New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 31, 1915, Page 4

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a2 T SR S - ~ News for ‘Daily Fashion Talks BY MAY MANTON — and Theatre Gdér& ' WILLARD WILL SHOW HOW IT WAS DONE { Will Tliustrate How He Won the Title in the Famous “26th” With the 101 Ranch Real Wild West, he will box three rounds with uis sparring partner, in the main tent, both afternoon and night. People Who saw that famous fight in Havana say it will go down the annals of the pugisistic lane as the most important epoch in all the world of fistic ac- ! Li‘“‘ FOR PRESENT AND FOR FUTURE NEEDS ERE are two good models for simple frocks, ectly adapted H to the August vacation and they also are ad,;.rim i:?o\?ige sciool gnyl * that will be here before many weeks. The dress to the left is made with a plain, long waisted body portion to which the plaited skirt is attached. Here, the materialis figured linen, with collar and cuffs of plain and the bélt is of leather, For the 6 year size will be needed . of material 27 in. wide, 234 36, 234 yds. & with 3¢ yd. 27 in) '!di’{oryf:e collar and cuffs. The May Man- ton pattern No. 8487 is cut in'sizes from 4 to 8 years. .7 The second frock is made with a belted blouse ova laited skirt. The blouse isan absolutely simple one,c! at the back and fim-'heg with a shaped yoke and ‘an unusual shapiag at the lower edge which gives it distinction. In the picture the blouse is made of white galatéa and the skirt is of rose colored, while the “Husband spoiler” is the term a friend of mi class of women. SR AR To S { FERALDINE WALTZ. (Lodg 8he says she would like to start a society for the suppression of hus- Prines’s Orchostra. band s A _LA CARTE. ( ) ipoilers. A i1 Prinee’s Dand. You may not immediately recognize the kind of women she means un- MARIGNY. (Sarablo & Oun- der that title, but I am sure you will when I describe them to you for they diolo.) T Prinee’s infect every neighborhood and every social greuyp, The husband spoiler is either a single Woman, a restless young mar- ried woman or more rarely a widow. It is Rer habit to systematically spoil every young and would-be contented and well-behaved young hus- band who comes within her reach. She Laughs At Everything He Says. ( MY BIRD Her methods of doing it are various. One is to laugh at his every at- n, is the stellar 2 master-film from &irl, believs jueen discovers affair, she, in re- jen to his suit. There laughter aplenty in rentures, . = The bal- s made up of reeld from the ters, adding much ito a well” ar- ld_ susroundings ol and’ delightful _of “The Song of star cast of favor- _for the last time Spendthrift” a six the famous Porter drama. “The Spend- L ramatic story of 8213 Girl's Dtéu., 10 Design by Moy llnu-/? rose colored material also makes the bands. Any simple washable material can be used for the present and for a and the like are special favorites while many weeks to come but linen, galatea cretonne is one of the novelties of the ‘season. The dress would be pretty made with the skirt of plain white and the blouse of cretonne banded with the white. """ For the 12 year'size will be required 21{ yds. of material 27 in. wide, 1 s. 36 or 44, for the blouse; 214 yds. 27 or 36 in. wide, 13{ yds. 44, fér the’ikylg 3 ‘The May Manton pattern No. 8213 is cut in sizes from 10 to I . Th above patterns will be mailed to any gddmsa by the Fashion D:pa:r}xee:fof thi: /paper, on receipt of ten.cents for each. a woman’s extravagance and folly, which’ hammers home & lesson of amazing reality and is one that should not be missed. Several sin- gle reel comedies and dramas aug- ment toddy's program. BENEFIT CONCERT AT POLI'S SUNDAY Sunday evening’'s benefit concert at Poli’s theater will give local people an opportunity to see pictures of Win- Britain ROS. & ARLINGTON’'S AT 215 AN, NIGHT 8:15 AUG.’ FRIDAY, 6 NALAIS N/MINGIE 7N WORLDS &l CHAMPION LLA (HIMSELF) chell Smith’s successful comedy: “The Only Son.” Mr. Smith, who is well knewn in Hartford and Farmington, where his home is, has written many tery successful plays, but “The Only £on” is one of those.that proved to be particularly adapted to the motion picture camera, Ancther reature of the program is_“The Sea Wolf,” a dramatic production from Jack Lon- dcn’s popular book. There will be a Charley Chaplin comedy picture and many other single reel comedies and dramas, a program of fourteen reels. Ne¢ admission is charged, but.a silver collection will be taken at:the door, to be distributed among the poor of the city. Begining Monday afternoon, the Poli Players will present the mowun- tain play, “The SBhephera of the Hills,” a play that has proven as popular as the novel upon which it is founded. Millions have read, thc book and they will be pleased to know that Harold Bell Wright, who wrote it, assisted in the dramatization with Elsbery : W. Peynolds and they have succeedéd in retaining the atmosphére and the characters of thé book. Mr, Ayres, Miss Skirvin and the other Poli favorites will have ample opportunity to display their talents in this Teally beautiful play, for its lines ere strong, its situations intensely Cramatic and its themé all-absorbing 2nd Interesting: It will be staged in &n elaborate manper and otherwise présented up t6 the usual high Peoll standard, SUNDAY CONCERT Will Be Given at Compounee DIy American Band of New Britain. Following is the program fer uext Sunday’s concert: SR | March, “Ye Boston Tea Party.” Pryor Overture, : ‘Waltz Hesitation, ‘“Avec Moi” ,., Selection, “The Only Girl” a, "Cows May Come.”. Von Tilzer b, “I''m Going Back to the Farm® Cigenasuaiase e ieres s iea, CBerlin Grand Selection, “Alda” ,..,, Verd! Cornet Solo. “I Hear You Caliing b L R R S e (Mr, Schwietser.) a, Starlight ,.,..s00000.,. Cruger b.“A La Carte” ,.,,..,, Holzmann Selection, “High Jinks.” ;,,,, Priicl Finale. “Daughters of America”,, R I e TR W, H. Bishop, Director, The popular 75¢ Sunday diunérs have attracted large crowds to the “Bohemian . Girl.',,.Balfe Lazerup Herbert Marshall Lamype complishments. There never was a iight like it. No heavyweights ever withstood the terrific blows that were délivered by these two mighty masses of musele, and no heavyweight battle €ver went so many rounds, Both men were in the pink of con- l dition. When one realizes they fought one hour and forty minutes, harder than two men ever fought before, and no man could begin to fight that length of time, unless he was in the perfection of pugilistic fitness. Dur- ing the exhibjtion of Willard and his sparring partner, the twenty-fifth and twenty-sixth rounds will be jllustrated -—blow for blow—feint for feint— | move for move. | . ; BIG FEATURE FILM BILLED FOR KEENEY’S Among the photo-play features to be shown at Keeney’s during the next few weeks will be: “Where the Trail Divides,” with Roberi Edson in the principal role, which will be shown on Monday and Tuesday; “The Governor's Lady,” Edith Matthison playing the leading role, the headliner on Wednes. day and Thursday; Murguerite Clark in ‘“‘Gretna Green,” Friday and Satur- dey and “The Sins of a Mother,” Thursday and Friday. The last named is probably the greatest motion picture ever produced. It is expected to create a sensation when it is shown In this city and the management ex- pects capacity audiences will see it. The above mentioned are but a few of the big feature flims that are on thie 1ist for the New Britam playhouse 1for the balancee of the summer. All e Paramount film releases as well as ihe features produced by the Big Four combine are to be shown here in their regular turn, These screen dramas are without question the wonders of the motion picture worla. There is nothing produced either in this coun- try or abroad that will equal them and it cannot be gainsaid that the Keeney patrons are not getting the best avail- able. “Sunshine Molly,” with Lois Weber playing the lead, will be prominent or. the Keeneyscope program #&gain tonight. offer tonight a first class vaudeville show. Anthony and Atbano give a ! musical entertainment. Their accor- dion concert is a splendid feature of their specialty. Stewart and Stewart have a song and conversation skit that gives entire satistaction and the Koppe trio gives a clever exhibition of hoop rolling and juggling. Menu for Tomorrow Breakfast. Fruit Fried Egg Plant Broiled Potatoes Gems Coftee Lunch Rice and Mushroom Croquettes Molded Corn Starch Tea Dinner Broiled Mutton Boilea Rice Caper Sauce Lima Beans Green Pepper Salad Wafters Cheese Frult Farina Coftee Rice and Mushroom Croquettes— Peel and cut ons-half of & pound - of mushrooms into small pleces; add two tablespoonfuls of butter and sim- mer, covered for half an hour, Add one-half of a cupful of well washed rice, one ° tablespoonful of finely chopped onion, one-half of a tea- spoonful of salt, ons-quarter of a tea- spoonful of whits pepper and one pint of water and simmer until the rice is tender, More water may be added if necessary to keep from burn- ing, When done, stir in two well beaten eggs, taks quickly from the fire, add one tablespoonful of finely chopped parsely and put away until cold and firm, Form into small cro- A quettes, dip each Into slightly beaten egg, roil in fine crumbs and fry in smoking hot fat, © Fruit Farina—Heat to the seald whatever kind of berries you can pro- cure—for color effect some red var- jety is really best—and press out sv- ery drop of juiée, ‘hot, sufficient sugar to make swect, then measurs and turn inte the double boller, When scalding sift in one tablespoonful of farina fer each heif pint of iiquid, Btir frequently until the mixture thiciens, then cover and cook slowiy for half an heur, id in weited cups and serve very with cream and sugar, 3 ! Besides the ‘‘movies” Keeney’'s will | Yetters. Add to it, while| doing afterward, tempt of humor, hawever feeble, until he begins to fancy himself a won- derful wit. The result is that he goes about bering people by his attempt- ed humer like a spoiled child who has been laughed at once for some fairly bright saying and keeps repeating it. When his wife tries to keep him from making himself ridiculous, he tells her that she has no sense of humor and cannot be expected to appreciate his. Makes Him Think His Wife Bosses Him. Another method is to try to make the husband think by reference and allusion or by open assertion that his wife is trying to dominate him. “It's easy to see who has the last say in your house,” she says or “How lucky your wife is to have a husband who lets her manage everything just as she wants,” or “I never say 4 man so devoted to his wife.” Whereupon, the husband who has béen merely showing a kindly consideration for his wife’s wishes instead of riding rough shod over them the way some men do, begins to think perhaps he is making an easy mark of himself and to grow less considerate and more exacting. Pities Him For ‘His Uncongenial Wife. ‘ An advanced stage of the husband spoiling habit is that in which the spoiler pities the husband for having a wife uncongenial to him, or in- capable of keeping up with him. Of course the husband must have shown his wijlingness to accept such sympathy before it was proferred, and that is detestable in him, but it does not justify the woma nwho gives it. In justice, I must admit that the husband spoiler does mot always mean to make trouble. Far from it. Many times she just doesn’t think, simply wants to make herself agreeable, and other times she does sincere- 1y believe that the husband i not appreciated. Occasionally, I suppose, she is right, but she should remember that the best of husbands has his seamy as well as his smcothly finished side, and that she might not be so warm- ly appreciative if she could see both. T “Cost Relative to Value of Goal”; Declares Advocate of Suffrage Alice Barrows Replies to Miss Rudyard’s Views on Wo- men Securing Vote—Education Consists in-“Do- ing to Learn” Not “Learning to Do.” {By Sarah Addington in New York Tribune). “Beekman, 3000!” said Alice Bar- rows Fernandez energetically to the telephone operator. The next minute a reporter was hustling up to Ther office to receive her answer to Char- lotte Rudyard’s statements quoted in Wednesday's Tribune. Mrs. Fernandez bégan without pre- amble, her first topic being the ‘“‘Not- Eventually, Why Not Now. “Really, this sort of thing exas- perates me very much, she sald spiritedly. “ ‘Not yet’ is such a fu- tile thing to say. There are always the ‘Not-Yetters'; the history of every radical movement shows this group of those who are afraid of the new thing, afraid of change. Professor Robjnson at Columbia,.in one of his books, says that evén during the In- ably living under 4 democracy. /First of all, woman suffrage is a distinct right, if we wish to maintain & dém- ocratic governm ‘Government should depend upon the will of those governed’ may be a trite phrase, but it has a world of meaning. And women, being governed have a right to express their will i the only farce- ful way there is of doing it,— by vot- ing. But that's the mere beginning. Just the ballot in itself would mean nothing if it did not lead to bigger things. ~ But there are these con- siderations; ;that women will have freedam to develop in al difections | that opportunity will be thrown open to them in every line of achieve- ment; that they will be able to im- prove their own conditions of living and working. One waman out of every three in New York city Is a working woman. The average wage is $7 to $8 a week. through, if you’re not a voter? None. ‘What good have women's strikes ever done? None. “Then, next, there is the fact that quisition there must have been those who said, ‘Oh let’s not abolish the Inquisition entirely quite yet:; Jjust let the horrors be mot quite so hor- rible’ The Not-Yetters don't accom- plish anything excépt hindrance. And not as mueh of that as they would like, doubtless. “Now, Miss Rudyard says that suf- frage methods cost too much. Well, cost is relative to tho valué of the goal; if the ‘thing desired is desired enough, any price will be cheap. Would we rather travel an easy road that leads nowhere than a hard one that takes us to a rich land? And besides, I don’'t admit for one sec- ond that suffragists are sacrificing too much. 1 think theé present type of woman is thé finest woman there has ever been. She has integrity, far-sightedness, humanness, the abil- ity to do the day’s work—these four qualities most to be desired in men ; and women. Suffrage is developing her, educating her. Talks Academically. “And right here let me say that when Miss Rudyvard talks about ‘education, not agitation,’ she is talk- ing academically, More than that, she is talking about education as it once was, not as it is, Education used to be learning to do: how it fs doing to learn, M ducation as viewed of moderns is a practical thing, an active working basis for living. 8o, I say, the minute women have the ballot, that minute responsibility Is going to settle upon them and they will get extremely busy, Women will- fesl that the burden of proof rests upon them and they will make good, That's human peychology; we always live up to a standard when success depends upen 'it, There's ne such thing as learning first and The two things are simultaneous. And besides, we're net an entirely ignorant elass; women as a whole are bétter educated than men.” Women and Demeocracy, “Miss Rudyard says we musi'nt ask f#or representatisn because we're wemen, women have a great deal to offer to the world, and the world, self-suffi- clent as it may be, is every day re- ceilving the benefit of women’s minds and work; the ovte will only make her more forceful. But lastly, and most important, the freedom of wo- men (s going to make for democracy, and democracy means the richest de- velopment of the race. I don't mean anything by democracy so philan- thropic as ‘improving mankind,’ but I do mean that state of society where each persan has the full opportunity to express himself. An Mlusion Dispelled. “And now,” Mrs. Fernandes straighténed up indignantly, “here we have the statement that women should be ecomically cheap. Good- ness knows they are, but that they should be is atrocious. I've sald this | bundreds of times, but I'll say it & few hundred more if people don't know it; That according to investi- gation and figures which I myself heiped to gather for the Russell Sage Foundation, there are just as many women working between the ages of 26 and 45 as there are between 16 and 25. So that women's prime in the working world is just the same as men’s prime, and this talk about women being economic iriconstants is all bosh. I we could only dispel that illusion from the minds of un- sclentific people! “Put that In black type, can't you? “Nor do I concede for cne mintite with Miss Rudyard that ability de- pends upon vitality, Or that women haven't as much vitality as men. She has no right to say that when many, many physiclans and investigators elaim for women quite as muech en- duranee ga for men, And her ex- haustian idea made me have the best laugh I've had for a long time, I must say that meeting men's minds doesn’t tire me in the Jeast; it's great. fun te meet any mind, I den’t find that vast difference between the minds of the two sexes, But the only mind it tives me to meet s an anti-suf. frage mind, And that's because thers But what good | does it do to try to get legislation | OF RADISE. Medloy. (Berlin & Gottler.) Prince’s Bavd. Columbia Grafonola Leader, $85.00 ejedtor, EASY TERMS. Bnogmi WHEELER 128 MAIN ST. Hallinan Bldg. it ! By DOROTHY CLARKE So sorry you couldn’t have boss with us ..... We had a delight’u little luncheon party and almos minsed the train ..... Yes, Lucille i going first to Racquet Lake and then to Lake George ..... Bhe can't haip but have an awfully good time, bu! she dldn’t like the idea of leaving all .. She was wea P stunning traveling suit of dark bjue gabardine ..... The color schem: was charming! . Gold and blue ++s.. The pockets were outlined ir« gold embroidery and the coat wa lined with gold brocade ..... It was softly rolled back in two sort of lapel eftects and there, and In the slashed sleeves, the Drocade was go agsinst the dark blue ...... was aleo a smart lttle white walst-cont butomed up with

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