New Britain Herald Newspaper, January 30, 1928, Page 4

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, JANUARY 80, 1928 How and Why By Ann Alysis For all that is sid about the wide open, large eye being the most attractive, if we give a moment's thought to the matter we will sea that while it may be beautiful in ftaslf, yet it is when the eye is in agreement with the other features that we have true beauty. Proportion here, as everywhere | olse, is the deciding factor. This was brought forcibly to my mind recently by observing a pair of large and appealing eyes set in a face that was otherwise coarse and heavy, ®o that my outstand. ing impression was one’ of intense disappointment. Think of some of your acquaint- ances for a moment, of their eyes in particular, Now, if Eleanor's rather small, but undeniably viva. clous and humorous eyes could ba exchanged for a large round pair, would friend Eleanor's beauty be ‘| enhanced? Or would it be swamp- ed by the naw pair? The deecp-set, twinkling eye has ! as much charm as any éther type. And is not an eye with a little slant, & Ia Japanese, an attractive thing? Of course too small an| eye or too large a one or one that protrudes unduly is not so good. Nothing whatever can be done to alter the original shape of this By Beatrice Burton of “Sally’s Shoulders,” “Honey Lou,” “The Hollywood Girl,” Ete. Love’s Embers Adele Garrisen”s Abserbing Sequel To “Revtiou of a ife" tention of questioning Dicky con- | cerning the man at her first oppor- tunity and wondered whether or not she would pass on to me the inform- ation she recclved from Dicky—it indeed he told her anything of value. But the major portion of my thoughts was not given to oconjec- tures concerning others. I had enough gloomy thoughts of my own to supply a dozen people. The sight ot Edith Fairfax's photograph with the intimate famillar message writ- |ten across it, which I had caught when it had fallen unobserved from Dicky's pocket had shaken me to & degree as surprising as it was tore Money Love .. READ THIS FIRST: | mal Fallure Lily ‘Lexington, only daughter of 1 Our dinners at the farmhouse, | <specially when Dicky is at home .nd Ldilian is with us, are generally mest pleasurable atfairs, for both | wmy husband and our old friend pos- sess the ablility and the inclination o talk entertalningly. Either of hem is sufficient to insure the con- veraational auccess of a meal. When hoth of them are present, dinner is a long-drawn-out affair, because the rest of us ilsten and laugh, and w9 all take an unconacionable time "fac the meal. it u this evening, following | turing. 171;“1'! 'r::um from ::o city, we | In the awful time following Grace migh! returned from w | Draper's suicide and Dicky's hor- fuurlfl. ";‘J’.'r,’;fiy w:l“:flent, dis- | rible doubt of me, which had tralt. Conversation was limited to | Wounded me beyond my power to perfunctory neceasity and I think | pardon him, I had given no thought e wers all glad when the meals|to Edith Faicfax, whoso hopeless was over. | love for Dicky never had been de- | Tt was not hard for me to guess |nled by her. That she was in North the reason for the general air ot | Carclina with her old and delightful gloem. Almost all of us were ab- |8reat- ¢, Mias Dora Paige, I knew, sorbed in some special unpleasant |and had guessed that Dicky had ar- problem of our own. Dicky, I know, | ranged her vacation from the mag- was only waiting the opportunity to | azino in whose management they berate me for my agreeing to tutor | Were partaers, hceiuso he wished | Fleanor Lincoln at Philip Veritzen’s [ 10 complicatisn in the problem ot the Cyrus Lexingtons, jilts Staley Drummon1, a rich bachelor, to mar- | ry her mother's chauffeur, Pat; France, Her parents and friends drop her, and she goes to live with | Pat In a cheap little flat and do. her own housework, which she de- 1 Pat has invented a new kind of | piston ring, and he and Roy Jet- | terson rent a tiny machine &hop, | where they intend to make it and | market it. Pat works three or four nights 2 week, and Lily has a very dull time of it. They are poor, be- sides, for Pat has put every nickel he has into the wonderful piaton | ring, and Lily begins to regret her | hasty marriage. However, she still | in in love with Pat, and wildly jeal- ous of his former sweetheart, Ella. | abeth Ertz, a nurse, One day she meets her chum, Sue Cain, down town, and Sue asks her | to a party. She accepts, finds she | has no clothes to wear, and tele- | phones Staley Drummond, who 8’} still in love with her, according to Sue. He pays for the things with his own check, which is aeen by | Pat's sister, Florence France, who | works in the shop where Lily buyn" Danger of that Cough or Cold? Mother, if the youngsters hard “t:ke cold,” if for un;'lgf a d:z‘:: other fl sons they get “sick with a cold,” stop it as fast as you can. Don't let it hang on. Colds |kax(smy and stay, too often lead into pneus monia or flu or chronic bronchial trouble, Too oftcn a cold leads into a fatal compli- cation, Moth » behest; his mother was atill irritated | 0ur future which eonfronted us. because of his inconsiderate slam- | ming of the door, and because of Katie's noisy ways, while Katherine 1 was sure was revolving the tragic | emotional problem presented by Hal | Meredith's letter. | What was troubling Lillian Y| could not imagine, but the almost | peychic tie between us is 50 strong | #at I knew she was sorely beset by | wome problem, Yet T knew of noth- | ‘ing which could have disturbed her —except—my memory flashed back | to tho incident of the afternoon | when she had recognized the red- | bearded man as a hanger-on of the revolutionary socleties which it had been her business as a secret ser- | vice operative to investigate and de- | stroy. Was this man a more danger- | ous character than she had repre. | sented to me, and had she mini- mised his potentiality for evil be- | cause of the fact that Dicky knew | the man and had been heard to jest | with him? With mounting excite- | ment I recalled Lillian's avowed in- The Facape of Terror the Goshawk | But this message brought to mv mind a sudden convictlon that Edith Fairfax w playing a waiting game, and that if 'ky *nl1 I eme to the final parting of the ways, as had seemed most likely when she left for the South, she would be at hand with her beauty, er attractive personality, her business comrade- ship and her great love to fill the place which I left vacant. ‘With all the will power T possess- | €4 I braced myself to go through my coming interview with Dicky upon the subject of teaching Fleanor Lin- coln without betraying my knowl- edge of the photograph or my reac- tion to it. But I was digging my nails deep into my palms when after dinner Dicky seized a moment when we were standing apart from the rest and said curtly: “Come up 10 my room as soon s | you can slip away. I want to talk to you.” Copyright, 1928, Newspaper Feature Service, Inc. No substitute can ever be Quite the samo as being free. —Terror the Goshawk Perhaps you will remember that | Terror the Goshawk was caught by | Farmer Brown's Boy, who set a trap | for him on top of the telephonol pols. Farmer Brown's Boy had done | this because Terror had been catch- ing his chickens. Having caught Tesror without injury, Farmer | Brown’s Bey decided to keep him | & prisoner. And e it came abour .. that Teverr the Goshawk, whom all | ‘- 4o little people of the Green Forest and the QGreen Meadows feared . greatly, became a prisoner in cage in Farmer Brown's dooryara. “% hate to do it, old fellow,” said | Parmer Brown's Boy, “but I just can't afford to have you stealing my chickens. 8o I am going to keep you a prisonzr hers until it is time fer you to go back north.” B0 Terror was a prisoner, but he | was & very well treated priconer. | Farmer Brown's Boy did everything | te make him comfortable. He saw that Terror was well fed. There was | ~ & bex shelter for him in bad weath- | “ep and he really had nothing to osmplain of, exccpting his lack of “fresdom. But nothing ever can, or ever WAL, make up for that. This i9 especially true with one who has had the freedom of the skies, as Lad Terror. 80 always there was & | leok of longing in those ficrce eyes of Terror's. He pined for the Green Forest. But #¢ he pined, the other little veople rejoiced that he was a orisoner. The Green Forcst was & :afer place for them with Terror | out of the way. TlLeir one fear was that gome day he might cscape and * reters. That was their fear, but it | was Perror's hope. ver did he let | nepe wholly die. Always he was on | watch. ¢ chence to escape should come, he would be ready for 1t. At first while he was a prisoner e was visited cvery day by littls people from the Ol4 Orchard and | the @reen Forest. They didn’t coms to ask after his health and tell him they were sorry he was a prisoner. Goodness, no! Thcy came to mock and make fun of him and to tcll him how glad they were that Y was where he could no longer do any harm. But after a while they grew tircd of this and there eame @& time when Terror had no visitors at all. In fact he had been quite for- gotten. g Then one day as Farmer Brown's Boy was putting food and water in Bis eage Mother Brown called fo %im from the housc. He shut the door to the cag: in a hurry. He thought he hooked it. But he didn’t hook it. That is, the hook didn't eateh. Then he hurried up to the Roise and gave no further thought to Terror. Now Terror cou door wasn't lo. time after Fu left that Terror discovered there was a .ittle ray of around the edz- of that door. poked it. The door swung ever o little. Ha pushed. The door swunz balf open. Terror's heart gave a great leap of joy. Boldly he pushed his was out. T You mav be sure that he wasted no time. He spread those biz wings of his andt away he flev, straight to the Green | ™ t. No onr et =aw T in't see that that light pis of him happened that it was on the very day that Spite the Marten tried to catch Chatterer the Red Squirrel, You will remember how Chattercr was istryck down in inid-air by Terror, Chatterer hadn't been watching for any such enemy as that. ™ Of coures Terror was greatly dis- appointed at not catching Chatterer. For a few with Spite the Marten. Then took to his wings, Up above the trees he flew. Up, up he went and | the neighbor asked the | very nicest | | north. Terror was leaving the Green ! Gidnt ree you yestcrday when you | them if she s0 much as mentioned Forest. He wanted to get away from. moved out... . been & | But I'd like to say good-bye to YOU name, as Lily was intending to do¥ Crow | now and tell you how sorry T mni A finally headed straight into the place wherz he had prisoner. Only Blackey the saw him go. But that was cnough. Terror had escaped from prison and 2lso that he had left the Green Forest. The next, story Schemes ‘and Plan: “Reddy Fox Menas for the Family BY TER MARY Breakfast — Stewed prunes, ce- | real, cream, crisp broiled bacon, creamed potatoes, milk, coftee. Luncheon — Noodle soup cclery and apple salad, graham bread, cho- colate_cookies, milk, tea. Dinfier — Stuffed pork tenderloin, sweet potato apples, creamed onioms, grape fruit salad, apple tapioca pud- ding, milk. coffec. Chocolate Cookies One cup suzar, o cegs, cup melted butter, 2 squares bitter chocolate, % teaspoon soad, 1 table- spoon warm water, 3 cups flour, 1, teaspoon vanilla Cream sugar and butter and 2dd chocolate melted over hot waier. Save the white of one egg for frost- ing and beta one whole egg and re- maining yolk until light. Add to first mixturc and beat hard. Add soda dissolved in warm water. Mix and sift in flour. Add vanilla and mix thoroughly. Roll on a slightly floured molding hoard to one-fourth inch thickness, Cut with co cut- ter and bake twelve minutes in a hot oven. When cool frost with a hofl- & frosiing made wit hthe white of BE. ihese cookies keep extremely well bhetter after the first dav. hite frosting on the v inakes a very attractive Thos: who lige » pepper- mint and chocolate combination might flavor the frosting with a drop or 1wo of oil of peppermint. | (Copyright 1925, NEA Service. Tne.) 1% | he discovers a the clothes. wife, Sadye, when she sees Lily with Staley; and neither does Eliza- beth Ertz, when she “bumps into” them one day. Pat finds out about the affair on Christmas eve, when jeweled watch that Staley sent Lily for a gift. They quarrel and Ldly goes home, to find that her father has had some busi- nces losses and that he and her mother are living on very little. 