New Britain Herald Newspaper, June 8, 1928, Page 24

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, JUNE 8, 1928. By C. D. Batchelor Bright Colors For the Gray Days Society Dons Red—Flowered Chiffons Get Head Start on Summer — White Satin for Evening Wear. The Heart Story of a Steadfast Woman Once Overs Reglatored U. 8. Patont Otties SRS Love’s Awakening By Adele Garrison Clouds Gather Over Two Families | cvor Marioy wished of me, it would That Seemed to Be Ncar Final Happiness. I atood still in the center of Dicky's room, with the sound of the door he had slammed still sounding in my ears. So this was the result of our first difference of opinion since we had pledge “pick up the pieces” of our sk ed happiness, and try to tune eu jangled bells into harmony' A mut tered oath, a slammed door, hot anger in Dickys heart—and in niine ? I was not sure wrath, tears or laughter chief emotion swaying me, but that al present in my tter- were > one ex- perienced would have t me to for hours with a nervons head- e. But years of marr with a man of Dicky's temperament and temper—are an effective shock absorber, and my fir sentment at his outrageous introduction of Philip Veritz nam in our disagrecment me into mirth at the recollection of his childish outburst almost before the sound of anotier door—un Outer one —clos told me t had flung himself out ercise his anger in some form of violent activity 1 was and wondered whether his horss or his motor car would as the outlet for his anger. A sudden mirths 1 was in Lis room ¢ venting bis taking sanctuar sent me hurrying out of it was no one in sight in the ha t as 1 passed the door of Marion's voom, I saw that it was slightly ajar, and 1 had gone hut w steps beyond it whe of Lillian's youug to me “Auntie Madge minute for me “Any number of the turning back imme 1 welcomed the intorruption a hen a Vs as issiie rged itselt Dicky of Lious: serve that b daughter Have each other to whether | was the | » were lion 1 of b o I her s me turity, help me to drive from my mind the wemory of the unpleasant scene in which T had been a participant. | She drew me into her room with | hands which 1 discovered at once cold and shaking. 1 harply at her and saw illed with pain and bewilderment ) warning my tocsin sounded coneciousness, and as suddenly, defensively alert. in must he careful to say no word o could Harry Underwood. 11 must not antagonize by defending him too warmly. 1 had the curious sense of facing stranger, as with mannerisms un- Iy ler mother's she drew ward a air, put me into it and down herself in one facing me. this strong cmotion Eiving face and eyes a pathetic ma- id not he the laughing ho, during the years hip with her mother, dear 10 me as 1f she own blood Madge,” ther o On the erry f my friend ad been as re my Aunti little cat <he h in her voi ayed how near she ou do love me, don’ “Véry much, Marion,™ rgan with + which be- was to tears, you?" 1 returned “that mother does not know, “1 want to tell you a secret,”” ahe 1 on, “and give vou something for me until I come back rom school.” “Do you mean,” it 1= a 1 asked slowmly, seeret which your and which to keep from lLier?” r she burst into stormy n me e 0t my mother first she gobbed. “She's man's wife. He comes before vervhody.” 938, Newspaper Service, Ine Copyright HIS NOSID By Thornton W. Burgess Shadow the Weasel was running along down the bank of the Laugh- ing Brook. He was keeping a watch- ful eye out for Billy Mink. Al'hough they are cousins, t} the hest of friends. Shadow knew that Billy Mink regarded the 1 Brook us his special hunt round. He resents having others hunt there. You see, Billy is both a hunter and a fisherman. Shadow the Weascl is one most independent little people in world. He doesn’t ¢ bright eyes for anyhody. is without fear. That s beca has such wonderful confidenc himself. He believes that nobody can catch him, so why should he be afraid? Now, Shadow fisherman. H¢ and then, but h catch one as Bil ever, he is an hunter, and he some one twic Hunting hadn't this morning. He Teeter the Sandpipe discovered him and f fact, this was ti had seen. S the edge which the Big 1 Laughing Brook this way and that the ground, Hound runs whe the trafl of Rind vas using