New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 1, 1916, Page 4

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turnips are young, wash them ly and cook without peeling. will cook as tender as the seh;ic} thés/ tl T N | News NEW. BRITAIN DAILY HERALD. SATURDAY, JULY 1, 1916. he turnip. lour adheres to the hand and ssed lightly remains in shape s the imprint of the lines of of the hand. How Cora and David Temple 1 should be lifted from a pot dumplings are cooking. They A STORY YOU CAN BEGIN AT ANY TIME Her Side- and His Solved Their Marital Problems By ZOE BECKLEY o be heavy if the lid is taken e they are done. = The Cards are weary and have not time ong stretch the body out flat loor, relaxing for a few min- his will do wonders for tired went over to * the corne one of th patted the stone in place with a new “Let’s build it firmly, David, deare: derground passages from each other,’ David flushed at her strange mall pin feathers that are so clean from very young chick- be wiped off with a damp much less time. wrong to put shoes near a The heat is bad for the Fill damp shoes with paper d them where it is warm. philande: ved a woman sloyal to about it? “You're welcome to know every s “Oh Dave, dear, I was thinking of bosom. Slowly she took out Wanda's gave it to David. He stared at the le message Wanda sent. “Fight the beast with her own we: MAN! Has Mrs. Brett a husband? T MAN!” “Cora, dear, isn't this foll any attention to it, are you?” “I don’t know! I don’t know!" know that I trust vou, David—but not no longer stay passive and let her str days and heart gnawing and insutfera employer with the Cora. ITad Tom bet hvenient way to boil macaroni jut it In a wire basket. Tm- his in the kettle of boiling wa- Vhen the macaroni is done lift o he t deal of shantung is used for Ir frocks and summer costumes. better to wash table linen by andkerchiefs should be wash- e. waiting and suspense. Bu rid stared at the foundation of housewife shouid remember ost cases of bad temper come Indigestion, and indigestion fre- comes from poorly cooked hide nothing from him. pocket lay a copy of his letter to Tom he do as much as Cora had done? On the first free day together Mrs. B little speech. he had written Tom Woodford, asking Tom how far he could go to propitiate Cora just got to do something myself, if only to keep from going mad v t David, Face Up 3rett let them have David and Cora eir new house in Colony Park. Cora trowel and kissed David. st, and—no secret chamb * she added tremulously He remembered the letter and un- and yet written she demanded confidence and not be Cora ring his ecret of mine,” he said a little stiffy. mysel Cora murmured in David's little lavender-colored, scented lett tter, read it and stared again BUT'NOT OVER THE SAME there be, GO FOR THAT apon! £ such asked. “Youwre not going to pay repeated wretchedly. “T only Mrs. Brett. I only know that I can ike and strike at me, give me lonely ble suspense and humiliation. T'v h dear, believe I trust you; please his new home. In hig hand was Wanda's letter that Cora had given him as proof of her determination to In his ears rang her trust of him. In his answer to him. breast and Tom's Dared Was he equal to her in not Keeping secret chambers In the new home and life they were building? David realized then how love call strugg} searched the souls of its leaders. quailed at doing on his side. He took out a carbon copv of the Tom’s answer and handed both to Cor: between her teeth. TONIGHT Ethel Clayton In “DOLLARS AND CENTS” Five Reel Feature. Warda Howard In “THE REGENERA- TION OF MARGARET” “Shall we chuck all this and begin anew somewhere else?” harshly. But Cora knew his harshne “No dear, returning Wanda's to her bosom. friends advise us!" There was a note in her voice and deflance. and again. “No dear, no!"” she cried. William Welch in \ and vou must trust me. “BEHIND THE SECRET PANEL.” you, ing. s that searched the spirit as keenly as Cora had just done the very thing he Was it at him she flung her challenge and defiance? snapped fire. But she caught him quickly to her and kissed him again “It 1s not at you I am going to fight. But T am going to follow Wanda’s teach- T'm coming out on the offensive, David. Brett with her own weapons—and win both for me and you.” ed for heroism and hazards ever a faith or a and people letter he had written to Tom a. She read them, her lip and caught he asked ss was not for her, she whispered, putting his letters back into his pocket and “We will each of us do what our a light In her face that rang of His eves I trust I am going to fight Rose HIGH CDASS VAUDE- S —— VILLE DAILY. . ’ l Menu for Tomorrow Breakfast. Fruit. Sugar and Cream Potatoes au Gratin Coffee Cereal Fried Egg Plant Rolls Tunch Potato Chowder. Fig