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The Heart Story Love’s Awakening By Adele Garrison Aoel 1s Bustled Off to Bed so the Pamily Can Discuss His Father 1 bhad i g back a Yerit ofa Steadfast Womav thir 0 s ru the a house has moving. But she turned to mistress of to when she's trouble Mate,"” Noel husband thing toget Hr SmT, will get a glimmer all about. Then while without <ome which Harry H 5 In't let he father in a 0 Unlike I the Father. Son Harr ipor No Harry 1o the Rescue A DEED O] DARRKRNESS By Thornton W, Burgess o's Hound | 3 | These two thieves were used to locked doors Browr work TASTY \\l( g chicken a that demand a sood ‘Ara o fi every so oft came so strong ist had before he Brown's Boy | way over ir old scamp:” fau I sho . up. Well, Reddy )'l»x w a good run, m: then B come home all tired out a no harm done. It was along of the night t up to the h y. very quiet. mer B Bowser th i tha to go. & t bed Farm rd Bowser's ¢ er flavor e in the darkest ho two figures house. They Al was own's house, for ery aslecp in there. vou that that dog isn't around’®” spered one of these dark figures ir at stole were stil] said the other voice now, way over in the back part of the O!d Pasture. I know that tound's voice. 1 wouldn't have sug- gested trying for these hens here if T badn't been sure the dog wasx gone. Hello! The door is locked.” But the locked door made litti. difference. These two thieves used to locked doors. It took only a few moments to force it open When they entered the henhouse. one of them turned on a flashlight “My,” he whispered, “this is th best fot of hens we've found. This will be a good night's work. Where are the bags?” “Just outside.” replied thief. “I'll bring them in.” He stepped outside and brought In 1wo or three hig bags. “We'll have to work Qquickly,”' e There's his wer the other Easter expenses are mostly over- head. | ¢! | Bride— “Pretty nice job Mrs. Reoistered U. 8. Patent Office Hoover's Groom—*“Yeh, but not much future to it.” Fermr Glazed clay i What of science which treat phenomn na of visior Frozen water. . Sheltered place. . Quaking. To drink . Kimono sash Light brown. Conjunctior . Tiny golf slowiy mound Native nw . From wi ree d Tiocolate come? Values, . Walking stic} . What admiral became a the Philippine Tslands? . A stomach vird. . Very high mountain. . To stroke . Silkworm. . Devoured. Long narrow inlet. Ancient. hero at of a lightly, FLOOR KNEELER An old hot water bhottle, when flled with bran makes a splendid | kneeling pad. polishing floors. | portion | destruetive effect ! portant 1n commer: \nol when scrubbing or | BEHB‘/IENB / mum A R AT S Tk EE!BBEB (S[Lh IME] A IIIEB B [e]s] Bflfl%flflfi!fl % I‘.IBBN HIAITZEAlSTEZO L1 O] YOUR HEALTH MORRIS FISHBEIN Lditor rual of the American Medical Association and of Hygela, r Health Magazine. man about 30 ling a tar wagon Lway construc- 0us « iren opened e of the kettle of he heard what in ran about a tar-hoiler. of tar on the of fumes, the fumes to He breathed sas out of brea coming cut of the violently it time onvulsions [burn by |vere t | The il with | he has ted hemorrhages from the | acute inflam- , later a severe some disturb- ous system. Tar Cancer it has n described ' of some of the scri- conditio n follow pois Dr. Carey P. Mc voints out that road far is a ion of chemicals left after distiilation. When applicd repeatedly to the skin it causes irri- tation such as tar cancer. ¥ Because of the nature of the va rious chemicals that are invelved in the tar combination, almost every one of the systems of the human body may be affected. The benzene of the tar has a specially on the blood and ~sponsible for hemorrhages loped I & that e One of the substances most im- and in medi- cine derived from coal tar is phe- bolic acid. It is used as an antisep- | tic. When taken into the body it is extremely caustic. Tt will burn terned in a red, There's a Short Cut to Long Coats VARIED MODES IN FAVOR ON SMART PARK AVENUE land the short of the down Park avenue a Mrs. Robert H. (By BETSY SCHUYLER) NEA Service Writer York, March 30.