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

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4 PINEY RIDGE” IN | MOVIES AT KEENEY'S [Picturization of the play ivid Higei scored his 8e succes the Selig tributes “At Piney Ridge” to the eney pro m for tonight. This pat picture is a five-part adaptation one of the most celebrated dramas d on the screen it is expected to even greater favor. Sharing pors with it tonight will be “The ent Shame,” the latest episode in “Who's Guilty” serial in which Moaore and An Nillson are rring. This sensational serial i racting a great deal of attentior oughout the city and is responsible large audiences Monday and lesday evening. ednesday and Thursday there will new chapters in “The Mysteries of Ta,” and on Wednesc only the ture of the program will be rothy Phillips and Lon Chaney in e Mark of an absorbing in which greatest company n on Kelly plays the lead in the en part Blue Ribbon flim, “The lw Decide: which will be shown on iday ana Saturday. he vaudeville talent this week in- des Scamp and Scamp in illing bar specialty: Wister and flor with their repertory of Trish ladies and Kir a Japanese kgler of exceptional Porothy Fruit Cereal Panned Tomatoes Sugar and Milk Egg Biscuits Coffee Lmnch, Lettuce and Egg Salad SHoeed Pineapple with Whipped Cream Iced Cocoa Dinner. Veal Olives Mashed Patatoes Succotash Radish and Cucumber Salad [Cheese Straws Watermelon Iced Coffee bgg Biscuit—Sift together one brt flour and three teaspoonfuls ing powder, rub into them two lespoonfuls butter, add two well ten eggs, one teaspoonful sugar i one-half teaspoonful salt. Mix lether with one cupful of milk. il one-half inch in thickness, cut b biscuits and bake in hot oven thirty minutes. heese Straws—Rall puff past trim- gs one-eighth inch thick. Sprinkle h salt, red pepper, and grated se. To keep these Ingredients on | paste, pat and fold in three layers. 1 again, spread, fold and roll as be- Cut in strips one-half inch wide four inches long. Bake in a hot n. TONIGHT Selig Feature “At Piney Ridge” “WHO’'S GUILTY?” WEDNESDAY DOROTHY PHILLIPS, in “The Mark of Cain” ,jg FRIDAY and SATURDAY DOROTHY KELLY, in l ‘The Law Decides” TODAY ONLY Triangle Plays Present Douglas Fairbanks N “Reggie Mixes In” Paramount Plays Present Edna Goodrich IN “The Making of “Love's Getaway" Paramount Pictograph TOMORROW and THURS. THEDA BARA, in “UNRER TWO FL o BILLIE BURKE, in “GLORIA’S ROMANCE"” Matinees 50— Evenings 10c LAKE COMPOUNCE CONCERT EVERY SUNDAY AFTERNOON. Bathing, Bowling, ing and Dancing. Boating, Billiards, F The Popular Picnic Ground. Regular Dinners. Moving Picture Theater- PIERCE & NORTON, PROPS. al | | | | | | | | NEW. RRITAIN | News DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY AUGUST 1, 1916. for Theater Goers ®little wife. A STORY YOU CAN BEGIN AT ANY 1IME Her Side--and His How Cora and David Temple Solved Their By ZOE BECKLEY The New Ls;;e. ved out of tl ation ‘emple each turned impu In Cora’s eves were both compos met a wtion with rare ¢ gave her calr But was David's wifc Cora’s philosophy, had alway to fight the being a legal possession a man ¢« She longed to know ty dence really was h all hers eagerness into her gaze. Then—so suddenly that it took her time thrill through her from head foot and Kkissed her. People in the busy railway have met after a lon 1bsence and smiled 1 the fashion of humans who dote upon a little fl To Cora the embrace nd kiss spoke the most have been content wit that, without To David, however, whose mascuiine nature words were necessar; -and immediately so. “Come 1i'l girl, core of my heart,” he hustling her toward the neavest exit, * hills I nt to talk to you, dear. Cora's spirit sang within her “You needn't, whispered back, squeezing his nd und andir I know what you're going to say? You're going thing; and vou mustn't do Da The was inevitable somehow. The best of it i “that we've all got something good out of T'll confess, New York." David winced, and she continued without ing him a chance to break n: “You sec, things have to be paid for. Wanda did me a very ur service. And it was only right that I should take the risk of a prico be- ing high. Oh, I don't mean that Wanda exacted a price. She has heen splendid. I mean that Fate exacts a price. For everything. Alway You don’t get something for nofhing, Davy. Often a woman pays v dearly when she enter the market I entered. TFor I was buying something enormously valuable—you! Your liberty of action. Your fature. Or perhaps I ought to say ours. “I needed help desperately, David. highly for it. If Wanda had been a difi the best sort In the world.” “Yes, my darling girl, she is” David spoke with intense feeling. she isn’t—Iisn’t my sort. No one on this earth my sort, but you. If I could only make you know how clearly I see that now. est! We've all learned a lot by this—this chapter you call i Bretts and Wanda and you and T. “But T believe I've learned the most, Cora. For I've learned the soul of you, the true heart of you, the fine, fine quality of vou, my own eirl. There is something I feel for vou that wasn't there before. A sort of_—of reverence, maybe. Oh, I'm making an awful mess of trying to tell you, dear.” = He stopped a moment, groping for adequate words. “Just as a tain something went out of my feeiing for Wanda on the last cvening I saw her alone, a certain something has come into my love for you. I can't plain it. 1 guess I'll just have to live it. We're going to start fresh, my We're going to be happier than we have ever heen.” i Marital Problems As the train mc of Davi other’s face. She had Wanda vely and and from ked the into sight 1 and Cora the I vivid ec d wisdon 3 Al fan e rn Th ording distressin ur ness. sh to of from. dis liarity, rmeth her generos hers, 1y her put a had not heen That »d cont rs on was feveris what breath and David shot a wondrot her old- rn pair to andir in hi the mn fr 2 “‘touch whole story. or further demanded concre supposed ndly, = 1shin of words whispered catching her arm and a long tramp through the et's take Dave, dear old 1 - Don’t to blame yourself, whole-—whole chapter, she hurried on it. That's the splendid laddie, I put in some hideous hours of worry while I d,” she suppose for cne vou pax was in nd I ran the rent sor chance of payving -well, she isn't. is as it—the cer- The Little Vanities. “None have more pride than those who dream that they have none. You may labor against vain glory until you conceive that you are humble, and the fond conceit of your humility will prove to be pride in full bloom.’— Spurgeon. brought forth was from business woman who has own way i the business world since she was sixtcen, who is an excellent pianist and a fine housekceper. But the thing she is most proua of her endurance as a pedestrian, She has a walk of eighteen miles to her credit and she is more pleased to be tola that there aren’t many women over thirty five who could walk as far in a day than at any other compliment. a successful made her What are you the most conceited about? Someone plumped that ques- tion into a silence in one of our after noon chats on the veranda the othe evening and the resulting conver tion was most interesting. Try it some time. If you can get people to be honest you will get some worth-while sidelights of character. People are seldom proud of the things they have the most obvious reason to be pleased with. The Strange Things People Vain of. The brainy man or woman fre- quently takes less pride in his mental ability than in some minor accom- plishment or perhaps some single physical beauty. Do you remember, in “Little Wom- en,” how Jo, the clever member of the family (and presumably the plainest), wept bitterly the night her mother was called to her sick father’'s bedside, and when her sister, assum- ing that she was worried about him tried to comfort her, she confessed that it was really because she had tried to help out the family finances by selling her one beauty, her splen- did mane of chestnut hair. That little human touch was one of the many that make that wonderful book so real and so beloved. Tell Her What Wonderful Endurance She Has. One of the confessions Another was from a writer who is more proud of his tennis game than of any of his books or the honorary college degrees he has received. The two things that pleases me most to be complimented upon are my skill at darning stockings and my horseback riding. & So it goes. Perhaps They Take Some Praise for Granted. Of course I don’t mean people would sacrifice the larger for the lesser gift. Perhaps when you analyze the subject they are not really more proud of the lesser, only they have ccme to take praise and admir tlon for the larger for granted, and therefore are more pleased by com- pliments on the less obvious accom- plishment. Are that these In any case is watch fer theso little wealknesses. | Bven without baldly bringing the sub- ject up you can detect them by watch- ing for them. The socially clever woman doecs not need to be told thls, she always knows what overyone' weak spot in the vanity line is and plays upon 1t. o ¢ an ice to season | it 1s Interesting our talk soapstone griddl der, requires long | Household Notes| A rubber garden apron is a great convenience. well pairs and be | sunned should hoes should be aired; and sev o kept in use. Use raw peanuts for salting when- cver possible. The wax or oil polish which is| good for woodwork is good, also, for | leather doors. To clean copper rub it with a lemon dipped in salt. At different altitudes water boils at . Hot weather is always tolerable if | ifferent degrees. | vour nerves are properly fed and aireq | and rested. | The common garden gourd makes BARA AND BURKE ON FOX'S SCREEN ; i LNDER TWO FLAGS WILLIAM FOX PRODULTION 7y 7 The attractions for tomorrow and Thursday at the Fox theater will bring together on the one program two of the greatest of the present day women screen stars. Willlam Fox will present the “most talked of wom- en of the screen,” Theda Bara, a sereen version of Ouida’s masterpiece “Under Two Flags.” This is a story of Algerian army life and give Thedw Bara an opportunity to display her remarkable talents in the worid-re- nowned character of Cigarete. The supporting cast is exceptionally strong and includes the great screen vil- Jain, Stuart Holmes. On these two days the third chapter of the great film novel “Gloria’s Romance,” feat- uring Billie Burke, will also be shown. In this chapter a touch of mystery is given the story through the disappear- »nce of Richard Freneau, a suitor for the hand of Gloria. Dr. Stephen Royce, a bitter rival, is looked upon as having something to do with the disappearance. Miss Burke displays some more wonderful gowns and oth- er wearing apparel from her wonder- ful mllion dollar ward The Pathe Weekly, a George Ovey com- edy, and the Seeing America First travel pictures will make up the bal- ance of the program. today th Triangle feature, “Reggic Mixes-in,” featuring Dougla rbanks and the Paramount feature, “The Making of Madaliena,” featuring Iidna Goodrich, together with a Keystone comed and the Paramount pictograph will be shown. FRENCH ON PARADE ENTERING VILLAGE Stroll Tnto Town, Cane in Hand, Following Bombardment For yons, France, Aug. 1.—The ter- rific results of French shell firc were described by Albert Thomas, minister of war, in addressing a gathering of workers in munition factories here. . “During the long months we have Just passed through,” he said, “there have been hours when a slight m take or misunderstandint ed I tween citizens doing their duty in tho interior of the country, and those ful- filling the nobler and more danger task on the front. It was sald the workers slackened and did Supply the army with all it needed. | Well, herg 15 a pleasant fact we ob- | served recently on the Sommo: When the twentieth corp; the colonial COrps, entered the villages of Hem | and Curlu and when they carrled | Monacy Farm, do know how | they entered ? 1t, not | In risking all the infantry. No, they | walked, as the soldiers sald to mue | a few days ago, cane in hand throu the illage or, rather, t mense sea of broken rod Tepresented the village, tude and friendship their thoughts | you ssa The proposition below, which is open to every reliable housckeeper or her husband in the United States, is, we believe, the most extraordinary busi- ness announcement that has ever appeared in this paper. We are not sure that we have made clear our purpose in sending out ten thousand of these TWENTY-YEAR GUAR- ANTEED ALUMINUM SETS under this remark- able offer; but we do know that any house- keeper who fails to take advantage of this offer is virtnally slamming a door in the face of Opportunity. i m . . it M This set consists A QUAKER VALLEY COFFEE PERCOLATOR, of scven-cup capacity; made of heavy aluminum metal; has a mircor-liko finish, with cbony fin- ished handlo. © Will mako beiter coffee—yes, better than any your mother ever made. A