New Britain Herald Newspaper, June 25, 1928, Page 12

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The Heart Story of a Steadfast Woman Love’s Awakening By Adele Garrison Madge's Father Determines to Quit| power who stop at nothing. His Life of Peril and Settle Down |Men of this type, some of them in My father put his arm around me | unbelievably high places, formed a and drew me close as I voiced my|band whose outlawry was as fan- almost hysterical plea that he ta tic, but far more vicious than | no more of the dangerous mysteri- | Robin Hood's. The assassination of | ous journeys which his work in the|rulers and the wiping out of cities diplomatic branch of the sccret|upon a certain day if huge sums of service had made imperative for money were not forthcoming—these him during the years since our re- | were their plans, The rounding of union. | them up sent me on that last voy- “Did they affect you so much {age of mine and Allen Drake and 1 will my darling?" he asked, contritely. came back marked men. 1 can tell “Oh!" I shuddered against him.| you now, my dear, that if it had | “You never will know how much. not been for Harry Underwood's 1 never have told you because 1| help, and your ability to decipher didn't want to hinder you I felt | that code message, you might have as if 1 were a soldier's daughter, |been minus—what is the mode d indeed 1 was. But surely — | phrase? cetly good father' generals retive, don't they? | *“Don't ijured him, catching He laughed indulgentiy | his hand “Yes, and so did I, once, as you| “No, I won't jest about it,”” he remember.” : | said. “but you must believe me 3ut they held vou in reserve” T when 1 tell you there is no more rejoined, “and it seems to me t for y to be concerned. vouw've been busicr than you were [Those devils were implacable, but cver since that time {they have been offectually dealt “That is true,” he admitted. “But | with, and if 1 do not die until they thure has been a sort of tacit agree- | cause my taking off, 1 shall live ment that when this last job was|fo rival Methuselah’s claim. And un- completed, 1 could shake off respon- | liss there's something as grave as a sibality except for consultation in an | war, T shan't leave the farm except crgency. And Iis to Under- | on pleasure trips any more. Shall 1| vood, T believe 1 Ul be able to | tell you a 4 | 1 a real rest.” | He was flushing like schoolboy, | I am still bewildered hy the nd I felt a sudden fantastic fear. | covery that he has hee K oly he was not thinking of— seven',” he said, “that man who has Oh! of course,” 1 forced myself Kept our whole department to say. with baffled curiosity for all these | “I'm writing a book.” he said, | vears. Andayet, now that his secret {and T breathed again, “the history | is known, 1 realize that always when | of some of our cases, for a very | 1 have received messages from that | limited cir ation, the members of mysterious figure, 1 have been|the service of other countries. They huunted by a sense of something fa- | have heen pleased to gay that our | miliar about the bizarre phrascology | methods we orth copying, and in which he ecouched h notes. |1 have been asked to do the work. | Wll! he certainly has carned im- | That is what I meant when T told | munity for the rest of his life and | your mother-in-law I must be treat- expiated every whit of that old cd as a guest.” erime. This last cxploit of his has| “But I'm afraid it will he simply helped to cut out a can very Limpossible for vou to work under near the heart of our hody politic | the conditions you'll have here,” 1 and that of other countries. said, with sudden alarm. *“Oh! 1 You sce. dearest,” he went on, mustn't throw my burdens on your “while we always have with us a!mustn’t throw my hurdens on vou certain type of fanatical revolter | this way. I must stay out here this against things as they are. we have | Winter heen troubled since the war by a (To be continued) new type of conspirator, the crim- - inal of high mentality, with con- Copyright. 1928, wspaper tempt for authority and lust for IPeature Service, Ine. By Thornton W. Burgess When all is said and done, my dear, There's nothing that is really queer —S8tickytoes the Tree Toad Stickytoes is right. He is absolute- ly right. Things are queer only be- cause they are unfamiliar. The mo- ment we become familiar with things, they are no longer queer. Now, to Stickytoe: the things which Scrapper the Kinghird had told him about his cousin Big Btickytoes and his other cousin Whooper, who live away down in the warm Tropics, had scemed very queer; but when he got to thinking | l Once Overs NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, JUNE 25, 1928. By C. D. Batchelor Petont 0N NEVER JUDGE THEM BY it over, it came to him that prob- | Although the words are short and ably they wouid think the things he | “You're wrong, Winsome, quite [{here are no unkeyed letters, there g in this decign to prevent quick com- himself. “I'm used o having my ba- | fheir father’s mouth, and from there | o0 hics born in the Smiling Pool, so it | 11Mp out into the Great World. This | HORIZONTAL doesn't seem queer 1o me for Mrs is all truth, every word of it.” 5 % Stickytoes and me 1o go hack to the | Scrapper 1ooked very hard at Win. | 1. Seasoning used for the preser- Smiling Pool every spring. The | fome Bluebird when he said this _ vation of meats. §miling Pool doesn’t seem a queer | “If you please.” epoke up Sticky- | ¢ é“La;v,::-‘ snakes nursery for our babies. But 1 sup- |10e& “what is the name of this| 5 p'_”m'y‘m:‘n;d toi ihe cxohane pose it would seem a very gueer | Frog | of one currency for another. nursery to those cousins of min: 1 Delieve it is called Darwin's|,g “p O0C 0" OB P of away down where Scrapper the | Fro replied Sevapper 118, BEintor e beast & Kinghird goes in the wi Tiwone| i Wt neniled Atickyioes, T vall el o rae ihread sisedsto ioutline der if Scrapper really meant what [T can say is that I'm glad I'm just | the design in lace, he said an ordinary Tree Iro 116, Inet What did he say?” asked Win 1228, by 7T 3V, Durgess) 50" yny * shallow: receptacle. for come Itubird, happened to story: “Mrs Peter Has | holding articles gt ickytoes talking to hu 115, Prophet who trained Samuel self - 19 rehicle “He said, * replied Sticky(ons OLD SONGS WANTED S S ainnenky that he knows of some tadpols Tndianapolis. June 25 (P—The Tn- he coat after roughing-in in who live in their father's throat liana Federation of Music Clubs has | plastering. I guess they don't lit ng Started a eoliection of words and To amalgamate, then,' kled Winsome., “They Music of old ballads, songs, and Ewer. probably live in his throat only un- dance tun ping that eventually In contrast with *con” til he can swallow then will be con distinetive record To hurl. ‘You're wrong. Winsome, quite ihe’ American peopl To disparage wrof deelared another vo ind s T Two five there was Serapper the 1. windor. who had come up just to overhear the conversation i To mitigate a Frog down, 4way 1 Fermented lquor made from &pend my winters whose babies an infusion of malt. hatch out in his throat and live 42, Radical (math.) there until they are hig enough to |43. To state positively. | = |44, Seven plus three rd s 45, Gaelic suel 40 To measure. @ cArE {0 Anar: 47 Animal similar to a horse him. So Winsome Bluchird 45. Mocked. SN ot B VERTICAL 1 1. Wise men. th . Nimble. (ha 3. The utmost extent. 4. Peak. 5. Horizontal timber supporting the common rafters 6. Basket twig. o 7. Lifeless, S, ltead fl it ivs 2. Harem. el iy {10 To braid. e s T 11, Fashion e 19, Large silvery fish realated to “Just s0," said he ! Wgplicanel g, i e 20 ]!‘rrlummz to the calf of the g with air it is 'rimps. as a music-hag IS Gas into which water is con- fter the singing I verted to the boiling point. has another for it. Mrs, ot dEpaie: brings him a dozen or more An insertion. “Take care of these, my zed clay blocks says, ‘and don't et anything 2. To arrogate, to them.' With that <he furns her To blaspheme. back and goes off to have Iinished. time. Mr. Irog stuffs t 37. Polynesian chestnut tree into that music-1 which lame is the 40 Infore, conies a nursery. By and by the egg wrup which 2. The deep hatch and the litte tadpoles con- 4 £ i<hion possibil- (Copyright 1428, NEA Service Inc) tinue to live in that que arsery gty A Lanvin i in | - — In tine they chang t other Lron resquent touches NEW HANRIES tadpoles do They o perfect of i Nl T8 A Black-white vogue spreads to little Frogs. Of course, they are tiny dved fox eollar 1ffs of plain Iherchicfs Wisps of linen have le fellowse. Then. one by one. they jame ¢ e pien as docs the <iartling modernistic patterns print- crawl out of that queer nursery into Lem which resembles a flounce., itd in black on them. THEIR 'LEGS - UNLESS THEY VE GoT. TROISERS 'Drink Milk, is Doc_t(lr'_s Urge Says Most Americans Do Not Have Enough, BY DR. MORRL PFISHBEIN | VEditor Journal of the American Medical Association and of Hy- gia, the Health Magazine. The experts in nutrition have de- cided that 1 3-4 pints of milk per day is a reasonable average con- age American really consumes about | three-fourths of a pint. As pointed out by Dr. C. E. A. | Winslow, milk ranks third among |the foodstuffs as a source of ener- |y and second in richness in pro- \wml and in fats. | For more than a quarter of a cen- been given in this country to the ob- {taining of a pure milk supply. but standards of cleanliness in milking are still low. Contamination Easy Contamination still takes place eatily from the cow, from the fin- |gers of the milker, from flirs and JAIL TATSTKTA] AlVIeTRTEIO[RIBFETLTIININ] k[1 To]7]s [cTolulr TP elc] el TS TP TATTIVTETRI W] E] RECUNNE2RmE RN . InTolR] Tel LT TFTo[s]"] BERNREEENEEMN [WIo] TwIRlANIGILTE[ {mA] alolol JcTuTAlTIMF7TB]E INJo[oINTHETGIOZIP 1 [N] (CIR[e[e[cTEPAN] VIM[B]u]s] is collected or into which be poured after collecting. Further- more. under civilized conditions of [living, it is necessary to transmit | milk over long distances and there |are nunierous possibilities for con- | tamination in transit. | Although there is still much ty- berculosis from bovine sources in the United States, the rate for this |type is twice as high in England as !in this country, due undoubtedly to |the higher standards of purity in | milk demanded by the laws of the United States. |~ Nevertheless, even with all of our |1aws relative to sanitation of dairies land to pasteurization of milk, oc- | casional epidemics of typhoid fever, |scarlet fever, diphtheria and septic |sore throat still develop from in- [fected milk due to someonc's care- it may Menus E)f the Family BY SISTER MARY (By Sister Mary) Breakfast—Orange juice, cereal, i = cream, pouched eggs, crisp whole | C8nes8 in secing that the laws are wheat toast, milk, coffec | properly obf\\od. Luncheon—Tripe roll, head let.| Doctor Winslow points out that one of the most important points in | the control of milk is rapid coolins. The milk should be brought to a lemon butter sauce, fomato and cu- | (operature of 10 - degrees conti- cumber salad, cherry custard, milk, |Shade 25 Soon after milking as pos- | coftee. | Pastcurization is the most effi- | Green peas and carrots as well 8 | jone method of assuring pure milk potatoes are scrved with the fish. \,ng heating for 30 minutes to a |The salmon s cut in slices and |gonnerio s of 6o degrees will de- {broiled. ' The vegetables are cooked | yioy all of the germs without mod- separafely and served as a border |iyiie the cream, or its chemical or for the fish and the sauce is poured | pyvient’ charactoristics. |over the whole. | upplying Vitamin C Tripe Roll True, this may have some effect | One pound tripe. 3 potatoes, 2 'on tne vitamin €., the anti-scurvy | teaspoons minced onion, 1 cup soft | vitamin. IFor this reason all spe- | pread crumbs, 2 tablespoons minced | cialists recommend foday that in- |8reen pepper, 3 slices bacon, 1-8 ! fants depending largely on milk for | te | their diets be given also some fresh oon pepper. Wash tripe through three waters. ' fruit juices, such as either orange tuce, bran rolls, berries with cream, | milk, tea. Dinner — Broiled salmon with | Drain and cool. In the meantime |juice or tomato juice. boil, mash and season potatoes. Doctor Winslow is convinced that |Combine with onion, pepper. | more disease is due to the lack of (crumbs and green pepper. Lay tripe {flat on a board and spread with po- |tato mixture. Roll firmly and tie securely with string. Rell in flour. |brush over with sa oil and place on a rack in a roaster. Cover top | with bacon slices and bake for an hour in a hot oven. When ready to serve remove string and pour over a well scasoned | hot tomato sauce. Cut in slices for drinking milk that to the drinking of contaminated milk. So important ix this substance in the diet that he feels it should become a national question. The centralization of milk produc- tion in large concerns and the atten- |tion of government health depart- |ments to the sanitation and econo- | mics of the industries are neces- |sary,” he sa: in assuring greater serving. | milk consumption and a purer milk | (Copyrignt. 1928, N¥A Service, Tnc.) | supply. | BN ] SHOE GLOVES Taffeta and Crepe Are ‘ Iline, lightweight toe rubbers in all colors and in snakeskin printed can be had now fitted into their own case about the size of a folded pocket handkerchief. Paris, June 25 (A—Plaid taffeta and heavy, dull crepe de chine are sophisticatedly combined in a new ‘,M et dress. The Dblouse has a | Combined in Dresses |}, | WRAPPED ICE | square neck and no ornaments save | For the ice bhox that is old and taffeta cuffs to match the skirt. The [ not o scientifically perfect as it skirt is finely pleated of black and |should be. nevspapers wrapped lemon yvellow. but black predom- [around the ice keep it from melt- \irates in its general effect. | g suption for man, whereas the aver- | |tury a vast amount of attention has | from dirty vessels in which the milk | Women to Play | (i) Mrs. Woodrow Wilso Shaver, wife of the chairman of t BY RODNEY DUTCHER NEA Service Writer shington, June —The Dem- ccrats treat their women better than the Republicans. There will be something like 150 | women delegates sitting in the Dem- jccratic national convention at Hous- ton this ycar and about 260 women |alternates. As was the case at Kan- sas City, there are fewer women iseated than in 1924, a reduction ‘fram about 500 to 400 among some 2000 delegates and alternat | The Republicans had than | half as many feminine delegates and la few alternates. Many of the ladies will split their |votes with men, so that their actual |voting power will be somewhere ‘:-mund 100 votes. For some reason or ofher, ’\lumcn at the Democratic conven- |tions are considerable more inde |pendent that their Republican sis- ters. An excellent example of Demo- |cratic feminine indapendence is the |case of Mrs. Emily Newell Mrs. Blair was national committee- {woman from Missouri and for sev- eral years vice chairman of the na- {tional committee. | When Scnator Reed wanted the | Miesouri delegation it would only Fave been smart politics for Mrs. Blair to chime right in. Instead of | that, Mrs. Blair, a good Wilson Dem- |ocrat, led the fight to prevent his |endorsement. Mrs. Blair, of course, | was eleminated from active leader ship in Missouri politics as soon as the Reed faction gained ascendancy |at the state convention. She will be | succeeded as committeewoman by [Mrs. C. B. Faris, a Reed supporter land wife of a federal judge. Reed’s | other foes joined with his friends to endorse him and save their skins The nominee will select Mrs | Blair's successor as vice chairman, but she will be active at her hea quarters here during the conven- less tion. he is regarded as the politi- | cally best informed woman among Democrats and liant administration of her position. Nearly all the leading women organization’s will have represent- latives before the platform commit- /tee to urge their various pet pro- grams. The platform, of course, will be dedicated by the politicians, with | A considerable number of widely |known women are deiegates. Ind lana paid a neat tribute to widows of three of her distinguished sons by placing them on the at-large sl They are Mrs. Thomas R. Marshall, widow of the vice presi- {dent under Wilson: Mrs. Samuel | alston, widow of the late Senator |and Mrs. John W. Kern, whose hus- band was one of Bryan's running- mates and a great progressive fight- er. | Mrs. Woodrow Wilson is expected tc attend the convention. but not as a delegate. It has been reported that Mrs. Wilson favors the Smith Can- didacy, possibly because Reed is Smith's principal opponent. | Among the anti-Smith women is Mrs. William R. Pattangall, nation- al committeewoman from Maine, But Mrs. Pattangall is not a dele- gate. She had the courage to oppose |8mith, and met with defeat similar to Mrs. Blair's. One hears, by the way, that quit a few Democratic women avoided posts as delegnies in order to avoid the expected wet-and-dry ! fight. Gertrude Atherton, the novelist, is a delegate from California. Among |the others to be seated—all dele- gates unless otherwise stated—are: | Mrs. Anna Dickie Oleson, an al- |ternate-at-large from Minnesota, | who was the first woman to be nom- inated for the United States Senate. Mrs. Emily Smith Warner, daugh- Iter of Governor Smith, from Albany. Miss Gertrude Ely of Pennsylvan- |ia, a leader in the League of Women o l\'n! B | E »eth Marbury, Democratic national committeewoman from New York. | Mrs. Henry Morgenthau of New | York. wife of the former ambassa- dor to Turk Mrs, Nellie Tayloe Rose, former governor of Wyoming, who has been {active in the Smith pre-convention campaign in the west. Mrs. Leroy Springs of South Caro- lina, who spoke for McAdoo at New York in 1924. { Mrs. Gertrude Bowler, national committeewoman from Wisconsin. i Mrs. Ralph Swafford, a woman's |leader in Kansas City. | Mrs. Bernice Pyke, national com- imitteewoman from Ohio. retiring vice chairman of Democratic National Commi ttee; Franklin D. Roosevelt of New York: (6) Mrs. Nellie Ross, former governor of Wyoming; (7) Mrs. Clem Yh"L Blair. | vetires after a bril- | such concession as seem expedient. | Bigger Part at he Democratic national committee, Here are some of the women Democrats who are expected to play a part in the convention at Houston: 2) Mrs. Peter Oleson, of Minnesota; (3) Mrs. Emily Newell Blair, Missouri, (4) Gertrude Atherton, the novelist; (5) Mrs, Mrs. Walter H. Jobe of Detroit, prominent and influential in Michi- gan politics Mrs. Isabel Ahearn O'Neill, mem- ber of the Rhode Island state legis lature, Congresswoman Mary Norton New Jersey, | Mrs. Clem Shaver, wife of the |chairman of the Democratic Na- [tional Committee, is a leader in the Women's Democratic Law Enforce- !ment League which will demand a ldry plank. | iWon;e—rl_ N;d to | . Leam F Inance of |Instruction in These Mat-: ters Is Essential. | “There is an enormous flood of | women eccking first hand knowl- |edge in finance now. Clubs give |lectures, banks and bond houses have women's departments. But schools and colleges rvally should |give courses for women in practical {finance, Mrs. William Laimbeer, head of the Women's Departments of the National City Bank, now edi- tor of the first financial department in a woman's publication, said this. “Liberty Bonds started it.” she continued. “The logical aftermath is 'logical and tremendous and wide- |spread interest of women in | Kinds of finance. from budgeting to linvesting their own money. | “Professional women and home- 'makers who are wives of profession- |al men with fixed incomes are per- | former {Faps the most dilligently interested | |classes. They must make each penny work, and ahove all be secure. They tackle finance from all its angles— tiusts, insurance and £o on. | “Women spend 85 per cent of the | family budget. Therefore it is a ser- 1ons pational responzibihity how they spend it. Courses to instruct women 'in finance must coma eventually | Children should he taught from their infancy the value of money. “My own children have had their |own checking and savings acconnt land made their own investments |since they were 10 years old.” Mrs Houdini Waits in Vain {Look ng for Message That Never Comes. “Of course there is magic in the world—for those who can catch it —just as there are fairies for chil- dren,” says Mrs. Houdini, widow of | the late world famous magician. “But it requircs tremendous dex- terity, poise and excceding self-re- liance to be able to have a hand in magic. 'Add to all this a belief in the su- atural and one hecomes a spirit- uvalist. But the difference between a spiritualist and a magician is that a magician never fools himself, and I'm inclined to think spiritualists do. For they are fanatical in their belief in their communication with the | hereafter. I “Not a day has passed since my | husband's death but that at least | one spiritualist has come to sce me. | Houdini and I made a compact 35 | vears ago that the first one to pass | would get a secret message back to { the other, a code message. To date [ TI've had many messages purported to be from Houdini but never a one | that had a word of our code in it. “I've believed in magic for vears now. If I ever get Houdini's message I'll be convinced of spirit- valism: I am still waiting, and hop- ing, to get his message. I obey all the impulses 1 have to do things that might bring communication. “I have a handkerchief Ruth Sny- ler embroidered for. me while in the death house. The other night I woke up with the urge to wave that handkerchief three times around my head. I waved and waved it. Noth- ing happened. “If anybody can come through it will be ®foudini. Until he does, T am watchfully waiting to believe in spiritualism.” per all | Girl Gets Medal, 'She Saved a Man Australian Miss Is Award- ed Gold Medallion. Sydney, Australia, June 25 (P— |A to-year-old girl, Miss Lucy Done jaldson, is wearing the gold medal |of the Royal Shipwreck and Relief |society for having rescued a fellow swimmer from the attack of a shark. She and a girl friend were bathing in the surf one evening after all other bathers but one man had left the water. When the man threw up his arms and shouted, “Help! A shark has |got me,” Miss Donaldson sent her companion to shore for help and herself swam to his rescue. Splash- ing the water vigorously, she frighte ened off the shark and succeeded in dragging the man, badly injured, to shallow water. STUFFED PEPPERS Green peppers, stuffed with chopped liver, rice and onions, make a delicious and filling luncheon or | supper dish for hot days. PRINTED LIN A circular skirt of white linen, with ecalloped edges, has a’ slip- |over long-sieeved blouse of black {and white printed linen. TOMATO JUICE When oranges get expensive. & zood substitute for the breakfast |drink 15 strained tomato juice, chilled, Serve in small glasses. REG.U. S PAT.OFF. ©1928. BY NEA SERVICE INC. If show prices go any higher. the | audience will have to give up clothes, | too. Fashion Plaque A, 2 Z Z \\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\ \ LR R > 22z g@dsék A pale green chiffon summer ev: I ning gown has as its so.e decoration a cluster of chartreuse cherries) | posed at the hip in back. )

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