New Britain Herald Newspaper, May 9, 1918, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD. THURSDAY, MAY 9 1918. — News or Theatergoers and Women Readers ———— A EVELATIONS OF A WIFE]| INDIGESTION AND By ADELE GARRISON | Madge Interrupted in the Din- {ng-Room of the O1d Inn. atevor embarrassment my pres-: came at her qualnt old inn eaused Hofer she managed to conceal jutifully, Only a constant, watch- rained look in her eyes told me | ghe wished me anywhere in the but on her lawn asking for 1l luncheon dishes. And in her y to appear cordial she became dve. , hew lucky!” she exclaimed. “T EW VAUDEVILLE ‘DREAMLAND” GEORGIA EMMETT ALEXANDER and FIELDS The Aristoeratic Hoboes VIVIAN MARTIN “The Sunset Trail” BURTON HOLMES SCREEN TELEGRAM CHRISTIE COMEDY FRI. & 0X'S " for Those Who Discriminate Should a Woman Be Condemned for One Misstep? SEE IS BROCKWELL TN “HER ONE ‘MISTAKE” ‘Wonderful 5-Part Fox ama of Great Intensity —ALSO— Episode No. 3 [E WOMAN IN THE WEB NEW SUNSHINE COMEDY [UTT and JEFF PATHE NEWS TONIGHT THEDA BARA e Soul of Buddha OOMING NEXT WEEK GRIFFITH'S GREAT 8th WONDER INTOLERANCE > o . EENEY’S HIGH CLASS VAUDEVILLE WHITE and WHITE 5 VIOLIN BEAUTIES EUGENE TROUPE LOUISE LOVELY “A Rieh Man’s Darling” BULLS EYE ‘With EDDIE POLO CURRENT EVENTS, In * RbONS’ THEATRE Toxmfl'r A’I‘ 8:15 Attraction of Regular Season 8§ HILL'S BIG MINSTRELS . PRICES—25¢ to $1.00. Today for the Opening of the OPERA PLAYERS Monday, May 13, with the York Casino Success, “FLORA BELLA” CE Nights, 10c to $1; Mats., and Sat,) 10c to &0c. Season Reservations Being Made Now. 1veYourEues SEE TANLEY HORVITZ, 327 Main St. Optician | tion have some chickens, beauties, ready | to go on the fire this instant. They | were ordered for a lot of people Who | in unexpectedly a little while | ago—not my regular customers, un-| derstand—and I'll just steal one of those for you. They are pigs, anyway, it won’t hurt them to wait ittle! And now what else do you want? If you are so hungry, you won't want to wait long. What you bet now, I re- member just what you liki Shall 1 tell you?” ‘“Please do!” but inwardly I and appraising the had just made. There was false rir Hofer was a shrewad wom: with an eve to main chance. It wasn’t lik her to inconvenience a large party for the benefit of onc patron. Either she was telling a falsehood in order to flatter me-—something which for some reason or other I didn't e was giving me the fowl on ('Ount of some concealed motive of her own. a I said enthusiastic: H”), little spee g to it. Mme. A Feat of Memor, I had it! She couldn't refuse to | serve me altogether for fear of arous- ing suspicion, but she could hurry my luncheon so as to get me away from i the place as soon as possible. I ven tas I ened to her I was resolving to ‘]|n;:m' as long as I could over the luncheon. “You will wish,” | saying reflectively- | forehead in a palpable | register absorbed thought—‘new po- tatoes from Virginia, ereamed, fresh asparagus tips, right from our own bLed, a salad of romaine, watercress znd chives, some large strawberries with the stems, and a pot of coffee with those little cakes—you remem- ber?* “I remembered perfectl I said, and indeed, the menu she recited was a familiar one to me. The dishes were especial favorites of Dick: and mine. It was a more elaborate and expensive luncheon than I had planned, but although the dishes were all those which Tequired little time for cooking, I could linger over so bounte- ous a luncheon indefinitely Sharpened Wits. “That will do splendidly!” I said. “And now I'll freshen up a bit while ¥Fm waiting, if you don’t mind.” 1 started toward the house as if it were the most natural thing for me to lead the way. Mme. Hofer muttered | an exclamation beneath her breath, which only suspicion-sharpened ears like mine could have heard. The next moment she had caught step with me, and was smiling broadly, a smile that I was sure hid anger, perhaps fear. “I will take you to my own bath- room,” she said confidentially. “These people here today are running all over the place, and