New Britain Herald Newspaper, January 3, 1929, Page 10

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY' HERALD, THURSDAY, JANUARY 8, 1929. VIVACITY ---OR DIGNITY? Formal Gown Expresses One of These Moods and Never Twain Shall Meet. ¥ Once Overs By C. D. Batchelor ’ A . T'he Hl-afnt Stary Ve 3 w enmg Steadfast .\Vnmn By Adele Garrison Katto Reveals That Mary Hersclf crying and, tell me, do you think | Has Been Posing as “Janct { Mary has suspceled you were nov| Rawdon” | what you pretended to be For a long minute I looked at| She wiped her eyes, sniffled a bit b s the wavelope addressed “Miss Janct |and then was hersell again. LETS MAKE THIS Rawdon, Box ——, Southampton, L.| “I sure she no tink nodings abour ANNOUNCEMENT OF 1.. New York,” and the blotted bank me only to laf " she said earnestly. THE OPENING SWELL. deposit slip with the same name|“You sce, she in sooch hurry to ger . wr‘i’uen a!plhc top, which Katic oudt of post office und bank before LETS TELEGRAP:{ had put into my hands. Then 1 dot Meester Juckson get back dot | THE SUCKERS, looked up at my justly triwmphant she no hat time tink yling else little maid, standing above me now | but feexing dose tings.' in her excitement. | T turned back to the envelope ana | “Then,” I said, “then, there is ne | the slip. | ‘Janet Rawdon! Mary has been! “Did you sav these were written | scnding this money to herself under | with her left hand>” T asked. | thaf name and has opened an ac- | “Yah. I sce her,” Katie re-| count in a Southampton bank as sponded. | “Junet Rawdon.'" | “Have you those pieces of blot- | “Sure thing,” she returned. “Vot ter pasted together?” I asked T tell you? Ve all blind, blind!” Abundant Proof “Indeed we have been,” I return-| “Yah, 1 get dem.” she a ed, "and we have been most unjust nd left the room, returning a min- | to Mary. We owe you a great deal, | nte lgter with the cleverly pasted Katle, for your cleyerness in solving | cirenlar picce of boltter. 1 took it this problem for us. You have saved and compared the blotter address | me & great deal of mental worry. left by the cnvelope with the en- and T thank you so much.” velops Unmistakably they 1 am prepared for almost any- wers thing from Katie, but T did not ex- “May ve these, Katio?® T rect to see her hurst into a storm | asked with perfunctory courtesy. of sobw, the while she snatched my | “Sure ting. Vot T vant mit dem 2™ hand and covered it with hysterical she answercd “Here, T wrap dem Kisses. in paper for you. Den nobody see “I get mad ven you no steeck |von mit dem.” 1 around vile T tell you someting, nnd | She defily wrapped them in & 1 sulk like leotle mad dog for days | piece of newspaper and 1 took them und days. Dot no vay to treat boss sratefully. who good to me like you vas.’ |~ “There is only one thing more. Katie Is Vorgiven < 1 said. “1 do not wish you Secratly 1 agreed with her 2aything of this to anyons, 5 he had been most trying in her mot even to Jim, unless 1 give you sullen insolenc> during < o [permission.” our preparations for the rixton "ot you take me for?” she de. visit, But I felt just now as if Katie 'manded indig “1 no sieve, bad atoned for cvery dercliction |t flour troo. 1 | since she had entercd iy 1 g dem to you, T forget everyting. and T slipped a comforting arm 1wl vay goot detcetif do, und T telt around her. you T fake me twe <soms corre. - “Don’t think of that a spondence school und get me goot commanded. “If you didn't do as diploma you think you ought, vou certainty | (Continued Tomorrow) fave made up for it with what youw Copyright, 1829, Newspaper have done today. Come now, stop Revistered T. 8. Patent Office NIGHTCLUB JAUARY 25 | i cning gowns for different maods depends on fabric and cnt. (Left to right) There's movement in every foul of Patou's “robc pour danser.” a modern evening gown made of chenille dottod sk net. It's scarf heighiens the suggestion of movement. An off-white mousscline gown expresses dignity and grace lin fts longer skirt and the unusual back treatment. A heautiful yellow manne velvet drese, clogquently formal and reminiscent of the “grande robe du soir” vold, has bath dignity and repose in its flowing lines . BY JEAN PATOU i ;Paris.: Jin; 3 — X 'have . eften may have such a severe cof- |from the shoulders of men, cone heard women make the atatement g ., "3 je hody that the pulse cludes Mrs. Ethel L. Beat, a field that evening dresses can very WeW| ..o i gtjll he rapid on the fol- | worker of the women's bureau of the be worn from one season to anoth- |, i,z norning. United States department of lahor. er and that they are the only type) “yop o " pe “game iy prescribed | Mrs. Best sayn that few white of dress that does not go °"""' for invalids as good excrcise dur- |women within the state enter busi- date quickly. To bear out thisij o " o0 oiocconce, it is sufficient [ness and that the majority of these etateient they say that @ winteri % pogin *with one-half hour ot [are employed in stores an hotels. evening gown can very well bofo. 00 ng s increase gradually. fhe number of professional and made of chiffon and a summer one | "y o Toinvor Joses weight during [business women is small, the of satin or velvet without 100KIna |y o pare " varying from one pound |avers. at all out of season. i i’ st st Emiphti scenia] D R SONEI TprSelghtoan oleny fiand being greater in men than In quite logical. There is, however, "'m":nlre Sta Bea Wh very tion of fan- 3 . ge Ul 0 & 'yary ImpSHAnt ies It the player drinks a greav ric in the creation of an cvening : the g2 El l Di gown. This has nothing whatever dcal of water during the game, s Vol'ced - 5 the weight will remain the same. | to 700 Wil the ‘"'"“l’ Feanon> | Lomses of ten pounds or more, When a couturier empl ':-"‘ “'d'\" which are reported to occur to ";‘" '“‘“""‘Lr“ ::‘:‘;Yr::_o:“m i | champlonship players on a hot ore is a very s e e {iod e noaiv yolks and milk. Cook in & doubte | i ole"of ‘tabric, for a creator, d:-i‘c. ste:tnsreroroigulte Sacnoclys PETER HAS A FULL MIAL By Thornton W. Burgess The change of outlook is complete When hunger finds eno to eat. eter Rabbit, Peter Rabbit had had one of the most narrow escapes of all his life Hooty the Owl or Reddy Fox cer- tainly would have caught him hal he not remembered having seen Black Pussy the Cat push open a little swinging door made especially for her in Farmer Brown's barn. Peter had pushed open that litile door and entered the barn just as| Kooty the Owl was reaching for him, The little door had swung to right in Hooty's face. Now that he | was inside, Peter was both thankiul and scared. You kiow, it often i scary to be in a sirange place ny little shivers ran all over as he sat in that biz, dark When one of Farmer Brown's ho jumped almost out is th side, where he susp the Owl was waiting ar He didn't know that %eddy Fox was | also there. Peter crouched clo: door through which he had entered He crouchcd there for a long time, trembling with fright happened. And presently nose —his wabbly, inquisitive nose—began to pic pleasant odors. To begin w i 15 the smell of sweet clover hay. 1t fairly filled the barn. Then Peter canght iff of cabon It secmed to him that his ach just turned right over with of cabbage. He stood it he could and t move about a li “Lll look around a bit,” thought Peter Iis whole outlook had changed just | cause he had a fall slomach. In two < h (Copyr g i Burgess) The nest story Doy ilas a Surp cut variety of questions fen- . None of them is \ you may e y hesitations. HORIZONTAL Tn what country is Montrcal? To indule Acidity of the stomach. fac A low place hetween hills. A place surrounded by ram- parts and bulwarks. Menus for the FamiZy [filling becOmes very thick ~and crcamy. It the filling Is cooked In a double hoiler it will need frequent | stirring to prevent lumping, while it it is cooked directly over & low flre it must be stirred constantly to prevent scorching and lumping. | When the filling s thick, add the | rest of the ingredients and pour into a baked pic thell. Cover with | | meringue, Meriugue 2 egg whites, 1-8 teaspoon salt, 3 tablespoons sugar. Beat the cgg whites and salt until very thick and fluffy. Add the su- gar and beat until crcamy. Roughly pile on top of the filling. Bake in a siow oven for 10 minutes. Cool and scrve, For variety, substitute white su- gar for the brown and add pecans for the black walnuts. Three table- spoons of cocoanul may be sprin- Kled over the top of the meringue Lefore it is baked. One-half cup | chopped dates may be substituted | for the black walnuts. | Guiding Your R Child LITTLE MIRRORS Ly Mrs. Agnes Lyne A certain high school tcacher [tells of a little girl in her class [ who sccmed suddenly to losc all in- | tercst in her studies. Although previously she’had been | & good student, her grades in many | subjects now fell below passing. Her | teacher noticed that Claire had be- | come ungccountaisly sensitive to | | criticism and cried easily if teased by her classmates. She appeared to #pend most of her time day dream- ling and drawing pictures in her note book. boiler or mfir a low fire until the | jer not only in displaying to best hec advantage ry intricacy of cut, tut also of contributing to the general lines he sceks to impart [to his creation. Movement—or Repose® Evening dresses are of two dis- tinct types. There fs the dress that is meant for movement d that which calls for repose and dignity. Consequently therc are | matertais better suited than others for each of these types, the judi- cious choice of which is another manifestation of the art of the fash- fon creator. Velvets and satins, owing to the particular way in which they “fall,” are best suited to dresses designated on sinuous lines, with a general movement distinctly de- termined hy their cut. Dresses such as these resemble the very formal ‘evening gown of old and in fact look formal whether they are scen In movement -or In re. oS Dresses made of sheer fabries, on the other hand, necd fo be seen in movement to be appreciated at | their real worth, also to show off | small details that otherwize es- cape notic: at a cursory glance, These dresses full of movement |are better suited to the modern zeneration. Today a younz wo- man is so alive that she scems to | communicate a sense of vitality to her clothes. The: medern zirl's evening dress is speclally studied to show off this vivacity, consequently many of its graceful details are dissimu- lated when the wearer is still. New fabrics, such as the new velvets, although infinitcly more supple than the old qualities, stilt “set” more stiffly than any shecr material. They give rise to an in- termediary style. This intermedi- ary style s necessarily nonde- script, lacking in character and character after all is the essence of all art and of all things pertain- TOMORROW: Fatigue and the heart, PARTIES AND BUSINESS CANNOT BE HARMONIZED Chicago Girl Gives Up Socials to Become Adviser on What's Correct to Wear, Chicago, Jan. 3 (@ Beckwith of an American lineage cars old s the latest recrnit from Cihengo social circles to the ranks of the “working girls.” As advertising manager to two smart shops &he attempts fo in- duce her sociely friends to buy gowns for the winter's partics which she given up for busi- | ness career. For as she said, “you can’t mix business and pleasure—late partics and 9 o'clock office hours cannot be reconciled, If constructive there would be more vae: ies in social cirel My family approved of my working, and all in all its the best idea I've ever had.” Miss Beckwith at Wellesley v a member of the crew and a tennis player. She givis of means oniy knew how much pleasure they would derive from doing something the daghter of Judge and Mrs. J. W. Beckwith. | poco NEA Cleveland Bureau Brown Semple, Cleveland girl Her mother has a famons collection i tyce glorified by Ziegfeld in “Kid of Wedgewood and Spode. Florida Women Dodge Worries of Business St. Petersburg, Fla., Jan. 3 (®— Women of Florida are not interested in lifting the mantle of business {Boots,” has been granted a divorce from young Joscph P. O'Donnell, 21, son of a wealthy Cleveland contrac- tor. Miss Semple, who eloped with O'Donnell June 20, 1927, charged neglect. A financial arrangement 1\\éls made, according to attorneys for the actress, pened he grew bold Dinner Menu it “]m St R 4 round steak cakes, mash. | One of these drawings came by | ing to art. = That is one: reason Ay iTing Dt 3 niy body with a 5 Lok buttored turnips, bread, CPance info fier teacher's hands, 1t | Why T am not very enthusiastic . ous train 4 ;| was a series of little sketches de- | about the new velvets, as T esti- that the pleasa 1 ¢ | } i . 4 5 T ey o | Cranl head dettuce and | ¢ - oy filed oy w Hasliih 2 ’m 1: Lo I8 ome- | 4. ieh dr black waliut cara- | VicUng courtship, the lovers kissing | Mate a gown should be a work pf were loose leaves round on ! \ g The claw of a bird of prey. | 3y the floor. Feter s down be-| wee 26, To merit, Gl o <ide the first one he found and be-| |9 e e, J3. What continent can to cat. le and ate until | that leaf had wholly disappeared. He sighed with enjoyment Then he ate 1 and a thira lcat. By that t ~wasot| Fashion Plague willing to he called nimal s used as a heast | pan. Droj clies 118 hunger, as the . Fld stom A5 wendor w g for a good meal. ) rth- arou Lo, | WCL G, coffee, LRACoiin el onl e g i) L] 80t s S e e i u:n‘l{”;‘ ".'l'q{.ilf{ nd plants : minister and Bible, matrimony, with | these fabrics, because T do not use L SRR A i g 2 il B raty R Galea Tty llnnm,i pins and flat irons *flying | them :\.m cxtensively for after- Brown had & pile of cabliuges the ' L0 ahdone vound round sk, kround, 1| 1hroush tic airl and last, the di- | noon dressen but T still maintain i S pin fag noys : REEALT, cEpoon! fincly! ehoppad onton. 1| ourt with the fudge granting | fhey are not ideal for evcning take Pet long to find them. i » g k{ Corei. SRLECCioPReaiCHICty DN UH R FY [ e o ! ; poon it 1.4 tea.| Claive offered no explanation oth- —— et 1 e, 4 tablospoons | <7 than o say, “Well, that's the way [tacs or tomato purce (to. |t iS. iSN't it When her teacher " i protested that it was surety not that ource of raw diamonis’ il | way among the: people she knew ahe — being 1 ccdom of accoss to a house. | TRk i aba ol sald, “No--but that's how it is just| Fggitors Note: This is the second VERTICAL 1 pie pan or in a (rying | the same - otk of a series of three articles on the low a glowing | A @2y or two later Claire’s moth- | Physiology of Golf. len on the Sahara? . e eakes are well “T came in to discuss her daughter's : 4 W and brown the other POOF echolastic standing. In 3 mo-| By DR, MORNIS FISHBI rubs do the may ng? sides wnd then lower the fire and "0t she was pouring ferth an un- | pdjtor Journal of the American Shart Ietter. o inutes, 1 owill re- | 'ADPY story of a successful career | Medical Assoviation and of Hy- ot < P OTR BT A BED, \ Iinutes to thorough- Saciificed to wifely and maternal geia, the Health Magazine 4 devotion, of years of falthful per-| Through the Burke Foundation « cooked on top formance of duties the only reward | which endowed a sclentific study of 1z 1 tablepoon | Of Which had boen the loss of her | the physiologic effects of golf. spe- pan. Whes hushand’s love and his rceent fla- | cial investigations have been made i cover with a 8rant unfaithfulness. | of the players reactions. called? i 5 minutes, | When it was suggested that the | Certain players were permitted st o o climax in her own atfairs had some- | 5 make:three practice shots and ettty her thin | DO mirrored itself in her little |then to use a fourth explosion M of serrow. the cook- 's mind, causing lier failure in | xhot for driving a ball out of the t was Henry Wadsworth D sulstituted for the |*€hool work, she dismissed the mo-|trap. The time required for the A e e |5 tion. saying, with tght lips, “Therc | est wos one minute. . ort sword : ¥ with Raisins | i3 N0 quarrelling in our home. The | In every case there was & Jrancs away. s er cup rai- | conversation at the dinner table, if | marked rise of the blood pressure the truth. 1 won VFuzzy ¢ : k 2 cups sugar, | @0 Is pleasant.” Not until she had | after the shot, and this ' rise was e b S lwrrics and | been shown the pictures did she 2d- | greater in the case of cxperi- Sl I S ) i) : ‘ 1 soft berrfes, | it the connection between her 6wn | cnced players than in the case of believe Reddy. S Uhiought 16 was] \ I s th iring waler and cook | Unhappiners and her child's Pre- amateurs, Evidently the concen- Just one of Reddy's tricks o gt m=| | 3 i ; are’ soft. | CocipAlion. | tration neccssary and the tension el S 100 the su.| Tt is no smeil part of the duty of | associated with such shots s suf. ; - Pour into a | Parents to solve as far as possible | ficient to react immediately on the So Peter hegan fo look about i been rinsca | 10e problem of their own personal | biood pressure. a place to take a nap. He hurrow in a cold happincss. and havirg done all that| The general evidence seemed od tindet the hay. e even nibbled 1 ready te | i8 possible, to act a8 happy as they [to be that 3.000 yards of playing | wish they were. | ] i a little a8 he burrowed. for it was A strikis et L La : AL e ARG R e il iistance makes little difference to swoet clover hay, an spife his vin zown of < ¢ E SHlhes ey a healthy man ‘when he plays with full stomach fat ; A | \\f»\ll} TO SHOW SCULPTURE [1he same tempo all the time. A it. He only burrowcd a liitle way flovor 5 iy it Siabs o011 | San Francisco, Jan. 3 UP—Cili- ndly game has much less ef- under. Tt was il . ! SaEmRval, 112 11 tea- | fornia club s omen will have an ex- | feet the pulse rate and the ot st b 3 Y nut o meats | hibition of Ameriean sculpture at | pulse pressure than. a champion- Madama Nicole Gronlt wears a model of bois de rose and bl <ince the con ' ¢ lata the rizit io 2 e S Mix 1 < |1 Palace of the Tegion of Honor | ship game.. / which T sketched there, Her costume, made for the 1tiviers. e th M e 1 i . n1 sl fevorlooking Golden Gate park. The| A strenuous game. such as takes [robin's egg pluc and black with hat 1o match LSS G, the egx | exhibiticn will last six months. lplac:‘ in championship ‘ourna- 1o sample how of taff UAYRES A RITA.

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