New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 7, 1915, Page 4

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|'Signor Nunzio Arzillo posses a most b t two tablespoon- cepan; add two , blend over fire; ' milk, boil three 1 the time. Add remove from fire chopped cook- - mushrooms, four €ggs, seasoning nutmeg. . Turn o cool. Shape into with beaten egg i me quart ripe and ome half er, one cupful sugar, -eream. Dissolve ling water, add rasp- ough u sieve, sugar * Pour nto a wet n firm and garn- eream and ripe rasp- 's Big Inventory Sale in the main buiid- in the Annex brim- bargains, the senii- sale at Wise. Smilth ford, will attract im miles - around. n, women and chil- in house furmishings rything in anything ment store carries, ‘reéduced pricées in a re price iestr ong In ihe suit de- markabla bargains 8, coats and dress- 1 women’s ftailor- re $17.98 L) $30 arc - at . .Other are ati at Ne FAMQUS TENOR TO SING AT FOX'S with a veice:that showed sings of = possible deveélopment was employed in the New Haven clock shops, dili- gently working at his daily task of stamping out pieces for the assembl- ing of the finished article. After working hours he would sing at pri- vate functions and parties. His am- bitions were to become a great singer, | to study under somé of the greatest About eight years ago young man | . SIGNOR: NUNZIO ARZILLO. It happened that Miss Ella Wheeier {Wilcox was entertaining at her home at Short Beach, and this young gen- tleman was askeq to sing for the party that evening. The hostess and her so- clety friends. were immediately” im- | pressed with the rare qualities of his ! volce and Miss Wilcox sent him abroad vocal insiruetors in the world. On his return to America Mr. Nunzio Arzillo, the same young unassuming fellow 'developed into a remarkable tenor. With the kind permission of Ella Wheeler Wilcox, ment of Fox's has arranged to bring | Signor Arzillo to New Britain and he will be heard during the three day .engagemsnt of ‘“The Eternal City.” ‘wonderful and robust tenor voice, his renditions of the classical airs: are ‘Bems of beauty, _and the manage- ‘ment ofi Eox’, elatest: over “the re tege i ot & and Fox's, Friday, Sat- iyhls week. “The Eternal’ City,” adh . as closely as possible to ,the st of the novel. . brimful of thr scenes’ photo- graphed against a background of sur- passing beauty. St.'Peters and the Va. tican, the narrow steep streets and the ancient palace of the capital by the Tiber appear frequently, while the ruins of the Coliseum are used for ‘one of the most effective passages of the play. The London scenes are no less convincing. There is Charing 'Cross station, Trafalgar square, and an ‘unmistakable bit of Soho right in front of the spectator, the meanage- | j, 8713 Girl's Dress, 4 to 8 years. Every sléeveléss frock: is fashionable, This one is simplicity itself, yet it can be made in two such diffcrent ways as to give two entirely différent results. On the figure, it is' made of rose colored linén, is perfectly plain and is worn over a guimpe of white batiste. In the back view, it is made of handkerchief awn in a dainty shade of rose color and is worn with a belt that is passed through slashes, while the itdumpe is of organdie with short sleevés. others will be quick to see that there are many other materials that an be combined. For an every-day rock, gingham or chambray ma?!s a Dretty dress with white crépe or white voile for the guimpe. For the dressy one, all the lovely handkerchief lawns, the cotton crépes that are really mar. velously beautiful and-a number of simple silks are appropriate. Taffeta With- scalloped edges and worn over a ‘;r:umfie of o?a‘ndie, smocked with color to fia'.ct the dress, makes a very pretty 2rect. For the 6 year size will be requir 24 yds, of material 27, 36 or 4 x:qmde:, ‘or the frock, 234 yds. 36 for tle blouse. . The pattern” No. 8713 is cut in izes from 4 to 8 years. It ‘will i ve mailed to any addréss by the Fashion | {'Jepartment of this paper, on“receipt of en cents. of Great Task, Women of (By Ernestine ‘iuns in New: York . Tribune.) ¢ “FOUR FEATHERS,"— - ATTRACTION TONIGHT “Four el'athers” dramatizéd fron: thé. famous novel of the same name by Captain &. E. W. Mason will hold the stellar position today and tomor- row on the big motion picture pro- gram at Fox’s. “Four Feathers” tells the story of a young man, who by reason of fear, fails to respond to his country’s call in