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'LOVE'S Adele Garrison’s Al “Revelations of a — | Ratie Finds the and Gihves 1t 1t too: the startled and her hand with secn arou With the Jous 1t I put ou the bean AR Moy sterions to Madz sy tor know do efery tin tink she und I vondor Ru she have from ch vich she « inside. Ve don't know moo ting vort more o farm—und-—lon You tink girl her® Not in mil steal decs tine, [ of gang of murdered in our beds, 1 te It wonuld be ¢ t that, but T mtr with difficuity, for almost irresistibly lnug when ghe xives rein to fed imagination. however, all desire for laug! mae, for Katie had put her hand look-——do you fwo t MBER s Sequel To f Wife” wrl pted, cut Hdish vows up with eric it you her i wody until n to Jin mard's tone ito the tell outer em op guard ms tink gone? wepaper 1eat By Thornton W. Burgess Welcome Robin and Arrive “Cheer up! Cheer up sing; “1 am the YAttle Friend | ' doth Rohin harbinger of sprinz!™ -0ld Mother Nature, | ption in the It was wh waus still holding his re Nd Orchard that another Teard coming from the hig elm tree in front Brown's house, ' “Cheer up! Cheer up! Cheer up!” this voice kept 1c ing over and over. And 1 cheer in the very sound voice, “Welcome Tobin® littla people Welcome Rohin i Welcome Robin top of an apple frec chard and all the folk at once gat Teaving Winsorme T some didn’t mind. ioo full of joy. B isn't fond of &0 ‘Then, too, he would't ha question to answer. o hie ed to himself and flew over to I er Brown's dooryard to i th Mttls house that he and Mrs W aome had used the year hifo Meanwhile all the tonzurs v #lying aronnd Welcon they had around Win«o Had Welcome Rohin o elap over his ea would have w them. But when peopla discoversd Robin had not be the o apent the = only a aueztions cionp zlad to wasn't ¢ come Fouth. “Listen'” denly, ward th chard a Ma st Peter, along ¢ litte heart voice was p of the | ) eried together. “Hu arrived!” down to in the Old ¢ little feathered ed aroun Vird 1is ide wnch attention chuekl Blucbird at Sunny ttle like 11 No one wihere know it id he, "I haven't flown f fhe 11 Or 1928, Life’s Niceties Hints on Ltiquette an inquire the cr who has ren- for a woman to s her his v renders other 1it- nish Women Practicing Medicine A Pr—1ew of Sl creity of Fashion Plague NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, MARCH 16, 1928. *Once Overs slang | dot | You say | Very little this speeder-up puzze time should be lost on There are but three unkeyed letters, Try vertical for a starter. Morizontal . Nehicle . 'To extol By, Berr . Competitor Tnit . Door rug Egg-shaped Geographical dran iz Silk worni Cleaned by rubling Fucha To entice vith a cloth 15t vesse] Prower property Short po nitable far mu oy Resided Substance and mails 1nir 0f Upper hmman limh Reckoned Any flatfish 28 Iz of thread 0 elironolog v fives. Almost 2 donke Ahote Oposite of whal Comes n Vertical Reasts of burder Alarm =ignal device To withdraw from of the 4 Active How and Why HAIR B DY THE ANSWER By Ann Alysis advance of SHOULD THI care and el No. 6| Fezictersd I, R, Patent Offise By C. D. Batchelor B e {eant homes, 4. Porehcud Black and pate tiates . Carri blur in vapor o on i Perfumed Type Aleal ointment of paint Large -deer To poss Guided Accomplishe Amoun rated at in e lieh A persom i ference to as ynent. Ttigid Wing Part m Greatest part of a o plung: M 41, Witticism ANSWERS TO YILSTLRDAV'S NRACEHORNACI]! el MBI R RIAM A MO TARJERIA EICMRERLINEID] @gEE_© [o/SHS) that upon 1he has Iy vou that Aronshy time sprinkicd econsiderabic in vonur hair. and that the ef far fram pless otlier persons cmed 1o fend 10, but they nt where there black, while your f that yellow. t enongh of ty. . or tinting 11, That is can e done u retain hat way hoi- And in thi Your Health How To Keep It— Causes of llness BY DR, MO S FISHBLI Uiditor Journal of the American Medical Association and of Hy- geia, the Health Magacine, A recent survey by the statisticians of one of the largest insurance com- panies in the United States gives an inkling of the amount of money spent en the care of public health in the United Stat Tn this are ‘nvelved at least 150, 000 physicians, 50,000 dentists, 300.- 000 nurses and at least 100,000 ad- ditional attendants of various kinds. The costs of hospitals, convales- Arugs, bandages and urgical appliances make an esti- mate of approximately $2.060,000,- 000 a year 31 r cont of the try representing otal income of the coun- as an approximate cost of slek- ness Cost of Unfortunatoly is not yet sickness kness. exact information vailable as to how much costs the crage family Indede, there is not any ormation as to low much any <roup in the ecommunity actually avs for the care of its health. The statisticians of the United States Burean of Lahor endeavored to find out seme time ago from a <tudy of the families of 12,000 work- ng men how much they spend each and their estimate yielded the sim of approximately $64 { rical workers in anotlier group pend approvimately $30 per year per famfly for sickness HHowever, the diffienlty is not in the anbunt crage of any great bt Ahe fact that few actually sgve fon meeting an emergeney which may arise and nay suddenly demand a very heay ontlay for the care of gickness Health Loonomy. of cconom each year. yea pent over an 1 of years The s 1s et Leginning to be applicd fo a stuly of hmman health and disease " erally well known that eo tions can hardly be econtrolled s, factorily without a eomplete knowl cdge of the facts concerned. Several movemnents are under wayv cgin to acenmulate facts in the ! {1014 of medicine. In this work the public must co.operate by a willing. ness 1o supply figures as to the coet of illnesa and the amount of money pent on varions human activities Clubs Give Out Guides For Home Equipment Washington, March 15 —(#—The nnk hook has a new companion in th housewife's library—the home pment primer, published by the Federation of Women's seicnee Ji- ieneral Tubs, The and tiy stalled primer suggests what labor e gaving deviees may be in- in homes, the sug- dependitiz on the public lities available to the home, Defeets in - household equipment have been determined hy the fed- ration in a survéy of 000,000 ur- ban and 40,060 rural The federation already has made a cam- ection of 1he defeets. primer tells what scienee an offer to relicve the drud- the housewife and to pro- health of her family, ex- types of cquipment and range of prices for the ce of prospective purchazers varions homes. Wiz Tor ¢ The IS v of 1he the DELICIOUS SNACKS bridge refreshments pariies istail r cress white bread mak ndwiches. or anchovy betwesn paste whole ap LIKE GAME Arizona Governor ot a Politician. (BY JEAN L. SOULES) (President. Department of € room Teachers, National Ednes tion Association) has Dbeen of Arizona siv I Hunt declares ie intensely dislikes politics. | Nor daes she care for formal en- | tertaining, preferring to spend her | time making pets of the birds of the fields and forests. The backyard of the mansion zrounds is a veritable | etected times governor Mrs. Geo March 16 (P 1 school class I or failure . Spokane, Wash., Toes the size of any effect on the s of pupils in that class? This i& one of the foremost prob |lems facing the classroom teachers of America today. We are all agreed that there too many failures A06,006 pupils in 1he country. In evil we are are among the public schools of the order to cor t the seeking its cause It has been suggested fhat classes may be one of the e pupil retardation. A group of teachers in ous arts of the country, under the leadership of Dr Praderick L. Whitney vado State Teach Greeley, ar problem. It is a problem cerns parents. The relationships of the home are very personal. When the young child comes to school the tcacher 1s expected to assume a nersonal interest in him. But if the teacher has 50 other children in the same class she finds it difficult to give individual attention to all of ’ them. . =< The problem centers around the W. P. HUNT purpose of teaching. 1If teaching is a matter of drill, in the fundamen- tal processes the only factors in de- termining class size » the factors of the strength of the teacher's gardens make | voice and her disciplinary ability. the mansion grounds one of the Rut if traching is 4 process places of the city, with erange aiding ehildren in atttaining es and spreading palms forming | eals of citizenship and background more 18 needed than loud the davzhter of a and discipline. A program of that family of the west. Mrs. Hunt sort requircs the development of in- learned to make the best of hard- | dividual initiative on the part of yips. | Sh proficient in the pupil, through proiects conduet- ing for the ailing, e\en learning ed by the children under the leader to set broken arms and legs for ship of the teacher. “We had no doctors in We have studied | country.” long enough fo know uses of MRS, GLORG of the has domes! 1, a covey of quail. Mrs. Hunt's flower many her creatures she favorites are of show speech pioncer became | says, the the question that small that vitally con- | the | character | DOES NOT [EDUCATOR URGING SMALLER CLASSES Wif“;.lmn L. Soules Believes This Would Be Great Aid in Teaching Children in Schools. B A A ORI | JEAN L. SOULES | classes are more effective than largs | one So many children who need | the personal attention of the teacher fail to get it because they feel she is foo busy to talk with the Children coming from the small | family life where induvidual atten- {tlon abounds react unfavorably to being dealt within a situation which uses them to become members of |2 crowd rather than individuals The nervous system is affected by the high piteh of the teacher's voice. the necessary confusion in a large {group and the loss of personal Lidentity, Tf every teacher could become in- timately acquainted with | member of a small class. the live of countless children could be mads | brighter. Tndivi every 1 attention might relieve me of tie many failures by over- jeeming the discouragement de- Iveloped by the child who sees sa many of his classmates going ahead {after he has once been left behind. ter to Siam, Mrs. Hunt considered formal entertaining a hardship. Menus of the Family | BY SISTER MARY When Governor Hunt was minis Breakfast —Baked apples, countey sansage, commeal pancakes, Girl Aitists Pay Expenses maple syrup, milk, coffec. e With Paintings. Luncheon— Macaroni baked with | peanut butter, jellied tomato salad, date and nut bread, cup custard, milk, te | Dinne gravy, ma ions, chees plain cake, cereal, Heaw Birmingham, A Artists of ancient davs who roam ~d the world. painting when inspi- ration and subjects presented them- selves, hiave their modern counter parts in five Alabama women who have just completed a fourncy over urope and Africa. where they pre- reed their impressions on as. r—Swiss steak with brown shed potatocs, atewed on- ball salad, canned fruit, milk, coffee, Jellied tomato salad for this time of year when fresh tomatocs are nigh in price. There are many ways to vary the scason- ing 1 the tomato jelly and either After reaching Parie. the party, I'rench or mayonnaisc dreasing is | headed by Miss Carrie Hill, who good. Thg following rule is un- has won distinction in American art usual in that grated coceanut is circles, set out in an autemobil added. Several weks were spent in Esy dellied Tomato Salad, lion, a month In Corsica and an- Two cup canned tomatoes, 1 #mall other month in Tunis, while they onion, 1 teaspoon salt, 1 teaspoon spent less time wandering abont sugar, 2 tablespoons lemon julce, oflier sections of Furope and 112 tablespoons gelatine, 4 table- Northern Africa spoons cold water, 13 eup grated Whenever subjects we cocoanut the artists stopped, out Peel and slice onion and add to und other implements and therr tomators. ‘Add salt and sugar and (hey remained until the work was simmer fiffecn minutes. Soften gela- finished. Naturally, the {ine in cold water for ten MINULCS. |hrought a wide variely of eubjects Strain tomatoes through a sleve and — Ayong the dozens of paintings, stir in softencd gelatine. SHF Ut ich have heen on exhibition here. dissolved and add lemeon julce and | ;.0 those of mosques, mountains, cocoanut. Turn into four individ- |0 qocoicar Africa and the brown ual molds and let stand until ehilled | ot C e ol nd firm. Turn out on lettuce and | geaongy contury houses of Espalion. sorve with French d : 2 LIAtE e oL the tumble down eglises, the m \GonaTIEDL )R/ A of Venice and the great cathedral of Finds Girl E\pami TR G Reading Interests With Miss Hill were Alice Rumph Sweethriar, Va., March 15— Sylvia Plzitz, Willie MceLaughlin Fiction continues to hold the inter. | Della Dryer. They all agree st of the modern girl student, but following the ¥ trail 48 fav moce does not form such a large part [ASCINating than working in the sfu of her reading as in the past, in the | 110. They alse find, Miss Hill says. opinion of Miss Elizabeth Steptoe, li- 1At what interested them in their brafian st Speslbriar coCEe: _ travels also inferested others, papers are read twice as assidiously !Me demand for fhe pictures and modern poetry, biography, art Made the trip profitabic and contemporary travel algo claim an important part in the changed | Woman Runs Hotel taste of the college girl, she sa For Capifal Worker: Washington, Mareh 15— (- Miss Mary A. Lindsley is in compietc charge of a big elty Totel nerhape, the only woman in such a pocition. She i< the manager of the Gracs Dodge hotel Y. W. €. A.in war fime to meet the Tousing problems of women workers in Waghirigton. Mre. John . Rocke feller, Jr.. first vice president of the | [national Y. Y. €. A. and chairman i | 6f the notel’s hoard of directors, waid i ‘rm-nnfl_\' the hotel has continned its | operation “hecause it in a demon- | atration of a practical business & cess run with the highest ideals.” Mime Lindsley formerly was a | hospital dietitian in New York and | Chicago. 2nd during the war she was ‘a Red Cross nurse overseas. is excellent ound. ame easels journey sing. s Serviee, Inc.) | - {London Woman m?l’atlu 1 1 To Lord Mayor’s Office Tondon, Mar. 15, (P —Fngland’s | tirst. practicing woman barrister, Miss Joan Clarksen, algo is the enly woman “freeman” that London | has ever had. Being made a “free- man” is regarded by some as a stepping stone to the lord mayor's | office, other steps in the route be- ing clection as councilinan, then alderman. Each year the senior | alderman automatically becomes | h { lord mavor. | LIGHT COATS NEWEST Paris, March 16 OP-—Three im- portant dressmakers stress the idea of light coats for dark dresses this spring. White silk coats with black linings, beige coats with brown lin- Paris (A—Fancy sleeves are & ings and gray coats with navy blue #pring innovation of importance. |linings are new. This Redfern model of cream color. | «d morocain has the two-tiered bell | sleeves whieh are much in favor. In Wack a half bolero iz attached to a voke and hangs to the waist on the ,right =ide. MODISH RROWN A maid of hionor's gown of ecru batiste and lace takes a big bow of faficta an one ip and a |floppy horse hair hat of brown. “oft hrowy ' MONEY March 15— | She s, | which was huilt by the | {Opera Singer Boasts I Americanism Abroad Parie, March 15.—(Ph—Dissenin- {ating American culture is one of the | phages of the Furopean sojourn of (Miss Cocil Arden, Metropolita: | Opera singer, who expects to spend {the next two years abroad. | "Artists need to change their en {vironment at intervals,” ehe said “They are like professors who need 2bbatical vears to stimulate and invigorate them. Each new pubiic zives something to the artist.” Americanism is a hobby with Miss Arden e stresses the fact that she was born in New York and all of lier essential musical training wa= ‘1 there. n lier Spanish-style apartment on the left bank of the Eeine between intervals of practise and concerts che s in for domesticity, taking pir- ticular pride in her ability to cooul and gew, ceived GRISTLY MEAT When meat is found to be grist- v, be careful to cook it very slew- Iy, This is true also of coarser meat cuts. Careful basting aleo helps. MEAT STOUK It is often advantageous 1o hae your butcher bone a joint you ar buying. Use the hones for meat stock or soup 8nd your roast can be stuffed with dressing to fill in PARSLLY GARNISH Fried parsley makes a good nish for fish and croquettes. Never have the butter in which you fry it hot enough to turn it hrowa. MEADING GLOVES Refore sewing up rips in gloves Iuttonhole hoth edges with fine tircad. Then ecatch these threads tozethier in a buttonhole etitch, CANDIED PEEL Candied orange. grapefruft other peel la delicions served in hot tea, and gives a fine flavor to rice pudding and adds something [to a cold beverage or SINKING FRUIT You must put {ruit-cake infe a liot even or your frult will sink to the hottom. Dredging fruit almo Ielps to keep it from sinking. GLISTENING LINOLEIM Use up vour starch on warh days by adding to the water you mop with. It will make your lin- olenm shine like new, ‘WHITE FLECKS New Tweeds in black, grays. blus and brown have tiny fleckings of white that give a softening cast to the colors. ‘FLAPPER FANNY SAYS: | Modern stylex taken a big load | smashera. certainly have oft the bageage