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Menu for Tomorrow)! Breakfa; Fruit Boiled Eggs Baking Powder Biscuit Coftee Lunch Vegetable Ragout Fruit Tapioca Lemonade Dinner Cream of Celery Soup Beef Pot Roast, Brown Gravy rn Mashed Potatoes Cold Slaw Peach Dumplings Iced Coffee Tapioca. bottom of Cover one fFruit ing dish with peaches. pful of tapioca with cold water, soak two hours. Drain and put into a cepan, add two cupfuls bolling ter and one-half teaspoonful salt, pk until transparent. Add one-half Joful sugar and one tablespoonful of jaon juice. Pour over peaches, bake lenty minutes Serve hot or cold h sugar and cream. eam of Celery Soup—Chop some ery, thun put two cupfuls of it into ucepan with one quart cold water, bk till tender. Put two slices onion, de of mace, two cupfuls milk into bther saucepan, cook slowly twenty putes; strain. Melt four tablespoon- s butter, add two tablespoonfuls fur, seasoning of salt, celery salt and i pepper, then add celery and milk Jctures, cook five minutes, serve hot. Cover How’s This? We offer One Hundred Dollars Re- hra for any case of Catarrh that can- t be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure, I's Catarrh Cure has been taken catarrh sufferers for the past jirty-ive years, and has become own as_the most reliable remedy for tarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure acts thru le Blood on the Mucous surfaces, ex- lling the Poison from the Blood and aling the diseased portions. fter you have taken Hall's Catarrh pre for a short time you will see a t improvement in _your general jalth. Btart taking Hall's Catarrh e at once and get rid of catarrh. nd for testimonials, free. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, Ohio. 1d by all Druggists, ¢, NOTICE he New 'Britain Wet Wash having ved into their newly equipped lding are,prepared to do first class k. We. solicit your patronage. jisfaction guaranteed. 38 Union pet. Tel. 583 LAST TIME TONIGHT CHARLIE CHAPLIN IN “ONE A. M.” ETHEL TEARE IN “THE TRAILING TAILOR” RICHARD STANTON IN “THE SPEED KING” TODAY ONLY Triangle Plays Present De Wolf Hopper IN “Casey at the Bat” Paramount Plays Present Myrtle Stedman IN “The American Beauty” Keystone Comedy Paramount-Pictograph Matinee 5c Evening 10c =7 2. THEATRE § RAN Hartford Matinee Every Day at 2:15 Evening at 8:15 ALL THIS WEEK AL REEVES BIG BEAUTY SHOW 50 PEOPLE—50. Mostly Girls Seats Can Be Reserved By "Phone or Mail. AKE COMPOUNGE | BAND CONCERT EVERY SUNDAY AFTERNOON. Boating, Bathing, Bowling, Billiards, Fishing and Dancing. The Popular Picnic Ground. Regular Dinners, Moving Picture 'Theater- PIERCE & NORTON, PRCPS, = News for NEW. RRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, AUGUST 22, 1916. A STORY YOU CA N BEGIN AT ANY 1TIME Her Side---and His Huw Cora and David Temple Solved Their Marital FProblems By ZOE BECELEY When a Man’s Despondent. “This said with a rueful smile home to me all the harder how little I you are, the dearest, gam wife. Fine, sensitive, sensible— s bitter-sweet comfort yow're offering me, Your very offer to help me as stenograph st little woman a man wa . a woman whom a Croesus would be proud Cora,” David Temple or drives Here h for a have offered to shower gold on, show off before the world in a sctting worthy of the best women in the world. And what do I do for you at Colony Park, something approaching your deser this.’ wste of back to ? After giving you a 1 you With a deprecating hand he took in their little new apartment where they were commencing their uphill fight again. consoling words and thoughts which ru hand over them. ow that yow've started me, dear, my system,” he smiled I won’t” he snapped. burden, mostly like a moonsick calf. I am ashar Cora shook her head. ed! “There’s no question of pride between thee and me she said tenderly. “If vou won't talk the things that bother vou to David,” me, yowll brood over them yourself. Which will be innards, dear. Also you and I are one in the only keeping your troubles to yourself Then his face darkened You'rea game little of my placing, with a grin. Let's the his Cora tried to interrupt with shed to her lips. But David put get my wail out of in disgust at himself. “No, woman you bear your And I, I go moaning over mine talk of something else, Chick.” you must let me in such things, worse for your so you're And much Dbest sense, honey, when you tell me about them. my part of our head may knock the ground from under some of the tomb- stones which seem to clutter your view just now. David’s face brightened. He was about to say something So talk, de: - s a tribute to her, but he did not, and, putting his arm about her he let the action speak the more personal message. But the relief to him of being able to unburden his worrles on his wife and yet be absolved by her of the suspicion of weakness helped to lighten his depression. “What sends a man down in the dumps, most of all, dear, is to fall down on the job of moving his wife to Eas here you are headed not for but away street. Here I am nearly thirty; and from Easy street. “Then I think back to the men who started with me and the men who ran abreast of me. There are mighty road to comfort and success than I. my fault or inefficiency entirely. few I realize, of course, that it hasn't been But when of them who aren’t farther up the a man’s down for a time, no matter how the brick came to be where he tripped, he's inclined to lay the blame to himself and gloom over it. “You joked about tombstones cluttering my landscapes. Well, dear, I can almost see them. Each of them is the tombstone of a decade in my life from now on. ‘Here has passed away D: The In all sincerity, dear, 1 nothing much good to say about it. fiftieth—only worse. not much else ahead. And it's not the v ia Temple’s thirtieth year.” And same about the fortieth and the I see nothing but struggle and ion to inspire one who has fallen to the foot of the hill and has got to gird his loins for the up climb against “You’'ve brought this funeral oration on yvourself, Cora, dear, by insisting on your oneness with me. Now these are the things I tell myself. These are the mountains that loom up before a man who’s down below and If you know any crosscuts and roundabouts, teach me going seem heavy. them, little comrade, and then I'll give “‘He travels the fast make the the lie to the man who wrote est who travels alone.’”” VIRGINIA PEARSON FEATURED AT FOX'S The attractions at Fox’s for tomor- row and Thursday bid fair to outdo the programs for any Wednesday and Thursday in some time. Willlam Fox will present the Cleopatra of the screen, Virginia Pearson, in his mas- ter film prouction, “Daredevil Kate.” The brains of the east are pitted agalinst the strength of the west, with a woman holding the balance, in this new William Fox feature. Daredevil Kate is a woman of brains plus strength and she has all the craft and cleverness which years of experience dealing with the rough miners has given her. Separated from her sister many years before Daredevil Kate is brought into contact with her again through a string of remarkable hap- penings which makes this a very gripping film story. The supporting cast is exceptionally strong and the settings are up to the usual high stand- ard maintained by the Fox company. In addition to the above the sixth chapter of the great serial novel “Glo- ria’s Romance,” featuring Billie Burke will be shown. In this chapter Glo- ria’s brother lays a trap to catch his wife. He does not know that it is Freneau with whom she is carryving on her flirtation. Gloria is still con- fined to her bed and watches what is transpiring from this point of vant- age. The Pathe Weekly, with some interesting views of happenings throughout the world, a George Ovey comedy entitled “When Jerry Came to Town,” and the “Seeing America First” travel pictures will also be shown in addition to above AL REEVES IS AT THE GRAND THIS WEEK Back in Hartford amid qhe scenes of many successes, Al Reeves and his Beauty Show burlesquers, opened a week's engagement last evening at the Grand theater, Hartford. Through out the performance there s a touch of something different about the brand of work handed out by the company, the stellar features being Charles Robles, who handles the parts as- signed him by Mr. Reeves in a manner that merits words of commendation. Supporting Mr. Robles are Al Green, remembered by Grand patrons in days gone by. Other features are the num- bers contributed by Jerry White and Viola Cavanaugh, Bernice Taber and Edna Clair, Claude Eddy and Margie Earle. Francis Murphy billed as ‘“‘the second Eltinge” is exceptionally good. The show is styled a burlesque, but the appellation of vaudeville might be more fitting. The production is set in two parts, the first being a fancy gown shop on Fifth avenue, and this affords the members of the chorus to show some of the elegant gowns that “your old friend Al” has loosened up for this season. The chorus are on par with those of the everyday bur- lesque troupe, several being po sed with good singing voices. These are detected during the evening. Leonia Miller the soubrette looks very good and her added fi ure the Minstrel Girls, received much applause. Reeves has not diverted any from that