New Britain Herald Newspaper, September 18, 1918, Page 4

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Svillo fality. It 0 io, v d vory will he seen C Hun Ray’s deals with yuatry, (¢ the sit- erman mothe o this spies in dni tion hd the e p in merican emise THEN was ER. big the would not huge crowds gain admit Farnum in since with oX" theater Hippodrome the to as as it If e w ve ho nee Rider Fox York accommodated od William rple Sa have strugg witne of the P performance Fox vaudevillc Farnum furnishe to Kenins vesterday, show Lassiter, the delineation of Ameri- in e big M enger wholesome, fearless nism that e history pursuit o siste hesiter pits his lone strength, skilland ags all the and powerful situations that not been equalled films of the In his relent- =4 his s abductors untless courage inst re- ecret the or- de- urces of nizat and FOX’S an ou art "W host of ad- e count is of exceptionally includes the Girl in ir, who presents a novelty act oh is a fine act: the Hawaiiaa which is a very entertaining act, the Irish comedian, who has a blendid act full of fumny jokes Cha Ray will {omorrow The Claw t AMr photopl war MAMMOT 1 SDAY, I—IT or Theaiergoers and SEPTEM BER 18 1018, portray an Oxford in in gradunt and vight at the play is laid on Africa. Into this comes Scs in the ivory soon took @ course Oxtord cinating The Incale of o T .ondon the west coast o derful coun ter t ue in- st of a T His e firm of a cr uave manner malkes him & he finaily daug? ¥ popular person anad introduced the King's Leaving the palace he crin ane the and come is 1o B discoyor shing ers— fthem the B the only ich they g climax ihoth yves- Bif orman cos absolute fbortray the accused of a e by of danghter one of witne: suitors, then the sed i n- e best dramatic on the nating of countr play. T ALt il sereen this fus the aft pictur in play holds the tion udience. TI i wonderfully shown livd di- nes in the the s e rable « 4 Y reel show consid e by The comedy A standard dously O enry <1y, story amnseinent feature of this tremea playhouse is it superh orehesty ry membes t | ented minsician whose marvelous abili- oo eeognized the of ox dancer and repertaire g Ll stime Bd the head of John he pricg of her bw stirrink New Yorkers Iphotoplay has cver done. ted in cight of regal BiEht 1aspiving e | oatost tragic love stovies over fd. Chy Darnton in the Iivening Vorld >.~\>) = Willinm proved hiif: ruling { the motion world amazing Salome” the greatest of Hlm spc he and challenges raoppi fac.je Nothing approachine sheer emotiongl appeal of th has ever Lchieved on th Isewhere. It wrung from the sxclamations, of “Riders o oin s of this week as bhooked in E-spectacl Si- popular by lovers con to pa- boing that tho ment cellent sts of evor ng f nd the W assured musicol ntly this music, Picinated = il | grand opera fastidious Qe trons are al treat stands A to program W promin among ei acts other big features of amus center Bullets thaa iihe Intentichisone o (B Lk has more adventurous features of the all mee Fo 1f the picture again any previous cpisodes ol when revealed It stuns | ind Juanita Ha vin and 1 foiling the ins bill morve Lorenzo Cox, dem- with ced vaudeville in proiuction i “taele "‘ Ities galore imaginaaidon known toNligni I8 “Scissors ability rapidity cde the senses. ; g [ onstrates his remarkahle .. [whichEne | him in the | The o with makes n Places lead in this fascinating art Ritch a black-face team with ind the svissors. The been A or spec- tato and matic thaa staged in quested s constant pplausc e 1t any the Coliscum to come tomorrow Lugines and {he big this the b in this city song stories: ridly Nero Patror s dra- morc | with selections e operatic | comedy keteh, bill ¢ spectacle ! 5 malke er | vaudevillc scen md Fri- | dreds will do tlome” a b unle M disappoint. not Riders of the Iurple " but is the penalty aiting until i last minute productio. presented at Ifox disappointed were secin that ¢ to sce the 1 costume touch of fashion The all with the truth a black smart symbol velvet in of theater white of is EY’S Hayakawa Latw L obi featurs, a b Henry story, Current Weekly all offers its fa This big times dail mooth ind in his latest w,” has wished K Sessuc Man's THEATIR, A could at home had gaily colored wooden bead ehid he easily made satin and turban it one Paramount-Art- Bluebird i | White | | 1t velvet, craft an 0. Uaiversal vaudeville acts, Keeney' teature, the sta fivents Vs the hlonses with one-piece Most to the suit effect of harmonize on one Sram, 1 LN tidious p: program ored | thereb. what s e trons this week i produce a presented three Sessu the ished Japanes. “The White Man's 1 portunity that Hayakawa, suave pol A helt ur and interesting cloth. Tt tic finished with is loosely bal new striped ront and plag an op- | |1 |t | he long for o FOLLOW THE CROWDS TO WHERE YOU SEE ALL THE BiG PICTURES TOMORROW FOR 3 BIG DAYS ONLY The Gorgeous Spectacle ow Stirring New Yorkers as no Other Photoplay Has Ever Done With the Incomparable. THEDA BARA Mammoth Ac 8 Superb, Magnificent, Dazzling, Thrilling, Awe-inspiring, Barbaric, s of regal splendor, inspiring Act of the Greatest Love Ever Told with 4 BlG VAUDEVILLE ACTS NO INCREASE I PRICES MATINEES—1,7000 SEATS AT 11c. EVENINGS—BAL. 15¢, ORC. 25¢, BOXES ?3¢ LOGES 33¢. ! know i zing 'FADS AND FASHIONS | REVELATIONS OF A WIFE When I What Happened Bdith F; "he passion Madge and cod ch Other. effect of I3dith Fai and fax adjuration revelation upon tender me was a quick feeling revulsion rd the pitying had fo her So it had whose Jealous was true, after all! very address | rage flamed must have for 1 suvy my was uneertain within uy up again me, and heen visible the a my back for a The bronght Iven if something ity would + her. So I calt kindlin “Don't Mi don't face giri it hand | been ra hlow ht of e de me with whai 1 feared which 10 My senses my returnin and common sense doubted gain by frightenin nothing and f € frier schooled my voicd ness, even 1o an aspect ¢ Iy le misunderstand s 1 rfax,” T said to he from me. | palliated the other, “You or to sh ry ot hood to that fled qui afraid of w not the f phi ink my soul fier - pnly cettain for with my est anger had ind to find which i anxious thing reasons from you s necessiary many for me { h het there he here was a relief flashing nge in fice ted, but s very high on was also a quick that | have irl pupils predoniina v slight filming of teimmin in in f (Copyright eves observed ont when gz A ien it thing wouldn't undergoir quiz some forbic interpreted were | dircetly | concerning (2 — t onee to ploit. 1 mean that concerning tell me When held a passionate 1 1 and couldn’t next there Dicky some which she the instar ! posite mic voice | hands. the | 1 be thing her of answered instead she calm protest me dignity wild to was 3 said 1r your of a moment she fore. o “T shall he very s answer any question [ ¢ out betrayving confidence The inferen that dences of 1 how | and how you wound Lith in ib) GraRain madi n slad to with fof f | has & him! no held conti you But needs evil surrounding 1 to of judgment of him And bear o she | thousht | wn there hushand’® which upset my my he Um his was barred enforced « dictated shrew ‘It is no fax,” 1 d band and you carc it s nece flaunt that and m. T a speech worthy secret to me, Miss beg you to “that each other, and | longer for to |1 there | make Pair- hus- for seathingly for my now this searcely cannot the between reveal Ty you any and My Her trembling natching from fact are o eXCUSe don’t ik dences Underwoo to that vou care to me face was as she “No Wonder Your Husband—' and, her he honsc And thir I regretied the speech as had left my lips, but notso po 1y as I did a moment later when girl 1 had insulted sprang to her and with the hot dyeing proud, sensitive face flamed out royally: : “Oh! Oh!” she choked. *“How can you say such cruel, underbred, vulgar things to No band—"" She stopped color ebhed out of her her deadly pale. 1 her with | almost an uncanny What was the rest of the sentence which she had left unfinished concerning Dicky And then T saw a transformation indeed. As if by magic the shyness, | the timidity, the girlishness of Idith Fairfax seemed to soon as it rushed ant the feet her me I, left alone color hadn't Dicky, and was the ¢ expla 2 to sec Hers thi received to harshly nie! wonder your hus- panic-stricken, and the face, leaving watched " = The just as stewed ribs spinach in the winte fascination char is To boiled cold prevent slip from her, | in Eodsipiien the from leaving a calm, poised woman of world, who looked out at searching, appraising, judging “Please forgive me,” she with sincerity, but there was only dignity., no abasement in her contrition T should not have spoken to you in that manner, but—"" “Neither should I 1 did.” I finished you will aceept my She inclined her ont, but there was expression of hep I fancied I judzgment, depth A | dren | volled i | me elicion balls to suid light 2r vi Yellow rooms will of just as soften the most g have Then ‘1 apologies head in something that, renuneiation spoken oK N over old hold who hoard articles for trus! ve 1 can use grave in the eves disturbed read in me warning their «f Graham!" pause, “I want believing t to Love Fim Truly". Nrs little Lionor of ing to she said after you to do me the what 1 the e She looked at me expectantly “I do believe it 1 returned unexpected earnestne and at T meant the assertion “Then lel me assure you now, on, “that your hushand does not care for me at all in the think. That e believes true friend who serve him in two cies, who stands I am sure. That I 1v, hopelessly, have he does not dream of upon my part, thank G “It is my prayer that know—and yet—and brokn tears all bhecause unshed, I truly than you can—would make hin happier-—be a better wife for him! 1 Jooked at her with tha seemed spiritually opened “I believe you would,” T said cerely, without rancor, giving her | tribute of honest speech which had bestowed upon me. “And 11 jove him very much.” at m truth.” The Last “SELFI sy you is Lot with ! knew | | * she | This home went thriller way me heen three ready to care for you be a | to ahle emer serve has or TWO O HER him deep- vou guessed, such o d = he will hut tolly | CHARLES “THE CLAWS ( never voicc the love hey morc him into bitter mor ) 1918. Fiftieth Premium TUist, G. M. RUNDLF he is the OCT. 7-12, one Underwood & my it tl hin wror in req adve £ withhold - jus! longer ou p working dropped hat pondered ined rd my a it v plunge them dor ndy popeorn up cen sh clothing Showing H YATE With WM. S. HART. will ANOTHER BIG FI T Anniversary Address i Sec., Danbury, Conn, ith is one tall velvet quill placed Und voice e won Ny repentantly. vou could husband only 1 by believe me. g, e v 1l frie srse in might you litt let Y t a se. leas; h my and a om her equest husba HOUSEHOLD NOTES | i he discoloration i imm for t the & will or of send treading on air. VAUDEVILLE. THE GIRL IN GREAT ATURE 18 Al TOMORROW RAY HI H FAIR Send those loves your lack to \IR. NEW BRITAIN CHAPTER. | Reports received by the jter from the schools show that the { Pupils are still active in Red Cross {lines. Tn St. Mary's 1446 pieces have | heen completed since June 17 includ- {ing knitted articles. This work [ done by St. Mary's Sodality | The August report of | street school follow hags, underdrawers petticoats sweaters pairs of un local chap- was the st Bocles ershirts. To finjsh the allotment of the local | chapter which far from pletion it that more men tako work. There several refugee cut garments 10 be This work may be done rooms of the locai chap tor is now com- is necessary the up hundred are sewnd the at at o1 home. Milan of the women of prominence vith the Ameri work Ttaly One Italian co-operat- many now Red Cross in its Sita Mever present i in Camperio is Signora Milan, At time Sfmora Camperio is particularly interested in the establishment roches, or nurseries, for the children \f Lombard, mothers in the r ikindergartens - | district brim ! the the whose at are fiold Two of these the running under the direction Milanese, who planned and looked iallest details in connection with he of the women in the furnishing and decoration schoolrooms, the food, the children. Twice each and sometimes oftener she visits to see that they up to standard she has set Signora Camperio who first sowed seed that bore fruit in the training and organization of Red Cross nurses in Ttaly, ad it was through her untiring efforts and ethu- siasm that the first school for the pur- pose of training young women of Italy for this profession instituted late as in 1908 in The first came to her when, a wife, sho lay ill Iinglish 11, waited upon an English | Red Cross nurse. Gratetul for kind and efficient care she received at the hands of this young woman, Sig- nora Camperio questioned her as to her training. T told her of the hospital nursing she haa taken and explained that she was also a “Red Vross” nurse whose duty i times of war to administer to wounded on the battlefield and times of disaster to aid the injured Signora Camperio listened with growing interest. Tt was then that the plan for something of the same wind for her own country came to her. | Returningto Milan she intorested a few | few friends, and a small was who received lessons and ban or a “First Aid” course from Dr. Scipione Losio, a colonel of the Italian Red Cross, who volunteered his services. Realizing, however, that they swere the theory but not the necessar, in a training of this kind, Signor Camperio in 1906 trip to Paris to visit institutions France where such | nursiniz was taught The she visited the hopital at Atenil. considered the most modern of its kind, where nur [ received instruction and volunteers from the outside .were taken in. After an inspection of several other institu- tions, includir the Nurses' School at Plaisance Mlle. Genin, who has sin been decorated in the Signora. Camperio retuned than ever imbued with the nurses’ school for established Conte della vice-president. now Italian Red Cross, vork ce fie nurseries in Milan © entirely encrgetic or rice hout now in !order., ar of this personally the them ind has fter erwood) | nniform | charge, of the dress of play steady, nan uny and op woek resisting | them are kept the high last 1t “They realize was the vou, unflagging He ven in position for fluences venture was Milan 1904 in by as nds, as idea in Young ay an i harsh le while me "ou hospi 2o, can Leila 10 nurse lips hands, zloves, the course nd the two | in journey | I had | 1 less class in anatomy ng, canned xcellent acquiring practice most v hard made ediately in he chil- | honey o oomiest ool and under war, Italy iden to house mebody oL of a training her countrywomen to he it Milan Somag Tnteresting then the ia. President a committee its head for the Just the perio, - with was formed new E. Grandi at o take up plans school at this time brother-in-law returned to Filippo of Camperio, Signora Cam- Ttaly from Man- churia where he had been milltary attache to Russia during the Russo- Japanese war, and where he had heen instrumental in arganizing £.000 Rus- sian nurses for service with the troops. He willingly and enthusiastically lent Jhis aid to his sister’ plan for the or- ganization of Red Cross nurses in Italy and immediately gave a series | of lectures ta Interest the people m the new project. This lecture tour brought them to Rome, where the queen mother, granting Signora Cam- | perio an interview, congratulated her |on the splendid work and herself do- nated flve hundred lire taward the founding of the achool at Milan. With suffictent funds at length {cured and the Interest of the peoplo ironsed, Signora Camperio made a second trip to Parls, taking with her the woman directress whom she had clected to be in charge af the new school, Thera they studied the insti- tution Pleasance aad returning to Ttaly December 14 1908, the first school for nursing ‘at Milan was apened, Fxactly two weeks later oc- curred the 2arthquake at Meesina. The you a CTs. N at for on it was ! present | and other influential citizens of Milan, | re v i AERICAN RED CROSS NOTES 1 first nu injured were ses to the relief of who were brought to Naples the members of this Milan school, who gave such a good account of themselves and so admirably dem- onstrated what merely two weeks of traiaing had done for them, that en- thusiasm for the new school swept over the entire country. In many other . cities similar institutions were imme-* | diately opened and hundreds of young | Ialian women cagerly embraced this | new profession | Three vears later, ia August, 1011, | Signora. Camperlo, still interested in | the great work of training nurses for ! her country went to London, where I she visited the London, the St. Thom- and Queen Alexandria hospitale, She carried back with her many pre- cious pamphlets an documents rela- tive to the work, and returning to Milan, aided hy two enthusiastio friends whom she found awaiting her, apostles of reform in the hospitals of Ttaly, and a committee composed of many prominent Ttalians, founded the Princess Jolanda Training School for under the patronage of her the queen, The course in this modern and up-to-date training covered three At the outhreak of the preseat war the school and hospital were enlarged and turned into Tervitorial Hospital No. 8; and taday side by side with the Red Cross of the Princess Jolanda’s hospital | training school waves the tricolor of Italy During Mever months { front, | the Nurses majesty most school vear: the pregent Camperio has in a military hospital at the only leaving to take up the work of aiding the women of her peo- ple who. with their men fighting in the trenches, have ha to take upon own shoulders the work of the well as of the home. One of greatest ways in which she can. of help Signora Camperio believes is in the establishment of creches, or nurseries, for the children, so that the are enabled to earn their living in the fields and are assured at the same time of the well-being of their babies. Understanding as she does her own people and their needs,. |th American Red Cross has found this Ttalian woman an invaluable worker; an Signora Camperio on her part is ever ready to express her ap- preciation of the efforts of the .Amerl- can organization to help the people of Ttaly who have horne long alone and unaided the full measure of fering a cruel war has brought them war served Signora for five their field the be mothers in co- suf. upon l Baked Onions, large onions. ounce butter substftute. Seasoning. Select 3 large sized onions; peel and cut them up and down into slices about an inch thick; sprinkle each slice with a pinch of salt and pepper. Melt an ounce of butter substitute in baking dish and place this the seasoned slices of onion. Bake 30 minutes in Scalloped Cabbage. 1 small cabbage. Milk or soup Seasoning. Cut cabbage into quarters until tender in salted water. Set aside to cool, chop and with salt, pepper and butter substitute. Stir in heaten cgg and a little milk or soup Put in a casserole and sprinkle crumbs of Victory bread over top. Bake 30 minutes in a moderate oven stock and hoil season a stock A skirt fr frock of rose crepe has a straight trimmed with three of of coral beads and rows ge varn SR STANLEY HORVITZ, 327 Main St. Optictan s. Uptometrist KEENEY’S POLITE VAUDEVILLE., Double Feature Photo Plays. DOROTHY DALTON | in “TYRANT FEAR.” A Big Bluebird Feature, | B 1 Big Al Star Vaudeville Acta, 1 Current Events. Wm. Duncan in “A Fight For Millions”

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