Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, MAY 25, 1925, The Heart Story !Once Overs By C' D' Batchelot She's Mistrm Of va.nishing Al’t a b} . Of a Begletored U. 5. Patont Offing Love $ Awakenmg Steadfast Woman P Landscapes, Portraits, Copies of Old Masters, Grow Under the Needle of Mrs. By Adele Garrison AR #E L L p o L APRAL A g AT Enie George, Who Will Circle World Just to Learn New Stitch. Madge Tries to Clear the Way for “Un E n jealou ; ot o v y (BY JULIA BLANCHARD) Lilliaw's Happiness a ] 2 ey 2 | New York, May 25.—Most women | Despite Harry v» nderwood s al travel to far reaches for the ro- | o control the m L RO, : 2 ; ¢ & ¢ mance of new sights, But Mrs. | saw in hns eye 8 the 8 fear i ¥ F s T 3 5 Enie George has gone to Thibet, | knowledgement that 1l Fuess: ! ! as Rl 4 7 " g | Tahiti, Zamboango, South Africa, home in my query eralng. by 1l as my ow : " 3 3 : 3 4 / 5 Mexico's interior and other strange | reaction to the old romance butwees 1 s RELIT R 7. 4 e ? places just to lcarn fancy-wark | i 5 il 5 5 ! F stitches. 3 | illian, not / LR "/ ) N R g 8he really is a landscape and por- . nor fear ond % 4 L . o i trait artist who uses homespun ~ Remem- | o . /% 4 S linen for a canvas and needle and | back into 4 e h . ' : silk threads for her brushes and : paints. And in addition she can copy any antique piece of hand- | work you can show her in any| museum! | Her “pictures” of such famous English places as the Ann Hatha- | way cottage differ from paintings i i ) only in that they are apt to be even | d to all the AW, \ N more natural looking. For the | terial in L " \ \ N sheen of silk somehow secems to| 3 Y . | S catch the sun’s gleam. the flower's bloom and the brown cottage's * smooth surface in a most life-like | manner. | An American Exhibitiion N Hanging now at the Hotel Roose~‘ would { ; . velt are some of her pictures— | And Vo g A ! : : . | colorful ‘English gardens with gay n i | primroses, hawthron, daffodils, and | | other favorites: vistas of green flelds 2 | . {beyond an arched gate; flagstone | ! Yy ; ' 1 , 4 ! paths leading down old-fashioned i held ) Ar hild i \ = v gardens and other alluring views, him nd that, | i g 1 * Each is made, stittch by stitch, { with a fine needle and very fine silk rwood took the words jr ; . i (O " 7 thread. One garden uses 58 differ- t 4 ; i &l | ent greens, cach shading into the | next so skillfully that all one ndtices is the light and shadow of mid-af- ternoen. | For years stitchery has . been a | | hobby with Mrs, George. She is, so | far as is known, the only woman ir | America today who can make land- r scapes and portraits with a needle e that” T told o 3 Sl 2 and thread. There are about six or “And T'm going to ;A i @ b 7L 2 | seven such needle-women in Eng- which T think Lil \ ) ¢ ¢ = land, which, incidentally, is Mrs, Tam sure 2 . : George's home. But expert stitchery | you far more | . g o in too painstaking an art for many women to take up professionally or | for an avocation. | From the “Old Master: > , “1 inherited my love of stitchery said loyally, S re | v A refit e Mrs. George tells one in her clipped life when T 1 ! English tones. “My father was an and T rewarded her by ra erry 5 5 5 o E ) 2 g % hell Ui Jestiine ont vhon: ato| A Commuting Henpeck—“Will the wife believe this one?’ gmbroidered. Thouzh T have never | wire, Fnic George reproducing & museum piece to upholster an ane 2 S & . tique wing-chal Below, the Ann Hathaway cottage, onc of her silk pictures hrolgbt ghe KIQ homa.: e < 2 kind of garments T could embroider | Foinesded Hen t) doilies, antimacassars, pin-cushions, S S i B S Printed Chiffon 55 =™~ WEATHER CHANGES (CHIVALRY STUL t o : vervice, Inc.) | t cinated me. 8o T ook course af or . _ 0 2 T opulatich i S| AFFECT HEALTH VERY MUCH ALIVE L L] 86-year-old woman who was| Will Be One of Modes |trained when a child by Helhronner, | For the Fall, e o an et Bear Distinct Relation to Vari- Even in Political Life, Says sible back before Victorla's reign for D | £ < By HAZEL REAVIS ° !introducing so much