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HERALD, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 31, 1026, —————a————— ——————— = ‘ i in the Fox News. A rouse, which was - i = - MY HEART AND MY HUSBAND |, || 2 |, i man e tien | Shetland Veils of ADELE GARRISON'S NEW PHASE OF e ”x mtmsasns b s | Decade Ago in Favor > ) A gold in aska is. depicted in “The Revelations of a Wife 7 -J{“ "h "’"" Fame of ihe;Yuken. in whicn Doro- || ' The time of this play of the north — = e = - is in the days of '98 when the gold What Madge Felt Forced ; Saz Harbor. see Mrs. Ticer, and ask j mad crowds sought to uncover the | these questions of her. it will help Unless otherwise uoted, these motices are written by the press hidden wealth, where there was no to Tell Lilli | matters along materially.” hurcavs of the theaters or other attractions witk which they deal law of God or man in the camps and | where a man’s quickness ‘on the draw’ decided the question of whether LYCEUM THEATER. critic, was asked “'to what he attribut- | he would live to get back to the . When Constance Talmadge comes to | ed the unbroken line of success.” | “states” with his fortune. People who L he Lyceum theater on Thursday in | Reid’s answer was “To (he fact tha! know the mining camps in the time of fest of reassuring words. (IUCh eanses offa fbneaisdomn. SN el lfey Gl Cate s» dllin B HIChEsheRTR T s | By e We i e s have mlol‘hlcr i | islnratonTes e e thing’s going all right,” she | are plenty of taxis at the other end. | sented by Lewis Selznick patrons of | matier how. ve mother defend-- reflection of those times. i wer to the inguiry in my so that 1 can reach Ticer's quickly the screen will have the opportunity | ing and sheltering her children, and ! Manager Dean wishes to inform the inew better than to put into “Good! Now memorize these & of secing the best Constance Talmadge | [ have found that the hearts of the | public that the performances at Fox's ds any query as to her success or I'll trust fo vour ingenuity (o ask; picture that she has appeared. She is | world hive responded and are are run on the “new time." ure in tracing the man, Jake! them casually.” seen in the role of Joan. young, happy | doirg so.” ; “Begnning next Monday and running | | | illian came back from the city in ! T'li take that first train in (he week following little Mrs. | mornir It will be quicker than I rke: wecident. but hurried away ' dare drive a car. [ won't need any- in the samc (v with only the body with me, and there won't be s5 sey, who had caused Alice Hol- She put a paper into my hand.| and carefree living alone with her In “The Confession™ the mother is; for three days only the much heralded ! be and myself much geental an- ' looked over my shoulder until I had | grandparents, who have forgotten the | wonderrul in her love &nd loyaits | “Her ant Man.” with Miss Shir- h He's an unusually slippery read the questions, answered the sin- | word Outh.” 1In a house nearby | and there has never been made a ¥ M B star will be the offer- nal to trace, but we've zot a zood gle explanation 1 asked concernin lives Martin Grey who has come down more wriistic picture since the discov- on hir He hasn't bothered you one of them, then hastened to her | to his country house to grieve over | ory of the art of making {hem. There will he an entire change of lice Holeombe in room 1o make her brief preparations the death of his dearly loved father. | Ap .dded photoplay atiraction will | the vaudeville bill tomorrow Not me.” | said, “and I heard from for her irip to Washington. Joan and Martin meet and for many ! bo on the hill for the last three days LLool L e only last night, so 1 am sure hv As I folded the paper and put ivj Wonderful days they laugh and play | with Ralph Ince as Abraham Lincoln b e e safely in my dress for memorizing | 108€ther. Then cne day Joan is di in “The Land of Opportunity.” Ther: thought not.” she returned. *[' later. T remembered that 1 had said j CoVered and she is ordered never 10 i il ba four new excellent vaudeville . t think yvouwll ever be annoyed no word to Lillian of Robert Savarin's 5¢ . e s him but once more, and at that intended visit. 1 knew that I mus ran L L Artin and | s Beatties,” in an act that will you'll be the sacrificial 0 remedy the omission before she lefi, ed out in a trap. with Mr, Wilsey : for the artist would be domiciled in | wer . SRl gL & the pari of ihe figer while [ our home by the fime she returned. | ‘nosegie 'y eheh the elty alice is not | “CHU CHIN CHOW. the role of the mighty hunter.” A Shock else to do but to marry Joan. She | A singer who has had ou know what usually happens He had answered our letters of in- | readily consents, thinking that the | MOSt remarkable carecrs cver known e goat,” 1 smiled, vet with an vitation with an almost pathet best way out of her troubles. She has | it the thcatrical busines: is . in the rd tremor at ever again meeting cagerness of acceptance, and I wasi adopted “who cares” for her motto | €ast of “Chu Chin Chow.' the musical nan, Jake Wilsey, even und re that the main reason for both | und not knowing the responsibilfties 1 which F. ltay Camstock n's efficient protection. his acceptance and his first note con- | married life she decides to have one | @nd Gest will present at Par- won’t let the tiger eat you.” | cerning his pictures was his desire to ) wonderful time. She [orgets all about | SONS’ theater the entire week of April c e n promised. Then she hesitated, sce Lillian. With the thought of | the man who has made it possible for : 12 This is his first appearance upon d at me speculatively. I won- Harry Underwood's mocking face as) her to have such a wonderful time and | e stage and for oot f vou could gel away to cover, I had last seen it. T felt a sudden | becomes fast friends with Gilbert Pal- | NeW York he delighted the audiences = 1a e kitchen of her own lLome one little angle of this ihin surge of hot indignation at the barrier e, Alice’s hushand. Palgrave is a | 2t the Century theater with a beauti- ,““ Mary cooks daily for a family hia. ou wouldn't have to he | Lillian had built up between hersel? | Scoundrel of the worst sort. One night | Iul rendition of the Cobbler’s Song in , of four adults. She brought to her b 21 o o dh ot leave i Te lonely artist who loved her | @t an inn he threatens her with a re- | the last .qfw vot “Chu l'hm} Chow.” His ' kitchen an undersla)\(hng of the SR Nl Volver. She tells him Martin is the | name is Felice de Gregorio, and audi- | chemisiry cooking, zained from R It was in this spiril that 1 soush(| OnlY man she lnves and she is not | ences marvel at his splendid voice. | study of e e state | Meagc RenCmbers s Gl S hat | 2fraid to die. Martin saves her and , They Will be surprised to learn that | university. Consequenily ‘the advice | (By Cora Moore) ! veil. is singularly suited for I could mapage that! But e ine 2L S they both decide to settle down and be | Just before the production of *“Chu | she offers is a happy combination of | small, clearly defined features. The han wouldibetwildwithi T Ytsslinscoloned ineivora happy. The vaudeville will be | Chin Chow” Mr. de Gregorio worked | theory and practice. Iivery recipe ! : A i pattern is an all-over one with the curiosity.” [ UIShEL Clothed imy i cas the Lyceum policy. “none better.” { I Waterbury. in ~a factory which |she gives is her own, first tried out | New York.—Som: cfght or ten | merest suggestion of a woven dot her fix that end of it" Lillia here v Something 1 must 121} Other photoplays will conclude tne bill | Makes @ specialty of producing high | and served at her family table. vears aga fashion made a fetish of | and therc. youw." I said when she had bidden me 3 % | | ks him to take her to the home of | o 1o "G S $ok e Cotice, her friend, Alice Palgrave in the city. | e actn one of the New York's Fashion Authority. Bed. '‘All T have to do is to tell : i it for the last ha All next week | ¢! pottery. In this factary Mr. de Shetiand veils. Now she is about to =5 e S e e enter. “Marion. dear, will you please | “Hycxjober inn" will be shown | Gregorio received exactly three dol- e iatihersalf and Theve et e - BY AUTG. 3 some government business aml down and tell Katie to open a can | wiih ndne better vaudeville, | lars and a half a day. TIn “Chu Chin When we wash curtains we always | vogue here for Shetland veils. ! Waterpury, March 31.—James Al- Lave askedf you tolfind lous | cowetneiFipreserved Sicherties SR oy Chow' he receives exactly one hun-iput them through several tubs of | Here in the illustration is Miss ' gcrs, 40, a laundr gon driver, sus- ing for me at Sag Harbor. ''NCheon “CONFESSION” AT PALACE dred times that much as compensation | clear cool water before really wash- ; Laurette Tavior in her present role of | tained a fractur suil and possible kpsll tethy (o0 o Tinana il R 0iicontse Easuniie gMadee/i Sl | Suisar 3 g for one week ing them in soan suds. | "L'Enizme.” in “One Night in Rome.” | infernal injuries vesterday. He wa government work on hand, ! (-»}11(1 said n\mn_. ntly. and hurried out ne of lh.v most talked of photo- y = = 2 . | Very hot soap suds has a tenden- l The veil she has tied around her hat | knocked off his seat and run over/ n last week, which has taken f the room. Necither her mother nor plays that has ever been shown in DAY OF “EASTWARD HO!™ | ¢y to set dirt in a fabric. Durind | and is holding up to her face is' an automobile that had started wh h time that I haven't had the | Ver ask the child directly to leave | this city is now appearing at the Pal- “Iastward Ho!" closes its run to- | the winter months all curtains ac- | named for her. “L'Enig It is soft { the owner, Emil Jenzell of Naugag §6 pick up all the threads con- | the Toom when w: have things tof@acc with Hen:y B, Walthal, Americ night at IFox’s theater. It shows some | cumulate a large amount of sooty | and fine with the ing lines not ! tuck was cranking it. Jenzell wa £ discuss which require secrecy. Bui | Premier charicter actor, in “The Con- s gang stuff true fo the life | dust and even shaking is not going | too heavy to conceal the regula: out- | released on his own recoznizance. Wilsey. But if youll go to | e 3 : - fiaisey she has been trained to obey instantly | fession. It is a story of brotherly reveals an east side gambling | to dislodge this black sufficiently to | line of Miss Taylor's featus r too fo) : 3 i 2 3 nor toa the various little subterfuges which | love that zrips and holds your atten- | joint modeled after a notorious re- | permit of plunging the curtains di- | indefinite to blur the expression. tion until the very end. Henry B.| sort, and with the usual careful real- | rectly into hot soap suds. Another popular Shetland pattein CASTO R I A For Infants and Children In Use For Over 30 Years i Kk for a visit, and 1 thought vou WEBER PRE O 1 iy S L thowEht You | ter the environment the love of moth- | these times. Menu for Tomorrow. “Prima Donna,” another new i ~ er is universal, and the love of a A comed) “Passing the Buck.,” is Breakfa Stewed rhubarb, buck- T Elind Nature Jjust naturally provides —WEEK OF APRIL 12(h. ‘Not Harr she wasped. “He laoss special foods for us when we AIl, ORDERS NOW! hasnit come back, has he? ineed them most. Of these food D ’ H I Q we employ and which she understands % £ L ) E S 3 S . THEA1 Eh perfectly. I knew that she would not | Walthall is seen as a Catholic priest | ism that marks a William Fox produc- It is amazing how black and inky | is the “Alumette,” rather more dar- | | : Always bears Signature of s EW ZIMBALIST Comic Musi- | o G SnAOMLEe tUEn, mother for her voung as everlasting | one or the most amusing and DIESeSt | wheat cakes, Syrup. coffee. There was olute terror in her i M b £ th 5 ;2 1, $2, E $3: el - rhubarb is one o e most impor atasi 8 ""‘l,_* i Wed-1 (oice. T rushed to her and zrasped jtant. The pronounced tartness of | Aiatince, tofez ands i . stimulates appetite. While {Copyright, 1920, N. E. A.) bidden. % When {he door closed after her T[S (he best character actor in pictures. | cal American manhood. brave, strong. | three or four watess there isno dan- | {hreads drawn to the center of cach ght, 8:15. Standard 5 turned to Lillian nervously. Alother love is the universal tic | unafraid: the man who can be the |ger of almost boiling hot suds in the | little octagon in-an infinitesimal cir- Week. Mats, T “Dicky has invited someone you | \WDi¢h Dinds all people together. no | hero on every day occasions and with- | washing machine causing grindy- | cle, then an over dot. It is a pattern . Mats, 5 : matter what the nationality, no mat- | out bluster. It is just the story for |looking curtains. for a full, round face. while the result gave me a glimpse into the|a;q twenty stage succcsses, and upon | day. The inter: in this wonderful Dinner—Pork tenderloin. scallop- * to $2: Fri. Mat. o depths of my friend’s soul not often | peing interviewed by Harold Bell, the | serial has kept up to the last. ped potatoes. baked squash, French - to VGRG0 Gl vaiiio — = An intersting hit of news is _shown | endive, bran rells, apple pie, coffee. and put her hand out gropingly as if My Own Rccipes. gk @ { { return to her mother's room until | HARTFORD. le adds another laurel to his crown, | to sound judgment. It presents typi- | bit of soap to start the dirt. After | has an octagonal mesh with {he | i { f ') which had made me phrase my an- Hal Reid, the American play- | a long time. The last cpisode of the | baked potatocs, radishes, jellied nouncement so awkwardly, bul the | wpight, has written over a hundred | “Invisible Hand” is being shown to- { prunes, tea. - G l l nd his remarkable portr: Al of this | tion. The play is a legitim e appeal | looking the water grows without ing than the veil just described. It eal Play. 17y . i ! -, D t as ervousness, not design, | . ‘he - ges. o cok. 5 = s % i 250 e e v was my nerve as ihe Rock of Ages. laugh provokers seen on the screen for Luncheon—Creamed dried beef, | @@wfi@@@@@@@@@@@@ eletefliotodoolototoToN 0 Satur- hor tast it Matinee. 75¢ to $2.50. ‘Wo. no!” 1 said. “Someone | rhubarb is really a vegetable it may AND ONLY TIMES IN very different. Robert Savarin . he served in many ways as a fruit ‘ - e —— - - \ { B fand should be used and varied oftem. e F A I R \ Da]y Councll, : Stewed Rhubarb, e v o GRAND Hartford No. 12,K. of C. | 0.0 BEIRInESieeet ENoneRLuzs-CHij i Peel thubarb and cut in inch cHIN cHUw RLE UE A '13 dt lzth pieces. Pour over boiling water, let | Q i stand 5 minutes and drain. Put in 2 S prl r 0 BARDECHS BHARD) ia zranite sauce pan. add sugar to !taste, and enouzh water to keep from burning and cook until soft. rld's Most Beautiful Pro. Rt Rty | { Big Scenes; Company of b e il | Monday Evemng, {The rhubarb may be cooked tender usical Extravaganza of the “N S . M .d o0 rc treet‘ fan.l the sugsar added at the last. By in its fourth year is { c & boiling water over the .rhu- s e 5.4 “New Social Maids ; April 5th e @s L Ruckwheat Pancakes. and . H . Public ~cat sale Frida Bluch Landolf. Direct from N. Y. Entertamment and TICKETS ADMEITING I 1-2 cups buckwheat flour. Millinery. 5% i ¥ ] @@@@@afifimafiwfifififi Theate; London. Direct | ear at the Century theater, “ With Pascinating Ina Hayward vy | No tclephone orders. "¢ Hippodrome. .ENTLEMAN AND 2 LADIES 1 1-4 cups wheat flour. o Now for a week of real bargains in beautiful Easter D H ; SR1iRtablesnoonERua Unz o REE Such attractive styles! Such beautiful trimmings! And such wonderful ancing i [ 15 edroonit @ values! Come in and let us put the finishing touch on your Las‘cr Tickets on sale at Kenney & .\'i‘fl\ilhli mix flour, baking powder H @ costume with one of these pretty Spring Chapeaux. {0 with buckwWheat Add IO something DOil‘lg '“”"]'\'m:'{l \31‘:.',1‘*'1:‘::::.4 e j;’l::uzl:“llwllilk to mal)\e‘;\ thin ¢ hatter. | g W d f l V l F 3 i £ T 2 Bake at once on a hot gridd i Every Mlnute ( Has any cook discovered why On er u a ues or@ ‘man prefers pie to salad 5 R BB S - 3 Easter Week LYCEUM | | “’5” TRIMMED HATS TRIMMED HATS ¥ HOWING TONIGHT “THE HOUSE OF BIG HITS.” ! iéI- A very beautiful assortment Val. $7.50. Spe- $4 98 H = Jaxa LAST MES TODAY or MATS. AT 2 P. M. EV A 5. Special ster week cial Easter week illi m R ll o (New Time). Willia: 1 Russe Eugene. OiBrien B “Eastward Ho!”’ AND . EVERYBOD TALKING ABOUT g TRIMMED HATS S e Manhood Play that has appealed to the masses. Koko Carnival CO. “THE CONFESSION” féi' SV e POX : The act that ereated more & 2 the cntine world. showinz today, the famous i S WTITH fruit. Value $8.50. $6 98 = aughs than any other that R K house. built here in New Britain by one of our old 5 Jaugh 'I‘:";I' Special Easter week . GAGE TAILORED IS, PIRL, SAT, APRIL 15, 20 HENRY B. WALTHALL I" Z "‘vl‘-‘"? o8 '\”"7“":'“‘“ " THURS. FRI. SAT.. DON'T MISS THIS WONDERFUL DRAMA z:;;" CHILDREN’S HATS SAILOR HATS —With— oo ENDORSED BY PR ()\II\ NT CLERGYMEN, Trimmed with ain Rib- DOROTHY DALTON fo A larze and pretty display bons, with hiack uvvl white un- 3y pis wonderful struszle between love and the forces of Evil. C t -‘ n fol special i e o3 e | onstance pag Keith Vaudev"le Acts—4 2 & mo... $2.98 L. '$6.98% 1 — BIG. QU.XLITY, ACTS — 4 | T 1 d i a ma ge 5 ATTRACTION, THURS., FRIL, S 5& FOX'S SUPREME VAUDEVILLE ADDED y SAT,, s B | i caminy GoldenblulillmeryCo. P}ilfi)‘l A —;.\ll lil' & JEFF — “HER AL ('"T‘» WINK"™ | WHO CARES? “The Land of opportunity = £ 22 WED. — APRIL 5. 6. o His Master Produc N ANDDVILE NEW VAUDEVILLE WITH SHIRLEY MASON ; “THE BEATTIES" R 4 11 MANT NONE BETTE E A E : neh Storc, 863 Main St., Hartf The Sweetest Cirens St ver b LION MAN P s OTHER FINE