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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 20, MY MARRIAGE PROBLEMS Adele Garrison’s 's New Phase of REVELATIONS OF A WIFE The ‘Way Bess Dean Met Every Kindly Overture. “I'm sorry we've nothing which to bathe and anoint thes feet. Lillian ‘said tenderly, thé nat- ural nurse in her rising above the dislike that I suspected she felt for Bess Dean. “But there's nothing I can do further except wrap them loosely in this gauze. That's right, Madge,” as I proffered her two large pleces which I had cut from the roll always carried for an emergency in the pocket of the car. ‘“Now some pins. Just lift that foot a trifle. Now the other. Thers: Swiftly, skilfully, she swathed the bruised and swollen feet in loose wrappings of gauze, cradling them for a moment in her hands as she gave her final difgctions. “Madge, please, that motér blanket, folded and laid on this foot- stool. Now, Miss Dean, your feet on that. Madge, that sweater of yours which you won't need, the day is so warm—just put it over her feat light- ly. There, Miss Dean, you're as com- fortable as you can possibly be until we reach Mrs. Cosgrove's.” “Thanks,” Bess Dean mumbléd shortly. “But I could have done as I was until I reached there.” Lylian made no'reply to this un. gracious speech, nor did I. But I with poor the tonneau save the merest com- monplaces during the journey home. Robert Savarin and Dicky kept up a running conversation, and I was sure at one point the grave artist was giving a description &° the weird “portraits of souls,” which the saf- fron-bloused artist had exhibited in the art gallery, for Dicky laughed heartily, and I caught fragments of pijhrases which betrayed the subject of his merriment. | And then, at last, we turned into the familiar drive of the Cosgrove place, and Lillian spoke_softly, with her own rare thoughtfulness, to Bess Dean. “You won't be able to step on those feet now,” she said. ‘Don’t you think you'd prefer to have Mr. Cose grove carry you to your room instead of—" she gestured toward Dicky and Robert Savarin. \ I think the girl already had planned the humiliating journey to the house which she must make, and was determined ghat if possible Dicky should not witness it. “Of course,” she replied decisive- 1% “Pa Cosgrove is the only man big and strong enough to carry a woman up a flight of stairs.” How It Was Arranged. Her tone subtly relegated Dicky and Robert Savarin to the outer limbo felt a little salving of my conscience, as one does when a person one has injured is boorish aWout reparation offered. And I had caught a quickly veiled but angry glance from the girl's eyes which \told me that she held me, not her own folly respon- sible for her plight. What Lillian Suggested. There was no more conversation in COULD NOT KEEP HOUSE Without Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, Says Mrs. Pitts of Newburgh Newburgh, N. Y.—“My trouble was a weak back and I could not walk two blocks withoutbein; A M tired out. I read o Lydia E. Pinkham’s egsm Com- poun: 'wspaper decided to Pvee itatrial. Now [can own work and walk with eue always' keep Vagetahlo Com E is m fnanI and { hounvlthout it. Ihave it to many and always ,, You nuénnu this letter if you WARD PITTS, 2 High SL Newburgh. N. Y. It has been said that ‘‘backache is an lnvention of the Evil One to try women’s souls,’’ but even so, it is more often a symptom of a female trouble which sooner or later declares itself. Day after day it drags a woman down and night after night prevents restful sleep. Such woman should follow Mrs, Pitt’s adviceand try Lydia E. Pmkhlm s Veg- etable Compound, and regm Letters about your health will be gwen careful attentionand held instrict confi- dence if you write to Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass. Their experi- ence of over 40 years is at your service. SAGE TEA KEEPS YOUR HAIR DARK When Mixed With Sulphur It Brings Back Its Beautiful Lus- tre at Once. /Gray hair, however handsome, de- notes advancing age. We all know the advantages of a youthful appear- ance. Your hair is your charm. It makes or mars the face. When it fades, turns gray and looks streaked, just a few applications of Bage Tea and Sulphur enhances its appearance a hundred-fold. Don't stay gray! Look young! Either prepare the recipe at home or get trom any drug store a bottle of “Wyeth’'s Sage and Sulphur Com- pound.” which is merely the old-time recipe improved by the addition of other ingredients. Thousands of folks recommend this, ready-to-use prepara- tion, because it darkens the hair beau- tifully, besides, no one can possibly tell, as it darkens so naturally and evenly. You moisten a sponge or soft brush with it, drawing this through the hair, taking one small strand at a time By morning the gray hair disappears; after another application or two, its natural color is restored and it becomes thick, glossy and lus- trous, and you appear years younger. CREAM CLEARS A STUFFED-UP HEAD Instantly Opens Every Air Passage— Clears Throat. It your nostrils are clogged and your head is stuffed because of nasty catarrn or a eold, apply a little pure antiseptic cream into your nostrils. It penetrates through every air pas- sage, soothipg and healing swollen, taflanied membranes and you get in- stant relief. 3 Try this. Get a small bottle of Ely’s Cream Balm at any drug store. Your clogged nostrils open right up: your bead is clear; ho more hawking or snuffling. Count fifty. All the stuffi- ness, dryness, struggling for breath i3 gone. You feel fine, of physical- weaklings. “And please get everybody out of the way first,” she added imperious- ly, with a side glance which included me in the presecribed list. There was a touch of malice in that glance which irritated me, and I am afraid it was a crude sort of revenge my temper spurred me to take. “@h, Dicky!” I said. gayly. “Don’t dare turn your head ‘when you get out, but walk strajght down the path to our cabin. And if you see Mr. Cosgrove, send him here to carry Bess in. T'll explain when I get there. Robert, you are also requested to make yourself scarce.” “Ours not to reason why,” Dicky retorted, getting out of the car, with Robert Savarin following. Then the 'wo men walked swiftly down the ath to the cabins with ne back- ward glance. At the mention of his father, Ted Cosgrove had tumbled from the running board and rushed into the housc. I guessed that the elder Cosgrove would be in evidence very shortly, 66 I alighted from the car myself. “If you don’t need-me,” I said to Lillian, “I will go and %ook up the children.” “Don’t excite yourself on that score, Madge,” Bess Dean contrived to as- sume her natural air of good- natured badinage, but I knew instinc- tively that her finger-nails were trembling primitively for contact with my eyes. “I don’t need anyone, and your husband is waiting for your ex- planation.” A sudden pang of conscience seized me. I whirled and looked her levelly in the eyes. “Look here, Bess,” I = d straight- forwardly. “Dicky will have so ex- planation from me. That was only a jest. And I think you know me well enough to believe that I mean what I say.” “Oh, yes, everybody knows have the one and only PMritan conscience.” had a tiny edge. Cosgrove!” Jovial Mr. Cosgrove, of concern, canre to the side of the car with many ejaculations of dis- may, and as I turned away I caught a glimpse of Bess Dean being lfted in his glant arms and borne into the house, where Mrs. Cosgrove, with alarmed aspect, ' awgited him and his burden. Lillian followed them in, and I— knowing that all possible attention would be given the girl—walked slow- ly down the pathway to my own cabin. you simon-pure Her laughter “Ah, here's Pa IN NFED OF wWCE Something was troubling Henrietta Hen. She seemed to have some secret sorrow. No longer did she move with her well-known queenly manner among her neighbors in the farm- yard. Inctead, she spent a good deal of her time moping. And ne one could guess the reason. She didn't even care to talk to anybody—not even to boast about her fine, speckled coat. And that certainly was not in the least like Henrietta Hen. Always, before, Henrietta had seized every chance to parade before lh? public. Now she seemed to crave privacy. 8 What was the matter? To tell the truth, Henrietta Hen herself did not know the answer to that question. That is to say, she did not know why a certain thing was so. She only knew that a great misfortune had be- fallen her. And she dreaded to tell anybody about it. To be sure, there was old Whitey— a hen who had lived on the farm longer than any other. Most mem- bers of the flock often asked her ad- vice. Even Henrietta herself had done that. But this difficulty was some- thing she didn't want to mention to a neighbor. If there were only some- body outside the flock to whom she could go for help! But she knew of no one. Then Henrietta happened to hear of Aunt Polly Woodchuck. The Muley cow, who went to the pasture every day, mentioned Aunt Polly’s name to Henrletta. According to the Muley Cow, Aunt Polly Woodchuck was an herb doctor—and a good one, too. No matter what might be troubling a pérson, Aunt Polly was sure to have 1 his face full| Gloria Swanson in the Paramount Pictute #THE GREAT MOMENT ¢ FOX’S SUNDAY, MONDAY, TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY something right in her basket to cure it. “I'd like to see her,” Henrietta Hen had said. “But I can’t go way up in the pasture, under the hill” “Could you go to the end of the lane?"” the Muley Cow inquired. “Yes!” “Then I'll ask Aunty Polly Wood- chuck to meet you by thes bars to- morrow morning,”” the Muley Cow promised. . That suited Henrietta Hen. “T'll be there—if it doesn’t rain,” she agreed. Early the next day she followed the cows through the lane. And ¢he hadn’t waited long at the bars when Aunt Polly Woodchuck came hobbling up to her. Being a very old lady, Aunt Polly was somewhat lame. But Henrietta Hen saw at once that Aunt Polin wae hannloseln old-fashioned. she was spry, for all that. eyes were as bright as buttons. Henrietta Hen saw at once that Aunt Polly was hopelessly old fash- ioned. She carried a basket on her arm, and a stick in her hand. “Well, well, dearie! Here you are!” cried Aunt Polly Woodchuck. “Thel Muley Cow tells me you're feeling poorly. Do tell me all about your- self! No doubt I've something in my basket that will do you a world of good.” Newspaper Service). Fruit Salads Will Serve as Desserts BY SISTER MARY FRUIT salad may often be served in place of a dessert. After a dinner that is rich in fats and Bta‘rchel a dessert of fruit is acceptable. The winter din- ner especially gains . much if the salad and A one and the whole is topped off with black coffee, cheese and crackers. The fruits that were canned during the summer months may be drained from their sirup and used in many combinations. The sirup should be saved for drinks and sauces for desserts. Pear Salad Allow a whole canned pear for each serving. Work a cream cheese smooth with cream. Any of the cream cheeses put up in small pack- ages may be used. Fill the cavities of the pears with the cheese mix- ture, put two halves together to make a whole pear and serve on lettuce with whipped cream dressing. ‘Whipped Cream Dressing Four tablespoons butter, 2 table- spoons flour, 1 teaspoon mustard, 2 tablespoons sugar, 8 tablespoons vinegar, 4 tablespoons water, 1 tea- spoon salt, 1-8 teaspoon pepper, egg yolks, 1 cup whipping cream. Melt butter, add flour, salt, sugar, pepper and mustard, mixed and sifted. Stir till smooth and add vine- gar and water. Put over a slow fire and cook, stirring constantly till all is thick and smooth. Take from fire and add yolks of eggs unbeaten. Beat well with the spoon. Let cool and add the cream beaten stiff. Mix thoroughly and let stand two or three hours before using. Fruit Salad Dressing Four tablespoons pear, peach or pineapple juice, 4 tablespoons lemon juice, 4 tablespoons lemon juice, 1-3 cup sugar, 1-4 teaspoon salt, 2 eggs. Beat eggs slightly, just enough to mix whites and yolks. Add sugar fruit and lemon juice. Cook over hot water, stirring constantly until the mixture coats the spoon. Remove from the fire and cool. Either of these dressings are good with fruit. Combination Salad. On-half cup diced pears, % cup - diced peaches, 1-4 cup diced apple, 1-4 cup diced pineapple, 2 table- And her| (Copyright 1921 by The Metropoman 4 dessert are made|’ spoons preserved cherries, nuts. Drain* pears, peaches apple from their juices. and measure. Drain cherries from juice. Chill ingredients. Mix and serve on lettuce masked with either dressing. Salad should be served as soon as mixed. Quince Salad Eight quarters canned quinces, grapefruit, % pound whlte red raspberry jam. Cut quinces in cubes. Remove grapefruit from skin. To do' this cut grapefruit in half, cut the center pithy part out with scissors and scoop the pulp out with a strong tea- spoon. This way there s no dan- gr of any bitter skin clinging to the pulp. Save the juice. Seed and skin grapes. Arrange fruit in groups on lettuce hearts, putting the quince in the center. Cover quince with whipped cream and put a teaspoon- ful of the jam on top. Serve plain French dressing with tHe salad. To make the cream: Three- quarters cup whipping cream, 3 tablespoons grapefruit juice, 1 table- spoon lemon juice, 1-4 teaspoon salt, paprika. Beat cream with the fruit juices until stiff. Add salt and paprika and drop on salad. % . cup and pine- » Cut in dice 1 grapes, ot - 1921 Unless otherwise noted, theee notices are written by the press bureaus of the “WITHOUT LIMIT,”’AT LYCEUM. ““Without Limit,” that wonderful drama of the gamble of life and of love, which surprised the audience at the matinee today, is about the only picture on the market that has such a combination of human appeal, real “life” and pulsating heart interest. “Humoresque” is the peculiar name of the sparkling musical comedy pre- sented by the ingenious Hoyt's Revue this part of the week. “THE OATH,” AT PALACE. A new bill opens today at the Pal- ace, bringing another wonderful’ show for fall festival week. The Keith vaudeville bill will feature six won- derful acts with Polora’s Hawalians, real hula girls and all natives of this musical isle in an offering of native music and dances; Master Gabriel & Co., present 'a fantasy in three scenes called “Capt. Kiddo”; Hilda Lach- man Co., Broadway’s famous imper- sonators of famous stars will be well liked with their excellent offering and there will be three other acts of fine calibre. “The Oath,” the photoplay which opens today at the Palace theater, is a revelation in the art of the mo- tion picture. In it R. A. Walsh, who produced and directed it for the May- flower Photoplay corporation for dis- tribution by Assoclated First Na- tional Pictures, Inc., has obtained two intensely dramatic effects which have been marked by critics as being im- portant advances in the art of motion picture direction. BETTY COMPSON—FOX’S. One of the most unusual roles ever seen in a motion picture is that por- trayed by Betty Compson who stars 'with Milton Sills in ““At the End, of the’ World,” now showing at Fox’s in connection with six high class vaude- ville acts. She plays the part of “Cherry,” beautiful daughter of a broken down Englishman who con- ducts a cafe in Shanghai. Beautiful Chinese costumes of luxurious silks form a pleasing phase of the picture, but it is the story that is all com- pelling. Wally, Ferraro and@ Wally com- pany in a spectacular acrobatic act is one of the vaudeville features. An- other is Inman and Lyons, those well known comedians who always con- DO YOU KNOW~ | WHY GIRLS LEAVE A. Arendt of 461 Church street says, as his answer in the “Why Girls Leave Home"” contest: ‘““Ambition is the one word which, in the most concise fashion, lescribes why girls leave ltome. Tt may be a commenable ambition or-otherwise, vyet it is vright lights or to be free of parental Home? “Why Girls Leave Home” is to be shown at Fox's and the management 18 offering $10 in gold to the person who submits=the best answer to the question. Answers must not exceed 50 words in length and should be ad- dressed to Contest Editor, Herald. theater or attractions with which they deal. vulse their audiences. Fred and Elsle Burke ar> two Irish comedians and singers who always score and a novel- ty offering is presented by Gilroy and Correll. One of the best numbers is the great scenic production entitled ‘“Moonbeams,” which is a winner. The sixth act is Fletcher and Monde in a musical number. From the pen of Elinor Glyn, au- thoress of “Three Weeks” comes “The Great Moment,” which'will be the starring vehicle for Gloria Swan- son at Fox's Sunday night and con- tinuing three days. In addition, Sun- day’'s program will include Buck Jones in “To a Finish.” . CAPITOL—HARTFORD, A picture without a sub-title and yet remarkable in its clarity, due to ariistic imagination and inventive re- source is “The ¥burney's End,” which will be shown at the Capitol the last {hree days of this week. It tells of the splendid sacrifice a strong man akes to insure his wife's happiness, even to the extent of prefending he is dead in order that she may become the wife of another who is more near- iy- her equal. “The Wife Hunter” is anether musi- cal delight by George Choos who has produced such successes as “The Lit tle Cottage” and “Oh, That Melod; In this exuberant musical comediette, of which Allan Brooks was the au- Fall Festival ka R.A. Walsh’s Big Dramatic Thunderboit ‘The Oath’ 6—KEITH ACTS—$6 | Polora’s Hawaiians Real Huls Girlg Master Gabriel Co. in “Capt. Kigdo™ . ' Other Fine Acts. Our Guarantee Goes With This Bill. The safe way to wash fine fabrics Tests made by leading makers ‘ ‘ TITH the greatly increased use of sheer fabrics and very delicate colors in the lase few years, the manufacturers of silk materials and garments have met a serious problem in the of delicate fabrics way women laundered them. % Incorrect washing methods and the use of wrong soap products-have ruined numberless garments, and brought the manufacturers many complaints. Lecading manufacturers of fine silks, woolens, and sheer fabrics, have recently made careful investigation of the laundering of their special products. As a result of these investigations they un- qualifiedly recommend Lux. Some of the famous manuffzcturers who urge you to wash all fine things in Lux Snks Belding Brothers Onyx Hosidy Van Raalte Company Mazx Held, Inc. David Crystal WooLeNs Carter's Knit Underwear Ascher’s Knit Goods North Star Woolen Mill Co. The Fleisher Yarns Made |n U, S, A, CoTroNs AND LINENS Betty Wales Dressmakers James McCuteheon & Co. Purltan Mills Pacific Mills Mildred Louise Dresses tscr, Guy Voyer and Helen Ely lead i{he company of fifteen Deppy fumsters. Cormbia and Victor have a record singing act that’s a whiz for novelty. Weston and Arnold are an exception- al team of singing comedians. Frank Cronin and Letty Hart have “A Mes- sage of Melody,” and Laura DeVine opecializes in delightfully entertain- ing stunts. . FUR TOP STOCKINGS New York, Oct. 20—These rolled- down stockings that the young women have been wearing have been giving the orthodox quite a jolt. They got another the other day, when a New York girl returning from Franee ex- hibited some Jacy frills with which Parisians are/ ¢crowning the rolls. It's getting a bit late for such summery frills, but a fur top for stockings is now under consideration for the coming winter. Saturday was planet gaturn. named after the ET THE HABIT-GD TO THURS.; FRI., SAT. Betty Compson Mllton Sills “At the End of the World”’ A story of love and the under- world in the Paris of the east.— | Beating with the big things that move human hearts, This is truly a very wonderful pigture. 6—VAUDEVILLE ACTS—6 SUNDAY GLORIA SWANSON in Elinor Glyn’s “THE GREAT MOMENT” BUCK JONES —_—in—— “TO A FINISH” GAMBLE OF LIFE ‘Without Limit’ ANNA NILSSON HOYT’S REVUE PRESENT “HUMORESQUE” Entirely Different From * Previous' Musical <Comedies AERCARRS L THREE DAYS, BEG. 'l'ODAY GUY VOYER and HELEN ELY in THE WIFE HUNTER A Musical Comedietia by Alan Brooks, Introducing THE ELWELLF SISTERS Laura Weston & Phelpps De Vine Arnold & Carroll COLUMBIA and VICTOR ! One of the Most Unusual Pictures That Has Come to Our Notice || “THE JOURNEY'S END” PARSONS == THEATRE — Baruo!d MATI NEE SATURD AY MITZI in the romantic musical masterpiece “LADY BILLY” The Light Operatic Sensation 300 Times at the Liberty, New York “STROLLING PLAYERS” Comedy - Song - Dances Everything the Best. Pre-War Prices Special Price of 25 cents for the Ladies every Matinee except Holidays. Any seat in the orchestra.