New Britain Herald Newspaper, August 31, 1928, Page 16

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Love’s Awakening By Adele Garrison The Mystery of “Janet Rawdon,” and Mary's Checks Deepens, Lillan nodded emphatically when I asked her if ghe were sure Mary was the person whom she associat- ed with her dim memory of the mame *“Janet Rawdon “That's the impression I have,” she said, “but, of course, it's abso- lutely nothing to go on.” “But what ought we to do about 42" I asked. “Nothing at present,” Lillian an- swered promptly, “If this ‘Janet Rawdon’ is a blackmailer we've got to catch her without Mary's know- ing anything about it. 1f she such a hold on Mary that the child’s turning over most of her allowance to her, Mary wouldn't dare give her away. We'll just have to keep our Joseph's “Going supplemented. th one: | th | and ke She's to the her mail sible 1 I e g1 in th ks out 10 ‘Janet ‘n one b “There’ hat, Kty n. She The Heart Story of a Steadtast Woman etter,” Lillian s @ ina isn't making Rawdon’ ing them in her scrap book. sending wom know,” i s absc eyes open and watch the girl with- | out her suspecting us. It's fairly easy out here, but it's likely to be harder when you get into the city. However, there are four of us, you, | the Dicky-bird, Harry and me. We ought to be able to keep cases on one girl.” “Mary doesn't g0 away from the farm very oftem, does she?” Kath- erine asked. “No,’ Lillian answered “and practically all of her journeys are —you se Her s wh [ fatner hore much res spoke qu ou an voice n whose 1son ckly them or We've jou e it us ot 10 be a into tol Brixt nt when t a tor—so sw e red falt to p! 1 memory execrate, taking them got to watch rneys, it pos- moved rest- much as you However, about it subject. Harry one of 4 At not on visit. He the come - wgreed. I wanted to could let rtably ~Tom 1 he n new s it always of Marion's she has so I and letely at sca m looked up quickly, her at- NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, AUGUST 31, 1928. Once Overs Regletered U. 8. Patent Office By C. D. Batchelor Real Beauty Is Older Specialist Approves Faces Not Too Young. Natalie Thurston, beauty special- ist, maintains that *“Fascinating Forty” has advantages over “Sweet Sixteen,” if the older woman takes the care of her personal grooming that she should. “Blushing youth has no advan- tages over blushed-out maturity Miss Thurston stated. “If you doubt it, hire yourself a front row table at any smart night club and see who rates the masculine attention. Sweet * Charactenistic Of Style Barons Decree for Velvet and Also Rule That Hips Must Be Flat While Monotone Ensem- ble Is Missing. New York, Aug. 30. (UP)—Con- sidering in a general way the trcnd of fashion as crystallized in the collections of the great Paris dress- makers, it must be recognized that the sweeping movement for more formality in fashion goes on. The reaction from post-war simplicity proves stronger than ever, apparent in many phases of the current | mode. |1t is reflected in the greater ex- ploitaticn of the groups designated us afternoon fashions; these more | formal daytime types this scason compose entire groups of coats a | well as dresses for semi-formal oc: sions. | The reactien from post-war sim- plicity is revealed in the amazing success of velvet, an essentially for mal fabric, and in the approval for ¢ Flair Toward Formality In Fashion P % . arisian Openings | fitted effects which naturally in- clude the idea of a normal waist. This inclination to suggest u molded line is introduced in coats and suits as well as dresses. In the latter, the molded tendency is interpreted as a version of the prin- cess silhouette, appearing chiefly in evening gowns, but it is qualified as a very modern iuterpretation of the princess, line which means, of | course, that'tt has not the tightly- | fitted effeet of the old princess ef- | fect, but a straighter Qunbelted sil- houette. The circular movggment 1s almost | as generally sponsod in the skirt | silhouette for fall as is the flat hip- line. It is quoted in costumes for all occasions, tor sports as well as | afternoon and evening fashions and in coats find suits as well as | dresses. The qualifying character | of the circular line in dresses, how- ever, is that the movement starts well below the hips and that the tendency is that circular flounces be placed low. While the popularity of flounces, | pancls, godets, loops and points is unabated, the new and repeatedly quoted phase of fulness so intro- duced is that it be as flat in effect s possible 50 that the effect is of a slim silhouette. 3 s 1 had hoped. meant to made in the company of our roval ter neighbors of Trees and Trar via | t 1 dressy coats as well as for the short | | Length must be constdered jacket suits and as in the Sponsoring | wei as breadth in discussing the and the reigning price of the House of ‘Veritzen, all of whom, I think, we can acquit of blackmail.” I smiled as a visualized slende stately Princess Olina, of wvania, and gallant Prince Georges, of Trees, atill cherishing their in- cognito, while they ed mance with young Noel Veritzen and Dicky's lovely young *“Mary takes some long dri with Prince Georges occasionally,” Kath erine venturcd. “Might she not tale udvantage of those drives to mect | this Janet Rawdon? s clever enough to make G moon was a che colored m\..J at ro-|y tell you | you outl 1o repeat “Lillhar t [ 1 ha he m." s had facts, “which won't 1 hate even letter s her It's from an old by of frien show K she'll be orges believe the | Copyrizht, Marion's g0, swindled Mr, 1 of mone ons of s ago. the T father Morton ont ¥ His wife, Lillian's best it why not letter? Then for herself.” » Continued) . News rvice, In per Feature By Thornton W. Burgess Fright is but a state of mind; | Most often without cause you'll find. | Old Mother ‘\:mm‘r How Peter Rabbit did wish he was | in, the dear Old Briar-patch! | . had he wished anything more. (I wasn't back in the dear Old Biar-patch. He was over in a Lramble-tangle in the Green Forest, feeling as miserable as a Rabbit can feel. Patches of hair were missing from his coat. He smarted from scratches he had received from one one of the children of Yowler the Bobcat. The truth of the matter is | Peter had lost his nerve. Yes, sir, | he had lost his nerve. He was so | badly frightened, so upset, that he | actually didn't dare start for the| dear Old Briar-patch, He was afraid | to leave the bramble-tangle. | His big cousin, Jumper the Hare, had paid him a visit there but had- n't stayed long. Peter had hoped he would stay. He wanted company. But jumper had business in another part of the Green Forest and nmh-] ing that Peter could s duce him to remain. So hunched up, a picture of mi wished and wished and wished t he had never left the dear Old By ar patch. He was so busy being mis- erable that he paid no attention to anything el It wasn't until a dry leaf rustled right hehind him th Peter gave any attention to anything | else. But that rustling leaf he could- n't help hearing. It startled him ter- | ribly. It startled him so that, with- out waiting to what made it, Be jumped and ran farther into the bramble-tangle. Then and not until, then did he look around to sce what had caused the leaf to rustle, xcuse me, Peter,” said squeaky little voice, “I didi’t to frighten you." Peter opened his mouth “You didn't frighten closed it again without saying He was ashamed to say it, for of eourse, it wasn't true, Instead, 1 gulped once or twi nd then said “Hello, Whitefool W doing here “I'm trying to muk where to to b, e would in- | t| see | 5 mean g0 “Truly 1 did Peter. You were in hor right about th 1 hack to patch I'm go gt m look said Whitetc Yowler the It fng around my old that 1 don't dars longer. 1-T think I'll mo Old Orchard. You do: those Dobcats will com do you?" Peter shook his head not,” said he, “but Farmer Brown't Cat. were you, T should caught hy Yowler one of hix children Pussy.” Whitefoot look 80, said he, “I that.” hom s0 mu T l ust the 13 as by hadn’t thought of “What is dre diul 2 U.S PAT. OFF. “times makes on |the sleeve, are of gray broadt asked Peter is much S with ow the | al awl plac- of | ail. * T told | s Get into high on this puzzle. The 13-letter center word and the ab- sence of unkeyed letters will help you to a snappy finish. HOMIZONTAL Dread, To loiter. clip. Premium paid for the exchange of money. Prophet who trained Saumuel. To entice, Vault for the Mesh of lace. Afresh, Custom. Tatter. To beguile. Edge. Feminine pronoun. Citadel. To sunburn. Sound of a rip. Divided into sections by types of property. Small cyst tumor. Diamond. Fiber of the century plant. Eucharist vessel, Maple tree. To affirm To drink dog fashion Edible rootstock. Magic rod Defore. Death 36. notice VERTICAL Obese, 1f. Intention Rugged. Smooth, unaspirated from lemons Volvanic scoria Convent worker, Wrath. Long hench in a church To grasp forcibiy To astonish greatly. Near the stern. Large flightless bird. Fwer. To rend as stitches, at-bladed garden impl ro finish. nd or last act. soft red vegetahlo on in a hospital. To yvawn. Cat's foot Yollow bugl: Two fives Blemist ght-wheeled vehicle. CLOTHES SAVINGS you house It tive plan to have some attrac- frocks that you can put on oon as you come shopping or work. you will find it far easier to always look neat and well-groomed when going out. Changing shocs also is a good econ- omy measure. in from | ANNE/AEN EN v/ aan/aaw)) % T T ANN/dEE/dNE 7/ AN/ il WddN/dEn//Eld AN/ dNN/ //dAR/dnil BENLGD ONODER 757 0 00700 [l e Rlo[N e R Rlo] e [AINEE[RIE P01 s c] /7ol 1 1€ e Vs o] (€ [nEZoTale [ AlT]E] [R[o[aFRIAT I INIY] B/8 [0]o] 070 ZclolN e MZAR[V[TIAMA NI [A[N] A5 ZAs VAP0 T O] NN [sEe]AlL]E[e [N] [EIN]o{v[r[eFAEDIEIR]L] Heal_th_‘i-lints i BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN Editor Journal of the American Medical Association and of Hy- gela, the Health Magazine The average paby walks when it is about 18 months of age. As the colored boy said when asked as to his tip, { but most | the average.” | Mothers should mot be d | turbed if their bables fafl to wal at 15 months of cause a neighbor's Susie walked when she was months old. | When the child is born its brain |is a well developed structure capa- |ble of learning. It has certain patterns of conduct that are in- herited. For instance, it will do not come up to child or Aunt grab avything put in its hand and | Chic dainties that add dash to the well-diessed woman; lef¢ to right: S umptuous and i formal tailored bag of brown antelope, with modernistic tucks and a handsome faster A scintillating evening of kerchicf and envelope purs ¢ | hang on. | By the time it is six months oid it can roll over. { Speaking ouie children brgin [ recosnizable words at 9 months, [ few children use more than five or six words by the time they are 13 months old Some infants can drink from a lcup at the age of a year, others | continuc to a bottle after two cars, although this is somewhat | delayed development and can probably corrected by proper teaching The 4-year-old child should be able to dress itself and to wash its face and teeth. Some children vpoint to the nose, eyes or hair and can climb steps at one year of the average for this con- about 18 months. Listening to Stories -old child, as estab- Dr. Arnold Gesell, can use simple septences name familiar ob- ljeets like kuys, pennies, watches, tac. and listen to stories and llcok at pictures, and attempt to describe its own experiences and ask for fthings at the table by their names, Above all, it 1s important to re- to say use A 2.y lished by fold ind pl 4 ‘The average is a dollar, | age merely be- | 13| “T hear that efficiency bird, big as he is, has an inferiority complex.” “I hear it's an interferiority complex.” A SPEED PUZZLE member that children differ. Not | all of them can be educatcd in the same way; much depends on the environment and handling of the individual child. Life's Niceties HINTS ON ETIQUET 1. What expenses borne by guests paying long visits? 2. If taking a long trip as a guest vhat other bills should a guest pay, instead of charging to the hostess? 3. When a guest on cross-coun- try trips. or an ocean voyage, should one tip for one self? should be The Answers expenditures tips, 1. Small personal such as carfare, taxi, con in town. 2. Laundry, doctor's special side trips not by the hostess. 3. Yes. bills and suggested é bracelet matches. apricot chiffon with black lace, fashion necklace and bracelet. BY JULIA BLANSHARD New York, Aug. 30.—Accessories always are a barometer for the modes of the moment. In the strict- ly tailored era from which we have just cmerged, accessories avoided dainty feminine paths and stayed as | strictly tailored as the sports clothes they accompanied. Now we see the reverse. It is essentially a feminine era in | clothes. So there is a hemdlong rush of accesories into the deli- cate, the filmy, the sumptuous and the femininely beautiful. Furs are back for rich touches to cos- tumes, hats, bags, coats and scarfs. Laces, paillettes, shimmering se- quip and gold and silver laces all have.their part in fashioning the richest accessories the present | generation ever nas worn. Crystals’ Popular Real stones characterize new autumn jewelry, and gold and sil- ver mount them. Crystals play & tremendous part in the decoration of this winter's smart women. The mEwest- are the string-cut crystals, discs that are big in circumfer- lunch- | NATALIE THURSTON sixteen may win the dancing mara- thon. But when it comes to pic ing the woman men love to look at, Fascinating Forty gets the breaks.” “In my opinion there are more outstanding beauties between 30 and 40 thar among girls under 21. Ethel Barrymore, Glorig Swanson, Mary Pickford, the Imadge and the Gish sisters, all famous for feminine perfection, are well over 25. “After all, a face is but the mir- ror of a mind, The average woman does not begin to live until she is 30. After that, experience, plus the per- fect cosmetics of this era, gives her % 60-40 advantage over youth. But the older woman must remember to | make the most of her advantage. | She really needs to be more ful of her grooming than the er girl in her first blush of youth. F as;l;ion |use ot the féather trim, A new fall model of Chanel beige, | with wide side brim, shows a novel | |of satin for costumes of similar | types. § The movement of the mode gains further strength in the develep- ment of rich lames and satins in the casaquins or blouses which ac- company the new ensembles of | dressy character, ',\nd in the ten | dency to give brilllancy to evening fashions by a studied distribution or white or color. Awakening to Color Value There i8 aiso a to the value of colors and their re- lation to each other with striking color combination introduced with distinction by important creato which threatens the long suprem- ac yof the monotone ensemble. The overwhelming endorsement of patternod fabric is another re- action against the simpler style moods. In woolens, silks and metals, prints, novelty faconnes effs spread the con- trolling influence of design over day and evening fashions, asserting further the mood of clegance. In reviewing the Paris openings, it is all-important to cons| the silhouctte from the point of view of that sponsored by the greatest number of houses as well as those creators who have most authority With this in mind, the silhouette element whith ufidoubtedly has most conviction is the flat hipline treatment, reported as endorsed by 90 per cent of Paris designers. This may sugzgest efther a high or low waistline, for with a flat yoke about the hips, the upper line may be em- phasized as it sometimes is by an extra narrow belt which breaks the flat hipline, ; That the position line is to remain for another sea son, a movable q indefinite ele- ment to be decided by other phases of individual models is ascertained by the fact that in detailed style | reports of the openings the refle:- {tion of higher, lower and normal | posing of the waist is about equally halane Fitted Effects Show Modern Idea This is also affected by the fre- quent allusion to fitted or of the wals ence but thin, Pearls are still good, in two or three strand cu But costume jewelry from Paris is very ingenious and very individ- ual. Necklace, bracelet, purse fastening and belt buckle make up some new jewelry ensemble silver or white gold, are popular cut originally and set in sterling types of jewelry. Molyneux shows originality by making a stunning necklace and bracel:i set of knots of small gold beads strung between big wooden beads stained blucr than - mepphire. They are iight, gorgeously colorful and extremely suart. tLirown and Blue Fur belts are new this year. usu- ally taking ornamental buckles for contrast. Cut jet is good, or some richly colored stone, like coral. Scarfs of fur range from a tiny stone marten skin to the pmew two- yard long white fox scarf which looks like a single, slinky, sump- tuous animal, with his head “@bout one's shoulders and his feet reach- ing almost to one’s knes The wrong side is padded satin. ttering is the eclon g of carneliun, ony of ombre paillettes. A Purses differ as much as cos- tumes, though brown tones and medium blue shades seem likely 10 receive the most attention. Onc handsome imported set has a brown antclope bag istic tucks, and a rich fastening of carnelian, marcasitc and onyx on sterling. A bracclet of jaggedly- cut carnelians makes up the sct. Evening accessories are scintil- lating in their beauty. Dazzling shoulder pins of real stones and crystals are excellent. Lucky the woman who has rubies or emer- alds. If flowers are worn they are ille, of satin, which the gown itself is fashioned. The evening kerchief set is fas foned of sparkling paillett sombre effects, perhaps from silver through lavender to purple, The kerchief knots on the shoulder and is rich looking and becoming. Its little envelope purse may be of gold or silver with the paillettes panelled into it. Huge evening hankies are new, too, fashioned of 18-inch equares of rhinestones and crystals on black | new awakening | wenves, | semi- with modern- | apt to be exquisiiely made of chen- | lace or chiffon from | skirt silhouette, and the most au- | thoritative seem to agree on allow- | ing the skirt hem to reach to two | or three inches below the knee cap. | However, there is more irregularity and more dipping points in the afternoon fashions, while for eve- ning there is less of the very full back dipping points and more ap- proval of the circular panels and loops, etc., balanced and posed over |a skirt of straight hemline. Menus of the Family BY SISTER MARY Breakfast — Orange julce, cereal, cream, crisp broiled bacon, overs, milk, coffee. Luncheon — Stuffed baked pota- toes, buttered beets, brown bread, cookies, lemonade. Dinner — Veal birds, matocs, molded spinach pie, milk, coffec. Remove seeds from uniform te- matoes and stuff with a mixture of sweet corn cut from the cob and shredded sweet peppe Season with salt, pepper and butter. Stuffed Baked Potatoes Four good sized potatoes, 1 cup milk, 1 tablespoon butter, 1 table- spoon flour, 1 cup finely chopped cold boiled ham, 1 small stalk cel- ery, 1 slice onion. | ke potatoes and cut a thin | slice from flat side. Scrape out soft | part, leaving a shell about 1-4 inch | thick. Break up potato left in shell and season with little butter. Fill with ham mixture and cover with a, |rough layer of potato forced throug ricer. Sprinkle with paprika |and reheat in hot oven. To make |ercamed ham scald milk with cel- { ery and onions in top of double boil- er. Heat over hot water for 15 min- utes. Remove celery and onfon and stir in flour and butter rubbed to- zether. Cook and stir dircctly over the fire until mixture boils Cover nd cook over hot water for 10 nminutes. Add ham and use as re- | quired | (Copy stuffed to- alad, apple ht, 1928, NEA Service, Ine) SANTIN Accessories Follow The Fall Mode To Femininity ngated, soft white fox neckpiece. A x and marcasitc set in silver; a diaphonous chiffon hanky of generous size fs Molyneux's new costume jewelry uses rich biue wooden beads alternately with clusters of small gold beads to of filmy chiffon and using eon- trasting lace profusely. One ties them about the wrist, when danc- ing. The same sized hankles, in finely patterned handkerchief lin- cns, are tucked in the pockets of the scason’s smartest tallleurs, to flow gracefully over the side in a colorful wave. Hosiery readins plain sheer chiffon, unlocked and undecorat- ed. Shades that blend with browns are the best, at this moment, for autumn glorifies brown, if any scason ever did. The mesh stock- ings are still excellent for sports wear and with tailleurs, but the fancier the costume, the plainer | the hosiery. New red and brown | shoes are so decorative themselves that they necd no help. The same is true of gloves. Gaunlets of tan glazed kid, mocha, fine chamois and some new leathers are excellent. Plain stitching characterizes them. And the strups that fasten them at the wrists are apt to be plain, also, with only stitching to ornamenf them.

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