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EW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY, MARCH 27, 192C. Make Curtis New Britain’s Next Mayor-- By Voting For Him Before 8 P. M. Next Thursday, April 1ist “A Clean Campaign on His Own Record” " MY HEART AND MY HUSBAND ADELE GARRISON’S NEW PHASE OF Revelations of a Wife = s What Happened When Leila “Took Charge” at the Durkees ‘Leila, dear! How good of you to, come to me! This was little Mrs. Durkee's greet- | ing to her son’s fiancee, and no one could have told from her manner that she cherished any other feeling save joy’ at the presence of the girl at her bedside. “It was good of vou {o and want me, ™ Leila returned “And now won't you pleas me what I can do for you?” Absolutely moth! just now ce returned. 'l have had ¢ supper 4nd my ankle is very com- fortable. You must have someth to cat, and Madge will Show you where vou are to sleep in the room adjoining mine. 1 am ashamed ‘o have you go into it, I haven’t cleans1}] there this week and it's perfect hovel!” “Yes, I' am ‘terribly Leila,” Alfred Durkce saiu ghakinz his head dolefully. 1nth rented that room last week to vaudeville artist with a troupe of per- forniing pigs, and they naturally left # in a perfectly awful condition—" | “And wasn't {t the week before Dicky interrupted with a face as sol /émn as that of the traditional judge— Wwhy is it, I wonder, that no one ever imagines a jurist smili $nake-charmer had it Dicky Graham!" “Yes, ma'am,” meekly. “What’will Leila think? Enever think of i a sorry for you, | gravel You know rented that room to anybody. Durkce Criderstands We all shguted with Jaughter at the little’ woman's anery T Accustomed to her mental processes, hér habit of taking literally eve thing ‘Alfred and Dicky said at aring, we knew t bewildermer the A man at sixty ] years of age is 5 : either a failure b'or a success. BEECHAM'S " PILLS have been made for sixty _years and have the largest sale of any medicine in the world! " Millions use BEECH “Wold averswhere, STEAMSHIF . TICKETS ' All Parts of | 1o boxes, 10c., 25¢. " the World Owing to the very heavy bookings to Europe it + advisable that bookings is| who desire sailings in July or August. oreign Exchange | Large supply of English.! French, Swedish, German and Italian currency on hand for the convenience of our patrons. Money, cable orders to all parts world. ,6eo. A. Cuigley 297 MAIN ST. K1 and draft of the \ ritain | her own possessions and habi i make it. { hint of discord. | Which ! from i Arton that ri the boys ble custom were ridiculing of depreciating The of housckeepers, T I had been in it—that the to her own which was i for Leila's occupancy v r, as inviting as pe and the reflected d Mrs. Durkee's tastes could But no matter how fully she had prepared for guests, she always uttered the same little formula about being ashamed of her rooms and her beds and her cooking and s the other details of housekeeping in which she was so adept. “Get along with the whole of you!” she said pettishly as the sound of our laughter brought the jest home to her “Leila, I'm glad you've come. Thosz | boys simply pester the life out of me, and they're too much for Madge to keep in order. I hope vou'll be able to hclp her straighten them out. Now run along, dear, and get suttled in your room and have something to eat.” “ most knew-—for room next tended particular nes won't Le lenz” Leila promised “And when [ come vack”—arch “I'll talk over the best metheds of discipline for these bad boys.” Aifred Ts Tactless To my 3reat relief she had nothing about having had her dinner before coming to Mrs. Durkee's bed- side. I knew that my little neighbor was in that state of nervous invalid- ism when just such a small occur- rence would annoy her, n think her futu daughte wanting in eagern la had seen th voided the pitfall ihought. for her succ in cate task bLefore her. The two weeks of Mrs, Durkee's confinement to her room confirmed me in my opinion that the gentle Vir- inia girl had rare tact nd tion, founded genuinely upon feelinz and delicate instinct managed her future mother- beautifully with just the right note of deference in her manner, and if it had not been for /Alfred’s own short- shtedness the would have been no ss 1o see he and had augured T had w. warning shed fo drop her a concerning Mrs. Durkee word of said | | chemistry care- | jealous pr cherishing of her canning ogatives, but feared to do so. for fear the girl's sensitive nature would read into the warning something of the truth of her undesired prese had been so carefully kept her. But 1 soon saw th needed no such admonition, for never obtruded her own view recipes upon her prospective moth in-law and listened patiently to the showe: of instructions the older woman gave her concerning the d ferent varieties of ‘‘preserves” s wished made. I knew. lowinz M Leila had or e however, that Durkee’s made number of the southern dainties she loved for Al- fred, and with a man’s obtuscness and a sweetheart’s fatuity, he, one evening after supper, put some especially de- licious conserve into a dish and brought it -to his mother's bedside, where Leila and I were sitting. “Mother,” he began, “vou're an acknowledged autherity on canning. I've never scen anybody like here’, somet] g beats anything I ever tasted before. What do von think of this fér a little southern MME. SUNDELIUS SINGS HERE SUNDAY follewing program at Fo: tomorrow. ert is given by the Swedish church, Dr. Ghman, hegin prompuly at Un Bel Di Vedremo des fol- 1ctions, be; inst The given will be The con- Lutheran It will om N Puccini ndelius Male Chorus Arpi Selected Sextette amning Vallpigelat Mor Britta .. Aspakerspolsk Mme. Korling . Beckman Peterson-Berger Peterson-Berger Sundelius Volin Andante Cantahile Serenade dis. Tsigane Herbert Elias Solos I'schaikowski Valdez Ander Oh ! Love but a Day Fairy Pipers . Song of the Open : Mme. Sundelius Mrs. Beach Brewer La Farge Piano Solo Fillmore Ohman Ave, Maria, 0ol e ch-Gounod _With Violin Cblizato Mme Sundelius and Mr. Ander Fillmore Ohman, \ccompanist. on t she ! she | vou, but | i | season, | Spreaa uome family Thehen of her o cooks daily for a ults. She brought to her understanding of the of cooking, sained from of domestic science in a state ;. Consequently the advice a happy combination of wna practice. recipe is her own, first tried out d at her fam £Copyr Some house SPRING C certain date the family die of a In thiv day rugs, is it impossible kitchen an E. A.) s not done by will fall and th a rdwood floors and for a house to | accumulate the dust in hidden nook that resulted from heavily carpeted floors. The use of a vacuum cleaner keeps any housc clean and free from du nd makes the spring cleaning more of a freshening proposition. Until furnace fires, either one's own or one's neighbor’s, are out for the new paper and curtains soon their pristine beauty. The reno- tion of a house dependent en- on the weather. Menn for Tomorrow. Breakfast—Halves of grapefruit, French toast, syrup, coffee Luncheon — Creamed ~ sweetbreads in croustades, celery, mock cuelTy pie, tea. Dinner—Nut loaf, celery sauc steamed rice, vegetable salad, hard-. boiled egg dressing, date pudding -offee. My Own Recipes, dash of salt on bt apefruit instead of sugar. stimulating to a jaded appetit And keep in mind that a tart fruit and eream or milk will not mix hap- pily. Kiddies alwa want a cereal for breakfast and grapefruit is not the fruit to give them. Orange juice sup: plies minerals without the amount of i found in grapefruit. Little folks m it necessary to plan two kinds of a morning meal Creamed Sweetbreads i 1-2 pound sweetbread 2 tablespoons buter. 11-2 tablespoons Salt. Pepper. 1 cup milk. Stale bread. - putting 1 ke Croustades. Prepare sweetbreads by putting into | cold water for an hour, draining and parboiling in acidulated salted water for 30 minutes and blanching in cold er. Separate in pieces, removing membrane. Make white sauce of but- ter, flour and milk. Add sweetbreads and season. Cut bread two inches thick and shape in circles or square Cut out the center, leaving a shell. with butter and brown in a Guick oven. Fill centers with creamed sweetbreads 6 Mock Cherry 1 cup raisins (sceded.) 1 cup cranberrie 1 cup sugar. 1 _teaspoon cornstarch. wter to cover Wash a pick o cranberries. Cook raisins and herries together for 20 minutes in enough water to cover. Dilute cornstarch in a little cold w ter and s into mixture. P ke between two crt Hard-Boiled Egz Dressing. teaspoon mu spoon salt. volk (raw.) hard-boiled ez tablespoons oil. 3 tablespoons vinegar. Paprika. Mix mustard to raw yolk soiled yolks with mixed add oil Beat until thor add the chonped boiled lettnce ssing salt_and paprika and Work in the hard- « fork. When well ind vinegar slowly. ghly blended and whites of the hard- ange’ vegetables and salad bowl : This is a good with plain lettuce.- N. 7T. in the kitchen mc per not temperature. 1d pour over dressing to s tem- MARY. KCoughs and Colds Mean Restless Nights which sap the vitality. Danger lurks in every hour a cold is allowed torun. Assist rature tobring your children quickly back to health andstrength and avoid serious_complications y the prompt use of s Syrup — over 60 years in use. Always Guy the | ‘RED SPRUCE GUM fl«wtbwnsouchwa‘u AEEEEEEEEE think that if the | < tage ir i i motive | servant |t [ ) e i 1 o ) ) 6 ) o e ] T ) o ] 1 AN IMPRESSIVE CANTATA | “FROM OLIVET TO CALV ARY” By Maunder SOUTH CHURCH THE PUBLIC SUNDAY EVENING, 7:30 IS CORDIALLY INVITED ITEEIEI@EEIEIE T ) ] o ] i e ) e )3 6 e 5 e 1 ) ] FUTURE OIL SUPPLY TROUBLES INDUSTRY Question Causes Scientists and Manufacturers to Evince Concern RS0 | Washington, D. C., March 27.— Why are we worried about 0il? Our future oil supply is a question is troubling captains of indu and scientists, yet the reasons for stood by the average citizen. George Otis Smith, director of the U. S. Geo- logical Survey, explains, in a com- tion to the National Geograph- ciets In the coursc of the centuries the raw-material issue changes. In the long-bow epoch of England’s military strength the conservationist feared a depletion of the yew wood which might give the Teuton, backed up by his larger for an obvious advan- light ordnance. later, when Britaiii’s W power depend- i upon her wooden ships war_the inxious nuval chief foresaw 73 PO§Si- bile shortage of the nak which ‘nade the walls that stood between Eng\ i and her enemies. \ “Tod. those who: plan for the fu- ture prosperity of their natio: iize the extent to which other iaw 1ls are essential to the gen being, and for some of th ce no adequate substitutes. remost among these mosi usi- and least abundant, if not, indeed, able, commodities stands mineral oil, or petroleum, and not only the conservative Briton, but the most optimistic American, may well ask himself: Where will my children and children’s children get the oil that they may need in ever-increas- amounts? “But while the United contributed far more than half (61 r cent.) of the oil that the world used for nearly 60 years, we have \dy reached the point where we are consuming more oil than we pro- duce. Is this position of the world’s greatest user of petroleum as safe as is spectacular? “We arc the world's greatest con- sumers of petro but, impressive the 1918 figures of consump- 77,113 barrei no mind ¢ grasp the idea of that quan- tity. Truly it is a flood of oil; for, if spread over tho 60 square miles of the District of Columbia, these 413 million rels would cover the arca to a depth of necarly a foot and a half. “Be 1ing with four miles of iron pipa laid down in Western Pennsvl- vania at the close of the Civil war, this system now embraces a huge net- work of buried pipes from four to eight inches in diameter, trunk lines and laterals, aggregating nearly 30,- 000 miles. “When most of us were in school, meant kerosene, and gasoline or o was something to be bought mun! Great of States has re tion—413. “v benzir lin a bottie at the drug store or tho int shop. i Today oil has become the premier power, not only on land and 1. but even in the heavens abov: and the depths below—truly the bes of Mars and Mercury. farshal Foch is quoted as sayving ‘4 arop of gasoline was worth in . drov of blood.’ number and P war ‘ variety of uses »leum and its products are continually increasing, but even more striking is our increased dependence upor a few of the products of the oil refiner; notably gasoline, kerosene, the many types of lubricati oil and fuel oil. “There are said to be 300 or more products of petroleum, each with its own u Some of these products serve merely our convenience, such as the artificial ‘vanilla’ flavoring or the cover of paraflinc on-the jar of jelly or marmalade: others were found Juring the war period to be absolute- Iy ossential to industry on a large scale—for example, the heavy oil used in tempering steel plates. “It is when we think of the marvel- ous growth of the automobile indus- try that we realize a future demand Tor lubr tion that staggers even the prophetic statistician. With more than six million pleasure automobiles operated in the United States alone, we haye an annual consumption esti- 1¢ of pet i this concern are not generally under- i ] | mated, by the officials of the for most company manufacturing high- grade lubricants, at 120 million gal- lons of lubricating oil, where twenty years ago the demand for this pur- pose was practically nothing.” PAINS SO BAD STAYED IN BED Young Mrs. Johnston Had Miserable Time Until She Took Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. Chicago, TIL,—“I was very sick for some time with pains in my sides and back and I could not do my work at times the pain in my side was so bad I would_ have to stay in bed for days at a time. My mother- in-law had taken Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable C b m- pound and recom- mended it to me. It cured my pains and S I am now able to do all my work. You c.1 publish my testi- tnonial and I hope the Compound will do others the good it has done me.”—NMrs. AxyA JomNsTON, 206 E. 41st Street, For forty vears women have been telling hos vdia E. Pinkham’s Vege- table ComWeund has restored their health when suffering with female ills. This accounts for the enormous demand for it from coas* to coast. If you are troubled with any ailment peculiar to romen why don you try Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable. Compound? It is made from native roots and herbs and tontaing no narcotics or harmful drugs. 112 Milliens used last year” to KILL COLDS HILLS CASCARAE=D QUININE " BROMIDE Standard cold remedy for 20 years —in tablet form—safe, sure, no opiates—breaks up a cold in 24 hours—relieves fnp in 3 days. Money, back if it fails. The genuine box has a_Red top, with Mr. Hil picture. Ae All Drag S CONNECTICUT SCHOOL OF C. A. PERRIN, Dire: 259 Main St. Violin, Piano, Mandoliy Class and Private, Movemen ONLY q Cream, Pasteurizl Britain. |4 E Announcement ! WONDER CLOTHES SHOP 396 Main Street Will Be Open Every Evening From Now Until Easter MONEY=TIME = LABOR is not saved by buying poor Paini.- Buy the L & M SEMI-PASTE PURE PAINT pure Linseed Oil to mix with 2 It is positively the best, because made semi-paste (thick) form and enables SAVING OF $1.00 ON EVERY : of Paint you use. Use a gallon out of you buy, and if not the best paint made, retarn the balance and get all your money it Pays to “MAKE YOUR OWN PAll H. C. THOMPSON, CO., BRISTOL. They are simpl. OlitoL & M THE JOHN BOYLE CO. .\'E\\' BRITAIN adding Linseed ‘emi-Paste Paint Live Automobile :Dealer Local | A Hig A (4