New Britain Herald Newspaper, October 2, 1917, Page 4

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1917. ! TONIGHT AND WED. 3 Jesso L. Lasky presents ~———— A A A s A e —— e s A A A———————— the famous Japanese ac-. ot o . tor, 3 ford will be seen in an unusual tale, hm‘q;gm;;"é‘lm‘: i 2y ‘EVERYW[]MAN, AT “Poor Little Peppina.” How the ¥ 3 daughter of a rich man is kidnapped e LYCEUM Today--Tomorrow B ool i s et [} up in squalid surroundings, believed * ‘WED. sn((l):]:'v;ts. = PARS"NS THEATER to be, and believing herself to be the BEN INILAON an e IT’S BETTER THAN HIS BEST son of the Italian, is well told. She / ey ‘N,"" mmmn“xv“; e . is restored to her family finally, but e 0'09: ; ' I ”” only after such experiences as the underworld of New York can furnish. s Chanter——Wno tnthe I - ar BS ay U en lm Morality Play Gontinugs t0 IM- mne’scones are 1n Teaiy wna america. "of % e ? Mary, despite her unusual role and —o— apparel is still the lovable girl that HIGH _ GLASS ADDED FEATURE press Public by Its FOICE | 2R2"ek it thoen e ot VAUDEVILLE M RY PICKFORD “Poor Little Peppina” goes high in q e the list. by “Be merciful, be just. be fair The final episode of “The Secret SAFEGUARD the health Of the home IN To everywoman, everywhere. Kingdom,” featuring Charles Rich- sterilizing your household linen when Her faults are many. man and Dorothy Kelly will be t “POOR LITTLE PEPPINA” Nobody’s the blame."” shown, and Ford Sterling in “Stars you wash it. All white goods can be kep! This is the conclusion the late Wal- | and Bars,” with the Lyceum Weekly, spotlessly white and free from disease - - ter Browne drew after he had “Every- furnishing the news of the day in an Thprs., Fri., Sat.—OLIVE THOMA?; . b ot flu—ougha e e issimags ia| ilustraten tforme‘::nl S ( WED. THURS Coming—“THE TEN OF DIAMONDS”—Coming ! quest of iove. list. This big program will be the i After some six years on the boards | attraction at the Lyceum today and MATINEE-—IOC- NIGHT—lOC. and 200. the play ‘“Everywoman’ has lost none tomorrow. Because of the way in of its pristine attractiveness. If any- | which the house has been crowded 8 1 ’ thing, it grows bigger and better with | at the all-star shows of late the man- ‘ ¥ age. Last night at Parsons’ theater, | agement will have the pictures for a Hartford, the five-act morality play | three-day run. 5 REVE A IONS OF A WlFE was presented admirably by a thor- KILLS GERMS—BLEACHES—DESTROYS ODORS I I oughly capable company. S Some critics have argued that the | EVELYN THAW ON It is a safe, powerful disinfectant that bleaches By ADELE GARRISON character “Nobody” in this wondertul rizes without harming the fabric. i play is the best creation of the imag- SCREEN AT FOX’S and deodorizes it h g’ta.\ dorsed inative mind that has been brought Standard in most of the a;E: °5Pd‘ fi’fl: 3 b { The Amazing Thing That Happened [ inflamed imagination, had either gone | to the fore in‘ A:mcenturg'- ?:’lthou; b}}: Health Boa:d? everyw. :ns ::vy au SZP ed by as Madge and Dr. Pettit Left insane or was uttering the most fla- | stretching a point those who witnesse the government for army 3 the Resta; grant untruths about Dicky, together | the endeavors of Mr. Percy Parsons in | There cannot be the slightest doubt Sold by all first class druggists and grocers at Yt With & lot of wild utterances concern. | this role last night must agree that |that, without exception, *Redemp- 15 cents for a large can. Refuse substitutes I snatched my hand away from Dr. | ing my being meant to be his mate, | he has made great strides towards the | tion,” the present feature of the Fox i el etaietanate orthlces Pettit's touch, at the table in the un- |-and that he would make up to me Perfection of an ldeal. Under his| program, is the most fascinating pic- s y s % 5 for my husband’s neglect. skillful handling the character gains “Write for Booklet | obtrusive alcove off the main dining x;\d };mné bandiod] 5’ for my wrap | strength even as the play progresses. ture that has ever been seen on any rite for Bookle - My as reaching for my i 5 S . room, in which, through a misunder- when the physician’s strong hand fell | Possessed of a rare voice and powers | Screen. And there are several rea MENDLESON’S SONS 120 Bi way, New York City i i i i n, Mr. Pa is th - A. D DLESON road y standing of the head waiter at Ris- | over mine and effectually prevented | Of elocution, Mr. Parsons is the mas- |sons for this. In the first place, the s T THE YANKEE WAY tori’s, Dr. Pettit and I had eaten our | my putting it on. ter of every trick of stage-craft need- |star of the production, Evelyn Nes- Established 1870 &CLOLY. b e luncheon instead of in the public “Listen to me” he commanded!'ed to accentuate such a part. bit Thaw, was, until a year or two (First Chapter.) grill. I was intent upon one thing | sternly. “You shall leave here in two , As “Everywoman” Miss Paula Shay |ago, the most talked-of person in the SEVEN PEARLS only—to get away from the presence | minutes, and I promise that I wonvt-:ay no; have soxlne';ll the gifts which | world. Not an edition of any paper of the young physician who, to my [ speak to vou in the interval if you | Ber predecessors in the part possessed; | was complete without her photo- .uomTe Klng\—m]:‘fhlon llir)!e Rl Gom't wish me to do so. But surely | but she has a charming personality, a | graph, and several columns on the MAT. 5c. VE. c ~, our common sense tells you that for | ¥2re dramatic faculty, and a very |latest development of her, husband, Catarrhal Deafness Cannot Be Cured | 01, SoTion =o0sr B o e will | Pleasing reading voice. Her stage | Harry Thaw's trial for the murder of by local applications, as they cannot reach = B - | presence is superb and more than once | Stanford White—the first iminal only lead to most unpleasant com rst crim s onfy one wap ts ware cathsrhal deatnces, | ment on the part.of anyone who hap- | 5he Tose to dramatic heights. Partic- | case in many years In the Unwritten ana that s by & constitutional remedy. | peng to see vou. Wait until I have | Ularly was this so in such dramatic |Law was given great prominence. It MON. TUES Ramed sondltion o ‘the “mucous’ Ining gf | summoned- the waiter and have paid | scenes ‘;sYthehf“di"S h°f Beauty, thi ;‘ Smfiil‘"h“'flndel" the‘nv that a picture . the Eustachian Tube. When this tube 8 | the bill—then we can leave here de- | 10SIng o outh, and the departure o n which such a well-known charac- BY RUTH OCAMERON SUN. g P T e T eyt || corousty, Modesty, “Everywoman’s” hand-maid- |ter appears, should attract atten- closed, Deafness is the result. Unless tho I was not so frightened but that T |€ns. As to the three young ladies who [tion. But a good deal of interest is ; inflammation, can be reduced atd this tbe | could see the reasonableness of his |©Ssaved these parts, Beauty, Youth and | centered in another member of the will be destroyed forever. Many cases of | plea. Indeed, when I mentally caught Modesty, they were very clever. In |company, Russell Thaw, the son of deafnenslars c’;’,:“afifi";b!;lcx:";h:::fl;“k my breath, I realized that I wasn’t | the original cast Miss Patricia Col- | Harry Thaw. It is just like reading . faces. Hall's Catarrh Cure acts thru the | afraid of Dr. Pettit at all. My pas- | !inge, or Collins, an Irish colleen, |2 page out of life itself, to see this | Motor Boats and H“man Bodleso Dblood on the mucous surfaces of the 8Y8- | gionate indignation had been roused | Plaved the part of Beauty. It was | mother and son on the screen. As for ( ‘°"':‘¢c will_give One Hundred Dollars for | by his accusations against Dicky, and ;thought by those who selected her that | the picture itself, it would create I have a friend who has a beloved | two of medicine and a set of diet any case of Catarrhal Deatness that cannot | his declaration of love for me, both | N0 Other girl would ever fill the bill |& wWidespread sensation without 80 |\ ¢or poat. rules (most inadequately followed.) be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Circulars 5 > in just such fashi Miss Collinge | prominent a cast. For it tells a 2 Truly whoever it was that sald free. All Drug.lel . of which I felt were insults to me. Sh ABUCT s Ol M Iss S0 L0 ee 11 . As is often the way with motor | .. 1 tals be,” that 8--GRIPPING PTS.--8 F. 1. CHENTY & CO., Toledo. O And yet there was something about | WaS & brunette. Miss Martha Voight | story that is strictly human from be- “What fools these mortals be, = the man as he stood there with avert- | Who played the part last night is a |&inning to end, and it needs no great | boats there is frequently something |is one -of those many sayings whi¢h ed face that appealed to my sense ot | Plonde. It is a question here then of |amount of keeness on the part of { wrong with its innards. sounds about equally like the Bible justice. 