New Britain Herald Newspaper, February 8, 1922, Page 4

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1922, RONCHITIS At bedtime rub the throat and chest thoroughly with— | JIN C viekrs LR LU AL ‘ L dll DALY FARINON BLRRVICE 5 J | BLACK HATS FOR SPRING | MY MARRIAGE PROBLEMS Adeclo fiarrison's New Phaso of REVELATIONS OF A WIFE VAPORUB Over 17 Million Jars Used Yearly of the royalties on “Way Down Jaat," that play, which was to have been presented next week, will not he of- fered. Instead, “Over the Hill to the Poorhouse” will he the offering, Tickets are now on sale for week's play | | Ly, ? il have arisen regarding the adjustment [ Unless otherwise by the press agencies for the re It od, LaRiteal e s o i pective amusement Pettit has | cheerless i The physic ding as eve that he was early call, his helor office and his rather J j ? living-quarters, / 3 | AT | GREAT SHOW n,oas sl and forhid i i« o lisLinyan B vhiel man ok Again last evening and this after- toifle’ shackad: at. oln noon the Janette Sisters Revue, fresh e T ot i trom their trlumphs as members of fous about But Lilllan gave him Hddle Cantgre Midnight Roundery de no time to Indulge either emotion :”‘,”,,.;,r Mgsaldiancss "'IV"G"‘ "’l""' s A0 s g 4 er. here fs any vaudeyille enter While 1 husied myself with the four. | faining that these people dc dnot do months-old magazines in the recention | it 08 becar 59 L) Telbar or a dentist who has an up-to-date il ¢ p J magazine - she accompanied Dr, Pettit k06 poud papular ita roh. Jche into his private office with mueh the :',::"'; ,"",m :,'" mw?' w,'”"d“',, dl"l"m alr, T told mykelf, of 4 mother escort- fops o AR lcrl Lpa ous ing a small boy into a punishment 3 ':fh,r:,m:‘ &"r,','” ,'h,.\l,r;”"",.,. OFaainG room ; y 3 Riley, comedian, Templefon and Tem- | dh e b ‘ pleton, impersonators, and Hap| ekl vlon LR, L haards e ) : Smith, the happy go lucky punster. S L 'm:“"“:‘"fl‘ AN 3 ok “Saturday Night" continues as one 4 g 3 LI J 5 § of the best movie drawing cards of physiclan's at first nervous, expostu- the season. Seenes deplet all gorts lating, finally acquiescent, And when A | ST e e el i o Lilllan returned to the recéption room AL S e T ara™{a Vil Bood | [Vt Ao '{:";r';n“';':’n;"'“‘;:“'“(I "h"‘[""’ bitterly running through it and the ever pres- | Kht, | ¥ won, in her eyes. ent marriage moral that is to he ex Dr. Pettit, behind her, was visibly ccted in a Cecll De Mille produc- flustered, He turned to me awkward- Fad i Iy. : i i 4 Tomorrow {he enfire 5 \I’nur”'r;p has 4lm?‘¢; you good, Mrs, change, bringing Norma Talmadge f:‘n"\,nnl. 'w rmlr"l( with his best pro- and Tugene (VBrien in “Poppy,'"” the 1 Ns;m\u ,n'r. 0", are looking ex- sereen version of @he famous book by fnfl;n\‘zly :]\?H:V.Hon are Mr. Graham vnthia Stockley, In addition, there nasuegenie ) p i will be rollicking comedy—Buster Both are very well, thank you," | Keaton in “Hard Luck." returned demurely, hesitated, then Beginning Monday Mabeil Taliafer- asked abruptly: “And Miss Foster? ro in “Keep to the Right,” will onen Is she still in Sag Harbor, and well?" a three day run. This is a superb I had asked the question simply to comedy drama in which the star is What Happened Between De, Pettit and Ciaire Foster, LYCEUM THEATER The lover of high class melodrama treat in Chilg," week at Payton AT JOX'S, “TU'm so afrald Mother will overdo," nesy 1 sald worriedly, as Lilllan and 1 hur ried out to the big old barn which heased the cars, “No doubt she will,” Lillfan replied comnosedly, “but it won't hurt her' I supposed my face showed the startled query 1 was too polite to volce, for Lilliafd® explained with a smile. “It's a forty-to-one shot,” she said, “that your mother-in-law is pretty well fed-up with her daughter Bliza beth and the children, Her nerves are pretty nearly on the ragged edge, and f she didn’t have any physical labor to do she'd exercise her nerves hy going into one of her tantrums and rageing you. As it is, she can juggle the frying-pan and bang the double boller until she gets the choler out of ‘her system. By night she'll he so tired she'll go to sleep like a lamb.” “By night none of our lives will be worth a penny whistle,” T laughed. “But we all possess excellent foot- work, and she'll be too tired to chase us,” Lillian retorted. “T wish Elizabeth would go home," I said inhospitably, but the addition of a rocking chair guest llke my sis- ter-in-law and four obstreperous youngsters to a maidless household was enough, I felt, to make almost any chatelaine cuail. “She’ll go tomorrow, mark what will find an exceptionally fine the of “Her Unborn which s heing presented this the 'Y COMPSON—LON CHANEY AT PALACE, | An unusualy fine chosen to support Betty (‘ompson in her ne arving vehicle, “For Those We Love,” a Goldwin release, coming to (he Palace theater for three days, beginning Thursduy. 1.on Chaney, who made his first outstanding suc- cess in *“The Miracle Man," the same 4 picture in which Miss Compson her- self won national recognition, has the role of a gambler, whose every good instinet was covered by the hard veneer of his trade Richard Rosson, the brother of Ar- thur Itosson, the director of “For Those We Love,” has ap important part as the knavish brother of the heroine. Other seasoned actors in the company are Camille Astor, Bert Woodruft, Harry Dufficld, Walter Mo~ rosco, son of the theatrical producer, | Oliver Morosco, and (ieorge Cooper. There will be four fine Keith acts on the bill. an play it the Lyeeum theater Siock Players, Altho! I ¥ cost has been L acro s title of the play may sotund gestive, the content matter is ahsoluicly opposed to anything of that nature, The play tells the truth about birth contrel, in a clean, strajghtforward manner, There is a clash between two lov and the aunt of the man, who is an advocate of hirth control, and opposes them. [Finally, there s a great seene in the office of the family physician, and the aunt is obliged to consent to the marriage of her neph ew and his flance following a con- fession, which she, the aunt, makes. If you want fo feel the throb of mother love, thrilling you through and throngh, you must see “Her Un- horn (*hild,” especially witness the performa of Miss Rose ludwiz. Miss Ludwig shows how versatile a player she is in the role in which she is cast this week, Kvery member of the Payton Stock company will be well cast in the play to be presented next week, “Over the Hill to the TPoorhouse” Here is a story that will never die—with its langhs and so full of stirring moments. room - | nor clog “That Man—"' 8 program will A s =2 | CASTORIA For Infants and Children InUse For Over 30 Years being used much for Periwinkle, the new 18 just a shade off vio- favorite, is sports hats, color which BY MARIAN HALE. York, Feh, T7.—The first of the milliners New RENE difficulties which I'm telling you,” Lillian. prophesied. “Her mother will put her to work to- day, and from what I have observed of your sister-in-law, labor of any sort is anathema to her.” “I hope Mother piles it dp her to- day,” I said viciously, and relieved, though half-ashamed of my outburst, I climbed into my car and backed out of the barn. An Important Call. “Poor, unsuspecting Klizabeth !"* Lillian apostrophized, as we rolled down the driveway past her windows, the shades of which were still drawn. “Little she knows what is in store for her today. Oh, joy! Madge, you needn't turn your head, you're pagt now, anyway, but if you eould have seen your mother-in-law just now as 1 saw her! Elizabeth's window shade went up with a jerk, and Mother Graham, still holding the cord with which she had sert it up, was framed in the window registering dis- gust, indignation and all the other emotions appropriate to the occasion. Send the car along, old dear, I'm anxious to get back. It promises to be an eventful and entertaining morn- ing.” Send the car along I did, according- ly, and we soon drew up before the old house in Sag Harbor in which Dr. Also for pleurisy, pains in the chest, side or back, neuralgia, inflammation, muscular rheum- otism, bruises, swellings, frost bites, chilblains, stiff joints and muscles. The favorite family liniment for over 65 years. D MOTHER! CLEAN CHILD'S BOWELS WITH CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP Iven a sick child loves the “fruity"” taste of “California Fig Syrup.” If the little 1ongue is coated, or if your child is listless, cross, feverish, full of cold, or has colic, give a teaspopnful to cleanse the liver and bowels, In a few hours you can, see for yourself how thoroughly it works