New Britain Herald Newspaper, May 6, 1916, Page 10

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NEW, BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY, MAY 6, 1916. PEARSE SHOT FOR A g nesoneevorr § (5lobe Clothing House No' “larger-sized” Tires are made v gm than GOODRICH black-treads | . . L] IZE for Size, and e for Type, Goodrich Tires are as large as the largest put out tg any Maker, and WILL BE SO MAINTAINED. This means larger than corresponding Sizes and Types of many other Tires for which even higher prices are asfigd. It ‘means, too, the most generously made FABRIC Tires on the Market, at any price. Manufactured by the largest Rubber Factory in Amer- jca,with a 47 year Experience in Rubber-working, and a record for DEPENDABILITY which makes the above statements worthy of prompt acceptance. . : Made from the new ‘‘Barefoot Rubber,” which gives ) its maximum Traction with minimum friction,— with S e B e ) resilience, liveliness and long-life to Tires. the “provisional president of Ireland, was about thirty-three or thirty-four ; years of age and was known in Ire- 5 . . T land an an authority on Gaelic liter ature. He started in life as a b rister, but devoted most of his iine to literary and educational pursui‘s. RICED on that ¢Fair-List” basis initlated Jan, For some time he was editor of the 1st, 1915, by the B. F. Goodrich Co. which saved Gaelic Journal in Dublin and later founded St. Endas school, which he .more than $25,000,000 last_year to Tire-Users, i conducted up to the time of the Sinn through its propaganda against Padded Price-Lists. Fein rebellion. Pearse had inaay friends in the United States. He lec- riced so reasonably low that Competitors, whose prod- tured in this country on Trish ideals ucts are not comparable, claim superiority on the mere ana Gaelic literature, the proceeds of strength of their: Higher Prices (and the Larger Profits ishlsstueatening s Mo lnnport for of the Sinn they demand from the Tire-User and Dealer). Feinn rebellion was the son of an Goodrich Prices are based on what it costs the largest, Englishman, but was himself born and educated in Dublin. He was un- and longest experienced, Rubber Factory to manufacture e Tires, as ONE of the 269 lines of Goodrich Rubber Goods . _ for which it buys Crude Rubber, and over which its Over- “Via Wireless! It was melodrama, to head Expenses are divided. be sure, but it was a step in the right direction and my star seemed to be in Good Business Men should know, from this, why the ascendant. Goodrich ‘‘Barefoot” Tires can be (as they are) the best Gillette Finds Him. Tires on the Market AT ANY PRICE, —though quoted at “My next engagement was with William Gillette on his farewell 1 éé M 3 » the moderate ‘ Fair-List” figures frankly and openly pub- played the Teavies' in his repertoire, hshed below. i | both in this country and England. The managers began to see,” he laughed, THE B. F. GOCDRICH CO. | “that T coula act in $2 drama. Subs AI;TU1L. Ohio‘ quent engagements were in ‘Officer : 666, ‘The Man Inside, and ‘Inno- cent’. Mr. Miltern related an interesting experience with David Belasco. “When Mr. Belasco sent for me to assume a leading part in ‘The Man In- side,’ T was naturally elated. But when 1 learned my part was that of a dope- it | fiend and second-story worker, 1 was | franki st ed. r strat- “No Concern in America made, or sold, during ite | fonies et L emonsat- | B Hart, Schaffner & Marx show latest fiscal year, nearly so many Motor-Car Tires as did The B. F. Goodrich Co. 7 . seen again in an unsympathetic role, "g;""pubushed Challenge, still unanswered, proves but to no effect. He simply jollied me SoIme Vel'y Clevel‘ fl\illgs ill this. g along, telling me of a pretentious his- S e e g their Varsity Fifty-Five, priced would be given a prominent - for evel‘y Purse, $18 Up. played no interest whatever in my Penay to weicome il e o0 | New sfyles of Children’s Top- man’,” as Mr. Miltern affectionately —_— caed mim, et me severety wone | § oggts at $2.50, $3 and $3.50. “BAREFOOT® it it || coals at $2.50, § $ e ey nentenca wn. Acne vt @ High Grade Neckwear 50¢, 65¢, confided: ‘I knew I was just waiting for that lit- d 5@ tle outburst’ Mr. Belasco seems to $1.00 an $1° s