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HEART =« MY HUSBAND ADELE GARRISON’S NEW PHASE OF Revelation Warning That Came to M he man who chairs as 1 came down the hall where L had ie to seat him was not n either b, . although in every article re he evidently had tried clothing of well-bred ssed men. But to any the pable fact that hing of correct dress or of plest rules of breeding was ent through the veneered exterior his very common wood. le was a man of perhaps tle more than medium height, rewhat stockily built, yet with no picion of fat anywhere about him. fact, he gave me the impression having a reserve force of physical r stored about -him, although his ow complexion and deep-set eyes Imed to contradict this. There was hing out of the ordinary about looks except for his unusually e feet, which gave me an unpleas- impression of fallen arches, and burious looking scar at the corner one eye, extending up into the ehead, which e him the rather banny appearance of perpetually essing an interrogation point. This Mrs. Graham?” Pespite his awkwardness in getting his feet—from which [ judged t he had been little versed in this fymon mark of courtesy to women is voice was smooth, almost oily ARSONS’ THEATER HARTFORD. rose the a of to and 10 years, L L ‘'ONIGHT, 8 —TWICE WHED, Wed. Mat. Best Seats $1.00 A. H. WOODS PRESENTS “TO0 MANY USBANDS” A New Comedy in 3 Acts. W. Somierset Maugham. With a Notable Company. s. 25¢, to $2.00. Mat, 25c to $1.00 RAND Hartford BURLESQUE ain Street Fhone 1026-C ack SingerPresents| HE BEHMAN SHOW 11 New Features 1 W)EVH_ LE B Y ] FOX’S TONIGHT—WEDNESDAY Monroe Salisbury Superb Western Drama Sleeping w7 Lion” SPECTAL ‘Mary Moves In’ H. LLOYD FOUR BIG ACT! VAUDEVILLE URE NEW BRITAIN 'CEUM THEATRE PHONE 1000 THE BiG NOVELTY WEEK MAX MARCIN'S 4 Act Melodrama Farce- ved by LYCEUM PLAYERS anotoer sell- Your Favorite Ws golug (o ve out, so secure Advance, B MON-WED-THURS ST those Seats in awkardly from stairs i directed gentle- birth or acquired train- his copy well- experienced he knew the ap- s of a Wife in its quality, unembarrassed in its utterance. still the cheap tained it in my of consulting it Mr. paper and envelope which’ had con- hand. I made a feint as 1 answered him Bidgeham. “ am Mrs. Graham, yet. in what manner you Mr. Stockbridge?” “I am of sociated with Mr. defence.” A little b subconscious Horace Kent held the slip of May I sk represent his attorneys, —as- Horace Kent in his one \l of warning rang in the regions of my brain was the name of the eminent attorney whom Kenneth Stockbridge’s uncle had engaged for his nephew's defence. Alice Hol- combe had pointed him out to me on the streets, a courtly, brainy looking gentleman of highest cultural r;u,y. I aid not believe that he would tolerate for his sciate a man of the type who stood before me. If this man were really an attorney, which I could not help doubting, he belong to the discreditable had hear Dicky dub “shyster the ass name?"" voice w. purposely. “My name is—Bridgeham, George Bridgeham.” He had hesitated per- ceptibly before bringing the words out. A wild suspicion came to me that he had made up the name on the spur of the moment and that the firs syllable, “‘Bfidge,” had occurred to him first because it was part of the principal's name. “You Have Same Papers. “Please be seated, Mr. Bridgeham.” I took a chair myself, felt that I needed it, for I had no idea what this strange visit portended, and there s a distinct tremor of fright run- ning through my muscles. “Thank you, m—m—" He cut the last syllable short as he sat down and looked at me furtively to see if T noticed it. I made no sign ‘that I had done so, but 1 was sure be had started to say “‘ma'am”. I waited quietly for his errand, resolved to strategic advantage. Fog I had the quecr, uncanny feeling tMat in.some inexplicable way this man and' I ywere at dagger's drawn. § He waited also, doggedly for fully two minutes, then evidently decided that I did not mean to speak. “You have some personal I believer, madam. which Mr. bridge confided to vour care.” Again the little warning. bell my sub-consciousness, {:ouly this time it was a louder and’ mdre dis- tinct peal. I resolved to be wxceed- ingly wary in my dealings with this Mr. Bridgeham, who stumbled over his own name, ‘I am afraid your ous, Mr. Bridgeham, “I have only which T ',\ml your mechanical, it him to seize that state papers., Stoc rang | in belief is arrone- 1 said sweetly, some school records, for am personally responsible to Mr. Stockbridge and no other.” “T am afraid you will have to re- fresh your memory, as we say somec times to witnesses in the court room,” he said with more than a touch of insolence. “For Mr. Stockbridge has commissioned me to get certain personal papers of his which he say you hold.” For a moment I Kenneth Stockbridge would send some which I was for him. But he would employ for so delicate an errand- of such vital impor- tance—could not possibly be the man before me. 1 cast wildly about in some way out, found it, the man facing me. b Stockbridge school records,” I “And, of course, vou have a written order, from Mr. Stockbridge for me to give them to you ” FOX’S Thurs.-Fri.-Sat. The 13th Chair |PALACE TONIGHT—WED. “LITTLE ORPHANT ANNIE” WITH COLLEEN MOORE ANTONIO MORENO in “Perils of Thunder Mountain.” OTHERS Vaudeville FEATURING Ruth Curtis and Her Jazz Band a was staggered. had told me he for the packet s0 religiously the messenger one keeping surely one my brain for and turned to must mean the said positively. Watch for “THE AUCTION OF SOULS"” NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, SEPI Unless otharwise noted, these motices ard bureaus GHEATING CHEATERS ENTERTAINING SHOW Lyceum Players Score Big Hit on Opening Night (By Herald The theme of Manager son’s offering at Reviewer) W. G Lyceum theater Mas- the ‘act as butler | for this, Players the fifth week of the Lyceum can best be explained in two words—Cheating Cheater: of the play. the title The show deals with the plotting and counter-plotting of clever bands of two operating in the suburbs of New York city and to close four crooks acts of intensely interest- ing acting a surprise-ending is sprung upon the audience. The characters in the cast are hap- pily cast from Nan Carey alias Ruth Brockton, portrayed by Miss Leonaid, and Tom Palmer, played by Mr. Wellington, down to the two sturdy policemen who guard.the doorway of the office of the National Detective Agency in New York cily the morn- ing after the police make a successful coup of the gang. The work of Frank Ford who assumes the roll of Steve Wilson, a gunman and one of the toughest characters of gangdom, i especially commendable. His part, difficult one, is handled in a most capable manner and while opportuni- lies are offered several times to easily overdo thet role, Ford takes care of his lines without 'a flaw. . A great deal of ‘tho comedy interspersed between the lines of “Cheating Cheaters,” is put across by ‘Steve, and his acting of the part of a gunman attempting to to better impress their victims, is most amusing. As usual, the leads, Miss’ Leonard and Mr. Wellington, could not be im- proved upon. Nan, (Miss Leonard) s the brains of one of the gangs and s expected to engineer the biggest undertaking the *“combine” has ever attempted, while in other quarters Tom (Mr. Wellington) is being brought to task by memhbers of his sroup for not “pulling” the Brockton robbery.at once. Tom's hesitation is brought about by his love for Nan, whom he knows as Ruth Brockton, the daughter of and Mrs. George Brockton, his victims, while Nan's fusal to act, excepting when and where she pleases is explained in the closing scene of the play. Charles Mylott, in the role of Tra Lazarre, an unscrupulons lawyer, who is giving the Brockton gang financial backing but playing on the outside, offering suggestions but nev-. er glving orders regarding the meany of obtaining and disposing of the¥ prized Stuyvestant jewels, is seen to advantage. His warnings to his complices after they have fallen into the hands of the authorities are most amusing, he continually warning them that he has had nothing to do with the deals and that “anything you say will be used against yow.” Gqorge Brockton, a dignified confidence %nan. (Barrow La Paige) and the supposed ther of Nan, handles his lines in an excellent manner and Eugene Shakes- peare as a butler and accomplico to the Palmer gang is good. The audience is informed through the lines of the play in the first act— set in the yented apartment of the Brockton gang—that the Palmers have been pursued across the ocean twice in quest of the Stuyvestant jew- ls which are known to be iIn their possession. On the return both gangs are aboard the ill-fated Titanic and Tom proves himself a hero. -All are saved, including Ferris whose identity is not known, but who known to be tralling Brockton and Palmer in the interests of the Amalgamated Burglary Insurance companies. The Palmer group plays for jewels which the other combine known to have because of the fla display of the precious stones, effect a close friendship. The RED CROSS WORKER SICK TWO YEAR; TELLS HOW SHE GOT WEL Miss G. 1. Baird of 30 Glenville Ave., All ston, Mass., writes: I have been sick al- most two vears, had four doctors with little or n rellef. 1T was growing thin every da went from 138 to 111. 