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g The Heart Story of a Steadfast Woman Love’s Awakening By Adele Garrison Mariom Heveals Her Midden Trea-, Y sure to Madge Under Plalge swered. of Secrecy. | "But there's something about it you don't know,” she said excitedly, “something which nohody knows in I have seen it before,” I an- Wil ¥ u come over here, Auntic Madge?” Marion asked, wien sk " all the wo exce s " had locked the door of her room, gy oM Sypsak e ugIm and 1 rose from iy chair and cross & : u uow, for 1 want seme=body else to know it. Then if ed the room to the cedar chest which T know is one of her proudest 2/ Ything happened to me, you could tell mother.” . possessions. Her mother gave it 1o her upon her fourtcenth birthday, | I Waited for her revelation, but but Marion always has devoted only | (P51¢ad Of spraking. she sat down part of its space 1o keeping moths 11 e nearcst chair and ran her away from her woolen frocks. The [UECTS OVer Ui hox caressingly, as it were something sentient. And rest is assigned to the heterogenon collection of treasures which young- | |\'¢% £0¢ spoke it was reminiscent- sters accumulate, 5 . 2 She opened it and begun to dump ¥OU know T lied with my upon the floor the objects compris- | FTEITHICIRET Defore We both came ing the top layer. A huge stamp al- | 1} (A% VIR Aother” sh bum, two or three fancy work Tl Ll ’,°m L hl‘l“"’ " kets, each containing, 1 kn et ek eral unfinished picces of needie. | ooy O vork, an elaborate outfit for niu Sl g artiticial beads, a coloring outfit, a Bl L filc of her favorite magazine, a col- | L. |- D¢ Was my son.’ slie used to lection of ship pictures—a number | o 41 that L opan=iigas ; | teant the woman my father mar- of photographs taken by herseift—all | L9, (I8 OGN 1Y father mar these piled around me o e s b litied from the bottom of the chest | o8 00Ked out for you. - darling. LT She honom of fhe oliest) 4 thiel tarkunsia) sl tisre. | 1t jant worth anything now, so don’t look twice bofore and which 1 greatly ad- | O ] g Lgreatly ad- | ot j¢ bur it will be. But you mustn't " your mother thing it It was an ioned sandal- % t s 1 vou mustn't do anything aby wood lock hox, probably mors than | 5 Y97 TUSIIL 40 any )“r) "fi':f a century It was surprisin % P i % A4 U2V time the fortune'll come true. The thick of wood, 80 that ther: was hut joclLeomaiine, Sahen e n glve your niother anything n had it to. But you mustn't tell inything about it until you're might spoil it all’.” for sk the old wo W kept ; (:’“ o]’ o M’[‘ 1::«’:- o is histrionic ubility in most i A ] . oYl young girls and Marion posses She alva \ I 10 et dymould | s or 16 T oould dee fo oo Batacs anb aler o 28 Bl asing ola woman as she laid the b sbe dled, she ask- 505 n0tion upon her little grand- ed 10 sce hor granddaughter alone, o | e jNstlon favoe oGt bliterly | g, o ioiier made me prome.| weeping, she carried the box with |;,, . ® Gl MM RALS he PRRRLS her. Lillian had told me of the ; s tatien . sistence with which Marion ch s h'mvaflo,“‘,»':':v‘:.(:jx the hox, insistiug that she lave a ; e S trunk with a key into which sh :‘:“113‘:‘ ,:(,m:,“”"‘;'ph,\,\:"" could put it, and how she always ..o it wen't be Lreaking my promis kept the key hidden. My friend had | oy e e 3 Y o te u. Look here!” laid the child's eddity of behavior to ' 1! ey ,l.d"’,kA \' S :\én:\r zrrlmljo e for lnlr Brand yy. hox, threw up the lid and gently er, but suddenly, ag I looked| romoveq the old trinkets it con- at the hox and saw Marion's tense | apn 0™ 0 B¢ trinkets b con face, I wondered if there was some- | 1oy and pressed upon the center of thing really of hmportance conceal- | tng shallow sccond tray. It divided ed in the box, something which was | 1n the center and ros, exposig a B partof the “sccret” which the | seorat pompartment beneath ia young girl wished to tell me. which were crowded three long en- You know this was niy grand- | velopes mother's bos,” Marlon said as she | Cop held it up beforc me. | BY THORNTON W. BURCESS [coupled with unusually difticuit| : — {questions make this puzzle far from Who teascs and torn casy. The words are short, but In disposition is mort tough. -—0ld M Horizontal » i | 1. Who was the sceretary of was ar state during the Harding ad- Bear. Bhadow the W What is the nickname for the ped one of Cubby's hecls boliot b burt, But ft wasnt t Toward sea, , made Cubby loge his 1 Tree having tongh wood much as the impudence of T ARlasn the Weunel S i, et 3ol allvel rodred What territory in India be- ome on, dot” retorted Shadow. lotian. 16 Bortigal? “What are you waiting fo | OEEREL o lER s z s o | The god of love. Cabby wasn't waiting. He was | Hiw ilke ovian ot s i rushing masly at Shadow. now here L B0, A ot and now there, every minite, angry to be t Shadow certal Why don’t ud growling angrier ' Gubhy whirled about just in time 10 ¢ was teasing hin nd still | you st and " see Shadow's tai disappearing in NEW BRITAI ONCE OVERS Registerea 0. & 123 2 N L “That girl doesn't dr By C. D. Patent Oftice Batchelor aw a natural breath.” Nor, if I had my way, a natural death.” A TOUGH ONE A good supply of unkeved letters To long, Foundations Stranger, Speedster. Thin, crimped fabric, Vapor into which water is con- ng Bre 1 Culy > Sanatiss 1 san: fight Wetiar nio st andeiliae, | verted at the boiling point. fng” replied Shadow, and nipped @0ts. He dug that ant-hill open and |24 TO excite to activity. Culiby’'s other | vhen all the busy ants were |S1- T0 note the time of writi That was v fight. It a there, trying to save thelr |41. To fondle, good deal lik k and the Giant, Heked them up. Yeou |42, Officious, Cubby ver and ever so m ple who are very fond of |49, Always times bigger than Shadow. It was @ said to huve “swert (45, Afler what Indian tribe was pertectly absurd to think of such a { every member of 1k . I"'tah named? littls fellow as Shadow fighting with i« n “sour tooth” 47. Plant from which bitter drug y funny part of ft re all 4 of an's is secured. 5 having all the 1o be sour. 7(4% In what sport is Jean Borotra e nyself to find a player? a Wio founded the first medical 50 quickly that Cubby n Cutsy jump mure he had be thers to «ay provo To ma the covered Burgess) Cubby. Y¢ ang all » i And all the tine Sha on tormenting Cu v ct s, Shadow was beginning to o1 it away at a time ha want He ! know that there was r. to fear. And it pieased him tot that he was n in one so muc bigger than himself <o very unco After a bit he grew 1 | {49 i 30, What ournal in the United States? Vertical 1. What English novelist wre “Far From the Maddi Crow 2. To employ. 3. Driving command 1. Possessed. Wise man. To burn to a « Definite article. sailor. Indian of a Siouan ‘ribe Birds' homes Painful. To lecr To degrade. Organ of hearing Wing part of a secd, To tear stitches To perform To observe Fon fs a pupil at a military school call? Cubby, Besides, he had Comporition for two perform gome of the whie ers. possession of him when ¥ | | 3800 Whal reasure ‘or langthtas Brown's Boy had frightened off the | 5937 Inches squal? Weo ck. B0 he gave Cubt st Set of compositions numibe ®ood Tard nip and thr 4 in in order of their issue a little hole A stump, Cubio sdow’s tail disappearing in Jitfie hole t that feilow el v, and beg % frarith | aliy nd that old ). My, 1 ; Fow Le did make things fiy! He t | Wp the ground, tore up the roor | Gl the time Shadow the Weasel sitting on another stump a it off, dressing his fur and grins be watched Cubby. You see, i run along & little underground sage and so out. Cubby kep for a few minutes. Then, r that Shadow wasn't 1here, he stoj- ped again. It was funny to see hiy fls, Ty B0t motavtne | He acted for all the world as tho R he didn’t know who had been dig- ) pice. ik e ging there. He shuffled aws af( bl most unconcerned manner. To sce S den him vou never would have guessed : el that he had anything whatever 0 iade for contrust, Tts ample turned 4o with *he hig hole dug under that | oy A stump. He found a big ant-hill. Then o gyeq. rer i e torgot everything excepting those | lining. i \Menus of the Family Sea cagle. Constant companios. cloth. fi Py Sister Mary ist — Cherries, coreal, . creamed eggs on toast, ex- t with marmalade, miik, Luncheon—Hot bouillon, 1o; rackers, radishes, molded chees ad, whole wheat rolls, jellied sixed fruits, milk. tea. Dinner—Breaded veal eutlets, po- toes au gratin, bittered carrots 1A peas gus salzd, pincap- le pudding, milk, coffee. A molded cheese gsalad 1s Ae- ghtfully appetizing