New Britain Herald Newspaper, April 18, 1928, Page 12

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LOVE'S EMBERS Adele Garrisox!'s Al “Revelations Beginning a New Serial Madge Keeps Her Plans for Mary Marrisou and Noecl Veritzen a Secret “And now I have come to the end of my life story,” Philip Veritzen ®aid, still watching me intently. *You know now why I was so anx- fous to atteng all the functions given for the royal family of Transvania. fThere was a certain healing of my | self-respect in having the Queen of Transvania treat me not only as her | equal, but with a certain deference —T am a heavy contributor to her | pet charities, and—what is even | more to her liking—1 have bought @ play of hers. No doubt you have heard of her literary ambitions. But | of course my purchase of the play is a sccret as yet. Candor compels | me to state that it is an awful thing, which will have to be rewritten completely, as well as furnished with some good central idea, but to | permit her to sell it to me raised by one hundred per cent the self-re- spect trampled by pretty fect years ago.” 1 wanted to tcll him to substitute the word ' for self-respect, but pruder cld my tongue. “It was at that night club where | Noel was playing that the idea of | Nocl's marrying Olg daughter first flashed into my mind,” he went on. rought there by the un- nterest am the as she witehed Nocl play. I had a dozen plaus, but | none of them materialized. T put a tiusted man of my own empioy in a Position where he could find out what was going on in the royal suite e—there are wheels within wheels in | the world you know-—and thus 1| found out the sceret so carefully | guarded from the world; that the | princess had disappeared upon the day before that set for the return voyage, and that her maid, swathed a8 if helplessly 111, had been carried | eboard the ship in a clever dmper- | sonation of her. Tiut I could find no trace of the missing princess, and 1 | dared not employ a detective agency, slthough the man who had discov ered the substitution of the maid for | the mistress spent all his time in | trying to discover some clue to her | @isappearance. | “You may imagine my intrigued | Interest, then, when you told me of the wealthy young Transvanian who had rented The Larches.T am afraid | *3 hinted shamclessly for an invita- | crowds who had seen her distinctive | face with its famous Rapshurg nose, | although you muay not know it, you | bsor_bing Sequel To of a Wife” [tion to vour home, | sure you had an idea that my | anxiety had some connection with your new neighbors. Indeed your | transparent face and your candid | eves told me so.” He smiled whimsically at me, and | I flushed with annoyance. His smile vanished instantly. “Please,” he said with concern. “1 didn’t mean to t you. If you | only knew how T'll get back to my story.” His manner, his unfin tence only confused mic and 1 was int nsely relieved he looked away from i ished the explanation of h in my neighbors of which I b *1 was fully and also' 1 am d sel niore when fin- crest The Larches convineed,” fe said, “that in the person of your young neighbor I should sce the missing princess, although 1 wus curious to know how she had escaped the recognition of somecone among the of her father's family :Jl\\l, h I am thankful T do not But when T first saw her 1 I was utteyl at . al- though it did take me many minutes, with knowledge of physiognomy, detern the truth.” “I think said demure “The water glass ipped covered her identity 1 He flashed a glance at me which subtly conveyed admiration. | “Yes, you are right,” he suid. I | think I may be pardoned a little emotion at that suddenly opened gate to the plan of my dreums. 1 deterniined then that Olina should 80 back to Transvania only as Noel's bride, and so far my plan has been | working out beautifully, What do You think of it?" It was not the time, I reminded myself sharply, 1o express to him my utter disapproval of his project to scparate Noel from Mary Harri- son and join his lifc to that of Prin- cess Otina. So 1 took refuge in flippancy. : “I think.” T sa1d demurely, “that a herits mine wh inherit confess s¢ not my to T moment,” 1 of your as you i stem still are very much in fove with the | Queon of Transvaniu.” Copyright, 1928, Newspaper Feature Service, Inc. How Shelly Reached His Holo By Thornton W. Burgess Temper causes grief and pain And loses niore than it ean gain —Old Mother Nature “What finally happened to Shelly the Armadillo when Beauty the | Occlot had him?" demanded Peter Ralbit, his cycs popping out with excitment, Boomer the Nighthawk chuckled. You never did sce a fellow 8o up- et as was Beauty the Ocelot,” said That cat was so beside himself With anger because Shelly remained rolled up in that coat of shell of his, that he snarled and spit and made a regular spectacle of himself. He cer- tainly was the maddest cat I have ever scen.” “All the time Shelly remained eurled up so tight that in spite of | his strength Beauty couldn’t pull him over, It wasn't for lack of try- ing, but somelow Beauty couldn't | sct hold anywhere, Then he tried | walking off and lying down within Jumping distance and kecping per- fectly still. I guess he hoped that Bhelly would think he had gone | ®way. But Shelly didn't unroll. T | guess o knew when he was well | off. Then Beauty began to poke lim With his paws. Then he began knock- ing bim around. He got rougher and rougher, You his temper got shorter and shorter, Yes, sir, he was letting his temper get the best of | him “All the time Beauty v s growling | Registered U, 8, Patent Office (DILIC]A|T RO N{AJNOIETEIN|A R | A[Y[E[D| V[ TIHID]TIHIE] [S{T[H[T|HHIOIL]T|T|D|E [ [D]EHIE|SIPIOIEIL |1 [O]V] AIN[D|TIU[S|E|H|DIE|EIH|E] TIRIO|P|C|EID|G|O[H]MITIR] EISIHIE[TIU]|G|T]O] NJ 1 [F]S[O[AJLIN]O] Travelet- Hidden in it is a fawiliar quotation. You can unravel it by starting at the let- ter “HL" marked “Start,” and mov- If you liked yesterday's ter Iuzzle, he another. | He Knocked Shelly This Way and | That Way, | time Nhelly landed alinost on his own doorstep, and this time e un- | rolled. Yes, sir, he unrolled like a | flash and disappearcd in his hole. | My, my, how that cat dmf t! You see, he reached there just in time to put onc paw on the end of Shelly’s tail. Of course, he conld not hold it. It slipped right out, Beauty acted as if he were wholly crazy. He began to tear and dig at | the entrance to Shelly’s hole, And] backed away, then L suddenly vowling and snarling and spitting. His eyes and mouth and were full of dirt. Shelly must kicked some dirt his nosc | h back and snarling and spitting. He cer. lisappointed cat. Fi- ot his paw under Shelly | i a quick hard throw. It iy ne. Like a tlash, r him. t. though | thumped the ground hard | ided, hie didn’t unroll a | s too smart for that, This | er than cver. He | this way and that %ot a puw under him threw hini This Ehelly when he la Lit. made knock Once more T and once mor: he | FLAPPER FANNY SAYS: | ' tell you about | Howler the Beauty's face So that is the way that Shelly the dilio makes use of his cdat.” r Rabbit s to have a coat like Y es, it to have a “Huh!™ grunted “What is the matter mine? I'd rather of spears than a coat of shell “And I for my part.” spoke Bobby Coon, “am wholly satisficd | with the coat Old Mother Nature has | | given me.” | Well spoke Kinghird. said b thi cortuinly st like that.” Prickly Porky Wwith a coat like it full | nice e nice | up | replicd Serapper knows cqual | {10 010 Mothe 1t cach one | {needs. We can trust her every tine.” | “Who clse lives down there?” de {manded Peter, | “Oh., S0 | plicd scrapper Tell us about 4 us about ever many prople, them.” demanded them, Scrap- | per sl { turedly, i veplied Scrapper, good na- I tell you about one more Black Howler the Monkey Uve heard about Howler the Woir, spoke up Bobby Coon. “Are Rlack Monkey and Howler the Wolt related?” “Oh, my gooduess, Scrapper. “They no," not 1owl and so ¢ replied | related at | ch | alled Howler,™ ! (Copyright, 1928, hy T. W. Burgess) | How of HANGING BROOMS ! that hang off the last mucl it flaor e tonzer few for this purpose andle of cach broom and brusky I puddin tercamed |diced celery, 1 large onion, 1-2 cup closy ing in one coatinuous line from square to square, up, down, to the left or ght, until the “Finish” is reached o) y letter must be used, once and once only. No diugon nioves may be made, no moves out of bounds of th puzele and no passing through any bluck squarcs. ANSW Calvin_Coolidge, Charles Dawes, Frank Kecllogg, Andrew Mellon, Dwight Davis, John Sargent, Harry New, Curtis Wilbur, Jubert Work William Jardine, Herbert Hoover, | James Davis. NO STAINS ano keys have become stained, rub them with a chamols dipped into a mixture of whiten- ing and methylated spirit. should al- ways washed in clean suds, after using, rinsed thoroughly and dricd on their sides in the sun, | | | Menus for the Family BY SISTER MARY Breakfast—Halves of grape fruit, { cercal cooked With figs, cream, crisp broiled bacon, bread erumb p cakes, syrup, milk, coffee. Launeheon—Savery spinach, hread and butter, jelly, chocolate bread milk, tea, mothered Dinner salmo pea rhubarh L avory hearty family urging. spinach tunchicon will cat delicious dish that the without anxious Savory Spinach One pound spinach 4 cup| 1 slice grated tershire pork. fat che 1 table- teaspoon | rice, salt spoon pork, 1 v sie minee Wash nache through waters. pork i ndecp ¥ covered sauce pan and melt over a low fire. Add celery, and spinach, cover closely and cook oy low fire for fifteen minutes. Add rice 1 cook thirty minutes keeping the pan clo covered. Add pepper and Worcestershire sauce. Stir in cher 1d serve at once. If the rice is allowed to stand in lukewarm water to cover for several hours it should cook tender in thirty minutes and absorh the spinach juice. No water is added unless the does mot become tender in the | spinach stock Dbefore it is absorbed. | Copyright, 19 NEA Serviee, Ine.) | Liand onion. many rice P —Tinglan tching o accentuate fravel worsted sleeves and wool outlining the the slenderness designed by Max The stitching is n darker shule of brown and matehes the bell, whieh is also wopn, IThe coal i Lght w weisht, OPEN SANDWICH Open sandwiches ar being serv- Cliopped |in of a [ coat frequently v a4 et roqn fart eheese ind creans ke deligious sandwishca Your Health How To Keep It— Causes of Mlness BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN JAitor Journal of the American Medical Association and of Hy- gcia, the Health Magazine Orange juice {s added to milk in order to provide vitamin C, which is not present to any great extent in this substance, but which s to be found in fresh fruit juices, to some extent in the leafy vegetables, and in minor quantities in other sub- stances. Investigators in the blochemical laboratory of Cambridge Univer- sity in England have now made a study of orange juice to determine what other vitamins may be pres- ent and to what extent this may be depended on to take carc of vitamin deficlency in the diet, Some years ago it was found that orange juice contained some quan. titics of vitamin A, and early a8 1920 investigators in Yale Uni- versity in this country demon- strated the presence of both vita- mins A and B. Last year investiga- tors in the University of California showed that vitamin E was also present, although in not sufficiently great amounts to have an appre- ciable effect, unless large doses of orange juice were taken, For instance, 1.5 cubic centi- meters of orange juice are suffi- cient to prevent scurvy in a guinea pig because of the content of vita- min C. Ten cubic centimeters are necessary in order to prevent the appearance of deficlency symptoms of Vitamin A in a rat, and 16 cubic centimeters are necessary in order to provide adequate amounts of vitamin E for a rat. The Anti-Rickets Vitamin The English investigators have checked up on all of the observa- fions relative to vitamins A and I, and have added new information relative to vitamin D, the vitamin that prevents rickets and which is found most copiously in cod liver oil. In thelr checkup the British investigators found that orange Juice contains a fairly large amount of vitamin A; in fact, they found that only & cubic centimeters were | necessary to prevent deficlency | symptoms in a rat, instead of the 10 cubic centimeters previously found to be the necessary amount. Vitamin B, which is neccessary for adequate growth, and which hias some relationship to symptoms in the digestive tract, was found to be present in orange juice, and of this a dose of 10 cubic centi- meters was required. Vitamin D The investigation showed that vitamin D js absent from orange juice. This fact was first noted as long ago as 1919. It has been found that children will develop rickets even when faking considerable amounts of orange juice, unless j they have cod liver oil also. It has been attempted to add the vitamin D factor to orange juice by exposing it to the visible rays of ultraviolet from a quartz mer- cury vapor lamp, that vitamin D may be developed in the orange juice by this method. On the other hand, it has not n definitely proved that the ul- same time completely destroy vita- min A, or affect in any other way the qualities of the orange. It seems wiser at present to depend on the old reliable cod liver oil for the vitamin D effect. WHAT PRICE CONSONANTS New York, April 18 (UP)—Advo- cates of simplified spelling received a scvere jolt when Appleton’s an- nounced the sale of Finnish transla- tion rights to V. Poliakoff's biogra- Phy of the Crarina. For the mame of the purchascr was Kustanousosakeybuo Kinja. It seema possible | DEBS INTERPRET THE MODE “Miss Eighteen,” Says Patou, Finds Simplicity in Both Cut and Material Is an Nonchalantly simple — a blue and i white checkered taffeta frock with batistc vestoe, by dean Patou. (BY JEAN PATOU) For NEA Service | April 18, —There is no one | wlio chooses a dress more deliberate. ly than the girl of 18. She is very hard to pleasc but when she does see something she Hkes I feel amply rewarded for'the time and energy 1 may have &pent with her by her | cvident pleasure. Every creator has experienced that difficulty of expressing a sim- plicity which does not assume a ready-made appearance and is at the same time becoming. More- over, only a young girl can ac- centuate or render ridicule to a garment which is unbecoming to her. I mean by that that the elightest exaggeration in her dress is as apparent as her cxaggerated enthusiasms. Attractive Contrast On the other hand, no more | charming interpreter of the mode and its whims can be found than the girl between 18 and 20, when she is on the hrink of womanhood | and has lost her boylsh appear- ance. 8he s distinctly feminine and no morc attractive contrast can be found than a frock made of some old-fashioned material like taffetas or moirc worn by a dcbu- tante., Simplicity is an cssential quality for the “jeunc fille.” The sports frocks of the moment are well suited to her, as far'as her re- quirements for the early part of the day are concerned. Her after- noon frocks also should be ex- tremely simple both in cut and material and always should in- clude some sort of lingeric trim- ming. The Eton type of collar with a bow tie or the round collar and deep cuffs match, although rather boyish are made feminine by the materials used and are synonymous with youth. | This type of accessory, ncedless to| say, would be ‘deplacc” on a young matron. For Summer Wesr ‘The most charming young girls’ dresses always are thosc made of plain material, or else with a de- sign at the same time naif and carefully studicd, Ten years ago I was a great partisan of organdie for summer wear at country or seaside resorts. They undoubtedly looked most ef- fective when worn by young girl. i Modern conditions, however, are such that an organdie dress seems quite out of place and incompat- ible with the vigorous sort of life which she leads nowadays. For an evening dress I think nothing is more becoming’ to a girl in her teens than a dress of the “period” style in tulle, There are scveral in my present collection and my prefercnce goes to either a plain color or a graded cffect. Simplicity in Hats There is another point, the choice of a hat. Here again the utmost simplicity must be the first quality of any hat, for any occa- sion. A too-dressy or t00-sophis- ticated hat is enough to spoil the jmost simple ensemble. This ap- plies to all accessories which are called upon to complete the mod- ern girl's wardrobe, and re- gards jewelry in particular. Generally speaking, I do not like to sce a girl wearing jewels of any sort, because when she does they are gencrally too showy, too obvious. The most charming and well-dressed girls I know wear no jewels at all, or so few that 1 never have been conscious of them. to of aspect, WOMAN'S CLUB WORK Madison, Wis., April 18. (P—An cademic course in woman's club work has been added to the curri- culum of the niversity of Wisconsin extension division. A selected out- line for club study programs with a professor who will be available for instruction to groups all over the state are the outstanding features of the new course. SUNDAY SCHOOL RECORD Mexico, Mo., April 18 (UP)—Dave C. Owen, 58, of Mexico claims the state, if not the national record, for having attended Sunday school the greatest number of consecutive !times. He has not missed a Sun- |aay in 34 years. He has the half- century mark as his geal. He has ! carried his Bible with him every one of the 1.800 Sundays and has been | |througb it five. umea | Essential Quality of Her Spring Wardrobe. From pale to deep green—a youth- Saartly Sunder is the Eton ful evening frock of sombre tiers collar and cuff idea worked out in with dippings sides and a modest lace and organdic on a black flat decolletage crepe frock. xLaundry‘ Wok |Dout Pamper Your Child--- Urges the Mother of David Putnam. Bemg S_tudied British Hope to Cut Wear and Tear on Clothes, Hendon, Eazland, April {7, - British housewives new ar~ assured by their Jaundries that theie cholee linen no longer will come buck ruined, The British laundrios in establishing a scientific research which solves all luun- dry problems, devises better means of washing so as fo give satisfac- tion to the housewifr, keeps down the cost of laundry work and de- vises ways to turn out white, glossy §00ds with the least possible wear. | 11 a silk stocking goes home fo | its owner with a ladder in its side, | and is sent back with a brisk de- mand for damages, the reascarchers investizate the manner in which the stocking might have becn weakened. Damuged goods are examined un- der a microscope, fabrics arc tested | for strength by a pressure gauge, | effects of cleansing processes arc | observed through a glass window in the washing machine, colors are | tested by means of tinted discs and | the causes of color fading are in- vestigated at the research station, which is aided by the national gov- crnment. Editor's Note: This is the third of a series of five es written for The Herald and NEA Service by the mothers of famous children. In ob- servance of National Child Health Pay, May 1. they disclose their prin- ciples of child traini By Mrs. George Falmer Putnam Mother of David Binney Putnam, Boy Author David Binney Putnam is an en- tirely normal American boy. i luckiest attrilute is a fine physical equipment, Not quite 15 ye: old, he tually is more than six fect tall, and weighs 160 pounds. His pounds arc real hone and muscle, 135, have united Life’s Niceties Hints on Etiquette e 1. What has always been the | proper way to announce an cngage- | ment? | Do girls of good family some- times prefer, nowadays, to just tell the news to a few relatives and | friends and let it spread? i 3. What form can tak the party | The Answers 1. Etiquet demands nouncement party. 2. Yes. 3. Lunchcon, fea, dance, dinner parf other form of Give Children Some Say on Own Family If all childrea are given a voice in the family councils and a share in the family responsibilitics and treated with the sume courtesy and consideration as adults they will respond by surprisingly cffective cooperation and develop a more worthy and intelligent type of citizenship. Homes conducted on the autocratic, ccause 1 told you to” linew, are just as poor soil for the growth of democratic ideals as the homes where spoiled chil- dren are the family tyrants. an an- a almost any breakfast, ); 3 o David Bir y Putnam too. In part, that physical equip- | ment is due, I suppose, fo the simple out-door lif: and athletic ex- pericnces he has enjoyed for the last four years. Primarily, T believe American boys were less “brought up,” they would be better off. By that T mean if they were given more of a chance to bring them selves up, they would profit, We always have tried to put David on Nis own. He has not been pampered. We have tried 1o make him help himself and care for himself, He never has had a nursc or a governess. In his early lifc he looked to h mother for all that sort of thing. And latterly he has been out on expeditions — some of them protty strenuous—with his father. In our home lifc we always have fried to make the boy, even from his earliest years, a part of the family. He has always been at the table with us and has always been encouraged (o meet itors on an ;(qmll footing. e has been en- | couraged to talk and made to fecl, | I think, that intelligent listening {is an even more important social function, | Summed up, what scems to me {2 good motto for parents might be | “Less pampering and more inde- | pendence.” Keep Close Watch on Appetite of Youngster Is the child’s appetite good? 1f not, is it becausc: He eats between meals? He s finicky in his choice of i foods? I He is overtired ? He takes too much “feels full” quickly? i He is indoors most of the fand inactive? for | 1 READ HERALD CLASSIFILD ADS that if Fashion Plaque physically or mentally liquid and time Knotted bands of white.cdged bhrown kid make nnusual cuffs beige spring gloves

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