—The spring problem is just that—the long and the short of it! Judging by Byine New long cout the fashion parade ¢ of these fair days, the chic woman may have her coat anywhere from her hips to her heels and its all right, socially and sartorially speaking. Small women like M. Becker, Jr.. Betty Bennett and a number Mrs. Sherburn Gerard, Hop of others | look exceedingly jaunty in the spring husband grabbed off.” ! suit that cuts its coat smartly at the | hipline or even shorter, After the poison enters the | ystem convulsions follow Q.—Is there any way to tell a| burn of the skin by gasoline from a| kerosene” Which is more | serious? A. It is generally burns from keroscne jan those that the vh» skin more believed that | are niore se { from gasoline and former are likely to blacken | than the latter. Memu for llle Fam:bi | (By Mrs. Alexander George) | Vary Breakfast Menus Breakfast menus should be varied. spring sometimes finds the family appetites a bit jaded. Serve lighter breakfast foods as wheat and rice. The cornmeal and oatmea) are energy producers and better |adapted to cold weather, Dinner Menu Rice Buttered Beets Bread Plum Jelly | Spring Salad in Gelatin Chilled Canned Pineapple Cocoanut Rocks Coffee Spanish Rice, Serving Six One-third cup bacon, diced, tablespoons chopped onions, @ 1-2 cups cooked rice, 1 teaspoon salt.| 1-4 teaspoon paprika, 1-4 teaspoon celary salt, 2 cups tomatoes. Place the bacon in a frying pan; when hot add and brown the onions 2nd rice. Add the rest of the in- gredients and pour into a buttered haking dish. Bake in a moderate oven for 25 minutes. | Spring Salad in Gelatin | One package lemon flavored pre- | pared gelatin mixture, 1 2-3 cups boiling water, 3 tablespoons lemon | juice, 1 teaspoon salt, 1 tablespoon | sugar, 1 cup diced celery, 1-2 cup| diced green peppers. 1-4 cup sliced | radishes, 1-4 cup pimento stuffed olive Pour the Spanish 3 water over the gelatin nixture and stir until it has dis- | solved. Add the lemon juice, salt and sugar. Mix thoroughly and cool. Add the rest of the ingred- ients and pour into a mold that has | en rinsed out of cold water. Set. Cocoanut Rocks One cup fat, 2 cups light brown sugar, 2 eggs. 1 teaspoon vanilla, 1| teagpoon lomon extract, 1 teaspoon | ginger, 1 teaspoon cinnamon, 3 1-2 | cups flour, 2 teaspoons baking pow- ‘up cocoanut. | m the fat and sugar for two minutes, Add the rest of the in- gredients and mix well. Break off small bits of the dough and place three inclies apart on greased- bak- ing sheets. Bake in a moderate | oven for 12 minutes, Fashion Plaque l Y | The highly favored bertha collas is shown on a flat crepe dress pat- yellow and orange Phenol is also known as tur., the tissues with which it comes ln'o‘flov\(r design for spring. | front. avenue now. {Irving Berlin |cut and fitted | wears | off-white chiffon i thereby puts the finishing touch on| | hand-blocked blouse | Mrs. | rose hrige | coat. | with a grey suit that is a charming | perfectly firm with her. Genevieve Clendenin has a very | chic oxford cloth suit with such a coat and an unusual skirt with a rounding section of pleats across the She wore a red telt hat and carried a red purse one day. an cx- {ceedingly happy combination for carly spring. When Styles Bloom flowers bloom along fhe 1 do not mean just the lovely window boxes of geraniums. ! daffs. crocuses and so on. Kather- ine Tod wears her orchids or gur- denlas every day I have scen her re- cently—just one or two which arc charming agginst her fox fur or the soft kasha of one of her new suits “loral patterns in fabrics are re- Many I ceiving the praise of being chosen this love- smart social registrites Cornelia Grant has ly little rose print blouse with & black suit. Mrs. Lewis Latham Clarke wore a very springlike fou- lard patterned in green. beige and black flowers and made with the most feminine ruffles here and ruf- fles there. The vogue for the jons grow apace. 1 wears off-white satin at the Club last week that was intri v to her slim iigure. | by <pring. fitted noticed fash- The beautiful simplicity fecet setting for the Mackay's lovely charn. Emma Cudahy is*another who fitted things perfectly. At Pierre’s the other days she worc a gorgeous black velvet cnsemble Witn princess lines to the coat and a sweet blous The cout was collared in lynx and she wore atop her costume a metal brocaded turban that added a regal note, 1t is noticeable that as costumecs grow more intricate and dee gloves run in the other dircction. | The authentic glove, the one every | | nine out of every ten is wearing, i3/ !the pull-on of delicate hue, with | I neither button nor decoration save | | stitching. Mrs. Robert M. Byrne, the former Marion Gould, one who wears fawn or other delicate | shades with all her street things and former K ll'v is her chic. Incidentally, she has a sweet new little suit of the “dre: maker” type, of pale grey kash with rounding neckline and one of those open-worked very fine swe blouses that tuck into the skirt. Where Red Dashes Navy blue and red outfits arc h.ulng a vogue. There's a dash of red im every Park avenue lunc! h"m\‘ lately. Mrs. James B. Clews has a | with a black that used down lines by scarlet unfinished worsted suit scarlet for its up and She emphasizes this boutonniere. | Satin blouses gicam royally under | many of the new little suits now. Sherburn M. Becker, Jr.. has a satin one with an un- usual rounding collar with the back line standing high like a Chinese Katherine T. Lapsley has a sweet blush lavender satin blouse a note with the darker background. “YOU MUST SLEEP” By Alice Judson Pcale “For the last three wecks Jano | has not dropped off to sicep until | | after 10 o'clock and she neve lecps | during her nap hour at all,” com- plained a troubled mother. *“I cannot understand it. Yam T never al- low her to miss her afternoon rest and she is put to bed at night by the clock. I tell her, ‘Jane, you must sleep,’ and she knows I mean it, but she is restiess and tosses about and talks to herself. I'm wor- Miss Emma Cudhay Bi Miss Genevicve Clendenin | | ried because 1 can sce she has been losing weight and that she ous, but 1 don't W hat possibly do about No one can will himself to sleep— the more he concentrates on trying to sleep the more wakeful he be- comes. When a child has for one reason or another developed the liabit of sleeplessness it does no ool to command sleep; indecd, if the p s given in tones worry and fear of part of mother than useless, he done in that the happy pro- irin can't is nerv- 1 caa it commiand 1o s which hetray failute 1l nurse, it is wor: The which sueh instance child is put to bed in frame of mind; that the wihol coss of going 1o bed he mads oughly pleasant and rea When he protests that he sleep, e should he told in which ecarries no su stion of con- corn that he doesn't have to, it will do him good just to lie still ¢ and that sleep will sure hine by and by, Such a cou relax the nervous tension child. e will he freed of the vy which his mother's distress coni- municated to him, and long will 1 Ablish Dis reputation as a good per. SHOULDER STRAPS Lvery frock and wcinlly ¢ ning gowns should ha liold shoulder st Iasten a short picer cry narrosw the color of the frock frock’s inside shonlder seam. Put a snap fastener 1o the other end. on or st can s is 1o sec and rest Iy come to of treatment will in the wor- i a voice | DELICIOUS PRUNES 1f you soak prunes 24 hours in cold water, then put them on in the same water and let them come to a boil, no more, they are big, juicy and delicious. ! A cake that sticks to the tin may be loosened by placing a tin over & | Lowl of boiling water or turning the cake upside down on the table and |placing a rag dipped in hot water over the bottom of the the pan. BIOOMER TAPE Tt you put a little loop of tape at the middle front of the waistbands of children's bloomers, it gives you something to hang them up by and also shows little ones at a glance which is front and which back. Becomes Chlef of little straps | together. | to the | In pinning a rug or anything clse | that is heavy to a line, throw it over the line and pin the two sides to- gether below the line, not to it. This prevents bulgings trom the pins. SLEEVE BOARDS With more elaborate styles com- in again, and especially with the there now is upon intri- one should either bring shaped sleeves hoard p| ice or purchase a inexpensive and ing emiphas cate sleeves, out th old from its hiding new one. The worth their price. cobibutin, o gowno featine -rhf, umv/ Alice C. Oshkosh, 19-year-old daughe ter of the late chief of the alenominees, Ernest Oshkosh, will (succeed her father as head of the Indian tribe. She is an academy graduate and is known among her |people, at Shawano, Wis., as Princess Kenoke, irin statral 10 md«mumdo 4 o the, e Zame_that ie prinkd. in. epetic Qi