time of war. Ifis resignation from the army brings from three of his comrades threeo white feathers, supplemented by a fourth from his financee, last symhol of cowardice given him. He is stung to the quick and goes to Egypt, where the war is on between the Eng- lish and the Arabs, and enlists as a Greek. The screen drama gives all the episodes of his career at the scene of strife. His valorous deeds, whereby he savés from death by tor- tare his three comrades, his re- covery of valuable documents , and other acts of unusual heroism forces from his comrades just recognition of hid herbism and they demand that they return of the feathers. In re- linquishirg them, the hero demands that they be returned to his financee. Upon his return to England, he fiuds her waiting for her feather and a wedding, ring is the ultimate rewarad that binds them together. “Four Feathers’” is full of romantic inter- est but besides there are many tre- mendously exciting scenes shown of the dramatic conflict between the forces at war. The leading player is Howard is- tabrook, a handsome actor of ro- mantic ideals and inspiration, who ' {s well known to patrons of the reg- ular dramatic theaters. He is ably assisted by a large organization, in- cluding the attrctive young leading woman, Irene Warfield, whose per- sonality has made many photo-plays effective. In conjunction with “Four Feathers” ihe latest chapter of “The Romance of Elaine” that most fascin- ating serial and dn -¢xcellent comedy will be shown. med tea is useful when the ehile have a cold. Wash two tabl ls of the seed, add four | cupfuls cook’ slowly for sn 8 ! uice. and sugar and offers a raré opportunity for America to give to Europe her peculiar talent for emergency organization, quick re- lief and scientific organization. Merely to help the wounded is a task not worth while when here at home so much misery that cries out to be tend- ed, much as battle Wounds, is yeot un- tended. From an educational point alone is the work really worth doing.”, The American woman who spoke has been called to work with the Russian Red Cross at Bgri, Italy, the little port that was the first to suffer Austrian shells after the entrance of Ttaly into the war. Center of Trade. The port is the ‘cefiter of a lirge part of the Russo-Italian trade, and I Dr. Cecile Greil goés fo place herself at the head of the voluntary aid nurses, Itallan and Russian women of ing, have thrown themselves into the twar service of the Allies, and of the women who will run the relief work for the women and children whom the battles in Trentino will leave depen- dent on their communities. i An American woman, a woraan doc- tor—sent for across the ocean—the situation indicates international recog- nitian. Dr. Greil, who has been medical di- rector of the Manhattan Trade School has already had experience in Italy at the Children's Hospital in Florence and the Marine (Hospital in Naples, where she stood out in a country whose women, with a few notable ex- ceptiens like Dr. Maria Montesori, have never entered the medical profession. Peculiar, Educational Idea. “I would not go,” she says, “merely to bind up wounds. peal of being at the center of the mael- strom of this world. But I should never leave America for Europe just now were it not for the organizing side of the work. “There is too much medical work crying to be done in New York City, toa much misery here at home that needs an abundant supply of work- ing physicians to compass. ““But it so happens that of all the women in the world the American women has most experience and the most talent as an organizer. It is a part of aur education—a part, I think, of our eo-educational schools—that makes us able to work with men, to ws for Theatre Daily Fashion Talks BY MAY.,MANTON i { 8664 Box-Plaited Skirt, 24 t0 3o waist. i Here is a skirt that is adapted to many i coat to match for a street suit, it is per- " a portion of their length as desired. War Relief Work in Europe Offers Rare Opportunity for Talent of American Women Dr. Cecile Greil des That Except for Educational Part Better Tend to Misery Here at Home. ' “War relief work in Eurepe today‘ the } town, who eagerly, but without train- | 1 admit the ap- ‘ needs and uses. It can be worn with a fectly adapted to the indoor gown and it makes one of the best models for the skirt to be worn with odd waists and blouses. The skirt is cut in five gores, the seams being concealed by the plaits and it can be finished at the hatural waist line or one and one-half inches above it. In the picturé it is'made of white serge and white serge makes as useful a summer skirt as cah be sug-; gested. If liked, the lower edge could by bound with silk braid in place of being: ‘simply underfaced. The plaits can be simply pressed into place cr stitched for} For the menium size will be required 736 wds, of miaterial 27 in. wide, 614 yds. 36 or 44 or 334 yds. 54 in. wide; the width at the lower edge is 4 yds. The pattern 8664 is cut in sizés from ®4 to 30 in. waist medsure. It will be mailed to any address by the Fashion Department of this paper, on receipt of ien cents. NOT EXAGGERATED. Washington, July 7.—Secretary Lansing yesterday gave out a mes- sage from an unnamed man who has been . traveling through northern Mexico saying reports of faminés have not béen exaggerated. This informa- tion came througn Tampico. e | the United States Had 1 initiate, to assemble the parts of an active organization. Italian women, on the other hand, are perhaps a gen- tler race. They havé a dozen things to teach Amierican women that Rus- slan women have, and English women, too. But the other thing remains something that we have to give the warld.” No Real Udlity. ‘It seems to me,” said Dr. Greil, “‘that here lies a chance to bring the two countries together. If during my stay there I can run my school for voluntary nurses not only in such a way that those particular nurses learn to da the work in hand, but that the whole community can awaken to some interest in the way American nurses are taught and the way the school puts through its schédule, I shall feel that there has been something worth while about my going. “That is what I think all American work abroad cught to be—a demon- stration of the things that we do best in this country. That is why our Red Cross work in the Balkans is so val- uable-—because it is the establishing of a standard, as well as care of the wounded, that is accomplished.” ‘Won Reputation In Washington. Dr. Greil first won her reputation for executive ability with the Russian au- therities through a curious little in dent that happened around Washing- | ton Square. The Russian Consulate is in Washington Square North. One afternocn a Russian peasant girl who | had been deéserted by her lover, who | was waiting for registration in the | consulate, in her desperation took poi gon. The consulate was in.an uproar. { Messengers were dispatched for a doc- tor. Dr. Greil responded, pulled the young suicide through with a quiet- | ness’and a dispatch that were nothin | short of a miracle to the excited and voluble onlookers. ““So American women are like that,” said one of the officials. “I thought | you were all society and poured tea at | ‘afternoons.” And I have been in your country a long time, too. But you— you keep your head—you work quiet- ly and do things. How wonderful. And now it is Dr. Greil that the Russian Red Cross sends for to call upon her dispatch and her poise fcr in a crisis that a millionfold over- shadows the accidental work of a sin- gle late New York afternoon. Great American Contribution. 1t is the ability to take a given set oers kiss and the kisses of various nations. The players are scoring a decided suc- cess in this weéek’ play, “The Mislead- The management announces The sands of people are collecting time the management will start departmental which the federal government would | finance workers desiring to take up ] farm land. meets in December, to be proposed in | connection with which the administration “OVER THE WIRE” By DOROTHY CLARKE How did you like her? isn't she téo interesting for. words? I think she is positively the most fascinut- ing creature, and to think of her be- ing on- the firing line and a nurse . Did you think she was French? My dear, she is Belgian— and so smart.’ . . She is going into town this aftermoon with me— Yes she's downstaires now and wear- ing the prettiest costume . It's terra-cotta crepe de chine—th» bléusé, has a little sort of waistcoat effect of black and white taffeta which matches the collar and cuffs £ her hat is a huge panama with a very low crown and the black and white iffeta ribbons forming a large wired bow - but could vou come in with us T've got seme shopping to do and . . . int6 workable conditions that Dr. Greil considers the great American contri- bution, and with her own talent for seeing what things should go together, what consolidated and interwoven, she feels that throughout American relief in Europe today there shoul be spread this spirit of wanting standing examples of Ameérican enterprise and expedition among the nations from whose shores so many come to take up American citizenship. She looks forward to some well Knit system of internaticnal education, some immediate schemes for inter- change of principles and manner of adoption, so that the scientific organi- zation of one country, the spirit of freedom of another and on ' down through the particular national su- premacies, al shall be shared by all. If all-summer schools appear to be the need of a city like New York, ‘it is fair to suppese that much the same will be the need of Italian cities that have industrial problems, too, and where youth is short, as youth s everywhere. If New York leads in the movement, then she wants Ttaly to follow quickly, so that double pioneer- ing is not done on every side of the world that grows evenly fram side to side is the thing she wants, and a manner of life that she expects from enterprises liké the little hospital ex- periment at Bari, in which Ttaly, America and Russia meet. POLI WEEKLY WILL BE SHOWN SUNDAY The Poli Weekly is a motion picture | series which is to be inaugurated at Poli's Theater Sunday evening. This week’s fllms shows the leading woman of the Poli Players, Miss Skirvin, in various scenes of her day's routine from the time she leaves her hotel in the morning until after the perform- ance at the theater. Intérest centers in her athletic stunts, and much inter- est is also shown in her dressing room scenes when she dresses for the part of Flotsam, which she played last week in “The Girl From Out Yonder.” The film will show Miss Skirvin and the new leading man of the Poli Play- ers, Dudley Ayres, in “The Story of a Kiss. They will be seen in a series of nineteen separate and distinet kisses, including the kiss of youths, the kiss of the blushing maiden, the marriage kiss, the old couple’s kise, the business man’s kiss, the mother’s ing Lady,” in which Miss Skirvin and Mr. Ayres play the two leading roles. that a decidedly novel souvenir matinee will be inaugurated within a short time. “Get-A-Link"” bracelet has be- come a nation-wide craze and thou- the Within a short the novelty in Hartford, presenting links links for bracelets. with the names of various Players en- 1 graved thereon so that patrons of the theater may have bracelets composed of links with the name of each player. TO AID FARM WORKERS. Washington, July 7.—An inter- committee named by Secretary of the Interior Lane and Secretary of Labor Wilson, is at work on a plan to relieve unemployed under | A complete program with preliminary drofts of necessary legis- | lation is to be framed before Congress | credits bill is expected rural a of circumstances and animate them to press at that time, and Women Readers THIS IS A MAN'S STORE AT ALL SEASONS And just at this season there are many unexpected values that await your selection. are these $13 and $15 Fancy Mixture Suits Sell?ng at First and foremost $10 Just say “CHARGE IT” that’s all that's necessary at this HOME OF CHEERFUL CREDIT. THE CAESAR NISCH §TORE 687—695 MAIN STREET HARTFORD D6 you buy your clothes on schedule? That is, do you plan at the beginning of the season exactly what clothes you need and when and where to buy them at the best advantage? And, having made such a schedule, do you keep reasonably close to it, or do you let yoiirself be beguiled from it by any passing fancy? “For two vears 1've wanted one of these flat sailor hats,” a girl said to me the other day. ““Then why didn’t you get one?’ 1 asked. She is a girl who has a comfortabe amount of money to spend on her clohtes. She Fell in Love With a Leghorn. “Well, last year I had planned to buy one and. 1 fell in love with a stunning leghorn and it cost so much that I had to make my year before hat do for every day. And then this year I had the money laid aside to buy the sajlor and what did T do but get a crush on a little lavender chip hat. wanted. couldn’t change it. It is a dear hat, but it wasn’'t at all the thing I needed, or really I knew it before I got it home, but I bought it at a sale and [ I'm always doing things like that.” She sighed, and I laughed. Not because I didn’t sympathize with her, but because she described such a common experience. The average woman