New Britain Herald Newspaper, April 11, 1928, Page 12

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LOVE'S EMBERS Adele Garrison's Absorbing Sequel To “Revelations of a Wife” Plans Made to Ward off Danger ! posed to have heen carried ahoard Threatening Princess Olina ship tervibly ill and wh ’ A ported to be slowly convalescing at Lillian lost 1o time in making the | one of her father's paluces. You sce explanation sh d promised 10| am following your friend’s instruc- Phillp Veritzen. With the tinge 0f | tions and 1 my cards upon the now re- _,,‘,A - "'.‘ o burlesque which she often uses in | tapl i relieving the strain of a tense situ- I gave a quick, little sigh of relief, i ation, she marched us 1o the ce i b 1B G el Phic Fedor Beginning a New Serial-————————— of the li released our ely of my fears for the girl pushed chairs toward us, and struck | “Yes, 1 found that out fin i an attituds tten With - her [ duy,” 1 said h 1 ha | fingers tor he | pecte « truih for time, “I'm not the or < vour | Alis coln rsel irmed my Phil” she nd ex- | ] puzzled NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 11, 1928 stered U. 8. Patent Offsce ' Once Overs | | | By C. D. Batchelo: inting in a : and 1 ‘ How ean 1 in oy tor er You can kee ' get Yo Dot ! 1o } tirough talki h- | studying theatrical wake-up as 1 k vd him crispl 4 ha he said 'l admit 1 15 f & vour advice for herself, but she is | puzzied for few minut t my deeply concerned about Miss Lin- | first sight of her after the operation | coln's safety will tell you ahonut | had i crformed npon hir 10 it, but she in reticence -~ Wis at our w out be young woman’s | Jin to Lillinn and Mari L confidenea to anyvone not conversant | pnot 1 asked, remembe P With certain surprising facts eon- | tense serutiny he had given corning her. If vou have any ro- | Lincoln npon that occasion 1 wantie knowledge that you are!odd amusemient he had Foeping to yourself, T'd advise you s as ta jest 10 spill it hefore Madge hezins talk- [alons knew " Then the cards will e on the | Ye ho kuow | talde. TN be on the veranda, if you | ask o 1ol him there | want me n T into his cyes, a look She was out of the room with th W hiek held admiration and some door claged hehind her upon the echio | th ore pnzzling. her last words, leaving Philin I shall have 1o be careful whet | Vieritzen with his usual poise of | T think w near me” he | wner distinetly rippied | sand, smiling, sut enough of that Kut this is astounding,” he said. | What is this whicll you fear E I'lease sit down and tell me ahout | for Prin ’ 4 Have you discovered who Miss| I wish I 1 said slowly i Lincoln really 187" | “She has given e no econfidenes 1 Inoked at him steadily ! Fing it put 1 know that she is | Yes, T have I told hun. |terribly afraid of seme mysterions | i bal——r | menace, and 1 feel that there should { ile held up his hand in a gesture | he some guard put over The Larches well known to the members of his|at night, ast until the windows iatious organization. Evervone |can he fitted with bars, Jerry Ticer fzom his highest ranking assistant |and Henry, the man who has posed t4 his humblest office hoy knew that [as her uncle are the only men in i Stop! Wait till I have |the house. Of conrst, she has e “Red, I ain’t conscious of us usin’ no whim-wham like that on | wolfhound. but I cannot help fecl- in’ ? Then you know,” he said, “that|ing afraid for her.” our reducin’, *iss Lincoln is really the Princess Copyright, 1925, Newspaper e = ¢« . of Transvania, who was sup- Feature , Ine, Hy Thoraton W. Burgess Another Useful Tail The braggart is but il received, And seldom will he be believed. —O0ld Mother Nature Boomer the Nighthawk chuckled | when he heard Bobby Coon decline | to let Prickly Porky slap him with his tail, just to prove that it was a useful tail. “It is useful for fight- ing.” said Boomer, “but I cari't see that that tail of yours is useful in any other way. Now. your cousin lown in the Tropics’ —- “Whose cousin, where?” interrup- 4 Prickly Porky. Your cousin, who lives down in Tropics,” replied Boome! ; “I haven't any cousin and I lon't know where tne Tropics are, inted Prickly Porky. NCasv e “Oh, yes you have a cousin,” replied Boomer (he Night Hawk )h, yes, you have a cousin,” re- plied Boomer the Nighthawk. “He| ewhat has his tail got to do with ] lives down in the Tropics and the | g2 inquired Bobby Coon, who had ropies are 'way down South Where { hoen listening. th never is any winter. 1 “He hangs onto the branches with r cousin every year when I pass | pjs ail” replicd Boomer. “Instead rough on my way down further | of having a broad, thick tail cover- uth. He is a Porcupine all right, | eq witn little spears, like Prickly t he hasn't got a fighting tail” | porky's, this fellows has a lon tail The dull little eyes of Prickly | without any little spears on it, or Porky began to show some signs of | oyen any hair on it. And he can interest. “Does this fellow you call| cyrl the end of that tail around a my cousin look like me?” he in- branch and hang on in great style. If he wants to get away out where the limbs are small, he can anchor waired. “He does and he doesn’t,” replied Toomer. “He has a coat with 2| himself with that tail of his, and thousand little spears in it, just as | run no risk of falling.” you have, but there is no hair on} . s all very well,” replied that coat to hide those little spears. Prickly Porky, “but hat does he You would know, just to 100k at | 4o when he has to fight? What does Lim, that he is 100 prickly to touch. | ha do when Buster Dear gets after And his tail isn't a fighting tail, but | him? Or Puma the Panthe it s just ful as a iting tail. | “Ruster Bear isn't down there,” A T don't know but it is more usc- | roplicd Boomer, “and, while Puma 1l the Panther lives down there; your _ “How s it use srumbled | cousin has nothing to fear from irickly Pork: Nim. or very little. You see, your Weil” 1 cousin doesn't fool around on the Cousin of you uch. He spends a of his time in 3 £ his time up in the tree- very high up. 11 suma the Panther can- cat bark, as you ur follow him. That is after the tender leaves vl that tail of his comes in pretty good tellow, handy.” he §s sometimes in danger | Prickly Torky con, d this a ing, or he would he if it o minutes, Then he grunted, | for that tail of his" | “WelL” said he, "1 profer my own A e tail. T never feel safe with > ny other kind of a tail. If that fel- FLAPPER FANNY SAYS: |10 down there really hus a long [tail. as you say he has 1 don't be lieve consin of mine “I1e " retorted Boomer, true Porcupine, 1f you it ask ver the T ird i 1] said Serapper the Kingbird, who had come up just in | time to overhicar the | (Copyright. 1925, T. W. Burgess) | | The story: “The Upside SHANTUNG ENSEM 3 = olored shantung, printed tin anic patiern in tones, frock and cddi g coat of a ISS UMBRELLA I umbrellas in gay no handles protruding knobs of agate finishing MEDICM BRIMS #20. J. 8. PATTOPP. | Mats o cdinm brim are fre ©1920 v ws eTrVCE Tmendon i his and a boon to 1 | o1aer woman T the brim muer %ot every diamond is & stepping | b= irresular, preferably flaring over stone to the altar. lone «ide MARSEE ~SBBEN | ¥rom “an animal similar to the Type of pine tree. | sable” to “3.1416" this puzzle pre . Abbreviation for road. vides a continuous change of scen- | 8. Tree having tough wood. Amphibian similar to a frog. Mistake. Portrayed. | ery. The two long border words will | prove helpful. HORIZONTAL | 1. Animal similar to the sable. To wage 6. Opening of a volcano. | Sesame 112, To revoke as a legacy. | Wakeful attention, i 13. Sore due to lying in bed for Spear. | many months, Icline animal. 14, Organ of smeil. T'witching. i To acatter ha Wigwam: |16, Large stringed instrunient. rong saline solution {17, Wrath. Thin metal plate, 118, ential, Fra, | 20, Drone bee, To glide rhythinically. | 21, Writing implement. To yield. Rodent. Wand. Second not in scale, Anything steeped in any liquid. Label. Baking utensil. You and L 3.1416. lizg of a louse. Abbreviation for pound Point. To acquicsce. Portion of a circls Dig. | mm o Cooking utensi RIO[O]K] 42, Digit of the foot. | [YIo[sITIlH 2 Whenan, | [OINEMTIu[MORINAN ] 5] [E[N[A[TIE] : MolL [EJP [EINITIA] | Handle rl‘\'\llhl '.(x‘\l rity. ORE ONNERER CER To love exceedingly. . C mnmg “ JATV MR [P N [DIBIATS] | [S] Al Fragment or part To increasc in intensity. Washed lightl [SIEIATSIOIN] [E]R] [E[SITIE[R] To feel indignant displ Tiny golf dcvice, Standard of type measu | 1. !salt pork sprinkled with carrot Menus for the Family 5o 0 in cosierore:” A | % < Ihoilir ater 10 cover. Add lemon | wice. Cover closely and cook in a i BY SISTER MATRY moderate oven three hours. Remove akfi licod oran coreal [tongue to hot platter and cut n cooked with chopped figs, thin slices without cutting deep {bread crumb pancakes, new cnough to separate then. Strain li- syrup, miik, coff quid in casserole and add to tomu- Luncheon—Cream of asparazus | toes rubbed through a coarse sieve. soup, cheese muifins, Jellicd fruit| Heat to the boiling point and stir in salad, cocoa. 1 blespoons flour stirred 1o a Dinner — Casserole of or's | smooth paste with a little cold wa- L twice baked potatoes, cel- ter, Bring to the boiling point and vy, cream and apple salad, vanilla boil, stirring constantly for five min- jco cream, fudge cake, milk, coffec. |utes. Add sauted mushrooms and One of the most attractive Ways| pour over tonguc. [10 use cress in ad is 10 strip | (Copyright 1528, NEA Service, Tne.) the leaves from the stalks and use Eeo them as a border for the ofher IVORY JEWELRY torial comprising the “salad A dust-red casemble, with a is done in the dinner salad with 1 crenm satin blouse with a turn- Iy minced ecress sprinkled over down collar has a belt buckle, a top of the dressing on each servinz | choker collar and cuff buttens of Casserole of Beef's Tonzue carved ivory. One bes 1 eup sliced — = st carrot, 1 ed onion, 2 BLUE-PINK \blespoons mineed parsdev. 1 lem-! A vavy Line tailored gown opens | an, 2 eups canned fomatoes. 1 cup on a pink silk underdress, and has auted mushroon Captional it ' belt buckle of z00d) lices fat port Scald tonguc hailinz fo venty minutes. Dram and reme LRALD CLASSIVIED ADS ,skin. Place on a bed of sliced fat FOR BLST RESULTS Your Health How To Keep It— Causes of Mliness BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN Editor Journal of the American Medical Association and of Hy. gela, the Health Magazine v time the heart beats fts muscle contract When the heart contracts the blood is forced out of the heart into the large blood ves- sels and this beat is felt to the very limits of the blood vessels. The pulsc rate is a measure of the rate of the heart beat. Pcople vary as to the speed at which the heart contract. Sometimes the beat is as slow as 55 or 60 per minute, sometimes as fast as 80 or $5 a minute and still normal. It is possible for a disordered heart to beat slower than 55 or 60 a minute. Slow heart Dbeats are associated strangely enough, with thick skull and also with akull fracture, It is also possible for the heart to beat even more than 200 times per minute. A very rapid heart beat is sometimes as- sociated with serious disturbances, particularly of the thyroid gland. Rapid Hearts The hearts of children and young beople usually beat faster than those of old people. Rather rapid hearts are frequently eeen in young women without having lany " definite significance in rela- | tionship to their state of health. At each exit or entrance into the heart of a blood vessel there are valves. These valves prevent e blood from passing back into the veins when it comes into the heart to prevent it from flowing back into the heart when the heart relaxes after pushing it out into the arteries. When a mass of blood is pushed into a narrow vessel, the wall swells slightly, This is what is called the pulse beat. Power for Blood Stream When the heart beats it forces blood through the lungs and to the rest of the body. In the lungs the blood is given a new supply of oxygen. It is carried by the arteries to the most remote por- tions of the body, supplying them with the food and particularly oxygen that they need if life is to be sustained. The heart pumps about four quarts of blobd a minute When the heart is at rest; with mod- crate exerciss nine quarts arc needed, and during severe exer- cise the heart may pump as much | as sixteen quarts per minute. Fashion Plaque Silver lacings of kid and a group of thonge twisted ‘round the crown lare the novel trimming of this little {felt in the new English-red. 1 | {Dusty Glamou New York, April 11, UP—A still | | handsonme woman of 6§ years sits| | daily behind a neatly-cleared, effi- | cient-looking desk in the new Lin- | coln hotel in New York. She is in! | charge of the hotel's service bureau. | She is a graduate of a glamorous | past, Her name is Frankie Bailey. Ask mother—or fath. To the young generation, her| name may mean little, but to those | who lived in the days when Lillian | Itussell represented the ideal of fem ininity, Frankie Bailey walked away with the world's honors in legs. Before the Atlantic City Bathing Beauty contests, before the short | trock, and before the bantam-weight | chorus girls had chased the | vies” off the boards, Frankie Bailey | | had no rivals in any beautiful figure contests. She was supreme, | ‘Then Times Changed [ The sight of her in pink tights in 2 Weber and Fields extravaganza i something to write home about. | For in hier reign the silk tight, rath- |er than the bare flesh, was the { height of feminine allure, But times changed—and legs. The figurcs that were so admired in the ninetics gave way to the slim, boy- ish forms of the flupper. And the stage fortunes of Frankie Bailey | waned. Today she is starting life ove I'm going to like business” she said, With a game smile. “If 1 had | my life 1o live over, I would avoid the stage, and choose a profession where l12ss depended upon youth and looks, and the favor of a fickle pub- lic. Very faw actresses and public performers are able to retain popu- larity past a certain span. Then they find it- difficult to begin ancw in any other line of work. They rarely have saved much money on i the stage, Has Known Bitterness “Tf 1 had daughters, T would ad- vise them against going on the stage and I would sce that each one had | | some profssion or occupation by | which she could make her own liv- | ing. When necessary.” Frankle Bailey does not deny that | since the heyday of her carcer she | has been up “against it that she| has seen the reverse side of adula- | tion and flattery. She has known | bitterness and deep despondency, she | Frankic Bailey telay (upper vight) and two pictures of her in her pink tights days. McKee's ‘Black Sheep.! Her pictures adorned the ds that usced to g0 active again. But life from now on, is rather a serious business with me., eald. | The glamour gone. The colors In California a few years ago she | have faded.” was near death from a stubborn ill- Eyes Still Sparkle ness—and dldn’t care whether she| Tt was in Weher & Fiel®s hur- recovered. An operation, financed by | lesques of eurrent plavs. a genori- friends, saved her life. tion ago, that Frankie Railey won In the work I am now undertak- | her greatest fame. Her hrown exes ing. which is service to others, I ex- | still sparkle with fthe mirth that pect to find both pleasure and an | flipped many a Merry quip across opportunity for expression,” she | the footlights in “The Corn Curcr said. a burlesque on “The Conguerors other langh show. d, “It is very delightful to me to be | back close to Broadway. It is charm- ing to meet oll friends, and to be | and many a She appoar as Henry Dixey too. in ‘Adonis,’ g s At 68, Pink Tights Star Tums to Business r Isn’t Negotiable, Hotel Service Manager Frankie Bailey Finds, So She Changes Her Entire Career Despite Her Years, T ‘Little Christoph with packages of ciga As a busin a Grand . Hoyt and a5 woman now, she is whom are blen cordiality, and a Dame in poise, Time to Swat the Fly Again U. S. Health Service Gives | Early Warning. Happier Child,‘. | the Better It Is More Hints for Parents on i Bringing Up Children. The happicr a child is, the better | bis behavior will be. (By U. S. Public Health Service) Washington, April 11. (®—Spring is a season of relaxation and re- ) _ | juvenation, but it brings its peculiar | A Well-regulated. voutine life responsibilities, One of them is the | @ Child is cssential to his phy house fly. and mental welfare, The two most important ailments Regular habits can be formed | transmitted by flies are typhoid | nly if the child learns from expe fever and the diarrhoal discases|Tience that hc is to do the sam of children. These and other dis- | thing every day at the same hour. | eases may be transmitted in two It is only after the habit has be- | ways, by mechanical transference | come well established that we can | and by innoculation, Flies which |afford to deviate from our charted | course. Even then it is with more danger that introd inject germs ing, however, into the victim by bit- are relatively unim- or ¢ portant, since the blood sucking e, excep- | varietles are not so numerous in | tions, for with cach deviation from | the United States as the house fly | the routine come new interests and | emotional satisfactions, which in | type. The stiff, hairy parts of the house theaaltiyiig Wonios hus we form themsclves for every new habit. are fly are particularly adapted to the ¢ i mechanical transfercnce of con- | the habit of irregularity. tagion. Contaminated with filth = Laziness is a symptom, not a dis- ease. It may have a physical caus it may have an intellectual basis it may be an expression of emno- tional disturbance. in places where conditions are es- pecially favorable to the develop- ment of germs, it carries them to the food and drink consumed by man, It has been suggested that the TREET 5 slogan, “Swat the Ily,” be amend-| HOW much iron will he contain- | d to read, “Fight the fly by de-|¢d in a serving of vegetables de- | stroying its breeding places and |Pends to a large extent on th method of preparation. It will all | screening it out of the house.” New Plrntings Extend “Mary Sherman Forest” Washington, April 11. (®—The “Mary Sherman Forest,” a series of trees planted by women’s groups in various parts of the country, in honor of Mrs. John D. Sherman, president of the General Federation of Women's’Clubs, has been in- creased by four recent plantings, A spring of an oak tree has been placed in the yard of the Worth- H H while clubhouse in Thomasville,| Increasing in Japan Ala’ the Village Improvement as- | T0KY0. April 11. UP—Divorces arc sociation of Rehohoth Beach, Del., | INCreasing in Japan. authoritics say. has cooporated with the Woman's|@nd part of the blame is placed on Club in planting an evergreen troe; | Modern women and their campaign the Overlook Woman's Improve- | for caual rights. be conserved af the vegetables can bhe served raw, steamed or haked, or cooked in a terless cooker little will be lost if the vegetable is bofled in a smill ount of water, and the juice used in soups or gravie One-half to thr fourths of the iron content of vegetables may be lost if the vegetables are cooked in much water and the wa- ter discarded. Modernity and Divorce ment club of Portland, Ore., has| It has not heen ‘long since a Dlanted several evergreens, and the | Japanesc husband could divorce his wife over her protest withop Lane country officlals have gooper- ted with the Oregon Federation of Women's clubs in planting scveral trees. Bathtub Burglars Bother Cleveland Cleveland, O., April 11 P—That a number of Cleveland thieves believ: in the old adage “Cleanliness is next ! to godliness,” js evidenced by the number of bathtubs, sinks and sym- | any recourse to the courts. The law is different now, however, and while divorces may be had by mu- tual consent without legal procecd- ings, a contested casc must be tricd the same as in America. In Tokyo alone verdicts were rendered 250 contested divoree cases last year and there were 100 cases appealed. Women are the defendants in a majority of the cases, whereas only a few yea bols of houschold cleanliness in gen. |80 they usually were the com- cral, stolen from empty apartments | Plainants. The Social Affairs bu- 1) e coiitas of & FERE reau blames “complicated living The Cleveland Owners and Ten- | conditions. ants' association, meeting here, re vealed that the combined losses in plumbing fixtures of 1,000 members totaled thousands of dollars. “Fven radiators are taken along by apartment rifiers.” said J. E.|fair girls have invented the 5 Yelsky, president of the association. | party.”” feminine counterpart of the Ividently the thieves have a desire [ stag party. [to keep warm as well as clean.” | The term was invented hy the Steps to license all dealers in sec- | Honorable Ruby Hardinge. sister of Viscount Hardinge. aide to the gov- Friends “Hag” Party Tondon, April 11. (A—RBored M. whom she invited to cclebrate the passing of Lier “hachelordom” on Ithe eve of her marriage to Major Leaumont Besbitt of the Grenadier Guards The “hag parly” differed, how- ever, from its masculine cquivalent in that the sucsts were mostly ma ried wemen Life’s Niceties Hints on Etiquette = HINTS ON ETIQUET 1. What is one of the most im- jortant rocks of rudencss upon which marriages are wrecked? 2. Is it necessary for either to be especially rude just because they dislike the other's friends? What arc some of the “don’t” a wife or husband should avoid under these circumstanc . The Answers 1. The discourtcous attitude of husbands and wives to cach other's friend 0, cach should try to &how courtesy snd hospitality, even when the other's fricnds are uncongenial. Don’t fall leep, or sit and 4, or icave the room abruptly without a plausible excuse, or snub guests outright. Paris, April 11. P—A white satin dress designed by Cyber is an ex- ample of broken line. The decollete is cut in a diagonal line and trimmed with bretelles of strass. The corsage drapes to the right side where it ties with a large bow. Two irregular pancls on the skirt are cut in semi-circular form. PUST-RED EMISETTE A taffeta frock in midnight blue has a detachable chemisette of nove elty chiffon-orandie in the new dust- {ond-hand plumbing goods are cx- | pected to be taken to improve these | | conditions, Yeleky said. |a gathering of her women friends ornor general of C‘anada. to describe | red. A bow of matching color trims la blue hat for it.

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