New Britain Herald Newspaper, May 21, 1928, Page 10

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Love’s Awakening The Heart Story of a Steadfast Woman By Adele Garrison Princess Olina and Mary Harrison Under the Same Roof By Turn of Fate “Auntie Madge! What's all this about? Is Eleanor Lincoln going to canig down here for the rest of the summer. Because i she is » Mary Harrison's face was flushed and her eves gleaming with some- thing which had both temper and rvousness in Knowing that it would be most unwise, as well as a istinct breach of faith to teil her the secret of Elcanor Lincoln's identity, or the real reason for the royal guest's presence in the farm- house, I saw that I had i task before me in reconciling he Olina's sojourn With us Of course I knew the real 1 for her dolor, and I could not her for her apparcnt churli T did not need actual words to I that Philip Veritzen had mad up Noel the price of keeping he as his dramatic protege, after ion that she had deceived,h in her appearance as the masiked dancer. I knew also that my cm ployer in pursuance of his it plan to marry his son to Prir Olina, was providing frequent oppor- tunities for the two to meet. It was the prospect of seeing Noel in at- tendance upon Eleanor lincoin which was torturing Mary. With a little grim setting of my lips 1 re- solved that at least I could limit those social amenities until the menacing Sergius was disposed of, and it was sofe for Princess Olina to return to the Larches. 1 crossed to the mutinous figure my hushand’'s lovely young niece and took her into my arms. Mary. dear. will you trust me?" T asked. She stood stifiy rebellions for w few seconds and then +gainst me “Ot course T will, dearest” said. T know I'm an awful egg but you don't know A “Yes, 1 do kno I returned “know far more than you think. and some time,when T get what Lillian calls ‘an oft day’ I'm going to straighten things out. But just now. I can't tell you anything—can't do anything except. to ask you to frust to shut your eyes to anything quesr which you may ohserve, to treat Miss Lincoln as nicely as yon poesibly can, and to believe that it will be but a few days before she goes back again to the Larches. I'm going to the hospital is enly a pre- ne coss melted tence for her coming here. But it is | che | 1 impossible for me to tell you the real reason now, I am only giving you this hint so that you will know how import act as ¥y know! for any other which we shall You to give Mr. son the simply because er to hos- impres- the and she Iy eyes search- hravely the guessed was her thought of that, Lillian’s oor, and irried out loor hehind her arest chair as “Rlessed Suth1t! she apoatuo- phized e worked harder than T have 100 fresh as five little ‘em—five, T see von Ay safely tucked away guest room with a don’t <ign on her door.” T returned. “She's zond deal today, and wonderful at the which must have dis- Did vou gat hold a daisics ount the 1 in the Aisturt it was revealation trossed her of Dick sorely ‘ec, after houre of wrestling with long distance. He'n catching the first train heme. T couldn't tell him the truth of conree, and he surely i up ir i mons the air at ous sum- T don't whether he imagines yvou've eloped with Jim or Katie's suing him for hreach of promise. But he's winging his way through the upper ether into which, incidentally, old Phil has ascended | since T gave him an inkling of what i up. He's in the library now, de- manding to see you. Retter go down and see if you can calm his troubled spirit (Copyrizht ature ervice, Tne) 1925, Newepaper The Sealed In Egg By Thorntan W. Burgess The sreason we were given wit Is that we should make use of it. —Sunshine the Warbler The home of Sunshine the Yel- low Warbler is one of the nicest ht- tle homes of any of the feathered tolk of my acquaintance. Great pains is takea in the building of that house. It is snug and dainty and soft. It is so strongly bound to | the branches in which it is set that there s no danger that it will ever be blown loose. Good, ‘ery good, builders are these little folk There is no nest that Sally Sly would rather have one of her baliea cradled in than the nest of Sun- shine. She always makes a special search for Sunshine's home. This year, Sunshine and Mrs ine had built their nest in a bush grow- ing beside the old tone wall in the far eorner of the Old Orchard, Sally Sly had found it hefore it was half completed. But she had pot let them ynow it. She had kept away Only from dis had watched those busy little folk. Iiu every day, from a distarce, she had Lept track of thiey were Once fn a wi the corner o1 Or and 15 she look 10 sce how that was Drog S0 it was that <he Kne &8 was laid. She wa three o “Now is my hid Sur nee doi uld fly over of 1 harid passed vou down n the n the ed until t first tine,” thought sly, and where sne sdvantage shen tor ould be ungus Sunghine and Mrs intend to lea for a single il the H scrapper out 1o at Virds follos o . Sunshine When Mrs back &he strang: sharply, and ing over. H-: her voice i wrong. At fir 1ad droppcd and discovered th derstood at on e, Sunshine and had made going to what is it?" he “To begin are not going what has happen Lusiness. Then that egg up.” “But to do that al our own inshine 1 can luy Mrs. Sunshin “Why not somewhers ¢l Becauge this plac actly,” replicd Mrs lem, the same thing 1 7gain In a nest ready aid an oz won't enter he 2 to come here again. So 15t il ond story on this nest ar other cgg= in to waste. With could 1 k him Suns overcd her e Sunshine &% it He look: Instantiy 1 mind what : well o you will At has in this nest and hack vew Sally he wel) th this, away went “Why not bulld a new nest some- | where clse?” asked Sunshine | Mrs. Sunshine to look for more building material. Before the day that nest had been com- roofed over, and the roof the floor of the second story. A few days later this was all completed Mrs, Sunshine had Legun in. So that ¢gg of Sally would hateh. Mrs outwitte iy Sly by T 1 “The was over pletely vas really and laving Sly's never sunshine had (Copyright, 1928 The next Long Long Siecp story MAUVE AND YELLOW for a frocl low flat crepe s mauve band- v combin and skirt 1 ersa o» Fieige meant fox 1o In Dou- tox to 15 n mor night 15 collar and tul tlared cout Lhe fulne hich ool ine noon, or Currs om of rose- vool poplin s s to pockets, but of the coat is traight in & rgess) | NEW DBRITAIN DAUWLY. HERALD, M TDAY, MAY 21, By C. D. Batchelor SOME DAY MAYSE ILL BE ABLE, PEARL, T TAKE FOR A TRIP ON.OUR PRIVATE YACHT. b BUT wHeN The puzzle picked for the speed test this week has nq unkeyed let- ters. Many fans will be able to fin- ish in 15 to 30 minutes. HORIZONTAL Deadly To play ment. Close. Pressed. Exultant. Genteel. To change lower leaf. (ereal grass Armistice. Measure of cloth. English coin. on a stringed instru- End of aj; | of the | may have fur on (h i LA | The new like | Container for preserved food I.oases. Boy. To degrade. Yawning with wonder. Membranc of the eye. Beast. Gazes fixedly. To venerate River inlets. Comb of a cock VERTICAL Young mare. Growing ouf To value Vigilant Guided. To drink slowly Mathematical term Part in a drama To join or consolidate. Iron Drread Ravine VEES of Ewer. Feime animal \'chicles. Instigates. Native. To restore Wiser. Cripples Aside, To rub out Male ancestor. Ta donate Almost a donkey. Portion of a circle. hee. CRAVAT COAT coat collar, for at. Secarf embroidered A new is the collar raglan cnds ar or N KERCHIEF? kerchief for the sports- woman is the clear colored linen one. One buys two—a hig ker- chief for the neck and a matching small handkerchief, sHovLnEnR ARE I ntined pastsl colorsd silk and fabric coats shoulder creening have- the have a new flare in. Many Isleeves cut in with the bedy. THAT DAY [VIATS V] JPTAINTAIMIA| [S[CelAllio[ve JloIwIE]S)] ILIAIWICIO[PIRTARREIAIT) [CIRIM[VILILT N[GNTE (AN STATTI TR YRR IY[EISERAlFITRRETE]L] (AlS]P] [o]e [TIRY] Ou (P8 800 a0 [IN[NTel TR VIRIEI]L [E) ulEE NEE MOBLD SlelTivie[RIETIRIVIS]TIS] Clara Bow Gives Views on Movies iSays Film Career Cuts off Friends. | Success really should mean some- | thing mere than an accumulation of | wardrobes, cars and vacation trips, according to Clara Bow, the little | red-headed cinema star who is al- leged to, have more “It” and fan- mail than gnyone in Hellywood. “One thing that acting-success brings is more work. Perhaps that |is its most matisfactory regard. It | vou get more fun out of it than any- thing else, and T do.” Clara said | “Now, instead of standing in line for a chance, as I had to when 1 | was an extra girl, I can keep busy | steadily, one picture after the other, putting myself through the most thrilling emotional experiences. “Something that success does not bring is simple and natural com- | panionship. Instead, it seems to cut one off from people. After success. there still are friends to be made and T don’t know but making real friends is more of a success than success itself, Furthermore, after success there always is the opportunity for growth. I'rom the success.of youth, there is the smuccess of mature art to be developed. There is the re- aponsibility not to misuse chanc A star part in a movie Is, after all, Jjust a beginning. And T want to keep going ajeng so I needn't be ashamed of the road PAINT STAINS Hot vinegar will remove paint or putty staink on window panes. NEW UMBRELLAS New colored silk umbrelias have gay flovwers in hrilliant hue printed on their curfares Seme hate a few POBI others many. * CAME THeY DREAMING OF THE LITTLE CANGE BACK d\zeee THE SMOKY b RIWVER . 1928, Modemists Reclaim the Dining Room Delicate Colors and Lighting Through Silk Feature This New Treatment Menus t_:f the Family (BY SISTER MARY) Breakfast—Etewed prunes, cereal, cream, baked veal cakes with to- mato sauce, pop-overs, milk coffee. Luncheon—Cream of asparagus soup. croutqns, raw vegetable salad. rhubarb and strawberry pie, milk, | tea. Dinner—Planked fish with stuffed tomatoes, new potatoes in cream sauce, jellied cucumber salad, fudge cake, milk, coffee. Very finely shredded cabbage. grated carrots, grated beets, and a little acraped onion are combined with & Russian salad dressing to make the luncheon salad. Rhubarb and Strawberries Two cups washed and hulled strawberries, 1 1-2 cups peeled and diced rhubarb, 1 cup granulated sugar, 3 tablespoons flour, plain pastry. Line an eight-inch pie dish with pastry and brush over with white of egg. Mix and sift flour and sugar in a good sized mixing bowl. Add prepared fruit and mix care- fully until fruit is coated . with sugar. . Turn into prepared pie dish and cover with top crust. Bake ten minutes in a hot oven, decrease heat fifty degrees and bake until fruits are tender and crust is brown. When removing pie from oven shake from side to side and before | putting in oven shake to distribute | sugar and fruit evenly in shell, | (Copyright, 1928, NEA Service, Inc.) FLAPPER FANNY SAYS: | | { ‘Worry makes hair gray, so don't worry about gray hairs. Fashion Plaque | i | Mapgle leaves .of felt ‘mounted on | 4:skull cap of hair feshion this new | | Rase. Descat_hat. | per, tresh chartreuse and itable §8 of green |folds its modernistic, Astonishingly cool is the modernistic summer dit.ing chenille rug and lacquer furniturs done in the crispest of lemon yellows, chartreuse and soft green. room pictured at the top. It has silken walls, Every note in the tan-brown-red dining room pelow is modern, from the crystal door to the marble tables with its metal base. (By Julia Blanshard) New York, May 21. — Dining rooms, somewhat obsolescent in this skyscraper apartment age, are grow- |ing in fan with a single brown-red | ing more modern than the modern- ists who decided they were no longer needed. In a current modernistic expo: tion, nothing could be more distinc- tive and yet more expressive of this age than the dining rooms. Today a new attitnde towards life is pervading our costumes, thinking. activities. Furniture, its setting and the homes that house it reflect the same modernism. It is completely untraditional. But so are flappers! They're Restful of all, the dining rooms shown in the exposition have restful quality about them sur- passing anything dreamed of by the ornate, cluttered up, heavily furnish- ed rooms of a few decades ago. E tering them one’s nerves just must relax, it would seem, and digestion be aided unconsciously. 8econd, these new dining rooms know their psychology of color. Dining rooms for summer use cool, refreshing ton those for winter First employ touches of warmth in their | darker schemes. Third, just as all rooms now make use of other than wood, rooms skillfully combine with wood, marble, silk, cotton, crystal, ivory onyx, cork, zinc, iron, brass, cop- asbestos and almost anything else one could name. Soft Green and Yellow Stepping into a summer room designed by Professor Bruno Paul of Germany is more refresh- ing than having a cool breeze blow unexpectedly on a boiling day- It is donme in the most delicate green, @ soft chartreuse. Walls are in softly tinted lemon yellow sitk, hand painted on one side with modernistic floral interpretations In other soft greens and yetlow. modernistic media The rug has four shades, the soft | with | lemon_yellow for the center three ‘shades of this astonishingly two deeper tones bordering it in stripes. The | furniture s all light green lacquer | | with white marble tops and touches of silver every now and then to continue the gleam of the silken walls, All the lighting in comes through the silk. Therc are no lighting fixtures whatever, But when dusk fall a turns of the switch brings a_glow around the upper portion of the silken walls that rivals the softest daylight. The combination buffet-dining lacquer and un- geometric shape to make a refectory table of this room {no mean length- Curtains _of slithering. gleaming silk, striped like the chenille carpet in chartrcuse, cream and two deep- er green tones hang on silver rods clear to the floor. And a built-in cupboard for some modernistic animals in porcelain has its silver lining. The entire pic- ture is more daintily delicate than the first tender shoots of spring flowers. Rich, Colorful Treatment Contrasting warmly colorful and of dignified beauty is the ITtalian dining room done in tans, brown with touches of rich red. This room uses a combination of | ten materials to creatg it. The flower-like lighting fixtures swung above a metal chandelier that uses the same pattern of curves that the Rodier cloth on the walls em- ploys. The tufted carpets in soft tans, brown and deep red repeat The crystal coor, with its modern- istic mosaic of cut glass, uses the same general lines and curvy Impression of Space Here the senme of vistas is ad- mirably given. Heavy grilled doors lead the cye to the colorful rose- beige living room beyond one sid The crystal door gives an impre sion of more intercsting spectacles on the other side and a third out- let. a long window. hax its draperics from celling to floor in order not to detract the eye from its outward gaze. Gleaming palisander fashions-the the new dining | dining | little | jazzy are | buffet, with its marble top, and the chairg with their simple upholster- Ifloral pattern. The refectory table has curving metal legs on marble | bases and the top is of marble. Very diverse in thier atmosphere, |these two roo: et are the same at heart. For they exemplify the |svelt, more charming simplicity that modernistic Interior decoration Drings to us of the Fair Sex of Men's Manners. New York, adoption of Fwonien is evidence of an inferiority complex, Miss Annie §. | Peck, noted mountain climber and explorer, Miss Peck May masculine 21, (A--The manners by suggests who sought a man's cducation and a in by man's occupation, believes feminity and demon- strates it the bit of lace at he- throat, her softly curled coiffure and her narrow high heeled shoes. Twenty years ago, [ en knickers, a sweater and a pair of | heavy shoes and ascended Mt. Huas- [caran in Peru. It was a hard | scramble that established her repu- | tation as a climber. But, the othch day she sat in a chintz-covered arm chair, gazed thoughtfully at a well-kept hand and remarked that she made the climb only to show that women were just pable as men he trouble with most women, | more particularly the women of my | day,” she said, “is that they con- sider themselves half man if they do something that men do. They think it's smart to wear masculine clothes, to swear, (o be very hail-fellow-well- met. . “That’s all very well, but it's an admission on the part of women that they aren’t as good as men, that they know they aren't, and that they are going to try to be just as good by the usurpation of all the mascu- line trimminge.” When it was time for Miss Peck to go to college, back in 1870, she wanted to go to a man’s school. But she was denied admission to Brown where her father and her brothers were gradua &0 she went $0 the University of Michigan. In a class of 78 students, eight were women. All of them, said Miss Peck, hecame successful in their chosen ficlds of work There followed for the fragile looking girl, whose diminutive si helied her excellent physical condi- tion, vears of teaching school, of studying in Europe and finally a con- suming desire for travel, for explora- tion. In 1885 she climbed the Matter- horn, and in 1847 was the first wom- an to ascend the Orizaba. ) record ascents were to her cre | the years that followed until her Iast | climb in 1911 of two peaks of Mt. Coropuna in Peru, were first ascents ever made of those peaks. | She has definitely retired from the ctive life of mountain climbing nd devotes herself to writing. Sho is the author of two hooks on South America. TRI-COLOR JEWELRY The neckl and bracelets the moment have three strands jewels, One pearl necklace and « ring set has blue, rose and cre pearl strands. LUXURIOUS Rummer materials tixurious. Silk faille thing for sports clothes, risian weaves for novelty. Zrow more is quite the with Pa- | Inferiority Seen is Copying | Annie Peck put | both of which | ‘Women Think of Homes for Life Consider Jobs Only as | Temporary Occupations. Women still look upon jobs aw fransient.’ in spite of the fact that there are approximately 9,000,000 | women gainfulty employed in the | United Statea,” said Rose Schneider-, {mann, head of the Women's Trade Union League. | “Womens primary interests in life and their only permanent ones re marriage, home and babies. | Careerists really are in a very small majority. “With work less and less =killed, because of the machine efficiency of this age, this naturally is the case, Running a mangle, stitching seam:; | punching holas in cans, sorting oranges, and other mechanical joba can never hold the imagination and inte t of women. “The terrific turnover, figured at 100 per cent every five years in one lindustry, makes the work of organ- |izing women a different problem rom that of men, who alwa face the fact of being the bread-winners anad working until they are forced to quit, nierican women, beca this tranment attitude, never have come forward in great numbers ask- | ing for organization. More and more | women are going back to the fa | toy after marriage, but only teme | porarily. For, unless a woman can |carn a decent salary enough to eme I ploy help at home, it doesn’t pay her to work except when she necds some ecxtras like clothes for the children, a radio, or money to pay for emergencies.” b Porto Ricans Ask Suffrage Women There Desirous of Voting Powers. Washington, May 19 (P—Twe blackhaired, brown-eyed Porto Ri« can women are storming the halle | of congress these days in the inters c£ts of a movement to obtain sufs frage for the women of their couns try. Dr. Marta Robert, one of the | seven practicing women physicians i‘of the islahd and the head of a |large maternity hospital in San Juan | declares the entire feminine populas tion of her country is bent on ob= taining the vote. She and Miss Rosa | Smanuelli have heen sent by the suffrage associations of San Juan te speak at committee hearings on the proposed house bill giving suffrage to Porto Rican women. “We are all American eitizens."® Dr. Robert says. “But the men can vote and we cannot. When we Wi men come to the United States we have only to live here six monthm and we are entitled to vote, but all our lives we could stay in Porte Rico and never be allowed to exe press our choice for public officers.™ The suffrage association of which the two are active members has modeled its campaign for the vote upon that carried on by the women of the United States before the suff- | rage amendment was voted. While in Washington the women are guests of the National Woman's party, the organization that-is sponsoring their lobbying. Miss Emanuelli is secretary to a Porto Rican importer in New York. The bill in which they are inter- was introduced in the house by Senater Hiram Bingham ef Con- necticut. It provides for the amend- ment of the act of 1917, providing civil government for Porto Rico. and enlarges the scope of suffrage to In- clude women, .

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