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1917, ome Harold KWO0OD 2 Comedy of trignc, Love and Adventure. 2 PECEIVER' XTREE! iSmashing Career’ 'SUNSHINE (OMEDY BURIED ALIVE i _Chap, of 7 Pear| i MUTT AND JEFF : IN “BE .\l\" WIF PATHE NEWS ILYCEUM Lina Caval “Eternal Temptress” COMING GERALDINE FARRAR EENEY’S HIGH CLASS VAUDEVILLE WILLARD'S TEMPLE OF MUSIC —0—= Eva Tanguay S“THE WILD GIRL” s GRETCHEN LEDERER and LVTTLE ZOE RAE in “THE in “THE HIDDEN HAND.” 'GRAND HARTFORD SUGAR! sn’t any Swecter than the Girls in | “SAM HOWE'S BIG SHOW” AN This Week. Daily Mat. ARSONS THEATRE —Hartford— T. DEC. Mat. and Night f COHAN & HARRIS AFFIRM “GOING UP” _the Greatest Musical Comedy Hit ars. A Jamces-Dandy Cast. WHILLIKIN CHORUS BEAUTIFUL, 00 rly & Hundred Pcople on the Stage 24 Musicians in the Orchestra bod Seats to Be Had if You Buy Now IPRICEES—Mat, 25¢ to $1.50; ight, * to $2.00, Red Cross Déy etna Bowling Alleys TUESDAY, DECEMBER 18 i and Billiards, ; . flenu for Tomorrow Breakfast Stewed Prunes Omelet Griddle Corn Cakes Coffee Launch Potato Croquettes Stewed Fruit Rice Muffins Tea Pinner Bean Soup Meat Pie Browned Potatoces Boiled Onions Endive Mince Pie Coffee riddle Cakes—Sift together pint of and half-teaspoonful salt. Stir pint thick sour milk one level poonful sifted baking soda. ' As it ns to foam, mix quickly with the ir and bake eakes at ance. Muffins—One cupful of cold rice, one pint flour, two egss, quart milk, one tablespoonful ‘one teaspounful salt. Beat hard e quickly In hct mufiin irons. Rico News For Theatergoers and Women Rea o~ ~——— o~ . ~—. Sary &Practical e Dresr Making ";7(om Lerrons . Prepared Specially fo. This Newspaper By Pictorial Raview A youthful frock of dark brown cashmere trimmed with satin and fancy buttons. The pockets may or may not be finished with laps. Holidays without new clothes are not holidays to the growing girl, therefore special designs are prepared i i A Frock For Holiday Activities. | | | i | | for her at thie scason. The model pictured is fashioncd on rich dark brown cashmere trimmed with a satin collar and fancy buttons. A large | collar finishes the deep neek and there is a removable shield which may or may not have a standing collar. Attached to the long waist is a two-picce skirt laid in plaits front and back and gathered at the top. The pockets are trimmed with lape which may be omitted, if do- sired. A straight belt, closed in front, holds in the fulness at the waistline. In medium size the dress requires | B% yards 44-inch material, with yard 27-inch contrasting material for the shield and 5% yard satin for the collar. Even the young girl who is only ‘beginning to make her own clothes will expericnce little trouble in cut- ting this model, so simple is it. First, place the material upon the table, floor or some simple surface and lay the front and back gores on the goods so that the triple ‘“TTT’’ per- forations will rest nlong the length- wise fold. To the right of the back gore place the front of the waist, large ¢‘0’’ perforations along a lengthwise thread of material. Next to the front lay the back of the waist and the collar, along the lengthwise fold. The pocket sections and sleeve follow the collar, only they have the large ‘‘O’’ perforations resting on & lengthwise thread of material. The stay and belt are laid with the straight edge along the selvage of the material. The large collar may be finished in cither round or pointed effect at the back. SELVAGE EOGES i Smith’s , tures of one Billy i able daughters. | unimpressed, walting for his “Dream | HAROLD LOCKWOOD FOX’S OFFERING Motidn picture fans will find some- thing decidedly unusual and enter- taining in Harold l.ockwood's latest success “The Square Deceiver,” in Wwhich he appears at Fox's theater to- day and tomorrow. The picture is an adaptation of Francis Perry El- Tott's sto “Love Me for Myself Alone,” which enjoyed such a wide | popularity on its recent