posses an uncanny insight into char- acter. He discovers traits that no one i had detected. Moreover, he knows = the secret of harmonization. None of E m— = his players ever usurp ”")‘ limelight | . qience was made up of steel mill near a city park, is causing a great to the discredit of the other actors., ompjoves, grim, primitive, but, nev- ' influx of people to that section who of matic writer and critic, in a re- TERN [;A and who, by force of circumstances, | myself into my part—a villain of the | frankness of how he asked a well-| payhaps, his power lies in that fact Kl . ! il + : could not seem to rise above his en- | deepest mould—with all the maiigant | known playwright and stage director | aps il - e crtheless, conscious that good must desire to live just removed from the : Dallsant Lanowni b 5 that, though his mind Is of & psychic My criminal s and dirt of the central par-e a villai ‘heavy’ as i 5 £ i r e scenes while I emphasized my wicked- | = John Miltern, however, has risen | VAlain or the heavy’ as it is termed | for his trouble. | ferences. I nhope some day,” he add- [ Seer s WO S et A o, N above the environment that threatened | ;1 © 1% PIOMeSS O, THESS Darts offered Tries Wall Street. [ ed, “to do something really notable | o=%% T e G K lume of hisses to engulf him permanently. He has| 20 VRS0 RIS FRRG “m_m‘;m(fi"‘" I decided,” he went on, “that be-| under his direction.” R D G (G 5 D come triumphantly to the top of his| vg o overloaded with ornament. | fore I would play villain roles in cheap | T asked Mr. Miltern what he con-| . went off the stage o . profession, and today he is regarded A g 2 2 Bl 2 sidered the essentials of good acting. i 54 herimia ¥ Britain Bo W]fls Sta @ SUS- | as one of our 1 ining actors | CTammed with high-sounding words | melodrama again I would quit the | i R I'he actor believes that the luric S | as e ew remaining ac and far-fetched figures, made me |stage. T sought hard but could not Secret of Real Acting. melodramas will eventually return. ; : ’ PN 3 by ( {i g Ad ty = Sl ne - | who dared so to presume upon the in- | upwara trail. So I kept faith with : onquerin Versl .,,,C,’,‘fn‘?fi,fifc‘“f‘{’“(‘l?” ,th,e".\en:fn mere | telligence of the public. | my resolution. I left the stage and | words and deeds,” he replied, “that | flesh in plays dealing with elemental 2 y _— S ";’,u" ‘5“‘,‘?3 tnm‘uco* s “Of course, I had to have a sense | accepted a position with friends in| what you are thinking is infinitely | passions. And believe me or not.” he m—— i er'!the caption “Up and Down | gestures m‘h‘e“l'_;:;l;“h';ve - 'pfct‘“m of humor to balance the storm of dis- | Wall street. I invested $8,000, all that | more important than what you are|added, “those cheap melodramas And Hands. Became Scaly and Skin A, . a v V. ) a s is A a av e reu . . and ‘teamwork."” Y ear such | O Davis and Theodore Kremer | heatrical Scale,” Louis R. Reid, | MOTe critically exact, may Tead with | approval which continually greeted | T had saved from years of touring up | saving, and ‘teamwc You hear suc wen Da Was Sore. Ashamed To Go Out, even dissect a part with a truer philos- : umber of the Dramatic Mirror, | ophy: but fpw‘i:;‘] v ru\_i mor(-p\i\'id- lot palled, and I began to long for “It did not take long for me to see | mean that the players are not trying | Broadway. = - an interesting sketch of the ca.|ly the prominent rfm\‘””o of @ char. | fresher and more fertile pastures. I|that I was simply another example of | to seek individual glory at the expense Mr. Miltern confessed that his am- | HE R rirter = e the ‘sxpren. | Wanted to do something worth while | the lamb led to the slaughter. And | of others; that they are all contribut- | bition is to play whimsical characters, | ED BY CUTICURA / bt Jo ;n 'w‘v('-ln' the actor, per- | acte o L‘L;VO t kv";stn‘:e.-' L‘hc D ity | on the stage. But I had not looked | in a short time my hard-earncd sav-| ing to a harmonious picture. ~You | “such as the creations of Barrie,” he more familiarly known to New | Sion, ha e earn S5, reality |, round long when I realized that I had | ings were completely gone and I was| don’t find successful baseball teams | said, “or those with which Sir Charles SOAP AND OINTMENT ; ;h:er)r(pl‘car;3» i:?.atrst.hsm‘lcmu is| T was particularly struck with this| with villains that no one would be- | H. Woods, ‘broke’, and disheartened. | applies in the theate . ““One night before retiring T was troubled 4 fomerm, (-lr'))ur"v:rc m; I\”' oW I quality in his latest performance. An lieve for an instant I could play any- | He generously insisted on aiding me The actor expressed admiration for | NEW STANLEY PARK. | with an itching and in the morning I found B ermanent suceess and a name | ©Ver-heroic role, Mr. Miltern made the | thing else.” and offered me a part in a thriller | his present role. ‘It is really the most| mpe recent appropriation of three [ that my fac all broken out with little Sm' e aea e e nn‘i:‘“; P P '1_ = I felt a genuine sympathy for the | called ‘Deadwood Dick’'s Last Shot.’| sympathetic part I e ever plaved. | {housand dollars by the city to start | pimples, en they came on my neck stage i 3 g, 3 cly plausible and convine-| actor as he told me of his vain at- | I accepteq it eagerly, meanwhile | Though for that matter I have alwayvs | jevelopment in this new park in the | and hands. The pimples became scaly anc 1 ¥ 1 «“-{!":*l“g]{" r""f:'\',, which tend t0 | manly style, with considerable feeling | black moustaches and sinister “Ha | one day, I: met my old friend Winchell | spicable characte Perhaps, mY | Lerintendent of parks' office, with its | 1scratched and my faco Lecame erug F ,m*:' _“‘" “" 5 e S and subtlety. The suggestion of force | Ha's”. He told me with admirable | Smith, and he offered me a role in | audience looked beyond my words and | {¢pnj courts, baseball diamonds, | Wassored and sore I was ashamed to go ouse s.‘ ((u;] n bo ramatic Mir-| \as always present and this mere sus actions into my mind and saw that I| g0 skating pond, pretty walks and | doors at all. It lasted about three months, r‘wl <;1,."[:‘.;.-\~ r:t"::‘e ‘0‘\;' -vlnm;! tion made his personation seem was not as black as I was painted. arives, and beautiful groves, has in-; “ltried and — to no purpose. ¢ an's: stage life which | more manly and natural. | Outvillained Villain, {erested many of our citizens in | A friend told me to try Cuticura Soap and Wentitinely, “T have traveled| you ars scoustomed to Sameciate. with playing in Pitisburgh at the time. The | lov streot trolley life, oPpesite e | Nashua, N. H., Aug. 27, 1915, ds and known all kinds of| grtists. His eyes are soft and dreamy | sible to the residents of the central | Sample Each Free by Mail lttle did I think that the words | put with a blase expression strangely . i [ p—— | as well as the northern section of the : A LA L sed a deeper significance than X N el s | | s 4 i With 32-p. Skin Book on the treatment balht boofod i e dener | mingling with their gentienesa. ame 0 ew eCc lon FRISBIE’S | city. The fine concrete road 'extend- | or the skin and scalp, Addros poct oot aywrigh RY for the devel- | ing 1n front of the park adds Iargely | SCuticura, Dopt. T Bostons Foies ura, Dept. » Boston.” Sold by vironment.” power I could command. for a sympathetic part in a Broadway | anq philosophic cast, it is eminently | «orobe" evil in the end. ke wh re striv o in- | i i J 20 have striven successtully to in- | ,nqer at the audacity of playwrights | obtain a footing on the onward and | “The power to make vour audience | “When people tire of motion pictures i i my criminal activities. 3 E w > far ‘es soun- | ases ‘uniformly fine ¢ 7 o ere not any worse than a good many Tore o e ey SEil may | MY criminal activities. At last, the | and down the far places of the coun- | phrases vy fine acting’ or | wer . Shee or he | that he i i : n people as John Sheehan, for he does. been caught in the net of specializa- | out of a job. A sadder and wiser | when the players sacrifice team-work | Wyndham has always been identi- ng step by step fighting against | ing. He seemed to feel what he repre- | tempts at independence and his strug- | keeping my eyes open for a congenial | contrived to win a measure of sym-| North End, along the elaborate | my skin was so sore that I had to hathe { Ointment so I did, and after using three t of Wis chorsiter First an Amateur. i i (T was always interestedlin the tn E. B. Hardy has completed plans for one of the finest develop- ' ANIMAL FERTILIZERS ' B T iy ontoms this memn | drugelsts and dealers throughout the world Rose Above Environment. “Each season would find me playing | production and was only laughed at| jiactical in the application of his in- intentions knew no bounds. 