8he is not very happy, and after a month of loneliness and longing for Pat, goes to see him in their little flat and finds Elizabeth Erts helping him dust it, Jealous and hurt, she goes home and consents to see Staley's lawyer about a divorce, naming Elizabeth as corespondent. Then Staley backs a company that huys out Pat’s pistcn ring company for a song, and he tells Lily that | Pat won't make a dollar out of the | deal. Next Lily gets a letter from Pat's mother, telling her that she is closing the flat for Pat, and asking | her to come and get a flask ana cigaret case of Btaley's that she left there. Lily goes on the following day, and taps on the door, hoping that Pat will answer her knock. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER LIX Lily knocked again and waited. She opened her vanity bag and glanced quickly at herself in the mirror set in its top. Yes, she was all right. Flushed and starry-eyed, and looking her very best, in case Pat did open the door to her. She was throush with him forever and ever, of course. She was divorc ! ing him, . . . But even so, she wanted him to sce how lovely she | was, and to reallze how much he was losing when he lost her. But he did not open the door, and heither did anybody else. 8he knocked again, and then she rattleld the docr knob, But still the door stayed ‘closed. “Well, of all things!" she said to herself. “To’send for me to come | down here to sgct my things, and then not to be here to open the ¢oor when I arrive!” | 8he gave it a vicious tittle kick : with _her | down the flight of steps with Scir i ® | They came to mock and meke fun reached the laniing & | | (Copyright, 1928, by T. W. Burgess) | | cinnamon toast, | foot vefore she sterted solled, gaudy. carpet. When she foot of them opened and a small, dark-haired woman her nmelghbor for six stepped out into the hall. Lly aid not xnow her. She never had wanted to knew her. She had always held herself above all the women who iived in the zpartment building. _“They're all right, they're common and ordinary,” che had said grandly to Pat, when he months. moments he quarvelled | agkied why she lidn’t make friends | he | with them, Mrs. France?” now, in the imaginable, “I “How do you do, way . 1 was down town. that we never got acquai | Soon all the Greon Forest knew that you and your husband were MVIng | firmly, as she pushed open the gate here.” She held out her hand and Lily found herself shaking it warmly. . What cyes this woman had, and how triendly her smile was! And her voice was just as low and well-bred |as Sue Cain's voice. “I made a ake about her, at ny rate, Lily thought, when 10£t her and started down the street. | “Therc's nothing common and ord | nary about her. She'd probably ha made a nice friend for me in all the lonely, dreary monihs T spent here.” | Bhe wished now that she ha | made a frien1 of the little, der! | 4 woman, who probably had band as friendly and twinkling . But then, so far as that went, she wished that she had done a good many things that she had not done She wished that she had | “chcated” by cecing Staley while she was still living with Pat &he wished she had not left that liquor sk nd cigaret case in the I ere his mother Lad found them. “he wished she had not lost her t-mper and shaken Elizabeth Trtz that night at the Jettersons” hou “I've wrangled cverything so f2 she decided. “But from now on T'li be very sure of what I do before T do 1t.” Then she realized not that had srianged her for long time had filed her divores as coresp to get e quietly—<o that there would he no scandal when the time came for her to r-arr; aley. “However, T've flaslk: and the Fnew. “It wouldn't sound 11 court for Pat to tell h 1 tooi: « gifts 1fke those from a man, And cspecially from Staley* to gt the zot farct eas But ghe says nothing | to Pat. Neither does Roy Jetterson's | door at the | who had been ! i divorce from Pat if it knew Staley but | kind, twinkling dark ! " those Staley's | Yes, #he must get the flask and the case that very afternoon. 8he must get them and give them back to Staley, so that it would be just &8 if he never had given them to her, Mrs. France was alone in her kitchen, making ginger-bread, when Lily knocked on the back door, 8he was singing, too, but when she; looked up and saw who was stand- ing out in the sunshine, she stopped abruptly. e Her lips were drawn into a thin, tight line when she opened the door, and she did not look as if she were capable of singing anything. “I got your letter,” said Lily, “but when I got to the flat there wasn't anyone there, and the woman down- stairs tells me that Pat moved out yesterday.” Mrs. France nodded. “He did, and | T wrote you in plenty of time to get jlhn! silverware that that man gave you,” she answerzd, “But you didn't show up yesterday, so I just stuck it into one of Pat's suitcases.” “I'd like the things,* Lily sald. | “Where are his suitcases? Upstairs? T'll run up and get the stuff out of { them.” It came over her that she would like to go to see (room that had been she and Pat had had last May and | rart of June. But Mrs. France shook her head. | ‘No, he's asleep up there, and I don’t want him disturbed. He's go- ing to work late tonight—and be. sides, the thre2 suitcases that were filled with houschold things that | {vou and he bought aren’t here. They're over at the Jettersons.’ I didn’t have any place here to store a lot of things. The clothes closets | in this house aren't any bigger than | the law allows, and there never i» any place to put anything!” | She shook her head, and then | gald: “You'd better go over to the Jettersons' for that silver if you | want it ! Lily hated the very thought of go- ing to the Jottersons' for anything. | And nothing but the knowledge that Staley's w ey flask and eclgaret ! case were there would have taken her there that afternoon. . . . She | knew she simply must get those | gifts of Staley's before Elizabeth Ertz got them and wused them | against her. “No court would give me & had made me gifts like that,” Lily told herself. She did not know much about law, but ahe knew | enough to realize that. And wouldn't The Erts be tickled to-find the two expensiVe silver ar- ticles with Staley's initials on them, and threaten to tell the court about | her name in connection with Pat's “I've got to gct those things, | that's all,” Lily made up her mind, {in front of | house She knock2d on the door, but no ! ene answered her knocls. “Jiminy, {this is my day for finding every- | body out,” she was complaining, when Roy Jctterson came around the side of the house from the | back yard. Roy w: | his face was flushed and there was a streak of automobile oil on it. He ! scowled when he saw Lily, but she smiled back at him radiantly, . . . She was glad that Sadye was not at Sadye's neat, pretty She put the letter back into her bag jthem up.” the lttle | all the home n his shirt sleeves, and pleaded. 8he wanted to get them be- fore anyone saw those tell-! tials on them—those initials 8he just had to have them! *There are a Jot of this along with this sllver,” she ex- plained. “Clothes and a pillow and— come on, Roy, let's go and hunt * She laid her hand on his flannel sleeve coaxingly. (TO BE CONTINUED) Life’s Niceties Hints on Etiquette e 1. Is it obligatory for a hostees to entertain for her house guests? 2. Why? 3. What is the established way of entertaining for a guest? The Answers Yes, So that her guest may meet | local friends and in turn be invited about. 3. 1. o A formal dinner. Smart Shadows The black and white plald skiing Jacket silhouettes itself clearly and with. great chic agalnst the snow- clad hills. APPER home, and that she had only him to deal with. It was 0 easy | “work” men—to get from { whatever you happened to want. It pe* s Pat would have | ~ said, following him [ around to the hack porch where he was ot work at 2 long table, “R are there some suitcases of Pat's to them | | Movie actresses marry in haste land repeat at lelsure. | | | here—and if there . may T look at them, please? There are some of mine tn them.” - hegan to fiddle with some irnts of stecl and wirc that lay bee fore him on the table. “How do I know there things of yours in he wanted to know. anc> turned them over to » for Pat—until Pat wants thing cases? me to 1 them agei Lily pulled M, from her handhag. then,” she said w | tells me abont cigaret case And they h In she sent me But Ro | don't want to read your letter,” he 1t 11 look through tha nd if there are any silver things like yours in them, I'll gend them to you.” . France's letter ell, read this, ily. a silver flask and of mine that she found. in that eise—in one o an. I &1w her and here Lily put the letter back into her | bag. “Let’s 1ook for them now,” she | In it she | just shook his head. *T| | Inoneminute Dr.8choll's Zino-pads make the most peinful corns stop | hurting—theworld'sfastest, cafest | way No powerful liquids or caustic plasters to give yon acid burnon the toes. Zino-padsremove the cagss— | friction and pressure of shoes. No cther me! does this. Absolutely safe, sure —cannot barm the tenderest skin, Zino-pads are thin, protective, healing. Atall drug, shoe and dept. ttores — 35¢ per package. DrScholl’s | oxide gas in garages. | Tablets has feature, but in a later article we will consider what ' cosmetics will do to deepen the shadows and lines around it #o as to simulate a change in size and shape. Copyright, 1928, NEA Bervice, Inc. Your Health How To Keep It— Causes of Niness BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN Editor Journal of the Amcrican Medical Assoclation and of Hy- gela, the Health Magazine Bome years ago various firms throughout the United States en- deavored to exploit devices for the manufacture of ozone, It was claimad that these devices could be plac>d in theaters, halls, or in other places where the ven- tilation was likely to be poor and by the supplying of ozone a suffi- cient amount of oxygen could be produced in the air. It is now known that the difficulty under such clrcumstances is not with the | oxygen but in most instances with the movement of the air, the hu- midity, and similar physical fac- tors. One of the most serious of mod- ern ventilation problems is the control of poisonous carbon mon- Again t ozone salesman has come to the front and many commercial ga- rages and service stations have | put in the ozone machines in the beliet that the oxygen given off will convert the deadly carbon monoxide gas into the compara- tively safe curbon dioxide. | Mr, C. W, Balls, technical engi- | neer of the New York State De- partment of Industrial Hygienc, has just made avallable the re: of an {investigagion of the p cability of such devices for the purpose for which they are sold. He finds that the ozone gencra- tors do nmot convert the carhon monoxide into carbon dioxide at a | rate that is fast cnough or in a| proportion that is complete cnough:| to be of any practical use. | It is far botter and more effec- | tive simply to open a few windows and to permit the removal of car- bon monoxide by the process of natural diffusion, If there is not proper diffusion, it may be neccs- sary to install mechanical venti- WANTED 50 Thousand Skinny Men The Kind That Will Take Pride A Manly Figure How much better a man fecls when his weight Is normal. He nearly always has plenty of energy; seldom gets tired and al- | ways looks like a real honest to | goodness man. There was an exceedingly man in Atlantic City—he was rundown and ncedced a lot of fl He took McCoy's Tablets and within two months wrote that he had gain- ed 28 pounds and felt like a new man, | It you are underweight McCoy's| offer ought to interest you. | McCoy takes all the risk—Read this fronclad guarantee. 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Two fives Work of genius Etaircase post Soft and smooth Almost a donkey Tiny wren or mouse Unit Male Part of verb 10 be By Valued Slides Moterial lald - on in decorative relief Icon Geaus of true olive trees Fnglish coin Stomach of an animal Frozen water Blue grass To malke a mistake Lair of a wild beast Answer to Saturday's Puzsle Hor Native of Dower pro; Granted fa To draw water by dipping Anger Always Tedouin tribe Ty €9 89 3 1o 1o B8 1o k2 1o 1D PR R SR Average or ordinary Iniquity stellation Cubic mcters sed 39 me of another person !4 assumed by the author of al43. work To leave out Sick Tmitated Contest of speed Tiny green vegetable Elood Inspired with reverential fear To mention 36. 37, 38. Flat round plates Verbal Silk threads forced under ekin - (ATBT5 [AICORSINEEL BEeEND - RaRnia

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