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SSSS S v £ Unless otherwise Indical theatrical no tices and reviews in this column are ! ,Irmrn by the press agencles for the respective amusement company. /\M\“\m\s&wx«w\mm “WILD HORSE MESA"—CAPITOL Paramount has picturized another of those red-blooded stories from the faclle pen of Zane Grey, and this new and high-powered western melodrama, “Wild Horse Mesa,"” is now at the Capitol. The Keith-Albee vaudeville bill has five great acts to offer, headed by Alma Duval and Co., in “Dances Fantastic,” a clever dance offering well done and capably assisted by Harry Glick at the piano. Force and Williams have an excellent act, “F'rom Low to Iigh, and provide the real comedy hit of the program. Heer and Menetti offer a pleasing dance and aerial offering; Billy Ab- hott entertains with a series of songs and song stories; and Bee, Shean and Phillips Co., have a very clever skit, “Three's a Crowd,’ 'that offers splendid singing, dancing and com- edy. The shows are continuous daily, On Thursday, Jack London's “Adventure” will be the big attrac- tion. m R Weg iy N> g X . &- [ - national affair at Atlantic City. Miss Edith Nash, winner of a prize in a contest among the show girls with George White's “Scandals” this year, attracted considerable attention but her companions guve her plenty of competition for the attention and applause of the patrons. The special music foy this offering s handled by Paul Specht, himself, “THE FOOL” AT PALAC Good Thouses again yesterday greeted the Palace opening program presenting the photoplay master- piece “The Fool” and . four good Keith vaudeville acts. “The Kool" is an adaption of the famous stage play of the same name and is head- |ed by Edmund Lowe in the title role. |The Keith vaudeville bill has four very fine acts headed by the Carl- |son’ Bisters and Fitzgerald in a col- orful song and dance revue. Mort Harvey is a single entertainer of lability; DeVore and Graef offer a eplendid athletic act with a line of |good stunts. Moon and Mullen are la comedy act with a splendid lot of songs and storics. On Thursday the {entire bill changes and brings as the [feature atiraction Tom Mix with his famous hor: he Rain- ow Trail, Grey story of the Tom in his usual GOOD BILL AT LYCEUM A superb cast which includes Wil- lard Louis, Irene Rich, June Mar- lowe, Helen Dunbar, Sally Long. John Patrick, Kate Price and Robert gnew 1a presenting “The Man With- out a Consclence” at the Lycenm theater and on the same bill, in ad- dition to selected comedy and news | ; =z reels, f8 William Russell in “Before | ""'""““’:"”f‘l ‘I:“‘)"" Midnight,” a play replete with tense | ST U Sl action. | eently adopted at the New Bri g Lnnln: on Thursday the Lyceum | H1!8h achool has met with great ap- { proval among both faculty and stu- will have two mare hig features, one | o0 " of which 1s “Children of the Whirl- | “"r, %0 baot with the old system of wind" and the other heing “Parisian \ marking the eclement of Love! Tn the first mamed pieture | ;avad o large part in making up the Johnny Walker and T.ou Tellcgan | yiorage of the student, Work 18 have fhe leading male rolos. 8- | now divided into daily assignments porting Marguerite De La Motte. of one-twentieth vilue and on the T completion of the ignment a mark BAL TABARIN of 20-20ths or 70 is given the stu- at T Bal Taharin a | dent. This means that the essentlals lar ndienca witnesged the “frolic” [ have been covered and a passing presented hy a sextette of heautiful | &rade is given. One must do more voung women recenfly connected | than these minimum essentials to ob- with some of the well knpwn musi- | tain the mark of an honor student at cal comedies along Broadway. Those | the school, who recall the eonfest fo select the | The f voung woman fo he “Miss Hartford" | the senior class wr at the Atlantie City heanty pageant | ditorinm of the A will Miss Tidna Starck. | this