it will be pleasanter for you in my own apartment. Just come round this way."” She started around the side of the house. But T affected not to hear her. “How pretty the place is this year. claimed. Are the big has IH and ng-room quaint as 1nust have at them. have been homesick i place.” Mme. Hofer was two fingers at her attempt to I ] as a look fair i for I Tan lightly up the steps and into | the wide hall with as good an imita- of feminine impetuosity as I | could muster. And as I reached the | arched entrance into the dining-room I saw why Mme Hofer had tried to | get me to come around to the side | door. | For if ever a delegation from Fatherland sat in council it was the party of perhaps eight men and two women who surrounded a large table made up for the occasion in the rear of the room. They were talking gut- turally in their native tongue, but as I entered one of the men said some- the Curran’s Tomorrow, | Friday 160 Joubet Pink Massage Cream. 15¢ Vanishing Cream. 15¢ Cold Cream. 15¢ Taleum Powders. . 15¢ Nursery Talcum Powder. ... 15¢ Benzoin and Glycerine Lotion 250 Kiss Me Face Powder 250 Kiss Me 85¢ Kiss Me s abe Me Toilet Water 36¢ Kiss Me Rouge. . 10e Trial Bottle 10¢ 10c | 17¢c | 17¢ ! 25¢ tlcum Powder . Perfume. 25¢ 25¢ Te 39¢ 19¢ 59¢ 25¢ Cutex Nail En.’lm(‘l. 75¢ Demiracle Hair Remover 35¢ Freezone Corn Remover. ... 25¢ The Gurran Dry Goods Co. 381 to 385 MAIN STREET. believe—or | | hastily hands elean while polishing shoes. CONSTIPATION Quickly ‘Religved By “Fruit-a-tives” Rocuox, P. Q. I suffered for many years with Zerrible Indigestionand Constipation. A neighbor advised *“Fruit-a-tives” (or Fruit Liver Tablets). I tried them. To the surprise of my doctor, I began to improve and he advised me to go on with ““Fruit-a-tives’. I consider that I owe my life to *Fruit-a-tives” and I want to say to those who suffer from Indigestion, Constipation or Headaches — try “Fruit-a-lives” and you will get well”’s CORINE GAUDREATU. 50c. a box, 6 for $2.50, trial size 2; At dealers or from FRUIT-A.TIVES Limited, OGDENSBURG, N. Y, thing in a quick undertone, ang twe or three broke into careless conven- ional remarks couched perfect English. Bottles and the remains of a first course showed that they were cele- brating some event. The papers of the day before had chronicled a German victory. I hadmo doubt that no mat- ter what the reason for their being together, they'd been drinking to the ccess of the Teutonic arms, and 1 also sure that they had counted upon Mme. Hofer's be vent any unfriendly pe tering the dining-room. To make conviction sure, my sharpened by the stress of the ment, distinctly saw the ecdge of a small silk German flag peeping out from the blousc of one Woman's gown, where she had evidently thrust 1t when they saw me in the grounds outside. HOUSEHOLD NOTES Apples added to f} make a great improver in ey mo- rhubarb ent, pie Ice cream that is coarse grained has been frozen too quickly. Put raisins in rice pudding and you won't have to use sugar. Olive oil excellent with cabbage, lettuce or beet tops. is boiled s | Skirts should be suspended from the | bottom on the clothesline. Griddle cakes can be many of the allawed cereals—rye, bran, buckwheat, cornmeal. 1f chiffon proves hard to cut evenly, pin it on a stiff piece of paper and cut both paper and chiffon. made with | 1 Tt is convenient to keep gloves in the shoe hox a pair of old to keep the The careless use of soap spoils the hair—it must be washed out very thoroughly before the hair is dried. Chicken legs can be scalded, skin- PRETTY DANCE FROCK IN PALE PINK TAFFETA 1 | | | { | jand it There is no qu ion about the de- lighted appreciation this palest of pink danec frocks will excite this summer. Taffeta was used in the making, draped into simple lines and caught up at the sides with a small bunch of ri LYCEUM OFFERING “TROUBLE BUSTER” A story of wandering childhood, un- limited adventure and true love, un- raveled in thousands of feet of film on a mation picture screen under the title of “The Trouble Buster” brings | to the Lyceum theater for the latter | part of this week, Vivian Martin, known throughout the motion picture firmament as “M Merry” because of her sunny, childishly care-free disposition, and adniired and loved millions of motion picture enthus- sts for her charm, ability and cap- tivating beauty, “The Trouble Buster”, without Vi- vian Martin, would be a good picture because it tells an interesting, trus story, and has the advantages of set- ting and scenario that must be pos- sessed if the production is to be a tccess, but “The Trouble Buster”, with Vivian Martin, is somethi ned and put into the soup pet. If esss are x7lmn\ make them inte a dinner dish and save the meat. Boiled rice can form part of child’s school lunch to save bread. be cooked on top the a Apples can more than a good pieture; it is an ex- cellent production, a masterpiece in its depiction of the hardships of life that fall t an orphan and highly in- teresting in the manner the writer adopts in unfolding the heart-grip- ping story. The vaudeville bill today, tomorrow and Saturday, includes ( rgia Em- stove quite as well as in the oven. Teach fthe children to use honey as much as possible to save sugar. A pinch of salt should be added to all cakes and to most puddings. Apples and oranges will keep bet- ter if they do not touch each other, Salsify is a very wholesome vege- table which should be better known. from the soup bone nt addition to soup. The marrow malkes a pleas Cornstarch should be cooked fif- teen minutes to be cooked thorough- 1y. The fruit that is in season should be xnzuh, most of, especially for des- Why not bring “SAFETY FIRST” Mowv nt Right Home by Using ONLY our PASTEURIZED Milk and Cream, for Qurs is the only properly Pasteurized Product Sold in New Briwin, J. E. SEIBERT & SON, 101 PARK STREET. Telephone 1936, mett, Irish singing comedienne, Alex- ander and Fields, and “Dreamland”, a singing travesty with three men and one woman. This is one of the best bills offered at the Lyceum this season. Menu for Tomorrow Breakfast Oranges Oatmeal with Milk Sausages a la Creole tolls Coffee Lunch Potato Croquettes Peanut Sandwiches Compote of Fruit Sweet Wafers Tea. Dinner Boiled Fish Boiled Potatoes Peas Celery Salad Wafers Stewed Figs Coffee Sausages a la Creole—Prick \ho! sausages, place in a frying pan, hall cover with cold water, heat rapidly and boil until the water evaporates. Turn frequently until browned, then pour over them a pint of well sea- sened tomato sauce. Cover draw to one side and simmer teen minutes. for 1t | | | | | | and children | 1 | | | pest drug store | dr i view THIS WEAK, NERVOUS WOMAN TO0K VINOL Made Her Strong and Well Wis.—"I was in run-down, anaemic th my hou inol was v made certainly strength creator —Mr John Vinol is a itutional run-down Barneveld, nervous. tion, so burden. a weak, condi vork was commended, 1t and and strong the st tonic I have ever Lewis. cod liver and remedy for weak, neryous, conditions of men, women Your money will be re- turned if it does not help you. The Clark & Brainerd Co., Drug- gi ; Liggett's Riker-Hegeman Drug Stores; John J MeBriarty; Nathan | Noveck; W. Russell, t in every town and city me iron con- in the country. | “HER ONE MISTAKE" FOX'S OFFERING The many followers ma at Fox's who rockwell in * Devil's Wheel” two weeks ago, remember her wonde versatilit in portraying dual roles, 1d in her latest feature, “Her Onc Mistake” M Brockwell in pre- sents a dual role, two characters that [ ly dissimilar hose who the pict will be prised the change in Miss Brockwell's ap- pearance. In her second character she h:u ehanged her ypearance en- tirely by making up F The transforn 1\\\"\ is ay Miss T Ithy of the photo- aw Gladys he ag are © by In t appear: who has been bk who is posing Some vears later ed to the district city when the crook reappears, tr time in court. He is convicted. A young girl who loves him pleads with the court for an op- portunity to say good-bye, Miss Brockwell helps her. Still later, when the crook. escapes, he confronts tha two girls. The end is stir and