1 ‘held up tions of the city. dividualize their performances, in- feel that your thought transcends your | they will again demand actors in the monotony and insignificance of my | try and proceeded to ‘get rich quick.’ | finely balanced cast’ They simply | of the plays we see for §2 today on Lasted Three Months. ocal boy and made his home in 1s Convincing. tion. I had been so closely associated | man, I wandered into the office of A.| to individual efforts. The same rule | fied.” adversity and struggling eter-| sented. He played in a quiet gentle- | 8le to get free from the trammels of | role in a first-class production. Then, | pathy, even when playing the most de- | jjneq shown hy the map in the su- | with cold water to keep the pain down Joe news even to his close friends. Zou fe S 5 | | 5 e 1 You feel this concealed strength | ) “I shall never forget, however, | Visiting this new addition to —our ) 0 Fe5 e o .- : e o T o i, e J : 52 , 2 asered | City’s recreation ounc Situated B cura Soap and onc-half a box hen on the opening night of ; % | when in a spirit of deviltry, T wagered g s | of Cuticura Ointment I r red o L8 g is a much younger looking n than i but twenty minutes walk from Main £ itment I regained my com- ereart of Wetona,” I heard John | yo, expect to find. His figure is tall tiatithe s ndiencehwould Hibs e B k) treet, at the end of the North n- | Ploxion. and was completely lealed." as ia 3 r P o Z = i 2 i 1 BV F el e > B exit. I were | & v & J ) R 5 o Signes 1 eles Q7 a n as the dauntless Indian agent, | ung slender. His featu o ithoaa | eyeryjjentrancosunid Lex't i elmors ley street trolley line, opposite the | (Signcd) Miss Helen Ly ) Tyler St kd the bustling activity of the tended to shortly extend this perma- club I recently had a talk with | ater,” he began, “and naturally this in ments for homes in the city of New Britain. He has divided up the (Bone, Blood and Tankage) nent pavement to Hartford, it will | ———e jltern and I learned that the | terest resulted in organizing an ama- | Andrews property of 45 acres in lots of 50x1560 to 250 feet and they “Made in Connecticut” s % 5 % saasil : s ; e 2 s of 50x15 25 p v make this section even more popular 55 is strangely relative to his own | teur dramatic society in my home e Ll R e L L A. b ‘\“h‘\ ?01}. 12078 Tar s it concerns the theater, | town, New Britain, Conn., but before Connecticut Farms el DENTIST are the finest in the city. 15 minutes walk to the property or 3 min- I traveled all stage roads and|I had a chance to prove to my fam- | utes from Farmington car line, and on the west line of Belvidere ' A Brand For Every Crop cently erected by the management of | Natlonal Bank Bldg. Open Eveninge Fi ented all kinds of men. fly and friends any genuine histrionic | and fronting on McClintock rond. s Corn and Grain Fertilizer (. P thid Tt i o . Smi vas | ability, T was given an opportunity to vas afrald Winchell Smith was Y was g | PRICHS ; o disclose my name,” he be-| €0 on the professional stage in a melo- U O en in his address to the grad-| drama Which was to tour under the EASY TERMS. AGENTS ON PROPERTY EVERY DAY, ll(,:onledic;lew¢ I:Il_(:‘" Crops hel s o : | Ity W Eribic? Market Gardeaod Top Dresee e Ll e DR o WanyRG ood §Bottied o sierTomodpeatl W iie getting away from the provincial | Begr,d“ ine or Liquors, idea, that it is necessary to live in | rder Same from .T.FRISBIE sl inatiinlielncomany o D e o e el R E T L COMPANY S tne more consestod pact of the citv. | pHILIP BARDECK, L% vilians in cheap melodramas, | preparation and training. I threw D ) © GNE) WD the sure increase of the value of land | 185 Arch St. ‘Phone 482-2 onts of the American Acad- | direction of sullivan, Harris and i 5 fs;.j\lrr‘l‘(”(‘]“svb Ar;' he sald that he| Woods. I considered myself fortun- | Offlce 304 ’_2 Maln Street New Haven, Conn. The easy plan of paying for lats, and

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