Nis ¢ found him 1 rouldn’t that nos Shadow the ground Rabbit's 1 10 himseclr can Just make That means 1} here now. It time to try to re's the irush has that fellow voice so not ughing of the the the Weasel isn't o a little fish now nnot dive in and How - =zood Mink can. isn't afro had ind n to ru to lowser the find Shadow has % e & nos There sat \'v tree, where t the simply wor turn quickl Longbills lips. Ther three time taste those might mich v “They ou My, my. Woodcork know of more. T been feedin be caren 1. On Longbill i bills will trail of or When Shadow he makes a rea! he is a persistent fellow easily discouraged. He down to make it a husincss now inces of ¢ 1 He f <ettling of “Are you looking for some onme?” | finding the Woodcock family. sald a volce over his head He was using that wonderful nose of his. Yes, siree, he was using that wonderful nose of his ( Boy E Copyright, 1928, T. W. The next sto Interfere Burgess.) lite of Rumania Is Now Learning to Cook Lucharest, toumania, June § P Npecial classes in cookery are be- held for Roumaniam society imen at the Girls Cooking school 18 dies tradition | about the | an ancient “Ladies never know ilgarities of cooking.” th lie - popularity of nong the elite in the fact that as the sponsorship Iy, Queen Mari Americs wledg considered *vulgar” by but that, on the con- s for ovation the royal fan ng her visit to a praetical kn not the queen the United | black | drapes | ips and falling the hiem line from the e are sleeve is With a low oparture The The lose q flare collar 10d with looked that her lovely color was gone, and her cyes ite my lo\iug sympathy for her, a muffled deep W 1 It mnions meant an appeal to for sympathy in her silent rebel- against her stepfather's return, interpret as eriti- | i “Farmer Brown's | o | | ! ) i LT “What, mother—no bustle?” | | | | | | n This completely { puzzle is the kind that most fans like. It contains worde in common use, of short and medium length. Horfzontal Wholly absorbed. Not bright Exclamation of sorrow. Opinion Frozen water. Hockey on horschick. To classify. Quantity. Rad Silkworm, Wicer. To piece out Gives up. Finished, Grief. To observe More ashen in color The back or contrary. Age, i Banal i::s Wing part of a {39 Carbonated water. it To ‘XP"(‘(DI‘;ly FForetoken. Tiny golf device To conceal Grit Part Paradise, Vertical Upright portion of a stair To love excessively. Hazard. To mak To ox Tmages To apportion To imitatc ad a great dv Similar Furnished wit To fo air violently To thread Female sheep. Porn. Medium-sized sofa Mexican dollars, Fragrant smell, Burdened. Maturer, Swift. To glide Devoure interlocking [AIRIMI TOINTV JOINTAINTA| | (SINETATKIVLTTIOINS L] t |Menus of the Family (BY SISTER MARY) Breakfast—Shreded fresh apple, cereal cooked with {cream, crisp broiled bacon, toast, milk coffee. | Luncheon—Checse bage and tomato s | pop-overs, cherry sponge, milk, tea. Dinner—Buked sturgeon with dressing, shoe-string potatoes, heet greens, cottuge cheese, rhubarh and raisin pie, milk, coffer. | Sturgeon is a large salt water fish that is at its best during June and July. Choose a picce from the | thick part of the fish and parhoil {until the flesh shows signs of heing | tender. Then cut deep gashes into the fish and fill with a well sea-, soned bread dressing. Bake with | frequent basting until tender. | Cherry Sponge Two cups stoned cherries, 1 cup boiling water, 1 cup sugar, 2 tabld- | spoons granulated g 3 egg whites, 1 tablespoon jice, | few grains salt, 1-2 walnut meat Soften gelatine in 1-2 cup cold water, Simmer cherries in boiling water and sugar until cherries are tender but not broken. Drain from | syrup and dissolve gelatine fn hot | syrup. Add lemon juice and let| cool. ‘When mixture hegins to thicken fold in the whites of eggs heatten until stiff and dry with a; | few grains of =alt. Add cherries and turn into a mold to chill and become firm. Turn out of mold and | serve sprinkled with nuts and a | cance made by beating the yolks of the eggs until thick and lemon colored and gradually beating in one-half cup powdered sugar and 1-2 vup powdered sugar and 1-2 cup whipping cream. Flavor sauce with | 1-4 teaspoon vanilla. (Copyright. 