New Britain Herald Newspaper, May 13, 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)

The Most Ma‘%’éfi Love's Strugg Throughout the FI, oS e S FOX’S"THURS 125,000 PEOPLE 1,500 HORSES 1,200 CHARIOTS ; SHOWN FOR MONTHS IN NEW YORK AT $2 PRICES Some of the Stars Miriam Cooper, = Mae Marsh, Robert Harron, Lillian Gish, Constance Talmadge and E!mo Lincoln, Star of “Tarzan” SCALE OF PRICES: VELATIONS OF A WIFE By ADPELE GARRISON me in ind ing panic. “What have you donc demanded. There wag no change of expression in his face. But I fancied that into his eyes shot a flash of malicious en- jovment. Ile spread his hands in in- nt disclaimer “But suavely, nation that came near bhe- Madge Evaded the Keen Waiter's Eyes. ouldn’t control the consternation | when upon reaching the ver- of the inn I found Pete gone. ed upon the waiter following EENEY’S with mv dog?’, nothing, madame,” he said “I haven't seen the dog since madame took him out of the dining room. He is perhaps around at the kitchen door. The cook has a bull - terrier, too, and there are always bones and s there. shall T look JHIGH CLASS VAUDEVILLE B for him, or will he bite if I try to “BROADWAY REVIEW" bring him back, madame?' Beneath the humility of his manner there was a triumphant mockery. I was sure that he knew the where- abouts of the dog, and was only play- ing with my fears. T felt terribly b People Carload of Scenery ON PUES., WED. EARLE WILLIAMS P sk All at once alone ana nd (‘.m\.(r‘j p.\rf)‘mxn 4o !‘l\('lpln\!\', Had they killed poor Pete, AMERICAN LIVE WIRE or had he heen flung, a prisoner, ‘n some dark corner? And what did the conspirators in the dining room—for such I was now sure they were —mean to do with me? “THE SPIRIT OF THE RED CROSS" A al Scenes Taken a¢ the Battlefront and the Trenches. “He Will Come Back."” | The suspicion that the wine Mme. o B | Hofer had cent me was drugged didn’t NS THEAT_—R—E appear so improbable as it did in the dining room. The conviction that I —Hartford— was in personal danger of some kind selzed me with resistless forc My first impuls to take to my heels and run as fast as [ could. But a second thought told me the futility of such a course. If the people at the ALA OPENING ird Summer Season of OPERA PLAYERS New York Casino Speed Queen was TONIGHT the B e :\‘I‘t‘an‘rtmili)i: l|.n:':an to molest me, it “PLORA BEL fi:i;\n(‘\, \\f' \] ‘Ihln" "Hf‘fl vl"l'll\v)fllt' ef- R ter_friperd Ohorus —| L0 MOL L eRiesany, autlo. uns ieslits supern < gus And if, on the other hand, 1 my suspicions should prove to be FE—Tonight's Performance =a ground 1 B e iticket Street Mil < . would ecut a ludicrous I v ot Tewish figure, leaving my luncheon and un- I g ouncil Jewla. paid bill and running off like an in- n f ie woman WS—Nights, $1. 75c, 50C, 25¢,| There was but one thing to he done, fc. Matinces (Wednesday ‘and | to keep my poise. 1 resolred to wet ay), 50c, 25c, and 10c. Seats | as if I susp. oted nothing, and, turning for Entire Week. to the waiter, who was still standing at attenton, I explained my long hesi- tation in answering him “I was just wondering whether 1 ought to go and hunt him up mysels,” [ T said, “for he wouldn't let you touch him. But it isn't worth while. He will come back after a while. Ana [ now will you please bring me a chillea bowl, some anchovies, paprika ana 0il? This Wine is just the kind I wish for a favorite salad dressing of mine.” B. STANLEY HORVITZ, ist 327 Main St. Optician cent Production All Ti Tth's Colossal Cf pding iz $2 000, OOO Spectacle SINT OLEEANCE 3—DAYS ONLY—3 DAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY BY THE PRODUCER OF “BIRTH OF A NATION” 4--GREAT STORIES--4 See Ancient Babylon In All Regal Splendor, Massive Walls, 300 Feet High, Where Chariots Speed Madly to Destruction. It Stuns the Imagination. It Challenges the Senses. Mat., All Seat 17c. Ev’ Bal. 17c,0rc. 28c, Lo 9_c, oxes 55¢ “Certainly, at onc He before tary gleam tion n dressir mind, coiled hurrie salad brir such touchi meant Whe things table, “Did salad ? | I fer salad and ette a glass. Wor F paste classic gleam of triumph | wine, something which I couldn’t have | managed if the observant eyes in the ! dining room had heen on me. | For a moment or two 1 had a| respite from observing eves. My back was to the wall of the inn, my tabie between two windows in such a posi- | [ tion that only by leaning far out of | either could the people inside see what | 1 was doing. I Knew that I really must eat part of the salad if T meant to carry out | the scheme ng [ see me contents of the glass into the bowl of I knew look saw Me wiping my lips with m FADS AND FASHIONS | have flatter heels than in many a day before. ack madame. I will get thom, e, An Empty Glass turned I had way quic again cang in h which contirmed my det ot to iet a drop of wine pass With the excusc of the 1g 1 could pretend to drink the but not t momen- my sulad which had flashed into my a scheme at which my flesh re- even as my spirit urged it. With d, nervous fingers I grasped my fork and separated the salad, part of it above the rest in | a position that I could avoid nz it with the wine dressing 1 to make { en the waiter returned he set the for which T had asked upon the | and then asked deferentially: | 1 madame wish me to dress the thank vou,” I returned, “I pre- hurriedly pour most of the dressing which T had just made. that he would turn at the dooy | me, and when he did he - servi- empty s I put down the nearls men’s smartest new spring shoes velvet gowns trimmed with diamond trimming are of almost beauty WILLIAM FOX PRESENTS GEORGE WALSH BRAVE AND BOLD A mile-a-minute action story well seasoned with love .y Poore Sheehan Shg«l lzy Carl Harhaug}u Girl FILM CORORATION TODAY AND TOMORROW Also PEARL WHITE Ep. No. 7 HOUSE OF HATE In s You Know—and Others Now Playing THE GU Also SON OF DEMOCRACY GALA VAUDI’VLLE Spec1al Matinee for School Children at 4 o’Clock Teday and To- morrow. o e e e GEORG‘- WAI SH A’l FOX THEATER TODAY Would you like to have vour hreath almost taken away? Would yvou like yvou and your > Walsh, ta have something that will make vour forget business daily worries Go see Geor, the Willi x athletic thunderbolt, at ‘the theater today and tomor- row in his new photoplay, “Brave and Bold.’ The stary tion in it has a mile-a-minute and a laugh and a thrill ac- al- ILTY MAN § | marriage. ever heen given to the American pub- Jlie. When a picturization of the same story is flashed on the Lyceum theater screen this evening, New Britain audi- ences will have to admit that Broad- way was right, for seldom has therc «AHWoOds prserrs Hxs Broadwa)‘ Suocess dramatic inten- of such strength of plot and gen- all-avound excellence. This aft- ernoon the picture scored instantly as startling revelation, and it will be speated tomorrow and Wednesday. “The Guilty Man” Claudine Flambon, Marie Dubois, hat marry the owner of order that her child ume. Marie had been of Claude Lescuyer, a’ ris- lawyer, but his father de- cided that he must not rry out of his station in life. and ordered Marie to keep away from him. Her explana- tion that he must remain with her fell on deaf car: 11 to extricaté herself frem the predicament she married mhon Jighteen véars after Marie i found, a the home of Flambon, is under the tenement and his wife and Claudine occupy. Flamhon owes Jean Michand, owner of the building in which the saloon is located, a sum of money and expects o have Claudine, now grown to beau- tiful young womanhood, marry Mi- chaud in payment of the sum due. Claudine, however, iz in love with Gaston Marceau, an author, and plans to clope with him to escape the forced On the night she is to leave Michaud call and order a play of such (ldl relates the a ¥ n, been a sa- might the Par of whose mother, obliged loon in have a sweotheart voung 10 w ¥ the story. arudge in whase saloon the opening of Flambon and that Marie and her daughter celebrate the engagement of the girl and Mi- chaud in the loon. refuse Michaud leaves in 1bcking the door When they a roge, and Flamban, {of the apartment, rushes at Marle, t throwing Claudine to the floor. Sesioines; - { The seeing her mothor about to TR T AL, {he attacked, os a revolver and kills { Flambon. She is charged with mu der, is brought to court, and there it = e is found that Claude Lescuyer, the most every second. It is well fitteq!8irl's real father, who has risen to the to Walsh's steam-engine ways. It is|attorney-gencralship of Paris, is pre- adapted from “Four-forty at Fort|Siding. From this -point one may Penn,” by Perley Poore Sheehan, It} casily imagine the possibilities for dra- 2 - % 5 = S natic developments. e pla & o forces Geéorge to travel migh matic developments. The play is one shes home forcibly and makes that sma the Hidden Terror, and it is now pret- ty evident who this human monster is. This serial is one of the most thrilling of any shown as yet. Pathe News, and “Girls You Know," by Jameés Montgomer Flagg, support Gearge Walsh to good advantage “THE GUILTY MAN” ; AT LYCEUM TODAY | When Irene Fenwick, in peared on Broadway in A. H. Woods’ production, “The Guilty Man,” New York was taken by storm, critics de- claring the piece one of the greatest ! dramatic stage presentations that had 1914, :m.I | ! summenr | this evening [he a { money charitable works conducted by {the opening week, | melodramatic to dress it myself.” hut he finishes strong. & S RIS I put the anchovies in the chilled| He captures a billion dollar war ov- |2 deep imprint on one's memory. | bowl and mashed them, then addea|der from a foreign prince who Onjtheieamic, bl e ay anc Xyead : Z corce | nesday, a high-c vaudeville bill the oil and paprika, and finally a gen- | made an appointment for “Four-forty | f 3 levill crous allowance of wine. Then 1|at Fort Penn' with George. George's|Pe shown. The vaudeville acts are [ poured a glass of the wine, set It by |rival trics his best to keep George|Hary Brooks and Co in a sketch, my plate, and turned to' the waiter. | from the meceting and it is the ab- | The Old Minstrel Man,” which playea “Fleass take all this clutter away,” | stacles that George overcomes that |8t the Dig New Yark theaters: Brown I said with a hint of pettishness in my | makes for action and thrills. Why, he (and Taylor, a man and woman in a voice. “I haven't elbow Toom, even carries the prince from the hotel | COMedy singing offering, and Adlon | I took the glass of wine in my hand | just before the dynamite shatters the|2nd Co. two men in a comedy jug- [and held it up to the light, as if ad- | building and he has troubles of his|®ling oddity. miring it, and just as the waiter turned | own keeping his sweetheart from the = T e e away With the tray of salad dressing | power of his rival. OPERA PLAYERS OPEN | ingredients 1 raised it slowly to my 7 of “The House of Ilips. He saw me do that, but he didn't shows Pearl White pursued by SEASON AT PARSONS’ A representative Hartford audience of a size to fill Parsons’ theater assured for the inaugural of the third of the Opera Players The performance is to for the Council of who will use tha derived for the Market station fund and other the or- season testimonial Women, thus milk Jewish street tion lora Bella,” the New York Casino success exploited by John Cort two seasons ago, is the vehicle chosen for and it has all the £0 to make up a fine Tts score ripples with gems. It has a story . n elements that entertainment veritable | Adertvising HARTFORD Dignity andstyle are combinedin our SUITS [Simply Say “Charge It”’] HUNDREDS of the latest suits are here— | and you may choose any one you wish and say “Charge It.” A Dollar a Week will pay the bill without “extras” of any kind. | MEN’S SUITS . $16.75 MEN'’S SUITS . ... $18.00 MIEN:SESUITSESSN i ‘ and up to J | Hats Shoes Furnishings | One Thing Men Hate “She keeps at me, so0!” And if I'm ever such a fodl as to Once upon a time I found myself. { éay anything decent about another through the fact that I sometimes | woman, Goodnight! Bhe's everlast- emploved one of the parties,” in the | Ingly at me about that! queer, 1 unhappy position of board of arbitra- | should think her o pretty, when 1 tion for a husband and wife who |always used to prefer blondes. (his were finding it increasingly harder to | wife is a blonde). And what was be happy together, ad vet who did |I talking to this othér woman about, not really want to separate, coming up theé street, when I looked" Her chief complaint was that her | so interested? And maybe I wouldn't hushand had grown terribly irritable | be so cranky if I was married to her. and no longer seemed to take pleas. ure