New Britain Herald Newspaper, June 30, 1915, Page 4

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FAOM OUT YONDER” Eve. 10,20, 30, §0c. = ¢ Tomorrow | Breakfast Fruit ’ s Milk Lamb Chops Browned Potatoes Coffee .. Lunch Lebster Farci ‘Cress Salid Iced Tea Pea Soup Celery Sauce ‘Corn Pudding fha : “in‘a saucepan, fuls flour then 5 , sdlt and pep- AHT thick, stirring ove ‘from fire. add put on ice for Lwo er shells, © sprinkle piecés of butterover Wi/ ‘erve hot. eve, sweeten them them to cool. Put over.the fire, add | th¢ country: The ~eggs and little grat- over-the fire untl it ngtiboll, take it from r it: gradually into the I for the condition of all anks at the ciose of busi- rest of her wardrobe is anything like In Thousands of Homes early and certain relfef is found | for the ailments to which all are subject—ailments due to defective or irregular action of the stomach, liver, kidneys or bowels—in the most famous family remedy, the world has ever known. PILL are justly famous because they have proved to be so reliable as correctives or preventives of the sufferings, dull feelingsand dangerdue to indigestion or biliousness. If you will try them to cleanse your system, purify your blood, tone your stomach, stimulate your liver and rogulate your bowels, you will know why &so many rely on Beecham’s Pills to Insure Health and Happiness htnns-hoim Medicine in the World. Sold everywhere. In boxes, 10c., 25¢. “OVER THE WIRE” | (Department of Recreation, By DOROTHY CLARKE. Whom do you think I saw this morning? I motored into town quite early, and we were just turning down the Avenue wheén I happened to think that Beryle had gotten back, so I popped in ... You know, there have been whisperings of the usual moth- er-in.lew trouble, so 1 thought TI'ad investigate “Too extravagant’ ..i... and so on ..Well, if the theé negligeee she had on, I must say I can’t blame mother-in-law . It was made of thin gold tissue, held in around the waist and over the shoulder by heavy ropes of Iapis Lazuli beads ..... Perfectly gorge- ous lnes ... Her slippers were gold cloth, and she was wearing a sort of tusban effect of blue sllk thdt matched the béads and was fastened with jade .. can you imagine. it ‘on Beryle! Too artistic for words! She told me all about her hon- evymoon, and what do you think? DESLYS SCREEN DEBUT AT KEENEY'S TONIGHT Caby Deslys, international star and onc of thc most popular actrésses in the world, will be seen in the leading role in “Her Triumph.” a four reel Frohman photo play, securcd for a epecial fcature of the picture program at Keeoney's tonight and tomorrow. Gaby is now a screen star - of - the first magnitude and picturizations:of dramas in which she figures are at- tiaction great attention throughout management of Keeney’'s went to big expense in get- ting the picture here at the same time it was released in metropolitan cities. It is expected, however, that Gaby will prove a hox office winner and the receipts wiil show the additional cagh outlay was warranted. | congested, play-suffocating cities can | eoll Sage Foundation was recently led { wich boys were asked to make are miet i fll the three simple requirments for | ¢lementary pupils while among the | | wich boys were able to do only about Theatre Physical Training for Pupils Should Be Made Part of School Curriculum Russell Sage Foundation Gives Report of Survey of Rec- reational Life Demonstrating All-Around Physical Inferiority Among Boys and Girls of Ipswich. Russell | have large fields, ample yards, and Sage Foundation) spacious 'halls, somebody must be on If you were to tell the average proud parent of the average small town 1hat almost any schoo! boy of the big, the recreation facilities Which you want your young people to use will probably be little patronized. No Systematic Training, Ipswich possessed no systematic physical training nor expert ieadership, and its recreational showed the result. After school on imp further, run faster and chin imself more times than his own vil- ge-bred son, he wouid probably look ou indulgently in the eye and ask you really felt quite all right to- iay. People have heard so much about how the slums dwar{ districts that the inferiority of city-grown 1lungs ard muscl has become a kihd of 5 by-word. In order to get at the facts in the case, a man connected with the Rus- per cent. of the 696 boys. and girls than seven per cent. were using the athletic field. tend the ‘‘movies” oftener. Sixty-nine per cent, to apply his yard stick to this par-| poys and fifty-two per cent. of the ticular tradition. Selecting .certain athletic tests which are commonly met by large numbers of schools in New York and other large cities he took them back to the good old New Fngland town of Ipswich and tried them on its home-grown school child- ren, as “thrillers” while but five per cent. of the boys and three per cent. of be called educational, The Teport of this survey, which ha just been published, throws an illumi- Make Poor Showing. The test were in jumping, ‘running and chinning and the passing marks in these three events which the Ips- ‘of the recreational life and needs of a small town. In closing it presents a program of future development for Ipswich, many provisions of which would apply with euuval appropriate- ress to other towns and villages throughout the United States. 1 Several Recominendations. Among the recommendations given are the following: each year by thousands of boys of the same age in many large cities. Only one, however, was able to ful- bigh school lads there was not a sin- gle student who was able to make the. marks set for boys at that age. irls as a regular part of the school Iu the chinning, or pull-up, the Ips. | &\ o s curriculum. Teaching of games for playground use. The extensive use of group games in physical training and the. use of the athletic badge test group athletics. Equipment of eacn schoel and school yard with sufficlent apparatus 10 enable teachers to make the best rossible use of recess time. Grading of school property wherever necessary to render it most useful. That in the next school erected a gymnasium with lockers and shower baths be provided. home and cne-half as well as boys from some of the most congested sections ofyNew Yerk City. Howard Roscoe Knight, who made this investigation, does not claim that the results demonstrate an all-round physical inferiority on the part of these Ipswich boys. They had had no tody training in their schools. The New York boys, on the other hand tad enjoyed systematic physical edu- cation since entering school The com- parisons, in other words, are straws which indicate that the large cities are overcoming their defeets, as habitats | * mnat the bullding be oot 1 ‘or the human animal, ana that if the | G ; ! g | movable furniture so that its tewns and villages do not wake UP | ooms may be used for civie, social. they may some day suffer the <-ha_gr1n | and recreational purposes after school of having to look upon'the large cities | y gupg, health resorts. "' organization of a public athletic Smiall Town in Bac Way. | 1eague. Mr. Knight's survey of the recrea- A permanent tional life of Ipswich which, by the | committee. way, numbers about 6,000 souls, gives | many evidences to support thé grow- ! ing belief that the small town, als though blessed with play spaces; is really in a bad way because it has nobody. whose particular business it is | 1o run the play plant. A playground is like a theater, To draw | large patronage it must be efficiently man- eged. Play activities do, of course, g0 on without paid guidance in small towns as well as everywhere else. . Shooting craps, card playing, breaking windows, swapping varns at the livery.wstable, joy-riding, pranks down in the lumber vard, jumping freight rtrains—such pursuits flourish without stimulations —like weeds-—everywhere. But if you FEELS LIKE ‘ A NEW WOMAN As Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege- table Compound Dispelled Backache, Headaches and Dizziness. holiday celebration HIGH LINE CANAT' OPENED. $5,000,000 Undertaking to 50,000 Acres of Land. Grand Junction, Col, June 30.— The so-called high line canal, seventy miles long, which is to irrigate more { than fifty thousand acres of govern- | ment land, was opened here yesterday. John J. Fitzgerald, chairman of the house appropriations committee, start- éd the machinery that opened tht head gates from Grand River. The. canal was constructed in four years at.a cost of approximately $3,000,000. HORLICK’S The Original MALTED MILK hy less you say “HORLIOK'S” s may get 4 Substitute. Irrigate Piqua, Ohio.—*‘1 would be very un- grateful if I failed to give Lydia E. - Pinkham’s Vegeta« ble Compound the ' raise it deserves, | or I have taken it | at different times | {and it always re- ]lieved me when other medicines failed, and when I hear a woman com- plain I always rec- ommend it. Last win- ter 1 was attacked with a severe case of organi¢ weakness. | I had backache, pains in my hips and over my kidneys, headache, dizziness, | : ete B lassitude, had no energy, limbs ached - Drink Williams® Root With the addition of Famous Play- erg’ pictures to the pregram, the man- | agement of Keeney's is able to pru-f able to do my housework. vide one of the longest vaudeville and photo-play shows given in this part of the country. It takes nearly four hours to set all the acts and ‘{ho numerous screen dramas. The show Is easily’worth twice the admis- sion /price charged. ¥ Huge ventilating fans keep the theater comfortable and it would be difficult to find a better place to spend an evening. Among the vaudeville acts are Nel- gon Raymond company, wire artists: the Mable Morgan trio, operatic sin- gers; Epaley and company, comedy triog and thé Turners, roller skating Beer; cold, sparkling, full of snap and vim, You will like it—every one does. ‘o supemg,. | It is easily made at home, costs but 2¢c a quart and will give your whole family bet ter health and more . comfort during hot weather. Be sure and get Wiliiams and I was always tired. ‘I was hardly T had taken Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- pound on one other occasion, and it had helped me s0 I took it again and it has ‘built me up, until now I feel like a new woman. You have my hearty consent | to use my namc and testimonial in any way and I hope it will benefit suffering swomen.’’—Mrs. ORPHA TURNER, 431 S. ‘Wayne St., Piqua, Ohio. ! Women who are suffering from those distressing ills peculiar to their sex ehould not doubt the ability of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound to re- storé their health, oers hand with an attractive program or | play | life | three different days more than sixty | girls expressed a preference for those | subjects which are readily classified | the girls mentioned films that could Physical training for all boys and ; building | class | an Malie Your SHir - Soft and Clear i observed were in the street and less | Over two-thirds of the | boys and over one-halt of the girls at- | cnce a week or of the Cuticura Soap For the toilet an-d bath assisted by occa sional use of Cuuicura Ointment. 4 Samples Free by Mail Cutleura Soap and Ofnt everywhers Liberal samaple Of each malled froe witd B0 g ene: Address posi~card “Cuticurs,” Dept, 4F, Boston rizting light upon many other features | “THE MIDDLEMAN" SHOW TONIGHT Those who remember Albert Chev- alier, the wonderful English charac- ter actor, when he was in this country ! starring and in vandeville, will be in- ’terested in seeing him again on the | screen, in the Henry Arthur Jone's Istirring ana pathetic play *The Mid. | dleman” during his American tours in the legitimate theaters. The depths {of feeling displayed by the sweet na- ‘tured pottery maker, Cyrus Blenkarn, for his much wronged daughter, his trials in a life of vicissitudes, his dis- coveries and consequent joys when they bring back to him all that he loves most in the world—his daugh- | ter, will be recalled by everybody who has seen this remarkable play on the | stage. There is reason_. to ccnjec- {ture that when the scréening of this | play is seen at Fox's today and to- morrow there will be thousands who will rejoice in having seen it. Mr. Chevaliers acting in the role made notable by E. 8. Willard, is under- stood to be not only virile and dra- matic but he hasyrealized the sweet character of Blenkarn with the force ©of maniless and character that are composite in him. The fullest depth of interest in the story concerns Mary’ and Julian and the father, who suf- fers the degradation of his daughter’s wrong, his plans of revenge and the dire straights into which he is plunged before he rises above them after dis- covering a new glaze which brings him fortune and his long cherished oppor. tunity, In conjunction ‘with “The Middleman” the latest chapter of “The Romance of Elaine” as well as the | most recent Ham comedy will be shown, 5 “THE GIRL FROM OUT YONDER” BIG HIT i 1 ! Love triumphs over seemingly in- surmountable obstacles in the story of "“The Girl From Out Yonder,” in which the Poli Players are appearing | this week, and from the time that the girl at Cape Cod meets the suc- cesful young bhusiness man who | summering there until he finally wins | her consent to marry him, there are | all-absording incidents that hold rn audience spellbound and interested. The pl written by Miss Pauline Phelps of Farmingten and Miss Mar- ion Short, and which has enjoved a long career of uninterrupted success, deals with rcal human beings who live | genuine eventful lives. As Ben Crooks, an old crony of the captain, Mr. Seabury has a part in which he furnishes fun aplent, Miss Skirvin PALE BEAUTY FADES The girl who comes home from school or shop tired out every day may be beautiful but she will soon fade. She will be fortunate if she escapes a physical breakdown because the ease with which shetires is _probably the firet warning symptom of a thinning of the blood that cannot be disregarded. Thin blood may give an attractive pal- lor for a short time but soon the patient becomes thin, flat-chested, haggard and angular.. The only beauty that endures is that of rich, red blood shining through a transparent skin. Almost any girl can build up her blood by nsing Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills. They are usefiil to growing girls, to pale girls, thin girls and those who get tired or out | of breath easily.. Mothers of such girls should seo to it that the tendenc( to anemia is ¢hecked by the use of Dr. Wil- liamg’ Pink Pills before the trouble be- comes chronic, 4 Dr, Williams’ Pink Pills will build up the blood if anything will. They are free from opiates or harmful drugs and can be taken with perfect safety by any- pictures were Johnson, aged 75, of this city, died en Re Complete - Clearance | s et - MONEY | Open a Charge Account Ladies’ Suits SUITS THAT SOLD AS HIGH AS $18.75, $7.98. SUITS THAT SOLD AS HIGH AS $24.75, $9.98. SUITS THAT SOLD AS HIGH AS $32.50, $12.08, Ladies” Coats COATS THAT SOLD AS HIGH AS $14.75, $7.08. COATS THAT SOLD AS HIGH AS $20.75, $9.08, $2.08 Summer dresses, $1.98. $1.98 Lingerie waists, 40c. $1.49 Tub Skirts, 70c. Clothing, hats and shoes for the whole family, METAEsAR Miscr SToRF 687-683 MAIN STREET MILLINERY { 98c to $1.08, the ‘wéason’s best styles and worth up to fi!