New Britain Herald Newspaper, March 21, 1928, Page 8

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NEW BRITAIN TR Once Qvers I Beginning a New Serial Madge Covers the Queer Characters | off u code m 3 On the Paper ? W wendo Lillian bent over weer marks | cited by discovery t ir- wpon the thin pap 11 acters used several yrars befc in ch masked the secret n especially diabolical st agunst th Governn taken from the secret © Aller nal tri something r but I'mi no « Drake w 1t had be per of Lilli tance it Lad b with— "Ag amendal. about that 1 “I know, don’t you ren a thin papes concernir Lincoln e last T shouil the char- language or lian anter rupted excitediy, “that you wer able to work out bec you once had studied the old inscr with some decays who'd forgotten anythir pened since the time ters were cut in the stone. Of course, 1 remember. You don’'t mean to tell me that these are the same sort of characters! “They are S returned, “but of course it the exact reproduction of take days, perh ks of work, 1 dots upon the thin paper to decipher the code.” Purposely T had named twi “Bit how long would it take you | time that T necded, for T wi to copy it line for line, dot for dot, e two coples just as the thing stands there?’ | have one 1 looked the paper over ¢ *To copy and check, ahout an opies hour,” I esttmated. | checked thre “Get at it then, pronto,” she com- | locked them manded. “Do ven want me-here, | ed the or would you rather I held the fort | done o downstairs and insured you against!into the interruption?” niniature “Downstaire, {f vou don't mind,” | lian and beaii ¥ told her smiling. | and miniatur “In other words, getoutand ms drive me ag it snappy,” she said as she m intended to r no risk of dropping | . 1 told and e P A OS5 e it hap- | rve while Ana when re made and each times for errors, 1 v in my desk, fold- ! 1y as It had hean and inserted it again t the hack of . with a word to ). g the chain pendant in my bag, T had Jim | in to The Larches. I : & Petent O1tkce tep on it, Gregory ! There's a big truck right behind you toward the door. “But I'm that b 1 had restored E proud, ana this nor Lincoln's treasure to her, from Heaven. Lot me know as 00 as you're through. 1 waut 1o &on Sory f Peter's Tropicul Cousi J It is & fact that few g To know just how thry are r mv.«:.i | —01a Mother Nature Probahly this is a good thing Your Health How To Keep It— Causes of lliness lr— No Unkeyed Letters MORRIS FISHBEIN 'Egitor Journal | Medical Association and of Hygeia, the Health Magazine little boy's” definition of the! p i . i For it has nominated Mra. Mabel | backbone is that you sit on one end | yy1ot¢ MacNelll ‘a8 treasure: The | jon of human and| L-f » N- . | of 1t and your head sits on the ather. | omioation ls eanivalent to election | DAtUral rusotrces, they care about | ie's INiceties | The backbone is composed of 33| gnd when she takes office January {or 34 bones which are placed onelj, 1929 for a four year term, she reparated bY | will spucceed Miss Margaret They are held together!herson, who did not seek re-clec- | by ligaments or bands of tissue like! gion to the $5,000 & year job be- jupon the other In addition, great muscles {movement of the back as well as|gury. |in holding the hones in place. The extreme limit of movement is fixed | men in the race for the position by processca of the bone which ex-|and Mrs. MacNeill had two women the main | opponents, 8ho is the daughter of into contact with |\, H. Abbott, retiring tax recciver similar processes of the next bone.isnd will be the eccond woman to tend from the jdisks and come [ flexthility of limited in this wa much more flexible fthan in others. cially flexible. spine is curved in,versal Christmaa carol has been These curves are bal- | wiitten by Mre. B. G. Miller of spine i ment of a ! aithough 1t 15 Nehragka Woman Writes | candiaat. n some animals | : £pins of & cat | Universal Yule Carol spocified smm of money on lis i four places. ced so that when one curve increased another s curves become over-!and orchestra will be entitled “Liv- {enrved or when the spine is thrown |ing Christmas Spirit.” improper curve, 'said to have curvature of the spine. | ations, chimes and bars and meas- el If a person stands | invariably in a bad position, a con- arranged by Lumir C. Havlick, di- stant strain is thrown on the mus- [rector of the 110th Medical Regi- and the ligaments so that the|mental Band of Nebra< rubber wears out exactly as it does in an overused pair of suspenders. Overstretched Ligaments . the flexibility to the suspen-tiste and narrow cufis, cmbroidered s, which are dead materiol, and | peayily, lighten a flame satin frock. | e 1 00 oy o, T will if one waits 100 long, it may @ 1 ! impossible to revive the flexibility| of overstretched ligaments, In such 1 cuses a competent ph |vides braces to assist the [ligaments in doing their work. planned primarily with a view to flexible and bleod which provides {them with thelr nutrition. 1t a person stands or si‘s fm- ts thrown | upon all of the organs and the re-' sult s general fatigue and ilinees. TUSSAH SILK *Rosarie,” an evening [Worth, is made of flowered tussah, gown by | sometimes. You s ll sorts of relations are i proud of and otl as I | i have just said, fome we are proud | | i of. §o the discovery of a new re- ! i lation is not alwiys best discov- | | ery in the world | | Peter Rabbit 1 | £ the members of | he thought he k 0 % members of hi f e he s well vit Although this s o un- ' f. Born. cousin Jumper the He | Keyed lottors words Melted. known Jumper ever e was a A may prevent the cd. Take Procecding i/ little fellow. Through Jenny Wren Nos. 14 and 24 horiac for Ty, he learncd of two Southern cousing, wpyt-qut, Peter,” exclalmed Serapper amplos 8. Sced bag, the Marsh Rabbit and the the Kingbird HORIZGNTAL plar [ Rabbit. He had heard of | 1. Mai 10, dim B ern cousin, the Jick Peter honnesd exeitedly. | 5. Snare. Candle [ of his cousins in the “What color is his tail?” he erfed i Obese itrance ; Arctic Tlares, So P “It is the same color as his coat 12. Opposite of i Matorial used in meking ate. knew all of his relations, But Peter and his cont 18 roddish” replied Valiont Employs | was mistaken. It r. “But for 1 that he's a 1 nging 1 body to think N Wbit. T've geen him often, Te's ches. i relations. o Peter was Iy sur- al rabbit and he's just a Cigarctte eenor i prised w crapper the Kingbird v 2 Th ntral part o ; remarked that when he had eried Peter ding a hoiiday 1 v ) down in a far ¥ country cal Tnepired with reverential fear. S, Any short song Fanama for nter Le had seen atdn’t miean To allot itt a cousin of Peter here. You | stupid.” said he, “1 it just One who misleads. 21, Angry. ought to have scen Pater’s long ears | full of curiosit Aqua. Alleys, | stand up. “opyright, by T. W, Burgess) et 31, Spindte on which a i #I haven't got any cousin down » next story: “A Lover of th A W volves there,” said Pt 0 ning of the nose. |37 To imitate. “Tut, tut, Pele t X B A portion of the eye, Type of snow &hor. ] e o o et Daughter Is a Doctor; ‘ : Mother Is a Lawyer | i London, Mar. 21. (A-Mrs, Flor- sing throngh i sarenziey, who has just heen R tted to the bar, hag a daughter 11 10 is a full-fledged medical prac- i r, and is regarded by fem- T . in as typical of many British Basial s iscs Plot of ground w middle-nge who a AT 0¥, 1 rned professions - s willing to live in I Mrs. » Tesant ¢ “ : {arcd { s st L foremost woman CUNERTICAL | G 1. Tended | [ T 2 s of olea tres i . {5 { ;[ Fashion Plaque |~ ™ 2 ; | 7 i of 1| In the same wav, lghts have an ! v effect of changire ihe | would £} were just right for afternoon | tell . y v dulled or so changed that the effect vellow taffeta o # Hei HO\V and \v/hy J is startling, when the ray 1 fall on the face. f i Fosl ek | | Liouges conta . : ; ; o WATCH NIGHT LIGHT llow, such as the orange or tan I C i ON YOUR MAKL-TP gerine type, should not Sieasd Lot T { BY ANN ALYSIS zit because the lsht my; deepen {er TET S vellow tone, giving a fantastic per ¢ 1 « somglésion by e and |, How it is al possible to 1™ nd pretended : rouges which emphas color- {one down the rouge sou wear by ry carefully i l ing. The blonde sh aeli pewder over it. he t cicte thiyts Gf powder i ndy this maiter for yourself by | there is a ' | \ Tor the b to. boldness in ol ting the lamp over your dresser | : re ds \ el : vl Viviaiso nd working out proper color | a strong There | Al% us 1o the lip ! . o stic point fe et % yours hut At ve CLUB 80 YEARS OLD a rabhit.” Al f 7. Mass “Has he e 11 2 s : 1 ' Physiologieal Institute, s : A must consider ollost woman's club in Massachu- k b % | i ctis and the second oldest woman's V lub in con will soon cele- o Lrate its elghtie ok his 1 Monograms are now to be found ‘ rsary. Two 1 t a on everything in milady's wordrobe ived gold medale te commemo- ‘ rter than On shoes they are seen in chic metal potlight on th te the fiftlet ( buckies, simply designed [¢ t LR v ship. |with tha pattern vellow. | nft red and a very deep red. FRINGE AND FLOWEBS Varying te hip bow of sllk, frock has lavender. its left | L2 blue and pink flowers on hip, from which vellow fringe hangs | & a great dea) of | below the hem. CAPE SUIT with a hip- cape has all of its adges| {acalloped. The hat that tops it has| scalloped brim. | TWEED BAGS | ensembled have flat the leather binds the [scams and fashions the fastenings. ame material. AUTUMN MOTIF On an oyster white background, ywas Miss Cornclia | xay autumn leaves lven an afters Bryce. Her ! inoon frock with tight bodice and| Paris, Mar. 31. UM—This dinner gressman and a minister to Hol- | i full circular skirt. HOT CHOCOLATT | 1 Mot chocolate, flavorad with cin- | attached by slender points to the fathor was Peter Cooper, the invens namon, and strips of foast browned anugly draped girdle and extending | tor and builder of the first Joco- make a |into wide flaring panniers. A bunch jmotive in America hange for five o'clock tea refresh. | of primroscs is added to the W'l A Suffrage Worker Divorce courts are where DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 21, 1928 ___—_——___—W—- By C. D. Batchelot TALK WITH EXCLUSIVE INTERVIEW LITTLE TOTS. BY WOMAN CANDIDATE . Gifford Pinchot, Aspiring to Congress, Thinks State’s Reputation Needs Reclaining, Parents Should Answer 'y [P =S | My { Honest Questions Honestly. | A child’s honest questions should teceive Lonest apswers. Whenever your boy shows a ten dency to bang or break thin | eupply him with a hammer and | really find something about the | house to fix. Iike a nail in the floor. boards of the porch, a nail in the | closet, or tacks for the ironing | i board cover, | | Likewise, the screw driver comes | in handy, when the “fixing” ten | dency manifests itself. ¥i {screws to tighten here and thers in hinges and loeks, or hooks to !screw in under the shelves. | This will give hin the idea of ful cooperation in your | and he will find merely | | hanging or pulling to pieces in | itself unintcresting in comparison, | t A child's self-confilence will do pend on the confidence which {adults place in him. { w | We hear m complaint now- {adays of the failings of the young | ganeratton—of their lack of con- sideration or others, their sclfish- I ness, their waywardness. In utter- ing th complaints parents fail {to recognize that they are confess- iing their own failure to bring out all thet is best in their children, | We cannot shower gifts upon {our littlc ones, give them all they 'ask for. treat ther as if they had “an fnalienable right to happi- neas,” and then expect them fto express gratitude for that for 1 which we have never trained them ito be thankful. Try this out on your adelescent gome time: “One rcason Red | Grange is alway® in the pink of | | condition is brcause he eats green vegetables,” It may not he very clever, but it's better than: “For Mrs. Chof————"1t's her own sl and der own fight’ il | heaven's .aake, eat your spinach!” she docsn’'t seem at all aarmed. Incidentally you might let it hel oo pooapar 21— “T'm for | worker sulfrag known that there is a rumer to |the effect that both Babe Ruth | 1end Mary Pickford are very fusay her, p in | Sh st 160 per cont—1"1 help i e every way T ¢ <how | sylvar femand political or- i i {and her fight ganizatbn r Republican wome: and demand that they have their That was S and to nsist they |spiuach at least three times e 1p|“("\0['h reply wher what [equal trms in | weck. 1t your customer ghould |p "y0 2 T b 28k how you know, you can safcly pui- Yet moone who ever visited the | say that you read it In a news- | . Lok beE n Ml s paper, which, so far as it goes iz ,. ho fam ; ,‘,‘,Av,{}l..,‘ “\;,,»i |true. 1 ced Ner ho life for sutsi O P Lome in svery On thowhole, one Trs. Pinciot is capable of putting on a god show -— and that sh tits her ull £ rve on state and county mitiees become a candidate for th Mrs. Pinchot did not scem alarn | S ~d over her hushand’s cdict. Rather, |Woman Succeeds Woman che welcomed ft. Theodore Roos velt once said of Mrs. Pine 1 | InGeorgia County Post 7" 2000 F. Atlanta, Ga., Mar. 1. P—Women ishould hold the pocketbook, be- | lieves Fulton county, in which the | | greatest part of the city of Atlanta |is located. Giffo hout ¥ other woms the consery protection of that politic action to stanid of righteousness, Dut I am not asking to be elected beeause T oam | o woman, I am not divecting my | campalgn toward the woman vote. 1 stand or fall en my polit on and t n, and Hint: on Etiquette S e Cul- | Is it tye that tipping varies ith the typeof hotel at which one stays, the clas in which one travels and so on? Ty 2. It trasling inexpensively, i A memingh (e oLl M ray [or it 9HE) EXESHID migitipe u o at Harrieh fipstiniass (paskng eris e 1¢ a waite or anyone else gin rupt politics 1hat Liave spivioe. deihls 2. Janker M eylvania elections a natio than the one glwn, should one com dal. “If nomn d and ele promise to work for the enac w providing that a 0 has cheatod in an | cause she prefers to teach school | rather than handie the milliona of collars which oceme into tho trea- | i ‘ | | Men left the field clear for wo- again reh The ‘nswers Pereatages are alway exclusiv places., | hold a county executive position, ce tia are mratnitie: rests atirely with the clection or spends more than a amonn Crete, Neb,, Mar. 21. UP—A uni- ', noooion ehall antomatically b elver. revented from taking his seat. g e Tiix voun g0 a one wov orad Menus of the Family | BY SISTER WMRY ¢ ia | Crete who hopes naval bands of 2l | 0 jin gidioncsty at the polls If | countries will play it upon entering = s, his center ofl foreign porte. as a gesture of good Concern for the Farmer “Y pledze myself to work for the interest of the will. The score written for both hand ing today {s a busin Break GerE I o ! Methods of distribution, protec- - A e inetrumental plece has vari- | Cream, b ani i e I tion of markets, cost of production .(iyn iy iy 1 suel damen i es for many traditional Christ- 1 such fundar Luncheo ogE lettu sandwiches, mold cot sance, milk, ted Dinner—Rolled r loped potatoes, canned aspaggus as well as yezetable oils, are BeiNS grawn butter sauce, canned peare. imported from o and Aheppgee cake, milk, coffec | Phflippincs to Jov the priee (n" Baked Eggs as vital to the farm nufacturer or the hanker. “Today . In cream and o mas songs and carols, It is leing rice Mth apri- amounts of m 1 | stem, 1er roducts, t NEW EMBROIDERY Daytime dresses employ embroid- imponsible o Fe- | ory to add dalntiness. A little ba- -"‘:;’f‘:"{‘ g "“l‘“‘ 15, '_r"”"”"f‘ ca tablespoons butter, 2 ix serious matter ar 12 that ) poons flour, 2 cups milk, g t will eome up in the next poons minced Ereen PEPR, he | il i U A | 10 {ubleepoons minced pimentc jhe put on the agricultural commit- gpe 4 tablespoons buttered Yread |2 ; At L rimbs, 1 tablespoon grated chesn clan pro- ow 3 " DElaE o R ”'_" WAL Melt butter, stir in flour ani worn-out | (0] Omt fons and stand bebind their €03 jaowly add milk, stirring constanly ’d struetive program for industry. (Liring to the boiling poiut and .. are | . Mrs. Pinchot s ( StamehIV g ana green pepper, galt and py- dry as Dher hushu S or ver. PPour haulf into a bhuttered be dry men and women in T ling dish. Dreal eggs over top: te .\'mc_r.s. dry congressmen. ing care not to break yolks, Seaga) “The official ~who votes dry but {jjp)y h salt and pepper a1 Arinks hims It and serves 1HQUOr o Tgver rematnipg sauce. Cove in his home is not fit to hold prh butte: crumbs and sprinkl sie offfce. We all know DOW MANY i grated cheese, Bake fifte \such there in Washington 10- {injnutes fn a moderate oven. Ser from baking dish. myeclt %0 onvright 1928, NEA Serviece, Ine. rothe Ay 2 s vote dry, cause.” Mrs. Pinchot has the advantage of being very decorative as well %< FLAPPER FANNY § informed. She has titian hair, a| {regular school girl complexion, | and a real flair for clothes, yet she | gives the impression that these | ire quite unimportant and that . she does not rely upon her charm. A Painstaking Speaker Sha is a hard worker and a maingtaking person—her gpeeches have all becn carefully written and gone over, and all her points verified. | She mee nothing to daunt her lin the prosprct of from five to ten speeches a day from now until the primary clection in April; and &he |48 perfectiy willing to address any {group in a private home, post office | or store. . &he comes from a family |has been gocially and politi |important for generation St zabeth father was Con- dreas designed by Luclen Lelong is land under Taft. Her grandfather | made of dlaphanous black tulle. The | was an antl-Tammany mayor of| ! skirt ia & merfes of uncven draperies New York and her great-grand Mrs Pinchot was an active play off matrimontal ties | shoulder.

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