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{Love’s Awakening mmm mw-u Hy Adele Garrisem Bicky’s Insane Jealousy of Verk- .— & Sign That Nis Oid Love for Wer Is Flaming Anew™ Wenders Dicky himself was ashamed of the sneer with which he had answered Lillian's assertion that I had not wished to go with Phillip Veritzen te the country inn for tea. Even threugh my flaming anger I realized that as he followed the venomous words with a quick contrite: “Serry, Lil, 1 don’t mean to doubt your word, of course.” A ‘Never mind about me,” Lillan retorted. *°Me! I make no never winds in this." It's your reaction to| what Madge did that's important. Now, I give you my word that Madge went to explain things te Philip Veritzen not of her own voli- tion, solely at my urging, and that their presenc: at the tearoom was simply because they could talk bet- ter there than in a car. I expect you to believe me and to calm down. You can fight the question out witn Madge later if you wish, when you're in a saner mood. But just now you're roing to see her ulone only over my dead body.” Dicky bent to his steering wheel, averting his eyes from both of us. “There is nothing more to be said, evidently,” he commented with shrug. "I always bow to your de- cisions, Lillian. You know that. And—I accept your explanation, of course.” He sent the car along the delve- way and around the corner of the house, while Lillian leaned back in the seat and gave a deep sigh.” Was Dicky Jealous' “That's the worst run-in I've had in many a year,” she said, ““and 1 don't like it. But when he gets in one of those jealous tantrums of hia nething but rough stuff goes. On: thing you oughat to hug to your heart, old dear—if jealousy is a proof of love you don't need to worry about the state of your apouse’'s affections for the present at least.” 8he did not look at me as she spoke, and I got the impression that she was carefully avoiding my eyes. 1 was glad indeed of her thoughtfuluess — if such it were— for 1 feared that she would see in my crimson face and my excited eyes how deeply her appaxently casual remark had atirred me. Was it possible that one reason for Dicky's jealous aversion to Philip Veritzen was a revival of his old temptestuous feeling for me? In all my troubled consideration of the estrangement between my husband and me, I had not considered this" poasibility. HOW PETER WAS FOOLED By Thornton W. Burgess Few folks have eyes that really see; ‘Things are not what they seem te be, ~—OIld Mother Nature It is always provoking to want to know a thing and try in vain to find it out. Peter knew that the must have a nest, because, though he often saw Dipper, he never saw Mrs. Grebe with him. Semetimes he saw Mrs. Grebe, but she was always alone. He never knew which one it was that he saw wntil he asked, all of which was very amusing to the Grebes. But at last one day he found a way of dis- tinguishing between them. He no- ticed that there was a feather miss- ing from Mrs. Grebe's right wing. After that he could always tell one frem the other. Peter tried watching Mrs., Greba 10 see where she went. She always went in the same direction and Pe- ter couldn’t follow her. Have you guessed what direction that was? It was down. Whenever she bade Peter goodby, she dived and that was the last Peter saw of her. He knew that #he swam under water, but when she finally came up it was always where Peter couldn't see her. Pe- ter had become so discouraged that he had about made up his mind that he wouldn't look any more for that home of the Grebes. Then one morning, quite by chance, he dis- covered Mrs. Grebe. Peter had coms down into the swamp at the head of the Bmiling Pool during the night. You know Peter likes to travel about &t night. At daybreak Peter was aitting under some ferns close to the place where the Laughing Brook enters the Smiling Pool. He was looking about idly and suddenly he made a discovery. Sitting on one of the many little mounds of deal rushes and weeds he discovercd one of the Grebes. He felt sure it was Mrs. Grebe and in this he was right “My goodness” thought Petey “‘can that be her nest?”" No wonde; I couldn’t find 1t! I wonder if it really is. 11l scare her and sce what *he’ll do. It that is her nest and there are any eggs in it, I ought to be able to mee them from here. So| #uddenly Peter thumped as only Pe ter can, Instantly Mrs, Grebe was off that nest and disappeared under | vater. There had heen a couple of auicker movements of her head as #he went off, hut that was all. Peter then stretched up as high | could, but he could see no « as &&s. In deed, he could sce nothing that look- | ed like & nest. It was just a nass of dead reeds and grass matted 10- gether. There were several ofher similar masses scattered about. No. it didn't look at all like a nest. Pe ter was disapopinted. Still, he felt tkat it must be the nest “I wish I liked the water hetier thought Peter. “If 1 liked the hetter 1 wouldn't mind out there to find out. But I don'i like the water, so | guess 1'll ju #tay here. If that is Mre. Gre nest she will Bome back to it sooner watce Kwimming he | t | chiffon I had known that he w of my employe: to his pride; and the ego of posses. sion which makes so many men ob: tions from other men. ward estrangement in were living. Rarely barrier which his awful me at had seemed a promise of | nearer each other when world again, but it was a promise unfulfilled, and I knew—subcon- sciously at least—that Dicky's busi- ness partnership with Edith Fair- fax and my professional association factors in keeping us apart. Returning Love Another soul-racking shook me, and with a sudden little of the car and jumped to the ground. “Excuse me,” I said lamely. “I've attended to before I left. “Don’'t mind me,” she said with & cheerful banality which ateadied me as I knew she had intended do- ing. 1 flew through the kitchen and up Katie airs, leav ing my little maid wide-eyed at my baste. But I intended taking no chance of meeting Dicky. Secure in my own room, for Mary's com- plete convalescence had restored it to me, I bolted my door behind me, and threw myself breathlessly into a chair. For I was face to face with some- [thing in my own soul which was racking me ar might some medieval instrument of torture. Liluan's chance comment—or was it chance? —1 was not sure—had brought m: not only the possibility that Dicky's old affection for me might be flam- ing agatn, but another still more disturbing. X had found—not happiness but 4 certain calmness, a contentptent, a freeom from worry, in the pact which my husband and T were keeping. Was It possible that I was deceiving myself, that underneath what I had thought to be only the embers of my affection for him, my old tempestuous passion for him was threatening to burst forth into flam: (Continued Tomorrow) Copyright, 1929, Newspaper Feature 8ervice, Inc. - vl[uv “I wish I liked the water better,” thought Peter or later. Of course, she may have been just sitting on that place.” 8o Peter settled himself to wait in | patience. He could hear Redwing the Blackbird. He always did lk> to listen to the song of Redwing. Presently Redwing came flying along and alighted on that little mound that Mrs. Grebe had been sitting on. He stood there for a few moments, after which he flew over to where Mrs, Redwing was sitting on her nest in the alders, not f from where Peter was sitting. “That settles it," said Peter with a migh. “If that had been Mrs, Grebe's nest with eggs in it, Red- wing wouldn't have sat there so un- concerned. He didn’t see anything unusual there and there is nothing the matter with Redwing's eves. Oh, dear, T was sure ¥ had found thal nest: Well, 1 zuess I'll go home to the dear Ol Briar-patch.” That 18 where Peter made a mis- ake. He should have remained right where he was, He would have seen aomething " Fashion Pla;;ue g A rhinestone choker has two small rings at fhe side of the throat through which fo catch two large handkerchiefs. This fash- ion is extremely new and smart for evening, sealous but I had laid it ject to their wives receiving even ionecuous and cenventional atten- And 1 had rigidly disciplined myself to accept as something probably unchangeable the terms of outward amity but in- which we had my hus- band attempted to break down the distrust of the time of Grace Draper's suicide had raised between us. There | drawing Harry Underwood had been restored to our with Philip Veritzen were the main thought exclamation, 1 threw open the door forgotten something I should have hall to the Mazuma, you're in bad. Snapshooting the Millennium. By C.D. Ba!che]qt I think you're