New Britain Herald Newspaper, February 20, 1928, Page 10

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_ Adele Garrison's Absorbing Sequel To “Revelations of a Wife” Beginning a New Serial: e Praducer Is All Set to Observe © : the Drama Unfold ®As: for Phil's third reason for attaching” himeelf to Mother Gra- M. for the day,” Lillian went on, ‘going to give him a chance to ‘witch the gambols of that most in- teresting quartet of youngsters, Mary Rarrison, . Fleanor Lincoln, Noel e and young Mr. Jackson. ‘Why he's 80 interested in their emo- tiasal reactions to each other, I cah't fathom—it's the greatest puz- sle of this whole affair of which Fieanor Lincoln is the center — but he is, and therefore the elab- omtte camouflage for the plain and fangy sleuthing on his part. Well! I'm golng to be old Tobby at the rat ‘hole, my self in my odd mo- ments. . Look! You have to slip it to Phil for artiastry in carrying out his plana. He always can be depended on’to brown the toast on both siden? ‘My eyes followed hers, and saw Otto, Mr. Veritzen's chauffeur un- folding a large and comfortable deck chair and a beach umbrella for Mother Graham's use. I knew that in the wagon box of the old flivver driven by Jim there were folding chairs and beach umbrellas, but nothing #o elaborate or so comfort- | abel as these contrivances which Mr. Verltzen patently had planned especially for my mother-in-law’s comfort. Dicky, with Junior on his shoul- ders, emerged from the men’s bath house and plunged into the water, but I saw him atop short for a second at the sight of Mr. Veritzen gallantly placing Mother Graham in the chair with the big gaily-colored umbrélla shading her from the sun, apd knew that he had a complete picture of the scene resentfully im- printed upon his mind. Young Mr. Jackson came out next apd with a look around—which it Wway easy to guess was in search of Mary—walked down the beach to- ward us. But'it’was Eleanor who tipst emerged from the women's pa- viljon and ran lightly toward the beach. At its edge she stopped, lpoked- across the bay to the oddly shaped cliffs beyond their elike glittering serried bayonet in the sunlight, and then the By Tharnton ‘W. Burgess Naany Won't Believe Pray always kesp an open mind That easy entrance truth may find. =—O0ld Mother Nature Nanoy Meadow Mouse was trem- bling. Yes, sir, she was trembling all over. Bhe wanted to run and she didn’t want to run. S8he was afraid and at the same time she was very, very curious. Some one was digging in the snow and that some one ‘was going to break through into the little tunnel in which Nanny ‘was waiting. It was very strange. “It myst be some other Meadow Mouse digging a new tunnel,” thought Nanny. “OH, dear, I wonder, who it can be! My, if Danny were , here how he would make that other fellow run! He wouldn't allow an- cther Meadow Mouse in our tunnels. Jiut perhaps it isn't a Meadow Mouse. I do hope it isn't Shadow | the Weasel.” Now if Nanny had stopped to think ghe would have known that it wasn't Shadow the Weasel. Shadow | getting too short of breath 1o an- EMBERS turned impulsively to young Mr. Jackson, -and spoke a few rapid words in a language unknown to me. But I could distinguish the oné word, “Georges!” spoken in the manner of a salutation. He spoke but one word in answer, =0 low that 1 could not distinguich it. As she heard it, her hand flew up to her lips with the frightened gesture of a child who has forgotten some prohibition laid upon if, and she turned toward Lillian and me quickly. But we liad averted our eyes, though beneath my lashes 1 could see the frightened look she sent foward us, and the relief which appeared upon her face, when she saw that we were not locking at he he next second they wers both |in the water wading out toward the depti which would enable them to swin. T did not intend to look at Philip Veritzen but my eyes went involuntarily to him, and 1 saw lim tap the Lack of one shapely hand with the fingers of the other, sure | signal of annoyance upon his part. | “We're in the middle of the first all right,” Lillian murmured, and indeed T also felt as if 1 were witnessing the premiere of a play. “They were hoth so flustered that | they never thought to wait for Mary and Noel. And now that litts matter is getting old Phil's goat | Watch Mary carefully when she comes out, and I'll keep my eves trained on Phil. I suppose you real- ize what that little colloquy just | now signified?” “It's what we decided before, lisn’t it?” T answered, “that Eleanor | Lincoln and young Mr. Jackson are {old acquaintances? This view ews dently reminded her of one they had scen before, and she called out to | him concerning it before she re- | membered that they were suppose@ to be strangers.” | “Correct, or Sherlockia!” she sala | while T thought guiltily of the con- | fidence which young Mr. Jackson | had given me, and which I had not | revealed to Lillian because of my promise to the young man. “Here comes Mary now. Train your eyes that way.” \ Copyright, 1928, Newspaper Featurc Service, Inc. “I wonder it he'll want (o be friends with me.” just like him. That is, no one did but this stranger. are you running away from me eried Danny, for you know it was he. Nanny only ran faster. She was he wanted to wait, but she was afrafd to. She wanted to believe doesn’t go about digging tunnels. Ha uses the tunnel somebody else has dug. She really had nothing at all to worry about on that score. Nanny moved a little farther from the point where that digging was | going on. Then she once more sat | down to watch, and she was all of a trem:ble with fright and hope com- bined. Suddenly out into the Jlittle | tunnel came a little paw. Then it was followed by another little paw and by a blunt furry head. Nanny gave a little gasp. She just had to. | That little head was very, very like | the head of her beloved Danny | Meadow Mouse. There was a lot of snow in the fur, for you know that the stranger had heen digging through the snow and more or less of the snow was in his fur and clinging to it.In a moment more he was wholly out in the little tunnel. He sat down back to Nanny and he gan to shake himsclf and to mak his toilet “Oh breath. gasped Nanny under her You see, even back to this stranger looked like Danny. Tn fact, Nanny was having hard work 1o convince Lerself that it wasn't Dan- ny. “It {sn ahe &aid, over, “it isn't. It fsn't Danny cause it can't be Danny. Roughl the Hawk caught Danny, so Danny in dead. T didn’t suppose there could over and be another Meadow Mouse who look- | g ed 8o exactly like Danny. T wonder who he ia 1 wonder if he'll want ta be friends with me. T wish he would turn around.” Just then the st around. “Danny!” squeaked And then at the sound of her own * voice she furned and scampered as fast as her little legs could take her * Lack toward home. anny! Stop, squeaked a fimihar o voiee of Danny ‘ anger did tirn Nanny. Nanns! Stop! voice, It Meradoy didn't believe At S) * wouldn't believe it. She couldn’t he- dieve it. 8he knew that Roughi g the Hawk had caught Danny. Didn't &he know that Danny was mno longer alive? This stranger who looked like Panny and sounded like Danny she knew wasn't Danny. She glanced | back. He was coming after her. ran like Danny. Yes, sir, he ran ex- actly like Danny. She ought to knov Hadn’t she watched Danny a. thou- send times running along their little poths and tunnels? No one else ran | was. People are that way som that this was really 1 but she | wouldn't. She wouldn't, because she couldn’t! $he knew this couldn’t e Danny, so she wouldn't believe it People who won't believe a Lardest poople to convinee. (Copyright, 1928, hy T. W. The next story: “Nanny Is vinced at 1. Menus for the Family Rurgees) Con- 'NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD;:MONDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1925 . Once QOvers Most of the questions in this puz- have a musical theme. The in- tervening words will be casier. Horizontal. Spicule of a sponge. Messiah?” Also. Pertaining to clves. Wing part of a seed. Undersized ox or cow. Quantity. The unit of metric system. Plant used with senna. Who was the author “Divine ‘omedy"? You and me. Afternoon meal. System of courts weight in the of the Point of compass, What Trish conductor composed the most popular of our light opera melodies? Abbreviation for “street.” (By Sister ) Breakfast — Selections of grape | truit, eggs serambled with rice, crisp broiled acon, graham and muffins, ilk, coffee. Luncheon Inon, raisin Baked potators sliced hot