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There is more Catarrh iIn this section ¢f the country than all other diseases t together, and for vears it was sup- Sed to be incurable. Doctors pr 8cribed local remedies, and by constant- Iy failing to curc with local treatment, pronounced it Incurable. Catarrh is a local discase, greatly influenced by con- stitutlonal conditions and therefor uires constituifonal trentment atarrh nufaciured by Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohlo, is a consti- \utional remedy, s taken internally and acts thru the Blood on the Mucous Burfaces of the Sis ne Hundred Dollars reward is o iy case that Hall's Catarrh Cure fails to cur Send for circulars and testimonlals, T. J. CHENIIT & CO., Toledo, Ohlo. Sold by Druggists, e\ Hall's Family I'ills for constipation. LYCEUM § TONIGHT DOUGLAS FAIRBANKS “THE MAN FROM PAINTED POST” MONDAY MARGUERITE CLARK } ! COMING ! The NEW PICTURE LYCEUM SUNDAY Great Double Feature Program AND MANY OTHER REELS A THREE HOUR SHOW FEATURING WM. “RUSSELL ANTONIO MERINO EDITH STORY FOX TONIGHT LAST SHOWING OF ALADDIN AND HIS WONDERFUL LAMP 19th CHAPTER OF FATAL RING MUTT and JEFF, GEORGE ADE FABLE nd PATHE NEW JOUS TODAY TS 10c¢. OONTIN ALL SUN.—MON.—TUES. FARNUM “WHEN A MAN | EES RED" A STORY TAKEN FROM “THE PAINTED LADY.” KEENEY’S HIGH CLASS VAUDEVILLE. BOB TENNEY comedian of Waterbury Bros. and Tenncy. Late “A VOICE FROM THE TRENCHES.” Sketch. BRUNN AND BRUNN Wallace Reid and Anite King IN MAN'S “THE SQUAW SON." [, ——— e — “The Joy House” GRAND HARTFORD —ALL WEEK— { ] | Mollie Williams’ Own Show i All Star Cast, Chorus of Beautit ! Mat., Except Sat. { Ladies' 10c. | AETNA BOWLING ALLEYS. CHURCH ST. Alley can be Reserved Now for Leagues Open Alley at All Times e e e s ~ ~— e A e A A A e News For Theatergoers and Women Readers e e e e A A BY RUTH “Do the thing that's nea L Though if's hard the whiles Ilelping when you meet them Lame dog over stile: That a good little poem, always liked it. Sometimes, too, the first line comes into my mind with a slight emenda- tion. “Do the thing that's hs my L i mean; It you have a number of things to do and you particularly dread some one of them. do it first. Get It O Your Mind. You don’t know (unless you have the habit) what a help it is to get the hardest task off your mind. It makes the rest of sccm easier by contrast. Also 1t is good discipline *to make yourself do promptly a thing you dis- like. Also the impetus you have to get up carries you straight through your casier tasks with a rush. Tako a very humble instance. 1 Hate to Brush Off the Crumbs. I have the most inexplicable deep seated dislike to one littie ho hold task connected with my d 1 simply hate to brush the crumbs olf the table. I am always tempted to leave this I have rdest,” says n to me,—and this is what 1t your tasks CGAMERON SIDE TALKS . —— The Hardest Thing until after I have and gotten them ready to put If T do that, I am subcon- sciously dreading it while I wash and I am apt to be more lackadalsical, more prone to let things interrupt me. If, on the other hand I fling myselt briskly at the task the minute I get the last dish cleared off. and am con- | scious that I have a clean table, my dishes are apt to go much more brisk- Iy The same is true when I have any- thing difficult to write. If I leave it | till the last, my whole day's work drags. 1f I do it briskly, while my morning courage is good, the whole day goes better. Write Hardest Letter First. 1 should think it would be so with w business man and the heap of de- | talls on his desk awalting his atten- | tion. Or with a feacher and the many problems of school discipline and rou- tine to be faced. Or with anyone who has any duties of any sort. Which I suppose in- cludes practically everybody, if you don’t shut out those people who de- liberately manufacture their duties aud call them ‘‘soctety.” T Cainen— tho EVELATIONS My heart, in vulgar parlance sank into my boots when Cousin Agatha, cleverly reading my intention of go- ing to the post office before taking the noon train for tho city, malicious- ly frustrated my intentian of going there unobserved by remarking she could save me the trouble because she was going down there herself right away. For n moment I was in despair. Another of the mysterious, anony- mously sent newspaper clippings en- closed in cheap envelopes addressed to me might came by any mail, and 1 was sure that Cousin Agatha wouldn't hesitate to steam the grimy envelope open and read it if she could manage to do so unobserved. To go away to the city even to investigate the origin of the clippings was im- passible, if the mysterious missives were to be allowed to come to the house. When I was in my room prepar- ing for my hasty trip into the city to see Katherine Sonnot, my very dear friend, and my brother-in-law’s flancee, whose help I wanted in de- termining whether or not Mrs. Allis had any hand in sending the clip- pings, T had” planned to go to the post office’ and ask that my personal mail be forwarded for a few days to me in care of Katherine. Cousin Agatha’s Disappointment. I had no correspondents of such importance that their epistles couldn't wait for several days hefore I saw them—Katherine and Lillian and old Mrs, Stewart, the woman with whom my mother and 1 had boarded for many years w@re my only friends, and they always used the long-distance telephone if they wished to tell me anything .of importance. All of them were far too busy to spend time in writing letters to anyone living near. What should T do? I knew Cousin Agatha well enough to know that she'd be at my elbow when T made my request of the postmaster. T must think out some other way at once. And then, spurred by the rowel of necessity, the solutlon flashed upon me. 1 turned a nonchalant face to Cousin Agatha, who was watching me keenly through her half-lowered lids. “No, I am not going to the post office,” I returncd sweetly. ‘“Thank you so much for offering to help me out. But my errand, upon seccond thought, is one Katie can attend to just as well as not. It merely con- cerned a disputed bill at the butch er's and, comc to think of it, he's never at his shop on this day any- Ny Cousin Agatha's face could not con- ceal her:*disappointment. “All Right, I Feex.” “Oh, very well,”" she said, with her most resigned, martyr-like tone, and went up§tairs to prepare for the walk to the post ofitce which she evidently felt obliged to take to carry out her fiction of needing to go there at once. As soon as I heard her door close I fairly flew up the stairs to my room and, locking my door, sat down and wrote an explicit order to the local postmaster to forward my personal mail in ihe care of Katherine Sonnot in the city As I was about to sign it, question arose in my mind. I knew Cousin Agatha's persistence and a certain clever cunning she possesses That she had grasped my scheme to forward my mail I was very sure. That she would try to pump the post- stor with wily, seemingly careless ioning T > sure. And T s not so sure t the kindly gar- rulous postmaster would be proof against her machinations. But [ could not put into writing a warning nst his answering the i questions of a member of my house- hold. T could imagine the toothsome gosslp which would be upon many a lip in Marvin. So T simply signed the formal request for forwarding my mail and went In search of Katle. s0 a new ‘Why Madge Sought Jim’s Efficient Aid. l p OF A WIFE By ADELE GARRISON m, her husband, I remembered with a lightening of my spirits, was a great friend of the postmaster. And Jim, I had reason to know from a little epi- sode of the time when my father, then unknown to me, was trying to trace my movements, causing mo great embarrassment, was singularly efficient in keeping his own counsel. “Where is Jim, Katie?” I asked when I had gone into the kitchen, first being certain that Cousin Agatha had left the house and that my mother- in-law was safely eating her luncheon in the dining room. “Out by the barn,” Katle respond- ed. “You vant heem? I call heem qveeck,” and she started for the door with her usual alacrity to do any er- rand of mine. “No, thank you, Katie,” I returned, smiling at her. “Just see that Mother Graham doesn’t want for anything, and tell her ff she asks for me that I have gone out into the yard for a moment.” “All right, Txfeex,” and with the , familiar words in my ears, I went to the barn in search of Jim. Menu for Tomorrow Breakfast Fruit Rice Omelet Twin Muffins Coffee Dinner Clear Soup Roast Mutton Boiled Rice Scalloped Tomatoes Lettuce Pumpkin Ple Caffee Supper Apple Salad Canned Pears Tea Cakes Caffee dice Omelet—Warm a boiled rice with one tablespoonful butter in one cupful milk. Add three well-beaten cggs and pinch salt, pour into hot buttercd fryving pan and let brown: when set fold and scrve. Apple Salad-—Mix half cupful cel ery nd half cupiui apples sut into half cupful pecan meats chopped, with mayonnaise, thorough- Iv together. Scoap out six large red apples and fill with mixture. cupful — SHAKE INTO YOU HOES Allen’s Foot-Fasc. th ptic powder to be shaken into (! d sprmkied in the footbath. The advises men In training t their shocs cach mornin ters and sore spots an, { swollen, smarting feet and takes the st | out of corns and bunions. A certain v licf for sweating, callous, tired, aching feet. Always Allon's Foot to break in Sold everywhere, 26c. ——— e OUCH! ACHING JOINTS, RUB RHEUMATIC PAIN Rub Pain | small Right out trial bottle of Jacobs Ol1" Rheumatism is “pain” only. Not one case in fifty requires inter- nal treatment. Stop drugging! Ilub soothing, penetrating “St. Jacobs Ofl" right into your sore, stiff, aching joints, and relief comes instantly. “St. Jacobs OIl” is a harmless rheumatism | liniment which never disappoints and can not burn the skin, Limber up Quit complaining! Get with old Jacobs OiI'" at cny drug store, and in Just w moment you'll he free from rheumatic pain, soroness and stiffness, | Dor’t suffer! Rollef awaits you. “St. Jacobs OII" 1& just as good for mel- atica, neuralgia, lumbago, backache, sprains. a small trial bottle of old, honest “St, | | | I washed the | ! most REAL COMEDIAN AT'KEENEY'S THEATER | When Bob Tenney, tar black humor- ist, sails on the stage at Keeney these days, there is a perfect uproar. BRob is no mean comedian, in fact he is one of the best on the big time, and he knows how to use the acces- sories to increase the fun. For in- ance, when he makes his first en- trance, he does not fall on the stage | or make spasmodic appearances, as comedians do. le literally “sails on.”” He has a craft, “The Saucy Belle,” he calls it, in which he salls his way to success. As a mu- sician Mr. Tenney is no slouch. He is, however, a comedian first, last and all the time and ‘he introduces such fun into his playing of the cornet, French horn and trombone that one cannot forget for one moment that he is above all a comedian. His solo on . the latter instrument to panta- loon accompaniment is a scream and | has the audience convulsed with laughter. His jokes are new and, bright and he is undoubtedly one of | the features of the all-star bill that Keeney's is this week presenting to | capacity houses. Wallace Reid, supported by Anita King, will be seen today and tomor- row for the last time in the Lasky- Puramount production “The Squaw Man’s %on,” the thrilling sequel by Edwin Milton Royle of his famous story “The Squaw Man,” which was the first photodrama ever made by the Lasky company. By a strange co- incidence the production of the sequel | was begun exactly three years after the beginning of the fliming of the first story. In addition to Miss King, the cast includes Dorothy Davenport, Raymond Hatton, C. H. Geldert; Er- nest Joy, Lucien Littlefield, Donald Bowles, Mabel Van Buren and others. DOUGLAS FAIRBANKS AT THE LYCEUM Tonight offers the last opportunity for a view of America’'s leading come- dian, Douglas Fairbanks, in his latest motion picture offering, “The Man From Painted Post” at the Lyceum theater. There is no need in elab- orating on Fairbanks’ work. Every: one knows this big, red-blooded ex- ponent of motion picture comedy, and when it is announced that this is his latest picture, containing the fruits of his labor in previous offerings, some idea of {ts finesse may be galned. The Lyceum Weekly, a Keystone com- edy and other pictures are on the program. The performance today Wwill be continuous. Now for next Monday, Tuesday and ‘Wednesday another of those big double feature programs, with no in- crease in the price. Two shows for the one price. Marguerite Clark will be seen in “Bab's Diary,” a delight- ful offering such as Miss Clark alone i3’ able to give, and Edwin Selwyn, one of the screen’s most famous act ors, will be seen in “The Arab,” a powerful feature of an unusual sort. Throughout these three days in addi- tion to the two features, the usual list of smaller pictures will be shown. | That great big fellow, William S. (Bill) Hart, the man who draws the voung and the old, will be on the Lyceum program next Thursday, Fri- day d Saturday, in his latest offer- ing. “The Narrow Trall.” This is his masterpiece, a plcture that is worth going a long way to see. | | | ! i | IN LATEST PICTURE Tor three days, starting tomorraw, | the photo-fans of New Britain will given the rarest treat of their ' lives, for the feature of the Fox the- ! 1 be none other than ill Farnum, in his very thriller, “When a Man S The story of the picture is hy the popular fiction writ- er, and was widely read on its recent appearance in the Saturda vening Post, under the name of “The Painted Tad) It presents Karnum in one of the best and most unusual roles that he has ever had, that of Luther Smith, & brawny sailor of fast disap- pearing tvpe, and it is & smashing tale of adventure and retributive justice in the South as. Smith, returning from a long voyage, finds his sister; dead, and his mother dying, through the work of a man whose name he does not know. Despairing of all fu- ture happin and in an effort to forget the past, Smith ships aboard the ‘Albatross’ for a prolonged cruise through the stormy and treacherous South Seas. Unknown to him, the skipper of the ‘Albatross’ is the very man who broke up his home and killed his sister. After a hot fist fight, ' in which Smith pounds the captain almost to a pulp, he decides to leave the vessel at the next port. During the ensuing days, on that little island on the Southern Pacific, Smith meets and adores a woman who is known, | for obvious reasons, as ‘“The Painted Lady.” Thinking too much of Smith to accept his attentions, she tells him of her past, and then, before he had time to recover from the revelations, leaves, and sails still further south. The most exciting scene In the pic- ture occurg when the captain of the ‘Albatross’ who has rescued the Painted Lady from a ship-wreck, and has been repulsed by her, takes her to the African coast, and offers her he for sale to the natives. Tuther Smith happens along about this time and— well, vou can imagine what happens. “When A Man Sees Red” will be seen at Fox's on Sunday, Monday and Tuesday. e N e e e ddle “ Women. Are Here Told the Best Remedy for Their Troubles. Freemont, 0.—‘‘I was passing through the eritical period of life, being forty-six years of age and had all the symptoms incident to that change — heat flashes, nervousness, and was in a generzl run down condition, 80 it was hard for me to do my work, Lydia E. Pink- ham’s Vegetable Compound was recommended to me as the best. remediefor my troubles,which it surely proved to be. I feel better and stronger in every way since taking it, and the annoying symptoms {mve disap- pea »—Mrs. M. GODDEN, 925 Napoleon St., Fremont, Ohio. Noith Haven, Conn.—*Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegeta- ble Cdmpound restored my health after everything else had fdiled when passing through change of life. There is nothing like it to overcome the trying symptoms.” —Mrs. FLOBENCE 1SELLA, Box 197, North Haven, Conn, In Such Cases LYDIA E.PINKHAM'S VEGETABLE COMPOUND fias the greatest record for the greatest good LYDIA E.PINKHAM MEDICINE CO. LYNN.MASS. TS WORTH WH TO THE PUBLIC We Wish to Make a Preliminary Announcement of Qur GREAT FIRE SALE Which Commences Tuesday Morning, Nov. 20 Watch Monday’s Paper for Details Thank You THE BIG STORE RAPHAEL’S DEPT. STORE 380-382-384-386 Main St., New Britain, Ct.