a first-class crook and I beg {0 be excused from acting as your attorney.” TITITI AT a/ ANEEE/ SRR /AN ANEEEE A || 7] | Illl%flll | 4| | 7 ddEEEER”7A0N7d8 dEEER”74REEd”7R A | [ 1111 HORIZONTAL Who invented the progess ot sterilizing milk? Opposite of bottom. Packs as a ship. What type of letter is “a” ‘Which is the most melancholic sounding note in the acale? Reverential fear. Picture taking machine. Images of heathen gods. Hybrids between horses and assen, What is any great divisions surface with climate, called? Central portions of apples. Mother. Part of verh to be. © brag. Dried grass used for fodder. To exist. In what city in Montana is the State School of Mines? To happen well or ill. Challenges. A heavenly body having a leng nebulous tail. Warbles. Eiver, Abbreviation for “Saint.” Product gathered by bees, Fragile. To scatter as hay. A malicious satire. VERTICAL one of the five of the ecarth’s respect to the Like, Commonplace, Drags along. Female sheep. You and me. Ponderous volumes. Is in debt. Vor each. Who was the ruler of England during Shakespeare’s hey- day Male servant. What French nobleman served in America during the Revo- lutionary War? To love exceedingly Oath, Unit. Water filled trenches surround- ing castles. Homes for doves. Female horses. Corpulent. Curcd thigh of a hog. Rundled Shieets of paper folded onee. To eat. To appland Putrefaction, Branch Fourth scale Tehold note in the minsical 38 READ HERALD (;Lksfil! CIATr o[l MNRIATRIS [w] AIR]1 TARAIWILBECAIS [¢] [Plels|TRAT] [epue]vieN] Sielcpgenoggse]v] YOUR HEALTH RY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN Editor Journal of the American Medical Association and of Hy- gela, the Health Magazine “Tn the middle ages the most dread discase for mankind in general was smallpox. So gommon was the con- dition, that the unusual person in the community was the one without the pits and marks of amallpox upon his face, Toduy fhe person who carrics about such scars is a monument to the ignorance and stupidity of his parents who refused to permit him to be vaccinated. nallpox s a preventable disease. Sin |the work of Edward Jenner, it {has heen definitely established |that vaccination confers protec- tion in the vast majority of cases. Lssentially, vaccination is a means of giving the person a mild atiack of the disorder. An ob- servation made by a dairymaid to Edward Jenner. namely, that sha could not get smllpox because she had had cowpox, was the rea- son for his undertaking to develop inoculation against the discase, Because man of the early mid- dle ages did not have any iden as 10 how this discase might be spread from one person to another and because he feared the diseasc 0 greatly, he developed strange notions as to the power of the dis- sase to strike in an unusual man- !ner; hence the notion developed |that smallpox might come through | the air | In the middte century, after of the nineteenth Pasteur had made his fundamental discovery, scien tis's hegan 1o doubt that discase cAN he transmitted by the air route. There was a fime when it thought that most of, the in- fections diseases conid pass to man by this method from man Now adays it is generally recognized that few diseases are spread in this way, nd there is even begin- ning to be some doubt that moist droplets expelled from the nose and throat will carry with them the germa of disease, sufficient in number to affect other persons. In the interest of safety against tuberculosis, pneumonia and other diseases affecting the lunga particularly it is best that people continue to cover up each cough and sneeze. however. When the telephone was in- vented, it constituted for the ma- jority of mankind as great a mys- t as did amallpox. Hence it was not at all ‘strange ‘that the ignorant should believe that dis- ease could be transmitted by talk- ing over the telephone wire. As long as there are people willing to believe in telepathy, in the evil eye, in witcheraft, and in charms of one type or another, there will be people willing to be- lieve that disease is caused by the evil spirit who can fly by magic over vast distances to strike those who are not protected by the proper charma. MAKING THINGS By Alice Judson Peale We live in an age in which the Processes on which we depend for our way ot life are obscured by the evep increasing complexity of our social organization. The city child, especialy, sees only the finished product. It is quite poa- wible for him to grow up with no experienc> whatever of work with materials. In 80 doing he misses one of the authentic delights of human exiatence. Many achools have a ecertain amount of craft work which tries to fill this need. But school hours are short, and two or, perhaps, three hours a week spent at the work shop or “studio” do not begin to meet the child's need for this sort of outlet, With the approaching end of the #chool year we begin fo make sum. mer plans with our children. If we are staying at home most of the summer we should see to it that our 1 boy and girl have some genuine in- tereat which they can pursue during the vacation period. A work bench at which one can build anything from a hird house to a boat ix, of course, a fine thing. but tools and work hench are not cheap. When such equipment is be- yond our means we can gather to- Kether at much less cost the equip- men for other types of work. “ Rheets of copper, brasa, pewter and German silver are available and the tools required to work them are simple. Boys and girls alike find pleasure in zeeing the flat metal turn into bowls and trays and plates and a hundred other things under the blows of wooden mallets. Weav- ing on small, inexpensive loomis, pot- tery (if there is & kiln nearby where the pieces may be fired) basktetry, the making of bleck prints on paper or cloth, all are simple crafts which can be carried en within the con- fines of the ordinary hom?. Children whe want to do this sort of thing probably can find out all they nieed to know from the crafts tea r at school. FISH MoLp Avprarance in foode means much in summer. An inexpensive Gsh mold ‘er jellied fish salads and a pretty flower mold for des. serte are well worth their Inex- pensive price. It WontBeLongNow Till No &gu!%mfiwfhmenfim The longer lines decrecd by Paris couturiers are born e out Above B (Left) An evening gown of creme moire, by Louisebonlanger, has touches of pink and pale gree n in the bouffant petal effect at the back. The corsage of velvet pansies has matching edges. (Right) Red a' nd white piaid on a supple moire with unusual collae and cuffs of white organdie meke up a dressy Poiret f rock for afternoon Paris, May 22.—Never was there such a grave matter or discussion where women gather together as the question of the longer skirt. It is extraordinary what a world of con- traversy this detail has caused in fashion circles and apparently the matter is not yet settled. We have clung so hard and so0 long te the short skirt in the be- lief that it imparted to us all an air of perpetual youth that it took a man of daring like Jean Patou to «ndeavor to change the order of things. He, like & few others of the leading couturieys, had ac- custoined women for several seg- sons to longer lines, but until now thesze efforts had always been con- fined to evening dresses and even then, the legs from just below the knee were seen through the sheer materials used. In his present col- lection, Jean Patou frankly low- ers the hem of all but his sports dresses withoutas much as a word |, of warning and, what ix more, his collection has been voted one of the outstanding ones of the sea- 2on! . Short Skirt Doomed? ‘Women, however, are born imi- tators — in their dress, at all events, Let one or two of them who are recognized as leaders of fashion adopt the “between the knee and ankle” length and it will not be long before ve all follow suit. Tt would not be an impos- sibe thing, either, to hear the short skirt spoken of with scorn next season. The fact remains that normally long skirt is ‘un- doubtedly more becoming to the majority of us, however much we resent peing told so. Another feature of the new fashions that is causing much comment is the form-fitting prin- cess style are showing. Women see in this style an omen in the form of a walst-restricting corset, and refuse to be compelled to wear anything #0 old-fashioned. As a matter of fact, most Frenchwomen wear some kind of support, even the slimmest, and that is all the new fashions would ever need. There are many women who were not very alim but who managed to hide the fact. thanks to the low waist and fullness of dresses of a few seasons ago. But the new swathed hipline and formfitting bodices beiray boedy and women are torn between the desire 1o possess one of those delightfully new frocks, and the necessity of correcting their sil- houette, Foresaw the Made Poiret's collection, after many seasons of oddness, appear thif year 1o be extremely wearable be- cayse he just continued creating models on a theme which now has been adapted by everyone else. He siresses the princess line also and shows some unusual sleeve treal- ments, but very few of his models could be termed eccentric. Poir- et's skirts are, of course, just a lit- tle longer than anyone else’s, but that is part of their ol’ixlluhl\' Menus for the Family By ,\lu. Alexander orge Tomate Sauce with Fish Dinner Menu Stuffed fish fillets, tomato sauce, creamed potatoes and peax, bread. currant jelly, asparagus salad may- onnaise orange ple, coffee. Stiffed Fish Fillets, Serving Four 1 1-2 pounds fillets, 2-3 teaspoon alt, 1-4 teaspoon paprika, 1 cup bread crumbs, 3 tablespoons butter, meilted, 1 tablerpoons chopped on- ion 2 tablespoons chopped parsley, 1 exs. Wipe the fillets with cloth. Sprinkle with the salt and paprika. Mix the rest of the in- gredients and spread on the fillets. toll up and tie in place with a White cord. Place in a small baking pan and add 1-4 inch of water. Bake in A moderate oven for 30 minutes. Untie the cords and arranze the rolls on a merving platier. Garnisn with parsley. Tomate Sawce 2 cups tomatoes, 1-2 cup wa- a damp 11- that all the couturiers | ever curve of the | ter, 2 slices of onions, 2 bay leaves, 4 whole cloves, 1-4 teaspoon sugar, 3 tablespoons butter, 3 tablespoons flour, 1-2 teaspoon salt, 1-4 tea- spoon papr Cook slowly in a covered pan for 20 minutes the tomatoes, wate onions, bay leaves, close and sugar. Strain into the butter which has| been mixed with the flour. Add the rest of the ingredients and cook for 2 minutes. Serve with the fish. If yeliow, ecru or cream color is desired for curtains or rugs, add 1 tablespoon of yellow ochre to each gallon of water uséd for the rinsing. | ] More ochre can be added if a deep- | er shade is desired. ‘} Menu for Bridge Tea | Fruit salad, cream cheese sand- wiches, strawberry sherbet, coffee, LIGHT DARNING If you darn at night, insert a| nall electric spot light for & darning stool and yow can see per- pectly what yow'are dojng. FLAPPER FANNY SAYS: le being men’s wages, can't blame husbands “Teanis Days Are Here” Pattern 1709 New RBritain Herald 15¢ I Pattern An extremely smart example of wports frock for tennis, golf or re- sort wear, is shown in Design 1709. The deeply pointed voke sections of bodice and skirt have slimming, length giving qualities welcomed by every smart woman. The several skirt pleats insure casy width and freedom, and make for slender lines. Printed percale, linen, shantung, ponge or rayon are suit- able fabrics for this model as they launder well and are always fresh and crisp in appearance. May be obtain=d only in sizes 14, 16, 18, 20, 34, 36 and Rize 16 requires 21, var 40 inches wide. ‘This model is easy to make. No dressmaking experience is neces- sary . Each pattern comes to you with simple and exact instructions, including yardage for every size. A pertect fit is guaranteed. Patterns will be delivered upon re- ceipt of FIFTEEN CENTS (15c) in coins carefully wrapped or stamps. Be sure fo write plainly voir NAME, ADDRESS. STYLE NUMBER and S8IZE wanted. material, Our NEW SPRING and SUMMER IFASHION ROOK will be sent upon receipt of TEN CENTS in coin. Ad- dAress all mail and orders to He Pattern Department, 343 W. street, New York city. fon, on has a back, cream chiffon, of all three making triple bows in the front of a V neck. a white crepe de chine blouse, | oration, of a skirt yoke fitted to the belt line and then bloused with slight fullness above. for |ored hip-line blouses may opposed to women getting actly the waistline or slightly above or below. TRIPLE COLLAR A rose and créhm figured chifs a pale grey background, triple cape collar in the of plain rose, grey and with one-inch ties 'A New Line of Chic Tailored hip-lines are the halle mark of chic in new lingerie blouss that do not tuck in. Jean Patou fi with te hand-drawn work for dece until it has the same effect ntric; The belt on these new tail be at ex.