Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
MAUNDER’S FAMOUS CANTATA NEW BRITAIN DAILY ‘“‘Penitence, Pardon and Peace’ SOUTH CHURCH SUNDAY EVENING at 7:30 Publié Cordially Invited | MY HEART Aanxp MY HUSBAND ADELE GARRISON’S NEW PHASE OF Revelations of a Wife into and tennis things to fas! iddy over my nig The Summons P feet stockings That Came in the \Igh! shoes, the qul(l\l\~l The insistent ringing of the tele- | drew a skirt and phone awakened me from a troubled | dress and, thrusting my sleeves into slumber in the night following the' a sweater as I went, T was out of my writing of our invitations to Rob door when T heard Marion's voice in Savarin—a umber haunted by ! ghtened dreams in which Lillian, Harry Un- Has anything derwood and the ~artist figured | mother fantastically. “No, For a few seconds 1 lay in that| knowing transition between sleeping and wak- | allay iug when one’s faculties are scattered j truth. ““But Auntic Durkee has hal and nced a stronz tug to assembicfa bad fall and I am 3oing over ‘o them again. Then I switched on the | take care of her. Will you take car night light, pulled on slippers and of Junior if he wakes up?” Tathrobe and hurried to the nch “I'll stay awake until you telephone in the hall upstirs. It i back,” she promised, “‘but please leave always my lot to answer the telephone | the light on a little, won't you? if it rings in the middle of the night “Surely, darling,” 1 said, My father's room is too far from it | be back as soon as I can.” to hear it, my mother-in-law’s As I ran down the hall and frailness put her out of the ques- | room I looked at my wrist tion, while as for Dicky,” whether | One o'clock! What had my waking or sleeping. he pays no atten- | neighbor been doing on the stairs at tion to either phone or doorbell. this hour? 1 knew that unless she “Let 'em ring. It's nothing in had guests for an evening party she Young life,” I have heard him always wont to bed at about eleven sleepily, regardl of the fact thu I rushed into Dicky's room and put any sert of emergency mizht be the | my hand upon his shoulder. He cause of the untimely message. { sprang up, startled. Alfred Durkee’s voice came over “What the devil?” he ejs the phone, agitated, tense then with quick alarm, “That you, Madge? Can you come ‘ Mother! What is it?"” over right away? Mother's fallen What Alfred Fearcd downstairs. I don’t know how badly | M Durkece has fallen she’s hurt, but—" E 1 said. “Alfred just “I'll be there in a minute or two.,” | phoned. I'm on my W over. You'd 1 said quickly. “Go back to her. ! better telephone Dr. Gibson for Dicl Is Startled [1aifrea hasn't had time. Ull tell him 1 _rushed back to my room you're doing it. Then come on ove EIEIEIEIEIE]EJEIEEI[EIE][ZI]EIEIEIEIEIIEIEIEIEIEI@E]IEI[EI happened ) darling,” I said _that the quickest way her fears was to tell her quickly, to the comie to Dicky’'s watch. my culated, “*Junio down- thry HOUSE OF EXCELLENCE TONIGHT LAST TIME HARRY CAREY “Mark_ea_ Men” TOMORROW EVENING SUNDAY GREAT TRIPLE BILL ! H. B. WARNER “Grey Wolf Ghost” “The Triflers” —WITH— Edith Roberts AND “A Milk Fed Vamp” MONDAY TUESDAY WED) WILLIAM IFOX PRES eo. Walsh —IN— “A Manhattan Knight Athletic DAY Photo Drama in which (his Star Surpasses Himeell ox’s Supreme Vaudeville & JIMMIE LOGUE —_— “THE EXPLORLERS” “BRAZILLIAN JUNGL DOUGHERTY AND DOUGHERTY AND “ROLLING O ATLANTIC CITY BOARD WALK™ THE INVISIBLE HAND" —J iR OUTING COMEDIES Cameramen “ON TH Episode 14— — With its Ten Thousand Entirc World ) 5 ) ) ) ) o i ]EHEIEIE]EIIEEIEI FOX NEW Covering tne EHEE]@@@E]E and 1114 little | ! and, i found tele- | fear | | said, i ago she | dead, is awake and looking after Junio “Of al] the rot! How it ious enough for a There you go azain, butting into oth i pcople’s affairs. Did Alf : | telephone { ‘He .didn't" have time,~ 1 Ir: aly. i | I Marion | do you i moving toward the But ple don’t trouble yourse cither to telephone or get uy and 1 will no - doubt be manage.” I am atrdid 1 more cmphs than for the repose of the sleepers in the house. But I have seldom been so , angry at Dicky as 1 was at that mo- ment. It was, how but one of a i number of similar incidents, and 1 do | not think Dick 1lone among 1 in his conventional horror of takin initiative in another family's the door wit was necessary shut 1 h redoubled stairs to the side haste T went down- door opening upon {the lawn adjoining tne Durkee place The lock gave me some unexpected trouble and I Jost a full minute before 1 succeeded in opening it. As I final- wung the door wide, T heard voice at the telephone upsta asking for Dr. Gibson's number and 1 smiled, as 1 sped across the lawa, at the discrepancy between Dicky's “bark and bit The Durkee door I rang the bell. A Alfred, wild-eyed and with rumpled hair, sketchily attired in a bathrobe and slippers, opened the door. “She's fainted or somethinz,” he gasped, fear and horror on his e, turning, raced for' the sta was locked and moment later, again. ~When T had reached his side I him holding the little figure o° his mother in his arms. Her face was colorless, but I saw that it was onh a faint. One leg was doubled under her, and I judged that she must have fallen upon it. - “I heard her calling to me,” he big drops of perspiration stand ing out upon his forehead, “‘but when I reached her she wouldn't let m move her, said the pain was too bad. She made me go and telephone fo you, and after 1 came back he Wwouldn't be moved, Just a minuts went off like this. She isn't she?” “Indeed, no,” I returned with o mental anathema upon my littie nds stubbornness in refusing to be ut into a more comfortable position. has simply swooned with the T'll take her feet and hélp you her up to her bed before her to. Then [TCHY BLISTERS ALL OVER FAGE SkinSoreand Red. Had toScratch. Lost Rest, Cuticura Heals, we “ My sister had a cat scratch and blisters formed all over her face. The skin was sore and ted, and itched so that 225N, she had to scratch and irritate the breaking out. ) Shelost her sicep at night. Ji; The breaking out devel- { oped into large sore erup- tions and it caused disfigurement. ““Then she used Cuticura Soap and Ointment, and she used one cake of Cuticura Sosp and one box of Cuti- cura Ointmentwhen shewas healed.” (Signed) Miss Madeline Sroka, 163 Spruce St., S. Manchester, Conn. Improve your skin by daily use of Cuticura Scap,Qintment and Talcum. Eample Each Free v Mail. ZLabdaratorier, Dept. , Malden, Mass.’ c. Ointment 25 and 50 Cuticara Soap shaves without mug. AKDUND HARTFORD. THIS WEEK \l\ll\l i1 SATUR Il\\ “A'S GREAT! ¥ SRTAINER FRED STONE “Jacko’Lantern” Eves. and Sat. Mat, S1 to §3. No Telephone Orders Take 5 GRAND Hamurd BURLESQUE JOE HURTIG'S { “Girls of the U. S. A.” WITH (SHIMKY) | Main P’hone AW JILTON VYAUDEVILLE know | doctor” | you to | said | door. | HERALD, SATURDAY, MARCH 20, 1920, TOD MUCH DRAB HOME LIFE LEADS T0 THE DIVORCE COURT, SHE SAYS uNbERWOOH unDéRves S‘g? Miss Lucille Pugh, Popular Member of the New York Bar, as She Appears in the Evening and D uring Business Hours, (By LORRY A. N. E. A Staff Cor New York, March Young couples of the present day suffering from an overdose domesticity.” * Thi Pugh, 20.—"Too many are of course of courtship and mar- riage nowadays is: Marshmallow courtship. Chocolate cream honeymoon. Peanut brittle early married life. Miss Lucille more than just a according to ttorney-at-law for 1 vears at 135 Broadway, ‘hisper off Wall Street, is the great underlyig cause for the fact that divorce not now subject to a luxury tax, having grown to be a staple. Marrirge Grows Dull in overdose of domesticity,” Pu who rezarded onc of the snappiest members of the bar around Wall Street, I mean thal “BON-BON - LOVE"” Lucille Pugh says the usual Rock salt divorce. \ ——————————————————————— considerations, and plants the divorce seeds. Neglect is the fertile divorce By field. says Miss Leads to Neglect “It is not the husband who stays out one night a week or who even young couples muke the mistake of leaves his w alone several nights not interesting themselves in things a week who is guilty of neglect so outside their little sphere of married much as the husband who is at home life. As a result it grows dull. And every night and yet omits the little when it grows dull it cau. neglect. attentions that are the spirit and evi- And neglect certainly causes divorce. dence of love. So, the woman may “Unhappy marriage does not burst also be raglectful. forth as the sudden realization of “One great wrong invites forgive- mutual defect. One of the marriage ness, for it does not show the man in partners drops the little attentions, his character, but out of it. A series the swectheart kindliness, the tiny of slurs or neglects leads to hate.” is says @0@6‘% For me its a bottle of milk and a package of POST TOASTIES We Have Been Appointed Ofiicial CRVICE STATION for this ter- ritory. Zenith Equipped Cars POWER, SMOOTHNESS GAS ECONOMY. SPEED, CR“BU“:"'OR AND Ao 1N GETLO T A. G. HAWKER 10 Elm Street, New Britain, Connr | theater, { one | edienne | who Yes, Cold All Biaf Coush it o Left E Feel great this morning. As soon‘as I felt it coming on yesterday 1 used Gray's Syrup and nipped it in_the bud. Just couldn’t miss an hour at the office, we are _so busy and short-handed. Gray's Syrup is a habit in our family, the folks have used it for sixty years. 1 Atways buy the Large Size as i RED SPRUCE (fim ', i flnnbonl DWATSON & CO. Ntw)’ork kL THEATRICAL MEN SELECT OFFICERS | H. B. Dcan Hcads \ssociation to Get Better Vilms and Vaudce- ville Here. A meeting was held yesterday after- noon in the Lyceum theate: was attended by men interested theatrical and amusement enterprises in New Britain and surrounding territory, At this mecting an orgs formed which will be Theatrical Managers' association of New Britain. The object of the asso- ciation is to better theat condi- tions in this city, to furnish through co-operation better motion pictures and better vaudeville. A representative will be stationed i New York who will act as sart of a general advisor and censor on all ac before Leing sent to the various meni- bers in New Britain. This will also apply to all motion pictures. If an or picture is not acceptable in York or elsewhere it can not be fois ed on the New Britain public through some unscrupulous theatrical agent in New York. The representative will review and pass on all acts and pictures before members of the assaciation here will consider booking them, which will in- sure the public of not being compelled to tolerate some bad and tiresome pic- tures and acts which might otherwise reach here. At yesterday's meeting Harry B. Dean was electéd president of the new association. Mr. Dean is the local manager of William Fox's theater, having been in this city but a short time, and came here direct from Fox's Academy of Music, New York, and previous to that was with the Davis theater in Pittsburgh, Pa. ane of tho Keith houses, consequently Mr. Dean is well fittéd with a wide experience in some of the best and largest thea- ters in the country. S. Andrulewicz of the Lyceum was elected vice president and- John S. Contaras secretady while Peter Pe- rakas of the Palace will fill the office of treaslrer, all of whom are well known locally. The public will be invited to offer suggestions or file any complaints for or in connectian with any theater in the city through a letter addressed to the president, who will take it up of- ficially with the association. The Theatrical Managers' associa- tion of New Britain is a move in the right direction and the public will hope for a betterment of conditions and will gladly cooperate with it. (nization was known as the “THE SWEETHEART SHOP™ PLAY AT THE PARSO attraction at the Parsons all nest week, with the us. ual matinee Wednesday and Satur- day, is a new musical play, “The Sweetheart -Shop,” the book and ly- s of which were written by Anna aldwell, who ha to her credit many notable suc ack O Lantern,” Fred Stone's present ve- hicle, is from her pen. The wmusic of “The Sweetheart Shop"” was writ- ten by Dr. Hugo Felix, who first en- deared himself to the theater- going public by his ch rming score of “Madame Sher and whose. melo- dious “Lassie,” heard here earlier ason, is well remembered. tion means that the y v is work of an experienced writer w trained musician. Much has been said of late making the world safe for racy. well “The Sweetheart deals with making it safec for intrepid voun men contemplating matri- mony. To do this, one Gideon Blount, a fanatic on the sale of insuranc conceives the idea of insuring sweet- h ts against “‘domest infulicity” —whatever that means: but this Blount has 2 knowledge of human natu and realizes that some of & will be “*ha ardous, SO W nce is sought upon a bride hie has a staff of tempter: and the C premium is based upon ihe which the young lady wooings of her u This is certainiy insurance, even to H situations The about democ- insur pos- pro- of de- Tistens pective fessional the to the tempter kind of i the humor to be ¢ be readily ap AMe AMa and Patch also ed a cast includin s secured from “oNies,”" dancing nd to the New immediately est of our mo: comedians; ¥ of skill and one of the Burglar’ appeared suc rtford. and the : have provi player who v wich V entric revelation and the in which acting wa York publ ablished him promising youn Howard, a co personality. who leading roles in Paul Nicholson, in Hartford with 1o need further who playved the York secason of Lertora, who was New York com- Zella Russell, lag her created ‘Kiss has man mention: Helen Férd, 1l the entire New ometime™; Joe | aviator ‘in th pany of “Going I Una Fleming, M Harper, und others. The producers have been for- tunate in being able to o a chorus of fresh young young ladies unspoiled by lor with musical comedy, who can nee and - wear beaudiful cefully. too the gowns | she ofre which | in | in | This Shop™ | his en | known | new | ted from them will ! iy for of four adults. She brought kitchen an understanding chemistry cooking, gained study of domestic science in a university. Consequently the 4 is a happy combinati practice. Every s her own, first trief served at her family table, (Copyright, 1920, N. E. A. Once in a while it's a good p! look through pantry cupboards tuke a sort of inventory. There certain cercals and that will not keep through thel months and need to be used up the weather is still cold If one knows there are 1 to use it is easy to plan will use such provisions For instance, co S warm weather cerea producing food to be, doesn’t keep in hot places. one finds one is long on cornmed short on rice, put the rice on shelf and the cornmeal « shelf, in plain sight, and corn. I"rom pancakes to pudding mecal may be used to advant Menu for Tomorrow. —Sliced bananas wi corn dodgers, nj of theory he gives and an rov, meals Break coaked cercal lade, coffec. Luncheon—Apple and ch Dinne tato souffle fritfters. er cutlel . oran My Aithougl light meat cou of the tood o substances in proportion to ma In the luncheon menu the satisfy the appetitc and the furnishes the protein in conee form. Corn Dodgers 3 cups corn meal. 1 teaspoon salt. 1 dessert spoon lard. Boiling water. Mix corn meal, salt and lar with boiling water, making a st| ter. Beat hard for five minutes by spoonfuls onto a well gres Bake in a hot oven. The bwtler be stiff enough to fiatten on U leaving the dodgers high in tl ter. Potato Souflle. 4 good sized potatoes. 1-2 cup milk. tablespoons butter. 1-2 teaspoon salt. 1-4 teaspoon pepper. 2 s. B Cigy)otatoei with the skins| well done. Pcel and put thi ricer. Scald mijk and melt b milk. Beat milk into potatoes son with t and pepper. Bea of egss till \hhk and lemon-| nd beat into potato mixture. whites of eggs till stiff and d fold into the first mixture. Tu a well buttered baking dish a in a hot oven for ’l)] minutes. ce or it will fal e paked Indian Pudding. cups milk. tablespoons butter. esgs. ; 4 cup corn meal ) milk and stir in mcs Let coal, but not so Jukewarm. t eggs well gredients to corn mixture i thoroughly. Turn into a butter] ing dish and bake an hour and Serve with lemon sauce. More tedious’ than a a tWice-cooked steak your head { When a basket of bottles—you need BEECHA PIL SEECHAMS Y “‘ Stomach or bo order poisons and thus irrif rest of the bod. hrg-‘S-kofAnme!em’ in o old everywhere. In boxes, 10 twicet is py s Don cious baby oy usiig unknows pasteurized milk. Use OUR REALLY SA PURE PASTEURIZED ML eliminate ALL question of or richness From selected sources of h 1ty and THOROUGHLY Pa SZED in 2 modern creamery. ASTEURIZED MILK will s; nost exacting J. E. SEERT & 401 P"ARK STREET) Tdiephone 1936