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Love’s Rea ‘The Story of a Wife’s Triumph Over Jealousy By ADELE GARRISON “Sherlock” Train ard Mr. Has- brouck Thoroughly Enjoy Match- ing Wits with the City Detective | wat Mr. Hasbrouck’s story of the de- | for tective's activities bore out the fron censtruction” of his friend, Train, | the in several details. | fen “I think he suspected something |ing: all along,” Mr. Hasbrouck said over |scri the bountiful breakfast which Mrs. | wor Train did not have to urge unduly |he upon him. “He had more brainy v« than we gave him credit for, and when the tire went bad on the roal he gave me a dirty look, and 1 saw he was sort of mulling over my wanting to go to Kingston with him. | Tra Then after you met us, he Kent| *C looking back as if he expected | Hol see somebody coming—guess he fiz- |ally ured you might trail him. i “Ot course, I knew better than to |1 go clear to the ferry, but I got far down this street as 1 darel. |vou Past the railroad tracks and almost | to the street that turns off to tho| bridge. I told him that was th Zorner I wanted, and as soon b was out of sight, I doubled over ‘o | the place of a friend of mine who | ecyel Xeeps a little shop on that st | for He let me sit in the window 1|1 match—the shop's so near the cor- [ dow this road brid aro 1 1:0d cenc jvell as the one to the I knew I could spot his car came back from the ferr: S “It wasn't but a few minu Mr. Hasbrouck went on, “hofore eame poking back, driving slow and looking from {he road to the othe ane, I reckoned—and again, looking ove Aind when he spied the corner, he d up on the op- posite side of the road and T just had time to tip oft my fr and get into the back room wh he opened the door and came in. *‘Is Hasbrouck I he asked @s cool as a cucumber. told m to mect him here.’ A “Sherlock Tolmes” “You'd have thought we'd pals since we were weaned he spoke. But my friend ws 4and he looked at him sort of sleepy | Dike. <~ *'What's the + “ ‘Hasbrouc Hasbrouck, Phoenicia w the fellow shot 1 sort of riled-like. ‘I know he n here. He said you were a 0¢ his. T “If you know that, wore than I do,’ my @ sort of tired drawl. ‘“There hasn't dnybody of that n been in here that I know of. Hasbrouck, did yor say?—there are Hasbroucks all through this scction, thick as sp fer, but I don’t know any of 'em And there have been only two peo- ple in here so far this morning. Wa {his Hasbrouck a little man with & gray mustache No, he wasn't’ the fellow ghapped, and he got himsclf out of the shop quicker than he came in He got in his car and whiskel old if a the shop mnear | Lrot | got ou* 1| his he G the way amc he asked up ck, can rien 1 | cha fun of il ever | unu; You know friend said in me Mr. | nod 1r‘lw | plea only headed “Why! tcok torey tehed wou “What do you know about {ha | they | they 1 “We | figure | time of OUCY S wakening Once und the corner this ched him through the me while 1 m the backroom. man at the ferry who is on in the and he said the bed nqguirin about thre nen blue sedan, and when found out they hadn't been over he turned around and beat it took pity upon Mr, ain lest but patently inful reti- and exclaimed appropriately: what Mr. onto this My road friend windosw phonin hold ot I know th carly morn- 1 de- was e z man that's would do.” in said he oh, Sherlociz id jovi- a regular Hasbrouck rain’ Mr. ad T called the turn,” M- his gleaming. t important. What did do nex Having a Good Time? Then I got hold of my boy —it some telophoning to get him im to beat it on his motor- his eyes peeled < roadsfer and the 1 o him. When he got I had him hide his mo- behind the and thex | what was up. He h the roadster parked ons- the hotels and hadl a fellow like one came out, got i around to another it down Mr. Train a tha e, 1 11 lescribed n he cl shoj him said of intil escribed I on the into hotel to me ain with ion what you said he Has- 1d do.” 1 ick struck it 5 town, polic inquir kn 'd n L n you tell you oats in chief much in, th of got away wor t replied turn, ouch, yous- and it prec to n his aEE I didn't Yeht on let him put any- me, anyway,” he ad planned to go to New nyway, and nee to trail this of it will be I you sual 1 to pa for went on and Mr. ervice i mor arnestly. than the fun | “What n decid orth I shall this | | be | won't aquarrc] about Mt H ded srouck said, and a vigorous : out the bill for ti hat's b foi my il exp ure— 00.” By Thornton W. Burgess | Through caution there - lost; 8o pause and always count the cos —Mrs. Quack. is little ~ Mrs. Quack had sat on her 4l day. For some time no e had been looking forward to the| Hour when she could slip away ani| get a little needed exercize whils | she filled her crop with good yel-| Bw corn, put in the Smiling FPool for her by Tarmer Brown's Bo "fhe more she though that cc Qe hungrier she grew. W Wait until the Black eveeping out from behind Me Hills. That is hour Qest. It is a beautiful hou l, quict hour. = “I'm nearly 7_’\'&. Qua slip out. 3y, but that ®ood! I don’ been as hur think I'll stari utes.” Mrs, Quack was Itave the mest watchful eves of I ow pass just a c Instantly she looke o Shadows ca ad the she “Pretty “oon no corn will t in moving shadow i Stuspicious of. At 1et, the little people of the « est and the Green Meadow Quack looked up just in time a great, broad-winged bird ou against the sky. There was no of wings. Had that bird be shadow, it could have beer silent. . “Hooty the Great muttered Mrs. bBreath. “I wonder if he ar if he has come ing Pool to hunt. It looked It his wings gemewhere near that he is already of a tree very near ear! What did 1 now for? I want % dont’ dare around.” 7 Mrs. Quack sat there quict a long time. The Black eame creeping out acros: NMeadows and through . It grew quite u grew hu Phere had been fidicate th footy around. Yor a We far away ™ this timc = “Oh dear, said she to he Hor Quack I the th da vier and hungt nothin HORIZONTAL Highest mountain in Can Inventor of telezraph Stecl. Renistered T Some bird has discovered a new plane To woo. Chryzalis Tidy. Devoured To lacer: What are Lair. To perfor To ogle. Pus: Lany it would have th 1e end ef her he move CAL tephen Doug debate? Minor To put Nam Artists' Lish. o pul s for Prima Divan, Hind Golf Guided South s note. down for ames, 1 along. cattle donniw st lock ju D s H Foons L chop I M pepp Cook Add ool food (Iror tab i I it 1 ped e A 1t bu or. pa until consta Vanilla yoon lemon extract, 0d cake 1 slices. Uni r00ns or me ut cpper irsley cry or pin well bea or rsley, creamy. nd cook onc thy feg 1 1 It t d f in a glass mo Add 10ld and Whipped cr 1=poon cooked t ) loave r 4 spoon salt 1 nientos, ten. 1dd flour. ir Box Cake tablespoons | 1-8 4 cups milk va lour, double fa bl 1 tablespoon s tablespoon 2 cups celery and milk, constant.- minute, nilla. $ slices ad cggs boiler frequently 1 old with rve cu desir \ loth nd r non extract. ang mixtur:. in t am can od o he sides d in clear i Lt HOW'S yaunr HEALT K Dr. lago Galdston ~ Acadeny of Medicing Blood Pressure There is « saw about that runs: “When the stock market goes down | bicod pressure goes up.” f he stock market is a relatively ccent institution, but the study ot | blood pressure is almost as old as | the science of medicine. | The ancient physicians place] !n uch diagnostic value on the pulss, ind on the basis of its character a pted - to diagnose illness, pr. scribe treatment and forecast re- Its. 3ut before the invention of d pendable time-picces and of som: means for measuring blood pressure most of the true message of th pulse was undecipherable to the ob- scrver, One of the carliest attempts to time the pulsc was made by Galileo in the seventeenth centur: 2 observed the swinging of & suspend- lamp in a cathedral and noted that, no matter how large the ar the time consumed in its swing from one cxtreme to the other was the same. Since he did not have a watch by which to time the swinging, this in- genious thinkar conceived the idex of using his steady pulse as a measure. Then, nicas {tcok reversing the process, d the pulse by the time it to swinz a pendulum with a length. The faster ¢ pulse the shorter the pendulum, he longer the pendulum the more time it takes to complete its swing. [1° pulse and pendulum keep iu | time. pulse rate could be measured | | by the length of the pendulum: An ingenuous ideal But neither pulse nor hlood pres- sure could really be understood u til functions of the heart circulatory system were This knowledge was given us by 1 contemporary of Galileo, the great Willaim Harvey. On the basis of Harvey's discovery it was subse- quently possible for Stephen Hal {a clergyman, withont a medical di- ‘['w ¢, to study blood pressurc an- 10 give us a first mecan for measurement. 