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Love’s Awakening The Heart Story of a Steadfast Woman By Adele Garrison Philip Veritzen and Miss Lincoln Again Appear At the Farmhouse. As Katie announced that “Meester Veritzen mit hees boy und dot Mees Lincoln, dey downstairs,” 1 looked across at my father in qui dismay. T had promised Mother Graham that 1 would stay with Junior until Kath- erine returned, an assurance upon which my captious old mother-in- law laden with an overwhelming sense of her responsibilities, had in- sisted. And my father's word o warning concerning the personal in- terest of my employer to me seemed still to be floating in the air, so re- cently had they been uttered. don’t see how I can go down,” 1 said in bewildered fashion. “Kath- erine hasn’t come back, and— “That's where you wry The little nurse's cheery voice scunded from the hall, and a second later she came out on the veranda. “There! you see your problem is solved,” my father said, and his sig- nificant look at me told me that he saw the necessity of my receiving Mr. Veritzen. 1 turned to Katie eyes were going from my face to mine with the lively curios- ity which is her greatest fault. “Tell them I'll be right down,” 1 directed. “Where have you put them?" try hat dem go by living room.” she said wth a touch of exaspera- tion in her tone. “But dey tink dem- selves so smart, und dey sa Set 80 nice out on veranda ve stay here.! Und I always 'fraid I tip ofer tea wagon getting eet down dot step.” “We don't serve any tea Katie,” I assured her. “Mr Verit- zen, no doubt, has only called to in- quire about Junior as all our other friends have. And the others are here every day, as you know."” “You bet your boots, I know.’ my little maid declared. “Dey all time | underfoot. But I got to heat eet, or dey tink you no vant see dem.” “She's uncanny in her timing” Katherine Jaughed as Katie hurried away. “She knows exactly when to ‘beat it' in order to avoid a call whose bright | father's out | today, | | “She's incorrigible, - Isighed, "but—" “Put that last s italics,” Katk nd visualize it vnusually exaspera alden. For you'll so willin, v capable—r 1 know, word rine ad henever Yad ronished, you're never find so devoted in an- nd so s modern “1 know that,” I agreed now, will you exc me. change his house dr for thing a bit more formal.” “Don't take too long,” admonished. I saw the as it entered the house, well-laden one. 1 esteemed n a fruit doubt it “And must som; 1 proce and it was a think you're st have bought out lso a toy shop. No sk 1o see the boy and Junior's awake there will be no But if he's aslecp, the e barred to Lindt and e Prince of Wales.” “Mother!” The call Junior's room, and Katherine her finger to her lips * He hasn't heard whispered. “He calls yo first thing when he aw down,” Then alond cheerily | “Mother while. She callers. But father, “Oh, goody! w 1 other story.” my small carcled. and 1 was ashamed tiny which 1 felt accs of my fathe ‘stitute for me. 1 told my ingly as T hurried room that 1 was a of the person who wishe save the cake at the I wasted very little time in dress- ing, and a queer quixotic little feel- ing made me select the least hecom- ing atternoon dress in my wardrobe, and pay scant attention fo my coif- fure. For my father's words of cau- tion were ringing disturhingly in my ears as 1 went downstiairs to greet my zZuests. (To be continued) (Copyright, 1925, Newspaper sion store, he'll rgh came put you" al he b will has to some vou're grand. 1 have an voree of the his easy as a o1t noiselessly pang 1 ptance sub- ath- to my instance to eat and same time perfect Feature Service, Inc.) By Thornton W. Burgess Sometimes things become so plaln.l You need not bother to explain. —Mrs. Peter Rabbit Peter Rabbit had left the dear Old Briar-patch a little bit out of sorts. It seemed to him that he had been sadly neglected by Little Mrs. Peter. He was still out of sorts when he reached the Green Forest and he re mained out of sorts. The result was | that he didn’t go back to the dear | Qld Briar-patch at break of day, as | was his gustom. He remained over | in the Green Forest. | “P'll give her something to worry haps she'll treat me better when I return.” But Peter was quite mistaken in thinking that Little Mrs. Peter was worrying about him. As a matter of | fact, she wasn’t giving Peter li thought. She was too busy. She had | too much else too think about. In | faet, Mrs. Peter wasn't really aware | that Peter wasn't at home If Peter had known this, he would have been niore out of sorts than he was. Peter remained away two days.| Then he decided that he had wor- ried Little Mrs. Peter enough, so he returned to the dear Old Briar- patch. He fully expected to find Lit- tle Mrs, Peter anxiously watching for him. He was disappointed. Yes, sir, he was disappoint.d. Instead of finding her anxiously peering out from the edge of the dear Old B patch, Peter couldn’t find her at He was the one who began fo wor- ry. The longer he looked for her the more he worried ould have ventured out ol Briar-patch by Keddy ox, or Ol Redtail the Hawk remembered stamped. In less 1 Little Mrs, Peter hind him. thing to sk Peter tur suspiciously ed. far- she dear caught or He n Coyotr Suddenly W “Were You follow me," I'm going to show Mrs. Peter away. Peter followed. finally turned do rath—one of ¢ the dear Old B long since to investigate 1t Mrs. Peter. “Well,” said he stopped. “where's ¢ “Right there,” proudly. pointir grass Peter peeped saw cute little the head of a Peter understoo instantly why Li been in; me vithir he P e ceric tell ther fine looking they're fin: proud of them you, my dear tell me before “Because 1 know Bit replied Liftle Mrs couldn’t have kept ti your life and T didn’t war cret known while thos: b wholly helpiess. Did vou ¢ such darlings? Aren't they est things ever? There them. Peter!” (Copyright, 1325 by T. W “Peter Makes a b lookir And But are Bu The next Discovery, story “Where were you?"” he demanded Kentucky People Plead For Boy | Youngster Who Killed Pal Gets Life in Pen. Katherine | from | avs the | Hurry called tittle | NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 27, 1928, Once Overs . i Reatstered U. 8. Patent Office il I i i 1 ipitals, | ed at your hand- ! No Unkeyed Letters Two words, . 15 and 38 horl- zontal, form the key tfo this easy | puzzle. How about a speed test m: measure weather capa- | bilities? your warm HORIZONTAL An actual happening. Woolly surface of cloth. Pineville, Ky., June Heath Greer, a robust 13-year-old boy who ¢s in the mountain region of Lau- | Run, near here, mu: of his life in prison the of the law of the of Ker may be unheld. Heath shot and killed a playmate, Luther Partin, during a quarrel, He was brought before Circuit Judge D. | . Jones, charged with first degree | . He pleaded g and w, weed o life i sonment. don’t remember what Luther 1 quarrele the boy | va. I remember he hit me with a stick and then tried to do it again. 4 shot him.” in his fa- nd wanted to other boys littler than rel rest that in order ou Loys carry have | I did | at | don't ry ro- tay until | strict shall American | $2.000 to s o raise cont car v ind w and that with there, taught aned away arreling. | man of the | the appeal | nttle re- Hardon for funds met has |sponse thus far, spend the | Gentle blows. 12. Plant from which a bitter drug | is secured. Dined. », Tox 1. Bditor. Blushing. Thin scale. The ovule-bearing organ of a | «d plant. | Merey To beautfy To concur. | One of the subordinat f a whole. whole golf course I'endent mass of ice, Bed lath ¥ i e for publication Pointers For witched. rtaining 1o A Wrath Eik. To rot hy ex i VERTICAL 'Little Hints on Caring for Children. air, lence. helping your child to find his in this world muke not been dedicated a: 1ces quite openl in others unconsciously, to out unfilled ambitions_of a The mother who is vaguely “mu- crage popuiar in E wal” feels that she must have a aining to one’s birth r who will shine on the con particle How much wiser such a would be, sa hildren, ine for Parents,” if she scovercd, as early as pos lirend and extent of her child's real | capacities and directed her training | toward their development, instead of | elutching at an unattainable ideal to satisfy her own vanity some cert stage, mother the Mag ut of order. Medieal 1 e the examination of Approached A thin eushion Small frosh devated pati itution Home lifv can be made an expe- democracy for the The school in recent years come to realize that its auto- itie atmosphere, where the feach- was (he hoes and the pupils did they, ordered, W Drunkard rience { child in who aids nemy to con- nun or nina. ik ative J& andular orzan whicl | Preparation for democracy. 1t 1 s bile | now training the pupils to partici- Wit pate in the rinning of the school by turning to them the respons Lility for its efficient management in matters suited to their age and home which follows wig profit likew! we i\ ! ( ok h satis malignant over jo center Sorrowful. The wind. Part Ball or of an apple. ry mple side sheltered from the of v glo s only reddened, an application of vaseline or bland oil may be all condensed | that s necessa But if the burn is especially at | &evere and the skin is blistered or | charred, the application of oil should be avoided, but the sponging on of a =olution of haking roda and water may aid considerably. Or, dnet on horic acid powder and keep the burn protected with a piece of lclean gauze until the doctor comes. cment. Form of moisture npon cool surfac night (Copyright 1928, NEA Service, Tne) | The best vields of potatoes generally obtained from sandy gravelly clay loams. e or “Dh, Mr. Turps, how I love your adorable brutality.” the Parents sure | parent. | ible, the | poor | By C. D. Batchelor r A Patou frock of sheer yellow wool. BY JEAN PATOU For NEA Service Parle, June 27—1 always am very strict about sports dresses and greatly disapprove the dressy type lof sports dress. but T have at last |met a percon who. on this subject, Taught Children | opinion there is nothinz more ridic- ulous than a tennis dress with a lot |Is Basis of Their Entire Life and Education. {of unneccessavy trimmings, and Mis Wills cordially agrees with me. Among all my clients the has the |reputation of being one of the most agreeable amonz the saleswomen, She listens to any advice which is given to her concerning her other | dresses, but where tennis clothes are concerned she is the most stubborn oung person 1 have ever seen fused New Model Miss Wills is charmingly stubborn. Cne of my modelers wanted to make a new design of tennis dress for her | this sur but she flatly turned Probably nothing is more charac- | teristic of the courage and intelli- gence of American parents than the efforts they are making to enlighten | themselves on the subject of child training. Not only do they consider the | mental and moral upbringing of | d0Wn the suggestion, stating that the their children nowadays as import- [model which I had ereated for her lant as phvsical welfarc, but they |tWO years dgo was perfect from the have come to realize that the old |Point of vicw of the player and that way of preparing a child for a shel- |She did not want to change. tered life in a sheltered world is of | This in a way was a great com- }nn more use nowadays than an um- Pliment, but a couturier is, of Erailaiin a isphoos: | course, always tempted to change Parents are apt to blame them- | style. Miss Wills knows tennie and |selves, and other pcople have been |her own mind and that is why she | auick to criticize them, for a lack of | Wears a two-year-old model. She |discipline that has resulted in what |Only consented to allow me to make we call “the terrible younger gener- |the dress in silk instead of cotton, ation.” and o add her monogram. T believe that parents aro entitled | I have come to the conclusion that to sympathy instead of censure in |Silk is just as serviceable as cotton these rather chaotic times. All trans- [for sport dresscs, in view of |ition stages from the old to the new 8reat progress that has been made are chaotic. Forewarned is fore- |in the manufacture of silk, making armed, and how were parents to il washable, know that times werc going to| The sporting characteristics change practically overnight? Jor |Miss Wills are cvident in her choice times did change sudd-nly, with the |of street dresses. She has a marked advent of quick travel and instan- prefercnce for tailored clothes. She |tancous thought—a renaissance |likes the fashionable colors—yellow, more tremendous and far-reaching [T¢d and light blue—because she pre- than that which occurred in Europe f¢rS brighter things. She always in the fifteenth century. Events that |€hoos afternoon and evening 100k 50 years to happen then are 4re in which she is completely history now in a week. |at ease physically, and this time she But not only the tempo of the chose silk chiffon in misty shade: |times has quickened; it takes no | One of the most youthful models astrologer to tell us that the new era | Miss Wills chose is one for home is not only onc of material and | a yellow in one of the new, ysical changes, but that the great- | SDeer woollens, with est change of all has been in thought |MMiN&. It has the yoke and sleeves lattitude toward world-old institu- ¢ut in one and the yoke buttoned up tions. |to the white scalloped col |" This new frecdom suddenly let | Knife-Pleated Frock lloose upon the world has, for one| The body of the frock is stitched jon at least, been dangerous- | GOWn knife pleats which flare be- ar its undoing. Trained for the |NOW slanting skirt yoke to a full |cloistered shelter of a more or e pleated skirt. Two pockets, slanted rtifical life, young people sur]du",! ike the yoke line have scalloped ly found the walls down. cdges. The belt of suede follows the | Seme have lost their heads and (Datural waistline and an inserted .arly in the school of experi- | Danding of the skirt points upward But these very children will [in front fo form a loop through make the best parents in the end, Which the belt runs. Lecause they will know what their | With this sl children are up against, They will [straw hat, with a yellow banding. {give them a better defense than th One of her new tennis frocks, of |old-fashioned precepts handed down |“hite silk serge, has a shirt collar |Erom a placia past, |and a full pleated sk Children today are facing a rather |less. Topping it is a tailored white {unsentimental. matter-of-fact, but | flannel jacket, with 4 {more honest age. Things are being |§ave a patriotic ineignia that has agged out into the open. and in- |twWo tiny fennis racquets crossed [dced it is the children themselves | under it. rgely, who are doing it. | reater than ever will wced for straight, clear thinking, un- ased by prejudice, and unwarped |by complexes of mind and charac- |ter. The child of the future must be lfree from the hindrance and un- | happiness of inhibitions. He must be |free from his own bigotry. | He must be able to sclect the right }u.nm, of living and conduct and base his standards on what he be- Hx«vvs to be right, rather than upon what people will think or say, or |upon unreasonable custom. With the |world wide open, he must be his lown defense. He will have no use r the ecleventh commandment, "hou must not be found out.” Truth and frankness! That should be the basis of all child training. {But we must go back farther than Ithat. It won't do to wait until a child |is 10, or even 6, and then say, “We now must begin to think of John's character.” Child training begins at birfh, or las soon as instinct develops into | mental initiative and scuse reaction. And strangely enough it does not be- gin with habit training, although habit. training is considered the first step in character training. It begins {with health. of 1y be vhairi | FLAPPER FANNY SAYS: Lothario is the term used to des- | ignate a libertine or unscrupulous rake, The rising young man can't get a raise by reading success stories, the | lingerie trim- | wears a plain pica | 1t is sleeve- | no decoration | Miss Wills wears a Patou tennis dr A Champion of Clothes Philosophy Helen Wills, Says Patou, Is Charmingly Stubborn In Her Choice ¢f Frocks— Has Worn Same Model for Two Years. ' ess of white siik serge with flannel jacket. Health First in Baby Care Character Depends Upon Youngster’s Well-Being. Back of character training is hab- it training, and back of habit train- ing is health. The whole thing be- gins with the baby. The physical habits and | development of a haby are so closely realted at the heginning of teresting career ihat it is necessary to lay more cmphasis upon his be- havior. Instinet governs him |he knows when he is sleepy or | | | | | entirely— hungry, or uncomfortable, from the | knows that by crying he will get |the things that will make him com- fortable. | It is bad business, however, to al- | 1ow a baby to get to the stage where |he has to cry for things before he | gets them. If he is comfortable he | will net cry. His life should be run |on schedule and his wants antici- | pated. Not for one day, but for all | | days. Nothing should interfere with | his regular routine of cating, sleep- |ing, bathing, airing or other needs. | But it is bad business fo allow him im get into the habit of crying for things he does not necd. ‘We must get over thinking of him | as “only the baby.” Really he is the most important member of the fam- {ily and should be treated as such. | The highest percentage of deaths | among babies occur in the first year. Intelligent eare has reduced the fig- vres in the last few years. Howeve | constant vigilance is necessary. A |baby cannot be systematically {bathed, fed, aired and all the rest |of his regimen carcfully attended to one day, and be carelessly neglected | the next. He is just as succptible to { cold or baccili from an unclean bot- | tle one day as he is another. He nev- ler should be left to an untrained, inditferent, or too young nurse. Con- |stancy and consistency are the watchwords for his safety. Clothes for a new baby should he simple, soft, plain and washed. | No embroidery is necessary. Enough changes of clothing should be pro- |vided, if possible, to keep him im- maculately clean at all times. No ruffles or gathers or things difficult to iron—indeed ironing. except for |appearance is not absolutely cssen tial to a ha laundry. But al clothes should be washed thoroughly | fore using. bottles must be washed out daily rinsed thoroughly, and then boiled |for half an hour. Nipples must be | boiled too. This destroys germs that | breed in the milky film left inside. {1t may look clean and yet be dan- | gerous. Only boiling can make it pure. It possible, the mother should nurse the child. One thing ecience has not been able to do is make a food quite as perfect for young ba- bies as mother’s milk. Fashion Plaque Delightful for sports wear is this white felt Tyrolean hat. A white silk cord encircles the crown four times and is finished with a tuft of Lbright feathers, mental | his in- | beginning. In a few short weeks he | {and above all, drjed thoroughly he- | If a baby is artificially fed, his| withva bottle brush, in warm suds, | Many Factors Cause Insanity Almost Every Case Is Individual One. By Dr. Morris Fishbein Editor Journal of the Amerfcan Medical Assoclation and of Hy- gela, the Health Magazine More and more medical scientists are adopting the view that the caus- es of mental diseases are not in most, 1nstances single causes, such as seem te be proved in relation to infectious disease, but rather represent the re- sults of many factors working simule taneously upon the humawbody. These factors include the hered- itary structure of the individual con- cerned, disease, the functions of the various glands of internal secretion, |the results of alcohol cither in the patient or his parents, the re other infections, and fir stimuli coming from the ment. Individual Study This signifies, of course, that | person with mental disturbanc Inot be placed in a cast iron for diagnosis, but that every |vidual must be studied as an vidual if we are to arrive at a tion of this problem. Recently H. H. Corson studied the factors responsible for the develoy ment of mental disturbance in 2 college students The person who enters college is confronted with a maze of intelle tual problems and he is at an age when his emotional adjustments ara difficult. He has to free himself at that time from close family attach- ments. The nature of his studies brings up many religious questions and his age is associated with an increas. ing amount of attention to probe lems of sex. In many large institutions stud. ents are handled en masse and ca- reers are planned without special reference to the capabilities or {adaptabilitics of the men concerned. ‘The invariable result of this mass grinding in the hopper of education is the emotional breakdown of a |considerable number of young men and young women. Much of this could be prevented if students were encouraged to make honest esti- mates of their own capabilities and ¢ urged to adjust themselves to the the an- cage indis indi- solu« Paris, June 26 (A)—Navy blue light weight woolen materials is © considerable importance for ear) fall. A Lelong dress for the firs cool days has the surplice drape: blouse and trim hip line now favor led. The belt and buckle are pf lighter shade of blue which a chrys angthemum on the shoulder repeat