New Britain Herald Newspaper, November 7, 1928, Page 8

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Love’s Awakening The Heurt Story of a Steadfast Woman By Adele Garrison Madge's Distrust of Samuel Bflfloll] and His Dapper Brother l)el‘pfllfi.‘ Tdrew in my breath sharply as Marion Morton told Carolyn Brixton that she would love to room with her at the school to which they both were going. Therg was no way sort of crass unpardonable rudeness, by which 1 could question the advisa Lility of such an arrangement which on the face of it, seemed a most natural and pleasant one. the look on Samuel Brix- ton's face — a regular-cat-with- canary-inside leer, and the reflection of the same smug satisfaction in Charles Owen's eyes, told me that they had counted on this very lik- ing of the two young girls for each | other. . Nothing could so further their sceret meddling in Lillian's aftai as such an intimacy, and so an resentful was 1 that for a few onds I included gentle Helen B ton in my wental arraignment of th ple sharing in the scheme to | Lillian’s daughter into inti- matg companionship with Carolyn Brixton, But a single look into Helen Dirix- | | fon's face told me that 1 wronged | ker cruelly by such a suspicion. |t Her surprise aud delight at the dis- |t covery that the two girls were schoolmates were as genuine pleased aproval of their reom together. She turned lian with a wistful appeal in cyes, Dear, T lope vou approve.” said. *I couldw’'t ask anything bet- ter for Carvolyn. It's been such a worry, this question of roommates, | o 1 felt that T couldn’t let her room with a girl of whose mother or training 1 knew nothing. no matier Row carefully the pupils of the school are selected. And vet 1 live heen afraid beirg a new pupil wouldw't have the chance fo have a single room. This arrungement scems Providential to me, if- I “And to me also,” Lillian int rupted her cordially, and I realized [i that hec love for her old friend and |« her joy in their reunion had faken | the edge from her usually keen per- |t ceptions, She had no suspicion that | c Helen's hushand and hrother-in-liw had deliberately chosen the Whitne School for Carolyn, solely becaus x- | li > as plan to to Lil- | her she |t she | |t | an's unquestioning both naturally a But |almost hysterical | their saw s | perfun y | sively she was watchin | Samuel a littl good.” given vas there Marion was a student there. But the suspicion had become almost a certainty in my mind, though Lil- eptance of the situation had shaken me a bit. Something drew my eyes to the corner of the veranda where Kath- erine sat beside Mother Graham, bit removed from the exeited chatter concerning the 1001, The face of my mother-in- law—who k of Lillian's t nuel smile, w Srixton—held an approving and I remembered that both Caro- Iyn and Ronald Brixton had shown ual deference to her upow be- introduced—the hall mark of carciul tra Katherine smiling also, knowing y line of her expressive face, at that her smile was a and that unobtru- he faces of Bristo and Charles Owen, I was not surprised when she shot 4 swift glance at me and flashed me signal of code meaning v “Not so cment, talk to was but v tory of our rnacular, s 1 my ag ind resolved that 1 would her at the first oppor R But this was not my only res ion. It was vitally old myselt, that no opportunity to ta by il the was 100 shaken her n o her own 1 ixton he to Lil- nest day. il overjoyed ting with hiz 1o be usunl poised and self. Kevn perceptions s Dlunted by and 1 knew hat i least, shrewd enough to realize that fact ind his Lrother 1o act pon it herselt e resolute of her uotio| was 10 advisc n at Charles Owen d him watching Lil- sund his eyes fixed v @ met arehin they I rapier Was it i unconscions ¢ nee. Had Charles that 1 Samuel Brizton and Lillian nst And ey did not 2lane neet when flagh to or ht as o another " my faney T e n that liscover im and o guard chination Copyright, IFeature « disirusted both their Tomorrow) S, Newspaper Tne. ned 19 rvice, Two Disappointed Hunters By Thomton W. Burgess It what 1 hers 1 lose some others guin, s been no loss, 'Os very plain. —Reddy Fox 1t looked as if some Squireel dinner. Yes, that's the way it looked. Reddy I thought so. Redtail the Hawk thought so. Bnt Rusty the Iox Squirrel wouldu't 14 himself think 0. Not until he was caught woull he believe that he was to furnish | anyone with a dinner. But thing lcoked bad. They couldn’t very well | have looked worse. There was Rusty | on a fence-port with Redtail the | Hawk preparing fo swoop on him from above, and Reddy Fox waiting for him just below. Rusty saw one chancs 1t was just a chance and that all. But he was making the most of it. He couldn't afford to make = |! mistake of any kind. No, sir, e ! couldn’t afford to make a mistake of any kind. He would have to jury at just the right second. So Rusty | watched the swift approach of Red-|! tail. My, but Redtail was coming | " fast! It was hard, very hard, not | to break and run. “I musin’t run yet. I mustn’'t run yet" Rusty kept saying over and over to him- self as he heard the wind whistling through the stiff wing feathers of | Redtail the Hawk. « When it looked as if Redtail sure- Iy would catch him, Rusty suddenly | ¢ bounded forward half way alonz the | next rail. Then without warning he i one ol la to escape. | iR il made a flying leap off to one side, a flying leap to the ground. Now hoth Redtail and Reddy Fox wore | | aken by surprise, which was 5 what Rusty had counted on tail changed his course in the somewhat and swooped low. 1o pick Rusty up from the zround Reddy Fox found himself on the wrong side of the and bound.- v ed through the bushes, intent on | catching Rusty before he could once | ! more get up on the fv Both just too Rusty, but they were in time mixed up with each othe low swoop came just Vounded out from the one of Redtail's big Reddy across the fac Ay Reddy fost his temper then! snapped at that great wing a mouthful of feathers for But he hung on and that Redtail to the ground. Such u snarl- | ing and screaming th w then! Kedtail threw himself on h back and struck out with ilhos great claws of his. Reddy et go the wing and danced around, trying to find an opportunity to Hted- tall without those great claws, Plaming the Rusty. “Thar was mv Squiree ady. 1 found him first No such thing! tail. who now found him first and dr among those hushes, 1 for him to come out you came along.” “It doesn’t make quirrcl ‘tending that he spring on Redtail “If he was vour ' t you eateh him dtail. rdi of hin bie “T would hin frrt-wttended to yonr ness!” snapped Reddy. hoping fenee wore 1ox and struck | how | H and got | paiy broushd | as I b win “neon Meanw hils other for ring cach was the loss of stormed b sereamed was on i ny * snarl was own bus dodged Redtail the Wrong ANl this time tnsty the Fox Wl darted wy John rom the o 8 1 wihers Squirs dowan an do yon think ¥ was? e ol hol y Ch hiatd of and reling ith ime. No 17 tusty s e wonderi was gettin whit to 1 N nest story: Time, SINFEC s she few the wrung out nfectant ) next Tribune, “opy The y n A PHONES id disinfect- 1 Telepha A every ar an loth days. - hot me of with a STORING SUREENS Wher vou e e winter vill kn it MWove your sers ens or mark one <0 on ich [ » o omend s hetors win stori REMOVING To 1 ings or other hem in elond ir i stir 1he Plaque waistline, en meant | ma- | feit | had seen ! and At the | 1he | with a ! " By C. D. Batchelor Begistered U. 8. Patent Office A o s Toris (L4 ulul PIRNWY i . SNAP SHOOTING THE MILLENNIUM “Little Lady, would you believe it? When I was a Loy it took cighteen hours to fly from coast to coast.” saddin’ Grandra. ————— e — 8-].._etter Words Two letter horizontal) The last in both, Horizontal To draw in or away ndent, nd 49 this paz the s erint e ful, Hauthoy. Tast To observe, Plant from which is procurcd, Hurry, To primp. Palpit commund. Kk containing silver, Pennies To arra Chip o To cloth tant n Tearnin: 1gen window n o Male guinea iythmica tor's machine, hood erform. rider To reach placs nes into fak jons. saimon. Iy a 1o borrowed To bail rtion of a cir Tngredient EN HOLDERS i fiani envelops You car los and wash the o words e the ; by suction. gracetully. companion (Nos. 1 key to four letters bitter drug | BY DIt MORRIS Editor Journal Medical Association geia, the Health s of e | fever occurred in lrelationship of m spread of this dise (definitely establish | In August and most severe outbre few 1 (known to miedical records oceurred tin Greees | Atthou curring in Jeas 1927, the | il w Athens ouibreak in 1268 Au I h 15 sit 7 in explosive Istance, Athens in were yver druths were | which 176 | | death an as duc st v due 5 5 affectgd September 4 which had not y the community. The « over most of Greece, |the isiands | in the In Al iy, was likely {throughout the world reporied the b laria into Gr by | have been downfall of the it zation. | cities of fave of to irie it | may spo Aths lofier cond epreaa | prevalence | prevales | which | rounding are i tremer en- Hately i or ation e doubled an able dengue ih ot citie influx ders Make of two within ¢ Jossilile " il itly rapia ased population The symptoms of and coast past |such as this occurring in one coun- mosquit develop in the I the Magazi notal brea orida, a uitoe: was soptember ak of r. lor a 41 10 denge recorded in Piracus, of to a peopl by the re pidem particul towns. an o spre ingin toreign sibl Grecian s and Piracu: itic f oes and of that the Tope wal of dengue HEEIN American id of Hy- heen oc- \gue of for the marshes sur- has been ref in the muscles and joints temperature; o slight ihout 70 per cent of the ses and disappears on, the third high ocenrs in UNHAPPY PARENTS Of all the a child the nost insidions understood is that of being maude 1o pay the penalty of the unsatisticd (love oi one parent for anoth, | Lucy at the e of six has hecom such problem at home that her mothor is ering whether it | would not be best to send her v | to boarding school where, she {1y hopes, “they will train he At home Lucy ! dient and complitely unmanageable. © opposed cyveryiling her moth | wants her to do and positively enjoys | ikimg bher angry When | punished in her father's presenee | makes which ends in some I thing 1t liysteries and fuses |1 ecomn quiet untit he tal { b bathes her fac to her. At ni “S U SCrCning ¢ vy is atraid of the dark that her com noin hed bes he here is roally Lucy, but there is with her parents is just one of the their mutual unhappine mother craves from her love and att Her own unhiappi roo for love and interest in her child, £he treats her with short temperad irntability and uiter lack of sympathy and understanding. Ine deed her fecling is more akin to hate than fo! he sense that her clild is her rival for the afiections {of the man she married. This un- tude only further es from her hushand He 1esoly o ke up Lucy her motl of fecling, indulg- s every and dances attend- on cvery tuntrum. Lucy is a most un little girl Grownd hetween upper and the nether millstone of parental discord, she has learned that love is Power. learned about consideration for others. and 1auch about the sclfish exploitation of iove. Unless her par- ents mend their ways there are diffi- cult, unhappy yve head. Lucy's is an exts instane most wo way crim- and i Bl ofl deman ing o [ 1o ing wrong with zood deal wrong Her mishehavior consequences of Her ither more leaves little iove, 1's I whil ne ey le out- k-hone nd the to the rather Py affectionate the dengue v in Athens. have e Sept v Au rs m The cult task that parents have to that of ting their from the warping effects n personal unhappine of a ember, | conn difti t was in- red in [ these je: 592 on siuation protec Children of their Zona Gale Finds Romance o we discase d from spread arly in | Portage, Wis, Nov. Gale finds romanece enough for writ- ers in any small town. iFor insiance, the novelist said 1n an essay on her ive state, “When 1 graduated trom school Port- age seemed the last place in the vorld to 100k for material for writ- in pidemic 1 was rapidly d, it is ma trit wasn't bhut, still commonpl whatever sicc And, words any romance in ly enough and 1 was to find s 1 have there.” continued two Wisconsin,” have nerized, as have sty 1\ civili- she “FPorta the lecome for m to the | cortain words power in which 1 flies | orientals and others find potency, words which through immemorial ropetition by devout have be- come charged, “Portage, Wisconsin. that T of ard - popu- | have | strang has | peopl ter i its mer I not even thie who 1 |its seventsen through fever | ever note its name.” It scems wority - of the A never iler is with ind its s and ss by on ‘rains daily it Unite of i States it suffi- the in ople rash | iilictions which befall | ind least | is wilfully disobe- | niion than she receives. | for | nothing | tace is | for Writing In Any Town ‘ 7 R-—Zona | Black-White is Jewelry Mode Follows Trend of Milady’s Color Schemes, Paris, Nov. 7 UP—Even up-to-date jewelry shows & tendency to be black and white this scason as a result of French preoccupation with magpie modes. The real article employs onyx and diamonds extensively in many smart forms. The imitation follows with black enamel and crystal. Dress- makers are working hand in hand with the jewelers in some cases, to further the cause of black and white. Cheruit sponsors a simple orna- ment, used both as bracelet and necklace, of tiny diamond slides on a black cord which terminates in a hall of sonyx. Another dressmaker shows a bracelet of alternating dia- mond oblongs and onyx circles. The newest wrist-watch is as nar- row as the silver and onxy link bracelet on which it is mounted. The links arc long and narrow, and there are three rows of them, the two outer, ones of silver and the inner of onyx. \ere are many types of black and white braceclets, but the most effective, as well as expensive, ver- sions are frequently onyx and dia- mends worked in modernistic man- ne Costly handba re the hlack and white tendency, some of the finest of Hicm being of antelope and suede, with onyx and diamond clasps. 3ga-shell enamel, ¢ Dlack, is a favorite winter for vanity ¢ hoxes and m white on mate: ' WEAVER | BLNNE | Menu calloped cheese and tomatoes, 1 raisin buns, butter, lad, pumpkin pie, coffee. rese and tor Niv (A Meat Substitute) Two cups soft bread crumbs, 1 cup cheese, cut in small picces, 2 cups to- | matoes. fresh or canned, 1-4 [ spoon salt, 1-3 cup diced cele tahlespoons BY LOUISE Dinne 1 {butter | fruit s | ! Escalloped € T butter, Mix all the ingredients and pour into a buftered baking dish. Bake in ' slow oven 10 minutes. Serve in [the dish in which baked. I Two and a haif cu 5 teaspoon spoon salt, (milk, 2-3 cup raisins, fut, melted, | Mix all the i ients and heat {for 3 minutes, Malf fill well greased muffin pans and bake in a moderate loven for 15 minutes. Serve warm. | uit Salad, Serving Six i Cenp diced orange i pincapp! 1-2 enp .1 cup diced mar: sup salid drossing. | Mix and chill the thoroughly any juices [have collected. Add the r lows. Place portions in cups of tuee and top with the salad dressing. | Serve at one | t I One cup flour. spoon s . 1-2 cup haking powder, L 1 1-4 cups tablespoons 1 cup diced fr Pie at, 1-4 pi 1-3 cup t. 2 tablespoons cold water. Cut the fat into the flour with a (knife. Add the salt and slowly add the water. Mix with the knife, The act ameount or w er can not al- ways e determined but mege can be added if Leeded. When a stiff dough {forms, take up and press into a ball in the palms of the hands, Place on a el floured board and roll out un- il very thin, Carefully remove from the hosrd and fit into a decp pie pan Press the dough 10 fit into the pan. | UPrick with a fork ike in a moderate oven for iutes. Add the filling. | By baking the erust a little it will net hecome the long. slow haking. 50 tor mpkin ¥ | s and one half cups steamed e pumpkin, cup dark brown sugar, 2 teaspoons cinnamon, 1 teaspoon cloves, 1 teaspoon mace, 1-2 teaspoon salt, .1 1-2 cups milk Mix the sugar and pumpkin. Add the rest of the ingredients and thor- oughly mix. Pour into the shell and ke in a slow oven for 30 minutes. | CLEAN WOODWORK water is exceilent for clean- ing woodwork. Iour water over used tea leg strain through muslin - and it with a cloth This does not .urt woviwork, s | SAVING HANI If you put a little vinegar e wash day, 1s from nd chapped. in the it will beconi- water on prevent your ha ing rough Air your matresses on windy fully, at ¢ nd pilidws days. Birush them care- st once a fortnight and r in the sun. . Suzanne smiled, telling i Mad | ting fly France’s First Woman Lawyer Talks About Feminine Freedom Able Suzanne Grinberg, Who Specializes In Divorces Now, Says Only 242 Americans Won Paris Decrees Last Year. Suzanne Grinberg . ., Laughs At “Swift” Amer- ican Justice, Barrister-Sportswoma By JULIA BLANSHARD last night. 1 want & York., Nov. 6—A feminist [divorce’ 1 say, if they really want Las arrived In America who gallant- |& divorce T will take the case, but Iy eredits her husband with having |Why not wait, try to be patient, ad- furnished her courage to launch her [iust themscives a little, try to get s |along. There is far too little toler- She 18 the charming, ance,, far oo little humor, far too able Suzanne Grinberg, France's first |little consideration and patience in woman lawser when she was ad- [Many modern marriage mitted to the bar in 1910, Madame Suzanne’s law does not “I was very young when 1 finished |CHFClY consume her lile. ~She and my luiw conrkcs and was xo self-con- |10 husband and their 15-year-old scious at being the only won |son-livea busy soolal !ir",'v"-l,"‘;.w' the profussion that 1 am sure 1 nev “:: :l':n f:;:"“ prschuch svorySaRy would have started practicing it my 3 o e Iusband hadn't chided mee’ Madani. | 1o superh carriage, her lilt and it m:-_unu.. testif, ‘m 'ht-r u;:gd;nr"nl-»::. % il ; veation. She udmits golfing. play= S her own car, which, she adds, N i rw e, |£ome sport in rush hours in Parls. And why should being a wowan | |, WAl humeage, ’ keep you from bei a lawyer? X Shuve hahoSinors s Bikan Slon There will soon be otier women o |SPOrtS” she said. “Some day [ you company in court Of {want to take a year off and spend it I il b B0 3 are sra 2 AN ;\u\s “:;qlhm‘w‘\ mpn;k'l:. -n': o seems to we tha he spiri 1,000 women lawyers in AT liet aoost d6 parpostie: hen, growing very scrious for a [moment, Madame Suzanne Grinberg said, “I ‘have unother ambitlon, & very real one. T want to vote in my country. 1 believe that France will {have woman suffrage in time. Vo feminists all want suffrage, of course. But in France we can land do have economic freedom to n increasing extent. There is no restriction to keep women from en- Then tering any field of endeavor for . ity (which they are fitted. Of the two, first tive murder cases were women |1 NNk cconomic freedom I more Who had killed their husbands, 1 got [iMPor(ant than suffrage. But there four of them oft, but one received a A1 I'e ho argument againat elther, We Irench women are just waiting. sentence. My friends used to laugh- 2 ingly accuse me of believing in mur- ;‘l“‘:v"“'l‘l"v'f," we WL v (e oty dering husbands. ‘ Divorces arc her speciaity now. e She denics that there is any fecling WOBRLY CANDLE at all in Paris over Americans get-| 1f your candles are too small y-night divorees there. | for holders and wobble, dip the “We Parisizns have a fine joke |ends a second into boiling water ubout our Irench justice since {and press into the holders whiie Americans come there for divorees,” | (il melted id. » used to sigh and say. ‘Jus- iec s slow in Paris. Over in Amer- ica, the land of the free, justice is | swife and sure’ But now that Americans come to Paris for divorces we laugh and say. “Oh, it is possibl. that French justice is, after swifter than American eriously, though. a4 “much of the tallk abont Paris di- verees is unsound. There were only 242 divorces granted to Americans | | last year in P It is just that they are, shall we say, your de divore And some Americ lawyers feel that the cream of vorces should stay at home.” “Young girls come into my offi Same people can hardly wait until and say to me, "My husband and I,they see Herald Classificd Ads. auarreled HNew ! witty and almost France Of course few of these 1,000 proach Madame Grinberg in profes- sional stunding. She is the only woman member of the committee of the French Bar Association and the Confederation of Intelleetual Work- crs And she is the only wenan lawyer ever 1o plead m a military tribunal during the military occupu- tion of Germany. 1 have had many crininal c ne e recalled. her piercing, dark lizh | ap- 8," PRUNE SANDWICHES Children love prune sandwiche Rub well-cooked 1 .unes | throngh sieve, add some chopped | nuts and faw drops of lemon n | quice. 1 on ' whole wheat | Lread. Spr CLEAN SHAD Window shades should be clean- vach fall. Lay them flat, wipe £ with a cloth dipped in a mix- ture of one pint of hot water and & threc tablespoonfuls of benzine, Wi, | Dry by wiping with another cloth. | | | /1 s REG. U 8. PAT. OFF. oV ©1528. 87 KA SERvicE, W A divorcee is a woman who has taken her husband’'s name in vain. Just to say bl exciting. But the wa dress he calls Gran; ce ruffies on white taffeta doeen’t sound very ul Poirei combines the two in a dashing evening nother thing again. There are formalized pink roscs scattered over the dress and arranged in sprays on the left shoulder and hip. The dip at the right side of the unev hemline s almost balanced by a similar dip at the other. The corsage is joined to the skirt on a line which follows the skirt movement. RITA,

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