New Britain Herald Newspaper, January 8, 1916, Page 4

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YCEUM f'he Theater of Distinction— The Best Plays For the Best People In the Best Theater. TONIGHT “NEARLY MARRIED” B eek of Jan. 10 ; Manufacturers’ Week I'he CrossPlayers Bayard Veiller's Success in Four “Within e Law” buperior Scenic Equipment Augmented Cast, Etc. ame Prices—Matinees 10c and 20c. FEvenings, 10c, 20c, 30c 50c. s Will Be the Theatrical = Week Held in New Britain. Tremendous Acts. Largest .Ever Sam Bernard in “Poor Schmaltz” It’s a Scréam Don’t Miss It High Class Vaude- ville. PARSONS’ HEATRE—Hartford ONE NIGHT, JAN. 10 ler Francais Company in Edward Pailleron’s Comedy “LA SOURIS” (In French) to $1.50. Seats s: 25¢ on Sale. January 14-15 HE CINDERELLA MAN” fver Morosco's Latest Success, OX’S Keep Watching Me reveal I will here e fountain of youth. “High Class Entertainment and Recreation” daily AND THEATRE HARTFORD | eek of Jan. 10 | v, in order to decide what to do with | 1gt,” ! cident as a huge joke. B[ manner. NEW, BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY, JANUAKY 8, Goers and Women Readers - \/T > By ADELE LATIONSOF A WIFE GARRISON Y AR ‘What Harry 1Y) 1 name the person of all the world whom I would have wished not to Underwood Said. had been asked to meet in this em- barrassing I predicament of mine, should have said “Harr Underwood.” However, here he was, very much in evidence, and I had to think swift- promptly. him, I wondered how much he knew. Had Lillian told him that I was not going to accompany Dicky to dinner | at their home because of my engage- ment to dine with Jack, and was he standing here at the door of the taxi from malicious mischief? Or was he simply pursuing the gen- eral annoyance of me, which had ap- peared to be his purpose ever since he had met me? Whatever his sent about his tha motive, he busine: I must be realized You're surely going to give me a he persisted, his eyes fixed au- daciously on my face, his hand on the taxi door. “I'm sorrry,” T said as smoothly as possible, ““but you see I am not going in the direction of your home. Didn’t Mrs. Underwood tell you that 1 was not coming with Dicky for dinner, but perhaps would join you later? I have an engagement to dine with my cousin who has just returned from a year's absence in South America. A little shiver of disgust through me as my lips uttered the falsehood so smoothly. It seemed to me that I was launched, through no fault of my own, upon a course of deceit. But not for anything could I allow this man to know that T al- ready had dined with Jack, and that my cousin was even now hunting wild- 1y in the restaurant for my wedding and engagement rings which I had lost there. “They Can’t Find Them.” I could imagine his derisive smile if he should guess the truth, that upon a foolish impulse to keep my marriage a secret from Jack until the dinner should be over, I had taken off my rings and put them in my mesh ba He was so cynical, so malicious, that he was quite capable of telling the in- a ran I had a sudden terrifying vision of Dicky hea the incident of the rings from the smiling, sneering lips of this man. He must anything. But fate was against me. I had ! hoped that he would at once move on | when I told him I had an engage- ment. But wood. “How very engagement mockingly. ring not discover I had lost I did not know Harry Under- interesting. this dinner with cousin!” he said | “Where is cousin, by the | way? 1 should love to meet the dear chap. Lucky cousin, to be able to dine with the bride. I don’t suppose you would dine alone with me.” “You are perfectly correct in supposition.” 