antiquated stunt of appearing be- fore the footlights to tell the patrons just how good 'his show is and how much money he has made and how much he expects to make this season. His stuff may be very good, but at times some of his jokes sounded as if a healthy adornment of hirsute would soon be found on them. If ycu have a small portion of string beans and a small portion of beets, put them together and dress with butter, Don’t Be a Siave T(_) Your Nerves Good Advice To Nervous People. | i People who are excessively nervous, tired out and all run down, who get | ihe jumps anQ fidgets, who can't c | centrate their minds on work, have fi | of blues, trembling, nervous headaches and epsia and that “don’t give a hang’ ling so common to nervous folks may take it as a certain fact that their trouble is due to impoverished or devitalized nerve force. Their nerve cells are starving and when they give out entirely complete nervous pros- tration or breakdown is the result. A splendid treatment for weak nerves is found in the famous Margo Nerve Tablets composed of six of the best nerve vitalizing elements known to modern chemistry. These tablets go straight to the nerve cell and begin tmmediate action. Take a Margo Nerve tablet, wait ten minutes and watch yourself perk up. They feed your famished nerve cells, start healthy blood circulation and normal diges- tion. Then you brighten up, put on a smile, get some of tho old timoe “pop” ! back in your system and feel as hap- py as a clam at high tide. Nerve Tablets are absolutely harmless, contain no dangerous habit-forming drugs, are easy to take, inexpensive other leading druggista pell thom on a poasitive guarantee of succossful results or money back, Margo ' and Clark & Brainerd Drug Co, anu | Theater Goers and Women Readers “That is the fifth wedding gift I've nt this month,” a woman said to me, one day during the past June. “Some of them are to young people I | scarcely know,” she went on; “but| when I was married their parents sent | me beautiful gifts, and of course I want to send to them. I have beer married fiftcen years and I give ten to fifteen gifts a year and I'm not paid up yet. “Well, anyhow,” she ended laugh, “they’ll probably give children when they are marr can comfort myself with tha “And then your children will have | to give to their children,” I reminded her. Ana This A Really Embarrassing Situation. Her father was very well-to-do. She had a large wedding and mag- nificent gifts. Her husband has a| moderate income, and her father has | lest his money. Consequently, the steady drain from wedding gifts is really embarrassing for her. To be sure, she enjoys possessing the beautiful ornaments, the wealth of china, cut glass and silver - with | which she was presented, but if it| were a question of going without somo | of these, or paying the price she now is paying, I am pretty sure she would | do without. And I am sure there are many other | women who could say the same, i To me, the possession of the flotsam of bric-a-brac which the high tide of a large wedding leaves stranded in| our lives would be almost as much of | a drawback as having to pay the donor. with a to my >d, so I} we both woman's laughed is interesting. WITH ZEPPELINS AMONG SAND DUNES: | | Writer Tells of His Visit to Camp of Air Monsters Berlin, Aug. 22.—Anton Fendrich, who is about to publish a book the war, is glving to the German pub- lic its first real view of the German | alr fleet, which he visited “among the sand dunes.” Here is his story: “Somewhere amid the white dunes and the salt meadow weeds ' dwell the mariners of the air who have brought some notion to Albion that it no longer is an island. I was taken at evening in an automobile | over causeways and dikes to a group of buildings, dark airship halls, sil- houetted against the sunset clouds in great lines of modern steel construc- tion. on sand | ‘How many? I hear the ques- tion asked. Quite a confidence-in- spiring number. | “The commanders were sitting at a flower-decked horseshoe supper table ——MNot all of them, for some were ‘un- | der way.’ From the wall smiled the | Suablan, Count Zeppelin, without | Wwhose decade of struggling all this Would never have been. % These men were mostly bétween 30 and 40 years and already had many |a time participated in wild hunt through = searchlights and bursting shells and though they lived among these peaceful meadows the < keen look of the hun | inds at the front was | their faces, “In the midst of the conversation one of the commandants, tall and sMooth shaven, rose and said it was | high time to go, had to sail that ! m:im. Would I come to the hall” It was midnight as we approached | the dark struct 1 brightly illu- minated window t brond | f’lnd red, soon 8 ing slits as the whole ball turne its axis in order to bring the a into line with the wind. Hurricane from ¥ “The turning of a the ochre-yellow body the cruiser filled the giant hall with roaring and howling of a hurricanc “In front of the almost unbeliev. ably thin steel rods to which were fixed the screw propellers were hiz wooden platforms on which mechar lcs cowered and watched the wh ing propellers. These wooden pellers, each as tall a m soon became visible again, turned awk wardly a few times, then stopped. mechanic adjusted a few screw mered a few bolts, and then the der thin wooden blades again r The mechanic notes the faults first always with the ear only, but after- wards discovers them with the eve. “Now they had caught the right tone. ‘The ship is clear for sailing,’ the engineer reported to the com- mander, “In the front wall a gap opened slowly, like the pulling of a giant curtain in a theater, only much slow- cr, The motors took seven minutes i to slide back the steel wings on the { front door, The commander disap- peared in the direction of the for- ward gondela, From the portholes | of the connecting gangway grinned thc sane amped on as N opellers. zle of n e pro- A ham- A Lifetime Debt. | want, and can affora | cates and things { and | to si | parent faces of happy mariners, who called 1«7“1 Jokes to those who were staylng : e “Our Choices Are Ourselves.” For my ideal which d the of a home is one in, the furnishings and pictures| ornaments cxpress the tastes of ! occupant. “Our choices are our- sclves.” W is one to do about it then, dispense with the wedding gift or give up the big wedding? | Well, I do wish we could re-| cstablish the whole thing on a sim-| pler, more spontancous basis. I wish we could have gifts from those who to zive, and! freedom from the obligation for those | who cannot; also, more consulting of | the recipient’s taste and less attempt to get something that will look as if | it cost more than it does. I wonder if such a reorganization ould be totally impossible? Why Not a Subscription Wedding? A friend of mine has a still more revolutionary suggestion: “There’s no use blinking the fact,” she says, “people have big weddings portly to furnish their homes, and then they get a whole lot of dupli- they don't want. Now, why not have a subscription wedding? A wedding is an entertain- ment, you know. You could leave the amount of the subscription to the Jndgment of the giver. You might put ‘small contributions thankfully re- ceived, large ones in proportlon’ on the end of the invitation, then you | could take the maney and buy what vou really needed.” Whatever else you can say of that suggestion, you must admit it's original. UE=r @ . behind. Then the wondrous mo: was led out of the hall with an « which the eye could hardly credir. “‘Gas cells between the rihs of the air cruiser cheat the laws of gravita- tion. The ship is weighed to an ounce, no lighter and no heavier than alr, so that it swings in space like | a great feather. A band of frolick- ing schoolboys could just as well have led the monster out of its stall. “But outside waited the nightwind. | One knew it well from past experience Therefore a hundred hard seamen's ) fists grabbed 1t outside to prevent cap- | sizing. The Air Giant is Off. ““A shrill whistle and all the screws began their storm song. A few men of the landing battalion shook them- selves like wet dogs. They had got on thelr heads a spout of the water with which the air cruilWr lightens itself. Lightly the slender colossus floated upward and it seemed swal- lowed up by the night, a dark shadow against the Great Dipper. “In the commander gondola, ! among all the measuring instruments and*signal wires, hangs a small brown plush teddy bear, and amid the storm song of the propellers and the thunder of the motors you seem to hear rill laughter of children. TiW com- mander’s small daughter sent him the teddy bear as a souvenir when sailing 1 over England. “We flew. The deafening noise making conversation impossible, I at first noticed nothing. The comman- dant showed me the manipulation of the steering gear for clevation and di- rection and all the other technical equipment and the little bear grinned as one who knew it all long ago. “We flew over wood and meadow, over airship halls and barracks and the canopy ht. wough a pane, zontal trans- an alcove in the commandant's can see straight rd into the depths below. 2,000 feet the carth assumed htful relief that makes it a glant plaything. In the a aura of a city ape soon left behind. North Sea Fleet. when through of hor like small built wall of your eves the gondola, downws “AL that de seem like distance the g red, but wa glass Views “How the heart beat forward window the ted the gondola the North Sea was There lay the battle fleet, but the ships seemed | to hang in clouds, an optical illusion, for when seen from an airship the flat i you lies carth seems to zink like a round, Immediately under the 1o point, while round about the horizon scems to rise. Hence came the illusion that battle cruisers and a ht, steaming far out at sea, | through low clouds. meter showed 3,300 feet. e in the zone of explosion commandant said coolly ot deny that this | informatio bed the njoyment of my view over all the world. “The captain explained further: ‘At S height the atmosphere is most in- ed to creep through the thin skin of the gas cells, producing that ex- plosive mixture of hydrogen and oxy gen which you know from chemistry £ a man with hob-nailed boots were to strike a spark on the steel plates now he could blow us all into the air. That is why we now blow off gas. This prevents a dangerous proportion in the mixture of air and hydrogen. “Shrill bells sounded through the alrship, commands were called through the telephone, and wires were pulled. As wo flew back over the land agaln the commander pointed out to mo a largo white cross in the midst of o plain, It was a target. Four bombs fell, Not one of them fell out- | saucer. “Now we and quietl | at a time and half a day long in that | 1anding forces quickly caught hold of | the lines and after a few minutes L-X the ' of green was soon lost | Lol The Kind You Hayv Always Bought has borne the signa= ture of Chas. H. Fletcher, and has been made under his personal supervision for over 30 Counterfeits, Imitations and to_deceive you in this. ars. Allow no ono ¢ Just-as-good ’’ are but experiments, and endanger the health of Children—Experience ags inst Experiment. What is CASTORIA Qastoria _is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare= goric, Drops and Soothing §; Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. stroys Worms and allays Fev It contains neither It de= For more tham yIups. erishness. thirty years it has been in constant use for the relief of Constipation, Flatulency, Wind Colic, all Teething Trou= bles and Diarrheea. It regulates the Stomach and Bowels, assimilates the Food, givin The Children’s I’unacea—Tfi Bears the in Use For side the circles of which the crossed lines were the diameters. “We descended until biplanes, cruis- ing below us, looked like hawks. “‘You must also visit the motor room,” the commandant suggested. “Through two doors lay the way to the machinists. I could stand it for just two minutes. How men with ear- drums and nerves can hold out hours mad hell of sound that shakes the whole body to the marrow I do not understand. These men are heroes even though they merely hold out and do their oily work among the motors. “As we circled about our hall, the was firmly imprisoned on the wheeled iron block that runs on rails to the hall. “Not always is the landing 8o easy. Many a ship has been held in a storm | outside for twenty-four hours, the men taking relief shifts before it could be brought in. “It takes much courage and sclence to steer such a crulser through the air. The commanders all laughed when they read in the English papers that the English planned to salvage the framework of I.-10 sunk in the water of England, in order to copy tha construction. We will make them a present of a brand new one and they would not learn how to sail it in five years. “TI was a guest for nearly a week at the airfleet station and even more frequently came officers to the Squad- ron Chief with black dispatch cases. “One evening there was only very emall company at the table. Almost everybody was 'under way.’ | “The good wind for a journey to | England Is the bad weather wind | from the west, for it makes easler the return of the airship to port after it has done its work, instead of driving ! it back toward England. “And yet at home Herr Schwepp- ! haueer indignantly asks at his beer- table, when a brisk fine weather wind { plows frdm the east, ‘Why don’t our Zeppelins get busy and why are not ihe fine summer nights made better e of? “Honored Herr Schwepphauser and Comrades: I have been presentl] more than once whent airships re-| turned from England. And there refoicing according as the wind blows. ‘And the short summer nights are pro- hitious for sitting in cafes, but not for air trips to Alblon. 5 r“T“’:Jll?in“En(he week I was with the gircruisers one of the cmpmandanm had, in five days, spent eighty-elght hours in the alr and had slept only {wenty-four in his bed. “Another, commanding one older ships with open gondola {urned so frazen that it was neces | .t to knock off with sticks the ice | from the fur clothes of him and his men bofore they could undress, “But, in my mind, T took aff my hat most of all to the one whose first vrords, as he leaned out of his gan- cola, were «I haven't been able to get rid of my eggs.’ “He had orders to attack an iron foundry. From afar he saw it gleam- ing belaw, but the increasing stormy west wind prevented him from getting over it. The home journey led him over many a town and village of the land, which seeks to starve out Ger- man women and children, but he flew cver them with all his bambs. “Down on the water front every- of the e ary (4 Over 30 Yea THE CENTAUR COMPANY, NEW YORK CITY. healthy and natural sleeps e Mother’s Friend. The Kind You Have Always Bought Signature of d ‘o rs or the steep, Baltic. The description may be purely hy- pothetical, for the air above West Flanders been pretty well combed aeroplanes of the Allies, so that ark afrship halls, silhouetted against the sunset clouds in great lines of modern steel construction,” would Lave been easily located. Little hap- pens on the Belgian caast or behind German lines as far south as Noyon that does not make its way to the French or British secret intelligence department in a week or ten In May, on the marshes between Zeebrugge and Bruges, the Germans had built in a drained creek a series of hangars for small aeroplanes and cavered the roofs with turf cut from the surrounding marshes so that they appeared to be mounds rising from the plains. Yet, these hangars wero r three times bombarded from the air and finally destroyed. It is possible that in the same region were concealed the larger buildings needed to house the greatest aircraft. The rest of Herr Fendrich’s descrip- tion might refer to one of a half dozen Zeppelin bases whose locality known. | The most convenient base for at- tacks on England is, perhaps, the one cn Heligoland #00 miles from London. There is supposed to have hcen behind Ostend, to which Herr drich’s description might apply i not for the fact that Ostend, only 100 miles from the English coast, is under very close surveillance by Pritish airmen for other Teasons than those aeronautic, Aside from Heligoland, English air experts belleve the Zeppelins which at- tack the east coast of England come from interior bases like Emden, 400 miles from London; Hamburg, 450; Dusseldorf, 200; Cologne, 300, and Bremen, 400. They invariably follow & course north-northeast, trying to keep between Holland and Denmark, and then turn southwest and south down the east coast of England, some- times reaching London, but more fre- quently being driven back across the North Sea from Suffolk or Essex Several, seeking their interfor stations, have flown over Holland and been fired on by Dutch patrols seeking Heligoland ve often been driven northward over the Danish coast, where at least two have come to grief. rocky shores of the. days. is, one Fen- were have Those 4 “Weeds Used in Medicine” Is the title of a very interesting pamphlet recently circulated U. S. Department of Agricult {llustrates and describes the medicin- al qualities of roots, leaves and flow- ers of our most common weeds, which are nature's remedies for disease From the roots and herbs of the field Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- pound was originated more than forty years ago, and the demand for it has increased until it 18 now recog- nizéd as the standard remedy for fe- male ills—advt. Before frylng food, first roll it in bread or cracker crumbs to dry it then dip in egg and roll in crumbs a second time, Blueberry cake cut when hot and served with flavored thin sauce makes a pudding. delicious where stand new and gigantic airship balls. On the day I left the first of some new and splendid monsters came fiving from its airship yards. Others followed and lay ready for sailing. They are large enaugh to lay a fortress in ashes. Woe to you, Paris! Woe to you, London, when your day comes!” Possible Location of Airship Center. Anton Fendrich's description of the Zeppelin base is apparently intended to identify it with some place in Bel- glum between the Scheldt and the | tea as “whitc sand dunes and salt| readow weeds” do not suggest the | caast of Schlesing north of Holland | LIQUOR AND DRUG HABITS SUCCESSFULLY OVERCOME AT NEAL INSTITUTE 112 Dwight St. New Haven, Conn. Phone Center 6640