New Britain Herald Newspaper, August 14, 1916, Page 4

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TAT SOLDIER BOY INSPIRED THIS ? OFT FOR THE BORDER. aki colored broadcloth is cut in uaint shape, which is turned into litary effect by the double capes. broken belt is stitched to match 'ows zigzagging around the knees, stitching being one of the hall of fall models. ight kind of that makes for the B THE on comt biggest uccess. Hard work alone avails little. The biggest single factor he success of MEN WHO DO, IS INING. business training in this school siness will insure you a good ion at a good salary. mith Business School Main St. New Britain All Week Charlie Chaplin In His Big Success “ONE A. M.” Tonight and Tuesday Alice Howell in “IAZZIE’S LINGERING LOVE” Wednesday J. Warren Kerrigan in “THE BECKONING TRAIL” Thursday Billy Reeves in “LOVE ONE ANOTHER” Good Vaudeville Daily. TOD. Triangle Plays Present MAE MARSH and ROBERT HARRON IN WILD GIRL THE SIERRAS” “THE OF Paramount Pl ANN PENNI 1 “SUSHE SNOWFLAKE” Present GTON Keystone Comedy Paramount Pictograph Matinees Evenings 10¢ R AN THEATRE Hartford ALL THIS WEEK, Matinee Every Day MAX SPIEGEL. Presents HE SPIEGEL “REVUE” 50—PEOPLE—50 Singers, Dancers, Specialties. A Beauty Chorus. | probably NEW. RRITAIN DAILY HERALD. MONDAY, AUGUST 14, 1916. SRS S— ,{0 I Theater Goers and Wo DZs Do iz . az a7z, F; llu v » Ho! Everybody!! Know Zu Zu! EatZu Zu! Thecrisp- est, spiciest ginger snap that ever tickled a palate. Make a bee line to the nearest grocer man, and get a whole packageful for a nickel. NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY *ZuZyu * ZUZU * ZUZU * ZUZu ° ZUZU ¢ ZuZy UZu » ZuZy * ZuZo » Zu 7y ° Zo Zu © Zu Zy ¢ Zu Zus DZ 07 o DZAY o OZNZ o 0% 8 [ A STORY YOU CAN BEGIN Her Side---and His Marital AT ANY TIME How Cora and David Temple Solved Their By ZOLE BECKLEY Keeping House. The Temples' life in their new home had thus far been so keyed up, first with sheer novelty and then with the Woodfords’ visit that it took quite a spell of everyday housekeeping to step it down to normal. Cora had heen so occupied in getting acquainted with the wonders of her ‘“very own house” that she saw nothing but the delights of managing it. She had played the hostess to Beth and Tom Woodford with such conscientious thoroughness that many sordid and somber happenings in the kitchen re- gion had escaped her eve. For instance, there were the servants! Cora Temple had never been the mistress of servants before. York she had had a neat and amiable colored maid who came h ing and went home each night. In th ind new blishment at Colony Park it seemed neces: to have a cook and a general housemaid. Mr Temple was as sensi 1s the next woman, but she was a young wife in- experienced in dealing with fat cooks who said, “I'm givin' notus, mum. T'll ondly stay me month out. I wudden’t live in this place if yve paid me tin times the wages.” 5o, when this very thing happen ed, Cora, undismayed, went cheer-fully upstairs to her bedroom telephon e, out of earshot of Bridget, andcalled the intelligence office in the ci ty. Certainly, they would send anexperienced woman the morning Brid get left. Sorry she didn’t suit, etc.Three dollars, please. Two days before Bridget's departure the general housemaid, Annie, ap- peared in Cora’s sewing room. “I'm leavin’ when Bridget does, mum,” she remarked quite casually. “She’s the only one I know out here, and I don't like the country, anyhow. It’s lonely and it twenty cents every time I go to the movies in the next town trolley and ten for Problems In New morn- es costs me ten for the Cora didn’t wait for the finish. She again used her hedroom telephone. Certainly, they would also send a housemaid, ell recommended. Sorr Annie wouldn’t stay. Young girls don't like to work in the suburbs. Three dollars please. According to schedule, Bridget an suit cases and Cora drove down to station to to arrive on the 9:12. They did not arrive. “But we sent them to you,” said the ger actually saw them on the train. Somebody on ing for help must have offered them higher wz g0 with them. Oh, yes; madam they often do tl two more tomorrow.” Next morning the office telephoned that but could find no suitable servants to send. In a few days probably—Iut Cora said never mind, she’d get help from another office. She called four in succession. One of them could send a first-class cook for $35 a month, but had no maids who would go to the country. Another could furnish a woman with a baby if madam didn’t mind the baby. It was so hard to get workers for out-of-town houses, etc., ecte. That night David Temple came home to find his wife, hot and dis- heveled, busy over the kitchen fire, as she had been now every evening for nearly a week. She tried to laugh and take it as a joke. But when you have cleaned an eight-room house, made the beds, cooked, washed the dishes gone to market, seen the iceman, the grocer’s boy, the milkman, answered seven telephone calls, kept an enzagement, received calle fought with the laundry man over a wrong hill and a dozen other household miscel- lanies you are tired, whether vou are cheerful or not. And Cora, who had got her first experience as a suburban house- keeper, was so tired t she fell asleep in her chair after David had helped her do the dishes. “T'll attend to it tomorrow,” said David his wife climbed wearily to bed. “There must be ay of getting Annie departed with their oilcloth get the new pair who were intellizence office that train es and “Our messen- who was look induced them to sorry. We'll send they were very sorry indeed se rd Station and Marcia Moore in “The Speed King.” Three acts of en cvery day in ture features. CHARLIE CHAPLIN AT KEENEY’'S ALL WEEK audeville will he giv- adaition to the pi ANN PENNINGTON FOX HEADLINER Charlie Chaplin, the world’s famous comedian, will be seen at Keeney's all this week in his latest success, “One A. M.” the management having ar- ranged to have the film for which he posed kept here for the next six davs. Chaplin weeks are exceedingly popu- lar with the picture devotees of the city and it is expected that the house “One A. M.” im the funniest photoplay in which Chaplin has appeared. His press agents state t he is assisted by “a pair of stairs and a folding bed.” The film will be the feature of tonight's program. Another attraction tonight will be Alice Howell in the three reel comed “Lizzie's Lingering Love.” ‘With the Chaplin film week will be the follow The and tomorrow will be the Triangle f ture “The Wild Girl of the featuring Mae Marsh and Robert H ron, and the Paramount feature “St attraction : 's for today will be crowded dal : ie Snowflake,” featuring ton. Known Ann Pennin throughout the as “The Follies Girl,” Ann Penning- ton, makes her first screen appear- ance in the title role of “Susie Snow- flake.” This is a happy choice on the part of the Famous Players, for it is in itself a story of the musical com- during the | edy world. During the course of the ng features: | tale Miss Pennington does all the cle Tuesday, the Lubin drama, “Out of little things on the screen, which the Flotsam;"” Wednesday, J. Warren ve won her a country-wide reputa- Kerrigan in “The Beckoning Trail,” on the stage and the last episode in the “Mysteries he Wild Girl of Myra” serial; Thursday, Sally Carl- | the story of ton and Crute King in “The lived, almost makers;” Friday, Leah Baird in i woods! and Saturda human beings are like; her compan- ~ jons have been wild be her ha- NOTICE bits are theirs. It is a character al- most without precedent and ably handled by Mae Marsh. Playving op- site her is the other youthful star The New Britain Wet Wash having | POSif¢ her s the other vo : moved into their newly equipped building are prepared to do first class work. We solicit your country er h tio of the a young woms Sierras,” 1 who has ince babyhood, alone in 1e scarcely knows what The Keystone Players will offer an- other of their laugh-producers entitled batronage. | ;. " \vilq Oats,” and the Paramount {of the i him parent | that j tonished approval of the girl : through By ADELE GARRIGON Sees Grace Draper to Win Dicky. Grace Draper had not taken many steps of the new dance she had prom- for- ised to give us before I leaned ward in breathless amazement at the audacity of the g The dance she was giving was something like the old Spanish holero, the languorous steps, the posturings which the girl made it a most daring seduc- had spec- tive added tacle. I had to admit. however, made a most alluring pictur swayed to and fro. now throw arms wide in abandon, now ouetting, with her scarlet fluttering from her hands like a bird trylng to escape. Dicky had swung the plano slightly to one side, so that as he played he was able to watch the dance: e s playing without notes, evidently which he was familiar, 5o that his whole attention was free to be given to the girl who was so openly demanding it. 1 have attended many performances, bhoth with with my brother-cousin ett, and, of course, have seen many modern dances, which, say the least, are not marked by any par- ticular repression. My imagination fired, my judgment jealousy of the dancer, to me as I watched never in my life had more daring and bi than she was giving. As utterly regardless of me as if T had heen miles away, she kept her face turned toward Dicky, watching constantly, and whenever she passed him throwing back her head with a concentrating gaze of her won- derful eves upon him through in- dolent, half-closed lids. I recalled Lillian’s warning the girl was as “hard as nails” and would stop at nothing to win Dicky. 1 saw that the alluring dance, the ef- fect of which she had so shrewdly calculated, was the weapon she was pitting against my tennis prowess of the afternoon. Dicl As she swayed past the piano for the fourth time she smiled at Dicky and he returned it with a mischievous wirk. She drew the end of her silken h across his cheek with the ef- t of a caress and danced on. I could not bear to look at her any longer. I turned eves awa wondering if my gues also were ‘noticing the flagrant breach of good taste on the part of Miss Draper. Lillian’s face appeared devoid any emotion w ever. sat tinizing the dancer with narrowed evelids, as though she was some new species of animal in a museum. Only a slight tapping of her foot upon the made me realize that she v difficulty repressing the angry she felt for the girl. Lillian's attitude held her husband’s enthusiasm. FHe v his eyes watching every movement of the dancer, his face, startled out of its usual linc of indolent indifference, hetraying a skiil. Only a woman can understand how all my jealous misery con- cerning Dicky there crept a tiny d of pique that Grace Draper ould have heen able ‘also to win that she 1s she ing h deft theatrical Dicky and Jack Bick- to been m have b: may warped but it seemed the girl that I witnessed a arre exhibition that s Mischievous Wink. fe my with contempt But if apathy, of eager leaning forward, ap- { the admiration of Harry Underwood. | the dance came to a close Mr. Underwood sprang to his feet, clap- ping his hands, waving his handker- chief, and crving “Bravo,” as if he were witnessing the triumph of some world-famous ballerina at the Metro- | t politan. Where have you been hiding vour- self?” he demanded travagantly. “Why aren’t you on the big time? course, you’'re not an amateur, any one can see that, but why is it I'v hever heard of you before? I thought I'd seen every worth while in the country.” “I was on the Number Three ’ the girl returned Underwood looked " a minute, then he pursed a low, long-drawn “Graydon, the Graydon, leading manded. “Ye: the girl returned, shortly, while Dicky looked impatient at the colloquy, and Lillian and I gazed at ich other in wonder as to what it neant. 0! When did you on was sharp, a new Harry seeing. He had all iness man engagin If the girl resented his questioning sho did not show it. “Last winter,” she said A Hint of Trouble. I remembered the day I had first seen her, when she had returned to Marvin, and her sister had hinted of some troubled experience she had had. She must have just left her professional engagement on that day! I found myself mentally echoing the next question which Harry Under- wood shot at her. “Why?” “If you know the Graydons vou d need to have me tell you wh Draper returned. “Oh, the usual thing, rested on her with under- standing, appraising look, which the girl curiously did not seem to resent I think Lillian must have scen my led wonderment, for she flashed uring glance at me. There was comprehensive knowledge in nc road last yes Hornet's r with Nes calmly. artled his lips whistle. manager, and woman?” he Mrs. de- quit?” Th incisive. This Underwood I was the air of a stenog laconically. eh2 His eves an pu; a re sudden of the Triangle company, Robert Far- Satisfaction guaranteed. ' 38 Union will offer their “Newspaper of the ron. Street. Tel. 583 Screen,” the Pictograph. the look when we and a messa I felt that were next alone together Attempt | there w was | Of s some light that she throw on the situation. When Mr. Underwood this time in a brisk business-like tone, | he appeared to have forgotten that there was any one else in the room save himself and the girl he was in- terrogating so sharply. “Want to try it again, way this time? The girl drew a deep first air of perturbation in her Mr. Underwood spoke again: don’t mind telling you that you've got | something there in that dance that I | think I can put over with a friend of | mine who is putting out a production next month. Twill take you far from here, thou He doesn’t expect to do more than keep the show in New York long enough to give it a certain Prestige on the road. But it ought to do you very well far as the money end is concerned, and give | You a mighty good professional | standing. What do vou say?" The girl hesitated. “I'll have to think it over,” she said at last, with an appealing little glance at Dicky, Who looked decidedly flushed and embarrassed. My heart sank as I saw the ook of comprehension flash into faces of Lillian and Hari wood that T knew must he in my own. By “think it girl meant “consult Dic willing to throw away this ful chance for advancement bade her stay. could poke again, on Broad- breath I had | the seen | 1 same | the wonder- if Dic mgzfior To: Orrow [ Brealkfast i Fruit Broiled Kidneys Berry Muflins Coifee Lunch Scalloped Corn and Tomatoes Compote of Peaches and Bananas Jumble Icea Cocoa Dinner Baked Sweetbreads Mushroom Sauce Potato Kohl h Dry 1it Mashea Lettuce Ttabi r ssing irozen F Coffce Berry Muffins—Cream one-half cup- ful butter; add two tablespoonfuls su- gar, yolk of onc cgg, mix well, add one-quarter teaspoonful salt, {wo cup- fuls flour, threc spoonfuls baking | powder, white of cgg stiffly beaten and one cupful berries 1 in hot oven { in buttered mufl ke n pans. Kohl Rabi—This variety of the cabt of the reserved nutritive matter of the plant being stored largely in the leaves or flow it is collected in the stem, which forms a turnip-like en- rgement just above the ground. and pare the vegetables, the: cut in thin sli Put into slightly salted boiling water and boil, with cover partially off the saucepan, until ctable is tender. This will take from thirty to fifty minutes. Pour off ater and season with butter, salt and pepper. vegetable is a ge, but instead [ Household Notes | Necver scrape the cob when prepar. ing corn for canning—use only the tips of the kernels. old cles— hoard art Never clothing household give them somebody who can uvse them. or to When a kettle is badly burned do | not fill it with water, but set it aside to cool, then put in a handful of wash- ing soda and water and allow it to boil for an hour or more, Paint can be t using a no matter how hard and dry, ken out of woolen clothing by olution of equal parts of am- monia and turpentine. Saturate the spot two or three times, then wash | out with soap suds. Adjustments Riestore Tlealth and Permancent Quickly Nature the Adjustments 1s chiropr: s only aid. release nerves, opening the way impinged for nature to , dispatch energy over the nerve circuit { to keep the body well. Nearly all bod- i {ly affliction is due to nerve compres- !sion at the spinal column, as such ssure disturbs normal nerve func- ting, giving rise to inflammation !in and unnatural action of parts the nerves supply. Pain and distress are two manifestations of such abnormal | conditions. 11l health will continue in varying degree until the nerve pr ure is adjusted away. Chiropractic ad- justments correct abnormalities with- out the use of drv or instruments. Nature follows such adjustments with a cure. Drugs only check discase. Behind all effect there is cause. The I obviously sensible thing to do would be to correct the cause. Chiropractic is the science of cause. The chiro- practor most certainly locates the cause of all inco-ordination (discase) and eliminates it. There can be but one result of such adjustment; health will follow as naturally as water will flow when the obstacle that holds it back is removed. G. W. Van Alstyne, | ate Palmer school). Hours 9-12, evenings till' 8 o'clock. Phone 1 for house calls or appointments. D. C., (Gradu- men Readers MEN’S SUITS It's the “real thing” too! First of all, Dependable Qualities—and then Perfect Fit—wide variety, and un- tioned Correctness of SUITS AT $10 Formerly sold at $14.00. SUITS AT $14 Formerly sold at $18.00. SUITS AT $18 Formerly sold at $22.00. HATS SHOES HMARLEORD, 887—683 MAIN STREEL NIENT WEEKLY PAYMENTS if you were going on a walking trip and someone asked you to carry a Jot of things in your pack that you didn’t really need at all, wouldn’t you think they were ing absurd things? And yet—well, I was alling in the home of a recent bride the other day. On the piano were eight vases and two bowls. On the upper shelf of the mantel were eight pieces of brac (including six more vases). On the lower shelf there were nine be- side the clock (including five more s.) Some Day She Will Go to the Hospital. double bric-a- wall there were forty-one On the pictures. tious housekeeper. Some day I expect to hear that she as gone to a sanitarium. They will assign all kinds of rea- sons for her nervous exhaustion (that's the latest, you know, nervous prostration is going out), but I shall know the real reason—too much bric a-brac. How many of us carry too much impedimenta on our trip through life! I have illustrated with material posessessions, but I don't mean those alone. There Are Other Kinds of Bric-a-Brac. 'HOE GOES T0 RENO T0 SEEK DIVORCE 'Son of Press Maker Member of Freedom Colony Auf, of the late press New York, 14—Rumors that Tzobert Hoe, aire printing establishing a residence Reno, in order to divorce Mrs, Ethel Louise Dodd Hoe, were confirmed t night by Mrs. Hoe in her summer home at Amagansett, L, I Mr. Hoe has been in the town for a little months. He will have to remain there four months longer befare he may file his suit. His wife was shown a news de- ¢patch which said it was Tumored in Reno that she intended to fight the action, intending also to ask for a Inrge settlement if the decree was son million- manufacturer, in Nev., divorce more than two firm of attorneys there ta keep watch on her husband to look after her interests, ““Those later atements are not true,” she said. “If it is necessary to print anything, I wish vou would merely print the fact that Mr. Hoe is in Reno, and that I am doing noth- ing in the matter. I have no repre- tatives there and T will not fight any divorce action Mr. Hoe may bring. Nor am I asking for a settle- ment."” When Mrs. Hoe was asked the differences which caused about the Barnes,” 131 Main street. separation, she said: “I really do not feel as thaugh I Think of dusting that room every day, and I know she does just that, because she is a most conscien- is | swarded, and already had engaged a | Those Forty 'Leven Vases. There all kinds of bric-a-brac besides those which we clutter up our ar houses with. tht minds. There's kind we have in heart There that up there and set up in our minds that have to be dusted and aired shown off about once in so often. We would be happier and freer and broader-minded without them. But we don't realize it any more than the bride realizes that she would be hap- pier and freer without half of that cut glass and china and silver bric brac. We Always Have, and Therefore—— Then there are bric-a-brac conven- tions, the kind that don't have any particular reason or justice but are cherished just because they always have been considered valuable, and we don’t have the strength of mind to throw them away. And then there’s bric-a-b —those foolish, futile f gather along the way 1 in our hearts and kow-tow to. Everything, every idea and sion that adds nothing to the sum of our happiness and efficiency and clut- ters and impedes our live foolish bric-a-brac. It will be fall house-cleaning time. Why not clear out and simpli- fy our lives as well as our homes? 7o N, all and are bric-a-brac prejudices we have picked re and and and ac fears that we enshrine s posses- is soon discuss the matter at Please print only the plain facts.” The despatch from Reno sald Hoe | had established himself in a hand- come residence in the heart of the di vorce colony, and has become a sort of social leader among those who are the Nevada town seeking liberty | frem matrimonial ties. He nt | much of his time at the Riverside | tel, headquarters for the free hunters, and has been on several ties to Lake Tahoe, a nearby pleasure resort. He has a fine saddle horse, and recently bought an automobile. His closest companions, according | 10 the despatch, are Edward de Wolf, | known in Reno as a wealthy New York hotel man, and John Harsen Rhoades, who calls himself a New York broker. Tnherited $1,195,445, Hae is a son of the late Robert Hos who died in 1909 in London left an estate worth $8,374,619. The son recelved a bequest of $1,195,445, as well as an interest in the immenswe printing press business which his father established. In 1911 Mrs. Margaret Jc Brown Johns brought suit the Hoe estate for $250,000, to have been a “'w of the alre. Mrs, Johns was a Kentucky woman was a voung lawyer of this city Soon after the action was entered ATthur Johns met Mr, Hee outside the i home, 113 East Fifty-fifth | street, one night, and knocked him | down. Johns asserted Hoe had ma derogatory remarks about his wife, { floe didn’t fight back, but fled. Nor did he personally appear as a com- | plainant against the lawyer. | was held under a nominal i keep the peace for three months Hoe is a Harvard man. He was married to the wife he Is now prepar- | ing to sue on November 2, 1900. She -vas Miss Ethel Louise Dodd, daugh- ter of Rev. Ira S. Dodd, pastor of a Tresbyterian church in Riverdale, N. X, should has par- | and nson against claiming million- good-looking whose husband latter's Johns bona to

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