New Britain Herald Newspaper, August 17, 1915, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

iay and Thursday Smith” S THEATER ‘Week, Twice Daily. b"Poll Players G OF DAN MATTHEWS” p. - Eve.. 10, - 20, 30, 50c aily filom 12:t0 2 p. m. .80 SENTS Salt Water Journeys steet sééamships from and. Penobscot Bay its; also to Portland N. B. Fifteen Steam- A Boston and ith the principal cities resorts along the coast ew ‘Brunswick and Nova £ ' oW THAN BY RAIL stickets at all Railroad Offices. Baggage hrough. For full infor- address Passenger tment, India Wharf, | for Tomoerrow Breakfast 4 Fruit Liver and‘Bacon icakes R Lunch * d Cold Corned Beef Coffee Cake Dinner Turtle Soup Mashed Potatoes iflowér 3 Styffed' Peppers m: ',Beun Salad % “ Cheese Cahtaloupes Coffee icon—Have the liver cut ices; cover with . boiling wa- ‘morflent or two, then drain [Cover the bottom of the pan glices of fat bacon and set ¢ of the fire where the fat try out, pouring-it off once en draw the pan forward bacon is very lightly colored. to a hot dish ana keep st each slice of liver with ana flour, put the pan ov- | ter part of the fire and ook the meat; the slices e‘through but not hard: fm'‘in the dish, arrange the them and serve. If a flesired sift into the hot pan dry flour to absorb the fat, ‘brown and add gradualiy boiling water to make a i k- gravy Season, boil nt and pour round the liv- ash—Free a piece of cold ai from pones and fat and b FIpint of the minced jw. one-half of . a teaspoonful gide] ire stant teaspoonful | third of a teaspoonful of one teaspoonful of Worcester one tablespoonful of toma- Melt one tablespoonful of pping in a frying pan, moist- eat wiih a little good gravy, seasonings and spread in the read over-the top one tea- DL thé and draw ere it ) inutea; £t ok slowly for loppy. d be moist Have ready a num- pin slices of toast on a heated Bd e néptly; -poached cgg for | Heap the hash on the | with the eges and a Tea By DOROTHY CLARKE You know fringe trimming on hats is absolutely the very latest thing. ..... I saw-a perfect beauty in town; but, my dear, I simply couldn’t buy it .. My month’s account is awful- ly overdrawn ..... Don’t breathe this to a soul .. Imadeone ... .. I bought green, yellow, blue and black silk - fringe ..... I dug up a last winter’s black velvet hat Sort: of a bowl shape, and in an hour’s time I had a simply stunning of the “last word in Mil- I covered the crown the the | exomple linery” with a double row of each of different colors and all around brim I used the black fringe But I thought of a perfect vou could make from that satin hat Use the fringe in the Roman colors, they are extremely smart, and get it in very narrow widths ..... Would vou? All right, I'll come over ..... Good-bye, beauty black “We Can Teach the Nose to Do What It Should Do,” Ann Haviland Declares That Says Artistic Perfumer It Will Be a Long Time Before Sense of Smell in America Will Be What It Should Be. (By Sarah Addington in New York Tribune.) When Mary Jane is a tiny baby she is given a ball, which she balances preceriously between pink wrinkled fingers, and thus does she learn to feel, At 'he same age she is given a dose of ipecac, and as she wriggles her ton- gue and squeezes up her face her parents cry rapturously; “Oh see she knows it tastes different!” At five she is taken to symphony concerts to develop her sense or music .and car- ried to art galleries to see beautiful pictures. But where, oh where, does Mary Jane's little nose come in? What ‘raiving does that important organ re- ceive ? Gratefully Acknowledged. If it is a nose to be admired, then it is merely gratefully acknowledged, powdered and tilted whenever cooking cabbage is to be detected.” If it is un- duly large, or exaggeratedly carmine, or queerly contoured, it is deplored and powdered and minimized. But thet's all. And thus while four of the senses are cajoled and urged along, that fifth one, the sense of smell, is uttarly neglected. And this is one of the greatest griefs of Ann Haviland, artistic perfumer, whose business it is to perfume peo- ple °nd homes and theaters according to ireir kind, and to whom the sense of smell {s as essential as the other sense much more appreciative. They are willing to have the pure, naturdl, del- icate flawer perfume simply because they can smell it. “And men, no matter what they say, adore perfume. Of course, they don’t like the heavy, cheap sort, and that is the source of their long-felt objection; but of true perfume theyv are very sensitive. 1 usaully give them - vertivert, put up in Chinese Jars with big mannish labels. Once in a while they come in hsre done up in lavender or lilac out of their wives' bottles, but I soon talk them out of that.” “Perfuming is an art, not just now does it compare to other ar I asked, knowing full well where in the pyschology and the science lay. but owndering about the art principle. A Futurist Trend. i “Perfuming follows futurist art,” replied Mrs. Haviland, “and by that I means the color side of futurist art. I am perfectly mad about color, and | as I think color harmony I think per- fume harmony. Am I making my- self clear? Well, take Poiret’s color for example. They're what. I call true. And in exactly the same way that he dchieves trueness in color T try to make my perfumes true. Now, not all people like Poiret, or futurist art, or my perfumes. 3ut when they are educated they do. And just because at first they do not is not, sufficient reason for condemnation. sons don't enjoy lettuce maybe, 1 good vegetable. “It is the neglected sense,” she said, | qelights, in her Fifth avenue laboratory, “and perfuming is the neglected art. The middle class women in the United States are perfect bores when it comes tc. perfumes. They simply have no idea of what perfume can mean, They want heavy, sensational odors that stun the senses instead of stimulating them. They don’t seem to get the meaning, the feeling, the spirit of perfume. They buy all kinds of strorg stuff and drug the air with it aud imagine they enjoy it. Why, they don't even know how to apply their nose to a flower!"” “TTow does one apply one’s nose to er I asked, meekly, with a pic- of “The Woman and the Rose” ba mind. Smell- s scemed to he a tic process, not to an amateur. Here ture som. where ing flowers deiicate and be attempted were pointers. How People Trea: Flowers. my by most people crush a flower their nose, and then sniff for fe. But odor should be carried «n air current, and the flower should thercfore be heid at a slight distance from the nose. Haven't you ncticed that vou smell better out in . cpen air? Don’t you know that Irdian can smell anything, you know, because he merely stands up in his can.e and smells. He doesn’t jab thinzs up to his nose. “Tut more than that, people should think when they smell. 1 tell them to smell with the back of their heads. Perfume has an intellectual appeal. Only most people confuse their per- fume ideas rather sadly. TFor exam- ple, mast women won't have helio- iroue because it's lavender, and they rhick that's aged. loo" the fact that heliotrope has other cualities; heliotrope T always give to thinking people, not to old people. Smell The Lost Sense. “New York women have spoiled their sense of smell, I think, by arti- gly chopped parsely. ficial living Western women T find oor odors carry muci further? An | They entirely over- | “Most of my customers are perfect of course. I rarely have man or woman who is hopeless on the subject of perfume. By hope- sess 1 mean the kind who want lilac because they think the lilac bush is a pretty bush, not hecause it means anything to them. Rut still there’s a long, long w to travel before the sense of smell in American will be what it should he, what it was in the Orient, and what it is in Europe. There is one function of odors that | we all seem to get. though, and that's the function of a iation. We can remember our friends by the per- fumes they bhetter than by the clothes they wear, as well as by the quality of their voices. And we'll grow to appreciatc our noses more as we smell more. Now you can sniff lovely orors in the theater—I've just finished perfuming the MM Theater for 'Nobody Home'—s in public as well as at home we can teach the “c do what it should do—smell use Ise CHAPLIN AND CLARK IN KEENEY SPECIALS Charlie Chaplin in “A Run on the | “Wildflower,” with Mar- guerite Clark in the principal role, will be features of the motion picture at Keeney's tonight. The Chaplin comedy is said to be one of the funniest in which the eccentric | colebrity has appearcd. It won the approval of the first nighters and also this after- Jank’” and { program pleased a large audience noon. In “Wildflower,” Marguerite Clark ves a most bewitching characteriza- tion. This dainty little woman is at | her best in the part she piays and she scores a signal’ triumph by her re- | markable acting. The piece is in four parts and is most nzeresting. act of Atwood and Pinto, a pair of talented artists. They give an ad- mirable impersonation of Caruso and Daily Fashion Talks BY' MAY MANTON SMART SUITS FOR LITTLE BOYS 'OTHING ever takes the RIace of the blouse suit for the little boy and here are two good models. No. 7986 is made in middy style and is of course . drawn on over the head. In the picture, the material is white linen trimmed with checked and there are bands on the trousers as well as on the blouse for that treatment is new and fashionable. For the warmer weather, the sleeves can be made shorter and of course there are numberless materials that are appropriate, but galatea, linen, gingham and the like suggest them- selves and are especially practical and appropriate. If liked, the blouse could be made of white, while the trousers and the trimming are of color. For the 4 size will be required 3%£ yds. of material 27 in. wide, 2 yds. 36 or 44 in. wide, with 1 yd. 27 for the trimming. The pattern 7986 is cut in sizes from 2 to 6 years of age. Heading the vaudeville bill is the | Genee, imitating this parr of stars in skillful fashion. - Evans and Craw- DresicN BY Mav MATNON 7986 Boy's Suit, 2 to 6 years. 7830 Boy's Suit, 2 to 6 years. The second suit is belted and made with a tuck over each shoulder that pro= vides fullness, Here, it is made of striped galatea trimmed with plain, but there is a light weight éponge that is much used for suits of this kind; linens are always handsome, gingham and chambray are much liked and with these ma- terials is a wide range of color and design. In the back view, the same suit is shown made of white linen with short sleeves and it is pretty as well as com- fortable for the summer. If liked, the edges of the collar, the sleeves and the fronts of the blouse and belt can be scalloped, for scalloped edges are extremely fashionable for small boys’ costumes. For the 4 year size will be required 414 yds. of material 27 in. wide, 314 yds. 36 in. wide, 23{ yds. 44 in. wide, with 1 yd. 27, for the collar of colored material and 14 yd. of white for the trimming. The May Manton patterns of both suits Nos. 7986 and 7830 are cut in sizes from 2 to 6 years. They will be mailed to any address by the Fashion Depart- ment of this paper, on receipt of ten cents for each. offering that take advan- ford offer a novel song and dance specialty and Orville anc ¥rank per- form some thrilling acrobatic feats, There is widespread interest in the announcement that on Thursday and Fr v, Selig's great picture, The ary,” will be shown. This seven part Red Seal feature is a picturiza- tion of the famous novel of the same name. Wednesday and Thursday Fritzie Scheff will be seen in “Pretty Mrs. Smith” and on Friday and Saturday “The Unafraid,” with Rita Jolivet, will be the principal attraction. time tonight, and is an 21l Fox patrons should tage of. “THE CALLING OF DAN MATTHEWS” AT POLI'S “The Caling of Dan Matthews, bresented this week at Poli’s theater by the Poli Players, hot weather play, in that it requires no mental effort on the part of the audi- ence, and this despite the fact that it Tae action runs so smoothly and the prob- is presented and solved with | little real force that the whole thing may be taken as a matter of course by is a good “GREATER LOVE HATH NO MAN."—FOX’S is somewhat of a ‘“‘problem play lem s0 to pic- famous No Man,” When the producers decided turize Frank L. Packard's novel: “Greater Love Hatn they cast about for several months seeking the proper type o play the role of Varfe. After no little diffi- Corrigan was decided < an ecualy fong time “orrigan to forego but com- that what one who does not believe in overheat- in the time. In other words, one does not have to bother with the problem if he does not want to, but simply to listen to the telling of a bucolic The play is a dramati the novel by Harold Bell Wr It por- irays the struggles of a voung minis- ter, Dan Matthews, against conven- tional ideas of Christianity in a small town. The struggle is too much for him; the conventional ideas win, and he sets forth to fight the battle in oth- er fields. Dan Matthews comes to Cornith as the pastor of the church. The son of one of the elders of tie church, judge Strong, has betrayed a girl, Grace Connors. She tries to com- mit suicide. Dan Matthews attempts to help her in her trouble, and be- comes her friend, at the same time becoming the friend of a nurse, Hope Farwell, who takes care of her. cause of his friendship for these two he is dismissed from his pastorate. Of course e marries Hope. Some re- tribution is furnished in the last act by the disclosure that the judge, who has been instrumental in securing the dismissal is a thief in that concealed the fact that a ing his brain summer upon. It 1o induce Mr. several legitimate cngagements, the fact that the picture s now pleted is the best demonstration these producers generally get they go after, “Greater IL.ove Hath No Man a thrilling and intense darama calling tor a great amount of emotional act- ing and in this sphere of the drama no man on the American stage ex- -ceds Emmett Corrigan in ability. remarkable performance as the ar in “The Deep Purple” and his powerful and impressive .efforts in “Other People’s Money” and dozens of other Broadway successes, stamped him as one of the leading, if not the foremost American dramatic actor. ‘‘Greater JL.ove Hath No Man" will he seen at Fox's tomorrow and Thursday when local lovers of the ent drama will get their first glimpse of Mr. Corrigas: as a screen artist Anita Stewart, tiest and talented * s is picturedom’s pret- star, supported by I le Williams and an all star cast is seen in the fourth chapter of “The Goddess,” the serial beautiful, while Tleine Davies, the Broacway favorite s seen in “Sunday’ a Shubert produc- tion in five acts picturized from Ethel Barrymore's greatest stage success. In conjunction with the two above at- tractions the Pathe News with its cur- rent events will be shown ror the last Mulhall had been knowledge. of Deboran paid without the latter's The play has several melodramatic features; an attempt at suicide on a dark stage, the discovery. that a pillar of the church is really a scoundrel, and the struggles of a girl outcast. The melodramatie incidents furnish practically all of the action. 3e- | mortgage which he held on the home ' | put into the mixture. One day last week 1 received a p trade, advertising a summer sale. The next day I went in town to t mark-downs listed in that tolder. There were several gowns marke dollars and I ed the towards me where I ¢ racious look :1d 4 these How I Was Rebuked For A The graciousness, the smile and t She led me languidly toward the fac dicated the gowns. She did not inqui way try to serve me. She simply st giving the rack a casual whirl now « goods. I was plainly in her eyes a tention. Now this incident if it were uniq But is is not unique. On the contra interest folder. in mark-downs advortised in act that way. had several cuts and must h.ve coust and send aut. And yet here was th the customers were in danzer of rece The employer was heckoning cus ing them away with his left—surely a I Am a Great Mind you, 1 am not criticising sal I have the greatest adriration for t marvelous taste and ahil in contri Moreover, 1 know that they are often out to shop rather than to buy Nev this column, I think that thcre are sympathy they ought t¢ have with t pennies. Anad if T were an empiover 1 sh ployees that I did not want the draw inta advertising nullified by their su who responded to that advertising. Admir a Add a little lemon to the preserved | pears. should be Al carefully washed. salads One of the best of cooked greens | is Swiss chard. A small goldfish bowl is good to | whip cream in. | Fruits are often delicious sweet- ened with honey. juice is an excellent dr® patients. Grape for fever Whole or ground cloves are s2id | to prevent moths, When you take baby | a toy or two along. ) - | visiting, take ! Vanilla ice cream will often stomach set- | tle a sick Apple sauce should always he ! caten to counterbalance sdugage and pork. | A cellar that has been freshly | white-washed will give butter a strong taste. that is nainted found in a dark The coal shovel white will be easily cellar. The dough of entire wheat bread should be softer than that of white bread. | desserts are the fruits, gelatines Plain and The light and stewed junkets Lettuce, mustard and cress are: ‘HI good finely chopped if one wishes a change. If you are going to cook an erg ! that is cracked, first put a litile salt in the water. New lamp wicks should be soaked in vinegar before using. They will not smoke. Paste the owner's initials each towel used on a large family towel rack. : over Always push bac the skin at the root of the nails just after