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\ R - Richard Washburn ¢ 8. President omes United States a Here are and Constance, on the S. where Child be “hild, his wife and two children, Anna e Wilson. They are on the way to Italy, umbassador. HOLDING A HUSBAND | Adele Garrison’s New Phase of Revelations of a Wife What Dicky Felt It Necessary to Ask Madge. “Well, what do you want ‘about that! What's eating his Nibs anyway ?” This was Dicky's flippant comment as soon as the door had closed behind beneath oning the apology Dr. Peftit. But his_flippancy he was ques meaning of the physician’s at partins. As for myself, I was furious, SQettit was either crassly stupid, he had permitted his offended dignity and his dislike for Dicky him into a petty exhibition of taste. Whatever the in formally asking Dicky’s pardon fo bringing me home was the height o crude absurdity. it was not the sician had note since farmhouse. his meaning, burned at the ference—he wa both my gnind and Dicky's of suspicion fhat there was in his hearf the slightest vestige of the which to my great embarrassment 1 knew that Dr, bac sounded this my arrival at the I could not quite fathorr unless—my Imost yéars, and wh band and myself. Of course, 1 realized the reason be. hind his action. H beautiful, witty ¢ re Foster written in large characters all him. But I had see other men fatuated by other women making themselves in the particular fashion had adopted. A Quandary. I cast an apprehensive eye my mother-in-law’s cosner, and Dr. to know or to betray ause, his action first time the phy- ridiculous Ticer cheeks unavoidable in- bent upon disabusing any feeling he had shown only too plainly in former h had been the cause of so much friction between my hus- infatuation for was over in- without banally ridiculous Pettit toward was take Junior in night, for he'll He was on his feet in an , | Junior's necessity patently every other thought from his He dispatched his errand with alacrity, but even before he came back my tired little lad had smiled contentedly at my crooning, cuddled closer, and gone fast asleep. Luck- iily, his grandmother had prepared . him for the night before I got home, and I knew that all I would have to .| do when T got him upstairs was to roll him out of his big, fuzzy bath- 1| robe, his heart's delight, and. take off the stockings and knitted slip- | pers she had thoughtfully provided f|for him. “Asleep?” Dicky's lips formed the words noiselessly, 1 nodded, and he held out his arms for the sleeping chfld. Long practice has made u 1 | perfect in the transfer of the little {lad without waking him,'and as [ there with me be restless.” to- instant, driving mind. il 1 4 (a5 Jne: ‘,,_!‘7‘ Unless otherwise noted, these notices are written hv the press bureaus of the E O'BRIEN CEUM. Popular as New York's romantic Greenwich Village has been in recent fiction, very little screen drama has been drawn from the colorful lives of those interesting people who inhabit its quaint ramshackled high shoulder- ed old studios. In “Broken Melody,” Eugene O’Brien’s latest pictude which appears at the Lyceum ths week, Greenwich Village comes into its own as the background for the picturesque and charming love story. Mr. O'Briea piaying the part of Stewart Grant 1s seen in the romantic rote of a strus- #ling young painter whose love for Hedda, a girl singer, carries him from one continent to another and back asain and throuph a series of adven tures that are both dramatie and hu- norous. Also seven big acts of vau- deville, featuring the Three Kundels AT THE LY- FINE VAUDEVILLE AT PALACE. Keith vaueville headliners are now appearing at the Palace on the bill for the last half of the week. The fea- ture attraction is “The Maxwell Quin- tette,” an aggregation of clever har- mony singers whose equal has not as vet been heard in this city. Lucille Rogers, a pretty singing comedienne; Flherty & Stoning, the famous com- ~dy couple, and Tokio Murati, in a sensational Japanese novelty, make up the balanece of the bill. CAPITOL—HARTFORD. Her uncle squandered her fortune, hut with true Yankee grit shé set out t, blaze a new trail for herself, and so a New York heiress became co partner in a restaurant with a lum- verman from Maine. Such is the story of “Smiling All the Way,” to be shown at the Capitol the last three lays of the week. Sprinkled lavishly with American followed Dicky upstairs I saw that his ill humor, as well as my own, had been banished by the little t|ceremony. Mother Graham began fussing over the child as soon as I brought him in. We bad long ago fought out the battle as to which of us should keep him when he was ill, and she knew that it was useless to combat my -|decision to sleep with him. But I saw that she was anxious to pull off his little slippers and fuss around him as long as she could. So with a murmured word that I would he back in minute 1 slipped out of the room answer to a look from Dicky. “Come downstairs a minute,” he whispered, and when we had reached the shelter of the“sitting room he put his "arm around me and tilted my a in relieved, indeed, to find that she had)chin until my eyes met his. left the room. Dicky sa and grinned maliciousl my lip savagely to keep quick, humiliated te his glance aright—he, too, fathomed Dr. Pettit's purpoge. My father rose abruptly, murmur. ing something about the moonligh outside, and Icft the room with ~hi face carefully averted from Had he, also, comprehended the *n ner meaning of the phy n’s words Dicky eyed me qui were_left alone, save for sleepily hestling in my arms. “The doc isn't the lad in the world, ‘ he queried. I bi th at me. back is he, w my look. rs, for—if I read | many kinds of an abysmal had “I was beastly about that pup,” he said. “But, tell me something. It doesn’t matter a bit to you how ass he e makes of himself, does it?” I _think the emphasis of my - |swer satisfied him completely. t an- mine ) zically when we Junior, most chivalrous old dear?” I was in a quandary what to an- swer. If I betrayed my pique an humiliation he might suspect I knew not what absurdity as to my teel ings toward the physician. And if were flippant, offhand, he imagine that T was heroically cealing my emotion. I busied position before 1 decided to preten ignorance of Dicky’s meaning. “—Tell Me Something.” “I'm sure I don’t know what vo mean,” T said coldly. “Oh, yes you aq!” I saw that he anger. “Cuss him !” second later. “The conceited—" “Ma-ma, now sin’ Junior’s insistent little voice ed me a previdential escape. “If you want to keep on about an absurd nincompoop. find another audience,” T said he gibed, he exploded Dooner Boy. afford talkin ple: “But I'm baby. going to sing t He’s waited lon Please ask mother t bed for me. concern this bless enough for it Lillian's NOW PLAYING EUGENE : O’BREIN | The Broken Melody VAUDEVILLE — 7 BIG ACTS Preston & Ysobel Ada Gunther Emmett & Moore Murphy & Frier Three Daniels West & Van Sichem Teddy Stowell A e con- my- self for a minute in changing Junior’ and was perilously near insufferable, o ) spirit- e edly, and with a touch of flippant un- T d * = cnen FREEZE THE SALADS. Chicken, fish, vegetable or fruit delicious frozen. is If a frozen fruit sal- ad is served at a dinner no other salad or dessert is needed. Crisp, curly endive is an attractive garnish, and a few slices of the fresh fruit or veg- etable may be added when serving. Tomato Bisque Salad. One quart can toatoes, % me- dium sized onion, 3 sprigs parsley % teaspoon celery salt, 2 cloves, 2 teaspoons sugar, % teaspoon salt, 1-4 - | teaspoon pepper, 1 cup whipping cream. Cook tomatoes and seasonings fo- tventy minutes. Rub through a fine e. Season with salt and pepper ind add to cream which has been whipped stiff. Turn into a mold, pack in ice and salt and freeze for four hours. Serve on lettuce with mayonnaise. The salad should be frozen without turning. Heavenly Salad. One-half pound marshmallows, cup pineapple cubes, % cup English walnuts, 1 cup boiled salad dressing, maraschino cherrie: Cut marshmallows Add to salad dressing. apple cubes and nuts cut in small pieces. If the marshmallows are not nerfectly fresh let the mixture stand «n hour before packing in ice and sz1t. Freeze four hours. Serve on endive and garnish with mara- cherries. Serve with chees cups and black coffee as the last course of dinner. Frozen F s d u a o g o % in quarters. Add pine- ne Salad. Two cream cheeses or 4 cup cot- tage cheese, 12 prunes, 6 dates, 1 cup Fnglish walnuts, 2 tablespoons lemou juice, 1 cup boiled salad dressing, 2 ocanges, curly endive. Mash cheese and add dressing. Beat te a smooth paste. Use large, choice prunes, wash and soak over night. S*tone and Nl cavities with nuts. Stone lates. Add dates, nuts, lemon juice ‘| =nd prunes to first mixture. Turn isto a mold and pack in salt and ice and let stand four hours. Unmold and serve with sections of orange armang- ed on a bed of endive. French dress- ing poured over each salad just be fore serving adds piquancy to the dish. A dinner of fish, potato chips, radishes, iced tea and this salad serv ea with plain brown bread sand- wiches would be splendid for a hot mid-summer eveninz. (Copyright 1921 by Newspaper En- & terprise.) pep is “In Argentina,” a Sowth Amer- ian melange of mirth, melody and theater ar s try tions with which they deal. cances. The Four Casting Campbells have an act that mox: comedy with *he sensational. Jones and Deely are cingers and dancers, Dotson isfamed for his lightning steps, and Will Mor- ris so handles his bicycle that every vvolution of a wheel produces a feat ¢r a laugh. “VALLEY OF DOUBT” AT PALACE. The photoplay part of the bill at the Palace for the remainder of the week includes the famous Lee Kids in their brand new comedy, “The Hicksville Terrors”; Eddie Polo in the last episode of “King of the Circus,” =nd Willard Mack's well known story of the frozen north, “The Valley of Doubt.” The story is clear cut, consistent 4nd forceful; the cast exceptionally well chosen. The action takes place almost entirely out-of-doors in the Idmber camp district of Canada, and the scenes are very effective. e o e FAMOUS PICTURE PROGRAM AT FO THEATER He followed her to the tropics :o arrest her for murder. With her, he is the sole survivor of a shipwreck. They live together on a desert isle. They love and then rescue and ap- parently an end to his dream of hap- piness—but the picture, “The Woman God Changed,” showing at Fox's, then takes an abrupt twist that re- y'iull. in one of the most Sentirely sat- isfying dramas yet produced on the silver screen. The Fox News and a couple of comedies are also on the program. D?revt from Keith’s Orpheum thea- ter in New York is the big hit of the vaudeville bill—Milo and Blum. These men are the modern Vulcans and their feats of strength are nothing short of mzu'veloui; Ethel Seeley and company presents comedy sketch that brings some good laughs, despite the ir- ritableness occasioned by the hot weather and Gus Stuart sweats and dances, doing both proficiently. A musical number completes the bill. SLEEPY-TI CTrademark THE TALE ME,. TALES OF GRUNTY PIG THE GRUMBLER. All the farmyard folk agreed that Farmer Green took the best of care of everybody. Mrs. Pig often told her children that they were lucky to have 50 g0od a home, And not having lived anywhere else, they never im- :‘gingd that anything could be finer than their pen. After the day when he escaped from the pen, however Grunty Pig began to complain. He wasn’t satisfied with the feed that Farmer Green gave him, Grunty was the first of all to try it. ] he grumbled because there was no good place io wallow in mud, and es- pecially did he object because there wasn't a tree to rub against. “The orchard,” he often said, a much pleasanter pl is. “is :e than this pen Therg are trees enough in the or- chard for every member of our fam- ily to rub against—all at the same time.” Somehow, when Grunty talked in that fashion every one of Mrs. Pig's children began to crowd against the sides of the pen. And even Mrs. Pig her back. She did wish that Grunty wouldn't mention such matters. But nothing Mrs. Pig could say seemed to do any good. He was al- ways prattling, anyhow. She could no more stop his flow of grunts and squeals than she could have kept that water in the brook from abbling down the mountainside of Swift riv And eve:r more annoying to Mrs. Pig was the way her son Grunty tried to rub his back against her. She said “Don’t!” to him so often that she became heartily sick of the word. ‘What bothered Mrs. Pig most of all was Grunty’s behavior whenever Farmer Green came to the pen. It was mortifying to her to have her son actually try to scratch his back asainst her in the presence of a vis- itor. “I do hope,” said Mrs. Pig to Farm- er Green, “T do hope you don’t think that I haven't tried to teach this child better manners,” and then when all the rest of her family began to squirm and fidget against the sides of the pemr she added with a sigh, “Look at them! Anyone would sup- poge they had had no bringing up at aln!” Farmer Green srqils-d as he looked over the pen and watched the antics of Grunty Pig and his brothers and sisters. “There’s something that I can do for your family to make them hap- pier,” he told Mrs. Piz. “Tomorrow— if T can spare the time—I'll make a change here. A lady who's raising such a fine family as yours deserves the best there is, She ought to have BY ARTH Y AURESC?‘TT BAI herself felt an annoying tickMing along v 4 a home with every modern improve- ment.” “There!” Mrs. Pig exclaimed to Well the next day Farmer Green left them. .“Did you hear what he said? Farmer Green is a kind man. T shouldn’t have blamed him if he had put us into the poorest pen on the place after seeing your unmannerly actions. You'll have to behave bet- tbor, especially after we have our new improvements.” “Well the next day Farmer Green brought a stout post and set it firm- ly in the center of Mrs. Pig's pen. “That's for you ana your familly to rub against,” he informed Mrs. Pig. Really he needn’'t have explained what the improvement was for. No soone: had he climbed out of the open than Mrs. Pig and her children began to put the rubbing post to good use. Grunty was the first of all to try it. And to his mother’'s delight, he stop- ped grumbling at once. Nor did he ever again disgrace her by scratching his back against her. Instead, he always walked up to the rubbing post like a little gentleman. At least that was what Mrs. Pig said. (Copyright 1921 by The Metropolitan Newspaper Service). Tomorrow—Grunty Tells His Moth- er Something That Frightens Her. But He Is Very Brave. appearance of youth. Re- sults are instant. Highly antiseptic. Exerts a softand soothing action. Over 75 years in use. Send 15 c. for Trial Stze FERD. Ti‘g_oyr‘,_xklct}s & SON ‘Gouraud's Oriental Créé’m JUST RECEIVED A new Supply of Fish Globes. Also Goldfish, Ornaments, Shells, Fish Food, Parrots, Canaries, Rabbits, Liberty Malt and Cho}’v(- Hops. NEW BRITAIN BIRD STORE 105 ARCH ST., Tel. 1121-3 PALACE NOW PLAYING Willard Mack’s Story of the Freezing North “Valley of Doubt” THE LI KIDS “THE HICKVILLE TERRORS” KEITH VAUDEVILLE They All Admit It's the Best. with MAXWELL QUINTLTTE Harmony Singers. IN THE 14, 1921. Some More Truths. YV OULD you use a steam shovel to move a pebble? Certainly not. Implements are built according to the work they have to do. Would you use a grown-up’s remedy for your baby's ills? Certainly not. Remedies are prepared according to the work THEY have to do. All this is preliminary to reminding you that Fletcher's Castoria was sought wut, found and is prepared solely as a remedy for Infants and Children. And let ‘his be.a warning against Substitutes, Counterfeits and the Just-as-good stuff that nay be all right for you in all your strength, but dangerous for the little babe. All the mother-love that lies within your heart cries out to you: Be true to 3aby. And being true to Baby you will keep in the house remedies specially repared for babies as you would a baby’s food, hairbrush, toothbrush or sponge. Children Cry For ASTORI/ Are You Prepared? A doctor in the house all the time would be a good idea. Yet you can’t afford to keep a doctor in/the family to keep baby well or pre- vent sickness. But you can do almost the same thing by having at hand a bottle of Fletcher’s Castoria, because it is a wonderful remedy for indigestion, colic, feverishness, fretfulness and gil the other dis- orders that result from common ailments that babies have. Fletcher’s Castoria is perfectly safe to use. It is a harmless sub- stitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. Children cry for Fletcher’s Castoria, and mothers recommend it because they have found it a comfort to children and a mother’s friend. ~~ If you love your baby, you know how sweet it is to be ahle tc hetp baby when trouble comes. You cannot always call upon a doctor. But doctors have nothing but good to say of Fletcher’s Castoria, be- cause they know that it can only do good — that it can’t do any harm — and they wouldn’t want you to use for baby a remedy that you would use for yourself. > MOTHERS SHOULD READ THE BOOKLET THAT IS AROUND EVERY BOTTLE OF FLETCHER'S CASTORIA ot AhelpfulRemedy e mnmpng{mm Dmrrn:fl eSS GeNUINE CASTORIA ALwayrs Bears the Signature of AL Omonths ulil ) i 35 DosES ~ OCL\T: o (4 THE CENTAUR COMPBANY. NEW YORK GITY. Exact Copy of Wrapper. DAILY FASHION SERVICE, RIBBONS! RIBBONS! MORE RIBBONS BY MARIAN LE. New York, July 13.—In her hair she wore a yellow ribbon—but that's only the beginning of the ribbon story. Ribbons, this vear, are more than holding their own. Indeed, not only the summer gowns with their ribbon loop trimmingy show the popularity of this form ot trimming but the new models for fall and winter are very much beribboned. One striking model by Grauer Brothers is of the new and popular satin-faced crepe. Its color-scheme alone is startling but the use of pekoe-edged ribbon is something to make youth look longingly at this purticular frock. Although this gown has the appearance of a straight- lined dress it is really shirred on at the waist with a narrow ribbon belt tying in the back. Down the skirt are two panel effects formed by pointed cut-outs of the goods. These points are tied over henna georgette which forms the lining. The waist has a similar effect forming a vest. 'he sleeves which are short and Kki- mono have two out-outs tied with the pekoe ribbon. Another Grater Bros. model uses nioire ribbon in a novel straight-line effect resembling pleats. The straight- lined dress with pocket side effects set on, h~s a narrow belt which inter- laces with thg straight rows of black moire ribbon, back and front. These rows reach from the neck to skirt Dot~ tom and arve held in place by embroid- ery and nail heads. 1f you have any form of Rheuma- tism, Heart Affection, Stomach Trouble, Chronic Appendicitis, Chest Disease, including Tuberculosis, when not too far advanced, or any other ail- ment, you need my treatments for a complete cure. Electric treatments of all kinds. Electric light baths and all forms of the violet ray machine treatments are given without additional cost. Privatc woman’s treating room with lady iu charge, 9 a. m. to 5 p. m. Open cvenings. DR. COOMBS Natureapathic Physician and ctor, 252 Main St.. Phone 785 = =—{ The NOW PLAYING— AFTER BEING HELD OVER FOR FOUR WEEKS AT KEITH'S BROADWAY, N. Y. HE WOMAN GOD CHANGED” No person in New Britain can afford to miss seeing this Dramatic and Thrilling Story of a Wronged Woman. MILO and BLUM JUST PLAYE ORPHEUM LAST WEEK. ——3 OTHER BIG ACTS DAY, WEDNESRDAY WIL] =" roDpAY “="CONTINUOUS ~ NTINA” A South n melange of mirth, melody and dances; direct from the Theater National, Buenos Aires. : CASTING CAMPBELLS. DOTSON, FRANCES & ELI WILL MORRIS “SMIL *+ ALL THE With DAVID BUTLER and WAY™” LEATRICE JOY