New Britain Herald Newspaper, November 2, 1916, Page 4

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THREE DAY Lina Cavali “The SHADOW OF HER PAST.” Tonight Only. Dorothy Phillips in “THE PLACE BEYOND THIE WINDS.” TODAY ONLY MATINEE and EVENING Mr. William Fox Presents Bertha Kalich and Stuart Holmes IN “LOVE and HATE” BIEEIE BURKE, IN “GTORIA’S ROMANCE” NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1916, { News for Theater Goers and Women Readers ~ RIS o | N XK § Direct From the New York Hippodrome, Every Man, Woman and Child in This Vicinity Should Surely See THE MARVELOUS SEE—THE TWENTY DARLING LITTLE SEE—THE LILIPUTIAN COACHING PARTY ! IDGET SEE—ANNA NEIDER WITH HER HIGH SCHOCL PONY ! SEE—KARL BECKER, THE PREMIER MIDGET ANIMAL TRAINER ! SEE—DORA VIEG AND CARL FLORIAN DO THE MIDGET TANGO ! SEE—NEMO AND TOTO, SMALLEST TRAINED ELEPHANTS IN THE WORLD ! SEE—THE MIDGET ACROBATIC HORSEMEN, COWBOYS AND LARIET SPINNERS ! QEE—ALOIS VASCHEK, THE MIDGET STRONG MAN LIFT 5 TIMES HIS OWN WEIGHT ! SEE—THE GREAT HAWAIIAN SONG, DANCE AND INSTRUMENTAL NUMBER, HAAKA HICKEY DULA ! SEE—B—I'}‘EAE MIDGET BOXING MATCH—GABOR ™~ S Y . W RIK Make Your Plans Accordingly—The Most Remarkable and Costly Production Now on Tour Comes WWEN . YCEUNL I to The HULA, § the Lotus Study club really annovs (MORAN) BAGGO AND FRITZ (WILLARD) TARA- ALL IN CONJUNCTION WITH A BIG SIX ACT VAUDEVILLE BILL Seats on Sale for Entire Week at Crowell’s Tonight. PRICES—MAT.: 10¢c, 20c, 30c. EVENING : 10c, 20¢c, 30c, 50c, 75¢Get Your Tickets Early and Aveid the rush. T T R R N 2 P A I . T s o TS ALL THIS WEEK HARTFORD. JUBILEE WEEK “SPIEGEL REVUE” TONIGHT—DANCING CAR~ NIVAL LADIES’ NIGHT tna Bowling Alleys Each Wednesday Eve. leys open to ladies every Afternoon. RSONS THEATER, HARTFORD THREE CONCERTS BY THE FAMOUS OSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA PR. KARD MUCK, CONDUOCTOR Monday Evening, Nov. 13th. Monday Evening, Dec. 11ith. Monday Evening, Mar., Reserved Seats for the $3.00, $4.00, $5.00 and w' Selling at Gallup & Alfred, Inc., 201 Asylum St., Hartford, HARTFORD ART SCHOOL in Drawing and Painting. Day and Evening. Philip L. Hale of Bos- ton; Robert F. Logan—Apply |28 (Prospect St. Hartford, Conn. ING DEPARTMENT pt all-times ready to remodel your ! Coat or Suit into the latest style. ourning Garments Made up at shortest notice, tailors. Very reasonable prices. RAPHAEL’S DEPT, STORE, 880 MAIN STREET. IIVE STOCK SHOW. hibitors From All Parts of Country At New Orleans. New Orleans, Nov. 2.—The Na- nal farm and live stock show, un- anspices of the Business Men’s leing association of this city, will en here on November 11 with ex- ito! from all parts of the coun- and will continue through Novem- 19. 7The sum of $25,000 has been aside for premiums in the live- ¢k and agricultural departments d prize-winning cattle, horses, hogs, d rouliry, as well as exhibits of jore and dairy products and machin- Will be brought here from Miss- Dpi, Oklahoma, Texas, Kansas, n, Kentucky, Iowa, Georgia, and other state fairs. Many s from the Internatoinal Dairy ngress alsc are entered. The racing association has for one its purposes the development of the cricultural industries and it has pledged itself at all profits acerwing from the shall be applieqd to establishng permanent fair here. _—_— A rew veil is called the blarney. is of shadow net and s hat crown. A SBTORY YOU OAN BEGIN AT ANY TIME Her Side---and His How Cora and David Temple Solved Their By ZOE BECKLEY The Bachelor Friends The horrid little air of restraint between the Stedmans persisted. Ja- net-moved about the apartment quietly, putting away her motor coat and hat, folding her veil and tucking her gloves in their box with elaborate self-conscious care. Walter vanked off his outer garments and, although it was past midnight, donned a dressing gown and prepared for a silent smoke. It was he who spoke first. “It won't disturb you, will it, Jan, if I keep the light on in here a while?” Janet paused in her hoverings about the wardrobe and chiffonier. She looked at her husband without replying. It