New Britain Herald Newspaper, August 6, 1929, Page 14

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, AUGUST 6, 19 ) P Uhe Heart Story || By C. D. Batchelor LOVC S Awakenlng of a R Fatemiigifios Philadelphia, Aug. 6 — Katherine | “Finally 1 got mad. spoke to him Steadfast Woman . Gartside Emmert is a far-sighted k. 7 and got fired. Then I held down . manufacturer who believes in the » , ceveral positions, in a religious pub By Adgle Garrison & I F o b8 cfficiency of the five-day week and | 2 S 3 lishing company, in a railroad offic., I i allows her own employes two days : hen as a court reporter. In the of rest in seven. | L ! ineantime father had started ks “I think life is too short to be so | Wy - little business. 1 put on demonstra - tired all the time from your work | 4 ; A : tions at state fairs, on the Atlantic that you can't enjoy it,” this amiable. 5 J board walk, in store. I thoroughly down my spine as i s panicky at the softened look v ‘ i frank woman maintained. L enjoyed it all. And when the soap Georges telling Mary th tow ame into her eyes as shc , 1 - 5 “I have been fagged myself too 5 3 S hegan selling well, T started out from *“feave Olina out of this.” His fian- looked at her suitor's ardent fact cften not to know,” she added. “You B b louse to house with it. Then 1 or- cee's mocki refee- This handsome young prince with ! b see I sold our rust soap from house | £ i eanized groups of salesmen. [final- ence to the pr s evid t he was offering her, was a 5 J 4114 § ¥ to house before we made such a go| - & Iy, when father left the business to tim > to tempt any girl even thouzh | i - _ . W\ } of it. Morcover 1 know most wom- | . 2 1y brother and myself ve begun ed by a love for another man. | it b A n have some home-making to do in | : «elling through stores, I felt T krew I need not have worri | ' b P \ addition to their work, If they have | : the distribution problem thoroughly 1 look gave way to the carc- \ \ : i b L a couple of days each week to get | Happy Family Lite mockery to which she had ke k AL i gl e i |Pome tasks completed and have af £ § v Since Mrs. Emmert started in rust the interview, Her moment o s AT r lttle ‘zecreation besldes, thay work coap she has been married, become avering was over. but 1 knew that / - § g 9 b 4 ] jisntony anc NoRCen R B [od LR tUn mother, then @ widow, and now cr lite Mary would carry AT C-7 AL . & 3 1 |stavs practically the same. | L i SR e b e oy 2 Gt b [T & AL 7 ; b a0 o DusinesesBegho | being the proud possessor of ce f A 3 L The whole history of the growth ? CUEA% cRubhy Mittie’ grandenid, 10f the now highly presperous com~| 4 b 3 i i 3 pany she and her brother own is| MypoSSUIsI Gl in ol aess v it [iust as human and interesting as is | o e anaRIsticryalghed Lias 2 sht ¢ / Mrs. Emmert hersclf. o ¢ . spoke, but one knew that her type that only B b AT T i T g | "1t started 35 years ago wherd Mrs. | k of woman accepts facts like U rastic of treatment woull / cop iy i . Emmert was a little girl in a pini | natter-of-factly. “You see, my son hold she had upon him 4 7 iz \ | 5 : Sl / | chambray dress, all ready to go o | is musical and one of the happiest sl e i | : \ \NS aut e poBli 7 picnic, and accidentally spilt a . days of my life was the one when I n ¢ bo, i [ S g | § ! \ : bottle of ink over herself. = s was able to get a building he wanted el > v N\ ) S 4 \ i / | “My father'was a chemist We ; +nd give nim a start in his business to have action. and - 3 3 > v | children always thought he could fix of musica; instruments, measly old court A \ 1 |anything up right. o I went cry \e didn’t even mention the fact BT 2 A - , d {ng to him.” Mrs. Emmert toid it all | at it was a $53.000 business start ob he ok S so graphically one could almost see | | she gave hi That is beside th " \ | the little girl she once was, tearful i point with this woman to whom per- pathetie, running o papa for help. . conal relations are of infinite impor “He tried a lot of thi tance and Money nothing except a |recounted. “He didn't succeed in convenienc |iemoving all the spots right then ting on a three months’ va ind there. But he took out enough = cation in Iurope. Mrs. Emmert |50 1 could go to the picnic seemed much more willing to talk |, “Then he b experimenting. | A bottle of ink spilled on her dress about her son and his family than He finaily worked out a satisfactory when she was a little girl indirectly | the business formula for both ink and rust spots. | launched Katherine Gertside Em-| “That is because we have every- But it never occurred to him to seli mert. ahove, on an interesting in- | thing worked out and running well ity then.” dustrial career. she explained. “But I know that it Her Start In Business will be the factories and the busi- | In the meantime little Katherine thing about it. 1'd fi Aliost all | mess possibilities abroad that will in- had outgrown her pink chambray | night, trying to balance things. terest me. You sc:, when you have dresses by several summers and had {next morning T'd nsk him about the | put as many years into a thing as | started as a stenographer at $5 a[two, three or five dollars missing. | have into rust soap, you just natur- |week. She kept books too and, in|He'd look absentminded and then ally have it in the back of your | rer own words: <ay, ‘Oh, yes, you are right. I took | mind all the time. But, even t “I might have been there yet a little money out for John's shoes. | I think no one should let business the hoss hadn’t developed a troubic- | John was his little boy. But no|consume her. the personul some trick of taking money out of |child ever wore as many shoes as | things in life B ustain you, wher |the cash rezister without saying any- | that cash register paid fe vou aue 2 Prince Georges, Deeply Hurt by |lated Mary Gibes at the Throne of Trees | mome Strives to Avert an Open Break ture s as determined to s *A tiny thrill of excitement ran|a f her life, lor a seco point that had been putting upon pped a bit I had not it you had onc. 1 know wve been studying for th i Bacicito 1 S 1t really— not g g | = S el e | Modish For Afternoon different. If 1 had|e She ire back her head and “The doctor says my blood's thin."” irty envoneiniot of voyaljlooked af himSihroughShalCelosedt “Isn’t that what they call pugnacious anemia, Madgz wave been ’ cyelashes | 5 throne to X i have 14 pr i N e —= o will 1 e she said. Then she L \d again wnalysis of the cause oi | 7 . Ladofno 3 1 L oyarc pur! "1 cart disease bring to light the exist Printed 1 shall he other end of the room, and B £ e cnee of the conditions that are here | | | PLRFECTLY AWIUL e e ; mentioned i Dy Alice Judson Peale ps nn. e 736 soldiers with heu S “Mother, you really ought to do e 5 .}M” "‘\“,_ .H,“J:‘ ,\j,‘.,‘l,‘,‘-“, something about Tommy. He's per- fashions fever, infecticus dis and syphili fecetly awful. He looks like a tramp gain appearcd among the chiel His knickers flap around his legs | conditi associuted with the de . and his stockings are all wrinkled clopment of disturbances of th 1 | He never cleans nails and he chews e . ’ | three sticks of gum at once, so that 8 ' 1 wouldn't he surprised if he got Al s B ate sl T e Gl o I e " |lockjaw ane of these days Nadame PR A A N R | “Honestly, I'm ashamed to admit |he's my brother! And if he's going {to he such a mess T am not going [to walk hack and forth to schooi| The chic with him any more.” | iump} 1 he no lovelier qu 3 “Noelt Olin o called you." 3 Come over here, plo Mary Softens need you in the laboratory His voice, low and ardent, woul (Continued Tomorrow) have accelerated the pulsc 4 Copyright. 1929, Newspaper this striking girl. T think Mary, though insur- | IFeature Service, Inc afternoon frock by Where direction connection can b heart, removal of the tonsils during | Tollmann. A quiet stage is sometimes of henefit However, the decision must he mad by the physician in cach case ac . 5 ; I | cording to the conditions he find. [ ol e gney Ll o ll(‘l‘ll“\ CU”“‘K' Sndine oglie nondlyiensahas ¢ He's old enough to go by himsel® (oS C AN I G oy x . next year.” | and euffs are 1 “Yes, but, mother. he oughtn't to | | be that way. He's a disgrace to the of white s gonnedlon IOy ot | family, and 1'm surprised you don't compensation that is to be given to [ tanstia el s Lo | care more than you do. [ crepe de chine CUBBY FINDS A HONEY TR 2 <ZZ | pairment, of his ability to secnre ol \l\nyv'l‘d‘fl(lrr‘l S ot S BY THORNTON W. BURGESs employment and to do full work. | . i G i R ni [anienb et o LT R orie ) nag Tommy either about his ap-| 4 Honey that's without a sting [ o fon of persons with various forms o 4 PR e e el | | the Veterans' Burcau has (o considor in this connection is the anount of and the frock Vil e N e 2w ek have to be patient with him as 1 varies from $10 to | and represeuts a | trimmed with part of thecost of the war of ch el 3 Cubby Bear did a great deal of ' N AR Rl 1 | mitehof & ragamutitn a2 Tommy is lovely red reaming about You sec, us J 4 anc Horizonta il | P vhite BWN iy i e tivelis o T zonial You know it's only within the| and white Bear should He was forever 5 1 umons sor ESTERDAY'S ANSWE | past year that you have lcarned to| . s poking his nose into ull sorts of 7 E!‘FRGE(" ‘p‘o erd “1iopera compa = ANBIVER .| brush your hair and clean your fin- | 1NCrustations. BT " any actual cogniz s e s I alall port o Most famous Itaii HIE | | ger nails without being told. Why. A el el ¢ S 3 Sitkworm | don’t you remember, you wouldn't i eve o Pl s ) b 3 1 Who was driven into ¢ |even let me buy you a dress coat g . becanse of Sural | because you said it would be just a | N C nuisance?" A out of their way. It only now and then that he got a glimpse of them, or they of him “Some day he would say to | self, “I'll be se dgre try e nwi ! B 4 9 Mass mectir com: OIOH[P] Courtesy title Lubricates To stuff Inferior oysicr R EER IO >G>0 - Growing sisters often find their | e e ' 1RO younger brothers “perfectly awful.” | LRV AT LR OO RS 3ut for the sake of both children| Since hot days are hard on nerves In laundering white frocks, if you begin in ediately to use a litth blui in the water the frocks wi!l olor MiCp>[0[0) o] |it Is well that sister should learn |guests may_be less of a strain tolerance and that brother should Inot be nagsed into a permanent prejudice against all neatness and o ot [ politeness. In aue time he, like his|orc CUie @ foweraddsmuch too RUSTY SCREWS | breakfast is served them in th rooms. Attractive colored tin tra = >[om{>] =[O " sister, will discover their value 3 p \en; removir rusly screws o | PARSLEY TOUCH t stick A little MEASUL STENERS A way to clean silver in hot we nd leave a while befere 1 frock, sew the ball-snap section on | ley sprink over new potatoes, cold — the upper piece first, rub it with [meat served in a hed of crisp let BREAD BOXES il ? p ent tery and Apple salad, Serving 4 | Chalk and press the under piece in | tuce. fr cherries filling honey ne your bread and cake hoxes \ I e RS 1.2 cup [Pace. The ehalk wil mark the ex- |dew melon slices and neat salad own paper and they will stay for now 1- , 0 gre ) e g 2 S laa Jon | 4¢t place 10 sew the socket e all gocd touches o hot, damp weather. beginning to % shment pl He knew 7 ‘ I o ’ : resrizi : PAST COLOR 7 ] Loves When washing chintzes, ginghams and other colored cottons. add a halt of sugar of lead 10 a gallon er and soak them fo set the PRESH FRUITS PATT e WLt New Britain Herald 1ic Practica berries are much more than those e Pattern ear round : (dd the sugar The woman who has put on a bit cgg. Slowly add the milk (the of flesh will enjoy today's model amoun ) ys be de A TNV Q. Design 9, as it was styled special Tntorestod s 4 (R T pat it o o inch | line, the shaped girdle, snugly hold 5 2 : Cut into e with ing the hips in accepted fashion, an ] ] (il : ) e Cover he glaze | the flared skirt, all tend to slender | Extremely smart arve the silk S 7 i , crepes of dark grounds and printed ; e ! I'with very thin figures in maiz green, yellow or blue. Black, navy | and brown grounds are being shown in the new Iall frocks " I | May be obtained only in sizes nes 3 5. 40, 42, 44 46 and 1S |” size 38 requires 41 yards of 4 CHILLED SALAD 1inch ‘material and % vard vest and sweetbread jellied [ tabric. s deliciously beautiful an This model is casy 1o make. No or summer. Parboil the sweet- dresmaking experience is necessar cads, and d hoth them and the | A | Each pattern comes to you witn imbers. Scason with a little | |simple” and exact instructions, in ind paprika and add to gela- | cluding yardage for every siz A perfect fit is guaranteed } Patterns will be delivered 1pon . PRUIT STAINS receipt of FIFTEEN CENTS (15¢) Menus for the Family e e m D ins v « stamps. Be sure lo write plainly j | vour NAME. ADDRESS, STYLE O e ) ling wate NUMBER AND SIZE wante Hughland scones Win Favor y \ Our LAT FASHION BOOIK 3 i | will be sent upon receipt of TEN {CENTS in coin Address all marl 1 often anend monéy on | and orders to New n Herald tub- | things they don’t need to impress | Fattern Department, 243 West 17tn people they don't like. Lsum.r, New York City. By DR RIS HEEIN tditor dournal of G American Medical Associetion zid of Hy- in, the Heaith Laine i

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