New Britain Herald Newspaper, May 26, 1916, Page 14

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he Theater of Distinction— The Best Plays For the Best Peoplc In the Best Theater. INAL WEEK— MAY 22nd estimonial Week or Alfred Cross Presenting THE GREAT MUSICAL FARCE IS DREAM GIRL FEATURES SPECIALTIES All tickets for each per- cmance must be called for ore 6:30 at Crowell’s. SPECIAL Thurs. and 20c. tinees, Tues., Sat.,, 10c and bnts at 8:15, 10c, 20¢, 30¢, and 50c. REENI Pui i) Tonight and Saturday Fritzi Brunette In NTO THOSE WHO SIN” Frank Daniels In New Comedy Essanay Drama “THE SCHEMERS” igh Class Vandeville. ARSONS’ A TRE—Hartford b SHOW FOR 75 CENTS Week—Mat. Wed. and Sat. | RS .usy’ Viennese Operetta, A WALTZ DREAM” der¢ul Score—A Beautiful Story. hts, 75¢ to 10c, (500 eats at 25¢). i 50c, 25c and 10c. May 29— “THE CHOCOLATE SOLDIER" POLPS HARTFORD Week—Twice Daily New Poli Players in ACK HOME Southern play of great hrm, based on Irvin Cobb's dge Priest” Stories. tinees—10c¢, 20c. nings—10c¢, 20c¢, 30¢, 50c. O'UR FILM FOR EENEY’'S THEATER | - | Brunette in the leading Who Sin,” the lat- will be shown and tomorrow as cellent bill @ vaudeville Titzi to Thos release, tonight leature of an e ys and high clas: told in five ree it is ul drama of love and hate, lly produced and is presented creen in a manner tf ence. “Unto Those Who k many features that are new inal and give wide latitude in resentation. a edy leader on the program | days will be Frank Daniels “The Escapade These pictures favor every week and r musical comedy star 2dding to his list of local ad- episode on ack” serie ssan e part its dran Schem- the pro- The contribution to will be eelers in fludeville show rge audience provide a good acrq Fed H. Speare and company @any laughs with their npe le, “It's Only Immagingsion and Robbins do a song ang tion bit that goes big every some addition and single continues Collier to nd spe- Want Good Bottled br, Wine or Liquors, Drder Same from ILIP BARDECK, at | At grips | is | ompany will present | NEW. BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, MAY 26, 1916. Theater Goers anc__l Women Readei’.\s‘ | Vews for A STORY YOU CAN BEGIN AT TIME Her Side---and His How Cora and David ANY Temple Their Marital By ZOE BECKLEY Solved Problems Cora’s Answer Dear David: You have said you ‘“detest a meddler” and no one shall do any more meddling in your life, not even my mother. Now. my dear David, suppose we come to a clear understanding of what a meddl is? My poor little mother, staying in our home, sees vour old sweet Wanda Laurence coming and going, being very friendly, made very wel- come—recognized as your ‘“‘hest friend,” in short Mother speaks first to me, then to vou, is hushed yp Do and becomes more alarmed and puz-zled than ever. Then knowing noth- ing else to do, she goes to Wanda and begs her to cease her vi if she values our happiness. So you harshly berate my mother and allow her to 20 away from us because she incddled. You call that MEDDLING! Again I bid you think If you and I were crossing o dangcrous street, heading st going motor car, would you call it meddling if mother Or, failing to make us hear, shricked at the him ? Would vou angrily resent it, whining that you knew zoing all the time and particularly wanted to talk to the should my mother know we knew our danger? Would dling if a couple tried to commit suicide and some them ? No. that by h of us what meddling is light for a faust- cried to us to stop? motor driver to and halted where yon driver? you call one rushed were How med- save it to motives must be considered. My mother, even at the risk ng your affection, did ber best for us; and no blame attacl to one who does his be: to save others with nothing personally to gain You argue that “vou married me, not my mother.” You are wrons. You did marry her in the sense that when I married vou T married al vour business your tastes, your ambitions, vour friends and your people. Nothing is absolutely individual. Dave, not even love. No one can adjust his relations to one person alone. Try it for a single day and you will see it is impossible. Your lifs and liberty are touched at a hundred points by other personalities that have a just claim on your considern- tion Life full of compromises. It is one long compromise, in fact. No one has complete liberty either of tastes or of action. In that sense, then, you did marry my mother when you married You married all that I hold dear. The very essence of marriage is mutual. ity, co-operation, team work. If my mother happens in her effort to Toint out danger, to tread a little on the precious province of your personal lib- erty, we should together point out to her the error. It is not for either one of us to take highhanded authos.ty. No, David, you must treat my mother exactly as you would have me treat your mother in the same circumstances, Remember these two thing: (1) Mother had no means of knowing that the arrangement about Wanda Laurence was of our own mutual making. (2) Mother acted sincecely Sincerity Is alwavs its own justification. Be tolerant. David, and just, and willing to compromise. T am as much for personal liberty as vou are. But we cannot ride roughshod over our nearest and dearest to get it. Mar. riage means compromise. Copyright, is me. 1916. S. S. McClure. | | | | | | { anything sweet. coming into favor. will relieve nausea. a bilious temperament. vinegar on sliced tomatoes. makes a good luncheon d disinfectant for the water is good for pot plants. Rinse in clear warm water and in'warm water and glycerine. Household Notes with A delicious sauce for lamb is made with currant jelly broken up and mixed with finely chopped mint leaves and a few shavings of orange peel. Don’t serve fresh pineapple The old-fashioned gingerbread is The most delicious cherry pie is made in the English fashion, in a deep dish with no bottom crust and a cp in the middle to hold the juice. Sometimes a little plain lemon juice | Strawberries are g0od for people of | A carpenter's apron is handy to wear when gardening. Tt is firm x = | enough to resist dirt, and the pockets The juice of a lemon is better than | are an everlasting convenionce. _ | Rice with grated cheese over it| : Tn making cake, the butter should be creamed first, then the sugar and volks of eggs beaten into it, then the milk and flour and baking powder. i i Lime in various forms is the best household. An occasional dose of strained soot- { | In opening a cocoanut, | the eyes and q put the nut is hot, ana ease. o e If vou skin the rhubard before stew- | | enu f ing it, the flavor will not be so good. L wakhiie To reduce the cost of living, perts say to eat more fish meat. punciure ain-of! the millk. Then in an oven till the shell it can be cracked with Pour hoiling water over the new po- tatoes and they will scrape easily. Baked salmon in greet pepper cases | is an excellent summer luncheon dish | ex- | and less ! i Codfish Ballsg | Fluted Potatoes | N 5 o " New potatoes bofled until ~tender | Al otee with new peas added and creamed are | delicious. Lunch and Raisins Cocoa Dinner Tomato Soup Baked Salmon Loaf Farina Balls Mashed Potatoes Cocoa Junket Coffee Rice and Raisins—Boil rice in an Dabundance of slightly salted water until tender. Steam separately plumb a cupful seeded raisins. Drain | the rice, mix lightly with the raisins | ana nd over hot water for ten Blue is the most quieting color | minutes. Serve with a hard sauce. to use in a room for the person whose | Cocoa Junket—Allow one teaspoon- nerves are highly strung, and green | ful powedered cocoa and two drops (pure and cool) comes next, vanilla for each cupful milk. Wor — to a smooth paste with a little boil- warm | ing water, add the warm milk and sunburn. | make a junket in the usual way. Rice Marble should be washed with am- monia and water rather than soap and water. Loose chamois gloves are excellent to wear when gardening or doing any dirty work. Plunge tomatoes into bo for a few minutes if you would have them peel easily. An ep water is m salt said to solution relieve in bathe : equalled only by her capacity for food. | | kind that i phases of human eXistence | withal until } son ! sprinkle in | car cours who is a bit of a sport himself despite | | hi; 5 | carrying the plot to .a happy ending. ing ring PARSONS’ THEATER A MUSIC MAGNET (pera Company Doing Big Busi- ness With Popular Ofierings Take a bevy of pretty soul-compelling git with waltzes, | | a dashing lieutenant, a princess | lieutenant not in 1dd a drinking gar- set on the stage have an Os- pretty dancing girl and a whom the is love, for seasoning den scenc, stir well, to cool—and there Strauss opera hese are the | principal ingredients to Waltz | Dream.,” which is being sung in Par- son’s theater, Hartford, this week. Of | e, there are other ingredients, as the father of the princes: with you such 1 and rid unthatched h characters whose is 1 In the Opera Players, Mr. Pa made a very popular selec to entertain his patrons for the sum- mer. The cast is well balanced, the ; singing is very good and the stage | settings are equall acceptable. Florence Webber clever, cap- able songstress and work in ‘A Waltz Dream’ leaves so room for cr icism. In addition to her clear, | strong soprano, she is possessed of a | stage presence that immediately lo- | cates a niche in the he: of the | audience. James Hornberger has a | pleasing tenor voice and fits well in- | to the cast as the lieutenant who falls | in love with every pretty Vienesse | girl he