church em-| 564568 | M Cli (Associaied Press leashion Editor.) | broidery. This old lady taught me | 0us D 185 1 Paris, May 25 (®—Light weight |t0 sew portraits and landscapes.” s jprinted chiffons may take the place | Mrs. George not only took the MY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN | Women holding any sort of johs {of flowered chiffons for fall. They | equivalent to a college course in | —— |today, and especially women in {have a place of prominence in the | Stitchery, but post graduate work as | djior Journal of the American |public office, must work as human utumn showings and some | Well. \; Medical Association and of Hy- |beings and not as women, [ houses are predicting that they will | = r")'"";:':‘:l\n';l' “:":""“:"jl ot gela, the Health Magazine. {to Genevieve Cline, the m,p']_\;)u.?’ f\:vr‘ln'v‘»;umm_l‘r, : . [o e o0 Biake AL gle o o Almost ceryone ia famillar with ;m;‘ c\:tmngn apriser of \4\11!]\ ey ¢ new velvets apepar in sma o 3 3 PO g : o who has been nominated by Presi- lxéom‘fl(nrul patterns r;n{:ch like the |and 50 on, as well as do the 30 fif- |DCOPle who art humas baremeters. i ] By the aches and pains in their |dent Coolidge to the bench of the desig nd . | ferent Jacobean stitches, ¥ v - 3 bl | dosen in gold work, various ap-|® Change in the weather is coming, | This appointment would mako Miss s st o ! Ivet | Plique ones, all the Florentine cla For many years the relationships L“‘:°J‘g° “;‘-“A“"d only woman o ! e most common use for velvel s b - ] P of o . | eral judge in Amer . [is in coats,-mada on straight lines, | the Crewell and others which arc |0 Changes in tho weather to dis. |era) Judge in Amerlea. | witk fithout a collar of fur, |called mechanical. Bhe knows sey. ©aSe bave attracted the attention of o it cir Bos "';‘ng“‘x' ;O:lg”;'l ::M“;“ 0_3652; efd hiindrad Aiflerent oaLet medical and other sciéntists. In a i;i siisglny ‘gno::txmmcnt L::‘dhf:lh)" : e finger length s kets | © ' iy o he says.. “We et it, but in a ey rolled over and | - arc also shown. Af one house a| Stitchery always has been an ava. |Tecent emsay Sie Tegoard. OREN | \Rarant way. We metat by winsing : | #ray and white printed velvet juck. | Cation with Mre. George, ~though |noted for i oints out that the in. | the Fame fairly and squarcly aui top : ct i3 worn with a pleated black sat. | IOW she has come here to “paint” |16l diseane, POIS out WAL TAE PG Gaking for special favors just ey hwd f ver e 3 ‘m skirt. The print almost matches | With ncedle and thread some of . I serate t br i America’s millionaire homes, She |Of disease has not even yet attract. | because we are women. il Boare v 4 ':;lt“‘:'{':;‘ SeMlm ot e s “;I"Iw," show you her collection of €d the attention that it deserves. | “We must e ¢ feather turban worn With the | o " Of a little picture of a| He has spent mych of his time 4n | Women in public life arc bheing costume. L cottage. she will say, “I did that on | India where for m®hy years the gov- | Watched with more scrutiny than Printed velvet ovening wraps are | S0ifage, she WIlb say, U did that on | 0 e Kept adequate records |any man on any job cver received. | 5 Our success or our failure is the - represe er Epe of rain fall, humidity and tempera- o grawinlhelR e o success or failure of all women $n ; 0 Here's an jdeal warm weather | rom ir winter puzzle. 1t has no unkeyed letters and b s e i i smena| T o most of the words are short and [DIOILTLIAIRIMMICIGIRIATW] | Printed velvet ovening wraps are asked Cubby i a very small yoiee |0 e - 'U; o olLTe[AJAL e MIRIUTTR] | ~twneitily shown in the designer L Syind 5 i ; ations | {OJLIDWHOTITEITISITTOTE] s two Kinds of printd velvet n | Ndia. still another o trip to Green- | ture. Ssceaitn: Fiol public life. We must not cndorse AR SR Horizontal Now, you will either | sed in brewing m out, or pull them m evening wrap with a shoulder | Mo traces a definite relatfonship |Women for public oftics merely be- Wer Side Amusement length cape. The wrap proper is of : 6o e cause they are women. We must che s a tween pncumonia