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11 k| L Poached E‘}u Coffee of Clams ‘Mushvoom Saucé oes ‘all Gratin French Dressing Lady Cake prepare the me well beaten égg of water, taree tarragon vinégar, of salt one-quar- of white pepper 3, and one-quar- | of dry mustard. tablespoonfuls of et hot water until 'our this, while of shaved white hly. When one teaspoonful tabléspoonfyl lite onion, one _grated horseradish of grated smoked . be grated it fine) and one rimps cut into stand ‘away for dding-—8ift oue gnd a halt ng powdeér and a a cupful of ‘su- ¢ tablespaonful ‘of milk to make from._a spoon. ¢kly .one pint of "“’b’ floured huckle tter into a well ‘mold, cover with steam for = ene udding hot with uce. ’ égg, whipped .makes a de- ‘eaten on a stu-l | “Americap Patrol”, | royal Prince, ‘and there finds. Lord DUDLEY AYRES AT POLI'S NEXT WEEK Monday afternoon marks the open- ing with the Poli Players, for a lim- ited engagement, of Dudley Ayres, the new leading man who replaces Harry Hollingsworth during his vacatior in Maine. Mr. Ayres's most recent road success was in “The Mis-Leading { Lady” and it is in his orfginal part of Jack Craigen that he will make his . bow before e Poli -audience Monday afternoon. “Theé Mis-Leading Lady" i& one of those comedies that . de- pends upen the unexpected situations which constantly develop for ite com. édy and its record of seven consecu: tive months at the Fulton Theater In New York is ample evidence that its comedy is of the sort that the theater- goers like best. The scenes are luia in the Adirondack Mountalnl_a.nd ihe action centers ‘chiefly about® two young people, one a girl with stage ambitions and the other a chap who ‘has just returned from Patagonia and who 18 classified as a diamond: in the' rough. % 4 There develop a series of incidents that make the play ‘absorbing in in- terest throughout and with Mr. Ayres as Jack Craigen, Miss Skirvin as the girl and the other Players admirably cast. it looks like a most successfu) week. The Sunday evening benefit concert will again present Miss Skir- vin in motien pictures, showing ler daily routine from the time she léaves her hotel in the morning until she | returns from the matineee. Swimming | and diving feats, aéroplane riding, athletic stunts and many others of an initeresting natyre are included in the picture ang it is sure to interest her hundreds of friends and admirers. “The Battle of the Sexes.” “The Avenging Conscience” a Chaplin com- edy and many other reels will be ‘n- cluded on the program. No admis- slon is charged , but a silver cellec- tien will be taken at the door to be. devoted to local charitable weork. EGYPTIAN DRAMA - REPLETE IN THRILLS What promises to. be ome of the best programs offered at Fox's the popular motion-picture resort, will be shown tomorrow night. One of those weirdly dramatic productions full of exciting. and thrilling situations that | hold is, “The Last Egyptian,” in which .are featured J. Farrel McDon. ald and Vivian Reed. “The Last Hgyptian,” deals with the last mem- ber of a lang list of Egytian Rulers, who learns from his grandmother up- on her death bed that an Englishman, dishonored . the his veins together with the BY MAY N° “of time, the skirt 0 finish required. thc';gh!t':qndskirtandthe wrt 18 g:mtic‘flmr.hxtmbehun blood of Kings flows the bloed of the perfidious nobleman. Beforé passin_ away she gives to Kara the key to the secret burial vdults and treasure chamber. Kara vows to wreak al ‘belated vengeance upon the head of the man who has sullied his family | henor. He takes with him enaqugh treasure to carry out his purpose, goes to. Cairo, where he. is received as a Roane. With Oriental cunning he gees that he can best pierce his enemy te the heart through the nobleman’s beautiful granddaughter. Frem this point to the dramatic climax the spec- tators are carried through a series of struggles and battles that for realism 1 somet 4nd intensity cannot be compared with. Several single reel comedies of excellént ealibre¢ augment the in-) teresting program. For the last time tonight Betty Nansen, the quéen of emotional acting supported by an all star cast of ‘Willlam &ox favorites including Stuart Holmes, Claire Whit- ney and Jean Sothern is seen in “Should A Mother Tell?” 3 R85 B N BAND CONCERTS. Two Big Days, July 4 and July 5, A g Lake Compounce. Thé Bristol City Band Has been engaged to play the concért pregram at Laké Compource on Sunday, July 4, and the following numbers will be given under the direction of Thom- as J. Fisher, léader: March—*“Washingtén Greys,” Graffula Overture—"Golden Crescent,” Miller Cornet Solo—=8elected. 2 J. Simaneschi. Popuylar Songs. Grand Selection—La Traviata Verdi The Turkish Retreat Mozart Selection—"‘Under Many Flags,” Klein (By Redquest.) Waltz—*"Every Night” March-'The Pilot” The Star Spangled Banmer. Managers Pierce and Norton will serve the usual popular priced din- ners on Sunday and Monday and will provide to eiitertain a large crowd. On Monday, Independence Day, .a big program of entertainment has béen arranged for with a band con- cert in the afternoon, set fireworks in the evening, two performanées of polite vaudeville, at 3:45 and 8:15 P. m. and dancing aftérnoon and eve_ ning. The following pregram will be given by the Bristol City band under the direction of Ledder T. J. Fisher: Mareh—*Col. J. C. F. Tillson” . Schon Overture—‘Savay”’ Carlini Solo for Baritone—'‘The Carnival” D. Fiaschetti . Tobani Sherman Popular Songs Meacham March—"Prince of Pudmont” Guarino Grand Selection—'‘Remimsecences of “the Opera’” Fréd Godfrey g s Hits 1915” y Tobani | Waltz—*“Sunny Italy” ; March— Al and Ready” Buglione more st s ered cré, mufia;ugmyth a finisfie 0ot wanted, plai el ivet ri n is fid\ lacé or embroi For the medium size the blouse will for the be ; 6 for the yafm,.wed 208 7. ol ay Th pt of ten cents for éach, MARY PICKFORD FOR INDEPENDENCE DAY Eritertainment for local people on Independence Day will be generously supplied at Keenéy's, the manage- ment having made drrangements to have a special show with extra photo- play and vaudeyille attractions. Amusement seekers on that day will do well to pay a visit to the theaten and they will find the quality of the show way above par. Both the “movie” and vaudeville programs will Lave features appropriate for the day and there will be enough variety in both bills to ‘suit the tastes of the most exacting theater-goer, Featured on thé Keenyescope lay- eut will be Mary Pickford, the high- est salariéd and most popular motion picture star, who will appear in the leading réle in “Behind The Scenes,” a new play produced by the Famous Players company. Miss Pickford has a wonderful Hold the lovers of thé ilent drama and pictures in which she playsé a part are always big draw- ing cards. 3 Théré will be some other .good dramatic offerings, two comedy reels, |. “clothes hefore washing then. the Pathe and Hearst-Selig weeklies and some short stories. In addition the management has received assur- ance from the booking agents in New York that a vaudeville show:of ex- ceptional .strength will be sent here the entertainers making their :first appearance Monday, Tonight “The Bachéler's Romance,” featuring John Emérson, will bé one of the special attractions on the photo- play bill. The picture was received with enthusiasm by a large audience last, evening and it should serve as a maghet for another capacity Hhouse tonight. The Famous Players and the At 8585 Blouse with or witheut Bolero Over-Portion, 8574 Straight Gathered Skirt, 24 to 32 waist. more élaborate were wanted, lace could be used and if something or one of the muslin flouncings i edge, while, as a2 matter of course, n material can be trimmed to simulate the very beautiful and much liked and plain taffeta combined with fashionable, while cotten materials ery or g contrasting material. i uire s. of material 27 in. wide, eds yu‘&g;, l}fi yds. 44 and for the ov:‘l S K4 irt will Manton pattern of the blouse No. bust measure and of the skirt No. 8574'in au:- Daily Fashion Talks MANTON A DAINTY GOWN WITH JACKET EFFECT prettier, daintier summer gown than this one could be at the same time it is 50 simple that it can be made in the briefest 5 irt is perfectly straight and joined to a yoke. rhin blouse and the jacket portion is made ectly suited to the bordered material, and, asa result, i Here, the material is dain e a very dainty one, avail for man: deted without while ey i edges, so being per- is no u-\numz 'f::'- cotton marquise! fine sheer ::tton crépe. The needs and occasions, yet of the ty. with oNosane o0 oo Design by Hoy Monton 34 to 44 bust, or, indeed, any are effect. Bor- always can be trimmed acket 3 yds. of flouncin, t . ; ng 1% in. wide, lounicing 38 in. wide wit % yd. ma- 8585 i8 cut in sizes from 34 to 44 from 24 to 32 in. waist measure. wil] be mailed-to any address by the Fastiion Department of this paper, cn Rig Four combine ‘will aiso centribute io the program. The vaudeville per- formers, who have been cntertaining in pleasing style all week, will con- clude their New Britain engagements ihis evening. Household Notes | Vaseliné stains shoud be spenged with ether. Ncever Jeave graniteware to dry over a hot fire. Disheloths should be washed and boiled regularly. Beef dripping areé good shorten- ing for pie crust. All dry chéese should bé saved and keépt for grating: A’ feather wing is excellent to F dist bea springs with. . A go6d shampoo kimono can be made of a big bath towel. to soak It is always desirable on the ice. Never put meat directly ice, but in a plate over the A cléan sunny yellow is one of the best colors in a new kitchen. Grated cheese over mashed pota- toes makés an agreéable change Blankets should be put out in the sun and air at least once a week. An enameled saucepan that has bécome discolored can be restored in ing for ginger cookies and spice cakes. me the fellowing way: Fill it with wa- ter, add a little chloride of lime, anc allow to boil for a few minutes. excellent shorten- Poultry fat is Clothing should be mended if possible before it is put in the waslh. - Choose a heavy broom rather than a light ene—the weight helps in the cleaning. Plain-colorea ' fabries. take dve mueh more satisfactorily than plaids or stripes. Wash green vegetables -in Warmy water to remove the insects, and finish quickly in cold. Never throw a good . tailored coa: Gown carelessly if you wish it to pre. | serve its shape. When vou come to the padding in . a pisce of embroidery, it should always be dene in a hoop. In making tea the pot should Le hot before the boiling water is poured with salt at once, then boiling water Peured through them. . An apple or two ~baked in the inside ' of o goose will absorb .any rankness or oily flavor Soiled clothing should always be put into a hamper, preferably away | from the sleeping room it % Never, when wiping 1t to stand -in cold water urains all the juices out meat, alléw The water Rice cooked with raisins makes a | very palatable, simple dessert saved with hard sauce or cream Nuté when bought ready shelled should be scalded, driéd in the oven and put away in glass jars When dyeing at home., rémember that the material being coloréd should be kKept constantly in motion Whe perfect kitchen utensils ar those of aluminum—easy to Keep clean and very light to ;hlndle L Brown bread spread with butter | in which paprika has been mixed also makes very good sandwiches Toé cut thin silk satlsfactorily, lay it between two piecex of tissue papcr and cut with very sharp scissors Two big ' eyelets worked in tae opposite corners of the kitchen towel are better than loops to hang it up by. « ''A well-paddéa igoning board ls.a “labor favor, and Turkish toweling is ¢ne of the best materials to pad it with. N [ Always clean a brass cooking utensil thoroughly before using it. Vinegar and sult are good for thé pur- pose. @uncheon sandwiches of brown bread spread with cottage cheese sea- good. Before dyeing and article it should be thoroughly _.cleaned; espe- cially ghould it be free from grease | spots. A little soapsuds or a few drops of turpentinc added to starch will give the clothes a glossy appearance when “OVER THE WIRE” | | By DOROTHY CLARKE. Rae stopped in for tea on her way home from the elub, and I'm none the wiger. Isn't she mysterious? . . Not a soul knows whether they are engaged or not. T did hint very broadly several times, but she just got her ‘‘bridge expression” on and clogéd up like a clam. 1 under- stand, and the club is bétting even money on an announcement in the fall. Isn't she pretty, though. She was wearing an awfully sweet afternoon hat. It was made of twa thicknesses of Wistaria | colored maline. Her hair show- led through véry plainly, so you can imagine how cool it was. No | brim, and a garland of beautiful soft silk roses made sort of a band effect. ‘A larger rese fastened two long feath- érs, wired to form a figure eight. It was gorgeous on Rae. . . . about Saturday, you are to . Now, | wish to talk nor to be interviewed. | ingly, ' strength—not great masculine or féem- e A eadéi's Do you éver say, “You told e . The other day the cautious mem Weéuld find a erowd if 1 went to a cer On account of his caution his war fifty per cent., so I spent a good fAve reasons why there would be no crowd were, Hé was still unconvinced, and so place and there was a crowd, in fact find no seat, and when at length 1 ala and ill placed. 1 came home cross an one the next time 1 saw him, “You tol sprightlily of shoes and ships and geai thanked my stars when he forgot to It Takes Coura Tt seemed to me at the time quite do 80, 1 felt sure he would have done was talking it over, it came to me that to say. “You told me so” would be a ‘We all think we have a right to prove us to have been right and our those words, but in one way or anelhe that right to point sut our ewn wisdo ed by a duty to admit our opponent’s have proven right? If the right exists, so does the du A Right an If we waive the right then we m d Me So ~i 807" » bér of the family warned me that T tain place. nings are clways discounted about minutes pointing eut to him various ‘and why T shouldn’t mind if there was 1. Subsequently I went to the a very dense crowd, At first 1 could i procure one it was uncomforiabe a tiré But did 1 tell the cautious d me s0”? Hardly! Instead 1 talked ing wix and cabbages and kings, and inquire about crowds. ge and Squareness. natural and justifiabe that I should the same. But afterwards, when T to have the courage and squarencss pretty fine thing. say, T told you so” when friends wrong,' perhaps not in juet r Now why should we forget that m when Wé havé been wise is balanc- wisdom wher. it is he whom events events ty. d a Duty, ay perhape be exonerated from tho duty, but if we claim the right we should remember the duty. No three words in the English la wrong,” but their very difficulty raskes them a t I wish Kipling had included, “If you can say 'You told me so’ his list of Ifs the make a man. Question—There 18 a strain of i drinks to excess. He is engaged to knowledge of this fact. 1 think that and be all that he should. Should 1 teli her?—A Mother. Answer—I certainly thiak you should. éffort to reform him, but I think she This is a big question. Perhaps my re German Woman Does Lies There, Says a nguage are harder to say than "1 was est for moral courage. in htemperarice in my faniily and my son beautiful girl who, I fear, has no married to hér he may settlé ddwn 1 am afra id that if T tell her she may break off the engagement and he will go frem bad to worse. What sHall I do? Sho may choose to makeé the should khow what she is going inte. ader friends think otherwise - e, Her Duty--Her Right Frau Meyer-Waldeck Wife of Former Governor of Kiaow-Chow Polnts Out to Americans That Teutonic Females Are Not Suffragettes—Do Not Think of After the War, (By Ernesétine Evans Tribune.) “A German woman does her duty —her right lies there.” Frau Hedwig Meyer-Waldeck was speaking, wife of the former Governor of Kiaow-Chow, now after all these months homeward bound for Germany from the China coast. I had gone to her aboard the Ham- Lin- in New York burg-American liner President Hamburg-American Hoboken docks, where the Vaterland in mighty rust- | ing idleness and the Bohemia have lain for eleven long month. Recalling Countess’ Accusation. We were recalling the accusation of ' the Countess of Warwick, that one of the prime causes of thé war was the attitude of the Prussian men toward the Prussian woman, his insistenceé on ‘ woman's specialization in what he be- { leves the particular fields to which few believe in it. 4 For thé most part our German / her sex calls her. Mrs. Meyer-Waldeck smiled, a slow smile, the wide smile accustomed to English generalization. She did not Position of Reserve. “We do not talk. A German lady does not have any desire to be read of in newspapers. We have not your American point of view, nor the Eng- lish point of view.” She stdted it as one perfectly satisfied with the posi- tion of reserve to which her station ! called her. Then we fell to talking, nevertheless. of suffrage to German women after the war. ‘“We do not think of after the war. Suffragettes—we are not that. A few, maybe.” “But the women of the social demo- | cratic party, are they not likely to bespeak a share in governmental ini- tiative 2" “Perhaps.,” she said, ''but it is not a thing that holds the thinking of the moment."” Rights in Duties. | ! sored with' salt and pepper are Very | ooln through the hollow silence of the | 86 if T could, how women were mold- witeh-craft. ‘“They cut us off ar Yhey always do when a nation of the con- tinent grows strong. Once they thought that a T'vii .l Germany was not poasible, .1 they were our friends.” And with her feeling that Germany's cause was just, one saw again that for women there was but to do a woman’s duty, We talked of women's education, to ¢d who put duty before rights. She couldn’t compare, she said, since the American education was nothing she knew about. For want of something better I sketched my own, co-educa- tional from beginning to end, kinder- garten to university, dabs of this and | that, “education for assurance,” as my | Russian friends called it Educated in Separate Schools. Co-education she touched first. “A A great many do | not. | girle are educated in separate sel 4 | If her parents aré working people ofténest goes to the people's schdbl, where she studies geography, metic * * * all those things, and 1 may afterward go to a higher sehool and learn more of the same things. “If she wants to go to the university she prépares for examination to enter and studies the ancient languages. Otherwiseé ehe studies the modern lan- | guages only. I wasn't véry clear about the school curriculum, but I gatheréd that the 1t was about the possible extension !M‘ diftersce. lak JTHNE" WHA LEE © “things” led to “things.” You decided what you wanted-—or rathar it was decided for you what you wantéd in your crib and you worked out that destiny as you went through schoel. It was when she pointed out that each nationality develops its particular kind of edueation that T asked vaguely that' perhaps if there had been an in- ternational idea about education, all nations somewhat agreeing on what education was for, technical, philes sophical, maturing merely or what, - that clashing ideas might not have She spoke of German women as women who talked léss than they did, found their rights in their duties, and for the present .played eagerly, will- with a steadfastness and inine qualities, but great human char- acteristics—the parts assigned to them in the struggle for the defence of the Germanic peoples. I asked her foolish questions. I asked what her government wantéd met in war, Again she look at me “Tt 1eme | that. T think you are quite wrong.” For the moment Germany is too Ger- man to be interésted in the “common denominatoring.” And her women will do their duty as men see it. 5 To clean marble,. dissolve nev‘r\ pieces of common soda in a litte boiling water, and add osufeicnt whitening to make into a smooth out of the war. Sheé smiléd. Again the same German smile at the way the rest of the world snatches at frisk- ing generalities from the tongue of { non-authority. “Of the end of things, who can say? One cannot see.” Then she stated her German ponit of view, she, the wife of the colonial governor of the most extraordinary venture in colonizing that the world has ever seen, venturing to poin to English diplomacy. No Right Nor Wrong. “The English”—then she stopped. “English diplomacy is of the clever- ness that knows no right nor wrong in what it works for. They drew a circle round us.” She might have been de- gcribing some piece of aboriginal paste. Appy this fairy thickly 16 the marble, and wheh quite dry rub off with & damp cloth, and then polish. Underclothing which losés its whiteness c¢an be ecasily restored by soaking the garment for & whole day in pipeclay and water. 4 Y .} D HILDRE o it:;',u:x .