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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, AUGUST 23, 1929 The Heart Story of a Steadfast Woman Love’s Awakening By Adele Garrison | All Seems Peaceful and Calm as the | father is steady and genuine in its | Grahams Start Their Lite Afresh | growth | . My own dom problems riving no for troubled ght 1 am contemplat- em with thankful content all son, ordered remain in th for the ontented the Ka are me ct in its There is no calm so pe: Rtillness as th storm, no peace so which comes afte il been racked with pain. T the tru age, that 1, Madge Grah fzing today. I conning over and over ild catechism W 0 template a renaissanc tal happiness wi lost to me ollows ing as t wint trained my as prom the lip Ve ¥ather in « are s, hoary ousin’s wife, v for my boy act w ar as a child does a |t tre on to my e | 1ful Jim and Katie | our f Puture Perplexes Noel and that ronts Mary Har and young Noel | er. Noel's is sti hich warting of s toward ao. bed Dicky emotior be- ony, and o g to th rough wi Thysi somew’ both love Don't at pology all financia and le to make Mary Veritzen n me by g and acting Noel is workir rd the musical drama for 1s written the music, and am endeavoring to add But though the youth, both are happy Noel, at revo my cu. the my peac be the cc for Brixton and Owen There six sion with il Worry Us is greatly future, and boy, 1 uld are ot or {o ¥ Lillian zen, the zen, mo. in t c lovable Marion's warm them. Ho away from their west misgivi as lively either m 1t has this stretch of early winter Happy and contented in her with the husband from her, has been ci blissful in nowledge that b idolized daughter no lon harbors the lo ingr of her pfather was Marion's. T} the romantic Underwood her “Uncl famous ar her mother t that h No, Toledo, Ohio.” it I know no one th mist ng o re, 15 P late s it 1 The operator “The party will insists that Richard at you Margaret Gra- is it not ot s been e s0 long estra ) esp ven called M tis corr will t onsy Ak ste onee rl ha s not ris} er lik DS A HOME By Thomton W. Burge e o you supp from " T Registered U. 8. Patent Office By C. D. Batchelor “And get me str VioeD COWAN ight, Tom Thumb! Stay away from rmc dame or ock your block offa you!” “Aw—you—you—you yeast-eater, Pou.” oday’s P lelude drritability, fatigue, restless- ness and emotional disturbances. Doctor Mills is convinced that oc- ljustments to educational oduce ness of the eye 1 eve v through pro- ttention. He believes curriculums of study are |20 intensive nowadays that the phy- weak uzzlers muscles a longed ove e M —5 [2p3=] O] Z| 0| C O|0HY) ™Mo > 0[O )}U‘ 0, \M<[D>TI<BT] >R D 2> 0 Z | 0| M ) O\ claim ar Now sod was s plied v told 't 2 > |0 > O > ZERO|: p him un him. sooner if th what 1ying, he I'a want frox the | I mer to n; th FAR a READY Th ittl ner i he would have o m Z Probably or 1 could Brown's T g0 LT t1 d back o v Mly PROM Tsla Kimo wi h tiny Iy it e teeth >ga ) ' =10 > 0@ M|Z| O[T |] Zigesd M| 20| M s | C | T M| owns & hall 1 1V omes to have ly too eager- re- v that he an't As : o stay 1 he been He he Dowser n quite HOME TO AT ho all ,actions to educational strain in- | by | sical cost of this type of training { vields questionable profit when bal- iced with the efficiency produced | *The world does not requi and more neurotic persons,” ‘but urgently needs more accurate land more dependable ones.” There is a definite limit vmount of words that any reader can sce at a single glance. The at- tvmp!t to force the vision to see more and comprehend mora in a short space of time is likely to pro- Auce ing in serious in- Feapneity Doctor Mills recognizes the fact that many people are able to read lrar more rapidly than others and to comprehend what they read I more rapialy. Tighrecos s alto that much of this ability rest in heredity and is perhaps a form of genius. | TIntellectual capacity is practi- |cally determined at birth and gains lonly by proper training. There is a | definite and individual limit to the speed of correct recognition and | perception of ohjects and of words and if this limit is exceeded, there is a penalty represented by lessened accuracy, poor memory and inhibi- tion of associative values which are important in learning. The tests that have been made in- dicate that the most rapid readers can do at best a page of solid read- ing in 2 minute and that this speed n seldom be maintained with any sfulness for more than half an hour at a time. Menu;s fo; the ;ami[) to the ng result I Horizontal . Radio noise. White clay. Peg. Insurgent Collection of facts since, To run . Chart. To yiel IFilmy nishes. away anti Cheek-hone Waltz, Death notice A resin To dangle. Weight. . Sum Bushy clump, . Poem, . Poplar tree . Preceding night. To revoke. Side guard on an auto. Vertical MRS, AL Menus for Sunday | Breakfast | Cantaloupe, Chilled | Ham and Egg Omelet | Watfles and Maple Syrup Dinner Roast Lamb and Browned Potatoes Shredded Carrots Bread Currant Jam Vegeatble Salad in Mint Jelly Blueberry Tart Pie Coffee Supper Sliced Tamb Sandwiches Jeed Tea Date Nut Cookies Apple Sauce By Coffee . Duration FFeline mammal. Electrie terminal, Jail compartment Retained. Thin plate hredded Carrots 1y | cups shredded carrots, 3 cups Bac l { water, 1 teaspoon salt, 1 teaspoon sugar, 2 tablespoons butter, 1-4 tea- spoo paprika, 2 tablespoons chopped | parsiey. | Wash and scrape the carrots. Cut into shreds two inches long and 1-4 inch wide. Boil for 10 minutes in the water and salt. Drain well. Add the rest of the ingredients and cook for three minutes. Stir constantly. | When the carrots have browned a little, serve. of nec Owners! Dwelling. I"laxen FFamous. A forefather. Division of an organ | Blueberry Tart Pie Young cow 1 1-2 cups flour, 1-2 cup lard, 1-2 1 teaspoon salt, 3 tablespoons cold wa- ter. e Mix the flour and salt. Cut in the ! lard and slowly add the water. ‘BUR HI:ALTH When a stiff dough forms, break . 4 off two-thirds of it and fit into a deep pie pan. Add By ture. DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN trips made from the remaining = ough. tiditor Journal of the American Medical Association and of Hy- gela, the Health Magazine. At the recent meeting of the American M assoclation in Lloyd Mills importance Perry Misture cups blucherries, 1 cup sugar 1 tablespoon flour, 1 teaspoon nut- meg. 1 teaspoon cinnamon, 1-8 tea- Joon salt, 3 tablespoons orange juice, 1 egg, beaten. Mix the ingredients and pour in- | to the pie shell. When covered with peed of modern | the stripe, bake in a moderate oven demands rapid mental | for 30 minutes. which sometimes chil- | 1 are unable to make hecause of ocular defic The nervous re- | the ation. itention to eyes in educ excessive of the The ilization ustments and later electricity, coal fires. XANDER GEORGE | the berry mix- | Cover the top with criss-cross | the brook. Regularly they slept there Before lighthouses were lit by ml‘ they were ml §EOE_C_T;ng to Apron Strings But Now Makes All Kinds of Dresses New York, Aug. 23—Nell Donnelly is a Kansas City woman who has sewn up a million dellars! Her sucecesa story also reveals a trusting husbandi who tied his sav- | ings onto his wites apron strings. | For Nell Donnelly, now manufactur- er of all types of women's clothes, started her business by making gay, one-piece kitchen apron-dresses in the old-fashioned early 1900's when women usually wore long skirts, dressing sacques, kid curlers and boudoir caps around the house. It was her husband’'s savings that bought her her start. Nell had left the farm tn Par- sons, Kansas, to work and save for college. Instead she fell in love with Paul Donnelly who sat across the boarding house table from her. &he was just 17 when she got married and without knowing It, got her college course as well. For her new husband was a feminist almost be- fore the word was coined and faw no reason why his girl-bride should miss college just because she loved him. Together they saved and Nel matriculated and eventuzlly got her college degree, in a time when it was slightly scandalous for married wo- men to go to college, That “Married” Look Upon graduation, moving Into a little bungalow in the suburbs of Kansas City, Nell said emphatically to her husband, “It is awfully nice to be your wife, dear, but do I really have to look as ‘married’ as my neighbors do in their faded and frumpy house clothes?” “1 hope not,”” was lLis answer, So Nell started out to huy herself a few pretty printed frocks and apror3, to make dishwashing a lit- |tle more entertaining and to give zest to cooking, scrubbing, washing and bed-making. But she could not find them! House dri on the market for women 25 years ago were as unin- spired, drab and il-fating as pris- lon wrappers which they vaguely resembled. 1l refused to buy them, bought herself somé remhants, cut her own tterns on the parlor floor and le some original, dashing-looking ittle frocks, a pink chambray with green print with iaven- er touches and a stunning orange !one that almost made it an adven- to hang out the clothes and| shock her neighbors at her frivolous | \ppearance A Pretty remember criticism of one I intended to work or no laughed at then wr frieidly | Mrs i the fri AND NOW S MANUFACTURER, OF WOMENS CLOTUES' | Nell Donnelly “ready to challenge Paris frock York!” | to agree to get your usual sleep. | STUDY ESKIMO BONES You don't wan't me coming down | Ottawa—Tones of Eskimos, bg- to put you to bed, do you? If you |lieved to be thousands of years old. | don’t, it's only tair that vou should | destined to ate as much ex- get vourselves to bed by 9. Will you | citement in the scientific world as promise to do that?” | the bones in the Valley of the Kings The boys stalled. “Yes. but some- | or buricd in the ruins of Aztec vil- times the clock might be slow and |lages. The Rockefeller Foundation sometimes we might be late over at | has displayed interest in the finding Bill's. If we are late just once in a | of ancierl Eskimo bones in Canada while, does that count?” and plans a series of investigations. You know what T mean hy get- | to promise or don't 97 “Yes, but how w ting to bed r | we get to bed “I won't. I'll take your word for L pid “All right 1t child's b 1 | | v ture Ambition protestin old 100 work, Mrs the little girl “She replied at T owould le Donnelly did next Christmas nds some or gifts and they liked them | much they urged her to go invo | husiness and gave orders for copres, She discuseed it with her husband, told him her idea of selling her dresses to stores and he urgced her to go ahead. Then she spent a day | going the rounds showing her ples and came home with orders, h gave her the family savings to buy power machin hire and | the attic of their home fuctory. Business {hrived, and her husband enlisted ricd on, what with Hoover 'und Red Cross uniforms, in addi- tion to her own lines, huilt such a big busin had to mo« into a huge factory A Pine Welcome The day Paul Donnelly came back, after the Armistice, Nelly Don, her friends all call her, showed her husband a list of orders she herself had placed amounting to a year's business of a quarter of a million dollars. The business was hum- | | ming so fast that he took over the sales end while Mrs. Donnelly | {bought materials, designed dresses and m ed. | With increaing beauty tn women » apparel, Mrs. Donnelly sought out new fabrics, new styles, new Hne Her frocks hegan {o come out of the litchen and out the front door to the country clubs, sports and visit- ing Uow e makes a tremendous | variety of clothes, in | ‘ e 5 to the — EMBROIDERY TOUCH black flat crepe frock of retion has a round o t of unusually lovely old inan fiory tonc. The ves have winged the cuff. er you you know when rly. Do you want real and A dis Donneliy vife she rather o long the same at BEI/TS IMPORTANCE more wiil keep such a promise, if | Two hel better than vou have given him a chance to|one, in One usually make it of his own free will. is above the normal waistline, the It you trust i enough to put |Olher below. Between them -they him on his honor he will almost wh t couturier surely live up to your faith in him. 1 t women in Try it how it works. 3 belts ™m!" We promise.” tabs of idea to take your The child of 10 or when is a good house word similar oft modes. cimnphasize e important a mood to con. 1. and sec san- Fashion Pla;ue hetp was her f war came She car- aprons up as A lingerie blouse worn with the | transparent velvet ensemble will be colors, patterns and styles. | favored fall fashion. This sleeveless Has Confidence in Others | blouse is of batiste embroidered in | She now has two other women an all-over pattern. The collar is| associated with her in business: Mrs. |an interesting detail of the new another's way of lifting off the D. D. Mackay who goes all over mode. |ground, it's merely a take-off. Europe and America picking fab- | rics and designs and Miss Mona Ryan who is sales representative in | New York and other eastern c\llos.‘ For Mrs. Donnelly has tremendous | confidence in other women's suc-| for which Mrs. cesses, too. a word of pra I | | Another thing | Donnelly deserves Kind friends advised her to get a | Fifth Avenue, N. Y., address for ner | house trocks, thinking it would be | advantageous for their style value ‘ innumerabte When one stunt aviator imitates PATTERN 1759 New Britain Herald 15¢ Practical Pattern Dainty summer frocks will need “My answer to them all has been, | top coat, both for warmth and to nsas City bought iny aresscs an: |form an ensemble for I%all days. Kansas City makes them.” I could 'Design 1759 is ideal for such pur- not think of having them appear in | DOSes, as it is perfectly plain anl | disguise. They are mid-west prod. | may be made with or without jJin- lcts. proud of it and ready to chai- iDg. It may bé worn open a3 lenge frocks, let alone New Shown, or buttoned up close to the York!" neck. Practical and serviceable materials ihould be selected for this model he tweeds are adorable for kiddies nd will stand much hard wear. ore dressy are broadcloths, par- cularly when light shades of rosc nd beige are used. The tot's hat hould be made of the same mate- rial as the coat. May be obtained only in sizes 2 (4 6 and 8. Peale | Size 4 requires 1 1-4 yards of 54 inch material. This model is easy to make. No dressmaking experience is neces- | and cookad there suppers and break- [sary. Each pattern comes to you | tasts in the fireplace which they had | with simple and exact instructio | made of stones. They were glorious- |including yardage for every si |1y happy in their freedom. | A perfect fit is guaranteed. But mother heard tales of their | Patterns will be delivered upon staying up ‘til all hours and she wor- | receipt of FIFTEEN CENTS (15c) | ried lest they should not be getting |in coins carefully wrapped or the quota of sleep which is necessary |stamps. Be sure to write plainl | for growing boys. Their bedtime was |your NAME, ADDRESS, STYLE | 9 and apparently they were staying | NUMBER and SIZE wanted | up until after 10 almost cvery night. | Our LATEST FASHION BOOK ‘ “You've been getting to bed pret- [ will be sent upon receipt of TEN ty late haven't you?" she s 1. NTS in coin. Address all mail “Kind of. We don't notive =uch." |and orders to New Britain Herald “Well, it seems to me that if we | Pattern Department, 243 West 17th ¥ allow you to camp out, you ought |Street, New York City. | ‘Ka Talks PEE, &%, Parents By Alice Judson The boys that built themselves a camp down in the hollow | ‘ ON THEIR HONOR | alongside