Cake POLI’S HARTFORD This Weelk. Twice Daily BERNARD DALY The greatest Irish Singer with the Poli Players in “THE ISLE O’'DREAMS” $2 Star at Poli Prices Cocoa Dinner Tomato Soup Brown Gravy Creamed Carrots Salad Beef Cannelon Mashed Potatoes French Dressing Lemon Jelly Coftee Fig Cake—Cream thoroughly to- gether one scant cupful of butter, add one and one-half cupfuls of sugar and | beat again, add the beaten yolks of | three eggs, one teaspoonful of vanilla and one-quarter of a teaspoonful of | salt, then alternately three cupfuls of flour and one-half of a cupful of milk. | Beat well, add the whites of the eggs whipped to a stiff broth and two tea- spoonfuls of baking powder. Bake in | four layers and when cold put togeth- | er with the filling. 5 B | 2 i AKE COMPOUNCE , BAND CONCERT EVERY SUNDAY AFTERNOON. | Filling—Chop one-half of a pound Boating, Bathing, Bowling, B | or figs very fine, and five level table- Biniards, Fishing and Dancing- The Popular Picnic Ground. spoonfuls of sugar and one-half of a | cupful of boiling water; cook in a dou- ble boiler until thick enough to spread, add one teaspoonful of vanilla and put between the cake. Regular Dinners. Moving Picture Theater- N N, P] o EXFIRCE & NOIEON, EEROLS Cotton voile makes an ideal morn- ing frock for summer. Mew Britain, Wed., July 12 —ON THE USUAL S HOW GROUNDS Complete Performances— Afternoon, 2:15—Night, 8 [ R R A R A e A A A e e kP e W v AND THE MILITARY PAGEANT PREPAREDNESS -~ B Big Military and Wild West Parade 10:30 OWN TICKET OFFICE AT CROWELL’S DRUG STORE, 254 MAIN STioET—PRICES SAME AS ON TH E_GROUNDS. i 22 i | to give the concert 1a i March rican Band of New Britain Will sive Program at Lake Compounce. The American band of New Britain will play the concert program at Lake Compounce on Sunday afternoon from 3 to 5 o'clock. This band was engaged Sunday but the inclement weather caused a postpone- ment. Managers Pierce and Norton have arranged to accommodate large crowds for dinner. The table d'hote dinner will be served from 1 to 3 o’clock and the a la cart service will obtain at all hours. The following concert program will be rendered by the band under the direction of William H. Bishop, leader: “America First” Losey Overture—*Die Irrfarht ums Gluck" Suppe Heart" % Von Tilzer s Be the Same Von Tilzer . Herbert Van Alstyne .. Meyer Hits (No. 16) Lampe lection—*“Carmen” Bizet Good Bye, Good Luck, God Ball the Rocky Road to Dublin’ 2k . Grant Selection—*Blue Paradise” ...Eysler (a) “Loading Up the Mandy Lee’” Marshall (b) “They Didn’t Believe Me” Kern Finale—"Merry Whirl” . Leusberg The feet of young chickens can be easily skinned by pouring boiling wa- ter over them; they can then he skinned and boiled, and you will have a delicious broth. TCHY RASH ON CHEST AND FACE Later On _Shoulders and Back. Burned Like Fire. Had No Rest at Night, HEALED BY CUTICURA SOAP AND OINTMENT —_— @ (b) “You'll' Alw Sweet Girl” fos Selection—*Princess Pat” . (a) “Memories” ... (b) “My Mother's Rosar; Medley Remick's Grand long “I had a rash which began on my chest and face, later going to my shoulders and back. It was very itchy and I had to scratch it which made it burn like fire, and the skin was sore and inflamed. When my clothing would rub against it, it caused itching and burning which was very uncom- fortable and I had no rest at night, for after going to bed I would go to sleep for a few ‘moments only to be waked up again. “I let the rash go for about a weel when 1 used Cuticura Soap and Ointment. After the first application they seemed to stop the burning and after I used two boxes of Cuticura Ointment and four cakes of Cuti~ cura Soap I was healed.” (Signed) Wm. C. Robertson, 85 Mountain Ave., Dor- chester, Mass., Oct. 21, 1915. Sample Each Free by Mail ‘With 32-p. Skin Book on the treatment of the skin and scalp. Address post-card “Cuticura, Dept. T, Boston.” Sold by druggists and dcalers throughout the worid. The extent to which we become different people in our relationship to our friends (and enemies) is a never- ending source of interest to me, When T hear the other members of my household talking over the tele- phone, T can often tell by the tone of their voices, without hearing a word of the conversation, to whom they are talking. That is because the different Deople on the other end of the line make such different personalities of them. “I don’t like that man if he is your friend,” I once heard a woman say of her husband’s friend. “You never met him,” said he, “What do you mean " said she. She Never Mct His Friend. “The man I've always known, the man I go fishing with and tramping with, you've never met. It's an en- tirely different man that you meet, though he does have the same face and wear the same clothes.” How often that is true! We can never introduce the friend we love to some other friend, because the mo- ment he comes mto the other's pres- ence he becomes a changeling. The Eternal Barricr. specially is it true when the bar- rier of sex stands between. The man other men know, a woman never meets, and the women other women know a man never meets. “T can't see how you can like that man,” the Wants-to-be-cynic says to me with distaste. Of course he can’t. He doesn’t know what a fascinating, in- teresting, almost caressing manner The Different “You’s” en. All he sees plain-looking man for his beloved particularly The man is a lank, rather who doesn’t care fishing and who isn't successful in business. who is gifted with the ability of bringlng a touch of ro- mance into his Intercourse with wo- men in a perfectly harmless and legi- timate fashion, the Cynic never meets. | an You Blame Red For Not Harmon- izing With Enough Purple? for the influence of sex. to the broad aspect of the subject. George Eliot savs some- where: “There are people so gifted in regard to you that their ‘Good Morn- ing’ is charged with offence.” Now when anyone affects vou thus, is it likely that you will present to him the | same personality that you present to | those who dub you the right way? Hardly! And is it your fault that you are affected in that way? Sometimes, perhaps, and sometimes not. Is it the fault of the red that it becomes hide- ous when it is placed beside purple? Or should we say that blue is an ugly, disagreeable color because it does not harmonize with certain shades of | green? Some antipathies are just as inevitable. Again, haven’t you seen a blue that looked green when you placed it be- side a yellow? Even so To return a vou and I change accord- ing to the temperament of the person with whom we are in ju aposition. The “you” one friend knows may be as entirely different from the “you’ another pictures as one person from another. Wouldn't it be fun to he able to know some of these ‘‘you's” that man has when he is with wom- ourselves? Vit el Yl N that she By ADELE GARRISON !R SVELATIONSOF A WIFE, What Happened When Miss Draper Called. Marvin, Good morning. “Hella! Draper? Graham.” It was a distinct effort for keep my voice steady as I telephoned Grace Draper at Dicky’s Tequest. But her tones in answering were as cool W? Oh! Thi Miss is Mrs. me to and insouciant as I imagined she must | 1ook. “Good morning, Mrs. Graham.” Just the four words, but there was a subtle Inflection of inquiry in them. She knew I had a message for her, T was sure. There was also, or perhaps I imagined it, a special stress upon the word “Mrs.” “Mr, Graham has just ing us the needlework you thoughtful enough to do for him,” I | 1eplied. ‘‘He is naturally very anxious for vou to see your work as it looks | displayed in the setting of his room. { Will you not come over this afternoon and inspect the effect of your labors?" 1 shall not soon forget the effort it cost me to deliver Dicky’s message thus nonchalantly to the girl whose friendship with my husband was the one cloud upon my married happiness. My spirit protested against inviting a woman T disliked so cordially to my home. T tried to choose my words so that she would understand that it v Dicky’s invitation, not mine. A girl of delicate feeling would never have accepted an invitation to her employer’s home thus given by his wife. T had purposely chosen my words in order to test the fibre of the girl, meaning in case of her refusal to give her a warmer, more personal in- vitation. 5 But either Miss Draper was not able to discern fine shades of meaning or purposely disregarded them. Her ac- ccptance of my invitation was prompt, “That is very kind of yvou, Mrs, Gra- ham,” she sald, and again T fancied the emphasis on the word, “Mrs.” T am glad that your husband likes the work, and T shall be pleased indeed to | come over. " Will 3 o'clock be all right?” What Madge Overheard. “Quite,” I returned, and then with a feeling that might as well see the thing through, I added: “Will not your sister, Mrs. Gorman, { come with you? T should be pleased | to see her again.” “I will ask her,” slight hesitation in her voice. | you hold the wire a moment?"” | I heara her quick footsteps go away | been show- were she said with a “Will from the telephone and across the floor, evidently into another room. T caught her voice in a murmur which i did not v ords, retort. “Go with you TIndeed I'll not. T¢f that woman is fool enough to let her husband wheedle her into asking vou to her house, that's her look out. T'll rot be a party to any of your per- formances.” Without a word of reply that T could hear, Miss Draper came back to the telephone and took up the re- ceiver. There was not a trace of emotion in her voice as she spoke into it. “I am sorry, but able to come with me thanks you, however, for tion. T will be there at 3 I heard the feceiver click, had hung it up allow and me to distinguish the then a crisp, indignant ? | | sister today the Good-b; and knew my ried cut | ner. I could not but admire her poise, !Ill my heart was heavy with misgiv- ing as I turned from the telephone. The girl's sister must be very serious- ly objecting to her work with Dicky lo speak in the manner that I hag Ecard., No trace of any disturbance, how- ever, appeared in the face of Miss Draper when, promptly at 3 o’clock, she came up the gravelled path, Ifen beauty was striking as ever, and )m»r attire was modish—a green cloth .