all the con stipation poison, sour bile and waste out of the bhowels, and you have a well, playful child again. Millions of mothers keep “Califor nia Fig Syrup” handy. They know a teaspoonful today saves a sick child tomorrow. Ask your druggist for gen- uine “California Wig Syrup” which « has directions for babies and children of all ages printed on hottle. Mother You must say “Calfornia” or you may get an imitation fig syrup. A CLEAR COMPLEXION RuddyCheeks—-éparkJing Eyes —Most Women Can Have Says Dr. Edward :a Well-Known Ohio Physician Dr.F.M. Edwardsfor 17 yearstreated scores of women for liver and bowel ail- ments. During these years he gave to his patients a prescription made of a few well-known vegetable ingredients mi with olive oil, naming them Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets. You will know them by their olive color. These tablets are wonder-workers on the liver and bowels, which cause a nor- mal action, carrying off the waste and poisonous matter in one's system. If you have a pale face, sallow look, dull eyes, pimples, coated tongue, head- aches, a listless, no-gond feeling, all out of sorts, inactive bowels, you take one of Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets nightly for a time and note the pleasing results, Thousands of women and men take Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets—the suc- cessful substitute for calomel—now and then just to keep them fit. 15¢ and 30c. startle him out of his ridiculous self- consciousness, buut when he perceptibly paled at the question I was angry 1 had asked it. *'She is not in Bag Harbor. As for her health, I do not know, for I have heard nothing from her for weeks." His words and manner indicated that nothing was more trival, more remote from his mind than the wel- fate and the whereabouts of Claire Foster. But I--~who knew of his in- fatnation for the breezy western girl— caught the look of suffering in his eyes, and guessed that there had been some sudden and tragic ending of his love story. But I had no chancé to say anything if I had wished to do so, for Lillian was already at the door, and made an imperative little signal for me to follow her. , When we were safely out of hearing she exploded: “Of all the colossal, coiled-in-red- | tape, anointed idiots, that man is the most colossal and the most anointed !" she exclaimed. “Won't he do what you wish?" 1 asked. ““You'can bet the last cent you ever expect to have that he will,” she re#| ome of the winter successes, The, ! ‘s o decided ten- dency toward the very smart, small hat which bints of the tricorn and is done entirely in black. Black is strong. Black always pre- dominates in spring, giving way as the season progresses to flower tones. Some designers, however, are al- ready deVoting their bent for line and color to ‘hats of extruordinary: size, great soft floppy affairs in lovely col- ors. Mauve, tend to which has bheen a winter let, is also strong in A very clever model, and vastly smart, is the Idaire hat shown above, The shiny, ecrisply graceful beo feathers relleve what might be a too severe line about the face and give to the chapeau a rather ‘‘dress up' air. The hat itself is of im- ported haircloth. Hats of this type are seen with taileurs which go neatly about their morning shopping and are equally good with the gown one calls or lunches in in the afternoon. sports wear, , ME TALES THE TALE OF ) FARTHUR SCOTT BAILEY P2 e A MOONLIGHT RAID. plied emphatically. “But it took me ten minutes to convinee him that he'd better. T hope your mother and ‘Eliza- beth are progressing with that break- fast. Wrestling with the dear doctor's mulish mind has given me a ravenous appetite. SUET FINE SHORTENING FOR WINTER PUDDINGS UET is an excel- lent shortening for winter pud- dings. These puddings must be very well cooked, steamed from two to three hours. The pud- ding is then more easily digested than another type of pudding made as rich by the use of lard, 5 And another good point for suet is its cheapness. Fggless Steamed Pudding One-half cup molasses, % cup brown sugar, 1 cup. finely chopped suet, 1 cup seeded raisins, 1 cup sweet milk, 1 teaspoon soda, 1 teaspoon baking powder, 2 teaspoons cinna- mon, 14 teaspoon cloves, Y% teaspoon salt, 3 cups flour. Work suet with