Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
and Sat. s 20) 6, 20¢,-30¢, 500 at Crowell’s CORK. e Famous ne Name ELAINE” ke So Well IMORROW ORGAN | AND le( OU WILD RGET. TOLSTOY'S ZER A” ’S TURDAY DN S 0 — Hartford 11—DMatinee Present BIRD.” [to $1.50; Mat- March 12.13 rday.) OLF.” to $1.50. Mati- { wonderfully | is, in briefest form, an epitome of one N N BR "DAILY HERALD. | WEDNESDAY, MARCH 10, 1915. News for Theatre Goers and Women R 'BROADWAY JONES IS POPULAR PLAY Audiences at “Broadway Jones,” which is the attraction at the Lyceum this week, have enjoyed the delightful elements in this most popular play. The attendance thus far has sur- passed previous weeks. The Cohan label of authorship and production is, to the majority of playgoers, sufficient guarantee of excellence. George Co- han is nothing if mot original and because of that he has attained his niche in the hall of American play- It Includes Everything That’ to Coffee—Recipes for ing Almon Midwinter Soup Trout a la Normandic Ducks with Mushrooms wrights. His humor has distinctive marks that makes it different from other authors and the difference ap- peals to the senses of those who en- | jov comedy. There is a dash in the speed of “Broadway Jones” that just | suits the fancy and the flow of the | whole run of the play is enjoyable. The complications besetting him are | brought out and as | “Jones” wiggles out of his dilemma | Jhe evokes additional laughter. The ! enjoyment which the large audiences | have taken out of the performancesi given has ben reflected in the hearty | roars of laughter during the recital of | the lines and the expressions of com- | plete satisfaction uttered while leav ing the theater. The next matinee performance will be given Thursday afternoon. _ Seats are now on sale for remain- | ing performances and persons intend- | ing to see ‘“Broadway Jones” will do | well ont to delay too long. Everybody should see this week’s bill. | The management has made special | arrangements for the next attraction | at the Lyceum. In the next offering | the maximum of expense will be in- i volved. Subsequent notices will con- tain more specific reference to the | play. MABEL TALIAFERRO IS AT FOX'S TODAY |’ Mabel Taliaferro, the dainty drama- tic star in “The Three of Us” pic- turized from the play of the same name will hold stellar position on the motion picture program at Fox’s to- day and tomorrow. The story tells | of' a stirring romance of the gold re- gions where the stern law of every man for himself, quickly separated the weak from the strong and is a bitter combat between powerful wrang and tireless right. A vivid blending of romance, intrigue and the consuming hate of man, with a clash | of emotions demonstrating the incor- | rigible onrush of the passion for re- venge, the stirring tale carries one along at a fast gate until the finale | when the climax reaches yvour inne most emotions. Besides this excellent attraction with America’s daintiest | dramatic star in the leading role, the | eleventh and latest chapter of ‘“The Exploits of Elaine,” that daring mo- ion picture serial story dealing with “The Hour of Three” will also e shown. See the latest machinations | of that scoundrel “The Clutching Hand.” He is outwitted by = Craig Kennedy, but always scents attack, vanishes by way of a secret passage way and under the very mnoses of his pursuers saunters urbanely away to other quarters. The great dramatic treat of the sea- son . is coming to this city Friday and Saturday in the William Fox screen version of Count Leo Tolstoi's “Kreut- zer Sonata.” Every principal role in the long list of characters is filled by a Broadway star. Nance O’Neil ,the voung American emotional actress, whose art is known on all four con. | tinents, plays the role of Miriam, the wronged wife who takes in the end a terrible revenge for her injuries. Theda Bara, leading woman of the| famed Theater Antoine, Paris, adds | another “Vampire Woman” and Wi liam Sha leading man for Robert Mantell, Mrs. Fiske and Viola Allen, portrays with wonderful brilliancy the leading male role. Tolstoi’s Story. In many respects, “Kreutzer So- nata” may be called the drama of the | clash of the ““Old order changing, giv- .ing place to new.” Throughout its | shifting scenes, from the sombrely sad plains of Russia to the thrifty at- | mosphere of rural Connecticut, and the rush and turmoil of New York city, this theme and the tragedy of a noble woman’s soul betrayed and | relentlessly crushed, form the domi- | nant motive of this play of splendid force and sweeping power. It holds the spectator relentlessly enthralled, with blood jumping heartward and nerves athrob, from the opening scenes of the prelude to the terrific climax where shattered, llves and blasted hopes—the toysiof a grim fate—topple to a common ruin. This of the most remarkable dramas of today. It is produced by William Fox at Fox’s theater this Friday and | ana pour over the fish. Creamd: Potatoes Artichoke Salad Almond Pudding Strawberry Ice Spice Cakes Coffee Midwinter Soup One can ‘ecorn, one quart milk, one small onion, sliced; three tablespoon- fuls flour, one-half cupful water, one can tomatoes, one-quarter teaspoonful =oda, one-third cupful butter, two tea- spoonfuls salt and one-eighth tea- spoonful pepper. Scald milk, corn and onion added. ake a smooth paste of the flour and water and add milk. Cook twenty min- ules, or until mixture thickens. Rub through a sieve. Cook tomatoes, add | s0da and put through the sieve. Com- ’ine the corn and tomatoes, add bu- ter and seasoning, beat and serve. Trout a la Normandic. Boil a sea trout, add one sliced onion one carrot, chopped; two sprigs of parsley, one bay leaf a few pepper- corns and one tablespoonful of butter. | When done beat the yolks of two eggs with a little cream add salt and a pinch of cayenne. Remove the fish to a platter. Mix the egg sauce with the water in hich the fish was cooked. id one-half cupful of cream. Beat Ducks With Mushrooms, Clean -and season a pair of ducks Heat in a large and cut into pieces at the joints. two tablespoonfuls of butter saucepan add the ducks one { onion chopped fine two cloves of gar- lic and one herb bouquet chopped. Cover and brown for a few minutes; add one cupful of water and stew until tender. Then add one cupful How An Appetizing Sunday Dinner May Be Prepared Just at Present s Tasty from Midwinter Soup Attractive Menus includ- d Pudding. of mushroon of lemon juice minutes. an dsimmer for ten Creamed Potatoes. Wash potatoes boil with their skins on until soft drain and let stand several hours. Peel, cut in cubes. Put in saucepan, adding spoonful of butter to each cupful of potatoes. Sprnkle wth salt and pap- rika. Add enough cream to cover and cook slowly for thirty minutes. Serve garnished with chopped parsley. Artichoke Salad. Boil artichokes until tender. Drain j and cool. Separate the leaves and mix with an equal quantity of grapefruit pulp. Place on lettuce leaves and | serve with mayonnaise. Almond Pudding. « Pound one-half pound of almonds in a mortar. Mix with volks of six eg: and one cupful of sugar, two table- spoonfuls of lemon juice, one cupful of | cake crumbs and the whites of the eggs beaten ff. Put in a well but- tered baking dish and bake in a slow oven about thirty minutes, Strawberry Ice. Three cupfuls water, one and one- half cupfuls strawberry juice, one cup- ful sugar and one tablespoonful lemon juice. twenty minut. Mash strawberries through a sieve and add, together with lemon juice. Strain and freeze in usual manner. Spice Cakes. Sift two cupfuls of flour, beat the Volks of four eggs with one pound of each of cinnamon and ginger, one fourth teaspoonful of cloves, one tea- spoonful of grated lemon peel and a pinch of salt. Mix al linto a dough and roll nto small cakes. Bake in a _moderate.oven about ten minltes. MARY PICKFORD IS AT SCENIC THEATER Mary Pickford, the inimitable lit- tle star, will be seen at the Scenic theater this evening in five reels in such Little Queen,” presented by Daniel Frohman. As an actress there are few in number on the stage today who arve comparable to' Mary Pickford. The picture to be shown this evening shows Mt Pickford in her best in “Such a Little Queen.” The play deals with kings and queens and the trials which beset them in both the hard fleld of poli- tics and the imaginative realm of ro- mance, Anna Victoria, queen of Herzegovina, is exiled by reasons of political dissensions and finds refuge in America. Stephen, the king of Bosnia, also dethroned, comes to America. Their fortunes bring them together and a true spirit of romance permeates the entire play. Miss Pickford as the little queen makes one of the best impressions of her brilliant career. Several comedy reels augment the evening’s entertainment. BRONCHIAL COUGHS When the bronchial tubes are af- | ¥ected with that weakening, tickling cough, they need immediate and sen- sible treatment. The breath seems | ‘shorter because of mucous obstruc- | ‘tions; usually fever is present and your head jars with every cough. Your chest aches and the inflammas tion often spreads to the lungs. | The food-tonic that has proven its ‘worth for forty years—is Scott’s Emul- f%ion. It drives out the cold, which ;is the root of the trouble, and checks ‘the cough by aiding the healing iprocess of the enfeebled membranes. If you are troubled with bronchitig or know an afflicted friend, always re, |member that Scott’s Emmulsion buildg \strength while relieving the trouble. { 11461 Scott &Bowne, Bloomfield, M. J. LADIES! LOOK YOUNG DARKEN GRAY HAIR Use Grandma’s Sage Tea and Sul- phur Recipe and nobody can tell. Brush it through hair. 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 Saturday. Special arrangements are being made both in the lighting ef- fect of the stage and organ music for this production. ce Daily. yers. E LAW” 10, 20, 30, 50c. LECTURE DPEAN WAR.” Var Correspond- Church --SCENIC- TODAY DANIEL FROHMAN Presents MARY PICKFORD —IN— A LITTLE QUEEN.” IN FIVE REELS, See This Great Picture and “sucHa t 8:15 p. m. 35c. Youwll Enjoy Tt Tmmensely. ADMISSION 5 CENTS P R IR ST fades, turns gray and looks dry, wispy and scraggly, just a few appli-- cations of Sage Tea and Sulphur en- hances its appearance a hundred- fold. Don’t stay gray! Look young! Either prepare the tonic at home or get from any drug store a 50 cent bottle of “Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur Compound.” Thousands of folks recommend this ready-to-use prepara- tion, because it darkens the hair heau- tifully and removes dandruff, stops scalp itching and falling hair; bpe- sides, no one can possibly tell, as it darkens so nawurally 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, it; natural color is restored and it pe. comes thick. glossy and lustrous, and you appear YCars younger. BUSH ELECTED CHAIRMAN, Louis, March 10.—B. F. Bush Louis yesterday was elected chairman of the board of directors of the Missourj Pacific and of’the St. Louis, Iron Mountain and Southern Railw and also chairman of the executive committees of both roads. | ALIEN LABOR REPE | Albany, N. Y., M to repeal the law prohibiting alien labor on public work passed the as- | sembly vesterday, 98 to The mea- sure now goes to the governor for signature. AL PASSED, *h 10.—The bill $25,000 MARLBORO FIRE. Marlboro, Mass., March 10.—Fire in the Masonic building on Main street vesterday caused an estimated loss of $25,000. Miss Ryvan has a choice showing of new W s in all the fashionable modes and materials, at her shap, 79 Pratt street, Hartford, but one new voile in white and flesh which she is selling at $2.25 is so pretty that it needs particularly to be mentioned. It is an entirely new design.—advt. WUBEN GAN HARDLY BELIEVE How Mrs. Hurley Was Re- stored to Health by Lydia E.Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. Eldon, Mo. — ‘I was troubled with weakness. For two years I could not stand on my feet long at a time and I could not walk two blocks without en- during cutting and drawing pains down my right side which | increased every month. Ihave been at that time purple in the face and would walk the floor. I could not lie down or sit still sometimes for a day and a night at a time. I was nervous, and had very Jittle appetite, no ambition, melancholy, and often felt as though I had not a friend in the world. After I had tried most every female remedy without suc- cess, my mother-in-law advised me to take Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. I did so and gained in strength every day. I have now no trou- ble in any way and highly praise your medicine. It advertises itself.’’—Mrs, S. T. HURLEY, Eldon, Missouri. Remember, the remedy which did this was Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. For sale everywhere. It has helped thousands of women who have been troubled with displace- | ments,inflammation, ulceration, tumors, jrregularities, periodic pains, backache, that bearing down fge]ing, indigestion, | and nervous prostration, after all other means have failed. Why don’t you it? Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass. one table- | displacement, inflammation and female | s and two tablespoonfuls ! | wheat flour. sufficient W Boil sugar and water together for | crust sugar, and add one-half tablespoonful ! | THREE BOYDS GOOD | Keeneys’ { vaudeville The executive will sign it. | | scription, | who | ceiving deserved fact A Menu for Tomorrow R Breakfast. Fruit. Sugar and Fried Eggs. Broiled Potatoes. Vienna Rolls. Coffee. Lunch. Ceveal. Cream. Boston Baked Beans. Raisin Bread. Cookies. Tea. Dinner. Spinach. Soup. Broiled Fish. Mashed Potatoes. Brussels Sprouts. Jam Roly Poly. Soft Coffee. Raisin Bread.—One and one-half pints of milk, one teaspoonful of salt, one tablespoonful of sugar, one-half ake of compressed seeded ais sauce. veast, two l whole- to make a soft milk, pour it over the salt and sugar; when lukewarm add th t dissolved in a little m water. Stir in flour to make a drop batter, Dbeat hard for five minutes and set in a warm place i When light and spongy add the aisins, more flour to make a soft dough, turn out on the board and knead until very smooth. Return to the bowl until light, mold into two lJoaves, and when they have doubled in size, bake in moderate oven. Rais date and other fruit breads need very slow baking and a loaf of the above size should be for at least an hour and a quarter. It therefore, to cover the pan halg the period and keep a pan of water in the oven. Jam Roly Poly.—Make a and roll out. Spread with thick layer of jam, roll like a jelly I, lay on a grease® Plate or pan nd steam for forty minutes, then place in the oven long enough to dry off. Serve with either a hard or soft sauce. of a upfu dough. d the ea £ of rich a AT KEENEY'S THEATER Prominent among the this week are talent at Three Boyds, a trio of entertainers, who oc- the |cupy a position in the front rank of performers. These people are providing one of the most enter- taining acts that has played here in long tome. They are versatile peo- the ts and They Ir and considerable of singer ple is merit every They arc mental skill. ure their prog clever dancers of uncommon up to best advans Scotch numbers, special approval for their of the bagpipes and concer- The voung ladies in the trio wear some fetching costumes and make a decidedly attractive appear- vinning lance. While iocal vaudeville devotees have seen cyele acts of almost every de- that of Bud Snyder, a rider and is With us this week, ent from all the others = celebrated is differ- nd it is re- recognition. Bud a daring cyclist. He does thrilling stunts, exhibiting great clever- ness in every feature. He is as . ed by some clever entertainers. The is a novelty and it deserves at- | tention. !by the Great Chi | gler | torial, Additional sensations are provided o, a Japanese jug- and balancer, who is holding farth with the others. Chiyo has a number of original feats in his rep- ertoire and there is a newness about his act that makes it very pleas ing. The little Jap is a new ar rival in this country, coming from Germany where he was held for weeks as a prisoner of war. was released through the aid bassador Gerard. The Farrels appear in dancing nov- elty that has many good features the Two Girls in Cork find favor for their singing and dancing specialty. of Am- WAGES OF GIRLS ARE DISCUSSED IN PLAY “A girl cannot be paid at the rate of $7 week and dress at the rate of $12 without getting the extra five from somewhere,” opined Rev. Dr. Charles H. Parkhurst in a recent ed written as the result of a v to the Eltinge theater, New York, where the eminent clergyman saw and was greatly impressed by “With- in the Law,” which tells the story of a New York shopgirl employed in a department store at a pitiful wage Mary Turner, unjustly accused of theft, seeks revenge after her release from prison by consorting with a gang of “croo ng upon society Mary is a girl of superior intelligence and so she enough to keep “within the law.” How she obtains revenge upon the hard-hearted cm- plover makes up the interest of the four-act play, which presents many amusing and strongly drawn charac- ters besides that of Mary Turner. There are Joe Carson, the lovable forger, and little Aggie Lynch blackmailer, who amusin the audience forgives her n and Mr. Gilder, the ployer, and Dick, his only Mary manages to not for- getting English Eddie Griggs, the stopl pigeon, Cassidy, the detective, Inspec- tor Burke and Helen Morris, the real thief. Bayard Veiller'’s melodrama is the attiaction Poli’s, Hartford the- ater al this week. is wise is so that stern em- son, whom at to | in the oven | to | wheel jumper, | some | the | wicked- here | He | [ i i | | AISHBERG,, THE NEW SUITS, COATS, DRESSES, WAISTS, ETC. They Are Here. Al has the new ideas that fashion decreed in women's wearing apparel for the coming spring reflected in our NEW SPRING We it are STOCK want you to see A our displays once. most fasci- nating array of new spring shades include Rose, shown and Putty, are Belgian Blue, Black, teria Sand, Navy, while some of the ma- Serges, Poplins, etc. ete., are Gabardines, Coverts, Chuddah, SELECT SAY WHAT YoOuU “CHARGE WISH— Im.” offer weekly THE SPRING MAID admire The pay convenience bills deposits is what we vou to your in small man and Try it many a woman is with doing HEAESAR [¥liscH §ToRF GB7-6D3 MAIN STREET us Will our show- ing for the styles and ma- terials are the most modern HARTFORD. and of the finest quality. On Borrowing Eyes How much we see through other people’s eyes, A housekeeper is getting her house ready for goes about inspecting it to see if it is satisfactory. for dust, she gives the brasses in the kitchen an extra polish, she pauses to straighten the shades, and all the time she looking at her home, not through her own eyes, but through the critical eyves of the coming guest® If she were preparing for a less critical guest the would different to her. a critical guest. She She looks everywhere house look Buying Clothes to Please Others. to buy a usit, Instead of looking at her own eyes and liking and disliking accordingly, she of the eyes of that cluster of girls whose standards so her conduct. She really cannot afford the blue suit. The she should buy. But she has heard her friends criticise that style not quite up to the latest mode. She might have bought the less expensivey suit if she had seen it only through her own eyes, but she sees it through their eyes, and of course, buys the blue suit which she cannot afford It is really astonishing to find what important things people permit themselves to look at through the eyes of others. A letter friend once wrote me that she was really in love With a worthwhile, likable chap in her neighborhood. “I think I would ,marry him.,” she wrote, “if it were not for one thing. He is a carpenter and my girl friends look, down on him. You see we four girls have been together a long while and their opinions mean a lot to me. Of course, they don’t know him as well as I do. They look at his rough, working clothes and his work hardened hands and his lack of little refinements and of schooling. They don’t know what a really fine mind he has, and how courteous and gentlemanly, in the best sense, he is. But I'm afraid if I married him I would feel their disapproval of him and it would make me sensitive and unhappy Will She Make a Big Mistake? In other words she, lets herself look this man through diced eyes of others instead of through her own eyes. It seems comes pretty near deserving to make the big mistake she to make. Of course, through the eyes of For instance, other side of a question under discussion and it is very good to be able to catch tarough the eyes of others, But don't forget that God g your service and don’t be afraid to use them. Be all men doubt vou,” as well as to ‘make allowance A girl goes out the sec suits out of them out largely determine brown is what as young at the to me etting ready preju- she is g there is good 1 it is good through occasional are times when it be other able to able see to opponent’s glimpses of things the eye yourself to see vour 5 we you own able to TR Coiriiial” in eyes for “Trust their your own veurself when doubting, too.” War Lecture By Peter MacQueen, ’ villages France and Belgium win S. and | be shown in a series of two hundred Peter MacQueen, war correspondent with the armies of | OF more stereopticon views in on “The a new, superb causes, conditions of the most stu his great war lecture Great the allies in Belgium and France from | last August to Januar: | Buropean War,"” travelogue on the and consequences pendous war in history. Tickets for the great war lecture by Mr. Mac | Queen on Friday evening are now on sale at the Dickinson Drug by members of the Methodist | erhood. is to give lecture on “The Friday church Methodist he an illustrated eat Eu- War” on Methodist of the hood The pictures battlefields ropean d evening at | Trinity under the Brother- the of auspices : Co., ‘and Broth took on and amid the ruins THE POPULAR SHOE STORE HERE'S THE NEW MILITARY BOOT Where could you find anything more charming with the short skirt costume? Or, can you think of inything more novel than the military iooking laces and “strap”? Shown in Patent Colt and Metal Calf with Grey, Sand, Brown and Putty colored cloth Come in and see them Price $3°50 arid $4.00 THE SHOEMAN, Main St., HARTFORD ASK THE CLERK FOR S. & H. GREEN STAMPS new Gun Faun, top.