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By Adele There was something in Lillian's dancing eyes, and in the mock humility of her voice which warned me to be chary of my advice as she asked me what to do with the tele- gram which had just been delivered | for her husband. That she guessed something concerning this 'el\'.rami which was a8 yet unknown to me, 1} suddenly surmised and couched my | answer accordingly. “That is something upon v\hl&‘h | couldn’t possibly advise you,” I told her. *“You know your own pro- cedure in such matters. know your husband.” “I've thought so for a good many years, ful smile, “but 1 really believed for a few minutes this morning that I'd lost my key to his mental reactions. But only for a few minutes. Then the dear old boy's brain process| swung wide before me again. That's the reason 1'm going to open this, al- though I'm very sure Harry, poor | lamb, didn’t intend me to read it first. He meant to read it to me, 80 as to ‘add the air of verisimilitude’ which is his chief delight. But I| can’t wait for him. Will you excuse me? 1 nodded, trying to keep my facial expression strictly non-committal, as she tore open the yellow envelope and carefully read the contents of the telegram. She read it a second | time before she looked up with a | laughing question which yet had in it a touch of insistence. “What have you and Harry been concocting about the price of Winter | wheat?" she asked. 1 stammered out an unconvincing “What do you mean?” then sudden- | ly sent a stiffening wire down my | own backbone. After all, 1 had but acted in her best interest, even if she should consider me intrusive— which I was very sure she did not. She tossed me the telegram. “Read it and weep,' " she para- phrased. “For a hackneyed trick he ought to know better than to pull an | Love’s Awakenmg You also | " she returned, with a mirth-| 'l‘hlhlflShry Shndlm Wo-n Garrison ancient wheeze like that on me.” 1 took the telegram and read it meticulously, glad of the chance to lower my eyes from her mearching. mirthful gaze until I could find out what she meant by her contemptu- ous reference to the message. | “H. Undcrwood, care Graham | farmhouse, Kettle Drum Road, Sag Harbor, L. I, New York,” the tele- | gram began. “Imperative you come to New York not later than tomorow. stay umu present piece of work finished. “SCHWARTZMAN." Schwartzman,” Lillian ‘one of the cleverest, | most likable Simon Legrees in the theatrical game. But can he wield | the cat when his work isn't done? | Harry really has done himself proud this time. This thing is almost | plausible, for he has a piece of work on for Sammy. It might have fooled {me if T hadn't overheard Dicky spiel this morning abct Harry whole-souled mourning even to black \ underclothing. 1 knew then Harry was up to some sort of game, and Ithis telegram bolstered my theory. | ¥or you see, my dear, this is an old [trick of Harry's, so ancient it has long whiskers. Whenever he want- {ed an excuse to get out of town, he used 1o write or wire some friend in another city to send him an urgent | message summoning him. Oh, it isn't original with the dear old boy. Errant husbands have used it be- fore " I fell into her trap, for 1 rushed to defend Harry Underwood from what 1 knew was an unjust innuen- do. If he had asked Sammy ‘hwartzman to send the wire, wlhich 1 did not doubt, it was to pro- » him with an excuse to get out mmy commented, “He's not an errant husband." I said hotly. “If he sent this it was| so he could—he could—" “Do something you'd advised him d0," Lillian finished with a smile. ess up, Madge! There really isn't anything clse for vou to do. (Continued Tomorrow) Copyright, 1928, Newspaper Feature Inc. t Service, MUS, MUSAUAT WOINS JidlRY By Thornton W, Burgess Misery makes one torlory; Ly two it s much better Lorne. —Jerry Muskrat Jerry Muskrat was sitting at the tige uf tne water out on tie Green Moudows us wiscouraged wnd un- happy @ Muskrat as ever lived. It had stopped raining but tae water was still risicg. ‘rnc Smiling Pool Was low a small lake on the Green Meadows., Not c.ea the tops of the bulirusies were 1o be secn. Jerry's tine new house that he had worked 50 hard to bulld was entirely under water, Jerry had nowhere to go and he didn't know what to do. By and by Jerry discovered a li tle brown hcad, or, rather, he Ji covered a nose and just the top of a little brown brown“hecad coming his way. He began to feel better. Mis- cry loves company, you know, and he had recognized Mrs. Muskrat Presently she swam ashore beside “I was wondering about you, my dear,” squeaked derry COLORIUL BUBBLY Hard ' ANGTLMER puzzle. with When rainy days come, start the | DUt twe unkeyed leters. Try Nos. 18 and 35 horizo. for a starter, HORIZONTAL children and then color the blowing soup bubbles soup suds for him. i ot i el il Pectaining to narrative § etry. “I was wondering about you, my | 2"y it “(h";"d",';rlf ,‘,f":,:' Fiuld in o tree. fean T sahalied, 4 Did the | yopiow, red and other cheerful Westhiorbok s;:‘eirwgct up in the hole in the|yo, P 2 Eperiain, 4 in 5O nmound “Of course It did,” replicd Mrs.| 14. mo,y_ & Muskrat in the same squeaky tone| 1 Dinner. ot voice. “Did it get up in that| [fyour Bathiroom vines arc rust- 16. Constellation. RS Ao Honks o iyouret” | ed, a woolen eloth saturated with | (2 ) B0 A Seery modded mikerably, “It cov- | Fasoline or * ammonia will clean | ;o ered it,” said he. “Kor all I know, ‘l“’i';‘ s Such pipes and . nickel figy) D sk e lolders for towels, soap 71d o on WA bate mashel o :should be re-coated with Ry “Well, there's one satisfaction, can’t wash away a hole in a bank, declared Mrs. Muskrat. “I always did think you were wasting your time building that new housc. But| the gquestion now is, what zre we | going to do next? We can't sit here, for the first thing we know Reddy Fox will be sneaking over here. It isn't safe. We have got to go somewhere where we can keep | out of sigh “Quite true, my said Jerry. “Or, if we can't keep out of sight, we have got to be where the water is deep enough so that we can dive or swim. There's a log floating out there. Let's swim over to that and it there until we dear, quite true decide what we want to do. So Jerry and Mrs. Muskrat swam out to the log znd climbed up on it Out there they had nothing to wor- vy about from Reddy Fox or from O1d Man Coyote. In fact, they were quite safe from any of their « ies. Rut they didn't like if oy didn't like sitting right out in the open that way. Then, too, they were | hungry, and they didn’t know whers to go fo get anything fo cat. You all their usual food supplivs were under water now “My, but I'm hungry!" 1krat. 0 am 1! said my dear! The water is to Farmer Brown's corrfi om- | i | said Mrs Jerry “1Look remember rightly, there at one end of it—the er the water.” “Carrots! Did you say exclaimed Mrs, Muskrat, sure there are carrots over there? If there are carrots there T am go- ht over there this very| She pl d from her| end of the log and in the direction of Farmer Brown's cornficld, Jerry hesitated a moment or two and then followed. Tozeth- er they swam until once more th arted to swim | ity kel ist veseel. Wing part of a seed. i The common crocodile. REr Registered for a political ap g pointment and kept shining. GILT FRAME You can mak or gilt fnrmlvn” shin :n‘ ghtly if Burst forth you go over them with a soft Composition for one voice. Lrush dipped in a mixture of egy 3 : To damage white and chloride of soda To uncl Inspired reverential fear. Lnglish coin. perforate, To surrender. Corded cloth. To prepare for publication. TICAL Tree genus Ulmus, Pastry. Yellow bugle, Type of stringed instrument. Platfrom in a theater, Pertaining o air, Finit. Pretentions 1esidence, One in cards. At the present fime Finis, Animal similar fo a Pathway between of seats. To stop up. Bird similar to an ostrich. To cold constantly. @ type of lace, American rubber tree. lined cavity in a nod- ule of ston A popular report. aiher, Membranous bug To be in debt. Guided. Legume., silkworm. Mesh of lace. Heslth Hints Paris, Oct. 3. (P—Dlack lace is | felt the ground under their feet were almost, hut not quite. over to that field. They would have | to travel over ground a short dis- taft~e and this *hey didn't like to do But carrots were carrots and empty stomachs were empty stomachs: <o, ! after hesitating a fow moments, th stgrted. (Cepyright 1928 by T. W. Burgess) { worn in | el is black net and fine Paris for evering by . A new Worth mod- | black Part of the gathered skirt 1 wo- BY DR, MORRIS FISHBEIN 1 litor Jour: of the American Medieal Assoctation and of Hy- men of ail age train. The underbodice has a getn, the Health Magazine scrvatively low decollet but the! TIn the fall whooping cough is one luce top is her hig! Shonlder | of the infectious Mseases whic straps of strass continne in front | hecomes extremely froquent, per sautoir with a ruby and [ haps pecanse children get togeth: | again in schools. nd forge a NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1928. Health departments i whuopilig cougin Reglatored U. 8. Patont Office On land and sea, is une of e that 108t ditficuit conuraons wiih which they have not cusly, Inyvestigators dlacue spread rapidly stages vetore the first the are concerned. pearing in any ad rapidiy had Just atier it, st vase; tion is The germ of ¥ 1o > congin and stance from tne throat, Value of Vaccines There valuable vaccines WHICH ity PRYSiCutis beiley e ai of value 1 preven the disease. However, their value has not been sutficiently ablished 10 warrent their use in evory child, a recom- mendation which is made for the control of diphtheria, 1 mple. Whercas whooping cough in it- self a8 not an extrenely serious condition, the records indicate that it is extrem ly dangerous to small childion. jotioutarly those | under o1 n olcer sildren, the after effects and complic N umon.a, tuberculosi:, levs of the heart, and similar troubles, are sufficient to mike the dis- dangerous. More than 90 per cent of all J-ath ult be ing cough occ five v of In the con it is of the u the p.oblim of an exceedingly ditficult one. A few cases s1oup of 10 weiude all the disease pr have more duiing found likely is e whoop a time when diagnose the 8 at to whouping expelied cough with e ap- childien who evi- .t to 1y and it is dis- preven- is ach thrown to som from whoop- ur in - children under ntrol of this disease, tmost importance 1o keep the child with whooping cbugh away ‘rom other children. Thus prevention pends pri- marily on the parent< of the sick child as well as on fhe parents of other children in the <iinity, Keep the Child A, Children should b kopt away from other chiidrin wio have coughs and colds. Wienivir a cough or cld persists ore ‘han 4 day or two, the child “hould have roper medical attentior 1t parents Fnow of ather chil- ‘ren in the neighborhood who S ,/ have whooping cough and who are being permitted to play outdoors | with the ganz, the health depart- | nient should be notified, so that | the sick child will he put under | the control of its parents, and the latter informed that the child must be kept alone until it is well. In most communities the par- ents of children with whooping | cough are not considered as in quarantine, and are permitted to 80 about their duily work, A sign on the door to the eifect that whooping cough is present in the houschold permits other par- ents, however, to take suitable precautions for the protection of their children Menus of the Family By Louise Bennett Weaver Dinner — Baked pork chops, browned sweet potatoes, apple rings, baked, bread, currant jelly, head lettuce and piquant dressing, molcs- 88 cookies, sliced oranges, coffee, Biked Poik Chops and Lrowned weet Potatoes Four pork chops, cut 1 inch thick, 1-3 cup flour, 1 teaspoon salt, 1-4 teaspoon pepper, 1 cup water, 4 sweet potatoes, 1 1-2 inches in di- meter, 1-2 teaspoon salt, 1-4 tea- spoon paprika, 1-2 cup milk. | Wipe oif the chops with a damp i cloth. Spread with the flour and t it to keep it in place. Sprinkle with the teaspoon of salt and the pepper. Place in a small baking pan and add the water and a lid. BRake in a meoderate oven for 1-2 hour. Pecl the potatoes and place laround the chops. Sprinkle them | with the 1-2 tcaspoon of salt and the paprika. Add the milk and bake for 40 minutes. Place the chops on a large serving platter, add the .0- tatoes and arrange the apple rings around the sides. Apple Rings Four apples, 2 cups water, sugar, red fruit coloring, 1-2 spoon cinnamon. Wash and cor. the apples. peel. Cut the apples in inch slices crossways. Place in a pan and add the rest of the ingredients. Add the fruit coloring to the waier, | using enough to give a red color. Take in a moderate oven for 40 | minutes. Inspect frequently and turn the rings to allow even baking. It desired, the rings may be placed in o serving dish and the syrup pour- ed over the top and allowed to cool. Molasses Cookies Two-thirds cup fat, 2 cups dark Lrown sugar. 1. teaspoon ginger, 1 teaspoon cinnamon, 1-2 teaspoon | cloves, 1-2 teaspoon salf, 2 eggs, 1-2 cup sour milk, 1-2 cup molasses, 3 1-2 enps flour, 1 teaspoon soda Cream the fat and sugar for 2 minutes. Add the spices, salt, eggs land sour milk and beat for 2 min- utes. Add the rest of the ‘ngredi- ents and drop small portions from the end of a spoon upon greased taking shects ce 3 inches. Roke in a moderate oven for 10 minutes. [ These are soft cookics, 1 «up tea- Do not | Different width spatulas are ef- ficieney Kitche 0se one. { half inch wi helpful I re- moving steam-d or gelatin - mix- tures from theis molds and those three inches wide are very con- | venient for taking cooki-s from their baking sheets Sprinkle cinnamon and aver fresh apple sauce ing pungent flavor. blends with beef, ronsts. When serving pork, apples, baked or in accompaniment. nutmeg for a pleas. Apple sauce pork and veal always use sauce, for an CARE OF CANARIF Canarles should be given a window garden or grecn. A bit of I kird or mustard seed, reattered in a pot or will sprout in a few ys and grow into little plants if possible romove the bot- tom of the cag- and wet it over the pot of green. Other things 1irds love are nasturtium hlossoms, cut- tle bone and cayenne pepper pods. By C. D. Batchelog| Child Study Association Looks Back on Forty Years of Service Education Brings Amazing Change In Parental Attitude. Association of America, said, child’ was one who sat still. BY JULIA BLANSHARD New York, Oct. 3 — “I used to just smack my chixiren when they were bad and put them to bed with- out any supper. Then 1 began to seo 1 should talk to them. Now I Lave learned that I can make them friends who talk things over with me.” This testimonial, given in broken English by a glowing-faced gingham clad Polish mother from the lower East Bide, tells graphically what the Child_Study association of America is doing to teach thousands of par- ents how to understand and cope with their modern children, 9 shrdl ctao shrd tao hrd hrdl dldill It is 40 years this fall since a handrul of young mothers and educators, perplexed by the “younger generation” even in those pre-flavper, pre-juzz days, started this experiment in parental education by meeting for clinical discussion of their own problema, Now in Five Nations In November, this year, the Child Study Association of Amer- ica will have thousands of mem- bers celebrate its 40th birthday, in hundreds of chapters, not only in every state in the union but in Canada, Japan, China and Russia as well. While many have united in this work, one woman stands out for valiant, continued service as pre-i- dent of the organization for 30 years. She is Mrs. Howard Gans, Who joined the group in the 90's when, as the young mother of two children, she suddenly realized that an education in esclusive fin- iching schools and travel abroad had really taught her nothing she needed to know about rearing chil- dren. “It is almost unbelievithle l.ow the world's attitude towards chil- dren as changed in three de- cades,” Mrs. Gans said. “The definition of a ‘good child” lin those days was one who sat ab- solutely still, doing nothing. Now, the ‘good child' is the active one who is o absorbed working out something for himself or playing that he is entirely unconscious of anybody clse. “Fully attitude indicative of the new the father's place In the scaeme of things today. In the 90's, the futher was the pro- vider and the punisher. Now he's ‘Dad.’ ® pal, a comrade, a domi- nating influcnce in the child’s life. “In the 90's, when you talked about the child's nature and needs it was a foreign language to most. Iolks ved in the Ged-given parental instinct {0 manage chil- dren. Dewey, Watson and other inodern psychologists hadnt ap- peared yvet. Now there is a general appreciation that parents do - ot Lnow instinctively what to do with children, but must learn. “In the old days, folks said, *All children are alike’ Now we know cach Is differsat. Given three clil- dren who show fear, the chances are that each as had a differont reason for it and needs a different treatment. “The day of punishment for children is really over. Also the terrific misunderstandings between two generations. Parents have learned that they can bridge the Lig chasm If they stand on tiptoe and copy Alice in Wonderland who felt she must ‘kecp running fast s she could to stay where she vas' “By studying modern cduc: tional methods. understanding modern literature and never feel- ing aghast at modern parents can prepare their to deal with the problems day. For children must have frce- dom but they must be taught, in- v. how to discipline them- conditicns, children of to- The biggest problem hefore the Association today s the great American clamor for standardiza- tion in d-aling with children. just as in running machinery, manu- facturing clothes and other me- chanical things, according to Mrs. Gans. One Route (0 Mappincss “America wants a recipe for dealing with children — a guaran- feed-to-win formula. Our organi- zation and the many others in the field are heginning to make par- ents realize that children are the exception to the rule of standardi- zation. Each ch.]d needs his own diagnosis and treatment. Only 1 cause for birthday,” “For it is true. Now, sidered. courses. pecd.” icebox. Th time and the ijce. B i Editor's Cheney @ type of how 1t e sy ne litt of girl is Fragonard ruffics and ribhons of a bygone agc r 80 well; and yet, she is and lovely in her simple < in the days whes as dainty XVI. Carol | type of bl eoloring. as the see 80 many of its parental ‘education At least 22 colleges give Clubs are and enif ‘ure, color schemes and styles of gowns became he frock of today she graced the ballet of Louis the Bergma jerina of “Rosali=.” | the natural hue one attributes | the Nordic blonde, not a that glorious shade between. | eyes are blue — a | her lashes long and darker Mrs. Howard . Gans, above, for 30 years president of the Child Study “When my childven were young, Now, in my grandchildren's day, a good child is the active, happy one.” a ‘good that way can he become the hap- py individual he should be. “Our organization has great rejoicing on its 40th Mrs, Gans concluded. a pioneer that lives to dreams come . all over America, pre- is being con- stressing its CHOPPED PARSLEY Parsley keeps indefinitely in the herefore it saves time and trouble to chop a lot nt one n a glass jar, near put Patou's new heret is of green long- haired plush and falls gracefully te thet left back from the headband of green felt. Hats draped back from the forehead are very smart. FLAPPER FANNY SA There's nothing idle about wome en's curlosity. Omom and potatoes, in alters nating rows, are delicious escale loped. Butter the baking dish, »»' in raw gliced onions and pota- toel lea.lon, cover with milk and 11our, Put a little but. l(r on lop This dish has the ad- vantage of not being as fattening an all potato dish. Ribbons and Ruffles For the Blonde Butterfly Type Carol Bergman, a *‘Fragenarde blonde.” Note: This is the fifth of a series of articles written for The Herald and NEA Service by Alfred Johnston, most artists among American fographers, one of the fore- nho- Each day he discusses feminine beauty, explains st can be enhanced by tells which v8omest ctfective, Ifred Cheney dohuston 1o, blonde, hutterfly pe | reminiscent of the ladies e loved fo paint. The the prima-ball- is just such a Her hair is of to golden blonde, but Her gray biue, and than onde. race; mot a slver her hair, Her n is small and straignt, and her little mouth parts into a gracious fmile more cften than not — and shows ever rows of small, pearl-like teeth. Her skin is soft and creamy In It 18 & skin not as whit= Gainsborough blonde — not as peach-like in tone as the Greuze brunet. With her very light hair, it calls for a light rach- el powder and medium shade of raspherry rouge. This dainty type of blonde may uze a little more rouge than the willowy blonde. For her charm depends unon activity rather than repose. Her lip rouge should be applied very judiciously. No mat- ter what shade of lip-rouge a girl uses, if &he applies it without working it in deftly with her fin- ger-tips to climinate the hard out- lines, it destroys the beauty of her mouth instead of accentuating it. Miss Bergman wears her blonde hair in a Dutch cut, softly waved and combed backward to partial- Iy reveal the ear. Girls of this type who have long hair may sim- ulate this effect and catch the leng ends in a coil-effect, carefully pinned at the nape of the neck, to retain a youthful contour. White, flesh and blue arc pret- tiest for evening wear on this Fragonarde blonde. Rtreet shades are blues, soft greens, beige, black and white and softer browns. While it 8 a natural assump- tion that rhe may wear ruffles and ribbons, bhecause she s little she must be careful not to load hers If with too much ornamentation. Tt destroys the illusion of her Qainti- ness.