New Britain Herald Newspaper, March 27, 1928, Page 14

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LOVE'S EMBERS Adele Garrison’s Absorbing Se(iuel To “Revelations of a Wife” Beginning a New Se Madge Tells Eeanor How She Guessed Her Tdentity The girl who lhad calle Eleanor Linco ght in terrified amauzement whe stalled her con telling her tb was the Prince fa. In truth, T v breath mys of which this girl figure w a certain her bre n1f s so fant kinship sion of Wond: You know!' “Who told you? hie promise T was ready to talk will not obicct to 1 he 18 really Pri of the King of you knew it “No T did T suspected ¥ izing that he friends, T surmis e belongd to 1 had no 1dea “So you have truth about us fhe gald, a distit in her voice. I clumsy, or you shrewd. “I think you ar these premises, [ 1 the t note t were ong on hot! just happenes very sigr still has thet : famoy [ istic lin Fedor, for one, Mrs, Townsend saw for a suppose,” she answered, tling hersel? more 2dded. “Please tell me all about it you first suspected the truth, what made you finally sure?” he words were a request, 1 she comfortably when and et in her tons 1 to that peric edly no ma b thing of perfect.” Copyright il thefe was faint, a1 w a note of almost . not Intention col d m- indistinguis! Al :lized’ that tu thds abandon the mask she mad worn, Ci0usly Wil the omed 1ot to he scove s ecasy not to s sembling tly like Fedor, mising from your ohj g you picture migh Lat ¥ oti he Townse copy of the togr that you mu L or some ne on | 1] from your NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, MARCH 27, 1928, FAIR SEX 'MODERN “HUCK FINNS” ‘Once Overs A | on | a similar | that nd | picture phs and brought he ar rol- lerwood told | letter | H i out h pointed 1o 1 that while everything | facial detail en- | was exactly li st of a smile vety eyes of Princc vou me putti 1y shay ctive feature. T said s of co Yo Hapsb your S ppos my po * she said 1 and decid 1t 1 do." don amily vonstrued While so characte as dd Newspaper F Ine. By Thornton W. Burgess Curdosity Masters Bobhy Coon curfons are oli The The disinelined £ of their friends to mind. ~Old Mother Naturg Peter Rabhit © at the Laughing 4 left Bohby Coon rook in the Green Forest, Peter was disappointed,” e | was quite disappointed, e had | hoped to learn from Ilobby Coon more ahout Bobly's cousing in the | sunny South, w use Bobby didn’t know anything about thos: cousins, Until Peter had mentioned them Bobby had never heard of them. He pretended not to believe in them. But just as soon as Peter was out of sight Bobby Coon started off through the Green Forest. He had forgotten all about fishing. He was just as full of curiosity as D'e- | ter was. “I wonder where 1'11 per the Songbird.” to himseif. "I must talk to him. 1| must hear from his own mouth these things that Peter been | telling me about. I suppose Serap- per is up in the Old Orchard 'nmr‘ 1s no place for me. there.” Bobby resolutely turned about and started off in another dircetion. He |+ was headed for a certain hollow tree where he intended to sleep. the remainder of tne day. But the n » got to that tree th slow- | er he moved. IMinally he stopped al- | together, “Porivaps 1 won't to ! Fo clear the Old Orchard,” | thought lie. “Perhaps 1 won't have to go any farticr than the edge of | the Green For It won't do any harm to go e oanyway. 1 would like to about those | cousins of mir if I've got any, who live down in Jand where Serap- per the Kinghird passes th hoon | 1is way to his ably it's all stuff and T should like to t e soon truth Bobby ¢ turned and tree, for | Within was thought of thut he knew that in it he couldn't go to « that curiosity wouldn eleep. Once more Then he turne to retrace his st over to wh find Serap- muttered Bobby | have over it inter home, nonsense, 1 el if Kinghird way W the G vory « volca Serapper longer e cen ution 3obhy Coo of 1 Dobt Prob- | be you say. som¢ cousin of yours. call him Nosey. “Huh!" said cousin of mine.” to s&end Ser I won't go over | peter, -n-0-0-0." 1y tha n T son her? Golng & (Cop; hi Good Then he turned and looked up at the hollow tree T'm going over to more ahout that Scrapper long-nose ys the Bobby. “He's pu're sure you don't want m pper over here?” said Bobby, Peter laughed right nd him any Il ght, 1525, by next story: Natured.” he. rapper Life’s Niceties Hints on Etiquette t rsom 1f ir wice, how should you gr 1 cting er gavs he remerr another m you at it should vou do? 1 of 1 a anger knows does tha claim on sty won ours, ive al vour tin Answers ntly I've and had meeting an be tactful in regre 1t you can't. for your friend's 4 rond 1s the easiest going on a diet. yours— ask him | time, th or er hand flickered in | d- | r- “Until today 1| vonr identity on ctures show the it which can | 1 Registend U. 8. Patent Oftice By C. D. Batchelor | < e ki “And my own darling duckie, do take care of your sweet, precious self in the blg city.” oy no 1o £aid | =0 slow- | out. | {11, Burgess) 1s roduced to the same per- | - e him v te {real, cream, ach on t | | minutes, {40 sake ‘ “An apple a day keeps the doctor away.” Do you know the particular state in the Unjon noted for its pro- duction of this fruit HORIZONTAL What state is world-famous be- cause of fts apples? On what continent Alps? Game played on horses. ‘nkind. Source of indigo. To question. Supplies with nourishment. Prophet who trained Samuel, Minor note, Milky. Behold. What stone is Lighly prized by the Chinese as a gem? Tumultuous disturbance peace by two or more ®ona, Cured thigh of a hog. Promisc, To bark shrilly, To squint. Within Types of shawls or blank Point of cor Any flat fish, To detan. Case Bad External organ of Aroma of flowers, To keep. In what city will the Republi- can national convention for | 1925 he held? VERTICAL Delicately colored gems. To what genus does any plant or flower of the rose family belong? Large deer. To depart, 8. are per- Learing, Menus of the Family BY SISTER MARY BY SISTER MARY Breakfast—Macedoin of fruit, ce- poached eggs on spin- t, milk, coffee. Luncheon — Cauliflower baked with cheese, brown bread, tapioca prune pudding, milk, tea. Dinner — Lamb stew with dump- plings, grape fruit and cabbage sal- ad, apple roly-pol milk, coffee. Taploca Prune Pudding and one-half cups milk, 2 spoons quick cooking tapioca 1-8 teaspoon salt, 1 tablespoon butter, tablspoons sugar, stewed and sone One tab cup d Heat milk tn double boiler and slowly add tapicoa. atirring stantly. Add4 salt and cook stirring frequently. Re- fifteen | r Feminine form of nephew. Lay officer of a church., | 7. Sun god. & Unit. Little ball of medic Who wrote “The the | shion. Capuchin monkey. Cripples Sweethearts. Who was our tice? To drag along. Sea duck having down. Guided. To primp, Small particle of fire, Instrument used to lock. Which state stands first in the production of cotton? The hub of a whee Wing part of u ced. Rail (ird). Small piece. Large public Minor note A form of first ehiof jus- very, open automobil n scals PRIOTTIE]S)] m-nuflu [CAVARNCIANE | [AVIERINOIL [ [OMRE] | FENMERICOMFIL[EM EINIWOE SIGITER]S | T NOMCTARL] | [SIOlo[T Y GIAIL [EJPIO) | [AlB[LEMH]E [RIOMNPAlC] DENY NENE (A[S[SIRO] | JOMMAR] A DIE[TIERIM I INAITTV [OIN] ter and well-beaten |tered baking dish. Bake minutes in a moderate oven. | whites of eggs until stiff, in 3 table land 1-2 teaspoon vanilla. top of tapioca with an even of prunes. Pilo beaten egg whi over prunes and return to a slow oven for ten minutes, Serve warm or cold. Copyright, NEW RED Beat 1928, NEA & rvice, Inc. \ shade. It makes colorful | for soft lace dresse. {sports and prints for afternoon. BATISTE VESTEE For a delightful feminine touch, con- 2 black mourning dress has a point- hand- | ed vestee and puff cuffs of embroidered batiste. Mill on the | fine | move from fire and add sugar, but- yolks of eggs. Beat well and turn into a_well-but- | thirty beating spoons powdered sugar | layer Your Health How To Keep It— Causes of [liness BY DR. MORRIS NISHBEIN Editor dournal of the Anierican | Medical Association and of Wy I gein, the Mealth Magazine A general large num- bers of school children indicated Ithat from 1% to 2 per cent of all | children in public schools suffer with disturbances of the heart which |are of importance in determining | the length of life and the ability of | {the chiid to live a satisfactory ex- istence. A recent study survey of invelved the fn- | vestigation of children from 12 to 13 years of age who wer jexamined year after year in a pri- | vate school in New York city. Girl's Beat Higher As a result of this study of the hearts of normal school children, ;ll was shown that girls from 4 lto 12 years of age have a more | rapid heart beat when lving down {than do bhoys. The r when | standing up is about the same, ex- cept from 11 to 12 yecars of age, { when the heart rate for girls is in | general higher than that of boys. The blood pressure when stud- ied did not seem to show any spe- \cial difference in the two sexes, An encouraging observation was the fact that heart disturb- | ances appear (o steadily less | | frequent in children from the age of 2 years to 13 years. One of the ways in which med- ern medicine determines disturb- ances of heart is to listen for un- usual gounds or murmurs asso- Iclated with the heart beat. Some torms of murmur are definitely associated with certain ances of the valves, There are other heart which appear to be functional without relationship to any ana- tomical change in the heart lluue or any change in its ability carry on its work. Transient murmurs were in 6.6 per cent of the children tudied, but they were not found in any of them to be of strable significance. That e murmurs found not be taken 10 mean that a heart | of no signifi- | murmur s always cance, Strain of Exercises On the other hand the fune- | tional tests of the heart involved a study of exercises, and it was found that some children who be- came blue on exercise or who be- | came pale or short of breath or unduly tired actually had hearts |incapabla of carrying on work that was placed upon them, When the size of the heart was ftudied in such cases, it was found to be unequal to its task. A heart that is either much smaller or {much larger than the average for !the size of body concerned needs careful investigation, Dressmakers Stressing Sewed-On Scarfs Parls, Mar. 27. (M—The scarf | which is collar as well and is stitch- | ed to the neckline of the dress is a familiar phase of Paris styles. One dressmaker &hows bins scarfs attached to round necklines so that one scarf falls in back and the other is arranged in fromt. | Straight scart collars which hang loose or tie in a bow at the side of English red is the latest summer | the neck are used on soft fabrics slippers . accessories for | whether for coats or dress A new money saver is the scarf known with {and bag set which a well | designer advocates for wear | different costumes. Both are of | (#ik in & neutral shade. rfs of | tussore, with tussore covered enve- lope bags to match, promise to lave a summer vogue. disturb- | or | demeon- | should | AT WORK Many Women Are Starting Spring Gardens. Washington, March 27 (P—Wo- men are taking an unprecedented in- |terest in small spring gardens, win- dow boxes and house plants. Thousunds of inquiries for official information about proper spring | planting have flooded the office of | |W. R. Beattie, in charge of horti- culture in the department of agri- culture, and indicate that the spring {and summer of 1928 will be a ban- iner year for the small garden plot. “People with just a small bit of ground at the side or in back of their city homes have ample opportunity 110 raise hoth flowers and vegetables, | Beattie says. “Probably the prop ‘ganda of late on the need of going vegetable-wise for health has arous- ed many home keepers to the need of having cheap fresh vegetables at hand. | “We are advising the small house- {holder this year to plant lima beans jon the fence that separates his lot trom his neighbors, let the vine climb lup and have the two families share’ |the yield. The lima bean vine also is an admirable shade vine, and is a| productive as well as ornamental | {trimming to the lattice work of the back porch, “Kitchen window boxes can be used cffectively for planting small greens such as parsley and chives. | They make pretty foliage trimming for a bright kitchen and make avail- lable a sprig of green for use in {eooking any time." | Beattie points out that the past winter, because of lack of snow, has Ibeen hard on rose bushes and vines, la condition which will necessitate |careful pruning of last year's sprigs 1to make this spring's crop a good one. HAVE PRIVATE SHOWS i Collections of various things that small boys accumulate. s as snak birds and roc BEAUTY How and Why OIL IS COLD CREAM'S BASIC INGREDIENT madelling class, New York, Mar. American small hoy keeping all the objects to which he takes a fancy in his pockets. He i putting some of them into his own | private museum, says Miss Anna B, | Gallup, curator-in-chicf of the Brooklyn Children’s museunt. The Brooklyn muscum was the first of its kind, Miss Gallup says. and in its training of young natur. alists has fostered the privatc mu senm ilea among bo; Boys may be found almost afternoon in the scout rooms of the museum, making exhibits for the 26, no (®r—The Jonger is Ry Ann Alysis Cold ercam is one of the best, If | i not the very best of the beauty aids | that we have at our command to- | day. As a solvent of deep-seated grime, a skin softener and a skin food, it is invaluahle. The unguents and olls of carller day were used for the same . purpose that we of this period use | national exhibition sconting our cold and vanishing creams | Which will he shown next Septem- But the science of chemistry and |ber Cornell university, € {the ability to reach out to any |cases for live snak and white land we desire for the finest ma- | Mice as well as for inanimate ob terfals, has enabled our age toliccts plaster ca and smoke apd produce the most elegant products | Ik prints are made by the bovs in this line that a Iyyury-loving The scout room is the only ons | world has ever known, fn the Brooklyn's Children's mu The animal, vegetable sand min. | seum that has live animals in it cral kingdoms contribute fngre- | ¥ot the Turc of the hullding fs such j dients that may b used in making | _ s, | | | are housed in the Brooklyn Childres muscum, of which Miss Anna B. Gallup (upper left) is curator. The children at the right are looking at a shell exhibit, Below is a clay that mothers dificulty oungsters and birds display and nurscmaids have keeping neighborhood of it Minerals among the various out are A class in clay modeling has been cd and it is planned fo intro- new activities, such as draw- and music, after the opening an annex in April. There were times last year. Miss Gallup saya, when the muscum had fo turn ehil- dren away hy the dozen: Mor: than 262,000 chiliren and adults vist the muscum during the School children not only go there, hut the muscunt through its loa cases goes to the children fn the schoe Three teachers have been assigne by the New York City hoard of rducation to assist the mu- senm #taff and museum officials and «ducators come from other countries #s well as from various parts of the United States to study the work. {cold cream. The basic or founda- | tion ingredient {8 some form of | 1o|l Not all.crecams are made of the same oils, and in this out- | standing fact you will see the rea- | GOOD ] "NT Evening Bustles Call for | son for the great difference in the I\nrlous creams on the market, It Wearing of Jackets. |is also the reason why you, as the | purchaser, must find out for your- self by experiment the cream that agrees With your skin in every { particular. | Among the many oils used In | making cold cream, are almond, i castor, olive, cottonseed, Palm, | iy cvening dresses often make the | cocoanut, cocoa butter, lanoline, | woaring of wraps difficult if not al- 'lard, beet suet and last but not| 5e impossiblc. least, mineral oil or lNauid Petro-| geife tafteta made with gizantic jlatum. ANl of these olls are choux" cabbuges in the back or on Jeelient, but the animal the side is sure 1o “hump’ when ctable ofls have onc great Bt or cape/is) Arsped over dt: [tidaks Theye bscoms | rancil. But as Parls will have its bastles | occasionally on account of and poufs nearly every arcsmaker | rancidity, set up an irritation of |<hows some form of short jacket the skin. or cape, suitable for midsummer To avold this. mineral ofl is the |wear over dresses with elaborate! basle ofl most frequently em- |akirts, | ployed. The shoulder aapes, | Copyright, ovening sKirt. Paris, March P)—Spring styles plus the new elaborately rufflel or draped, give a mid-Victorian |touch to evening fashions and sct them apart from the straight lines and simple clothes most women | wear in the daytime. Nearly every creative dressmaker uses stiff taffeta in some form, uzu- lally draping it to a pouf on the side, or a bustle in back. These | drapes fall in pointed panels, or form small trains. Printed chiff are frequently treated in the ga manner, or combined with stiff silks. Paris makes many duplicate designs this season, repeating pat- [terns on taffeta, chiffon and satin. Some of the net evening gowns havg skirts that nearly trall the floor but arc made of narrow pan- els which hang from the walst With every step these gowns re- veal an extremely sjort skirt be- reath, or perhaps rqually short trousers, Jeanne Lanvin makes such | dresses of taffeta. Louiseboulanger uses several thicknesses of net or chiffon. The net dresses have tight bod- fces embroldered all over with beads and the same beading is re- peated on the foundation skirt or trousers. Mrs. Michel Weill, San Francisco soclety woman, and Miss Hallle Stiles, Metropolitan opera singer. | have examples of the new evening! fashions in their wardrobes. Mrs. Welll ordered a red and green flowered taffeta dress with two large poufs in back, extending into long draperies which just clear the floor. Miss Stiles purchased a| Inum jet jacket with jet bell sleeves, for wear over a black chiffon dinner dress. Coral and Gold Used In Costume Jewelry Parls, Mar. 26. UP—Necklaces of long, flat gold links fitted so closely together that the effect is of a single wide band of gold are among the new costume jewelry. Another favorite gold ornament ia the choker of flat leaves. Paris recommends smooth, bright gold lin preference to jewels for daytime 1928, NEA Service, Inc. | ONE-SIDED PLEATS | Many new frocks are featuring | |one-sided fullness, some of them having a sidepanel of deep pleats. One has a left pocket with pleats !below it. M cml'/f @ Paris, Mar. 27. M—The straight ailhouette of this Redfern dress of {black crepe de chine i that of the |seanon. The skirt combines the popular irregular cut with tiers and a slight draping of the lifted | |tront to give an frregular hemline. | wear. {The flat jabot rever and mmedj Pendants | foresleeves are new. (lets of coral are necklaces and brace- worn by many fashionable women. Coral buckles black shoes and coral rings hrongh which the ends of hand- kerchief searts are elipped, eow- Loy fashion, arc among the novel- ties. Wide bracelet cuffs of leather Jaced with thongs and slave cellars of leather arc new Sports acees- sories Umbrella Pleats Are Latest Style Dodge Parie, Mar. 27. (A—The dress- rs' latest disgulse for fullness skirts is the umbrella pleat, a i1l trisngular plece of fabrie n- o that the pleat is small at the and wide at the bottom. Paris < it on crepe de chine and ehif as woll as tweed and woolens. kirts that umbrella pleated smooth and tight at the hips. nd have the necessary straight line silhouette when the wearcr is standing still. In motion.thcy show a decided flave. top o T TUCK-IN WAIST Tuck-in shirts or waists are in again for the first fime in years Pastel colored linen ones are very good with navy blue or blacksuits. DOUBLE-BREASTED A white Canton crepe sports dre:- that has all its edges tound with inglish red. is fashioned double- breasted with red buttons to accent it. PEAKED LAPELS silk suits are featuring th tcd lapels that men favor this ir. A violet crepede chine suii’ has its cdges bound with catawba New BIB COLLAR Lanvin uses a large cxpanse of white mousseline, that resembles nothing so much as a bib, as a striking feature of a black dress. 1t has butten triniming. Fashion Plaque Fashion gives us an important new silhouette in the bandeau hat. What could be more youthful than this draped natural ballibuntl w a bandeau of black satin ribbes tici in @ bow st the side?

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