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The Helrt Story Melldful Wo-n Love’s Awakening By Adele Garrison Madge Is Mystitied by the Angry with her usual impressment, “it is Flash of Recogunition Between |:0 good of you to let ug come in this Prince Georges and Charles Owen | way." 1 am so glad you could come " I told her, and walked with lier to the nearest chair. 1 did not dare trust her incognito enough to (ke her across the room to meet the guests. 1 feared the upsctting cf both her royal dignity and her im- hag | berious temper, so when were Nineq if |Scated, T unobtrusively beckoned toward | Marion. She scized Carolyn by the hand and brought her over to us, introducing her very prettily to Eleanor who greetedgher graciously, but a bit absent-mindedly, for she was covertly watching the group op« | us where Mary was introduc- ing Ronald @0 Nocl and Prince icorges. Mr. Owen was not to be n and Carolyn cxplained that he had gone outside to smoke a cigar vania, | before the dancing hegan. 11 “But he'll cme in as soon as the phonograph starts, she said. “Let's start it then,” Marion said, ind the two with pretty apologiente us scurried across the room and put a record upon the machine as Mary brou ona v to be intro- poonigrolier in s fianknesy qu ':mnl) I(Itl<lxv:r," with Noel uad which she demanded his e | . Prince Georges trailing in her v-ake, But Mary disregard \ AR s 4 Noc It was distinctly Mary’s night. Frmscusive planp of Nocl had needed oniy her unusual they came through the door e IR hor AL held out both hands to him SiMcEs A0 MINE i “Hail to the prodigal! said . while Prince “Can’t you hear the fatted ealf spurred to squealing? Auntie Madge alrend as given the nccessary order. ‘Lo, Eleanor, T hope you feel like dane ing tonight. Ah! George, there vou are in person. 1 have to slip to you. You surely rounded up the gang with It did not take me long to decide that my imagination was not respon sible for my impression concorniug Mary's change of, attitude toward | Philip Veritzen’s ban upon her friendliness tg Noel. Ever since her first interview with th pro- | over, o We steadily maintained a const not actually cool demeanor the young vioMnist while lavishing smiles and friendliness upon the | youth whom she know org Jackson, but who in rea Georges of Trees. That Niel's sensitive soul suffered under (his treatment, 1 w though he had gamely taken advice to pretend an interest Eleanor Jackson, of whose identity | s the Princess Olina, of Trar he was and s ignorant. But b not be unaware of the lection of his socicty which young princess showed. Ac to haviug her 1 mands, she rivaled v is Prince posite my n | 5€ \\nh‘ * she ntly oyel appare kept ais patiently reac slightest whim. T v lip e ion to gave her Mr. Owen v as Ronald waltz rivalry {upon her, per pted the Itonald as she i dance which it dispateh and eelerity. appoared in the door- ) ¢ ; W 1 his partner ¢ e 8 ) the diction- | .‘:! a8 R down the room. 1 nearest him She put ont a welcoming hand to | #nd T saw what the others did not, him, but with apparent carclessness | {hat at his first glance at the group left her other hand in Noel's. 1 saw |©f Young peoole, the lines around the sensitive lad flush, but he pt | his mouth 1 |H<‘nm| lmvi Hyn’hniv’\“l his self-possession and langhed g at l~lv~lw\~ ‘Il.‘l‘;;. o m\z. n ‘\” s of her of | stant T saw \co Georges start an: release her hand, and Princess Olina ,l'm'.h' : i adroitly seized my greeting of ler | (To Be Continued to make natural her quick dropping — of her own hand from his arm. | “Dear Mrs, Graham,” she suid| gihing did not e RNy 1928, Service, Newspaper Inc Copyrizht, Feature Help Comes Just’ in Time By Thornton W. Burgess Help that meets the hour of nec With quick relief is help indeed. —Rusty the Fox Squirrel > ’ ™p at the head of a ccrtain lal the Merry Little Breezes of Ol Mother West Wind took it into their | heads to go dancing down the mid- | dle of the lake. Now when the Merry Little Breezes dance on the water they' make a ripple. You sce, | the water wants t3 dance too. ripple is made up of tiny littl waves, Perhaps we ought to call them wavelets. > 80 the Merry Little Dr danced down the middle of the lake and a ripple folloyed them down Now it wasn't a big ripple, but it rocked a certain stick to which was clinging Rusty the Fox Squirrel. Be- hind the first ripple came anoth ripple, and another 1d anothe Iach little ripple rocled the usty knew not be able to reach she ing distance, Rtusty sprang ashore dnd. with a flirt of his hig tail, | elimbed a tree. Halfway up he turn- r. o4 and looked down at hix rescuer, sHEK | 4g much ax to say, “T can't speak to which Rusty wus clinging and | vour Janguage, but 1 thank you just gently slapped him in the face. Now. [ 110 gamne Rusty knew enough about water 10| (o) right, 1 know that a little ripple m ; times grow info a hiz waye viind ghould blow hard, the would become o aud if should become rough, Rusty Kknew that he might not e able 1o riac shore. He would be much niore like ly to drown, So there w to do but to begin swimmis Rusty drew a long hreat of that stick and dling as rast as he could make legs go. The ripples o wentle as they lad They were growing bigger ger. Rusty was havis ter out of He was frightened. Never | felt more Melplegs than nov. You | oy, sece, there wasn't a thing to do hur keep on It he stopped swinming, drown. He| must keep 1 o matier how tired he 2= ning to athe again . (le hoy w l‘ud dle, paddle, Vi 28, by T. W. Burgess) some- fles It the water The next story he Boy and the Gun.” | Guiding Your Chik‘] s A let go| ¥ started on, pa not Modesty useful mited virtue which carly childhoc The Jittle gi throom while bathed is n<ks ahont his different anatomy, {01 ot to ask foolish questions. As would be cither didn't ask heen first has no place u Jier baby brother is shooed tu frequently she quite 1 swinuming. he would zht on His ligs we ©matter of fact she olish or stupid if she was. ndering info his mother's room while she is undress- d ot md s lis mother's embar- | Tis untimely intrusion. Hitle experiences the gnilt | his anotiier « . paddle, paddi something movir head of him. What ¢ httle wave hroke and he coaldn’t sce danger. It mig some Kind. Wel to b to b radidle, uddenly seared a of wood. Pust w't stop. to i St amine ft. He - st Then he 5t was end and that the of by a man in a floated on the really a canor. Tust a second. He dle—for, of the long stick was the man's then jumped He ran forward You should have i is order at once, it ron sich o 14 builds up a fecling s of th of hody e or interest | n | e 1s tai bhe- caof, worse crform than drow e paddle, pi hateful and n right in front tusty v interfere wit his mak- | flat, ljustment (o sex | oy little two year < recently called upon by Lopartment of the town | canse of a saw wh a long stick lived some | » child i ot child’s health on the endangering community. As attitnde ofy the public 1 to cease arm to t she was the weln, act as if yo zet out of the good thing 1 happened wind is blowing har will he roug erin the world « that shore. But He turned his ®hore and heza <at on the how f wind and th off. and hy reached, he moment the canoe was Wit little ch nothem a decent Jation to these matters A not let vulgarity in- awn homes water in v as innocent nudity fact that eve <henld be 16 1 : Aot | ahont rybody shamie, aceopt g i 1 body as an unemoti him the e was mp- | fied Aq the Her: “I#phone number? \ rl who walks into the | lly | she 18 | NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1928 Once Overs Petont Offics \ Now, Mr. Turps, what shall I wear when I pose [ e e Long Border Words | prove it somewhal | used u.p | rll garden back of | ing { ueh consciousness of guilt |y po ficnit to proteet our children | 1 1 dirty mindedness and to incul- | 1¢ wholesome | 14 EZ K7/ i [ [RIAYEZ7ZZ:S | T EEI’//IIBIIB/ / % VEARY ll;fi border words 1 vertical stousd No. 10 vertical difficult to recall, Horizontal What is the name of the small f-wild horse of New feature will not be 1. The tomb of what president is on the banks of the Hudson river, New York city? To chant. Falsifier. In what countr elephant vener To embarrass. Abbreviation for Fye tumor. en discourse. : white Accomplished. Masculine pronoun. ad. B Eixists Pathway between Bay or chestnut color. To immerse in w Isternal, To deprt by Multitude. Abbreviation for hire. Small fish. A provin ¢ Tnlet. Halian Hurled To suppose. Derisive seats, By Louix Bennett Weaver Dinner Menu Ialian Spaghetti Buttered Spinach Hot Liolls Butter Himp- 1 Ttaspherry G boat. “New Coffec Italian Spag Three cups cooked spaghetti; cup cheese, cut in small picees; cup chopped green pepper; % cup | diced celery; 1 teasoon salt; % tea- shout | “noon pa 2 cups tomatoes; 3 Distribntively Who is the radds To reioice | Vertieal river © flood menice? parts of a group. 1 river rika: s used). Mix all the ingredients and pour linto a buttered haking dish. Bake in a mode oven for 30 minutes. Serve in the dish in which baked. Pear Salad, Four canned p ettuce leaves; ! w in the 1nite lividu To remain. Male cat, Variant of *a.” Anproaches 4 pieces crisp teaspoon salt; % 3 tablespoons vine- 15 tea- 4 teaspoon pepper; THe At potut gar; § tablespoons salad oil; spoon_ sugar. - Chill the ingredients. When ready to serve place the pears in the let- tuce leaves. Mix the rest of the in- credients and beat with a fork for | one minute. TPeur over the | ana serve at once. Raspberry Gelatin One package pherr Tatin mixtu water; 1 cup di | cgewhites 4tiffly | salt Pour mixture Hurrah! Measure of arca The hody of what Kzyptian Kin ts m ent remos tomh om 1] it Luxor Decorative Who is the mesh | 15 British prime min- | flavored hoiling ten; the water over and stir until oughly dissolved. (ool thicken a liftle. Teat ind heat in the the gelatin it has thor- ILinuor. Pattern itock hlo contain nntil frothy which has cold water. Set stiffen. When ind surround | rnts. ¢ Pour into a mold Your ther's dang [ Leen rinsed out of Riaek in a cold place w ready t seri. with the haw to Comm Affairs of the Male child. mold enstar Custard Sance g8 yolks; 4 Two tablespoons Iespons olive oil (a sialad oil may | salads | 1¢ teaspoon ' and allow to | By C. D. Batchelor for my portrait?” | sugar; 1 tablespoon flour; spoon salt; 1% cups milk; spoon vanilla; extract, Beat the egg yolks and add the sugar, flour and salt. Mix well and add the milk. Cook in a double boiler and stir frequently until the | mixture thickens a little. Remove the upper part from the lower part 1 of the double boiler add the extracts. Beat for 2 minutes. Cool and chill. his sauce is good for any gelatin 1 tea- 1 tea- I puddings. Steaming is a good way to cook ibles as it reduced the loss of vitamines and minerals, and keeps the vegetables whole. Several veg- etables may be stecamed at the same time Over cooking cestroys the color in vegetables, To prevent the plaster from chip- ping when driving in & nail, heat the nail and it will go through smoothly. Pear juice left over from canned pears is an excellent beverage for the year old child. Herald Classified Ads point with pride to past performances. © 1920, BY NEA SENVICE, WE. Women dislike fo be driven—un- til hubby buys a car | Fashion P—Ia—que | TR RN rest of the ingredi- | Here's the new slecveless blouse avent velvet :dvocated for when the coat i remeved. or for daytime, nhen worn with 8 | suit. % tcaspoon lemon ! Bashful Swain Given Lessons Learns How to Woo Froml Chaperon. Kansas City, Mo., Nov. 13.—Nor- man Randolph Hart, at 15, was making only $2¢ & weck as a Chi- cago railroad clerk, As underpaid clerks do, occa- #ionally, he fell in love—and with the daughter of a very wealthy bond and mortgage broker, at that. Hart was bashful. Perhaps his youth and his $2¢ salary ([uve him an inferiority complex. At any rate, he couldn’t bring him- self go plead his cause. The girl was Miss Elcanor Glazer Schwartz, also 18, She loved, too; but ahe realized Hart Here are the two principals in the Hart-schwartz elopement, Above b Eleanor Glascr Schwartz, the bride; below s Norman Hart the bashful bridegroom. would never, never become an ar- dent swain without help. 8o she { confide?™ to Mra. Catherine Po- land, 28, who was employed by the girl's & chaperon “I'll give him a few les- sons and see whether you should marry him.” It was done. Hart obediently had & number of dates with Mrs. Poland. And ai last Mrs, Poland reported to the girl that Hart would now be an eminently satis- factory lover. S0 the chaperon stepped out of the picturc and the clerk and the broker's daughter Legan having dates. Presently the young couple decided they wanted to elope. Mrs. I'oland took them to Kansas City, saw them married and helped them get established in littie apartment. Aboht g{:‘q'. Schwartz, e learned about newlyweds, got . time Philip girl's father, it. He traced the two Chicago de- tectives and a policewoman, ecame 1o Kansas City and shattered the love nest to bits. Now the whole party has gone back, including the chaperon. Just what will be done about the marriage, if anything, was not made quite clear. The girl's par- cnts are unyielding in their op- position to it. Uncle Sam Is Testing Meats Home Economics Bureau Has Real Job. Washington, Nev. 13 (#—The king's “official taster’” may have had a hard job, hut it wasn't anything to the task confronting & group ef judges from the department of agri- culture who have been tasting meats for the past three years to deter- mine just what is best for the health and palate of the American public. In the home economics bureau where these experiments are being tried, a neat, white-clad young wom- an presides over the shining overs where eight legs of lamb—the day's | apportionment for testing—are being roasted. These are eastern lambs; soon we will begin on some from Idaho,” says the business-like young woman, looking intently at the thermometer | on her oven. Along come the judges. One does the carving, slicing off five thin slices, one for each judge. from | cach of the eight browned pieces of {lamb. The judges taste critically, chew gravely. Then they jot down their reports concerning the flavor, tenderness and general desirability of the meat, All sorts of meats are heing judged in this lengthy experiment which when it is finished will provide some definite information as te which ant- mals produce the mest nutritions and palatable cuts. Account i taken of the animal's sex. antecadents and i the part of the country it ia raised in as well a¢ many other factors. 925 i the bhest known telephone Aumber i3 New Britain. A scintillating Bird of Paradise struts its crystal and diamante chic cross the shim- mering .beauty of the white satin gown of & new evening ensemble by Eldridge Manning New York. Black-white, with a touch of apple green Chiffon in the facing of the long back panel of the frock, this ensemble 18 exquisitely individual. The crepe satin gown hugs the figure 8nugly and has & unique method of achieving its longer back silhouette by & modernistic step-down panel. The sharply pointed V neckline 18 new, too. The black velvet coat, with its white fox collar, is white lined, with the erepe satin fashioning the turned-back. cuffs. A smart little turban of white satin, encrusted with crystals and diamante com- pleten this lovely ensemble. Health Hints BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN Editor Journal of the American Medical Association and of Hy- geia, the Health Magazine Of all of the diseases that afflict mankind those of the nervous sys- tem take a premier position in their crippling, painful, serious nature. The nervous system is the great electric switchboard of the human body controlling thought, movement and action, as well as sensation. ThereforeSany disease that particu- larly selects the brain and the spinal cord is likely to result most disas- trously. Discovers Serum In his George M. Kober lecture in Washington, D. C., Dr. 8imon Flex- rer, director of the Rockefeller In- stitute for Medical Research, devot- ed his attention to three of the most serious diseases of the central nervous system that have recently afflicted mankind. They include epi- demic cerebro-spinal meningitis, epl- demic infantile paralysis and epi- demic encephalitis. It was for epidemie meningitis that Dr. Flexner discovered a caus- ative serum which lowered the death rate from almoat complete fa- tality to a relatively low percentage. About 1904 a large epidemic of meniugitis broke out in Europe and America. Apparently it began in Prussian Silesia and in certain At- lantic coast states of the United States, and appeared regularly each summer with considerable num- ber of cases until about 1920. 8ince that time it has about worn itself out as an epidemic, and ap- pears in the form of occasional cases here and there. Prof. Flexner in inclined to believe that it is pos- sible t.at the great wave of German immigration between 1900 and 1905 may have brought the disease to the Atlantic coast cities of the United Rtates. Epldem'c meningitis is caused by A model at Redfern’s seems to sum points for long coals. velour trimmed with astrzkhan. toward fhe side back. The fur is p way around the hem and up the si¢ The cuifs are wide, and their w fitted upper sleeves and shoulders. It s an aftcrnoon wrap made The ment of the skirt is freer than tnest ith at the a small round germ first isolated in 1887. The germ may live on the mu- cous membrane of the nose of man and is-transmitted from oene person to another, Before the discovery of the serum, the deaths varied from 65 to 90 per cent. Today the mortailty is un- der 25 per cent. Before the discov- ery of the serum, epidemic menin: gitis attacking infants one year old killed about 100 per eent; now less than 50 per cent die because they are helped by serum treatment. Attack Spinal Cord When the germs get into the hody they are carried to the spinal cord and there they attack the covering of the cord, spreading even to the covering of the brain. These cover- ings are called meninges, which gives to the disease the name meningitis or inflammation of the meninges. In this discase we know then def- initely the cause and ve have a ape- cific medical treatment whieh, it used early, will produce favoralle results. ; Sometimes severe paralyses result from this disease, W/ith modern methods of treatment it is possible to lower the incidence of paralyses and it is possible also by study of the paralyzed nerves d muscles to secure favorable results in the mat- ter of development and movement after the disease has passed. Ancient Chimes Will Be Rung Electrically Munich, Nov. 13, (—The histori« cal chimes of the Munich Frauen« turme, which are 500 years old, will now be rung by electricity. At the base of the towers & switeh< board has been installed from which a single man 1is able to set the chimes in motion. Every one of the bells has been equipped with two levers, one of which releases the current electromotor which sets the bell in motion. Just ask your friends about Nerald Classified Ads. up most of the winter's siyle of dark red wool cont closes at he side. The move- aud the closing wyapped well over in deep points which go all the nnder side to the clbow. ntuated by tightly ves on the RITA.