2 type. Miss Berta Donn as Youth car- | the spectator who takes the trouble If account were kept of the time |©F Shakespeare) said something. ried off the laurels, and, as Modesty, | to look deeply enough into the story, ~ RAND HARTFORD L0, “wool Thae 1w B e R S | st St o S0 | e woenan tnkering over b wnt bt | Sy D 7f O m If he believed the dreadful things |able. very marked resemblance to the sen- | time he spends riding about in it, - L ALL THIS -WEEK K l I he had said about Dicky were true, There is a philosophy running |sational part of Evelyn Nesbit’s real | I do not think that the balance would ' 2 099 B if he really cared for me as he had | through this play from the pen of |career. The tale opens with the ef- i f the ridi 3 Bliding” Billy Watson . s d 3 y fr list to the side of the riding. M i His lgurlesquc ‘Wonder Show = sald—brooding over them might well | Walter Browne that is true to lite. It | forts of a happily married woman, to | =, "' "% o B o e g enu 1or Tomo"ow tifal Girle—320 RZTS& M [Wap-] have led him to say things which he | points out the follies of the day in |live down certain incidents of her 2 "’—m&‘w"‘:‘ e might afterward regret. He had him- | language that approaches Shakes- |Past. For a time she is successful, | something extra wrong with it an o In 'horus! self declared he had meant to go {peare. It shows the pitfalls and the | but eventually there comes back into { he spent whole days trying to locate 2 away to South’sAmerica without |snares that lic before “Everywoman” |her life the man who had caused |spo gymculty. Broiled Bacon Fried Eggs FOR BALE BY speaking of the feeling for me he had [ who starts out in life. It shows, too, | her fall. Bravely she struggles against Buttered Rusks ese Times o0f Stress |Abbe Hardware Co, New Britaln, Conn. | cherished so long. that we sometimes go on a long, long | him, and apparently succeeds. Years He Tried Out One Thing After Coftee 5 e e fo., New Detalw. Ocon South America—the words recalled | journey for that which is within our | elapse, during which her son has Another. Relax Ta Hyerpe, " Now Britala, Gonn. | what I had forgotten; that for my|very environment. The story of | ETown to manhood, and falls fn love. [ = 0 = 50 EHan P NG Will Help Y. | ¢. W. Lines © New Britain, Conn. | sake this man had accepted a mis- | “Everywoman’ has been told in these | Picture the consternation of the par- e (P3S Ay, Jelly Salmon 1 eip ou. M, New Britain, Conn, : 2 3 tles concerned when it i 1 4 | way to the boat and he would tell me towed T ys 8 r's}ro;l'e New Britain, Conn. | Sion which might prove most danger- | columns year after year; too often in en s earne B amChantl Leach o b BEithGt T Stewe: 'omatoes Form Leagues Now Eaton Brothers, Plainville, Conn. | ous, in which he might lose his life, | fact to need repeating. ‘To be really | that the object of his affections s | trlumphantly each momning that he Banana Pie TNA BOWLING 8. M. Cowles, Kensington, Conn | the mission of looking after my fa-|appreciated the show must be seen. none other than the daughter of his i o o i hoat A Tea Jos. W. Camp, Newington Jet., Conn. | 4y ‘Surely this fact ought to ex- The many symbolic characters of | mother's enemy! There are innumer- | he would go down to the boat an ALLEYS C. W. Bushneil, Plantsville, Conn, s R 5 8 e : R Fran £ gripping intensity, but | fiX that thing and try to run the boat. AND ALL GOOD DEALERS. cuse much in my eyes. Everywoman' lend another point to scenes of gripping Yy 2 And she (why is it that anything so Dinner — It served at least to make my |its attractiveness. Aside from those [ finally, through highly original and T L T Th o T s Cream of Lettuce Soup 3 —— volce kinder as I sald in as matter | aforementioned, the various parts | unsuspected evolution, the problem is | 5 O TEC Gy Sriibl St (o s Roast Loin of Veal of fact a tone as I could manage: were played last night by the follow- | solved. Tonight will be ~the last|is called he) would refuse to run. - Baked Potatoes “Of course vou are right. But |ing capable actors and actresses: showing of “Redemption.” No seats n e m" 1 i Celery Salad i 5 Miss Arsula O'Hare; | are reserved. ere was somet ng else wrong an Grape Ice please call the waiter, for I must leave | Conscience, Mis TS ; tinker with that. “You see,” he here immediately.” Flattery, Nicholas Joy; Truth, a witch, would explaln, “you ean’t tell e’xactly Coffee He looked about for the walter, but | Miss Helen Diane; King Love, her son, o he was serving someone in the main | Melville Anderson; Blurr, rrank ki | GEORGE WALSH AT T hor swhila, Fouve 2ov s ooy st |, Orape Ice—This is mado by boliing dining room, then, suddenly, he put |day; Stuff, F. J. McCarthy; Puff, a : = - 3 bt b 't | together for five minutes one poun: his head in his hands. press agent, Albert Baron; Passion, a FOX S TOMORRO\W O;hz:“::sfl';t:; ';;gnotmen:m:;;y sugar and one pint water. Cool this, “Fool that I was!” he muttered. |play actor, Townsend Ahern; Time, a ¢ then add one pint grape-juice and the . N $ original or startling about this story, | iy g ) Fedy “I might have known that you'd take | call boy, Fred Hampw_n. Wealth, a and doubtless you are wondering why juice of one lemon and freeze once. A6 this)way SiAn dinow) T{supposeieyen{niillionalre, {I-JICfHLutchinao m; gWit eas i A PR SERE P EETEE R et arioat |1l am ! telling fit! our friendship is at an end.” a'nobleman, G. A. Choate; Age, Fred- omo 8s E And this is why. Recently this| Celery Salad—One pint cut-up cel- [ ] And Then. erick Blsnree; Greed, Miss Winifred | popular athletic comedian, Smilin | And this ls why Recently this |, \'stalis eprinkle with salt.and white 5 Baldwin; Self, Miss Margaret Yeats; | George Walsh, in his latest and, ac- | e fi St 2 - His ) bper. Prepare a mayonnaise. Mix I felt a sudden inconsistent fem- |y . v F 2 g wife finally prevailed on him to go to d on lettuce leaves. e Vanity, Miss Lila French; Vice, a rding to New York Tribune, the best with celery and serve ice leaves. | inine impulse to make him retract his | oo ' wacan Miss Donna Bartlett: and | COT3INE 3 est | a doctor. The doctor looked him YOUR LAST CHANCE TO SEE | words concerning Dicky. I would not | charity, a minister, Albert Warner. picture he has made yet. The fact!over and gave him some medicine and admit, even to myself, how much his » SRS that it is called “The Yankee Way” |some diet rules. He tried them for accusation disturbed me, how they |p Ay A" SCREAM should be S“ffl‘c‘enfly ‘“d‘““}:’e of |a week and did not get any L, | fitted in with observations and sus- yoapid five aclion: fcff,f’g”fnfefic’l?{ fiie S e e Again he picions of my own. — 5 3 not get any better. “It need not be the end of our AT THE LYCEUM | plaved by George Walsh, in the “bush |, =~ =0 o - With Doctors” He PR Ry dp e B S league” kingdom of Lithuania. In take back the terrible, the unjust ‘C};‘excgggrf‘:;e];"kzt‘; 1“,"‘*1‘11;‘; i;’:}:‘; Saidy LD T z‘;t;::sfifafl::tzaya}:::r Hundreds of people, formerly [ middle west of the U. S. A., George's | _ LPat Was the end of doctors fo . Lsisliety bl classed as admirers of Charlie Ray, |stay in Lithuanian develops into a |him- Jau : the popular young actor, are now his | running fight, but he gets what he is| “To the dickens with doctors.” he 219 ASYLUM STREET, He raised his head from his hands i hiaios ; A e i o most ardent boosters, for the friend- | after, and a nice little lady to take | said. *He doesn't know what the CORNER HAYNES ST. *7C1 Would ke to lie to you,” he said, | SPiPs he made in previous engage- | home to show the folks. Another | youile 1s with me. Look at the way bt T oeant, T have secn and neard | ments are now cemented more firmly | attraction of much interest on the ; HARTFORD. e o be th ameeh uld heard | through the excellent piece of acting | same program will be the formal | he tries first one thing and then an- 1%0 much ‘fi s "(‘1 any doubt at all | e 45 displaying in “Sudden Jim,” the | opening of that big new Pathe serial, | Other- E about your. husband.” . 1 |neadiiner at the Lyceum theater. Al- | “Seven Pearls,” in which that thor. | NOW. there cannot be much ques- But you eannot live preets though the title of this picture is | oughbred star, Mollie King, will be | tlon which is the more delicate ma- crled, heedless that in my agonizing | yjleading, the fact that Ray appears, | featured, together With Creighton | Chile,—a motor boat or a human ; doubt I was opening the way for tuc | giracted capacity houses yesterday, | Hale. whose work is too well known | P0dy.—and yet that man expects a : discussiono f the subject I had just|ang when the people who entered the | to New Britain theatergoers to re- | 40ctor to fix up his body without try- forbidden. ... | theater with an expectant look in | quire description. iig out his readjustments by letting | See her,” he answered roughly. “I|their eyes came out with a more| It is announced that the next big | the machine run awhile. don’t intend to subject myself to an- | then satisfled look on their faces, the | super feature to appear on the Fox They Don’t Give the Half a 7 other rebuff such as I've just encoun- | cuccess of the production was as- | screen will be “The Bar Sinister. wn"c'm & tered. I will say only one thing to | gyred. which will open its three-day run next Chances \ you. If you are not wholly blind you | rmelling the story of a young man | Sunday. This picture was directed by | And not only he, but many thous- will find out about the assoclatlon"of determined to make good, “Sudden | Edgar Lewis, the man who staged | ands like him, who know that an your husband and Edith Fairfax. Jim” leads the audience through all | “The Barrier.” It is in eight parts, A atomabilelos al aotorl boni 2 . WITH HER SON AND HUSBAND ] e e e e o at Win Vi words mechanically. And in that mo- | young man starting out in business | o new angle, but with startling force. | l0Ck or any other delicate mechan- ( ment I tasted the deepest bitterness | jife. Charlie is there with all his old ism cannot be fixed without adjust- . I have ever experlenced. For an In-|pep and gives as neat a performance - ments and readjustments and try- i our n stant I even believed all the things the | a5 he has ever given, which is say- The Great Divide. ings out, will expect the doctor to man before me had told me, for the | ijng considerable. When a young The woman in the prime of life | give one look at them and fix up a ~ name he gave me confirmed all the | man in a small town has the big boss | need not dread to meet the 1oss of | body out out order with a bottle or | Pl’alse A PAGF FROM HER O‘MN LIFE doubts and suspicions I had ex-|of the place again him, it takes some | her youth when growing elderly. ; Vi perienced. grit and nerve to go out and show | While some charms dtr;:mish, o;hers i | All d fl‘ | Then my faith in my husband came | the world that he is “there.” Charlie | should replace them—charms of ex- Wha D U i in qua i PY rushing back like a flood, does just that little thing, and the | perience, cultivation, wisdom. The octors Use | ifterent i dq : ty, “I don’t believe you,” I crled, and [ best of it is that he does it in a | great physical changes met between attern an hade from neither of us spoke again until after | natural manner. Because he is o | the fortieth and fiftieth year are in- for Eczema p d s the walter had brought his bill and | naural and does his bit in a way that [ deed serious, and ar not always well |, o pine combinatin of oll of Winter. | those you find at the or- we were out of the main room in the | movie actors usually overlook, Char- | borne. In the strain of modern life, ‘Thymal, and otudk healing ingredicats | hallway at the foot of the stairs that | lle gets right into that warm little [ few women are in condition to meet Prescription is now a favol | dinary wall paper store. led down from the private dining |spot way down in the bottom of his | these changes without some nppre-’ '“"‘, ,Q',g:gh s ",':“‘:",":,‘“me ! v pap rooms. admirers’ hearts. Suffice to say, * hension of deranged halth. But with | from the most A But our prices are far Then with a little cry of dismayed |den Jim,” with its tale of a b the excellent help of Lydia E. Plnk- MAT 10 EV’G 10 and 20 heartbreak I shrank back against Dr. | fight with a love story running | ham's Vegetable Compound, that old more reasonable con- ) . C 2 C Pettit. throughout is as good as, if not bet- | trustworthy woman’s medicine, : For advancing toward us down |ter than, any of Ray's offerings. He | woman may confiGently expect to en- | § sidering quality. those stairs ~ame Edith Fairfax and | makes good with a bang. ter later life as well and robust as . my husband. As an added attraction Mary Pick- | ever. Clark & Brainerd Co., Druggists. SRS

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