New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 19, 1915, Page 5

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3 4 7 s “BEHIND THE SCENES” WITH MARY PICKFORD “BEHIND the SCENES” Five Part Drama.’ HEARST-SPLIG and PATHE REVIEWS i OTHER GOOD MOVIES. Mary Pickford, ¥the darling of ‘em all,” will be the big attraction at Keeney's tonight. This famous little screen actress will play wne leading role in “Behind the Scenes,” an un- usually powerful drama to the feature of. the Keeneyscope program tonight and tomorrow. The photo-play is in five ;parts and is said to be one of the hest in which Miss Pickford has ap- peared in a long time. Pickford pig- tures are probably the most populay screen productions put out by th Famous Players company: They always make a good drawing card and from a box office standpoint they are the biggest ‘‘movie’” attractions re- leased by the Paramount people. b The Hearst-Selig and Pathe reviews will also be prominent ‘on tonight's program. 4 Among the vaudeville entertainers will be found McKenna and LeBlanc, singers and dancers; Harry Gurgoyne, character actor, and Julia Moore and company in an amusing specialty, There will be some good sung numbers during the course of this act. The manpgement announces some other big pictures for the current week. On Wednesday and Thursday the features will be Wallace Edinger in the big drama; “A Gentleman of Leisure.” 'This piece is given in five parts, Friday and Saturday the Fa- mous Players will' contribute ‘‘Rule G.” another five reeler, with Kathleen Fmerson in the principal role. Thursday and Friday '"The Million- ajre Baby,” dramatized for motion pic- tures from Anna Katherine Green's great mystery story, will be the main attraction. Harry Mestayer and an all-star cast will-be seen in this num- ber. The Keeney announcements indicate that there will be some treats’ in eV e Cool—refreshing—delightfnl Surroundings that are.con- ducive to healthy amuse- ment. ¢ Now Playing * | BURR MCcINTOSH and an all star cast of Shu- ‘bert favorites in, *“Col. Carter -+ of Cartersville” "Ploturized into five ‘acts tor splendid action from theé fa- mous F. Hopkinsor = Smith | ‘novel. o 2 ~ § W POLI'STHEATER Hartford ALl This ‘Week, Twice Daily. Ne 8697 Cirl's Dress, 6 to 12 years, THE DAIRY FARM Mats; 108, 20c. - Eve. 10, 20, 30, 50c photo-plays at the popular play= | house ‘during’ the week. ¥ach day there will be either a Paramount or Big Four feature in addition to single | and .double reel specials. ¥ 1 There are a great many’ different mas terials that would make up attractively after this model, but here, one of thg dainty cotton crépes showing an embroid+ dot is -trimmed wit yoke. well .as a fashionable one and the frock IN FILM PLAY BURR McINTOSH i . Dramatized from the famous novel “|'by B. Hopkinson Smith into a five act photg-dtama, ‘“Colonel Carter of Car-: ‘| tersville,” with Burr'MeIntosh in the. stellar Tole will be shown at Fox's to-’ day and tomorrow. The story, well known, is closely adhered to in this pleturization and with its many thrills .and heart throbs should. make an ex- cellent attractoin. b % Stewed Potato Orange Cheese i “Clear Soup / Hashed: Duck in’Timbajs.Gases ., Baked Spanish Onioni v a. ch read perigdical, “The Pathe Néws,” depicting in ani- mated views the most important and recent -happenings our own -country aver as well ag the latest views from the theater of war., Fox’s during the warm days I8 a veritable. rendevous foriamusement seekers who want rec- reation amid -environments that are nost pleasing, cool, clean, comfortable and refreshing, with the atmosphers in thé theater twenty de@rees cooler than'in the street. NAVIES OBSOLETE, DECLARES LAKE, - NOTED INVENTOR ~‘Cotfee “Orange Cheese Cl_;" Peel» 1 yellow rind:from two oranges and Boil in a saucepan of water until tender. Drain, and when cold, pound to a paste with one-guarter of a pound ‘each of ‘powdered sugar.and dutter. When smooth add gradually the beat- en yolks of eight eggs and ono table- spoonful each of brandy and sherry. Line some patty. pans with puft paste, | i1l with the mixture,; and bake inia quick oven: < . [ : S AR Sy Peach ' and Sego . Puddin ,—pfipnk one-quarter of a pound of sugolover | night in cold water. ‘Pare ona quart of peachies, put them in 'a (bultered /.’ pudding-dish ‘and pour -over the sa- | go. Add three tablespoorfuls . of . sugar and one cupful of water,. 'and bake for an hour.in a moderate oven, | Berve hot with cream,, “THE DAIRY FARM” AT . POLT'S THIS WEE | The straij h% gake e pattern b ¢ddress by the Fashion Depart is alt her charming in an absolutel child-like way. The bertha is being mucK used.this season and is always becoming to little girls, - The sleeves can be madel shorter or longer ag occasion requires. ht skirt is simply ‘hemmed, ucked'and gathered. There is very little abor required for the making. of such a rock ‘and smartness is beyond dis- bute.. | Fashionable materials. include a ong list of cotten fabrics and also simple Vub silks that could-be treated after the tame manner. ““For the 10 year size will be required 43 'ds. of material 27 in. wide, 4 yds. 36, X yds. 44, with % yd. 18 in. wide for and 14 yd. 27 for the ruches. 