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LOVE'S EMBERS | | i Adele Garrison’s Absorbing Sequel To ' | “Revelations of a Wife” Lo —— little hehind Junior, Mary had for- tten cverything else in the childish ph of winning. ' Thought you wers a chamol she laughed. “Yow'd be a card on | a mountainside!" | “I guess that's right,” Marion 24 with a meckness so utterly | to her that 1 wondered Mar 1cus. “But dsn't it up Doesn’t the camp look b It's so0 far away e can’t hear them talking. There's a place over her can the moon rise other spot sort of hard walk- you're tired. subtle challenge 1 Mary answered exclaimed. “What knosw Beginning a New Mary Comes Face to Face With Noel Veritzen It did not take me long, running at the pace 1 set myself, to come close enough to Mary and Marion and to hear the'~ voices. They were chattering like the ldren really are, and Junior's part of 1 colloquy was no whit younger than theirs, “Beat you ecrowing, and back to the Sum visited the f Marion, on you w: hat's Marion sai knowing athlotic pr : su is Mary here though when she f lorded it ov was or you s g Junior re boohy this a in Jice whi t you 1t bediin lead me she went o - ter wh vour boots I do” my | with vibrant pride in the little procession 15 1 realized with v throat, stra where Noel Verit- sending out strains | “Oh! T know!" ] citedly. “1'v in my g . M toll you both to a bet T get the “You'rs o wondercd i race she Veritzen was the dur dicated e sty floati 1 ki were still the bt song | plaving had ended and had not begun another. I my throat. water, ahould would ¢ forward promise to “I'll bet T beat vou both,” boasted valiantiy. but when they had themselves given a signal agrecd Mary's rush carried her far akead of the of Again T bowed to Marion's stra gy. for when she reac 1t h t the silence catch v I saw Noel's figure out- 1st the dune, and saw Marion and Junior rrve to one | side, leavi ry face to face the voung violinist. Noel ren din lined = Junior upon, said Veritzen. pyright, Feature 1928, Newspaper Ine. Servies, By Thornton W. Burgess A Happy Fright A fright that leaves you for Is hardly to he —old Mother Nature 80 vou see there and bad f1 of frights as e find that not irfroquently fri end happily. I yon doubt this ask Whitefoot the Wood Mouse; knows. You know W back to the Green Forest in search of Mrs. Whitetoot. He didn't know exactly where to look for her, but he suspected she would b und t place ught by Black | carried up to 1arm Ladn't oceurred think that happencd to | popped 1 tthe o have been ¢ ' o one 4 o 1ed . of me are good fri We usually think 1, but you will he itefoot had Up the tree he flod and popped in at the lttle round entrance coming nearer were right up st Whitefoot held fixed on | round opening. A shadow | it. “1-1 guess this is the " thought Whitefoot. then a sharp, squeak unde “Why vou running away from me, White- 50t2* Tt was the vo! of Mrs. Whitefoot, Such a relief as White- | foot the Wood felt! His ter- | fright claws were The : ne His ¢ to |and nearcy anyti.i have | the entr: 5 we right And litt a caught by o Owl or O ) ouse wouldr Mrs, W it Me Wil LY SISTER MARY rhu dis mhied lover RS Teat roll I . buttered p ery salad, choco- fe not of that keep the when she wou the parlor. 1 Celery satad hal diced ¢ r 1 lemon, yolk : cream, salt, lemon Add Add until hot xture ammed Its skirt i tatlore He shook all over. with buckle joins th jen, NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TJdURSDAY, MARCH 1, 1928, m—*——fi“—_——— Once Overs Registercd U. 8. Petont Office Drachma “Why, Gwen, “Hoaxi on. hat makes you so hoarse?” se? You'd be hoarse, too, if you’d been d slums all day tel'in’ ’em how little people can realiy No wonder I'm hoarse!” i By C. D. Batchelor ‘in the e happy haven't heard you've ut least 1 Now. do vou know what type volce khe has? No. 12 horizontal HORIZONTAL what city is the Bridge of Sighs Which is the highest all in Norway? rd of type mes type of voic 1f you famous What Garden? Sccond note in scale, Fdge. A form of the verb Pit in the skin Small globule « "0 ohserye Smooth Miable wilic o heave, Beverage, Silkwprm Employed Lai Char Tl Wealy sun go cteristic fruits fariily. cloth. surface of Discase cortracted in marshes. | Myself, Whirh Now Wi of | city is the | York sts s the n. capital W test of rica