for & sum- JAfeE IR JVIATLECIFIAID] [AlwleCdATBIElCTeRATT[E] [eIAlC AT IN]eTo PR o] 7] [IeTiTsTIsTelel aaINTE] [RTeToIATNITTRTIATY IOTETR] (1 T JoleIMialn]ols] 717 [RIale [ Tv]olv]ETOIw/E D) [olLTL ALl TEIT TR [ETATR] [s]o]alrTe[oFATIRIU]O]G]E] [EINToTT IVIEFLTUINTGTETS] (Slele[ole[rl e [NTTEIR]S] | | mer's luncheon. The hot boulllon | stimulates the appetite and | way to begin a meal for chil- dr Molded Cheese Salad Two packages crcam cheese, 1 up grated hard cheese, 1 table- | soon gelatine, 4 tablespoons cold | water, 1 cup whipped cream, salt, panrika, stuffed olives, Souk gelatine in cold water for 4 minutes, Dissolve over hot | water. Moisten cream cl with | milk and cream, using equal partg | Work until smooth. Add grated | en whipped cream, sall, pa- Line & mold | prika and gelatir | with slices of olives and turn in | chedse mixture, taking care not to | disturb olives. Place on ice to | chill and harden. Unmold and serve on a bed of watercress, | This salad is delicious molded a ring without. the olives and rved with fresh fruits in French ' dressing. Flowers Accompany ’Phone Complaints Parls, June 12 (P—In Paris, com- plaints of poor telephione service are said with food and flowers, | A committee of the Telephone | Operators’ association recent en- | tertained 105 operators at a ban- Panet. Each girl was seated ut a | small table between two subsgrib- | cre. After the wine and champagne, the subscribers brought up the eub- ject of better gerviee, and mentioned a few of the complaints. The presentation of each girl, followed be | completed the oceasion. flowers to specches, | FLAPPER FANNY SAYS: i | | | | | | is an | DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, JUNE 12, 1928. Brain is Life’s [Eliminate the Big Switchboard] No-No Method It Is From This Point All This Is Not Right Way to | Connections are Made. | Train Children. | “Mothers ahould concern them- BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN selves with what the child CAN do, Littor Journal of the American | Tather than with what he cannot Modical Association and of Hy. |0 i8 the advice of Mra. Sidonie geia, the Health Magagine | Matsner Gruenberg, Director of the brain of man is a highly Child udy Association of Amer. | ica. complicated organ. Compared v\nhi “How can I stop my child from that of a frog it is iike the switch- | " used to be the most fre- toard in the Metropolitan Opera | Quent mothers ever asked” Mra. House in New York compared to the Gruenberg pointed out. two wires that connect up & dry. | “NOW parents ask: “What e in- cell |teresting and challenging enough to Yet the braln of a frog. if |1 Child so that ——2m mapped out in detail, would make he newer attitude of parents the wiring chart of the largest AUEUrs well for the grown-ups of tomorrow. By nature every child is clectricafly driven factory, to us ; the words of C. Judson Herrick, | éclive. His environment challenges look as simple as a county-road | Fim constantly. He learns to control e | his environment only as he gets an opportunity stand things. | “We waste ot In fact, the brain is so complex to handle and under- in structure that its very construc- tion is sufficient to explain almost any theory that any one may want time and utilizing a energy by child’s interest in to offer as to how we think and |® econstructive way. Toys fulfill as to how we carry on our con- | this funetion. At | “Give the small child large The brain is the central switch. |Playthings or he will use his 'hoard of the human body. To it |Mus¥les on the furniture. The come impulscs from nerve endings | difficulty of the old mcthod of in the skin,'in the eves, ears, nose 'Child fraining was that a child nd tongue; to i1 come sensationseUscd to be stopped constantly by is to balance, and the position of Prohibitions every time he wanted concentrate Later, on something in- in adolescence, the body in space: to it come feel- 410 ¢ teresting. tngs of pain of fullness, of warmth or of cold in fnterior or. lis powers of "cunc(mraflon often gans. were impaired.’ | When these things reach the —_— |brain they arc likely to be trans- g lated into action. I]ps on ( onduct | If pain iy received the response ! v be a lusty “ouch” proceed- ] ing to the world | by means of the| @l Roya ourt larynx and other organs of spflpuh.! If the sensation is one of empti- oss from the stomach it may be These translated through memordes to motor activities including a trip | of the Debs. to the ice box, looking over the contents, sclecting a piece of ab- | London, June 12. P— American ple pie left from dinner and the gepytantes are congratulating them- onveyance of the said pie to the sclyes on the fact that none of | month and thence to the point | yj i numbeér who was presented trom which the original &ignal |at the rceent courts disgraced her- emanated. That is a type of €o- | it by tripping, or failing to curtsy ordination of which any electrical 'or losing her feathers at the cru. engineer would brag exceedingly. | cial moment when she faced the Mind, thought and their con-!king and quer | version into ion are the fune- | For days préceding the courts, tions of the brain just as digestion ! |ondon newspapers devote much is a function of the stomach. ot their space to “Do's and Don’ts Functioning 07 any tissue in the | {or Dei body results in fatiguc of thal| Jiere are some of them: tissue, | “On the night of the court. when Just as a muscle may become | you are going to be presented to tircd from overuse, =0 ulso the|King George and Queen Mary, cells in wiich the activitics of the |dont be embarrassed by the gen- brain are carrled on muy become | tloman in black silk breeches just fatigued from thinking, which 18 jnsidc the door of Buckingham pal- their function. luce, Eweep past him. His faint The people who think, there- | resemblance to the king has chilled fore, that the mind s something | many & young heart for a moment, rt, that can be detaclicd 4 his the ho; have reckoned from 'yt the king doe without | own door. the facts. “Don’'t worry about slipping when yon curtsy. A thousand cther debutantes are worrying more than you, but the carpet In front of the throne is specially thick and cling- Freak Hair Style wlr Th 1 “Don't use any scent, e quern Is On Increase!..m oy s, me quen show H “When you go to court,don't let 't answer More and More of It Seen |the excitement make you lose your | like | | appetite. The queen doesn't ! fainting debutantes. And a nice |litle dinner is a better investment | {than a tiara. BY HAZEL REAVIS | “When you go to Ascot, the great | (Associated Press Fashion Editor) |royal race mect and glittering fash- | Paris, June 12, —Women who |ion parade, don't expect want to be “recreated” in Paris | Mary to make a bee-line towards have strained the beauty business you, in apite of the gracious smile almost to the breaking point, says |she gave you at the court. Race | Emile, wielder of the curling iron |meets are not her long suit any- at a famous hairdressing establish- | way.” ment. Emile’s employer is limiting —_— Lady Aberdeen Made the number of customers he will ac cept each day for “recreative” treat- | o e | “Freeman” of Edinburgh According to Emile, “be yourself” | Edinburgh, Scotland, June 12. (P a motio without appeal to his | —The freedom of the city has been stomers, | conferred upon he Marchioness of “They all want to be made ditfer- | Aberdeen and Temair in acknowl- ent,” he said with a sigh, “and the | edgment of her forty years of pub- pretty ones ure worst of all. !lic work among women and chil- ‘We make them different, but some- | dren. times it's a change for the worst, | A member of one of Scotland's thinking. |most distinguished families, Lady Aberdeen is a descendant of Scot- | tish kings, and one of the outstand- 1s on the | ing figures in _society. as wife of the former governor gen- |eral of Canada, and the mother of | keveral children, she leads a busy Never- In Paris. 'at least to my way of There's such a thing as looking too original Eccentric hairdressing increase, Emile's colleagues of the comb and curling iron agree. The fact that women are trying to dis- guise the evidence that their hair | official and domestic life. is being allowed to grow, with the desire to “be different,” !activities for the improvement of is responsibl for bizarre hair |industrial, edycational and socio- styles, they say. logicul conditions relating to wo- One of the remarkable hair styles | men and children. suggested by one shop to women £he is president of the Interna- wiio want to ba different is the | tional Council of Women, a federa- ! Hottentot. It consists of & bush of | tion of national councils of women hair held in place by round combs representing thirty-six countries which pull the hair back off the forehead. The ends of the growing | hob are frizzed to the extreme. Another new hair style is based on a center part in back. The back years. WOMEN MAKE BILLBOARDS Walsh, Col, June 12. (P—By | sawing boards, nailing theq togeth- hair is combed forward over the ears and covers the short front | er, painting them and putting them locks. This style is recommened | up as signboards members of the Woman's Civil club of Walsh have earned money with which to swell the club exchequer. Business men of the community beught the bill- boards. by hairdressers to women who are letting their back hair grow. College Girls Handy At Writing Telegrams Wellesley, Mass., June 12. (P— Girl college students at Wellesley are addicted to telegrams, a sufvey here has revealed. There is a daily {average in the college telegraph ,office of 116 incoming and 176 out- 50ing telegrams. On holidays the number often | rises above 700, with emphasis on | Thanksgiving and Valentine greet- ings and special remembrances at Eastertide and on Mother's day. At |the end of vacations, when the pocketbook has suffered undue pressure, the “send money” mes- sage is popular. Fashion Plaque | Men college students show a knack for telegram writing, ‘tis #aid, especially during the football | scason and during the spring house parties. days of METEOROLOGIST REWARDED | Berlin, June 12. U®—Dr. Louise | Lammert, the first German woman | 1o receive an international scholar- ship since the war, has left for Aus- tralia where she will spend a year lin meteoralogic earch work. | i The International deration of | | University Women made the award circlets of straw in bright Will Ease the Mind| Queen | Moreover, | together | theless she finds time to carry on | and bas held this office for thirty A new Vionnet bag is made of two Picnics and parties is the ginger- colors | cream sandwich. San Francisco Woman Off to Africa to Lore lof San Francisco, intends to ol Cape Town at one end of the c she is &how packing the dainty garm she is taking from London. ntine Search For of the Witch Doctor , Alone, except for native guidcs and pack carriers, Mrs, John Fletcher 000 miles of African trails from t to Cairo at the other. Above ents that are vart of the wardrobe London, June 12, —Wives and mothers need not be tied to the tea cups if they “think in big circles” instead of confining their thoughts 1 to small diameters and start doing | | something to fulfill their stifled am- ! bitions while the thinking is going Jon. | Mrs. John Fietcher, | mining cngincer in Sun I came 1o this conclusion a ye while she was darning the famil socks and wishiug that she was ex- ploring the wilds of Africa, the land | of her heart's desire since a chance reading in her girlhood of a book on | the Dark Continent. | In moderate circumstances, With | a home, a hushand and a son to care for, her girlhood dream gcem- led impossible of accomplishment. crtheless, she is on her way to Cape Town, to begin a 5,000 mile trek across the Lower River coun- try between Lake Nyasa and Lake and on to Cairo. And | Tanganyika, fshe will be the first woman to make the trip alone, except for the na-! tive porters and guides in her sa- | | fari Amid canvas trunks and equip ment in her room in a London ho- | tel, shie told how it happened. | “My interest in primitive peoples was first fostered by the weird sto- ries told me by an old negro mam- nurs:d me as a child in where I was born,” she {my who St. Louil said. “As I grew up negro the relizious cinotions of the {their witeheraft worship and i niclodies, black: prim. itive remedies for maladies, aroused ll ¥ | desire to tr them to their source, and this interest was in- | creased when my marriuge to a I mining engincer took me to live in | mining camps in the West and in { Alaska, where 1 came to know the | Indians and the Eskimos and en- larged my knowledge of primitive | race “We are in moderate circum- stances, and T had to keep house, |bring up my son and care for my husband just like thousands of oth- |er women all over the world, but | When my boy reached his ‘teens |and went off to chool, T determin- ¢d to earn the money for a trip to | Atri During four months of each of the past few years I have taken a job of some sort and have put| |axide my earnings towards the ex- | pedition. ! “While T am in Africa my son |is going off with the Boy Reouts lon a aa trip to Honolulu and we are going to compare notes about | fences when I return in | { From Cape Town Mrs. Fletcher ‘Wlll travel to Beira in Portuguese i East Africa, and then to the rail- head at Blantyre in Nyasaland, | where she will pick up, her safari {of porters and supplies and atart lon her trek along Lake Nyasa to | Tanganika Territory. This will lead her through some of the wild- | est jungle in Africa, where her only | stopping places will be tribal vil- lages. ¥rom Lake Victoria she will follow the: accustomed routes to Cairo. Mrs. Fletcher's three canvas trunks and two suitcases revealed an {incongruous equipment for her adventure. Khaki riding breeches and shirts, atout riding boots, a pith lelmet and a warm leather coat contrasted strikingly with dainty satin slippers, smart evening gowns and a plle of delicate lingerie. “You think I intend to startle the native in evening dress, don't you,” Mrs. Fletcher said, smiling. “They are for use when I”strike a white colony, where the British fol- 1ow their national custom of dress- ing for dinner, even in darkest Af- rica.” EASY BEVERAG! Keep iced tea in the refrigera- most refreshing alone. GINGER SANDWICHES New and appetizing for summer tor. It is an excellent base for lemonade or other fruit juices. And, with mint and lemon it is| Loses Costly Gems Gems and wearing $25,000 were stolen from the New York apartment of Mrs. A. H. Hig- ginson, formerly the actress Mary Newcombe, French Women Fliers To Carry Friendship Paris, June 12, #—Two birds of France, Madamoiselle Denyse Collin {and Madame Maryse Bastie, skilled fliers, are going to emulate their winged brothers and make aerial wpitals of Europe. must modernize our propa- says the newspaper La- organizing a public sub- scription to send the two young women on their long air journcy this summer in a litte French plane. “Elegant and charming wonien can have strong hearts,” it con- tinues. “And the arrival of these two from the sky while thousanls watch will certainly do more for the glory of France than scores of lectures by dull old gentlemen all in black whose perorations their audiences oftep don’t understand.” Family Party Split Of Little Consequence New York, June 12, (A—With a little chuckle Mrs. Charles H. 8abin, republican natfonal committecwo- man, disposes of the family political differences that make her a hard- working fepublican and her hus- band a faithful democrat, “I think politics is just like re. ligions.” she sald. “It is sort of handed doyn in the family, and is something that is very seldom giv- en up with marriage. All my fami- 1y has been republican and it would be just like renouncing my faith to renounce my partisanship. It's just the same way with my husband, Democracy has run in his family for generations Polka Dots Appear Now On Many Accessories Parts, June 12 P—Even accessor- |1es have caught the polka dot idea. |Dotted bags, and belt and gloves { with dottde cuffs, are 30ld for wear with simple sport or morning cos- |tumes. Plain hats - with .swathed {bands of polka dot printed silk are {a favorite form with Parisians, AIR CURRENTS % | If you hang crctonne or even unbleached curtains across the outside of bedroom doors, the doors can be left open to create air currents and yet privacy can be matntained. SUMMER PILLOWS All pillows for porch use should have washable covers. Printed |chintz. waterproofed ginghams and cretonnes and ollcloth are good. CREAMED BEEF Creamed chipped beef on toast, Mix a little cry served with fried tomatoes makes e | | " v 1t's only for a month or two that |bacauss of Dr. Lammert's valuable |and centeréd with a modern orma. |atalized ginger with cream cheese. 'a most appealing summer gupper marriage is a gambol, work in this field, ‘ment of gold metal. Put between nut or ralsin bread. | dish. Berve ice tea with it. ¥ »