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,:ST !n o=, 2 3 #/’4 s |||\sij lcen are written by the press s with which they deal. Unless otherwise noted, these buresu of the theaters or at LYCEUM NOTIOES ular performance at the s suspended tonight for the len minstrel show which will 5 o'clock anged for v and Charles “The Honorable Collins in nshine Girls present a new | The litter for the balance of the weck | 8 striking tomorrow afternoon They | known on In & musical comedy ht Off the Reel,” or fun & pleture studio. This is comedy playing up the sit overy advantage, and it leal trimmings interwoven | Ih class singing and dancing jn. penting omedy aded " Delmonts, a Sunday in which Charles Miss Jose Collins will Ray will be seen in Almy.”” and Miss Jose ‘Where Is My Husband.” picture is a romance of character. Miss Collins is both the Atlantic nhardt of the screen sides of \1 HARTFORD. Mary Milex Heart"—+“Ladics of the Jury.” of the Heart,” in which Mary Miles Minter is starred, story of a girl whose eyes false, but whose heart true. This is the execellent at the Capitol satirical comedy, laugh compelling Ladies of the Jury,” in different of women how far cun get away | agreeing on anything. *2 | 1a Carte,” is dispensed by Hoy ris and Winters, and a trio of real funsters these are. Winters is the bright young woman member of this ¥ on the sereen since such | animated dissertation on matrimony. e as “Fair and Warmer." Dave Thurshy is a monologuist, the ter whether the reader Is | Kana o Boys do some balancing hind in his account with [ and juggling, 1 and Goff are a ey 6r baker or milkman, he | duo of pretty gzirls who ard musical this picture. It is a delight, | entertainers. h sparkling cleverness amid Tonight will be de of mediocrity during this eng 4 feature biil has been ar- [ brated Marmein _HARTFORD, L THIS WEEK :luhu- Bedini Offers kle Toes Sensdtion of the Season SHOW TO BEDINI'S DUS “PEEK-A-BOC % of the able tells the | played he | played 1 picture A it Girls vau the Sunshine are two acts of by Dalley sensational Bros., de- novelty ncet, ragtime musi- convulsive ualities, hich twelve show just from a Har- in is B one aspect of“the- critical #ituation has been relieved pleture which has its first | the Lyceum tomorrow aft- Parldr, Bedroom and Bath,” from the famous Droadway boess of the same name, It | more room for laughs than types they the last appearance ment of the cele« Sisters, interpretive With what ix conceded to be the biggest and most expensively equip- ped minstrel company ever orshnized, the Neil O'Brien minstrels will be the attraction at the Lyceum tonight at 8:16 o'clock Manager Oscar F. Hodge has promised that no expense has been spared to make the pro- duction one that will linger long in the memory of all who see it. Mr. O'Brien has written new acts or sketches, Is one entitled several among which “Hopping the Atlantic FRIDAY SATURDAY Another Excellent Show ! ONSTANCE BINNEY e STOLEN KISS A*{BUCKLE COMEDY—RUTH ROLAND EITH VAUDEVILLE “The Better Kind” —With— HE SONG AND DANCE FESTIVAL” AS nappy Girlie Revue FIRLS ! GIRLS ! GIRLS ! Pretty Music, Pretty Songs and Dances PER & LACEY ARLISS TRIO LAROSE & LANE DDAY 050 O Ocean, er of negro and is said to be one of the best and funniest, of this noted writ- humer. name implies with a darkey planning, Dealing as its on a hydroplane trip over the ocean and trying to keep his nerve under adverse conditions. A novelty dance called “Playmates” on * a new finale called bring to is promised as the ever have fo! an za! fo ing artists w Francis Roche, Nowak, Dan Mz Steve Allen, rawford, M BV | Le: | w | Ar by Ma Herbert Ginn and There will be at other i Ke by a sot ing =ensation | completed called po ter on ® ! The [ unded d tion,” will rmance flson, Davis pjor iller, a Laird right ¥ thur Dwy wher, g Dic! and concert. the ith *“The big irlie ting ana and “The rtunity to day. “The Stolen Kiss," rstwhile Susan, novel Lucille Van Slyke's delight whimsical “pretender" su the ful a me cessful o-1 Iy whistler ans BILL complete Palace on Thursday brings an- exceptionally vaudeville g and rovue songs and dances with a pretty stage fancy | acts include Cooper talking Trio in a fine novelty offe ring and La Rose and Lane offering original com- edy songs and ch Constance Binney, ]M'rt-on and stage, picty@e, “Erstwhile Suss | wherever shown, her Stolen many admirers will see fascinating star a Thursday, whose and whereby happiness, has been transferred to the screen with the utmost fidelity. Those w hn have read the book, HER Mother Goose” stories “Americani- a close what minstrel per- offered. The follow- been engaged: Lew “Sugarfoot” Gaffney, J. Lester Haberkorn, Joseph White, Fred wrshall, Bobby Gossans, Berrian, Charles Walter Sherwood, A. C. Ducke, Bob- ard ’'House, Henry tge, Neil Fletcher, Bobby Guyot. the usual parade he: which became a week. and After taking AT PALACE change of program | Jjor nearly a year, good bill. The prozram is headed Dance Festival,” introducing new costumes. and Lacey, comedians, Other sing- Arliss tion in | tale. tter. , debutante star of whose first Realart Allah praise the one actually second production Kiss,” .and - her get another op- he work of this the Palace thea- Friday and Satur- type “HONOR BOUND” first originated “cavemen.” that the one cure for drama of no especial merit otherwise, the caveman has his uses. But no one before has bothered to show us the whyfor, the psychology TORTURED BY STOMACH Atter Ten Years, She Found Relief In “Fruii-a-tives” 8807 Sacro Ave., SacgaMENTO, CAL. “I had Stomach Trouble for ten years, so bad that I got Stomach Cramps two or three times After years of terrible torture, I read about Fruit-a-tives’ or Fruit Liver Tablets, and sent for a trial box. the trial box, I felt better, so kept on taking ‘Fruit-a-tives” and am thankful to gay ‘Fruit-a-tives’ saved my life”. MRS. F. 8. STOLZ. 50c. a box, 6 for $2.50, trial size 25c, Atdealers or from FRUIT-A-TIVES Limited. OGDENSBURG, N, ¥, E—— the director’'s ability to re- tain the actual flavor of the original AT FOX'S playwright who Supposedly win woman a jaded the can of it, how he became a caveman, and S in the case of founded Little Miss tale of unique entertainer she finds the little ability as | is the love and Frank Mayo strong role as t Throwback the most of it. F! bave a quality, and wit] ittle Miss L) 0 QUALITY MEETS QUAN FRIDAY AND SATURDAY so forth. That is what Jacques Jaccard has done in “Honor Bound,” the pic- | ture in which Frank Mayo is starring | and which opened for a three days' engagement at Fox's this afternoon. has an he hero extremely of “The and he seems to make | rom his work in this picture it is evident that the producers “he-man” star of the first one who is hand- Matinee at 2:15 B Evening at 7:15 An Hour Earlier Sunshine Girls Musical Comedy Presenting “RIGHT OFF THE REEL” A Farce Comedy in Three DAILEY BROS. sational Novelty Act High Class Specialties Also All-Star Film Production mes, Surrounded by THE DELMONT Ragtime Musical Act “Parlor, Bedroom and Bath” SPECIAL From the Famous Broadivay TWO-REEL COMEDY LYCEUM TOPICAL REVIEW tage Success SCREEN MAGAZINE THIS SUNDAY NIGHT DOUBLE FEATU RE BILL CharlesRayin ‘The Honorable Algy Of a Mother’s Affection and or POLLARD COMEDY ALSO MISS JOSE COLLINS “WHERE IS MY HUSBAND?”” A Romance of a Woman's Love and a Man’s Courage— the Darkness of the Night of Doubt and Man’s Sacrifice— Sdrrow— Of the Brightness of a New and Joyful Dawn “THE VELILED MYSTERY" (Ej ALL THIS WEEK Evigs 8.15 Mats. 2.30 SONS™ THEATER HARTFORD MATINEES WRDNESDAY AND SATURDAY M. COHAN’S COMEDIANS In the Supreme Musical Success MARY”’ (ISN'T IT A GRAND OLD NAME?) Smashing, Peppiest Show \TI'HIL\\‘ innhln., Times. \Il'l'l\l" to E 501: . $2.50 BELVVVOVSBVILLBIOD THURSDAY “THE PARLOR BOLSHEVISY' MUTT & JEFF ROME “LIFTING SHADOWS” “ONCE A PLUMBER” WITH el YONS AND MORAN The Premier Prmenl:nlnn of Willhm Fox's Master Serial 000&000!@flb’fifi%fi"fi&&##éfi FOoX'S \/F\UD( \/IL.LL NOD FRIDAY Not God Nor Law LARRY SEMON & NAPL HARRY ROSA LOYDD NEVADA & cCo. SUNDAY EVENING, DEC. 12th. - EMMY WHELEN —IN— Last Episode of AND SATURDAY > Frank Mayo in “Honor Bound” A Rousing Romance Laid in a Land That Knew “THE SUITOR" FOX NEWS l‘§4 -HEADLINERS--4 The Best of Vaudeville KEIT & DUTTON 10) FORD EDUCATIONAL “BRIDE 13" 9@#@@@%@%@@@@@@@@@ #@@###fifi#fi‘#fi##fiia 'mme-gnough to please the matinee I i | Suitor” !interesting | | Duttan and Liloyd fof a { and cream, fried bread, syrup, coffee. | ter “pears, ! into meat, Dco | Pauley, | delightful | used for some time it will very likely maids. Our weekly mirth provokers, Mutt and Jeff are with us in “The Parlor Balshevist,” Larry Semon in “The and a new and exceptionally Fox News. audeville offerings are Harry Rome and Naples, Keit and Nevada and com- he Re pany. he bill for Sunday evening will in- clude v Wehelen in “Lifting Shadows,”” ns and Moran in “Once 1 Plumber ‘Thundering Vengeance,” hr\ last ep de of “Bride 13" and the _presentation in any- theater of 's latest serial “Fanto- MARY, George M play “Mar: week at Parsons’ AT PARSONS Cohan’. new musical which is playing this theater, will give a matinee Saturday. There is'a small but important part t is made to stand out prominently by the clever work of one of the players. This character, the cook, with her eccen- tric daneing, as played by Anne never fails to score. Miss Pauley will be remembered for her dancing in “The Roval Vagabond.” Curtain rises evenings at | 8:15 HOLDINC A HUSBAND Adele Gon’s New Phase of Revelations of a Wife The Mother Graham With Madge. Of course woman-like, my con- science began to reproach me a little after Dicky's rueful departure to see Dr. Paige and get our reservations for the No~th. I had had sufficient pro\ocn(ion for any amount of sternness with him, but I began to wonder if I might not at least have waived the question of de- parture for one day, and have gone with him on the canoe trip to Blue's Bridge a trip on which I could see he had set his heart. But the opportunity to chan, that decision was gone. Dicky had already departed on his errands. The only way in which I could make things easier for him was to save him from at least part of the im- pending battle with his mother over the selling date of the house. With a squaring of my shoulders for what I feared would be a most unpleasant interview I went to her room and knocked. “Who is it?"" she asked crisply, and 1 realized, with a little smile that she was still resolute in her determination Way Agreed { not to see Dicky until he should have Ki In the kitchen of ner own home chemistry of cooking, gained from study of domestic science in a state university.. Consequently the advioe she offers is a tappy combination of she gives is ber own. first tried oav theory amd practice. Every recipe Sister Mary cooks daily for a family of four a -ull She brought to her kitchen an “ understanding of the ard served ut her family table. If your thermos bottle has not been be a bit musty. Before fiilling it, it'’s a-good plan to rinSe it out with soda water. For a pint bottle put a quarterof a teaspoon- ful of soda in the bottle, fill with hot water, gork and let stand a few min- utes. Shake well. This sweetens the cork as well as the bottle. Turn out the soda water and rinse again with hot, clear water. _ If this treatment is used there will be no danger of any one complaining “funny’ taste about the coffee from a thermos bottle. Menu for Tomorrow. Breakfast—Baked apples with sugar Luncheon—Cream of lima bean soup, toasted bread sticks, haked win- nut cookies, tea. Dinner—Pork steak with spaghetti, mashed sweet potatoes, grapefruit and orange salad, cream pie, coffee. My Own Recipes. Pork steak is really nothing motre or less than a slice of fresh ham. It is an economical cut to buy as there is very little bone and therefore little waste. Cauliflower mizht be substitut- ed for the sweet potatoes as the starchy food is supplied in the spa- ghetti. Pork Steak with Spaghetti. 1 slice fresh ham cut 1 inch thick. 2 onions. » 1 green pepper. 1 1-2 cup canned tomatoes. 2 tablespopns flour. Boiling water. 1 cup spaghetti. Cut off some of the fat from the meat Put meat in a hot frying pan and brown on both sides. Add oniors sliced, pepper shredded and tomatoes and cook § or 10 minutes. Rub flour cover with boiling water. Season with salt and jyepper Cover and cook slowly or 30 minutes. Break spaghetti into 2-inch pieces and cook separately in boiling salted water. Make a nest of the cooked spaghetti on.a platter and fill with the meat and sauce. Cream Pie. 3-4 cup flour. 1-3 cup dbutter 1 tablespoon sugar. 1 egg. Sift flour and sugar./ Rub in butter with the tips of the fingers. Add egg slightly beaten. Stir till smooth. Roll out on molding board keeping the crust as round as possible. Line a | deep pig dish with the dough and bake | in a moderate oven. Prick with a fork if the crust shows a tendency to rise in the center. Fill with a thick boiled custard made of the yolks of 2 eggs. Cover with a meringue made of the whites of the eggs. Yes, we do (k) need dough, both lit- erally and fizuratively, we women. MARY. LDS of head or chest are more easily treated externally with— viens Over |7 Million Jars Used Yearly LYCEUM THEATRE TONIGHT AT 8:15 FIL OBRIEN obeyed her ultimatum concerning the® date of giving possession. “It is I, 1 said demurely, and the next Instant she turned the Key in the lock and threw the door open. “‘Come in,” she said grimly. *“Where is Richard?" “Gone to the village.” “To change that date? Instead of answering her at once I took a chair and sat down facing her. “Mothers” I said with a determined note in my voice and I saw her eves widen a trifle. “I think you will do me the justice to say that I rirely interfere or even obtrude my opinion in any differences betwéen you and Dicky."” Madge Is Direct. - Why should you?” she retorted t'l,l‘lly but ‘weakly, and T saw that she wits listening-to me closely. “I have #ways found you to be un- usually just in your decisions upon any question” I went on “and it is to that I am trusting now, for I have come to tell you something of im- portance and I wish to ask you to re- serve your decision until I have fin- ished.” “In other word: to interrupt you “Go ahegd.” “Of course Dicky did a most irritat- g thing when he sold that house without consulting us,” I began. “Then he reached the limit in folly and lack ou don’'t want me shé said shrewadly. of consideration when he gave the date | of possession as May first, only three weeks away. 1 agree with yougpertect- 1y on these points, and you ill re- member that I only consented to sign the deed after you showed me that it was your wish.” I paused for a second to let the re- jpuinder of her unreasonable can- tankerousness - of that time sink m, then I went on: With Care. “But as long as our comsent has been given, and the date'of possession arranged, you and I are business women enough to realize that there are but two courses open to us. We must either make Dicky repudiate his word or we must acquisce in his de- I"‘ [l i ) Hu "'"‘ flL ,J“, 7 i G I u,'m, L [ ciston and make the best of. a bad’ bargain. I'teund out that the purchas- er of the heuse must move from where he is May first, and that one of the considerations which made him offer so much money was po~sessmn at that time.” 1 saw my mother-in-Thw's lips tight, en and knew that she was turning over in her mind the facts I was presenting to her. “For my part, mother, I have al- ready decided.” I went on “I cannot humiliate my husband by refusing tc sign the deed, thus compelling him to repudiate an obligation already entered into, no matter how foolish or how unjust his actions may have been, - But 1 wish I could have your ap- proval” When Mother Graham capitulates’ she does it suddenly and heartily. “Of course, child,” she said, mag- nificently. “In fact, I never intended anything else. I only wished to bring Richard to a realization of the enor- he had committed. But, however > 'we going to manage it? We'll have "to go North at once.” My heart sank. She was in no conf dition to leave the balmy spring weather she was enjoving and return to the treacherous April winds of New York. But T knew her obstinacy so 1 cast about for some effectivesmethod of combating it. “There’s only one obstacle to our all going,” I said slowly, “angd that is Junior, provided, of course, that your own health will stand the change. You ought to be very careful you oa “Never mind me.” She brush t.e question of her own fitness aside aa it - it had been a troublfsome fly, and a¥l- her grandmotherly anxiety was in ‘her eves. “What's the trouble with Riche % ard Second?” “Why, nothing down here” I said slowly. “But you realize svhat a hurly? burly we shall: be living -in the nexi three weeks, with the house upset and movers running ig and out. We cannot hope that he will not take cold, even if he weathers the decided change from the climate down here to that up there.” I stopped short, waiting breathlessly ! for her reply. Would she take the bait .4 I had so carefully prepared? BETTER . DEAD Life is.a byrden when the bodw is racked with pain. Everything' ' worries and the victim béecomes * despondent and downhearted. To bring back the sunshine take 'l"hou'!a-lnu«!y0(‘!'lolllp\lletov-l 200 years; it is an enemy of all pains re- sulting from kidney, Hver and uric acid troubles. All' druggists, three sizes. Mhb-‘om"dfl-mh Sy “No More Bolllng Ont.'l'bat Radiator— . I'm Going To Buy A WASCO' : 143 '0 more pouring hot water on carburetar and intake manifold—no mare wearing out my battery cranking a cold, oil-congealed motor. I'm going to start out on time every morning from - a WASCQ-heated garage.” WASCOQ saves the car’s finish, prevents cracked water jackets, frozen radiators, reduces carbon deposits, saves the bearings, tires, top,—makes caring for the car easy in winter. The self-regulating hot water WASCQO System re- quires attention but once a day. Any handy man can set it up—no expensive steamfitter necessary. Costs less than street car fare for coal. WA S C 0 is also used for heating stores, offices, cottages, etc. A. G. HAWKER, ELM 5T.