and -

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