publication in magazine, and, needless to | sny, its screen version is even more excitingly delightful than its original style. It has to do with the adven- | Van Dyke, who, | being a millionaire several times over, it counted a great catch by all the fortune-hunting mothers of marriage- But Billy remains Girl,” who will love him not for his rillions. but for himself alone. Par- | untiring in her efforts to land Mrs. Pugfeather, who has de- termined that he will - marry. her caughter, Celia. Billy, however, | doesn’t fall very hard for Cele, but rather likes Mrs. Pugfeather's ward, Ieatrice, a penniless orphan. Rut he i~ somewhat afraid that her impover- ished condition might induce her to iccept attentions from him merely on ccount of his wealth, so to preciude ich a_ possibility, he disguises him- | elf as a chauffeur, and carries on courtship without her becoming aware of his real identity. This is the ireginning of a long series of hilar- iously funny and ridiculous situa- tions, and before he is through with | i, Billy wishes he had. never seen a nair of goggles in his life. The whole ! thing is a rapid whirl of unexpected 2nd surprising action, with a solu- tion which, although far from ordi- s yet most satisfactory. “Buried Alive” is the title of the twelfth chap- | ter of *“The Seven Pearls,” in which Mollie King and Creighton Hale take new risks in their search for the rearls which are to frece Ilma from the harem of the sultan. One of the liest comedies that has been made in vears is ‘*His Smashing Career,” the third Sunshine Comedy to be re- T d by the Fox studios. Tho: vho saw the two previous Sunshines, “Rouring lLions and Wedding Bell and ““The Milk-Fed Vamp,” will cer- tzinly not miss this one, as it is just good as the others, and in some | respects perhaps just a little bit bet- | U5 07 44 INCH FAAT ERTAL WITHOUT NAD , Pictorial Review Costume No. 7480. 13 to 17 years, Bizes, Why dan't we think more about the i sunshine _when we arc building or' choosing our homes? We look well to the location and the architecture; we insist upon mod- ern conveniences, especially these sine qua nons of modern life, steam heat and electric lights: we concern ourselves deeply over the size of the rooms or the color of the wall paper, | and then we fail to insist that the house shall be so placed as to drink in all the blessed, heartening, life- giving sunshine possible. (True, we are more thoughtful about such things than we used to be, but there is still great room for im- provement.) The Greatest Ornament of Any Room. Sunshine is the greatest ornament any room can have. Take the barest, plainest room, and fill it with morning sunshine and you have redeemed it. 1 once had a cousin who had lived for many vears in the city. She had lived in twa good apartments and in one fairly expensive house (it rented for sixty dollars a month.) Then the war turned her husband's business topsy \turvy, and she had to go into a little suburban apartment for cighteen dollars a week. There her Youngest baby was born. When I went to see her I was ushered into a room filled with suns] e, “Isn’'t it queer,” aid my cousin. “My other three babies were born in town. One at the first apartment I had. one in the apartment on R street and one at the house—and this is the 'first time I have had a really sunny bedroom. At the house I had some afternoon sun, but here T get it all day long, and you can't think what a difference it has made.” But I could. Morning Sunshine Is Best of AllL Any kind of sun is good, but morn- ing sun is best of all. It has a great deal more heating power than the afternoon sunshine. And the morning sunshine Is the most beautiful, cheerful thing in the world. T love to sit in it, let it bathe me and heal me. And (a certainly said before) no d. erly begun unless the breakfas has sunshine upon it. The Room We Liked Best. T once lived in a little country inn! where there were two rooms down- | stairs for the guests—the living room, | a big, ‘beautifully shaped room, at-| tractively fitted up with om-tm;hunwd‘l furniture, and the office, a little square | room, bare, furnished with a deal ta- | ble and a few utilitarian chairs, and | adorned only with the plants on the window sill. Ana yet, after breakfast, more than half the guests would wan- der into the office. Why? Chiefly, I think, because the living room was i | | SIDE TALKS BY RUTH OCAMERON We Need The Sunshine. a north room and the affice a south- castern room that fairly drank in the morning sunshine. Next time vou buy or build or rent a house, don’t forget the sunshine. FADS AND FASHIONS The white satin dots of color collars that the newest, Velvet is a great favorite afternoon and evening gowns. have are for The ruffles of are usually very the new petticoats finely pleated. Heavy shoulder trimming is found on the new French wais Ot 0un0 8 g e Ladies! Keep It on The Dresser ter, Those two well-known trage- dians, Aloysious Mutt and Telemachus Jeff are also present in a convulsing iece of work called “Be My Wife!"” The latest issue of the Pathe News will complete the show. EVA TANGUAY AT KEENEY'S THEATER | Eva Tanguay, as headliner at Keeney's theater, is one of the sea- sofi’s sensations. She is seen in “The Wild Girl,” a Seiznick production, dis- tributed by Select, in’ which Harry Weber presents her to the public for the first time on the screen. oi FKirefly, the wild girl, gives Miss Tanguay a characterization in which she is happily at home, and her in- terpretation of the part leaves noth- ing to be desired. Left with a tribe of wandering gypsies who had be- friended her dying father, Firefly is brought up as a boy. Only the old chief and the woman to whom he has ccnfided the child’s care know the secret of her sex. The fact that she vill inherit a large Virginia estate The role | cr coming of age makes her a val- Lable possession and she is indulged ia every way As she reaches her majority the eypsy band wanders southward and it is while they are camping in theé Vir- ginfa country that accident reveals 10 Vosho, the chief’s son, the truth of Firefly's sex. He seeks out his father and demands her hand in marriage. When the old chief demurs and re- veals Firefly's position in her own world, the younger man becomes doubly insistent, pointing out the fact that”“marriage will bring the girl's fortune under their own control. In the end the older man gives in and the marriage ceremony is observed. In addition to this feature there will be a five-part drama, “The Silent Lady,” an appealing story, with Gret- chen Lederer and little Zoe Rae in the leading roles. The character of Miss Summerville, acted by Gretchen lLederer, stands out the strongest. Miss Lederer plays with a thorough- Few drops on corn or callus stops pain, then they lift off. : <S> Your high corns on heels have toes your put and your calluses on feet, hut why care now? This tiny bottle holds an almost magig fluid. A | genius in Cincinnati d covered this ether com- pound and named it frec- zone. Small bottles of freezone can be had at any drug store for a few cents. ° Never limp or twist your face in pain again, but get a bottle of freezone and apply a few drops on your tender, aching corn or callus. Instantly © the soreness disappears and shortly you will find the corn or callous so shriveled and loose that you lift it off with fingers, Just think! You get rid of a hard corn, soft corn or a corn between the toes, as well as hardened calluses, without suffering one par- ticle, without the slightest irritation of the surrounding skin. Just a touch of freezone on a SOTE corn gives in- stant relief. I\ rness that convinces throughout, and due to her capable acting the heart appeal is increased to a great extent, Little Zoe Rae, as the child, offers just another of her natural and pleas- ing characters. Willard's Temple of Music, one of the largest musical acts now playing cn the vadueville stage, carrying a carload of scenery, and two other ex- cellent high-class acts conclude the program. CAVALIERI SUCCESS IN VAMPIRE ROLE Lina Cavalieri, whose beauty and ability pleased and startled New York, while she starred in opera, and whose same gqualities promise to make her name as famous in motion pic- tures as on the stage, is appearing this week at the Lyceum theater in her first picture, “The Eternal Temptress,” an offering of great dra- matic merit. Yesterday, at its first local ,showing, it was conceded by hardened critics, one of the best re- leased all vear. Combining the dra- matic with the beautiful, and its timeliness, this picture especially at this time when the entire world is in- terested in one great subject, the war, ranks high. Princess Cordelia Sanzio, a beauti- ful Venetian widow whose beauty and charms have won for her the admira- de‘rs Practical Christmas Gifts For a Dollar a Week No Extras of Any Kind Your selection at this Big Store includes hundreds of,,, worth- while Gifts—articles that will bring happiness and at the same YOU MAY HAVE CHARGED—and pay a Dollar a Week. GIFTS FOR WOMEN - AND MISSES Fur Scarfs Fur Muffs ‘Walists Shoes time prove useful. Furthermore, YOUR PURCHAS Suits Coats Skirts Petticoats TUmbrellas Hats Corsets Sweaters Raincoats Dresses Splendid Men'’s Gifts Trouscrs Sweaters Ulsters Neckwear Underwear Suspenders Suits Shoes Overcoats Raincoats Umbrellas Caps Hats Shirts Gloves Scarfs For Girls Suits Coats Dresses Sweaters For Boys Suits Overcoats Sweaters Neckwear Caps HARTFORD. OPEN EVERY EVENING TILL CHRISTMAS tion of the entire dis her admirers, Harr young American, the son Althrop, a diplomat. In the colonel's possession are valuable papers, stat- ing Italy’s attitude toward the war. Princo Estezary, an Austrian know- ing of Althro, fas tion for the woman, and realizing that he has spent most of h money on her, has a fellow-Austrian enter the race for the hand of the princess. Outdone in the splendor of gifts, young Althrop searches for a way to secure money in order to keep in the race and then the Austrian comes to him with an offer of a million dollars if the Ttalian papers are produced. Young Althrop secures the papers and sets the money, but the princ; has learned to love him, foilows to Rome and is obliged to kill the Austrian in order to regain the pa- pers. Thus she makes the supreme sacrifice for the man she loves, but does not live to reap her reward. Throughout, this is a picture that srips and stirs. Unusual situations arise, and dramatic moments bring e: citement and interest to fever heat. Cavalieri enters on her new career with everything possible to make it a success. Stage settings showing scenes in Italy are magnificent, and her supporting cast is capable of giv- ing heér the assistance necessary to bring out the best picture possible. is picture will he at the Lyceum v and tomorrow. On the same program will be the Lyceum Weekly, Keystone comedy and others. The Lyceum orchestra in its first week of organization is rising fast in the estimation of the theater's patrons, rict, has among Althrop, a of Colonel MERRY CHRISTMAS TO ALL MOTHER— Cooking recipe outfit. Purse. Crancs fine writing paper. Shopping List. Writing Paper with Mono- gram., FATHER— ‘Wallet, Check Protector. Ash Trays. Desk Sets. Cigar Cases. BIG BROTHER— Waterman Fountain Pen. Pocketbook. Memorandum. Scrap Book. LITTLE BROTHER— Story Books. Paint Boxes. Stampkraft Books. UNCLE— Old Hampshirc Bond Sta- tionery. Pass Cases. SOLDIER BOY— Writing Paper. Playing Cards. Fountain Pen. CHRISTMAS CARDS, BOXES, SEALS, TAGS, WHITE TISSUE, TINSEL CORD, : POST CARDS. ADKINS CO. PRINTING 66 CHURCH STREET BIG SISTER— Manicure Set. Address Book. Fancy Boxed Stationery. Photo Albums. Jewelry Boxos. LITTLE SISTER— Paper Dolls. Picture Books. Pencil Boxes. Sealing Wax Sets, Letter Openers, Calendars. Tonrist Cases,