New Britain Herald Newspaper, April 7, 1928, Page 10

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g | * The well protected, you will s¢ NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY, APRIL 7, 1928 Madge Takes Unusual Precaution: “I do not doubt that Iedor is an is with adequate protector, when he you,” I told Princess Olina at boast concerning her hound. her You promise me not to let him out- doors except in daylight, and then only for a littie space where you can watch him. Don't let him stray He is always close to 1 she declared proudly. “He s on the | fioor at the foot of my bed. Tt was a great sorrow fo him. and to also, when Maman decided that could mot be brought to America on our tour. Gcorges promiscd to take care of him, and when he came in search of me iro Jedor along with the (razy might be able to trace u him.” “It wasn't so insanc idea a all” 1 commented, I don’t th Prince Geo could have reco nized you t the Bridg - hampton station edor hadn’t | made a dash for v *“Perhaps not,” she replied | tone expressod doubt, and the den flush which came to her told me of her conviction that the young prince would have rccognized her anywhs 3 | “Is there anything you would like | (04¢ When I had asked her to keep A ook tos bR ‘1’ wior within sight until 1 came | I asked her. | home o, indeed, but—must you go?* | “Probubly there is mo danger at ahe asked, her fingers ciinging chitd- | A1 T 52id a bit cgldly, “but if you ishly to my hand. m't mind I'm going to ask Katir “Yes, T really must” T told her, | 10 keew all the screen doors locks for besides my unrcasoning worry | (°F 1D rest of the day.” over Junior, there were certain pro- | CThat's alrcady attended to.” she cautions for her safety which I[retorted with a little luugh. "I told meant to insure before nightfall, | Katic yow'd heard there were | and it was now late In the after- | 8¥psics camping around here, That's noon, “Then, au revoir,” she said loosen- ing my hand, but looking up at me so wistfully that I stooped and kissed her, a caress 1 never dreamed that I should give to the beautiful but arrogant girl whom I had known as Eleanor Lincoln, and who now was revealed as the Princess Olfna of Transvania. She returned the kiss warmly, if a trifle awk- wardly, and I gucssed that she was little used to caresses. Then I Jeft her, stopping on my way ouf only to ask Mrs. Ticer to sce that lights were left burning all over the house. “If Mr. Lincoln questions it.” 1 toll her, “tell him there have been bur- glaries in the neighborhood.” “I understand.” she said. bright eyes looking stcadily her inte LOVE'S EMBERS Adele Garrison’s Absorbing Sequel To “Revelations of a Wife” ‘ Beginning a New Serinl———————— ‘ faithful woli- “But dogs have been killed, you know, for just that reason. Will s onls you're | v in"” | told hey with = ! make her think | shared a great and respon- sible seeret with me. And then Jim to whom I proviously had telephon- ed. Was at the door and ! speed- toward the farm | Lillian met at 1l side Ve landa door. a comprehending. in- | nt smile upon her face. ! safe on upstairs Katheri said, | | “You ¢ ke a look a 1 on the | | way 10 your room. And gaze at the | prtticoated Machiaveli before you | 1 s0 worked o other-in-law's ingin u g would do Ner by Montauk and | carly dint way hack, so | | Dicky has t It took some | vork, hoy you. So the | s from your you want home by dar doesn't ton't Dicky'll he Know ont to stay late, And 1 ny dar At~ | n that of L ds there?” | There nething in her ton or so 1 imagined, 1 incredulity to us of which which rning the dan- eXpIes con I had told her in as g00d a reas on as 1 could think up kitchen is an arsenal of paring knives, toasting forks and meat cleavers, while I am sure she has four distinct kettles of boiling wa- ter for possible invaders. So come upstairs with your fears at rest and unpack your news reticule I laughed at her nonsense as she meant I should, and stopping on my y only for a welcoming hug and Lillian into my room where T her quickly but in minute detail of everything which had Wened during my stay at The hes. Copyright, 1925, Newspaper Feature Service, Inc. Lar By Thornton W. Burgess Prickly Porky’s Prickly Cousin Are independent as can be. —Bobby Coon. Bobby Coon was all interest. Boomer the Nighthawk had spoken as it Prickly Porky the Porcupine might have a cousin way down in the Tropics. “Boomer,” said Bob- by, “do you mean to tell me that Prickly Porky has a cousin down there?” “I certainly do,” replicd Boomer. “Does Prickly Porky know it?" asked Bobby. “Hew should I know?" replied Boomer. “I've never asked him.” “Does this cousin of his look like Prickly Porky?"” continued Bobby. “Yes and no,” replied Boome “What do you mean by that manded Bobby. “Well,” replied Boomer, “he has a prickly coat, but he has a long tail.” Bobby pricked up his little round ears at that. “Did you say a long tail?" he cried. “Isn't vour Thearing good night?” asked Boomer politely. “It's perfect.” replied Bobby. “But to- who ever heard of a Poorcupine with a long tail?” “You've heard of it now.” ratort- ed Boomer. | There was Prickly Porky himself, shuffling aloag cumsily there even a few teeny, weeny little No." replicd Boomer. “That tail |is to hang onto branches with and not te fight with. 1f it was all cov- |ered with little spears he couldn’t {hang onto the Wranches with it the way he does now . Bobby looked puzzled. “What does he want to hang onto hranches for? | Prickly Porky doesn't hang onto branches “In that long tail covered with 1it- 1" yvoll Prickly Porky fsn't Prickly tle rpears?” inquired Bobhy {Porky's ecousin. replied Boomer It isn’t covered with anything|g,yiy. *There is no more reason but kin,” replied Roomer lwhy he shouldn't have a long tail “But Prickly Porky's is” said Bobby. “That is the most danger- eus part of Prickly Porky. If you keep away from his vou will keep out of tronhl Prickly Porke fights with his ta So his consin down there has a long tail? 1V well, well! With a long tail he must be able to fight even better than Prickly Porky ™ “Who said he fights with ¥ tait”" demanded Booms “Nohody.” repiied F 1'd forgotten yvoun sa Ing on that tail but t FLAPPER FANNY SAYS: : ~ It doesn't help a man's polish to T tais | Porky {than there is why your cousin, Nos- {ey the Coati, shonldn’'t have a long [tail. 1f Old Mother Nature didn't [think they had a use for long tails rche wouldn't have given them long Old Mother Nature doesn't |make any mist |, ba, ha ;r‘mm Ho. Inughed ho, ho!" What are you laughing at?" de- manded Boomer, rather suspicious- v. “Are you laughing at me No. oh. ne!" eried Bobby at you the Robiby hast- joomer. 1 how ong taik"” mention my grunted. and Boomer turned Iy Porky himself. shuffling imeily. ight “ ng 1o think would 100k one with a | Did | Bobby was Pric some a voice W, ®argess) fhia siesh atorg: K Dilveseuce 1 —_— Life’s Niceties Hints on Etiquette o | Should = husband or wife | eriticize cach other publicly for | cortain plays in bridge. what they {wear or other similar things? | 2—What is a most annoying habit S01 wives and husband develop? | & -What is the unp result of =uch criticisms? An-wers cach oflier in 1 of personal 1 ~They remedy nothing but make others so uncomfortable that Jacks restraint in th becomes most the couple w o manner eventus iy |unpopular. on the spur of the woment. And | it sure worked. Katie is strictly on the job of guarding Junior. Her s from my small son, T went with | told | I wonldn't laugh | Prickly | There | | 'Once Overs Resistered U. §. Patent Offios o ON, R | “If { had been me, I'd a kep’ it.” ” «Wouldn't it a-made you too nervous? “ngli,(l could a-gone to the doctor for my nerves, By C. D. Batchelor couldn't 12” | — ERRED AEEME. . SEAER Most of the questions in this puzzle | 5. Half an em. have reference to Baster. There’ll | 7. Neuter pronoun. | ? 3 i be time to do this puzzle hefore you | S. Before. Sode it Wi aa Jneni ey el Al bladnidig \\ e and are out from under achool rules i |as completcly as they would be at Horizontal [l e, Ay | home. Cafes are also forbidden ter- fl 1. What annual church festival | 13, R .,",r,“ T T ritory for them. Fl occurs at this time of the| 16, ont worn by clergy. _The rules are not oppressive, the vear? 17, Silkworm, i girls say, and bear down on them 6. What term is applied to a td=c | 14" T what festival of the Jews | far 188 rigorously than the campus of mountains having a sharp, | does Easter correspond ? laws, written and unwritten, ob- irvegular outline? 20, Bovsawil served by their sister students at 12. The liquid part of any fat. |s1 Eve tumor. Northampton. The Sorbonne, where [ 14, Characteristic. B i e { the girls are studying the JFrench | 15, Wayside hotel BtiArie il e language, art, literature, history and 116, Beor, Fluid of a tree, philosophy, reports excellent schol- 18, What fool is associated with | R arship for them. | Faster time? Toll e [12.iHouse @ Obstriction of a stream., BROWN ROASTS | | 20, Enhdes, | Bolt. To crust a roast with a deep | Turf. | Units of work. brown hue, have your oven very Variant of i | 3 High terrace. hot when you pop the roast in, : What is associated with | g¢ yy determines the date of | then lower the heat. This crusts the | the Easter scason (pl) \ster? roast and keeps the juices in. Abbreviation for “railroad. 30, Half ofn quart: Jinshion, 41, Tiny golf mound | Swect potato How many days after Good | Point of compass, Friday is Baster? { To seatter hay | | Abbreviation for “road.” l | Native metal ! Feminine tifle of courtes: 1 Hog. Whirlpeao! Inducement, Proprietor | To refit a vals | arled \ 1 | 1. Which combinimg form n ,nyvt" n early period of tine | el 4. Bahin ered | heige Tndian yellows, jade and som shades of red will meet milady’ S shoe style requirements this sum- advance informa- |American Art Friend of Arabi Tunis, April, 7 P—An American | mer. This is the | woman, frail 1 appearance and|tion that comes from the designers I harely five fect in stature, is a rec- |of the shoe factories here, | ognized art authority Rere on Ara-| Tmitation reptile shoes are believ- Lians and desert subjects of North-! i to be on the wane but the man- ern Africa. nfacture are anticipating an in- for three a resident of s cxpeets 1o return |to her home near Chic soon with than & i demand for the real things and lizard skin shoes. yite shocs will be in greater de- mand this summer than for many seasons past, they believe. Miss Lidna Sterchi, 0 years more seord of has been requested to ex- canvasses hich she ibit in New York and Chicago. The smartest shoes will have France has decorated her with the prench lines, short foreparts and violet rosette of the Academy for hor | high arches for dress ware, but the excellent portrayals of Arabians and sports s will be distinetly Amer- tatrican scenes. She s also an officer jean with stream lines suggesting au- of the Nichian = Ifiikhar nisian tomobiles or angular wing effects, mvalent of the French Legion of pevealing the “airplanc influence.” e v A desizeer of sports elothes and Riot of Color Forescen heacih costunies has brought out > i rnbher iandderehic guaranteed In Advance Shoe Styles (o <y riest ana ary during a dip Lynn, Mass, Apil 7 (Pi—Indian | in the surf. They are worn tucked I printe and block prinfed hnens will under {he helt of the swimming cos- predominate in the fabrics. while tume, which is twe piece, trunk and !soft, yich hucs of blue, green, maize, shirt, this scason. Panis Showing Real Surpnse Astonished that American Girls are Chaperoned. Paris, April he strict chaper- onage of the 43 Smith cbllege ju- niors who are studying here at the | Sorbonne has attracted more atten- | tion than have the girls themselves. One of the principal newspapers asked “if we must revise our judg- ment on the proverbial freedom & corded the modern American girl." The American girls, most of whom ! are in Paris for the first time, have |to sign a card every time they go [out in the cvening., They must, un- less special permission is given, 1o | | e at home by 10 o'clock, and they | | must always be accompanied by & | | suitabhle chaperone. But according to Madame Guillo- | ton, Smith college professor, who | with her husband is chaperoning the Smith girls, a “suitable chaperone™ is anyone known to herd whom the girls choose from abong their | Crench or Amcrican acquaintances, | Montmartre is forbidden the girl student, except during holiday per- Paris, April 7 P—A two piece | Premet suit of black faille is made | with a design of the material stitch- ed on jacket and skirt. On the skirt | cach design outlines a loose panel | which Jifts with the motion of walk- | ing and givex the effect of a tailored retal skirt. The blouse is of white saun. Simplicity Cardinal Virtue in Hats This pink “feutre buvard,” with its simple buckle, makes up @ model which unmistakably is a Patou creation, BY JEAN PATOU Paris, April 6—When T first show- d hats in my establishment my sole idea was 1o add a further accessory to a dress, to complete an entirely harmoniol ible, of which the hat is ne v the fourth place. 1t had occurred to me about that time that were 1 a modiste it would be an easy matter to complete a {certain' dress by just the right type of hat and I also had in mind a very definite type of shoe which would be a fitting accompaniment. As far as the shoes are concerned, 1 1 a bhootier carry out my ideas, but 1 decided that the hats would be made under my direct supervi- sion, for the temptation was too strong. It proved an amusing novel- ty at first but as time went on it became more th an amusement and a novelty. The more T studied the possibilities of this new field, the more it open>d new vistas to me, Your Health How To Keep It— Causes of Illness BY DPR. MORRIS FISHBEIN Editoy Journal of the American Mccical Association and of Hygeia. the Health Magarzinc. More and more American investi- gators arc beginning to find import- ant a study of the parasites that in- vade the bodies of human beings. The division of medical sciences of the National Research Council has worked out an arrangement wherchy the Amcrican Child Health association will support an extended investigation of the way in which the common round worm attacks the child in the United States. This worm has been known as a parasite of man since the time or Aristotle. When it invades the intestines it may grow to a length of 12 inches. It deposits an enormous number of cggs which pass out of the body and develop. Mostly Children The preliminary investigations made by Prof. W. W. Cort, who has charge of the department of helmin- | thology, which mcans worm investi- | ®ation, in the Johns Hopkins Univer- sity, indicates that the worms are primarily associated with children, and indeed that children are infested about five times as often as adults. Recent studies seem to show that the worms may attack the lungs as well as the intestines and some phy- sicians are of the opinion that strange lung conditions in children may be due to the passage of the worms through the lungs. The worms that attack children particu- larly are the whipworm and the hookworm. udies its Habits Among the problems that the new commission plans to investigate, in addition to the manner in which the ascaris or round worm may attack the lungs, are the various factors i its development, the way in which children become infected, the influ- ence of climate on the growth of the worms and on their spread, and the exact role of the pig in disseminat- ing the dizease to the human body. A form of infestation with worms of a similar type occurs in pigs, and many students of the subject think that the disease in the pig is simi- lar ‘to that in the human. DECORATIVE WRAPPINGS Gifts of all kinds are much more acceptable if wrapped in one of the new decorative papers. There are appropriate designs for ocean travel, for bridge souvenirs, and so on. Fashion Plaque Gold metal cranes with flues from blue ostrich plumes for wings are the latest imported color ornaments dor hats. Here is a chartreuse yellow modcl made of blotter felt and threaded with a deeper-toned grosgrain ribbon, The first important point was to instill in my modistes the same ideas | as in my modelers. They would e | made to work together in the same | ¥ atmospherc and thus achicve a per- | fect ensemble. This is a principle which is the basis of my whole ac- tivity. ‘That my field of action has | thus been extended is a source of | great satisfaction to me. Another| point was to prove to modistes that | A modiste should be governed by whatever the hats they create they | the consideration of ereating a hat have to be worn with some sort of | #8 a fitfing complement fo a dress. rcie | Take the two hats illustrated here. | 3 | They were made to accompany a Bu. faghionm it Is a8 paay | simple dress or suit and would he to tell what the gencral tendency | suitable hoth ‘or town and country is, despite the dissimilitude of ex-|wear, yet none of these was created pression. But hats differ in this |to match any particular dress, Their respect in that they can have no re- | virtue lies in their simnlicity as well lation whatsoover to the style of the [as in the material of ' moment. All depends on the par- [ made. ticular influence which governs this | o newest {hing very important section of woman's|vard,” or hlotter f diste’s imagination, and she seems fo he more dircetly governed by ing events and influences thin « The crossing of the fashion in hats whicn inspired by N Happily a creator of h liber- matter delicate pastel adornment. 'This is perhaps the fac- | that they are of tor which is 60 attractive to women |shades, such as blue, pink and yel- and which gives every hat its own |low shows that they were created particular characteristic and charm. |in the same general “ambiance” as There scems to be no end to a mo- |the models they could accompany. *000000000000000000000¢ A Special Event of Interest to WOMEN Lucille Buhl’s Personal Representative will be in our Toilet Goods Dep’t to give a focille B Individual Facial Analysis to any woman who desires this special service VERY woman values a clear, smooth skin and firm, young contour . . . . wants to know how she can eradicate lines and wrinkles, build up sagging muscles, remove blackheads or reduce enlarged pores. Lucille Bubl, New York's noted beauty authority and originator of the Beauty Molding Method, has lrr-n%ed to send her expert personal represen- tative to our store for * WEEK COMMENCING MONDAY, APRIL 9th During this special visit, she will give—without charge— an individual Facial Analysis to any woman who may desire it. She will indicate on your individual chart whic{ facial muscles, if any, need buflding up—and how this can be ac- . complished with the beauty molding treatment right in your own home—an investment of ten minutes each day that will pay dividends in new freshness and beauty to your skin and restore a firm young contour to your face and neck. Remember the dates and come in for this special service, Lucille Buhl is widely known as“The Beauty Phi- losopher” because of her weekly talks on Beauty every Tuesday afiernoon over Radio Stations W.ZZ.. New York (2:20 P. M.) and W.E. A.R., Cleveland (1:30 P. M.).

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