1 smiled, howeve I said it. Though the thought hu- miliated me, 1 realized that I could not afford to make an enemy of this man. Just then Jack the steps. your came rushing down One look at his white face. and I knew the rings had not been found. He was so upset that he did not notice Marry Underwood stand- ing by the taxl, did not see my warn- | ing glance, but blurted out despair- | ingly: | “It's not use, Margaret. find them anywhere.” “Jack, I want you to meet Mr. Un- derwood, a friend of my husband’s,” | 1 said hastily, hoping to save the sit- uation. “Mr. Underwood, my cousin, | Mr. Bickett.” | The End of Worr, The two men | funectorily. “Glad to meet you, Mr. Bickett,” | Ha Underwood said, in his effusive “Have you lost anything { valuable? Can I help in any way?"” They can’t shook hands per- them. of them and dropped into my lap. shrieked. and the sumptuous looked after the what Tuesday will and en Stanley evidence ers, same is jointly ing public at | “Nothing of any consequence,” I interrupted desperately. | | “Oh, 1 I see, nothing of any con- ! | sequence,” he replied meaning His | eves were fixed upon my ungloved ' left hand, which showed only too plainly the absence of my rings. “But don’t worry,” he continued. “Your Uncle Dudley is first cousin to an oyster. Wish you luck. So long,’ | and lifting his hat he strolled on the avenue. Jack wa up consulting his note book Fred Erwin’s ; WITH i DRENCE BENNETT Tmer Fenley, John Sherry kenting the live wire bur- ue “FRENCHEE” | ECTLY PASTEUR 1ZED MILK ; SEIBERT AND SON, I Street, Near Stanley, ' eams. Tel. connection. | T heard him give the address of apartment to the driver, “Drive slowl he added “*Who ! was that man?” he demanded stern- ‘He no one you ought to my is Jack, T even wife and I cannot said faintly. 1 dread him, but old friends of avoid meeting dislike he and Dicky’s, him “He will make trouble for you some day,” Jack returned. “I don’t like him, but there is nothing I can do to help you. I've messed things enough | | now What shall 1 do, All my vaunted self-r | T relt like the most vine in the world | “We're going straight to vour home to see vour husband,” he said. “You will introduce me to him, and then us. I shall explain everything to him. “Oh, such sides, take Jack?” T wailec liance was gone helpless clinging i leave Jack,” I said terrified, “he has an uncertain temper, and, be- he isn't at home He was to dinner at the Underwoods at o'clock, It must be that now. | think Mr. Underwood was just going | home to dinner.” | “Well, we must go there, then,” re- | | | [ | | | | | 1 ! ne, | ronts turned Jack. “Put on then the absence of the be noticed until I have a explain about them I picked up the gloves and unfolded Something glittering rolled out your gloves, rings won't chance to “Oh, Jack, my rings!” fairly ¥ Then for the first time in my life I became hysterical, laughing sobbing uncontrollably. 1 “WITHIN THE LAW"” OPENS HERE MONDAY Monda ance of Britain, the I witnesses the first perfom- ‘Winthin the Law” in New this play will be presented at .yceum by the Alfred Cross Play~ eers. The company is excellently cast. Miss Julia Herne who plays Mary Turner, the Jane Cowl part, has a rare opportunity to display her strength and versatality, while Elsic )uthern as the little crook from Chicago “Aggie Lynch” has the musing comedy part. Alfred Cross (whom his physicians assured will be on hand) will assume that splendid character: “Joe Ga “the Crook with a heart. Ins Burke will be played by Arthur Vinton who has been playing Mr, Cro. part this week in “Nearly Married" and play- ing it well. Ralph Collier will be the leading juvenile, Irving White his father and Messrs. Sheffield, Hen- Ross and the Misses Mor and Muriell will all be in The production will bhe and every detail will be The Stanley Works have on Monday which opens known as merchants week. the American Hardware Co. attend in a body, while T 1t Hine, North and Judd have tak- the Wednesday night house. Th Rule and Level will be in Thursday night and Land- and Clark have done the day night, while Saturday aken by Union Manufactu company and the American Hos All subscribers and general can be taken care of at the sale Crowell's Drug store, ton, cast, house is Fr. for iery. Fastion Hits by May Manfon " 8860 (With Basting Line and Added Seam Adllowance) Boy's Blouse, 12 to 16 year: 8351 Boy's Straight Trousers, 4 to 12 years. There is no costume that suits the small Yoy better than the simple blouse with ftraight trousers. It is thoroughly com- ‘ortable, it allows perfectly free move- wents, it has a smart effect and always ooks well. This blouse an excellent made with yoke back and plain and it can be finished with a *ound or with a sailor collar. The trou~ ters are the regulation straight sort which ® necessary to masculine habits. In the sicture, the trousers are made of blue | terge and the blouse is made of white pheviot striped with blue and with a t/hite collar. For the 12 year size the trousers will fequire 13{ yds. of material 36 or 44 in, wide, 114 yds. 54 in. wide; for the blous¢ ill be needed, 25§ yds. 36 in. wide, 3 yds. 44 in. wide. The blousc pattern No. 8860 is cut in} vizes from 12 to 16 years. The pattern of the trousers No. 83sr1 is cut in sin% rom 4 to 12 years. They will be mailed ‘o any address by the Fashion Depart« ment of this paper, on receipt o tents for each. Help Digestion To keep your digestive organs in good working or- der—tostimulate your liver, tone your stomach and regulate your bowels, take— CHEM; BESLLS Largest Sale of Any Medicine in the ‘World. Sold everywhere. In boxes. 10c.. 25¢. ten BL DOROTHY CLARKE. The other day I bought a stunning- hat, and, of arrived T was in untrimmed after it had never looking course, trimmed 2 the faintest fden what would look well on it, except some frightfully expensive Parad plumes, and those I refused to bu The crown was slightly pointed in front and back, having a large brim that went high up on one side. Everything 1 thought of would hav spoiled the lines. so when Irances came in she and 1 brought out ali my old hats, and then I suddenly had an inspiration. I took two long. uncurled ostrich feathers, shaded from white to an almost black taupe. sewed them where the high part of the brim bent into the crown, and continued them across and down, sewing them flat and letting the ends spread out to curl under the brim. The lines are unaltered, and the effect is lovely AT GRAND THEATER DURING COMING WEEK despair. 1 have hat, and hadn’t Fred Irwin, four years, an absence of that his “Ma- be at the Grand Theater next after announces jestics” will Hartford, ment week for the is headed artists an engage- The such well- Bennett, lasting entire company known week, by as Florence prima donna; Virginia Irwin, a live wire soubrette; Vennetta Pressler, a remarkably beautiful woman: Elmer Tenley, a well known comedian; John Sherry, Paul Cunningham, Margaret Sharp, Edna Roberts, the Xela sisters Emanuel List. The chorus deserves more than ordinary praise for the girls are good to look upon and pos- sess excellent voices. Tn the harmon- ious blending of the various melodics they are assisted by triple male quartet. The scenic and costume display is in keeping with the splendor for which Mr. Trwin's shows have always been known. The six Xela sister wonderful Enropean dancers their work is always a sensation. Timanuel List Profundo of note who has recently come to this country fter two yvea engagement in the - principal music Is of Lon- don. The burlesque, renchee,” is a mixture of original music, son jingling jollity and fun while has been a lavish expenditur costumes, scenic and electric fects and novelty surprises, ol for ef- SAM BERNARD SCORES IN SCREEN COMEDY Sam Bernard, the famous comedian, ! playing the lead in “Poor will be the feature attraction Keeney's again tonight. In picture Sam made his debut as 2 i sereen star and if the other films in which he appears are as successful, the great Taughmaker should become cven more famous in the film thun he was on the stage. Iriday night's audience was in a state bordering on nysteria while the picture ivas being shown and the advertising it received | today should draw a capacity house tonight. There will this he a number of other good pictures. including a new eni- sode in the “liazards of Helen" se ies. The management has arranged splendid photoplay program and first class entertainment is - red. There are three good vaudeviile acts on the bill and tonight theater [ miilve glven a final opportunity to | see them. Ttamilton Walton. charac- | ter impersonator, is one of the fa- | vorites. He has an act of al merit and its goes hig every night. There is an acrobatic specialty