New Britain Herald Newspaper, May 26, 1928, Page 8

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Love’s Awakening The Heart Story of a Steadfast Woman By Adele Garrison Madge Patching up Lillian’s troubles When She Finds Some of Her Own. “Lil necds me 2" Harry Underwood repeated my words twice slowly, and I laughed at the utter bewilder ment in his face. “Modesty is a wonderful tr I'm glad you are developing it, id demurely, “but it's utterly wasi- ed at this moment. Let me ST vou that Lillian s you she never has nceded anyone life. He his fac “Tell m “In the nearly as str used to be. anything until very think she is mortally hreakdown. The little which Marion from her father wouldn't to send her through wbition and her now in her his chair, is not as she 1y She mother's.” “That, Harry 1 not a rich bhut T've flames here husky brut 10 relieve Lil of worry on th What's next The other need,” I said slowly, Jifficult for anyor a matter of 1 conscicnes. For ve that because of M ticad you. Now she coming hack “I knew prang fro over mo 1alking clear ont.’ “Will you sit as you promised 1 crossly. “Can't you see tha pointment in Marion's spirit vou is the thing which is her? That yvou car v, You will enly add turden by doing that. Al will brood over the fact that M the one 1o send you awa The way you can help h is by staying love and confidence. re really friends Lillian will be for the first time 1 many can he my nderwood said quictly. “I'm n, Abrahum know irons in the and I'm wood re, 1w enot urgent more I morbid ar she has feared ion ri- fears that your Mari rwood mors on; isfy own is a far to is Hian's she may estrange it Mr. Un chair, what 1 oy n his Tha hout towering I was ght to know 1 isten to i, sap- roward hurting down and o to her i When you two peace years, “That's rebelliovsly genuinely fond ¢ inathema to her. “The wonderful » order,” e ot for me. the kid, but a T'm I'm s a chance to at| 10t help by going | exercise your lof fascination,” there 1 told him. *“But a third facct of this thing I want you to look ar, and 1 think the chicf reason why Lillian needs you. She and Marion have lived only for cach other all these vears. Lillian never sent her to school until last year. If the companion- <hip is not modified by some other ifluence, Marion's marri or loption of a carcer will grieve Lil- lan to th. On the other hand Marion may inherit cnough of her mother's self-sacrificing spirit to forego n ige, and stay with Lil- an, I've seen so much of sort o fthing. Lillilan docen't realize but she's become so obsessed the idea of ing everything to her, dangzer of defeating he ) purpose. She's Lillian’: full has this wr guarding Marion | that | rf | | sure headed for hushand ced “What do you want tronble, thonght- me st exactly what have I told him promptly wonderfully consider ate to Marion and you can't help but win her after awhile. She's go- ing back to school in a little while, ind I imagine her interests there Will keep her from indulging the martyr complex which T suspect the is hugging just now, Almost ever girl of her aze has one. Hers is just a little pronounced than the average ‘s all.” You have a lot of influener with haven't you?” he asked hope- you n doing,” ou've been her. Iy “Yes, T have, but just now 1 should spoil everything by interfer- g We'll just have to he patient, all of v but——"1 looked at him steadily—"1 have your promise that you'll stic! Till a certain forrid territory zes solid,” he said rising and king down at me with eyes elo- quent with gratitude. “You sure are one good littls scout, Lady Fair. ! You've straightened out a problem and winning Marion's | for me and if ever I can help you in anything—what's up > ¥From the corridor outside came the sound of screcching as of some wounded wild animal, and the next instant Katic tore madly toward me her eyes staring, her face working with terror, “Oh! Missis Graham!” she wailed “Junior—Junfor—he—oh!” and she burst into hysterical weeping. Copyright 1925, Newspaper ature | vice, Tne. | Cubby Begins to Get An Appetite By Thornton W. Burgess ‘Who eats to live himself denies; Who lives to eat is far from wise, —Old Mother Nature For two or three days Cubby and his twin sister tagged along after Mother Bear, as she roamed about rather aimlessly. Cubby's paw heal- ed quickly, but you may be sure that Cubby had a most wholesome re- spect for Prickly Porky the I'orcu- pine—a respect that would stay with him as long as he should live. The cubs spent most of their time ex- ploring. After the long winter sleep, | about out it seemed good to Le out and again, Mother Bear had comne fat, but this fat did not last very long. You &ee, she ate nothing for a day or two, because her stomach had shrunk during that long slecp. It was the same way Wit and his twin sister. But three days they found a place the early grass v ning to show. They little of this. for voung A tender. The next day they found soms tender willow shoots and they ate a few of these By the end of the < their pet were beginning to com Lack, Cubby's especially. Ie hegan to think a whole lot about his stom- ach. It was abo this time Mother Bear led the way 1o s place, where the Laughi had overflowed for w while, Th ground was soff. It was casy to « there. Tt was all the easier, from the fact that during the winter t claws had grown. When we 10 slecp, Mother B vere pretty well 1more or leas broke crowing of wher hegin- nibbled it was and Now, with the Sleep, fhey come fong and quite sharp With thos Mother Twar kind of a root do you fhink ' tell you the skunk ¢ hag Then rool. What root ery h of i anotl, Cubby hat it w she v would o er Bear did P felt big pendent, 1o very into the for then Presently, funny little the protecting which the tiny skunk cabbage, the flowers (o eome ed, Cubb; the eart tor, who 1 hind him, in tha fa her il Moth- ) 1= o wad it in mind end those cubs World to iook 1r shortly Great Cubhy own hood, ont Hseo ered a which was ower first —were protec His ust be- ul nprove ¢ lm s of ht ing that t to s pi an ) ppencd 1o rec ten ed one those nd ri way Cubby’s paws began to fly and the earth began to fly, too seerted to him that he never could | get enough to eat. He thought about Cubby | two or | claws of hers, | of a You | out | right | little but cating. He was making up for the long fast of all winter. Dig- ging up and cating the roots re- minded Cubby of the days when he lived at Farmer Brown’s. It re- minded him of the carrots he uscd to eat there and of how good they tasted. And of what a lot there had been, The more he thought of those carrots the more he wished he could have one; and the morc he wished he could have one the more he thought about Farmer Brown's and i1 the other good things be had had to cut the silk almost s 1 couts a corta May 26. (A—When not Liack they are dark b this Tark Dlue material on that ! to | well-known powers | 1 6 NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, Once Overs o s A - SATURDAY, MAY 26, 1928, By C. D. Batchelor lDemes Sto That It Was Reststered 0. 8. Patent Otrtce Raw! you like them bette Do you know originate ? for No. 13 vertical, Raw! Raw! Or perhaps in st where most of them 1ts the Bay of 10 letters Horizontal Which city is the Cuba? Who is the commander of the dirigible “Italia” which will be used in exploring the Arc- tic reglons this summer? To rub out. Seraglio. Hazard. Definite article. To plunge I water, To soak flax. Break ers. Title of courtesy Exists, Decks out with cheap naments, Sun god. To devour. To steer wildly Short plaited scotland. Mineral spring Lifeless, Third note fn scale. Series of rows. Half an em Kixth note What political Thomas Heflin Neuter pronoun. Child's glass mart Who was the mother-in-law Ruth? (Bih.) To contradict as untr To harass Largest | chiet port of dforemost nsed for men. gilt or-| in seale of hold? e does J. of d plant teal American Who 1s the ambassa- dor to Franer Which econstellation f« picturcd as a ram In the zodiac? Enormons. To question. Point of compass. clamation of surprise. il Colored portion of the Hushand's brother in laws, hich green o What bay ters than water In Baking d RBefore, Cavity Sneaky. To make lace. Sorrowful Prophet Tiny marriags f< the most valuable m? produces mo y other hody the world? oys of who trai ewed form. | into | {Dr. Pointers BY DR Editor nal of ge The cgg s the dict, since that is easily dige: cient in carbohyd this, of cour: deficiency. The white chiefly of wa he is much tionately sou cium and iron, The two our its conter i cent fat, about B cral a th r i these tim calories s important to real z will provide about s A raw cgg e as one contrary 1o | i | fairly The | casicr | ness, | nas which lact upon it casily hard t pi heen n o rticularly hronght 42 |44 143 To bind. Variant of Correlative of either, devised for nd in water Menus of the Famlly | it og nove be [ will reduce the An egg should BY am, buked heon—Open toasted nd radishe SISTER MARY juice, oven age Orange er omel | imme diate hegin the warmer Tl AN sorts of sul i jare availabl Th {1y of cornstarch, ¢ ing matter. They the same nutritive Ly o wiches, illa coolk Dinner o and milk et liver, . snow new pud- ) iin their toma- | not | a little the ellent con menu su ; fo use up the dinner Open Toasted Sandwiches One cup finely chopped meat, Mespoon butter, 1 all onion, 1spoon. curry powder, 2 or 3 ta { hlespoons milk, 4 rounds of toast, 4 lices tomatoes, 4 teaspoons heed | 10ors, ver mutton m instance ceding from the 1| 1 Car hone | ehopping. Mo Iy remove every bit of skin, | from meat hefa t butter In frying paa, 2dd onfon fincly minced and cook 1 a en w color. Add | curry pow and cook and stir over | {the fire for three minutes, Add meat | milk and simmer ove slow | while toasting the bread. Brush | r each slice of tomato with melt- butter and broil on both sides. a slice of broiled tomato on cach | toast and pile the meat tomatoes. Put into thoroughly and Serve at once. when or tir ove |ea | Put round of }'n'\ ire on th a hot oven to ) ish ed th (Copyr with pa or 3. zood IA Serviee, Tne.) CLEAN QUILTS and 4 A new tucked t finished at the bow. onee tn the apen i sional shake. of the egg er, proteins and min- olk of the egg is fat highly emulsified, e mincrals as phosphorus, CEE 15 per cent of | is protein, about 10 per | one mainder water. nich and reduction in weight if Evaporating aw qa N | protein content and p content of vitamins, DISINFECTANT WAT! s disinfectant water you clean with. Windows, | furniture, the hath room should have | FLAPPER FAN n Eggs Add Good Protein to Diet| Fishhein Gives Some on Food. MORRIS FISHBLIN the Amerk Madical Association and of My- the Health Magasine, n impor it provides a protein nt article in d. It is defi- ate and sugar but . is not an important consists in which there vitamin A and D propor- protein and; cal- | Contains 70 Calories, weighs about per cent min- In attention to : that a single 70 calorics, so that lit is not good reducing food. is not so casily digest- | that is slightly cooked, popular opinion the other hand, even a raw egg is digestible, boiled egE of medium hard- bees into enables the gastric juice to 1o botter wag.or Preservati So important are cggs in the that all sorts of methods have preserving ing packing in solid suhstances | s or by cold stor- On is digested use the yolk a condition dvantage. diet been than, in- ¥ the moisture to a powder. 1 from cold stor- | ten bacterin which have heen held inert to multiply n | atmospliere, wAII’Il(l.‘l for czgs | <o consist isein promptly as most- | and color- 0 not possess ilue as eggs in rticularly not R in all| and Fashion Plaque | orgette vestes | iline with a | names” for | tegend, es- | BY ALLENE SUMNER Staff Writer for the Herald and A Serviee | May Florenee | Puliman, danghter of the late George M. Pullman, millionaire founder of a certain company that | causes thousands of “Georg and “Johns" to recive handfuls of quar- ters every rgorning when the sleep- ers roil into New York or Chicago or Cleveland or St. Louis, is the present Mrs, Frank O. Lowden, wife of the former governor of lilinois and one of several possible future “First Ladic It is no str tion to believe had cer n Orcgon, 11l 26.~ in on the imagina- that a Pullman girl advantages in the way | of education and travel and social contacts which might mnake an idea First Lady. Florence Pullman was one of the society debs of 40 or so years ago. She, along with Alice Roosec- velt and Ruth Hanna, gave the great reading public its. daily treat with tales of what “those rich girls” arc doing now. That Name Story Fiorence Pullman, one had it, “thought up all the her father's slecping | cars. was a student of Indian | and Hawatian tribal lore and | christened cars “Laughing W tinnchaha” or “Boola Boola in bewitching rapidity. s The story continued to have it that every time daughter 1lorence broke a bottle of champagne over one of her daddy's new cars, he put a silver dollar in her pig hank As Florence Pullman grow old- | er the silver dollar, according to | expanded into something | like $10,000 a year which Daddy Pullman paid his daughter for | “thinking up names” for his cars, | Mrs. Lowden laughs, not too amusedly, today at these tales, Denies the Part “As a matter of fact,” s T ncver named one of fath cars in ail my life. But the would keep-its stor The public had its | when “that Pullman g gaged to young the son of a Sunrise, blacksmith, and a mer attorney whom she had met at the { World's Fair in St. Loul | Newspapers shricked | { story She public | story, Lowden, | Minnesota, pracicing | k meri Richest Hei Weds Black- smith’s Son — Trousseau Rivals | That of Princess.” | There were tales of dozens of | Eions il el and shoes and seis of lingeric 1o the | total of a staggering sum. They were speculative stories as to low the young atftorncy was going to | keep up the pace in the way of expenses expected as matter of course by the millionaire car man's | daughter. Housckecper, Too | But Florence Pullman had been trained to cook and and be a housekeeper, too, just as she has reared lier own three daughters, sm never, cither as a girl or ron. put fashion, the appear-| ance of thi the smart thing to {do or see or visit, ahove “the sible, comfortable, personal choice, Several years ago, when her father [died. she and her sister divided the | Paltman thirty millions, Even today she claims to detest | | fashfonable resorts such as Palm | Beach and the like, where custom | | decrees rich people shall go. | The 4306.acre farm on {the Lowdens live in Oregon. {of the plain garden variefy. The | | house 18 English style, low, ram- [ Dly, gabled, with a velvety green a sen- which 1., is Many a vocal numper is a far cry from song. Lot | with their fullness rivalling thay enjoy revisithn 1 rolling down to Ro he recreations and ial lifs of the Lowdins is no more accord ing to the 1 Hoyles than other phras: of their living. Tove to go hack to Sunrise, i the winter time, bundle old clothes and coast on bo! down all the hills Frank Lowde knew and loved as the village blacksmith's son. Charitable Work Mrs. Lowden profers tive charitable and eivie social folderol. The Lowden summer camp for poor Loads of wizened drained ehildren are bre week summer to e and creamy milk and little more able to liv Lowden was governor nols during the war den headed the Woman's Counci National Defensc for offered her home as a convi hospital, knitted sw socks and Inspired the her state The four Lowden I one son, Pullm danghters, Franes Florence. I Madelener, Jr.; John B, Drake, is not married galore., k River. The Minn up i construr work estate heye has @ children puny, £ht fed' cgg g0 back of i 1 seen and women ildron . and Tarrict Mrs. Harriet is Jr, and Florence but has are thres and ances Alher GRATED CHE It vou have mad soup that seems to | tasty, try adding of grated choes: ing. 104 tablespoonfu just hefor THAT WILL STOP 1T When bu or desk stick and rub them bar of hard yellow soap floor wax. with a or Sunrise, ast down the hills Frank roamed as the village blacksmith's any .t Genuine Thnlls n to eity- eviry a Tilinois, of Mrs, | beaus creamed something | serve drawers with Champ F encing She Who Named Pullman Cars Favors the Sport -Mr Hopper to Represent U. S. at Olwnplcs. More and better exercise is the health advice of Mrs. Charles H. Hopper, champion American fencer who will represent America at the Olympic games this summer, reise keeps a person mnnmuy and physically,” she clean as- ly if one does creative ysical exercise is & much-needed counter-balance. “0f all « . it scems to me fencing is the perfect one. It has beauty, health and grace as its poss sibilitics. And it is the onc place in this hectic life where old-world courtesy plays an cssential pa “Good form is one of the rules of fencin, I often have thought t if children were taught fencing, their manners would take care of themsel for fencing would teach them the ime portance of ‘good form.’ “Fencing has other tremendous ages. It appeals 1o the ck well as the phy- I'encing combines the cxertion of a game like tennis with the joy of matching wits as |in a game of chess. Other exercises have their good jints, but T beleve fencing has en overlooked as an ideal exers for the growing child. For skill in fencing learned in youth lLrings joy throughout life.” first Feminists Know »|Those In China Get Big Kick Out of Life. An American flapper in scarch of 2 {her thrills knows nothing of the meaning of the word, according to Anna Loniss Strong, newspaper cors respondent in Russia wzine writer who has spent ne in the interior of China, While American flappers are in- geniously evading college d parents, Chinese girls T Know I | fighting on hawle fronts and ting killed for bobbing their h: t | Miss Strong attestod 1 owhere clse on earth has the | women's movement had a harder | birth than in the interior of China. Girls whose mothers were sold in imarriage and never ventured inte 1 {the streets, even to shop, organ- tlizing women's exc! adding (their strength to the meeting of worker: nd even carrying arms in the soldicry in an endeavor to larouse and organize the women of the countrysid “In some places auch crusaders Lild they become that, believing that <hort hair was a distinctive strida 1| towards frecdom, they rounded up small groups of objectors and intro- duced forcible bobbing. “The activities of women heen suspended somewhat military forces now, but they have awakened millbns of Chinese wo- men who will some day be heard | from.” I have by the 3 BOUDOIR BORROWS THE OXFORD BAG mininely soft and graceful are the | with the vagabond summer hostess garh hours. Oxford new pajamas, for The bagzy and the sleeveloss surplice waistcoa that marks the natural waistline are rayon #atin | fashioned of lustrous leisure bags skirt The edgings are hand-bound self-material. The tailored | jncket, with ita smart tight slecves, turned-back cuffs and ample full- ness through the hody is made of & gorgeons fuchsia colorcd transpar- ent rayon velvet. It has no fastenings but swings easily from the ghoul- ders, all t

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