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HEART «« MY HUSBAND ADELE GARRISON’S NEW PHASE OF Revelations of a Wife receding boat, biit er missed roke, she d apidly arms n. of her cetion as the brawny rhythm continued: “He acts hide in that t worry, The Scence b Ficld Glasses Disclosed to Madge. took atter nds from ' excitedly boat arest which had - so persisten three red to be persistent Ticer even and Arection one, of our curiosi prg in the same sept when ulated he had something to e hoat of h she ne mockingly don place for i e it any pe Keep risht on to stop prety voice its eqit soon and f knittin’ broke in to youru i monished 2 shat's gol info bs fidgety as a t of! herc frowin mysclf. Jost put pm Jong arms of es 1im, even if he here's only Buck < the boat, an’ it's a doin’ the rowin’ alone.” j ¢ 1 leld the contempt f vou can see. ! which one so often finc What's tl fisherfolk of the Im\sp s saw the sense of to his oars w and we were ween our sudd turned ught almost a niost of it had boat which When she it glasses. however, but Il see i on Shelter my/ f3 she had neck and adjusting “[ think anything over uns wh nher said, fastened glasses them around to her somc yours : s got the ' the ciiy cinelt a Ticer cAfter you kin see here,” Mrs. inter think from swered with ready > Reason? 1 take hoa soon boat to a survey acing away from us. last put down there was no satisfied curiosity off the at course and made gle from rsuing. time it was Mrs. Ticer nt to a chuckle. The Ticers Win. bught Buck'd git conviction of e he'd gone very far,” she 'He'd ought to have knowed dn’t beat me and Jerry to- vhen it's all he can do to win a race with Jerry single But what in creation is pos the critter, anyway?” mind evidently paused for who | - { her manne “You were right. Mrs. Ticer,” she ! said languidly. *I can’t see much of Shelter Island, but the glasses bring these other shores very near to omne's 1 use them?” I asked de- murely, wondering a. bit at her omis- sion to offer them to me, for Lillian i is always the soul of courtesy. I “Pardon! Surely,” she exclaimed, handing me the glasses. ISONS’ THEATER | S T Sl B ther?"” Marion asked. B AR O “Not until after a while, A S her mother answered quietly, JOEET AND SATURDAN | who know so well her indulgence of Matinee Saturday. ’ the child in every possible wish that . Shubert Present is reasonable, realized that there must sical Comedy ¢ be me especially good reason for cess Lillian's wishing to .keep the glasses o d Morning Judge in hcr own possession. with made the same pretense of wx\ec])ln" the horizon as Lillian had GEORGE HASSELL Brilliant Cast of 80 Including done, tried to be as adroit in masik ing my careful ingpection of the boat mrivaled Beauty Brigade c to $2.00. Mat. to $1.50 which was still rushing in a contrary direction to ours. But I felt that T treet Fhone C-1026 was clum indeed, and also admitted RLESQUE that my inspection was useless. What I had expected to see I did not know, WIS and DODY ELLO, AMERICA" but what I did witness was the very \ re- them next, uc- { 25¢ ordinary sight of one man in nonde- script garb swiftly rowing a boat, while another man, attived, as far as I could distinguish, in. rather natty sportsman’s clothing, was huddled in the bow of the boat in such a posi- tion that one could not ascertain his | stature, e or his featt Jerrs excited ejaculs made down the glasses quickly. his Tice me put they must think we have * he exclaimed. “Look boat leggin’ it away ma, SCRE \\l 0 SHOW. the and she | iile Il row ygu over lo where | the trace | i dearie,” and I | Unless otherwise noted, thes burcaus of the theaters or other I s | LYCEUM THEATE l The new bill of vaudeville and mov- | ing pictures at the Lyceum theater | plaved to lrge audiences at both per- | formances y Chief Zat Zam land compan 1d the vaudeville bill, | During the performance the Aztec ,Indian gives an cxhibition in knife | throwing. He will give a public cx- { hibition in front of the thcater on WALLACE REID «The Valley of the Giants® { { Saturday afternoon at 12:30 o’clock. } Elsie