‘v}’ll‘ a filmy lace blouse, and a coquet- tish little hat of green straw with for fear her sister might call omething which would embarrasg she exclaimed, and immediately began to discuss with Dicky the arrange- ruent of the furniture. She showed a familiarity with the pieces which betrayed the fact that she must have gone with Dicky on his shopping tours. At first Dicky took pains to include me in the conversation, soon he and his beautiful model be- came so engrossed in thelr admira- tion of the room that they did not rotice when I stepped away from them to the window and stood look- | ing out, fighting hard to keep back | the hot, angry tears which I would have died rather than shed before Grace Draper's eyes. | 1 did not even hear what they were | saying until an ususually high-pitch- | cd remark of the girl's startled me. “T believe I could get an effect simi- lar to this in that little apartment T am going to take, for about one- twentieth of the sum you've spent,” the said with a saucy glance at Dicky. | When she had finally gone after tea, served prettily and correctly by Katie on the veranda, I asked Dicky quietly if Miss Draper intended taking an apartment in the city. G, not really an apartment,” Le said, “just a coutle of rooms and bath which she and another girl are going to share down in Greenwich village when the sumner is over. You see, it's hard for her to go back and forth in the winter tme, and then I guess that sister of hers is about the | limit in general unpleasantness.” { “BUFFALO BILL” IS | WITH US ONCE MORE | i Colonel Willlam F. Cody, former chief of scouts, Indian fighter, dead- shot, traveler, Tacontew and pictur- | esque showman, known to at least| two generations as “Buffalo Bill" is re- parted to be again “in the saddle” this cetson, and his visit to New Britain | with the newly combined Buffalo | Bill-101 Ranch shows on Wednesday, | July 12, will revive many memories of | the career of this noted national character. The history of the Borderland would rot be complete if the name of Colonel Cody was eliminated. ‘While still a Young man his ‘nerve” and cool- headed judgment was so generally recognized that time after time he was employed to rid the “tough’ | towns of Kansas and Nebraska of their undesirable citizens, and when Te undertookk the job he never failed. The border outlaws learned' to have a very wholesome respect for “Mar- shal Cody.” He made an ecrly study o the Indians and their mothods of hunting and making war, and when- ever there was danger of an Indian sutbreak his services were in de- | nand. As a scout the Indlans recog- nized the fact that he was equal or su- yerior to themselves, and they were slways afraid of him. As a buffalo | hunter, in the days when the bison stampeded in great herds across the western plains, and espescially in the salleys of the upper Missouri, he ac- quired a Teputation that has remained with him throughout the years. Colonel Cody originated the Wild West show as it is known in the United States, and throush his ex hibition he gave the people of the a single exquisite scarlet rose, its only decoration. Her perfect feet ang enkles, about which I had heard Dicky xclaim when he had first seen hep were encased £nd black her, in black silk stockings pumps—she knew enough to enhance their smallness by weag- ing black footgear—while on hands were gloves of white kid A Particular ‘Welcome, I cast a quick appraising glance at her as I went forward to greet her, | contrasted the and auality of her present gowning with | the carefully turned makeshifts whic | I had detected in her wardrobs tha! first time I had seen her. Then shy| bad managed a very creditable effent \\!lh old materials, I )‘(‘”r‘t‘l("([ [}:"Y( Dickly must pay her a remarkab.| 2ood alary for her ervices to ('nflhll“ her to act ‘e is eg s c Ve this carefully groomed “Good -’Yfl(‘l'!]')flll. w flIS j":()tnl of you to come.” ried to put a cord 3 i lh}' 8reeting, but I am .’lf!'?\i(ll]“[r(f'l‘i?tg‘ D o o il e hat feldio SnoE matiorire ne el e What my greeting was oo tong So0S! Qid not savor of abselute puge.. ‘ul(‘,nx‘ljllgr;:‘]\\n;(‘flv a perfunctory nnswcr‘ tonded, ang. 'nl:nxr:n}‘c] n ] s & 3 Wi ir Dz done jutice to' al oy ol oY amenities necessary, turned w i‘l‘h a shing smile, How do you do, Mr. Graham! v are quite a stranger,” she satd, op. fering her hand with an afr o wor EIning her aficr an abrenes p o 204 He had boen but & v tiom the studio. “From what Moy | V:fl(’;]]alf} says, your room must be Wopderful. I am so anxious to see ite Sh; s“';u:s povrfoot, I had to aamit it. she must have known that I digliked eT, and resented her coming to my invitation had only Lome, glven at Dicky's request—trugt woman to 2nd freshness M Draper. 1t} social to Dick away my been another" s 2 er's opinion — but there was no hint of itorinm;}:(‘r manner. She might have been a valued family friend. Madge Quite Forgotten, I could see that Dicky was embar- rassed by the situation, but he carried it off with his usual nonchalance. “If T do say it as shouldn't,” he quoted gavly, “it's some room. We might well go right up and see it. come along, Madge.” “I hope your mother is well,'PpMiss Draper said as we ascended the stai “She is better,” Dicky answered, th an uneasy glance toward his | refu thus hur- | mother’s closed Joor—she had grimly ed to sce his guest—''but she ap- red unusually fatigued after din- and now sleeping. Here we Just cast your eves around th pe: ner, ar. is h(‘rJ | privilege | against Fast their first glimpse of the r life of the great prairies. Up to that {time, the cowboy, the cowgirl and the !plains Indian were almost mythi characters along the Atlantic seaboard | end even in the Middle West. Naturally, the realism of the show created a sensation, and this sensa- tion was more than duplicated when Colonel Cody took his great exhibition to Europe. In England and on the Continent Buffalo Bill was “taken up” Ly royalty and the nobility; he was a personal friend of the late King E rd, when he wa the Prince Wales; he knew the Kaiser intimately when he was the Crown Prince, and was entertained by many distinguished Furopeans, both military men and members of the learned professions Many well known artists sought the of painting the picturesque looking plainsman, and among them was Rosa Bonheur, the famous aninial The original of the Bonheur picture is in Paris, but Colonel Cody has a small copy of it made and pre- sented to him by the artist, and it is one of his most prized possessiens. It shows the Colonel astride a mag- pificent Kentucky-bred horse, Dre- sented to him on the eve of his first departure for Europe by officer friends in the United States army. The artist was infatuated with the American horses, and spent several weeks with the show sketching and painting them, as well as in making pencil sketches of Colonel Cody. While working he dressed in the breeches and smock of a peasant farmer. Colonel Cody has been in Paris several times since the death of the great Bonheur, and never tails to lay a wreath on her tomb at Pere la Chaise. Colonel Cody, in a recent Interview, expressed himself as being delighted to get back into the Wild West arena, where he has spent so many years of his long and adventurous life The “Preparedness”’ spectacle, which is being featured by the Buffalo Bill- 101 Ranch shows, also, he declared, appealed to him, because it afforded him an opportunity to make a direct, and at the same time picturesque, appeal to his countrymen to prepare to defend the honor of the countr all aggressors. The soldiers utilized in the display have been fur- loughed by the United States war de- partment for the purpose, and this in | itself is a grateful tribute to Colonel | Cody and an official recognition of his | former services in the interest of the | army. Vegetables tihat can be cooked the day before serying and reheated with- out loss of flavor are the following: String beans, |tomafoes, asparagus Oh! Mr. Graham! how beautiful!” spinach and pottatoes that you intend creaming. \ but | ¢ Popular Pleasure Re of July wi Compounce Pierce and Norton :=v’ ing a big program amt the patrons for next Tues ¥ will dancing at the r afternoon and evening. The Casino will be prej ply dinners to all who come sort, either tably There will band afternoon Bris Fourth Lake a be a la carte or be by a the style. in the | band from 3 to 5 o'clock and concert by the same band in 30 to 9:30 o'clocl by a 8rg ning from will be followed of set fireworks. _ There will be thre of vaudeville and u the summer theate grounds afford m such as the carrou ing, boating, bowl mountain climbing) view all over Conne| clifis. For those real holiday at a Compounce furnished wi of the new “scythe’—attached t straps from the shoull ing each hip of the short One

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