8 i rom | to any ment of ihis paper, on receipt of ten cents. Great Sale of American Dry Goods Company Merchandise at Wise, Smith & Company’s. Wise, Smith & Co.’s greatest sale of the American Dry Goods Co. merchan- dise will - attract a big crowd from New. Britain, for never before ‘have so great a number of bargains been of- fered at one time n a special purchase sale like this one. ~You will find sum- mer wash fabrics of almost every de- reription—linens and domestics, hos- jery and underwear, etc., and in addi tion there are rare bargains in cor- sets, embroideries and men’s furnish- , Smith & Co.’s Annual July | i okl "Yoilar and cuffs will be rale of Notions is also in full progress, offering standard quality notlons, small ‘wares and ‘household’ needs at deeply -cut prices. This will be a week of wonderful bargain giving indeed at the big store, and you surely cannot afford saye ~advt., | | ruches of | washable taffeta and finished with a laca | It is a very pretty combination a4 | miss such an opportunity to‘ ws for Theatre Goers and Wo Daily Fashion Talk & 8695 Gown with Raglan Sleeves, : 34 to 44 bust. There never was a more serviceabld gown devised than the simple one made of light weight taffeta or other.silk adapted to summer wear. This one includes very new features and because of its high necfi and long sleeves, it can be worn at an hour of the da?r. In the picture, it is made of one o the very thin taffetas, dotted for the main portion and plain for | the sleeves and panels, but it could by ! copied in foulard to be very pretty or in | the pongee that is being extensively used ! just now or in cotton voile or cotton irépe or indeed in almost any summer material If the contrasting sleeves are not, liked, they can match the main por- tion of the blouse and only the vest, and the panels made ‘f & different ‘material. he collar and cuffs are made from og A indie and the material i lv!’ore~all others for u:clhxs e It is one of the dai vith the hem-stitched edges, it is at- iractive in the extreme. Clever womer | j Will finish the collar and the cuffs sepas | L accessories, ntiest possible and | { fately, in order that they may be renew: " without difficulty. If a pla{ner gowneids tanted, the vest and the panels can be mitted and the entire gown made of one aterial, as _mgfiesued in the small view. he skirt is in three pieces and when the nel and vest effects are wanted, the two {dterials are joined beneath thetrimmi For the medium size will be needed 7 ¥ds. of figured material 27 in. wide, 4. ¥ds. 36 or 44, with 3 yds.of plain material 7.to make as shown on the figure; or, 536 yds. 36, 5 yds. material. For “the $6 in. wide. needed 3.4, The pattern 8695 is cut in sizes from 84 to 44 in. bust measure. It will be ' ailed to any address by the Fashion epartment of this paper, on receipt of ten cents. 14 yds. 27 in. wide, to make of one “ ady Suffrage” Not Wanted By Working Women of New York, Says Miss Barnum Votes, However, Will Come to Fair Sex and When They ‘i worn in sort of a turban 9 | in bird meetings, but she’s right thera | | “OVER THE WIRE” 1 By DOROTHY CLARKE . Did 'you know that Helen ‘Buca. - a wonderful - swimmér? I ‘hadn't any idea that she was o 800d ..... and I simply stood. on the beach and gausped I/ told her the mext time she .- went swini- ming with us'T was going e bring my' knltting with me, so.. I wotld have something to do ..... She nas an awfully cute suit and the prettiest cap! It's tied gypsy style . Made of rubberized silk was | ... Its efiect and | ! tied on the side in a tight knot with ilong ends which hang to the i shoulder ..... The main part of the | icap is a brilliant blue and the ends | iere striped with broad bands of i 7i1id ‘green, yvellow and red 1 We're going over again tomorrow (and f wondered if you and Tom : coild go with us Stanley is goiug with Helen and the six of us could elevated railroad in Chicago and one of the most prominent women in the American labor movement, hit the ‘neil on the head when she said: ‘The working woman isn’t interested at a board meeting.’ That's the key. | The working people aren’t very talk- n Readers_ "— This Is Hartford’s Most Helpful § ‘Whole Family. Here You Say “Charge It” and P 687—-6935 MAIN S HARTFORD “The greatest trouble, with she expects trouble.” RS “As if that could bring it How about it? 4 The unthinking point of vil 3 to the expectation. - SO But when you stop to think, dafi\& tsionhip is sometimes reversed and the ) 'ability ? 1 A man who was sent to prison for chéatl one of the prison workers why he did it. “I “or at any rate I wasn't dishonest until 1 worked expected me to try to cheat him, and so I did, and | ‘‘She detested explaining things to servants” W one of his characters; “her attitude was that of ative; they're active. They build a beautiful city, while the art leaguers are frothing endlessly over the utter utterness of a futurist design. ror city planning. » “Josephine Qasy, by the way, has engineered a wonderful suffrage cam- paign upstate in New York. She left today with Mrs. Blatch on a suffrage hike. “Then there are some other prom- inent labor women who are looking at the suffrage problem from tkLa workers' standpoint. T want, to men- tion their names, if you don’t mind, because I think people ought to know about them. There are, for in- stance, Elizabeth Mahoney, president of the Waitresses' Union, and Agnes Nestor, of the Glove Workers’ and Mary Anderson, of the Boot ' and Shoes,” who terrorized the voters at Springfleld, Ill, so that they dropped | an obnoxious amendment to the wo- man’s hours bill. This happened the last time I was in Chicago, two months ago. On Saffrage Track. “In Massachusetts it’s Rose Bren- ran, of the cotton mills of Fall River, and the wonderful Telephone gir of Boston, who are on the American- ized woman suffrage track. I could name a dozen more—America shou'd k¥now them all—Margaret Daley. Anna Fitzgerald, Mayme Scully and all the others. Why, the so-calles society woman isn’t in soclety at all! She’s not in the big swim; she's going ronond and round in a little exclusive bathing pool of her own. “Bvery trade union women knows who, once having expounded an idea or wish, fulfilled. - The attitude .worked perf ¥ dren, and usually with servants. No. one lishment with less worry and though A pectant attitude is a large part of efficiency.” - /z_ She Got the Grurabling She ¥ To take the opposite of this case: I know "‘ servants to grumble when she has company or whes larity in the meal hours. She has had many" Iper ways lived up to her expectations. I happen to came from a home where irregularity was the r the expected thing. She never grumbled there. Gi 14 pected. But when she came into this woman's home atmosphere and her employer’s apologetic manner grumble, she became the most accomplished “Tell me what you expect of your friends and I you get,” someone has said. ‘ 4 Drawing A Draft For Good Qualities On Put yourself in the place of the friend and see if the dency for this relationship to establish itself. You e thinks highly of you, who expects you to be generous Will you show your best side to him or not? & To expect good things of one, courtesy, kindli draw a draft upon him for the qualities. He may : the chances are that, for the sake of keeping his credit self and you, he will do his best to honor it i/ (3 clumsy and ugly, and I crippled my- self, but I felt better about it some- how, and now the reward of the faithful has come on the market. “And let me just say, too, that the reward of the faithful 18 ecoming to you New York women. Of course, you're going to win!” Advertised Letters. ! this fact that the lady suffragiet doesti't: "The industrial ballot is even more directly important to _her thau | the political ballot today—as it is to the men, t00. The ballot they dron Will Be Labor’s Own, She The following is a list of letters advertised at New Britain, Conn., post Do El_eefion Day 1 61 the thea- ter will see the /pictur#t which wag shown for the first’time last evening .t the benefit entertainment. ~ This picture shows the Players in an hour of fun and froli¢c at Laurel Park with chases aplenty, mishaps that are more amusing than one ‘would expect to sé¢ | trom | experienced , ‘motion picture players- and elimaxes: that- arp’ ex- tremely funny.. This week’s play, “The Dairy Farm,” is a rtural gem, that has been exceedingly popular for many: years and yet never more than at the present time. Its charactersare of the kind that will always live pleas- antly with theatergaers, for'they are sufficiently remote to be’ refreshing and real enough to appeal to the pub- lic. Thete are several proniinent' roles in the play, thus giving each of the Poli favorites an excellent oppor- tunity to appear to advantage The Story centers about a big hearted v rural ‘character, who is stubborn as he 18’ good-and whose stubbornness hrh:p him misery it his domestic life. Naturally it culminates satisfac- iy, with the family reunited ' and ®very ome happy, but there are a Series of incidents that hold the close attention of the audiences, -As a.spe- clal feature the management .an- Nounces that today will see .another Souvenir matinee and tomdrrow sou® Venir photographs will ‘be distributed. Free milk will again be served to all Patrons o fitting reminder of the Simon Lake, inventor of the sub- marine, says that modern navies are already largely absolete. He says that a great change is already in progress, the ultimate result of which should be the elimination of 'war between maritime countries, He says that in | the future, will, the aid of the sub- marine, which should make invasion impozsible, maritime countries may settle their differences by boyeotting the nufactured products of their énemfes until they and their enemies until they and their enemies come to terms on seme common basis, Dur- ing such period of boycott and discus- sion either side. may by the use of submarines. ‘hamper or prevent en. emies’ commerce with other nations, “Lady suffrage,” coins Gertruds Barnum, speaking for the working woman, with whom: she has been so long identified in the labor move- ment, “Is not the suffrage that the working woman knows, has time for or sympethizes with.. Lady suffrage is the pink tea kind, featuring Ha- walian dances and young men with gardenias, you know. But there's another kind—the working woman's suffrage. “You don’t find the trade union Wwoman's name ‘among those pres- ent’ at the Newport suffrage dances or the White Mountain teas. Yon see her name in the roll of those present on the docks among the long- shoremen, carrying green banners and shamrock literature to the Irish, Itallan and Yiddish pamphlets to ! distribute at the piers, They ars | talking to the freight handlers and subway excavators, They are not wasting time on the cude and the dandy; they arc interested in man- hood and womanhood suffrage, not in lady and gentleman suffrage.” . Applied to Our Bphero. “Isn't it reasomablae to expect the soclety woman to apply the suffrage movement to her own sphere?”’ Miss Barnum was asked, “Yes, at first, But you wait, she gets the vote she won't have time for parties, in the daytime! No, I'm not blaming her, for she's per. fectly sincere, ~ But, suffrage is edu- After Y . cating her. Ard isn’t that a splendid thln:‘,’ that the woman in velvet and furs is getting so mucn closer ~to that other woman, whose life is so utterly ' different?” Beams Enthusiastically. Miss Barnum stopped a moment and beamed enthusiastically. Then, “That's one of the things that makes me bellieve in it so. But you know I began believing in woman suf- ' frage at the same time I knew the earth was round. Therefore I can’t get excited about it any more. And it's so near that I am thinking of the tremendous responsibility at- tached, and that keeps me from ef- fervescing. “America's ideal is full democracy. Woman suffrage is a part of demo- cracy—political democracy. And with political democracy should come in- dustrial democracy. The biggest Jobs before the Americans right now, in my mind, are, first to establish more economic and industrial demo- ecracy and then to amalgamate all the races in America into an Amer- ican nation. This can be done to some extent by the political ballot of all sorts and conditions of people, but not entirely, Women also need what I call the ‘industrial baliot,’ They are combining both in the new suf- frage organization of tne Woman's Trade Union league, Hits Nafl on the Head. “Josephine Casy, the girl who or- ganized the women employes of the : League?”’ agked the reporter, | be* awful! in the trade union ballot box and the ballot they drop every time they spend.a dollar right vote for liberty, equality, and fraternity, the Ameri- can jdeals. By spending a dollar right I mean spending it . for . unionized goods wlth the union label. Tho union label is an American flag to o loyal trade unionist.” “What .about the Consumers’ ~*‘The ihdustrial ballot of the con- sumer-has almost unlimited possibil- itles.. The league in the past has mainly .emphasized - sannary condi- _tions, while the Natfonal Union Label , Leggue has gone much further and insisted upon industrial conditions. That s to say. the league has stood for light and air and sanitary shops, while’the N. U. L. L. demands in addition minimum wage and decent | | , hours, ‘ete. “Now" the woman shopper has put right up to her. The question that the Label League esks her is: ‘Do you want to vote for sweatshops, child labor, crippled men and women, or do you want to vote for a square deal to the workers?’ - The Union Leabel is a banner wortn rallying to; it’s just as important as the suffrage banner.” Miss Barnum stutk out a well shod foot and laughed. “Now, that isn't & bad looking union shoe, 18 {t? Well, they used to But, being fanatical, 1 insisted -upon wearing them, ana searched the town for the shoe witlh the label. They were heavy and l office, July 19, 1915, Adolph Berg. ‘Miss Alice Blair, F. W. Bennett. RENIER, PICKHARDT & 127 MAIN STREET. OPPOSITE ARCH. TE This Season’s Coats which were $5.75, Now ......,..: Coats which were $11.00 Now ........ Coats which were $17.50 N .w ....... The balance of our Palm Beach Suit: $11.00 and $8.00 Now ...... We are constantly mflm . ' lin Underwear, Corsets, Hosiery and Gloves. .

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