New Britain Herald Newspaper, August 8, 1929, Page 18

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Love’s Awakening The Heart Story ofa Steadfast Womanp By Adele Garrison Mary, Realizing That Only Draslll:] what M had been waiting for, 1 Action Will Save Her Happiness, | decided as she wheeled on Olina, her Reveals That She Was the Mask- | head ed Dancer of the Night Club As Mary shot her challenge Noel, I never had seen her rust forward expressing the ce and pride which were also vi- hrant in every line of her lissome figure. And her starry chal- lenging eyes, and the delicate car- mine of her coloring, completed a picture which might enthrall th senses of any man two who faced 1 saw that Prince look of dream But o2 man of th her was not enthralled in the strained face of Georges. It had on the one passing from a roseate o black reality. To h roblemn, any solution of ould be tragic. His chivalr h, Q —1 gue to give Mary outrageous fo m had come whicn forbade ultimatum defiance of between yovi sse ixoti ch her called the a choice gemnt belween compying with ‘nd not guessing th Noel and Mary were | with cir happiness as a stake faced future an tied to a not thought or one, m, or is wishes feh aying he the tragic wife with im who 1 1hlic of hin him in fig What Noel thou have told. T coula oulc brush the ir with one hie given muck roya t s little lad cart arms st cu mutino o and rushed her. But he had s the role of devotio I had asked of hir not deviate from if. At question is away hims to Olina and he would Mary's chal- rning his ira lenging father's verdict ability, he strai spoke tersely, er the matter-of-fact Le would h sional “Yon claim ve a questior pert you have said repeatedly t are g t dramati traincd Olina Curiously ¢ cated her clain ing at Georges the mention of ‘care Glina. Suddenly I had th viction that my husbar niece had not yet finish plan for disillusio Georges, and that she ing some move for it—that she ingly. The next ins! answered. From Olina’s lips came a dainty little laugh, a wraith of a thing, but expressing i finite incredulity and disdain, and wth the power of a stiletto to wound. It or something like it was \ets ugh, as Noel Mary was ho 1 ith | Pr waitin cord from O int my question was there suddenly thrown back, her | hands thrust down at her side, her at | more | autiful. Her lovely little head was | defi- | slender | body ~high, | f to play | ¢ eyes blazing with well-simulated ang “You do not believe, T sec shot the words at Olina. "I have to show you. Wait here, 1 shall be back in a minute he Masked Dancer | danced into her room while | the three members of the group she | 1d left looked at each other with a blank amazement in their faces— an astonishment which was reflected | in my own face, 1 knew. But when | in but little more than the irtervai she had named, she into the room again, I understood, and She shall eve She ris- W BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY ing from my chair, put my hand out in protest before I rememt rae | so far no one had krown I the room, and that I had promised | Mary | what happened. | Ior it was not our Mary who had | come hack but an but ab- | cost of the| pon the stage. In | clutch something not distinguish, but with a | teeli heart 1| s pow ad irdeed hands. was in | to re into the roon exotil in a fetching breviated da sort only used ¥ she I could little sick my impulsive step | he, | I saw Nocl tuke one toward her too md then stop a utility of stopped i realize irter- | of the xaggerated “Now s falsetio to you tha his judg the midd floor and swept us an | ntlc she said in a high voice, to tzen did 1 he pronounced the has hall endeavor o prove )t oerr ir vel 1 his son ust given | you, at least ap-| Watch closely, | 1y o give this lit- | ch one of t, then , hum- roan insta her beau- ol ateh- n spite on brava- ary whirled s in mer away from them raction of an ith her back to ther her hands were tace. When hlack silk and the While busy turned back mask covered her top of her adorable mischievou neath it as she swept into the finale I Princess Olina thing which madc icy with horror. “I krow you now. You naskod dancer in that (Continued Tomorrow) right, 1920, Newsy Service, Inc. nose and she smiled be- ried out some me were fhe right ¢ Cor Ature ETS HONLY By Thornton W, Burgess ALL ApouT Pleasures all too soon are past Sweetness will but seldom Cubby Perhaps 1 He hadn't many The fight 1s paws full Worla only should s supposed there in all t of it was bees Gre he worst could them couldn’t tree do 1h to get v hu up! They around h into ti one head Do y pered those A sharp sting whim and growled hook his claws into t little hole where and out and try to tc of the wood. He that hole I Loney. But | to slap Cubby snarled pic lioney t 50 close on the b, up with fr that piece HOUSL Resistered U e o— To Grud Seven stars 1 Colorado. Hatior shaped Put Menus for the Famil) ALEXAN i-lrutti S Breakf: Penehes (1 Luncheon S. Patent 0ffic o By C. D. Batchelor e g 4 g e YOUR HEALTH DR. MORRIS IISHBLIN of the American Medical Association #nd of Hygela, the Health Magazi the World war a tremen- dous number of men was rejected for service of flat feet, ham- mer hinions er other defects which the cxpetience of military afi- BY hecause toes, Macaroni Putti-Fratti Short Relish, cook ruit AN serving 1 aro Six ta ur i cup Marion Wilson s chopped ales Minture PURSES n Saratoga Spri g Quaint with its horse-drawn su its spacious white vled from shady id-Victorian nd ned fo tt ard His thers here from mansiors in vast ar 1 en luwns streets and i of fastial- leisure of tmosphere con has Roils Hoviety the wonth of Mional 1k lonk Jvees nos N nm this year to Whit Charles M ). Salmons, Averill Clark amous for took off Rev- ewly-huilt where their of rden colored Ivet 1eon In cluh s wom moved K or sat vhere Ny o ¢ diy Sun me that all skin game New Under the are playing a AUGUST 8 1929, ‘horitics had stown would prevent them from holding ont sufficiently on the march. | Not infrequently fiat feet | tion fairly satisfactorily. In | instances, however, good feet capa- {ble of marching 15 miles a day without strain must be practically | normal. | Much o fthe difficulty of feet to- |day deperds on the fact that im- proper shoes were worn during in- fancy and childhood. It is recog- nized, of course, that the type of shoes affected by women is impos sible from a scientific physiolozic point of view Thus, tne editor Lancet E func- most of the Landan Man's hoots and shoes ma be bad, but, if so, what cpithet of depreciation is strong cnough for the shoes of women? Now that all females are ladies, the orkers among them lave aped the fashions which we popular with | the wealthy idler past gene | tions who rode in carriages and d but little walking on their high heels and pointed toes.” Almost any ‘ype of shoe that the | juman being may wear is likely to force the big toe out of position by squeczing it in toward the other toes Ihe ancient Greeks and Romans | vore a sandal with a thong between | the big toe and the first toe which | welped to keep the big toe in its roper place. Very soon after tricting footgear, one loses Lhe ower of moving the big toe out- vard from the rest of the toes.,The | tiff soled shoe helps the! c | trophy of the muscles of the nd very soon one has the inflamed, listorted object that px for al oot in mcst human beings today. | Dr. Jobn D. Adams insists that first shoes of the infant should like & paper bag with . | «nough ape {0 make it possible o call the device a shoe. The ma- erial should be soft white Kid, with | texible unresisting sole and with a wstring of tape at the top. Since | ustom demands some conformity to ityle, the shoes between the ages of two and five should be \'\lffivlv‘lnl\'\ I'road to allow the toes {o assume a | natural uncompressed weight bear- ing position. Ie shoe should have cd heel, sufficient depth from the | vamp in tiie middle of the foot to | the middle of the sole, a broad flox- ible sole with u straight outside. Up to 314 years of age the heels should | not be any thicker than the solé; from to 5 the heels shonld be twice as fhick as the sol Tatks To 554 &%, Parents TIBILITY | JUDSON PEALE | of those children who She fol- s4vs: oi one years con- | se | faot he it a well-shap- SUGH By ALIC Ann is one |always follows the leader. lows wherever she is led, what the course or what the end. Ordinarily she is a sercne cheer- | ful youngster, full of energy and| Barbara Phipps this Aug for the cut and color | frocks, the shape of hats and general effect of all clothes | zc that sun-tanned without which smart to be smart wit, the Willizm er, frock of ful with tan, piped of [ the com wo- i i it | Mrs colo There lunching in a new soft pink wond Down hand Swartz ith Mrs. vore a dotted suit in burgundy and h William Langley u the paddock, printed in vivid red modernistic miniature Sloane in a hox and her Morton two-piece Mrs. | hour hins guests sponsored a white and | unlike Geo green, figures troes, Ars yellow not fir and this season’s blue, with a cool green cast Elizabeth Altemns to Jock Whitney in a geraninm zig-zag lines against cut with decp suntan hack George U, ment he rose ANl tan's M Deering new How wor shade of pastel it talkin o 1o stood print orchid Mrs Harris compl ed her Athy tan of with a ep o yel soft hue tones to heighten A Pashion Ra and prints are run ternat- in most- e n color off brown. predominate, Tallmadg black one fo atop a black to nee honor ons ar or thon Mrs huge one Prentiss floppy day wore | advantage | |18, | ceipt o matter | Hdy New Britain Herald 15¢ Practical Pattern. tunning Sports Model” Pointed effects assume great im- portance in the mode this season. and particularly lovely are th pointed yokes of bodice and skirt in Design 1750. The skirt is grace- fully flared giving frecdom and e swing. This of it model is delightful fashioned wash silk in a pastel shade. Or you wish, a cotton fabric might be used with smart results, elther in plain color or one of the new prints. Tiny attractive buttons lend dainty finish to yoke and belt. May be obtained only in sizes 20, 34, 36, 38 and 40. Size 16 requires 3 5-S yards of 40 inch material. This model is 16 easy to make. No dressmaking cxperience is neces sary. Each pattern comes to you with simple and exact instructions including yardage for every sizc | A perfect fit is guaranteed. Fatterns will be delivered upon re- of FIFTEEN CENTS (15¢) in colns carefully wrapped or stamps Be suré to write plainly your NAME, ADDRESS, STYLE NUMBER and SIZE wanted. Our LATEST FASHION BOOK will be sent upon receipt of TEN CENTS in coin. Address all mail and orders to New Britain Herali Pattern Department. 243 West 17th street, New York city. | ready interests. But let the leader of the moment prompt her in anoth- | er direction and she becomes over- | night a disobedient, fault-findis child who tries the patience of hes clders to the last notch. } So Ann, for ®ll her usual gool| qualities, is suggestible to a degrec | which may work her endless harm. | She is at the mercy of whatever in- | fluence is free to play upon hej { Suggestibility is a valuable quality, | since it is through it that children | largely are teachable. But sugges- | tibility carried to extremes leads to | an unstable and irresponsible char-| acter. Although it is nece child should know it is also necessary that he should know how to lead or least stand his ground. | Watch your child through the vi- ! cissitudes of different friendships. n’ throughout these he holds for the| most part to his own values and| his own standards you need not feel | that he is too suggestible. But if| it seems to you that he readily loses | ry that your how <to follow at to |his bearings and, like the r‘humr\lr‘nl\i changes to the color of his immedi- must try to| te environment, you trengthen him in his own values, | Let him feel your approval of his| independent actions. Give him your | moral support when in spite of his and white Mrs. printed outfit. Charles chant for as horses Amory has a pen | as well | On | na picking that hie opening day white fe with day ner, 1 print win honors her burgundy print was bertha. An- | famous win- terned frilled patting her Wrac he wore nery print of white, with yellow shoes heauty other a dain daisics tie, hat inst ar Among the all-whites, none smarter than Mrs. Henry Carne- Phipps, strolling in the dock with her hushand and for another look at Diavoln the little jockey with the colors of her Wheatley stables Mrs. William Prime and Cornelta Loth wear all-white a lot, (ornelta topping smart silk pique with a white turban, a model she has had copied in many colors her different Wit Cornelia, also in her inseparable school chum and si ter debutante, Mollie Cullem, of Pittsburgh whose flashing hlac Cyes low d 1n of St A pad hara ind gau nes ton costumes. white, was recently how at the Court | imalke Jamc Veils are Walter .J veil with \ It her cdging in again wlmon wore a f a chie black sisol turban B chard T. Wilson, wifc ot | the president of the Saratoga Rac | ing Association. wore a hig-mesh- | ed one with the big. green horse- | kair braid hat atop a green and white polka dotted costume, Mrs ine half | smartest {included | Chauncey own feelings he is in danger of drifting the way of the herd. Such an attitude on your part can help much to counteract his natural over-suggestibility. Fashion Pléque An interesting buckle is this one of crystal modernistic design. bagnettes in IN THE FASHION RACE AT SARATOGA Mrs, Charles Amory On the opening day one of the luncheon in the club was Mrs. Wilson's and Mrs. George Mesta, her guest from Newport, Bar Wilson, in a stunning beige brown printed frock, and Olcoit, famous host dur- Faben, kceps open his rambling white mansion. “Inniscarra,” show of Saratoga, which has esat veplica of his father's cottage in Ireland stand in the formal garden with r hox 1 and its white zuarded three 100 per store Indians. folks, par- horses, are little ensem- restaurant house bara an the at ing house wiio lovely nlace a pictur- ing out hy cent American cigar Many young society ticularly interested Dorothy frock Regan in here linen Tean ble Mrs. troiling Davis th deep in a in a rose William 15, v with her new husband, both heaming happy Vande bilt looked stunning in h Leige costume with a diamond bracelets liant e M wore « nderbilt, that smile, hrace of a bril Sloant makin Georg g bit fascina of jewelry, a tiny tlow diamonds, and topazes for H. C. Phipp hat sported ind diamond pin opcoat Me- Po rubies, emerald {the posies. M black ballibuntl handsome Wiy her | Kelvic |ner, a | weave, L with a onyx anyone hevond needs a But M WeArS a colored MeWilliams mustard stun- basket

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