was one of those looks that said: “It certainly will disturb me. Everything disturbs me to- night. If I try to talk I shall cry, so I'll keep still.” Walt suddenly had a sharp convulsion of conscience. had disappointed his little wife by not entering into the spirit evening’s frolic. He had tried, but somehow he could not. “Those chaps can afford to spend the night in revelry; they don't have to stick at the daily grind,” said 'Walt. (Attacks of conscious usu- ally make you cross). Janet looked at him again. This time she spoke. “They at least are willing to make an effort to be genial and gay,” she said in a low voice. “And I was tired, too. I'd.really rather not have gone. But I did so want to have you and them be friends and— and- oh, well, I suppose it can’t be done!” she ended abruptly, turning away with a short indrawn breath. “What can't be done?” grouched Walt. “Oh, for a girl, after she’s married to keep the men friends she knew before and have them like her husbard, and have her husband like them, and—and all be—be pals together. I did so hope you’d be genial and—and like the others—even if it cost an effort.” There was disappointment and a little bitterness and a trace of re- semtment in his wife’s tone. Walt smoked in silence for a while. “I'm not like the others,” he said at last slowly. “I'm nowhere in their class. Roy Nicoll has millions. And those other fellows are young, free, rich, of a different world altogether from mine.” “So much the better,” cut in Janet eagerly. “We don't want alwads to meet the same sort of people, do the same sort of things, see the same sort of 1life. We should have all sorts of friends, like the Temples have— rich and poor, gay and serious, intellectual and low-brow. ‘We want to be manysided, so that different people appeal to us in different moods.” “Janet, you don’t understand. A man loathes sponging on other fel- lows for costly entertainments that he can't return “Nonsense, Walt! We can return their entertainment. Not in the same way. They wouldn’t care for that. But in our way. We can have a simple little dinner here at home some time for Roy and maybe one of his chums. Or we can take the whole crowd down to Mezzini's and have a corking good dinner and loads of fun for a few dollars. It would be a real novelty for Roy Nicoll and his kind of men. Why don’t you know, Walt, that the most unostentatious things often appeal most to people who are used to formal and elaborate living?” Stedman kept silent. Something else Was passing through his mind Perhaps Janet sensed it, for she asked with a sudden troubled look: ; “You—you don’t feel uncomfortable with Roy because of any ined admiration you think he might have for me do you, 'Walt?” He did not reply, smoking moodi Marital Problems He knew he of the imag- Stealing from One’s Self. Your Ploughing Will Not Be a Success. If you put your hand to the plough and then walk backward, your ploughing will never be a success. I know two business men who have both had to gamble in buying their supplies for the coming year. Prices of raw goods were high in both their lines of manufacture. If they didn't buy they ran the risk of getting no supplies at all. If they did, they ran the risk of prices dropping and com- petitors getting ahead of them. Eoth bought. One is making him- self half sick wondering whether he wouldn't have done better to wait. The other is using his energy in find- ing ways to cut down manufacturing cost Decis “How I envy you going off on that !} lovelv trip!” one neighbor of mine said 10 another the other day. “I know it's a lovely trip,” said the other, with a worried expression, “but I almost wish we weren’t going, it’s so expensive. You know we de- cided to do it partly for the sake of business interests. We shouldn’t have planned it at all, if it hadn’t been for that and I feel as if we were spend- ing toc much money anyway. I know it wi. worry me all the time.” Isn't that a healthy state of mind with which to start on a pleasure trip? She Was Going to Spend Money and Refuse to Take Value Received. She was going to take the trip, she was going to spend the money, and vet she was going to refuse to take the equivalent in pleasure and men- tal refreshment. That’s what I call stealing from one’s self. Stealing happiness, steal- ing peace, stealing health. Tovery one who does not know how to put his misgivings behind him, to accept philosophically all the draw- backs which any course he has de- termined upon involves, steals from himself. ons Are Too Ready to Be Daylight Ghosts. If you permit them, decisions are ready to be daylight ghosts, haunting vour mind every time leave the door open for a minute. Be firm with them. Exercise them by turning your face to the future and pronouncing this magic incantation, “I have done what seemed to me best. I will not permit myself to waste my energy in worry.” SINGER’S MIDGETS ARRESTED BY BRITISH To arrest thirty little midgets, none of them more than three feet tall, and hold them as prisoners of war because they were of military age and members of a hostile nation, was one of the actions of the British gov- ernment shortly after the war began. The fact that the little people were so tiny they couldn’tlife one of the Kaiser’s muskets, much less should- er one to fight in his_cause, didn’t make a particle of ditference to the English sergeant and his men, who made the arrest; and it was not until the Liverpool newspapers discovered what had been done and called the matter to the attention of the prop- er authorities, that the little spects of humanity were released. This happened to Singer's Midgets, who present their revue, together with a full vaudeville show at the Rus win Lyceum next week. The above narrative accounts for the activity of the little people, who during their leisure moments sew articles for the soldiers on the other side. OPERATIC STAR IN . PHOTOPLAY FEATURE Lina Cavalieri probably the most famous prima donna in the world, will be introduced to Keeney patrons as a screen star tonight when she makes her bow on the big Gold Roost- er drama, “The Shadow Of Her Past.” Nomne of the operatic singers enjoy more popularity than that accorded Cavalieri and few of them possess her histrionic talent. She is an act- ress of remarkable skill as well as a great singer and her entrance in the “movie” fleld was but a logical step after her remarkable operatic success- es. The Pathe people secured her for this picture at one of the high- est prices ever paid to a performer. The production is scheduled for tomor- row and Saturday a< well as tonight and the photoplay lovers of the city will all have an opportunity to see it. Another big feature promised for tonight is the Universal Red Feather offering, “The Place Beyond The Winds,” a five-part photoplay in which Dorothy Phillips and Lon Chaney play important parts. Popular with the patrons are the vaudeville acts presented by the Four Hendersons, novelty acrobats and The Five Violin Beauties, a quintet of musicians of exceptional skill, Fads and Fashions Corduroy has a great vogue for lit~ tle children’s hats. The brim of the newest sailor hat droops down slightly. Silver and gold tissues are much used for evening robes. Many of the newest frocks have the weist line undefined. A wing made wholly of spangles is a novel hat garniture. -among the new blouses is one close- fitling and of jersey. Very high fur collars and wide fur cuffs are used on the coats. The semi-fitted bodice fastened in ihe back has come in again. The coat frock and chemise robe are having a great success. Some evening sleeves consist alto- gether of metal lace bretelles. Shm and longer lines are appeal- ing to the women of best taste. Persian cashmere handbags embroidered with steel beads. are The Tam o’Shanter to match the wool sports coat is often seen. Drilliants combined with fur extensively used as a trimming, are FRANK KEENAN ON FOX’S SCREEN The sport of kings, with all its at- tendant excitement, is said to be thrillingly portrayed in a number of scenes in “The Thoroughbred,” the Triangle play which will be the at- traction at Fox’s tomorrow and Sat- urday, and in which Frank Keenan plays the leading role. The story con- cerns the efforts of a Puritanic young minister to effect the abolition of horse racing in one of the southern states, his success and his ultimate contrition, inspired by a realization of the fact that his actlvities have caused poverty in the home of whose daughter he loves. Many of the scenes, therefore, are those of the race track. In addition to the above the Paramount Plays will offer Louise Huff “In the Reward of Pa- tience.” If you were a young Quaker girl whose knowledge of life was con- fined to the narrow limits of home town and there came into it a man of different type from any that vou had ever seen before; if this man won your heart only to plunge you into despair upon discovery that he was already engaged to another— would you hate him for thus having unwittingly caused you pain, or would you continue to love deeply and si- lently? These are some of the situa- tions faced by the little Quaker girl Patience in this latest Famous Player feature. The Keystone Players will present Dollars and Sense and the Paramount with their Burton-Holmes Travelogue to balance this program. For today the William Fox master- piece, “Love and Hate,” featuring Bertha Kalich and Stuart Holmes, “Gloria’s Romance,” with Billie Burke, The Pathe Weekly, See America First Travel Films and the Cub Comedy, “Inoculating Hubby,” will be shown. \7 Hoysel;oI;I Notes Turpentine will prevent the moths from eating the felts inside the piano. When a bottle of milk sours, seize the opportunity to use it for dough- Luts. A cut lemon will remove the mark made by striking matches on white vaint. Tops of old shoes, cut into shape and covered, make excellent iron holcers. Always use breadcrumbs in pref- erence to cracker crumbs when frying oysters. Boil a pork roast until partly done; then finish by roasting in the usual way. Yov can remove mud stains from clothing by rubbing them well with a rav potato. Corn beef will have a better flavor 15 u’l!()\\'cd to cool in the water in which it was boiled. A nickel wall towel rack is a handy thing fastened on the end of a kitchen table. Never allow a mirror to hang in the sunlight, or the backing will be- come clouded. Wear gloves whenever they don’t interfere with your work if you would have nice hands. Oysters should never be allowed to it destroys their flavor anl makes them tough. All house brushes should be soaked in cold water for several hours and laid aside until they are thoroughly dry before they are used. This pre- vents the hairs from coming out, and “increases the life of the brush. Now that the winter is before us it is very unwise to let children go about without hats. In fact, it is al- ways courting danger to expose sensi- tive little heads either to scorching heat or bitter winds. ] | certainly a winner. ajor Ainslee, | your | ! By ADELE REVELATIONSOF A WIFE GARRISZON W Why Dicky’s Mother Said “Do You Know That Man?” “You must have had a long ses- sion,” my mother-in-law commented, acidly, when I finally arrived at the room which we hud taken for her in the Sydenham hatel. “I went over to Lillian’s to get the hat and suit I am going to wear on the boat tomorrow,” I returned quiet- ly. “You remember I had this hat sent to Lillian’s from the shop, and went over there to get it befere I went to the club meeting today.” “T'll. bet you made those old frumps over there look like a collec- tion of hand-me-downs,” Dicky put in | from the chair in which he was tilted back comfortably. “That skyplece is ‘Whether because of his natural love for teasing, or because my work with { him as much as he pretends it does, i Dicky loses no opportunity to belittle the woman of the club before whom I talk each Wednesday. But I never need to answer his strictures when they are made in the presence of his mother. Tt is the one subject on which shels invarlably sure to side with me against Dicky. “It's Becoming FEnough.” She turned upon him angrily as he spoke: “Richard,” she said testily, “if you | cannot speak with respect of the in- | telligent, progressive women whom your wife addresses each week, I wish you would not discuss them at tall.” ! “Just as you say, mother,” Dicky re- turned -with exaggerated meekness. He winked at me as he spoke, a wink which his mother fortunately did not see, and which I did not dare to re- turn, for she was looking directly at me. “I'm to infer then, that the new hat meets with your approval?” I sald to him, with a grandiose little flourish. “You bet,” Dicky returned enthus- jastically, ‘most becoming thing I cver saw on you.” My mother-in-law sniffed. “It’s becoming enough, and bpretty enough,” she admitted grudgingly, “but it looks to me like a very ex- travagant pilece of headgear.”. | I flushed and turned away sharply. | It was absurd to care for such a thoroughly feminine pin prick, but I could not help resenting it. i “I hope it 1is” Dicky struck in . sharply. “It looks like a $50 lid to me; that’s what I wanted you to get, !and if you paid anything less for it I shall be disappointed.” “Fifty dollars!” gasped his mother, in horror. “Don’t Consider Me.” | 1t was foolish, I know, but I could rot help tantalizing her. “Well, it wasn’t over $50.” I smiled at Dicky as I spoke, remembering the $35 I had paid for the hat. “Good!” he said heartily. “But I wouldn’t have cared if it was.” “That isn't extravagance, that’ criminal folly,” the elder Mrs, Gra- ham snapped. I hope the day will food which the price of this hat will buy.” Like most pious wishes, her tone come when you will go hungry for | make so deliciously,” I replied promptly. “The rest of the dinner I'll leave to you.” In the Restaurant. My mother-in-law glared at me, “It strikes me there isn't much Jeft to leave to him after an order of that kind,” she said tartly. “You haven’t eaten many of Dicky's dinners then,” I said audaciously, with a little maue at him. ‘“He orders the most perfect dinners of any one I know."” “Of course, with your wide experi- ence you ought to be a critical judge of his ability,” my mother-in-law snapped back. Her tone was even more insulting than her words. It tipped with cruel venom her allusion to the quiet, al- most cloistered life of my girlhood I saw Dicky’s face flush hotly, and I feared that he was about to utter an angry retort in my defense. I knew his mother’s mood so well that I was.- sure any angry speech af his to her in her present state of mind would be like dropping a match into a powder magazine. So I spoke quickly, managing to shake my head at Dicky unobserved by his mother. “Please decide upon your order as quickly as you can, Dick I said, “T don’t know that I ever was so hungry before in my life.” “You haven't any idea what hunger is,” Dicky said, banteringl “Wait till you've been through a s fish- ing with me.” I drew a long breath as I saw my mother-in-law adjust her lorgnette and proceed to gaze through it with critical hauteur at the other diners. I hoped that her curiosity and interest in the things going on around her would make her forget her imaginary grievances, but my hope was destined to be short lived. It was while we were our oysters, the very first the season, that she spoke suddenly, abruptly “Margaret, do you know that man at the second table back of us? He hasn’t taken his eyves from you for theg last twenty minutes.’ Menu for Tomo i E._; T Breakfast Fruit Broiled Tripe Hashed Potatoes discussing offered of to me, Gems Coffee Lunch Cheese Polenta Toasted Gems Corn Starch Dinner Cream of Potato Soup Broiled Steak and Onions Molded Rice Creamed Carrots Celery and Apple Salad Bananas a la West Cheese Polenta—This is salted corn meal mueh cooked for at least an hour, into which is stirred just before” serving pepper and and one cupful of grated cheese. Serve plain with but- ter. implied that she would really enjay witnessing our hunger-driven repen- tance some time in the future. i ‘You don’t need to wait to see me hungry mother,” Dick returned good-' humoredly, “I'm like a ravenous wolf now. If yowll just postpone yaur worrying over the price of Madge's hat till some other time I'll be much obliged. Let's go down to dinner.” “I've been ready for dinner for an hour,” my mother-in-law rejoined, tartly. The look which accompanied the words told me that she was in one of the captious disagreeable moods in which she indulges herself occasional- | 1y I knew that it behooved me to steer my way warily through the even- | irg's conversational breakers, I flashed a whimsieal look at Dicky, a look which he returned with a ten- der smile that did much to hearten me for the ewening. “I'll be with you in one minute,” T promised, hurrying into the room ad- joining my mother-in-law’s, which Dicky and I were to share the night. 1 had nothing to do save take off my hat and coat, brush up my hair a pit, and bathe my hands, and T was back in the other room again al- most in the minute I had promised. Dinn with Dicky in a public din- ing room is almost always a delight to me. He has the rare art of knowing how to order a perfect dinmer, and when he is in a good humor he is most entertaining. He knows by gight .or by personal acquaintance al- most every celebrity of the city, and his comments on them have an un- common fascination for me because of the monatony of my life before I met Dicky. But the very expression of my mother-in-law’s back as I followed her through the glittering grill room of the Sydenham told me that our chances for having a pleasant even- ing were slender indeed. ““Well, mother, what do you want to eat?” Dicky began genially, when an obsequlous walter had seated us and put the menu cards before us. “Please do not consider me in the least,”” my mother-in-law said with her most Christian-martyr-like ex- pression. “Whatever you and Mar- garet wish will do very well for me.” Dicky turned from his mother with a little impatient shrug. “What about you, asked. ‘“‘Chicken a la Maryland in a chafing dish, and a combination salad with that anchovy and sherry dressing you for Madge?” he Bananns a la West—Strip the peel !from any number of bananas being | caretul to remove all of the fine bitter strings. Halve each crosswise, dip in sweetened lemon juice then roll in finely chopped nuts. Lay on a but- tered pan and bake in a very hot oven {until they can be easily pierced with this will take about twelve Serve hot or cold. a fork: minutes. Overboiled potato placed in a i cloth and squeezed hard, can be mixed with flour or barley meal, and made into scones. They should be toasted, and eaten with butter. ; Cottage cheese made without boil- ing water is usually the best. The curd is much softer. NOTICE! You can buy Ladies’' extra high cut. Black Hawl Sewed Boots at $3.00, Men's $5, flne bench made shoes, every pair represents the latest Fall styles in English lasts. Some medium and wide toes in patent kid, gun met- al calf and mahogany calf in button and lace at $3. We will sell ladies’ Royal High Cuts in African brown, Champagne and gray kid calfs, § value at $3. We will sell ladies’ two-. tone styles in English lasts, some me- dium Gray, dark shades for conserva- tive dressers, sale price $3. We will sell Men's $6.50 Police, Firemen's and Postman's shoes, full double soles and leather lined, sale price $3.95. We will sell men’'s Dr. Whitcomb cushion comfort shoes, $6 values at $3.95. We will sell Men's $5.50 Storm** King rubber boots at $3.45. We will sell Men’s first quality knee boots at $5. We will sell Prof. Richardson’s §7 arch supporting shoes for men, with rteel shanks, long counters and Thomas heels for $3.95. We will sell Herman's U. S. Army shoes in black and tan at $3.45. We will sell ladies’ classy models in combinations of black and white, tan and white and- other combinations worth $5 for $8. We will sell the very newest white calf and nubuck Royal Princess boots for ladies, with wave and dome tops for $3. We will sell ladies’ hand turn Jullets with rubber heeols and soft kid uppers worth $2.50 at $1.50. We will sell boys’ and girls’ $2.50 to $3 school shoes for $1.59 and $1.79. We will sell the biggest bargains in Connecticut, be sure to come early. Slater’s Shoe Store 843-845 MAIN STREET, HARTFORD

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