wash- ing the hands. | —_— | Iy and | to the Knives are cleaned more easi thoroughly with soda added scouring brick. Salads have a great deal to with health, hecause they are so of mineral salts. Qo full When making pumpkin pie, add a | dash of quince preserve and the flavor will be improved ! Prunes hidden in a meringue, the meringue browned in the oven, make a delicious dessert. J a i The newest omelet pan ! parts, so that the omelet may ped over and over. in be flap- two is | 1 g 1 | Anybody afraid of germs should | take lemon juice daily, especially in | the drinking water. | It is convenient to have castors| j on the kitchen table and can he | rolled where desired 1 i 2 { A cake batter should he licaten | as little as possible after the flour is sort of thing has happeued to me again and again when I h How Can The Employers What puzzles me is how the employers can afford to let their emplcyees The advertising fo!der which I had received was a ten-paige affair. HOUSEHOLD | water, | the things to How Can They Afford It? rinted folder from a shop where 1 ry and avail myself of some of the o twelve smiling a4 down from twent ing saleswoman who gown nswering That Advertisenient. he =ail simultaneously i peared k and with a supercilions gesture in- re my preferences; she did not in any ood back and eyved me ind.flferently, nd then. I had asked for mark-down person not worthy of courtesy for at- sailed diss mentioning Much this shown my either the mewspapers or the printed ue would not be worth ry, it is characteristic Afford Tt? 1t np, print reception st the hundreds of dollars to e invitation nullified b iving if they accepted it tomers with his right hand and pugh- costly proceeding. cr Of The Saleswoman eswomen as a class; on the contrary, heir patience, their courtesy and the'r ving to gown themselves well exasperated by custome are ertheless, 1 have said before in great many of .them who lack the he woman who has to consider the “who as ould explain very clearly to ing power of the money perciliousness toward the 7o NOTES little borax, dissolved in warm will help to keep the chil- dren’s teeth clean and sound my em- that 1T put’ customers A After scrubbing thoroughly, make a few slits in the skins of potatoes that are to be baked. Some of the most remedial fruits are Jemons, grapsfruit, apples, or anges, grapes and pineapples Common soap, rubbed on the hinges of a creaking door, will do away with the trouble. Green at once cellar, vegetables, if not nesded= should be kept in a cool wrapped in a damp <cioth. Sandpaper the soles of just - enough to roughen many a fall will be saved. rhoes and new them, A hot-water platter is a the housewife whose “men folks" frequently late for dinner. s00n ta, are A slight biirn should be ‘wet in- stantly with vinegar and powdered with baking powder or flour. Put in pinch of salt and a dash of peppér in a huckleberry pie and the fruit will lose its inspidity. Having several pairs of boots amd shoes means that they will all last longer and keep in better shape. Make the matches you camping trip waterproof. them tuke OB » Simply dip in felted paraffin and dry. It is said that if flanneis - are wrung only slightly before hunging on the line they will not be so apt to shrink Lemon bharley water is both pwlat- able and nourishing for invalids, In hot weather it should have a little cracked ice in it. It is not wise to save fruit jar rab- bers from year to year: the rubber its spring and will not make* the jars airtight loses It is a good plan for a nousewife make daily a type-written list of be done by herself as servants to well as her To prevent door keys from ping out of the doors and being lost,, screw a small hook in each door frame and hang the key on it Aron- This the cucumbers, sliced dipped in meal or cracker crumbs and fried, make an excellent dish when large Indiun then is season Sew a loop to the inside of the kiddies’ school hats; they will then stay on the hook and not fall to the floor to be tramped upon The bone in real very small and shert. lamb chops e Little licious bits of flavor to tomato the pdd omelet a de- Boiled rice and stewed fige served together make a very good dessert. Sponges nre great germ collec! ors and should be scalded frequently Chicken stitute for cake fat butter is an exc when ont $ub. making a It is best to with the breast roast or pan chicken 1t down will be more juicy.

Other pages from this issue: