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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 5, 1918, Theatergoers and Women Readers- VELATIONS By ADPELE Two Reasons Lillian Offered ® dge to Remain in the Hospital. other day and night at the hos- passed with no hint to me either Lillian or the nurse that there any immediate prospect of my home is puzzled me somewhat, for T feeling quite myself again. The | d in my arm wasn't a trouble- one, and I gathered from what Jnursé ana Lillian said that my unconsciousness had been due to | oss of blood T had sustained to- br with the terrific nerve strain fch T had been subjected, rather to the seriousness of the injury lelt a curious diffidence, however, oaching the subject to Lillian. was an indefinable austerity her that did not allow me to| t for an instant that I was a| er under her direction in the | e. This did not interfere with host loving care of me upon her | but I distinctly understood—and she meant me to understand ut direct words that she w: and of the situation, and th o g0 or to stay at her bidding. was not like Lillian, however, to se one jot of her authority need- or to keep anyone waiting for ation it was in her power %o 80 I kept my own counsel pa- in t 1 Thurs.-Fri.-Sat. ALLAGE REID MROCK JONES | rama of the Great § Outdoors | | b Time Vaudeville §| The Best Bill of the Season EENEY’S H CLASS VAUDEVILLE Bo—11c Eye. 11c—22c —— NELL SHIPMAN and ALFRED WHITMAN in IR FROM BEYOND.” Tatest O. Henry Story. Current Events. BULLS EYE SERIES Other Features. SEE OF A WIFE GARRISON that dey s soon as she speak awn ac she would ture of he folt that she could tiently, me about my cord Sa i sure the second to the hos say the nur x me up for the dav: | this modern feminivia L reward wasn't after surprised mornin my pital to hear had finished fi “Well, I thin edition of Job is entitled v Dear.” her that 1 wa of comin her after i iously, at smiled back didn't know any great amount returned “Don't exere patienc fib," retorted VY to Coo, Cenvenient, XS Comfortable TODAY ONLY WML HART in Bandit »nd the Preacher cd by an All Star Gladys Brockwell, eson, Rhea Mitchell, No. 14— THI EAGL EYE. KEYSTONE (COMEDY GAUMONT WEEKLY TTTOMORROW ONLY MAY ALLISON in SOCTIAL HYPOCRITES. A brilliant socicty dv in which the blighting influence of a lie is traced through two The Suppo Cast Rob't Episode vou've heen dy. vouwre going hom been too proud asy and I have heen proua of vour refi That is one of the most jualities of a first-clasg serv or woman—to know when to ask questions.” glowed with pleasure at on, for praise from to me. be ashamed to be a good pupil under vailr You know very well ing to know when but you have to ice not 1 mend means much “1 should thing else but tutelage,” id “Mer she lated, with 1 fetching Gallic shrug. “How the com- pliments are flying around this morn- ing!” Then her face grew grave dear,” she said. you that I don't for a few her com i an “I'm want “Se usly to tell vou to go home although vou are perfectly able leave the hospital this minute.” 1 am afraid my face showed my dis- appointment, although I tried to con- trol it. “I am at your disposal in all things, vou know that,” I answered quietly. She bent and kissed me “My Other Reason.” “You're my own brave girl,” said, a note of emotion in her voice. The next moment it was cool and crisp again. “Of course, you my Teasons.” “You need not on my account.” “I know that, but it's perfectly all right for me to do so. There are two reasons rectly with vour home.” My intuitian went unerringly to the one trouble spot in my home “You mean Cousin Agatha asked. sorry to a she returned. mother-in-law ctly,” “Did my about her “What she could in utes we had together. in-law is a brick, Madge. beginning to realize that “The realization has come to me Jately, too,” I said with a fleeting compunction for the times when I had thought my husband’s mother any- thing but a “brick. “She had Katie call me up yester- day when vour cousin was out for a walk,” went on Lillian, “and said that tell the few Your mother- I'm just a motor car, and suggested that you stay here until your wound healed so that she would not be able to guess that it had been caused by a revolver shot.” “T can see that she is perfectly right,” I said, and then waited. Lil- | lian had said she had two reasons for | my staying at the hospital. 1 guessed | that the second was the weightier of the two. | “My other reason,” she said slowly, | “involves something of a problem. It concerns the wounded officer down the | corridor.” | Complete instructions for homa canning and drying will be sent to the readers of this paper upon appli- cation to the National War Garden STANLEY HORVITZ, st 327 Main St. Optician LL THI Commission, Washington, D. C., en- closing a two-cent stamp for postage. S WEEK Garden Hose Gas Plates and Ovens Pyrex Cooking Utensils Wear-Ever Goods, Etc. A.MILL 80 Main Street. she | I shall tell | One of them is connected di- | 1 | you min- | Agatha believed you had been hit by | i AT FOX’S TODAY | was | | filmdom., | sreatest | brought | In | Mr. with | | generations. A powerful ne- DAINTY AFTERNOON FROCK OF VOILE | days yet, This afternoon frock of rose-printed voile, with trimmed and val lace finish, i L WILLIAM S. HART fashioned organdie William §. Hart in “The Bandit and the Preacher” is the main attraction at Fox’s theater, today, together, with Ep. No. 14 of “The Eagle's Eve.” en- titled “The Infantile Paralysis Plague”. the Gaumont Weekly and screaming Keystone comedy, Tt is the general consensus opinion that William S. Hart is one of the most popular screen stars in He is corrested to he the delineator of Western had- character that has over D before the puble. The charm of Mr. Hart’s characteriza- tion of the Western bad-man is in the natural way his personality adapts it- It to the part he attempts to depict “The Bandit and the Preacher’ the second of the super-features made by the W. H. Productions company, Hart is the typical bad man nof bad that the latent good qualit the man predominate. Tomorrow's attraction utifui May Allison, ites” a Dbrilliant of man in will al Hy- drama which the blighting influences of a-lie arc traced through two generations, The action takes place in Paris and Ton- don. and a great dramatic scene af- | fecting the fortune of two families is reipeated in the same London dramw- ing room thirty vears later. May Al {lison play the intensely Interesaing part of T.eonore Fielding. daughter of | a man falsely accused of eard cheat- ing. The lie ruins his life and bids falr to wreck her own. A distinguished | cast is seen in {this play including Joseph Kilgour, Henry Kolker, Frank Currier and Marie Wainwright, 'FADS AND FASHIONS Dotted navy foulards seem never to | 8o out of favor. in “So poc in a ar Mohair gains in favor comes more scarce. as wool be- Pale blue batiste is daintily trimmea pale pink ATl the tan shades continue good for suits and gowns. Navy blue serge bined with blue tulle. smartly com- As the season hats are noticed. advances more large skirts are of the season. Silk jersey prettiest among the Pony coats are in high favor for the { summer suit of silk. Braided black satin gowns always | have a certain distinction. When you chaeose vour percaie dress, choose a dotted one, | WASHINGTON SOCIETY LIKES MISS REILLE Miss Genevieve Reille, daughter ron Reille of the French high com- is one of the most the women war visitor States capital, sions have the so tertainments frequently have the cos- mopolitan aspect of similar events in | Tluropean capitals. BLUE RIBBON FEATURE ON KEENEY'S SCREEN ion, to the United The various war mis- contributed so much to c Alfred many of Whitman, Vitagraph' leading most man in successful native Chicagoan who took stage as a profession following his graduation from the Le Institute, in Chicago. His advance to leads rapid but he soon deserted the s ing stage for photoplay, where he ‘\. gistered most effectively in Vita graph's “The Divorcee”, Sunlight's Last Rail”, and “When Men Are | Tempted.” Playing opposite to his Jater successes in features has been even more marked, notably in “The Wild Strain” and 5 vanaugh of the Forest Rangers.” Mr. Whitman is seen in one of his strangest roles in “The Girl From Be- ! vond,” the Blue Ribbon feature, the }ntlrnclion at Keeney's theater. The author is Cyrus Townsend Brady and the director William Wolbert. Mr. Whitman is seen as the young Texas millionaire who swears geance on the fellow who drove his sister to suicide. He meets him later up the Nell Shipman, Blue Ribbon rid, but only as a protector at the re- quest of his dying partner and her brother. Nell Shipman has the leading fem- inine role and in the supporting c: are Bob Burns, Mrs. Hattie Buskirk, Fid Alexander, Patricia Palmer and Aw. Wing. Menu for Tomorrow Breakfast Oranges con Fried ham Muffing Coffee Ra & Broiled Eggs Tanch Fish Souffle Apple Sago Pudding Tea, Dinner Beef Rrown Sauce and Celery au