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LOVE'S EMBERS Adele Garrison’s Absorbing Sequel To “Revelations of a Wife” Beginning a New Serial At Last the Trap Is Sprung on the Conspirators, but Not Without Cost Lillian awakend at the expiration o helped me throug breakfast as tho Katie and Ji get evervtning | the glorious n |he one that o Sumeri. differen: much wo gifted Serzius chance to look at supposz an artis: ed.” T flushed ine ad felt h ever, which father's voice even in Di cost my I mend 1 loathed havi It was an and horror, 1 Princess Oli ker that ker o were marked for code paper she h and that the won favor who had paid for delivering a € 1id not en aelf marked he nother’s name | the { T th down. “Oh! what have I done! moaned. “I thought the was about jewels which could not get out of th she had left It {3 not what you have done what you must do,” 1 told aternly. “The capture of this plotter Sergius depends upon coolness and courage tonight.” 8he drew herself to her full slen- der height, every inch a princess of a royal house. “I shall not fail,” she said. “Tell me exactly what I must do and I will do it.” 2 It was my father who gave her the instructions for her actions as it was he who planned every d the night's work. He already sent for trusted. eperatives wio were waiting in a toan a few miles away amg to whom Dicky earried instructions as to their shados and seizing the accomplices of Ser gius who werc manning the truck en bearing the princess and waiting in other place his track and ran which his red-bearded & | was the so of a told Dicky. And after a dinner whidh none of us could eat, he summon«d Olina, Lillian, Dicky, Allen Drake and myself to hi= rooms for our final directions. Mr. Veritzen and | “Harry!™ his powerful and faithful chauffeur, Copyright, Otto, were to wait a few rods down I fort ngs were country , but her your 0 someone aw him turr from the which terrified na .':Nl::u 2 run towar: a something ey the sound of blows gling as Allen and Dicky fell 1 of | man, and his voice had maledictions as he rea had heen d, “A trap then, by soms ng, he cried hoarsely, and miracle of twisting, he freed himself and bounded for- ward just at t cond that K. seve doubled on up to There shot and 1 and came to seven stumbl knees almost at I wondered if my s were lex ma as 1 heard her sharp his s0s ing ery of 1925, Newspaper By Thorntom W. Burgess A gecret is when known by When told to two, vour done. one; —Old Mother Nat Fior apme time Eally 8 bird had been hanging a1 the ©ld Orchard. More than or she had been sneaking about in the Orehard, cially ve g morning. Now, Sally friends among her feathe lors. She has no fricwls simple reason that =i &pect of ‘any of nake friends of speet. So &he picion and no one thing to do witl folk, like Samn Robin, wers cause s s the smaller peop very much wor expie Ty red ne Hiasy darvk the “ecret,” Yellow Warbler she is too luzy 10 own the nests Kelecting the “1 don't ser Yirea, the ne 43 big as st of = half stand i | Once Overs NEW B BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, MAY 14, “But. omw Regiziored T8 Prteat Office can't you see he S By C. D. Batchelor| a pohce d(;q n expect- | lian's fe 1§ several long border o welcome offset o 4 and me 100t lever <atd sunshine Fhree-toe: 0 scattor This is a good | weekly gpeed test unkeyed puzzle While Jetters, shonld The letters in the cente Horizontal commo 1 o tax Restored 1 e Denotin Within o fon “IUs a dark secret < o1 ot t spite all | ! crabhod h brought to got the Yellow Wi Xerett your nest shine, children “If you t f thos wonld | COSTS LESS fecd cne o( & |coliee, Vertical for ther British Survey May \nl\c Red Hair \l\ \l(‘l v ) parior, ted by 1 thoritics comitt is all parts of cal characteris- i feets Nov 'Charm in Women| _ Not So lmportant Who Likes “Go- " (Gives Views, h opposed to development * says Inez 1 the first place, too much that they ~troubles. any ond place, 1 sort of rmif Like orm the right ut the moment it must am. tural charm, which, comic v ocecurs, is ac- But a fright- instance, sody. it's for nian whom you admired has lected to go charming. A hut no Tt is as had as oved and in may survive it on ean. cal or glamorous think it is too late clop charm “lop it or They've y wriod. Who wants aga Ang wmuch prefer the wmeasles reonally, 1 +n-and-drag-out method of | of | os consider | as long | for per- | 1 gaged 1928, Vaccine as an Aid to Beauty Doctor Tells About Small- pox Vaccination. BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN Editor Journal of thc American | Medical Association and of Hygeis, the Health Magazine. Inoculation against smallpox, the famous discovery of Edward Jenner, st practiced not long .efore . when Oliver Goldsmith wrote Stoops to Conquer,” and yet by so successful had been tion of his discovery, > beginning to be beau- because of the disap- of the ravages of smallpox vous to (h(. r smallpox cominunites | son in the community w free from the scars of this disease. After the widesy epplication e person in the the one with would devastate he eminent French physiologist, characterized the human | being as homo mus or idi- ot man, because g knowledge | avail himself of s Knowing t ‘protection against s we do city and neverthe- considerable develop the because of their unwilling ss 10 submit to vaccination. These | propie constitute a menace not only fo themselves and to their families, tates, still fi =l six wee 1\5 of 1928 130 reported in Connecticut, curred in or mear r the circumstances that ex- wvious to the time of Ed- 1 Jenner, at least one-half, if 1ore, of the inhabitants of Haven, to which the disease m Middletown, would bec cted. nm\ ver, of the 186,000 people in v Haven, more than 100,000 were ted in a short period of time three cases occurred in New n he cost to the city was " 20 years a4 vaccination of al U. !dren entering schools, The | |value of the requirement is demon- | : protection afforded r]villl‘mn‘ | wa not {Have only Rumaman Woman Has Made Big Discovery S. (P—Discovery the rays apparently create or excite radioactivity in lead and other nietals has just been announced hy Henvi Desland dircctor of the lnn-. observatory. discovery is credited to Mlle, Maracineanu, manian Mile. Maracineanu found that picces of load and other metals I from the roof of the observatory had beeome radioactive and regis- tered their rays on photographic plates. Her was an accident. She had placed a piececof polonium lon a shect of lead and ™ found that {the lead became radioactive, Ex- posivg the polonium and lead to the sun, she found the transmission of radioactivity was multiplied ten- fold. From that point she proceed- {ed to work out her theory, which | Professor Deslandres has presented to the Academy of Sciences, Mile, Mars nu worked for vears with Madame Curie, of | radinm vesearch fame, and has en- in independent studies at AMeoudon observatory. Paris, May sun discovery the cnen of the present day. go-gettors, Go-getterism is later one hand, 1 to femininity as | FLAPPER FANNY SAY It would | yiovement to develop Home very few go in for We clopment. cxperiences; prob. have men are born | vere anurdered ) acuum de vl Lo out 1 it vigorously. s from hecoming May 4P ool sport coat with lar reminiscent o has a double bre: enough - coat 1o make i vap that dress. Taris, covers the Lucien Lelong fulness | covered complete- REG U $ PAY.OFF. ©1328, BY MEA SERVICE. NC. 8necaking in during the wee small | hours should be pretty soft. | | | Fashion P]aque h .4 | A cap of vellow crocheted straw with black-eyed-susans i 'made of feathers is accompanied b a hlack georgeite triangle with daigy at cach point that | Wardrobe June Bride Should Take 'When Going on Her Wedding Trip Bendel Suggests Light Colors for Honeymoon — En- semble Is Good Choice for Summer, * Shimmering and radiant is the bride who chooscs gown the filmy black net model with gleaming | bumt-maize trousseau ensemble, with faille for her dinner gold dots Right 1s & frock and cheviot coat, (By Henri Bendel) New York, May 14.—The June bride is by no mecans through with | her responsibility | decides on what her | will be. Selecting just the right outfit 1m !l\e wedding journey is eften quite as hard. And especially this season (300(] when there s such a dive of | styles, materials and colors. | T suggest that the | op her | outfit bridal looking. old days | when the bridal couples were pic-| N i T tured as holding hands under a book |, « 1 Fids |they pretended to read but held up- | |side down have gone, and with them Ithe possibility that someone might guess that the couple is newly mar- | ried. | Should Be Light | Light of color, lecoming smartly useful the three sites that L should name going-away outfit An emaemble is a good choice summer. 1f one gets the coat long enough it will uffice for afternoon | wear over frocks. The ensemble | that combines sill with one of the new featherweight woo such as )| asperic or wool grorgeite, iz perhaps the best. choice. | Around this ensembla a whole outfit can be built. Different frocks, | Dblending with the coat, give variety. | And using a sports two-picce suit | |under it would change it from thr | dressy to the sporfive fype. For Sports Wear Especially if one’s honevmoon | |takes her to the heach will this |type of costume prove a wise choies : She can use it as it is for the Ivmud.‘ | walk or promenade, change it with R R TSR {a snappy sports suit for the golf| SOUME TCHENG |links and wear the dress without N |the coat for bridge on the country rnment's |club verandah | T show today one in a new color burnt majze. The two-piece frock | |ot silk faille, that sl shimmer- ling material that“has an inherent grace few silks possess, The hlonse has a most unusual cut, a pointed | |yoke on thae back and right side of {the front and a flaring jabot extend- ling from the front V over a plain lteft. front. It has the same rippling jabots| lack haircd running up the ontside of the |77 frock’s cuffs. A stitched and buckled [ @ |belt of the faille holds the nn,m\:“‘,"w into a mormal waistline. o Mixed Pleats The skirt has the new pleating—a few inches of accordion pleating, two big hox-pleats, and few knife pleats, repeated around. Soume Tcheng F rom Old Chma Will \vnb 1ssadress Tells of Native Land, when she 1 g EOw! wedd T'he mpty first time wit fortable furniture, 1vs Mis Nuie To now are ambassadrecs of ved in Europe tour of the world. o need is educae tion, a sense of so- ity ol Teheng ling for these tl stowly and methodically in wnd America. It \ furnish onr furniture good leg id, 1ES Enrops will take years te bt at we 150, least right woman, mixtire aks of the future . Her training was ree | A4 at the Sorhonne in Paris took a deerce of doctoe fter completing a hook on futional Mo in was an official delegate Washington disarmament Over this, matching in color, the first Chines |a summer cheviot coat of the new [Woman fo practice law and for & |flaring mode that is cut with rag- |{imc was president of the Cantoncse {1an sleeves and a Chinese collar. [tribanal of nghai Fine slot seaming give a beauti has taken an active part fully tailored touch to the cuffs, the 116 ariits ot tha Chinee natisihis front panel, the back and the!ifs party since 1910 although to de pockets. 1t fastens only at the it she had to defy her family, meme throat, with a silken loop and two [bers of the imperial Peking governs buttons. ment, and break with her fiance, & The Reboux hat matches this sha costume in color and spirit. Tt is| of ballibuntl and has an effective | trim of a band and wings of the| straw. Second in importance comes the dinner or evening gown- mixed | W of In “The China” £he Jat \S A p Con ment Bl the i | conference, w in Tigh-born, conservative Chinese n supposed to have carried dy namite across China for the natione on occasion. Of these rumors Tcheng would not talk, hows alists Mi ever. China, she says, Silk Net and Gold al country whose The very newest and perhaps as|owners that love their frecdom. becoming a medium a trousscan; I wonder,” Miss Tcheng said, it frock ever had is the new imported |the world realizes that women re= silk pet with a gleaming square dotvolted in China at the same time as of gold. the political revolution took place. Cheruit “A unique experiment in the | which the gold squares ar. emancipation of w s being |ered by hand, in symmet worked out in Men and ion to heighten the grace | women started to overthrow existe |downward swooping backline of the ing conditions at the same time and mode's silhouette. the result was that the women found Here we see the stylish V-line cut, | themselves in a pbsition of equality emphasized and accented. Neckline | which otherwise would have takem of the foundation of tulle, of the|them yis to reach. gown itself, the waistline and all the There are w 0 in nearly all pert tiers follow in perfect rhythm branches of the unking governe that V-line. With this, gold slip- ment. They are doing wonderful pers and the sheerest of filmy black |work because they realize that this chiffon hosiery should be worn. is their one great chance to make good. Part of their success s due to the fact that they have no hacke ground of age-old customs to hethe er them in performing their first is an agriculture people are lande has fashioned one in embroid- JELLIED SALADS Jellied salads, cooled in faney pudding dishes, make much dressier luncheon dishes than plain ones. | johs." a! Any flaked firh, with pimento and a| Mise Tcheng expects to visit the ! bit pf egs makes a ggod one. |Lnited States en route back to Chingy