1928, NEA Service, Inc.) i | 28 fig; aven fondue, d, whole wheat | cah- 1 1 of very to br a nd type 1 of affection for Ak lemon ek chopped | hottoms. nose | € " through the an chestnut Conjunction Feminine pronoun. i ine Lingerie Shows : Wide Use of Applique | Paris (P Applications of con- trasting silk and Russian drawn work #re two of the most fashion- able trimmings for lingerie. Wash satin is used on crepe de chine and crepe de chine on triple voile or zeorgette crepe. Some of the silk | sherts show whole borders of ap- pliqued satin on crepe de chine with pillow covers to match. ED FROCKS. 1f silk frocks are rolled in tow- cls immediately after rinsing M\d{ ron when still slightly damp they! look like new. on top, bottom and in between. LAUNDEI [ Hardes (By | on ! been converted by most by old for the baby ¢ Dave been any | 1ation which cuities and give him an opportunity to thrive advantages of { time, if the | and physicians now tificial medical re portant for the haby in all = observed, | alize | e Aust "feeding a nightmare for | seientious mother at that fime." d wise to reduce the glven to babies {dren {less mixed diet should be carefully |uberunt with vouth, self assurance | {quarded ags | ) | same ling. held iof rest and sleep and the dally bath | | supplemented freshing sponi “the | open | brings | violet {ana this is |~:rnuv|y of the bon i from | using alcohiol. “What, Grace—no petticoat?" Summer Season Hardk E?i Babes Period for New Arrival. Public. Health Service) June S.-—Summer, dest period, has science into the cial of the seasons, been brought the U. 8 Washington Baby's. This has about through the long study by scientific { investigators of the requirements gradual spread of thus gained. discases and infancy and the the knowlcdge of As a result of this work. many ideas which made life difficult ving the hot weather largely discarded and ideas have gained circu- minimize these diffi- new on the season’s natural abundant sunlight h air. demonstrated, among other t almost all mothers can their babies, at least for & proper effort is made, rarcly advise ar- feeding except for grave ns “Although breast-feeding is im- asons ic Health Serviee officials have “every mother should re- that it is doubly important in summer. Many of the ch sties of the season-—heat, flies, “te—tend to artificial the con- make During the hot tors have lea ason, the inves- cd, it is usually mount of food and even older chil- king a more or who are ainst overcating. they advise, the child should be At the infant given time d little pine- | Plenty of cool Loiled water to drink | fand not bundled in heavy clothing tic of the modern girl. { with the t mporary rising habits of fecding, bath- eping and airing also are to be important, with plenty by ing. ate climates,” they s n virtually live fn the in summer. Summer far richer supply of ultra- than any other season, vital to the healthy as well as other an occasional re- “Tn mod 15 of the bod RASS STAINS, ns may be removed colored materials by G most Fashion Plaque A new version of the decorative T'se three towels, {heel appears in chiffon hose in self- |toned checks. ac- | Mrs. George B. St. George Easiest Way is Happiest Way| Kewpie Originator Tells of Her Success. | “The things that you do with the | greatest ease often are the ones that | have the greatest appeal,” says Rose | O'Neill, originator of the famous| kewpies. | “You may make tremendous ef- fort at something you want to do | and neither have the same success| ner the same enjoyment that you {have when accomplishment is e: Rose O'Neill apparently took her philosophy from her own life. The public knows her best as the mother of kewpies, Fewer people know her as a scrious artist who ex- hibits in Paria and New Yor¥k, the' {author of short stories, plays and| verse and a novel not yet off the | press as well as a musiclan and| composer. | “Make your living.the easiest way | you can,” she advised. “That will! | give you leisure for the things that| matter terribly to you. For, after! all, the security is what one must have to make the most of life.” Modern Man's Wife Ought To Be Companion as Well Birmingham, Ala. (®—The strict- | ly domestic wife is no longer a ne- cessity, so far as man is concerned. believes