1t required the work of many other tists, among them som: j{of the most famous physiologists, {to give us the blood pressure instru- i |[ment ot today. Fashion Plaque nd-up collar of white v black cloth suit for Fashions New York, April 15—One must pick the right suit this year in or- der to win the Easter fashion game. There are so many suits to choose from that it is a real challenge to a woman's wits to decide which ace of style she should play. She may have a long suit or a short suit, so far as the jacket is concerned, but she will carry off honors it she combines feminine finesse with independent sureness in the way she leads off in her suit. And she should realize that she can't make a mistake in a black suit! She should carry it jauntily ani yet demurely and above all shz should never overplay her hand by selecting a suit she can’t manage well. Slender, medium height, younz women should go in for boleros and nipped-in walistlines; taller ones should realize the value of just the right feminine little blouse. Navy blues stand second in choice to black suits for Easter. Little pin- dotted and checked fine semi.sheer wools are quite as smart as plain colors and ribbed wools are better than flat ones. Greens and grays and violet and beige suits are to be found aplenty, too, but the blues and black lead. And never in the history of fashion was there such a ravishinglly lovely collection of charming suits as this year pro- duces. All of the hest choices for Easter are the soft, dressmaker Natty, jaunty and cute they ar be sure, but above all they ar:| feminine and flattering. The | blouse’s collar may well show at the neck and even fold down or frill| out over the coat. And the detait work on every suit of importance 1s exquisitely exoressive of the ney intricate era in fashions which no has fully arrived. Yor the young girl, an originat | O'Rossen suit in navy Dblue semi- sheer crepe has utterly charming | lines in its Jow-flared skirt that fits | snugly up over the hips to normal waistline and its nipped-in, semi- fitted jacket with soft lapel collav. This suit has a ravishing little lady- blouse of hand-embroidered batiste, with its square neckline outlined in a little self-frill and a like orna- ment running up the front a little ways from the waist, with pearl button adorning it. A Dblue straw beret, fox fur, blue opeta pumps, purse and gloves are correct acces- sories. Yor the tall girl, the long-peplun; suit is an answer to prayer. It glves Ler grace, charm and a casuil dressiness that suits often lack. One of these in black fine wool crepe has a vestee collar in cgg- shell galyack which points out to chic on both sides and in the back and stands up in a little turn-over collar that is stunning. The blouse i3 embroidered cgg-shell satin. The suit ties shut, a novel little way of fastening, and the skirt has slightly circular fullness, flaring in a v to suit the peplum’'s lead Smart and very new is the holero outfit in Dblack flat crepe with a blouse in white dotted swiss, frilled at the neck and making drop-cufis to the sleeves. The cut of this soft little costume is intricate and allur- ingly lovely. It has godets in the skirt, the sleeves are cut in one with the bolero and the bolero ties in front. The last word in smartness comes via a very finely checked gray and black suit with its long skirted coat cut much on the lines of a tuxedo 50 far as the little double-breasted | festening is concerned. The lapels | arc rounded and reveal the sweei- | est little white silk pique vestee m\‘]‘l the coat buttons over this with| biack bone buttons. The skirt gored and flares just about as much as the coat. Black accessories or| gray ones can be worn. Jaunty as any spring flowers that | ever adorned a garden is a little Augustabernard original in black sheer crepe with white pique and| pearl buttons to give it contrast. The skirt has unpressed tucks, is a neat wrap-around with wide hem | on the left front side, and the jacl:- et flares out over the tight skirt yoke in the newest and most ap-| proved line. The little vestee of | white pique flaunts a Queen Anne collar of tucked white pique and through the shoulder of the coat, a bow of the pique runs like a bou- tonniere. Kor this youthful cred- tion, a white kid purse, white gloves | and black moire pumps are quite the thing and a black soft straw beret adds another note of chic. Since capes are all over the fa ion parade this spring, the narrov shouldered woman should by all | means have a cape suit. One in finely checkered worsted, in gray, ‘s ideal for this woman. It belts its coat at very high waistline, to em phasize the little cape and its ski has pointed godets for flaring ci cular fullness to match the capelin. A white flat crepe blouse ties in front and one of the very new Milan straw turbans tops it. o Out of Place By Alice Judson Peale It is Carl's bad luck to live in a neighborhood where all the chil- dren are much younger than he In contequence he is always get- ting into trouble. 1t is all too casy for him to bully and domincer, to snatch the chil- dren’s toys and to monopolize the best of everything. HMe is vigor- ously disliked, not only by the chil- dren, but.by their moth As he appears on the street af- ter echool hours, he is certainly troroughly disagrecable, mean- spirited child, apparently bent on nothing but making cverybody clse miserable: As a matter of fact, he is not malicious, he is merely out o place. Neighborhoods do not always pro- vide a child with the companionshin that he necds. A child who, for one reason or another, is chron- ically unable to got along with th. children who Fappen to live or nea | batiste. | his own age, under the dircction of | Chie checks in via a striking suit of black and white checked wool (lefty made with a long-skirted coat that has an original double-breasted Tux- edo front, buttoned over a white silk pique vestee. Youth enters th Easter fashion parade in a cape suit (right) of finely checked soft gras and white. The skirt has circular godets and the cape coat is belted high over a flat crepe blouse. [} | LRI Dainty and very feminine is a soft little semi-sheer crepe O’Rossen suit (left) with nipped-in jacket and frilled blouse of hand-embroidered Gracious and graceful is the very new bolero costume (right) of black flat crepe and white dotted Swiss. The bolero ties over the round- necked blouse which has onc of the new ruchings of self-material at the neck and cuffs. if placed in a group of children ¢f | masculine companionship which ev- ery boy who well out of the nursery should have. The leader boy's club is usvally a young man of a ver high type who has been trained for Lis work. He often succceds where the father of the family is cither fa mother has failed in helping a absent or {00 busy and uninterest- |reighborhood bully to find a prop- ed to do his sharc in providing his|er outlet for his natural : on with that hero worship and |negs a leader. oy Local organizations, sich as the Boy Scouts, are open to any mothesr who takes seriously the problem of such a child’s social adjustment. They are especially useful when of a Make This Model at Home The Cape Mode for Wee Tots Pattern 1715 New Britain Herald 15¢ Practical Pattern By Anne Adams s cunning Jittle bloomer frock ts chic from the grown-up vhich ez predominate and isn’t it charming? Three in- vrted pleats give ample grace and freedom to the d The collar and bloomers are finished daintily with pleated ribbon or lace while pert ribbon bow trims the front neck Th horrow e in pes Design 1715 may crepe de chine, organdie, voile, pongee, batiste, lawn, cte. Whit and the pastel ades are delight- ful for little cither plain or dotted in cont color This pattern ordered only 5 4 and 6.. Size 2 re- vards of 40 inch ma- be made ef Xing cxperience is this model witi patiern Yardage for every and simple, exact instructions ven, nd I'IFTEEN CENTS (165¢) coins carefully wrapped, or stamp. tor cach pattern. Be sure to writs vainly your NAME, ADDRESH YLE IBER and SIZE wanted Our PATTI SPRING PUMTEEN CENTS 1 ake cut, sze, RN BOOK of NWW nd SUMMER STYLES i: CENTS. but only’ TEN when ordered’ with & pat- Address all mail and orders Britain Herald Pattern De~ W ‘l.y.m,,- the chic of white on black, would probaoly be much happier partment New 243 West 17th streey, York city.