New Britain Herald Newspaper, August 21, 1918, Page 4

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"MbOrton "Miss Katherine S0 I had to get her sam And then Miss Lillian{f§xpects Savarin and his sister, Mrs. Cos- e, on the train from the Catskills morning r'hay ought to be here soon_and, of pse, - Miss in wants breakfast them. They're going to take little Marion back with them right y, so that it won’t be necessary to her that her grandmother is dead. ow I've mussed up the kitchen a but T didn't know where things I'm so glad you're here to take rn ng to was palpably nervous, for talking s to Betty was like reading at sight heet of unfamiliar music. I had dea when I might strike the wrong But I rattled on, giving her no e to reply, until I saw the harsh s fade out of her face and her eyes en. I was unprepared, however, to r her give one of her loud, rollick- laughs, sure sign with Betty that was in high good humor. No Secret to Betty. Miss Madge, your time's * she said, wiping her eye hit to be an exhorter at ct All the poor sinners would in' over theirselves t'get to ire wast- You be the Last Showing of JACK PICKFORD “HIS MAJESTY BUNKER BEAN” in e VAUDEVILLE o THURSDAY WM. S. HART in his brand new picture “BLUE BLAZE RAWDEN" —o VAUDEVILLE NEW POLITE VAUDEVILL Triple Feature Vaudeville Bill. WHITNEY’S DOLLS. THE McPHERSON! A COMEDY SKETCH. MARGUERITE CLARK in “THE SEVEN SWANS.” A Big Vitagraph Feature. sKk 8. STANLEY HORVITZ, st 327 Main St. Optician mp meet- | NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 21, 1918, fclared with rine and 1 ful to keep “both you the br s, and I'll eat in a have to do our ¢ ost dehihs gertherine our ability \fix yau up R An’ then way I'll get eakfast for ‘here is Mi. nded, turn- jpected me of | pd hiding her 1 = Miss Marion,” T ! fthe truth if T | an interview | surely don't | breakfast for | er.’ i anybody abou Bompany hreakfast | jgtty to start for the | eeble-Minded,” she “I just wanted to fix Bottee and stuff it she | 1 would waken her a | gfore the time for their ar- | 8n vou can take her a cup of | "ou wish. But I'm sure she ¢ to take the rest of her st With her guests [ou don’t need to tell me nuthin’ ! that,” Betty replied with a chuc- “I just guess she will want to eat | ‘em. I ain’t got eyes in my head othin’. Now get along with you. | kot something to do this morning, a And as we “got along,” hiding our | smiles as best we could, I realized that | Lillian’s carefully hidden admiration for Robert Savarin was no secret o the faithful servitor in her kitchen. Dainty Marguerite photo play “The Seven Sw most bewildering, cinating, zling, marvelous production the Para- mount Arteraft Co. ever presented. An entire fairyland with mountains, lakes, rivers, houses and palaces was built especially for this wonderful and pretentious spectacle. The gorgeous gowns worn by the hundreds of women and children required months of labor by expert costu Mar- guerite’s entrance into Fairyland in a golden chariot drawn by twelve white horses is undoubtedly the most | geous scene in this tale of the land of | make-believe. The king’s palace on | the princess’ wedding day, the seven brothers changin into swans, the gondolas on the river at moonlight and the flight of the fairy queen over | the mountains are a few of the many | bea iful scenes in this photo play. | Not content with one , mount Artcraft feature on | program, the management | nishes a Vitagraph special : genuine thrille with | Ocean the locale, a bi vessel submarined at daybreak makes the audience gasp with astonishment {and how this marvelous feat is complished is a testimonial to motion picture industry. The beautiful and flowery Santa Clara Valley furnishes the background erial. “Br Bullets™ ode the hero is compelled | to ride a horse through a gorge; mo- }munmmy he expects to be killed, but his old friend comes to the rescue just lin time. TFollowers of this serial will be particular] interested in the new | characte introduced in this episode The current events contains many views of the American dough bo the launching of a new battleship, gor- big 1 the big also fur- This is a the Pacific oceangoing AY ac- the | for the new | In this epis ss The Big CONNECTICUT FAIR \ Ranc . | ! Grand Circuit Meeting | Opens Labor Day, Sept. 2-6 | Charter Oak Park, Hartford $35,000 in Purses $50,000 in Premiums Feature Exhibit: “CON TICUT AT WAR” By the State Council of Defense. Government War Pictures. Spectacular Fireworks Displays. The Great Midway. ADMISSION Adults—T73c. Days, 50c. Nights. Children—25c. Day or Night. No War Tax. Men in Service Free. Excursion Rates on All Railroads. Gates Open: 9:30 a. m. to 11 p. m. | | esting | il b i being a DAUGHTER ALWAYS TIRED Mother S Completel 's Vinol Built Her Up and - Restored Her Health. Long Island City, N. Y.—"“My daughter is a milliner and she got in- to a rundown condition, pale and had no appetite. After other medicines failed help her. Vinol gave her a good appetite, built her up and com- pletely restored health.” H. Oftt The T in this c to and cod liver peptones, iron and man- ganese petonates and glycerophos- phates, the very elements needed to build up a weakened, rundown tem, and create th sys- strer Liggett's John J. W. H. Everywhere. their inter- events prominent men of affairs in various duties and many more views of ,important throughout the world. The cducational film always has some entertaining and instructive of the making of various things d to supply the country in wartime. This week the management urated a new policy of placing four 'ts on the vaudeville These acts come direct from the i t circuit in America, so that the patrons are assured of seeing the ig mammoth | best acts the vaudeville field contains this vicinity acts as other theater in h such high clas and no can furn Keeney’s. Whitney's Dolls, a with four very clever a high class singing act, some original comedy. Godfrey and Doyle, a musical oddity, people, present introducing big favorite Mrs. | : JACK PICKFORD IN | | l = | | . | | inau- | team on the Keith circuit, bring some | stories that convulse the audience, the originator of eccentric dancing. The McPhersons, with Scotch songs and dances, are the best in their line that have played this popular theater. The Three Larneds with big cycles and little cycles, do some very clever | ridging. of the features on the double photo play program for the last half of the week is Billie Burke in “Let’s Get a Divore The other feature Blue Bird drama. One | Virginia Recipes | VIRGINIA RECIPE Beef Stock for Soup. Put on a shin of beef in six quarts of water. Boil all day slowly; it will hoil down to three quarts. For the first half hour skim well. No sea- soning. Use either for soups ar gra- vies. Mullagatawny Soup. Boil a chicken down to a rich gravy Take another chicken, cut up without boiling, place in a saucepan with gin- ger, nall red pepper, one garlic, a quarter of a pound af onions, salt, lime or lemon juice, and melted but- ter. Add a few coriander and anise seeds, and let simmer over the fire un- til it is a nice brown. Pour over it the gravy already made, and let it remain over the fire fifteen minutes. Beef or veal may be used instead of chicken FADS AND FASHIONS | | picture and it gives Mr. Hart combined gown. Blue and plum color make a charming evening better than a clocked k stocking if one wishes itive and at the same Nothing is and ribbed to be conser time smart lately, brimmed blue foulard, and ornaments two hats are, with polka dotted have for their only large field flowers. Straw Bolera Cloth Wrap This most becoming motor wrap of bolera cloth showing the new full collar and large roomy sleeve: (c Underwood & Underwod.) | black face member of the team is'the | son Vinol was so successful | M1 s because it contains beef | { ern fiction. lof the N: | one of the Egyptlan Pharaohs? FAMOUS COMEDY Today Jack Pickfard will be shown newest suc- Bean.” for the last time his “His Majesty story is one of the in Junker most cess, The ever popular Saturday Eve- the the with published in It Young Post. deals adven- of who tures a stenographer | believes in reincarnation and until he | is disillusianed he acts the great king | himself to have been in a | He boss and Wall will he beliey former life. ies the daugh- ter of his of dollars Thi ales of laughter from st Bunker Bean being one ma makes thousands Street in plunging. picture keep everyone in rt to finish— of the mos i mwacgrfi'KQT i Blue Blazes inden’f | As AUTCRAFT Dicware. P 5 lovable and laughable heroes in mod- Scenes showing the Great- est Pitcher will delight all baseball fan patrons. Could vou get rich quicker if you imagined you were a branch poleon family tree? Or of | The idea’s sound: Bunker made it pay! You won't know the supreme joy of being “‘on the sunny side of the street” until you see this jayous tale of a reck- less financier. The vaudeville program well worth the seeing and includes three high-class vaudeville acts. G. Hawkes, who has furnished | William §. Hart with so many vehi- cles, is enthusiastic over his latest scenario, “Blue Blazes Rawden,” whicy is to be shown at the Lyceum Thurs- | day, Friday and Saturd It is one of the new Hart pictures and is a | story of the Canadian narthwest, and | his contention is that since Hart is al- wa; big and convincing in any at- mosphere or surroundings, his admir- ers will welcome an incursion into new territory, so the geat delineator | of Western types doffs the sombrero and goes through five reels of thrilling adventure garbed in blanket coat and is Don’t Poison Baby. F ORTY YEARS AGO almost every mother thought her child must have PAREGORIC or laudanum to make it sleep. These drugs will produce sleep, and A FEW DROPS T00 MANY will produce the SLEEP FROM WHICH THERE IS NO WAKING. Tony are the children who have heen killed or whose health has been ruined for life by paregoric, landanum and morphine, each of which i3 a narcotic product of opium. Druggists are prohihited from selling either of the narcotics named to children at all, or to anybody without labelling them “poison.” The definition of “narcotic” is v 1 “A medicine which relieves pain and produces sleep, but which in poisonous doses prodices stupor, coma, convul- sions and death.” Thetaste and smell of medicines containing opium are disguised, and sold under the names of “Drops,” “ Cordials,” “Soothing Syrups,” ete. You should not permit any medicine to be given to your children without you or your physician know of what it is composed. CASTORIA DOES NOT CON- , if it bears the signature of Chas. H. Fletcher. W {ingthe Stomachs and Bowe: F Pumplin Seock Fochels Sulfe fifiamj:a{am fisd Supar ] gixfllzrymflxmr ikl AhclpfulRemedyfor | and Feverishness an LOSS OF SLEEP FacSimife Si¢natore of BT e GenTAUR CONPANT: fits ice. Seque oo, e con e furs of a Canadian lumber jack. Tense dramatic situations predominate in this production, which has for its theme the awakening of a rough, brutalized | man to a sense of better things through the appeal of a sweet, kindly, high-bred woman who transfers her affection for her dead son to a man she believes to be his greatest friend. The strange workings of a woman's | mind causes the big climax in this an op- portunity of dominating sensational scenes entirely different from anything in which he has appeared before. | There will alsa be a new vaudeville | program on Thursday that will be sim- | ply great. “ IRAE GHANGE B WOMAN'S LIFE Mrs. Godden Tells How It May be Passed in Safety | and Comfort. Fremont, 0.—*‘I was passing through ! the critical period of life, being forty- | six years of age and | had all the symp- | toms incidenttothat | change—heat flash- | es, nervousnesg,and | wasin a generalrun | X down condition, so | it was hard for me ¥lto do my wor | Lydia E. Pinkham’s | Vegetable Com- | pound was rccom- ! mended to me as the | best remedy for my | troubles, which it ! surely proved to be. I fcel better and stronger in every way since toking it, and the annoying symg;oms have disap- peared.”” — Mrs. M. GODDEN, 925 Na- poleon St., Fremont, Ohio. Such annoying symptons as heat flashes, nervousnsss, backache, head- ache, irritability and ‘‘the blues,”” may | be speedlly overcome and the system restored to normal conditions by this famous root and herb remedy Lydia E. | Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. If any complications present them- selves write the Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass., for suggestions how to overcome them. The result of forty years experience is at your service and your letter held in strict confidence. For Baby Rash Itching, chafing, scalding, all irrita- tions and soreness, nothing heals like Sykes Comfort Powder ‘\ Its extraordinary healing and soothing power is noticeable on first application, ‘ 25c at the Vinol and other drug storeg The Comfort Powder Co., Boston, Mass, | the fact that Drying than preserving cheaper method food conservation. is for for Cold boiled rice used pie crust just like be 1 pie crust. If possible, all market packs should be opened out on the porch or in the laundry, as the | sometimes roaches that find their way ! into the kitchen by means of the gro- packages. Velveteen 1ccessfully washed by making a lather of soap and warm wate Soak the velveteen in it squeezing it, but not rubbing. When finished, rinse in plenty of clear w ter and hang out to dry The housekeeper who must do her own dishwashing on cold, windy days should remember that a cut lemon kept convenient and rubbed on the hands after each dishwashing will save her from rough hands Many housewives have bemoaned their tarts and do not have the delicious brown desired. Always keep in vour cupboard a small pies pastry brush and brush your tartsand | pies over with milk before ting them in the oven just put- it will be you buy a d of by for the 11 be suf- you when imount When ordering e found more economical certain number of links in the pound. For example, family of six, twelve links w ficient, and it surprise it is weighed small the will be. saus wil is how of way, To make small portion mé onnaise dressing go a long add it by the spoonful to the beaten white of an egg and continue to beat it un- til all sing has been used. Bight teaspoonfuls and the white of one will make enough dressin for chicken salad to serve six person SR 7 3 ALGOHOL-3 PER GENT- uil A\"céelablc]‘rcpa:atmnfoms; "I similatingtheFood hychulz;l T{lgrchi* Promoting Digestion | Cheerfulness and Rest.Gontais neither Opium, Morphiaenos Mineral. NoT NARCOTIC ¢ Gonstipation and Diarrhoed ’iRSMfinfithmfrgn\/-inLq(ancy ‘ | things,” is | sins | doesn't Letters from Prominent Physicians addressed to Chas. H. Fletcher. Dr. J. W. Dinsdale, of Chicago, Ill., says: “I use your Castoria and advisé its use in all families where there are children.” Dr. Alexander E. Mintie, of Cleveland, Ohio, says: “I have frequently prescribed your Castoria and have found it a reliable and pleasant rem- edy for children.” Dr. Agnes V. Swetland, of Omaha, Nebr., says: ‘“Your Castoria is the best remedy in the world for children and the only one I use and! recommend.”” Dr. J. A. McClellan, of Buffalo, N. Y., says: “I have frequently prescribed your Castoria for children and always got good results. In faet I use Castoria for my own children.” Dr. J. W. Allen, of St. Louis, Mo., says: “I heartily endorse your Casg- toria. I have frequently prescribed it in my medical practice, and have, always found it to do all that is claimed for it.” Dr. C. H. Glidden, of St. Paul, Minn., says: “My experience as a prac- titioner with your Castoria has been highly satisfactory, and I consider it an excellent remedy for the young.” Dr. H. D. Benner, of Philadelphia, Pa., says: “I have used your Cas- toria as a purgative in the cases of children for years past with the most happy effect, and fully endorse it as a safe remedy.” Dr. J. A. Boarman, of Kansas City, Mo., says: “Your Castoria is a splen- did remedy for children, known the world over. I use it in my practice and have no hesitancy in recommending it for the complaints of infants and children. Dr. J. J. Mackey, of Brooklyn, N. Y., says: “I consider your Castoria an excetlent preparation for children, being composed of reliable medicines and pleasant to the taste. A good remedy for all disturbances of the digestive organs.” CENUINE ASTORlA ALWAYS Bears the Signature of n Us‘e Fof Over 30 Years The Kind You Have Always Bought THE CENTAUR COMPANY, NEW YORK CITY. SIDE TALKS BY RUTH CAMERON. Wh; She Disliked Her Cousin dislike “But why do you I asked a friend who her, 502" ness because a little cousin, had been tell- really nothing to her, isn't ing me of a cousin whom she could | be home during her visit. seem to hélp disliking. I had| T can just imagine the look on her met the cousin casually and could | face as she these things. For not see any obvious reason for the|I have met her, and not only her but teeling of antagonism. “What does| many of her sisters (and brothers) she do or say to you?” under the skin. My friend considered, cupped in her hand. “She says all sorts she finally offered. I suggested (“‘Such nicknames my because 1 am crowbar to pry the general who is going to n Like a Fretful Volice. of hateful I think that pity tical set there are few antagonize one more There is something and so whining about out the | you on edge, just like a state- | voice. In fact the two often { simultaneously. So I didn't wonder my friend dislike her qualities than self so egotis- it It fretful appear | her ¢ \ | i “Such of have for using it definite ment.) as,” the me as a behind as"” friends H always | one any longer why enough She Didn't Been Know When She Had ¢ i was unclannish To the Theater. to cousin “Well, she and they mother writes to the with that mother correspond to her that she theater or some such me, Cousin Edith writes mother lucky to ghters who are anxious for have a good time—t she know when she has been to theater. And her own daughters are prefectly lovely to hef. “Then, last time she came to us, Judith (her younger sister) going aw on a camping trip Cousin lith acted ag bout She would you! I il T e 1 iand blanch 10 minutes, e e nest in jars, add one Hat cheurd?She doesart cover with boiling water, put on rub- ng about Judith; and top and adjust top bail T e lv?p on \\'Yn’ thumb and little ) ol GG el expect | ung cool. With steam pressure outfit her to give up that campfire trip, and S e e el vet she says that hateful thir to malke Judith uncomfortable ways looking for a other people uncomfortable that's why 1 dislike her. A Chance To Pity T added a mental note “and a chance to pity he “For, isn't that the keynote of woman'’s character! She doesn't know been to the theater. She works up a state of aggrieved- are and cou- | if has and been place ack ave her is very da to Canning Recipes the CANNING RECIPES, Summer Squash. are, cut in slices or small pieces ip, pa of sait, it you away said, ‘How my house day?’ teaspoonful and < wasn't care any- always sit still she is or doesn’t what yossibly X sure 10 1¢ chance to make Lima Beans. I guess Shell Cold-dip, spoonful Blanch to 10 minutes. pack in jar, add one tea- of salt and cover with t |ing wa Put an rubber and top {adjust top bail or ew top on with a|thumb and little finger. Sterilize 180 minutes in hot-water bath Remove, has | complete seal and cool. With steam pressure outfit, sterilize 60 minutes at 5 to 10 pounds pressure. Herself. to when she

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