ticks, hose | Juneheon milk, | Dinner pork fendoer apple sanc Daked sponge, milk, coffes No cereal included breakfast and unless small Kfasl consists of t the fable a necessary. Tiee and | muffins take the usually fur Frenche vellow | jiee 2 mash Ioin, e corn, is in menu children whose bre cereal arve present corexl the not of ntr “por- shed by ridge heon Sticks tablespoons buttor Lrow iz, n sugar, 1 ¢ flour, 1 feaspoon Laking po vanilla, 1-4 cup 1 oot meats srains utter finely sult teaspoon chopy Mot i a smonth v e ) Jow When thor it ooy er cmove A4 unhe Sift al ter and add to first 1 and add nuts and the pan 1nd hale moderate ¢ iten ¢ il flonr vanilla cad st lined thirty shallow | with raffin papey < in 4 min ut from pan Cool. Then cut in narrow s The butter gives a these it (Copyright, 1 meiting il the flavor f the sugar delicious to | NEW SHOES | One-eyelet shoes in all the | Jeathers, as sharkskin and so on, are quite the ular street gtyle now. fancy lizard most pop- suct against eye st feminine posscsive pronoun. ‘Who was the composer of “The | Reglatercd U. 8. Patont Offteg He: “I love you! I'll love you forever!” She: “Forever? But I'll get older and older.” She: “Yes, but you won't know it.” ! By C. D. Batchelor He: “Well, so will I.” To ycarn or erave. Measure of clot To strike. Variant of To mend. Exults. Bewai Enemy h. cond note in the scale. Rope by which an animals is fastened. Hosc supporter. To sneer. Opposite of light. Mea To exist. Who is the mosf are of arca., fa mous com- poser offpopular songs? glio. In what role in the opera “R Galli-Gurei oletto” did her debut? To handle Melody, To scatter hay. To par, What type of roughly. short ig- make poem is suited to be set to music? small ca To damage, Work of g« To tear. Rowing implement 1 Guided, Combat with de To fi Gieneral_coneeption Who is of our moest famon violinists In what country mons ¢ faeiured ius. between {wo ons dly weapons 15 16 . 17. J the fa mann wers entona violins Vertical, Wiho was the Danube Walt Track BEAUTY How and Why NOT WATER BRATHS 1O THE LYES (By Ann Alysis) full i nacity three of are responsible for eharm of any face op them at their Tired ¢ ompanying | withered lids and wrinkled torehead and corners, are the direct result of 1 painful effort to eseape oye str T have told you how fourths of t it behooves us 10 ke lest. ves " fo g ain by correct lightin Today il con wrinkle preventive eve being the and sensitice organ that it must the greatest care in ¢ » in or about it. Except for the most | Ingements, der relief and measures. The Aclicate we ex- tremely Twenty-four hours. Minor note. Neuter pronoun, Answer to Satunday’s Puzzle [T TAIN]O] IG[AlS] simple treatinents, nothing LIE[PTU[S] [BIATC[T1] should be attemnpted without the advice of A physician Very e m cosed quickly s by bt the are. . T by i e hot or, of compres A produeed, cang to rela Aftey 1 dash 1idl a few memen ol coll e the h watel ndred inmediaiely apond (Copyright, 1928, NEA Service, Tne.) | mar Dan most as in fragile chiffon 2 red i as a man it} has chiffon one pink pattern WEAD HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS 'the he often the eye itself lids and surround- atigue may | applications of s f bathing or by sedative effect s z the tired museles per to (his treatment ening up and sparkling in gratitude! | women Herchiefs are a 15 not means . follow with roto st | nulat nd you 'nt better I, And how the eves re- by bright- HANDKERCHI huge, al- They come A cherry modernistic Your Health How To Keep It— Causes of Iliness BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN Fditgr Journal® of the American Medical In'a single brief paragraph Dr. V. A’ Mottram, professor of physiology of the University of London, gives the characteristics of'an inadequate diet. 4 5 The diet may be Insufficient in quantity or in quality. It may yield to - little bullding material (protein mainly), too little fuel material ‘(fats, carbohydrate, and surplus protein), or too little in the way of catalytic substances (mineral matter — for example, iron, iodine, calclum — and vita- mins.) The quality of the proteins may be poor—cereal proteins do not scem to have the biological value of meat or milk proteins. Then, too, the diet may be inadequate | becpuse it has too little (or per- haps ‘' too much) roughage, be- cause the proportions between the different constituents are wrong |or because ‘the way in which the food 15 given to the digestive cells is wrong. Yinally, no two per- sons have digestive systems exact- ly alike. For years bread has been called the staff of life. Bread is an in- adequate diet for a nursing moth- er rat and her offspring during the nursing period. Suckling rats whose © mothers are receiving bread alonc grow emly half as fast as those whose mothers are re- ceiving-bread and milk. | Mottram finds that the inade- quagcy of the bread is not due nly to a lack of vitamins A snd D or to a relatively small amount of vitamin B, or to & lack |of mineral matter. He believes that the inadequacy is also related | to the nature of the proteins tn the bread. He is convinced that the inadequacy . of bread, apart from poasible defects in vitamin and salt content, is due both the small quantity and the poor qual- ity of protein. " However, thls of Mottram is not supposed to give aid and comfort to the lov- orm of brown bread as preferred to such a discussion,” savs Mottram, |“is that the protagonists on each | side have an odium for the other | almost theological— sure sign of Ithe insecurity of the foundafions of their beliefs.” Animal proteins | of meat, even gelatins, | the proteins of bread. | periments reveal that male ani- | mals need more protein of high | hiological value and more vitamin B than do females. Both brown and 1used exclusively, articles of dict. | realized thet prac | tives en bread alone. diet, hrown bread apparently | o superiority over white hread. pronouncement such as those supplement The ex- white breads, would he poor It should b ally no one Tn a mixed has e s Life’s Niceties ' Hints on Etiquette —_ {11t corsage bouquets are given guests al a formal dinner, where are they placed? 2 8hould a woman pin on such la gift immediately or wait until lafter dinner? 3—Where worn today ? e The Answers 1—A¢t the leff of plate, on the din- ner napkine. -Tmmediately ' the shoulder, rt (or left) side. arc flowers usually preferabily 'SPRING TAILORS WOOLEN “STREET DRESS Beloved Feminine Frills Give Way ‘to Utility—Fabrics Sheer, Soft and Beautiful Geometric lincs make a blue kash- ine tweed as modern as it charming. New York, Feb. 20.—American women are accepting and are charmed by feminine frills and fur- belows for afternoon and evening wear, But they are demanding and getting tailored models for their runabout frocks for street wear until tea-time, ‘The reason behind this preference is that American,women are essen- tially active. Moreover many of them work—either at a vocation or avocation. They have not the tra- dition of long lounging hours be- hind them that makes the French women always take more kindly to softness of lines apd frills. 8o I find myself making quite neatly tailored one-piece frocks for canly spring wear—for those first days that the coat is shed. All of Them Woolens They are all woolens, incidentally. years women have worn suits or silk dresses. Dut woglens hdve yielded to the demand for sheer, soft beauty, Some of the spring homespuns are as featherweight as Iccland wool sweaters; some of the tweeds as soft and pliable as satin-backed crepe; wool georgette is nearly as sheer as silk. Spring models of runabout frocks favor the onec-piecc mode; they in- troduce © new colla sleeves are apt to be quite individual and diffcrent and all skirts show some reasonable width for easy walking—whether it comes from pleats, godets or plain gathers. Yor colors, grey is exceedingly good. Blues, as usual, come forth for spring but the preference for blues comes in off-shades, either n grey-blue or one with a purply tone. Tans and browns have exceptional beauty in their soft richness this year. But it looks as if green will be one of the favorites. I show today three new runabout models. In the first one, by using diagonal strips of tan homespun and slanting them upwards in the body of the waist, an unusually decorative vle is created without a bit of nming of v kind. A godet in- sert on one side, with large bone buttons carrying out the onc-sided effect gives individually to this frock. But its chief im to real dis- tinction lics in its sleeves, introduc- ing the old-time puff. in a modified form, falling gracefully over but- toned cuffs. The collarless neckline flares wide on the shoulders, a dis- tinctly 1928 spring touch. A fur plece and a crocheted straw togue with a dark brown feather orna- ment add smartness. A Germaine Creation. Tale green, in a new sheer, silky flannel, gives the cffect of a jacket suit in the second model. with cute metal ball buttons straightening its diagonal closing. A band of a dark- er shade of green on its hiem and cuffs is the only touch of decoration. This 1s a Germaine creation and the rolling collar that stands fairly high in the back of the neck ia really a concession o American women's de- mand for tailored effects. Tor Paris really prefors frills this season. A severely tailored costume that | shows a modernistic note is shown in the blue kashine tneed. Here in | the flare of the collar, in the dip of the voke and the rounding of the | front ckirt yoke we see the geomet ric design influence, elever, simple and charming is this interpretation of the modern trend. This frock has no back collar — just the front ing revers. The sleeves are one-button and a aimple helt of a:If material extends around | a low waistline. An approp smart new lon o hat is ahown in & ting models of red and grey velvet, a Reboux design. E BABOON BLUES airobi, British East tives have found that haboons can be kept away from settlements if one is ¢ d within sight of the others, clipped, painted blue and re- leased to rejoin his mates. Africa — Na- AP YEAR PARADISE furplus men, and it has domestic work for thousands of women, mays an announcement by that nation's high commissioner designed to prn mote emigration from Great Britain. !tive and killed him, the Dalal Lama This Is a departurg, for the past few | London —— Australia has 141,000 & light green sheer flannel, ANTELOPE BAG A new envelope purse of black antelope has four stripes of silver dip to points on its front. A wide clasp of jade is set in silver. COAT DRESS A smart daytime dress is of grecn tweed, with a slanting walistline end- ing in a novelty buckle on the left side from which a skirt flare ripples. NEGLIGEE SMARTNESS The new negligees have new neck- lines. A peach velvet one combines the Vionnet neckline and flowing sleeves to advantage. | NO TRUCKS FOR TIBET Calcutta—Because a motor lorry frightened a pony ridden by a rela- has forbidden established of motor transport service across Tibet. VELVET MUFF i Very new is a ruby red velvel muft, heavily shirred in the center and puffed on the edges and worn with a matching suit with shirred | collar, NEW TRUMVIRATE | Purple tweed, lavender kasha and | Rodier cloth in lavender shot with silver fashion a stunning sports Trout Calf A distinctive envelope bag for spring of the new trout calf, in honey beige. has an unusual insct of red in the left corner. | ) [ charming evening gown One godet, two puff cleeves and 1s Youth is expressed in the lines of many beme buttons individualize this tan homespun frock. NEW UNDIES Black chiffon ungerthings with yokes of silver or gold lace®and trimined with matching lace are the most stunning creations of the sea~ son. BUTTON TRIMMING A black crepe day-time frock has heavy, fiat round gpld buttons dot- ting the banding around the circular neck and down the front narrow panel. PLEATS AND FLARES A red georgette frock uses pleats in pointed patterg for its yoke and on the skirt, flared godets for full- ness. HISTORIC TOWN LOTS bridge, England Julius s old camp at St. George's Hill will probably be turned into a suburban development and destroy- ed. EGG-PLANT CRIFFO The new egg-plant shade advances in chic is hecoming the color for & of chifton with billowing flounces. Brilliants lighten it. P READ HE ©1528, WY WEA SEAVICE, WC. A girl T loathe is Phyllis YFareg she always wants to drive my car! Although straight, it has the slender sl houette which might, ba this season's or last’s ihers is mauch that is about a Worth of dark blus broadcloth. The coat. simulates a bolero with s two tiered lower cdgr. I is scalloped like the skirt. There i8 beaded new suit an elaborate Bouse of cream sating its richness matehed by the marrow, straight collar of ermine,

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