Miss Lucille litaker, na- |tional secretary of the Girls’ Re- serve, who asserts the modern hus- { band demands a wife who is more of a companion than a housekeep- | er. | Delicatessens, small apartments, {and time-saving household devices | have caused the need of the strict- ly domestic wife to disappear,” sh: | explains, “and the girl who becomes a wife can spend her time as a com- ypanion to her husband and as a jchum to her children.” | Give modern giris a chance and i they will become excellent wives and mothers. she says. i “The modern girl Miss Litaker continues. is delightful,” “She is ex- {and abilify and will make a much | better wife and mother than her | shrinking dependent sister. “Wholesomeness s a characteris- False mod- sty went out long hefore short skirts came in and the girl of today |is entirely lacking in sex conscious- | ness.” i OATMEAL COUKIES. When making oatmeal cookies or muftins, heat the milk used in the mixture before adding it. This gives a finer texture to the product. Identify all garments away in moth-proof bags by print. ing the names on like those used on felly glasses. AER.U. 8. PAY.OPF. 1920 BY WEA SERVICE, INC. You can’t blame a girl for 100k- |ing down on a man who looks up to her, .\lr‘ Charles Fellowes Gordon (BY BETSY SCHUYLER) New York, June $.—It's “horses, ain for Belmont suces horses. horses.” now that started. Needless to say, {t's ‘“smart clothes™ also. For the Belmont races always have had the double attraction of well-groomed horses running and well groomed women watching. 1 note with great isfaction, that the old rainy day psychology is hit in the head by modern woman. | “What of it?" they seem to say, | when the skies are gray as they were for the opening day—and pro- ceed to dress their gayest as & challenge. A rainy day scems a| clarion call for red hats, vivid| green costumes, bright clear blue | and so on. . Many Silver Buttons One day Mrs. Morgan Belmont wore a smart light grey kasha tweed ensemble with a seven-eighths coat and a chic felt and straw hat in a slightly darker tone. The suit's trimming was silver buttons, rows of them marching up both the skirt, overblouse and coat. Her sandals had charming laced leather straps | over the ankles and she wore a long double?skin pointed fox scarf that was almost a cape. A vivid sight was Mrs. Charles Fellowes Gordon in a stunning red flat crepe costume of undeniably Parisian creation, I's basque bod- ice snuggled down over a very full circular skirt that, with all its full- ness, was sveltly smooth over the hips. Her red toque had the same moulded fecling about it that the | dress had. She wore a bunch of tiny pink flowers at the point of the V neck. Modernistic Accessories Blue and tan of any moft tone fs | a hard combination to beat, it oc- jcurred to me, when T passed Mrs. George B. St. George. Her petite i figure looked charming in a cape coat of very fine navy twill over a soft beige georgette frock. Her blue felt hat had a ballibuntl brim | of beige. Her purse was quite lh-; most stunning of her accessories, a | modernistic affair with geometric stripes of several tonea of tan and navy blue, Bridesmaids nowadays look as it it were a garden party they were attending, rather than a wedding. Ilorence Clark Guernsey started a irevolution in the rainbow bridal { party idea when all of her brides maids wore the same delecttable yellow. Their rufficd tulle frocks dipped in the back, of course, and their big, floppy blue hats suggested a garden scene. Summery at the Ritz Weather persits in staying cold, but step on the Ritz roof one even- ing and you will think it is mid- summer, for flowered chiffons seem to be the accepted costuming for such an evening. There is nothing jand with Mrs. Morgan Belmont | Teachers Sho;— Better Health Average for This Class Seems Superior. BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN Editor Journal of the American Medical Association and of Hy- geia, the Health Magazine The occupation of teaching ia not especially deleterious to good health. The opinion is voiced by I, H. Goldberger, who, as & nt di- rector of educational hygiene of the board of education of New York city has served some 33,000 publia school teachers for a period of 15 years. The health of achool teachers is superlor to that of Industrial work- ers and clerical groups. Sehool teachers average 3.3 days per teacher away from work becaus of sickness as compared with an average of 5.9 days per persom fo! {those engaged in industry and cl ieal work. The death rate for schoel teack ers average 3.6 per thousand at all ages compared with a rate of 13:8 for the whode population, Their death rate then is one of the beast. It has been taken for granted that school teachers were likely ta suffer more with coughs and colde nervous disturbances than were those in other occupa- tions. Hcwever, it has been found thay they do not actuslly have rafi as high as people In other employments evén for these dis~ cases. It was felt, for instance, that the work of teaching brought on nerve strain because of its demand on the supply of energy and the mnecessity, of constant watchfulness. On the other hand, the person who teaches usually likes the worlk {and this means a great deal in the |avoidance of nerve strain. Nowss !days health education forms a con« ]nldcrabls part of every school proe gram. Therefore teachers are ene couraged to watch their own health land to excrcise a mort of healthful leadership among the pu; | In modern school buildings school |teachers have the advantyges of ime proved systems of ventilation, heat« ing and lighting, rest rooms, lunch rooms, gymnasiums and swimming pools. % | They have opportunity to apply the knowledge of diet and hygiene that they themselves must pass om to the children. The medical exami= | nation of the children are a stime | ulus to the teachers to have an ane more summery on earth than a soft- Nual physical examination as & pro« ly toned flowered chiffon. -~ Gene. | tection against insidious disability. vievg Clendenin wore one in about| In a final word Doctor Golde you pack; small stickers, five different soft greens, with scarves, tiers and everything that could float and look summery, Black point d'esprit and black tulle are mext in favor for evening attire, Mary Brown Warburton wears six diamond bracclets and a neckline of diamonds with a new diaphonous black lace creation she has. Decorative Bugs Bugs are to be seen as a further | Indication of the summer season— bugs as decorations, not pests. Mrs. | Robert Livingston Gerry has a huge metal spider crawling up a brown | felt toque. Mrs. Kenneth O'Brien | wears an altogether too life-like | chameleon on her rose colored | tweed coat with its deep collar of | red fox. i T often think it is a smart woman who wears white when evenings grow soft and lustrous under the June moon. Lately I have noticed several women who bear me out. Mrs. Frank C. Henderson wore a shimmering white gown. with scin- tillating trimminge, to the party Mrs. Edward T. Stotesbury gave last week at the Ritz. Mra. Jay Coogan emphasized the smartness of an { | | | | | wearing a white ermine cape over it. TAUNDRY BAG. An ideal laundry bag to hang on the closet door is the one made like la flg g fitted over a clothes han- | ger, with a slit down the front for | putting the clothes in. elaborately cut white satin gown by | berger outlines 12 health rules for {teachcrs which will serve every, |person in the community. | Simple setting-up exercises upow | arising. Regulation of the bowels, without |laxatives. | Balanced diet and | .time to eat lefsurely in a quiet, restful place. Provide a healthful school envire | onment. Moments of relaxation to relieve fatigue. Daily exercise in the open air. Diversion in some hobby. Eiglit hours or more of sléep N a well ventilated room. Full use of the week-end and other holidays. Avoldance of after-school tions and evening work. BSemiannual visit to a good dene tist. A health examination by a eome petent physician at least once & year. (Copyright, 1928, NEA Service, Inc.)} posie RESTFUL PICTURES. Quiet pictures, like water or | country scenes, are restful to sick folks when hung by their beds for them to look at. Action pletures may tire them. FEW FILOWERS. A single flower or several vades |with a single flower each often i better for a sick room with quaati- |ties of blooms that make the atr |too heavy with fragrance

Other pages from this issue: