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Love’s Awakening The Heart Story ofa Steadfast Woman By Adele Garrison Liliian, Reluctantly Reslizing Her “Beby” Has Grown Up, Grants Ronald Permission to Call cn Marion at School 1 saw Lillian’s lips tighten as Marion craved permission to ‘ask her something,” and I knew that she surmised the question had something to do with Ronald Brix- ton. But her response was prompt and kindly. “Of course, sweetheart,” she said. Vhat is it? 'Well—you—see—it's like this.” vion was stammering and her were crimsoning. *Mr: °s is awfully strict about any- oming to call on the girls— - special written permission signed by a mother or a father, and, more than that, it must be given to Mrs. larnes personally by one of the parents before he can get past the tront door or telephone a girl.” “Yes, I know that, Marion.” lian said. “Those are the regulations of any good school.” Marion nodded, swallowed hard and began again: “Almost all the girls have boys on the favored list—brothers, cou- ains. “Yes, when 1 entcred you I re- member Dr. Barnes saying that the way the cousing multiplied after a girl entered a school was one of the marvels of the ages.” Lillian's tone was dry, and her young daughter's deepencd. “But T haven't an she went on bravel. —is coming down lo amused, flush body at all,” nd—Ronall sce Carolyn once in a while—and he wanted me | to ask you if you'd write him mission to see me also when comes, and to.telephone me, and he wants to writc to me once while, too.” She tumbled the words out in hurried staccato fashion, with her eyes fixed pleadingly upon Lillian's 1 found myself hoiding my breath as I waited for my friend's answer. It was =0 natural and so ingenuous a request that I felt Lillian must grant it. A refusal would be a grave mistake. per- he in al | For perhaps ten seconda Lillian | did not answer, and 1 saw Marion's | beautiful gray eyes change from | appeal to wonderment, and then to | hostile disappointment. But they | softened immediately when Lillian | turned to me with a little mile and | said: | “Well leave the *decision | Auntie Madge.” | I knew that the | Marion’s, for llian already was awarc of my opinion, and 1 cut short the child's suspense at once. “I decide for Konald,” 1 said promptly. “He may write and tele- phone and cail.” Marion started checked herself to victory ~ was toward me, but the first step. 1 knew that if it ha® been some other favor than one involving Ronald Brixton she would have flung her- :If at me and hugged me ecstatf- ly. But she did not wish her mother or me to see how high a valuation she put upon the per- mission given her. “Thank you both so much,” she said sedately. “May T go a Ronald Garolyn now anxious to hear.' “Of course, run along,” Lillian said. But when the door had closed Lehind hec my friend faced me with tragic eyes, “My baby has gone, Madge,” she said. his s the beginning.” Of cot it 1 suid. “But please don't act as if the wedding arch was sounding in your ears. he Loy hasn't asked Marion's hand in marriage, you know. I don’t think you need to plan her trous- seuu for another fortnight.” | I felt as if I were touching a real grief brutally, but 1 knew that the must not be permitted to brood foolishly over a perfectly naturar request of her young daughter's, and I felt justified in my crassness { when the tragic lines of her face re- laxed and she smiled, though rue- fully. [ “I'N try to be reasonable” she | said. *Come on down. We've got to | take all of Marion's traps over to school with her " (To Be Continued) | Copyright, 1929, Newspaper | Feature Service, Inc. Reddy Fox Loses a Toe By Thornton W. Burgess You'll find the careless always pay: I's just as well it is that way. —Old Mother Nature Reddy Fox is not given to care- lessness. 1t he were, he wouldn't have lived as long as he has. Little people of the Green Ferest and the Green Meadows who are often care- less seldom live long. One of the very first things they learn when they are little is that carelessness , Is costly. But there are times when even the most careful forget, or become absent-minded, and 5o are careless. 1t is so with Reddy Fox. Even Old Granny Fox, with all her wisdom, is careless once in a great while. 1 doubt if there is any one who, some time or other, is not careless. Orhe storm that had driven Peter Rabbit and little Mrs. Rabbit to the shelter of the old woodchuck hole in the heart of the dear Old Briar- patch was over. All the little people of the Green Forest and the Green Meadows who were not sleeping the winter months away were out look- ing for something to eat. They must eat or they cannot live. So it is that there is always a great deal of activity right after big storms. While the storms last the little peo- ple can't eat. Therefore, just as soon at| | | Reddy Fox was hungrier than usual | his foot out when the wicked jaws | of that trap came together with & snap. Reddy's foot was almost cle: but not quite. That trap caught | him by one toe. My, how it hurt! | Tnstantly Reddy started to pull away, | but the trap was fastened and he | was held a prisoner by one toe. | Reddy knew what it meant. He knew what would happen if that | trapper should find him therq That | trap had pinched that toe nearly | off. Reddy gave a frantic leap and | was free. His toe, however, was in | the trap. 1 1 12, 13, There arc only {wo unkeyed let- ters to mar the picture of an casy | puzzie for today. Nevertheless twen- | ty or thirty minutes should be am- ple time for completion. NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, JANUARY 14, 1929. MILADY LENDS LER EARS TO Once Overs “Little boys wao make New Year's resoluuon.sbought to keep them. Look at your father. What an example he is.” “I know, Mom, but he’s had years to practice b TTH% T T T AEN/ NN 7 ANAEN ANEEN//d 4 T | Il=ll%- dNEEN”d HORIZONTAL Guided. Female of cattle. To slow. Always or yes. Type of monkey. Wanderer. wild or domestic Begistered U 8 Patont Ates o o 2 I ly applies to electrical ufensils sych as percolators, YOUR HEALTH RY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN Editor Journal of the American Medical Association and of Hye geia, the Health Magazine Sodium chioride or common sait | probably ranks first among all t! | salts in the human body, both in quantity and in its value in the body's nutrition. It is, however, only one of many salts and mineral sub. stances important for proper funce | tioning of the human system. Salt is not to be considered as |a mero sensoning, and the craving for malt is not at all like the crav. |ing for alcohol or tobacco. The | substance s important in rela- tlonship to the constitution of the (body and & deficiency manifests itself by this craving. Among savage tribes which live mainly on vegetables, salt is con- sidered much Americans con. sider sugar. Children suck sticka of salt as our children suck candy. | Savages carry small pleces of salt | in their pockets and offer it to each |other to lick much as an American {ruralite will offer unother a chew | | of tobacco. Actually in the past na- tiona fought wars for the posses. | sion of sources of common salt. A Bulgarlan physician, Dr.| | Assen Hadjioloff, in a considera- | | tion of the suajcet published by | the American Dietetic Aspocia- | tion, indicates the way in which | the body eonstantly takes in sait | and loses it in its metabelism. | | People who eat much meat can | do without added salt because | | they obtain sait frem the blood of | Z T 1T T 7 AnEEN Jamumm IIIII uN/ /M 7 iR "1 1] | 7 N/dEn 1 [s Ax[E]A] lo]E] IU's “fifty-fifty” for women now, it they would be chic as to their hair. Some of the new bobs, many of which are the long- shorts, show great change. Above, left to right: The Hollywool beauty bob shows the cars and curls the bak hair upwards in ringlets. The beanty curl bob is too theatrical for utility but looks nice on young girls, Below, left to right; The temple curl “fifty- fifty” is reminiscent of old spit-curl days. Picked as the boh destined 1o he most popular is the Princesse long bod which fast- ens the ends of the hair with a barrette at the napc of the neck. The new windblown bob has an irregular line over the cars which is duplicatcd by the backline, BY JULTA BLANSHARD o (NEA Bervice Writer) Guiding Your B - Chid & hild New York, Jan. 14—The very latest colffures reveal that cars that are out are in again! TOO HEAVY BURDENS By MRS, AGNES LYN The minds of life should be tem- pered for the young lamb as well as for the shorn ol We who are grown up must face bills, sickness and emotlonal unhap- | piness. As parents, we have had years In which to face, reglity and many of us find it no joke at that. But children during their eariy years must be granted complete Im»; munity from the stringencies r | adult existence. They should sense nothing of meney worrles, sorrow and the shadows whieh hang eve: | the grown ups of the home. Dis- | tracted parents must not yield to! the temptatign of making children | the confldants of their troubles. For | the childish spirit is not yet equip- ped to endure these things. | Andrea was taken into the confl- | dence of an unhappy mother. A | child of six, she was heard te won- der alouyd whether mother would he | “fifty-fifty”—that is, the long-short. able to get a acholarship again tu, | The hair in the back falls to the her this year, and whether they | shoulders, while the front and side could find a decent place to live tn | are left short, like last year's bob. that weuld not be too expensive. For that terrible in-between time She wished that daddy would ceme When the back hair is growing. heme to live with her and mether | hairdressers have produced little again, but “Daddy is £ selfish.” _ | chignons nttuched to clips that hang These are not wholesome consid- | on tight o even the shortest ends crations for the mind of a child. f halr. These chjgnons can. be The struggle to give her an edues. | Made into little biscuits, which are tion is no’part ef her concern. The|very good now on the nape of the family budget and the rent problem neck, into w miniature figure eight, are things she ought not to worry CFORs-Wise, or into curls. about for some years to come, Her| When one’s hair grows out. the tather's defection from the family faige choice présents itself. — Vari- for cars to show. The elcgant put a loop of pearls | through pierced Fobes or dangle some smart odd antique carrings, especially after evening has arrived. The long-short bob is pre-emi- nently correct. |lows a woman to change her mind. She can wear the bob either short or long. The sleck hob is excellent, but since waves do much to take years from a woman's face, many a head of hair born stright now takgs on kindly waves. Indeed, there are now 24 different ways to have one’s hair waved. Many of them look so natural that one's own mother would probably think her memory is net what it was and that she was mistaken in thinking that J. hair was straight. These are merely the highlights of the beauty trade shows here new. “Fifty-ifty” Bobs in Limelight Most of the bobs that receive at- tention are what beauty experts call In other words, it is modish now | For, you sec, it al- | ne's | running | Ior the woman with a well-shaped |hcad and a graceful, slender neck, |there is the new Hollywood beauty (bob. This exposes the ears, waves the froat-and sides of the hair to Hollow: the head’s line and curls Tack upward in tiny ringlets the cne Itire back lon ghair. | Yor the girl with natural curls, there is a new beauty curl beb, This exposes one ear, parting the | bair on that side, draws it down |over the other car and back, | Catcling it with a barrette in the | back, the long ends are made into two pr more Pickford curls. | Princesse Long Bob Wins Popularity The Princesse long bob is picked for the most popular bob of the season. This allows a woman to | part her hair on either side er the middle, 10 wave it abeut her face |and over herggara or above them an she prefers, then to draw it back, hold it fact at the neck with a bar- |rette and let the ends fly. One {vhould never let the hair grew longer than three inches below the barrette with this, Since the wild-blown hob h ways been popular with girls straight hair, a 1929 one that makesthe sides mor blown than the bangs. The new feature about this one is that the back is no longer shingled but in grown long and the back hairline is cut ragged to conform with the front. A fifth bob thdt hids fair to suft | many, is called the Temple Curl | “Aty-firty. the new finger waves that are wide, natural looking mnd easy te put in. | Part the hair stightly to one side, Ibring it down to form little templa | curls reminiscent of the spit-curls ot | the 90's and swing the rest over the car and draw it down to form e This calis for one of ' (Copyright, 1929, by T. W. Burgess) |14. | ani | circle she cannot help but feel, yet | 0us types of faces and necks bring ing for food. The next story: “The Kindly the animfals they eat. Meat con- P | different solution [tains considerable quantities e |It can only hurt her still more to different solutions. { hear and echo her mother's harsm | as a storm stops, they are out hunt- Home of a spider. Joined. Ititle chignon in the back. | 16. 1 " Reddy Fox was hungrier than | Deed usual. You see, he had had little to T eat before the storm. His stomach H d' * Mrs. Houdini Gets [{4 99 Message |17, 118, had been almost empty then. By | time the storm was over it seemed | to him that the walls of his stom- | ach met. Just as soon as it stopped | snowing Reddy was out hunfing. | Now it happened that, unknown to Farmer Brown's Boy or to Farmer Brown, a neighhor had visited the Old Pasture late in the aftzrnooon before the storm and there he had set a trap, a steel trap, for Reddy Fox. He d set that trap ve fully, for he knew just how difficult it is to fool Reddy Fox. He had set it where he knew that Reddy Fox frequently passed. He had studied Teddy and s ways. He knew t Reddy, like most people, is mo or less a creature of habit, He knew that no traps 1ad heen set in the Ol TPasture for a long, long time, ) Rrown and Farmer Rrown’s Bay would not allow jt. So. ket that trap, sneaked re in a roundaubout way, so would not he trap and ch red with 4 ha had he en he he seen he had art- b leaves and liftle you a The was through that W n 11 hav il inare If that doesn’t eateh hini, then n no trapper.” declared the man h an evil leer, as he made his home, Then eame the storm. The wind howled and blew. T¢ piled the snow not suspected £now in other places the trap. Tt blew all Finally the trap was partly covered by snow. tut wholly so, as Tough North stopped his hlowing When Reddy s Joft he was in a hurry ing grounds not | Wina his home o reach his hunt- | He wanted to get ov 1o the Green Forest. So he was carels he hurried along a path the lat Houdini he had used many, many times. So gician. | pied as genuine a it was that he didn't that trap tray ted to her from ntil s Wont o step ough Rev. Ar in it ad packed £ the I sirit under the pan of the trap and t New York. Her| was slow in spring G result save promised 1o send was that Reddy was actually taking | a spirit message if possible. [ Mrs. Beatrice ini, #bove, widow Titt | Cli Hire a Stout. | | Freighted. , .l Prevents. \Menas for the Family Gold, silver, etc. | Frozen water, | P 1 Paragraph in the newspaper. Common usect. i Utter by the mouth. Tniquity. The male bee. To annul. Dark red vege Pertaining to birds. To lubricate. Noble type of fear. Rigid Pertuining to wings. Afternoon e To come in Tir device for opening and er 1o [ To make a mistake, Wil VERTICAL Stews from Leflover Foads | are palatable, nutritious land casy to prepare. Use leftover | nieats, vegetables, fish or fowl and combine with a thin white sauce or | gravy (leftover;. When baked in a' buttered baking dish, they form he main part of a luncheon or dinner. Some scasonings arc needed such 15 onion, celery, green peppers or pimientos. | Teday's Bill of Fare | Stews rapefruit, am, buttered toast, coffec con—Cream of celery soup, sweet pickles, sugar cooRles, iies (canned), tea Ditmer—heef and rice stew, hak- cd squash, biscnit, honey, head let- French dressing, pumpkin pie, meat To argue tuc Animal hack Oppposite Moist To Prajection of the car. having lurge humped oc of and Rice Stew hed meat). other kind of cooked may be used) 1 cup diced cooked meat (cut in 1-2 inch pieces), 1 cup cooked rice, | 2 tablespoons butter, & tablespoons tlour, 1-2 teaspoon sall, 1-4 tea- noon a. 1 1-2 cups milk, 2 tablespoons chopped onion, 2 table- | <poons choppel 1-2 cup | liced cooked carrots (any otlter leftover vigetables may be usedy. Melt the butter and add the flour. “ook slowly and siir constantly, un- til the mixture turns a light brown ' color. Add thr prika ani milk and eook until a creamy sauee forms. Stir frequently to prevent | lumping and scorching. Add the | rest of the ingredients and pour a buttered baking dish. Dake a mode oven for 20 minutes. ritious and full of flavor. of close, | (Any meat verify Bird's home. Braced framewcrk for carrying a railroad over a depression. Barrier confining flowing wa ter. To perform To pass periodically climate to another hirds Roadside ho'el To be ill ive metal To revolve celery, from one as various salt, | Reply. To hinder Level One-half of a To reileve. Yellow fluid secretea b into quart This is nu Wash alnminum | ind pol- inser if a Never seak | well after This esprect live it n ap suds, Tree hearing acorns nal organ of sound. e mi rvant girl—use Herald im el Xt finish Ads arm sificd shing or polis, | water | of sodium chloride, as do alse mit- | fish, but the fruits and | vegetables, and particularly fine | flours, contain very little salt. ! The fact that a certain quantity ' salt is needed by the bhody should mot be taken as a warrant for overmalting foods by those who like to stimulate their sensa tion of taste. The human system | is built so that the amounts of | substances needed are definitety | controlled through automatic | regulating systems. Excess of any | substance upsets the balance and throws an added burden on the | tissucs. | FLAPPER FANNY SAYS: REG.U. 5. PAT. OFF. ©1928. BY MEA SERVICE. INC. In a bridge game everybody has his own idca as to who is the dum- my. Mammoth fvory is softencd carving by soaking in hot water. for I- , READ HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS | criticism of her father. It is enough if the little child faces his own problems; if when he has spent his pennies all at once he can wait without grumbling uni next allowance day; if having suf- fered defeat he keeps a stiff uppes Iip: and if wanting all his mother's love hp learns to share it happily. A child who too carly feels the | existence has Y| shoulders bent by burdens too heavy | trials of adult ‘or hi# years. When lifc seems tow |hnrd he hecomes unduly saddened and serious and !ess able to under- take his own adventure with a hap- Py spirit. Fashion Plaque A STRIKING new scarf for southern resort wear is composed 'of two triangles of crepe joined cnd to end—one red and white, the other blue and white. The Chinese are believed to be the hardest working farmers—and the lowest paid. READ HERALD CLASSIFIED Al FOR BEST RESULTS PARIS, A Dblack taffeta dress at Nicole Grovlt's is entircly veiled with siik {voile and has fine round ruching of «kirt that flarcs like & lampshade. taffeta around the hottom of & saucy ¥ RITA.