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The Heart Story of a Steadfast Woman Love’s Awakening By Adele Garrison Madge Plans to Entertain the Brix- tons at the Farmhouse in Spite of Lillian’s Protests, “But, of course, never like you." The words with the affectionate tone which invested them brought a | s comforting little glow to my heart|to speak, “don’t make me unhappy although I did not need the assur-|by persisting. You know I mean ex- ance that outside of her family I|actly what I say when I tell you stood highest in Lillian's roster of | that you not only will hurt, but of- friends. I smiled back at her, and | fend me it you do anything else but voiced the offer of hospitality to the | aceept my hospitality for the Brix- Brixtons which I had been planning | tons, as I would accept yours for from the moment when Lillian had | friends of mine were conditions re- read to me the startling letter which | versed.” Samuel Brixton, old business asso-| “Yes, you would,” she scoffed, but clate of her first husband had sent| what she saw in my eyes, changed to her. her protest to immediate surrender. +Of course you must have them| *I give up,’ she said, stretching come here,” I said. both arms as high in the air as pos- “I must do nothing of the kind,” sible. “There's nothing else to be she retorted sharply, rising to her | done when you are ‘on hospitable feet, “Isn't it enough that Harry | thoughts intent. But I really should and Marion and I should be quar-|like to know (being a curious per- tered upon you, without bringing son) where you intend to put them down a horde of strangers? I'llian” write him the name of that hotel | “That is no problem at all,” I told where Phil Veritzen is staying—if | her cheerily. “You know the farm- he's made his pile, as he says, he|house is a most adjustable place. In can afford that place—and tell him | ll probability if they are coming T'll see them there.” | cast to place the boy and girl in “If you use that word ‘quartered’ | their schools, they won't stay over asgin I threatened, “yowll be|two or there days, and for that quartcred and drawn and hanged, | time, I'll have some extra emergency reversing tie old process——" | beds put in Dicky's room, mine and at'll be done to you for [ Mary's. Then Harry can bunk with | Dicky, you and I can share a room 's pretty bad,” I admitted |as we have done before, and Marion and Mary will enjoy camping to- to a hotel. And as you cannot in- vite them without including her husband and his half-brother—what clse is there to do but to ask them all here for whatever time they cun y. Now, please,” as she started NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, .FRIDAY, JULY 20, 1928, 'Once Overs “but you brought it on yours Now listen to reason, for if you don't I shall use force. You well know you've carried your end when ever we've lived together like this.” 1 was speaking only the truth, for though we have no regular schedule of payments, Lillian and | always adjust the household ex- gether I am sure, That will give us your room, mine and that small one of Marion's for the guests. So write your letter inviting them as soon as you can. Ask them to wire at once the date of their arrival. Then we can see how much time we have before they come.” Registered U. 6. Patent 0ffice By C. D. Batchelor |\Wives? They Are Miss Phillips Tells of the Various Types. New Orleans, July 30 — The man who puts his wife high on a pedestal and gives her the chivalrous atten- tion of a knight of the middle ages is pretty much of a washout from the point of view of the wife. This rather startling remark comes from Miss Lena Madesin Phillips of New York, just re-elected to her third term as president of the Na- tional Federation of Business and Professional Women's clubs, “Forget the squaw stuff,” ndvlleJ" Miss Phillips. “Abolish the pedestal of chivalry, Treat women like hu- man beings. And inside a genera- tion you won't recognize this old world of ours.” The reporter who was interview- ing her asked what was the objec- tion to chivalry and pedestals. Miss Phillips_explained: Like India, She Says “When a man marries a woman and puts her in a shrine and wor- ships her with elaberate chivalry and decks her with diamonds and makes her a literal prisoner of his home and his love and his children, that man In his own way is like the hus- bands of the child-wives of India of whom Katherine Mayo so recently wretg—the men who load the wrists and ankles of their women with all the gold and silver ornaments they can afford. Talks Of Here Distinction Is I;ifiicu It to Achieve, Since Chiffons and Laces are Worn in Daytime, Summer Evening Frocks T - £ P “That man who, as he will tell you, ‘puts his wife on a pedestal,’ is mentally swelling out his chest and looking around at all the men and women he knows and saying: ‘Look at me! Look at the way I house her and [lmy blue model at the Look at what I won! Left is one of Bendecl's rose heige frocks for midsummer wear, The right featurcs a mnovelty skirt and olde load her with diamonds and furs!’ fashioned bertha *“To him that wife on a pedestal is just like a valuable painting or % S any other rich plece of property that For NEA Bemica tells the world how good his stand-| New York, July 20—The summer ing is. And the poor deluded man |evening frock would seem to be the flatters himself that his wife finds simplest of all costumes to select vea, Personification of v.” she grouned. "T'll write it within the hour. You surely are the most relentiess prodder of lasiness T ever knew. “Thank you penses when we are sharing each other’s homes so that the burden is equally divided. *What bearing does that have on this question?” she asked tartly. “A close one,” I retorted, “because in it is the crux of the BY HENRI BENDEL present. - The very simple bodice has a deep yoke in the front and back, and makes no effort toward any or- namentation beside the material, The other costume photographed is also an effort to escape the obvi- T said with a little agreement | bow, “But,” hesitantly, for I knew that you are to consider the farm-|I was treading on dangerous Y him enough as her sole interest in house ax sous own Tome. You know | sround, “aront ‘you soing to tell “Tony, how'd you like to be one o’ them ciouds up there, just the world! Adida pias, bub coumaistamiz el Copmening e e DRl RS . very well tha you were the | Harry about this before you write to o) ’ sl ” . “Why, no one woman can be b - g aterlal, chatelaine of the farmhouse, you |Mr. Brixton?” Y floatin’ around doin’ nothin’ at all? o, e Pl 2 can be P& ¥or with chiffons and lacy frocks be used for the afternoon tea dan- PROREN A9 Rhe. wola- in #t ot worn all day, it is quite difficult to |sant or th informal dinne uite as 3 5 o sa e ‘mal er q a any man's life. And conversely, ho one man can be big enough to fill the whole life of any one woman." “Women Human Beings” Women, Miss Phillips inaists, want to be treated as human be- “Well, Fat, it don’t strike me as no occupational change what~ ever.” never would permit your old fricnd Helen Brixton or her children to go Copyright, 1928, Newspaper Feature Service, Inc. achieve distinction in the evening, |appropriately as for the strictly eve- and all the heavier and richer fab-|ning event. rics which are so attractive in the Formal Flowers winter are completely out of the This one is as blue as the sum- question in July and August, mer sky and as soft as a clcud. The Ings, receiving melther favors nor | Practically all other considera- old-fashioned bertha, which glves & handicaps because of their sex. tions must be sacrificed to cool- | most quaint and unusual line to the b ness. Even the colors should be|shoulder, suggesting the old- short ce—— “Women are not goddesses and she asserts. sleeve of a decade ago, is made of dainty and delicate rather than they ore not squaws," “They have their special function rich and striking. hand thread run lace, caught fn of child bearing as women. But Filmy and Light front with a bunch of metal flowers, gt aside from that, before and after | The ideal summer evening gown These flowers are stiff and formal, -“f accenting the deep point at the throat and at the waistline. A note of novelty is achieved in the skirt, which is circular on one Fortunately the occasions for|side, and shirred to the waist on the| formal evening clothes are fewer |ot! The sash is tled in a care- during warm weather, and elabor-|less, graceful bow, and the hemling ateness is less to be desired than[shows the unevenness that the well| sweetness and light. regulated hemline should. Three materials that may be de- In colors there is not much to sy pended upon to give the effcct cf |except that yellow is having a de-| filminess and coolness are lace, chif- | cided vogue. The delicate greens fon and tulle. also are featured, and blue has not| T am showing today a lace frock |bcen so smart in years as now. which I designed especially for mid- The all white gown is seen le !summer wear, made of hand thread (frequently than usual, and depend: run lace, rose beige in color—for, in- | usually upon the addition of soms cidentally, dyed laces are having a|color for its effect. Naturally, since during tho has something of magic and moon- light in it, suggesting the gosa- mer weave of the fairies and the witchery of far-away places. and beyond that function, they are human beings, and they want men to treat them as such. There is no sex in work, A business is business and & profession is a pro- feasion, whether it be conducted by a man or a woman. “This organization of business and professional women's clubs is not an end. It is merely a step. It is a step toward the day when a woman lawyer will be a member of a bar association becausc she is a lawyer—not a member of & profes: sional women's club because she is a woman, The day when a business woman will be accepted in a cham- ber of commerce as & unit of the WHITEY IS KNOCKED OVER By Thornton W. Burgess The tempter at your elbow stands; Pray close your ears to his demands. —Old Mother Nature, Whitey, the white-coated young aon of Peter Rabbit, and the only one of Peter's children now living in the dear Old Briar-patch, had found, : right on the edge of the dear Old i Briar-patch, what seemed to him community's business life with the |tremendous vogue. shawls are lald aside . like & queer little house, It was‘a fact of her sex having nothing in the { Three full ruffles form the skirt, | summer, color and dash must b world to do with it. two of which point upward and onc achieved in the costume rather tha perfectly harmlcss house so far as he could sce. It was open at onc end and inside were some picces of 3 carrot. One little plece had been 3 outside. It hadn't taken Whitey 3 long to discover that this was good to eat. It seemed to him that never had he tasted anything so delicious. Now he was trying to make up his through the use of gay and intrigu. dips down to form the hemline that ing accessories, fashion so particularly loves at the “We are headed toward the day when the ‘Ladies’ Auxiliary' wil vanish from the earth. “I hope, I believe, that the daugh- ters of the women of this organiza- tion of which 1 have the honor to be president will be acccpted as units of thelr communities, side by side with men, instead of being se- daily 1s protective, although th canned cabbage also has beel boiled. The fact is that the canned cabbage is heated. in air-tight can Destroyed By Heat greater physical strength.” “The picture I see of the future of women in America is a woman working side by side with a man. Both keen and eager and open-eyed. “It's a trap,” sald Mrs. Peter, cr is just silly. That's It. Mother| wne new design of this puzzle may is just silly. I guess I'm big enough |neip your “game.” particularly it mind to enter that little house for|to take care of myself now. i some more. whatever that was Y haa ‘:ove.lri]:'f‘m ',‘,““f, ihty ‘:“"“"‘""" Ahe it Paris, July 20 (#—The three plece | gregated into wamen's organizations | anaring responsibilities. Doing good | Evidently the factor that s i , et in oroni b0k thak BEF L ool L Wish 3 naltiabrie arbre ong border words. sports outfit with tho sleeveless | merely because they were born girls | work, Getting its rewards. Taking |volved in the destruction of th little house all over. So he cut a|right now.” He licked his lips, Horisontal Dblouse shows undiminished popular- | instead of born boys.” hard knocks without whimpering. |[vitamin 1is oxidation. Heat suffi: 3 way out from the dear Old Briar-| (Copyright, 1928, by T. W. Burgess) | 1 Tending to rise again. ity. Lelong makes one of beige| Misa Phillips chuckled that deep. . *Anyone who thinks this organiza- | ciently high will destroy vitamin A grey jersey, The sweater has grad- | rich note of mirth that underlies the | (1on of professional and business |C, and heat for long periods of] patch, for the little house was right 9. Kind of johnny cake. uated rows of dark green with a|scriousness of her words. women works against home life and | time will destroy the vitamin. St the very entrance of one of the|The next story: “Foolish Young|10. Perched high as an cagle's nest. r paths into the dear Old Briar-patch. | Whitey.” 13, A frame with rungs used for broad white stripe. The belt is ot| *This squaw stuft ought to have | motherhood and the careful rearing | Access to air or oxidation durl Once outside, he hopped all around climbing. green with a buckle o match. The | died long ago.” she continued. “If |of families is a shallow thinker. We |the heating process 1s the mo A that queer little house. He could ol 14. Those who carry. flower is made of the jersey. The|there is any question of who should | pave wives and mothers in our or-|scrious of all the factors in § F find no other way nte it. 1In ract,|[V]enus of the Famlly 16, Poison. only fullness in the skirt comes from |do the heavy work, it seems o me | conization—and there are no better | destruction. e £ 18. To abdicate. three =mall plaits, the man should do it because of his| yives and mothers anywhere. 1t minute amounts of coppen o he could not see into it. & “It's a queer house. I wonder ¢ whose it 1s,”” said Whitey to himself. *There scems to be nobody about. “You take the most chivalrous of these men who ‘put women on a pedestal’ Put it up to him which will make the best wife and mother are present in the vessels used {p heating food substances, the wi. tamin destruction will take placq much more rapidly. This is dud BY SISTER MARY 19, You and me. 20, Type of venomous snake. 22, Italian river. Breakfast—Stewed prunes, cereal, BREATHE RIGHT I don't sce why I shouldn’t go right | cream, baked French toast, syrup, |33- To free. 11. Porous stone for flltering water. in and help myself. No ome Wil be [ milk, coffee. 34. Auctions. 12. Distinction or fame. —the women whose only interests |to the fact that the presence o any the wiser.” Luncheon—Green pea bisque, | 25: Snake ‘:lcd‘ ‘:v Cleopatra 10| 13" competitor. : are in her home, and any home can | copper will speed up all oxidativ 8o presently Whitey hopped around | toast sticks, tomato sandwiche: commit suiclde. 15, Extracting ore from the ground. . . get petty after a while, or the wom- | reactions. in front of the queer little house. |bread pudding, lemonade. ™ |26, Btandard of type measure. A7 e ayalbince; 7 You Must Breathe With Rezuln_nty and Ease, an whose mind is awake and whose | The use of copper kettles. in the For 4 long time he sat there, net| Dinner—Brofled mutton cutlets, |37- TO misrepresent 1. Round ends of hammers. Before You Can Swim. eyes are open and who can see and | preparation of tomato pulp prod Biing 1o, oo insiah, vet unaste o |asaliopen phlafuss; atamen Kulk |k Weventinoteduacnle. 24, Calm. think and appreciate this world side | duces more destruction of vitamir Jeave, The longer lie gat there the | with lemon butter, stuffed beet sal- |30 T duminish |27 Oricntal sovereign's instrument g = by side with her husband. If that|C than if heated in tin lined ket et lizes Bl o sariot tRINHNEN | a0/ Bheapsutry] tapilEss; st aake; | SE Uiepsll SOF BUBROLINE the woo granting a_privilege. man tells the truth he would prefer [tles. Furthermore, the tomatd him. His mouth watered. Tt water-|milk, coifee. in an open fire. 28, Diacritical mark. the live, interested, growing, wide-|pulp after heating will be foun(iillrresic ed more and more, or-| Strawberry mousse is excellent 35. Breathes loudly in sleep. 31. Griefs. awake wife to the domestic moron. [to contain small particles of copi 00pe! | 37. Covering the bottom of a shoe. An Edomite. ‘And I think he would prefer to look | per. St tuured to poke his h withdrew it quickly. He felt tha he had been very daring. “It's all right," said inside of him, ' perfectly al s on hi out t of him. Tn an instant he v feet, however, and was just run when he discov Yes, sir, he discovered his mother. very much puzzicd. “I'o save you from being made Sl plicd Mrs. Peter short- | (Copyrisht, 1928, NEA Service, Ine.) For when you drive forward with | of the water as that gives you the | ;o beqestal of chivalry. Treat wom- |are much more stable and ditticu l{{mg h“?' you knoww what that : JEME A A Y the first arm, you breathe as you | wrong position. Learn to exhale| ., jjxe human beings. And insideto ruin. S el Cuffs Above E'lbow «.i:wl‘:.e :vhsfivl:oulh:o:mlfirn t:: I‘:.ni‘:e;u:t‘::r t::: -7.":“;:":’"“ that| " ceneration you won't recognize| Unfortunately we do mot ¥ “It's somebody's little house; 1 don't Add Original Touch Tt am forwaid, you exhale, 1n| Be sure as you drive that right cledlos Jnow auont o of the, e kn‘rl\\\' WO Paris, July 20 (®—One of the in- the water. hand outward, that your left is as . serve and dm “';ne.‘r’ ut° e 1's a trap, i Mrs. Peter. “H}hn sting touches on the tight fit- As you exhale, drive the right|far behind you as it is in front. H lth H t how muchlm“““ el : you had gon. here, you wouldn't| ting sleeve which is introduced by arm down into the water, as you |Sometimes, when you forget this, €a Ints ing gets | ms i have been « to get out.” i!.m\m. Redicrn and some other de- did the left. Keep it slightly curv- [ you really fail to push as much e i “Why couldn't 1 get out the same | signers s a turned back flared cuft ed, 80 it will not fecl any strain. | water with that hand as you might, BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN BABY’S BED ! . MORRIS i 1 went in?* demanded Whitey. | which is sct on above the elbow. Becausue,” replicd Mrs. Pe Sometimes it is made of shirred vel- ways tire casily. Try to keep the And through this last part of the [ Editor Journal of the Amecrican | To keep the baby's enamelled bq “the door would have closed | vet in the tones of the dress. In body relaxed, whenever possible. crawl stroke, remember your kick-| Medical Assocation and of Hy- |spotless, wash dally with & dan shut you in. Now you get away from | the case of a dress of geranium red Drive this arm forward, close the [ing. It must never speed up or gela, the Health Magazine cloth wrung out of white soap sud - and y away from here I from Bechoff this frilled cuff fingers lightly, cupping them ever so | siow down, if you want to become The most sensitive of all the vita- | Polish with a dry cloth, Whenever you see one of these little is of the lace itself. 2 slightly 80 you can scoop the water |& strong, steady swimmer. As & mins to heat is vitamin C. This is - wooden howses, keep away from it.| — 2 to drive the body forward. For this | matter of fact, your feet by their |the vitamin that prevents scurvy. LYNX COLLAR D torget, k y from it. MOT _ is the part of the stroke, as we said lpenludum regularity, can count the| As pointed out by Dr. Walter H. A high lynx collar rounds tIf Now. go! | On the blouses much fagoting is Z before, ihat tells the tale, The more | stroke for you, just as your feet do [ Eddy in a recent discussion of nu- back of the neckline of a straig ff Whitey knew better than to di :n, as well as much nemstitching Z that hand and arm can displace the | in dancing. They can be, when trition, whereas one gram of raw |line, short coat, of a thin blad obey when his mother spoke t and hand embrolderies. Z water ahead o fthem ,the more the | properly trained, the guide to per- cabbage daily will prevent scurvy |broadcloth suit for late summer, way, and he went. But inside - 2 e Z body will shoot head. fect rhythm. in a guinea-pig, twenty times that was saying to sclf. “I don’t be- STUFFED PRUNES : Your breathing has much te do Remember, six kicks of the feet |amount of cabbage, if the food is NEW METAL CIOTH " A bathing suit of bold modernis- up snd down, with knees straight, | bolled for an hour in an open ket- Among the new fall materials & « knows what she . 1 dont helie No, sir. ey ing any harm In it 1 don’t b lieve there is any harm¥n it. Moth- . Then he mall voles A4 his mother. frozen in an iccless refrigerator, but | 3¢ & t| can be made in tested pound bak- |30 Lrocreated. | ing powder cans packed in & pall of | (" 1, 1eg' of boats occupled by pas- jcct and salt if a crankless freezer ¥ el gl st fare. I|or jccless refrigerator is not at Beapchbaring ghe oyt 7. Bugar sand. 8. To abound. 9. Niggardlincss. <| Sprinkle with sugar and let stand hour. Press through a coarse Soften gelatine in cold water 0| one sieve, Squips. 36. The diocesan center. . Abbreviation for doctor. promises to be very smart for fall, with a few inches of the frock show- ing below the coat. | for five minutes. Dissolve over hot Use six cups of fincly crushed ice a[to one cup of jce cream salt. ded prunes, stuffed with cream cese, nuts and pimento, make a tic design has dark blue flannel REG.U. 5. PAT. OFF. Bernioe Zitenfield stroke is like the first, only differ- ent. Remember that taut muscles al- with your ease in the water. If you 01525 oy wea seavice. me licious and hearty salad for sum- shorts joined to a knitted bodice of mer suppers. | biues, red and biack. Summer drinks are cold because ice is what it's cracked up to be. gasp, instead of breathing regularly, with the safe clocklike beat that .|your arms and legs keep up, you exhales under wator as she drives the right arm dmu’lmmmmhmmfimmfim ing water. Do not try to hold the head out thereby slowing yourself. to every full stroke of three motions out with the left, both arms at sides, out with the right. back on that kind of a mother as his own. a legitimate part of the life of any Wifchood and Motherhood “Wifehood and motherhood are And just as the man who shuts his eyes and his brain to these other in- terests is failing to live up to the best that is in him, so the woman “D.d-did you do that?” he stut-|water and stir into berries. . el o Fateand alli dnto bemita, Bt Bashion: Plague FLAPPER FANNY SAYS: whose tange of vision is limited to |use of water in cooking green veg * 7 Little Mrs. Peter nodded e o ket q :L{ cannet last in the water. the walls of her home is infinitely | ctables ‘may be injutious to th e L I PN A . THE ZITENFIELD TWINS Exhale through the noss, XKeeb* ||eyq of & human being than the wom. | vitamin B eontent. 3 ¢ x 4 sl m into mold and pack in Z For NEA Service ing the mouth shut. Relax, 80 you Ho A 2 4 studle Evidonss ey. looking very much injured and|ice and sait. Let stand four hours. : 5 an who looks and see and studies— ence is as yet not avallabl The third movement of the crawl | can breathe easily without swallow-| ;3 {t geems to me she is infinite- | regarding the manner in whic 1y lese of a wifc and mother. “Forget the squaw stuff. Abolish The vitamin A content of butte: can be reduced markedly by heat ing at higher temperatures if current of air bubbles through. Vitamin A, however, is morq by the application of heat, but th presence of alkalis destroys 1 much more rapidly than does th presence of. acids. Therefore, th vitamins D and E may be dc stroyed. Apparently these vitamir tle, is required for scurvy preven- tion. Four grams of canned cabbage metallized sheef velvets and metall brocaded georgette, both hig’ decorative for evening. A [pend!s jinvest heir manif right. There isn't a thing to be| hand. Vertical APPLIQUED DESIGNS spic afraid of.” Strawberry Mousse 1. Wands. s An: Veavet Epe woman, as husbandhood and father- |stable than vitamin C. and § i, Whitey took a step forward. Just| One quart berries, 1% cups sugar, 2. Finished. plique are uzed effectiveiy on chif- hood are a legitimate part of the |scems doubtful that ordinar: Jos a8 he aid so something bit him from |1 tablespoon granuiated gelatine, 4] 3 Oneerved. fons and very delicate fabrics. life of any man. But they are only |cooking harms the vitamin A 1:llers) o the side and knocked him sprawling, | tablespoons cold water, 2% cupa| & Bun 804, a part. They are not the whole of | plant sources, although oxygen, |Jilion o 3 In fact, it made him squeal right|whipping cream. §. To secure. 4 FALL COATS life. Before them, with them, and |present, will destroy vitamin 4 arm out. It quite knocked the wind out| [ull, wash and drain berries. 6. Destroys by slow integration. The seven-eighth length coat after them are scores and hundreds |from animal sources. decisi and thousands of other interests. Vitamin B is slowly, destroye e a }