1 was so discour- aged 1 aidn't know what to do. One night about three weeks ago, 1 pleked up a_paper and saw your Dr. True's Elixir Family Laxative and Worm Expeller, advertised T made up my mind I had worms, and the next bought a small bottie of Dr Elixir I was surprised at the stomach werms some a finger long, &0 mucl slime, that looked ns though it was just the skin of worms. The day before I fook Dr True's Blixtr, 1 thought 1 should go wild with the crawling in my stomach. 1 feel like a new person, all my friends say 1 look 0 much better. 1 wouldn't have bellevad any ona could feel so much better In such a short time 1 can't glve your medicino praise enough.” Signs of worms: Offonsive breath upper lip. sour stomach, deranged stomach, becasfonal ripings and pains about the navel, pale face of leaden tint, eves lieavy and dnll, twitching evellds, Mtehing of the nose, dtehing of tho rectum, short dry cough, grinding of the teeth, red points on EENCARN durine sleen. slow fever Dr. True's Elixir, The Family Laxative and Worn Expelle 1s ALL DEALE. DANBIRY e 50th Amnual—Oct. 6 to 11 THE LEADER IN DISPLAYS Attractions and Attendance. is the is hy and plot ewollen sold by G. M. RUNDLE, Sec'y, Danbury, Ct. I’ ||II ] Il!!l s written by the o€ the theaters or other nmwu—. with which they deepens when Nan is invited to spend a few days at Palmer's home in the absence of her parents from the city —while in reality the “parents” a making ready for the haul and the get-away to South America. The Pal- mers, believing the Brocktons to have gone away from home, start for Brocktons and find Steve to be the only occupant of the room in which the jewels are stored. They gag him but as they are about to get away Sis ceught by Gbreel New develor: ments come with rapidity and the thild_scene finds the Brockton and Palmé 235 in consultation for the purpose ning an amalgamated combine Wi she words of Nan, “will - drivg gne~ ther crooks out of businessause, there won't be anything lg:c hem to steal.” The meeting is rudely interrupted by the entrance of Holmes and two policemen and all are taken to the detective’s office where'the surprise is sprung. The play-gnds with the pro- claiming of Tom a hero and’the sign- ing up of all membhers of both gangs as members of thejNew York Bur- glary Imsurance vice squad. AT THE PALACE. The Palace is offering big photoplay and vaudeville features tonight and Wednesday. The photoplay feature is a screen version of James Whif- comlr Rile: famous poem, “Little Orphant Annie,” with D. W. Grifith’s latest ““find,” Colleen Moore, in the leading role. Mr. Riley is also shown in the picture. The beloved poet shown surrounded by the children T loved so well and is presented in sev- eral scenes. All of the characters of the ariginal have been brought to the reen in a lifelike manner, and the #nw:ll of the story is bound to move eeply all those who see it. Other photoplays include Antonio Moreno and Carrol Halloway in a new episode of “The Perils of Thunder Mountain.” A laughable comedy and the- Palace News Weekly completes the program. The vaudeville bill is featured by Rtuth Curtis and her jazz band of five pleces, who, offer real jazz music. la Viva and sister offer dances, acro- batic work intermingled with songs and piano; MeRae and Aiken, two black-face comedians, have an origin- al comed that is sure to is act Dplease. IX'S Life in New vides the Sleeping THEATER. York's little opening scenes Lion,” Monroe latest success, which opened a three day chgagement at ° IoxX's theater vesterday. The picture cpens in the habitat of the Italian immigrant in this country but the hulk of the ac- tlon is laid in the Western plains where men play life’s game with an open hand and ready iron | that works Wwith oiled neatness. Tony was an immigrant from th> sunnyland of the ancients. He was also a_modeler in clay and sold his wares oh ' the t where (ne%cmm;on of the gul- found.dn Himl.a friend. A special Christie comedy, the last in the series that have been shown at Fox’s for the past three weeksgfentitled ‘“Mary Moves In" is a rippingeprodution of refined humor. Haroll Ligyd. as usual graces the bill in ai@splendid comic attraction The lat@€st issue of the Pathe News completes the screen bill. A vaudeville program of entertaining value consisting of four big acts give a corking variety per-/| formance. De Voe and Morales have a novelty balancing act that is sure- fire. The King sisters, two pretty damsels, are full of music and pense it in a capable manner. Fields and Edwards are comedians of no small caliber. The Rose trio comes to New Britain with a big time nov- elty singing and dancing act that a sure winner. How to Hel Tired People Get Rested (By Biddy Bye) There is one prohlem that present with every man's wife most insistent at the time changing seasons; as in the when warm Indian summer days, aft- er a cold snap, bring the man-of-the- house home at night fagged out The thoughtful woman who rightly views her half of the marrlage part- nership as protector of the funds whether they be the money or the health of her household, Just cause to be concerned. ixcessive “night fagg" is a symptom of low- ered vitality. Towered vitality means a physical condition in which the system is prone to the assimilation of what ever germs happen to be float- ing around. “Colds” are most easily caught at such a time, and may re- sult more or less seriously. There is one thing that every housewife can do to alleviate this “tired feellng.” She can feed her pa- tient raw eggs. Raw ©gES are recog- nized hy medical authorities as pad- ding for worn nerves, props for droop- ing bodies and lullabys for sleeples: eyes, The idea of a raw egg is not par- ticularly palatable. In fact few peo- ple can take them undisguised. But happily there are many ingenious and delicious dlsguises. Among the Dest are the following: Grape Foam. ogg beaten ligh KIDNEY TROUBL Italy pro- in “The Salisbury's dis- is ever It is of the autumn deceptive disease— thousands have it and Jdon't Know it It you Uwant good results you can ake by using Dr. Kilmer's e oot the reat Kidney ~medicine. At druggiste in large and medium size Dottien Sample #lze by Parcel Post. almo a Happy A ( { others Many mothers who in order to keep the home neat and attractive, the children well fed and dressed, continually OVCYCIO. The experience of motherhood alone causes a severe strain upon the system, from which many women recover slowly, and serious feminine disorders may develop unless great S5 T NS R0 Lydia Vegetable Compout nd LYDIA E. PINKHAM MED care is taken to prevent them. To such women Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is invaluable. For many years this root and hertb medicine has been recognized as the standard remedy for woman’s ills, restoring them to anormal, healthy condition. 2 Mrs. Morgan’s Case East Hampton, N. Y. — “For two. years | suffered with a female weakness, pains in my back and painful periods, and I was so E:nd tired that [ was not able to do my work. A friend told me to use Lydla E. Pinkham’s Vege- table Compound and it fgave me reat l'ehefp My pains left me and amnow able to do my work and feel fine. You can publish my testimonial and if your Vegetable Compound does others as much good as it has me I will be very much pleased.”—Mrs. CHARLES E. MORGAN C’SF E.L.Dennett. AWord to Childless Women There are women everywhere who long for children in thelr homes yet are denied this happi- ness on account of some functional disorder which inman Ecases would readilyyield toLydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. Such women should not give up ho until they have given this wonderm medicine a trial. E.Pinkham’s 2 tablespoonfuls granulated sugar. 1 wine glass of unfermented grape Juice. 1, teaspoonful of lemon juice. After mixing the above pour the mixture into a large sized water glass and fill same with ice water. By use of a second glass rapidly pour the liquid back and forth from one to the other until it is thoroughly mixed. Serve with cracked ice. This is a most effective revivifier and may be drunk any time of day without injuring the appetite for meals. Tt Is an ideal drink for the tired man to find awaiting him upon his return night. An excellent raw egg remedy sleeplessness might be called an for lgg Night Cap. en light. milk 1 egg bes 1 cup of ing point. 2 tablespoonfuls of granulated su- gar. 1 pinch of salt. Nutmes. After beating the oughly the sugar and salt. to whip as you very slowly the scalded milk. Be sure the milk is just at the scalding point. This point can be ascertained by the steam beginning to form off the surface as brought to a scald- in thor- Continue pour in egg stir let telling you about it. Address Dr. Bmrhle, e Binghamton, N. Y. snd_en: close ten cents, also mention the New Britain Daily Herald, it heats in the double boiler. When all the milk has been slowly whipped into the esg mixture, grate a dash of nutmeg over the top. Serve imme- diately. This drink, taken just before ing to bed, has two values. In first place it is highly nutritious. of blood to the stomach and brain are consequently and sleep ensues. £O- the n N Tnaslws < a flavor and ready to eat says @@‘ POST TOASTIES Most popular of corn flakes. the second place it stimulates the ait gestive organs, thus producing The head: relieved a I TTTIIIT I v/