Mount has a pretty singing act. Jimmy Dunn is a comedian and has a line of new stories. The manikins are always popular and the act on the Lyceum bill is out of the ordinary and found much favor with the large audiences. Wallace Reid in “The Valley of the Giants,” is the feature picture. There is action from the start to the finish and the lovers of ourdoor life will enjoy it. The scenes are laid in the great redwood forests of Californi Some of the most beautiful photogra- phy cver seen in any picture is a feature of “The Valley of the Giants.” Mr. Reid has a delightful role, that of a young lumberman who wages a hard battle for fortune and wins out in the end. The Mack Sennett com- edy, “The Star Boarder,” is a scream from start to finish. The Paramount magazine and the news weekly and a chapter of “The Lion Man" makes up the strong bill for the remainder of the week. Tomorrow doors of afternoon the VAUDLVILLE ALLACE REID “‘The Valley of the Giants”’ BIG VAUDEVILLE ACTS-4%' See Chief Zatsam perform his perllous@ t of throwing sharp knives and encircling @ h them a human form. [0 ] ) ) o) ) ] ] ] ] FOX’S | Anniversary Week FRIDAY AND SATURDAY GEORGE WALSH IN A GREAT STORY OF THE DEEP “THE SHARK” IT'S A THRILLER otices are ! bling the two. ipyn IL el ...Jmt‘i Written by the press attractions with which they deal the theater will open at 12:30 o’clock and the performances will start at 1 o'clock and 1l continue until 10 o'clock at night. Don't miss the chance of seeing the bill at the Ly- ceum theater. George Walsh is the big attraction at the last half of Fox's anniversary week in a splendid drama of the deep blue sea, *“The Shark.” This sea story of luck, lure and love holds the at- tention of an audience from start to finish. It relates the amazing adven- tures through which a young society girl passes in her search for ,the unique. She is captured by a hufan devil and saved by a man who would destroy her but whose manhood awakened by her helplessness. He i becomes her protector and fights for ! her life and safety. He wins'first her admiration and then her love. Georg Walsh plays the role of the protec- tor as the mate on the tramp ship whose captain captured Wilsh has never been scen in a more absorbing dramatic produc- tion than *“The SHark” which is a story with plenty of action, fistic bat- tles and free-for-alls. There have Leen many good pugilistic contests shed on the silver sheet but none n compare to the fight between the captain of the Aurora and the mate over this pretty younz girl. The vaudeville consisting of six acts, is of iber plendid variety. bot Trio have an exceptional- 1y novel offering in the fact that one of the trio balances herself on a wire held in the teeth of the other mem- bers. The Rural Comedy Four is a comedy quartet that dispenses real comedy and harmony without scram- Jenne Loudon & Co. offer a clever sketch. GIVE EXCELLENT PROGRAM. Audience Enjoys Musicale Last Night | in Swedish Lutheran Charch. New DBritain music lovers were afforded another enjoyable entertain- ment last evening, when the Arpi Sextette gave a concert in the Swed- ish Lutheran church. The Apollo Singing souety of New Haven as- sisted in the program and solo num- bers of merit were given by Herbert Anderson, violinist; Miss Mabel An- derson and Frederick W. Latham. The program was arranged with care and the variations offered wero pleasing to all. The singing of the Arpi Sextette and the iApollo society was excellent and the soloists’ num- bers brought forth merited applause. WANT APPROPRIATION. At a meeting of the municipal garage committee last night Chair- man King recommended an initial appropriation of $500 with which to begin operations. The running w'li be mechanical after a time, as charges will be made for repairs and storage. Chairman King and Com- missioner Edward Parker are to be in cha CHILDREN GET ESTATE. By the will of Petronella Kordal filed for probate yesterday, Frank Kordal is named executor. Building lots on Acorn street are bequeathed to him. Half-interest in a lot on the same street given to a grand- daughter, Helen Kordal. Pauline, a daughter, is left a Wilbur street lot, is | household furniture and $100. The remainder of the estate is to be dl- vided between the son and daughter. Alpha orchestra at the night.—advt. 18 fair—one ! ¢hicken on pieces of toast placed on a hot platter and pour over the gravy. Cranberry Frappe. 1 quart cranberries. 1 cup sugar. 2 lemons. 1-4 teaspoon soda. Parboil berries in soda water. Drain and put on to cook in boiling water to cover. Cook until tender and strain through a cloth. Make a syrup | of the sugar and 2 cupfuls of water. IG€chen In the kitchen of her own home Sister Mary cooks daily for a family of four adults. She brought to her kitchen an understanding of the chemistry of cooking, gained from study of domestic science in university. Consequently the advice she offers is a happy combination of theory and practice. Every recipe she gives is her own, first tried out and served at her family table. (Ceopyright, 1920, N. E, A.) of brushes nowadays, that if one is trying to economize in equipment by purchasing only the most necessary and many-sided labor savers, one is rather at sea as to what to choose. A brush that means a lot to me is for wiping down wal This is a biz, flaffy piece of lamb’s wool on « long handle. and spreads out flat so it is very easy to wash and always fluffs out to its natural state of softness so there is no danger ng the wall paper. Constant attention to the walls will mean a big saving in cleaning and papering bills. But a rag tied over a. broom has heen known , barm than good. ! Menu For Tomorrow. Jjuice, bacon, eggless Luncheon—Parsnip cakes, mon toast, tea. Dinner—Chicken fricassee, mashed potato, winter beets, celery, bread and butter, cranberry frappe, sponge cake, coffee. i | cinna- My Own Recipes. The estra time spent in squeezing oranges for juice more than repays | one. The cheaper oranges with seeds are usually sweeter and just as julcy as the big, expensive, navel oranges. Of course, if halves of the fruit are served it is almost necessary to use the larger oranges, but for juice the small ones are just as good. Eggless Muffins, 1 cup coarse bran. 1 cup flour. 1 teaspoon baking powder. 1-2 teaspoon salt. 1 1.2 tablespoons molasses, 11-4 cuos milk (sweet). Mix in the order given. Turn into well greased gem pans and bake 20 minutes in a hot oven. Chicken Fricassee. 1 fowl. 3 tablespoons flcur. Salt and pepper. Triangles of toast. Cut up chicken as for frying. Put in a kettle and cover with boiling water., Simmer about 3 hours, adding salt when atout half done, When ten- der remove from water, roll in flour {and fry in bacon fat. Reduce the chicken stock to about 3 cupfuls and strain. Mix flour in the bacon fat left in the pan from frying the chicken. Slowly add stock. Season with salt and pepper and cook 5 min- utes, stirring constantly. Arrange Olcott's orchestra at the f._nr—one night.—advt. II-@S@@fii@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@ PAL pkedetetodedetoletetotofeolotelco ek & TONIGHT AND SATURDAY THE BIG PARAMO UNT-ARTCRAFT SPECIAD “LITTLE WOMERN” Taken From Louisa M. Alcott’s Famous Story. You Have Read the Book—Now sec the photoplay. KEITH VAUDEVILLE FEATURES ACE} © BYYBSGGHORBBGE | | home-mad, a state ' Therc are so many different kinds . The wool comes oOff | to do more | Add lemon juice. Cool and turn into freezer. I'reeze to a mushy consists ency. Use equal parts of salt and ice for freezing frap[/)e. Why do we seek an article marked “hand made” yet shy at one that's MARTY. JAPS GET PHILOSOPHIGAL Woman Advisor Wants World-wide Understanding Between Capital and Labor—Tokio Shop As Example. Tokio, Jan. 16.—A co:operative or- ganization of capital and labor which would not ignore human instincts and feelings should be established throughout the world, in the opinion of Mrs. Ko-ko Tanaka, woman ad- viser to the Japanese labor delega- tion in the international labor con- | ference at Washington. ! Contributing her views on the labor j question to a Japanese womeh’s-mags azine, Mrs. Tanaka says/that.if such { & system were inaugurated, ‘the:labor: | €r would be emancipated froim: the ! position of a wage earner_ahd.would { employ his energy with hope ‘and {zeal. She continues: *This is no mere paper arguthent! | Such a system is actually practiced in a ticket manufactory at Tokio. It is & small factory with less than 50 hands. The owner leaves the man- agement entirely to his employes. The profits arc divided equally between owner and employes. The experiment the test of several yvears THE TIME THE PLACE anp THE GIRL MUSICAL COMEDY Under the Auspices of Daly Council, K. of C, JANUARY 19 AND 20 Tuesday Night practically sold out. Plenty Monday Night scats left; hurry ; and avotd the rush. Monday Matinee—Prices 15¢. Evening Prices—81.50, $1.00, 75c, NO WAR TAX ClSSype e ——— 35¢, 25¢ and 'and it could be applied to any factory scale.” that on a much larger Mrs. Tanaka believes ‘union } recognition should be granted by thae the be Japanese government and that umion idea should in due course, extended to woman labor in Japan. COMFORT STATION COMMITTEE WILL ASK FOR APPROPRIATION Sketches for the proposed muni. cipal 'comifort station, to be erected on ‘the north side of Central Park, were presented last night by City En- giheer: Willlam H. Hall at o special committee meeting. Councilman J. Gustav Johnson presided and Coun- cilman George Wells was named sec- retary. The committee voted to =t before the board of finance and ta: + ation to explain the projéct and ask for an;appropriation. Statistics from several Connecticut cities and from Springfield, Mass., were presented Of the sketches produced and dis- cussed, one furnisho=d by the city en- gineer calling for a 42 by 57 foof structure at the north side of Central Park, to cost $20,000, was approved. | l Honest Advertising S is a topic we all hear now-a-days bécausé so many pesple are in. Trg ed to exsggerate. Yet has any physiciaa told you that we claimed unreasonable remedial properties for Fletcher’s Castoria? Just asl them. We won’t answer it ourselves, we know what the aaswer will be. That it has all the virtues to-day that wad cleimed for it in its early day: jstobefound initsincreased use, the recommendationby proniinent physicians and our assurance that its standard will be maintained. Imitations are to be found in some stores and only because of the Cas toria that Mr. Fletcher created. But it is not the genuine Castoria that Mn Fletcher Honestly advertised, Honestly placed before the public, and from which he Honestly expects to recéive his reward. Genuine Castoria always bears the sigaatare of N @@-:éi'@@@@#@##@@%#@##@#fi@%##fi@ 2 Goldenblum Millinery Co. @188Mfin&nwg Y.M.C.A. Bldg. ¥ b4 SHGBEFRBBBBBE G B OBBO OB colors. Regular value $12.50, 3rd ¢ Anniversary Trimmed Hats, less than half price, all Special for Saturday .. Trimmed Hats. Regular value $9.50. Special for Saturday .............. Last call on Beaver Hats. Reg. value $4 95 © Ul CLLE 2SR T T LT T TR LT R T T TR ey & w “SPORTS IN THE ALPS”: EW AND NOV! $3.49¢ $3.98% & $4. 98@ $8.50. Special for Saturday Newest Satin and Straw, and Georgette and Steaw. ... ... ... FREE EXHIBITION The Chief will give a Free Exhibition in® pnt of the Lyceum Saturday at 12:30 p. m.% will hurl daggers at any person volun- ering while blindfolded. ack Sennett Comedy “The Lion Man” Doors Open Saturday at 12:30 and ow Begins at 1:00 o’Clock. 55 55 5 5 ) ) ) ) ) ) 5 ] ] VAUDEVILLE ACTS FEATURING: NURAL COMEDY FOU! Liesmerd Bl ing ek o s ih i = The newest models in Georgette and Straw Com-, binations. On sale for Satarday . C S e £ Goldenblum Millinery co.§ “BLIND HUSBANDS.” “THE MIRACLE MAN."” g @ 188 Main Sh.eet’ Y' M. c‘ A‘ Blds g TR T P PP T . SEE THE FIRST EPISODE ANNE LITTLE—JACK HOXIE IN “LIGHTNING BRYCE” A SENSATIONAL SERIAL. EXTRA ATTRAOTIONS TALBOT THIO MACK SENNETT'S SOREAM- NE L ,()(’D()N CO. i ING COMEDY BOX OFFICE OPEN 1.30 TO 10:30 acdoledodedetelotoleto ottt Rt T Re ket ietedetedeteleloloTotetelol Lottt o Tt oT R R R A “THE STAR BOARDER.” bedeRedefetetotolelotototed BUY YOUR SUNDAY NIGHT TICKETS TODAY EEEEE T EE LegaReted (=] W