and 2 miniature musical comedy in addi- tion. a a sU | | | 'S APPEAL. Y. 8 denied Albany Jan he court of a appeals motion reargument of of Schmidt, the New York priest, | victed of the murder of Anna | ler ana sentencea aic in | tric chair at Sing Sing next for Har con- Aumul- the olec- week, | [ | DENIES SCHMID] | 3 i the appeal to HEADACHE Sick or nervous headaches always result from a torpid liver or a dis- ordered stomach—treat the liver, or sweeten the stomach, and the head is cured. The surest way is to take As Result of They invariably relieve all ail- ments resulting from liver or stom- ach trouble—quickly remove giddi- ness, palpitation, biliousness, indi- gestion, constipation, etc. ‘ Purely vegetable. Plain or Sugar Costed. 80 YEARS’ CONTINUOUS SALE PROVES THEIR MERIT. Dr. J. H. Schenck & Son, Philadelphia. | Menu for Tomorrow } { through, { be that there | Schmaltz” Breakfast. Sliced Bananas Cereal with Cream. Broiled S&moked Salmon Rusks Coffee Dinner. Windsor Soup. Chicken Cutlets, Lamb Mint Mashed Potatoc Salad Roast Sauce Fruit Checse Parfait Coffee Supper. Stuffed Kgs Olive Sandwiches Macaroon rcakes | Tea. | Soup—Put into a sauce- | pound potatoes, half parsnip, small piece large onions. all cut pieces, then add one sugar ,and one tablespoo put it on the fire to set add two quarts of wat { for one hour. Put through \ strainer, using a spoon to press it and return it to the pan tablespoonful of flour that has been moistened in one cupful of milk, and hoil five minutes. Add «alt and pepper to taste, and serve. Windsor pan, one turnip, one celery, two in small spoonful ful butter hot then nd boil One of the many pathetic incidents connection with the war is shown The children in the accompany- ing picture are orphans, made so by the The picture was taken in ,the yard of the Children’s home in in ere. with a here rd I T housands Made Orphans European War | Berlin. All the orphan asylums and i other institutions for both old and & | ;cung have been filled to overflowing since the war, and Germany is con- fronted with another in caring for them. Macaroon Pancakes.—Mix together | two ounces flour, two ounces pound- ed macaroons, grated rind of one or- ange and two ounces of sugar. Beat up two eggs and add three-quarters of a pint of milk. Stir the eggs and milk gradually into dry ingredien making thereby a batter. Warm frying pan, put in small piece of lard, rub it all over the pan. Then put in | one teaspoonful melted lard to make a thin over bhottom of the pan. Heat | it till a faint smoke begins to rise. | Then take it off the fire and pour | in enough batter to thinly cover the | hot of the frying pan, turn carc- | . . l.(m‘\m;x"m when ready serve with milk | _ There is a young girl who T my window every morning on antSueay { way to work, who aly has | lightfully chic appearance. | very simple clothes, but they have an | air. She could walk down Fifth | Avenue and not look dowdy, which to | my mind is the supreme test. | ou may be thinking that her clothes, though simple, are probably very expensive. You are wrong. I though too, until I found that | she v stenographer with coni- | paratively little money to spend on | herself. " I've studied her | and I've come to the conclusion it is simply because she has touch passes her de- a MALONE’S REPORT ON ITALIAN LINER VERDI Collector of Port Investigators Un- <0, derstood to Claim There Were o No Gunners \board. tha $.—Collector e the Italian which arrived Thursday with two mounted, was received yesterday. It understood Collector Malone's neutrality investigators reported there were no Italian gunners aboard. The collector's opinion is understood to the presence of the guns has the Verdi's character of man. indicated that the state department will ask the Italian gov- ernment to have the guns removed before the Verdi sails. A DASHING H Ma- liner t ;:uiu What | What do I Well, for instance, Jan, on i, Wa lone's Giuseppe New York hington, report Y *The Touch™ the mean by touch is fine a thing better by instances) when other girls were hemoaning that their furs opened in the front and hence looked hopelessly