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\ ( Special Fiay and Satuday Only NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1917, 1 LYCEU Geo. M. Cohan In the Super-Picture “SEVEN KEYS TO BALDPATE” Added Feature BESSIE LOVE IN “POLLY ANN” MAT. 10c. NIGHT, 10c. and 20c. COMING | Billy Burke “The Mysterious Miss Terry” CEENEY’S ALL THIS WEEK! «IN THE WAKE OF THE HUNS.” Thursday Only VIOLET MACMILLAN —t— “THE GIRL WHO WON OUT.” Thurs., Fri., Sat. HOUSE PETERS ) “HEIR OF THE AGES.” HIGH CLASS VAUDEVILLE A MAT. 5c. EVE. 10c. GREAT SHOW AT FOX'S TONIGHT DUSTIN FARNUM “NORTII; OF 53” 7 PEARLS RED ACE MAT.5c. EVE.10c. Tomorrow and Sat. HOLIDAY PRICES COLUMBUS DAY ' Madge Evans “THE LITTLE DUCHESS” FATAL RING MUTT AND JEFF PATHE NEWS R A RARTFORD. —ALL WEEK— JACOBS AND JERMON'S Big Burlesque Reyiew With HARRY K. MORTON ' the couches, rugs and chairs, | put them down. | the question of their disposal will not | weeks, I have tried in every way I | could to avoid any clash with him. { should have uttered. | tents of the waste basket, I firmly re- { | | | | sM\MWW—/\ New. ~——— e e ‘Why Madge Determined Dicky Literally at His Word. | I have come to the conclusion that i rant of and indifferent to the house- | keeping problems of women. All my ! life long I have heard this assertion ! made by married women and my life with Dicky has confirmed the theory. If I had lacked proof, however, it ' was furnished to me by Dicky's be- havior about the litter of books, magazines and newspapers he lugged down from the attic when I asked him to sort them preparatory to our removal to our new home. Instead of asking me where it would be con- venient for me to have them, he brought them straight to the living room and began plling the stuff on with sublime indifference to the small clouds of dust which arose when he " And when I protested that they would ruin the rugs and furniture, he had growled, “Take the furniture out, then!” and added a comment that he didn’t intend to frecze while he was sorting the things for me. “For me?” I retorted. “My mem- ory may be faulty, but I don’t recall bringing into the house a single book, tion you're sorting. If they're mine, take long. I shall simply call some charity headquarters and them to send their wagon here.” I was surprised at my own temer- ity as the caustic retort left my lips. Not that I am particularly patient, Griselda, but ever since our reconcilia- tion following the terrible misunder- standing which sent Dicky to San Francisco for so many long, .weary up ask down Repeatedly I have choked down re- plies to his frequent bursts of impa- tience, replies which my sense " of justice and my self-respect told me I Upon the occasion of my last clash with Dicky, however, when he so rudely refused any explanation of the fervid love letter I had found in the hall after he had disposed of the con- solved to pursue differont tactics with my temperamental husband. I saw clearly that qulet submission to his magazine or newspaper of the collec- | REVELATIONS OF A WIFE By ADELE GARRISON to Take) the average man is strangely 18NO0-) .oyrage, it was nothing to the amaze- ural arrogance and intolerance of his disposition. An Unequivocal Reply. But if 1 were surprised at my own ment depicted on Dicky's counten- ance as he heard my words. Then! the look of angry resentment with which I was only too familiar flashed into his face. “I've no doubt you would do just that very thing,” he said icily, and there was an edge of contémpt, simu- lated or real, in his voice that sting me. “I don’t think vou have the slightest conception or appreciation of the value of these things. But, for- tunately, they don’t belong to you. | And I beg to inform you that I shall sort them right here in this room. So if you‘intend to remove the couch- es and rugs you'd better be quick about it.” “Grammercy for your exquisite | courtesy,” I retorted, and felt very | much as would a small girl who had | just stuck out her tongue at some | rude boy. “If you will kindly leave | the room for 15 minutes [ will get Katie and Jim and clear the furnish- ings out.” “Vot Dis All Mcans?” The words he growled in response | were unintelligible to me, as he mut- tered them on his way up the stairs' to the attic, soon as he had d appeared I hastily summoned Jim and Katie, and for the next quarter of an hour we worked like Trojans. “Vot die all mean?” Katic demand- ed with the freedoml born of her long, | faithful service to me. “You say we not move for four days Vot use tearin’ dis all oop so soon? It gets us noddings, und it look like der devil.” Mr. Graham wishes to sort his pa- pers down here because it is so cold in the attic, and if we don’t take the furniture and rugs out they will get all dusty,” I explained carefully, al- though I felt much more like dis- missing the girl with a curt repri- mand for her impertinence, uncon- scious though I knew it to be. Some- times the necessity T am under to treat Katie's foibles with forbearance, because of what I knew was before her, grates upon my nerves. I saw Jim flash a disapproving look at her, which Katie heeded not at all. Neither marriage nor time has changed my irresponsible, tempestu- ous, little maid. She made a mu- whims was the worst possible thing for him and for me. self-respect 4nd intensified the nat- It robbed me of [ have hees head examined,” she said tinous little move at my explanation. “Dot Meester Graham he ought to rebelliously. ‘Who was the man who used kept rolling down fast as he pushed it up? It wasn't Tantalus, Sisyphu: Well that's the man I always feel like after the strain of entertaining an unenthusiastic guest. | If T were a fairy godmother and could give a child just one gifts I| think it would be the gift of en- thusiasm. Enthusiasm {is such a wonderful leaven. And unenthusiasm is such a terrible curse, both to those who have it and to those who have to live with him or her. Or even to entertain him. Unenthusiasm Is Always a Curse. You've all been hosts. Now wouldn’t you find it less of a strain to enter- tailn an enthusiastic, appreciative (mind you I don't mean gushing) as was it. No, it W EET—————— In These Times of Stress Relax BOWLING Will Help You. Form Leagues Now AETNA BOWLING ALLEYS - Pork Roast, .Short Steak, Sirloin Steak, Round Steak, . Smoked Shoulders, . Smoked Hams, 37¢1 38¢ 36¢c 33¢c 24c¢ 2 b. (Y3 66 [14 . 66 66 — SIDE TALKS - BY RUTH CAMERON Undesirable Laughter to guest one have to push up hill a big rock that | enthusiastic defect-seeing guest | week than the heavy un- one day? One of these unenthusiastic guests | came into my home the other day. | We have made a few little improve- | ments and most of our guests are tactful enough to mention them. She said nothing about them. Her first remark was “Isn’t it a hot day. The train was terribly uncomfortable.” Her second, “That couch cover has | faded, hasn’t it?” ! We Gave Him Our Best. Before another guest we had striven to set the best we could find in the | line of eatables because we know he is particular. “I hope that steak is all right?” we asked. (It was a sir- loin, which all things considered we thought good enough for any man.) ‘“Yes,” he said absolutely without en- thusiasm or qualification and then proceeded to tell us what good ten- derloin steaks they served at his fa- vorite restaurant. Later another guest said to him, “Don’t you think that salad dressing is splendid?” (We are rather proud | of that particular recipe and were most grateful for her effort to extort a little enthusiasm.) “Yes,” he saild, “It's all right.” | Not to Say “Thank You” for a Gift. One puts into one’s home and into one's culsine the expression of one- self. When one entertains a guest | one is making him a gift as it were. For him to utter no word of praise or liking is as bald as to take a Christmas gift and make no response. Of course one cannot shed the bless- ed sunshine of enthusiasm every- where unless one is born with that beautiful gift but one can at least try not to be too unenthusiastic. 30¢c All kinds of Veal, reasonable prices. All kinds of Roast Beef, from 25¢ to 30c. Mother’s Oats, 3 Packages for 25c. 'THE LITHUANIAN GO- OPERATIVE ASS'N, Inc. Choice Groceries and Meats. 