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

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: i s o 2 R B " Tea EW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, APRIL 12, 1928, “Revelations Philip Veritzen Reveals His Am- bitious Secret to Madge. At my disclosure of the dar which I feared was threatenic Princess Olina of Transania, Philip Veritzen sprans to his ket “But this is torril think that I have been ke ance of danger near hor! Ler at on There cmotion 1 his voice, his fac twn by Tear that 1 wondervd i Yomance-proof been caught by the spell of Olina’s beauty and charm, and the glamour ppo t man hud place in the royu of a. T could think of no oth planation of his =1 oncern, i to my disg vanity . 1 found my wincing at the 1 I had no however itrospection, He alrcady had started for the door. had 0 call him back brtor ached it “Oh, but you mustn't do that!” I sald. will think T hay he- trayed her conidence. Besides she is sure that Fedor is all the protec- tion she needs. But I have ar- ranged with Mrs. Picer 1o keep the lights all burning at night Underwood and I thought per vou could think of somc plan to guard the house at night with her knowing iy thing about it has promised to tell me what s terrifying her before very lor and then we can form othe He came slowly ! to his chair, sank into it as if he suddenly wer at the cnd of his strength, *You are right,” he and you need trouble your no more | about The Larches bring guarded. Tamorrow T shall have down som trusted men who will take tu watching it at night. And tonigl Otto will drive Noel and me down there and we shall take turns in yatrolling the grounds. The limous- ine will make a very comfortable resting place between watches.™ His voice and manner were those o a man who sees his dearest pos- scssion threatened. T sat silent, ing that for the moment he wished 10 sound to disturb him. It was but ! sens- Wrong side up to you may What is right side up o me —Silly the Sloth, | Prickly Porky is slow of wit. He takes a long time to think things over, That is because, being armed | he is with the thousand little spears that he carries fn his coat, he mever has to think quickly. And | hie is stubborn. He is seldom willing to agree with anybody. Boomer the Nighthawk had just been telling Prickly Por out the latts long-tafled cousin in the Tropics und Prickly Porky has stated flatly | that he didn’t believe he h cou- sin with any such kind of a tail ‘Then Scrapper the Kingbird had <ome along and had said that it was | true, You sec, both Boomer and | Scrapper go away down in that land | where there is no winter., Prickly Porky considered this for |at Boomer the Nighthuwk. he « few minutes. Finally Boomer said: “Don't you believe it now No,” grunted Prickly Porky, and -gan chewing a piece of bark. | “There you are!” said Scrapper Kinghird, “That is what eomes living in ene little place all the| ne. If Prickly Porky had traveled | as you and I have, he wouldn't be 8o | gt in Lis ways or so jgnorant.” | ! At that Prickly Porky bristled up ! and his thousand littlc spears all | stood out of his fur ¢ Who says I'm ignorant?” he demanded “I do” retorted Scrapper the Kingbird, “You belicve only what you have seen, and you refuse to be- | Tieve what others have seen. Now, iobby Coon has never seen any of | those queer members of his family | slown there in the but he | believes they are , becanse we | bave told hii . 1hat so, Bobhy Bobby nodded. “Certainly,” said he, “I have reached the point where 1 can belicve Almost anyth It you should tell that T have @ rel- ! ive down th who walks upside down, I'd bel Serapper the chuckle. Hig eyes twinkled said he, “vou haven't any relative down there who walk upside down ut ther chap do who Joes travel upside down just the | same, He spends most of his life up- | APPER FANNY SAYS E NNI ALY “shower: bring flowers. . may - LOVE'S EMBERS Adele Garrison’s Absorbing Sequel To of a Wife” fow seconds, lowev creet once more, a had pulied him “What do you think ke asked with the cha defere crally invests any que 10 n “It appears faultless,” cling oddly fort 10 1epl d back in nieant to stay in it for “No doubt my intens cerning the princess rather fantastic to vy nd as he waited for me kecnly. “I haven't had tim: thought,” 1 prevaricats I ) “That is like you,” b ly. “and 1 am gratefu He spoke cxactly us tive or a betrc not adroit cnough to surp in my fac ke ruptly, that somtime listen to a story of my “Indeed, I remember, opportunity to clad of the thing which might div tion from my telltale wondered lave the chanee “You shall 1 will explain why Princess Olina so care not only from danger to he; It ave Beginning a New Seril—————————— | er, before nd I saw th together, of my pla rming note of © to my opinien which gen- stion lic puts T returned, that it was a distinet to him at all. He shot a keen glanc, some time, anxiety con- ust appear n ou, my reply T was watching to give it any d, forcing a been too ¥ said fervent- 1 m it a rela- the from eyes as he said ab o I told you ask you to voutl * I told him, ert his atten- face. “I have any times when 1 should ar it near it now, he said. T wish the fully guarded but from any adverse comm which might be made concernin her. It will ex- plain why T have deceived her about giving her u chance upon the stage, Wiy I would not permit your hu hand to make thos: sk ctehes of her, nd why I am determined that she (1l marry Noel, a stranger things h vventually share the Transvania with him.” Cop rright, 1928, N, Feature Service “Has he got legs?” dem Coon. side down.” Bobby Coon looked Scrappe telling the truth Boomer at last. “Nothing clse er promptly. “It ma lieve, B3obby, but there down chap down tl “Has he got | 3obby Coon “Certainly,” replied Scrapper, “He | and the has four legs long legs, too. “Then will you please explain to | 18. me how he can travel upside down? |19, T he is upside down, on his wouldn manded Bobby. telling the truth,” gru Porky. Then he looked very hu nd perhaps— happened— throne of ewspaper e, Ine, 1anded Bobhy very hard Is he asked but,” replied Boom- | be ard 1o he- an upside demanded ¥ are quite he would be " de- 1 told you those fellows were no”i’i. 26 | 26. nted Prickly “Oh, yes, we are,” replied Scrap- *This vel o1 bout ngs per, blandly. chap doesn’t t When he moves ¢ the trectops. He h be done, Bobhy." Bobiby seratehed his fully. “Perhaps.” said h not for the life of me can hang on that way 1y, replied Sc 1y, “silly the Sloth.” (Copyright, 1928, The next story Ohio Club Lima, Ohio, April 12 system s outworn, Ohio I d at (he end of survey of the The surve o by the ails, which i Irma Gerkins of cluded a study iils in Ohio. Jls respon of the v ean suid T nt of ti by T. Women Would Banish Jails | deration of Women's sion of vy, under the chairmanship of 69 of 1 upside down 1 the grougd. at all, it is in from the un- lder side of a limb. So, you see, it can | nos: ‘But I can- © how h¢ . What is his \pper, prompt- W. Rurgess) 1 Sloth.” (®—The iail members of the | clubs f a state-wide was carris adult delin- of Dayton, in- county wwible for the jails are do- with e d 1 fede itself which at me, then | his chair as if he he said, | and T was | thought- | worn .| der biseuts, fresh asps | 'Once Overs | | | i | Begistored U. S Putent Ofpion “Aw, come on, Madge. Let’s be Bohemians just for tonight.” By C. D. Bsichelor i STODIC TOLET) INGU { | AT B BEPRRN ST | Do you know the name of the man who composed the opera “Car- men”? It's for No. 28 vertical and the middle letter is “Z. | HORIZONTAL 1. Who was the first governor of what I8 now New York state? 6. What is the highest tower in | Jurope? |11, Eon {12. Eucharist vesscl, |14, What is the sixth, seventh and eighth incarnation of Vishnu? 15, Peak. 16. Gash. Egg of a louse. Half an em, To perspire profusely, Seventh note in scale. Type of snowshoe, Carmine. Breakwaters. Cantaloupe, Sesame. Baking dish. Exists, Pertaining to a nephew. What is the abbreviation for South Carotina ? Hissing sound. Gothie. Jixcecdingly warm. To prepare for publication. Lair of a beast. Game played on horseback, High adult male voices, To harden as metal. VERTICAL Rhythm. 2. Metal. 3. To doze. 4. You and me. 5. Story. 6 | 28: [ Orient, What is the ablireviation for A GREAT COMPOSER | | { | | | | | | France? 8. Ventilating machine. | 9. To eject. [ 10. Until the seventeenth century i | what was practically the | | universal language of learn- | ing and diplomacy through- | 1 out Europe? | i3, Materlal used in distilling. | 16. Whirled. | 17. Dissenter, | 20, Hank of yarn. | 21, Small memorial. 23, To perch. 26. To put on. 28, Who was the composer of the Jopera Carmen? Central portion of an apple. What is 8ir J. Forbes-Robert- son by profession? 30. 32, i 34, Siepe of a hill. | 36, 8eed sacs. | 37. To color delicately. 1 38, Opposite of heel. 40, Dowel. | 42. To sKip. | 44. Toward. | | 46. Afternoon (time). ; | | IMA[RITIEINIMCIRIAITIE IR] | [AID[E[EMINBIEIDISIOIRIE] | | [N[oISIERNTIEIDIRHIAIRP] { PIRE] [PIEIN]C] [ [T[A/LIOIOTR] | [CQRTATY] ; OTIAl] B WOE ! [AlR[CILTAIRIGIE MNP [AIN] | AN EISITIolEMTIEINT] [EINo[o/w[e [DIP 1 [E[CIE] DIE[EPIEININRTTINISIE O] ;Menus for the Family| BY SISTER | Breakfast—Orange | cream, fresh beef on | toast, milk. coffee. - Luncheon—Cheese fondue, MARY Juied toast, cereal, extra stewed canned tomatocs, rye bread, scallop- | ed appies, milk, tea. Dinner—Stewed gravy, mashed potato chicken agus in but- ter, stuffed celery, radishes, carrot straws, maple 1it, crisp cookies, vs have discarded the milk, coffer anty jail system a long time aeo, | Fresh Beef Toast i it 1 lcad all other ates One pound round steak ground, f to follow, substituting in the |2 tablespoons buiter, 1 small on- of tie county institution a | ion, 1 fablespoon minced parsley, series of indnstri 1 farn apr thic scason popular Kinds thine pebbles, amethy mother- Jewels re ts. aquamarin -pearl. coral, lapis lazuli, with every sort of | Some of the opals, garnets, and ne, jade, “1 cup milk, 1 tablespoon flour. 1-2 teaspoon ealt, 1-4 teaspoon peppe | triangles of toast. Melt butter and add onlon finely minced. Stir and cook over a low fire for five minutes. Add chopped meat and stir well. Tnerease heat and cook ten minutes, ring frequently. Add milk, stir- salt, with | aking pow- | the ! ! pepper and pa a amooth paste s Stir flour with a little cold | milk. Bring meat to the boiling | | point and stir in flonr. Cook until | | thickened and smooth, stirring | constantly. erve on hot toast | arranged on a hot platter. i Knee Length Pants | On Newest Pajamas FParis, Aoril 12. ®—The Lido m; see knee length pyjamas this sum- | mer. A few Paris lingerie makers are showing candy stripe sleeping to suits with the conventional Iong! | ved jackets and knee length | shorts, French women have refused | to take the pyjamaesuits scriously, | considering them sented for wear novelties pre- | by the more daring visitors to b h resorts but the models are said to have a quick | | sale with American buyes | MAYFLOWER COLLAR A slate grey taffeta frock, with a very tull skirt and Puritan collar of white organdie has a little May- |modern pattern fashion a feminine | The cape is the | flower ship embroidercd on it. {alone are likely to develop rickets. | the milh, | ting its supply of iodine. | the supply | cause | represents a fairly serious loss to the | meats, cereals and vegetables. Your Health How To Keep It— Causes of [liness BY DR. MORRIS BEIN Editor Jouwrnal of the American Medical Association and of Hy- geia, the Health Magazine. | From time to time experiments have been made in the feeding of milk, changing the form or the! preparation and studying the ef- | tects on children fed with this moat | complete of human foods. Experiments have been reported | which show that the boiling of milk | interferes somewhat with its con- | tent of mineral salts, particularly | calcium and phosphorous, and that | young animals fed on heated milk When children are fed on boiled milk they must be given increasing quantitics of cod liver oil in order | to improve the growth-promoting properties, which are to some ex- tent destroyed by the heating of | Milk i also depended upon by | the child in many places for get- Although of iodinc necessary to the human body is relatively small In amount, it must be Kept up to a definite level or the child will de- velop symptoms related to the thy- roid gland. " Investigators in a medical re- search institute in Aberdeen have now carried out a series of experi- ments to find out what happens to | the fodine in milk when the food | is boiled before serving. It was found that heat would 20 per cent or more of all the fodine in milk to pass into the air by volatilization. This, of course, child that takes the milk. While these considerations are of great importance &o far as they re- late to the feeding of the infant, they are not, of course, fundamen- tal in relationship to the taking of | milk by adults, The grown up person does not de- pend on any single food substance in his diet. He is likely to supple- ment milk or any other food that he may take by a wider variety of Although milk is the most perfect of foods, it is not absolutely perfect, since it lacks greatly some of the mineral salts necessary to life and is not even complete in ita content of vitamins. | More and more it 18 becoming | to be realized that the only safety in diet is a well balanced diet with some of all of the important food substances. (Copyright 1928, NEA Service, Inc.) Fashion Plaque | | 1 | i 1 “Off-whit fox and two tabs of broadtail wool-embrotdered in a spring collar. | ernment to do what is right. ’Hlln as cultured or vulgar? MRS. AVERAGE WOMAN Cincinnati Picks Her, and Here April 11, (®—What rrent problems of the da Well, for one thing, she! siderably better informed about them than the average man. She ‘rage woman think about | con- | has her own ideas, and she docsn’t | say "1 don’t know" questions, Mrs. Jacob average wom distinction by to any of your Abel 1,2 awarded that school mothers’ club that surveyed the city pretty widely, She is middle-aged, the wife of a hookkceper, mother of two children. The clubwomen who selected her felt that she typified the average woman — in | incinnati and elsewhere. | she reads the newspapers magazines, and thinks about what she reads. me time ago an Taverage " selected in Towa, | and | | | TRV WA S betrayed ignorance of such an im- portant affair as the Locario treaty; hut mnot Mrs. Abel. She knows about things. Here are a few of this average woman's viewa on current issues: Nicaragua: “Well, it does seem bad to have to send our marines down there, But I have always thought we should trust our gov. Per- haps we will find a way out of this Nicaraguan trouble sooner than we think.” | ‘smpanionate marriage: “'T have ! just been reading Judge Lindsey's hook about it, and 1 am afraid 1 do | not agree with it, although 1 think he 18 right to waken parents. They | must learn that the world has mov- | ed since their day.” Prohibition: “Well, that's a hard one. But one thing 1 do know, Not drinking is much better, much safer, than drinking. What makes people want tol drink? Just because they are told not to? Are they all children? Well, I think of my own children when I say I would like to get rid of drinking. They haven't gone with the crowd so far. But may- be 1'd better touch wood.” Religion: “Yes, I believe in re- ligion. I belong to the Methodist Episcopal church and the Order of the Eastern Star. I guess a | good many people have gotten away from religion, but it's the one thing really to depend on. They will all come back to that some day. The home of this average wo. | nan is clean, neat and comfortable. | She was making a dress for lher | daughter, who is in high school, when the interviewer called. She smiled and protested slightly when told the club had named her the city’s average woman, “I'm afraid I'm not enough,” she said. modern Life's Niceties Hints on Etiquette (L= 1. Is it good taste to discuss things of a personal nature when there is a possibility of being over- heard? 2. Should onc ever gossip about other guests when attending a par- ty? 3. How does the voice, Jaughter nd general demeanor stamp a wo- The Answers 1. Certainly not. 2. Never, 3. A low, well modulated voice, quiet demcanor and soft laughter are part and parcel of the lady. A high-pitched volce, hoisterous laughter and loud talk reveal the vulgar person, Crepe De Chine Now Bathing Suit Fabric Paris, April 12, UP—White crepe de chine bathing suits are among | Paris’ newest efforts. They are not the “dop’t go near the water” type of swimming suit, for all are of rubberized silk. Dressmakers design them for ac- tual bathing purposes. Mme. Alvire Popesco, Parisian actress, has ordered a white silk Jenny bathing costume with a matching cape of white rubberized crepe de chine lined with scarlet. length of the one is Cincinnati's of Tulsa, Okla., proving th b g et e | THE INFANTRY HAS AN EXCELLENT EYE - / hen the rescrve officers training corps of the { Missouri held a military ball the other night, one ¢ boys’ chores was to choose a qucen. Here she is- at the infantry hasn't e its eye. ity of A dough- 1 Clay irely lost Smoking is O. K.. This Girl Say. But She Thinks Dry Law Is All Wrong. New Orleans, —The pro- | iibition law is & and smok- | ing by girls is , 9ays Miss Golda Schill, New Orleans, the only | woman due to recelve a degree at | the law school graduation excreises at Louisiana State Univ in| June, | Miss Echill has some pro- ! nounced ideas, but let her tell| them: | “I am opposed to national pro- hibition because I don’t think it | can be enforced, because violation of the prohibition lessens all | respect for law, and last of all, | hecause if it could be enforced, it! shouldn’t be because drinking is not a fit subject for legislation. “Drinking is not a moral ques- tion but one of hygiene. Only ex- cessive drinking becomes a moral | question. “Women have as much right to smoke as men. “It is not a sin for a woman to! smoke or drink although she may suffer more aerious physical con- | sequences than a man and should be governed accordingly. “It {s bad taste for a woman to smoke or drink in the presence of | consclentious perscns who find it | offenaive.” | Miss Schill intends to the practice of law graduated. Paris, April 12, (& 100ks like o collar the : neck Although it trimming line of & model from formed by an go into when she is insct ke, bot, anc it = *There i8 no more worthy pro- | oo YK ok and ey e T e: | en i ki obtuined in the “€P- | game manner b ands ia al- o et e T havems | Hme manner by bands of diagonal ly woven jersey beige jersey set inte plain spent five years in college just to be a housckeeper,” 0000000000000000000000" Just a Remind-r! You Have Only Two Days More in Which to Consult the Personal Representative of —the noted beauty authority of New York and widely known as “ The Beauty Philosopher” be- cause of her beauty talks every Tuesday after noon over Stations WJZ, New York at 2:20 P.M. and WEAR, Cleveland, at 1:30 P. M. Wiu Buhl’s representative will gladly tell you how you can be your own beauty special- ist at home, with the aid of the Lucille Buhl Beauty Molding Method. You can also have an individual Facial Analysis by this expert, —a special courtesy to our customers. {This Week Only—Toilet Goods Dep't} piece swimming suit.

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