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LOVE'S Adele Garrison’s Absorbing Sequel To “Revelations of a Wife” Beginning Madge Discusses Mary’s Behavior with Noel Veritzen This tinne, at my repetition of my theery that Mary did not mean word of the cruel speech she flun at him, Noel Veritzen did not stoy playing. But he drew his bow s the strings so swiftly that if pe had been dancing to his n would soon have found thems gesping for breath. “Slower!” I cautioned, “I know I'm astonishing you, but you mustn't betray your feeling in your music. However, I'm not going 1o keep you much longer. U'pon second thought it wWill be much better for Mary 1 vou and I go back to the car togethe 1 shall explain that followed the race of Mary, Marior and Junior, but was unable to up With them over the dur nisgsed them coming back which is the truth. Then T sha that 1 came across you you back for the singing always have when the moon comes back, I'll tell you the rest as we go, and we'll see if there's somethin whieh can be done. He played the selection through 10 the end, and put his violin in its case, Then hLe put his hand beneath my elbow, and we started scross the dune. With strict fidelity to eompact he kept silent, and 1 on giving voice to the theo first had come to ms when M her room at the farm, cried h eally, “I can't I can't” at my ur ing her to grant “l's Pequest to see her, and which Liad received ro enforcement within the lust minutes, “I do not belirve Mary is acting upon her own volition in refusing 1o see you, Noel” T said slowl b appears to me like a child obeyin ple 1 his we By Thornton W. Burgess Mrs, Whitefoot Approves and m,.‘ approves Peculiar is the female mind; Whatc'er you do is wrong, find, —Wahitefoot the Wood Mouse Whitefoot was a moues when at last ‘Whitefoot into the n very he led Mrs. home he had #0 carcfully prepared in one of the There, er 4n beehives of Farmer Brown. my dear,” said he, “did you ¢ all your life sec such a place to spend the winter? I've taken the greatest pains to make one of the nicest nests. T worked very hard, my dear. T had to cut away a lot of comb to make room for this nest love it?" Little Mra. Whitefoot was very busy muching @ dead bee that had fallen from the swarm at the top of the hive. All the time her hright Uttle eyes were taking in cvery- thing. It was much better than she had expected it to he, But not for the world would she ha said so. “Pt—it will do. T guess,” squeaked Nttle Mra. Whitefoot. 1 mean, this place will do very nicely for a win- ter home, It scems 1o he warm, and 1r all you have told me is tr hout the food supply we shall spend the rest of the winter very comfortably. But this nest won't do at all. Good- ness, no! I never could be satisficd with o nest like this. Where under sun did you get ali this stuff that you have made it of? Whitefoot looked a little explained where he had gotten all his material, including the cotton te which he had brought the little wrenliouse where he lived for a while. “The matarial squeaked Mrs, Whitefoot, shall have to huild this over, T shonli you starte. got husy to the word, nest all apa And Lurt, e from [ right,” “hnt we t o all when must E action egan to pull that q He nothing, He sat Mre. W1 She wa and sh time undoi: W1 person a0 wnving a f this nest so “T didn’t with the venture viry nies not very Whitefoot cs ing to have 5 Mrs. Whitefoot irried back and forth e new nest she sensible ides ot of A steri 1t woul work if you had g0 this tir Whit fe m he t Mrs ling was going r than the one he hought it (Copyright. The on a Warn Day Menus for the Family BY SISTER MARY story: “What Hapj t—Baked app: you'll | proud | wonderful | Don't you just | milk stirring EMBERS 2 New Ser]al——— some commund in fear of a punich. | { her?” he | you do mot | on such terms with that ‘ that he would dare ve her a command to—-" 1 stopped 1n our descent of the whirled facing him. | olute and colossal idiocy 10 a young man in ¢ don't Jack- comr love think 11 1t Mr. George L into this at all | Bl peated in be- | d T put my| 1 i | the 1 am lown dune, fraid T shail startl Noel,” s have ed T y sk you with Mary stop to your friendship | d again and struck his he said. “f | before. But I ought not to theory into words, for if T were to speak liter- . T should have to answer your hy saving that I have had 1 sald to me concerning Mary, | an walt, Lowever. 1It's | s attitude which troubles me. It unsettles me Do you know in I was almost glad when she as %0 decided and so brutally frank ihout her feeling for me, I'm not | saying it wasn't a facer, for I've told you how much T care for her. But it decided things at least, in a way, set me free. But now I'm as | puzzled as 1 was biiore. You—you can’t mean, Mrs. Graham, that you | think Mary cares fc | Copyright ervice, Ine. “It—it will do. littlé Mrs. Whitefoot. and rice, toasted muffins, endive with French dressing, date and nut putf, milk, tea. Dinner—Steamed lamb with pars- nips and ¢ a Lard cooked cggs, new c ge and NEW BRITAIN Once Overs e o) e . “Hones’, Mame, I thought he was a puffeck gempman up to th’ time he gimme th’ black eye.” celery salad, canned peaches, jelly cake, milk, coffre, « med ¥ Three pounds hreast of lamb, parsnips, 1 eup cooked peas, tablespoons hutter, 1 tablespoon | flour, 1 eup milk, 1-2 teaspoon | salt about | Save | broth, | cut in salted | and | Jamb | stir add 10 peas, lamb untit tender, 1 hours steamer for pare parsuips, cook in boiling tender, st im and | one under and md until in a border platter. Melt and salt and constantly. Brin boiling point und adad very hot and pour over lamb | liquid serub water irrange on ot in flour butter, slowly Makse and parsnips. ight, . N ery Inc. Copyri Life’s Niceties Hints on Etiquette When ar o8 out place? How mar 1y be properly in A spoons cov- Wh 1 tahle? > AT Dt hon ir correct position Answers t, informal wher meals thers is no it bouillon & L bowl soup spoon e up, Tessert Hollow- at right Dots and Spots and gpotted mods s <ho irt advantage in wural ballibunt] straw with navy Lluc dots and navy grosgrain ribbon. to o faueen | sudden | what a shock ‘take to free The Bible who s plotting of her name HO! 1 Whick young took part purchase What Jewish queen people from the Haman (Bib.)? Regions 0 vex 15 To scratch 6 Ventilating machin Frost bites Adverbial ne Who led the Egypt? Kindled Deity To hasten To stroks tells about a Jewish d her people from | the Haman. Do you k now 4 resident uisiana in the L waved her plotting ot ative Israclites 0 dangle Paragraph in a newspaper Who was the first explorer from Europe 1o reach India by set Almost a monkey Satiated Relative > Pistols Period i Organs of Pertaining Emine Sxultarn Planks pronoun sight 10 the forearm VERTICAL On what river is Chatean Thicrry 2 Bright yellow and Dlack bird Home of a lird Rodent Ron Abbreviation Two fives for street 19 ‘29 ‘A JEWISH QUEEN 11 L | re— To gre Discovery Slumbers T Inemy Cluster of wool fiher 5,250 foet (pl) Prepared lettuce To strike Male cat What city tria What Franeis the § ner? what eity national 10 11 13 16 1 20 4 26 is the wital of Aus- 31 was the profession Seott Key, writer ar-Spangled Ban- of ot was the first inter- arbitration court along per division man hody Perched Age Second note in scale To depart 16 ANSWERS TO YF How and Why | e——— By Ann Alysis The first beauty that the eye ree- ognizes is beauty of proportion. That is why we are offended by too much b I owe become fat it should over ni that as to serate our ugliness, But fat accumulation s an insidious and g so gradual that we do not realize | how e have departed m | 1 proportions until | it reaches our | very for nd shoutd well fricnds a our what de means il come Many hodily detects may be eon- | cealed by artistic arrangement of | ins*ance, | would be 10 us | s, hair and dress accessories, fat is something that forees on s attention. If we wish to return to a normal figure, strict measures for correction must be taken at once, deal may be done by rocks whose long lines and brok- ntidotes for torso hould take advan- such reliet liut at the same time, pin our faith to dict and exergise for permanent resul Copyright, 1 hut itsalf SPORTSY TW A salt and pepper tweed fuit in- troduc cape of almost full length that has snugly fitted shoul- ders and a tailored HOT TEA Nothing is nicer in hot tea, serv- | ed Russian style in glasses, than a fow luscious prescrved gtrawber- ries and slices of lemon. culiar chang A great | wearing | measures. | we should | rvice, Ine. | Preal f Your Health How To Keep It— Causes of Illness BY DR. MORRIS Editor Journal of the Medical Association and of Hy- gela, the Health Magazin Medical science is beginning accumulate more to nd more fnforma- tion about the glands and the man- ner in which they and their tions affect the gencral condition of the hody- When it first began to be realized how important were the functions f such tissues as the thyroid, the hypophy the parathyroid, the panc he adrenals and other slandular organs, philosopher ph ns began to develop all sort of queer notions regarding the im- portance of these tissues to the human hody, ts Tollow Fancies After the irst flights of passed. however, research began to study sim- problems and to accumulate ‘s of importance in under- sianding these mysterious glands, For instance, the glands known as the adrenals, which hove the kidneys, are stroyed hy serious discase. When this occurs, the person is likely to develop a condition known as Ad- dison’s discase, in which there is usually great weakness, dizziness, <hortness of breath, loss of weight, the joints, and gradual of the human hody. skin becomes pig- ted and turns to a sort bronze color. In the absence sceretion of the adrenal glands, person is likely to die. hypophysis 1s a small gland near the brain. Its P in laboratories sometime: sorenc ually 1 of of he the in the gtructure of © hody. Giantism and dwarfism «re not infrequent in relation to changes in this gland. Diabetes s scerctes the sub- is important in the zar by the hody. De- rtions of the ceils of sult in diabetes, zland is associated with goiter. anges in the gex nds result in anomalies being developed which - of great in- terest, The extracts of these glands seem to have important effects on the hody in some cases. Unfortu- nately, the American market s flooded with preparations of glands and extracts that are worthless. paner that Landling of st tion of | the panere The thyroid nee ELAPPER FANNY SAYS (T e [ e standing col- | REG.U. S. PAT. OFF. Y NEA SERVICE, INC. ‘The low cost of clothes in some countrics is a dark secret. ancy workers | lie just | over- | be associated with pe- | OF HIS RIGHTS fNabha's Income Also Has Been | Officially Reduced The Rajah of Nabha, news reports say, has been deprived of his title and privileges, has had his income | reduced, and must henceforth live | outside the territory over which he i has ruled. His mantle will fall on the shoulders of a minor son who will rule for the present under a regeney, b bha, like many another native state, might casily be lost in the vast Indian peninsula,” says a bulle- tin from the Washington, D. C, hieadquarters of the National Geo- | raphic Society. “Its arca is only about two-thirds that of the State of Rhode Island, and it has little more than one-third of Island’s population. Yet live with a certain pomp, and wherever they go officlally fifteen guns boom forth a salute, Near India's Sammer Capital “Nabha is situated in northern India close to the hills in which nestles Simla, the summer capital of 1 1 | i \ 1 | British India, It is only the north- | {ern edge of the little state that touches high ground, however. Prac- tically the entire area is in the and a portion is virtual des- Like a number of other Indian Nabha consists of many | ittered in territory of sis- Thirteen patches make 5 928 square miles. Nabha is of the Punjab states. More def- inftely it is one of the three Phul- Lian states; other two better | known mecmbers of the trinity be- ing Patiala and Jind. In case there | is no heir to the throne of one of | the states, the rulers of the other [two and a Diritish representative | choose @ new ruler from the Phul- | kian family, T, te liot, |ag ture of its people of the fact that Nabha 4 in large part sandy, *he principal activity The Sirhind Canal, one is Rhode | its rulers | AVERAGE DEATH RATE 1910-1916 $.22 PER 100,000 <~ DEATHS FROM ALCOHOLISM IN UNITED STATES ey MiopLE ATLANTIC STATES - PENN=N N.J in India, irrig the rdvantage that | ntities of grain. | Caniels pull the plows and transport much of the goo | Government Machinery iof the largest ! to such good {it exports larg als the average for the years 1910-1916, tion and Public Morals of th | survey. The chart above shows the t | alcohol death rate for the nation fi FEWER ALCOHOL DEATHS CLAIMED FOR ALL BUT MID-ATLANTIC STATES RATE PER 100,00 e 190 95 921 MY 135 aflm 194 m”u”"w 922 194 1926 Since prohibition the death rate frem tlcoholism has been lower than the Board of Temnerance, Prohibi- Mecthodist Episcopal church finds after a rend, the line indicating the average the six years preceding prohibition. 4401 {1 S oy ATt G DT aehin G ry of The graphs below show the trend fn the Middle Atlantic state, only region an important country by little Nabha, council of adviscrs minister, a commander-in-c 1, and a e rajah has his ief, a min- | ich is leased similarly sells a opinm. | “One of the paradoxes seon | in Indix is found in Nabha, ruling group are Sikhs, of the | ! standing, fighting, reformed branch {of the Hindu religion, But well over | { half of the population are orthodox ‘Hm-hls, o are still other re ligious groups more numerous than | [ the Sikhs; the latter, in fact, num- | { ber little more than quarter of | the whole “The town of Nabha [ the state, has existed s has a population of hout and is surrounded by a mud W The p rajah Jic [ the R | capital of i Cunid Fellows Women | Even in Foreizn Service | ‘Washington, Mar. 6. (P —Sinece the state department hegan to omen into the forc ser |t have reccived 2 But one alrcady has d to | [ he marricd and there rumor | that another plans to abandon her | icial carcer for ma Lucille Atchis Ohio, | Smith college gradnate, was s first woman diplomat, | ppointed in the Harding | tion and served as a| of legation in B¢ ! 1o is now ma | 3 | n pointments. | resig is a rimony iss 0o of 1 Am Miss Pattic Field of Denver, who has an A, B. degree from Radeliffe, was the cond in the foreizn H vice. She was appointed in 18 and still s a viee consnl at Am- sterdzm, whence 1he cerning matrimony (manates, The third is Miss Frances Willis Redland duate of anford uni former stant prof political nce at route Valparaiso, con- of | i hition | situation destruction of She is en | Chile, to sul. as vied ind a forcign | ' mediat | mortality, | death rate | the | based upon rumor con- | - is maintained | Where the effect has been least, and the Mountain States, whel | been greatest. i Washington, Mar. 6. (®—Only in jone geographic division—the Middle | Atlantic, containing Pennsylvania, | | New York and New Jersey—has the | death rate from alcoholism equalled | in any single year the average death rate from alcoholism in the same states during the meven years im- ly preceding wartime re. striction on the sale of liquor, de- clares the Board of Temperance, Prohibition and Public Morals of the Methodist Episcopal church. It reaches the conclusion after a &ix month surv, covering the re- lation betwee prohibition and the results of which public toda cographic division but Atlantie, it says, the has decreased largely, &mailest decrease being in the South Atlantic division, containing the state of Maryland. “It is cvident that the unfavor- hle showing of the Middle Atlantic and South Atlantic geographic di- visions ix due to the hostility of public officials and propaganda against the law,” says the board. “In the state of New York the death rate per 100,000 from alco- holism in 1926 was 7 as compared to 3:9 for all registration states, while in Maryland, which also has a governor hostile to the law and where many agencies of public | pinion are opposed, the rate is | were mac In e the Middle The alcoholism rate of the Mid- dle Atlantic statcs for 1926 is 123 per cent of the average for the wet period, 1910-16, for the same geo- graphic division, the South At- lantic division which stands next an index of only §4 and the for all registration states, the 1910-1916 average with an index of 100, is only “The deplorable results of agita- index | which she kept flying through it has 86 YR. OLD WOMAN FINALLY RETIRES Madame Brotte Kept Ope of Turkey’s Most Famous Hotels — Broussa, Turkey, Mar. 6. (#— For 27 years mistress of one of the most famaus hotels fn Asia Minor, Madameo Auguste Brotte, an $6- year-old Frenchwoman, is about to haul down the tattered French flag the more recent world war and the Tureo Greek conflict. All other foreign hotels closed during those tumultuous days. Ma- dame Brotte alone kept her inn running. Now, broken in health and heavy hearted sincg the death of her two sons who went back to France to lose their lives in the war, she has decided to sell her “Hotel d'Anatolie.” Madame Brotte has not seen her native France for scventy years, but she says that she is too old and ill to go back to die there. She |came to Broussa when she was six- teen with her father, who estab- ished a silk factory here. Here she married a Frenchman also en- gaged in the manufacture of silk and after his dcath 47 years ago she turned her husband's factory into the hotel which has made her famed throughout the Near East. During the war the Turks uscd part of her hotel to imprigon cap- tured British officers: The English prisoners delighted to work §n her | tion_against the law is further in- | ated by the fact that the Middle | { Atlantic division, which shows an | | index of 113 in 1926, had an index | of only 21 in 1920, the first prohi- | year, so that the present| is due to the systematic | | I it conferred by prohibtion. | | | | | | | | | Parls, P —Rows of stra | the fitted corsage of 2 hlack cvening dress of Goupy's Four long points extend downward on the skirt, arranging the fullness of the tulle well below the curve of the hips. The left side of the uneven skirt trails the floor, where- as the right reaches only to the ankles. tulle design. | the so-called metropoll: tan area has traded its heritage for political pottage, the same can- not be said for other parts of the country, The Kast North Central division has an index for 1926 of only 53 the West Central 69, the | 12ast South Central 58, the Moun- i tain states 32, and the Pacitic states 46, “A comparison of the deaths from alcoholiem and of ! deaths from cirrhosis of the lver, which is almost invarlably caused | by alcoholic consumption, indicates 1 that the latter has heen more uni- | “But {f rate of formly reduced under prohibition, | due perhaps to the fact that it 18 | cssentially chronic and not acute. | The index rates for the various for the year 1926 are: New | England, 47; Middle Atlantie, 71: Fast North Central, 65; West | North Central, 65; South Atlantic, ! 33; East South Central, 35; West South Central, 77: Mountain, 38: | arcas | Pacific, 73; and for all registration | | states it 18 57.” The conclusions of the survey will be published by the board in !a book, “The White Book of Pro- hibition,” and will be followed by other surveys on prohibition. | Uses Technical Skill | In Her Public Office West Palm Beach, Fla., Mar. 6. (#—Agnea Ballard, the first woman | architect to be registered by the ! state board and the first woman county official in Florida ends her term as county superintendent of public instruction with a rare com- bination of achievement. During her administration, when she was not busy with the executive detalls of the office, she devoted her architec- tural talents to the designing of small schoolhouses. of the very real bene- | garden and some of them after their return home sent her seeds { for the flower beds which they had tended. Ireland Now Has Its Woman Who Is Sheriff Delfast, Ireland, Mar. 6. (#—Mrs. Julin McMordie, the new high sheriff of Belfast, Is the first wo- man to hold ruch a position in Ireland. | Bhc Delleves tmere fs connected with her position that a woman ought not to undertake, {but she was greatly relieved to learn that it is not compulsory for her to be present at an execution or to sign a death warrant, Had this been necessary, she said, she {would not have considered accept- {ing the office. Her husband, the late R. J. Mc- Mordie, was lord mayor of Belfast for five times and at one time her father, the late Sir Willlam Gray, was high sherff of Durham, Eng- land. Mrs. McMordie was a mem- ber of the first Ulater parliament. nothing Sweden’s Woman Judge Finds Her Task Easy Stockholm, Sweden. Mar, 6. UP— After three months on the bench of a Stockholm city court, Miss Margaret Traugott, Sweden's first and only woman judge, says that the job “isn’t g0 bad after all.” { Her male collcagues are all very kind to her and help her out with much useful advice, she says. The other judges have been #o anxious to amist her that Miss Traugott has become the “pet” of the Stock- |holm bar. Not that she s the i clinging vine type, for she is digni- | fied and austere in court, but be- Icause the Stockholm bar associa- tion is quite proud of her, 8wedish women have just about invaded all the professions and businesses. Baid one prominent Bwede in a newspaper finterview, “We Bwedish men now have al- most the same privileges as the { women.”