has a limited—frequently a very limited—amount of money to spend on her wardrobe. impulsively. She can’t afford to spend ocarelessly, or And yet how few women plan the-expenditure of their clothes money systematically and carry it out efficiently. Of course, a schedule is not thoroughly efficient unless you permit it to be modified when good cause arises. But a crush on a pretty dress which does not fit in with the rest of your wardrobe, a passion for some garmeént so expensive that you will have to curtail all the rest of your plans i# not a good cause. First, Use Your Imagination. In planning one's wardrobe for theé summer I think one should first of all use imagination. Project yourself into your own life for the summer. Picture your daily occupation and.imagine what kind of clothes you will need the most. The averagé woman doesn’t buy what she needs, but what she needs most, and so her problem is one of selection and elimina- tion. Nert. plan your color scheme. A friend of mine has decided that the two colors most becoming to her aré dark blue, for dark things, and lavender for light gowns, and she almost never wears anything but these two colors. Of course, this results in monotony, but on the other hand it insures her becoming clothes and is less expensive because, if your clothes all fol- low the same general color scheme they can be carried over from season to season more successfully. Why Not Write It Down? 1 suppose many women will laugh when 1 suggést that having made these plans, you put them on paper in a definite schedule, covering colors, style and price you can afford to pay. Perhaps such a business-like pro- ceeding is funny, and then again perhaps it isn't. And now, having made your schedule, be wise enough to depart from it when it is advantageous to do so and firm enough not be beguiled away when it isn’t. How shall you know ? the manager of the family money. ability to make decisions. fitness. SOUTHERN PLAY ON KEENEY FILM With, “The Warrens of Virginia" for the inotion picture headliner, Keeney's offers this evening a photo- play bill of uncommon merit in ad- dition-to an admirable vaudevilie ghow. markable portrayal of a famous Southern novel. It has attracted wide attention since produced before the camera. In its picturized form it 1s even more popular than when pra- sented on the legitimate stage and it 18 a big drawing card in every house where it is presented. The piece will be giv.n &gain tomorrow “Tliy Isle of Regeneration,” an- other Giz- film feature, will be { leader tomorrew. “‘Country will top the bill Friday. The vaudeville show this week is finding big favor. Not in manv months has there been a musical act to compare with the Four Jolly Bachelors, one of this week's special attractions. Fred Haase, 8 populas Boy.” | Ney Britain singer, is one of the mem- Mr. Haase's solo | bers of the quartet. wins big applause every day. His associates are also talented entertain- ers. They offer a program replete with popular and classical numbers. A thrilling acrobatic novelty in- troduces to New Britain theater-goers The Marlows, European pérformers who have been scoring heavily since their advent in this country. They give an exhibition of cleverness, the equal of which is seldom seen in this locality. Little and Allen havé a light and entertaining musical specialty. The feature picture is a re- | | patterened wall-papers | Well, my friends, that's part of your business as All How wisely you decide is the measure of your responsible positions demand the Teota? it i Household Notes Study the markets - and things whicH are in season. buy Lemon juice is a powerful germi- cide, and rich in organic salts. canned use. Many vegetablés can be ag easily as fruits for winter if pos- well. Do your own marketing siblé; no one else will do it so p The good housewife plans to less. en her work dum?z the summer time. in paper par. in jars and Never keep goods cels; store everything tins, Hens' nests should be kept &8 carefully clean as a'canary bird's cage. have a dado or use large. in a low.eell- Don't inged room. Work in the garden is better for health and complexion than almost any medicine. i Don't forget to see that the locks of drawers and wanrdrobe cupboards are in good condition. 1t possihle (60 pay ready money, settle your bills promptly at the ‘d of every week. ok Cream goes further Whip plain, on f £d

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