New Britain Herald Newspaper, March 9, 1928, Page 22

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 Adele Gar NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, MARCH 9, 1928, EMBERS Once QOvers on’s Absorbing Sequel To “Revelations of a Wife” Beginning Madge's Sympathy Turns to Ele: Lincoln It was only for that 1 permitted Philip Ver patent boredom at the bea testivities to spoil my ow joyment of the moonlight close ¢ 1 tully 4 with chagrin, that it wi recommendation he had cb particular rm o when at Lillian's broad hint b hrowing a Lotl mo: a few training disposed e on his part oyment of of the moor of all n suggestior Iy incongruonus young beanty of he Iy 1 remembered of the hooting 1 was b myself that unwittingly mitted my prejudics young neighbor—an ey 1angible thing : ttitude toward a friend—Lillian upon that point “yen for opportmity rta torror s an L short time, mine 2 New Serial —————— 1 between Dicky 1t she was talk or, as always upon was cuddled in but for the first brought him at not asleep, evi- ipon fulfilling his that he meant until we went home tions were keeping Dicky Nocl was so palpably ed Mary close boat might away as cighbor nd Veritzen, th Jun pien arms, had he W o ach er's snce we 10 e watc and to- and as far was Jackson s turned 1 mile imp 1 to h com Lit . M over b You don't comie 1l oln. Won't share mine comfortable so ©t with such s movement® tretehed hand ridiculously sus- | rity and <o t both Dir 1 Noel's nded in the air you o she said | really ha 'n envy- | over be- <0 B didn I repro ldn't quite " sk you come 1ed her. dare to come un d, but there wi k of inflection as if rised at her own i my voice to a murmur, t it with sympathy and formidable then?” Y v, I'm sorry. T don't me. 1 don't wonder yon | thouzh, after our last les- | id that T did not af- ient opportunity for me But when yon on Tuesday I'l t ghten out the for | 1 want you to helieve that 1 cady to help vou in way | any time." (Copyri think so, son. 1 ord you su aid o iin am afr sking come in g 1o st ssons Newspaper By Thornton W. Burgess The Whitefoot Family Moves will stop nger it be f Mother Nature, A mother's ove Although with da —Old it naugh Mrs, White was getting and more worried. That there in one of Farmer Brown's hes lives was getting to be a lively place in more ways than one. Those five Labics of hers were growing very | tast and they were very lively small tolk. This would have been bad cnough at five babies can always manage to get into plenty of mischief. But, mak worse, the rightful owners iive, Who hid slept most of t . were beginning Lo You the weather varmer, for gentle Wind blew almost ever Whitefoot continu family nights, for the day. At night er compunions when White s inclined itefoot oot mor: nurse best, for w Ho Honey we quict. visited hiv think that worried re foot was more you for 1 White Whi imming W carly worried ust can't imped ont of round by 1 next story: Vo wught. | ry | S. Patent office By C. D. Batchelo GTFp P BOYS AND ' A PROSPECTIVE “FIRST LADY” SEE NEW STYLES Here's What Well Dressed Man Will Wear o Columbus, what the well-dr will look like this forth by the Furnishers' Association, No longer will the hatless, less, garterless lad be classed that scholastic fraternity, ate” All three of thes dress will be very muc when the 1925 sty March ed spring Here's young man set and as Ohio Clothiers' cap- in “‘collegi articles of in evidence son gets in tull swing. |after the “Oho!” he exclaimed, “some one else | has been living in this hive.” Short, easy words abound in this and the two r hori words are sitnated 1o provide lots of ussistance. Horizontal An oily colorless fluid Maxim To defame. To face as st word of Life’s Niceties Hints on Etiquette Which is corrcet for luncheon 4 or white linen? he formal dinner 1 embar what To fly. Revivifying. Before . Lost color. Moisture morning One-horse Point Cooking utensil. Small flap. Tiny particle, Cutting instrament Fish-cating, diving bird Conferences regarding o cial case, To finish Sirair To regret excecdingly cond note in sc To withdraw. Abbrevistion for Vertical a trumpet. TS, napkins mateh the The Answers ul luncheon r though white iways good, damask s persons of 4 damask colort found on % or cloths are carriage. Conservi forred ive white still pr by zh most color: No. rather t often of fine Reason Child Is Bad Is Th'lt He \e'*Js l reedom vour not be- Dlast of seems Versi some 3 Fat i Bill of fare. Moridin dy: Jative tor to of cither BEAUTY How and Why —_— PANDLUPF—ORIGIN AND PREVENTION AD HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS ST RESULTS cinating dandruff is nothin ing of epit er of skin il parts of i e head, th in the meshes of the hair, where, if they are not removed by ’v quent npooing and hey e main as tve it of my_')-p( rection hair it o, wither is Dandruf than permost c on or les rmis or up- h as o dy. Tt caught on seales ar brusiine, on first is 10 thor- y sevi scal fan or plish aroughly from i e this 100sning pro t towel & the imy point “tion of dandruff. the ould Dplic of white varicolored mannet scaling in the next crepe Ao Sine cells applicue and the v is the cor step $ To slum! To elude. Departs, To scatter. To work, Incrustation on a sor Let it stand. he spread of an areh Entrance. ntric wheels, anskrit dialeet, cdster. lake, o provide fo Rustic. Pillow. Burden. o employ. Beverage, ZORIPEIAIRIL! lm@l *‘En EJ m ointmen liqmd preps taining salicylic o hick or ion con- 1 or other chem- do just this thing 1o not which ingredi hers wil contaii such hich do not ula which you can have favorite pharmacist make N ents and w 50 L form up for 1cid, ho Salicylic Powdered Bulsam P Zrains, ins. ins Irops. tment, rub into Ampoo the NEA) 1d Wills His ( iildren to His Wife March 9 tion to an « t 1 e ¥ Hus! at 89 was will of her d. Her T also by to my n 1 wife what iily of chil- ‘o honor to 's blessing chly reward her reful, ny mot G wst upon her for the d r miny years of ca your | In addi- bequeathed | faith- | Your Health How To Keep It— Causes of Illness Y DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN Editor Journal of the Americ Medneal Association and of Hy- gela, the Health Magazine. daughter and two sons Greek poet Euripide died The wife, of the many centuries ago after eating poi- | sonous mushrooms. | A French investigator found more | than 100 death in the neighborhood of Paris in a period of 40 years to- ward the end of the cighteenth cen- | tury. Indeed, the medical lMterature of | | France, Germany and Austria shows records of thousands of cases with hundreds of deaths each year all |over the world from this cause. Dr. 8 R. Damon points out that | there are no simple tests by which the layman can distinguish poison- ous from harmicss mushrooms. The | superstition that peeling the top | shows somecthing or that cooking jwith a silver spoon will indicate the poisonous variecty is without the slightest scientific foundation. The only safe rule for those who want 1o cat mushrooms is to study the matter scientifically or to depend on those who have made a scrious study of the question. There arc more than 8$0 species growing in America that are known 10 be poisonous. Almost everyone is familiar with the first symptoms of mushroom poisoning. These include ‘acute pain in the abdomen and the ittempt of the stomach and int tines to get rid of the poisonous ma- terial. In a few days the person becomes aundiced, tarns blue and if the casc going to be fatal, gradually lapses into unconsciousness. To a certain extent, the methods of treatment used depends on the sxaet type of poisonous mushroom that has been caten. In every case, the first thing to do is to get out of the stomach and intestines any of the material that can be recovered This is the gencral rule in every type of poisoning. A physician when called will injcct atropine, a drug which seems to have special virtu in overcoming the dangerous symp- toms. The intense pain is relieved by the giving of sedative drugs and other methods are used to protect the kidneys against the damage that may come to them from the poison- ous substance. One of the mush- rooms containg a particularly dangerous to the nerve indings. For this type of poisoning the ttropine is almost a specific. ELAPPER FANNY SAYS: Fhe most almost popular dancer nothing but her dar puis m | not as plentitul ! they |ing powder, cge, | floured | vdges with | (Copyright, poison which is | Two and three-button coats with high semi-form-fitting and 19-inch botto on trou rs will be the rage. Gray will predominate in all the suits, the association says. The topcoats will reach just below knces. The style will pattern raglan swagger model, with a high military color now he- i worn in London. Greens and will be the more common the ssociation further decrees worn by the young scholar shall, for the majority, be checked; pin and block ch The conventional shades in hats, brown, gray and tan will still hold favor; hats of more riotous colors in the haven't yet found foothold Be Menus of the Family au Brummei's wardrobe. BY SISTER MARY. Breakfast — Sliced fresh pinea cereal, cream, broiled cott reheated potatoes, corn muf- milk, coffec Luncheon Vegetable Imon and rmalade chowder, shredds lettuce shorteake milk, tea. Dinner — I%ish loaf, tatoes, cabbage and rhubarb pudding, milk, coffee, The luncheon dessert is rather out-of-the-ordinary and very good IU's most acceptable just at this tim of the year when fresh fruits ar and inexpensive will be later, Marmalade Shortcake Two cups flour, 4 teaspoons bak- 12 teaspoon salt, 1 1-2 te scalloped po- apple a cup butter, spoon cinnamon, 1-2 cup milk, 1 1 cup orange marmalade, Mix and sift flour, haking powder. nd cinnamon. Work in . until light with nd add to dry ingredients. Mix to a soft dough. Divide into two cqual parts and roll on a lightly board to fit a round cake pan. Put one picee oiled and oured pan, marmalade and cover & dough. Bake 40 moderate oven and serve whipped cream, The lower layer of be ushed high at the the center slightly hollow. water before fitting on top layer and press cdges firmly This prevents the marma- of the cake spread with with remain- minutes in cold with dough should cdges, making Brush the the together, lade from running out while baking. 1928, Service, Inc.) (hlldren (.ro\\ ing Up Are In Need of H_appmes' Children need oy up should mot be a burden. Learning should be without tears. It is really important for hoys and girls 10 have t deal of fun and foolishness nd laughter in their every day life. Hint to Mnther to Make egetables Appetizing Mothers whose children refusc spinach or carrots should agk them- Ives: “Docs your product appeal to the eye and to the taste of yoi customer?” If it does, and he still refuses, look over your sales force. Are both of you parcnts attractive popular salesmen who use your own products? L gred ' CRAWL Ind,, March awl? By all means h, dean of the normal American Gy Indianapolis, ) Should baby ¢ says Emil It college of the Union. There is nothing 1 develop the muscles of the ders, chest and back, he s Paris, March 8 () its are style ur trimmed the exception in spring To malke this model even more exceptional Jenny puts two Kinds of fur on it. whitc ermin at bottom and black Persian lamb the collar. The coat proper is made of heavy erepe de chine, the kirt of hiack and the top of the roat of white the on OHBE Mrs. Herbert Hoover This is h is onc of our most promi: latest studio portrait, tak WOMAN RIVER SKIPPER ROUNDS OUT 33 YEARS AS MASTER OF PACKET ng prospective First in Washington. of dough in an | Mrs. honi Mary Becker Greene (lower right) is master of her home and is tae Gliio river stcamboat “Tom Greene (lowerleft). Above she v at the wheel, Cincinnati, ing a scl e shove leave nuv m her liking, fapt pl v Becker Greene has returned fo her post of authority in the pilot of (h~ m Gre " Ohio river vesse is the on! I\ w vnmn master and | - THEFLAPER 0 ma for 3 yoar s has D clor Finds ess She Wears, home ties :rnkfn‘ “]e leth]er Her immediatts her hnsband, arch 9 (A house by the death of a year ago, Oshorne € ; call of the world to her s Mrs. Greene sold her ( nati home and moved her f “Tom G her ho; ne nein- rniture . named for onc | Another boat, *Chris |1€4st: cne 'is named for her other now a river captain and pilot. Greene's husband owned a | river boats and she joinea| He claims, docs this medical gaxe. on hoard the “Greenlana”|that our own giddy flappers, who ortly after they were married, |lightly trip down the strect when shunned the | Boreas is flinging his chilly blasts nd mastered her at every unprotected spot, covercd fession, | by a few strips of this and fewer of Her ri that, are less susceptible to pnen- timacy with cvery nook along the|monia, influenza and the grippe than hores and change in river currents | the husky — colleg he-man, all and a knowledge of the science and |Wrapped up in their coonskin coats. fart, of navigation that matched the |their floppy galoshes and woolen wits of the most expert river mas- | muffle ters, “The modern woman wears silk, $he foresook the atin and fine woolen garm to establish a home terials which are much mo e woven than man's garments and iso- late the body perfectly,” Bernard says. Moreover, women cover the up- | per part of the body, which contains the organs particularly sensitive to -old.” FParix, ch 9 —It seoms the less better your health, At if you take the words of Dr nard, professor at the Paris of Medicine at their face you wear the to1 1 of ni 'S pro- lore grew to include in- | | river for for her a time sons ¢ most inclement weather does net Leep Capt. Greene from the pilot house when her hoat requires careful pavigation and she fre- quently takes a turn at the wheel to relieve a member of the crew. Period of Adolescence Is Cne of Extremes Adoleseence s an age of extremes, brilliant hopes and black de-| Part of the loy is rager to own life, 1o be 4 man, to see e 1d; part of him longs to re main safe in the known protection home and chilabood. These two|of punishment cannot make him feel cinotions if he is not sympatheticallyd generous toward his sister. In fact purred on, and guided and guarded, |if he has to be punished before he drive him this way and that until will give the candy, this will almost finally nds himself in a vague surely keep him from feeling gemer- cmotional in which he can’t |ous. So your punishment prevents h think clearly about anything. He|practicing the very habit you wi plunges desperately into philesophy, | him to build. In such cases punish- science, or pleasure. | ment does more harm than good. Punishment W ill Not Stop Selfishness Punishing @ child for heing selfish will not make him unselfish. You [ean perhaps by punishment make a {hoy give his sister half of all the ndy he gets when you are there to : that he does it, but your threats his wo Tiv

Other pages from this issue: