New Britain Herald Newspaper, August 10, 1929, Page 10

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Love’s Awakening The Heart Story of a Steadfast Womanp By Adele Garrison Madge's Timely Interference Pre- vents a Serious Flare-Up—and the “Romancing” Scheme Moves To- ward a Climax Mary, you are a very bad child! 1 do not know whether to smack vou or send you to bed without any suppe 1 shot a whimsical husband’s lovely young uttered the burlesqued threat was determined to put upon frivolous plane temporarily. at least the situation brought ahout by her recklessness. 1 knew that } was grasping at the traditional straw. for both Noel and Prince Georges were at the point of explosion into murderous anger. but it was the only ruse I knew. “This child loves I went on. “She is superlative. 1 hope Mr. Veritzen will be able to subdue her, but [ have my doubts after this particular —prank—of hers." T smiled at Mary again, and with a furtive glance saw that the others were relaxing from their ten Looking directly at Prince Georges I struck a more serious note 1 beg you to believe what T am going to tell you [ sald slowly. “Mary in her to prove a point to you has greatly exaggerated an incident which would be of no importance whatever were it not for Mr. Philip Veritzen's pe- culiar prejudices concerning the lusion of the young women whom he honors by training for his work Purposely T made my voice im pressive. I held no brief for Philip Veritzen, but something in me had revolted at the palpable assumption | ~natutal though it was — of our | royal young visitors that any career was fathoms below the alted state to which ad torn. my as 1 smile at niece a to he matic,” always ir ness listen to me and to ex- they heen The Veritzen Method “You would of Philip Veri realize the deadly which his traiinng condemns a young girl. Study, sleep and stated supervised exercises—these make up her days and nights. The routine became unendurahle fancy you réalize her highly nervous temperament, and in 4 hecdless moment she yielded to the urging of a frivolous hequaintance who was related to the manager of the night club and danced there an hour or two each evening for a short period—until—she realized that she was completely out of tune with her nvironment, and ‘fessed up to her uncle and me. Of course we saw it that she did not dance there again and that was all there was to the incident. She never had gone un- scorted to the hall, she never was asked to meet the patrons, and the mash she wore completely hid her dentity. The fact that she danced there has been known only to her own family, to the Underwoods and to the Veritzens. But Mr. Noel Veritzen's connection was the affair was only that of a spectator. Hv iid not know her identity—in fz have to be a I went on, monotony to for 1| melodra- | student | of to Mary—I | strung | to ! [ never spoke to her until the day that |she left there. | Prince Georges stirred uneasily in his then looked frankly Noel “I heg to offer said formally, then boyishly. rush of words. “I say, old really am terribly sorry beastly temper I have.” 1 saw Noel bite his lip, he was strugsling to other's frankne: The Tension Breaks have the same sort,” with a little smile, chair, my apologles.” he with a man, 1 It's a that the meet iyt § last right The guessed at a tension that hoth at they part to make thing no matter how was gone, hut young men were sitting glad th enough over the And rar rb gesture. great their sur- that al- he the vorges’ slur to Noel's presence in Mary had guessed would memory ring the refere whert da I sa Olina angry one thing more to looking now at Mr. Veritzen was at the dancing. of his pro- his discip been any danger there becoming ourselves itted her to So T must ask | remember,” Princess terribly not ¥ ct that dared to defy 1 t ere had one rearance anyon nct h per inue her training. known I he con beside wou'i ve you- lease o W * Princess Olina said pret ready have forgotten that | Mary dance or heard the and I know Georges has too. | Haven't you, Georges?" She flashed an eloquent and for the instant answered hers, 1 I saw a new expression it of & man coming realizaiion of | royally he was | tily. I sa story glance | that his | that | them slow | was | “him eyes fancied in to a an error. Olina beautiful in that moment, | 1lso most womanly, every ce of felinity gone. 1t was a long ond before he answered her, and at| NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY, AUGUST 10, 1929. Once Qvers Registered U. 8. Patent Office were | shaking hands | | when he did it was with the air of | man who suddenly remembers | that someone is waiting for an am- | swer. a course,” he said also.” 1 said simply, “Come, 1 want in the other apartmen®.” “She has polishe caroled rashed. you D the switch s’ and her Mary b irrepressihle it in eve. Both smiled, |in their with 2 ! our needs me. would obfect he would not.” 1 said and he with us out of the apartment, leaving Prince Georges {and Princess Olina together. | (Continued Monday) 1928, Newspaper Inc. can Nocl and Prince Georges but there was no real mirth and as they both rose Noel spoke hastily think 1 ought to go ¢ apartment and see if my Do you think Mr faces us. n to fath er Un- derwood “I am sure went | Copyright, Frature Service, BEARS, BEES AND HONEY By Thornton W. Burgess justice ‘tis no more than right, make the bully suffer fright. —Farmer Brown's boy in To Farmer Brown's Boy was watcw ing a sight he had never expected to have a chance to watch—two Sears n a bee tree. It didn't take him long to understand just what had happened. He knew that the maller of those two Brars ‘ound the honey and had climbed v to get some. There he had heen iiscovered by the other Bear, who A4 promptly gone up to \are. The smaller Rear, a he bigger Bear, had gone on the tree because he couldn't lown the tree. To go down the would have meant to meet the hig cr Bear coming up. Farmer Brown's Boy knew that smailer Bar was bawlinz be 1 fraid. He knew that the ng and whining of the bigger Bear was because of the stings t} haa get his of up &0 the cause he w whimpe latter was receiving from the a And that the growls and this Bear w the other e After a Farner Boy hegan {o he sorry for the er Bear. know Rear. “Buster Bear is just all that honey.” thought Farm- “That get snarls of re intended to frighten time Brown's small- by zoing to whieh you was take er Brown's Boy. up above won't any sir, he won't get a t wish T could scare Bu: and give that your do helieve it Cubby ought Feve Tl see I've know Bu v vell hefore any one more Rear.” Farmer Bro inutes longer scene. Then he At the sound happened at a fast They were ter Bear had pawful of comb dripning with Tt never reac Ruster Instead, it halfway to Boy was standing. lot of lowed it At the big Buster Bear hegan to slide that And high up Cubby Rear also hegan Farmer Brown's could stare open-mouthed with He hadn't supposed that any big as Buster Bear could come a tree so fast. Once more he vel Tt that vell had heen a shot from a terrible gun, it could have been no ilttle rascal of it. No, is € to now b p and f 3 hoot surprisir hed < mo was flung where F. A <ot armer there. sams tree ahove o Roy s He landed with a thump | more effective. Buster RBear, who was two-thirds of the way ust let He on Forest IFarmer Brawn's Toy | long bre Dut Ruster there this t an. Bear another 1 wasn Hardly had hit the ground when and 1 to his feet was ump a half-grown Bear bo ne aring W in the oppo- ister | th ection He had was Cubby t B had had out o s e So at last (Copyr | READ HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS FOR BEST RESULTS “Can’t you read signs?” By C. D. Batchelor | more with and D S A Presidential Quiz | D e S L 4 3 | po: | “Good heavens! | ks To 5 Parents HOME TRAINING SHOWS By Alice dudson Peale The children were standing before the bulletin board where the daily schedule of camp chores, made out | a committee of the children, was sted. | “What's my job? sweeping the dining room? 0. K. Where's the hroom 2" And Nancy was off. Llsie, who huad stood beside her at the bulletin, looked until she registered the painful news that it was her job to sweep the play room. she whined. “I just | hate to sweep. I don't see why T have | to. T don’t how anyway. I'm | not a servant. should T know? I'm not zoing do it." and she ! by know how o | flopped into the nearcst chair. | HORIZONTAL of our time Which one What is the of Killing Sun god Ozone Eccentric “Before Christ" Heavenly body Slash Nothing Smell presidents was at governor of New [STA[TWNBTI IDIETDINAIDID] | IERRINADOREMLIEE] | E]R[1 ITIONAIL B M[D] RIOBISIMLIEISITIEE] [T ISIWE AT IEIOL [ [T W] M[alLTARTI [A] JaMIE R 1A D1 IKIE [S] IDIOMGIR[1 [TIRIIIVIE] president’s lezislation power wheel Mire | Dove' To stitch Pine Carpet Half To help Projection on a fireplace Point of compass home tree FECTIVE be PLAIDS Flaids popular autumn em will and some amazingly ing and pleasing effects are | 100k and gesture | do it this | strik- | Twenty on her way down stable to saddle her out for a long morning Green Bug lane. “Nancy certainly is lucky.” wailed Elsie, “look at her. there she goes | off for a good time and 1 have to | work!" Wearily she rose and looked | for her broom. irritation | and | peevishness written large in ever minutes later Nancy was | the hill {o the | horse and start | | ride down She swept and swept badly. Her councillor showed her just how to did part for her and left her | to the overwhelming task of sweep- {ing a room measuring 16 by 14 feet. Home training shows. Naney and | Elsie are simply the products of their respective homes. Nancy will get on well wherever she goes, whereas | Elsie will discover only a world | which conspires against her comfort and pleasure. 1f children during their | fully assume are trained properly carly years they cheer- their responsibilities. | | They waste no time complaining. | achieved by ng the materials that green, of Flower pot An offer Chum Otherwise this and in the same One way frock in red. black ind fine line yellow | points the main line of the front and back of the has a bertha doing the BLACK snug bia smallest a on hrige, Cover of a red Granted f; I'alsehood Ship's tuhe down skirt ani sam record Paking dish Toward By w Field Alleged Tidy What chusetts VERTICAL officer a SISOL A sisol 1 the rban with veils right of crawling means cye has ruby I up the [ front foree of PERSIAN LAMB hroadcloth fiounce, Persian the capital of A has a flaring cuffs of black coat for fall circular collay Principal Note in Tniquity Correlative anning Standar of a prison Jamb, ot car Fashlon Plaque Death TP Whao Portion noti New of York's food socond will governor? chewed by Where time national air races be To nod Mongrel Wooden In the Young Fish's Wand Part Bone People toath organ in 1o inited politically Light What I.eo? Wh stroke Quantity Affrmative Fxelamation Beliold Preposition of necklace for two strands of new of of made crystals caught at the should with a clasp of bagnette crystals, laughter place and They do their work and are ynad\, | for play. How are you training your ichild? Menus for the Fam:b By MRS, ALENANDER SANDWICHES F'OR SUNDAY TEA Cheese and pecan sandwiches minced lamb relish sandwiches, iced | [tea and lemon quarters, sponge cake vanilla_cookies. GEORGH Cheese and Pecan Filling for Eight Sandwiches cup white cream cheese (1| 1-2 cup pimento stuffed chopped. 1-§ cup chopped pe- |cans. 4 tablespoons mayonnaise. Mix the ingredients and spread on | | Graham bread | Graham Bread, Made From Sour Milk cups Graham flour. 1 1 our, 2-3 cup sugar (light 1 teaspoon salt, 1 teaspoon teaspoon baking powder, 1 egg, cups sour milk. Mix the ingredien a greased loaf pan, v lined with waxed 20 minutes for 50 minutes he 24 hours old bef sandwiches, Sponge Cake (Fasy to Make) 4 cgg yolks, 1 cup sugar, 1 tea- spoon lemon extract, 1-8 teaspoon Jt. 3 tablespoons cold water, 2 ta- | hlespoons cornstorach, 7-8 cup flour. 1 1-4 teaspoons haking powder, 4| egg whites, stifily beaten Beat the egg yolks and add the sugar, lemon extract, salt and cold water. Beat for two minutes. Fold the rest of the ingredients and pour into a shallow pan, which has heen lined with waxed paper. Bak» 1 | olives, | | 2 2 cups brown). soda, 1 - 11-2 and pour into | hich has been paper. Let stand Bake in a slow ovan bread should making into for he in !'spoon I four inche | the various reducing diets | the opening days of | for the grapefruit, | York State in a moderately slow over for 30 Natural Waistline Mode Is a Line That Won't Go To Waste This - ‘-1 all | Left to rigth: A Black flat crepe frock with lace touc hes at neck and cuffs exemplifies Jean Patou’s con- ception of the long-Lmbed silhouette, Charmingly fem inine and enhancing is a pale pink mousscline de soie evening gown whose cut gives a wide, soft girdle cffe ct. By intricate cut, a Patou figured chiffon compli- ments the slender figure and yet gives the effect of g reat fullness. 10—The whole of the world whose interest lies in fash- ions is agog with excitement once regard to the fashions that will be offered for next fall by the couturiers. T know for certain that son’s modes will not present such startling new features as was the case at the time of showings. There are several reasons for this assertion of mine and 1 will cndeavor to cxplain the why wherefore of it. There will be changes in styles be points of the summer o extraordinary and besides being widely commented upon, that the ensuing scason must necessarily rest upon the laurels of the preceding one. Never, in the annals of Parisian ite couture,” have there heen two sons of widely divergent is only natural that radical movement come a period of Paris. Aug. noticeable the new scason were no ause unexpected styles. Tt afier every there should calm and it is minutes, Vanilla Coo! butier, 1 aspoons tabl 1 1-2 cRES, cup 2 E alt cups cup \anilla, Figar. 1-4 tes spoons rream, teaspoon baking 1-2 flour, | powder. Cream the butter and soft. Add the rest of the ingredi- ents. Drop portions of the dough apart on greased baking atten the cookies and YOUR HEALTH Edito Note sugar until sheets. bake, F This is the second of six articles in which Dr. Morris Vishbein, the foremost writer on health topics in America. tells how nos so popular look in the eyes of medical | science. The first article the discussed so-called Hollywood diet. BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN Journal the American Medical Association and of Hy- geia, the Health Magazine The remaining days of the Holly- wood diet are like the days that have been specified, except that an orange is substituted occasionally Editor of may be or the take substituted for the cucumber lettuce, some pot cheese may the place of the egg. On the twelfth day celebrates by getting one lroiled lobster at lunch and some broiled chops and cole-slaw at din- ner. His two olives jump to three. Finishes With Fish On the cighteenth day he gets one broiled fish. plain spinach