New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 2, 1928, Page 10

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Love’s Awakening By Adele Mary Secmns to Have an Advantage 1 the Game of Hearts Philip Veritzen's eyes held an in- scrutable look and his brows were narrowed as Mary came into the room looking lovely enough to justi- fy the ardent admiration which was | plainly mirrored in the eyes of both Noel and Prince Georges. | saw my employer send a quick furtive look at Princess Olina from beneath | those heavy eyebrows, and guessed that he was furiously angry at other three of the quartet for the | hurt pride wich the royal beauty | was trying hard to conceal. | For there were no youthful mas- culine eyes fixed upon her as if| they would never look in any other | direction, as Prince Georges and | Noel were gazing at Mary. Yet many judges would have awarded | the palm of supcrior beauty to the tall regal girl with the raven blugk hair and pansy eyes. But Noel's af- | fection is of the sort which once fix- | ed, never changes, Prince | Georges was so carric away by Mary’s American vivaciiy—and au- dacity, that until the novelty of his acquaintance with her wore off, he would have no eyes for anyone else. “Hello! everybody!" Mary breezily as she came up the steps. | *“You look so lazily comfortable, and | we're all windblown! Is Junior all | right—but of course, h or you ! wouldn’t be down Madge." She flashed a prett glance at me, and 1 s her, my genuine fondn. augmented by her concern boy. “He has just wakened most refreshing nap.” 1 said Philip Veritzen, as if sudder membering the real object of visit turned his inscrutable look at Mary into a smiling appeal to me. “Then don't you think he might be amused at some of these trifles,” he said indicating the packages | which were piled beside him, and which justified Katherine's asser- tion that “your esteemed hoss has | bought out a toy store and a fruif | shop.” | I never have seen so attrac basket of fruit as he had br while re, Austie | affectiol iled back for at 4 [} from a and re- his | said | ¢ | Th | property of M The Heart Story of a Steadfast Woman Garrison It was far more suitable as a bon voyage gift for some departing potentate than it was for a small boy. Still I knew that Junior would be wild With delight at the odd and rare fruits which shared honors with the perfect specimens of the more familiar varieties. A huge box of candy, a number of books and several costly toys cal-| culated to send any small boy into! the seventh heaven of delight, com- | pleted the array. and Mr. Veritzen, | affably smiling over them, was evi- dently much impressed with himself in the role of Santa Claus. “If you will substitute ‘delighted’ | ‘overjoyed’ for ‘amused’ 1 can ee with you,” 1 told him smiling. Unfortunately, his nurse forbids | andy or books at this stage. But e fruit and the toys he can have, and I am so grateful for them. And | a little later when the ban is ree moved the candy and books he given him.” Mr. Veritzen with an air of disdain quite regal. “The bhooks, certainly,” he said, “but tonbons not f from the molds! Unthinkable! all have another hox as soon as he is able to t them. In the meantime.—he inded me the box with an elabo- te bow, “pl accept them for yourself." “If yowll permit them,* T said auickly. v d dare to—" tell me you're fes’ " he said. or put up his He to share “I never Don't the calor not But I am,” T returned quickly to forestall the flamboyant compliment |1 feared was on his lips. "It is only youngsters like these w ho dare defy all diet laws. So- T opened the box and put it upon the table, “Don’t you dare ro sat ali of it,” T threatened w we all had| sampled the luscious dainties tnside. You may have ail hut one layer. at is going to ls the personal Veritzen and myselt when we come back. How would you like Adcliver your gifts in person, Mr, Varitgen? Nswspaper ‘counting “You have Whitey Runs Away By Thornton W. Burgess The young advice will seldom heed; You cannot make them see the need —O0ld Mother Nature This is true of all sorts of little | folk. The result is, they get into all sorts of trouble. They are so sure of themselves that they scorn their elders. This seems to us a sad state of affairs, but perhaps it is not as sad as it seems. They might be even worse off if they heeded all the advice that is offered them. As it is, thy must learn for themselves; and, in learning, they attain wisdom. There is no teacher like experience. First-hand wisdom is far better than second-hand wisdom. Whitey, the little all-white rab- bit in the dear Old Briar-patch, was getting tired of advice. Both Peter and Mrs. Peter knew that it would be much harder for Whitey to keep & whole kin once he was out in the world than it would bhe for his| brothers and sisters. Being all white that way, it would be a very diffi- | cult matter for him to keep out of sight of watchful, hungry eyes. They told him so many things not to do | and so many things to do that poor little Whitey declared he had @ headache. They managed to keep him dear Old Driar-patch after brothers and sisters had lett gone out into the Great World Little Mrs. Peter could gite ber time, But Whitey didn't like it “I can't n without your r ning to see where I am goir what 1 am doing. I'm sick of it! don't want you running after me the time. “But. mother other 1 g0t to be as watchful, caught by in th his | and | Then w! “you its. twice proteste W you You 1l knos in ord not of your Whitey to be one tasted do Little Mrs “You mustn 1 There is plenty of roo in the dear O1d Briar-p Mere you will be gafe mustn't think of go Great won't But W just preten Right down in his he decided that he dear Old Briar-patch the chance he got, and he that chance would meant to run away he could escape from vatchful eyes, His chance afternoon of 1at Mrs. Peter was taking forty as the saving is. That i taking a little nap. Whi napping and his mot this w her chance Vu too. Whitey discovered " his | mother was doing and had tiptoed away. Peter Rabbit was at the oth- er end of the dear Old Briar-patct and he, too, was taking u nap. Whitey stole out onio the Green Meadows and pauscd to lool back He was all ready o pretend the Rhe was just looking for some sweet | flutter. you mustn't! right tch for you. You o the to hear that | com his mo along late v 1y sho y had by thought | a nap gt | pansed once {up him all | “But, Whitey,” protested his mother “you know you are not like other rabbits™ i |f clover. But there was his father or his mother, ed and ran a little faster, more to no sign no of 0 he turn- | Then he look back of pursuit uckled. Then he kicked vls as only a half-grown | and went on. He was toward the Old Pasture 1925, by T. W. Burgess) |1 “Whitey's Tirst |1 I There w: Whitey ¢ his he rabhit aded (Copyriz The Advent nest story ure BROOCHES COPY LAMPS July 2 (P—Poudoir lamps latest eccentricity in designs ornaments and hag clasps ts show a lamp hase of 1d of crystal and hat The orname Paris all over of blue, fon P—Gold | pattorn of rose and m background n ar. An skirt which con rics of irregular pancls hae a single shoulder strap, in colors of the dress. nie in an | s in tones |a 4 chif- tor « ta on is &hown A odel has 2 entirely The sts itures short steamed fruit, EW BRITAIN DATLY HERALD, MONDAY, JULY 2, 1928 Once QOvers Beglatored U. 8. Patent Office “Haven’t you ever worked in your By C D. Batchelor life?” “Why, Madam, this is my life work.” Here is another design that fea- | words, with three and | ve letter ones in the majority. Note the center word Horizontal | 1. Insane | Pertaining to mood | Cry of a raven | Hail! Musleal drama Striped camel's hair eloth Egg of a louss Fundamental 7. Mesh of lace 8. Employer, Cover Anction . Roils or ulee Dimm Pertaining to 1 Personal male ser Very swift smell Legal rule vpe of molding To pull along Native The deep. l [AIRTTT 1M [N[u E IIIEIIIEEIIIE-R! [LlolTTs]"To[nTe TelaT]s] [a[o[7[T].Te [RI"In]O] [ Is[alo] TalvIoln] |1efoIn]sT T (By Sister Mary) kiast—Orange cereal | syrup, Jnice, cream, baked toast, coffee ¥rench uffed chiff and merin Luncheon—§ peppers, wa- nade dressing, whole ue pudding, milk, tercress with cheese Tuding oat eream rmine. uigaichos tea R Dinner—Droiled 1on butter, 1 carrots, cabba ling. milk, coffee stuffed peppers offer a suggestion for a bridge luncheon as well as the tamily mweal. They are especially good to serve for a ‘“one-plate” luncheon since the pepper acts as a containe: Stuffed Peppe Four large sweet green peppers, 1 cup peeled and sliced mushrooms, 2 sblespoons butter, 17: cups shelled 1-4 teaspoon salt, 1-4 cup cup buttered crumbs. Slice from the stem end of pper and remove seeds and Cover with boiling water, let tand five minutes. Drain and rub b coating on outside of pep- Melt butter, add mushrooms cook five minutes. Add peas have been cooked in water to prevent burning until almost done. Add cream, salt and a few griins of pepper. Il peppers with this misture, cover with a thick layer of butter- mbs and place upright in a buttcred baking dish. Pour a little hot water in at one side of the lish and bake in a moderately hot oven for 30 minut. Baste the pep- pers several times with the water in the baking dish, pouring the water over the peppers and not over the crumbs, (Copyright 19 rice. halibut scalloped steaks, potatoes, salad, cherry Vertical Distal segment of the ding the fore dispatch hoat nt from iction W Aqua lude of To Mixture condiments To harc Value set nd which enoug ormer portio Perfect Discolore Iluid roc Mi om a vol ed cri - stich ort slecp, To impose a tax on. €O soft it ful SAUCH . cust for taping or other 3 e coft A deli griddles =hould ! mple of Neptune, in south- thoroughly and heated | ern Italy, is held to be the finest srough, slowly, hefore using. Never|specimen of Doric architecture out- sh them but wipe with oiled cloth. | side of Greece. iMenus of the Family| wheat | just | NEA Service, Inc.) | Health Hints BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN itor Journal of the American Medical Association and of Hy- geia, the Health Magazine The human is slower than the animal in arriving at a period when he is able to take care of himself, Almost with birth the animal develops a behavior pattern \which guides it in its conduct of life, Each epecies of bird has a definite way of building its nest. Experiments have been made with one kind of bird being put on the nest of another partly completed. The first type could not continue with the had to begin all over. On the other hand, being is not guided by such definite behavior patterns. He thinks tor himself and it is doubt- ful if any two human beings let alone would follow exactly the same’ plans in constructing shel- ters, the human Forming the Pattern During the long period of hu- man childhood, however, the be- havior pattern i§ Dbeing created which guides it later in life. If a situation arises to the man is unaccustomed, he tries various solutions, and eventually adopts one which seems to him to be best. The procedure is called the trial and error system. The human has progressed beyond the animals, because he is able to study each situation as it rises 2nd to learn from his mis- takes. It is, of course, that when a definite systems ready established. These have to do with the maintenance of life immediately after birth. The child does not have to be taught [to suck or to swallow, it knows | how to to wink its eyes and to sneeze. Begins to Learn at Once It has to learn to walk, to talk, [to feed itself. The child begins to | {learn almost immediately after | {birth. The habits ingrained in the first few months of life are per- haps the most important of all in creating a method of living for future years. Parents will do well the rate of development, courage useful courag which far quite child is born possible certain of action are al- to watch 1o en- habits, and to dis- antisocial and baa mnabits. Fashion Plaque A chic and practical sports ban- deau for unruly growing hair is of colored taffeta with an adjustable {gilt buckle. FANCY BEETS Buttered beets make one of the loveliest garnishes in the world when sliced in odd shapes with some of the fancy potato slicers, partly completed job, but | Infanta Isabel Beloved Woman Is Regarded as Spain’s “Grand Old Lady.” London, July 1.—"Your Royal Highness is very high. You will have to go higher.” The speaker was one of the Span- ish court physician. His patient was the Infanta Maria Isabel Fran. cesca, The old lady looked at the man of medicine with puzzled eyes. She was the daughter of a king. the er of a king and the aunt of a kipg. How could she go any higher? She rippled with merriment when she found out what he meant. The man of medicine was prescribing for her health’s sake some daily flights in an airplane. Thereafter the In- fanta Isabel, as she was always called, often was to be seen zooming over the great Spanish seaport of Bilbao. She Loven the Thrill The royal aviator was not one bit frightened. Until old age pre- vented, she was one of the most fearless riders and hunters in all Spain. This flving thing was just another outlet for her restless en- ergy. It is doubtful whether even her nephew King Alfonso XIII, is more popular with the Spanish masses than she is. Yecars ago it was said of her that if a regular French revolution broke out in Spain, the mob itself would put a guard around her hou life, property, and comfort. She has had a long and busy career She was born in Madrid in 1551, being the elder sister of King Alfonso NII, father of the present King. She married at Ma- drid May 13, 1566, to Count Gir- genti. he marriage date was of evil omen for her young husband died on November 26, 1771, She never remarried Being of an independent nature, she did not choose to live in any of the royal palaces with the rest of the family. So for more than fifty years she and h servants. High-Born Democrat The poor always have had ac- cess to her home. She often has made excursions into the most squalid quarters, personally, to bring food, medicine and money to the very needy. A proud Bourbon, she neverthe- less has always spoken with equal affability to high and low. She likes people and she enjoys her popularity with them. Woman Soldier Leads the Fight Is Campaigning Against White Slavery. Warsaw, Poland, July 2 (P—A de- scendant of the Greek emperors