VERYICAL 15 the composer of the “Aida”? litary commander, Who w opera hian n domi« or wild | of stie W [filling the usual term befora birth, | weigh pounds ymature but immature. ito heads. ' hoys true Hung: xpected 13 16, 18, Reeular stipend § oftizer. Preped Reds of wild bea W Zealand parrot kills B when pressed by m Digit of the foot. Hindu nsibifity most fonr faino Cooking Tniquity Mother o day's Puzzle JOJRTE] Answer to Yeste DREA MEE [D]OIL] —_— BEAUTY How and V/hy striet your h the the tere among type in wh dominant, that as ature moulded harmonize with frisnds are of square fol thing aturcs 10 tieir dominant quali Huve you also poted that the sec- ond zroup, the o a people, are as a rule, not 5o rigid in their views s0 domin in manner usy as the others? If vou have, you will likely be intercated in knowing tha the last group, the tapering faced, | are the ones from whom artists and | culptors have delighted in selecting their models | The tepering face suggests the tri- angle lines of k and jaw g quickly and sharply down- rd to the pont of the chin. Often type mlined with the square s oval, but almost always in AW 1o be a distinetly utifui and delicate type that is cially Jovely in women. When beauty is the criterion for n and strength for man, one ay readily se that the tapering face ht be considercd as showing weakness I the mascullne sex Nevertheless we do oc onally find an artist or port In whom this deli- e formation is greatly admired. (Copyright, 1928, NEA Service, Inc.) conve w 1 Your Health How To Keep [t— Causes of [llness BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN itor Journal of the American Medical Assoclation and of Hygeia, the Health Magazine, The mnormal baby when born ghs about seven pounds. Some jies when born, even after ful- as little as three or four These habies arc not pre- A baby weighing less than five| ind a half pounds and less than 0 inches in length at birth is an| mmature baby. Such babies seem have disproportionately large | It hat is an followi are bor interesting om.-r\auon: a great war more than girls. Thiy was in Germany, Austria and| Y after the last war, Premature Births Aaron Capper found more than Loys among immature ntants, which constitute 10 per cent ! ot all births. Its is an interesting | that 10 per cent of all births premature, that is before the | time, From one-fifth to! se-third of the immature infants | twing, § i Germany there is one twin| for T the United | 1.1 per cent of births are In the Uuited States, in there was one set of triplets | every 10,014 children born, and | 24 one for every 8,543 children, | Apparently premature babies born | and a half to seven months | even though they weigh | 1200 grams or 2 5-§| Dr. ire e In in is recordcd 1 which five| horn at one tim only 220 It moved irth, but lived only | minutes i reported of nfan grams or a month, | ured s werse weigl one ams | case is a1 on! a child me; centimeters in length ouncis. Tt doubled | ts weight at the end of one month 1 tived | The First Year i f< much more difficult for a| premature or an immature infant rvive the first year of lifel for one born at the regular| 1 fully developed. | per cent of immaturs in- | fants who weigh less than four pounds at birth die within the first | twenty-four hours. Of those weigh-| 'z more than five and a half nounds only about 1 1-2 per centf It during the first m-omy-rour‘ hours, A child born so greatly under-| welght demands | special mursing | are, careful regulation of the heat] its atmosphere, proper feeding | ind special care to prevent infection. | i | Are pluce cards good form? 2. When are fancy place cards | od? 3. What is the correct place card for a formn! dinner? | e Answers 1. Yes, for anything but family parties. 2. They are in good taste for any holiday, birthday, announcement or other gpecial occaston. 