\n’rmnn. $10.98, The ability to make friends easily and quickly is held by those do not possess it, as a gift. In some people it unquestionably is, inasm: as it eprings fro a spontaneity of manner that they themselves are ly aware of. They know that people respond to them quickly and wit out conscious effort on their part. 3 Less fortunate acquaintances say of such a person, “Oh, he makes friends anywhere.” And though thoy may sigh a bit, because they dog't make friends as easily as all that, they never stop to analyze the l:f?' Now as a matter of fact the people for whom we really care the mosf. whose society we are always glad or, are people who, we say, understand us. They combine cordiality, sympathy and ‘interest to a degrée th; warms us. We are at ease in their company, we expand and are conscio: that we are at our best. 2 As a Flower Opéns to Sunshine. All of us crave self-expression hefore an apnreclative audience. A when we find the opportunity, we open as readily and as fully as a flowsr basking in the sun. If you vourself find someone who takes this. intérest in you. whose very first glance seems to say to you, “Here is someone that 1 will like,® you cannot help but warm to him. That is the way of human nature. Amfl that person, if his attitude towards you is his habitual attitude towapd mew acquaintances. will have that same effect »n them. In short, he wili have the gift of making friends. To him you will open. You will give the best there 1s in you You simply can’t help it. There is no more secret to the art of making friende than that. The next time you are introduced to a new acquaintance try it. Instead of sim- pllydsflylng. with formal reserve, “I'n: gald to know you,” look glad, glad. . The Merely Muscular Smile, The new acquaintance may nov 1ook worth the éffort, He may have for instance, the same expression of deadness that you yourself com: ly wear at such moments, tempered, of course, with a merely muscular smile. The surest way to find whether he is worth cultivating s that ont- lined. Give him a bit of human sunshine; let the warmth of your man- ner kindle the chill in his, Nine times out of ten the result will surprise you. For he is just such another human as yourself—a fellow man wWho craves sympathy and cordially as :uch as you do, but who feels that he hagn't the gift of making friends, ; ‘A Very Simple Formula, If you will but adopt this simple formula, if you will only let peopls know that vou are willing and eager to like them, théy will feel towarWs you. just as you feel towards the person who has the gift of making frisnds You give him the best there is in you.- You show to the best advan- tage before people like him And thatwill be your réward—other peobia will give you the best there is in them. —— TN has one of those parts in which she is at her best, that of the lighthouso keeper’'s daughter. Mr. Hollingsworth as Edward Elmer likewise has a role well suiter to his ability. The full cast of the Players is used and all the favorites have pleasing roles. Sun- day evening Miss Skirvin will appear { in another motion picture at the wa- cred benefit concert. The pieture wiil show the popular leading lady of the Players’in her day’s routine from the time she leaves her hotel after break- fast until dinner in the evening. The taken in Hartford reé- cently and shown her leaving her hu- tel, studying her part at Elizabeth Park, enjoying athletic stunts, like- wige a swim, a ride in an aeroplane, arrival at the theater, scenes in her dressing room and in fact her entire day's routine. will stop™ that’ itching ringworm, rash or other tormenting skin-eruption, try Resinol Ointment BURNS PROVE FATAL. Meriden, June 30.—Mre. Emily one. Your own druggist sells them so ou can begin the treatment at once. A lelFful booklet, ‘‘Building Up the Blood’’ Root Beer will be sent you free on _request by the WILLIAMS & CARLETON CO., Mirs. Dr. Williame Medicine Co., Schenectady, Hartford, Cotin, - N. Y. late yesterday afternoon at the Mer- iden hospital as the result of numer- ous burns she received in.a fire early yesterday morning. She lighted a match endeavoring to discover the time and her night gown caught fire, enveloping her in flames. and Resinol Soap You will be surprised how quickly the itching stops and the skin becomes and healthy again. Resinol Om-ull.‘.‘ pimples and dandruff, 4 h-e“:‘ly doctors. Seapdor the toilet noyeélty. 1f you want special advice For Friday and Saturday the man- Write to Lydia B, Pinkham Med- gement announces John Bmerson in icine Co., (confidential) Lynn, “The Bachelor's Romance.” This i: Majs, Yourletter will be opened, snother four reel photo drama pro- paad and answered by a woman | Players’ com- igngd held in strict confidence.

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