hand till creamy. Stir in molasses and brown sugar Mix and sift flour, salt, soda, baking powder and spices. Add alternately with milk to mixture. Mix thor- oughly and add raisins. Turn into well buttered mold and steam three houra. Kerve with lemon juice, Since suet is unsalted more salt is required in a suet ‘puddinz than in a pudding shortened with butter. Rut . remember that hoth hrown sugar and molasses have a salty tang. Chocolate Nut Pudding. One-half cup chopped suet, % cup sugar, 1 cup flour, 113 teaspoons hak- ing powder, % oup milk, 1% squares bitter chocolate, 1 cup nut meats, 12 teaspoon salt. Work suet till creamy with hand. Mix and sift flour, sugar andi baking powder. Work into suet Add milk and stir to a smooth dough. Add salt, nuts and chocolate meited over hot water. Mix thoroughly and turn into a well buttered mold. Steam two hours. Serve hot with cream sauce. Cream Sauce. One-third cup butter, 1 cup sugar, 3-4 cup cream, 1 teaspoon vanilla Cream bhutter. Slowly heat in sugar. Beat in cream a teaspoonful at a time. Delicate Fig Pudding. One-half cup chopped figs, % cup chopped suet, 2 cups stale hread crumbs from soft part of loaf, cup sugar, 1 enp milk, 1-3 eup flour, 1, cup chopped almeénds, 4 eggs, l; taspoon baking powder, 3 teaspoons; vanilla, 1-4 teaspoon salt. g 1U"se the flonr to flour figs and sued a8 much as they will ‘absorb Mix remaining flour with bakinz powder. Soak crumbs in milk for half an hour. Add sugar and yolks of eggs and beat till mixture looks white. Stir in slowly figs, suet, almonds, salt, % The Meadow Mouse party, in the cornfield, vanished as if by magic. Not one of the merrymakers lingered an instant after hearing that Fatty Coon was entering the field. And, since Master Meadow Mouse hap- pened to be near the shock where he lived, he ran up it in a twinkling and crept inside it, to curl up in his nest and try to catch forty winks. He felt safe enough. Hadn't old Mr. Crow come to the cornfield every day? He had never even poked into a shock to disturb Master Meadow Mouse or one of his cousins. Mr. Crow had eaten corn, to be sure. But he hadn’t bothered anybody. And now Master Meadow Mouse thought that as soon as Fatty Coon had | 1 | Master Meadow Mouse had fallen into a doze when a sharp rustle waked him. stuffed himeelf with corn he would atrall back to Cedar Swamp. Master Meadow Mouse had fallen into a doze when a sharp rustle awoke him v HoRHY" Fatty C‘oon now! he chuckled. “There's He's pulling an ear of corn off my shock. Well, T don't believe I'll miss it. There's corn enough in this field for everybody."” Master Meadow Mouse tried Ao Ro to sleep again “1 wish Fatty (‘oon wouldn’'t make 80 much noise," said Master Meadow Mouse, grumbling a little because he was very drowsy and didn't like to be disturbed. “There!” he exclaimed after a few moments! ‘“He's gone, thank good- ness But Fafty (‘oon had only carried his ear of corn to Broad Brook, to wash it before he gobbled the ker- nels. He was very particular to wash COUGHS - Natufe’s means of stopping coughs comes to you direct from her vast Spruce Forests. Over 60 years in house- flour and bakjng powder and vanilla. Fold in the whites of the eggs heaten till stiff and dry. Turn into a but tered mold, fillingsmold not more than, three-quarters full Cover and steam three hours. Serve with . the pre- ceding sauce or piain hard sauce or whipped cream (Copyright, 19 < 22, NEA Service.) hold use, [ '‘GRAY'S SYRUP- lin alarm. EXECUTION HALTED almost everything he ate. But that was about the only way in which he was fussy. There was nothing, almost, that he wouldn't holt greedily. After he had devoured the first ear of corn, Katty (‘oon went back and pulled another off the same shock. Again he roused Master Meadow Mouse from his slumbers. y “He's gt it again!” Master Meadow Mouse complained. *1 wish he'd go to some other shock. The third time that Fatly Coon wrenched an ear of corn from the shock where Master Meadow Mouse lived, he paused and cocked an ear towards the top of the shock. “Was that a squeak?” he asked himself. And then he sniffed. “Ha!" he cried. *“Do I smell a Meadow Mouse 2"’ Fatty Coon was onot mistaken. When he rustled the dried cornstalks the third time Master Meadow Mouse had cried right out in his sleep. And he waked up just soon enough to hear Fatty Coon's remarks. “Maybe you do smell a Mecadow Mouse,” he replied under his breath, 0o Fatty Coon couldn’t hear him, “but it won’t do you any good; for I'm not coming out of my castle until you go away." It soon appeared that Fatty Coon did not intend to leave. For Fatty began to pull at the cornstalks with his claws. Although TFarmer Green had bound the stalks together tight- Iy, one by one -Fatty tore them loose and let them fall upon the ground. And inside the shock, Master Meadow Mouse suddenly started up (Copyright 1922 by The Metropolitan Newspaper Service), AFTER FIRST SHOCK Chair at Sing Sing Repaired While Victim Waits Trenton, N. J., Feb. §.—A dramafic incident which deeply stirred the wit- nesses in the death chamber of the New Jersey prison marked the exe- cution, last night of George Gares, of New Brunswick, who brutally murder- €d Theresa Kucharski, five years old, in a hotel room on Dec. 22 last, As the execution was in progress, a’| defect developed in the wiring of the electric chair which made necessary an interruption for repairs. During this brief delay the condemned man moved convulsively and gasped in the chair, Shows No Fear ‘ Manifesting but little concern as to his fate, Gares walked into the death chamber with (wo spiritual advisers, the Rev. l.eon Chamberlain. of 8t Paul's Methodist church, and the Rev. Charles H. Elder ,the prison chaplain. The first contact was applied and had been on but an instant when a fllckering and sputtering beneath the chair attracted the attention of the officials. 1t was necessary to im- mediately turn off the current and it was found that the wire connected with the electrode attached to the man's leg had ‘hecome disconnected., The defect was remedied with but brief delay and the customary two ad- ditional contacts were applied. Upon their completion Gares was pronounc- ed dead. Victim Unconscious Physicians who were present at the execution, Dr. J. Wellington Crane, prison physician, and County Physi- cian Frank G. Sca.mmel, insisted that the interruption of the electrocution did not result in sutfering.to the con- demned man. The first contact of the electricity, they sald, immediately pro- duced apoplexy, which made the man unconscious, Electricians explained that the foot of someone, probably the condemned of RED SPRUCE GUM D WAISON S (O Youark man when he sat in the chalr, came in contact with the wire and dislodged i at her best. Owing to some /ehE BESY CCNDUCTED THEATRE IN NEW Thurs., Fri., Sat. Feb. 9, 10, 11 n « POPPY" § Phatoptag Versionf CYNIIA. STOCKIEY'S Famous Boks A Brilliant REVIVAL, Supported B EUGENE O'BRIEN Extra Attraction BUSTER KEATON in “HARD LUCK” ' MONDAY—“KEEP TO THE RIGHT” Matinee 2:15 10c, 23c, 35¢ All Taxes yeetm Phonc 1000 Evening 8:15 ', 4le, 58e, THe All Taxes Box Office Open from 10 a. Included m. to 9 p. m. Included " Matinees Mtfh}lt{i'TTfi(Tsday: "i‘hm‘sda—fihd Sdturday NOW PLAYING PAYTON STOCK PLAYERS Present -:- “HER UNBORN CHILD” The Unusual, Gripping, Fascindtipng Play—A Play of Tre- mendous, Human Appeal ALL NEXT WEEK “Over the Hills to the Poorhouse” NOT A MOVING PICTURE UNDAY EVENING AT 7:15 OFFERING OF HIGH CLASS PHOTOPLAY Alwbhl bears - !; - Your Last Chance to See “MOLLY O” Thurs.—Fri.—Sat. —8- BETTY COMPSON FOR THOSE WE LOVE ¢ GCOLDWYN Cast Includes Lon Chaney. KEITH VAUDEVILLE — Sunday — Elaine Hammerstein Alice Brady PARSONS ——THEATRE—— HARTFORD ALY THIS WEEK The Senson's Most Exiraordinary Succes: Wagenhnls' & Kemper Present THE GREATEST AND MOST AMAZ DRAMATIC HIT IN HINTORY ¥ THE THEATER THE BAT . The Sensation of New York and Chicage. THE TOWN'S GOING BATTY! Join the Merry Throng! NIGHTS—b0c to $2.50. SATURDAY MATIN 50¢ to $2.00. OF T TODAY—CONTINUOUS 2 B()OMEI}%I_‘_IG ILL Lionel Barrymore Emma Carus —with— J. Walter Leopold POLD, Singing Their Own Songs. PRINCETON & WATSON, TAMAKI & CA., NICK & GLADYS VERCA, MARY LAWLOR. Shubert Vaudeville GRAND THEATER HARTFORD NONETTE, Gypsy Vjolinist WHIPPLE & HUSTON BRAATZ: SHUBERT ROVE & C(ULLEN A. 'ROBINS, The Walking Music Shop. THE SCRANTONS; Toples of the Dar; CICCOLINI, Just Out of Grand Opera; LYNCH & EDWARDS, “fn the Cellar™ MATINEE K RY DAY 25c—b0c except Naturday, SELMA NEws; @

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