3. A plain white card, though the 1 to than ima2 a Forty of Life’s Niceties Hints on Etiquette 1. e ‘ hostess' monosram or Ler erest is |knee design of permitted for decoration. | the | kinds of half hardy | such as ferna and begonias, | composed of Lalf peat, | potatoes. On the berries, ! window gardens or hotbed. A good |in | the sced | stdering the flowsrs show you what the combination of THE SUN SHONE OXN SEASON HERE FOR PLANNING GARDEN Honsewives Should Get Hus- bands Interested Now BY ARTHUR N. PACK President, American Nature Association The gardon aimy goes Into ac- tion in March. The “shooting irons" | of this army shculd be taken out right away and everything put in ship-shape order for the summer campalgn. Take a look at your bird houses, too. Birds are useful in the gar- den for their help keeps down the insect population. March is the month for grafting over trees to new varieties. Split grafting 1s generally practiced on | large branches, eaddle grafting on smali twigs abcut the size of a lead pencil. In grafting, new wood is chosen | from the top of Learing trees, top | wood making best scions. This is cut into pice about six inches long, and cut wedge-shaped at one end, s0 that when the cleft is opened with the grafting knife, the wedga fits tightly into it. T be stul, the bark of stock and sclon is placed in contact and then waxed over. New lawns can now be m, and old ones renovated, Go o lawn with rake, scratch the soil, then give a dressing bone dust, or soot and wood ashes, mixed with fine soil. After the first rain, go over the lawn with a roller and if any reseeding is nee- essary attend to it now. rt a Lily Pond Soon the water llies will he | starting up. If of the old roots are to be divided, this is the best time to do it. A small plece | of root, planted in a pot or rough | wire basket in rich soll, will give | Brooklyn, N. quite a quantity of flowers during |the bride upon the summer. Make a small lily | shinc pool with a half cask sunk into|in h the ground, and stones placed | Howard Cox around the edges. Behind these |this one they ci plant ecerastum, arabis, or nepeta, ¢ its effiene %0 that they grow over the edgeifectly deniorsirate and create a pretty effict W Hotbeds can be started for all | flowers and | as vegetables. Asters, stocks, zinnias, |y petuntas and other bedding plants | ) are now sown in the hotbed to | make strong plants for sctting out | in May. Any bhouse plants that requira repotting should now he attended to. Four foliage plants, a soil half loam, is best. Most flowering plants do best in plain loam, and should e potted firmly. Soot will improve ferns, In northern parsnips, rad carly turnips south, tender melon, okra, ade r up of Y.. Mar. 1—Happy —t rnoor v when we were m nelly recalled on the 1 anniversary, prophec, 1T rememb “I remember garden and thi jworld was just one that had bec 180 elaborately ic in ow ! kitchen, e told. “And fifty jously fulfill: i dt looking ) the our she was the pretticst of the whola picture,” put in { hushand, prondly. “My, but sh a pretty little 1 & th 0 little T could my hand tha sunshi Her Bridal Gown—Buttons, Buttonst “The dr ould he very funny today, but it as beantiful onnelly K that wonld nd alon Jirt that touched the floor fn front and a train with pleated ruffles — the whole skirt was ruffled, and it but- toned down th~ hack with countless tiny buttons and huttonholes.” It certainly @14, agreed | bushand. 1 the sleeves were tight &he couldn't {them for hersclf ™ “Women certainly s more ibly today,” sard Mrs. Connell cir ror ¢ was that of & post- cuploye and teacher, who met at a 1o Jious loved, wed, had feur childre happin and believe that very much worth the livir Most of our frier people” explained Mrs, “We meet them through i o was states early peas, ist hes, spinach and in he sown. In the vegetables, such as egg-plant and sweet Pacific coast iy | and Ovegon all kinds of vegetables will be planted in | March. and new plantations made of rhubarb, asparagus and straw- W with Alow. as Washington Time for Cuttings Cuttings of all kinds root easily now. Many cuttings root best in water, Camellia cuttings can be rooted this way., taken from the new wood. Root cuttings the the button of of rosns in way to root cuttings in the window dre garden s to supply bottom heat by placing a small eleetric bulb | a flower pot. This is covered with a small pot, comented firmly to the hottom of the cuft pot, and when the heat is turned on the sand beecmes warm, so that the cuttings root quickly. Leaf cuttings of begonias and gloxtnias root cusily when treated this way. Phlox can ha propa- gated from cuttirgs on a mild hot. bed. Primulas for the window garden next winter are sown this month. Tt s a good plan to cover h a light sprinkling of dried sphagnum moss passed through a fine sicve, as this holds moisturs and Lielps germination. Sphagnum moss s also usefnl when transplunting the seedlings. They lift with little mats of roots and soon get over the transplant- ing. In planning a schonl ~met . found our chil- s Less Evident On Coats for Spring Ta Mar. | (#-Spring will be a season of simple coats with little fur ,on them, style Fur yle shows in- 1 6r two houses of im- lavishly fur trimmed portance show coats A wi fur honse. f silk faille with a lining nred by of fur begins four or five so that the cf silk coat, while tor spring the furs of s The iinches from the edge, that of the provided ind gazelle are garden and eon- to be planted tn it. color should he eavefully studicd, Nature Magazine Washington, D. €, will send you a color-date chart for a two cent tamp for postage. The chart will first at Susliki HUBBARD SPATUE PLANNED rora, N. Y., Mar. 1 —(P)A Elbert Huhbard wi fall on the ground of the shops he founded, The monument, a lifo-size bronze statue, is being modelled by St ! Jerome Connors, New York senlp. tor. It shows “I'ra Flburtus” seat ed in a familiar posc on a boulder and attfred In a Jiking costume which he wore much of {when at hom monument Lo be erected this colors will be fn your garden, SUEDE SPORTS-WEAR A new buff-colored suede gports suit has picoted collar, cuffs and bottam edges of both the jumper and skirt. EW SLEEVES Sleeves arc cut in one with hodice in a two-plece frock green and yellow Rodier cloth. scarf {s joined et one shoulder th of A 'FLAPPER FANNY SAYS: Fancy Tops *\\\MV\\\\ LRI RN RG22 22222227 REG U S PAT OP ©1925_Ov mEa SERVICE. M. The same colors that appear in the leg are utilized in the above age often leads the wife woollen sports stocking. ‘Tub comes in! whole | ot | this new, Scotch 'the family wash--that's where the the A BRIDE, SO THEY'VE STAYED WED 50 YEARS Mr. and Mrs. Itoward Connclly on the day of their fiftieth anniversary dren. The young women of today are magaificent—so independent, 80 st, and with so much to choose eary from Doth agreed they would prefer, if had the chance, to be young 50 years ago. lieve young folks en- " said tod “Peca joy b4 1b themselves Connelly. “1 more, ° more, laugh more, and make a greater effort to be honest in their lives.” The Councllys have not traveled much. They have lived in their pre: ent Brooklyn hcme for 41 years. She Doesn't Believe in Divorce As to the divorce problem— “I do not believe in divoree,” £aid Mrs. Connelly. “Peopls should work out their problems, net run away from them. When one really s the happiness of another in he or the will make allow. Mrs, phil Connelly is not a consclous sopher, but this is her creed: ver plan, not so much as a da head. I take what comes and don't worry. 1 live fn the present, not the future or the past. I believe in Lappin: and I belfeve it 1s here for ali of us, just like the sunshine. At 76, Howard Connelly is com- pleting ) 4th year of service on the New York Postal force. He is the City Hall station's assistant su- perintendent of mails. “They wanted to retire me when Iw he reminiseed. “At that a ir was just Leginning to my back. Besides, how * can a family man live on a ponsion of $1.600 a year? “I Jave succecded In postponing wy retivement four times: at 70, 7 74 and 76. 1 hope to postpone ft once more. But five postponements 1o all the law allows. §o when I'm 50, periiaps I'll be the holder of an other record—that of the oldest postal service graduate out looking for a job.” French Society Girls Learning to Shoot Paris, Mar. 1 ® — Freneh girls are learning to shoot. A group of 60 society girls has been reernited by Paul Gastinne- Renectte, 8 firearms manufacturer. The girls meet one Sunday morning a month. They are taught how to handle the varfous kind of firearms and how to hit the bull's-eye. “The young men have forgotten fradition of their fathers that a man ehould know how 1o ms,"” says Gastinne-Renett:, "o 1 have interested the gir! of g%fi%w#{ the time | Suzanne Talbot chooses white flan. inel for this summery suit collared in | lynx, but it would develop ef- tively in darker shades. The jack- ‘et has a side closing, where the three buttonholes and wooden buttons add to |a tailored touch that is repeated by straight sleeves finished with buttons.