New Britain Herald Newspaper, January 15, 1929, Page 10

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Love’s Awakening By Adele I the Girls at Mariow’ | Sue Among New School *“Not the main entrance, Auntie Madge. Don't turn this corner. Keep Fight on & few feet. There! Do you | see those tall gate posts? Turn right | in there sand draw up by the side | of those parked cars. You'll be al- | most under my window then, for| this is Senior Hall.” i She could have said “This 1s| Jeaven!” in much the same tones, | 1 was sure. We had heard enough | during her junior year at Whitney of the traditions and privileges in- \osting life in the building which Loused the girls in their last year of school to know that she was realiz- ing the fulfillment of a cherished dream. | The Brixton car had followed us in, and Marion scrambled to the ground, meeting Carolyn in an| cqually impetuous exit from the other car. “Look, Carolyn!" she exclaimed. | “There's my window, and there’s Bob! And Mike, too. What a g¥p! Y'm not the first, after all. Hello, up there! Come on down for a min- ute before I have to sce Mrs. Barnes.” “Can't, for a few minutes” onc ‘ef the girls leaning out of a second story window returned. “But leave your traps down there. We'll help iyou tote them up after you've made your bow in front. When you go in pipe Dr. B's necktie. It's a hot baby.” “He hasn't the limelight all to himself,” the other girl interrupted. | Only her curly head showed above the silt and I guessed that she was ot dressed for critical inspection by strangers. “Mrs. B. has the spif- ‘iest new rig ever. Oh, 1 tell you, ve're all dolled up for fair. The disrespectful little devil Lillian murmured in my ear, but T )ad caught a distinct note of pride in both the girlish voices and knew that their comments were really a tribute of admiration to the man | snd woman at the head of Whitney. They would have been loyal to| shabbincss, but they openly exulted | n modish attire. | Something else 1 had noticed | also and that was the low pitch of | the volces of all the girls. Their | 'and who had evident !wind progress {out wh The ll:rt Story a Steadfast Woman Garrisen tons, were gay, unsubdued, but not shrill or loud. I doubted if they could have been heard many feet beyond my own car. 1 had no opportunity to tell Lil- lian of my theory, however, for Marion came dancing back to the car, pulling Carolyn after her. “Mums, I heve a scneme, she said. “Let's you and Auntie Madge and me go round in front and see Mrs. B. 1 have to report I'm here, you know. And then you can tell her how I want Carolyn for a roommate, and how she’s here with her mother. Maybe, as she's going to be a senior, Mrs. B. would let Ler come in today. You never can tell what might happen.” “I think that's a very good idea, Marion,” her mother said, smiling at he “And we'll go over right a She turned to the other car with word of explanation for Helena Drixton, and then we were on our way to the front of the building, leaving Ronald and Carolyn stand- ing by their mother's car. I shot & glance at the upper windows 1d saw that the two girls who had talked to Marion, together with thre others, were unmistakably watching Ronald. He was well worth any girl's looking at, T thought, as I gave a backward glance at his lithe, slender young ire, with his really handsome e and his fair hair, unruly in the breeze. We were several minutes reaching the main entrance, for Marion not only wished to point out to me every detail of the big ivy-covered bulldings, but she was in turn inter- 1upted by girls who were arriving singly and in groups, and were ap- parently filled to bursting with ecctings and questions. We were just at the steps when one of the girls we had seen at the window v made whirl- downstairs, caught Marion by the arm. ‘The girls sent me down to find the sheik is,” she said in what was meant to be a whisper, but which was clearly audible to Lillian and me. (Continued Tomorrow) pyright 1929, Newspaper Feature Service, Inc. By Thornton W. Burgess ddy Fox limped slowly home. There would be no hunting that nizht for Reddy. He had been care- | lss and he had lost a toe in a dreadful steey trap. Of course, it | had pained him a great deal at first, but the cold had brought a blessed numbness and, as he limped along, his foot did not pain him so much. But he couldn’t run on that foot and so there could be no hunt- ing that night. Poor Reddy! He felt mearly starved as it was. What| should he do? He would just have| to grin and bear it, that was all. | Now, as he approached home, he | met Mrs. Reddy just starting out. Ot course, she saw that something | was the matter and right away| Reddy told her what had happened. He wurned her that there might be | cther traps and she must watch out. | “Good luck, my dear, good luck | in the hunting,” said Reddy, as he erept into the house, hungry and miserable. Mrs. Reddy hurried away. She had started out to hunt for herself, but now she intended to hunt for Reddy, too. “Poor Reddy!” she thought. “It would be bad enough to have such a thing happen at any time, but to have it happen now when we are half starved is really | dreadful. 1 simply must get some-| thing for him to-night.” 1t was the next day that Farmer Rrown's Boy took it into his head to g0 up in the Old Pasture. It was the first time he had been up that winter. Now, the trapper had al-| ready visited his trap and found | Reddy's toe in it. He knew that fr would be uscless to reset that trap | right there, so he had taken it up Bnd reset it at another point. In do- | ing #0 he had left tracks in the snow. Of course, Farmer Brown" Boy discovered those tracks. *I| ‘wonder who's heen up here | thought he, “and what for. He followed the tracks. £o he came to| the place where the trap had first| been set. He saw the disturbance | in the anow. He saw some drops of | blood on the snow. Looking around carefully, he saw Reddy's tracks appraching that place and then lcaving there. He saw right away that Reddy had bheen using only 1liree feet when he left and he dis- ed little spots of blood on the ady was g thought Farmer T turned to follow racks to where he had » trap. He soon foun g it and took clear throug I irmer Brown's Boy. The ¢d und went back to follow tracks 1o the door of his ho saw that Reddy had gone i “That Fox must be half starved,” thought Farmer Brown's Boy. “He could e had nothing to eat through the storm and now that he has a hurt foot he has little chance to get anything to eat. I'd like to go straizht over to that trapner's and fell him what T think of him. But 1 guess the first thing to do is to go back home and get some food Reddy B: Boy and pres: meat and bo them and ha had heen cooked hound. AN this he front of Reddy's doors bhurried away that Reddy own's the He up. turn- eddy’s T home went Farmer Brown's Iv irned with meat still or dinner tha Tic Ao ad ther might put - “Roddy was caught, but got away,’ thought Farmer Lrown's Boy not be delayed in satisfying his hunger. It was a Kindly deed—one of the deeds that make Brown's Boy beloved by all the lit- tle people of the Green Forest and the Green Meadows. Copyright, 1929, by T. W. Burgess \Expel_Student Who hlete thdraw ricd all mar- | inates must withdraw I'cbruary Farmer | “Believe it or not, Red, I've had quite a large following, meself, in me day.”. EASY QUESTIONS TTT 1 [ et T U N/ i” ////' 3 [ ‘The plural of a sea mammal will also answer No. 10 vertical. |of the other questions or interme- | diate words will be any more dif- | ficult. None Horlzontal What famous explorer is con- ducting an_expedition to the South Pole? Type of poisonous snake. To melt. Eggs of fishes. Handled. Tree having tough wood. Added to. To perform. A prayer. Badge of honor. Flower leaf. After what inventor are sleep- ing cars named? Wooly surface of cloth. Stratum. Similar to a donkey. To trifle. Rigid. Painful Delicately colored jewcl. Public speaker. Cherry colored. Guided. Popular report. Line. Native metal To abolish. To tinish. Vertical . man-owned airplane sful trans- What G made a atlantic flight? Frame of wood used to oxen. Long grass, Wing part_of Where is Mount To fondle To stop. Toward sr What bay Pole? To dibble Writing impler A temporiry s 1] is near South Formal Tevie To desire wit lish money To smear. A portable Berore Mother WHITE KIDS 4.1 puli on or button trickily. BEl//Ea0 /o A %ggaé‘gfi 3 [YY/olBlE] Z)-1* DIEINZAAVIE] IMIEITIATLY / MHELE 7 Menas for the Family By MRS. ALEXANDER GEORGE The Useful Sweet Potato Swect potatoes permit of a varicty of methods of serving and they Llend well with meat, fish and fowl. Store sweet potatoes in a cool place and try to prevent them from br ing as they will then soften and to be discarded. Serve mashed sweet potatoes with roast pork or veal. Today's Bill of Fare Breakfast Chilled oranges, wheat cereal and dates, serambled eggs, buttered toast, coffee. Yancheon ned carrots, graham bread, marmalade, fruit cookies, tea. o or Dinner macaroni loaf, buttered bread, butter, wa s, head lettuce, Rus: chocolate pie, coffee. Creols bean, 1elon pickl Aressi ate Pie Filling for One Pie (Serving 6) squares chocolate, Chox wo melted tablespoons flour, woon salt, 1 cup milk, 1 eup cgg yolks, 1 teaspoon 2-3 cup sugar. § 1-8 te water, 2 vanilla, Melt the part chocolate in th hoiler, nd w it . Add yolks Cook i1 filling lumping. It wi minutes to thicke and pour Cover with the per ad the ted, add x thorough- and egg of a double milk a double boiler until the thick and : i comes v fre ut vanilla shell Add the pi mibled Fges, Serving Four milk, or 2 min- |utes. Place the butter in a frying pan; when hot, add the egg mixture. 1"00‘\' very slowly and stir constant |1y until the mixture thickens and be- | comes creamy. Lightly pour onto a | serving platter and serve at once. YOUR HFALTH BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN Editor Journal of the American Medical Association and of Hy- geia, the Health Magazine Whea the marathon dancing craze attracted public attention a few months ago, people began to view with alarm the participants in these exhibitions, One physician who 102 participants in a contest | extended 1 hours has made vailable & record of his experi- nce in the Journal of the Indiana State Medical Assoclation. The dancers moved themselves about for 40 minutes and then observed that ~—Is any good derived from breathing exercises? A.—Breathing exercises properly conducted are pleas- ant. They are not, however, a “sure” road to health, and no breathing system guarantees treedom from disease. rest being for 20 minutes, re- the floor ly they were asleep J reached their train- ing quarte During the first ten ‘rlll)'s the chief complaints were sore feet, blisters, callouses, corns and bunions, although many of the dancers suffered with inflam. uations of the eyelids. ] Mental Attitude The first disturbance Lody of scrious ticed was a ch of the importance mno- | nge 1n the menta | state after ten days, when the con- tan's began to become hilari- onus, deprossed, or irritable. These nges in temperament were the result of continuous exhaustion. At such times the dancers scemed to be semi-conscious, some of them suffered with delusions or hallucinations and some of them wers so clouded mentally that v:w\- did not seem to know where the A young mental hanstio larious ternately, lusion th tained of il repute fost of veloped a f: sure with disturbance of the pulse. Howeve the h id not scem t manently disturbed in any Test of Fatig After all such dances nothing of value to scientific icine, conditions of severe fatigue occurring in industry or wsociated wita remarkable ath- cats provide a far better what the human constitu. 1 undergo and still recover. studies made in the past ffirm again and again the re- markble factors of safety that exict in the human body and the remendovs ability that it has to rome vere damage if given widow condition peychosis, nd developed & known e becoming hi- bursting into tears al- and developing the de- she was being main nst her will in a place the contestants d in the blood pre prove med- since : chan the fashion field, m to decide their t there's a difference m for the discerni liets and for the very yo for for boleros are ns are and its: AT suburban wear, sports utility, such <hopping < Finger tip jackets e the | Long coat for quarters coats tall woman's figur slenderize hospitas | AS HER HEAD IS DRESSED --- SO IS MILADY BY HENRI BENDEL | For NEA Service New York, Jan. 15—There is, more than mere vanity in the para- mount interest hats hold for wo- men. 'Ot course, since hats can make a woman pretty or unattractive, it is right that they should conccrn| the gentler sex. But fundamental- ly hats also deserve consideration because of the keystone position hold in style: Hats are, one might say, eters for the mode. They reflect changes more readily and easily than frocks, gowns, suits or coats. Colorful Hats—and Spring! When hats grow colorful it usu- | ally augurs a colorful spring for all | the reaim of women's wear. You| will remember that the ubiquitous | plain little felt of a few seasons ago preceded the sports suit uniform that practicaliy all women adopted. More recently, flaring brims, more adornment, a change in outline and | increasing detail in manpulation of | materials in hats came before the | intricate fashions in garments to- 1a Therefore, it is fitting that every- | one concerned with women's attire | |should watch D That s why { Palm Beach models hold such at- | tention, hecause their changes will | reflect changes all along the line. i Variety Marks Straws Variety of straws shown this | spring is the first noteworthy thing, | | probably indicating the increasing | wealth of new fabries for gowns and | ensembles. Bakou, ballibuntl, bang- | kok, Paris Meme, sisol, paillasson | and leghorn are scen in quanti though most of them are expensive | | straws. Many of them introduce | novelty versions of their straw, lacy | interpretations. Color is always im- portant in spring hats. A bright | | cherry red is seen often, soft rose | | shades are excellent. Chartreuse, | lac beige, off-whites and several | clear light greens are perhaps the best colors. Black hats are fewer. A fine sense of intricate orna- ntation that yet looks simple | distinguishes the best models of | spring. Brims that slash and turn | back upon their own crowns for | | decoration, giving unusual silhou- | ettes are good. Some hats show a | preference for wide or irregular |sides. Crowns risc slightly. Rib-| | bons, fine flowers, feather fancies, | pins and veils adorn spring hats, Now—the Scarf Hat! cwest hat this spring 1s | the ‘scarf hat. If one is old enough he will remember the old auto| veils that used to swathe the huge sailor and anchor it for that wild ride in the open automobile of tne | 1900's. New scarf hats are beau- [ tifully ftiting, tailor-made 1928 versions of this hat and veil com- | bination. Many of the little sc hats are of fine felt, svelt and vas becoming, with their matching arfs, their decoration as well as ccompanying scarf. To illustrate. | The a soft pastcl pink felt turban, cleverly cut with ir- regular long sides, is swathed in |a matching scarf of twisted chiffon | cloth which threads through a slit lin the right side of the hat and | falls across the shoulders, ing almost to the skirt's hem. Youth in This Hat Tllustrating the wider sides, one of which is apt to flare more than the other, is a Reboux creation of hurnt leghorn. 1Tt is slightly poke shaped, with its brim exceedingly short hoth front and back and its Spring hats introduce new straws and fabrics, new colors, new lines. hat, one of which is a soft pastcl pink felt turban intr fcately manipulated, with chiffon crepe swathing ity slipping through one side and fashioning a long scarf. features irregular sides, a folded brim and ribbon banding that tie burnt leghorn for a poke shaped hat with short front and back and wide sides. 1t is colorfully banded. extend- | (Upper right) in (Left) The very latest is the A natural Chinese bangkok turban the back. (lower) Reboux uses New Milford Woman State Senate Member Hartford, Conn., Jan. 15 (M—Miss Mary B. Weaver, who manages her own extensive farm, “Candlewood,” in New Milford, will be the on: woman senator in the Connecticut general assembly in the forthcom- on. Weaver s not, however, MARY ©. WEAVER new to political office. She has served threc times ip the state house of representatives, s well trained in legislative procedure and committee work, can debate on the floor and run a committee at public hearings. She summarizes her view of wom- en in politics thus: “Women are still pioneers in the political field. Nevertheless, they crown rounded in a youthful way. A zay little fan-shaped band of o, orange and yellow rain ribbon trims it. so complete- heart that many small. One Iy won woman's pring models are the newest is th more sprizhtly in the than most small hats down on these is a way woma Chinese s, which is folded brim cmet shape f black gra ri through the bri and ecrown tied in a it the whit bow at AT 5 place in the political vorld. Ale ready they have aided constructive legislation.” Excellent nowadays is the ensem- {ble that features brown and yellow in combination. Yellow blouses are especially good if they are decorated with polka dots that sprinkle orange or red among their brown dots. FLAPPER FANNY SAYS: ©1929, BY NEA SERVICE, INC. Tell a girl she is becoming, but don't tell her what. Take the road to success via the | pervenche blue, Lilo blue, maize, li- are slowly but surely taking fllvir]ll(‘r:\l«l Classified Ads.

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