meets. As the father, Roger | Gray has an opportunity to do some | ellent work and he lives up to hi act. Lillian Crosman, the prin- is also heard to advantage. Os. borne Clemson is another whose work | should not be passed over lightly | while Francis Boyle makes the ceil- with his’ wonderful basso. Lillian Ludlow makes an adorable lit- tle “Fifi,” whose pretty dancing is a There are a number of hypnotizing song hits—Strauss waltzes—in the opera, the kind the audience hum as it is leaving the theater after a pleas- ant evening. Next week the Oper: offer “The Chocolate Soldier should make even a greater sion than “A Waltz Dream.” “THE STORY OF THE ROSARY” AT POLI'S Players will which impres- “Back play The final performances of Home,” the delightful southern in the which the Hartford Poli Play ers are scoring a decided hit this week, will be presented at Poli's the- ater today and tomorrow, with mat- inees both days. This remarkable play is based on Irvin Cobb's intensely hu- man southern stories of Judge Priest which have been dramatized by Bay- ard Veiller, the authows of “Within the Law" and other equally successful plays. The famous jury scene is per- haps one of the notable of its has heen presented on the Poli stage and it develops some situ- ations that are absolutely dr matically The Poli have unusually appropriate roles Next week’s attraction is “The Story of the Rosary,” a massive melodra- matic production that has no con- nection with any other play nor with the motion picture of a somewhat sim- ilar name. The big dramaiic¢ pro- duction teems with real life, presents that are age and most unique favorites seldom presented on the st ! treats with a subject that is now uppermost in the mind of all people of the world—war. No play ever written presents the terrors of battle d the heart-rending home scenes in connection with it. Al- though written before the European war, its author, as one'critic has said, “might have written it vesterday” for he has presented facts t were un- dreamed of two years ago and yet are realties today. The brotherhood of man and the demand for respect for women form its basis and it develops a story of intense human interest. The play will be presented twice daily throughout the week. Seats are on sale at the box office. AEROPLANE RACES Featuring New Britain’s Famous Aviator NELS J. NELSON See Nelson Drop Bombs on Fort from Aeroplane. MOTORCYCLE RACES Fastest Professional Riders in Southern New Eng- land Entered. AUTOMOBILE RACES Five Mile Match Race and Racing With Aeroplane. CHARTER OAK PARK TuesDAY, MMEMORIAL DAY MAY 30 ADMISSION 50 CENT: St. ‘Phone 482-2 i knife. | operation, { found Encourage Enlistment in Uncle Sam’s RATIONS, FREE OP! Sea Army. Philadelphia, Pa along the cause of increasing the number of enlistments in the army, navy and marine corps, surgeons at the Jefferson hospital, this | city, have announced that they will remove, through minor operations, and without charge for their services, disqualifying defects in applicants that can be remedied by the use of the May 26.—To help preparedness by i Many men are reijected at the re- cruiting station who might be saved to t{he service through a simple surgical the Jefferson doctors have T week they removed enlarged tonsils from one and hammer toes from another rejected applicant of the United States marine corps, and both these men will be enlisted when the wounds heal FPERFECTLY PASTEUR. IZED MILK SEIBERT AND SON, Park Street, Near Stanley, | square | waist this GEORCETTE CRAPE FUSSED INTO JABOT vy CHARGE This deep stock with a flare daintily ~hemstitched and Shirred into a graceful front of - georgette crape, Wern with a dark ixing is most effecti top is wired. is picot shirt a edged You Dresses, and Dr | | i PLAY AT LYCEUM DESERVES LONG RUN | Waists, Suits It is to be deplored that the Alfred Cross Players are not going to remain in New Britain at least one week more, and that during that time they could present again the same play that is rounding out the season here, “His Dream Girl.” For, if such a thing took place, “His Dream Girl” would be thoroughly polished in the that it would be a real play of New Britain life. For this re son: | Ever since the opening night of this week the members of the stock com- pany at the Lyceum having been add- ing here and there to the play until they have some touch of wit on almost every local institution. Now that the | lines have been completely over- hauled, and every performance is a little different from the previous one, the play should be able to run all through next week. But it cannot. Th players, for the most part are signed up for other work. Alfred Cross is meeting with great | verblooms, Georgettes, SUITS SUITS AT SUITS AT o918 SUITS AT ......:. $16.75 And upward way $10.98 TRIMMED HATS will find them here—ready pretty Trimmed Hats, Sport Coats various other popular fabrics. sonable—all sizes for Women and Misses, CHARMING SUMMER STYLES s Coats—all the Latest Shoes, etc. you need and say ‘“Charge It.” DAINTY ~ SUMMER DRESSES ARE READY A splendid display of the choicest Summer styles in Sil- Organdies, Prices COATS AT COATS AT COATS AT WAISTS THECAESAR MiscH §ToRs 687—693 MAIN STREET HARTFORD for you! Cool, pretty Choose what and rea- Crepe de Chine, remarkably COATS $ 7.08 $ 9.98 $12.98 And upward SHOES success as a planist. Few people in | the city, outside his immediate circle | friends, knew that the popular man of the ‘company wa capable of playing some of the most difficult pieces ever written by the old masters. Yet, Alfred one of the most accomplished pianists in the land of stagedom. Philip Sheffield had previously given an example of what he could do with the “ivories”, and | this week he is left alone to himself in the matter of singing one of the | funniest songs that'has been heard | here in some time. Tt is called “Some Little Bug Will Get You If You Don’t Watch Out,” and is a sort of “safety first” plea to those who must eat In downtown restaurants and rooms, far from where cook things mother used make.” Miss Julie Herne, too, is! charming this week in a plaint, slm- | He telis Jurid tales of rheumatism ple, sweet little ballad, “Auf Weiden- | nouralgia, blindness and even insan. sehn,” a very appropriate Somg fOr | ity caused by the poison poured into farewell of any kind. Winifred | the system from these hidden plague Wellington and Frank Wright add to | e s i BL S the musical end of the performance. | from o pain in vour toe tn e hocnt ache Dhe suggests that you have your teeth éxamined. Nor is this, as you might think, THE SUMMER SUN I caused by a desire for business. That SHADE UP TO DATE | 'is not possible, because he doe not | possesses the apparatus fohr the ay examination, He Blames Bad Teeth For Every Il No, it is merely that he has become so impressed by the important part that teeth do play in the general health that he has lost his sense of perspective and proportion. He knows that almost any symptom could be { caused by discased teeth and he gets the idea that almost every symptom is so caused. It interesting ing look back the cause of all | discovered Of course you remember when lack fresh air was seized upon the Cross is | A dentist friend of mine B - st nine has recent they ; Iy to | sces become convinced that hidden ab- the of teeth are the source of most human ills. ses at roots spots. is and rather nd see how human ills has amus- to often been of as | cause-all. And then, again, it was adenoids or overgrown tonsils that could be held accountable for any sluggishness, physical or mental The Oculist Says Eye-Strain Causes Backache Listen to the oculist and he will tell | You that half the time indigestion or FOR BEACH WEAR backa nothi Again we are er ne we w food was time ing t can three Both No | Fonne they over bit the b to be look he: possit to dr one w chewe th any w Ang too o c Coffee cording coffee meals still suffered from being denied the two or What's the They wreng? They « Every extrer In other ed testines healthy to look after much The Cause-All ache ng al symptoms told that worry about chew every fifty ti was the cat to a or lassitude but ger are of eye-strain. will ne health mouthful we d il forty to only it of our of all ills, a relative of mine. She 1ddicted to health fads and every visited her hem upon asm we insisted on impos- After the drinking bete-noir the us, anti- ater I I passed her remember became and discomfort glasses to which I was acc tomed Are Wrong and Both Are to it all right; are Right. answer can't all he they are all some wrong ch have a their it sense extreme ruth. The of truth without represents’ some extracts to the wise man it going words, the a faddist about after all the to get as to chew wisc anyth big much one’s food enough water, at but not to wash down with it, to ke to get sleep enough teeth and eve trace rning symptom to its source. 1 last but least, not to think about the whole matter is not to f as 11 frest r esser , le, ink ishes, food proper meals if un- p one's in- not T N e A flappy brimmed Milan stra faced with pale pink georgette c the edge being re-enforced straw. The only trimming wreath of flat leaves, glaze: and flowers in pastel shade a charming model for the Examined and Glasses Fitted by A. PINKUS EYESIGHT SPECIALIST with | is a berries This 1s | sixteen- 6 teams. Tel. connecticn. year-old. Cver 30 Years Experience. Have Your Eyes, Aileys Open to Ladies at Any Time. AETNA BOWLING ALLEYS Church Street.

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