sensational. Miss Brockwell does some very splendid work in this play. Episode No. 3 of “The Woman in the ‘Web,” entitled “The Speeding Doom,"™ shows Prin Olga and Tawford from the r s of the bridge, after the American miraculously escaping it has been blown up by the German agents, and then Lawford is captured by Siberian Cos only to be aft- erwards rescued the princess who wears the uniform of a slain Cos- sack. By desperate horseback riding they catch a train for Vladivestock, being chased by their pursuers, who have commandeered and American locomotive. They being rapidly overtaken the when Ivan, , throws a teh and hurls suing locomotive into a ditch. a gripping serial alive with . A very funny Sunshne com- edy, “His Neighbor's Keyhole,” the Pathe New nd Mutt and Jeff com- plete a gre week and bill, fully up to the customary Fox standard, which is the “Best for the Diseriminate a lured as a wealthy man. this girl is eng: attorney of her we aws heir i Dy hy FADS AND FASHIONS Black made wi -hiffon L very gowns are long st ometimes jght skirts. Some of the loveliast pastel shades seen are in crepe de chine wa the llm 10‘(‘mhlmv mes seen at Evening Hindoo ar theater. is superior machine work, re- two ) with two table- Potato Croquettes—Mix fuls hot mashed potatoes tablespoonful hot milk, spoonfuls melted butter, one tea- spoonful salt, few grains cayenne, dust of paprika, one tablespoonful chopped parsley, few drops onion juica, Beat well; add two egg yolks: shape into croquettes; dip in flour, beaten egg and bread crumbs; fry in smoking hot fat; drain and serve hot, cup- one Tomato sauce is far more savory when seasoned with just a sliver of onion. sults that beat the old method of laborious hand labor—Ict us show you how we launder best shirts, collars, ete. Union Laundry Corp,, 266 ARCH ST. taken.” | ul | v BY RUTR Did yvou the sound ing? In church, minister us to from disassociate its mean- ever try of a word ago, the which the me weeks a sentence in word glory occurred. As he rolled {out that word in his low, musical | voice, T felt one of those little quiv- lers of emotion travel up and down | | my spine. And it wasn't the context. | li'\(' quite forgotten what that w i ¢ was purely tho music in that word | glory. Affer that, 1 fell to studying words ind was interested to see how almo inevitabiy it is the words with “L’ and “1 in them that have that mu- sical quality. Most Beautiful Words in | Our Language. | | [ | i One of the You may have heard of the Fyench- | man who said he thought our lan- ge had so many beautiful words in it, and when asked for an example | rolled out. the word “cellar door.” Of course that is amusing, but say it | over to vourself, trying the while to ! :te it from the meaning and 1 see how right one of the most beautiful he was. { In pas- ' TALK CAMERON Words as Sounds sages in Wordsworth, the “glory” occurs: “Whither is fled that visionary gleam' Where is it now, the glory and the dream.” Was ever anything more musical, except music itself? And just see the and “Rs”, One Reason Why We Verses. Take, again, that passage in the Bible most of us love so well without having much idea of what it means the last chapter of Ecclesiastes. Loo at the (to me) most beautiful verse: “Opr ever the silver chord be loosed or the golden bowl be broken."” What music! And what a gathering of Ls and Rs, Of course 1 do not mean to present this as an original notion. T realize that it is an undeystoed linguistic principle. “L"” -and “R!' .are the liguids. I merel as an int T Comonem word Love Certain a rour attention to It recall your > ing fact. “RICH MAN’S DARLING” KEENEY'S ATTRACTION | | The attraction for the last thrce‘ | days of this week at Keeney's the- cter will be “A Rich Man's Darling,” with Louise Lovely as Julie Le Fa- brier, Madame Swan’s most attrac- tive dress model, who was always dreaming of romance, with a capital She didn't exactly envy Mme. Ricardo, whose dresses so wonderful- ly fitted her, and all the other smart customers, but she had her visions or.d when she saw a picture of Lee Breoks, the millionaire sportsman in a paper, all the day dreams wore his plessant face. But Lee had his troubles. His father was dissapating fortune every few weeks on that same Mme. Ricardo, who thought hier own husband safely engaged in a spring revolution in South America, 3, chanee sight of him chapged her pians from a trip to the Grand Tides tha j than Afternoon gowns are apt to showg greater skirt fullpess than tailored costumes, In millingry there is more of straw there was last year, and this r's straw is smooth and fine plait. { Little of the “door mat” variety is tc be seen. hotel at Moose Bgy to a quiet hiding place in the npext town. But she had ordered her new gowns sent to the Grand Tides, and Julie was sent there with them. Old Man Brooks was-geing there too, but Lee hecid- ed to beat him to it and have a look : expensive beauty. Through a series of events, which Julie | took as part of the Romance, it was the little seamstress that he found | dining in madame's gowns and in her name. Lee was a swift young man, and he did not stop until he had cloped with the supposed rich man’s carling. ‘When the papers came out { the next morning with this lieadline, Young Hunter Poaches on His her's Preserves,” there was the devil and all to pay, with arrests disownings and tearful brides, until {oid Mason Brooks decided that. he i found a very acceptable recom- | bense for his lost darling in his new | caughter. | Three very good acts of vaudeville | | with The Five Violin Beatuties as the headliner, White and White, singing and dancing, and the Tugene Troupe, consisting of eight acrobats conclude | the program. | | ARPET CO. 219 Asylum Street, HARTFORD. DR. CLINTON J. HYDE. ARE YOU BOUND FOR THE SORAF HEAP? “Doctor, I am not sick, but I don’t feel right”” That is what many day to me when they come to see me the first time. And that just expiressesy it. You are not sick enoughto go to bed. You can eat, you cafn sleeg you can work. I But you dew’t work with ‘the vim and zest of former days. Your sleep and you don't enjoy your food as you once did. And your nerves get the best of you. Things bother you, ruffle you, that you nevél. noticed before. You begin to see difs ficulties where there really are none, Trifles warry you, and not having enough troubles of your own, you borrow some, is not restful, Of course, to a casual observer, you seem the same, because you are try- ing to control yourself. And if you should tell a friend, or go to an -in- experienced doctor, they will tell you you only imagine things; you should shake it off. You begin to doubt your- self. You sometimes think they are right and try to brace up and be bright and cheerful. But then your old feeling will come back. with re- newed vigor. You begin to wonder if it really is your mind «nly. And if It is so, is it the first step to insan- ity? Anguishing thoughts begin tor- turing you; you are trying your best to fight them down, to appear happy, but in n. You find yourself in the grip of an invisible power that seems to sap your life blood. And when you feel your strength energy and power slipping away fror you, when you find you can't do jus- tice to your work any longer, then vou become despondent and might va THE NEW RUGS! Exclusive Patterns Charming Shades The new Rugs that tend to add cheer and real home com- fort are here in variety. High Pile Axminsters Wiltons—All Grades Body Tapestry Brussels Brussels Without question there's a Rug here for every home anpd at the exact price you wish to pay. Inspection invited. You are very much in the same condition as a delicately constructed engine, which has not been cared for right. Put it in the hands of an ex-m» perienced man and he will soon have it in fine working order, But trying your own hand at it, or turn it over soon be fit for the scrap heap Let me save you from the scrap heap! DR. CLINTON, J. HYDE The Hartford Specialist, 373 ASYLUM ST., COR. FORD ST. HARTFORD, CONN. Hours—10 to 4 and 7 to 8. Sundays and Holidays 10 to 1.

Other pages from this issue: