New Britain Herald Newspaper, April 17, 1928, Page 12

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

LOVE'S EMBERS NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUES | 'Once Overs Adele Garrison’s Absorbing Sequel To “Revelations of a Wife” Beginning Madge Hears More of Philip Verit- | 2en’s Successful But Bitter Past. “She telt no deeper emotion ma than she would for a faithful The ‘words. miliation w tul_portion, Verit nd n ympathy “How you lia il of the bitter hiu- I had been his youth- came haltingly from n's lips. T th onut m inveluntary gestur W Ve osuffered!” I oex- claimed softly, regretied both words, and gesture the next seeond, cmployer quickly erasped iy stretched hand in hoth his feart of gold he murmured mboyantly, Then as T freed my hiands from his grasp, he lookedl the protest which he evidently did not think it epportune te voice “However ™ resumed, "I must let you w your synipatly ipon the ids 1at any minutest por- iom of thiit youthful suffering or in- ‘atuation hus lingered with me it wenzory of it, yes, and the bitterness wt the scurvy trick which Fat vlayed mie in the matwer of my birth, But my love for the Princess 01gq died long ago, althongh I am second 0 ne one in my admiration of the eauty, the grace and the keen men- tality of the Queen of Transvania. She lacks, however. the warmth of motion and the unselfishness which alone make a woman adorable. 1 :arly discovered a streak of ruth- icssness in her nature and realized hat though I was perhaps her clos- st associate and she confided all he roubles to me, yet she really nev 1ad seen me a: man, as anything Lut a sort of human machine as- signed to her retinue. 1 was sure . year after I had left her s <he would have difficulty in llr‘aluhg cither my name or my features.” I mentally echoed his remark con- cerning the streak of ruthlessness in the nature of Queen Olga of Trans- vania, I just had come from the :rightened daughter of that queen, for my out- ste 1 fugitive because of her mother's| ietermination to marry her to the widdle-aged and ugly king of Trees. But T made no vocal comment, for { saw that my employer had not fin- shed speaking. for r| hat | vice, | a New Serial: “Of course, with your rare knowl- | cdge of youth,” he said, “you realize ' that my discovery of Olga’s ruthless- ness did not lessen at that time ! cithcr my lefiging for her or my suf- fering at losing her. It was several ars before I was able to think Imly of her, and I do not like even ow to think of her wedding day when I, as an officer of her guard W her married to my cousin, the king, who did not know of his Kins- ian’s existence, and would not have pent two thoughts upon the matter | it he had been intormed of it. ! “Do you wond the vibrant Vvoice went on, “that I swore a mighty oath to myself that day, vow- ing that sometime, somehow, I would even my score with the royal family | | of Transvania? The memory of that | vow followsd me across the ocean. | {tor I left the country, immediately following Olga’s marriage, taking care that no faintest clue to my | destination left, T asked only that the Transvanian part of wmy life e blojied out ‘My“life. my career, since T came) country always been the property of the public, although I} have tried to keep my home life as | | private as possible. Five years after | T came here, T met the gentle, loving girl who later became my wife and Noel's mother. When she lived— | {only a short ten vears after our mary ge—she gave my life comfort, dig- nity and beauty, She died believing that she had given me supreme hap- piness as well, for I made it the husintss of my life that she should believe §t.% \ He paused on that speech, and 1 s conscious that he was watching | stion to it. But 1 kept my | face blank of any other expression Hhan sympathetic interest in his |stery. His remark that he had | ceased to care for Princess Olga vears before, his artistic intimation that he had not loved his wife, the resulting Inference which my know edge of him bade me draw-—all these strengthened my resolution to give him no intimation that I was read- ing between the lines of his atory as he patiently wish me to do. was I to Shelly Has a Fright By Thornton W. Bur Fright wil sometimes quicken wit That would be slow if not for it. —01d Mother Nature. *“Well,” said Peter Rabbit, “T suppose that Shelly the Armadillo. down there in the Tropics, doesn't do much worrying, seeing that he has such .a fine protective coat. -1 suppose such enemics as he might have leave him alone, just Prickly Porky's leave him alone. In other words, T suppose ge really hasn't .any encmics. 1 envy people like Prickly Porky and Shelly the _ Armadillo.” Prickly Porky, - grunted. bit,” said he, “that just because I carry a thousand little spears, 1 am left alone. More than once Buster Bear, Puma the Panther and Tufty the Lypx have tried to get me. any one of them could have turned me on my back I would have been helpless. Very likely this Shelly which Scrapper has been telling bout, has encmies smart enough to least try to get the best of him.” . “As to that, 1 can't say,” replicd Serapper. “I've only seen him a few timee, for he prefers to come out after dark.” “I've gren him many times” said | Boomep the Nighthawk, “and it is just as you say, Prickly Porky. He has encmies in spite of his coat of <hell. And, like you, he would be helpless if they could get him stretched on hLis back. You see, that | shell doesn’'t cover him un wilo was close b neath. I remember once 1 was sure that I never would see Shelly again.'” “It was just after darkness klfi‘ ‘Don’t think, Peter Rab- | 1f | | him. IIIMII He was moving along slowly amd | those big ears of his were waggling | Here is 2 new kind of puzzle. It's he got some distance from his hole. Yes, sit, he got some distance from | his hole. Then I saw something mov- ing in the shadows. 1t was hardly | more than a shadow itself. At first I didn't think anything about f{t. Then I noticed that it was creeps ing. Yes, sir, it was crceping. It wasn't staying in one place. Apd & moment later 1 saw that it was Beauty the Ocelot “What is an Occlot?" Peter. A member of the Cat spoke up Scrapper the Kingbird. “Beauty is on2 c¢f the smaller mem- bers of the Cat family and one of the handsomest. That is why he is called Beauty. “1t was quite clear,” continued Boomer,: ‘that Beauty was after Shelly the Armadillo. He was t#ying to creep up on him and surprise Probably he intended to turn over on his back. But some- quires one to’ journey from squarc to square until he has completed the spelled out, letter by letter, slogans or quotations. ‘The idea is to begin the journey at the letter marked “Start,” in this case “C,"” and from this movc in one continuous line up, down, to left or right, but never diagonally, and only one square at a time, in such a way that the names or quotations are spelled out in order until the letter marked “Finish” is reached. To get you started, for igstance, you would move from C down to A, down again to L, down further to V and down again to I. Then to the right to N, which the first namec of a well known | person. After that the going Is a fittle more difficult, but if you take the right turns, you'll come out in names, demanded family,” him had hegun to settle over the jungle. It wasn't too dark to| see, but it w dark cnough 1o bring 1 night-loving folk out of their hiditg places. 1 happened to | be sittinr o1 4 log right on | edge of th 1 saw Shelly Armadilio « out of his hole start off to hunt for his dinner. was moving « slowly and the big ears of | ere waggling. He has a funny of waggling thos ears. He w tending to business and not paying any atton- | tion to anyhody else, After a ting t and He ) s o FLAPPER FANNY SAYS: ,lm ets the guests. i When good marriages dis, they go Tt Parie { thing warncd Shelly just in the nick | that IIEJEEEEE RIBIEIRIAIRIGIRII IN|D|WIM O[HITISINIEIRIGIAG]G] mam I}{l {caled @ Traveletter Puzzle and re- | entire trip. At the end he will have | would give you | Reglaterod U. B. Patent ffice INTER “What is the idea, Madame, trying to edge in ahead of m ;NATM)NHL DAY, APRIL 17, B+ C. D. Batchelor! ——— e?” BIL W[S[T] . 500d shape at the Finish, with the names of twelve nationally prom- | inent men. Now go ahead and fry it, but re- member, no diagonal moves, no jumping, no moving out of hounds of the puzle and no passing through black squares. BEIE ['JE!BE [ATSTS] NV [ TE S[o1T] [LITIEINERAICTE] (ER[RIYAIPISIERMETYETD] | | | of time. He jumped straight up in' the air in the funniest jump you ever saw. The moment he touched the ground again he started to run, and.I ean tell you, Peter Rabbit, Shelly could give you a good | 1 didn't suppose he had so | much speed in him. Beauty the Oce- | lot was after him at ence, Then be- 4 game of dedge, All the time Iy trying to get to his hole. fins. milk, cotfee. \ He was almost there when Beaus | Luncheon—Cream of onion soup, {v pounced on Him, but, of course, |t0dsted crackers, lettuce and cottage | ity couldn’t dig his claws inte \chw"" open sandwiches, fig cookies, hard shell. His claws just siid |mik, tea. off. It was then that 1 saw | Dinner—8mothered well protected Shelly the Arma- | He instantly curled up in a hull. There was no chancegfor Beau- ty 1o throw him on his back. Beau- | tv id his best to make Rhelly un- {10ll, but he couidn’t do it.” wright, 1925, by T. W, Burgcss) next stof How Shelly ched His Hol Menus fgr_ _th_e Family BY SISTER MARY BY SIs R MARY Breakfast—Orange juice, cream, crisp broiled bacon, roft |cooked eggs, bran and raisin muf- veal steak, " rots, sliced tomatoes, banana cream pie, milk, coffee. The eggs are soft cooked in the bacon fat. The fat should be hot when the eggs are carefully slid into 'it. Then cover the frying pan closcly and reduce the heat. Cook eight minutes and the tops of the eggs will be a delightful pink, the iyolks soft and the whites firm and tender. | Fig Cookies Life’s Niceties || Hints on Etiquette o in 018 ter, 1 .cup Hght brewn sugar, 2 cups flour, 1-2 teaspoon sault, 2 cups Quaker oats, 2 egen, milk, 3-4 teaspoon soda 1 teaspoon cinnamon, 1-2 teaspoon elov Cream butter and gradually beat 1o sugar. Add eges well beaten. Mix dry ingredients, including chopped fiance drops in, who figs. Add milk to f mixture and HINTS ON ETIQUET 1. Is @ general announcement of an engacement made at an engage- ment tea? 2. When the introduces hin |3 Is h a tea usually more ly and drop from tip of ¥poon onto elaborute than most informal teas? ‘oxled and floured pans. Leave about The Answers two inches space between each a fow guom Just quietly cooky. Bake fifteen minutes in a hot ov His Hknlm. sees to it that h'_’ (Copyright, 1928, 1nc.) . Not necessarily, though flowers ' — und refreshments may be especially READ HERALD CLASMFIED ADS lovelv. FOR BEST RESULTS NEA Service cereal, | mashed potatoes, ercamed pew ear- | about ! | One eup chopped figs, 1 cup but- 5 tablespoons ' {then dry ingredients. Mix therough- ! PAINTED SCREENS Before hanging up the screens, | they should be brushed thoroughly | and the frames repainted. All hinges | should be oiled thoroughly at the eame time, NEW PILLOWS Triangular, round and octagonal shaped are new pillows. Taffeta and satin scraps make lovely ones. Also | glazed chintz in small figured pat- terns. MINT SAUCE Spicy gingerbread, with raisins and nuts, makes a nice dessert it served very hot, with some thick pudding sauce to which a little mint has been added. STUWFED BEETS Cold beets can be made into a pretty salad if the centers are dug stuffed inte the hole. Serve two or three on lettuce with French dress- | i, DECORATIVE BERRIES If your strawberries are very big ones and fresh fromi the country, serve them with their stems on, around a little pile of powdered sugar into which your guests can dip them. 'day than at the beginning. in men, out and eream cheese and pimento | Your Health How To Keep It— Causes of [liness BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN Editor Journal of the American Medical Association and of Hygeia, the Hcalth Magazine « The time has passed when big muscles were taken as synonymous of strength. It {8 realized that eo- ordination of muscular activity nnd; proper control of muscles is just as important. | In the development of the, muscles certain ones are associated | with the fundamental activities of life, such as sitting, picking up ob- Jjects and self-protection. These are | likely to develop first, Later on other muscles are eall- ed into effect for such activities as are involved in dancing, heavy lift- | ing, throwing and playing. Measuring Machines Machines have been developed for measuring the powers of the muscles to perform various activities, and comparative studies have been made of children in various groups, as well as of adults in many indus- {at home, | unanimous | tederation, 1928, Stays at Home to Mind Ranch Wisconsin Governor’s Wife is Domestic Person. —_— Madison, Wis.,, April 17. UB—Mrs. Child Training He Has Fred R, Zimmerman, wife of the | governor of Wisconsin, stays at home and “minds the ranch" while her husband is out campalgning. 8he says that is the best way she can be of help. “A wife, of course, help her husband as much as pos MRS, FRED R, ZIMMERMAN sible,” she says, “but I do not be- licve the wife of a public official should make politics her field. “My husband wants nd I want to. So it is The Zimmermans have two sons, Robert, 16, and Frederick Under- wood, 9. Mrs, Zimmerman's hob- bies are music and flowers. She has taken many prizes with blooms from lier gardens, {Commerce Attaches Will Aid Travelers Washington, April 17. (®—Com- meycial attaches in large European | citles will be instructed to act as special pilots to the group of 50 members of the National Federa- | tion of Business and Professional Women's clubs who will spend three months abroad this summer. The gropp will visit the homes, offices and factorles of foreign wo- men engaged in occupations similar to those of American women. The United States department of commerce has announced it will ar- {ghe showed a tendency to write let- jon in I range for the women to be met in each large city by an American representative of the department. Under the leadership of Madesin Phillips, president of the the women will sail | July 20 for London, wherc they will be entertained by Lady Rhondda. Dame Rachel Crowdy of the League of Nations will receive the visitors when they reach the secretariat. The delegation also plans to visit the Women's exposition at Berne. The Soroptimist club in Paris will be hostess to the group during its week stay in the French capital. ‘Election Encourages Japanese Suffragists Tokyo, April 17. (P—Jupanesc general election, the first under th new universal sufirage law in which more than 10,000,000 new voters were eligible to vote, has cn- couraged fhe women of the country in their fight for political equality. Some of the leaders express the ! tries. These studies indicate that the | ur»ngth of children bears a fixed re- | lationship to their body weight. Men with easy jobs make better strength records at the end of a day than at the beginning. In heavy work all workers show poorer strength records at the end of the In women the musclcs of the chest are less well developed than ! Back Muscles Tn women certain back muscles are bettor developed than those of | men, and doctors suggest that men . would excrcise these muscles better if their shirts buttoned in back in- . stead of in front. Women regularly exercise eertain | muscies in the dressing process that are not called into play at all by the average man. | Since the disappearance of the long skirt measurements indicate { greater strength in the leg muscle: of women than used to be the case. Automobile Schools | Draw Italian Women | Milan, April 17. (P—Italian wo- men are turning more and more to driving their own cars, and hence are attending automobile schools to learn all about the innards of the machine. On one of the principal streets of Milan, which {s the chicf automo- bile manufacturing city as well as national agency headquarters for uumerous foreign muy be scen attending lectures and demonstrations. They learn to be mechanics be- fore they are drivers end instruc- tors say the students learn as fast as possible &0 as to get a chance to drive. Texas Woman Totes Gun for Uncle Sam Paris, Tex., April 17, P—A gun bidden in the voluminous eleeve of her ceat and a bright shiny badge pinned under’a bit of lace at her throat are the accoutrements of Misa Della Ashley, deputy United Btates marshall of Paris. Miss Ashley rcceives the eame READ HERALD CLASSIF] AD: FOR YOUR V'ANT! "RABALM HEALED MY VARICOSE VEINS operation. M A Gros, :uw - idy'd ‘- Iu*b— arieass oo Xy ot druggiote. um assignments as the men in her of. fice. She makes arrests, serves pa- pers, represents the federal govern- ment in court and frequently trans- sports prisoners to federal prisons. MENDING MATERIALS Now that clothes are getting fus- sier, the old fashioned sewing bas- ket should hold snaps, hooks, bute tons and so on. Put buttons on one safety pin, anaps in & small bottle to .jar not so optimistic, makes, womemsy belief that they will be given the vote in the near future. but they be- lieve that the influence on the poli- tical parties will be greater than ever before. Dr. Yayo Yoshioka, Tokyo Women's federation, head of the lieves that administrations directed by men alone too much with ideslistic and aca- occupy themselves i demic discussions and touches the practical problems of the commun- | ity to an inadequate degree, “As long as the affairs of our country are administered by men, real prosperity can never be realized,” she says, “We women Tope to do our share when the time comes to lead our country to thc right road that leads to happi- ness.” g0z oY Paris, April 17. (P—A hopey col- ored lace alip is worn under the printed chiffen of & Paul Caret mod- el. Touches of the same lace appear in the drapery at the side of the akirt and §m the puffed foresleeves gathered into very nerrow tight!$ cuffs. The pattern is yellow, red, keep everything handy. blue and black on 8 beige ground. me to stay Lena | be- | is going lo[ BY MRS. WILSON FOLLETT sther of Barbara Newhall Follett, 14-Year-0Old Author of “The House ‘Without Windows" and “The Voy- age of the Norman D.” You can't teach | teach you. children—they hara, I found her changing before | my very eyes. She never has gone to school, for when she was small we lived in the country and there was no good school there, so I be- gan teaching her at home. | that I had to be on the alert all the time in order to kecp up with her. When she was about four years | 0ld, she showed a consistent inter: |in her father's typewriter and mine, b own and learned the alphabet and spelling on the typewriter keys. Found Writing Easy It always has been my theory that Ithe mechanics of writing was diffi- cult for children. I found, with Bar- bara, that she learned the mechanics of typewriting a y as she learned to manipulate her knife and | i fork correctly. Then, not having to| think about the formation of her let- | |ters, an inner stream of expression was turncd loose. I never permitted her to themes cr compositions. | in write v8 write to some- someonc in As a result, that she must alw one; or, at least, have mind when she wrote. | ters. And she has written volumes of them. Many of them have been to famous people. and her cérrespond- enco with people like Walter de la | Mare, William Lyon Phelps, Klinof | | Wylie, Willlam Ellery Leonard and | many others, has been considerable. I never knew when she atarted her first book. Barbara has a charming | habit of giving presents to other {members of the family, receiving them, on her birthdays. Book Was a Gift Three months before birthday, she started “Tht Housc Without Windews” for my birthduy | gitt. She confided in her father | reading him the installments as they came off her typewriter. On her big days, she wrpte four to five thousand few days after her birthday. | We stress regularity, common sense and good health measures in her daily program. Barbar eats | common-sense food, wears common- lnnae clothes and goes in for fresh ir, sunshine and the out-of-doors. she is enthusiastic about sailing and Others | that solves the problem of keeping | iox on ¢ ITer out of doors. Any child with a real interest in life is easy to train, for he is anxious | {to do everything that will help at- | tain his end most effectively. 'Office Seeks Woman Avon, Mass.,, April 17. | out a campaign, without even seck- ! ing nomination, Miss Elinor Shaw | has been elected Avon's first woman | i selectman, thus becoming a mem- ber of the little board that runs the | executive branch of this town's government. Miss Shaw is no old-time resi- dent of Avon. A former supervisor of music at the Rhode Island state | normal school, she took up farm- ing here eight years ago. The way she attended to her business im- nressed the townsfolk and soon the iound herself on town committces. HOUSEWIVES HEAD PATIENTS Hartford, Conn., April 17. (P — Figures compiled from the records of the hospifals here show that in 1927 more patents were treated for fnjuries and 1llness who classed themselves as housewivea than in !any other occupation. On the other )hu.nd. patients who gaid they had | no occupation made up the second ]mup while school workers came | third. ! PARSNIP MOUNDS | Mashed parsnjps, moulded into lit. | tle mounds and entirely covered with shredded parsley make a colorful wvegetable and a surprisingly good one. TEA STAINS Jee-tea stains can be removed from linen by soaking the stain as soon as possible in Javelle water and then pouring boiling water through it BRIGHT CORNER You sometimes can brighten up |& dull corner by proper placing of { mirrors to catch the light or by aqd- ing some lively orange, scarlet and lemon-colored pillows to a corner so- fa. . SPRI Housework is less dreary in spring it the housewife makes herself some bright erange or scarlet smocks or house-Jresses. The pleasure they give far outweigh the cost. STRAWBERRY PIE Bake a ple crust over the back of & pic tin. Fill with custard to which gresh strawberries have been added, and put back into the oven just long enough to heat through. | She was given a typewriter of | even | | avoided using the words. T told her | instead of | her nigth | 'words; the book was completed just | Bay State Selectman | —With- | Easy If lnte rest 1n Life SESE——— Sl(ms of Snakes ; Used in Fashions When I first started to teach Bar- 7 |Latest Advices From Paris | Describe Innovations, 1 found ! Paris —Reptilo skin shoes arc ¢ a spring revival and custom- shops arc talking learnedly hoas, pythons, water snakes zavds, plein and doctored. As prices for the rarer snake skins {mount it hehooves the woman who |is buying them 1o recognize, the |snake she wants when she meets it | Lizard, natural watcr snake and ka- rung are onable but expensive |skins which are “d in imitations | that deceive many an unwary pur- | chaser. Dyed reptilo appears now in rich ades of red, blue and green as [ell as black and natural tones, Boi skin shoes arc shown in bright reds. | aull decp blues, and many shades of green. Mahogany and egg plant are cther shades seen in the shops that make shoes 10 order. Blege, most shoe dealers say, will he the outstanding color for summer shoes, borate shors both for are out of fash- cvening and aytime w te embroidery and feweled decoration has wlmost | disappearcd from the windows of the smartest shoe o String Belt Styles The string helt \m extremely nbrrow width |everywhere in Pavis. They even ap- pear on simple ovening dresses at {one house. The belf, whi¢h is a single string |of strass, is used o great deal by a |leading dressmaker whose ideas are widely followed in Americ She clasps the string of strass around [dwsses of satin, grorgetic and chif- ffon at a point just atop the Lip bone, {fastening it like a necklace without | buckle, [ swumer Ermine Favored Fur Summer ermine and white ermine | dved the color of the summer fur ltop Paris’ list of popular furs for spring coats, Summer ermi d cuffs make {and sum: ‘\\Inul ermiine dyed in ot beige also is widely e with fox coll many of the spring ing wra although delicate tones shown, Dyed :1 shaded chif- fon of nany thicknesses is worn on the Rivie Evening Style Uses Ostrich Glycerined and uncurled ostrich | plumes give promisc of a return to general favor, Madame Jenn dress of tulle, hows:one evening vith a skirt almost, entively covered with long strings uncurled ostrieh quite prominently [on cvening wraps and gowns. RalD A. R. Will Be 97 on 4th of July | Binghamton, N. Y., April 17. (® | —Mrs. Jane Squire Dean, one of the few women who can claim té be a “real daughter of the American revolution,” will celebrate her birthday -.on July 4, wHen she will be 97 years old Mrs. Dean is a daughter of Jonathan Squire, originally of Fair- field, Conn., who, at the age of 12, drove wagons for the “ragged Con- tinentals.” Mrs. Dean was born at Mattewan, N. Y., and is the only survivor of 15 children. ¥ COAXING APPETITES If children’s appetites lag in the spring, try a new, colorful cup, saus cer and plate for them. They wilj take their milk more readily if it iq served in a pretty little pitcher and they are allowed to pour it out. Fashion Plaque Georgette blouse—Japanese-grceg georgette fashions this charming blouse with groups of large tucis caught at the front with flowers ané tabs of the samie material. .

Other pages from this issue: