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The Hea.rt Story Studfast Wonun Love’s Awakening By Adele Garrison Tho Sinister Shadow of Jack Leslie far as I'm concerned.” Katherine Croeps Across Mary's Path Again | rose leisurely. “I haven't the faint- “Anybody else want to sco ihe |5t Bolon what all this is about, A but I shall be glad to listen.” weonlight on the ocean? “I'm ready to go up immediate- Harry Underwood's big jovial| 1™ voice seemed to fill the veranda, |l I said and in another five He was in the highest spirits and | 'MBUles we were in comifortable I knew that Lillian in their dvive|D81I8¢es in my room with the to the ocean had shown him her | 400F safely locked against intrusion. appreciation of the new car “"‘“\\m\x,m:\ nrm.r\n:d;l;‘l\l l;ll\llx.a: a:-‘l: of his thoughtfulness in planmn"\‘ i B e seated Mine fer Marion's return to school in it. ! W > h : w1 = | With a few Not tonight, thank vou.’ I X¢ |1, Katherine about my finding plied pm;\flp:)‘.» F‘:'g'.J.';\:.:nb--lfi;"“”"“ check and bankbooks and fif]snfll -mmaxln SINDS \zd ‘added e |tUrning them over to Dicky, I went She caugl g Suaty aade lon to a rapid recounting of what negative to mine. ifis boska: of | Dicky had found in “I'm not going to ask you, Dicky- | the subterfuge we had employed to bird,” Mr. Underwood said. get the hooks into the stair hiding simply going to tell you to place and of Katie's aid in preserv- words of explanation m come arunning. I'm restless tonight boy, ing it. Last of all 1 produced _he and I craves company. So flex Your | summ Dicky had made of the lifting muscles and get yourselt out pigyy, in the cheek books and of that chair. If you bribe me big | handed it to them. enough, I'll even let you drive the| mp.. grigied it in silence. Kath- new boat. | erine was the first to speak. “No, sweetheart, thank you just| “Looks bad,” she said, her face the same,” Dicky drawled as heltroubled. “Now who on earth do rose and sauntered to the door.|you suppose this mysterious ‘Janet “I've mever taken a bottle from a| Rawdon’ can he? Do you suppose Dbaby yet and I shan't begin tonight. |she's an emissary of Jack Leslie" Come along, you half ripe filbert.| I thought of that,” I said, “and But I warn you that after the first|it seems the most plausible explana- hour I'm going to sleep.” tion “I told Harry to get Dicky out of | “Save that for your last guess,” the way,” Lillian said when they | Lillian admonished. “Not that Jock were out of hearing. “They’re hoth | Leslie wouldn't be capable of just wide awake and good for hours of |such a stunt, if he dared. But Noel talk, and if wouldn't be leave ‘em flat, while they were just the here it and Huzh Grantland put the fear thing 1o |of God into him so completely on we fore- |that night that T don't belleve he'd gathered for a confab. And | ever try to pull anything—not while for waiting till they were through |they're alive. And I happen to for the evening—nothing doing. I'm | know—I've never told you this be- dead ard buried as it is. But I feel | fore, Madge because Hugh asked as it T ought to hear the dope me to kecp it secret unless it be- Madge has about Mary, which of |came necessary for you to know— course you're in on, Katrina, and |that Hugh furnished the money to I want to spill some stuff of my | ship Jack Leslie to Australia and own to you both. So suppose we | promised him a monthly allowance come up to your room, Madge _‘n he'd stay there indefinitely. Jack There's a dandy brecze from that [doesn't like work enough to ris side, and it's far enough from the |losing that snap by ecoming back girls so they can't possibly hear us. | here.” What do you say Copyright, 1928, Newspaper “That the motion is carried as Feature Service, Inc. Peter Gets Scratched ] By Thornton W. Burgess * | Who never thinks to look hehind Ia little better off than blind. Old Mother Nature. as absorhed fn | what he was looking at. Do you know what that means® It means | that he was so interested in what | he was looking at that he had for- gotten everything clse. Now it is bad business to become absorbed in any one thing when there may be danger around. Yes, gir, it is bad business, Peter found it out that day. It happened when Peter discover- Peter Rabbit MOI2130%3 02 019An3 D2 NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 29, 1928, By C. D. Batchelcf }(’—”‘)/ STARRING| DORIS DEARY] POWER PUNCH YOU GO CrRAzy _WITH THe HeAT ] I)RN i NC S LOVE STORY PEP A$ T__)'LIKE I =928 = R I "RERE FEEL WE BUT THE PENALTY OF ADAM, 7 THE SEASONS DIFFERENCE A AS THE ICY FANG ND CHURLISH CHIDING OF THE WINTERS wWiNO« WHICH WHEN IT BITES ANO BLOW 'S UPON MY BoDY, EVEN Tibk { SHRINIS WITH COmD. ‘TR 1 SMILE ANE SAY 1S No FLATTERY! THESE ARS CWNSEALOIIS THAT FEELINGLY PERSVADE ME WHAT | AM' SWEET ARE THE USES OF ADVERSITY. WHICH LIKE THE TOAO UELY AND VENOMOUS, WeARS YET A PRECIOVS SEWeL IN HiS HEAD: THIS OUR LIFE EXEMPT FROM PUBLK HAUNT FINDS TONGUES IN TREES, . BOOKS [N THE RUNNING BROOKS, SERMONS (K STONES AAD GOOO IN EVERY THING * AND AS THEY LIKED IT - /600 — So This Is Progress Long Center Word LL Ll % T I T T T NN ANNEE NN AN/ ANEEE TR o T E/I%E Wi . dumEEEE o %Il - N ' \ \K z= B E // //, 11T Z 1111721 | “.-// H....% "] ] ] RY SISTER MARY Breakfust —Green gage cercal, cream, broiled liver: celery and radishes, muffins, | cotfec. Luncheon—Potato and p soup, graham bread and | sandwiches, sturfed tomato | sour cream | Dinner—Baked | scalloped potatoes, beans, endive salad, cobbler, milk, coffee. The woman who must & small family will find an sional cottage investment. There is no was Lone and usually very little The meat is very good used most any way real ham is | Cottage hams usually | \weight from one and | four poun Sour Cre; One cup sug: ing, 1 cgg, cups flour, cotta buttered fresh one-h m mbles 1-3 cup sh 2 cup sour cre: jumbles, grape juic plan range 1-4 teaspoon salt, 1 Menus of the Family plums, wurst, milk, arsley butter salad, ham, lima peach for occa- ham an excellent ste in fat, in al- used. in alf to orten- am, i ed one of the kittens of Yowler the teaspoon soda, 1 teaspoon cold Bobcat playing with a leaf in a patch | Without the least warning Peter water, 1 tcaspoon vanilla, 1 cup of moonlight over in the Green | was knocked flat shredded (‘;;c(un\ll. . ; Forest. Peter hadn’t known that Cream shortening and gradual- there were any Bohcat kittens over | ©n® reached them. The little Bob- Iy beat in sugar. Work in 1-2 cup there. This was the first Dobcat|¢at 1ot go and squalled. Peter tlour and add egg well beaten. Kitten he had ever scen. just iw rambled to his fect and dodged.| This puzzle has four unkeyed Add another halt cup of flour and out of sight in the Black Shadow | Then away he went, lipperty-lipper- | letters, of which two are included stir until smooth. Add sour cream on the edge of the moonlit space | V-1, as fast as his legs would |in the long center word—No. 6 and mix thoroughly. Add soda dis- Peter sat staring with round-cyed |take him. He wasn't a sccond 100 | vertical. solved in cold water and beat mix- wonder at the little Bobcat playing | “00n. The squall of = that kitten HORIZONTAL ture hard for one minute. Add re- in the moonlight. He quite forgot | PFOught her wiother, Mrs. Yowler,| 1. One-horse carriage. (T]o]v] ,/B maining flour, salt, cocoanut and everything else and this was a very | 10 the scene in a hurry, but by the | 4. Collections of tents. [T[AIXAS [OITAPARIA |vaniia. Mix thoroughl Chill foolish thing to do. time she reached there Peter lad| g Sncaky. m Emm 28| |tor several hours. Roll on a slight- “It's @ baby Bobcat as sure as 1| disappeared. He ran until he was |12, Possessive pronoun ly floured molding board into a live!” thought Peter. “It just can-|Out of breath. Then he crept into a|13. Conscious. II.'.I/ | sheet about 1-4 inch thick. Cut not be anything My, what bramble-tangle and began to[14. To hasten. 5 mum,g,fl.flfi./ m JA| |vith a doughnut cutter and bake funny little fellow he is! He has a |Smooth his coat and lick the places Constellation. [P[E[R]1] |in a moderately hot oven for eight spotted coat. Yowler's cont isn't |Where those sharp little claws had To chunge a diamond setting. to ten minutes. spotted like that. Perhaps Mrs, | Scratched himg v Collection of facts. Work scraps of dough left from Yowler's is. I have never seen Mrs, | (Uopyright, 1928, by T. W. Burgess) Finger ornament. cutting into a sheet and cut in Towierr | The next story: Enough of the Pig pen. squares, een Forest To affirm. Copyright, 1928, NEA Service, Inc. As a matter of fact, Mrs. Yowler looked very much like Yowler him- | e ) himself. Baby Bobeats always have | GRAY FOR EVENING 24, Gloomy. spotted coats, just as baby Deer| A new pale gray shade is being | 25 Darker. i always have spotted coats. When | cxploited for evening by no_less | >0 lhnll;”r:; i that baby Bobcat was grown to full | an authority than Madame Vion- |-o: * o . s size those spots would have mostly | pet, 53 llgs:r division of the human disappeared i R Now, it never entered Pets s head that there might be other -"‘rval ~ haby Bobcats. No, sir never en- 9‘ To, conns tered his head. If it had he muu— s 7 ably would have looked aro @W / ::' Z‘If';i“"" little bit. As it was ha remain 3 T(“‘ ’m;,k“ s HiNDEn S e i nE B Rird similar to an ostrich. playing in the moonlight. The ae tiies ten was having a wonderful t | OB ahio Techivs 2 it Feter felt as if he wanted to go « Kindled and play with him. Liut he wasn't VERTICAL foolish enough to do anything of Taliman the Kind. He just remained right | Aedl BECa Bienor prky where he was. He remaincd right Stlena: 2 where he was and he remaine Vehicle. perfectly still, Tnspires reverential fear Without the least warning Deter | Cliewtng tnoun). was knocked flat. Yes, sir, he was AHimAL Victtn: knocked right over. Not only i To Babaan: Lut & ot of sharp claws pricked his | To cut in thin slices. skin. It secmed 1o hir Ocean stsamer. cked him To long. seotted and frig And ¢ Hoisted taut up. goodness how he did Kick! He dre Every those long hind legs of his up ¢ To stitch shot them out with all his strer Vehement outery. When Peter kicks he can kick b To vex| 3 He kicked hard now, And Peter Devoured. lucky. Those two hind | Compartment of an eleetric landed right in the stom switchboard. sister of that iittie Bobes Fragrant oleoresin. wio had n P been watching. It was she jumped on Peoter. She I ter when he first arrived and had stolen up until she was enough to jump on him. made & sound. Now that little Bobcat really wasn't big enough to kill a full grown Rabbit. Her tecth were not f‘""‘t‘# | yet big enough to do much more | than hurt, but they were big Aug. 9. (P—Delicate enough to hurt and her little claws | shades of green. and some vivic were sharp enough to scratch: and | ones, are indicated as minor favor- she made the fur fly. Of course ites for next season. Madame Yteb | the kitten who had been playing in | mukes an evening dress of green. | the moonlight stopped playing :nd | blue chiffon over satin of the | came over to see what s going | same shade. She puts three gather. | on. It was perhaps fortunate fir «d flounces. hound with satin, on Peter that he succeeded in plenting | the skirt, and adds two long cir- that kiek in the stomach of that| cular panels at the sides. The | little Bobcat just iefore the other ' crushed girdle is of satin. ' p | has returned | Many of these One of the sunant mutes Sterilizaticn condition are sometimes and sterilized hefore b as wipers. | It is impossible much infection rags used in { other hand, it is licve from the to this wa; To contradict Type of singing voice. Sca cagle, Iashion Tiny golf mound. Hemstitching Used On Sleeveless Dresses | Paris, Aug. 29 4M—H(malll(.hlnl; with a vengeance for the simple warm weather frock. i« particularly favored for the slecveless frock in crepe de chine voile nen, wool crepes and thin woolen fabrics. Turkish point which permits curved lines is a favorite v n of plain hemstitching dresses yoke, und are set on a plain round this hand- | work is their only trimming. [ cdge as to the | contamination of | possible for diseases to | mitted in this manner. One of the dangers f material is the presence rusty pins with W amount of | and | hands of workers may be scratched, iu”ur“nn: a ready infection to ente Federal Regulations | The Unitea states has specificd methods o nd sterilizing rags used | by the government materials will be used. It is the opinion of the New York State Department of Labor fthat common decency requires |that wiping rags be washed and | sterilized. The danger that they may carry infection unless passed | Blue and gray wool tweed fash- through such & process cannot be |ions a tailored pump for fall. It is ignored, Health Hints facturers of roofing material. ¢ just how is transmitted reasonable to be- available that opportunity for government establishments it | which make certain that only clean BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN g & 3 Editor Journal of the American Life’s NlCCthS Medical Assoclation and of Hy- ENe mea No, The cleaner rags in fairly good | : i < 2 ad, te 1 ers, | condition are picked out and sold | ik 0‘}":‘21"““:'”“"'"r go |as wipers; the dirtier ones in good | ke : washcd cing sold by On the knowl- bacterial it is | be trans rom such of bent hich the f washing as wipers gia, Health Magazine HINTS ON ETIQUET As scientific medicine begins to give attention to the discases as- sociated with industry strange g - : sources of infection and of other | ’;J‘““; o {‘""e“:’ Jhe things disturbances come 1o light. JiE H‘I:O“’”d”;l‘::‘"fi‘“;f,;' St A recent report by the New | = e S York State Department of Luhor,:‘)I"I“.Olyt:f':(:‘d ,:fllfl“"“‘“f.‘,’““"“ o hes (o do with wipleg rage an a | 0T SO STHIR RS a0 source of infection or of other! oA 58NS | {to entertain herself? hazards, | e b Wiping rags come from all sorts | o . 2 |of sources, many from the refuse| 1- [0 mcet their hostesses' plans | of 1’\“””" & \,", = f the ra s;:llmlhl.\', consuit them about out- | g% Some of IhC TUBS| i, engagements, be considerate |purchased hy regular: dealers; mre| y & siie wacvants’ ahd be |80ld to paper mills and to manu- | T 00 METE, SEECES T and shop- Fashion Plaque trimmed with gray lizard skin. The First and Second Ladies of Democracy Here, in the event of a victory for the national democratic ticket, are the future first and | second ladies of the land. Mrs. Alfred E. Smith, right, and Mrs, the candidates,.are shown at a reception in a New York hotel. taste of the social activity that the presidential election may bring them, for they met 2,000 women who thronged the great ballroom. . Joseph T. Robinson, wives of There they had their first Women Help World Peace Kathleen Norris Sees Them Doing Much. “We should have no more wars,” sald Kathleen Norris, famed author. “If a few—a very few! American women made up their minds that the World War should not be for- gotten—that our dead, in Lincoln's matchless phrase, should not have died in vain, that the time has come for action and not passive ac- quiescence.” Securing universal and lasting Mrs. Norris affirms, is n hands of women. We could do this, we women America,” she declared, “through the Federated Clubs, the Kathlcen Norris Parent-Teacher organization, the Red Cross and the “Y,” the Girl Scouts and Campfire Girls and all the magnificent groups that exist in all the churches. “The only question do it? “First, let us women appreciate that we can understand the causes of war if we study them. is, will we “Second, no war ever has ex- isted without the emotional ex- citement caused by lies and mis- vnderstandings. “Third, there has never been an international dispute that could not have been settled without | bloodshed. ‘Fourth, every woman can play a most important part, a perfectly practical, simple part in ending all wars, it she will.” Mates Hard to Find for Chinese Divorcees Peking, Aug. 29. (®)—Chinese wo- men, §n striking out for freedom, have struck a snag. In the emanci- pation of women, divorce has be- | come an easy matter but, in the new order of things divorces are not at all popular, Now that the sexes, among the educated classes, have been min- g freely socially, and in the pro- fessions, many young men Wwho were married according to the old Letrothal system “by arrangement” meet girls whom they like better than their wives. The outcome often is that they seek and easily obtain a divorce on the ground of incompatibility of temperament, Then the discarded wife goes out in the world to start all over azain. But life's pathway for her if she has become domesticated and is lonesome for companionship, is not a rosy one, for the young men seem reluctant to marry wives di- vorced by other men, Portuguese Woman is Legation Chancellor Lisbon, Aug. 29. (A—The first Portuguese woman to enter the dip- lomatic service is Donna Margarida Gomes Barbosa, who has just been apponted by the Rumanian gov- ernment to the chancellorship of the Rumanian legation in Lisbon. Her,_appointment was effected at the request of M. Guaranescu, the Rumanian minister. Donna Margarida is the youngest daughter of the late Commander Gomes Barbosa, a distinguished na- val officer who was for some time governor of Cape Verde. The new chancellor's appoint- ment adds another bright feather to the cap of Portuguese feminism, which is increasingly active. Wo- men here are fast breaking loose from the old ideas and taking their places in the foreground of the in- dustries, business and the profes- slons. In Lisbon there are now more than a dozen women docto; and a woman attorney recently New of the son she nnited. A. Moo: the firs! years ol ot hloo as him wi sh. father grated directed to go bi as Moonan has sc Although related they met virtually | strangers. membered the mother who had left when | her | ni- left that count Moonan's mother She kept constantly numerous time, Orleans, La., Aug. 29. Atlantic, Mrs. Mary n her son, Dublin barrister, since he was nan, t time 1d. by the clos d bonds, The man barcly th relatives in Ircland to visit and mother who had to New Orleans. in touch by mail. she land 1 his rearing occasions to her native sped on, ack . P— Separated 49 years by the wide gulf | strengthened. a mother and tho | red by mail now are re- | morrow Ann Tiernan | this George | for seven | son. never returned. | and On | planned | but | the old tics | Mother Who Reared Son By Mail Sees Him After Forty-Nine Years 12} weakened and the new ties for her and to- never came. But now slender woman of 82 is plan- for Ireland under the her 56-year-old It was tomorrow ning to sail | protecting arm of She would not come to him he came te her. The mother had turned deaf cars to his cabled and | written pleas to return to her na- tive shores so Moonan came to plead his case in person. With the picture of her relatives waiting to reccive her in old Ire- |1and, she capitulated, packed her helongings and is ready for the journey. “Old scenes, friends again,” is carrying Mrs. ceean, 50 t | old =ongs, ol4 is the thought that Moonan over the opened an office here, 3 on it Paris, chine has replaced satin Silk Crepe Slippers | for !I,*]vening Footwear | D eCO“ettes ' Now Are Lower 29, (P—Crepe as Aug. lights and gaiety. 86 U S PAT.OFF ©1928 B mea sERvict Young couples are satisfied with their lot only when a house is built smart material for evening shoes in Paris. —_— Only dull gold, or black satin, is T . nelding its place for evening siip-{ LNis Will Be Style For The pale shoes which are 2 hed, or. contrasted, with the E‘enlng Weal delicately shaded velvets, laces and ARG silks, indicated as fall’ first | . Aug. 29. (@—The fashion choices for evening wear, are of a |1 s have achieved the apparent. heavy quality of crcpe de chine |1y impossible and lowered the necke called erepe mongol. | lincs of formal evening dresses. Gold and silver kid slippers are| The smartest of the new dresses still the first favorites for the hogs designed for the night hours are as hackless Their possible. it not imp sometimes, ficult, wible, naker| Jewcled shoulder ps take a with a long list of royal dies | place of importance in the evening among his clientele presents a train- | mode of winter. On flesh colored ed cloth of goid evening wrap. The |net brilliants and colored stones train, several fect long, hangs like [Stand out strikingly against bare a pancl from the shoulders. The | shoulders and heighten the effect | front of the wrap reache only a|of low decolle Carved or pol- few inches below the knees. (ol .;Nwl jade, and some coral, also 18 and wide bell slceves are bordercd |Used for shoulder bands. with sabln and there is an wp-| In coutrast with the jeweled strap standing collar of sable which |is the invisible tulle shoulder bapd frames the face, | of flesh color, still used by soms e O important houses, although its vogue is less than it was four FLAPPER FANNY SAYS: |months ago. T R oy Most evening dresses are cut with only moderately low necklines in front and exaggeratedly low V | or U decolletes in back. Very of- |ten the bodice crosses, surplice fashion in back, and the top sur- plice is pulled to the side to form a puff or draped bustle from which a long end hangs to the floor. Lead- ing houses design dresses of this type in velvet, taffeta and chiffon trimmed with the finest of Chane tilly luce. g Hemlines, in many instances, fol- low the dip of necklines and just clcar the floor in back. On other, the Jength is at the sidea/ in dresses with circu< lar skirts. Some strass is used as embroid- ery on velvet evening dresses, but as a whole comparatively little jewd eled embroidery appears, except a ornamental shoulder straps an possibly a motif on the front of the bodice. CLEANING SPONGES .. To whiten and purify a sponge, soak it in milk and rinse thore oughly in warm water to which @ i little carbolic acid has been added. S . A fra tial elec mer dur was inst cati the a pl bot In pow to i opp Tege layeq Mg 1chel ed v hand in th night Th Jose Fran tain, briso