morning. Mrs. Amy C. Guilford, “hn really wae Miss Rathing Sulf | class adviser, told the members of G3irl. a8 sha made o specialty of dem- | the class that they should begin to onstrating {he various models of An- | think of the functions connected patte Kellerinan bathing snits, made | with graduation. The officers of the for the fair sex. AN of the youns | class are as followst Fred Geanett, women whoe participated in the | president; Gertrude Bardeck, vice- thing Girl Revue at “the Tah™ | president; Helen Armstrong, secre- nirht were of the same styls as | tary; Rohert Barker, treasurer. Migs Rtarek, professional show girls | ho knew well how to earry them- . how to wear an abbreviated nme to {he hest Avantage, | ey offer o miniature heauty con- | | «an devil role, LE Last evening anditorium exercises of s held in the au- ademic building remember HAS FAREWELL PART Miss lidla Sandberg of § Stan- ley was tendered a farvewell party number of street by a madelled along the lines of the | drew M. Johnson of Stanley street. | Miss Sandberg, | New Britain High school last June, | today entered the Hartford Ho<p|m Training School for Nurses ecd of the Gulf stream it fiows alonz the United States coust is approsimately five miles per hour. CAPITOL)| CONTINUOUS SHOWS TODAY & WE KEITH - ALBE | VAUDEVILLE 1 Alma Duval'Co. as PALACE New Britain's Coziest Theater TODAY & WEDNESDAY 2:15 and 30 “THE FOOL” With EDMUND LOWE REITH VAUDEVILEE . Carlson Sisters AND FITZCGERALD T OMORT HARVEY TTDEVOREAND GRARE — MOON AND MULLEN ~—_ TFHURS. = FRL — SAT. TOM MIX N “The Rainbow Trail” 1 D HORSE MESA" JACK HOLT 1LLIY, DOVE THURS. — J3CK LONDON'S CADVENTURE” LYCEUM TONIGHT & WEDNESDAY The Man Without a Conscience With IRENE RICH PARSONS’ HARTFORD Tues, Wed, Eves., Sept. 15-16, MATINEE WEDNESDAY Then to Plymouth Theater, New York City ARTHUR HOPRINS TheFirst Flight By —Also— JOHNNY WALKER, Before Midnight || LADIES' MATINEE This Coupon and 10c Will Admit Any Lady to The Best Scats In rescnts Maxwell Anderson and Tanrence Stallings. Authors of “WHAT PRICE GLORY" Eves. B0c,-82. Wed. Mdt. 30c.-81.50 Bathing Beauty Revue AT (1.5 @3UH NIGHT THIS WEER Music by Paul Specht prize winner 1 pageant, Gcorge White's “Scandals”; Miss Angele Toohey, Earl Carroll's “Vani- ties”; Miss Eva Frisk, from the El Fay Club; Miss Madeclon Smith of *Artists apd Models”; Miss Violet Anderson. George White's “Scandals,” and Miss Mary Angelo, Hartford’s Own Beauty. These girls will offer a miniature Atlantic City Beauty Pageant, No Increase In Prices Every evening at 11:30 o'clock these six beautiful young damsels will parade about “The Tab” and you will have the opportunity to sclect the most beautiful of the sextette. Get your favorite table rescryved for tonight and witness a_novel offering. Every Night This Week LE BAL TABARIN ON THE BOULEVARD. EAST HARTFORD Telephone Laurs! 24 P’resenting Miss Edith Nash, SS9 chance! her friends | last evening at the home of Mrs, An- | who graduated from The Tantalizing Honey-Tree (By Thornton W, Burgess) meant bees, Yes, sir, it meant becs. It couldn't mean anything else. Buster stood up. He put his forepaws around that tree and dug his claws in, Then up he went, It is surprising how fast great big | Buster Bear can climb a tree, When ¥ou see him on the ground he looks 50 clumsy that it doesn't scem as if 'Tis folly Nature tries to teach, To wish for things beyond your reach, —Buster Bear Buster Bear always had a feeling that in a certain part of the Green I'orest there was a bee tree, You know a bee tree is a tree Which is partly hollow and has been taken possession of by Busy Biee and her relatives as & home, Buster didn't know why he thought there was a bee tree somewhere around there, It was just a feeling that was all, He had spent a lot of time looking for a hollow tree, but so far he had not been able to find onc, He couldn't ¥e sure that he smelled honey yet always when he came along that way so@cthing made him think of honey. So always he stopped and sniffed the air and \looked. Ie trusted more to his nose than he did to his eyes for Buster's cyes are not as keen as they might be. They are not as sharp as the eyes of some of the . o1 posibly other little people. But he can iy ™ piiyc e and e proved It trust that nose of his. Yes, siree, | Up, up, up that trce he he can trust that nose of l“""'“ | glimbed, and all the time that hum- On thie particular day the Merry |00 SO0 S LD Little Breezes came dancing from a | Bim! Bam! Two sharp little lances direction they had never come from |t VR G SRATE HC TAReSS | BtcrsRinicn i ate iliivis Wanorit | SRR LHDIS T S e ch one stopped and tickled hi8| pyoior ghook his head and slapped nosc, then danced away. Now what |,y 4joae two bees With a big paw. | do you think they tickled his n08e [ njoro hoes were coming. Buster | With? They tickled his nose with | gowleq and snarled and L snapped, the smell of honey. Yes, sir, they |yt Jie kept right on climbing. In | did so. They tickled his nose with fact he climbed a little faster if |the smell of honey. Right away [anything, In a moment he reached | Buster began to feel his mouth [a little round hole and out of that fer. He knew then that there ! hole a stream of bees poured. They must be a tree with honey in it near | made a cloud around#Buster's head. at hand. There just must be, It |My, how angry they were! This| couldn't be otherwise, He turned, |was their home and they meant to | and holding his noso and sniffing | fight for it. Such a growling and and sniffing, he slowly walked in the jsrarling and grumbling as there | direction from which the Merry |Was! Buster hooked his claws into little breezes were bringing that |{he ¢dge of that little round hole #autl of Tomes. land tugged and pulled and pulled | After awhile he missed the smelt, |and tugged. 1t was in vain. That Then he knew that he had gone past | V85 @ knothole and the wood around ihe tree from which the merry little |1t Was auite sound. — He fust had breezes had heen bringing the smell | [0 B0 down that tree, and go down of honey. 8o he went back until [\ & hurry. The hees were too once more he smelled that faint, de- :,“‘-‘:\:hw“{.?'.hflh::"\‘;‘l'l" 11\‘1:1 :‘\"n:\”;dn“tlel :::‘\:\:m tickling, delicious odor n(‘nr (hatinones i s e OO ES | hones. y talizing ree. e couldn't tear it | Then he began open and he couldn’t pull it down, the trees around, By and by he|yas sir, a most tantalizing |found a very big tree which had & |tree. humming eound coming from high | (Copyright, up in it. Tuster's little eyes | sparkled, That humming sound | Then He Began Looking Up Into All the Trees Around be at home in a ooking up in all it , by T. W. Burgess) ‘ The Great Storm."” ordinary symptoms, or the rash | when it appears instead of being red may be a blush black discolora- | tion, which looks like a recent | bruise. ! Broncho - pneumonia, the most common and the most fatal of all the complications of measles, fs! very apt to occur, The cough is ver v painful and death usually follows quickly. ; se pprosimatoly 10,0600 peopls u (0S80 L0, forme o mesdles avel I {the U. 8. died of measles in the | ‘ i year 1323, This did not include a12Ll¥ they are of {00 common oc-, : 8 IS currence. i arge number who died of broncho- While®allithet severa 1 : : 5 i e cases may | e B DO | o Baieraye o houiakivGows. thit| S proncho-pne i reatest | | caused by measies. prouchdom e gisiile bereateat a a ot LG TR (L G Rt il S other com- all cases of broncho-pneumonta oc- | |/ IREHRCS Tharo | cur in chiidren under five years of | PUCANONS and (he ears, eyes, cen- | age. This 18 also the timo af lfe |5 JEEVOUS system, the heart and| when measles is most apt to occur. | ¢ ¢ REASs RSOl than | Nor is the story of the ravages| mr'uly (licretisiRanse ¢t l'of measies complete without men- | e AGte [fioniintla Raveqtiumne Toticics of ioomersiot thetmouths This may re- o 5 sult a le . tack of measles. Less froquently in- | o (CS18 B € sorious dis "'\} and flammation of the ear or eye may | . & ally no exposed per- |'son who has not had it. be left behind as a mark of this| *°f TN Ie Bo had i Your el g | 3 our chil- =i s neighbors, you should know that a ance. child with measles should be put to [ Tcasloatiatn, dlasase loticlone as i W Rn Al ke ntil away Ltron otnss | soclation. ach autumn when oo 00 8 long as it has any | rho )€ ore; i % e el el G L L R e SRR the | | in the number of cases of measles | © " | until winter frequentlys sees " | | uently room should be airy, but it disease spreading in epidemic pro- 2 | Slegase] i P b should bhe darkened, because chil- s e it dren with measles are very sensi- | e ‘vv'vlklvw e !f‘\;); on tive to light. The bedelothes should | he child N L be thin, because the child is apt to the cyshalla mhow, Hitls tod ek o6 160 wirm, dtick off the cove | upon them, and the sufterer has o\ "0 4 vuwor from & |\'olrl A .fr‘\?!\w-‘ the appearance of being just ready {no % LT TONL & o & ehtl-| to cry. i i i | neumonia, | Symptoms of Measles o | | 19 The next sto Your Health How to Keep It— Causes of [llness ) DR. HUGH 8 CUMMING \ | Surgeon General, United States | Public Health Service e of prime im- increases, the white of : Food should be light and should | Tn the morning You will find the | o088 chiefly of nutritions broths, {hard palate and back of the throat pasteurized milk, soft boiled eggs, have becoms colored a dull angry PIELCHREOC T L) red; there may be a few little red|""y 'he ke v be ced lemonade will prove com- spots on the Mard palate, and 1o 1uuie 1o the inflamed. throas. you loek closely &t the lining 2 B 5 2 | The child’s eyes should be kept | membrane of the cheek you wAll|, - " |see some small white-tipped red- clean, and should the tever run [ Aee i sy S e thel high the comfort of the little suf- e CPEIS B S LIPS EREISROM ferer may) Baiincreakeaiby aponging from their discoverer. < : with tepid water and alecohol. | At the end of the day it will be $ ! | | Every child sick with measles | {dound (hat the Sever RUL B8 BB Cohanind Nove ahilledt medieat Eitan: | ras t befors. o i S ¥ % »r_‘j:fnn !t““;l"hlh’(::""‘:t“_;nm tion given by the family physician. | re L4 Tihe beq | Temember These Five Ponits | rolling and tossing about the bed, You should remember: | | : i e U o T () Tt e (lghea with menates This sort of thing will continue | 10Uld bé provided with a quantity | $ of soft paper napkins, and as soen | [ for three or four days. Then little | 20 011 PARET napkine and as dusky red spots will appear on the D SoLeCEthes ; . ADpe | should be burned. gal; A A S R L e e R e A Within | taught that they must a'ways hold oo e their handkerchiefs in front of the il B I mouth when coughing. will look very 3 ; 3 : i (3) That everything which has e’ saah will bt to, fude, ana | o0Re |n' contact with patients suf- | al A1 | fering with measles should be ster- [ within 3 or 4 days thereatter will | o us B0 C RStES Sowd | be entirely gone, leaving behind | S ooved o comt |in contact with other people. " th ‘21'\-;:”! o L AR AR ST S R R e i f i measles exists in a community, no This is followed Ly peeling off of | Measies ¥, the outer layer of the skin in little ““1"14”;‘“3:_‘; :‘o ":" 5 wm(" :h:_u(t! bran-like pleces. This process 1| ¢, @ come in contact with other children. known as desquamation and lasts . ) | about a week, (5) That it.is little less thar | In the meantime ‘the fever will "crir‘ninnl to v]erml( cllllrlryn known I 2 j1g | to have measles to come in contact ‘};f::‘:W'r‘;“',"‘\_',‘":m'::\:“:: :"m‘_h]“e‘:"e‘l,_ with well children. While it is gen | mitted to g0 out to play with other i €7lly considered that a person can | children, provided he does not |SUffer from measies hut once. there [ have a running ncée. | are cases on record of gecond and May Cause Other Diseases third attacks. These are unusual ‘ Sometimes measles is more ma. | S ——————— | lignant. The patient may suffer BOBBED HAIR looks wonderfy from convulsiens, from high er. with the tinystint of Golden Glow an excessive devalopment of all the | Shampoe.—ad\t, 24 hours this rash will body. and the child much bespeckled In from § to 7 days By BISTER MARY the grapes, Boll until thick, l’ull Into jelly glasses and cover with |, paraftine when cold. The pulps of | the grapes will of course have to be cooked before rubbing through the colander, Plain grape butter fashioned jam that fussing to make, Grape Butte Wash and pulp grapes, and rub through colander, Combine skins and pulp and weigh, For overy pound of fruit use 1 pound of sugar. Bring friut to bolling point, slowly add sugar and cook until mix- ture is thick. Put into sterilized jelly ghasses’and’ cover with parafine when cold. | (Copy rlnhh 1925, Grapes wanted for jelly should be Just beginning to “turn” or ripen. Ripe grapes will not jelly as satls- factorily as unripe ones, Grapes for conserve should be perfectly ripe, Home-made grape juice 1s deli- clous in iced drinks and more eco- | nomical than the commerclal pro- duct. White or blue grapes can be used as preforred or convenient. It you have lots of room for stor- | age and lots of cans to use the method of putting 1 cup of grapes into & quart can and filling the can with boiling water is quick, but if room 18 an object the concentrated | canned juice is preferable, Grape Julce Wash grapes and plck from stems. NEA Service, Tne.) Put into preserving kettle adding bolling water to prevent burning. | Cover and place over a low fire, T[] SPENH $55 382 Bring slowly to the boiling point and | cook until the skins leave the pulp. | Pour into jelly bag and drip until | | pulp is dry, about twelve hours. Measure and use 1 cup of sugar to four cups of juice. Put juice into | kettle, bring to the boiling point and | slowly add sugar, Let boil one min- | ute after all the sugar is in, Pour | into sterilized bottles or cans, filling | containers full to overflowing, z||\d| and julce 18 a good old- | requires littlo | Cook pulp Finance Board Appropriates Money for Stanley St. House ollowing portint city an explanation of im- projects by representa- |tives of the departments having the |several matters in hand, the board |of finance and taxation last night voted favorably on a program of the fire commission to build a new fire station in Belvidere, purchase and 004 | i apparatus, and erect a drill st tower; authorized the purchase of a 10 section of bleachers at Willow Brook {park, at the park commission's re- quest: approved plan of street \\m)\ outlined by the public works and accepted the decision of l|v( INMVHI board to reject all bids on a slaughter house uddition, the pro- posals heing too high. The park commission Ineluded in its budget last year an item of $1,- | 400 to purchas This item was “pruned of the es- | timate, When the Hawley loan for park purposes hecame available | it was decided to ca v through the original budget, one item of which was this purchase 1t ask seal at once. If bottles are used the corks should be dipped In para- ffiin before putting into bottle and then fhe cork and top bottle dipped into sealing wax. When this is used diluted with water, Grape conserve s Unusually with cottage cheese as there enough tartness fo add piqu the combination, of it should bhe ney Grape Conserve Five pounds grapes, five pounds 1 pound sceded raisins, 2 oranges, 1 cup English walnut meats, Wash and pulp grapes. The fruit is weighed after removing from stems. Coop pulp and skins separ- ately, adding enough water to the skins to prevent burning. Rub pulp through a fine colander to remove seeds. Combine with cooked skins, add raisins, grated rind and juice of oranges, and bring to the hoiling point, Add sugar and cook twenty minutes. Add nuts and cook ten min- utes longer. Pour Into jelly glasses and cover with paraffine when cold Grape rolish is delicious with cold meats and is worth making Grape Relish a hleachers, ont was also planned last n to funds with whicl to grade for six tennis courts and construct two but the bids were twige as high estimated so the commission will Four pounds grapes, 4 pounds [alter its plan and ask for funds later brown sugar, 3 cups vinegas, 2 tea- | The courts will he built at Sand spoons allspice, 1 teaspoon clove: Bank hill end of the park. teaspoons cinnamon. Ttems in the fire board plan Wash grapes and remove clude $32,000 for a building: Rub pulp throngh eolander to re SS2.50 for equipment; $13,000 for a move seeds. Put all Ingredients into | preserving kettle, using the skins of as in- The only voiced came MOTHER:- Fletcher's Castoria is especially pre- pared to relieve Infants in arms and Children all ages of Constipation, Flatulency, Wind Colic and Diarrhea; allaying Feverishness arising therefrom, and, by regulating the Stomach and Bowels, aids the assimilation of Food; giving natural sleep. 0 ST To avoid imitations, always look for the signature of Qfid Tdolefars Absolutely Harmless - No Opiates. Physicians everywhere recommend it. can’t sleep? Try this easy way fo get a good night’s rest L4 ONIGHT, and every other night—just at bedtime—take a glass of Borden's, the Im- proved Malted Milk—the hotter the better. You'll be surprised to see how much more easily you get to sleep. The secret is that Borden’s Malted Milk soothes your tense nerves and nourishes your overtired body. [t’s as satisfying as a light meal, yet better for you than solid food late at night because, al- ready partially predigested, it puts no extra strain on the digestion. Made by a unique process that gives it higher food value, greater digestibility, and a more deli- cious flavor than other malted milks. Free from excessive sweetness. Get a package today from your dealer—in 7 or 15 oz. glass packages—and start tonight to enjoy sound sleep! The Borden Company, Borden Bldg., 350 Madison Avenue, New York, N. Y. THE IMPROVED MALTED MILK ~in the square package pumper and $4.500 for a drill tower., | opposition Children (ry fo RAYMOND GIVES LECTURE. A large group of men and women attended the first of a series of {hree | lectures being given by Frank Jéwell | Raymond under the ausplces of the Chamber of Commerce last evening, Mr, Raymond will continue his falks tomorrow and 1'riday evening, from Commissloner ¥, A, Searle who was not pleased with the site, which ! He s the old Shipman school site, favored some place street other than Stanley street, He was Informed this and one other | t, which commissioners felt less laptable, alone are available ( The money for this station, as well ‘ (oY P 36,000 for street work, will be The highest point of elevation In raised on short terpy notes author- ‘.;‘_\;um...,. is on o mesa in Clmarron ized by the legislature, | county and is 4,800 feet high. leading into a EcoNoMY IN HEADWEAR There is real economy in w vearing Stetson Hats—they pay full dividends in service and ‘ltl.\fflctlofl—th(‘.\ are cheapest in the end. The new styles for this season are smart and snappy—like a brisk autumn day. You will see them on the heads of well-dressed men everywhere All sizes and all colors await you now—get your Stetson while the selection is good. CONNECTICUT HAT COMPANY 6 R. R. ARCADE Open Every Evening This Week Did you know that there are very definite reasons why you get better baking results with a Crawford? Sin- gle Damper Control is one. Come in during our Anniversary Sale and let us show you all the exclusive Crawford features which have made Crawfords fa- mous for seventy years. A. A. MILLS West Main Street D. MILLER CO. 26 Church St. BLANKET SALE Full Size Bed Blankets; SPECIAL . FOR SDAY AND THURSDAY ' §2.39 Pair See Them In Our Window 50 Pairs value $3.00