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Love’s Awakening 'l'hll:rlsm [} Steadfast Woman By Adele Garrison The Diplomatic Pairings for Supper of schoolboy naivete and respectful at the Party Cause Some Dis- tments Katherine's whispered gibe brought me back with a start from blind chance, courtesy which made him irresist- ibly appealing. “No, we're going to leave that te 1 told him, repress- what she iaughingly had called my |ing a smile at the disappointment in indelibly mental expressions, had mind-reading. But pressed upon my were several facial fleeting but betraying, which revealed the dominant emotion thoss of our guests whom watching. Prince Georges dancing with Pril cess Olina was talking earnestly with her most of the time, and I guessed that he was telling her of his inter- view with Charles Owen. But often his eyes strayed to Mary, dancing with Mr. Owen, while Princess Olina’s surreptitious watch of Noel, dancing with Carolyn never ceased. | in either There was no jealousy 1 knew as would have been e had Mary and Noel been dancing together, but there was the distinct uneasiness which each of this romantic royal pair manifested in any activity of Mary and Noel which did not include them. T wondered 1if their eyes, sharpen- ed by jealousy, noticed that Mary and Noel also were giving only per- functorily courteous attention to their partners, and following each other with their eyes. But my specu- lations concerning the quartet of young people at such cross purposes ceased,as abruptly as did my obser- vation that Charles Owen's poised manner hid rage at Prince Georges. and a sinister sort of satisfaction at the sight of Marion and Ronald su absorbcd in each other. For the danee record came to an end, and forgetting everything else, they crowded around the fruit punch howl, “Supper s rveady,” I-told them. “Mrs. Bickett and I thought it was a pity for you to stop dancing to prepare it.” “How perfectly adorable!” Caro- Iyn exclaimed, and her brother look- ed at me, “Shall we ciaoose our partners now 2" he asked, with a combination Buster Bear Is Jumpy By Thornton W. Burgess Temptation always is insistent, And day and night is most persi tent. —Old Mother Nature ' Buster Bear tried to fool himself. He tried to make himself believe that he was surprised to find him- self back at the place from hich Le had started in the morning. “Now, how did I get here?” -said Buster to himself. “How under the sun did I get here? Why, this is the place 1 was running away from, and here ¥ am back _again! Well. now that 1 am here, I believe I'll have another lock at those pigs. A | look isn’t going to hurt anybody.” But Buster didn't start right over to the pigpen. In the first place, thers were lights in the little farm- house, 5o he knew the farmer had not gone to bed. In the second place. | he heard a dog bark over in the barnyard, and dogs always make him nervous. So he decided that he would not have a look at those pigx until the lights were out in the farmhouse and the dog had stopped barking. But while he waited he couldn’t im- tablets | cd surprise which his eyes as I thought of the delight- would be hiws when we should use the device for arranging the supper partners. And in | when, after Katherine and I grav 1 was | Iy had manipulated the strings we | had so carefully arranged, he ‘ound Marion holding the other end of the cord he had been given, his face | was no more radiant than hers. | Both were still young and naive | enough to show their emotions as | candidly gs children, and their de- |light at the supper arrangement was patent to everyone. There was no such pleasure re- tlected in the other faces, however. True, Carolyn was radiant, but 1 knew that she would have been just as please with Georges for a sup- | per partner as with Noel. She was at | the stage when an attractive youns man is that and nothing more. | As long as she was not shunted to her brother, or her uncle, she had no quarrel with what chance | brought her. But Georges, Olina, | Noel and Mary could not conceal all | traces of disappointment at the pair- |ing. Only Charles Owen's face wuw | inscrutable. I could not tell wheth- | er he was content to let Ronald ab- {sorb Marion’s attention, or whether he would have welcomed an oppor- tunity to ingratiate himself still far- | ther into her appreciation of him as “Carolyn's wonderful uncle”—an ex- | pression T had heard her utter ear- |lier in the evening. There was but little dancing after supper and Princess Olina, plainly | restive, insisted upon going home despite the pleadings of the other | girls. Prince Georges seized the op- | portunity given by their importu- nity to tell me the result of his in- rview with Charles Owen. | I think T've drawn his fange,” he {told me, with a touch of pardonable | complacency. te! ment tor the pig. It was well for Bustey Bear that he did not know all this. T fear that, had he known it, his Thanksgiving would hav been spoiled. As it was, he felt that | | he had had a perfect Thanksgiving. | (Copyright, 1928, by T. W. Burgess) The next story: “Buster Returns.” Menus of the Family Thanksgiving Breakfast Menu Grapefruit and grape juice, ome- let, broiled bacon, date muffins, coffee. Grapefruit and Grape Juice for Six Six halves grapefruit, 2 table- spoons sugar, 3 tablespoons grape- juice. Wash the grapefruit and cut in halves. Carefully remove the seeds and cut out the centers with scis- sors. Add portions of sugar and place in a shallow enameled or china dish. Chill over night. In the morning use 8 sharp knife and loosen the fibers around the edge of the grapefruit. Add the grape- juice and serve at once. Omelet, Serving Six (Chopped parsley may be added for color and flavor) Three tablespoons butter, 7 eggs, well beaten, 1 teaspoon salt, 1-4 teaspoon paprika, 6 tablespoons milk. h Beat the eggs and add the salt. paprika and milk. Beat for 2 min- | longing. U'e: pig WON'L be i intu | don’t believe it would get me trouble after all.” He steywd out inte the moon- | light and standing up, looked long and hard Then he started towara the pen. Buster Has a Real Thanksgiving By Thoraton W. Burgess A stomach filled you'll often fird, The secret of a happy mind. —DBuster Bear Buster Bear climbed up over | the rails of the pigpen of the lone- {1y little farm on the backside of the | Great Mountain. Buster was a_loug | | way from his home in the Green | Forest near Farmer Brown's. It is doubtful if he would have been bold | enough to climb into any one’s pig- | pen over there, but here it was dif- | terent. He wasted no time. He seized | one of the young pigs—a pig that was about a quarter grown, killed it almost before-it had time to squeal. and dragging it back with him over | the rails of the fence, he carr'zd it to the woods. He carrled it a sur- prising distance. You see, he had a | guilty feeling. He knew that those! | pigs belonged to one of those two- | ily, kecping all the time in the lcgged creatures callpd men. But so: blackest shadows. He kept his ears | far as Buster was concerned, he open their very widest all the time, | could see no reason why he had not Every little sound he heard woula | S0 much right to cat pig as the man make him jump. He was very jumpy, | Who kept it in the pen. So he didn’t | indeed. Yes, sir, Buster Bear was fecl that he was stealing. | very jumpy, indeed. That was be-| Now, though Buster didn't know cause he was nervous. |it, it was Thanksgiving Day. There At last he saw the t zo out In |in the early morning hours Buster the farmhouse. He had heard noth. | was eating his Thanksgiving dinner. ing of that dog for & long time, for | You would have called it breakfast. the dog had been called into the | but it really was dinner, for Buster house. Buster waited. He wanted to | would not eat again that d My, be sure that everybody in the farm- 4 that pig house was asleep. When at last he a full meal for so long | thought he had waited long enough dn't remember when it he started toward the pispen. Bur he time of year when he had gone only a few steps whe t and he was he turned and ran back into fthe st in order tol woods. He thought he had heard im warm through noise from :he farmhous. He His appetite this waited a long time and then tried - was just as good as ever, but again. | the acorn erop and the beechnut This time he was almost over to | crop had fafled. and Puster had the pen when a horse in the barn [hatd work to find cnovzh food to stamped. Away went Ruster, straight | Keep him from day to day, not to back to the woods. He certainly was | mentfon making fat for the winter. jumpy. This time he decided that h So, you see, this was a reall didn’t want to see those pigs. “1'1| Thanksgiving dinner for Buster g0 off,” sald Bister, “and 1 won't | Bear. When he had finished it he come hack. I've seen those pigs omee | gave little thought to what might and they'll look just the same the |happen when the farmer found his| second time. Looking at them won't | pig gone. A full stomach makes a do me any good anyway. 1 want to |sleepy bead. Buster could think of taste one, not see one. But I'm not hothing but a good nap. So he shuf- going to taste one, becanse it might fied off fo find a place to sleep. get me into trouble. So if T am not Pretly soon he came to a Roing to taste one, what is the good Windfall. You know a windfall is of staying around just to see one? ¢ pile of trees that have heen blown | won't do it. I'll go away right now.” |over one on another in a gr at| Buster walked a few ps then | windstorm. This was just the Kind turned and walked back azain, Then | of place that Duster liked. He found he sat down, 'ooking out tfoward | a place where he conld ereep under that pen. As he sat there his head |that windfall. He raked a few leaves swung from side to side. as Bear's | in there and then lay down. In two | heads have a way of doing. Jle just {minutes he was asleep and dre aming | couldn’t tear himself away. One of Of pigs. Buster Bear was having a| the waindering Litile Night Breezes perfect Thanksgiving Day. His| brought the pig smell over to him. |stomach was full and now he was You and 1 woul liked that bly and dreaming | smell. We woutdn’t have liked it itful dreams all. But to Duster ar it was the 3ut over at the farm where Bus- | most tantalizing smell possible. No had caught that pig, an angry wonder he couldn't e him farmer was planning trouble for the | away. who had take his pig. He had | The little stars twini 1o pigs squealing in ‘he | in the sky. The moon « ht and had gone out to see what | flooded the little farn the trouble was. But in the moon- | Out there back of the light he couldn’t see clearly enough | pen was almost as hght a to know just what had happened. The pizs were uncasy and However, when he went out early around. Buster could Thear 1 the morning, he was no fonger in Finally hs sighed. It was doubt. He counted his pizs and 4 sigh found one missing. Then he found zot fo haie one of (low Bear's footprints. That told pigs.” said Buster to himself, “T him all he needed to know. That pig| can't get along without one of thos= had heen taken by a Bear. Rizht| pigs. ¥ time T think of those |away the farm-r began to make plgs my stomach turns over with |plans to get that Bear's skin as pay- keep still. He wandered about uneas- | how g0 at ar them 1 long Nuster ve ay tasted! Buster {ed olives, 1-4 cup chopped utes. Piace the butter in a frying pan. When hot add the egg mixture and cook slowly until light and fluffy. Take a spatula and carefully fold over half. Place in a moderate oven for 10 minutes. Turn out on a hot platter and surround with the broiled bacon. Garnish with celery tops or parsley. Date Muffins, Sixteen (Delicious, served hot with tea or coffee for lunicheon). Three cups flour, baking powder, 1-2 teaspoon salt, 3 cup sugar, 2 eggs, 1 1.2 cups milk, 1 cup chopped dates, 3 table- spoons fat, meited. 6 tablespoons Mix all the ingredients and beat ' | for 3 minutes. Half fill well-greased muffin pans. Bake in a moderate |, oven for 15 minutes. Serve hot with butter. Thanksgiving Supper Menus Turkey sandwiches, sweet pickles, chocolate cake, coffee. Relish sandwiches, coffee, choco- late fudge. Chicken relish sandwiches, oatmeal cookies. Turkey Sandwiches, for Twelve (For variety, serve toasted) One and one half cup chopped cold turkey (any other fowl may be used), L4 cup chopped celery, green pepper, pimientos or sweet pickles, 1-3 cup salad dressing, 1-4 teaspoon salt. Mix al Ithe ingredients and spread upon butts of white: hread. Relis] (These may Boston Brown bread) One-half cup pimiento cream cheese, 1-4 chopped pimiento stuff- tea, or Bagistored U. §. Patent Offiee By C. D. Batcl}elou ~_TWO LONG WORDS 7z 117 TTT] 111 7Z 117 VL % | | 7 [ 1] Wiz, | | | | il Tz I ] 1% Z 111 ANEEEE/ AN Li ammdnnn 2 || Two long vertical words are tha' key to this puzzle. Ncither should prove troublesome, and the rest will also be rather easy. ! Horizontal i . Soft mineral used powder. . White linen vestment. . Shed for doves. . A mixture. . By. . A portion of the earth's surface. To suppose. . Portuguese money of account. . Close. 18. To guard. American pigeon hawk. 24. Made of flowers. 28 Pertaining to birds. . Growing out. Negligent. Stopped up as water. . To conceal. . Bark of the paper mullberry. 38. To knock. Home of a bird 43. Foretoken. Since. Largest land plant. To breathe heavily in making 45 | 46, and laborl- . A thick shrub. Beer. Falsehood. Affable. ! Protective garment | 8 A list. . Compendium . Quartering place for troops. Native metal. . Beverage. . Organ of hearing 3. To wash lightly. . Wedge-shaped plece of . To damage. wood. sweet vickles or pickle relish, 1-4 cup chopped celery, 1-4 teaspoon salt, 1-2 cup salad dressing. Mix all the ingredients ana | spread upon buttered slices of thiniy cnt bre Chicken (Any fowl or chopped meat may be used) One cup chopped cooked chicken. 1-2 cup chopped pimiento stuffed olives, 1-4 cup chopped sweet o1 1ill_pickles, 1-3 cup mayonnaise. Mix the ingredients and spreaa upon buttered slices of white bread. cooked HEAD PROTEC Tt children slcep in a draughty room, tie a strip of ticking, ecre- tonne or other firmly woven fabrie across the head of their iron bed and tuck it under the mattress. This keeps the wind from hlowir, down their necks and protcets their heads. Night preceding a holiday. Edge. Battering machine, Devoured. Guided. d. i Relish Sandwiches, for Six Child’s gyrating toy. Eucharist wine vessel. Writing implement. Before To obseryve To scatter as hay. | 36 40 1 |42 ! = FIRi-PL If cleaning the fireplace is such hore you shrink from having fires often, why not measure it and {have a pan 1nade to catch the | ashes. They can be made inex- spensively at foundries, of tin or even bras th the back and siles two high and the front open show 4, ‘THIS FAST YOUTH Toledo, Nev. and age, when infants upper lip drink spirits of juniper Goesn't stop at things ordinary. However, police of berries, rest a speeding motorist miles an hour. 12-year-old boy. CLEAN FUR It the collor of your fur soils your neck, try cleaning process. , not burn. the fur Rub while warm collar. Fashion Plaque Beige antelope is ‘contrasted with they will scarcely [a glazed brown applique and heel in this French opera pump. 28. — In this day smoke cigars and /boys with fuzz on their unadulterated one out of the To- ledo recently took time out to ar- doing 35 When caught, the speed demon turned out to be a coat the following Heat bran in a saucepan, stirring it well so 1t will into Shake well and rub more until the last bran comes out clean. Shake and air the coat. Guiding Your R Child INNUCENCE By Mrs. Agnes Lyne Parents cherish the illusion that their children are quite “innocent.” By “innocent” they mean that they are free of any interest in or knowl- odge of sex. This apparent state of innocence is something in which parents take great pride. They are happy in tne feeling that although they them. selves are stained and scarred by life, their children are atill as fresh and pure as the day they were born. They try to keep them 80 as long as possible. As a matter of fact nothing coule be more unwarranted than this as- sumption of innocence in children. The mass of scientific data accumu. lated in late years bears out ti conclusion that all children, unless they are defective, are naturally in. terested in and curious about sex. Parents who serenely state that their child has no interest in the subject, that “he has nevey asked & question” are only telling the intelli- gent listener that they have made their child feel so guilty about his sexual curiosity that his lips are sealed in the presence of his elders. Buch parents can never know what goes on in their child’s mind. ‘Why are parents so eager to as- sume that their children are inno- cent? It {8 because they themaelves feel guilty about sex. Although they have become parents they have not lost the unhappy feelings of sin and shame instilled in them in their own early years. It is a vicious cir- cle in which the sins of the fathers are indeed visited on the children even unto the third and fourth gen- eration. The heritage of guilt is handed down from parent to child. It makes little difference whether this is done by gross prohibitions, or by the subflest evasions. The sensitive child is injured by both No amount of subsequent teaching about the “beauty” and ‘“sacred- ness” of love can wipe out an or. iginal strong impresson in the life of a child. It inoncence s freedom from guilt then only those children can remain truly innocent whose parents help them to face the facts of sex in a simple and natural way. Health Hints BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN Editor Journal of the American Medical Assocjation and of Hy- geia, the Health Magazine It is now well established that tu- berculous infection starts during early infancy and that from 60 to 80 per cent of all children by the time they have reached 13 years of age have the organism of tuberculosis in their bodies. Only w few actually succumb to the ravages of ' the disease. There- fore, obviously, the human tody has in it factors which aid in over- Question—What is cretinism- Answer—Cretinism {s usually the result of inactivity of the thyroid gland, particularly in several generations of mothers Uving in a region where such inefficiency of 1he thyroid gland is common. The child who is a cretin fails to develop either physically or mentally in a sat- isfactory manner. coming tuberculosis majority of cases. The experience of many physi- clans indicates that a severe at- tack of measles, scarlet fever, or some other acute infectious «is- ease in childhood may decrease the resisfance greatly and that a sud- den intensification of the tubercu- lous disease affer such infections s not unusual. ‘Watchfulness Authorities are also agreed that much may be accomplished in con- trolling tuberculosis by detecting the manifestations in the child at | the earliest possible moment and by giving suitable treatment at that time. For this reason the growth throughout the world of preventoriums for children in what i called the pretuberculous stage has been tremendous, and the pub- lication of studies of cases from such preventoriums may be cited as evidence that they accomplish good work. The child who is about to have tuberculosis often manifests symp- in the large GIVE FEET A HAND Proper Placing Lends Grace. W:W&MWAWWAVA s TR i SRR R Plant your feet right, for Editor's Note: ‘Thix is the fifth of a series of six articles on “How to Grow Graceful,” written exclusively for NEA Service and the Herald by Doris Niles, youngest American dancer to head her own ballet or- ganization. BY DORIS NILES The American girl has beautiful feet, and the surpassing art shown in every variety of American footwear is worthy of her. At no period in the history of dress have girls’ feet been more prominent, and conse- quently requiring greater skill in management. Therefore, the vexed B AVAVAVAVAN Av (a\ grace, says Doris Niles sciousness, nervousness, timidity may be revealed in hands and feet by twisting and restless movements, though the countenance is calm. Proper pose of the feet in relaxed graceful position while sitting, and when standing to shift the weight of the body occasionally and easily from one foot to the other, will give a touch of elegance to any figure. EXPENSIVE HUBBY . San Clemente, Calif., Nov. 28.—D. | W. Bellew of this city evidently does ret hold with the time-honorea | castom wherein the husband sup- question of what to do gracefully with the hands has now added to it another and more difficult one, graceful use of the fect. To eliminate any extreme position of the feet in walking, if the habit is abnormal in either toeing in or toe- ing out, practice the straight foot line. By this I mean to walk along a straight line in the design on a carpet. 8ee that the feet are planted straight and properly on that line and continue so throughout the ex- | ercise, made a few minutes at a time. In addition, thought and at- tention should be given the straight | line principle in . general walking. The fault will soon vanish. 1 have had to give exercises in this same direction to many as- pirants for my ballet, who came to me from over-technical masters. This usually results from over train- ing in the so-called “turn out posi- tion,” necessary to a certain degree in toe dancing. but a great fault in interpretative or other forms ot; danding. This fault effects equally the natural beauty of walking or} positions of the feet in repose. | I have seen people sit in a bril- | liant ballroom when the feet and | hand positions absolutely marred an | otherwise “beautiful picture they | would have made. Relaxed repose and grace were the things needed. | But they were leaning with elbows ' on knees and with their toes turned | | | 1$1,700 when he married, ports the wife. It cost Mrs. Bellew nearly $40,000 to support him for |three years, in addition to paying their wedding expernses. Bellew had and he used this as pin money and lost most of it at gambling, charged Mrs. Bellew, who won the divorce. in, or some equally ugly position. Tt is a strange truth that emotions | which may be concealed in a per- - son’s face find unconsciously mlt:xle“ The latest thing in clothes is & expression in the feet. Self-con- !womun keeping an appointment. toms of the impending danger, but these ‘are usually so transient and S0 uncharacteristic of any special disease that they are usually over- looked. Frequert attacks of colds, influenza, disturbances of diges- tion, regularly recurring fevers, and perhaps genetral lassitude are among the most common of these symptoms. Not infrequently there are asso- clated with these conditions under- welght, coughs persisting for six weeks or longer periodic swelling of the glands of the neck, and fa- tigue. Not infrequently, there are also disturbances of the bone {or- mation. Modern scientifie medicine checks the relationship of tlese symptoms to tuberculosis by the use of skin tests with tuberculin and the use of the X-ray. If there are areas of tuberculous inflamma- tion in the lung, the X-ray will in- dicate these areas through shad- ows on the plate. Scientific Study In the preventorium it is possible to study the child under controlled conditions, to make regular obser- vationg, and indeed to give the child before it has tuberculosis the same type of scientific study as is given to a person with tubercu- losis in a sanatorium. As a result of studies which he made, Dr. 1. D. Bronfin of the Na- tional Jewish Hospital in Denver is convinced that preventoriums for the observation of children who have been exposed to tubercu- losis and for treatment for tubercu- losis in children are needed as urgently as sanatoriums for the treatment of adults with tubercu- losis, To keep the plaster from crack- fng, when you drive a nail into the wall, dip the nall first into very hot water and hammer while hot and still wet. it m‘ PARIS. There are almost as many shades of green in the new fashion show- | ings as there are in spring fchiag Looking at them makes one think of Palm Teach or the Mediterranean resorts, where mimesa soon will be in bloom. Jade, Pistachio, and olive are the snades most frequently seen. An olive crepe de chine dress at Patou's is made on straight lines with | tailored effect. “The skirt is joined to a voke and has a deep inverted pleat in front. The coilar ends in a hoyish bow tie. The sleeves are i snug and tailored like the rest of the dress. The only touch of grandewr is the strass buckle. RITA.