New Britain Herald Newspaper, April 26, 1928, Page 12

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r LOVE'S EMBERS | Once Overs Adele Gax'n'isoq’s Absorbing Sequel To “Revelations of a Wite” —Beginning a New Seri] = —— | | . Key of a Puzading Secret up—and might be some There was someth in Lillian's . He told her not to wait up for ner, as she made the grave an- | bim as he'd told the other man to cment that Jim had taken a until he came back. o ssage to the red-be i wan in 1sibly went upstai and shack, which told that il front way to J.ad something more to say 10 v with her r Jim.” hun the annouig 104 Us what you g 1 Do n de,” T exclaimed. K 1 couldn't let her go veplicd simply. fdenly W [ d Jim fur sonld Katie fi surpaise he did go insi not con t in. Ther pon her ¢ ound that inside | looking to- | it D was a lantern | “Let you 1up- ) possible reason | Wihoever thought i found 1 for a light g and 1 possibly b farmiiour: Uy to keep sk k at Don't 4 me ther W Reard ru athled man s sent s that I-bearded hink Jim acts only oni stem of communication. It's like *Mr. Gral old me to give you is—" this letter,! Jim said. She stopped as if to marshal her | ' the man returned and ts, ans only by or a hill again as eep from screamin her to hoy himseif werc | try with her story. opinion that he m made no attempd fo leave 160 men to know ouse until the friend for whom pondence with Dicky.” honed had come been from the chair and where he was to slecp door hours he was not on g 'l tell you what hap- nd Jim are to take tur id, “and’ that’s every ig the hot onight.” f But if you can make eflected that Lillian m r ' head or tuil yet out of it, ‘you're unusual i than 1 am, € Din! ol it's too so sk you omment, as 1 luck in PN NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, APRIL 26, 1928 vou've had I to her recital your quest About nine o'clock,” Lillian went Jim told Katie that he was go- 1o the after the He en ailing— be waking | Feature 2 : Wméfl'i gt Harmony and Discord. By C. D. Batchelor bl CAN THAT_LOVE SONG.WILLIE YOUR \ MOTHER AND TO QUARR L i | | | | | 1 | | = B | 4 Miss Lassic Honeyman ] BY BETSY SCHUYLER N Yorl Ayl — Para- | phrasing the old adage thatr “One :n\\l"”U\\ doesn’t make a summer™ I'd like to observe that one or vven two | spring races do not necessarily con- By Thornton W, 1 ; that's what they gess your frien for. Tioy'll quickly even score., up: the Peter Rabbit \ surprising t appencd over lere on the edge of the Old Or- ard. It was where t Old Or- 2 rd joins the Green Fore g 3 Pabbit, Bobby Coon and Prick Corky the Porcupine had heen lis- | = . . toning to the storics Scrapper the | .. fi.. Jngbird had been telling abou " Jungle and the people who | | ‘.“ 5 d there. Now, it isn't like Peter | | bbit, or like Bobby Coon, to he | holly eareless. It isn't like cither | them 1o fail to look around onc He hopped right over Prickly | iwhile. But this time they Porky's back gotten that there might be da i e T 2ot Prickly Porky between him and S PR el .ddy Fox. And then Peter kept [the daughter of Cadmus, According 5 “*Ll,‘ {er's atiention: Tatning, |Gl0se:tc Prickly Borky, He lent gisst {ito mivtiology, Bliat aas hex nams B waie Docviliod 1o wos Dieddy | 08 amsr bim s dared. You should :!:, ,lnln- she was |\|rnvwl into a sex s G i o) U0V e seen the face of Keddy Fox. | 80ddess? Au.}:l _!mn'/..«;ntal‘ iy Boddy had stolen up while |12 showed all his fectn in they = = HoWEOWS others had bgen listening to | uslest kind of a snarl. He tried| . A0 AFE AU U BUIIDOREN0L AL e : vunning around Prickly Por But | oppli, RINE o the Sa§ihes A Coon was | Jeter ran around also. Do what he | Iv'"'?';'i' ; 4 S Naithap | FOuld, Reddy couldn’t getion thaf 8. DHGTHEC. T v 5 # 3 ith, me side of Pricky Porky that Pe-|11. Which of the daughters of Prickly teddy et [ Cadmus was changed into the not the ! : : zoddess thea? a%: of them. Now Trickly Porky is slow of [40 4 ;:0“”,”1,__ LEyenthon & Moitfhs: Gt foot. Every one knows that. But |3y poror Babir 18 iy when Prickly Pork te angry, Be s s ond note i pealng \er any one he o “"“""“"-‘”“"I"]‘ 10116, Which month in the Mohamme- pping. Reddy can fight pretty | stay that way for some {ime. Prick- Qmicalendaris e monthd e : Iy Porky was too slow of wit 10| ,'v“,'”,;‘.."d BoEiE Rt cox i realize what Peter was doing, He Priciasn Wy 2 etually 1ho that Reddy Tox Gatengilies B Posliy. Tiis wius pretending to attack him 1t Reddy Prickly I‘ml.;‘ |]n ot rt.rv'u.\l;l'i‘ mall felt brushes used to rub ter hadn't little spears hidden in bis coat. My, out chalk. Ject thers w sueh a prickly looking sight as he o ‘,”1\1_ ter Rabbi cvery time that TReddy Kimono sash. y turn. I vi near him, Prickly triped camel’s hair cloth. S uld lash at him with his R o dilate. bered 1 2 hile, Pobby Coon resented BiRile Rirap: plac i Fox. *You Let it stand. | 5 \or from here,” growled Bob- Seeond note in scale s ‘Lhope § “Wedon't want you around.” gy pxpelled air through the nose nen away from here when 1 Toudly. St : got ready, and not bet A1, Talian river. : replicd 12, Linzlish coin. be for you 10144, pertaining to the ear. \ declared 45, Male, o towards What author wrote the most famous book on the theory of vl e Keel 47 Envoy on Bobby Coon, o 1 Vertical 1y, r o griuned him, 1 witior of “Ballad is Peter & Guol? 13 ut 11| Collection of f Catch out” To depart said Pier, - —~ e T W, Tiu : 5 o Menus for the Family | BY SISTER MARY : Viroaktast—ilalves of grape fruit, NI cereal, cream, breakfast spinach, Nicetior || L e i | Hints on Etiquette Lutie reamed finnan had- | ai w cabbage in leme 1 on the stre bad | It ling, mil 1 tan > raon. i 1pot r boiled po- ShaR B toes, scalloped tomatoes, cel and radishes, rhularb pie, milk, cof- e i v t ro is never dry : i ordinary oven 1 b oaly searing sur mecat bred person has civie | the heat should b i th nough to put it in recep- | minimum and about oon- Y gboas At about P oiling water added. This s burning and pro- suftic niois Jing ‘emn—Heral Creamed FPinnnan Haddic | E wi ey { > f \ . ( 4 A SEA GODDESS | Growing out. Comment, S| « catters hay. Juter gari nts. Point of compass. S ilkworm. Who wrote Robinson Crusoc? 58 W;)fnen Heag | — Colleges ir! U.S. {did its bit in keeping many a Social Registrite warni. Happiness Blues ot = It was a nice sight. The out- aRCIN & ¢ 4 standing fact that socicty is {Fair Sex Take Places IN|jiaying the blues again this year P;ducilti()nal WOl‘ld | Newer and jazzier bin and, curi- Y A & ously, happicr Blues they are this season. A terfain new Lido blu Washington (® — One hundred [tones up the whole seens, so penc- per cent increase in the number of | {rating and yet so becoming s it, | women college presidents in the past | A1) Diuc. or black and bie ie th | 12 years has been noted by the U. 8. | 1o color scheme, : irean of Education. Tu its new edu- | g T 0 Tllies Rl il '“"'""""' ”’f' Vg "f‘lf coats, blue coaf-dresscs, blue chif- |7 vomen Collcge and WnVerStY | fons, bluc sweater suits and blus | presiden ice 928, en i T A e Mgtk ubist woinen opilean ea the scene would have been, never- tives and most of them were hea {Theless, ¢ | of women's seminaries and fini IS e S i . 2 sehoals that mave o collage degnea. | Loe & niaskiinalvdual SRains ther | was a turban of & Inscious- | Almost all the la len's colleg :l'\‘ women executives, This year's list shows that there are seven women in the position of | superintendent struction, 40 who are city superin- | tendents of schools and $00 who are | | ot schools. county superintendent state county in the one s Iher now or district; The nu 12 yea that past te e is one w | division of the bur |one who heads % law school and |Yivid Diluc cne a scheol of medicine. While many of the schools of the does |1cast one women school exccutive. e castern wom- " ‘presided over |100KINE blue flowers, worn by Mrs Dean Bedrord. It topped a na { blue tailleur and white satin blous | with a pointed fox about to fall off right shoulder, Blue Shocs Watherine of public in-| nd Hat Steel picked Indepen- dence blue for her smart coat-dre It tied on the left Lip and had a a most individual back yoke, sig@nd- ing collar and rather loosc cuff Her smart oxfords were of matching perintendents mbers of worien has doubled iere is only not have at rs. ] blue kid. o was the hat band on . omen head of a |tailored Baku bonnet ! of cducation,| Mrs. Walter Stackpole chose for thic accessories with Tier grey suit, } The most charming blue fizured What is the abbreviation 101 | )50y dentistry, pharmacy and vet- | frock Y've seen this year was spon- Vireinia [evinary medicine have women on | sored by Mrs. james Lennox Banks, Dwells, their faculties, none has a women |Jr, under her black coat with its Written in notes | o Ghiles exmpiative |softly waving badger cuffs a ‘\\‘ Pl ST et |shawl collar. This frock had those vat's hair cloth P o ‘7 |pice German bachelor Dbuttons wmr.n:v‘iv I:.:?;ih Says Hair C?s_ts Women vrinted on a black background and Away from the cenfer of the Half Billion Annually;ymy R ‘h“. i e oy [ Now \'ork.IAp 26 .J:),_‘\vo;,;,x~s‘:‘Irnu'n‘;s“u‘.. V-neck, the jubot and : | “crowning glory” costs them $136,- | the cufls. What man was made king of | {0050 naally for upkeep | And Powder Bluc Hoan et i than men’s sleek hair and shaven | lassie Honeyman, who by the way Oniton ot bl ounin e o n e eembin el S BL ISPt S S SRR A M P S L Dbt sy b Blni d New York beauty gpecialist, | 5on’s box, had her smz!l'i. kasha coat M e St lined with that subtle French pow- sl -artipder:in o stem | Haircuts and shaves for the mas- | der blue and under it wore a chif- e in a sten. culine population put $454,400,000 |fon frock of the same shade. Her NHAE G anvohlent in the pockets of the nation’s bar- | hat, with snappy upturning brim, 2k |bers, while women pay a total of | was the powder blue. ki . £591,000,000 for waves, shampoos, Her hostess, Mrs. Frank Hend- Abbreviation for railroad. " = e s one th . bl o stroke lightly bobs and th® like, according to a t_rng. was one of the smart black- W e survey made by him, white pictures that made the ex- Approximately 19,700,000 Amer- |ceptions that proved the blue rule. M EIS [RIEISITIO[RE] : INIAICITIE]D] Tother, [T]ATME o I CTATMIMIATN] ATLT1[K]E] FONER NEN NEE AlS|SIIMIAINTE] [PTAIRIE[S] OIWIE] A[L [A] ican women spend an)average of Her frock and cape of black flat $1.25 every two wecks in ]12\i7'=('l‘l‘p€ had frills and bows of black dre ng, cutting, waving and |velvet. A deep, rich badger col- washing, Louls said. |1ar blew softly in the winds ilu\'e a gentle frame for her smile APRICOT PUNCH [In her own inimitable mapner, A refreshing summer beverage | Mre. Henderson illustrated the new | is apricot !sliced apricots and juice through a | sieve, add one-fourth eup of both orang ice water and sweeten to taste. punch, juice and 1 Fashion Plaque uses to which gardenias have ' on put by wearing two ol them in w1 velvet on her straw toque. Inci- juice, add | dentally she carried onc of the new, | most colcrful purses—a rather large |affair in reds, yellows, purples and white. Force a can of emon Satin Ensemble | Mary Ann Brodhead, of st Crange, N. J.. chose a her pur- tablespoons but- | th ihies rown wons flour, 1 1 milk, 1 cgz yolk, 1 table- | spoon Worc hire sauce, 1 ta- | Wlespoon mineed parsley, 1-% cup ‘umy~ 1 green pepper. Wash fish well, cover with boil- ng water and simmer just below | the boilinz point for ten minutes. Drain remove all skin and hon parate into flakes, Melt | butter - in flonr and slowly add milk, stirring constantly. Bring to the Dboiling point and add Worces- | tershire sauce, minced parsley and | chopped pepper. Heat thoroughly and pour slowly onto egg yolk slightly beaten At wit beater and add propared finnan | haddie. Heat over hot water but o not let boil. Serve on square of hot buttered toast, o 1928\ NEA Serviee, Inc. Sunshine in London azz band i ply blue for her satin ensemble of {long coat, pleated coat and mould- jumper. The coat’s line and {the frock's touches carricd a con- | trasting light blue. Her hat | showed how straw can Le the per- fect trimming on darker felt. { Dress Frills Banned | As Hampering Study 1 Detroit, April 26 (P)—It's goodbye fritls for the attending” the | Liggett private school here | Going on the theory that girls’ il:.inds are distracted from heir | studies by their frocks, the man- agement has ordered the regulation attire, wearing of | For warm weather, the girls will | wear uniforms made of India silk in navy blue. In the winter, the s will be made of wool and ¥ be worn in red, green, blue and ‘l)r(jll). Both models will be trim- Scarf—A new French scarf is of | med with white pique colla nd heavy white crepe de chine with the | enffs. Skirts must be two inchds be- ccalloped ends shading from palest [low the knce. Woolen hose are ro- How 1o orange. | uuested for winter wear. B 1 lgraphed or paipted. Social Registerites Like Blue Tones Miss Mary Ann Brodhead Mrs, Frank Henderson CROWD.EXISTENCE. DEMANDS CAUTION stitute a spring. The first day of the spring mect jof the United Hunis on the cours at Aqueduct was Dlustering and | Fditor's Note: Ever increasing vide them with safe water for drink- | chilly and dusty and a lot of other A1OWledge of physiology —and the |ing, with sufficicnt water for bath- et ringlic And e conditions under which most of us|ing themselves and washing ‘their e | second day was so rainy and cold V¢ today are combing to make new | dishes and linens, with artificially e e e e fur couts op drmands tpon us in th of our | circulated air, with light for vision, rainy day apparel were in order, #3alth. This is the third of a series|and with uliraviolet lisht to tak: On that fisst day, howeyer, pride ©F SIXNarticles on “The Physiological [ the place of the invisible rays ot Lif Tomorrow: Stimulants and the sun. Drugs. \ “It is necessary to develop metli- By Dr. Morris Fishbein ods for the prevention particular Journal of the Amcrican of the diseuses that attack the nos. Medical Ascoviation 1 of Hygeia, |sinuscs, the throat and the lu the Health Magaz since thesc respiratory discases par- Profe The third thesis of sor A.|ticularly are passed from onc human J. Carlson's analysis of the physio-|being {o unotlier logical dife is as follows: ! VIt ds necessary by preventive in- s a consequence of the industrial { oculation to protect wan against developments and growth of cities, discases associuied with contaminat cd food and water and against the germs that are coughed or expelled rom the mouth and throat. Artificial Aids “If modern civilzation is to I« saved, the human being n t be en bled to live in modern civilzation | under safe conditions. Hence arti- ficial methods of providing human beings with the things provided by the outdoor lit: being developed w large population of men today a wore crowded, more subject to polluted air, polluted drunking wa- ter and industrial poisoning than our ancestor “Investigations made by scientists 211 over the world indicate definit Iy that the packing of human beings together in proximity in such places s halls, motion picturc palaces, of- buildings and kitchenct apart- ments has resulted in the spread of |in increasing proportions.” those discases that are passed from | As is pointed out by Dr. Carlson man to man. {a continucd increase of population Task for Engineers means increased growth of citic ibled | creased industr fice ay in- “When men are thus a al concentration in vast numbers it is necessary to|increased industricl poisoning. bring into play modern plumbing battle for life of the future me and sanitation and all the.intri increased research to ncet these cacies of modern engineering to pro- | new problems. + £t ‘ - . ’ . ened up, held out his arms and chkens Chl clasped I to him. After a long embrace she returned to the sta- | tion and went on her journey. Next !Lluy she received word of his death . Lives in London | MINT SALAD | To give a tang to a spring salad, |add some chopped mint leaves 10 | French dressing and serve over lettuce, tomatoes and cucumber. Her Home Is Secluded and She Sees Few. London (#) — Almost forgotten b the world, Mrs. Kate Perugini, 88| rhe houges el g el BhC lives sccluded in her Chelsea home | pioq in the first warm days more drcaminng of the verses she would | ¢han ‘any other time. A fifteen liko to write “if she were mot the | minute rest before lunch is most daughter of Charles Dickens.” refreshing. ior Kate Dickens has always wanted to write and her friends as- scrt that she has a fine literary syle of her own, bt she has re- | RENEWED LINOLEUM It your lnoleum shows eigns of wear, scrub it thoroughly, let dry irained because she feels that “a | without walking on it and varnish daughter ought rot attempt 10 fol- | with a good grade of varnish. This low in the footsteps. of such &| froghens it and rov v its life father.” —_— A sweet faced, silver haired old | she still bears traces of the uty which Millais, Val Prinsep other artist friends have por- \d_on canvas. is herselt an artist and not- | d for her portraiture of children, bui she now refuses to be photo- As a girl she wizhed to go on the stage and was offered an engagement. Her father was against it ¥nd advised her to go on with her painting. While in her teens she married an "artist named Collins and under his guidance pursued her studies. After his death, she married the late C. E. Perugini, also an artist. Their house is full of relics of Dickens. At the entrance of Mrs. W Perugini's studio stands the hi | torie table which her father used ! when giving readings and which he took with him on his American tour. He could not read, he sald, | uniess he had that table before Lim. A Tighly valued picture shows | three angel heads. Dickens was | itracted by it at a sale and M Perugini recalls how on one day he came home with a picture on | the top of a cab, had it carried up | to the room of herself and her sis- | and there hung i, saying, - is something heautiful to be | your ey | When Dickens suffered from fits [ |of gloom and depression, Kate would attempt to solace him. She v 4 curious premonition | | ch occurred before his death. She and her sister had left “Gads- {hill.” the Dickens home, to go on Paris, April 26—(P—Asperic, pebbly surfaced woolen fabric of lizht weight, but firm quality, is used for la visit to London. At the railway { morning costumes and sport en- | station. Kate said: sembles. Lucien Lelong a gray “I must go back and speak t0!blue sport dress of asperic with tather agair |straight silhouette, square meck- Wiicn she reached the house she {line and a few diagonal tucks. A | found him pacing the room in dis- | group of deep pleats is placed ot {ress. At sight of her, he bright- |the side front of the skirt. {

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