New Britain Herald Newspaper, June 14, 1928, Page 10

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Madge Finds Marion's Secret Pro- vides Material for Queer Conjectures 1 imagine that my emotions while slipping down the hall from rion’s room to my own were much like those of a novice fn burglary upon his first job. Under one arm 1| carried the pasteboard carton which Marion had tied so securely an which ehe had packed dead grandmother's old sandalwood box with its hi n compartment, the secret of which was known only to the young girl. I had promised that 1 would her was absent at . but though 1 rad realized t. i 1 rejected Ma. | rion’s plea, she 1n all probablity would find some less loyal confic vet 1 would have by ant, arrassed if 1 had encountered Lil. X while 1 the box from her daugt r's room to mine T gained my own room safely, however, and lost no time in purting the box away in the bottom of th small chest in treasures and the key of which 1 carry with me. Then with the odd feeling that 1 inst had fimshed a grueling race. I eat down and let my fancy play around the envelopes, which T had €een in the secret com- partment and which Marion's grandmother had said contained the girl's “fortune” when she should be ecighteen The envelopes had heen in my Pands but 2 moment, but 1 had poticed that two of them were much Reavier than the third and evidently contained flat packages protected by the stiff corrugated paper, necd to pack photopraphs A fantastic theory concerning the possible con- tents of those heavy envelopes ecir- eleg tantalizingly around my mind. but T routed its absurdity with 1n- voluntary langhter. Not so easily, however, could 1 banish the alluring possibility that there might be some basis for the aged woman's soler belief. How much 1t wou if she could know that the child she 0 idolized would he assured of éven a modest competence! 1 knew my triend would never use a penny A mean to Lillian Love’s Awakening By Adele Garrison Ma- | { in | keep it for her while she | been woefully em- | hch 1 keep my own | ONCE OVERS By C. D. Batchelor The Heart Story of a Steadfast Woman Registored 0. 8. Patent Gttion of Tom Morton's money for hersels | but Marion was entitied to a [that could be salvaged from financial wreck her father | made of his affai: 1 knew Harry Underwood's reck- less generosity. He had told me that he could lift the burden of worry over Marion's college education from Lillian's shoulders, but after the outburst 1 just had heard from the girl, T knew that Marion would strongly resent anv financial aid | from her stepfather, and Lilian would not subject her to the humili- |ation of receiving it. What a eolu- I tion of the whole problem it womwd be should this old box, with its se- cret compartment really prove a treasure trove for the girl | 1 shook myself back to sanity vith an effort, and went down to | Katherine's room. wishing to catch her before the brisk walk which she | manages to take every day, no mat | ter how urgent her case. In the first two davs of Junior's illness she had !gone only as far as the long ver- anda and divided her walks into five minute periods of tramping up and down the porch, so that if she were needed at Junior's bedside she could be called at once But today she | had announced her intention of |leaving my boy with me, and had permitted his grandparents to er [tertain him for a few minutes be- Ifore 1 insisted upon his scheduled Believe it or not nap Knowing her conecienscionsnese, her decision had lifted a great weight of worry from my mind, but I wished further assurance upon | ene particular phase of my problem | “May T come with you as far as the garden gate?” T asked, smiling. | | as she met me at the door all ready | for her walk | “Sure you don't want to talk to | me here?” ghe returned. I can wait just as wel!l as not." “You can but vou're to." 1 retorted. T only want to ask you one question, and it doesn't | need long constderation. I'm sure | you'll have ample time to answer it | between here and the gate' Copyright. 1325, Newspaper Feature Service, Inc Four of a kind and still he got a poor hand. - | not going ©Old Mr. Toad Has a Feast By Thornton W. Burgess One thing for which there is need, And never an excusa —-014 Mother Nature Cubby Bear is greedy I don't suppose there ever was a little Bear who was not greedy. It 1s just as natural for a little Bear to be greedy ag it is for him to ba hungry. Now, no you know gresdy people are usually sélfish people. In fact, T think may #ay they are alwavs people. Greediness and selfishness 8O together Cubby was licking up ants at the ant-hill he had dug open just within | the edge of the Green Forest, and 1acking his lips as he ate | Vo hese are good.” said ‘The only trouble is, they are| not plentitul enough. T wish this ant-hill were five fimes as big. Yes, | sir, that 1s just what I wish. My, | my, how good they taste And juet then Cubby spied Yellow | g the Flicker, who also was | picking up anis st as fast as he | could. For a second or two Cubby was t00 astonished to rven speak. You see, he had not know that Yel low Wing was anywhere around, and here was this impudent bird actually taking his ants. Anyway that is the way Cubhy thought abont it “Those ants belong to me.” <a1d Cubby, and jumped toward Yellow Wing. Yellow Wing simply flew up in the tree over his head “They don't | bhelong to vou!" he snapped. “Ants don't belong to anybody but the one who gets them | 1s greed | | I EIIRI. Een dNEEN AN N Anal aune Two nine-letter words feature this| auestion puzzle. Of the two, No 10 letters are the same in both. of the Family |taste has disappeared along with the | vitamins, 1 | 1 Horizontal | 1. Tn what country i “The Great e Wal"” 5. Soft mute Frealfast aker rhubarh cereal | Solitary. cream, cnigp broded bacon, pop- | What constellation 18 repre- OVers, milk, cofice | sented as a set of scales in Luncheon crole of zpring | the Zodiac” | ables, prune bread, floating is- 14 Orderly arrangement or line. | land. hermits, milk. tea 15 Inlet Dinner A mutton cutlet 117, Breakwater tomato and cabbage salad, straw- {35 stoong. ceustic molution berry cobbler, milk. coffee “Well, didn’t | get them?" demand- |19 What river in France had twa | Braised Mutton (¢ utlet, o1 Cubby famous battles fought on its One shee mution cut 115 inches shores during the “World thick. 4 potatoes. four or five new Warts {carrofs, 4 or & white onions, 2 tea- | CHIFFON MODEL 2T Tonbien o salt. 12 teaspoon pepper, 1 o 22, Seeured cup boiling water A muptto sporta . frock | has W Choose meat from the larzest part printed chiffon pleated skirt, in Wing partictatsca PCnpoaamong i ol ke raspberry shades and a white chif- ENDIL S teta several places through to the bone fon jumper banded. belted and To perish in water - ym‘r:” s o haibon | carfed in print. Males, ¥ & To wager tors, scrape carr ind peel onions . To knock lightly Put into a g zed covered ha = Drain g dish or roaster. Sprinkle with Fashion Plaque Drain. e Verbal Kly on both sides until 33 Thick shrub ind place on bed of vege- 40, To stupefy by a hlow Sprinkle with remaining salt 41 More diccriminating |#nd pepper Add hoiling water and 43 What genus of moths includes | C0Over closely. Bake two hours or the clothes moth? loniger in moderately slow oven, | 44 Reckoned chronologically Serve on a hot platter arranzing the 145 Atom mieat in the center and fthe vege- bles as a horder Vertical 1. Kaolin. type of earthy -sub. | (Copyright 1928 NEA Eervice, Inc) “tance e — | y: whetstone HAND TINTED SKIRTS | Writing fluid Paris, June 12, P—Knife pleated | | Point of compass shown here with | Deity. in pastel colors. | To 1mmerse in fluid Wading hird ‘4 i 2 “Well, didn't T get them?* de- manded Cubby, glaring up at Yellow Wing Yellow Wing chuckled “You aian't get thoss T got,” said he, and vou're not zetting those that are running off in all cctions now You're selfish, that is what i the matter with vou. You're pig- gish Cubby glared up 2t Vellow Wing but he couldn't think of anvthing to $2y, 80 he turned his back and once more went to licking up ante He hadn's seen 14 Man Tozd off at one side, who was picking up every ant that happened to come his way Ol \r tened himee Toad ea1d not He flat (tiaoenient wonld have had hard K to him, even it he had looked straight at him. Just as Chibby Be gan to lick up oA Mr Toad he te r those that came his o ared; he e Fut he yust Ther s a so ot c Fors oh drew p his ez be STty il svtn aiifs. M= tood up, E 4 hi flay it it There ia Far Brown's Bo as coming thre 1 Fo ing tround ¥ t el to one side He ather side Farmer Browns Poy conld b At the came t Yel he ker flew off to g0 was Ol Mr. Toad oO1d e To forward to where Cut Bear had heen. Then he gighed was 4 long sigh of pure happin And sfter he had sighed. he got right down to business That hittl- red tongue of his flicked out and again. flcled out and in agan fiieled out «nd in agan. and ever i pprgted, He was Raving that feast all to himself (Copyright 1923, by T. W. Burgess.) v |for summer. Change the dirt ;Mmu:h the union of the women of \eELE: Sru N e Mise Trma Dicbel of Reno, Nev. s around them too the United States and the South S 7 {niwnelimational scemalory s often a bridesmaid. but never has | American countries.” | CHL B RSP L e omn o e e biean 4 bride. The reason is thab| CLEAN FLOORS RBetty has accompanied her moth- | — Elatesilinkucanitoidiar A Four har. 4 should be |er in her lecture tours for the past | he 1= stenozrapher to one of the | Your hardwood floors shoul in her 0 past | 11, To ventilate e bisy NiEtices of the peace in Reno |gone oter carofully before fhe |threr summers and 1 prepared 1o | Women Invade Clubs, | A2 ’"A.: hag “ ";’y""‘; ": ‘:"]':" jand nds up for about four|summer starts If not waxed th evote all her time to the move. Londoners’ Qtlo“ghold | ERLL B IR A loE O0de [couples every day. They call her oughly, the fand and grit from ment after her graduation next| , - "0C P55 BT | il | | Reno's “official bridesmaid.* | summer will scratch them. June, [have invaded the last stronghela of | e B oaction iarracts | ' me = the misogynist male—the London | 129, Who led. the Jews out ot £ [ club ?!;« m,m;,,m;r d]l'-:av'i: e; Thie Tigh-heeled beach shos of Bib Wh P d WI“ T k H S V. everal famons London clubs hax the tep, 1€ unusually smart and Tewel | presence of women “",'"a,""t,,,m practical ek of penihs | of their anti-feminine e ring fence i | "One of the pioneers in the latest 1 Dry | | | teminine offensive s Miss Ve- 32. Rodent similar to the guine | | nard. who has heen secretary of the WP S Army and Navy club for one vear. | Grier The Devonshire club and the Ar- What volcano is in hur's club are other famous clubs Voegretted evcerding! 1 which now have women secreta- e 4 | | vies. The secretary of the Devon- Tnlquits | | shire, Mrs. Perry, mingled romancs s A With business and became the wife | it of 2 member of the club committea, | ik Coincident with this development » " | |comes the announcement that wo Iy e iR e | men have made so _great successes o e e el el | as real estate agents that the cities S S Gl e g B R and towns of England are employ- o aannr bl |ing them as municipal estate SR L L | agents. The Chesterfield town DRI Uina e R e en i ien council appointed Miss J. M. Upcott e | to manage all its real-estate. The s D H Kensington borough council chose s sl el women to manage part of its prop- Eeolia ot i erty. Rotherham, Stockton-on-Tees R e L Rt and Walsall have followed suit. and other summer foods ve al | tendeney to stain the finge Rub | Foe . . INTERESTING COMBINATION immediately with lemon and ‘\"PE Pariz, June 14 (A Nattier blue 18 A -whits finen dress; witli Bodics ‘”m it STl 2 i ,pn’;t featuring diagonal pleats, has a | DaaLoonn blus crens ae box pleated skirt and a three- GHILA 8 LHDRES e U] folely quarters coat of red. white and Give yvour vacation children | with sty cline in rose, 108 Patterned Bliansing #ik, something constructive to do each | blue an b form a collar |Thy< is a front view of the lodge on Cedar Island, where President and Mrs. Coolidge will va- b e e S R e e L "“n‘&'a,“u cation this summer, near Brule, Wis. The islet is flanked by lakes and by the Brule river, | gy, (40 ia s mittion times ae bg The bydaws: ot Diariie are Eses ::.1,'";:.N:"',,. vhia Nelb. | on inn vatta, The sk pieateq | filled with fish and concealed amid thick woods. Other buildings on the estate include dining |as our earth ana 300,000 times as 1er to respect than the in-laws. |ful thinge. in larger pleats than usual. hall, sawmill, power plant and boat house. assive. | cook hamp Clark, was ribhon opening br Lomsiana, Mo, |1he famous speaker of to t Tine o Rare ‘Vegetables Best For Health C king Often Spoils Good | Qualities. getables, rare, please!” That Dy Ruth Okey, will he as com- mon a dinner order of the futur when fond yalues really mean som. thing to us, as “Steak, rare,” is to- Aay — Dr th. as Associate Professor of Household Sc at the Um versity of California, is “Okey”’ o Tier Titamins Trivate homes vegetables as lttle as ing more of che eaid v conser alues, Rut restaurants, horels thar cook i large quantities <tezm, boil or bake vegetabl vou have to look at them what species they are—fo Vit over-cooking stance. can amins are Vitamin B, have 65 per s value cooked out of toods lack of this vitamin causes appetite, failure of young of weght, sor, and intestinal difficnl “The loss of Vitamin reduces ahout irritability, flecting joints by overhea from susceptibint 0 1s all important |ln\\l RED TURB!A A new turban, entirely fre roses, & and forget-me-nots fashioni loss cooking cent, causes types of decay the limbs and also destroved tects fection, 1ta has violat: SUMMER LING orts and bandeanx colored hankerchief mmer charm and Nightzowns lik 1 short catel otfer conlne are sleeveless Official Bridesmaid| are learning institutions destroved RI¥ Ir. grandson of the delegated to raffic on ge over the Missouri | ties named for | may develop he house to possible the food and les until to r their by for in- cent of The | loss of | animals lad. of ties which | per certain | pains min A, . pro- ¥ to in- | NS of flow- ardenia ng it, in del- linen, | summer | e them | a warning note re | trol of human beings in relationship Befty. a_ junior at MeGill univer- = | sity in Montreal, Mrs, Archdale has | COAT DRESS started on a tour of the United | New for races and other spec- | States in fhe intercst of interna- | tator sporfs affairs is the sports | tionalizing the woman's movement | coat dress of tussar or other| The two have gone to Kansas | reugh silk. It has tailored collar where they will act as .rprp.( and sleeves, just like a coat ives of the National Wo- R —— man's Party in its effort to have ‘ PAGODA SLEEVES the republican national convention Pagoda slceves are new for sum- ' incorporate a plank in its plavmrm} mer eveuing coats, They are full |advocating an equal rights amend- | |at the top and then flare to great- | ment to the constitution ‘ | er fullness at the cuff. “Most individual countries are | PR e = well organized In ftheir \\omon's‘ HEALTHY FERNS movements,” said Mrs. Archdale. | Ferns that have been in the |“The big problem now is to make | house all winter often need a dose it an international movement The} | | Marmiage Is No |. Cure For Habut Unsettled Persons are Not Sure to Settle. BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN Editor Journal of the American Medical Association and of Hy- gela, the Health Magazine In a recent consideration of the nerves and their control, Drs. Foster Kennedy and Lewis Stevenson sound tive to the con- Know Them By Their Hair Head-dress of Chinese Women is Barometer of Prosperity. to metal disease, The unthinking frequently ad- vise marriage as a cure for un- settled habits of life or for that sort of irritable restiessness that come on in the years beyond ado- lescence. | However, the specialists cited say that for a young man or wo- man fo mariy a person of abnor- al or perverted mind is to in- vite unhappiness and tragedy not only for the husband and wife, put also possibly for their children An hereditary trend toward | mental disease which may reveal | iself only in the form of peculiari- | of conduc hefore marriage under the added re- sponsibilities of married life into severe disturbances of the mind. Inherited Defects Physical defects of the body which develop during the lifetime of the individual are not likely to| The cingle ornament worn in the huir of the Chinese woman on the be inherited On the other hand. | 1¢ft tells at a glance that she is not prosperous The other woman, mental defect is frequently car- | Wife of a wealthy merchant, wears a ) welled bandeaux, pearl, jade and ried on. perhaps through the in-| ivery flowers. Iy interior China has struck vhounnas‘uqn growled at the r!;mr One of the most esvere of the |Of Chinese women in the head, lit-| “The fluctuation of paper mon- erally. |ev, together with the fact that conditions concerned i epilepsy. buried silver runs a chance of he- Contirmed epileptics, all authori-| For. in tima of peace and pros. | red | e ties adviee, ghould not marry. |Perity. & Chinese husband makes| ! Stolen gave rise 1o this custor Marriage and its added responsi- |his Wite's hair the family ex- | Of PUling savings into som s Vilities invariably aggravate the | chequer. Every extra tael, equal |?P{ 'hi"E 'fll' WA i condition t0 $1.50 in Mexican money, goes| (NOW it s hea e il True many of the greatest char- |INto an ornament for the sleek y"m‘n‘ a‘.':;’;"h; it ke Carns acters that the world has known.|black locks of the first lady of his Rl S S B e st were epileptic both in childhood |household \roh.“m Tove ihei- \ehitabeal with and in their adult life On the Tt 18 not necessarily that hol el el = other hand., the condition it so!loves his wife more, but that m‘ h“m‘” m““m” Bk tcarce serious that it may well contra- | f«ars losing his savinge less when | e e e indicate marriage they are In the form of segotisble| [ S0 "5 TRAEE AR 8 WESA Doctors Kennedy and _tevenson | ornaments, For there are no sav-| (ofth Gad, breacdth Even the point out that the various misfits | Ings banks in the interior their savings. Their homes have n We, cranks ecriminale, ehut-in Barometer of Prosperity been robbed of the obiects that personalities, and others belong | By the long silver hairpins, the | e e e scientifically in a great mass of | golden butterflies, the filigreed | Y S5 PO NIV, m RS ances people who are said to have psy- | flowers. carved ivory bits, studded |, ‘,m{m,‘ mpEinelAnyones Belns chopathic constitutions. caps, bandeaux with jewels em- | gepirute. % E 2) That is to say, they suffer with |bedded in them, iade geegaws and | Children Remg Sold | some disorder of fhe brain cells|s0o on one could tell a family's | “They are leaving their babies caused either by disease or by a | prosperity | by the wayside in the hope that deficiency 1n structure which be-| Now, not a head i1z left With | gome foreigner will pick them up zets queer conduct even a single. ornament for vast|ang care for them Mr Raler Trouble Makers areas in the famine district, ac-|gaid. *The mothers cannot ferd While these people are not in. |cording t6 J. Earle Baker, former |(hem. Some fathers ara seling sane in the common understand- |railroad official for the Chinese | theyy children into the mills and Ing of that word, they are a men- |government. now returned, after | cing.song houses hecause they ace to the communitics in which | 10 years in the interior, to work | hear they coull get food and live |they live because they are con- |for the China Famine Relief hars stantly dissatisfied with conditions | “No barbaric princess ever| It looks as if 1t will he many as they are, stirring up difficulties | decker her head more gorgeously |vears” he continued, “before the which the more normally minded |than the Chinese women did a | vater Mles in carted 1vore. the of the commumty must ecttle few vears ago,” he said One of | mimature templ ar weapens, Their parents are not entirely [our Christmas trees would look |and symbolic pins of j2de and gold responsible for them, since good |dingy in comparison with the | would reappear in the shiny black environment and careful rearing | Wives of some of the prosperous | hair of the women will not sgolve the problem for|Chinese men. Even the poorest| The first ornaments that do ap- most of them. On the other d, [farmer would have been destitute | pear will mean far more than | their parents are responsible to [indeed whose wife could not boast | mere decoration They will mean the extent that these people are one little gold lily or jade spear. | that the inferior of China again | born with mental capacities uhnh”‘nr in that geegaw lay hope of | hope of life and happiness.” represent their heredity MOTHER. DAUGHTER, FEW “HFLLO GIRLS" wmmflv Washington, June 14. (P—Tele. | phone switchhoards 4o not &eem m‘ attract marrizd women who work, according to a survey of married H FEM[NIS l S women gainfnlly occupied, recently y completed by the United States Wo- men’s burean. Only 14 per cent of the 120,281 married women em- ployed are engaged in occupations "I”‘l"""h"f'";f‘;’:"f';]"("- Y "‘: H tom | Washington. June 14 (Fi—Femi- | ’Tl"‘] ol m‘m" g P'r‘"’:[“”‘ Pm':":’H |niem has champions in both mother “nn'wn ;rflpl_'";“sd medflnm“l‘(‘;and daughter in the family of Mrs, | Helen Arcl ! cervice and 243 per cent of them | rchdale, editor of an engaged in come sort of manu. | Sh \WeEKIY review. | a1 enga n some 2 : | a n With her 20 yea aughte facturing and factory work. yedr - 010 daugiiter, TOURING COUNTRY of castor oil to make them healthy Hmnr has started on this continent Tnes Gray and S “The film heigh: suppo cludin The v cluder Kemp and and ¥ disper ment il ON (c ture, farm party of 't branc they will b enact; restor g pe comp! cultus “Th berth tural We velop enltur has b plishr Under ed by tratio have funda halan them, the p ture | comm dustri Pt limite exerc volun; possit action dema; done also poliel the a as the and £pons sional in s0 «crops the t differ ductic comp ing s T that | ture aid t} the n the p crops handl do n temp! throu subsie ation: 10 m largel ers’ the u as ar costs red h pluse the ¢ benef endor thus certes henef the p port princ BUDDC 1 been ot ag only for ti of th of ag o farm tition have the d of th fve b as pr etead rated agric Justic able of th INI An dian villag for tl natur hand

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