STX.QUART PRESERVING KETTLE—No more usefal cooking vessel ever mado. Preserving fruits is only ono of ita many uses. There is daily, almost hourly, use for a vessel of this size in the kitchen. A THREE-QUART PRESERVING KETTLE—Equally as handy as the larger size every day in the year. A NINE-PIECE COMBINATION OUTFIT—Includes a covered roasters a doublo boiler, a stearm cooker, five cgg poachers, and three pudding pans. of twenty-one pieces, as follows: person that our prices are lower or our quality is higher. We want to prove this to you. Aluminum Ware to place in your home without a we will ship one of these sets by express or Parccl your set iffion sign and return the coupon promptly. ~You will for your Kitchen that is guaranteed to wear for Quaker Valley organization stands back of this guarantee. After you receive this st we want you to exsmine it ‘SHR LOME carefully. Note the thickness of the metal; compare it with any aluminum utensils you may already have in use; inform yourself as to present prices of high- grade aluminum ware. Then, if you are completely satisfied that you could not buy a set of the same composition at retail, equal or even inferior in quality, for less than fifty per cent more than our price, remit §7.95 at the rate of a dollar a month; if, on the other hand, you are not entirely satisfied on every one of these points, you may return the set within thirty days at our expense. Now, sign tho coupon and rush it to the mail-box. We assure you that on this proposition there is no time to lose. Quaker Valley Mfg. Co.,128 M1t tation charges on arrival. thirty days at your expense. [ Shipping Address q Aurora, [llinois - Street, SEREP R i The RIS only 48¢. e s of the threc larsc The Cold Water Camel, turned toward their comrades In tha rea i “They asked me to thank, in their | name, the work women and workmen of the munition had | enabled them to without | shedding their blood were | only five seriously wounded in the | whole brigade. It was thus th n- tered in triumph | only a few moments before hy the en- factories enter who there There a village occupied | I appeal on the the point of illness and fatigue. future of our land, victory and the i independence of beloved France are ! all at stake. You are striving at onee | for the integrity of your country and the liberty of all peoples.” to you, to carry | The COUNTING RAILROAD VOTE. gaod plaything for a baby. i A wheel tray is a great saving of | time and strength in hot weather or | any ather weathe i Sprinkle clothe. with the garden | hose while han { ing on the line. i If iced drinks are taken frequently ir hot weather, remember that they raust be sipped slowly. | "~ | Bath sponges should be hung out in hot sunshine as often as possible, A little crystalizea ginger is a good thing to have along on an ocean trip. It a bay leaf Is added soup it will g An old piano stool will be found useful in the Kitchen, as it can be ad- justed to different heights. to tomato e it a delightful flavor. | begun New York, Aug. 1.—Preparations for counting the vote on a general strike of 400,000 employes of 225 rail- roads in the United Statc re been here. The count will com- pleted by August 7, according to the leaders of the brother It will be supervised by the presidents of the conducto. engineers, firemen’s and trainmen’s unions STRIKING St. Lou PACK Mo., liberation to | | New C employ (I'rom Capper Adoption of cmblem of the one of the things that ‘will not down.’ with st St. Louis last night nd reti 500 men are houses in voted to accept the ¢ > party by the employe today. About ) wor affected. | | | It A New Eféhif}_ Inierview prohibitionist party is fairly crackles suggestive- ness. double ar the fi amed mel and its Of course, stemach of the ¢ holding water, as well as its auto- of fat campaign city Her account Experie of an | woman Mrs. Pillard Tells following brief with a New Britain over seven years ago, and it will be read with inter every citiz Mrs. F. L. Britain, say from rhe throu for matic production from its Kump, are, for the it Jjustifying choosir keen | reasons | leaders in as the party Court “I used to s natism and the small very es The street, fICF | | .ut in their choice | svmbol, if that we these statesmen reatly ant ache k. I caught then I suff > most of Doan’s Kidney Pil ich I got at The Clark & Brainerd Co’s drug stor wve me o much relief that I contin- ued taking them and they made a complete cure (Statement given October 1908.) oOn April “I still think ve Kidney Piils o “builded better than cold We rely upon the encyclopedia for information about the camel, which is not indigenous to political life, Take the pace of the camel, for example. It is remarkably ‘‘steady and uniform.” Speed not the true | characteristic of the camel. The | thing that distinguishes this beast of Pirden is its persistence, which it keeps up regardless of everything, even, we suppose, ridicule. “It lives 30 or 40 y rs,” says the Milburn | cyclopedia, ~ “The patience of the camel has heen celebrated by authors. 20, 191 rd said Doz s y haven't had occasion to use them in a number of years but 1 know that they are good 50c, at all dealers. Foste M Buffalo, N. Y. re all there is to it, | | they | and Women Readers cxpress charges to New Britian e TWO SANITARY SEAMLESS BREAD PANS, with round comers. Dimensions, nine and one-half inches long, five snd one-half inches wide, two and three-quarter inches decp,—just TWO PIE PLATES—to insuro have a pie plate that will distribute the heat. those made of puro aluminum do this. HALF-PINT MEASURING CUP—Faeal) the good festures of & glass measuring cup, and one more,—it will not SANTTARY LADLE—Bowl medo of ono pieco of puro and one-cighth inches in diameter; handleis twelve and one-balfinches long, SALT AND PEPPER SET—Handy, attractive and cverlasting. This distribution of ten thousand of these aluminum sets is our way of convincing ten thousand home-makers that it is no longer necessary to pay retail prices for Home Fur- nishings. We work for a living here in the Valley; there are no expenses here b'ut those which add value to the merchandise we sell. When we ship Home Furnishings direct from the factory to your home, with no retail store expenses added, it niust be plain to every reasoning o right size. ie crosts right, st Joate e slumipum, four Hence, we have selected this set of Guaranteed cent in advance. post direct to your home. We make this offer despite the fact that the prices of aluminum goods are advancing by leaps and bounds. Preparations for this great distribution were made long ago; and you may be sure qf getting On your simple request, en have an Aluminum Set twenty years; and the grea Quker Valley Mfg. Co., 118 Mill Stroet, Aurora, Illinois: You may ship direct from the factary to my home for thirty days' free trial, the twenty-one picce Aluminum Set. X am to If entirely pleased, I wil Your special get-acquainted price of $7.95 is paid; otherwise will return within .y nothing but transpor- R remit 31 a month wail (Please write first as well as Last name in full) nd vicinity 331,—Aug. 1. are Coupon No e e e e e e e e e But, ness, with all its general ibmissive- it is resentful of inju cording to some rank republic always ill-humored If the thira garty prohibition ms ers were in doubt whether pick camel or the ostrich for th party ies, and ac- (probably 10crats) abserve; nd and morosc the | emiblem, they showed good judgment | purposes, prohibition | The ostrich just pokes the sande and lets it go at that the camel plug persistence, a d stibborn obliviousness roundings that are grudging admiration its head In here- with a and a right alon patience ta hi worthy of sur- un- Catarrhal Deafness Cannot Be Cured by local applications, the dises portion is only o to curc and that y a con Catarrhal Deafness is caused by flamed condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube fs inflamed you have a rumbling sound or imperfect hearing, and when it is entirely closed, Deafness is the result. Unless the inflammation can be reduced and this tube regtored to its normal cond hearing wlll be destroyed forever. cascs of deafness are caused by which is an inflamed condition of the mucous sur- faces. Hall's Catarrh Cure acts thru the blood on the mucous surfaces of the sys- tem, as_they of the catarrh titution not reach r. The 1 deafness, medy n in will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Catarrhal Deafness that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Circulars free. All Drugglsts, 76c. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, Q. I3

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