New Britain Herald Newspaper, August 4, 1928, Page 4

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s The Heart Story of a Steadfast Woman Love’s Awakening By Adele Garrison Mary Is Overjoyed at the Prospect |told her. “Not one of us will try to of Being Able to Buy some intluence you. But we must go back “Pretties” to the others, or we'll never get to From bencath my eyelashes T |the shops.” gave Dicky's lovely young nicce an I slipped my hand through her intent scrutiny as he told her that larm and Dicky tactfully hurried he wanted her to show him the iead of us so that 1 was able to things she meant to buy with the k to her without anyome clse Loney he had given her. As 1 fear- | hearing me ed, I saw a quick evasive look flash Mary, dearest, please relax,” I into her face, and guessed that even | whispered. “A taut fiddle string s with this gift she was planning 10 |a limp rag compared to you. I sup- devote part of it to the mySterious | pose Mr, itzen's work is worry. purpose which had swallowed her {ing you—— dress allowance. n as she real- | It isn't his work,” she flashed, ized that no other course but spend- | then added anxiously, “Please for- ing the money on her own clothing |get 1 said that Auntie Madge. 1—I was open to her, my throat ccn-|—don't know what I'm saying.” stricted with pity at the look of rap-| You're all tired out,” 1 said ture which came into her The | making my voice practical. and child’s beauty-loving heart had been [trying to give her the impression starved for the pretty things she|that 1 raw nothing more than fa- had denied herself, that was re- in her patent nervous tension, vealed plainly just remember you're on & “Oh! oh!" Her voice was tremu- | heliday today. Forget Mr. Veritzen, Jous with joy. “I never dreamed Of | vour work and everything that wor- anything so lovely happening t0 Me. | ey you, &pend your money on the But are you sure, Uncle Dicky that | things you like, and have a good you ought to- time generally.” “Wish 1 were as sure of Heaven, | gpe stopped short, loosened her Kit cat,” her uncle returned. - rm from mine and made a g member 1 have no daughte s of tossing something over her own to buy dresses for, so the shoulder, regardless of the curious just naturally a fund aching to g tares of those nearest us, itself “swapped for dresscs and | hof couse they think I'm crazy,” hats. L | she said, “but they'll be around the 1 drew a quick startled b | corner in another second, and they'll There was.a note in my hu nais [never think of me again. That's the voice—was I mad 1o Interprot 1t 43 | picest thing about being in a eity. RAPUR. SHRIUL IoREIEL. UL | You can do anything, and nobody o m;'a-“;\ ¢ xr‘ ‘1“‘1- n\“l-l\.\m.'x:.;i, | cares. And 1 couldn’t help it. Auntie BALIARLIOR o BAC, ALREDS: ¥ | Madge. 1 just had to do some fool ol LeAting At ipui- | hing to preve to myself I was {ree b e e o 1o saln tanai oy ths ey, Jegesl Nke 3 man who B e ot T3 i avit |Das carried a Bus of four o & M) vourself, your aunt Madge, Marion ;.um throws it away hz'[urc he starts e Mus Tinderwopd all b’ once, |io Tun dewn. Oh, bovl what a day | 'm going to have. And it's all due about your purchases. 1f you do, vou'll need D el Inttead of a day. |t you! Oh, you needn't get that 1 never knew two women yet “lmv"“”"d fawn look in your eycs. could agree about a gown Just | Uncle Dicky's a dear, but he's a cult yourselt, and then as your |man. He never would think of this grandmother is fond of saying, one [all by himself.” ) person will be pleased.” Copyright, 1928, Newspaper s slanderer, Mary,” T} Feature Service, Inc. 'King Eagle Gets His Fish By Thornton W. Burgess A loss may sometinies prove a gain 1 hope 1 make my meaning plain. —Plunger the Osprey Plunger the Osprey, whom people call the Fish Hawk, was in trouble. He had been in similar trouble be- fore and hadn't lcarned his lesson. Temptation had been too much for him. He had struck a fish too big for him to carry away and he had driven his claws in so far that now he couldn't get them out. There he was, trying to lift that big fish out of water, and there was the big fish trying to pull him into the water, nd up above, looking on, was King It was big ecough to tire even his gle, wondering what it was all strong wings 'lh?\-‘::\'s sagle was mot in & good |abead. They would tear that fish to tempey. He had swen that fish close | Pleccs to feed the babies. When he to the surface before Plunger had | reached home King Eagle was glad struck it. He had intended to catch | Sn0UBh to leave this wonk to Mrs, it himseli and then Plunger had He felt that he had earned | shot in and seized the fish. This in itself was enongh to make King | (Copyright, 1925, by T. W. Burgess) Fagle angry. “That fish helongs to| The mext story: “King Eagle me,” said King Eagle to himselt. | Watches Another Hunter. “Yes, sir, that fish Iylongs to me, e and I'm going to have it. What under the sun is the ter with Phunger? - FLAPPER FANNY SAYS: There was plenty the matter with | [T Plunger. He was getiing tired and | |# he was very, very frightened. For a second or iwo he rested, with his wings outstretched on the water, Then once more he tricd to beat his way up. | By this tme King Eagle had lost all patienee. More than once he had made Plunger drop a fish by threa ning him. He tricd it now. He shot down, screaming: “Drop It! Drop | Poor Plunzet d to drop it ever had he wanted anything more an he did to drop that fish. lle balf turned 1o look up at King Eagle and the latter saw his chance. | He struck and struck hard with those great claws of his. He sank | And then King life. them into that fish. Eagle had tic surprise of Despite the tlapping of his great wings, he could lift that fish only | | L little How he did flap and | | cat wings! You see, he| | not only the fish, but he | | X AR nG u.s PAT.ofP] ind King s temper PR T ey - ”‘; et l:” — h‘:“fl L There are seven ages of man, and e appened. He |two of women. One is her right one. was clinging to that fish purposcly o, and try take it away from | Fash]on Plaque im. Kinz Eagle screamed at him o screamed back. But am was of fright and Fag had come over to s U the trouble about, flying about overhead screaming tel. or a chance to strike X too, thoug cor was cling e to 1l urposely to 1, vet 10 tear his grasp | ot the fish loose the ed his iy, | found himself froe his | ¥ up into {1 el to his favorite pr there he sat for resting, for he out. And for once he feit toward King Eagle a time. | 15 1horo They had saved him didn’t know it. But Plunzer it and was happy Meanwhile King Iagle was A BAG MANNISH TIE to ing his way heavily toward the ne iteh are examples of the on the Mountain. great vogue of printed silks. fish. 1t was big enough to tire even his strong wings. But what a feast READ HERALD CLASSIFIED AUS it would be! Mrs. Eagle had flown FOR BEST RESUL ‘ ture [ NEW BRITAIN DAILY HEP.;%LD, SATURDAY, AUGUST 4, 1928, Once Overs By C. D. Batchelog !Sex Equality Reglstered U. 8. Petont Office “My husband’s the sweetest man in the world when he’s sober, but he hates being sober so much he’s really nicer when he'’s drunk.” | cal! 39 The answer to the tained in No. 41 horizontal will r question con- | stories you have read of show- boat days. 'Tis a tough puzzle. HORIZONTAL What famous college for wo- men is located at Poughkeep- sle, New York? Esteem. Liquid part of any fat. Embankment built on the bank of a river to prevent the overflowing of its banka. Sum of money lent at interest. Bird similar to an ostrich A hodgepodge. Slash. Innuendo (pl.). Corded cloth. Paid publicity. Roadside hotel. Seventh note in scale. Ear of corn after the are removed. Type of grass. Exclamation of surprise. To disagree Masculine pronoun. Part of verb to be Cubic meter, kernels Myself. Funeral pile. Unit, To dip water out of a hoat. Violent atmosphere disturh- ance. In what state To weep. Point of comp: Venomous snake What is the alluvial tract at the mouth of the Nile called? To implore. VE What is in Ttaly? Audibly Chair. Infquity. Variant of * Deity. ewel. 0 protest To change a jewcl setting Notwithstanding. What famous explorer in his plane whil help to the “Italia” Prophet who trained Samuel Pitcher. Wooden tray for carrving tar Obes Twice. A single thing. Which of the presid United *States was nor ot Chio just Civil War? What author o “Topsy' mor- nis of the the after gover- the ted the and char- Little” \etors Iy To build. Who ranks the greatest lyric mo: n Germany ? Abbreviation for “mister.” Mother. poet of | was lost | carrying | nest to Goethe as | | 7/ i///flll//i// L1 7, 7 I=I/ 2, | Illl%flll%fi TE % 717 1] ddn”an BRE7Z [ [ {the demand. When sugar and l %EE B | starch, the foods that are known as mfl E V) | carhohydrates, are taken into the body they are etored first in the E A E% e p { ma he coat | whi he: helt 1r 1 —A new red, a nti mbling Chanel red. is | 1 tor fall hy Nicole Groult. skirt is of crepella and nmg is Jersev. The navy blouse with dots is of crepe de chine and the populat tricolor effect. blouse 1= double-hreasted and finished with a wide red suede 373 %, Dlug praon pretically unaltered, if it Is not re- Exclamation of iny quired at once as fuel. DAY Jalling on Reserve il When a person decides to dlet Alleged foree producing hypno- | gng begins to fast, the first sub- e stance catied on is the reserve gly- S cogen from the muscles and the {liver. This reserve is probably ex- The flower ix of the erepe de