in her society, though she tried in every way to please him. “She Keeps At Me, So.” About Getting Home Harly. “Then, if we go anywhere she's al- ways at me about getting there early, and then she's at me about getting The man was less articulate, at | home early on aecount of the kids. Arst. He admitted his irritability “If it isn't one thing it's another, and deplored it. He knew she tried | —that'é ail” to please him, hut—and here he grew Later, 1 tried to translate this as red with the effort to express him- | &ently as possible to the wife. ‘% gelf and finally spluttered out the Tnstead of opening her mind and above: trying to understand, she burst into “She keeps at me, so.” tears of self pity “That’s the wayv “Doesn’t seem ag if I could stand | he is. all the time,” she said, “always it, sometimes.” he went on, “If I'm | finding fault with me!” reading, she’ll ask what I'm reading. The next day she wént at him If T sit thinking, she wants to know | about that, what I'm thinking about. She's al- And yet she says she would doé any- ways asking me what I've been doing | thing in the world to bring back the old harmony. Anything, T am afraid, but during the day. There's nothing I'm ashamed of (proudly), but I hate this try to giving an account of myself all the | realize that there is someéthing jn- time, herent in the masculine nature that “And then, she's always at me to [ resents being ‘‘cabbined, eribbed, con- do thig or that-——things she thinks I | fined,” oven by love and good inten- ought to do-—write my mother, or | tion# something like that. I supposeé she's right, sometimes, but her keeping at me, so, only sets me more against it. that appeals to the heart, while its at- mosphere and action is that of a cab- 1ot since two of the acts are laid in a famous public cafe in Petro- Menu for Tomorrow Breakfast, grad. Many old favorites are included in the cast of principals, notably Stewed Rhubarb Mabel Wilber, Howard Marsh, Dixie Cereal and Milk Blair, Edward Smith and Lillian Lud- Poached Eggs low, while the newcomers are Matt Rye Bread Hanley, Ainsley Lambert, TLouise Coffee Fvans and others. There 1s a big chorus that can sing and dance. Alon- Lunch. zo Price is director in charge of pro- Creamed Corned Beef duction and the musical director 1s Soft G 5./ Tony Bafunno. Theré will be eight i L’m-f;; E0okisy performances of “Flora Bella” with matinees on Wednesday and Saturday Dinner. e S Split Pea Soup EARLE WILLIAMS Baked Fish Mashed Potatoes ON KEENEY'S SCREEN Asperesis Dressed Lettuce Apple Pudding Coffee Earle Williams, Vitagraph international reputation, star of came to Creamed Corned Beef — Dira moving pictures because he wouldn’t [ enough cold corned besf to meaxura loaf all summer. He Was thoroughiy | a pint. Make one cupful white sauee, established as leading man on the|add tablespoonful minced celery and legitimate stage, but the usual idle- | keep hot at the side of fire for ten ness during the summer got on his| minutes before serving. nerves and he applied for extra parts at Vitagraph's Brooklyn studio. He possessed ideal qualifications for a motion picture actor and with the ad- Soft Ginger Cookiek—Cream to- gether each one cupful brown sugar and shortening. Add one scant table- vantage of a splendid stock training, | spoonful ginger, one scant tea- his advance w rapid and he never | &poonful salt, ene teaspoonful has loft Vitagraph. baking soda, one cupful molasses, one Me is seen to advantage in “An|half cupful boiling water and suffi- American Live Wire,” the Blue Rib- | cient flour to make a dough which bon feature, which will be the at-[ will Toll out easily. Roll in sheet, traction in Keeney's theater on Mon- | two-thirds inch thick, cut in rounds day, Tuesday and Wednesday. Grace|and bake in moderately quick oven. Darmond, one of photoplay's young- est and most beautiful stars, plays opposite him and in the supporting cast are Hal Clements, Miss Toner, Orral Humphries, Margaret Bennett, Oatcake is made with fine oatmeal, salted and mixed with cold water to a Stiff dough, then kneaded, rolled in a thin round cake and baked in a bak- and Malcolm Blevins. ing tin. Eat with plenty of butter,

Other pages from this issue: