New Britain Herald Newspaper, February 27, 1928, Page 10

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

- LOVE'S EMBERS Adele Garrison’s Absorbing Sequel To “Revelations of a Wife” Beginning a New Serial Lifiten H-l m Producer’s Dis-| “You ace,” she said, exhibiting ]the stick, “these are the tips of *Sp that's & Nnte -(uk " Philip fairly substantial apple trce branch- Veritsen commented as he watched ' es. They are stripped of their bark Katie's nervous scrutiny , of the 'and each is whittled to a sharp malp dish of our camp supper. point at one end, leaving the other “How very irteresting!" (a8 a grip for the hand of the cook. There was a subtle something in Then over that sharp point are his_voiee which told me that he did | threaded alternately slices of thick not conslder the dish — or any part | beefsteak about two inches equare, of the beach party interesting in the | thin slices of white onions and me- least, and I guessed that he secret- | dium thick slices of bacon. You see, ty was annoyed at Lillian for ma- a slice of steak, of onion and of ba- neuvering him into giving a party | | con, then repeat the process until fer her, and at me for proposing this rustic and primitive form of enter- tainment. The grcat producer is an exotio person, with his tastes and habita city-bound. This frolic upon | the beach would have bored him in any case and, because of Lillian's malice in walking him over the beach and making him carry drift- woad for the fire, he had added ac- tive resentment to his boredom. Lilllan laughed gleefully, I knew | that she also had caught that subtle note and that it delighted her. “Yesa, isn't it lovely?” she coun- tered as enthuslastically as if he had just given utterance to an ex- travagant paean of praise. “Do you see how it's done? Let me show you! Katle, may I take one of these just a minute?” At Katie's delighted nod, Lillian walked to the fire and from beside it lifted one of the steak-threaded sticks which my maid had in re- serve, 8he took it back to Mr. Ver- itzen and began to explain ifs preparation as gravely as if she were the instructor in a school «f cookery and he an carnest young housewife, It was almost too much for my ristbles and I think Dicky's as well, for I caught his eyes as they roved over the pair, and before we knew it we had flash- ed to each other our old mutual ap- preclation of something appealing humorously to us both. But the next instant my husband’s face hardened and hae turned nhrnpnv to speak to his mother, while fighting back a sudden impulse |u tears, resumed my watch of Lillian giving her lecture. By Thomton W. Burgess Whitefoot Moves ‘Who moves when therc is aught to suin To better things will acon attain. ~Whitefoot the Wood Mouse Whitefoot the Wood Mouse was much excited. He had made a great discovery. Whitefoot had made many diacoveries in his life, but this he felt was his greatest discovery of all. He had discovered a hechive that he eould get into. Now, perhaps you think that this wasn't much of a discovery, But, then, you couldnt Hve in-a beehive if you wanted to. | 80, ot course, you cannot be expect ed'to appreciats the advantages that beehive. “This is & perfectly good home I | Lave here,” sald Whitefoot to him- | self, a5 he snuggled down in his | warm bed in the little wren honse which Farmer Brown's Boy had put up especfally for him in an apple tree on the edge of the Old Orchard. “It is one of the nicest hames I ever had. But it isn't as good as that home of the bees. That is, it 1sn't as good a winter home. It is warm, but that home of the hees is warni- er. Of course, I couldn’t live there in summer, because the lecs wouldn’t let me. But it is a dandy place to spend the rest of the win- ter. Then I can move back here. This will be my summer home andl that will be my winter home, Could anything be nicer?” Whitefoot was still asleep and dreaming of his new home. When he awoke that was the first thing he_ thought of. He was impatient for the Black Shadows to come creeping out through the Old Orch- ard, so that he might in greater : ty run over to that bechive. Just as soon as he thought it was safs to do ro he started. He took with Kim a lttle of the cotton waste of which his bed was largely made, When he reached the hive he went ingide and in no time at all he was very busy. The proper place for that nest would be up in one of 1 rear corners. To make room for it he must cut away and remove som of the comb built by the of course, it wasn't hard work fo do this. Those sharp tecth of his had no difficulty in cutting away that waxy comb. Some of it was just empty comb, but some of it had honey in it and Lec food stor away. 8o Whitefoot dined while worked. It was rich livinz. Of course, all that had to be remove d. He nice clear n busy mous: carried to ti pushed outs That s, he pushe outside. He didn't much cut for f Me found that ¥ of it in ¢ It took him a ight to clear bees he cut a i some to =uit him. of cotfon was him. That was the hegi new nest Whitefoot wis tir there that day, but finally decided it would be wiser to return to little home in the wren house. just beforc jolly. ro bright Mr Sun kicked off his 1 Wanket and began his daily ehimb up in the blue, blue sky. Whitefoot once miore reached his comfortable bed in the 110 for | | ittt afe- | the stick is filled, leaving just c¢nough recom for the ends of the sticks to rest upon the stones end bricks which make &a rampart around the fire. The cook keeps ' turning them until they are broiled. But I am afraid I have kept you from your clams. Katie will not for- | give anybody who hasn't finished them by the time the first serving | ot steaks is ready” Mr. Veritzen looked down at his | pasteboard dish of steamed clams | which Otto had brought to him— the chauffeur was patently enjoy- ing his part of the affair with a speculative air. “I don't believe T could eat any | more of these,” he said. “Give them to me, then,” Lilllan {exclaimed, and she attacked them with the gusto of the hungry child into which she is transformed at oue | of our outdoor feasts. | “But what a ninny you are! You | never can get clams like these on | dug cnly this morning, steamed over this open fire and flavored with this marvelous of Katie's, But perhaps you are ing yourself for the steaks and the corn which Jim is just popping in now—that was gathered this morn= |ing, too, the first of Jim's garden | —and the potatoes roasted in the shes—and the watermelon buried in the sand over there. If you're be- ginning o have to watch your di- gestion, perhaps you're wise to pass {up the clams for the rest of the feast.” | Copy | . Newspaper ryice, Inc. Just 25 snon as he thought it was safe to do so he started wren house, The next night Whitefoot back again at the hive. As before, he hrought with him some the bed from the old honse. But it was a long way from that house over 1o the #0 Whitefoot looked ahout for other material. Not far from the hive he found a little piece af burlap, part of an old burlap bag. This just suited him. Tt was frozen down d he the whole So, keeping a watch, he proceeded to ravel out that piece of burlap until he had all he could carry. So Whiefoot worked, and by the time the Black Shadows started to leave in the early morning White- foot had a good enough bed to spend the day there. He had moved in. (Copyright, 1928, by T. W. Burgess) T next story: “Whitefoot Is Lonely." was of Tive, Reglstered U. 8. Petont Offies 1st Movie Censor: “I suppose we ought to turn down this ‘Pulse of Passion. ’ 9 2d Movie Censor: “Yes, I really think we should. You en- This puzzle veletter words. word for No. 1 n easy puzzle A judgment Nominal. or more Cavity. Fa couldn't earry | Menus for the Family BY SISTER MARY R MARY) Breakf: ed prunes, cereal, cream, ham. toast, milk, coffee. Luncheon—Cream of split \cedoine of vege- udding, milk, tea. ! hoiled din- o pea ng {10 3t and working untl soft, ey in nt HORIZONTAL or sentence. 11- the duty. Cut portions of window glass. To toss up (as a cent). Appraises. rves More diffident. Uttered the cry of a raven, Everlasting. Single things or persons. Honorable fame. Seventh Occupying Twice, Mother. To cut off Changes placc of habitation. note in the scale. a middle position. To lop off branches. a syllable or I«’an; To utter a loud shout One mass Groans. who carries the wine at | VERTICAL Savory meat jelly. hild. To perform. Abbreviation for railroad. Homeless ¢ anded. consists mainly of fi the vertical; it make 5 a Gives up in favor of a higher imperative Second note ced as the inside of a coat. Camel's hair cloth. Neuter pronoun. joyed it, too, I gather.” Your Health How To Keep It— Causes of Illness BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN Editor.. Jonrnal of the Amevican Medical Association and of Hy- gcia, the Health Magazino Apparently no one knows exactly just why children are = sometimes korn with both hipa dislocated and are thereby crippled until gome operation is performed that will im. prove the condition. Sometimes the condition is noted. - immediately after rince the hips look alike when served: casually. . The 1egs seem to be about the same length and the trauble Is not discovered until the child begins to Wwalk. Dr. John L. Perter points out that o single dirlocation produces a slight limp, but grows worse as the chitd hecomes more active. As the weight increases, the difficulty becomes greater and walking is still more awkwatd. Mostly Girls If both hips .are dislocated, which occurs in about one-fourtn of the cases, - the child beings to walk later, waddles, and haas | greater disability and discomfort, Apparently 85 per cont of the cases occur in girls. One suggestion as to the cause of this eondition gives a mechani cal explanation; mnamely, the posi- tion in which the child lies pre- vious to birth is such that gevere pressure . upon it may throw the head of the large bone of the thigh out. of the socket in which it should lie. If a child limps noticeably when it Dbegins to walk, consultation should be had immediately with a physician. A careful examination with the X-ray may show the heads of one or both of the thigh bones are not in their socket. ‘Today, =& competent specialist will replace the Jdislocated head of the bone 1n the socket by manipu- lating it, carrying the head back into place- by the same route through which it was displaced. 1t too leng o time has eclapsed during which the bone has been out of place, ft may be impossibla to restore the head to the socket by - manipulation. The muscles may be too strong, or the rocket may too shallow, - .- Soomer the Better As a rule the younger the child the more easily the hip can be re- placed in proper position. After the third or fourth year, manipu- lation is still more difficult, and |after the sixth year frequently im- | not birth, ob- “rozen desserts. o scatter hay. You and me. The determination of a matter in dispute by a dirinterested party. Harvests sums of money paid as a pen- It oreigner. Surfaces a roa Peri, Propelled a boat by oars. ‘Whither. Raving lunatic. Granite. Punctuation mark. To evade. Reglsters of names. Sand or gravel. To handle. Feather rcarf. Deity., Stop ANSWERS TO SATURDAY'S [RIETPTETATIMIAIPIAIUIS] Al l@mfl@llflfl T INJEPIOITIATLINRIA] (S[E[TIRW T IRIEISIPIET) £V L ICIODINRIAITIE] [EM L [TINAEDIEIR] 1] [RIT[PINSIAICHRPIE INIS} LIAID) INJAITTAIL EROIVIO] [A[LERLTA[TIERIAIL BRE]L EAEBDIBHH n [o[P[EINITIEIEITICIR) HO‘»V | 1Y Do you arou r cor your rwa iz ner vin ty ri you 1 whe shampoocd, or b 10T s to thorong hair, he shower it Whet the ipplicd fo the 10 avorite touet i o s0ap n yourself Lment to hay an eco- to th is form of nd § [ BEAUTY and Why ANN ALYS Leauty shop vou shed dq, you per- and | provided it is good. | powsible without great danger of injury to the tissues. After such a condition has ex- tsted over a long period, the only | hope of restoration lies in the use | of surgical operation, opening up Now remove the lather by rinsing | and repeat the operation, using & wild vinegar or lemon rinse to en- tircly counteract and alkali that may rcmain on the hair from the oap. In turn, rinse off the acid gireetly. Life's Niceties service. Inc) ||| Hints on Etiquette __ n your hair is ready for the toweling and hot air fanning which || will dry it and leave it in wonderful | condition for waving, which com- | pletes the proce | (Copyright, 1928, STAINS vour homespun linen table| 1. When a crowd returns from T gt i ) 86 :o“k‘\un) in a taxi, should a girl keep ¥ in tepid water and rub | the rest waiting while her escort | until loosened. Hot water | secs her to the door 2. If she lives high in an apart- is it necessary for him ment house, | to see her clear to her own door? 3. How can she show her con- eration for the waiting friends? The Answers 1. Certainly. Not necessary, but usually done. 3. By having her door key handy and making her remarks about the modish patch- [evening's pleasure brief, though Javenport or | courteous. INGING BEADS ould be strung on lin strings. if they are at all he nd likely to break the string easily. | Dental floss is good too. | St 15 & vio- vy PATCH- \\Ul"\ «t e SHIONS ‘ your ndl- and ende of sxlk‘ of the for 14 The hagfish, found in Montrey RLAD HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS'Eay, California, has three hearts, shortened | have filled up and be | ELECT FOURTEEN WOMEN MAYORS IN CITIES OF ENGLAND AND WALES women's prerogative in England en mayors among whom are: Miss Margaret Beavan (left) Lord Mayor of Liverpool; Mrs. Foster Weilch (center) Mayor of Soutbampton; Lady Edward Hulse (upper right) Mayor of Salisbury; and Mrs, B. M. Drapper, Mayor of Deptford. London, Feb. 27.—(#—Cities and towns of England and Wales today have 14 women mayors, one of them a lord mayor, as the outcome of the elections in more than 300 cities and boroughs. Each is in office for the cnsuing municipal year. The only woman lord mayor elect. ed was Miss Margaret Beavan, in Liverpool. The provincial boroughs women mayors are Bury 8t. Eq- munds, Pudsey, Tenby, West Brom- wich, Wrexham, Chesterfield, East- bourne, Merthyr Tydfil, Whitehaven and Litcnfield. Deptford, London, also elected a woman, Mre. B, M, Draper, whose husband serves un- der her direction on the city coun- cil. American celebrities who decide to land at Southampton, England’s big passenger steamer port, will here- after be welcomed by a woman chief QUEEN VICTORIA with Book to Go Forth T.ondon, am, warts and all.” Thus the great Oliver Cromwell told an artist —and in a similar spirit King George the Fifth has allowed to go forth a hook in hich his | grandmother, Queen Vietoria, by her own pen, painfs herself in all her strength and w all her wisdom ulvl foiblcs, breadth and her judices. .\(‘nv-a“on of Month The volume of her letters just published by John Mu v has been the book sensation of the month in England. Here is shown: Queen Victoria, an aging woman who would not see that times had changed and that the English people were forming a democracy. Queen Victeria, a sovereign who was angered and frightened by the sweep of the liberal spirit Queen Vietoria, monarch of a con- | stitutional country who held in af- fection her great Tory prime minis- ter Disracli, and in detestation her great Liberal prime minister, stone. Queen Victeria, a stubborn woman who did not scruple tack Gladstone in letters which she marked “strictly private” and order- ed burned after read. Queen Vietoria, who often with clearer eyes than her states- men, and whose judgments have been ratified by tir The letters date from 1872 when the queen was 60 and had reigned 42 years, until 1885, when she was 66. el “Paint me all her old The Two Men Disracli was always the courtier, | Gladstone the tribune. Disracli treated Victorla as a queen, never forgetting that she was a woman. | Gladstone treated her as if she were |a public azsembly. Disracli wrote the ‘queen missives Ithat were almost akin to love let- ters. The queen almost retorted in | Kind. &he leaned on lim. She found his advice always good. She | gloried in. his imperialistic poliey which was to make England great. | When Disraeli went to the coun- fry in 1850 she was stunned when the Liberals swamped him. She was supposed to be a constitutional mon- | arch, but, at first, ghe tried desper- | ately to avold calling Gladstone fo form a ministrv. An~ 3 |forced by events to summon him as ! prime minister, the tissues, and manipulating them | Rilk 1= the least important thing that goes inte Losiery, PAINTS HERSELF 'King George Allows Uncensored as 1| Glad- | to at.! saw | Being the mayor is fast becoming | and ‘Wales where there are now 14 wom- B executive, for Southampton, too, for city, has clected a woman, Mre. Foster Welch, 1o be mayor. Salisbury, which recently celebrat- ed the 700th anniversary of the granting of its charter, has its first mayor, also. She is thg Hon. Lady Hulse, only daughter of the first Baron Burnham, and widow eof Sir Edward Henry ° Hulse, Bt. Lady Hulse came into the public cve eight years ago when first elected to Her selection attracted much at- tention among the nobility, those the first time in the history of the | the town council as a conservative. | witnessing the ceremony being Vis- | count and Viscountess Durnham, the Hon. Mrs. Pleydell-Bouverie, Sir Hamilton Hulse, Bt., Lieut.,-Colonel the Hon. W. Lawson, General Sie Alexander Godley, commander-ine chief of the southern division of the army, und Lady Godiey. In addition TLady Hulse is a justice of the peacq for Hampshire. Analysis of the lord mayors and mayors chosen in the provinces shows there are 165 Conservatives, 90 Liberals, 35 Labor, 30 Indepens dents and one of the Co-operativa | party, while in 15 instances the po= |litical party is not given. In the Lone don boroughs 16 mayors are muncis pal reformers, 7 Labor, 3 Progress |sive, 1 Coalitionist, and 1 Indepens dent, and in one case no statement was made as to party write amazing confidential letters to Disraeli. Nor was fhat the queen's only in- |discretion. When the Iwere in the field in Egypt and the Soudan and when &he disagreed with Gladstone’s policy, she did ot scruple to write sharply critical let- ters fo Lord Wolseley, the general |in the field, and to his wife, {she importuncd the gencral to take a strong line with his government. Mourns Disraclt A severe blow to her was the ideath of “Dizzy,” concerning which she recorded in her private “Dear Lord Beaconstichl was one of my best, st of friends, counsellors. Hi: to me and to the s well The end w blessed one but oh! that it shonld have come so soon.” Contrast this with a letter fo the Duke of Argvil: “Mr. Gladstone was amiable when her he got amongst but. as soon as foolish adorers | all was forgotten Far from all political squabibles, Is the following poignant and human entry in her journal upon receipt of news of the death of her son, the Duke of Albany, in 1884 “I went back .to rest a, hittle, feel- {ing stunned, bewildered and wreteh ed: 1am a poor. desolate old wom an and my cup of sorrow overflows, May God in his merey spare my other dear children.” And thix confession wriften in her diary on New Year's Day, 1881: “l feel how sadly deficient 1 am, and how oversensitive and {rritable, and how uncontrollable my temper Hl‘ when annoyed and hurt. But I |am g0 overdone, so vexed and in !such distress about my country that | that must be my excuse. I will pray | daily for God's help to improve.” “00“ SO R.\T( HE® 1f your mahogany furniture gets ecratched, paint ~ with fodine until the proper shade is reached, let dry and polish until glossy. BRIGHT ALUMINUM Discolored aluminum can often be restored to brightness by | with a cloth wrung out of lemon juice. U'se no water, 1t you will dust the fop of your cake with cornstarch before putting ! on the fluffy icing, it will not run. This dress of black satin, part of a Worth ensemble for afternoon, is sim- plicity itself in ef- fect. But the cut is sophisticated with its side drapery, which wraps around from the back, and shaped belt, which is set in. The collar is finished with a narrow band of black satin fastened with two black satin buttons. British troops | in which | Journal. | most devoted and Kind- | as wisest of | such a pillar of strength at such a | | moment is dreadful. plausible :mJE TO GARNISH Poached eggs, sorved on round pleces of toast, can be made very attractive by zarnishing with strips of pimento. | I ATLVRE-PROC When making mayonnaise, add one fablespoon of hubbling, boiling water after you have thoroughly mixed some oil with the egg yokes, first hegin to til thoroughly b suds. Turn When cane seq |sag. rub them with hot upside down soaked chair sun. WORK BUDGE New Year is the fime o start | budgeting your time for house work, 1A good plan is to account for every { minute of the morning and work I towards Ivisure atter Junch SUITABLE APPARLL Cold winter d @ more cheer= ful if the home-maker wears smocks of gay colors. TNeds, vivid oranges and yellows awe the hest shades, | l Flowered rubbing | | The vogue dictates smartly | fowered hals for spring. The chig lof the charming model above lieg in the modern arrangement of the |fat pink fowers on red straw, new

Other pages from this issue: