New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 6, 1915, Page 4

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E § é r‘_ i g ./ ’ Bachelors Quartet And Allen anologue Gymnastics ‘Movie Feature = From Home” ' cowardice, his and glorfica- (| and movement, with.the conspicuous Mp Les -by-Water prful Maine & hicken, s Baked Corn Salad Lon Hot Wafers ge Pudding. Half a cupful one cupful ots, , one-half cupful we cupfuls chopped .chopped beets, fat, one'nalf k, few drops on- ¢ of salt and pep- ‘in a frying pan T in all ingredients, for thirty min- into a fuls water and an hour. || void of those grewsome details that | “FOUR FEATHERS” » SFIRRING WAR FILM Declargtion of war inspired the hera of “Four Feathers” with fear. The hero resigned his commission in the army to escape the possibility of death or the sufferings Wwhich war brings to all soldiers. ~ His comrades, with whom he is on intimate terms, each send him a white feather, three in all, and when his fiancee seés him reecive these symbols of cowardice, she adds a fourth by stripping her fan of one of its plumes. The young man is stung with mortification and secretly goes away, enlisting as a pri- vate under an assumed name, in far off Egypt, where the war has begun. His.record is remarkable’ for valor. The record. of this soldier “of many heroic deeds reaches England, and When it is disclosed who he really is, the three friends demand. the return | of théir feathérs. He returns them with the request that they be given to his flancee. Upan his return aft- er the war, his flancee asks for her | feather. She receives it and a wed- ding ring too. This is the story in | brief of “Four Feathers” dramatized | from the much read novel by Captain | A, E. W, Mason, which is the stellar | attraction at Fox's tomorrow and Thursday. Scenes of war, but de-| are sp often offensive when depicted | upon the screen, are shown in thrill- ing effects much martial enthusiasm achfevements of the hero always in| 4he foreground. Besidés these, there | are romanti¢ episodes concerning the | hero and the girl who loves him, and | his rehabilitation, return and glorifi- | cation afford episodes that are grati- fying in the extreme: Heading the large cast of players is Howard Estabrook.who has dis- tinguished himself vn the dramatic Stage as a star, and he is ably second- ed by Irene Warfield, a popular film star. The latest chapter of “The Ro- mance of Elaine,” will also. be shown. For the last times tonight Eugene O’Brien and Elajne Hammerstéin, are seen in “Thé Moonstone” a five part adaptation of Wilkie Collins' great novel, and thé Pathe News with its current events. FRED HAASE WITH CLEVER QUARTET Fred Haise, a forther New Britain young man, well known in/this vicin- ity as a singer and entertainer, is one of the Four Jolly Bachelors, a quartet |of talented performers, appearing . at foenty'n as the feature of this week's vaudeville show. r. Haage received 2 most cordial reception yesterday when he made his Ihitial appearance | with these singers. He has a solo j dufing the time allotted to the quar- tet. - Last evening this number made a big hit and the singer has to respond with an encore. The quartet is one of the best aggregations of singers playing in New Britain in‘a long time. The program. which it renders ‘is mixed and entertaining and it shoula find favor all week. The Marlows, clever gymnasts; Lit- tle and Allen. in a classy pianologue and the Williams company, high class entertainers, make up the balance of {the vaudeville bill. It is a good show -and well deserving of the patrdnage of local vaudeville devotees. Heading thé Keeneyscope program tonight will be Jesss Lasky's big pro- duction, “The Man From Home.” this play William T. Hodge won a tre- mendous success a year ago. it was first given to the pubMe in pic- turized form, it has been the hit of the ‘“‘movies.” reels. Charlés Richman plays leading role. For temorrow night the - manage- ment announces “The Warrens of Vir- ginia.” generation” will be a feature and Fri. day “The Country Boy” will be the screén headliner. the Nothing tastes as good on a hot day as a glass of Williams’ Root Beer. -Drink all you want only 2¢ a quart. Asgk Your Neighbor. S0 many thousands of women h beén restored to health by Lydia Pinkham’'s Vegetable Compound -that there is harly a neighborhood in any city, town or hamlet in this country wherein some woman has not found health in this good old- In! Stnce | The camedy is in five | Thursday, *The Isle of Re- | | { { i fashioned rcot and herb remedy. It you are suffering from some womanly ill, why don’t you try it.?—advt. Lake Compounce The Popular Pleasure Resort. BAND CONCERT EVERY SUNDAY AFTERNOON. Dancing Wednesday and Saturday Dinners A. La, Carte. Plerce a:id Norton, Props, Bristol, Conn. ‘doublé boiler Cook x until bed the milk and is rice through a sfeve ettle, add three | h a cupful of il the time till | meve from POMPEIAN OLIVE OIL #HOLE S OME PURE \ Five Times this belief. Goers Safety First! “Safety First” to the housewife means safeguarding the family’s home-baked food. Always use Royal Baking Powder which insures delicious and healthful food. Royal Baking Powder is made from cream of tartar—derived from grapes. Contains No Alqm or Lime Phosphate As Many Babies Die in First Year of Life As in the Second Facts Do Not Support Deep-Rooted Belief Among - Mothers That the “Second Summer” Is An Especial- ly Perilous Period for Infants. A wide-spread and deep-rooted be- one to he greatly feared. PAULINE FREDE “ETERNAL CITY" COMING TO FOX’S On the ashes of the fallen empires of Tyre and ancient Sidon there sprang the towers and domes of a new empire, the city founded to bear life ! cternal, Rome. ©ut of Rome's triumph and failure comes to us Hall | Caine’s “The Eternal City,” which, woeven into a spectacular picture by the Famous Players Film company, is being presented at Fox’s the last three days of this week 'with Pauline Fred- cricks In the title role. From the dreadful days of Nero, to the présent ¢ay, there have been men born who iuve had the good of Rome at heart and who have fought and died unknown that the city might be exalted. All this glamor, this power has been preserved in the photo-play of “The Bternal City,” The curtain goes up on the city of Rome banked | against a night sky, its lights reflected | in the water shimmering at its feet. The story is the development of human characters strangely acted upon by fate. The Coliseum lying in ruins is made a center of one of the most stir- ring scenes where a, mob of hundreds of people flee through its openings. about five times as thany babies die in liéf prevails among mothers that the|the first year of life as in the second, ‘“second summer” is an especially per- ilous time for the baby, and conse- quently, The facts, however, do not support | figures show conclusively, Official figures show that | that the great loss of infant life takes and that nearly two-thirds of the babies who die in the first vear of life die in the first three months. These therefore, RICKS AS “DONA ROMA” —_— e —————— The papal scenes are beautifully dig- nified and highly impressive. His Holiness, the Pope, and the Vatican are wonderful. Miss Fredérick as Roma, swayed by fate and ruled by power other than hers, is splendidly convincing. There is one thing that is never lost sight of, the fact that the characters are living, breathing men and women, moved and actuated by a fate they know not of, and fighting for they know not what. The picture runs through the gamut of emotions and we realize that after all it takes little te influence a nation. As a photo- play of, high standing, of great artistic value because of its presentation of the life and doings of the characters oi careful deliberation, of scenic de- tail, gorgeous backgrounds and real life in a country foreign to ue, the presentation of “The Eternal City"” justifies its hame. 1t is a beautiful piece of work, carefully and accurate- lv performed, and presenting a phase of life of ultimate value in the history of the world. As a special feature werked in conjunction with this pre- sontation Signer Nunzio Arzillo, the famous tenor of the Metropolitan and protege of ‘Miss Ella Wheeler Wilcox | 2= been engaged to render classic se- lections. e ' ' place among very young babiés, and that if a baby has survived this early | period his chance of living to grow up is greatly infreased. Mistakes In Feeding Babies. The reason the “second summer’ has acquired this partly undeserved i reputation for danger lies very large- ly in the fact that babies are often made sick because mothers make many mistakes in feeding a baby aft- | er he is weaned and before his diges- tion is able to deal with ordinary family meals. The fear of the second summer re- sults also from the fact that the baby is getting his teeth at this time. Al- though the teething process some | times is unjustly blamed for causing illness, babies are, no doubt, often up- set by the pain of teething and do, therefore, sufféer more readily from mistakes in feeding. Affected By Heat. A third reason why the second sum- mer makes babies sick applies equally to the first summer, that is, the ex. s cessive heat affects them badly both | directly and indireetly. Heat often spoHs the milk and makes it unfit for the baby’'s use. But even a prop- erly-fed baby may be made sick when the weather is very hot. H A long continued spell of extreme heat i§ very hard on babies of all iages, and the greatest care iz needed |to avoid evéry other cause of iliness lat this time and to prevent by every { pessible ‘means an attack of summer diarrhoea. Greatest Safegnard. i The greatest safeguard which the' mother can threw about her baby in the second summer is to see that he has proper food. at regular intervals in suitable quantities, and to keep ' him cool. A baby who is about 9 or 10 months at the beginning of sum- mer should, if possible, continue at the breast until September, because even two or thres bredst feedings a day may be enough to keep his diges- | tion in good order; and. in case he becomes ill, to save his life. The bréast milk should be supplemented | with two or three hottles of cows’ milk preperly prepared, as directed in a former article in this series. | In addition, some other food may ; be given, but it must alwayvs be. re- membered that care in feeding the baby at this age is as important as in early infancy. Changes in the diet in summer should be made very cau- tiously. should be added at a time. be given at first in very small quan- tities, and its effect on the baby care- fully watched meanwhile. If the baby vomits, belches gas, or shows looseness of the bowels, th2 food should be greatly lessened quantity or taken away altogether un- til the disturbance subsides. Food Recommended. For a baby from 9 months to one year of age, the following food .is recommended: Strained orange or prune juice may be given once a da» | after the baby is eight or nine months old, unless his bowels have a tenden- ¢y to looseness; it should be given midway between feedings: for in- i nd Wom Only one new article of food | Tt shauld | 5 | in Hartford’s Most en Readers Helpful - Store Offers AN Its Wo- men’s Early Seaso. Suits at $7.98 up The finest displa; ¥ of stylish suits that you would care to see and the prices are radi- caily reduced— Values Up To Sizes Up To 50. Wool poplins, $45. gaberdine, serge in fact a full array of the most popular materials. and finest THE CAEsSAR MiscH 687—-6985 MAIN STREET HARTFORD, CONN. “I hate a pérson who is always peéople from imposing on one.” The inevitable inference of smile, i | trary! The Instinct | | unselfish,” says one. “Now I think around you to have a reasonable am ceives herself to possess! “Idealism is beautifal,” saye an along without it; but if it'a going to with practicality. of idealism, but which she imagin: is the beau ideal. stance, if he is fed every four hours. the juice is given twe hours after a bottle feeding or nursing. It is best to begin with small amounts, say. two or three teaspoonfuls, and te increass slowiy till one to three tablespoonfuls are given daily. At nine months he may be giusn beef juice, heef tea. or plain mutton or chicken broth once a day. At ten months he may have one t two tablespoonfuls of cereal once day. Cream of wheat or farina may be used, ejther of which should be | cooked for at least three-quarters of an hour in a double beiler. At ten months he may have a smaj piece of toast or zwieback or a crust of bread to chew immediately after | his midday feeding . 1 At twelve months he may have cereal twice a day. If oatmeal is used it must be cooked for three hours and strained. Child Twelve Months Old. The following diet may be recem mended for a child at 12 or 13 months: 6 a. m. 8 a. m. spoonfuls. 10 a m. Cereal, 1 tablespoonfuy! with milk, or stale bread and zWic- back with milk, 6 to 8 ounces. 2 p. m, Broth with stale bread. or Beef juice, 1 ounce with bread | crumbs. 6 p. m. Same as 10 a. m. 10 p. m. Milk, 8 ounces The principal requisite for succeéss- , ful feeding is that only such amipie food as mentioned above should be given. Tt is particularly dangerous to give the baby of this age tastes| uf the family meals, for if this is done the baby is prétty sure to be given food unsuited to his digestive organs, and also to have his taste spoiled for the simple diet which should satisfy him. o a Milk, 8-10 ounces. Orange juice, 1-3 table- “MISLEADING LADY" AT POLI'S THIS WEEK “The Misleading Lady,” by Charles Goddard and Paul Dickey, which had a long run in New York last season, is given this week by the Poli Play- ers at Poli's Theater, Hartford. Dud- ley yres, the new leading man of the company, takes the leading role of Jack Craigen and plays the rather difficult part very convineingly. Mar- guerite Skirvin is Helén Steel, the misleading young lady. Craigen has just returned from Pat. agonia, and i& one of the guests at a | house party, at which Helen Steel is| present. She leads Craijgen, on 4 wager, to propose to her and arranges an audience, composed of the other guests. Craigen is naturally when they break in upon him, as he ie proposing, when he l2arns the trick which Helen has played upon him. | were his own qualitie: We never realige that we are im to ourselves. In fact we may not ev If anyone taxed us with such a high him indignantly and scornfully. An self-satisfied people as much as anyone. should have a proper seif-respect. B Question—My sister and I do not get along well together, think it is our duty to live together. Rose, for instance, is altogether too idealistic. hasn’t any common sense, Now I belleve in having some common sense.” JIn other words, her own temperament, which is really without a grain is a combination of the two qualitigs, A Definition of Charm, A very clever short-story writer has one of his cHaractérs ask thé other to define charm. Whereupon, says the writer (or worde to this effeet, I'm quoting from memory). ‘‘he proceeded to set forth the considered embodied charm and which, when he had finished, she found losing his temper,” I héard s woman say the other day, “but I do think one should have enough spirit to keep 8he emiled, a No-ma'am-I-ain't-seen-your-canary smile. tone and manner was this, “One should have enough spirit, but not tho much—like me.” Yet she isn't a woman who is ordinarily called conceited. On the com- She is always wishing she had talents, or clothes. or looks, like yours and if you praise her for anything she is most deprecatory. of Seif-Belief. She is only unconsciously expressing an instinct of the human race, almost as deep rcoted as self-préservation—the instinct of self-belief. “It's all very well to be unselfish. but there’s such a thing as being teo it'’s better for yourself and everyone ount of selfishness.” In other words, just that amount of justifiable selfishness she con- other, do “and the world couldn't get y good it should be leavensd Bhe ality which he puting the ideal balance of qualities er be conscious that we feel that way. opinion of ourselves we should refute d the we should probably say, ‘I hate Of course. 1 believe everyons ut that's quite another thing.” Do you We are the last of thé family.—M. ¥. Answer——It is unfortunate that you twe sisters cannot be at peace in the same home, but if you Have givén the thing a fair trial better live at peace apart than in discord together. Doubtless you will get more happi- nees and profit out of occasional meetings when your idiosyncrasies dom't get time to wear on each other than out of the friction of eonstant umeon- gemial companionship. TR G “OVER THE WIRE” ” aarmm 7;./‘//;,/,,1,‘ By DOROTHY CLARKE, My dear, why didn't you come?]| You missed the most exciting q‘me' of the season\ . It was fright- fully thrilling ... Some Wesi-| érn chap- is visiting tie Wrightneys and played for the Meadow Larks— you never saw such riding He was wonderful! We all lunched at | the club and played dummy bridge until the game started on, very well—Mildred was wearing auj ivory corduroy suit and a charming —eeeee Ehe taunts him, saying that he has no knowledge of waman and advises him | to capture one in the Patagonian man- ner and carry her off to study, her. He takes her at her word, wrape her in his coat, carriés her screaming from the house, and takes her by auto- mobile to his bungalow in the wilds angry | of the Adirondacks, where he chlim‘wwound-‘. She has succum! her up and proceeds to study her. Helen's fiance. follows thém and ar- rives at the bungalow the next morn- biouse ...... It was white echiffon, high collar, and peéarl buttons set all the way down the front, a sort of sus- pender effect of charmeuse crossing in front forming a crushed girdle, which tied in back in a bow ...... Nothing special—l wore my funny hat—they all liked it enormously ... the floppy dark blue straw, trimmed with huge enameled wooden beads of a deeper blue Now what do vou think of this for a favor for my impromptu polo dianer? ing, only to learn that Helen has | broken loSse and escaped, after strik- ing, Craigen With a felephone and knocking him uncons¢ious. Tracey sets out to find her, and, when he is gone, vhe returns with the news that she had left to obtain aid far Cn whom she thought she had ser sigen's prehictoric methods

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