New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 21, 1928, Page 4

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Love’s Awakening Liltian Decidcs to Comsult Underwood Before luviting the Brixtous to the Farm Lillian’s facial muscles Harry | “pool their lives. | she, 3 tion of her life would deal stiffened | jppy Underwood's jealousy. ever o elightly at my question, but | she gave no other indication of be- ing at all affected by it. Yet I knew that it had jarred her into a re- suid mendacious; | ot something which membrance of something novel in |touch, and which Marion’s father her experience. For years she had |id not handle. I belicve he will see been absolutely a free agent, re- reason on that point, sponsibl te no one for even the You're an incurable optimist,” courtesy of an explanation of her | she told me, smiling. “And I'm not actions. My query concerning Har: Underwood, though put as mildly as possible to her attention the fact aving accepted his contrition and brought him back into her Lfe again, he, as her hus- | band, ought to bave some explana- tion of the advent of the Brixtons Madge, but T have father's estate would have would vring her nothing but The Heart Story Steadfast Woman By Adele Garrison amasamnaasannnl I wondered how who had resented Robert Sav- | arin’s archaic attempt at domina- with “1 can understand his feeling,” 1 “but this scems |something different. It is restitution you need not ! so sure that I want him te sec rea- son or that I want to cither. It's an uwful thing to say of a dead man, the feeling that nything Marion received from her some- thing evil clinging to it, and that f¢ bad before her letter was sent out. | luck." She waited for a long minute be- | “It's not my optimism but your fore she answered e, and when | superstition which needs a physte 1 reterted. she did speak, 1t was with the il pancy which she so often uses cover up her deeper feelings. “Thanks for reminding me T have | v a perfoctly good husband down in to you m antime, “But there's no our squabbling about it. As soon consult Harry and have a DIy to your letter, lot me know. In i T'll drop a word to the froat vyard,” she id. “Of Kati, and she'll see that things are course, T ought to tell him out | freshened up all around, so that it this hefore writing to the Brixtons, they do come we won't have to but honestly, I hate to. He won't | have one of Mother Graham's clean- make any fuss, of coursc—but I |ing upheavals.” know that he'll be boiling inside. | “Bettor not tip the old dear off He's rabid on the subject of—Tom. |then, until the morning the guests Fven if T wanted to use any of— lurrive,” Lillian advised. “Another Tom’s—money, I couldn't with thing I must get off my mind is Harry sround. He's the most inde- | that shopping trip for Marion, How pendent crank on earth, you know It was an eftort to keep from smiling at her naive explanation of the reason for her husband's aver- sion to her using for Marion any of the money the child's father had left her, The least conceited of wo- men, Lillian cculd not see that her husband in the belated but flaming | [about it? Couid you possibly depend I ment.r t “Who could resist that?” 1 told her. on your taste and a lure “I'm sure | train.” tenderness of a love revived was in- | Lillian supplemented. “Heaven de- tensely jealous, not only of the liv- [liver me from a man on a shopping ing Robert Suavarin whom Lillian | trip. However, neither of them had loved, but of the dead Tom icould he coaxed into going, so we're Morton who had Killed his wife's af- | safe. There they are now! I hear jon for him in the first year of [them on the stairs, Old Phil must their narriag have frightencc himself off the It wus @ phase of Harry Under- | rescrvation, Let me hide Brixton's woold's nature which I was sure ‘h‘m she thrust it deep into Lillian never had suspected owing ) desk—*"before they come in. I to the comradely, almost unsenti- [to choose very carefully the mental nature of the pact they had | when I tell Harry about this.” made when th wo derelicts” Lilllan expressed it, had decided to | I ature Serviee, Ine, go in with us tomorrow morning? I do so Jude- like I can 2o. We'll plan to take that early “Leaving our husbands at home,” her want time Copyright, 1925, Newspaper Foolish Young Whitey f TS ’::’ e VIQ”)A’,]L;‘ 1 to wait on table, isn’t he?” “Oh! Mother, how