old-fash- ioned, or cven before they had sensed that fact, this girl had fur- hished up her old fur by cutting off the worn edges and twisted it around to open at the proper angle under her left ear. Again, her veil is always hung | just the right angle, and I defy ar | one to tell anything that gives more style to a costume than a veil draped the very latest angle. T Call This An Admirable Quality. We were talking about this he other day and I how ndmired this quality in her. “I don't see anything particularl; not altered a merchant It has been at AT OF girl said much She wears | since then | (one can often de- | the fact | From Styles to Tact | admirable about picking up the latest | styles,” said my companion rather | sniffly. | 1 do. presupposes us cultivate | observation. No girl who serving, with eyes looked at but saw what was before | them, would pick up the little trickss of style as this girl does. I don’t know her personally, but I have heard that she quick and | alert in her office work and live and | interesting in her social life, and I | don’t wonder. Observation stores the | that of of do most habit For the ability to a habit which too little—the wasn't alert and ob- that not only is mind with interesting things and makes its possessor interesting and worth knowing:. act An Outcome | Furthermore, of Observation. observation is goes or perhaps 1 is hand with tact say, tact of the habit is the unobserving people who are always making breaks, say |ing and doing the little unki Ilh!ngi that they would know Dbetter hand in | would | | development It better a spiritval of observa- | tion | | than to say or do if they had their eves and their minds open. It is the | observing person who notices how it pleases Mrs. A. to be asked about her plants and how touched Mrs. B. is by inquiry for her mother. the habit of taught in our ols could be introduced not only separate mind cise but as part _ of the work in everg cou 1 think | our children would the gainers. 4 - o o RN S any I wish [ observation | couta be It it as a CARDINAL MERCIER | WILL GO TO ROME Berlin Assures Prelate No Obstacle Will Be Raised As to His Return to Belgium. —The Bel- | n has been Rome, January sian minister to the Vat } informed that Cardinal Mercier, pri- xception- | | mate of Belgium, intends to leave for | Tome after presiding at the consecra- tion, to take place in a day or two, of the new bishop of Tournai Cardinal idea of coming to for the consistory able to Mercier abandoned the Rome last because he was un- guarantees that he would be permitted to return to Bel- gium. Having applied to General Von Bissing, military governor of Bel- gium for guarantee, he was informed that they could come only from Ber- lin, although the general gave him such assurance as he could- The re- from Berlin c: late to month obtain clever Frenchwon man’s black derby and f with navy blue velvet. side she jauntily coque feather—a to her allies. the sol- n took a ced the brim On the right placed a Spanish subtle Italians, compliment whose sponse ne too diers wear these piumes on their hats. enable the cardinal to attend the con | officially from sistory but he has now been informed Berlin that to his return no obstacle will be raised to Bel-* gium It the cardi will ar- » here about January 15. He will reside at the Belgium college during his here. Pope Benedict has been notified of his expected arrival, is expected al sta CARNFE . GOING SOUTW. Winter Florida Advice of Physiciana 2 Car- way Miami, Will Spend the on ‘oast Upon New York is Jan. Andrew negie his Fl house on to to spend the winter cruising in a boat the inland of the ast. The condition of Mr. Carnegie’s health at times dur= ing the last year has caused his friends some anxiety and his sojourn in the south is taken upon the advice of his physicians. His health is said to have shown considerable improve- ment recently. On his eightieth Thanksgiving, it Mr. Carnegie had his fortune and mously wealthy. on waterways Florida e birthday, last announced that away most of * longer enor- was given was no

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