New Britain Herald Newspaper, April 8, 1919, Page 4

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, APRIL 8, 1916. Y SOLDIER SWEETHEART 2 |FLANDERS POPPIES Adele Garrison’s Continuation of " REVELATIONS OF A WIFE AT g EASILY CULTIVATED hat rs. Durkee Said To Madge.y lance, but real good nature, rising with ~ " ‘ 2 ;‘ ) ¥ e L o ‘_' Red FIOWBFS OE ance Mfly Be Uacrity and shaking out her flufr % s ; s . draperies. “Iv's dull as ditch waier, G his Countr g, busy afternoon over the manu-| I never could bear that W—, anyway. Town in This OUEY < : - N Pipt of the novel which Mr. Durkee | Don’t like his photograph. He looks :l'l'l"‘*“ "tlflrv;“—vw noted, :‘::l;:c notices are written by the pres The Kind You Have Aiv » the signa 5 3 reaus o c ey W 1 s i o] o, re o o] ¥ Signa= With an| t00 la-de-da for anything. Come A fhcithenters;o [ Plonctouswith which they den N iheRHarasl ture of Chas. H. Fletcher, and has been made under his along, Madge, I'm dying to talk T : i ik personal supervision for over 30 years. Allow no one clothes. 1 haven't had anything new At FOX'S. LYCELM THEATER, 3 ns to say of to_deceive you in thi Counterfeits, Ymitations and fhd cigars, with their feet elevated | for azes, and I'm planning how to fix Norma wge in the six-reel Se- | A role in wiich she has umple op- 11¢ “Poppies Flanders.” a familiar ¢“Just-as-good™ are but experiments, and endanger the | i Dicky and Alfred Durkee spent a c has born Bishca Dicky to illustraie bundant allowance of pipe tobaceo b the sun parlor windows, while| over my old ones. Maybe we can | lect Drama, entitled “1ler Only Wax" | portunity 1o display the talents that (oWer (0 mosi of us, by sight to those health of Children—Experience against Experiment. BB i eateatd s swap.” [ and Charlic Chaplin ware the attvac- | have made her internationally fam- who ha etirned from o Ael H :;;‘_A_ kLol Rt Lm“";: ‘1'!’)"‘:9 "P2] The taugnter of our men followed | tions at Fox's tonighi. “Her OBV | gus as a stage and sereen staris in g SE R, LR Do Telds hat 1S B e A8V ! us up the stairs—when Mrs. Durkee | Way™ tells the story of a youns board- | tarpreted by Mae Murray in “Danger, DUt ORBRLO) Castoria_is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare- randa chairs, they read and debated | talks her childlsh nonsense she is ir- | ing school sirl mes “f”‘_‘t‘ | Go Slow,” which is playing at the 'hose WHO have remained on this side goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. Tt contains neither Ith all the Tusto of men resuming | resistible in her appeal to the risibles- (M reais. s of a lost fortune, | ricoum today. She is Mugzsy Mu- of the waler Opium, Morphine ner other narcotic substance. For ! made my friend toss her head ~--..ip Of the dreams of malr lane, who has been reared in N “In Flanders fields the more than thirty years it has been in constant use forthe | antly mg the boy whom she loved lor relief of Coustipation, Flatulency, Wind Colic and bsence. i Dol Distraotion: life time, and the problem of MANTY= | L g 116 aqvantages of an education g and their | Diarrhoea; allaying Feverishness arising therefrom, fitred Durkee has an unusual| wioneetted thinesi she. muttered.| F, Weslih fo cave tho Homs TOM| o) gyen honest associates, she tuok ta D002 NE Bl Ba¥e 2 Mew sienificance and by regulating the Stomach and Bowels, aids the as- b e ALl tones = t - | being sold. Lucille Vi estbrook (Nov-| oy e 5 SFOR ok (akes to (o those thousands of Ame similation of Food; giving healthy and natural sleep. 1 g and he likes the sound | “Phink their old authors and manu- | 14 Taimadge) in vain tries to soive The Children’s Panacea—The. Moth Fricnd, Bt it almost us well ‘as Dicky likes scripts aro the only things in the|ncr problem, but when Jo Marshall | fer: Sho Joined a Eani Qs for w i WOHTL FOOSC DHve bovs | = o listen to him. In fact, Dicky al-| WOrld- They'll chuckle to themselves | (lugene O'Brien) hitierly tc ner f D e G e The K!nd ‘V@“ Have A[ways Bought - hanien o about our gabbling over dresses, vl | that her love of luxury stands be peys lazil erts that he can get| yoyw would they like it if we went | tween them. she tells him that she » Bears the Signature of pngenial work after a long enforced poppies will | York in an atmosphere of crime. De- pgom again this year ican men i Water. She joined a gang and for a and women whose brave boyvs have 1 vision of spoils of one job, the cellar Iy offered themselves on the altar of Bhe spirit of a manuscript much bet- headguarters of the gang was raided. human liberty | d like ¢ frumps? Just tell me | w ani lelmont, a wealthy | around like old frumj v will marry Pat Imont One of Muggsy's pals was shot and When the flowers of IFlande | fer from licarving it read than from | man. After the wedding, Lucille isj Wne of Muggs pals we E 3 ‘ mders and k i | wisely made mo dnswor fo! this, | tha meglooted ~wife, and finally hev [(2notlieni arkested. Afuzzsy: = escalied A ce oncel morcs mod ' iniiihc soft | perusing i many the manu=j - o0 e sied with the 1oclk | husbanid declares his intention of di- [ ahd climbed Into a freight car goins winds they will not sway and bend earsslnah re-war days wiich T} oo 0 00 idvobe door. .« And the mext | voreing her for the sake of a so-f West. In the little town of Cotton- and hreak under burning blast of hos g- &W ead aloud to him—-so ali through the | minute I bogan spreading over ¢ho | ciety vampire, Mrs. Randolph, whose | ¥llle Muggsy fell under the niotherly tile cannon. Nor will they shudde: @ 5 © | sesoeiated with | influence of Aunt Sarah Judkins. @ and die as shrapnel and grenades @ ternoon the mnovel the notec thor | bed my gowns of {he vintage of two | name has long been ! . U o ocnte hoxel ibe o e eonndegingin e doden) am sl el clbed il | S e e e e In Use For Over 30 Years had written was clothed with dramatic ons [ v ) AR T e o 1d quickly make Mrs. Durkee for- | cides to end all and after killing Bt turn of the hoy who had left home as they blasted and tore brave men THE CENTAUR COMPARY, FIEW YORK CITY. L L TREE e ; e o L y { on « Years before, 1gEsy wdually felt o b ) i o I should have liked nothing better| et a real or a fancied grievance as | mont, shoots herself. And then the ) 3eiie befor Muggse sradually felf o bits. . M d than the opportunity of sitting quietly | the sizht of dresses. new or old. awakening; but the awakening mus rself getting away from the old life Thel fowers that spring up ‘Over|| B e “dine and the| I knew something else, also, some- | not be revealed, as “Her Only Way™ | dnd thoughts of crime and in tinie be: There' to inspire tlie song birds this | L = v { ends W @ most surprising climax, | came a vi jelle. Judge Cotton year Sl el ! Biscussion went on It would have| thing that made me welcome this op- | ends with a most surprising Clmas | TEHAC & v n Tu Cotton year will not maturc only to he been a o treat to me—indeed, T|Portunity of shosing her my ward- | after six of the most powerful and was the meanest man in the town and trampled down by conflicting forces L 8 < o 1 . absorking reels. Chatlie Chaplin is| he held a mortgage on Aunt Sarah’s of battle-mad men. They will not die | 5 lave the sitting-at-the-feet- | robe. The little woman has a rare % i E‘f“:ys e .{,\I",” ‘hp,—:::‘l\ T L i i eons, mad | the added attraction =t 1ox's in one | house and threatencd to foreclose, but ' because naturc gave them fertile soil | Where the poppies flourish and a re- [ cultivation is necessary. Safe to sayv :“’a:‘”l]“ \"” “‘M(‘ '“m Cbut tho! & posifive knack in | designing and| of ths funniest ol Mismany comedy | Muggsy outwits him, makes Aunt in the track of a tank or in a spot | Minder to all of the fields of France. | that ma beds Sree A e 5 e a positive knack s g anc ble laws of courteous hospitali- | “‘fixing over” things, That it would be o o > inexorable laws of courteous hospita o f et wetitor ovs e ter yesterday Phe latest Pathe | to her and then finds happiness her- made. But they will come to nod in —_— ty decreed otherwise. News. with pictures of the proposed [ self. In this featurce thrills and heart perfect understanding on white crosses For little Mrs. Durkee was not only | fore Dicky would wish me to accom- |, ..o jane flight across the Atlantic, | interest dominate among the shell holes. SMART SPRINC WRAP OF PONGEE patently bored by the discussion, but' Pany him to dinner and a play in ane. Fo ey : - new [English troops (hat The vaudeville p m is good. Es- “They will see and 5 : . = S s ¢ z : : T see and understand as I knew from experience that her!town I was sure. And T had nothin® | ,.( to watch the Rhine, the visit of | peclally good is the offering presented no human can, the forgotien place presence had the same effect upon modish to wear. for T hal bousht| gj,z Aihert of Belgium to the Amer-|he Tom Moore and Sisters. oY where fthe the two men as that of a fussy, noisy; only the simplest, most NeCesSANY | jm froops, as the guest of General | Do pickey little canary. There were times when | things during the war. My evening j poyching, preparations made in Bos- had the unmis of the vivid bloony » successes, which cvoked much laugh- | Sarah wealthy, brings back her boY where muddy trenches were to be| The seeds are very hardy and little | will flo 1 reabouts this summer unforgotten by went is a very fine black-face west,” and their long roots reaching y comediennc, and Leon Sister and Com= ' down into (he clay will take sacred they loved to have her with them, | and afternoon gowns tonSon el ieuyni o ARG 26 tn i ivi | ielme s i e i o 2 3 { . ot Yany prese a novel wire act nourishn anc Ghi Rt but not when they wished to concen- takable look of heins out \"( “t“r;: sion, and other items of world in- On "l‘h\n'sdfl\_ Priscilla Dean, the v«)\u!'s\\"i‘]‘lei:}]y.u\\”'h]m“l’y :"' ]m:‘ e trate their minds upon a subject. which iwiille it botheredinie bat Hitle liferest. ¥ mhe four acts oty vandeville i 4t A il N N a i L n s o B 2o s I say, Madge.” Alfred Durkee look- | would, I knew, annoy my husband’s|are headlined by Mr. and Mrs. Mark Wild o 3 T n I say, Me E | 0 <) : LALRS TS ild Cat of Paris”” will be shown i The flowers of Flanders fields ed up trom the third pagoe of thel fastidious taste Hart, in their nationally known com- | € “00 @0 00 m B P8 ined have Ve 2 manuseript, which had been punctu-| Mrs. Durke promptly selzed the| edy Trish sketch, entitled “The Coal s . midst war's fierce hell, 2 e s mother’s ingenuous com- | prettiest gown I had—one of ivory | gtrike.” » ated by his mother's ingenuous com- mhroidered in gold threads triumph for Miss Dean. appreciation of what peace and quiet ments upon a wide variety of topics, ' crepe embroic & wn't you lead the mater gently up and held it up critically, G : leans R ve Iy Sreturningiaoldicnat e 3 : her loose| “You lucky gi 1id. “There's | SAGE AND SULPHUR PALACE THEATER. some time paints word pictures of | Xv’a‘:'vv{:1v§:‘f-.v A (syc-r;'\:t’{h\‘x‘\‘;‘:“ like that| so much stuff in this that we can take DARKENS GRAY HAIR| 'The new Palace theater ix hegin- '“hvi-% I"mww_lh?t_ would nét die. The while I'm reading this? Goodness it out here, add to the length, hide ——— - ning to assume the appearance of a ounded hf"\ particularly like to tell I love and revere her, but I. the joining right under this embroid- | Brush this Through Faded, Streaked | real, up-to-the-minute playhouse. A | olf the messages (he flowers brought prefer worshipping her from | cre design, and swirl it tightly Locks and They Become Dark, tlarge force of workmen are laboring !)wm !‘hg beanty of um_v song, ‘The - when I've ¢ Jusiness on hand.” | avound your ankles in the most ap- Glossy. Youthful overtime in an endeavor o have the | ftose of No Man's Land’ is a flower “You needn’t t < T care anything ' proved style. Have you still got the Almost everyone knows that Sage | new theater ready for occnpancy in a lmn;ljw and conveys a compliment to about vour 1 old story,” his adorable slippers and embroidered | Tea and Sulphur, properly compound- i short while. An entire new lobby of Iliil‘«vnv women x\hm will endure. E g ith affected petu- | hose You used to wear with this? ed, brings back the natural color and | {lle Is now being laid that will extend The flowers of France and Bel- pother dechined “Look Here!” lustre to the hair when faded, streaked | (o the auditorium of the theater | &lum and Italy are such that they will : d or zray. Years azo the only way 1o | proper. The appearance of the boxes | live and bloom anew in the memory get this mixture was to make it at|{i5 heing changed and new draperies | Of those who have received courage home, which is mussy and trouble- { \ill adorn the new edifice of art. The | and comfort from them some. Nowadays, by asking at any | cquipment on the stage will be entire- “Some of these flowers are sown by drug store for “Wyeth's Sage and Sul- | | now. The scenery will be of the | the winds of chance. Many of them o , 2 times.” ur C ound,” yo ill get a large o . 5 o b me ory : S : phur Compound,” you will g Z¢ | now art style and the Mghting will be | are sown by the hand of man. A very ALL WEEK TONIGHT 3 “I remember.” she returned absent- | },,({]o of this famous old recipe, im- = ’ N e {dhe very latest. The decorafions will | beautiful custom prevails over there MATS. WED. AND SAT. Iy, “Let’s see the evening coat you | pyoved by the addition of other in- | ;”mi,','\ i .W‘,,}.'f,, s ‘\L:mm‘j»‘q S e by Sy e MESSRS. SHUBERT Present wore over this.” e e MCINTYRE and HEATH I brought out the darling of my Dot slav evasil Ty it NG fone heart, a blue velvet cloak with a deep | can possibly tell that you darkenecd fur collar. It was a coat of several|your hair, as it does it so . naturally HELLO ALEXANDER | scasons’ use, and the collar was dis- | and evenly. You dampen a'sponge or | Company of 70 With Exceptional ) ;h. shahby. soft brush with it and draw this Supporting Cast. Tucluding Talented “H.-m,” commented Mps, Durkee. | through your hair, taking one small Broadway Beautics. “The velvet is still good in this—it | strand at a 1e; by morning the gray | Nights 25¢ Mats. 25¢ to $1. sure pays to buy good materials— | hair disappears, and after another ap- but It's rubbed all around the edges. | plication or two. your hair becomes 4 ¢ fur R autifully dark, glossy a ractive. You need new fur on the collar and | beautifully dark, glossy and attractive e e e e the edges of the sleeves, and a new e S X « i So many thousands of our boys are lining : I can t‘r' i t0n YouRS ol ol HAPPINESS SAYS Jazz Once Again. sting amid the flowers ‘Over There R will McCormack & . Barny's famous | that hk% flt‘r\\mf».il!(,nl\A\]_‘Mu‘(?x|\ i like good deal, I'm afraid. for fur Mayer's Dixie Jazz Band will play for | Places ‘Over Here. ho knows but 8 g the dancing tonight at Holmes & Foff- | that the wind wafted pollen may no introduction is | Plend In the creation of new and even more beautiful colors. Surely the blending of the thoughts behind these kept Burglar,” This feature is another alive a love of the beautiful and an “Almost as fresh as if they were new,” I said. “You know T had this made not very long hefore Dicky went HARTFORD. away. I've only worn it two or three rds of new carpet will be laid and | Sows a few flower seeds with his wheat | all new furniture and fixtures will be ' or other grains. This is. particularly In the Gorgeous Musical Extravaganza placed in the ladics’ and gentlemen’s | true in the edges of fields that border rooms. The lobhy will be finished in | the highways and the result is a coun- marble and a massive display of spe- | Livside that smiles appreciation to the cially built advertising frames will | heavens that water them grace the walls. The lighting of the “This custom is worth tfansplant- exterior will also be a great feature | ing. of the Palace theater. Tt is cxpected [ “The beautiful habit with its rich that the new theater will be ready to | return should appeal particularly to cost a i of the right kind. T ought not to d TONIGHT spend so much on it. T can wear it man’s Hall, and The Cl et Siar the way it is this season.” needed, as the dn‘m[nu public R HopClnznt Des s ¢ < . y t claimed them the best ever, in other Look here Mrs. Durkee sat up B iy ; and looked at me witheringly. “What words a broadway attraction will be | flowers will make of us better men RS aec here tonight, TDon't miss dancing to | and better women with a clearer ap- are vou going to do, sit back and twid- cciati rhat the bo: . N rma le o Tiors Ao leb Taien Paivias ihisiwonasitul Ba diANsh opfidnte B haiselatlon ot A ER S R ovs S Al q’ s s e s e precedes the dancing.—advt. and their brothers in arms have done or s 3 4 C for the world. vour husband?” 3 = “There is a beautiful flower that Taimadge : MCWELL T your childs heaien FIET OFF CORNSTY | i em cenin et o You WELL? Wwhile at school. the ‘Shirley’ poppy. / “The seed of this poppy is very i ; : b - e ‘:E 2t - . small, so tiny that a pinch between - 5 % elw 0”,4 = Doesn’t hurt a bit and €osts only | (he thumb and the index fingor will Most popular of Spring wearing h shawl collar, and HEfl UNLY WAY pick up a hundred of them. it e eents But it { apparel arve smart wraps, as ~M4>\\\|{ rown bobbinette is a responsive little plant. It blos- | above. This one is fawn color pongee, soms beautifully, a rich, warm, sym- pathetic red and other colors. The D = X VAVDLVILLE, % price of the Shirley poppy is very low: OSTR]CH ORN MENT ““OR EVEY A WDADR CHARLIE / A F L YNG WEAT TODAY d | border of a field half a mile long. Ten Ik cents’ worth will rim the bottom of a CHAP IN silo and a cow barn with a girdle of I ) 5 significant heauty. A quarter's worth will fill available spots around a front (c) Underwood & Underwood. vard, or make the approach to a barn X or machinery shed more beautiful i [ “The farm children who make 7 | | daily trips to the mail boxes can help ? A out. In many places there are from S /) d five to ten mail hoxes grouped togeth- er on rural delivery routes. These MR. and MES. MARK HART : : d : and 2 LS (¥4 ] i batteries of mail boxes should look SMITH & KEEL t | down on little flower eardens this ey ° vear. During the past two years the “Eat More Bread” | letters from the boys abroad have JONES (& A EON e R D and use 99 B asict Just drop a little Freczone | been dropped into those mail boxes = [ an that touchy corn, instantly it stops | and received by boys und girls who Angelus Flour . | iehing, then vou lift the corn off with' ran all the way home with (hose COMING THURSDAY | | Thompson Milling Co., Lockport. N. ¥ § the fingers. Truly! XNo humbug! highly prized missives. Keep alive the Sold by THURSDAY | 'I'r{ I ; .;,...m"_\ our .x(r\li!i:'a‘.i‘:l:]\\ al TR A penny’s \;u:vh of poppy Sl ) s “A SILR-LINED BURGLAR fltinyibottle for a fow cents sufficlent fo lpcotshwil malts a garden sbotiot tie in “FIGHTING FOR GOLD" {Thos: Shanahan, RCor:SHartlord with rid your feet of every hard corm, soft| rural postal station.” PRISCILLA DEAN | corn, or corn between the toes, and An agitation is on foot to have a The Wonder of the Scrcen in a §§ | calluses, witbout one particle of pain, | hod of these flowers planted at the Most Thrilling Story | soreness or irritation. Freezone is the ! oot of the “Welcome Home arch on | discovery of ~a moted Cincinnatii central Park. The sentiment behind | senius, such an action, is a worthy one and readily understood It is by way of TONIGHT IS THE NIGHT THIN PEOPLE OF McCormack & Barry’s Famous : NEW BRITAIN: maveRsoe sz 4 THEATRE oo AT HOLMES & HOFFMAN'S HALL [ eiia factive: rormi fae eich IRAS RV | occurs in the living cells of the body. | mom ||| Formerly Keeney’s [t i i o ™ - ftu —TOM MIX~— Admission Including War Tax antee Of Lesulls Or mouey bacig jevening weas 5 s Underwood & Underwood

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