lovely you look! And Pop’s all fixed up IN WALTZ TIME o | Ithe length of the disease, the con- |stancy of the high preasure and the Icirculation of the blood in the heart muscle itself, | Hardening of the arteries of the believe bears some | causative relationship to essential |high blood pressure, since such changes in the coronary blood ves- sels were found most frequently. They found that about 15 per cent of deaths in persons over 60 years of age are duc to primary hyperten- Ision, Men ure more ltkely to be | troubled with the condition than are | women. The available cvidence indicates | strongly that high blood pressure is { hereditary and familial, but, as 8 theart itself they By Thornton W. ¥ nointed out by the Minnesota inves- The weak of will cannot s | tigators, many more studies are Where'er you turn you'll | | needed hefore the exact relationships Old Mother Na can be determined. gy 1t is notable, morover, that over- Whitey. the half-grown son of | weight tends to be associated with Peter Rabbit, whose coat, strangely | high blood pressuure and that the cnough, was white a8 the driven high blood pressure tends to come now, was like other young Rubbits down with a reduction in welght, and most other young folks, for On the other hand, many obese peo- that miatter. He thought that at ple do not have high blood premsure, times he knew more than his and the disease not infrequently oc- mother, Yes, sir, that is what b lcurs in those who are underwelght. thougiit. Lut young people are very (Copyright 1928, NEA Bervice, Inc.) apt to think that way. They have | to learn by expericnce, Experience | | . s thee best of all teachers, but the | ave Orelgn :};\,.\‘U:b\"o\'f“.\u-.' el okl The question for No. 1 horizontal R E[S[ulr]c]ENTT]. pretty bigh somietine Ihere was the little house, just nsl“r"{M i itizon 1((?"'\-?1’1:3“ Ve | PO IN[E BZAIEIR] [E Cultu[e He[e 1 believe,” said v Iking he had left it ey i OGN ED T[E[R]S to himself, “that Mother ot TR e e i v ; 1JalR[s e Ny [cE@DO[EMi ] ! simply foolishly afraid. As long as ok DREUEIGE denn orizontal | 5 13 % there is no one home in that little | What will happen 1o n NOWZ 1 1 On what large river is the city | LS@pgav| [ple RGIPI0] (M. Hmmg Gives Advice house 1 foind on edge of the | What, oh what, will happen to me | 1+ B0 \EE aTEe . IRV IDBASIAIL [E]STHA[SP to U. S. Foster-Children. Old Tiviar-patch, there is no reason | 10V L “"‘-‘*!""l‘(:" s ""‘";' {oe| 6 Into what sea does the Yukon |[EIMZABIE LT 1€ AT T 1 shouldn’t help mysell o (he | A1l 1 guess she knew what she was ks n than that Jittle hite I found | Just then he heard & sound out- d Digger of coal. NIOIRIEIS @@sSolL]i [n]e ','rm'f.;',l“m; 0,“1’:, (‘l‘-m"rl? :;,‘,0::’:; outside. A house caw't hurt any- | Si4° I was a light thump, He rec- | 14, peint of compass Y IEAINIE IDFZE ID]6[E S e tial hody. OF course not! Anyway, it | cgnized it instantly. 1t was the sl |15 To govour, s|t[efe[R]alele]s ihal hon sdopied thom-do. pariia e 5 e B ayment for the advantages they re- won't do uny harm (o hive a look.” | hal of his mother, Little Mrs. Peter | 17, Swine. XDl So Whitek watched bis chance | 1hbit. As best he could, Whitey |15, Threc-toed sloth o IR S g e and when Mrs. Peter wasn't around | thumped a reply from inside the |15, Label, Amictican, Mrs, Johanties Hpvine, he sole 0ver to the forbidden place., | (Fap. Then Mrs. Peter knew what |21, Dogma. H alth Hi ; S Uy i ; There was the hittle house just as | lad happened. She knew she had |23, Part of verb to be | t he had left it. Insi bR A rived too late. There was no way |24, Neuter pronoun | € nts pieces 1rrot, just Biad legt |0 which she could open that trap, [26. At the present time. = | theih. He couldn’t s that any- | 'houzh she did her best. Finally she |27, Abbreviation for “street.” FISHBEIN Bod® s i heon ther A= hid o give up, but she stayed close |25, To cover as with an arch. | couldn’t ser 1} sthing had beop | DY thumping occasionally to let |29, Stain, of the American | 10! I He tried fo see the door | Whitey know that she hadn't de- |31, Upon, ' on and of Hygeia, | ifls: inother said sMeht. catoll s | erted himm; SaTiishor. | ie Health Magazine | 1 hopy He st (Copyrizht, 1925, by T. W. Burgess) | 34. Variant of “a.” ir studies of the bodies of | ad with nose o The next story: “Whitey Has a [36. To put on 120 persons who had died with the 3 d looked | New Home.™ Stepped with a measurcd tread. levmptoms of cssential high blood wit Mother e — elf. pressure, pathologists in the Univers 1w g him. No one was in S o . Paid publicity. ity of Minnesota paid special atten- until the Menus of [he Famlly 43. Cot. tion to the condition of the heart 3 £ 44. Dower property. 1 of the blood vessels. ! BY SINTER MARY 46. Correlative of either. Their o s convineed them {47 Residences. that person this condition ar Brea t Orange juice, wrn.'(l""’“ :“m:" l"‘"»'::'v'o-*"‘v" adapted 10 f)ikuly 1o have an enlarged heart, > N, French toast, syrup cred c. particulirly one portion of the heart L L e R L i e s “Crater Luke | ot ; Sl ,,‘,‘,“,’.,..l e i il . JaBL tevke AIANE. Batisry wheon — Vegetable hash, let- National Park e hearts of many patients with | founder of the Swedish Children's tants him, | tuce sandwich, peanut cookies, choc- . {high blood pressure however, and Orchestra, sald, another piece, | olate egg 3 Vertical {only enlarged. The size of | . Hoving believed it so heart- tter than th Dinner oiled fish steaks, | | eyt famous Malian poet wrate |the belicved to depend on lily, in. fact, that she has founded Whitey was no | Sh#dow potatocs, buked eggplant, “The Divine Comedy " i | 28 Swedish clubs throughout Amer- ous. He boldly | "W Dett and cheese salad, Mme| 5 pegton. i ica that study and produce Swedish vl took the third | S ety cake, milk, coffee, 3. Negative. | folk songs and dances. ot and cheese salad 15 an un-| ¢ @ employ | “By preserving the Swedlsh tra- “How | USUAlly attractive salad and s ideal| 5 o throb. | dition, wearing Swedish costumes, As long | With a fish dinner. 7. To eject. and cultivating ~ Swedish customs Tiia L T Bect and Cheese Salad 8, %o saip and manners, at times, the Swed- nothing under| Twelve ting beets, 1 large packs| o within ish-Americans really enrich their the sun cream i Dars 1 cun |10 Close. own lives and thus, in turn, have No t piuces of earrot ir, 1-3 cup sugar, 6 whole: |11 Who was the composer of the |more to give America,” she ex- that W | 2 inches stick cinnamon “Peer Gynt Suite?" | Mained. mall a cnn small picees, % 1easpoon | 15, Three and seven. “Think how rich American life on 1) pnnaise, hearts of lettuce. bR e s e B | | would be if all the nationalities rse, Cook bects until tender, plun, Medieval tur | that go into the melting pot here Farme e Doy into cold water and slip skins, Com- Ordins of conventional | would preserve some of the beau- pecially to o © vin . spives and salt | To make amends. ty, culture and color of their na- back, s nd bring point. Pour Light brown. (ve lands! oot b oiling 1ot over beets and let stand | was fastened 1o 1 cool. CRill in the vinegar. big pices 1t oy | Minco parsiey very fine. Make finy Tt piecos Wit o balls of cream eheege and roll like miere Dites, e renrhod. o U half of them in mineed parsicy, Put set Nls teeth o ity te | 1I00e bects, one plain cheese ball veache ] ont and ot his teoth g g | a0 one parsiey covered cheese ball Right they and 1 A on each salid plate covered with | happened’ Whiter <udds wes of Tettuee hearts, Garnish | Bimself in the dark. Tier L Lwith mavonnaise and serve at one loor Tiud closed?! T ek 1a: Mie; Poter had told i, STRAIGHT WRAP ppen Bad happened. A ‘ wear over evening frocks Tl ever < delicate little flowered ! croin that Wt cont, eut straight line and How Whit ish that he juarters length, of rosy oheved bis mother. | posies on a black background. A Mineral spring. In what state ix the largest siw- mill in the world? oft mass. . To scatter hay Into what sea river” empty ? Smiell, A Spanish or Mexican dolia 2% Cupola of a bulilding. does the “Rhine 11. Departs. | 43, To implore i 15, Sun. 45, Myself. ’ o 50, Scventh note th scale LG U S PAT.OMF. R T e © 1923 0Y NeA SERVICE, WE. READ HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS| A swiumer docsn’t need a hunt- FOR BEST RESULTS er's license to get ducks. “It secms to crs who come to America owe something. Jt i not right that they should shed all responsibility and forget the generations of dif- ferent culture that have gone into the making of them. By fostering the race's culture, in addition to me that foreign- the American culture, ‘they can lielp discharge the obligation they lave towards their adopted coun- try.” ATTACHED PANELS A cheery Ellzabeth crepe after- noon frock has organ pleated pan- longer than the hemline, on cach side. it Woman Declares. Makes Crime Easier, This “Prohibition has magnified, rather than diminished, the work of sav ing girls,” known as the “Angel of Chinatow because of her rescue work there, against white slavery, “dens of iniquity.” dope mostly under 17, In Greenwich Village. “With the passing of the saloon and the establishment of ‘clubs’ and speakeasies, the seats of crime and the meeting places for criminals have shifted and become harder to find. owadays it is comparatively simple to ask a girl to the theater, an after-theater supper and then take her to one of the disreputable night clubs, “Chinatown may have been clean- ed up. But Greenwich Village is fill- ed with speakeasiest that, in their Vi are as vicious as the old dens n on the Bowery. “All this makes it easier for girls to be lured from the path they want to follow and harder to help them back onto it again. Prohibition is largely responsible for the increased number of girls who need saving.” Mntemi—t;lluts Built For Alaskan Indians Cordova. Alaska, July 21 ,(@— Through the efforts of missionary workers the Copper river Indians have at last given tribal consent that their women he enabled to bring children into the world under the shelter of a roof. For centurfes, winter or summer, mother-to-be of the tribe have crept into the wilder- ness and glven birth to their off- spring in snowdrifts, forests or swamps. At a recent mass meeting the grand council decided that women may go outside their cabins or stay inside, as they dcsire, for the ad- vent of children. Missionaries have assisted in the construction of ma- rooms on their one-room houseg. The older women, however, shake their heads at the ways of the younger generation and scoff at the “weak- ness” and extravagance of the young women. Nome young women of the tribe persist in the ancient tradition, considering it a concession of weak-{ ness to depart from the ways of their mothers. HAT KERCHIEFS Kerchlefs have gone up in the world. A new black picot hat has a Kerchief tied around it, knotted in front, of grey silk, striped in Dblack, eream and green. ORNAMENT have a jeweled ornament for the right shoulder of an evening gown. But it should be gorgeously rich, perhaps a dia- mond flower. * should ju} 'TABLE CUSHIONS Hard floor cushions, four or five inches thick, for use under the table and in materlals and colors 'to harmonize with the rug are a permissible comfort, g Sl | TIERE | The tiered skirts popularity 1s cvineed by a goft pale pink satin frock that has a skirt yoke achiey- «d by three tiers of material, SKIRTS Paris, July 21. M—Plain yellow and cominbations of yellow are fav- ored. Agnes shows a yellow silk sweater with a gold thread design. The flowers on the belt and ties from the collar are of yellow erepe de chine. Each flower has a center of strass. The akirt is of deep yel- low, shading toward orange, and For almost a quarter of a century Rose Livingston has waged a battle and have had part in saving 4,000 girls, in Chinatown, the Brooklyn Navy Yard area, and later “Night clubs, speakeasies and pro- hibition now hinder the work of sav. ing girls,”” Miss Livingston charged. ternity huts and some of the na- | tives are constructing separate bed- | says Rose Livingston, Bemice Zitenfield 5 hows how to float. BY ZITENFIELD TWINS Floating is another thing the swimmer must know. It is excclicnt all worried. It may reussure you of the swimming tank. your backbone while doing it. stap on top unless Take the deepest breath you can|ened and turn and turn on your back as you do |back colla it. Kick your fcet up slightly, if| they seem inclined to fall to the bottom, as most untrained feet do. Kecp the body arched. Don't hs | taught. afraid to It the head rest back| One can help a beginner, if he on the water. It is as if you|is careful not to help too much, were sleeping on # bed without | Putting the hund under the back. 2 pillow and your head felt a bit|and holding it there any length of lower than your body. | time accustoms the floater to that vou get fright- over or let your pse or swallow water. Floating is one pleasure many | persons might learn without know- ing how to swim, if properly This is the only way you can|much support. But it one just float successfully. For if you in-|arches a floater's back and -leaves ist on raising the head, that arch | him, it might help, of the backbone is flattened and| The straightness of the body s you sink, the main thing. Keep the feet Keep your feet together. You | near the top of the water. This can put your arms down at vour|can be done by kicking slightly sides. This is perhaps preferable | every time they seem to be getting until you get expericnced. Then |aw { you can fold your arms under| After you really learn to float your head for a pillow and it|vou will find that you can breathe, makes no difference. {look at the scenery and enjoy life Open your eyes if you fcel atlon top of the waves. Scenes and Styles Change w Betsy Predicts New Skirt Lengths, New Shoe Modes and cher Innovations. Mrs, R. H. Amberg Mrs, Haley Stowell BY BETSY SCHUYLER the spirit of summer than wra New York, July 21.-—The kaleido- | this scason. Over a chiffon and| scopic view of smart New York as |lace dr Mrs. R. H. Amberg, of one sees it in summer time—always | Short Hills, N, wore a stunning en route to Newport, Southampton, |littlc coat one day when she was Paris—gives a decided impression | in lunching. It was of grege chif- that styles as well as destination are | fon, with its wide ccllar, cuffs and| changing. bottom edged in badger. It look- ' «d excecdingly summery. Longer Skirts, Maybe! 5 D shiic For one thing, 1 notice that the | Dog Days” Clothes skirt line grows a trifle longer — no:»,: ;';1’(1 a'o'L-'k‘“ h;\\:’:!htt c::‘:a" the days grow shorter, ay ¥ - as the days grow sh £ B0 Govlios o8 sumser sbonad in G even be that skirts, like hair, may decide to forsuke the abbreviated. Formal skirts still have that wav- ering uneven hem — 50 dear to wo- dog a At a recent one 1 no ticed Mrs. Haley Stowell sponsor. ing the latest ribbed sports suit,) 4 ncw weave that stimulated pleate| men by this time. It is in the | : e j formal daytime things that I sense fli“ ;0'0"“'['" k'\:'lhflf :‘;r mnm-na ithe real change. They show the | Pro% 5l e cardiga jeffect of all this lengthening here (and therc by adding an inch or e " ¥ 'Ol AN . P b w0 outright to thelr regular| , FOR :i:‘;“l ke el i hems. E s b o AL of tulle, applied perfectly flat fo T eptie abOUt | yirtn of dance frocks, achieving L B ON8 10T | ortain tailored effect that is ve daytime again. The smart woman |1eC6 (likes her freedom of motion too 2 well, 4 LACE. GOWNS Crisp Organdic Dickey = ¢ lace a ¥ Ve T noticd skirts well below the | T1¢ 1ace afternoon gown in vei smart in Paris, worn with a coaf] knees on hoth Lucy Eustwood and : 3 of the same color in wool or silk, ankell Shook as ey sHonved @ \you tns cout and #he. Trook ohl bit one sweltering day. Hansell S s Shook's frock of beige satin had d a crisp looking little dickey of em- F ale_PIaque broidered organie in it—a happy touch on a wilting day! Lucy Eastwood looked her usual smart eelf, in a tricky light blue “little dress” with an accordion pleated overskirt and a long panel ar- rangement that hung from the | left shoulder to the hem, | Chic looking footgear turns to | oxfords ever and anon, these days, predicting quite 2 mode for one and two-cyed oxfords for Amumn.‘l | | Jean Stewart wore a trim and rather dressy looking pair of brown sucde two.eyelet ties with a printed frock and wide-brimmed ballibuntl hat. Bright Shoes Are Pretty The vogue for colored shoes the evening continues vor. It is astorishing how pretty twinkling fcet on a roof garden can look in jade green, Ceil blue, or magenta slippers. The other day Dorothea Bauer made a charming picture in a jade green chiffon gown, topped by a svelt little coat of sheer jade green vel- vet edged with chiffon, with slip- in in high fa- A new fall glove employs my has two inverted plaits. The gold threads make a pattern. pers to match the color. Nothing is more expressive {lic lace appliqued on a scallop of |cuft. to Bee the blue heavens or the top |Yor relaxing, resting, waiting for| After you get your position ace that second wind that may be bet- | curatcly, you will feel light as a ter than the first wind, if it only | cork, and find you can ride the bil- comes. Tows with the same ease as a Floating is really easy as can cork. Try not to mind if the be, §f you remember fo think of | water breaks over you. You will our ¢ ife A n sol enite [Antha Fobber Ay nilty im t nled ach Talicl refers READ ok Would er tha m 1o| log th ure ar “rench 0-GL Face P GLO.

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