45 East Main Street. Free Auto Delivery to Tel. No. 842- Any Part of the Town. Catarrhal Deafness Cannot Be Cured pplications, as they cannot reach ed portion of the ear. There is only way to cure catarrhal deafness, and that is by a constitutional remedy. Catarrha! Deafness is caused by an in- flamed condition of the mucous lining of the Bustachian Tube. When this tube is inflamed you have a rumbling sound or imperfect hearing, and when it is entirely 1 “SEVEN KEYS” ON { motion pictures. | ! THE LYCEUM SCREEN No argument could be used With any more force than the meager an- | nouncement that George M. Cohan | has entered motion pictures, to prove that the silent art has at last taken its supreme place in the dramatic; world. Cohan is beyond any shadow of a doubt the most popular man now engaged in that big business of giv- ing the public enjoyment, and, while he is known better for his work be-, hind the footlights, finally realizing the greater importance of the pi tures, the better opportunity they present to furnish the world with good, clean entertainment, he has accepted an offer to appear in several Happily, he is prov- ing just as big a success working to the tune of the camera’s click as to the applaud of the masses. George M’s first picture was taken from one of his own plays, “Broad- way Jones”, and his second, also his own “Seven Keys to Baldpate”, in which he is appearing the remainder of this week at the Lyceum theater. In “Broadway Jones” Cohan wormed his way into the hearts of all who saw him, he farced the critics to open up with their most pleasing phrases, and he made the directors shout with jov, for the big experiment, bringing the world’s most famous playwright and most popular actor into the new department of drama has proved successful. Now he has gone them ono better. He is the same old George, with the ever-ready smile the familiar handclasp, and the little whatnots that forced the world to take its hat off to him and keen ‘it off ever since. On the stage Cohan made his | name famous, on the screen he bids fair to cut a niche that will remain as long as the word “theater”” remains in the English vocabulary. On the same program will be Bessie Love, that darling little girl that sets the galary-gods’ hearts thumping ever so mysteriously, in a story whose quaintness and pretty plot cause it voted a leader in its] class. Miss Love in her new role goes up another notch in her climb to fame. The Keystone comedy, “Unclo ! Dudley” completes the program suit- | ably. DUSTIN FARNUM ON SCREEN AT FOX'S Juding from the reception that greeted Dustin Farnum in his newest screen “North of 53", the crowd must have been mightily de- lighted to see their popular idol once more where he belongs, cast as one of those big, rough diamonds whose pal- | ace is a snow-covered log-cabin, and whose limousine is a dog-sled. It is more than good to see Dusty ‘“mushin his dogs along to the northward, over the desert of unbroken snows, his life dedicated to the precarious task of wiping out the man whose lying tongue had slandered and - well-nigh ruined the girl of his dreams. As “Roaring Bill' Wagstaff, he falls in love with a young woman who has been driver from the community of her birth by the scandal which her unscrupulous employer had contrived to attach to her name because she had resented his insulting advances. She arrives at Caribou Meadows, where Bill is leading a life of loneliness, fol- lowing the mysterious murder of his partner. But her story, with the wings of malicious gossip, soon catches up with her, and she is not long in finding herself again the innocent ob- ject of suspicion. Bill, however, eith- er refuses to belleve the rumors he hears about her, or else ignored them, for he loves her, and asks her to mar- ry him. She refuses, strange to say, success, closed, Deafness is the result. Unless the inflammation can be reduced ard this tube restored to Iits normal condition, h will be destroyed forever. Many o deatness are caused by catarrh, which is an inflamed condition of the mucous sur- faces. Hal Catarrh Cure acts thru the blood on the mucous surfaces of the sys- tem, We will give One Hundred Do 1 ‘rhal Deafness that cannot I's Catarrh Cure. Circulars All Druggists. 75c F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. and when Bill, upon investigation, learns the true state of her affairs, he sets out on his own hook to “kinder straightin’ matters out a bit”. Ac- cording to Bill's idea, the first thing to be straightened out was the man who started the trouble, and with the S 0. M.COHAN ARTCRAFT PICTURES [ who played opposite him in “The Spy”, is again in the cast, as Hazel Weir, the girl in the case. The sec- ond chapter of that captivating serial, “The Seven Pearls”, is one of the best serial episodes ever filmed. Mol- { lie King and Creighton Hale will find . it hard to live up to the reputation they are establishing for themselves in this picture. And “The Red Ace” | is certainly worth seeing, too. ! Tomorrow’s feature will be an un- usual picture from the World studios, in which dainty little Madge Evans is featured, entitled “The Little Duch- es”. A new serics of comedies, “Mutt and Jeff”, drawn by ‘the famous car- toonist, T. I. Powers, will also start { tomorrow, and the fourteenth chapter of “The Fatal Ring” wil be among the other excellent features of the pro- gram. Menu for Tomorrow Breakfast. Boiled Fish Marmalade Coffee Cereal Gems Salmon in White Sauce Cucumber Salad Sweet Wafers Tea Dinner Vegetable Soup Steamed Fish Fried Egg Plant Potatoes Stuffed Tomato Salad Chocolate Pudding Coftee GEMS—Beat two eggs very light, one pint buttermilk or sour clabber, one-half cupful of melted butter, a little sugar, salt to taste. Enough flour for as of batter. Just before cooking add small teaspoonful of soda. SWEET WAFERS-—Three eggs, one tumbler of sugar, one-half cupful sweet milk, butter size of egg. Flour to make stiff batter. Flavor. ANOTHER NEW GOWN OF BLUE TAFFETA determination to do so, begins some of the liveliest adventures that a man ever had. Miss Winifred Kingston, | Afternoon gown of navy-blue taf- feta, combined with foulard in blue and white. The overjacket of navy 1 For Theatergoers and Women Readers . The Hospital | Doctor “Contagious dis- ease epidemics would be unknown if I could make the hospital standard of sanitation universal. In my hospital, to dis- infect the garbage cans, toilet bowls, and linen, we use BLEACHES DESTROYS ODORS It’s the best and most powerful dis- infectant I know for home use, and it’s inexpensive.”’ Acme Chlorinated Lime is sold by all first-class druggists and grocers at 15 cents for a large can. Refusesubstitutes which may be stale and worthless. Write for Booklet A. MENDLESON’S SONS, 120 Broadway, New York City Established 1870 Factory, Albany, N.Y. e e e ] chiffon falls in graceful lines and is marked by bead embroidery, follow- ing the same design as in the fou- lard. The Turkish skirt is a distinc- tive feature. The hat is a georgette sailor, for trimmed, and two jet or- . naments mark the wave of the bhrim. Pots and pans half filled with water and put on the stove to soak only hardens the substance which clings to the side. Fill them full of cold water and stand them off thy stove. HORSES 2% CATT! First Na- VEGETABLES icai shew BOYS’ & GIRLS’ & Contests Oct. 15, 17, 18, Oct. 15, 16 - 17, 18, 19, 20 16 19 HORSE RACI -HORSE SHQW BACK ON-THE MAP New England and the Eastern States have a People’s Fall Exposition Second to none The Eastern States Exposition & Dairy Show Springfield, Mass., Oct. 12 to 20 FRUIT STATE EXHIBITS MACHINERY FOOD Eastern Berkshire Congress Show—Auto Show SWINE Dairy, Beef SHEEP Training Camp Oct. 12 AUTO RACES %* 3¢ GO TO IT We Give Royal Gold Trading Stamps—Ask for Them Offerings for Week of October 8th to 13th Inclusive Big 4 Combination 5 1 5 1 C C Ib. Elryad Coffee ................ 35 akes Lenox Soap ...............30 an Cleanser ....................10 30 R. G. STAMPS FREE ....... $1.14 MILK, Van Camp’sor A & P.largecan ........ 13¢c KELLOGG’S KRUMBLES, apkg. ............. 1l¢ WHITE BEANS,alb.........................17c KLEENSWEEP,acan ........................ 5¢c Asparagus TIPS A can 25¢ Quaker Toasted Corn Flakes A pkg. 8c. Red Alaska SALMON A can 28¢c Grandmother’s Wheat FARINA, Apkg ......... 18¢ BEST BUTTER, Ib .... .. 50¢ PURE LARD, Ib ......... 30c CHEESE, Ib .... . 820 . 40c 50 Stamps with 1 can A. & P. BAKING POWDER ........ 50c 40 Stamps With 1 1b Freg City Dellvery §AM 2P M 'Phone 135 184 MAIN STREET, NEW BRITAIN, CONN, We Give Royal Gold Trading Stamps— Ask for The