chine. distributed over the the skin, around the various organs, mixed with the fibers of muscles, and in other places, the body. for the organs and for the muscles, | proteeting them against bumps and blows. and is a storehous which the body can draw in times of famine. of starvation. human being stores in his body any excess of fuel foods poses. #torage is called on to take care of |of a compound called glycogen. |and the Mver for glycogen is defi- starches |lcngth of time a person can fast | One of the renults is th: Health Hints BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN ditor Journal of the Amcrican Medical Association and of Hy- gein, the Health Magazine In the normal human being there s a moderate amount of fat widely body, under Dr. Mary §. Rose has listed suc- vinctly the purposes of the fat in It serves as a padding as insulation of energy on It has advantages It is well known that animals julld up fat rescrve against periods In the same way the beyond wWhat nay be needed for immediate put- Fuel Storage When the muscles act the fuel liver and in the muscles in the form In time of reed this glycogen is called on as a fuel supply. How- r, the capacity of the muacles nitely limited, When an cxcess of sugass and beyond the amount that can be stored 1s taken into the body, this is packed away in a still more concentrated form as fat. Fat that eaten is also stored in the body hausted in a few days. After the glycogen is used up. the hody is likely to call on the reserve fat and it i then that a loss in weight will begin to occur. The without harm, Dr. Rose emphasizes, is practically determined by the amount of reserve fat that 18 present in the body. Life’s Niceties HINTS ON ETIQUET 1. In Introducing your family to friends should you refer to them formally, as “Meet my mother, Mrs. White How would one introduce her sister to an older woman acquain- tance 3. To a man? The Answers World-wide Campaign to Aim of Women Accomplish This. Women must learn to cooperate interntionally to get real world-wide sex equality, in the opinion of Mrs. 0. H. P. Belmont, leader of New York’s established 400" and presi- dent of the Natiowal Woman's party. “With the functioning of the League_of Nations and its interna- tional labor burcau Wblishing MRS, O. H. P. BELMONT rules governing conditions under which women shall work, it is im perative that women represent themscives internationally and de- termine what action shall be taken regarding themselves “The need for international ac- tion in behalf of equality tor wom- en grows more pressing every da An intelligent Union®of Women, from all countries, should have in- fluence in preventing international bodies from establishing the same inequalities for women in interna- tional law iwhich individual nations bave made in the past. 'Such an international commis- | sion of women should receive the support of the feminists of all coun- tries. It is to be hoped that the da is not distant when women will s the importance of such a step and | will establish headquarters for the commission in every capital of every country in the world. In no oth way save by solidarity can feminists get international equalit Sober Hats Top Gay Frocks Paris Sponsors Both Brimmed Hats and Toques, According to Costume. Left: Paris, Aug. |chiffon dress necessarily meant the {return of the larger hat. Whateve argument there may be to find in favor of the close-fitting toque, it is seldom as becoming. As a conse- |quence women have not been so at- tractively hatted for many seasons | s they are this summer, and it is Don't Permit Over-Eating . Parents Should Watch Children at Picnics. | | grosgrain Consider the old-fashioned picnic when Papa, Mama and the children trotted off with old Dobbin and a basket to & nice quiet place by the | creek where the children could swim and the older folk wade, and top off the day by an feast of sandwiches, rosy-checked apples, cake and other delectables. Each and every thing home-made, it you please, and half of them | ‘home-grown. Everybody home by | bed. | The picnic still lingers but its ancestors of the good old days | would not recognize it. Usually it is & hurry-up affair picked up on short notice, eaten in & rush at some pop-stand, so that the road won't have a chance to cool off be- fore the car hits it again. Apd the picnic food, things in cans and ready-made pick-ups, is ailded and abetted by pop, cracker-jack, cream cones, candy and sundry, swallowed hastily and promiscu- ously by the entire family from the baby up. The Stomach Pays! Now there is a time and 1)1'\(-( tor everything and far be it frong me to give a black-eye to the mm- ily plenic. If the older mtmb(rx have indigestion the next day and take tablets for a week to hring them back to normal, that is their prerogative. There 1s an old. slogan about the price never being too high if you want it. But the place for all this heter- ogeneous collection at onc and the same time is not in a child’s stom- ach, 1 wonder how many children are in bed at this minute from over-cating at picnics, pleasure- parks, or other like institutions. For children have no sense about eating and they have an ostrich- like capacity. The truck one small boy can absorb in one day is na- ture’s most puzziing phenomenon. Give a child a dollar and let him ge off with a crowd of other small human appetites for & dayv's outing under no particular eur- veillance, and if he doesn't sample everything swallowable before he gets home, Chin Chon Chinny wasn't a Chinaman. Where Dyspepsia Begins Perhaps of a sun, No need to and a swimming pool. go through all the processes of hygiene that sends him home with a stomach-ache and a temperature, Mothgr calmly gets out the cas- tor-oil bottle and keeps him in bed & day. “Oh, he'll be all right. He just ate too much,” she tells the neighbors. 1. No . Your friend already knows your family name. 2. “Mrs Carver, this is my s\- ter, Ruth. “Mr. Carver, meet my sister, Ruth. is Mr. Carver. Interest in Scarf Affects Dress Yoke Paris, Aug. 4 P~—The all-absorb- ing interest in scarfs of all kinds has brought the neck line of the dress into unusual . prominence. ‘avor shown a voke which is in a different tone from the rest of the dress. Com- binations of yellow and white, blue and grey are frequent. The style is naturally limited to women of fair height as the natural result is the breaking of the long line neces- sary to the short figure. I want you to Ruth, th But in another week or less, the process will be repeated very likely. His parents know that they couldn’t do that with their dys- peptic stomachs, bad gall-blad- ders, or slow livers, but because Johnny's young they think it is all right. What they are doing is fixing Johnny properly for a dyspeptic, gall-bladderous, liverish maturity * himself, and they do not realize it. Chfldren must have wholesome food. Certainly a treat now and then and under But too much of the other proper conditions is harmless. there is kind. JELLY SALAD A delicious and cool-looking sal- | ad is made by combining cucum- bers and pineapple in a clear jelly salad. Blice the thin as possible and grate the pine- apple. Berve chilled on lettuce, with mayonnaise at the side. Gar- nish with pimento. .with all types of light dresses, and Ambrosian ' ming eight o'clock and the children off to }‘" Lnal ice- ! there is a blow-furnace | cucumbers as | safe to predict that we shall see| {oth brimmed hats and toques in the | !fall fashions, While the light seen, the natural the one which colored felt is colored straw is| harmonizes best | with printed moussel- The smartest are usu- trimmed with se ribbons matching the colors in the dress and finished off with a jewel brooch if the occasion | particularly ine de soie. ally simply |demands it. As dresses this sum- {mer are more elaborate and fem- | inine, hats in contrast are dis- | (tinetly sober in regard to trim-| This sobriety extends to all | |other dress accessories, as a matter of fact. An American’s Shop | Hats always seem to have fasci- nated women. Iivery day you hear well known society woman or theatrical star who has started a hat shop. The latest arrival here in this department is Florence Wal- ton, the well known American danc- As far as the models which are on disp are concerned, their | ideas are excellent. She says that| the beret type of hat is to be the main theme on which she intends to work for the coming fall and winter. For golf or motcring, they [have no equal in comfort and they | 'sut almost every type of face,| 'and felt finished off with a knot at the hat, right, tops a flowered chiffon dress in pastel shades, | Breton Florence Walton wears a new beret, of red-brown panne velvet ic; a wide-brimmed bandeau 4—The vogue of the|provided the proportions are right. She has taken ideas from all the varieties of berets—the Basqu and the Alpine chasseur. Miss Walton is using soft suede for sports wear, and for dressy oce casions, velvet alone or combined with felt. Among the advance models which she was shipping to America was a rich red-grown vel- vet and felt beret fashioned rather like a student's cap and finished off with a knot at the side which lent it a jaunty and youthful air. These should be worn slightly tilted, and it seems that all hats are to be worn tilted over one eye this fall. Actually New Marcelle Lely, another young mo- diste who is fast acquiring a repu- tation for making youthful hats, is using long-haired panne velvet com- bined with felt for her latest creas tions. A beige felt, for example, will show a crown and part of the brim covered with this brushed panne. The effect is astonishingly new, especially when you had ar- rived at the conclusion that nothing new could positively be thought of. Marcelle Lely also excells in the | toque type of hat. She charming creatigh which consisted in a close-fitting crown of felt, simply swathed round with a wide biack satin rib- bory faced with white, Which tied in a knot at the side, as only a Parisian modiste knows how to tie. Panne and taupe Wwill be very largely used and the hat with a brim will be broader on one side than the other. Black, rich brown and beige will be among the first colors. This, is easily explained they happen to be the colors which blend best with autumnal shades. had a You Need Talent| ' To Win Success| Fortune On Stage Is Merely Chance. “The esire to act is a t should be discouraged the path to fame on the one of the hardest in the universal | disease th because Grimball, leader in “little theate move- of the first woman producers said this. Miss Grim- ball has discovered and developed many talented young folks have later found fame on Broad- way, such as Helen Gahagan, for ‘I example. “People who want to America's ment, and one act can be | into three Miss imball asserted. are | those who consider the | high road to adventure, a life full | of glamour and more to be desired than any life of their ow those who have the urge for life and people and scek the stage as an {outlet; and third, those who really have the talent. Only the class should go ahead. “It is rare that one youngster out of 30 who are determining to make their life work acting has the real instinct for the theater,” | she continued. “I think the flair for the theater is an instinctive thing and the de- sire to act or create plays for the stage is just born in you, he first essentials of success in the theater -— granting one has talent — are personality rather {than beauty, intelligence and the | capabllity to work. However, none of these helps much if an actor or |actress lacks talent. Granted the who | last | Menus of the Family BY SISTER MARY Breakfast — Peaches, cereal, cream, crisp broiled bacon, bluebere ry biscuits, milk, coffee. Luncheon—Tomato and ham sandwiches, cress and apple salad, brown bread, milk, tea. Dinner—S8alisbury steak, horse- radish, wax beans, cucumber and lettuce salad, filled cantaloupe, milk coffe During the summer months when much fresh fruit is served “au naturel” for breakfast, the housekeeper will save herself many stained napkins it she will provide finger bowls with the fruit course. Boiled cottage ham is cut in lices about 1-4 inch thick and browned quickly first on one side end then on the other. Medium- sized ripe tomatoes are peeled and cut in slices of the same thickness, These-are dipped in melted butter and brofled quickly. Ham and to. mato slices are arrarged in alter. nating layers in a hot dish and tiny springs of parsley browned in the ham fat are sprinkled over just before sending to the table, This makes the tomato and ham sandwiches suggested in the luncheon menu. Blucherry Biscuits Two cups flour, 4 teaspoons baking powder, 1-2 teaspoon salt, 3 tablespoons butter, about 3-4 cup milk, 1 cup washed and dried | blucherries. | Wagh berries and spread on & soft towel to dry. Mix and sift flour, salt and baking powder. Rub in butter and add berries. Cut in milk. Roll on a lightly floured molding board. Cut in rounds and buke in a hot oven for fifteen or twenty minutes. . Serve warm with lots of butter. Copyright, 1928, NEA Service, Ine. STAIN REMOVER {talent, and given thege three | qualities, an artist s emerge.” ' After-Tennis Coats Add ‘ a Brilliance of Touch | ‘ Paris, Aug. 4 (P—Bright stripes are used for many of the “ew [umr-tenms coats that meveral im. ! portant houses here are showing. They are used for the same pur- poses as the old-fashioned English blazer and at resorts sometimes provide the wrap for a simple din- ner costume. For women who are sure to | To remove discoloration from Joorsteps, mix chloride of lime in- to a thin paste with cold water, Apply at night and leave on until ! morning. Wash off with clear water and your steps will be clean. PUFF CORSAGE A caramel colored satin frock has little soft puffs of its fabrie making an attractive little corsage at the left side of its girdle. MOIRE WRAP A rich green moire:-wrap has cape wings, tipped with eighteen inch shirred ruffies and a shirred in mourning the same type of jacket is made In black, flecked with lulme. Elizabéthan collar. o o ernih o4 oS s B S g

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