Gratin Mashed Potatoes Fruit Coffee Roast Cheese Cook half hoiling a little lemon Sago Pudding cupful sago in five cupfuls water until transparent:; add salt and grated d of one Core and pples, arrange in buttered dish, fill cavities with sugar and sprinkle over lemon juice, bake until apple tender, adding one heaping teaspoon- ful butter before taking from oven Apple bakin Souffle--Mix two cupfuls cooked fish with two cupfuls mashed pota toes and Deat well, add onc cupfnl milk, seasoning of salt, pepper and paprika. Beat volks of four eggs un- til light, add fish mixture, when well blended, fold in stiffly beaten whites. Pour into buttered baking dish, bako for forty minutes in a moderate oven Fish For Women Who Wor Worry and “the blues” linked together, and in many due to some functional derange- ments which if not corrected may lead to more serious ailments. More out-door life, sleep, water-drinking and a few weeks’ treatment with that good old-fashioned root and herb remedy, Lydia B. Pinkham's Vege- able Compound, will revitalize and strengthen the tem and work wonders for any woman. If you are prone to worry and ‘“the blues’ try it.—advt. Y usually cases Dark linen frocks are fantastic designs with thread. stitched in white cotton | 1 l I | 1 | of | one of the best parts in hi 1 life of Washington that en- | o i since Monday screen portrayals of Western life, is a | ven- | ceking the girl he himself had mar- | | Jones” »opular of | Wild | three w WALLACE REID AT LYCEUM TOMORROW w will days of morrow e Reid at the the week afternoon. the the popular Jones" three matinee to “Rimrock | miner, | star 1 ail he in “Rimrock Lyceum the I with a As copper picture st Arizona moving s s | CE REID /»Rimrock Jones’ career he- the camera. There is the rough, | and woolly stuff that delights and there is the society life and scenes in New York's famous hotel which appeals to the theatergoers. The vaudeville bill will be one of the best that played the theater during the season. Duffy & Inglis singing and talking comedians, lead the bill. They recently played the Palace theater in New York, which plays nothing but the higgest acts in audeville, Lawrence & Kdwards in a comedy offering “The Pension Offi- cer™ and Gaffney & Dale, in a come- dy offering complete the bill. The fi performance of which has pleased large will be given ill he Dorothy for has the bill audiences tonight. The picture Dalton in “Flare-Uy VEILS SUITABLE FOR MOTOR USE RS, TPhoto by Vestern Newspaper Unioni B This two-in-one veil, suitable for general use or motor use, is extremely smart and may be worn in two or ¥s. When arranged so as to cover the e, it an attr tive oriental effect, or, as shown her ap- pears as a complexion veil HOUSEHOLD NOTES If butter should be worked salted. This will ness, o sives becomes a littlo over and restore the strong it | slightly sweet- When cooking ve hecome discolored with a damp ashes. sels of granite iron rub them dipped in coal | outside, cloth Rice pudding that is and stirred often will than that is balked out stirring. baked he n quicily slowly o rich | one with- | A simple leaves the delicious cakoe in the batter. to pe. pouring flavor is by layir pan given frash cake hefore in No he fluffy i It should go to the table light be the ked it potato 1 will wait to ht from and eaten st oven | Make a blankets clean a be well lawn you case for fine, want them to stay time. But they should | heavs if © long aired | Sometimes it is possible to make | a lunch cloth from the worn table cloth. Cut out the whole center, fin- ish the edge with a rather heavy c cheted lace, set in a piece of insertion | to match, forming a in | the center. large square | I If the handkerchiefs are yellow. the | that they have not been | washed. overcome this reason is properly To | yellow color, put the handkerchiefs in | cold wateér in which there is kerosen about one tablespoonful to a qua ‘ and shaving of a good laundry soap. | Let the handkerchiefs hoil in this for | about three hot Take them ont, dry in thae sun, and they will he snr\w\‘l white. This treatment will apply ml any linen or white clothing. No Fxtras NEW SUMMER STYLES Dainty, Cool Garments that will make you feel cool just to look at them-—the cream of the Summer Fashions, ready to put on. Select what you need and say “Charge it.” WASH SKIRTS -$1.98, $2.98, $3.98 and upward. WASH DRESSE $7.08, $8.98, $9.98 and upward. NEW WAISTS—In Lingerie and Silks—$1.29 up. SKIRT: SUITS—COATS SPORT PAY U TRIMMED HATS—SUMMER SHOES SILK DRESSES—ETC. A DOLLAR A WEEK SIDE TALKS BY RUN OCAMERON Too Much Humility Carry any virtue to an extreme and you come pretty near getting a vice. Humility is one of the finest of the Christian virtues but when humility is carried to an obtrusive extreme, when it becomes Self assertive it loses its essential quality and be- comes, if not a vice, at least an an- noving fault. This fact has been Frought home to me recently by a woman who has the habit of running herself down. She is always talking about her faults and deficiencies. One of them is the fact that she looks older than her husband. She does, somewhat, but one might forget the fact if she did not give it so much prominence. Whenever she meets new people, she makes reference to this fact, exag- cerating it and making altogether too of an issue of it. She Shies Off the Road. think T know why she does it. is onc of those people who par- detest pretense amd subter she has always shied away until she shied off the road on the other side. She can't b to have people think she isn't conscious of this disparity of appear- ance, and so she bores and -embar- russes them by making too much of it Self depreciation is sometimes a forn: of vanity. 1 have known people who kept their cgos in the center of he itional stage hy the sim- much 1 She ticularly fuge, and from them conver: CUTICURA “‘My face and neck were covered with small water blisters. The skin was very sore and inflamed, and later a crust formed on my face and neck. ‘The itching and burning were 8o in- tense that I scratched and I could not sleep. The breaking out later devel- oped into large sore eruptions, and my face was so disfigured for thetime being that I could only see the members of my family. I used Balm, and Salve, but without success. The trouble lasted five weeks before using Cuticura Soap and Ointment. I got relief in about a week, and I used two cakes of Cuticura Soap and two boxes of Cuticura Ointment when I was healed.” (Signed) Mrs. F. H. Corson, Box 12, Lochmere, N. H., July 16, ’17 Make your skin beautiful by usin; Cuticura Soap daily for the toilet, an Cuticura Ointment .for first signs of pimples, redness or roughness. Sample Each Free by Mail. Address post- card: “*Cuticara, Dept. R, Boston." Sold evervwhere. Soap 25c. Ointment 25 and 50c. ple expedient of talking continually about their own faults. Of course those to whom thev ran themselves down would politely deprecate the faults they ascribed to themselye: and long discussions of their persén- ities would follow. metimes They “Get ‘With” I particularly hate this kind of fishing. Sometimes of course a con- versation of its own accord takes the turn of personal analysis, and it would be undue reticence not to ad- mit and deplore a fault. But to hear anyone deliberately try to fish up compliments by baiting the hook with self depreciation makes me good anc sick. I'm never very sorry when I see them pick the wrong kind of fishing ground and catch a sculpin! On the contrary! Come TUp " An Inside Bath Makes You Look and Feel Fresh Says a glass of hot water with phosphate before breakfast keeps lliness away. This excellent, common-sense health measure being ! adopted by milllons, I | Physicians the world over recom- mend the inside bath, claiming this is of vastly more importance than out- side cleanliness, because the skin i pores do not absorb impurities inte | the blood, causing ill health, while the pores in the ten yards of bowels do. Men and women are urged to drink each morning, before breakfast a | glass of hot water with a teaspoonful | of limestone phosphate in it, as a | harmless means of helping to wash | from the stomach, liver, kidneys and howels the previous day's indigestible material, poisons, sour bile and toxins; thus cleansing, sweetening and puri- fving the entire alimentary canal be- fore putting more food into the stom- ach. Just as soap and hot water cleanse and freshen the skin, so hot water and limestone phosphate act on the elim- | inative organs. | Those who wake up with bad breath, coated tongue, nasty taste or have a dull, aching head, sallow com- plexion, acid stomach; others who are | subject to bilious attacks or constipa- | tion, should obtain a quarter pound of limestone phosphate at the drug store. This will cost very little but is sufficient to demonstrate the value of inside bathing. These who continue it cach morning are assured of pro- nounced results, both in regard to health and appearance.