New Britain Herald Newspaper, January 20, 1921, Page 4

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rt on- laid he did a pleased sald n lekly want e @ It HO cany Bthes Marion er classifica me a lot of bu w0 much pe or breath ‘You know any servine dear LAl en she took brought ol tor . "‘S8he le man for nocording he plans to br xomething was lucky from last koeps in & havo been estato out every Island. | p Westches- in of sells or anything ed. “‘You 1 want a jon the cast e we were and, of rban home life “'s0 outside to get ing over strike your have time, You won't before the and it's neces uction NCE id Powell. Alaskan i Clark O0'Malley; ' eat we'll HUSBAND ew Pluce of a Wife “Fishing! Fishing!" she ou don't deserve bite 1l you what you already fhat you look perfeotly hat suit. The only thing ©f is that the real cstate men will think yvowre a member of the As- family secking to Increase your land holdinks, and run up the prices on you ‘It remarked it She laughed mocked ! But I'n well know, stunning in raid I'm to do,” I better he have coldly, you anything you'd Lbout delightedly of your remember out But in ten minutes.” “When Uncle lnrted 1ed the I v orls that tim luncheon Robert Comes.’ of the room and advertiscments those which She out eareful- con- mo- all en- and tin for immediate lay within casy Marvin. 1 put carefully in the future reference, to niv purve the I Then I bathed nfy f: ! bit, and wen deration ai tance at fo back ones | down talrs just ttetty announced lunch con Mario the to her were already in hild clinging taking little nd down as and the me- would not et Ldltian the hand ane steps up #prings, Loy tini mother' incing nimating she ex- “Have you scrumptious ol Auntie Madge." came 1y the perfectly that I'm going South to see Junjor! Of course, you have, 1 heep forgetting, but Im just yo crazy happy hink anything straight!” vou sit up stralght and luncheon we'll excuse the mind,” her mother sald with a loving smile on clatmed, as 1 heard Hews 1 can't Fust your tate gravely her face Marion of your but to her darting her my pressed her lips ve in a swift an endearment paculiarly and came around hehind chalr to pull It out and seat me “You wee,” wshe explained. there \ny man in our house until Unecle to to do things ¥o 1 have to be a boy some- cares own i=n’t hert this caomos stay, her mother exclaimed, volce, with a note of it which 1 hada never dddressed to her little Marfon'" startled sternness before h daugh The child flushed faced her mother held high In in a in pard distressedly, with her consclous but little recti- she head tude Hut, mother,” thought Auntie side the family “All right, sweetheart,’ er replied tenderly luncheon or we'll bo train " Hut I could hardly eat, old Betty's viands, in curiosity the meaning of the phrase Uncle Robert comes to stay.” truly out- said, I wasn't she Mudge her moth- gat your Inte for the delicious as were to when —GRAND— HARTFORD WFEEK JANUARY 17, Johan S, Jermon Offers BARRY & GEO. DOUGLASS With the BON TON GIRLS Don’t Miss Seeing This Particular Company. JOonN 0X’S DMORROW AND SATURDAY Latest Whirlwind Drama MBER 17” INIVERSARY — AUDEVILLE Featuring JA DA NI |.u|mmp| j DIRECTION f ! NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD. THURSDAY, JANUARY 20, 1921 l l [ GEORIGIE FOX'S, Ti NEW BILL AT LYCEUM. What is said to be one of the best bills in the entire repertoire of Hoyt's company “Greenwich Villagae Fol- les™ which is presented today, to- morrow and Saturday Felix Martin and lLew Brems are well cast and the chorus has some ndw and dances. She did had never would not be is songs not seen have to tell. Albert the other man— likely ever to encoun- ter him. Yet Meta relt deeply that the man shc was to mawery shouid not be kept In ignorance. Then came the dread fear that her secret would make a vital difference; that her con- fession would rob her of his love. What should she do? “Should a Woman Tell?"” is a tense, human and infinitely appealing steory of a woman confronted with one of life’'s greatest dilemmas. Alice Lake plays the part of Meta Maxon, daugh- ter of hardy, somewhat grasping par- ents, never, until circuntstances led her out into the world of wealth, knowing the ways of men, came to a point in her life when she had to make a great decision. Elsie Ferguson's latest appealing Paramount pieture, *dady Rose's Daughter,” will be shown at the Ly- ceum this Sunday night. Leouls Ben- nison will be seen as the star in “The Ioad Called Straight.” “Lady Rose's Daughter” is a su- perb picturization of Mrs. Humphry Ward's celebrated novel of the same name which scored a world success some years ago. MELODRAMATIC WALSH REEL IS FOX FEATURE. New York's underworld is master- fully exposed in “Number 17,” George Walsh's latest production which opened a three days' engagement at Fox's theater this afterngon. The QUANTITY| j. . sALV NOW PLAYING RSDAY, FRIDAY, SATUR ' story runs the Managing Dircctor FEATURE DE LUXE Aral written by the press WA LSH WILLIAM FOX DAY —IN— NUMBER 17 gamut of humanity, from New York's “four hundred” to the underworld. Because of his love for a girl, Frank Theydon finds him- self marked for assassination by a gang of criminals whose aim is to restore the emperor to the throne of China. The conspiracy has its root in New York's Chinatown. A wealthy woman is found dead in the apart- ment adjacent to Theydon's. Who Killed her? Central office men are baffled, but Theydon solves the mj tery and it is this discovery that leads him into desperate corners Mildred Reardon is Walsh's leading woman in ths film. Other reels are the Fox News, a Mutt & Jeff animated car- toon and a two reel side-splitter “All Wrong.” featuring Clyde Cook. Cook was the comedy star in “Skirts.' The six acts of vaudeville which mark the second half of anniversary week have two headliners A dra- matic sketch ““The Criminal” goes over well. A cast of: four characters puts it on. The other lead is t'A Creole Cocktail,” a typical colored troupe of entertainers with plenty of jazz. Nan Carney is a singing com- edienne, Louis Leo has a string of funny stories and songs and Jimmy Logue offers his own iaterpretation of twentieth century juggling. The last act on this augmented bhill is the Gould Sisters, These two girls have a piano and song act ¢Vich, while .ot unusual, is neverthcless of high calibre and goes well. The pianist | is a master of the ivorifes and puirs’ up well with her singing sister. THE FAMOUS TRAGIO HIKE ] OF THE iHTING 69TH” Great Band to Appear Here Sunday Afternoon at Lyceam Theater. or so infamous—because of the un- deniable sufferings of those who took | at 2:15 J This hike has become so mmous—i Matinee Evening at 7:15 Doors Open Halr An Hour Earlier “COND BIG WEEK Best, Brightest, Most Original of Tabloid Musical Revues “Greenwich Village Follies” A smasbingly smart satire on the revue epidemic in five scenes, with Ten Pretty Truoble-Makers and Trouble-Curers and an excellent cast of Principals. —ALSO— ALICE LAKE —IN— “Should A Woman Tell?” Wherein a New Er Within a Special Two-Reel Comedy EN MAGAZINE land Conscience Fights Woman's Soul for Love “HER HUSBAND'S FLAT" LYCEUM TOPICAL REVIEW HAZEL MOORE Soloist With the 69th Regiment Band part in it that it needs no detailed de- scription here. It must by any impar- tial historian be admitted that durnz it the men of the 69th Regiment were insufficiently fed and shod, that they endured great and unneécessary pains and privations. It must also be ad- mitted that they bhore these trials with a cheerfulness which amazed the French civilians through whose vil- lages they passed accustomed as were these people t6 soldiers of almost every human race. They would crukh their feet into their frozen, broken-soled hobnails of a black morning, and | breakfastless start out, with a song on their lips, to climb the foothills of the Voszes Mountains through the heart of a blizzard. At noon (shifting thelr feet about to keep the blood moving) they would (if it was ane of the lucky days) bave a slice of bread or two pieces of hardtack for noon mess, At night they wonld have a sleep instead of supper. But they were never dispir- ited: they were never too cold, too hungry or too weary to snz or to teach the innocent French villagers strange bits of New York slang. No man in the 69th Regiment “fall out” during that terrible hike. But many fell down. That is. no one, be- cause, of heartbreaking, weariness, or faintness or lameness went to the road- side and waited for the ambulance to pick him up. porney in ambulance >r trucks the deep snow, unable move. And wherever to speak bleeding white roadway. parade,” said one of cers serving during this period. diers at Valley Forge. indomitable spirit of the afoot through those four tragic days. The Fighting 69th Regiment Jan. 30th, at the Today— Friday— Saturday That Big Dramatic Production “HALF A CHANCE?” WITH MAHLON HAMILTON AND AN ALL STAR CAST A DRAMA OF BIG MOMENTS, BIG CLASHES, SENSATIONAIL CLIMAXES AND TREMENDOUS HEART INTEREST A PLAY MEN WILL REMEMBER A ROMANCE TO THRILL WOMEN! FATTY ARBUCKLE “‘RUTH OF THE ROCKIES" [ J KEITH : VAUDEVILLE —"“THE BETTER KIN Those who finished the did so because they had fallen senseless in or the Regiment passed there were bloody tracks in the ‘“That hike made Napoleon's retreat from Moscow look like a Fifth avenue he medical offi- And many an observer compared the Reg- iment to Wastington's foot-fore sol- It was only the American fighing man that kept the Regiment Band will appear here on Sunday afternoon, Lyceum Theater. TERRIBLE EGZEMA FOR 10 YEARS & Yo Trace Of The Disease Since Taking “Fruit-a-tives” Dover, Ngw HaMPsSHIRE. *In 1906, I began to betroubled with Eczema. My arms and legs were bandaged most of the time; and «. sometimes I could squeeze the pug out of my hands, they were so bad. About 8 months’ ago, I chanced to read an ad. of ‘Fruit-a-tives’ and ‘Sootha Salva’, in which was told of a person cured of Weeping Eczema by these remedies. N After using two boxes of ‘Fruit-o-tives® and one box of ‘Sootha-Salva’. I em enurely free of Eczema™ Dr E N OLZENDAM, D.V.M. 50c. a box, 6 for $2.50, trial sise 23 At dealers or from FRUIT-A-TIV Limited, OGDENSBURG, N. Y. Tickets are on sale at C. L. Plergej Music store at popular prices. CAPITOL. “On With the Dance,’ the screen attraction at the Capitol, Hartford, for Thursday, Yriday and Saturday, show. New Yock right life with ¥t brilliant Broadway cabarets, the 1ux.| urious apartments of the rich d much more that goes to make the spectacle that is indeed dazzling. ¢ “The Luck of a Totem," is a ol act comedy with music based on Alaskan incident. The Maxine Dane- ers have a classic in terpsicho € art. The -bill likewise brings. . CIp and Verdi's Italian comedians. Wm. Dunham and Grace O'Malley appe in comical musical capers, and. th Silvas are sensational equilibrists. BIG FEATURES ON PALACE BI An_excellent bill is now showing the Palace for the laat part of week with big photoplay and wy ville attractions featured, The vaudeville headliner is the by musical comedy, ‘A Japanese 'fiofiey, maon,” with a big cast, special ery and a real beauty chorus. O aets include “Erford’s Golden Whi one of the latest novelties in vaudg ville; Nita Johnson, a clever sing comedienne and Infleld and Noblet § their singing and talking skit,” the Song Booth,” The big photopla procduction .on the program is “H a Chance,” which just flnlshedq long run on Broadway. N “Half a Chance,” adapted Frederick S.. Isham's celeb novel, is the first picture this re: er has seen that can stand & face with that celluloid claMd “The Spoilers,” without blushing®] arouses every drop of red bloo you far the man who is convic murder on a frame-up, escapes being taken to prison, is ship: and cast on a desert tstind case of law books. - Ten years later he is a greak g1 inal lawyer, and facing newer greater dangers that he has to_fi off with keen wits, a keen bragii the brute force that had at on® made him a star in the prize ring, th fro; Y wush giass decanters, bof and water jugs use a salution of and vinegar. A dessertspoonful of rough | moistened with vinemar is put ' the bottle and shaken. Wash in ! scap suds and rinse well in | water, Dry thoroughly. | Unprepared sailt is preferable i prepared table salt.’ eV | Menu for Tomorrow % I Breakfast—8liced orangeg crumb pancekes, sirup, hasi] Patatoes, coffee. Luncheon—S8cotch eggs, bread and butter, carrot ma: apple and rice cake, tea. Ginner—Baked ham, twice potatoes, spinach, fruit salad, roll, coffee. My Own Recipes '~ The best. oranges to use for) ing are the California fruit, The necting- fibers are mot so tow there are na seeds. Every bit white covering that sticks so to the tender skin of the should be removed. Slice very and sprinkle lightly with sug Apple and Rice Cake 1 cup flour tablespogn . butter tablespoons lard egg (yolk) teaspoon baking powder 1-4 teaspoon salt 2 tablespoons water Rub butter and lard into sifted with salt and baking pd Add yolk of egg and enought make a dough to roll. Roll as crust. Line a pudding dish wi crust and fill with the follow} 1-3 cup rice 4 cooking apples sugar and vanilla Caok rice in. mill 2 2 1 1

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