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E. Pinkham’s Vege~ ad for weak women and and I would be glad if I p you,writo P The first chapter of “The Goddess,” the new serial produced by the Vita- graph, written by Gouveneur Morris and Charles Go . featuring Anita Stewart and le Wiillams will be shown at Fox's commencing today and tomorrow. “The Goddess” is in fif- teen tmndu,’.a.nd Fox patrons will o well to foljow each and every chap- ter as it'is one of the most interesting and instructive stories ever produced in serial form. Acting of the most artistic kind is seen in the serial, Here is Anita Stewart—Celestja-God- dess—in her myriad personality. Here is Anita Stewart, actress, child of the muse, gifted with the rarest of art, Successor of Siddons and Bernhardt. In conjunction with the first chap- 4 ’s Vege-! ter of “The Goddess,” the Shuberts Dresent “After Dark,” a. five . part photo-dramatization of the Wm. A. Brady greatest stage success in which Alec. Francis portrays the deep sym- pathetic character of Old Tom. The story is replete with stirring and thril- ling scenes built around,6 the great metropolis ahd for the fover of the Dark’” will more than please. The Pathe News with its current events and some excellént comedies augment the stellar program today and tomor- row. ~ DUSTIN FARNUM AS THE GAMBLER, KIRBY Prominent among the Paramount} features to be included in the photo- | play program at Keeney's this week | is “Cameo Kirby,” a picturization of the famous novel of the same name, | materials, such as gingham, chambray, l with Dustin Farnum in the title role. ' palatea and the like, are in every way This production will top the Keeney- scope bill tonight. and is one of the most screen dramas released in months. Mr. Farnum won great fame in the: bss stage production of this romance and | With in the “‘movies” he is also bound to make great strides as the story is one affording big opportunities for screen acting. The Hearst-Selig and Pathe reviews will also be numbered among the features this evening. “‘Cameo Kirby” will also be shown tomorrow. Some exceptionally big attractions | ‘nave been secured for this week. In | addition to “Cameo Kirby,” the man- | agement announces Elsie Janis in “The Caprices of Kitty,” a five reel special for Wednesday and Thursday and Lofs Weber in ‘“‘Sunshine Molly’ for Friday and Saturday. The Big Four combine will offer ‘‘The Sport- ing Duchess” Priday and Saturday as its contribution to the attractions for the week. In this famous play, which was staged under Lubin man- compelling dramatic features ‘“After | It is in five parts | interesting | {f agement Rose Coghlan will be fea- tured. This is said to be one of the ost \fascinating plays of sporting life“ever produced before the camera. Miss Coglan is one of the country’s mbost remarkable actresses. . She has won new laurels since her advent in the “movies” and she is now rated as one of the most celebrated screen ar- tists in the world. Besides this great lay-out of mo- tion" pictures Keeney’'s will offer dur- ing the week three high class vaud- eville acts. Since the management inaugurated the new policy by which the big mo- tion' picture productions were billed, Keeney's has steadily increased in popularity and despite the warm weather the theater is well fiiled ‘every night. Do not use’ any bread until it is a day old. . All crusts must be soaked and used for puddings or dried and ‘made into erumbs; .for, in many 1 recipes in which flour forms a prin- iyss| cipal ingredient, bread crumbs may 8681 Child’s Rompers, 1,2and 4 yearsy Mothers of little children will see at 4 E!zm:e the ad_vant?e of -these rompers _They are easily adjusted and they ar practical. Furthermore, they are sc simple that they can’be made in the leas little bit of time. There are only twe seams to be sewed up and the edges to be inished, opening at the front i fizished with over-facings and the edges are laced together and the lacing gives ¢ smart_touch. All the simple washablq Y, sppropriate. : In the picture, however, 1] galatea is trimmed with plain, ferred, the neck can be made -gul: bnd of course the laced edges are not tssential for one edge can finished an under-facing and the closing ffected by means of buttons and button- holes, if that finish is better liked., For the two year size will be required 2% yds. of material 27 omm36 ’r:q wide with" 34 yd. either width for trimming, The pattern 8681 is cut in sizesfor 1, 3 and 4 years, It will be mailed to an tress by the Fashion Department of thi/ paper, on receipt of ten cents, To make satisfactory cream sauce, first put the milk on, and whilst this is getting warm .rub the butter and flour together until smooth; as soon as the milk comes to the boil very gradually add the creamy mixture whilst the milk contniues to boil, and the finished sauce will be quite smooth. ad’ . G SRR Dl Ll ——— Dailyv Fashion Talks BY MAYLAMANTON 8704 Tunic Skirt; 24 to 32 waist. ) The tunic continues to be a favorite fn spite of all the other designe shown ©nd here it is given a new and inter- sting form. It flarés gracefully and be- omingly and is worn over a skirt narrow : F | black silk was pathere.l ! forming a trimming In vhw nough for contrast, yet wide enough for fashion. The lower edge of the tunic tan be finished with scallops or it can be :ft straight. It is one of the prettiest and most.attractive garments that ever i fvas worn and because of its inherent tharm, it is a favorite. Here, it is made f taffeta over lace, but the model is a o0dd one for any material that is soft aough to be gathered successfully. It ‘ould be very charming made of cotton | {r&pe or of cotton voile over taffeta and . would be pretty in a colored voile or olored crépe over the same material in , hite. In the back view, the flounce on I e under-skirt is plaited and there, the terial is chiffon, while the tunic is of. ille silk. | l . For the medium size will be required | L}l{mydo. of material 36 in. wide, for the: bundation, 4 yds. of lace 14 in. wide far | jathered flounce, 234 yds. of material 44, i br the plaited flounce, 33¢ yds. 27 or 36, 1% Kda. 44, for the tumic. The pattern No. 8704 is cut in sizes from ¢ to 32 in. waist measure. It will be pailed to any address by the Fashien! H Eepanment of this paper, on receipt of ! ken cents. School Girl's Version of Business Success in Theatrical Designing How to Make Money at “Art” Told By Young Lady Who Has Fashioned Gowns for Members of Winter Garden (By Alissa Franc 1n New York Tribune.) Because it is July and the world is full of schoolgirls who want to “do something”’—what a phrase it is, “do gomething’’—and the world is equally full of people who lecture, and very properly, on technical training and the abolition of genial willingness and amateur enthusiasm as u substitute for professional preparedress, it's time to go back and tell a fairy tale. A fairy tale is never rational save 'be substituted for ‘hailf :the quantity ashburn’s| Shows —AND— -, | Wild Animal Arena - 20 Enterprises. in One of modern times that is always successful because of isttractiveness and ever pleasing, always changing, lock at RENTSCHLER’S PARK for 6 _Days__ and Nights as faith is rational. Who 1s it—for I forget—who says that the uttermost romance is the only matter of fact affair? - Never Studiea’ ~Art.” Vyvyan Donner—a heroine's name, gpelling and all, surely—is eighteen, a little, slim, dark-eyed daughter of the people, who never studied ‘art” and never even Heard of the celebrated studios of the Continent, where stage costumes that have turned nations mad were made, and yet— Here she is in New York, with a will to believe in success, a morning declaration that there is no such thing as failure, and simply, sweetly, casily, prayers granted, sne finds her- self with a record for having drawn the designs for a great number of the ‘Winter (farden chorus gowns, and busy night and day with Ned Way- burn’s new comic. 1 sald she had never had a lesson. That was wrong. She had one. “The lesson I had?” ‘Went to Cooper Union. | “Well,” she smiles, “I went to the Cooper Union, thinking I would like to take the fashion class. I found a iesson being given on the drawing of raincoats. I thought this was rather slow, so I commenced doing costumes for a chorus of revue. The teaCher came around and I quickly hid what I had been doing, but she insisted on looking. Instead of giving me a good geolding she told me my work was “wonderful, and took me to one'of the directors, who advised me to finish the gketch and try to sell it. I took it to the Schuberts and Mr. Ellis bought it from me, ordering two more. That was on New Year's Day, and it seemed a good omen, which it proved to be, for in the spring I was again sent for to help with™ the Winter Garden show.” 5 “Why did you commence by drawing for the theater?" “I had been on the stage for three years, and am never so happy as.when ‘I am sitting Behing scenes in the dark listening to th c and plan- 14 Chorus. ning my costumes. None but the thea- tres would take iny work, for an ordi- nary shop would never stand for my crazy Inspirations,” she adds laughing- ly. “Work for the stage seems un- limited in comparison with any other designing.” *“Which do you prefer, ladies tights or ladles in skirts?” “Ladies in tights, I think, for I always draw a nude figure first and then dress it. It is the only way to get right lines. I take a great deal of trouble with the people I make de- signs for and git for hours watching Ahem at rehearsals before I attempt a skewlh for them,” Wanted to Work for Wayburn. She tells of how from the com- mencement of her success she had always had an idea that the one man she wantoed to work for was Mr. Ned Wayburn, So for three whole weeks from early morning until night witia the. greatest perseverance did she tiy to see him. But in vain.. The people around him guarded him so closely that not a glimipse of him could she catch. plored her to only let them peep at what she had to show, but nothing would induce her to do so. “So, just to get rid of me,” she laughingly tells. for by this time they had grown tired of the sight of mc, they let me in to Mr. Wayburn. He asked me ho wlong would I keep him. ‘““Ten ininutes’ said 1. But onte he had seen my work he would not let me go and right away ordered from me all the designs of the Reisen- weber Restaurant Review. He left every idea to me, and when the work was finished he was delighted and gave me the review of the Midnight Frolic, now playing at the Shelburne l;;tel, Brighton'gBeach, caled ‘Splash o in Doing 200 Costumes. “And now I am doing 200 ' cos- tumes for the ‘Town Topics of 1915," for which I have even to pick out the materjals,” said this mald of seven- teen summers, finishing the short story of her cateer, “Isn’t it wounderful?”’ And her cyes gleamed at the thought of her own success, which is still a little strange to her, She tells of the business of her days and of naving so many orders that she dodges people in the street for fear they would want her to work for tham, hating to refuse. Has No Spare Time. “How do you spend your time?” “I really do not have any time?” You see I have three spare spare new | ting a speed boat U ! are to give a dinner after each race. “OVER THE WIRE” | By DOROTHY CLARRE I saw a stunning affernoon suit Long BReach yesterday ... 1t was the most effective tion I've seen his sensou ..... The coat was black silk, made in rort of a paddock styla .... -.‘luse fitting to the -walstline with very laring skirts ...... Thue skt wits of duff taffeta with black salin stripcs and ottom of the skir around the b TR ithe teoth de- Jaclk is thainkinz of get- o follow the races in .. You know the “Resolute” and “Vanitie” arc to rass a series of events and all ‘he vichting crowd sign ..... Jack hasn’t decidod yet as to whether he will buy one or net, but | I'm simply wild to own one... . never knew what motor hoating really was, until I went thirty miles an hour in the Van Buskirks I'll let you know just as soon as ):u: makes up his mind ..... We vugat to have some jolly times thea A All right, Grace ..... Good:bye .. B i i A .ideas to get each day for the next month,” she says quaintly, “and this keeps me pretty busy. I am trying to learn French, and all the reading I taffeta combina- | the | Theatre Goers and an L o s pocirs Readers VACATIONMONEY IS YOURS The average vacationer spends a third of his vacation money for clothes, for things to prepare with. At this store you get what you want and, at the lowest prices, and you pay when you return. NO MONEY DOWN—$1 PER WEEK Clothes for the Whole Family. Misca STORE 687—6953 MAIN STREET HARTFURD The Real Things The Wants-to-be-cynic has been playing cards with a partner addicted to that most trying of partners’ faults—overbidding his hand. At a erucial point in the game this ultra optimitic partner had capped the cynic's hid of three royals (thoroughly justified) by four hearts (not justified) and thereby had lost the hand, the rubbeér and the game. The cynic had taken it very calmly on the whole and we were congrat. ulating him upon his self-control afterwards. The Oynic's Lesson. . “Well,” he admitted, “there was a time when I wouldn't have been so want to get done I manage to have, for my mother reads to me all the time I am working. . “But above all I love dancing, al- | tablespoontul of butter, salt ana pev Mr. Wayburn’s assistants im- | for ten minutes in saited water, then | remove the lid, so that the potatoes though I have never wanted to be u dancer. I love to sing and I play the plano quite well. “Some day I shall design scenery. I have some ideas of my own about it,”” she says with the assurance of a Gordon Cralg, but I must study and study and study, and one day I am going to be one of the great designers of the world.” And one does not'doubt, with her pluck, confidence and talent. | Menu for Tomorrow | Breakfast Peaches Cereal Sugar and Cream Hashed Meat on Toast Coffee Lunch Vegetable £alad Cup Custards Cocon Dinner Chicken Pot Fle Mashed Potatoes Squash Lettuce French Dressing Wafers Chaese Fruit Sago Pudding Coffe Chicken Pot Pie (en Casserole)— One large chicken, three quartirs of a pound of ham, three pounds nf po- | tatoes, half a pound of onions (span- ish, i possible,) three-quarters of & pint of stuck or Waeel, .. { per. Have a good-sized cuserul:.-.‘ Wash, peel and parboll the potatoes cut them in rounds about three-quar- l ters of an inch thick. Peel and cut the onfons in rings. Cut the ham in | large squares, and the chicken into convenient joints. -Fill the casserole with layers of, first, chicken, then ham, onion, potato and seasoning : till the casserole is full. The top lay-’ er must be of potato, and let the slices overlap each other slightly. Pour in the stock; put the butter in| small pleces on the potatoes; put on the lid and bake in a slow over for three hours. For the last half hour may brown. If necessary, add more stock if it dries up at all. Fruit Sago Puddding—Boil one | cupful of sago in two cupfuls of fruit juice until the sago is a transparent jelly. Then turn the jelly in alternate layers in a buttered dish with sliced pears, or apples, adding a sprinkling of salt. Bake about two hours and then let become cold before slipping a thin-bladed knife about the edge and bottom so the jelly will slip onto a dish. Serve with cream and pre- served fruit about the dish. A Wonderful Picture Section. Most of the chief evenis of the wide, wide world are pictured in the photographic section of The New York Sunday World in a style which makes it a delight to study these contributions to current history. It is safe to say that “World Pictures” haa calm, but I think I've learned to put cards in theéir propér place now.” “I've learned to put cards in their proper place now,’ that sentence leaped out at me and I sat revolving it in my mind while the canversatien drifted on to other matters. Its a pretty big lesson, isn’t it? Of course, T don’t mean merely put- ting cards, but putting things in gene in their proper places. - A true sense of values is one of the biggest and rarest assets in lfe, To put things in their proper places is a lesson that neither wi nor experience alone can teach. It takes bath the passing of the y and the ardent.desire to understand the issues of life to enable us to and weigh, and eliminate and appreciate toward & true standard of ival Some People Live A Ceniury Without Learning. e A man might live a century and still have an utterly falsé and a man might live but half that time and have begun to glimpse | truth, # You've got o get down to brass tacks and actually think for yourself to learn to put things in their proper places and “thinking” someone has sald “is Just whiit no one wants to do.” 3 You've got to analyze your own desires. You long passionately fo possess some pretty thing. You covet some honor, you are eager for some pleasure, as a pénny held close to the eye eclipses the sun, so this particular desire bulks out of all proportion, and if you cannot fulfill it, temporarily blots out the sunshine of life. You must learn to put it farther away and see it as small as it really Is. Things Are Only A Part Of Life. Things, material things, are only a small part of life, but some never realize that and those who do glimpse that truth are mtm losing sight of it. Friendship, honor, self-knowledge, courage, wisdom, love, self-eontrol character building, aren't these after all the realities of life? Whether you win the game of cards is a minor matter, but whether vou play it honestly and without losing your self-control is a tremendously big matter. Help up to leern to put all things in their proper places is a very big prayer in a little sentence. T2 Comm effective features of The * Sunday World. The demand for the coming edition s =0 great that orders should be placed in advance each week with your newsdealer.—advt. HENRY TRUAX TO SING AT POLI'S THEATER is a guarantée of its worth as a play. Miss Bessie MacAllister makes hew first appearance with the Poli play- ers today, playing the second leads. All of the favorites have prominent | parts and the preduction promises to be popular. When the Oircus Comes to Town. (Bridgeport Post). “Ladie-e-s and Gen'men: You will | now give your kind attention to the elevated platform in the middle of The management of Poli's theater makes the announcement that Henry become one of the most attractive and A. Truax has been engaged for a limited engagement to sing at Poli's theater as a feature of the stock com- pany productiens. Mr. Truax, who T a large number of admirers in Hart- ford, posses a fine volce and !s one of Hartford's most popular singers. | Mr. Truax will sing between the acts and will, when occasion arises, sing in the productions. He is well equipped for this work for he has not only had prominent parts in produc- tions but he sings grand opera as well He made his initial appearance today and will appear at each production untfl further notice. Mr. Truax was recently a cabaret singer in this city and has since sung in light opera. . Tht Poli Playérs will make their appearance in *“The Ghost Breaker,” today, opening what promises to be a popular week. The prominence of the play among current successes makes it admirable for stock produc- tlon and, although H. B. Warner, the original “Jimmy Valentine,” scored a decided success in the play, it has never been seen in Hartford. It sel- dom happens that the management of a theater presnting stock productions is able to present such a success as “The Ghost Breaker” in a eity the size of Hartford before it has been presented by a road company, yet' Mr. Poli has succeeded in carrying through this thing. H. B. Warner played in “The Ghost Breaker" In New York tgr a solld year, a fact thal K 5 o b the tent, where we have on exhibition for the first time In America fthe world renowned Mazle Tobasco. e little lady is a rare type of the Al bino. She was captured In a wild state in the jungles of Burnips Car- ners. The red corpuscles In her blood were turned white by the con- stant use of American breakfast food when a child. She received her education in the public scheols of Burnips Corners and can write' eall- ing cards with her taes. Those desir. ing to purchase phetographs ‘or converse with the little lady will find her a very interesting person. “Now, we will direct your attention to the ele platform on the right, it you please, where it gives us great pleasure to announce the world pe- nowned Professor Gonzolavitz and his famous sacred educated cow eof Indla. Winnie by name. Winnfe, speak to the ladie-e-s (Jab her in the slats, professor.)” Winnie—Mo0-0-0! “Winnie says she likes the ladie-s-s much, v'ry m'ch. Right over here; noéw, If yom please, where we have on exhibition Stretcho, the famous rubber skinned who appears by special . per. of the Stretcho, you will observe, need weap no suspenders as nature has - vided him with a marvelous sul . tute. He has on sale souvenirs in the | shape of handsome garters and of himseit.