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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1017. Today and Tomorrow Dorothy Phillips IN THAT BIG BLUE-BIRD SPECIAL “The Rescue” COULD YOU FALL IN LOVE WITH YOUR EX- H HUSBAND?—SHE DOES— ND WINS HIM, TOO! GET IN ON THE FINISH! ONLY FOUR MORE CHAPTERS OF FATAL RING! SEE CHAPTER 16 TODAY! “The Cheese Tamers” STARRING THOSE FAMOUS TRAGEDIANS, MUTT AND JEFF- PATHE NEWS USUAL LOW PRICES COMING! BABY MINE A BIG FEAST OF LAUGHTER. LYCEUM TODAY Marguame Glark “The Amazons” ICOMING! MME PETROVA KEENEY’S HIGH OLASS VAUDEVILLE. FOUR MIDDLETONS McINTYRE & WYNNE LAWLER & DAUGHTERS BARON’S MIDGET HORSES Kathlyn Williams and Wallace Reid in “BIG TIMBER.” Grace Cunard in “SOCIETY’S DRIFTWOOD” I GRAND HARTFORD Jacobs and Jermon Inc., Offer —ALL WEEK— “Sporting Widows” Featuring HARRY COOPER and Big Company of Co-Stars. AETNA BOWLING ALLEYS, CHURCH ST. Alley can be Reserved Now for Leagues fOpen Alley at All Times — f FLUSH KIDNEYS WITH SALTS IF BACK IS ACHING Noted Authority says we ecat much meat, which clogs Kidneys. too Take glass of Salts when Kidneys hurt or Bladder bothers you. No man or woman who eats meat i regularly can make a mistake by {flushing the kidneys occasionally, says & well-known authority. Meat forms luric acid which cites the kidney: they become -overworked strain, get sluggish and fail to filter the waste and poisons from the blood, .then we get sick. Nearly all rheu- matism, headaches, liver trouble, (mervousness, dizziness, sleeplessness and urinary disorders come from sluggish kidneys. The moment you feel a dull ache in [the kidneys or your back hurts or if the urine is cloudy, offensive, full of sediment, irregular of passage, or at- tended by a sensation of scalding, stop eating meat and get about four ounces of Jad Salts from any phar- macy; take a tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast and in a few days your Kkidneys will act fine. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, com- bined with lithia, and has been used for generations to flush and stimulate ‘the kidneys, also to neutralize the | medis in urine so it no longer causes |irritation, thus ending bladder weak- ness. Jad Salts is inexpensive and cannot Injure; makes a delightful efferves- | cent lithia-water drink which every- one should take now and then to keep the kidneys clean and active and the lood pure, thereby avoiding serious dney complication from the | o T SNSRI SRS S e ———— News For CORNER CORNER MAIN and CHURCH STS., Hartford WEEK-END SFECIALS FOR SATURDAY One Article From Each Department at Cost or Less Than Cost for One Day Only $25.00 SUITS $19.75 New Models from our regular stock. $27.50 DRESSES $18.50 Big variety of serge, satin and wool jersey. $8.98 SKIRTS $5.00 Plaid, check, army cloth, serge and poplin. $7.98 COATS $1.98 0dd coats for immediate wear, slightly shop worn 59c HOSIERY 49c Onyx hosiery in black and champagne. $5.98 SWEATERS $3.98 Pure wool in white and light blue. $1.98 GLOVES $1.75 1 clasp washable kid gloves in tan and grey. $1.50 VOILE WAISTS 98¢ White and colored. Large selection. White kid belts. $1.25 BELTS 69¢ In crepe and flannel. $1.49 KIMONOS 98¢ $2.98 PETTICOATS $1.79 Satin top with taffeta flounce. $10.00 CHILDREN’S COATS $7.98 Zibeline in brown, burgundy and navy. $1.75 CHILDREN’S DRESSES $1.50 In gingham and percale. - Grey and brown wolf. Do you collect Bromidioms? I be- inimitable distinction between Sulphide and the Bromide hinted that it would more likely be the Bromides Bromidioms. g Nevertheless, I do love to collect them and I do wish reader-friends woud send in some of those they have collected and I will pass them along some day. “It Isn’t the Heat, It's the Humidity.” Of course, you know what a Bro- midiom is. It is one of those remarks that with certain people inevitably follow a certain mental stimulus. For instance, you suffer from a very hot, very damp day and some Bromide is sure to bring forward triumphantly the information that “It isn’t the heat, it's the humidity we mind.” Again a person has shown himself determined to have justice in soms small money matter. If he is a Sul- phide he assumes that you know he isn’t mean. But if he is a Bromide, he is pretty sure to say, “It isn’t the money, it's the prineciple of the thing I'm interested in.”” One Never Hears Ome's Own Bro- midioms. Bromidioms are common by the nature of things and yet they are hard to collect because it is only in sudden flashes that one realizes that they are Bromidioms. Of course, one never hears one's own Bromidioms. One must wait to hear them on someone else’s lips. I have been collecting for time and I only have these few: “Yes, 1 hate to write letters, but I love to get them.” ““The trouble is that though I re- member faces perfectly I can't re- member names. “I don't like little ba.bies, they are so red.” “If vou hadn’t asked me that name 1 could have thought of it in a min- ute.” “I do love to see anyone grow old gracefully.” “I Would Have Made Tt ‘No Trumps.’ * “If T had only known you had those some l trumps.” cards 1 would have made it no $19.75 FUR SETS $14.95 SIDE TALKS BY RUTH OCAMERON Another Collection “If you have old furniture in the lieve the genius who suggested that family, that’s all right, but I don't see | the any sense in buying it.” “‘Dogs always know wha l‘'te them.” ‘Won't you add some of your favor- than the Sulphides who wauld collect ites to that list? But please remember in your col- lecting that, to quote Mr. Burgess, “Tt is not merely because the remark is trite that it is bromidic; it 1s because with the Bromide it 1s inevitable. It follows upon the physical or mental stimulus as the night the day, he can- not then be true to any other im- pulse.” And again, ‘“do mnot merely collect hackneyed phrases firrespective of their true Bromide quality.” S PARAMOUNT FEATURE ON KEENEY’S SCREEN | “Blg Timbers,” a usual fine Para- mount picture with Kathlyn Williams and her eminent co-star, Wallace Reid. The story contains plenty of human interest surrounding the life of a western lumber magnate, show- Ing as it does the keen sense of jus- tice found in the west and weaving all into a story replete throughout with consistent situations and a cleverly worked out plot development. It lg indeed gripping and leads the audi- ence step by step to a very satisfying climax. Four excellent vaudeville numbers, showing an abundance of comedy, en- joyable music, both vocal and in- strumental, graceful and grotesque dancing and clever performing midget A. PINKUS, Eyesight Spectalist and Manufacturing Optician, KYE EXAMINATIONS ARE FREE Broken Lenses Duplicated. Office, 306 Main St. "Phoue 570 REVELATIONS By ADELB How Mother Graham Fared Where Madge Failed. It was just after brcakfast that I turned_away from the telephone, re- alizing What the old saying, “heart in one’s boots,” meant. Mine Was cer- tainly clear at the tips of my toes. My dismay must have been reflected in my face, for I saw the faces of my fam- ily express concern, and Dicky ex- claimed: “The movers can’t come. | cooky that's it.”” “you win the cooky,” I returned with a feeble attempt at merriment, although I felt more like Weeping than joking. I had been too stunned by the gruft announcement of the mah at the other end of the wire to make any comment, and he had hung up the telephone before I had recovered my breath. He was evidently afraid of the protests to which he might| have to listen. “Is this Mrs. Graham?” he had asked, and in answer to my “ves” had | blurted out: “Terrible sorry, Mrs. Graham, but the roads are so bad we can’t possibly get up there to your place with the truck, and we can’'t get hold of any horses for love or money. We've tried everywhere, so we'll just have to throw up the job. If you can't find anybody else and can wait until the roads get better we'll be glad to do the job, but just now it's impossible. “Margaret!” My mother-in-law’s i volce was as grim as her face, which looked as if it were carved out of granite. ‘““Do you mean to tell me that you let that man tell you he couldn’t come and never apened your head to tell him he had to come, no matter what the excuse?” Mother Graham Is Irritated. “I didn’t have any chance, mother,” I returned. “He talked very hurried- ly and hung up the receiver ‘before I had any opportunity to answer. “I suppose he gave the roads as an excuse,” Dicky saild, and his airily| nonchalant air irritated me more than his mother’s militant disappraoval of my easy-going ways. He had such a detached air, as if the moving were some other family’s problem than his own. ‘‘Well, they are awful, but that probably isn't the real reason. He's no doubt got an easier job somewhere and has thrown us over.” ““Oh, I don’t think so, Dicky,” I pro- tested. ‘‘Don’t you remember seeing those moving trucks stalled in the mud last week? And it's been thaw- ing and freezing alternately ever ‘since. It must be worse than ever now.’ “Margaret, I could shake you,” my {mother-in-law exclaimed {irritdbly. i “Here you expect the movers tomor- !row morning, they disappoint you and jall you can do is to stand around mak- i{ing excuses for them. And you're iabout as bad, Richard,” she went on, turnlng to her son. ‘“Why aren’t you !at the telephone making the fellow ‘under!'and that if he has taken the | contract to move you he's got to do it, ; if he carries your stuff out on his shoulders.” “Because it wouldn't be the slight- est use,” Dicky replied lazily. *“You don’t know these particular natives, mother. They're the most indepen- dent cusses on earth. They have an idea that if they consent to do any work for you you ought to go dowr on your knees in gratitude for lhcil' condescension. And they do it in their own good time and way, or not | at all, just as it suits them.” Dicky Shifts the Burden. “I always knew you were a fool, Richard,” his mother returned tartly; “but this exhibition of idiocy is posi- tively sickening. What’'s that man's, telephone number? He may not do as| | he has agreed, but he’s certainly going to hear a_ piece of my mind.” And he certainly did, as we, who sat breathlessly amused during the spirit- ed telesphone conversation that fol- lowed could testify. Mother Graham has an extensive and vigorous vocabu- lary, and when she 1is angry she doesn’t mince her words. But I knew ; so well the absolutely maddening in- | difference whieh she must be meeting | from the man at the other end of the wire, the phlegmatic assent to her diatribe, the unalterable decision which na words could affect, that I was not surprised to see her slam the telephone down on the receiver, evi- dently in the middle of a sentence from her opponent. “There’s no use trying to talk to a man who ought to be in the asylum for the feeble- mlnde she snapped. “I told you so,” Dicky drawled, and | his mother was so exhausted that she didn’t reprove him. ‘“And now, may I ask, what in Sam Hill we're going to do?” He looked at me and I saw that in a breath he had shifted the entire re- sponsibility upon my shoulders. I had | engaged the movers, because he said ‘he was too busy to da it, and he evi- i dently meant to leave the heart- breaking problem entirely in mry hands. B e —————— horses are included in the attractions. One of the best acts ever seen in New Britain is that of Lawler and | Daughters. Years ago Mr. Lawler gained fame as a song-writer, “The | Sidewalks of New York,” “The Mick | I'll bet a That Threw the Brick” and many oth- er song hits of the past years being | among his selections. | MclIntyre and Wynne are versatlile | entertainers and they win lots of ap- | plause They have a pleasing line of humorous conversations and intro- | duce new jokes which occasion hearty | laughter. They appear In change of | costume and sing nicely and dance | well. i Baron's Midget Horses and the Four Middletons, a musical act, conclude an exceptionally good vaudeville bill. Pathe News, Animated Weekly and Satisfaction Gu-.rnnee‘\]x Current Events are shown daily. !another drives Theatergoers and Women Readers e e e OF A WIFE GARRISON Menu for Tomorrow Breakfast Oranges Stewed Kidney Corn Cakes Cofteo Tunch Cream of Carrot Soup Fried Fish Potato Croquettes Tettuce Mayonnaise Lemon Ple Coffee Chicken Salad—Cut boiled chicken into dice. Mix cupful celery cut into dice with chicken. Sprinkle all with salt and pepper. In- to three tablespoonfuls of oil stir ta- blespoonful vinegar. Pour this over chicken and celery, toss till mixed. Line a bowl with lettuce, fill with chicken salad and pour mayonnaise over all. pleces cola,’ Potato Croquettes—Put two cupfuls mashed potatoes into a basin, add one tablespoonful melted butter, one well | beaten egs, seasoning salt and pep- per. Form into croquettes; roll in beaten egg and plenty of bread crumbs. Fry in smoking hot fat. Drain. Serve hot. BLUEBIRD PICTURE AT FOX'S THEATER In “The Rescue,” the feature of the Fox theater program for today and tomarrow, the Bluebird Production Co. has fashioned a photoplay drama which rises to the heights of superb dramatic _excellence, and it presents Dorothy Phillips with one of the best parts of her altogether exceptional | career. In the supporting company | are five of the ‘prettiest girls in the | mavies today. The story is an adap- | tation of a magazine story by Hugh Kahler, and it tells the unusual expe- rience of a divorced woman who falls in love with her ex-husband. It is a decidedly unusual situation and has been worked up in a surprisingly un- usual manner. Bluebird always seems to procure remarkable and out-of- the-way vehicles for Miss Phillips and her supporting cast and “The Rescue’ is no exception to the rule, as it is certainly out of the ordinary and filled with surprises. and unusual twists. The star has that variety of role which taxes an actress to the utter- most, but she takes advantage of every opportunity presented. Quick changes of mode, quick changes of ex- pression which signify at times two distinct and separate meanings she is called upon to effect, and she never fails to produce a strikingly success- ful result. As Anne Wetherel, she is jtold of the intense love existing be- ween her former husband and one of her close friends, Betty Jerrold. The information brings her to the realiza- tion that she herself has never ceased to love the man whom she divorced, and the thought of him being won by her to desperation. The course she pursues in attempting to break up the proposed match and the surprising result of the whole af- fair make up one of the most enter- taining and crisp photodramas that has been seen in some time. The sixteenth chapter of “The Fatal Ring” will -also be on the program As this fetching serial is rapidly ap- ;proaching its conclusion, there being but three more episodes after the present, the interest is heightened to the nth power of excitement and thrilling possibilities. ~And in this chapter something is sprung that has an immediate bearing on the solution of the picture. Another popular feature of the extraordinary program will be “The Cheese Tamers,” a thrilling spectacle in which those well-known tragedians, Mutt and Jeff, will have the featured roles. The Pathe News will also be shown.’ MARGUERITE CLARK IS LYCEUM HIT ‘When an actress can portray with equal ability the variegated parts re- quired of Marguerite Clark, who is appearing the remainder of the week at the Lyceum theater in “The Ama- zons”, and do her work with the nat- ural ease and .apparently at-home manner that Miss Clark gets into her work, she is deserving of the great credit being given by critics every- SIMPLY SAY “CHARGE IT” Hundreds of —in sizes for every figure, outsize woman’s figure. NO Suits Coats Dresses . Trimmed Ha[s Skirts ‘Waists Shoes Coats, Dresses, Efc. TE'E VARIETY of our stock and its enormous size are the talk of the town includes every model, every material, every wanted color Women’s, Misses’ and Juniors’ Garments PAY A DOLLAR A WEEK Fine Suits, You’ll find here a stock that from the slight miss to the| “extra’ charges of any kind. to to to to to o to $75.00 $90.00 $50.00 $20.00 $18.00 $16.75 $12.00 HATS MEN’S SUITS AND OVERCOATS SHOES COMPLETE LINES OF Boys’ and Girls’ Garments 07693 MAIN STREET HARTFORD BUY A LIBERTY BOND where the production has been shown. As “Tommy”, a girl of high paren- tage, brought up to live and act as & boy, in common with her two sisters, she has the most difficult role of her career to enact. She makes the best of it though, and adds greater laurels to her credit because of the excellence of her work. In a finely equipped gymnasium the girls receive the training of men; taught to ride and drive, they develop a love of the great outdoors, and by the time they have grown into woman- hood, their mother has done a good Job, for all three are really mascu in thought, word and deed. The action starts when “Tommy”, portrayed by Miss Clark goes to visit London rela- tives and after three days in conven- tional, society-bud clothing revolts, and attircd in a full dress suits goes 1 certain night to the liveliest music hall in the city. There she drinks witi the whole-heartedness of a reguiar saloon patron and takes so much in- terest in certain happenings that her stay ends in her trimming one of the hall bullies. Escaping from the scene of the fight, she leaps into a passing auto- mobile and promptly, woman-fashion, faints. She awakes in a man’s apart- ment with him and his butler trying to resuscitate her. Then her escape from the apartment by a leap through “\\N\\\\\NNNN\\\Wzzzzzzzrpornrry |2 window starts some real excitement, which keeps the interest at fever-heat until the finale. There are.some thrills that are thrillers, and the comedy | element, led by Miss Clark is well | carried out by her supporting com- pany. Last night's audience was al- most a record-breaker and the warm reception given the picture forecasts a pleasant stay for the diminutive star. On the same program will be the Lyceum Weekly, “‘Stop, Luke, Listen,” and several other good attractions. Fads am&ms Tapestry shopping bags are new. Satin coats are heavily embroid- ered. Fluted ribbons are used for trim- ming. Stock collars are made cf whito satin. Crow blue satin makes = pretty | dress. Gray moire trims a black frock. satin Many of the winter suits are belted. e 70(11' Couniry / Buy a LIB RTY BOND