is the leader of Poland’s fight against white slavery. She is Miss Stanislas Paleologue, a veteran of the Polish Women's Legion who was wounded in action at the defense of Lwow, and her family coat of arms called “Lasca- ris” consists of an imperial black eagle with two heads, st on a blue field, Farly in February she organized and became the official head of a corps of 23 women police, all vet- erans of the Polish Women's Le- gion, who are in charge of Poland's social erusade. Miss Palcologue’s great grand- father came from Greece, and his son participated in the Polish ‘nsur- gent movement of 1863, In 1918 Miss Paleologue joined the Polish Women's Legion as aid to Mrs. Zagorska, the commander. She was demobilized in 1922 after |receiving two decorations during {the defense of Lwow. \Dance Hall as a Needed Place Gives Good Medium of Expression. own small retinue of (BY NEA SERVICE) “Bigger and better public dance halls are what America needs for its | voung folks, Mary Alice Barrows, lecturer and writer, declared. | She knows her dance halls! Over |a period of years she conducted re- search on the dance-hall problem, visiting all kinds of halls in cities |1arge and small, in every section of Americ “Dancing existed hefore speech, that is how natural it is," Miss Bar- d. “You might as well try to stop the tides and the sun as to stop the inherent urge to dance. It is time that proper facilities for dancing are provided for every stratum of so- ciety. Dancing is human rhythm at work. Have you ever watched a baby's way of expressing delight? Always by repeatted motions. Rhythmic motions. The natural way to express happy emotions is in rhythm, like the heartbeat, runs all through the universe. We cannot | stop rhythm it is part of us. Danc- ing is merely an arrangement of different steps and forms to inter- pret rhythm. “We crave companionship, ®o we dance in crowds. It all depends on whether we are rich or poor, or whether we can have attractive sur- roundings. “We who dance only in comfort- able hotels must take thought for those who depend upon less expen- sive places. Inexpensive but nice dance halls are a real social need.” HONEY TASTE Melted honey, added to beverages for sweetening, gives a smooth pleas- ant taste that improves the consist- ency as well as the flavor. It Australia couid be traneplanted into the Atlantic aceaun, it would fill up all the space between the United |Etates and Great Britain, to safeguard her | has had her own house | Are Women Humans German Scientist Starts Hot Controversy — Insists Weaker Sex Is Link Between Man and the Apes. BY MILTON BRONNER NEA Service Writer London, July 2.—Resolved: that Raps Emotionalism women are not human beings. Woman's emotionalism now gets The affirmative will be taken byla crack. He lists woman's chang- Dr. Adolf Heilborn of Germany, ing moods, her fears, long duration author of “Weib und Mann” or|of grief, short duration of anger, "Husband ond Wife,” which is the | rapid changes of sympathy, frequent present hest seller of the continent. | laughter, impulsiveness, tendency Dr. Heilborn probably will be|towards fanaticism, cleverness in helped on the affirmative side by manual labor, vanity, religiou any number of disgruntled males. |ing and tendency to psychic st The negative will be ably handled | Then Dr. Heilborn goes through by every one of these strange be-‘!he arts and sciences with what he, ings who the eminent anthropologist | at least, is sure tine tooth care, and ethnologist, Dr. Heilborn, insists | and that there have been no are only eemi-human beings, a sort | really great names among women as of missing link twixt man and the among men. He then takes his con ape. The salons of Kurope have over to the fild of inventions. | heard this debate heatedly raging| Ah, he finds one—the ecartlien | ever since the little green book came | cooking pot! The only woman in- forth, and since the book is now in|vention that he deems worthy of America, it may be well for this|mention! He claims that her one “semi-sex" to begin marshaling their | discovery made primitive man de- ammunition right now. pendent upon her for better food., The book has made a stir be- | He hands her a little something for cause Dr. Heilborn is a scientist|this, but only because the cooking rather than an author of sensational | pot led to James Watt's tea kettle best eellers. He is 56 and has been | which, in turn, led to the invention an authority on anthropology for of the eteam engine. years. His “Evolution of Mankind”| Then, as if to ta any faint written with the late Hermann aroma of praise rcgarding that Rlaatsch has been called the best ! cooking pot, Dr. Heilborn quotes the thing in that field since Darwin. | anatomist, Paul Albrecht, who de- And it is this eminent scientistscribed woman's anatomical aspects who has taken his pen in hand to|as more favage and ape-like than declare that at best woman is but | eome of our present time apes. a very inferior man, and that at| He quetes him, too, on the sube her average she is just “a freak,”|ject of how women act when they part way between the human and|get mad and fight. They use tooth animal. |and nails, he says, reminding us that First of all. he disclaims that men never bite or claw an adversary, his classification of woman i at| Sic him, girls! all original with him. He offers| Are women human? You tell him! the reminder that way back in early Greece, Hippocrates and Aristotle said the same thing. | Cites Anatomist { He says that as late as 1554 the famous German anatomist, Paul Albrecht, stood hefore an anthropo- | logical meeting in Breslau and pre- | sented any number of scientific | facts sesking to prove the many imor» animal characteristics of wom- | an than the human, considered from | the anatemical aspect. | He cites, too, Max Funke, au- thor of “Are Women Human Be- ings,” who says that woman's| small brain box indicates that she | is not really human, but is merely a missing link between man and | the manlike apes; that, in short, she is a semi-human, Dr. Heilborn does not stop with mere anatomical study of woman. He has concentrated on the ps; ‘4 says, while the females work only | trom intuition. How to Bring Out Own Ideas Classes in Composition Good for Children, Minneapolis, July 2 (®—Employ- ment of the composition class as & means of developing individuality among school children and counter- acting the tendency of other courses |toward standardization was suggest- ed at the mecting today of the Na- tional Council of Teachers of Eng- lish. Meeting with the National Educa- tion association, the coungil was warned by Mrs. Luella B. Cook, jchic and emotional differencex, | teacher of English in the Minneap- too. And from the eum total of|olis Central high school, that “as a his tudy, he offers these con- | result of our sentimental emphasis clusions: { on co-operation pupils are beginning Anatomically, woman is smaller- | to resent any efforis to differentiate boned and genera aller and | the individual from the mass softer-muscled, s, Her Education must carry along twe teeth have a tendency to slant|jdeas at the same time” she said: outwards. This is typical of 'hP‘ ‘education which encourages a just lower races still existent. of the | geference to the group and that primitive Neaderthal —man, and | which permits the freest aspiration of the manlike apes. | of the individual Her cranium s smaller, and| The composition class may well § this means a smaller brain. | gerve as that place in our curricu- Moreover, her brain is not as fine- | jum where the greatest amount of Iy modeled as in man individual difference is encouraged And the eminent doctor recalls|and where pattern thinking the faet that those prople Who | couraged.'” rank lowest in the scale of man- | kind are the races with smallest | craniums and brains. Blood fs Different |1 The blood of a woman is so in- | ferior to that of man that it makes a constitutional defect, he tinues. Woman's blood has plasma or blood fluid, he out, but is much poorer in corpuscles than man's. Conse- quently, neither her brain, muscles nor other organisms can be as highly developed as man'’s, and he doubts that she “ever can reach the cultugml heights which | man has reached.” Man relies upon intellect and woman relies on instinct just as| animals do, the affirmative side of | the debate continues. This makes woman !es« independent than mnn_% | FLAPPER FANNY SAYS: more | points | red but—he admits—may give her more serenity Woman's organs of sight, hearing | and smell, says Dr. Heilborn are in- farior to man’s. But he does con- descend to admit that her senses of | {taste and touch are superior. But don't chortle, ladies. He says that this very superiority shows a lower order of evolution than man's, as nothing else could do. Animals | always have better genses of taste and touch than human beings. A study of men and women students in the universities con- clusively proves that the males are | always intellectually superior, When a girl uses rouge, hasn't the face to deny it. Orchards in Fngland cover he proximately 232,000 acres, | The Sister of Buffalo Bill EA San Francisco Bureay Mrs. Julia Cody Goodman is a “little old lady” of 85, but the longing for adventure still is bright within her. And why not, for she’s the sister of Buffalo Bill, once ‘mighty hunter of th west. Mrs. Goodman is starting on a trip around the world to visit members of her famous family. Here she is pictured with F. A. Goodman (left) and H. J. Goodman, broncho-busting nephews. ]

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