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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, LOVE'S EMBERS Once Qvers Adele Garrisml’a Absorbing Sequel '{o “Revelations of a Wife” Beginning a New Serial een Gives Mad A claan Alcrican ancestry 1o be in- Swrong Hint of Wis Love for Her | forior to that of son with its At my comient that 1 thought he | huckground of illegal union? | was still voery much m love with the e put up a protesting and un- Queen of Trans my employer derstanding hand as he saw the dis sprang to lis feet, his face dark- | taste in my face ened by u fro ¢ ot all propor- You musin't misunderstand me,” tion to tin - cmark T had 'he said. I s no disapproval of | made. I recal o storics 1 had | Mary uiy actions. | read of the arrogane: And an tully conscious of the | terized the royal house of Hapsburg, suporiority of her unsullied ancestry | whose blood flows s veins, 10 that of my poor boy. But Noel and made the mental comuent t s my son, and I am sure some day | B had his full < o trait. will shure my bitterness at the deal Exidently of e to | which Fate Las given him. If 1 can | hear the story of his vouth, includ- | give him back part of his heritage ing his romantic ihiment to the f by & marriage with the I'rinccss of Princess Olga, now Quecn of Trans- | Transvania, 1 must do it vania, did not pevmit the lese Was the man blind that he could | Hesty of ev armless a jest a8 not see of what ditferent fibre Noel I had offvred him. But 1 did not|was made? He had told me but a 8t my levity. Better to have ! few minutes before of the “gentle- Rim rivially angry, for T saw ihat | loving girl,” Nocl's mother, yho had | Ne was 1ot seriously concerned, th brou “comfort, dignity and 8 face the <eeper wrath which 1| beanty™ into his life. There was the Was airadd would have heen direc boy's heritage, not the arrogance toward £1 had tr v v, childish ambitions which swered 1 n to what pervert Philip Veritzen's thought of bis plan to have h Uy clear judzment Norl marry the fugitive Pring He did not give me a chance to Olin reply even if 1 had wished to do so, | Not that I rsp nd 1 1 that for the present gileut upon t point 1 1 Lie was willing to waive the opinion yrotest, aud that vigorously, as v of his cour tor which ha &s 10 do everyt e wer asked. Stili standing he put o quick, | thwart h f feit it could | terse questio | Bring only 1 to four “Have you any remotest idea of Mary Harrison, Princes the nature o dunger menacing Neritzen and o Georges. the Princess?” meant to justify the appellation of | “Nothing definite enough to put Mchiavellian which he himself had | into words.” 1 cvaded, “but I am | given me, in my dealing with that hoping that e hersclf soon will | delicate problem, and as a first step | tell me what 1s alarming i 3 looked up with carcfully simulated “Then is nothing T can do | tontrition «at ius frowning face. but see that sha is safeguarded “Please ve me” 1 said before | every hour of the duy.” he couid speak. “I should not have “That, of itself, is rather a phrased that ‘hou a jest. 1t mendous undertaking,” I smil really is too sacred a matter to be is ono that will be fulfille treated lightly. 1 wm sorry.” clared didactically. “And now, His frown vanished and he looked | softening his tone, and holding out @own at me with eyes that twinkled | his hand in farewell, “I must go fn embarrassing comprebension of | and deploy my defenders—I trust 1 wmy thoughts, | have the right jargon. Au revoir un- No, you are not sorry at ail.” he | til tomorrow when 1 will report any aid, you will excuse so unpar: unusual in our night's wateh. donal) ntradiction of vour & Please Mo not scorc my plan to gertion. You simply are trying to | hastily and—disabuse your mind of get out of reply to the question | the notion ti I am still in love X asked you. But I do not need your | with the Queen of insvania, or, answer to know that yon disapprove | indeed, with any other woman ex of my plan, Your sympatlies, un- | cept—but this is not the fortunately, are enlisted in the ex-| He was out of the room I fore T tremcly youthful, ephemeral, and | could rise from my chair, leaving wndesirable affair hetween my young | me wondering in agitated displ gub and Mary Harrison.” sure what he had meant by It was my turn to frown. Was it | abrupt queer ending of lis possible that in his ridiculous long- | speech. ngs to appease the thwarted vanity Copyright, 142 of lis youth he considered Mary's iFeaturs which promy “My father’s a taxiderm “A taxi—what?” i e S. Newspaper rvice, Tne, MEENNE EE!NEH O[CIYINJOE] [S[M]OJO[N]P] The Howler of the Jungle. By Thornton W. Burgess. Bad reputations oft are found To rest on nothing wore than sound. Mother Nature. Petor Iabibit and Bobhy Coon and | Prickly Porky © Porcupine de- | manded that Serapper the Kingbird | gell them abont the Howler of the Jungle, "way down in the Tropies. It w o see Prickly Porky taking an interest in anything ex- gept the next mouthiful of food. You Know Prickly Porky scldom pays ny attention to anything excopting | his stomiuc visit- ors who had come down from the ¥ar North during the severe winters had told | of Howler the Wolf, ®o he was i right away when Scrapper mentioned the Black | ugg course, Tl belleve Howler who lived in the Jungle “You suy that Howler the Wolf | end this Black Howler you have | You never have seen anybody who | mentioned not related at all,” i Bentioned aro | looks the lcast bit like ~that f("wMenus for the Famlly “If that is the | jow." , T suppo different type of Trav- | . Hidden in it 1h names of 20 ditferent tlowers, You can unravel it by starti at the letter “R,” marked “'Sta and moving in one continuous line, from square to square, up, down, to the left or right, until “Finish” s reached. Every letter must be used, onee and once only. No diagonal moves may be madc, no moves out of bounds of the puzzle and no passing through any black squares, But some of t erested you." de- clared Bobby Coon stoutly ‘ v don't look at all He has four legs, hasn't he "I demanded Bobby. Breakfast—Grape fruit scctions, | plied Scrapper, “he has cercal cooked with figs, cream, to- 3 | mato omelet, crisp toast, milk, cof- Black Howler,” suid v T know And 1 suppose he has a fail” fee absolutcly tha are Mot 20Nk 10 { quoke up Peter Rabbit | Luncheon—Spinach souftle, haked | like to talk | R R ! age pudding, milk, tea. At nd artul AT, My eooanass || Pt loaf, creamed car. how lLe can use that tail:” prois ameid ieant isatg | cT- voul" de- licd rhubarh, three-layer cake, milk, “Maven't | Teter was all interest at onee, He | e hen you | always is intercsted in tails. He had | oppi jg ghe soason of the opened his month to ask another when cake is a most convenient auestion regarding that tail when thing to have the house. A des- Pobly Coon spoke Isert of fresh it served with cake Well,"™ said Bobby testily. “¥ he's [ig always aceeptable and m.mr-s«} four logs” and o tail, what 8 o claborate’ last minute prepara- | ihout him that is going 1o Itions. | ke it o hard for us to believe Three-Layer Cake | what you tell us? Masn't lic a fur | alf cnp molasses, 3-4 cup | coat {butter, 5 cggs, 1 e i, % enps | tainly. plicd Serapper, “he flour, teaspoons baking powder, | tnr coat. You didn’t th he |1 1 cinnam ! erod one, did you?! ground ginger, 1-1 teas perhaps he didn’t have spoon salt, 1-4 cup cleaned cplied Bobby. “Now currants, 1-4 cup seeded raisins, 1-2 | this mystery abont? cup milk, 1 teaspoon vanilla, pink ! What 15 thut is going to be so coloring. hard for us to believe 2 Heat mol and add 1-4 cup “Well, Tl tell you,” replied Scrap- | butter. When butter is melted “Black Howler looks a whole stir in soda. Add 1 cgg well 1 “,] t like one of wo-legged en. Add 1 cup flour mixed and | creatures called men. Of eourse, he sifted with cinnamon, ginger, 1 tea- | isn't as big as 4 man by a great spoon haking powder and 1-4 tea- | deal, dust the same he looks a [8poon salt. Add currants and mr' | “T don't know | tell vou alout spoon - cach hese whole lot like one.” to a »oth batter and pour into Petor looked at Bobby Coon, an oiled and flonred layer cake pan, Bobby Coon looked at Prickly Por- Bake twenty-five minutes in a luml-] kv, Prickly Porky looked at Scrap. ecrately slow oven. Use this for the per, and all three slowly €hook their bottom laver of the cake | heads. This was a little more than Cream rematning 1-2 cup butter ! they could believe, Scrapper cer- and beat in sugar. Add remaining | tainly was trying to “stuff then 4 eggs one at a time heating cach s the saying is. That any one wear- egg thoroughly into mixturc. Mix ing fur could possibly look liks and sift remaining flour, baking tian was more than they could swal- | powder and salt and add alternate- low Iy with milk to mixturc. Divide 1 knew it,” declared Scrapper. | this batter into two par {“1 knew it. T t the st part add raisins and cnough pink | that you woulduw't believe me, Tt coloring to make a tty pink. | 1 can tell yon o ing, and that Add vanilla to batter L if you could i m howl you and bake vach oulid be ready lieve almost cake pan. Use the mixture nything, It cortamly would give you |for the middle layer and the white REG U5 FaT OFF the ereeps, Y it g inilla [« 1 Put ©1228. BY NEA SERVICE. INC. ou thi . pottios At hoiled (Copyright, 1328, (A and decorat a4 sides . “itlack Howler k ith halves of or Son tics arc <o quict you can | hear a pint drop. walnuts. I ist.” ““Oh, he was RIETTTRIO[E[T[STAMIV]ETT] DA[STE[SLIC[YIN[E[M[E[P] S| IAIVI1[o[HIR[TIH[S[WIE] UiclO[R[C]A] SILIILIVIM] [1|RTA] [ [NJAIG|O[L ] UIMIRIE[GD] 0151 ]A[DIP[SINTAR|C]T] OILID[LIN[Y]AT]X]o[P[S]S] AlE[D]SINIR[T]LTH]UTS] ANSWER Hey diddle diddle, the cat and the fiddle, > The cow jumped over the moon. The little dog laughed to see such fine &port, And the dish ran away withr the spoon. of Aeses 94Y To one | Paris, April 14, (#)—Louiscboulan- ger makes @ simple sports dress of washable blue silk with a faney IFrom the narrow. up- inding collar 1o the dissemble Vigh waistline {i. dress is typical of smart sport ostumies for €pring. Crys buttoas fasten the blouse nd cufs. weave. “A taxidermist. What's yours?” THURSWAY, APRIL 19, 1928, By C. D. Batchelori! | | just a pedestrian.” Your Health How To Keep It— Causes of [Mlness RBY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN Edior Journal of the American Medical Association and of Hy- gcia, the Health Magazine Infections of the lungs and of the breathing tract are no new thing to human beings. They were carefully noted by physicians long before the Christian era. ho changes that take place in the lungs in pneumonia fully recorded by a pathologist the Dbeginning of the century, Bronchitis, which is limited to the inflammation of the tubes that carry the air into the lung tisfues, s differentiated from pneu- monia more than a hundred years ago. Today pneumonia inflammations of the tract are the second largest of death ull over the temperate zone. Climate Counts Many entific ~ studies been made to find out not chmatic conditions are re- | if Ychudi were care- | practices with the Bohemian | that other boys pla: named Rokitansky at |go to bed at T nincteenth | ugo, the hour was changed and the | feel that i o) breathing | and fast rules or that they arc be- | cd in anything” proved so original 1 get more causc | ing put through a schedule. have | time whether or | guires Child's Talent AN OLD-FASHIONED GIRL Is Dependent ' | SCORES IN MODERN ART Lillian Gaertner, Just 21, Decorates Leading Theaters Editor's Note: This is the fourth | and Designs Rugs. of & serdes of five articles written for The Herald aud NEA Service by mothers of famous children. In obscrvance of National Child Health Day on May 1, they disclose theie | principles of clyld training. . By Mrs. M. Menubuin Mother of Yehudi Menuhuin, Boy Violinist Although a good many parents seem to imagine otherwise, there is nothing mystical about the up- bringing of u talented child—not of my son Yehudi, anyway. Music has been the life of oyr family, but since feel that health is superior cven Yehudi Menuhuin to miusic, Yehudi and his two young- er sisters have been reared to feel that first of all they must keep well, They lead sane, ordered lives. ‘There is no effort to cram | them. ! Without good lhealth, T doubt | would have been able to develop his talent. His art would have suffered with his body. I belleve that esthetic attainment, i sranted native ability and train- ing, is in direct proportion to the | oy o health of the body. Distary fads | = e eated in oversthing,” the|abide modern poetry, Miss Gaert have no part in our program. Our gyt hi , sl i | principal of an exclusive girls' | ner is @ book collector of no mean chilqeen eat gocd, wholssome. food w York complained 1o |ahility—concentrating on biog and eleep regularly, They drink a |8chool in 2 great dugl u;’ wilk and v;’u quanti- | mother 1 years ago. phies, hooks of historic moment g 8 dreams m~|:m.>. vegetables, | “She just sits and i e “g;.:s €AL"SII|II'I|,\' | draws pictures all over the hooks Eapert Eque ne This is‘ n average day in our | 8he is supposed to study. She doesn't| Almost any inornin it one Boiasholi: rising bell, 7:30: | in the least upply herself to her les- | up short ¥ after dawn, he migl baths; calisthenles; breakfast; [8oDs ; S EDY Mse Ggaclier BINING stk | music practice and lessons; lunch; | The culprit in the case, a ?"l\sll!\l“’"v ial path mpanicd by Bal- two or threc hours of play in the | little 14-year-old girl with expressive | iur, her Austriun cpen air; dinner; evening calis- | Dig black cyes, stubbornly set her| figure in smart to sadde thenics: bed. {lips and waited until the principal |in a most military manner, for she We make no cffort to force Y- | departed. Then she Burts out rebel- | learned 1o ride in a cavalry school Mudi to practice. His violin al- | liously lin Vienna. wayas has been his favorite toy. 1| “When I grow up T shall do| Th . ways has been his favorite toy. He | BOthing all day long but paint and streak of sanic delight | paint, With gorgeous color. 1 wish | young artist He used to |l werc grown up right now—or “I love to juttor Not long | dead house once in w while she sl {08, Off 1o Europe — Alone Lingly confuss “Sometimes ) except | “If you feel that wuy about it, | knock off puinting day or so plays a | Lillian, you shull quit school right | and just ‘zo domestic’ — cookin said the child’s un- | maki . sweeping, dusting. | D think ther a isfaction home making for mo: women Woik s Relaxation “But as tor e, 1 paint becans satistuet thun from anything cls. Lillian Gacrtner . . . “really not a modern'™ Lillian is | novel elear through and ¢ mold-tashioned domestic in h wound 1) 7 o'clock. is never varied or when | X concert days, he has (DNow to paint, derstanding father and mother. No Rigid Rules And o Lillian Gaertne iled for We never allow the children to | Europe thut very summer, alonw. they are living by hard The little girl who “wasn’t interest- His routin on Sunday concert. On a nap in the afternoon. timg. sponsible for the high incidence of this type of disorder. known Bi recently concluded that a drop in the temperature below the nor- mal for the season of the year is likely to be assoclated with an increased number of deaths from such diseases, In London studies have . been | made to find out just how the fogs may be associated with deaths from bronchitis and pneu- monia, Leonard Hill, the noted British physiologist, is convinced that emoke and fog interfere with the passage of sunlight and are 'lhul directly associated with in- | creased mortality. Records kept for hundreds of years of climatic changes and of the incidence of fog have been | studied in relation to the' number ot deaths from respiratory dis- cases, There are so many factors fn- volved that it is difficult to draw definite conclusions, but recent studies again scem to show that sudden changes in tre more certainly related to | bronchitis and pneumonia than | the incidence of smoke and fog. | ‘Treatment One of the these discascs is that they are most fatal in old age and in youth. | Ior this rceason records of varfous | kinds of tréatment must always be studied in relationship to the ages of the persons treated. Nowadays the most important factor in recovery from pneu- { monia s #killful nursing. In Lon. don during 1920, as recorded by | Epidemiologist Hilda Woods, only | 18 per cent of 5315 deaths from | pneumonia occurred in hoapital jand nursing homes, and 22 per- jeent in poor-law institutions, whereas 60 per cent of the deaths occurred in patients treated with- out special nursing at home. U. S. Now Healthiest Country for Babies Washington, April 19. UP—A two- thirds reduction in the infant mor- tality rate of this country is the chief accomplishment of public child welfare work, which this year celebrates its twentieth anniversary. Dr. Josephine Baker, of the New York Public Health Service and the Child Hygiene association, after a_conference with representa- tives of the children's bureau here, announced mortality rate had during the years, the rate had declined until the United States las become the healthiest country in the world for habies and children., remained static A well | gent thought. We attempt to deal sh epidemiologist has | intelligently with our temperature | main features of | that while the maternal | infant death | To be healthy requires intelli- given the appreciativ con fort of the doctor's yroecdir courage and dignit Fashion Plaque That | and facile with her brushes that she would be an unnecessary v | was admitted to the Academy of Art|tor both recreation amd rela fatiguing strain. We do require | in Vienna when she still was 14— 11 is no hardship for ne to { aystem, for we believe that to have | the youngest person cver so lon-|long hours, for 1 love it for both work and play re- |orcd. Iu fact, Miss Gacriner fecls intelligent application of | Now Lillian Gaertner, just furn- it she ever chose between a eans {ed 21, has another honor to add toand muarriage, it would be th her long list of eredits abroad and, | fornivr. during her past 1wo years, he “Bo far 1 never have had to giv children. | She been chosen to design | anything up for my painting,” sh | Yehudi has gratitied us by his dis- | modernistic rugs and carpets to | admits smiling. My parents Jin ipl y of talent but neither of his | complete mmlj nistic rooms ."r en m::r\ l:l)vlor.duwfm-.' and tol ! parents feel that his up-bringing | contemporary furniture—tic fiest | crant. But it 1 should love i man is different from that of any nor- | American woman to b selected énd he vesented my painting, I mal, healthy chiid. for this new ficld of work. afraid 10 choose painting. | i Paints Theater Mulr:h : = — Miss Gaertner is best known for N = ’ ker theater work. She painted thc Helpfu! Hints Rega‘u!mg Llf " N § 24,000 square fect of colorfui Care of the Children mural for the Ziegfeld Theater, de- Eating, slecping and climination £s iceties | signed the stage seftings and cos- | —establish these three habits and i i | tumes for such notable Broadway |you have built a firm foundation Hints on Etiguette | productions as “Much Ado About|for your child’s micntal and phyei i ~ | Nothing,” “The Straw Hat,” “The | cal health, 1. 1f an engagement s announc- | Viencse Review,” and others. e {ed at a dinner, are both men and | Right now she is putting N Al e (il who s frecls | women usually included as guests? |1ahour day doing @ series of | ‘e RO T | 2 If an cngagement luncheon is | charming juvenile screens—vivid, | yoreonts can honestly com igiven, arc men ever invited? | fascinating pictures of Joan of | g g it O 3. Is a regular announcement| re, the Crusades, some of the . (pin (g lever made of the engagement at|carly English invasions and other et ot such affairs? | Nistoric tales that delight children. At The Apswers !Indefatigable, this young woman . 3l | puints with ‘a passion for WOk | h. il who s fricked iun 2. Just women, and the girl|¢pat is astounding. lEslis ot ter e e |should ‘be sure fo lnclude her| “There are only two excuses fOF | reaysurcd by a fussy. solicitou flance’s sisters and mother. la woman's having a career,” she.| po eaSIted, I i (s, soifciton 3. Somctimes, but a more sub- | iniazes one by saying, if she can | et oU0 el worried, | {fle way of transmitting the news b induged fo quit painting 1ORE | grace imseir. On the ot b is better. 4 enough ~ to chat & while in that | {5 i poliine 1o e | | pleasant studio of hers overlook- | child 1o mect the pain 11 POLKA DOTS | ing the Hudson. | An oyster white tussah silk | Should Heed Talent | frock har an unique round cc''ur, | “Fipst, if u woman has any tal- | ths outside border and ties being | ont, Jarge or small, that drives o {of dollar sized black-white polka ner, she will be happier if she | o toei jdots and the center of pin-point jeeds jt. Second, if she must sup-|cpins” e jport herself, she often can find| (5r ticir conters. One with a four {real joy in working, and I think |y yorder of orang. has blacl she should make a career of it.!yeq’ ereen and oranee in i | Otherwise T think all women areT fiovors for its eoutor ! happier and better fitted to be de- 5 Eadpen corative social creatures and home- | FLESH BROADCLO |makers, Men really are much, - goreq broudcloth | more suited to work; they seem | plogh color, and doulile { constructed to slave and enjoy it! jacket with a black velvet p | “You sce, 1really am mot aljs gne of the most intriguingi modern.” says this strikingly | yovel of spring cutfits, young woman with unrouged lips ol and unpainted cheeks. “It is PAILASSON STRAW curious how my work is called| A black and white plaid pailla: wodern, It really fs primitive and | son straw hat is extremely smart its very simplicity has much in|pound in striped ribbon, with common with the severity of the | cockade of the same on the crowi. sophisticated modern. But I have = never in all my years of painting, PRINTED ENSEMBL drawn from: life. All of my fi§-| A tan, brown and orange very ures are imaginative, from the | gmall printed silk makes a charm. childish _ illustrations I drew in|ing ensemble of frock with pleated Grim’s Fairy Tales, on.” skirt and cape with pleated flounce. | True, therc is nothing of the flapper about this young woman. KERCHIEF SCARF Night clubs have no appeal for An evening wrap of ombre grey { her. satin lame has a double kerchie! She pronources New York's|knotted over one shoulder for a | hectic rush aiter amusement “tir-|novel collar, {ing and futile.” With her Euro- and white—A very chic new | pean background, she likes the NEW NOSEGAYS a turned-down brim of | cpera. classical piays, soclal eve-| A tiny basket of metal holds white coarse straw, with a crown | nings where interesting folks talk [crystal flowers in colorful fashior |and large how at the back of mavy | of their interesting wo for a new imported nosegay for blue felt. | Though she never has read a|the coat lapel, - il PR R T I -y e e