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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, APRIL 20, 1928 W - LOVE'S EMBERS Adele Garrisoq’s Absorbing Seguel To “Revelations of a Wife” - Beginning a New Serial Two International Romances Engage | planned, he'll never spill the truth the Attention of Madge and Lillian |about his birth.” “What's the matter, old dear? T'm glad you agree with me ¥bu look about as happy as a drug | it i3 unboly.” I commented. store clerk counting out stamps You never heard me i) Did dear, old Phil say something |thing else” she rctorted. “I'll ad-| upsetting to your mental digestion?” | it it's going to take some skill to | Fillian's bantering wvolce effec- {unscramble all the eggs now in the ) tively Jorked mo out of the unpleas. | [TYINE pan, what with Prince (!hnul ant conjecture into which Philip | UDAgining herself in love with Nocl, Veritzen's apparently carcless refer- | and Prince Georges daffy about | enge 1o some woman he loved had |MAry, while our two youngsters don't | gent mic. know just whers re e Gihine thing I'm glad of. Mary doesn't personally know Georges’ rank. There's a cer- he hold mc tain glamour about a prinee, you which, with Lknow, to a girl of hr age, hig part, has me p | | | | that | any- | that mattered to me 1 St a most astounding tale its resnltant pla on led—and up- varicate s 1 nodded soberly, for I did not see | just how the unscrambling of which | spoke conld be managed in the . Philip Veritzen’s powerful | aid | mfuenee ol Dot worry over that par Lo | MOW." Lilllan admonished “We have ali the tin to lay plans for the two i old und Be am sure ed. “H ish you the seal of seercey not. to 1 suid that lie I when e seriaim ial his vouth ed your the only I do not ¢ T am . tup n me cause he f that was voiced he ha Story, anywiy “T should draw tortures if you didn't Deen by the time d he went vou of it sharply. in the world spiking of the “rnational romances.” as the society reporters used to call them. Just now we've got something far more important on our hands Thank heaven, Phil's attending to the guarding of Olina and 11| put Dicky wise to the fact that a | little precaution around the farm- | house might 1ot be a bad thing. Of course, you cannot tell him this Veritzen angle of Olina’s story, Vorl while Phil probably was willing for | me, his oldest friend, to hear it, he | certainly wouldn't want Dicky, of all | people. to make merry over it, as he | surely would do. The Dicky-bird | doesn’t deserve much confidence anyway He certainly has doubled for m on the subject of that red-bearded man in the shack, But dou’t you think we'd better tell him | that we know Eleanor Lincoln | is really the real princess Olina?" | “He probably knows it anyway,” | T suid. not troubling to conceal my | resentment at Dicky's continued and | ostentatious parade of some with himself over the red- man in the shack. | Lillian shot a quick glace at me, | “He probably does” she assented “but it won't do any harm to ch up with him. However, if 3 like I'll take over that little job and | lcave you free to lock yourself with that code-written paper from the back of Olina’s miniature.” | but objection he at others to tell you the by said. out slow she W weighty conf safep he took in out of here, were as pressed fy time as that h friend of the simile quoters, the one-armed paperhanger So spill all you know and gucs: You'll just have time before dinne while you and Phil were Katie asked me if we could d early as long as Dicky and your mother were not going to be here T believe there's an especial thriller on at the movies T took the ehance yow'd approve and gave her permission to feed the menagerie earl making it as if he talking, s0 course,” T assented, and when had made herself comfortable ¢ chair opposite me, 1 told | her every work I could remember | of my thrilling interview with Philip | Veritzen. ade no comment! whatever had finished, then she sprang to her feet and began to | pace up and down the room. ! “Well! Who'd have thunk it of | our Phil.” she said. with her usual| trick of hurlesqueing any amazement or emotion she may feel. “Carry- ing a secret like that around with | him all these vears! And what a bit for Broadway! But it vill never reach them, for even if Phil pulls off this unholy marriage stunt he's she st | arded (Copyright, 1928, Newspaper Feature Service, Ine.) BLACK HOWLER AT HO! By Thornton W. Burg: To kinow a person you must be Where something of his home ~—Serapper the Kingbird. Peter Rabbit was very sir, Peter was vel please, Scrapper,” said he, “I am ready 1o belleve anything ‘you tell me. If you-should say that Black | looks” exactly like Farmer Boy, I'd belicve it." | Scrapper Iaughed right out, “Well, | i said he. “He doesn't | P : ! look a bit like Farmer Brown's Boy 3 and yet he does, If you know what I mean.” Peter shook his head. he, I don't know what you mean. “Well, what I mean is" said Scrapper, trying to cxplain, “that | yon = | meck. Yes, | meek. “If you | th “No,” sald You're getting me all mixed up,” |13 up | I 12, Black Howler is shaped a whole loi like one of these two-legged cr tures we call men.” “Is he two-legged?” Bobhy Coon. “I told you before that i four legs. Yet he is two-legged, too. “You're getting me all mixed up,” tnquired 4= sleeps In the tree lis really at home | per. declarcd Peter Rabbit. ywhere vlse “Does he have a hole in a tree the | wi don’t think #0,” replicd Scrap- | 14. T don't believe he | 17, “He's @ big fellow and it would | 1o, take a big hole. I've seen him sleep- | g ing in the crotch of a tree, ko I don't think he has a Jole for o | home. My, you should hear him when the sun comes up in the morn- ing! Or when it thunders!™ Peter looked up quickly, “Whe has thunder got to do with it? asked he, “1 dow’t know,” “I could never n | is jealous or scared. But when 1t | thunders Black Howler certainly | loes make the Jungle ring with the sound of his voice. I don’t eall it owl myself. TUs more half roar vk and ends up with a whole ts. 1 don’t blame anybody | cold shivers when 1 Almost wakes up to wake up | rest of his fam- Lim and for a little declared ePter Rabbit. “How can he be four-legged and two-legged at th wame time “Well, it's this er. “His front o' arms. When ground, which isn often, he travels on four le Ve sits up and stands up that way, | when he is in the trees, viiere hie is most of the really like way,” legs are he s very hut replicd mor: on the ¢ replicd Ser out whethe per. too. And b which is time, thos: arms, and Langds.” ke 1 ront his are half 1 lot of & who has the bear it for 1 v morning 1wk Howler rvhody ey | first time wlien he comes o travels onght most of starts in The in lse oin in witl 'Once Overs By C. D. Batchelor Rogistered U. S. Patont O1fice | l Two long border words, one hori-| {zontal and one vertical, and a great |10, number of five-letter words, feature 11, is puzzle. Horizontal i Restores Rounded convex molding. . To love exceedingly. Part of verh to be. Every. Got up. . Not hollow. . Flutters, . Verbal. . Homeless children. Seventh not in scale ‘Woolly surface of cloth. Commander. Open wooden vessel. . Deity. . To acquire knowledge Glasswort. . Closes, as an envelope Hazard. To pursue. Sheltered place. 3.1416. Ehe European clk. . To entwine threads into fabric. . That learned by:memorizing. Corruptly. Vertic Togically 1. Studied Stop! To proiit. Courageons . Bad. . Behold. . Duty. 8. Entrances. Your Health How To Keep It— Causes of Tliness BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN Editor dJournal of the American Medical Association and of Hygels, the Health Magazine. The first man definitely studied 1 and found to be color-blind was John | Dalton. To the horror of his Quaker |relatives he bought himself some scarlet stockings instead of dark brown. The most common Yorm of color blindness is that affecting red and green. These probably appear to the color blind person as a sort of gray. A pupil of the British physi- ologist, V. H. Mottram, was red- green blind. To him - blue was a warm color, since he assoclated blue which he could see with the blue summer sky. On the other hand | red meant absolutely nothing to him | but grayness and drabness. How We Sec Color Color s a*sensation excited in the | eve by wave-lengths of light. If sun- | light is passed through a triangular | piece of glass it breaks up into light waves of different lengths and of dif- | ferent colors. 2 | These colors thrown on a Foreigner. ’ |screen constitute the spectrum, be- To drink dog fashion. ginning with red ut one end and Competitive exhibition of wares. | running down to violet at the Aquatic mammal. | other. . Bulb flower. In most instances ecolor blindness To stop. i | is hereditary but disease affecting Black viscid fluid. jthe retina, the photographic screen . Rental contract at the back of the eye, by which we L HRswers o Yl sce, may also produce indiff —Pterced by a bullet. | y P e erence to - | cotora. Kind of fuel. There also are disturbances af- To ery as a dove. | fecting the nerves which transmit . To permit. | sensation from the retina to the { brain, in which the color observed is | |recorded. Such disturbances ob- | viously may interfere with appre- ciation of color tests, | Railroad Tests Many times a person may be color | | blind and not realize it until thrown |into some position where apprecia- | tion of “color is exccedingly import- ant, as for instance, when he works on a railread. Physicians who ex- | amine men for railroad employment | have worked out various tests, using lights, yarns of different colors, and | colored strips of paper, which the prospective employe is asked to 1ss0rt. Imagine if you can how liantly painted landscape marigold. | 1o g person with phlox, iris, v to think of spring in the peony, gladiolus, [ country when all of the beautiful aster, daisy, lilac, cosmos, daffodil. | 1jings that are green and pink and 9. To throw lightly. Before. Susceptibility. 15. Ethjecal 17, 19. ANSWER TO YESTERDAY'S Ros violet, ehrysunthemum sweet rocus, lily, geranium, narcissus, pansy dandelion, bril- appears "8, color-blindness. rinly noisy place in . Sometimes one of those birds goes roaring ever, starts 1 Howler off) meant an Of course, Scrapper croplan: “1 1hink, myself., “that he makes just to try 1o make other people think he is very fieree and dreadful. (Copyright, 1928, by T. W. Burgees) continued Serap- | all that noisc | “A Pamily Party.” T story o [ Life’s Niceties Hints on Etiquette [ 1. What Kind of | twice turnips in cream | spring is considered the easiest engagement party to give? Who receives? . 1s the in fa. Lridegroom-to-te pres- cup informal tea. Answers lay sm & Cngad ri and comes 1 to rds the fternoon with the other men €6 U € PAT.OFF. © 1228, 8Y Nk SEAVICE. INC READ HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS VOR BEST RESULTS pe when a man motor. Epring 18 the time welcomes a miss in his h softcooked |date muffins, milk, coffee. | pie, | pretty dish and worthy of iMénusm Vf<or the Family BY SISTER Fireakfast mon, cereal, MAR Stewed cream, eggs, whols — fi crisp bacon, wheat and Luncheon — Clear bouillon, jellicd vimp salad, rye bread and butter ndwiches, strawberry fluff, milk, a. Dinner — baked Han sW n bake in potatocs, Lcottage rhubarb milk, cheese, onions, meringue milk, coffec. Jellied shrimp salad s a very place a company menu as well as the mily one. deflied Shrin Two cann water, 1-2 teaspoon ¢ ~poon pepper, 4 whole clovs leaf, 1 tablespoon sugar, nall onion. 1 tablespoon granulated latine, 1 cnp cleaned and diced rimps, 1-2 -0 celery ) r Combine tomatocs pper. havleaf, sugar Salad cups 4 tomatoes, 1 E 1- clov onion peeled and minced. Put over International Women Preachers’ as- e fire and siumer., closcly covercd new | - | erimson and scarlet appear as a sort for 20 minutes, Strain, Soften gela- | of varied gray. tine in 4 tablespoons cold water for | | tive minutes. Reheat tomato juice to | hoiling point and pour over softencd | | gelatine. Let stand until cool and | heginning to set. Parboil pepper for | five minutes, plunge into cold water | and rub oft thin outer skin. Remoye sceds and white pith and cut flesh | into shreds. Turn mixture into indi vidual molds or one large mold. Let stand on ice until firm. Serve on a bed of lettuce with mayonnaise or & cooked dressing. Fashi;r;—F;E]ue | (Copyright, 1925, NEA Service, | | Nebraska Woman Acts In Baptismal Capacity | Red Cloud, Neb. April 20 (P— The Rev. Marie Burr Wilcox has | performed a function seldom, if | accorded other grandmothers. baptized her own grand- Inc.) oy | She child Mre, Wilcox 1€ one | ordained women state of Nelb the first w ot the of the three ministers in the was said to be | sdmifted to the | Methodist chureh | rdained eight years .go. and is genoral secretary of the ninistry . shie Scallops brown leathe Two bands of emphasize the dark scal- | The Herald and NEA | mothers of famous children 1 have to answer that Child Can't Be “Trained” For | ’ ~ |Outfits Are Smarter Thai Movie Acting (Editors Note: This is the last of a series of five articles written for Service by In ob- | servance of National Child Health . May 1, they explain their methods of child training.) | (BY MRS LAWRENCE Mc (Mother of Lawrence McKe Screen Star) Physical perfection and the abil to follow directions are the reasons why Sonny McKeen was chosen for the movies. In case you don’t know, Sonny, otherwise TLawrence, Jr., is the Snookums of “The Newly-weds and ' He is also the young- Mrs. William H. Vanderbudt, left, White Sul By Whit BETSY SCHUYLER) ulphur Springs, W. Va April 20.—I always have maintained that the American wWoman is morc fuscinating in sports attire than in any other t and if T ever am linclined to change my mind, a trip est screen star. In every mail, We 4o paim Beach or White Sulphur get thousands of lotters from Par-| gprings completely reassures me. ents all over the world asking how | b B we trained Sonny for the films. We | round docs help the costumer. we did not|y\ng against the natural beauty of “train” him. We only eared forypoq. famous resorts, the simplest him as every baby should be cared | ¢vie o frock tak for—uot in an ultra-scientific man-| o jeauty which a more compli- ner_but with love tempered by in- | ired outfit loses. telligence and common sense. What he does on the screen he does through love of his parents. 1 hope this does not sound too sen- | timental, for it true. T know ! there are parents who scold or spank their children. Sonny | doesn’t know what elther Means. {juneth jucket Chanel has o suc- One thing we always have in- | ceruily launched is a noteworthy sisted upon is absolute obedience. | roature. and one sees it in tweeds though. This is perhaps the MOSt|iicots jersey, and in the little important essential for a child | yrineea silk coats that are the screen actor, for he must be able 10 | cime matcrial as the frock follow instructions quickly Without | The fad for the plain dress and undue prompting. | the zigzag striped coat also Sonny takes directions like a 50l- | pregged in the most charming varia- dier, but it is all a great game With |tions, Never have T scen pleats him. 1t was months before he even |.,d flares so expertly handled. ! i “SNOOKUMS” McKEE pe. Of course, | Each year T decide that we have reached the ultimate goal in sports atti each year there are new variations and new interpret tions that improve upon the old. or Short Jackets ¢ the little seven-eighths n is of knew what the camera meant. He | Regides the long coats are many was simply used to doing What Nis | wwank short ones. 1 saw that very father told him to do. And in ad- | ciunning yonng matron. Mrs. Wil- dition happened to have & |jiam H. Vanderbilt, wearing one of camera face and screen personality. | {he very short box coats, absolutely Sonny’s father was once an ath-|mannish in cut, as she strolled out letic instructor and gives much : for a morning walk without her hat. tention to the baby's physical de- | Double-Breastted Cont velopment, He has worked out a, The cout was double-breasted, and simple set of ¢ ses for morning | haq pateh pockets in which she did and evening which train Sonny's lyot scorn to keep her hands. With muscles and keep him fit. When |t she wore a sport skirt of pleated we had him tested by the 1.0s An-{{weed, and white sport shoes. A gelés board of education at the time | \chite mpffler was so slightly re- he started picture work, he Was|ycaled beneath her upstanding col- pronounced the most perfect baby |y, L on, in the evening, T ever examined there. | saw her wearing a positively divine We have treated him as an indi- | yollow frock that had long sid. vidual from the start work never interferes with his regu- | oxquisite slenderness, lar routine of naps and feeding. He Other Vanderbilts works four hours a day at the | jicture here adding to the are Mrs. Graham Fair Child His screen | jangls and which emphasized her | studio when making a picture but gets frequent rests and play periods. ‘ He sleeps from 12 to 14 hours a | with many windows wide open, | eats green vegetables, drinks milk | and fruit juice, and wears clothes | that are built for comfort rather than style. Vanderbilt and her daughter url T, Smith, formerly Consuclo Vanderbilt, Both were sponsoring the black and white vogue—ecven to their dogs, which were white, with black spots Mre, Vanderbilt was wearing a coat of white, with incrustations of | s1f material, forming serolls and curves, and she had a smart white hat with an upturned brim of black. | Hats Are Plain Mrs. Smith had a tiered | white kasha with was very coat of hie, as wa white silk, with black Her shoes and her ilxal were of black. golf her dress of polka dots. wide brimmed | In a typical costume wa | Gladys Chabot. pleated jerscy skirt {and sweater of the samc color with horizontal stripe: siik. She had | the narrowest possible belt of leather |and all absolutely untrimmed cha- | | pean. | Starting off with her tennis ra quet T osaw Jane Foster in a one- piece frock of white linen with a plastron front belted with a narrow belt of the linen. Her full length coat was of the softest angora wool, and I noticed she wore these very-much-in-evi dence dolled wool socks with sun burned stockings. Three-Piece Frock Her companion, whom T did not recognize, wore a three-picce wool frock in compose eflect. The skirt was striped—of a material that looked very much like man's suit- ing. Her blouse was a white jumper buttoned at the side, and her short coat was of a dark wool, matching the darkest tone the striped skirt, S never were more attractive, 1d it seems purely up to the wearer whether one wears the square type about the shoulders or gypsy fashion bout the hips. Checked and shaded taffeta are popular for these color- ful squares, as well as the softer silks and the negligible chiffons and georgettes. in black and white model of white crepe de chine forms the yoke of the blouse in hack. Drecoll cords the scallops which form the yoke of the circular skirt and put touches of the same cording on the sleeve: There is a narrow black belt with white binding. scarf of a I EVENING NECKLACE The small tecklines are smart- est for evening right mow. One is of delicate, gracefully shaped leaves in Arasse. A bracelet matches it. DE CAPE The cape over one shoulder. in Rpanish matador style, is exireme- 1y smart. An apricot lace frock GOLD-SILVER STITCHING! A dilaphonous black tulle eve- | ning gown has its bouffant tiers stitched in =callops in gold and sil- | +fective beige lizard bag. |loped borders at the sides of this ' ver threads. A scarf haa similar +1ging. has a gold cape over the left tshoulder. long lapels, that | Sports Wear at Spring Resorts n Ever, Special Fashions Writer Learns From Observation. Gladys Chabot ngs at phur S Scourge | Being Defeated |Science Is Slowly Scoring | Over Infantile Paralysis. s s on a distinction | Roston, April 20— 1Int dreaded child scou antile rulysis, the all a | hy a discovery of ntile Paralysis Commiission The new cure, announced | W, Lloyd Aycoek, research oxpert of the commission, consists of serium ken from patients recovered from the discas Hundreds of the the commission have proved fhat the ctical. Tn only on: crer in the final stag . did it fail br. s, has been dealt quite a blow the Harvard Iu W by experiments iy {enre is pr | that of a su of the discas However | experiments | “We cannot | that this serum ‘HJ ion, after | the serum is applic | carly stage of the doubtedly prevent {and will in a great {the dis altogether. | experimentation we hope {an absolute cure.” | rhis discase, which mikes up | per_cent of the child death !l and is known to cause mor: {than 50 per cent of child-crippling enters the hody through the mouth e may stay in the body in |a dormaant state for ) and | then. lightning-like, strike at the {spinal cord, destroy merves conters, {and make muscles useless, is Avcock says of i as yet definitely treatment is goin: Bt it is my opin- reh, that it sufficiently it will un- eiteets, many cases ront With more 1o prove cure every case, extensive disease serions L8c i Mrs. | | Are Unq[_)posed Others Contested in Wom- en’s Club Federation. San Two aspirants for office cral Pederation of Women's Clul | apparently ave surc of clection | the convention her i May by {tue of heing lone « _.didat | Mrs. 1. G. Reynolds of I'ndu; | Ky., is the only woman running jthe office of treasurcr, Fue { herself, and Mrs. Grae Mor Poole of Brockion. M now | cording secretary. is 1he only |announce her eandic first vice presidenc For cach of thre there are two nomines Mrs, Williwm R. Alvord of Deiros |'Mich..chairman of the departme: Lot American - citizenship, and Mr Henry C. Taylor of Boomticld, Juw: lare candidates for the post of © cording gecretary. The officc of sccond dent is sough Mrs. Fugene | Lawson of Tulsa, OKkl md - Mrs George P. Palmer of Springticid, 111 As chairman of the division o {music, Mrs. Lawson, who is @ grand daughter of Charles Journeycuk tribal chief of the Delawares, b voted much of her activity to the | promotionof Indian miusic us 1l fundamental music of Ameri Mrs Palmer is. Ilinois director in 11 general federation. The two candidates for president are Mrs. John . Sippel, Baltimor housewife, and Mrs, Edward Frask- lin White, Indianapolis attorney. o April ) in the Gen- Antonio, I | | | | | | i | i on wy for o oiiic viee pres in French Women Lose - “Protest Vote” Count Paris, April 20 (A—A change in the election rules has deprived French suffragists one of their |trump cards. | In former years their male | porters were able to cast ballots for | women candidates, athough women ! cannot hold office in France. In scv oral cases sufficient ballots were |cast, particularly in commun |quarters, 1o demonstrate the foct |that women could be elected to jobr |if the law did not deny thum | eligibility. of sup-