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LOVE'S EMBERS Adele Gm‘rison.s Absorbing Se(.lue] To “Revelations of a Wife” Beginning The Locket Contains a Message of Great Importance It seemed hours 1o reality it was b sat wat ran her costly miniature anor Lincoln had carefully she had droppe following th Anna's” da honorable in thus seerets of my distaste must up i me sm wi X to a s began to blu verbal prot 17 you'll that thin epi said, “you'l vou any iig this snoopi more than yc ? Didn't [ that p this girl's very lite may deper our finding out wi she's up 10? And more in some way—I can't yet connection, but it will com there's somet than any one litr pend upon my getting tion which is Iyir 8o for the lov do come down to enrt shocked look off your map and me." She had worked herself into good humor—her rages zenerally end that way, and she 1 her tirade with a short little | “I am ashamed,” 1 =aid ly. “And I promise you, 1 m't oftend you any more by word, look or thought. How's that “Couldn’t be spoken handsomer,"” she said. “Now take this thing and see what you can do with it. My seem all thumbs someway.” me, although fingers over in the ws of rous 11l rid mys our yor vor, and shown in m ave ou o she cor S} ] —— I took the case again in my hands with the aid of the m. ing | zlass scrutinized the circular line | which we both believed marked the | g of a circular disk in the one of the je Is holds Lilliun commented, *“but 1 in what way? Il have to climinate, T fanc the magnifyin me, 1 pressed each | with the tip of my| t failed. T took ted it press- angle. | ruby— | a New ope f course, rom cv last of all th 1 pr I aid pressure not wd, and as her T saw her 1 excitement and, of the T extricated | while Lil- ndows that it per, Then laying the locket to one side and covering the tables with a white cloth, T unfolded the tiny pad of paper, memorizing as 1 1 so the exact manner in which it had heen folded. When it was all spread | out before me and 1 saw the queer | lack marks with which it was covercd, T could not repress a gasp- | little cry “Lillian?"* 1 Don exclaimed, “Look at| you remember? Jewspaper Peter Rabbit Visits Scrapper Use your tongue wh When ther kno reer you go Peter Rabbit Peter that people who fear to ask questions never get anywher But, then, Peter dovsn't realize that other people may as curious as he is. Peter had never been parti ularly curious in regard to Sc the Kinghird until Winsome Dl bird told him that Serapper was one of the feathered folk who spend the winter farther dowy in the Sunny South than most of the others do. Pe- ter got to thinking it “I won der,” thought Peter, “if it is so very different down there. My, it must b wonderful to travel. I must Scrapper to tell me about the people down where he spends the winter. 1 don’t suppose they're much different from the people up here, the furred and feathered folk. T wonder if 1've got any rclatives down there. Scrap- per ought to know. I g0 call on him.” So at the very went over to see bird. It happened Scrapper sitting on a fence post and there was no one el "Hello, old Long-cars Scrapper, as Peter cam along up. “Hello, Long-cars 1s everything with you?" “Finel” replied Peter. Couldn’t be better. How is thing with “Just ti replis “I'don’t sce but that 1he ard looks just as it « here last summer. change much u “Do they char where you spend quired Peter, “Yes,” repl never look get back the very, very f “Do the thes 1ooiin sy ove gt must first chance Pe er the King time that bout. xclaimed opping How, Just f ever Crappe Old Oreh- 4 when 1 ings don't down | in- mueh Yo “You wouldn't | tell you hov ther kin could down 1 are things you want to | \pper | | to test hi HEasy “Hello, Old Long Earsd” exclaime! | Scrapper rtainly veplied Serapper. “They are different. You have never seen any one like some of them. By | , Lsaw your cousin down T saw him down in a place (Copyright, 19 The next stol Cousin.” ¢ T. W. Burgess) “Peter's Tropical | Queen Mary Refuses To Disclose Weight Birmin, am, I nd, March 20, ~{@—The British nation has learn- ed th King C V weighs 150 pounds. He was visiting the British Industrics Iar here and was invited weight on a patent weigh- ing machine When the him, he exc *Is tha not at all bac record was presented to 1t? Well, that's 1 the tone of his remark indicated that he was igno- rant on subject of his own weight as most of his subjects ] ad watched her test, was then asked wouid like to be weigh- d | quickly as the or 1 shook h a laugh, sayin ) ik vou!" Loyal sul ore left puess at what huxom lady turns the queen, who she she s 1 of COCOANUT SAUCE ustard to which shr: en added makes a pudding made from has been steamed. dded Ik hovering over v% a charming NEW BRITAIDD Once Overs DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, MARCH 20, By C. D. Batchelor Registered U. S. Petent Ofpice l Trp to Australia? ¥? Then try No. 41 hori- zontal and No. 20 vertical. Horlzontal 1. What noninflammable used in balloons 6. Which is the largest Australia? gas city ‘o secure. “lash, Cavity. Interwoven. Deportment. To pierce with a knifs Compound yielding sugar. Oat grass. To exist. To total. Neuter pronoun. What two letters afternoon time? Deviations from course. Abbreciation for Peak. Who invented the electric tele graph? To bring legal procecdings, Verbal. Mesh of lace. Opposite of short. Recent. Concise, Limb. stand the railroad. Vertical Ugly old woman. Opposite of odd. Kindled. Hypothetical structural ‘Which 18 the largest Ttaly? Bed laths, unit, city in |17, 24, for | 36 direct | 38. Your Health How To Keep It— Causes of lliness BY DR. MORRIS FISHBE Cditor Journal of the American Medical Assoctation and of Hy- gela, the Health Magazine In 1898 a Boston physician report- od the occurrence in the United | States of a peculiar discase usually | found enly in the tropics. Another | case was reported from Galveston fn [1921, and a third from Cleveland in 1.1925. | In this condition a parasitic type |of organism gets into the tissue | through an opening in the skin, us- i\mlly an open wound, and there scts | up an inflammation which is associ- lated with granulation and over- jgrowth of the tissues. | 'The growth elowly progresses, ul- jr»mm sometimes, and eventually {may cause serious disability, it not {dcath, The organisms usually enter {through wounds in the teeth, so that the condition has also been i called Madura. foot. | In the most recently reported |case, a negro meat packer was in- ! volved. He had first injured his foot in 1914 and had suffered intermit- [ tently with trouble with the foot for |12 years. He was a common laborer | during most of that time, and never | had attempted to get good medical {he | treatment, but constantly had at- tempted to manipulate and treat the ! swelling with simple methods of his wn. As a result, the granulation had | grown until the lump on his foot To wager. | was about the size of @ hen's ege. | Who won the Nobel prize for | Scientific investigation revealed the his work in the fleld of med;. | Presence in the wound of the organ cine for 19277 |ism associated with maduromycosis Worshiper. The lump was removed by sur To make reparation. |gical methods and the resulting Brushes. | wound was treated with special anti In a greater quantity | septic solutions which have the pow- Standard of, {ype measuro, |eF to attack the organism that 37, Second note in scale. | causes Madura foot. In six weeks the Magic. condition from which the patient Cat's foot. | had suffered for more than 12 years | was cured. Abbreviation for Frost bite. To eject. Still, To permit. Cheerfulness. Boundary. Languished. Who was the president of Confederate states of Amer- lca during the Civil War i What American won the Nobel O prize for physics for 19272 Crowd. 19. { Other conditions somewhat similar | | to Madura foot occasionally occur in Ithe United States, among them be- |ing & granulation called actinomy- cosis, which 1s caused by an organ- ism similar to the one that causes {the tropical disease. Howcver, even ctinomycosis is a rclatively rare condition. PAINT STAINS Paint stains may be removed from zlass by rubbing with a paste made from pumice stone mixed with equal |parts ot turpentine and ofl. [AlP[E[DMNL{A]VIEJOIRIE] INE/WINRIOITIE MOIVIALL ORE PEAN BEHU [CIAIRYBIE[D[SIAIRIEIA) BEAUTY How and Why NG TYP) iE-UP By Ann Alysi . Whatever your type i golden b . chestnut olive brunet—: Never try to alter it indor cirenmstances, S WITH siver, avhurn, ivory or Phasize thut type Never it you, olive beautiful tones of colored powds will blend with your and bring indi- Tuadity out ks Wear brilliant rouge, o1 or usky red, accord to whether maké-up is for daylight or eve- g. Btudy th your own skin and experiment in colors till you get it right if you are a fair 1 any isky skin your uso tore the most delicate pink. R applying the powder. use i tiny bit of cold cream as u by 0 that the powder will go on smoothly. Should your skin 1» oily, dispense with the cream. If vou wish 1o emphasize fthe delicacy of your type, of course the touge must be delicate. Too vivid a rouge will appear coarse on blonde skin. But the brunet must s for effects which will | entuate her already vivid col- oring. Copyright N A Service, Inc. STUFFED PIM Canned TOES pimentoes are delicious v lefhover. . sneals aad crumbs, Cover with strips of bacon and bake until the bacon is eriep HORS D'OEYVRE A new Lors d'oeuvre consists of hot large potato chips dotted with Heat clips and put a por- tion of caviar sprinkled with lemon in the center of house-to-house saleswomen, girls are good bookkecpe 1928, The Siste York, March years ago i pink-frocked little g with a cheery smile and big, w open blue eycs, came out and confi dently spokie a long picer day school Easter services A few minutes later a pink-frock- led lttle girl with the same hie wide-open blue eyes, but without smile, came out and, not so conli- | dently, recited some poetry “They're the MeAllister 1wins old lady explained to a visitor., T just can't tell you whether it wi Margaret or Frances who was a lit- tle bit shy, they're so much alike.” Two in Cn As a matter of fact, hoth of them were Frances. (Or mayhe they were Margaret.) At least Loth were the same twin. For at the I one of them succumb at a Sun- to sta fright and, since they always learned | ich other's picces in addition to their own, the {win who had spok.n once returned to pinch hit for her Kister, Now, after 24 years of inseperable com it Tooks as if Margaret and MeAllister mean 1o pinch hit for each other for For they are They are to graduate trom the Ford- ham University law school this June and as goon as pc mean to hang out twin shingles. “Don't you think we should have a double chance at success®” them laughingiy asked. was Frances and maybe garet. Always Nip and Tuck Side by side the gir through grade and high schools hoth won scholarships at Cornell, Loth finished their last two v it was Mar- of undergraduate work at Barnard and they were always nip and tuck with each other in grades, ever lik- ing the same subjects. “When they were little they wer so devoted they used to take puni ment for each other,” their mother testified. “Often we have recited for | each other,” they confessed. *“And once,” said Margaret, with a roug- ish twinkle in her Irish eyes, “Fran went to a dance with a man who |asked me and he didn't know the | © ! difrerence.” | The are a remarkable ea {identical twins. They are the some | size and weight exactly the same. Both have squarish faccs that end unexpectedly in oval; both have the same lively Irish blue eves. ket identically under heavy eyebrows and lashes. Poth wear their light chestnut hair bobhed the same way. Their rather straight mouths show the sgame even white tecth when ! they laugh—which is often. But it is their identical characters that is sfartling. Identify them and then study them. Try to draw con- clusions, Suggest that Franees 100k as if &he might he the more ous, Margaret the fun-maker, They laugh and say it is the other w round, if anything. Ask Margaret |if she is the even-tempered one and rances likely to get heated in ar- gument and Frances says, “You should hear Marg ouf stun Tammany. She's a fire-b Tastes Identical, Teo. Their tastes are identical in sports. They like tennis and swimming and think touring In 1and and Scotland the best fun in the world. Until recently th | 4 alike. Now if they shop & they are likely to hring home pra tically the same hat or dress. Tiot are {nveterate readers and like n the same thing though Frances does lean towards liking detective stories | more than Margaret. | evitable that they pursue the | profession. 1In this, parental i1 {vnce exerted itsclf. for their fath lis a member of one ofgNew York's foremost law firms We didn't re choose.” said in concert. inh, profession from our father. And we inherited from both our father and our mother the belicf that girls can | be 1 just as well as men.” avs harmony between | two su('{ identi twins?* The question Was inevitable. Wouldn't ither nd.” ever t minute | taking law together. | ble they | one of Maybe it | e of | studi- | ving for | golf, adore | 1t seemed in- | sent having the other {And It's Going to Be Tough on Judge and Jury When Sisters Come to Practice Their Profession. TWIN SISTERS ARE GOING TO HANG OUT LAW SIGNS the Identical McAllister = Pinci hitking for her sister Were always nip and tucke in sbuciies Wil hang e out twin shindles MeARlister——one of them is Frances, the oth 4 around onece in a w Wwhen the o unique andividually might | they looking ch other contemplatively. “The so many advantages in having ¢ ympathetic soul near,” suggested | e, “that they outweigh any | disadvantages Iy How ’Bout This? “It i just like asking if you mind \aving yourself around, really,” th 1ded. ould ansthing ever i vou? How wonld it be if you fell in | love with the same man I “We wouldn't,” they agreed. “You see it must have ordained that we stay truly e i itible. For the only place we in taste is on men. us and T like them ¢ Or maybe it answered, likes them & “It looks as if our whole life is |« to be exactly as happy together it is now erted the other. Ma he it was IFrane Maybe it was | Marga FLUE DOES v ™™ WORK FAST I'his Disease Spreads With I Alarming Rapidity. hington, March 20.—(P)—In- 1 is the swiftest traveler of the respiratory diseases. Prior to the epidemie of 1918, medical authoritics were of the opinion that influenza was a specific, [ well defined disease. Studies made | during and since that epidemic lead | | several authoritics to believe that it | is caused hy a group of related | ms and not by one particular | germ. | periments of the Public Health | | ice led to the conclusion that | | diagnosis of influenza by superficial | mination is not trustworthy. | here is no standard by which the | infection may be recognized. Until | { the cause of influenza is discovered, | :nw relation between it and catarrh, | zrippe and common colds cannot be } known definitely | | 1t is probable that agents which | cause influenza come from the mosc | | and throat of infected persons. Some | | physicians ~ believe that hand i | mouth infection and indirect contact | are the principal ways in which the | | disease is spread. So far as is known, | water, milk and food do not carry [ the infection. although utensils of | [ the dining table probably do spread | influenz; I Keeping the general health at e high standard and avoidance of con- |tact with infected persons are the | hest preventive measures. { Clean, pasteurized milk, hot lem- | | onade ,oranges and grapefruit are zood anti-grippe substances, while alcoholic drinks should be avoided. If a person suspeets he has the dis should go to bed at | onee and call 4 veputed physician. | If it turns ont to be only a common | cold, staying in bed is the best treat- ment for it. The patient shonld stay in bed at least 48 hours after he | thinks he is well Pneumonia and bronehitis are fro- quent complications of influenza. “times neuritis is common. &} Ui 1se. he AN UMBRELLAS | llas should be opened =once [in 2 while and*serubbed with warm suds to which some ammonia has seen added. Rinse in clear water and | 1ot dry while open SHINY CRYSTAL To give brilliance to your glass land crystal ware, put a little vinegar | iin the water in which you wash it. | FRUIT C | Grated cocoanut, oranges, vou a different fruit cup and one | | ehildren like tremendously. i 1ded to sh«r‘-ll dramatic his or her breeding by tiic separate |social inferiors? should they bu | This transformed b |jabot of white josette and a vestec of | 7 the same. they | rited our | such a dress to mal Margaret. Life’s Niceties Hints on Etiquette 1. Is it with the after finishing services of a coach for a club, to do more than pay salary? 2. How is it p customary > 1o tell on ¢ she treats her 2. What attituc hildren in hould he taught ard to servants? The Answers 1. Tt is nice to send ¢ preciation, & book or note of ap- other little 2. The well-bred woman is more consi han the ordinary wom- an. Considerition, and unde respect for their no consideration v them or be rude. vork rve Irench toast for & niec ige, With grated maple sugar to dashes of ginger have reen added. BIAS BINDING Three different colors of bias bind- ng, stitched all around the sides of heatrical gauze giv modern and olorful dash to window curtains, AN ORNAMENTS Silver ornaments should be wash- in hot water and ammonia to keep them bright and shining. Jabo-f Tran;forms simple dress of black crepe is the white, full-lengti This which to take hing o ou have i some notice if over. Tiny turn-back cuffs of the white |and a row of buttons finish the plain, | close-fitting #lecves of this dress, and a red grosgrain ribbon helt with marquisitic buckle adds a touch of hananas and raisins gives'|color. The model 18 anusually smart and practical.