and a half grapefruit for dinner. Then they tell him to cat chocolates The 18-day diet is safer than most routine diets hecause at- the observer t next sca- | the spring | successive sea- trate | tind | ply | health, rerg and lettuce | tions, some spinach or | | four stalks of asparagus half a | in the world of fashion, that creators and the women who wear their creations are able to| enjoy such changes as have been wrought. Natural Waistline to When any one fashion has tvo scasons everyone is ready for something new and different. Take for instance the natural waisted | cffect, that totally new silhouette that ook the fashion world by storm. Women have only just started wearing these new dresses and enjoying them; therefore no drastic in this direction can be for the coming winter. The wuse of heavier and allo- gether different fabrics will evident- ¢ lend a different look to styles in general. Certain qualities of thick- ness and rigidit altogether absent the flimsy summer materials, 1o be taken into account, so couturier always has to concen- his efforts on a general soft- of the outline for his winter then, Dboth stay lasted changes expected om have a ening In addition to these things I ghould drink from six to eight gls water cach day and himself carrying on rather satisfactorly. On this dlef, {if the proper limited amounts of food are taken. one can reduce about two pounds per week | Not Enough Food for Extra Woik A redncing diet is one in whici the daily amcunt of food or fuer taken into the body is reduced so that it is erough to keep the hody running, but not enough to support extra work. When the person works the body uses up its own fat to sup- the extra demand for energy. The 18-day diet that has heen cited is well under one thousanc calories a day which are too few for the rroper maintenance of your except possibly in very rare instances. s of he will Its only diets of the past safety the faddish hard-boiled diet, lamb chop pinearple diet, and similar no- is its attempt to provide vita- mins and salts and roughage. over, like diet, FUR TRIMMINGS fall coats make much of fur | using the following furs tersively: skunk, red fox. natural and pointed wolf. dog and kit fox Brown furs on black coals are very smart. New trim ex I | plain | there models. ’ Velvets Popular winter materials, preferred. era for both Of all will certainly see a very be Whether they and other stiffer fancy, The point on which focused. So far as will be no several have shown the which, by the way, ed unanimously It is successful velvets and printed replace fabrics in women's I cannot tell. waistline scems all attention is now concerned, marked now since 1 will seasons normal by I am all my velvets 1 pa to be fore- nnes. satins the change: waistline has been adopte cl ients. Exaggeratedly high waists have been attempted this of no advocated the normal waistline somewhere knees, but I any extreme. are appreciated should naturally and consequence. return than between the have Even concerned, discretion summer, 1 have but this always to a more one situated is hips and never gone to where fashions is always exaggerations be barred. FLAPPER FANNY SAYS: Any brother how to swim, sister to somehody will teach else. any sister if they are brother and tempts to take into account some of | the fundamental needs of the hody Dr. Flora Rose. director of the New College of Home Trco- romics of Cornell Univers and Mary Henry, in the same institution time ago a foundation diet will ensure the most desirable | amounts of building materials and egulators in the diets of adults A certain foundation diet should include one and one-half fo twa cups of milk a day, but not more than one qucrt. A small amount or potato may be taken once each day. listed some Two generous servings of succulens | vegetables a day are necessary and one of them should be a leafy vege- table Several times a week raw vegeta- bles must be taken to insure vita- mins, because far too frequently vit- amins are lost in eooking. Two servings of fruit a day are desirable, and one of them should be orang or grapefruit. Tomatoes may be sub- tituted for these fruits because the tomato provides few calorles and fs | rich in vitamins. One serving of meat a day and one egg a day will provide proteins or body building materials, some vitamins. mineral salts, and to- gether about three hundred calories. Cereals and bread help to bring up the quota of body building sub- stances. professor of nutrition | whicn | Ne and organdie. May be obtained on requires 21z yards of 36 inch mater Patterns are FIFTEEN CENTS eah address, style number anc size. Address all mail and orders to New ATTERN 1751 ew Britain Herald 15¢ Practical Pattern * | The two smartly dressed sisters are wearing in sizes ial and Be Britain Herald Pattern Department, 243 West 17th Street, New York City. frocks fashioned of gingha 4,6, 8 and 10. 5-8 yard trimming. sure to write plainly, Size ¢ name,

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