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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1918, g “ ews For Women Readel's e s - — R - r - 3 = - = g = = = ———— = i 1 EUM THEATER = = == . | . v | LYCEU) JATER. = | merlcan e ross urse | At the ind opening of the Lyceum 1 | ’ | @ splendia big prosram offered to the 4 i ) | public. On this great program thero Adelo Garrisow's Continuation of . Cited tor I'renc rYoss o QY | wint be two superd features that con- REVEL a TIONS OF WIFE | [ tain an entertainmet in themselves, | % 1 e ing sandy,” starring Jack | A { S S TR | one being indy, g 11 N - - v qgm% { Pickford and charming Louise Huff. ||| &y i | "This is a charming story of life in | | What Harry Underwood Wrote'to me. Will you let me know how the | | Einimines, i enGbe, o (e ok | HARTFORD. | Littian. Dicky-bird is? I imagine, knowing me, | | as the nero, and Ruth Nelson, a dainty | | | ! you can guess what I've been going | B hein s \ -vis | - e g & & Bluc heire as his vis-a-vis. ||| Perhaps you would feel more mer- | through since the booze mot soaked | I \otion is filled with thrills and | ciful, Madge,” Lillian said quietly af- | out of me enough so I could think | (B e e e e 2 8% momunt, “if you wers to read :’JMHMSL ‘:’::at\,hilm:;'?“"-) I suppose | | Jack Pickford or Miss Huff have failed | the message Harry sent with the serv- | (72,168 £l went through hell over | | fo tako tho fullest advantage. Sandy | 00 o g e | is a cheerful, brave Scotch lad, who ice pin. It isn’t long and there's a “Well, so long, old girl, and—‘good | follows the girl of his dreams to her | reference which you will perhaps not | hunting'—Harry. " PlowHlthe sl ot e ey resent.” ’ ) oy 1 v " o res, o Kes v" She held out her hand for the box Depths of Pity. | | ;"‘ e e i ° | e waiting for By Sement o oit>|| | I laiaidown theilstter with a baftled | |is a matter that will interest the old | ||| | el 30 68 it layer of | feeling. No one knew better than I | | and the youns alike, and curiosity is | ||| | fo "he took the pln from 14 ey et 3¢ | how fine, how almost super-ssnsitivel| | satisfied only by seeing the pictures. ||| Jjeweler’s cotton, disc 05"‘21 T “”d_ ** ] Lillian’s personal honor, her ideas of | | The other great feature is “With ||| B e e dnen e o | benRdl tyitolofers i were MinnIaRGon | | Hoops of Steei” and in the leading | fied 1t fo mo Wt an D eie | sclence-ridden | message from tho | | role app the famous star Henry little gesture which I oM Cdtns | French battleficlds was like a compell- | | B. Walthall, who I ypeared before | B e e e | ioE Miandl EidCupon iNerispinits i Shell | in many of the greatest successes of | i tomds w ‘t‘;"l“ by ee the | couldn’t disregard it. i | the screen, two of which The | ) waod was hatefu "’l “fe‘l.‘ ‘1":; o The knell of Robert Sa s hopes | | Birth of a Nation” and “The Great | B et e e s, |had sounded. I saw that clearl | " In the role of “Emerson ||| - e partly T e s mrpiane, | HAITY Underwood, traitor, fugitive, | | » Mr. Walthall portrays the 1 o DR of O e ihini | misht have been struck out of Lilltan's | | character of a man the head of | f f"“l"” ’a‘ev_"t“:“f ‘h“' ":f“ 0 life, but Harry Underwood, repentant, independent cattle owners, who | i .'D’e T o O gan, “I'm | f2¢ing death for his country in atone. | | have been oppressed by the high- || o not :?r to “( O I essag e B no | ment for his crimes, anxious to “got | aded methods of a large cattle | oo §glng yeate v & Y { his” that he might give his wife her | syndicate. He accused of murder | Easbuiance or ‘I“.",‘““'f"'k‘;“;‘wlt;’;‘z“fi‘: freedom, yet mentally clinging to her | e e e Seii 19 Are you going to WAIT until Clothing is | n‘erh;ps you'd hl f‘_ o kn limmide skirts as any homesick boy might to | thrilli incidents. Circumstantial | H]GHER in Prxce as it %urclv will b Swer ,"e‘ - “";f“,-“’“ ?“§ bow I sot | his mother's. could not be barred from | i evidence is so strongly against him | C i :;:e':"“j;:;‘g]; e i B Taoes | her life until death should eliminato | that conviction seems certain. ; Or are you going to take advantage of OUR AL 5 him from her horizon, ! The big vaudeville bill is one which la you to thank for the chance to get | "..y,, see, don’t you?"” Lillian asked, e e e ohia | plan which gives you the Clothing NOW and ! BT, ould mot hother you with this, | 310 there Was a’vibrant anxlety in | Tliere will be Johnny Woods, lets you pay for it LATER? | O L 3 3 her voice that betrayed to me her | r colored ventriloquist; the it Lve Ehven yaur ot mima, | longing for my comprehension. | Dancing Mille special dancing of- EaSy Weekly Payments are 311 we ask. mext of M 10 in casd I gok mine: |1y S P sorey %o say 1 doy” I ro- | : e [ fering srhich i3 an exceptionally fins 2 ¥ ke, : turned reluctantly, unwilling to con- | | act, and also the great Burlesque ‘ \ s’“""‘;l‘!l' :0'?;&’"“‘10“:2‘52‘;“50“‘;‘°t““‘;’é fess that the strange pathetic epistle | FLORENCE BULLARD | Acrobatic Review of 1918. It is a | CLOTHING | | 3;:“ "fln‘°' 2ok e nm’you are § from the man who had wrought me | Miss Florence Bullard, of Glens | her sister, Miss Maude Bullara, “you | comedy variety offering which will not 1l ‘ { r““"-'ny fm"‘m‘hme' No tiss sazing | S0 much evil, had stirred the dopths ot Falls, N. Y, an American Red Cross | would unders'and that every ounce | f2il to please everyone of the Lyceum | | Hats and Shoes for Men i .Sony‘.fi;fd Tinl, but Td lke you to | MY Pity, abated perceptibly the hor- | nurse, has been cited for the French | of womanhood in you calls for you | Patrons. Come early and avoid the 1 \‘ | knaw 1 realize what a thundering | 70T, 1 had felt for him, even made me | ‘cross of war. The official cltation | to hurry faster and work the harder. | FUSh. ! | dB [ i scout you've been to me ail these | TS2lize that for Liilian there was no | otiaces You would not dare stop working ———— — | . an Oys | bully < Rl b other path but the one she had for you would only :ommence wee | | [\ years. And I sincerely OP® | ) hsen. ’ “She has shown imoerturable | | R Bl & D FOX'S THEATRE ) | have many good days. Do T avela Plantn | Barbardmeatalan iy Miiac r e o | ys, and I love each one. RSN : e l)a S a D " 1 yeu think he'd object to your wearing o : | May. Despite her danger she| . Mls® Bullard servea through the G e S £ ouar a €e ! this thing for a little while? I've got | “But, Lillian,” T added in what 1 | Boarched fo- and comforted and ase | SCISODS campalgn and later at | evident today Theatregoers —eager ! a hunch it won't be long. I know Il yinew was weak futile protest, “what- | sisted the wounded. Her attitude | Chateau Thierry. According to the | for their favoritc amusenient, were on baven't any right to ask you anything was especlally brilliant on July 31, | [Btest letter recelved by her rela- . ., 0.1 1o witness anc of the Iike this, but it would make me feel a whole lot better if you could stick it on. “One other thing I wish you'd do:for e p—————— Aunt Jane’s Advice “Qh dear,” sighed the young house- wife, “T have so much trouble in find- ing really good butter!” “Yes, I know how it is. We always had that difficulty till I discovered Benefit Brand ‘Sweet Nut' at the | Direct Importing Co.’s yellow front | store, 277 Main St., 365 Arch St., New Britain, where Benefit Brand Teas, | Coffees and Groveries Specialties are retalled at wholesale prices.” “Why, that's a kind of oleomar- ! garine! You wouldn’t serve that, would you, Aunt Jane?” i “You seemed to like it the day you lunched at my house,” said Aunt Jane with a twinkle in her eye. “Why, ves, it was delicious! You don’t mean to tell me that was your Sweet Nut.’” “It certainly was—it's better than most butter and it costs only 32¢ a pound. Of course they put the name oleomargarine on the package, but that law was passed before ‘Sweet Nut’ was invented, and there is no animal fat in it.”” A . i roughly, ! bit. dlowathmhthkchxser Bill and theKlown Quince for instance s GEORGE WALSH ever are you going to say Savarin ?” i “I am going to show him this letter,” | she said resolutely. f he is the brave, true spirit I know him to be, he'll realize there is no other course open to us. If there is that in him | which will lead him to try avoid this | obvious duty, it is better that I know | it now."” My face must have shown my pas- | sionate sympathy for the lonely artist, for her own twitched with sudden pain. “Don’t think this is any Fourth of July picnic for me, Madge,” she said “and—it fsn’t going to be so | bad for Robert. I have a plan—" She broke off abruptly, for we | heard Dicky’'s step inside the door, | to Robert ‘ slow, halting, pitiful, unlike his old Luntines | “I don’t need to warn you not word of this to Dicky,” she s riedly. “In fact, don’t tell him an thing which will worry him the least That boy must be kept as cheer- ful as possible.” MAINE SHOEMAKER Tired All Time. Did Not Want to | Work, How He Regained Strength. Sanford, Maine——*I suffered so much from a run-down, nervous con- dition and stomach trouble that I | never felt like working and had tried | almost everything without relief. The first bottle of Vinol however helped | me and it has built me up so I feel | better now than I have for a long | time.”—Chester D. Haines. There is no secret about Vinol. Tt owes its success to beef and cod liver | peptones, iron and manganese pepto- nates, and glycerophosphates, the | oldest and most famous body building | and strength creating tonics. Sold by The Clark & Brainerd Co., | Druggis Liggett's Riker-Hegeman | Drug Stores, John J. McBriarty, Na- | than Noveck, W. H. Russell, and | Druggists everywhere | P. 8.—Our Saxol Salve is truly won- | derful for ma. We guarantee it. | noneessential is a thing that ts us most wHen we Shows how this may be ac:amphs}xed. See the William Fax Production AND DOROTHY PHILLIPS in “TALK OFTHE TOWN.” A SENSATIONAL SOCIETY A RIOT OF GLITTERING IXPOSE SOCIAL SPLENDOR., 4 BIG ACTS VAUDEVILLE 4 “NINE KRAZ “BRANDON Y KIDS” AND TAYLOR” OTHERS FOX'°'S | New when bombs ‘urst near.” Miss Bullard left for overseas duty with the American Ambulance corps in December, 1916. and has been In active service since her ar- rival in France. For some time she ‘was on duty at the American Am- bulance Hospital at Neuflly, France, as a Red Cross nurse, but since the entrance of America into the con- flict she has been in service in the field hospitals. “If you could see the stretchers coming ‘n by the hundreds”, save Miss Bullard in a recent letter o tives In Glens Falls, she is now on duty in an evacuating hospital near the front. With cheracteristic modesty, she makes no mention of the events which lead to the distinction con- ferred upon her by the French gov- ernment, but writes: “I do dress- ings all day long and am on call every other night, which means those nights I usually work until one o’ciock in the morning and then Ye down with my clothes/on, and, if T 310 needed I am called. You 0 not get too tired for there is & constant change &ll the time™ The need of volunteer workers hl\sl brought out by the opening of survey on nursing resources in York, New Jersey and (unnl‘(u‘ under the direction of Dr. E. Meyer, Divisional Supervisor for the Atlantic Division of the American Red Cross. The survey in these states is a part of the nation-wide movement bee the cut to discover just what nurses and nurses’ aides are available at the | vresent time, so that a sufficient number may be withdrawn for mili- tary duty without interfering more than ne ¢ with civilian needs Dr. Me has sent out an appeal ACKLIFFE BROS. CO. New Britain Distributor. JEY HORVITZ, 7 Main St. it be done as quickly with eflicienc Those who h to| | volunteer for this work may apply | cither at the Atlantic Division, 44 last Twenty-third street; the New | York County Chapter, 389 Fifth ave.; the Brooklyn Chapte Remsen street, or at any Red Cross Chapter Greater New York. Confirmation of the statement that the need of warm clothing for the | people of Northern France is abso- | lutely vital s contained in a letter sent by the Foreign Director of Reliet | for the Commission for the Relief of Belgium to Herbert Hoover, chair- man of the commission. The letter Optictan | d2¥ AMERICAN RED CROSS NOTES for 5,000 women canvassers who will go from house to house. Women are | also wanted for clerical work The importance of the work demands that | s is sistent ation as outlined in copies of letters from the North of Franc simply beggars description. The people are without adequate covering for their bodies and are almost with- out any sort of shoes and cannot even obtain enough wood to make soles with sacking covers, “The situation is one which we must meet no matter what is invelved. You certainly realize, as no one who has not lived in that country can, the intense suffering that is before these people, unprotected 2s they never have been before and without hope of even being able to obtain fuel during the cold of the coming year.” Colonel Theodore Roosevelt's sug gestion that America’s fighting men contribute their old clothes to be sent to the Belgians and to the pegple of northern France met a generbus re sponse from Camp Upton. Nineteen c of old clothes were sent a few ago to the American Red Cross Collection commitiee. MON.—TUT Two Great Feature: JACK PICKFORD in “SANDY” HENRY B. WALTHALL in “WITH HOOPS OF STl SURPRI AUDEVILLIS BURLE TIC REVIEW OF 1918, JOHNNY WOODS. THE DANCING MILLERS There’s everything in this show to make you glad you came. KEENEY’ THEATRE VAUDEVILLE Comedy Success POLITE The Big “COME ON IN CO.” 5 Stars 12 Handsome Girls Carload of Scenery SESSUE HAYAKAWA THE CITY OF DIM FACES WM. DUNCAN __in “A FIGHT FOR MILLIONS > | W finest offerings ever presented locally. ‘The Talk of the Town", direct from its smashing successes at the Broadway | and Symphony theatres, and featuring Dorothy Phillips, is one of the most | startling photo dramas ever seen | | locally. It concerns Genevra French | | Who was raised in seclusioa by her| | widowed father. She is kept in in: | { norance of the world and its w: is | | practically a prisoner in her home | {and in school. She gets possesseion | | of a book called fow to Attract | . the Opposite S and begins to | | practice on one of her father’s younger | | friends, Lawrence Tabor. She does it o well that he falls in love with { her. She marries him to escape from | her bondage and then tells him she | does not love him and that she is| secking only liberty. She thought that she had learned life from a book, but when she tried to fascinate the econd man the truth was brought | home to her with a sudden sock. Be- cause she did not know, she became the talk of the town, but when she | learned she was transformed into loyal wife. “The Talk of the Town' | is a good, clean and humorous—a bit | startliag, absorbingly interestingly and | ! surprising at the end. | Nowadays everyone is On | Jump” both for themselves and | | | | cl for STORM WINDOWS AND DOORS Will Conserve Heat and Save Coal We carry stock sizes to fit all standard frames and make special sizes to order. For solid home comfort there is nothing to take the place of these heat savers. Allow us to submit an estimate, N Phone 1075— see Jump.” grown-up their country. You should | George Walsh in “On the | eve child d { knows of the famous ride Paul Revere, they will be enthused when they see George Walsh enact a modren | | ‘Panl Revere in his latest picture “‘On the Jump.” George, however goes { one better, he not only uses a horso | for the gallant ride but r s to our | modern conveyances to complete the reproduction of that famous ride in interest of Uncle Sam. George h exemplifies the hustling young an—as a living example ot | | | | (he} | | While | the | Amer { RACKLIFEE BROS. CO. INC. 250-256 PARK STREET NEW BRITAIN, CONN. youth full of life, ambition des to serve his (‘()\\ntl\', accomplish single handed abstacles which he encounte: | The vaudeville end of the program { is well balanced and up to the stand- consisting of tFh “Nine Krazy | Kids,” a reamingly funny school ! room act; Madi, the Gypsy Musician, cott, the Novelty Equilibrist and ‘ ndon and Tay The latter are { well known in New Britain, Miss | Belle Brandon being a sister of ti ate Archie Felmir Their act is a distinet novelty, with good singing, dancing and yodelling. what a and the | ara, or | KEENEY'S THEATER. The big musical comedy, with Xictor Fitzgerald “Come On Miss Eas Caroll and big feature comeds full comedy. Vie- sastman come Broadway success. b1l brand | new line of comedy. The chorus girls have a number of original novelties. The costumes and scene are far ahead of anything eve n in this city. On the big picture program Sessue Moreley, and is Keeney's This | | In% | man, ten | chorus girls this weelk. of son dances tor Morely and direct from a big Fitzgerald and C: big r and Miss is se Hayawaka in “The City of Dim { Faces”, is the feature photoplay. Wm. Duncan in the latest episode of “A Fight For Millions and several short comedies complete the program. A. PINKUS, Eyesight Speclalist und Manufacturing Optician, There is no need of enduring the discomfort that comes from a skin which itches and burns, or is marred by patches of eruption. ment usually relieves itching at once, and quickly makes the skin clear and healthy again, Resinol Resinol Ointment is gentle and soothing and has been a standard skin treatment for over twenty years, so you need not hesitate to use it or recommend it to your lrlm\ds Sold by all drugglsts. Resinol Shaving Stick tends 10 mvml ik tation. Resinol Oint- EYE EXAMINATIONS ARE FRERE Broken Lenses Duplicated. Office, 306 Main St. 'Phoue 570 Satisfaction Guaranteed IFIED COLUMNS OF THE HERALD FOR QUICK RETURNS E THE CLAS$S