and climate, beige velvet printed with a con- | SU(CHery, as a matter of fact, has |1 v i Haenl ; insist that all women for whom we L been music, t#® drama, reading and | finding a definitely lower rate of sationalized vose pattern in black. | v 0 R G TTEI, T g fon pneumonia in the warmer areas|vote are as ell qualiticd for jub- |1t has a scarf collar of coral colored |y Nyg George, She can get as|with infrequent changes in tempera- [lic office as any man. i chiffon printed in pale gray. § it o . " " » g 'Women on 11ke I - | excited over hearing of a stitch she ture. His explanation is simple, p d Lo e OS ev; | does not know as a collector can| The poor Imdian lives in a one- |Criticlsm —and sug by Tanner's vesscl [ral dresses In which printed velvel | over an old master, nedly discovered. | room hut and goes out in the cold |Loth men and women with a little Fluid rock {is used In the manner of flowered | Cugyji pery has meant so much to |early morning to wash in the [better grace than many of 'vlrm R T 5l ehiffon for full -skirts of more or |, S SR RS AT T e oben: e allows lis cotton loin|do. Living and working is neither less draped line. These dresses are| oo day be a lost art,” she says. cloth to dry on Lim. The dry, 3 man’s nor a woman's job. We all T 7 |lonk in the back. One model has & |.rhig machine age has almost ob- iness of the utmospherc leads to|must play the game and do the job i out, H Ao M { the Famil puff of velvet around tlle hips. a¢|literated it. The rush leaves one |rapid evaporation with great cool. | together. h He licked cpurat {lVlenus of the Family| lishtweight velvet is used at|ngyime tor quiet refiection, mecdlc {ing, all of the conditions belng mhny pluces for dreanes’ Whoeh ‘acs s,y ) !thus most favorable to producing - VOut I Tious O BAR SGRiEm “But T should like to say & word |chills. Nurses Plan to Unhulled strawberries, | before it is too latte about the! Most people carry with them Burges: 8. To fe v g gy exha, Sbalad Segks, Siotian peace and satisfaction that comes constantly the germs of colds, of 3 1 t ast, milk, coffec | British Women Voters | o™ £0od needlework. Tt is well | pneumonia and of influenza in| tt e ropiem Seging Portion of the mouti | Lunche fce and cheese fon- , worth the years of effort one puts their throats, The development of Pl SIS Rl e e T D these diseases is favored by the —_— lemonad Union of Women Voters, brought 4 ents rovht ’ % 2 Dinner—Broiled salmon steaks, |into being through the extension of Fringed%Edges e [lowering of the pa Memorial Question Coming { i i |ance by chills. 1. Work of ¢ i temon butter, scalloped potatoes, | the parliamentary franchise to wom- -4 | Sir leonard Rogers points out T = . Snbpale I el billiered s . pinapple spider|en at the ugo of 21 vears, has) Latest Trimming Styles | that much the same thing happens Up at Convention. . Wise cake, milk. coffes choscn as its first president the aris, May- 25 UP—Fraye | : s St Whera . To observe The Juncheon ice and | Baro Itavensdale, daughter of “Pmmmm‘) are maderfa)al?mg:gflc<“:_r:}::mdrj| :;nnu!ori:‘g,‘xl»‘e heat| Louisville, Ky, May 25 (P-—The Stone cheese baked wit an excel- (the late Marquis Cupzon by his first |,0 ypoir yee on suits and -pon'\pf the day to see the pyramids question of disposing of the $43,000 . Murdered t dish for small children. It s | wife, who was Mary Lelter of Wash- |y oatcrs by one of the biggest dress- ;:M other objects of interest are |collected by American nurses for & To scatter hay nourishing and vasy to digest asington, D. C making houscs. The frayed finish 18 |jiaple fo get chills when return [memorial to Jane A, Delano, wure Social ir vell as atiractive to look at. Most| Lady Ravensdale, who is a peer- | paptjcuarly adaptable to asperic, & |ing after sunset, at the time ‘of |time head of the American Red children are extremely sitive to ess in her own right, having BuC-|youon curtaced, rather loosely Wov- nfi rapid fall in the temperature, [CToss nursing service, will be Grinding t looks of their food as well as *d to her father's barony, i8 an | "o torial which ravels casily. L,‘;dn;_ sch circumstances pneu- settled at the biennial convention Solitary to the neatnass of iis service {enthusiastic supporter of the mod- | 400 wool fs treated in the e [ st 38 nonisn: of the American Nurses' associ®« Discolor Pineapple Spider ( {ern feminist movement. |wway. HEREEL = Cholera Fatalities tion here Junc 4 to 9. Digit of the 1 Three and one-half tublespoons —— ! In India cholera carrics off an| The fund was established as & b 4 scup w1 suga One sumptuous bridal set is of average Of 375,000 persons @ memorial to the 291 American -4 gup granul | exquisite white flat crepe, with ety illness lasting only |nUrses who gave their lives during Bilp Hain 1o Joon salt a-|Italian cut work done in delicate | e e Tconard Tiogers |the World War, as well as to Miss poon baking powder, 1-4 cup water, | pink, orchid. green and yellow. o j;\o\n(t: D“"_ ¥ha s conditions avs ID“::&“Q. i3 ; teaspoon pistachio flavoring ex- | Savbralie dh ~ woms our major propositions have tract, 1 small fresh pincapple Fashi Pl (U Ore amive cholera epi. |Poen made by different groups of small can grated pineapple, 4 table- | asnion aque jareas for exte nurses, as being suitable methods ics than in others. J # sponsored by Miss Mabel T. Board« Mot 1 1-2 tablespoons butter in | e BBaoHdl 10 ; A / cholera epidemics according s e scven or clghi-inch iron fryig \ { previous deficient rain fall, favor- | Mal sfftcr(l.ir) of the Red 11{051:‘,' Sprinkle brown sugar evenly 7 | hbte absolute humidity, and the oc- PIans for the construction o r surface and add fresh shredded | {4 A rrence of large pilgrimages involy- | Jane Delano room in the new Red sincapple. PPlace over a low heat to o e passage of huge crowds | Cross building known as the “Me- rtially melt the sugar. Canned ||| I ough the aeeas in which cholera | morial to the Women of the World wpple is not added until later. L it s Dol War,” now being erccted. e tis il f il : ’ | The religious pilsrimages or| ies Wosrdman's plan specified ind water, Mix and sift flour, | India serve to #pread diseasé as do | USINE $30,000 for building the r 1l buking powder and stir into g # atherings The menace |4nd the remainder of the fund for . Sprinkle chopped nuts over | ¢ all "“'f_emfi; e fact that the pil- | Urnishing it Some members of le and pour ovet batter. :“:"l: p’m through areas where se- the Jane A, Delano committec ob- oun Bake on the aiddle grate of a med- ere infectious disease is common, [ J°¢164 o1 1\1;‘.;”;;?‘;::.1: u "';01‘,';:;: cllation 1tely hot oven for thirty minutes, ; t o sl s e gl 2 & ort rafn out. upside-down on a largs e ’“':"““"‘f‘:“:::’: ks of what was a greater memorial. jaamors = : Other proposals recommended use SUMMER CLEANING nad « with or without a 1ting ready for sumuier 1 garnish of whipped eream |of the fund for building a monue Whon canned fruit is used it is| || | Western Reserve Girls ment in the national park in Washe cad over the partially melted su- 2 ington .for needy nurses or scholare ust before the batter is poured | || P Seem Quite mnedph!pn, or for an endowment, the ner | | Cleveland, May 25 —WWh numer- | interest to be used for mecting (Copyriz 28, NEA Service, Ine) \ ous eastern schools installing smok- | foreign nursing appeals for finane Folnd i ' ;m. rooms for co-eds comes the [cials assistanee. STARD | word from Western Reserve Unver- Ciisa sity that feminine students there do| To turn a belt right sifs out th | the N v pla a vere: Smart for daytime wear s this Alrplanes are dangerous. More wWot favor a smoking room. A vote|that you have stitched on the floors i | pan ater and kept at an even necklace of large silver links, one of and more people are getting married | taken on the subject resulted in # | wrong side, pin a eafety pin on . istron tempera Jane Regay's latest in them. 2 to 1 opinion against ft. i one end and use it as a bodkin > Ul them. out my- rd similar to an ostr shaped figure ore a lot of whimpering and tussing by pu out one 1 e. Wi which, as it 2 N could