New Britain Herald Newspaper, August 11, 1916, Page 4

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NEW,. BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, AUGUST 11, e —— News for Theater C Goers and Women n Readers o] LUSTAN GAS 15 NOT SETTLED 19106. A STORY YOU CAN BEGIN AT ANY TIME Her Side---and His How Cora and David Tempie Solved Their Marital By ZOE BECELEY FALL TROTTEUR | IS BUILT LIKE THIS | Problems = With as the Allah, week, is winning the praise of local music lovers who have been attracted to the pls 10use in large numbers since the act opened its engagement Juliette, a centr: talented violinist, 1 figure, the Temple of the headliner at Keeney's this Error of Clerk Gives False Im- pression to German Embassy Mission or Mischief ? “I hope you're satisfied now, Beth,” Tom Woodford said gloomily to his wife as they were speeding back to New York on the train. ‘“For ten s = e : : years I've been trying to tell you that you can’t manage marriage and life !‘“,”'d 1;,15," ALSicAl HoveltyRof mers for other people, either by telling them thelr faults or interfering with | . S04 the audience likes it. Juliette I lays with exceptional cleverness Beth was not “satisfled.” Their visit with the Temples had ended | every night. There mre ton beaols 1 prematurely with relmtions strained all around. For several days after Beth | {1 company presenting the :po‘(‘i'\}'\' had first spoken to Cora about David's shortcomings as a husband David | anq each has some number to bring out | had avolded the Woodfords on every legitimate pretext possible. Cora | pis individual talents. Nebo Glickman went on treating her guests with the most painstaking hospitality. ~But it | goes a dance numbe In the Shadow was clearly painstaking; not the spontancous manner of a sincerely felt | of the Pyramids:” Robert Mandell welcome. plays the 'cello with skill: Belle and The Woodfords were not slow to realize the situation. Soon after Tom | Nan Doherty twinkle their feet in the | received a telegram making their immediate return to New York ‘“abso- | damce of oy whilelEcanloy Conteolond lutely necessary.” The two families parted with every outward sign of | Anita Pindner contribute to the friendliness. But none of them was blind to the strained and even broken | cess of the turn with other bonds of friendship Beth's interference had brought about. Least of all | features was Beth oblivioust o what she had done. Tonight’s and tomorrow’s audience “The trouble with you, Tom, and most of the world, is that you live | are promised a photoplay treat when in the spirit of each for himself and the devil take the hindmost,” she |the Vitagraph company presents its said bitterly in response to Tom. “From your point of view I am noth- great underworld production, ‘“The ing but a shrewish, mischief making, back biting, interfering nuisance Lights of New York," with Leah Baird who lacks the fineness to see that people are entitled to privacy in their | and other noted screen stars In the | as interpreted, an indication that Ger. ) lives. Oh, you needn’t try to deny it Tom,” she cut in. “Because half cast. This pleture is the biggest | many's proposals were to be accepted | the time T tell myself these things, t00.” thing the Vitagraph company has pro- | as gatisfactory. “But because I try to 1ive out in my own life the highest, the most hu- duced In many months and it is prov- When Acting Secretary Polk man mission I know T'get a taste of the crosses ever yone has to bear who | ing a big success as it moves about | 514 on Wednesday of the impress tries to answer. ‘Am I my brother’s keeper? with a Yes. the clrcuit, gained in German official quarter “My neighbor is killing her child through ignorance. I must look on Another attraction for tonight Will | the meaning of the request he and pretend not to see because, forsooth, ‘it is not my business’ The | be the famous Dorsey expedition pic- | no couid not talk about the Lusitania. pity and horror I'feel at its unnecessary sufferings is ‘minding business not | tures entitled, “Rough Riders of | "Now | o1 Secretary Lansing and my own.’ Reaching out to save the llttle one is ‘Intruding on other peo- | Italy”. Ben Wilson will be seen in |y poii qeclare the request was in ple’s privacy.” “The Circular Room.” Extra NUmM- |, wise an indication that the United | “If 1 let the child perish T am ahsolved from responsibility and am ‘ro- | bers for tomorrow are Clara Horton in | gy cas’yat gpo €% 9% 00 (48 W0 150 } spectables When I see a man drifting into a career of duplicity and un- 3 | | CONVENIENT WEFFKLY PAY- ANOTHER BIG WEEK-END SALE Plenty of sizes—wide Washington, Aug. 11,—State De- partment officials have explained that the recent request to the German Em- bassy for permission to publish one of Count von Bernsto on the settlement of the Lu case was an inadvertence. va : 3 M swp st Al styles and materials and every item a been made, but an investigation of | Laicaln of the B ohent Spit s DES the department’s files disclosed that | LutelyfNORexirajchavs st voionen & SPORTS COATS, Up from o letter prepared by a subordinate of- | AN “Charge Account.” Values as high as $22.50. -$5.98 suec- | ficial had been signed either by Sec- dancing | retary Lansing or Acting Secretary | CLOTH SUITS. Up from . $7 gB Values as high as $30.00 TUB SKIRTS 79¢ Polk and had been transmitted to WAISTS .. SEoEs ....980 the German Embassy. : State Department offic\ls ‘declared TRIMMED HATS $1.98 SUMMER DRESSES 98¢ nia At first it variety of that too much in’portance had been attached to the request in German official quarters and that it was not, LOTS OF OTHER BARGAINS, MEN’S SUITS At Worth-While Reductions sar Miscra STORE $87—685. MAIN STREER i “Under :jw Lion’s Paw,” and Jane Gail | jong pending representations as satis- faithfulness toward his wife, who is my friend, I must look the other way. |in “The Come-on. factory; that the status of the entire to him.” I must neither say anything to my friends nm‘“ ey R s negotiations still was informal, and “But my dear Beth, what do you accomplish by butting in? om @ ” that none of the correspondence was ' | protested. “You only make it impossible to go on being friends with the THE DIVIDEND” AND S puh]i(‘npl'lon ot s | | people yvou want to stay friends with. @ » »Q | time. The case is regarddfl as still | il “T ‘accomplish this, Tom. T plant a monitor in the breasts of these THE CLOWN” AT FOX'S unsettled because of developments in with whom, as you put it, ‘T ‘butt in.’ " she answered solemnly, with the submarine warfare and the attitude intensity of a moral zealot. “You may not know it, but what I tell peo- of the European belligerents on the | ple about the bad in them Ikeeps on reverberating in their heart of hearts. subject of armed merchantmen which Don’t vou think otherwise! All the conscience In David Temple is repeat- arose last February at the moment ing my words to him every time he is tempted to mbuse Cora’s trust. Nor the Lusitania negotiations appeared have I left Cora unaffected. T know her watchfulness is increased by to be on the point of a satisfactory my warning. And she will be enabled to help him stay stratght. conclusion. “I knew this sounds fanatical to you and detestable. But I suppose State Department every one with a mission that looks to any other person’s good is a fan- their atte and a nuifsance. I am not conceited or sacrilegious when I say that 1 know why the Christs and the Savanarolas and the Tom Osbornes and their kind have been reviled and put down as fanatical nuisances in their | times. “But rementber this, Tom,” she concluded, witlfout breaking eggs. And one can’t live up to one’s conception right without sacrificing something. If T have to sacrifice good form and even friendship in order to do what I consider my duty to my brother and sister “humans about me, why, sacrificed good form and friendship shall be. TRA LINES is wood brown velvet, which is draped a full tunic of fvn georgette crape. The front is of the same shade, which also s the blousy top. Cuffs and deep r collar of white pontine just oh the girdle of white beads. LIQUOR AND JRUG HABITS SUCCESSFULLY OVERCOME AT NEAL INSTITUTE 2 Dwight St. New Haven, Conn. Phone Center 5540 The features at Fox’s today and to- will be the Triangle play “The Dividend,” featuring W. H. Thompson and Charles Ray, and the Paramount play, “The Clown,” fea- turing Victor Moore. “The Dividend,” . is thes tory of the boy about to en- ter manhood, a good boy, with no in- i clination to do wrong. He comes “one cam’t make omelets |Dome prepared to make his father's op | interests his own. His father who s president of a gigantic corporation, does not give the boy any encourage- | ment and for want of something to do the boy trtes a whirl at dissipa- tion, of which he soon tires. He again tries to get his father’s attention | 1, scnqor on Dec, 4. The En v re- DEVELOPS BEAUTY. so that he may be of some help and | ,150q giving its assent, dated Feb. 16 after being repulsed again plunges p. puplished at the same time. This GeepiliniofiEneitrelionl ihsiundenworld || HE-asores Lol il s ot ; and acquires the opium habit, an evil On the other hand, the suggestion from which there is no hand to guide | (nat any of the correspondence be | him. This iy a lesson for every fa- | uplished was dropped at oncd on | ther to harken to. the decision of higher officials that The = Paramount feature, ~“The | he circumstances which intervened to | , Clown,” tells the story of the “Circus | prevent a conclusion of the negotia- of [ Tent,” of the trials and tribulations of | tjons had not been altered, and that the members and how the children |tnhe situation still was in a condition | g0 to extreme sacrifices in order that | hich did not warrant publication of every one may be happy. The Key-|any of the correspondence. The stone players will offer Fay Tincher in | mmbassy was not informed of the “Bedelia’s Bluff,” and the Paramount | changed plan. Word was sent to Ber- will present the Burton-Holmes Trav- | Jin that the note would be made pub- elogue on the same program. As | lic here. usual the performance at this house on Thought Proposals Accepted Saturday will be continuous from 2| \when information was received to 11 p. m. here of the request to the Embassy | and its reply German Embass re——— cials were questioned and the: ! M f | inquiries to believe they considered enu or Tomorrow the proceeding as indication of the | = ) impending acceptance of the latest German proposals. In fact, it was stated that the diplomatic relations between the United States and Ger- many never had been so satisfactory, from their point of view, since first morrow officidls broke silence on the subject and as- | serted that what really happened was this: A subordinate official bles the diplomatic periodically compiled and published s a white book, wrote the German Embassy a letter, which Mr. Polk ad- mitted was signed either by himself or by Secretary Lansing, for permis- sion to publish one of the Lusitania notes submitted by the (,(n\xn am- who assem- correspondence If you have something to sell, if you want to hire help, if you want a better situation,'if you want to hire or let a tenemens, the classified column will place you in touch with the right people CHINESE STUDENTS COMIN: { | Thirty-one Will Further Pursue Edu- | cation in United States. | Peking, Aug. 11.—Thirty-one young | men were graduated this year from the Tsing Hua coltege, an institution aintained with the Boxer indemnity money refunded to China by the === | {/nited States, and they will leave for stronger than its | America in a few weeks to enter var- The majority of | 10US colleges and universities in that 2 yomen | COURtry. e o for| Paul S. Reinsch, the American the | Minister, Tsao Ju-lin, the acting min- ister for foreign affairs, and C. C. Wang, of the Board of Communica- tions, who was educated in America, addressed the yvoung graduates. Mr. Refnsch drew a distinction be- tween the old style of learning and the new style. He said the day is passed when a real scholar seeks dls- tinction and wealth for himself. The man who has true learning now rea- lizes his responsibility to serve others, and turn his knowledge to practical use for the betterment of his own country and all mankind. Mr. Reinsch said this is an age when action and TLondon Welfare Department Assists Female Munition Workers. London, Aug. 11.—Woolwich senal is about the last place one might | look for a beauty specialist, vet it is ' right in fhe center of that hive death-dealing machinery manufac- ture that one can be found. Right in the heart of this great arsenal a “Women's Welfare Department” is presided over by a lady superinten- dent who has thousands of girls un- der her care, to administer to their ailments and care for their complex- fons. It is from the high explosives and lydite sections that the girls mostly come from for advice as to rest from the dangerous work which turns their faces a yellow tint if proper care and precautions are not taken in time. Starting with about 400 girls, the Welfare Department now has charge of thousands. The girls are advised to avold Jewelry, bangles and such vanities, and they dress In neat blue, gray or Khaki ar- CHAIN is no weakest link. young men je many quali foess. They have bition, the inclination to work, the husiasm, the intelligence. The rec that so few of them realize their bition is because they lack prepa- ion. [Fou must know something biness before you go into it. smith Business about Don’t Whine. Take that sentence out. I know you didn’t mean it to, but it sounds like a whine, and it never pays to | whine in business. The rest is all right."” become fixed is enough to wear strongest nerves to a frazzle. In its inception the whining habit can easily be overcome. I know be- cause I have seen it done by a moth- er whose four children each passed Breakfast ihs Fruit Boiled Rice Soused Herrings Dry Toast Milk Coffee {4 perilled School 6 Main. St. New Britain real service to the general publc are expected from educated men. He con- gratulated the graduates on finishing their preparatory course, and ex- overalls and eat at a smart little Y. W. C. A. canteen which is decorated with pink walls and prettily decked tables. A hostel 1s already in being, built Lunch Lettuce and Salmon Salad Sliced Peaches by submarine warfare. This was supplemented further by characterizing as absolutely unwar- ranted recent intimations from Ber- lin that underseas warfare was about That is what a business man said when I showed him a tentative copy of an important business letter I had been writing. through the stage when a to & whine. She had two methods. repeat the child’s words in the same father wish One was to tended them a hearty welcome to the cducational institutions of America. C. C. Wang told the youmg grad- vates that China’s greht need today is men who can say “No.” He urged that young graduates go to America with the firm determination to be- come men of decision and positive character, who will be able to assist in directing China’s course along a fixed path, and will not be swayed by selfish ambition. Bread and Butter seen a baby Iced Tea drew the blackest line the my pen | Unlovely tones. T have offending | Of three respond to that treatment. It | that failed she simply refused to grant any wish expressed in a whine. The definition of a whine is, “th nasal childish tone of mean com- plaint.” Older people do not whine in their tones so often as in the spirit of their remarks. to be resumed on its former Scale. It There was the added impression that | could make through the United States had been convinced, | sentence. by the abandonment of the submarine And I felt ashamed of myself. campaign since the sinking of the | True, I hadn’t meant to whine, but Channel liner Sussex, of the sincerity | if I had done it unconsciously I had of Germany’s declaration of accept- | reason enough for shame. ance of the principles laid down. Up- on that showing they believed the state department was about to pub- the TLusltania correspondence with an implication, at least, of its acceptability. This view of the situation was laid i before Acting Secretary Polk on Wed- nesday as having heen gained n| I agrec with serman official cirel Mr. Polk’s re- | agree. ply was a refusal even to discuss the | It never pays to whine anywhere. , Lusitania case. Whining is onc of the worst habits | 57t As a sequel to the publication of | anyone can possibly have. they statement of the situation as it had | In children It is the unforgivable It explains but been gained from German sources | fault. trouble is great enough and laid before the state department I can’t see why mothers do not|enough) to e a whine for comment the explanation was | combat the habit the instant it ap-| A fine spirit may be bowed do made as stated in the foregoing. pears, both for their children’s sake | the its trouble The United States government, it |and in self-defense. will never therefore nmwnnl. does not consider There Anything More Wearing 1;“ whin : the matter settled in any sense any . 2 |frateicomardice; more than it was last February, when uaniafvibiniog ; And if that is not enough, it the declaration of a new policy to-| For to be in constant contact with a | shortsighted, for nothing kil ward merchant ships came up to halt | child in whom the whining habit has | pathy and pity quicker than a Peter J,|the negotiations after officials had admitted informally that Count von = (@ Bernstorff’s note met the demands of e the American government and offer- ed a satisfactory basis for negotiat- ing a settlement of the Lusitania claims. to accommodate 750 girls just out- side the walls of the arsenal; several bungalows have been erected to ac- commodate four or five girls in the costest riverside fashion and plans are complete for the accommodation of 6,000 more who will have tennis, clubs and other spare-time facilities. Dinner Boiled Fish Potatoes Egg Sauce Buttered Onions Cucumber Salad Frozen Cocoanut Custard Macaroons Coffee People Don’t Realize They ‘Whining. Most whining is unconscious. The whining child doesn't realize he is whining. My mentor said whine in busin Tonight Are and Saturday Leah Baird in Vitagraph Feature Lights of New York” BUILDING BIG FLEET. Cucumber Salad—Peel two cucum- bers and place them in clear, cold water, When ready to serve, cut them in two lengthways and lay on a salad dish, flat side down. Then slice across without disturbing their shape and and French dressing. You Can Explain But Not Excuse a Whine. then The “The Hamburg-American Idne Will Add to ercantile Interes The Hague, Aug. 11.—That Ger- raany is building a tremendous mer- cantile fleet, including the largest ship in the world, was declared hy Herr Ballin, general manager of the Ham- hurg-American line, in an interview rvith the Hamburg correspondent of | the Frankfurter Zeitung. The ship referred to is the Bls- marck, of 56,000 tons, being con- ftructed for the Hamburg-American line. There is also the turbine ship, Tirpitz, of 3,200 tons under way, and the iist also includes three others of 22,000 tons. At the Vulcan vyards, Bremen, nine ships are building, four of them having a carrying capacity of 18,000 tons, these being the world's greatest freight steamers. In addition, Herr Ballin continued, three big liners are under way at the Tlensburg yard. Two more steamers of 13,000 tons and three larger pas- senger freight steamers are being constructed. Two carga ships of 17,- 000 tons each are being constructed especially for the Panama canal trade at the Tecklenburg yards at Geeste- muende. The North German Lloyd is building at Dantzlg two fast liners of 35,000 tons, the Columbus and the Hindenbung. These are to be speedy, designed to cut down the time be- tween the continent and New York. The same company is bullding twelve other ships of 12,000 tons, the Mun- chen and the Zeppelin, of 16,000 tons each. The Bremen-Africa line is con- structing six steamers, the Hansa line cight, and the Cosmos line ten, rang- ‘ing from 9,000 to 13,000 tons, SCOTLAND HAS REFORMED. Londan, Aug. 11.—The report on prisons in Scotland for 1915, just is- saed, reveals a remarkable decrease in the number of criminals dealt with, the lowest since 1869, notwithstand- ing the fact that the population of the country has increased since then by forty-five per cent. The decrease is attributed chiefly to the growth af the temperance movement, Increased fa- cility for finding employment, and the recent mobilization. The number of criminals tabulated in 1915 was 27, 10, a decrease of 16,195, as compared with the total of the preceding year. find a but Now and you woman w “It never pays to , with more than a whining voice, often meet the Oftentimes these more Tonight Only! him and you whining spirit. . Ben THE O Wilson in ICULAR ROOM people have Hrozen] Gocoanutl Custardes Bastiup many trials and troubles and volks of four eggs with one cupful su- gar unti] light then stir into one quart |, of boiling milk. Remove from fire and flavor with teaspoonful vanilla ex- tract. Allow to cool, add one and one- half cupfuls finely chopped cocoanut, mix all well together, turn into a freezer. Serve with cak OFFERS FIRST SUBMARINE. Holland’s Vessel to Be Preserved for Posterity. New York, Aug. 11.—Dr. Gibbons, who has purchased the first submarine built from the plans of James Holland, offered today to give the ancient craft to the city, historical society or museum that could show the best right to it and that would guarantee to preserve it. “We bought it because want to see it lost as was Wright's first aeroplane, Fulton's steamboat and the steamboat built by Gibbons in Philadelphia thirty-one years be- fore Fulton built his,” said Dr. Gip- bons. think that excuses the whini ol does not excuse a : 3 OnIYe (or i Gail in com Jane ‘THE ness of whine. over troubles is th WHY NOT HERE? Hague, Aug. 11.—The Balkan Trade Company Incorporated is title of a new concern just formed in Berlin by the principal coal mas | ters, the object of the company b ing to deal in coal with the Balkan countr The capital of the com- is four million marks. The an Minister of Finance parti- s to the extent of four hundred marks, and Prince Hans von Ples is also a share- NOTICE The New Britain Wet Wash having moved into their newly equipped building are prepared to do first class work. We solicit your patronage. Satisfaction guaranteed. 38 Union Street. Tel. 583 TODAY AND TOMORROW Paramount Plays Presents VICTOR MOORE in THE CLOWN Triangle Plays Present W. H. THOMPSON and thousand CHAS. RAY Heinrich n holder. THE DIVIDEND KEYSTONE COME BEDELIA’S BLU Paramount BURTON HOLMES TRAVELOGUE SATURDAY PERFORM- ANCE CONTINUOUS pany S T Pru | cipat we did not HOWARD RETIRED. Aug. 11.—Rear Denton Howard Delivered to Any Part of the Gity By Carrier for 15 Cents a Week Washington, miral Ad- Thomas was placed on the retired list today on ac- count of ago. His last duty was president of the naval examining retiring board. terdes when a large double team | ocwned by W. €. Stevens aof Hartford and used in hauling dirt from the Blm | and | = Thomas W. Fay in Glen street wers | READ THE HERALD THE latest news from all parts of the world Eadly demasster s fesultas wood- | state and city to the time of going to pre: ence between the yards and a row & each day. Special telegraph wire. Full AsY ! the horses dashed along between the two homes. The animals were finally hrought to a stop by the wagon i']|n.£ \PENSIVE RUNAWAY, I " street paving job, ran away. The ad- | cf shrubs and many small trees be- sociated Press service and Iarge corps of i ming between a large tree and a fence About $100 damage was done ves Jjoining rds of Richard Vogel KEEP ]"FDRMED longing to Mr. Vogel were ruined as efficient reporters, + ¢ 3 i i i post.

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