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M v & gesture which from the horn wheel T brought r pt stop, and over the d o ing, my smooth L < What ill- my imagination having full play lad befallen my with | the few Lours since Kath- The st re those of strag nd I had talked together? 1 gling Er sul Katherine well enough to ac- Tobm w 1t hier of fussiness. There must be breakfast, b some scrious reason for this ad. | to travel alon s bRt i alor 1y | could not rid myself of the notion e nthat something momentous hag =5 1 for (habpencd. And when I was Inside litt1e g fear | the house from which no sound of (e Letivity came, I turned upon my lizing the Welcome little kinswoman and took her by o & form “I'm not a baby,” 1 1. “Tell [ So. while I what has happened rolled throu uninteresting (Continued Tomorrow) stretchies along the road, I loafed filled my be loving soul fth picture of Winter-stripped inn, w 14 EW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1929. Love’s Reawakening The Story of a Wife’s Triumph Over Jealousy By ADELE GARRISON ladge Arrives at the FParu and 1% Far Different Welron ceives a Than She Had Pondly Visioncd— What Could when 1 s, of the| & in the Be Wrong al I real- v miles | 4 taking the which is t I put on ¥ heurt joy of see- g out with with Jim s, could loor and then | id Jp;wu—i om niy unexpected ise. He is tion of it Kather- | | not to tell coming to son ir . to prevent the journey 5 What's Wrong? b 3 was 1 was disappoint- the sound- 1 I scarcelv upon it opened and e doorway, her istas, I before I tu lon to silence, As I ra relieved characteristic prompt nobody ed to anyone hurt h I th thon Lillian s . 1 wa re ning k ' Once Overs “How's the good wife this fall, Fred?” “She was too good to be true.” 5. Petent 0ffios By C. D. Batchelo shoulders, \Menus for the Family: By Mrs. Alexander George ‘ Menu for Dinner | | Spanish mac buttered spin- | ch, biscuit yrup, head let- | tuce, Russian ing, slice ba- | e nanas, date filled cookies, coffee. J w \ A% | i | Spanish Macaroni, Serving Six P o e | (Piquant) | 4 tablespoons butter, tablespoons | A A pog ) ‘\ : "flrm cups milk, 1-2 cup cheese. | 1 1o thos co- | cut fine, 1 teaspoon salt, 1-4 tea- I I n't sce ! spoon paprik »d maca- | 1 Jid roni, 14 cup e 1 4 cooked z poons | N too \essa, | choppe 1 cups to i a ' I le cousin Melt I er and add the flour. | €8E said tl cream vuce forms | 1 \ d the cheese and ! ¢ ir constantly un- I Add aill the rest ¢ i t r s 10 a 3 i ed ish ke in a 10 i 1 bal « | Cookies : and lard), ¢ aspoon va- X extract, 1 poons cream, el oon baking | T r q « and RO r. Cut off of the date mixture to B B | ¢ Bake 3 inches apart on greas b o 3 | T & sheets, It will requ 36 \ | | s to bake the cookles. | Date Filling ) (This can also be used for a cakr'l late |14 cup chopped dates, 1-2 cup light 2 rown sugar, 1-2 spoon salt, 1 ta- would o oon flour, 1-2 cup water, 1 tea- | oon vanilla, 1-4 teaspoon cinna- ¥ . ) non, 1-3 cup b nuts, E 1 flour. Ad1 % he 1 water. Cook slowly 1 . ! r tantly, until the mix- - th Add the rest of the 1 Pote | ingredie Mix and cool W 1e it e == | | S 0o this| School dentists inspect more than hose cocoons — on | Walton model of brown felt. The|225.000 school children In London back,” replied Pe- |longer lace veil s interesting, Gvery year, t HORIZONTAL Girl Monkey. To bang. Hautboy. Iagle Division of the brain, abbage stalk 0 moisten Verbal. Apart Ag| kation Guided. Brink Sheltered pla nent. of prop Pron Vehicl, Darlin To an o run To split To recede To leave out. Opposite of Born Delivered To care away. awea for. o scatter Three, VERTICAL Not general. To degrade. Substantial Embryo plant, To stitch. Verb A whole number. Slit. Pertaining to the lore To abolish. Affray. To avoid Intelligence, Component. Inlet Gem weight. Imbecile. Black bird. A kor. To think. Trivial. Action. Was worsted. as hay 41. Insect. | 42. Cot. YOUR HEALTH BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN Editor Journal of the American Medical Association and of Hy- gela, the Health Magazine | Alniost 10 years ago Professor W. | B. Cann of Harvard Universit | published a book on hodily changes lin love, hunger and rage, in which |he emphasized the evidence that |has been developed in various places indicating that emotions | have definite effects on the physical actions of the body. In 1866 it was known that the movements of the intestines }wnuld be stopped if a person | | showed signs of anxlety, distress or anger. Since tha time Can- {non has studied the subject in-| | tensively, particularly with a view to finding the mechanism by | | which such action takes place. | The public realizes that the | { mental state of the individual does have a definite effect on its activities, and for this reason far too often pcople resort to faith healers or quacks to change the | mental state when it seems likely that tht physical condition cannot otherwise be controlled. | ment of each child different New mfs From Pans Aren’t All of Fur , Oc —An ensemble to be perfect ris, be said may when all ac- cessories harmonize with th prin- cipal garment, that is to say. the dre Contrar) cessories ne to the general idoa, ac- 1 not necessarily be of the same material or the same col- or as the ensemble ither need they recall it by their lines in or- der to be Women will ad- 1t when eack material, cessory is composed of coloring and general li in har- mony with the dress, the result is then one of rare distinction allied with discretion. Of all winter access we the | must admit that the muff pla principal role this season. Firstly, by reason of its volume, and sec- ondly, because it consecrates, it were, nter ensemble. It adds also another ge to wonien Muffs as essories The first muffs to be created in my house formed part, not of the | ensemble, but of a " of acces- sories. By this I mean that Y were made at the same hat and often with an acc ing tie. These advance models having met with some success, 1 determined to show my elients that & muff could achieve & greater importance in their scheme of clothes than they perhaps realized Contrary to the old-fa muffs, the modernized versic not absolutely have tirely of Very often fur €xactly the same part as in the dress, that of hioned 1 does | to be n in the 1 s rose Left: Jean Paton complefes a stunnine en trimmed with aeatching foy, with a geacetul little mufy made of the same mater The lines and trimming of the muil are in periect harmony with the ensemble Two ditde fox heads adorn the front part of the muff and rufiles of the satin cloth give it the flaring lines of the ensem <atincloth, is lined with matching satin. Right: For a svelte winter costume of b broadeloth, Patow creates a striking black-white scarf, muft and hat en- DIFFERENT bl of astrakhan and comine. The muf) is trlangular shaped, through By Alice Judson 1 the use ol lets in the astrakhan, nine Among the most recen quired of childre righ thail— > pon e e e right to be different, the right of s = : - et emsienend el sbon el ow i) ining Entertainers Is One Tough individualities, different from each | o 3 N S < | other and from their parents' no + ave Pt Job, She Says tions of what they should be. J Present day knowledge of the —_ variations in original endowment, A has h both mental and physical, n plain that each individual own limitations, his own problems and his own goals which he must discover for himself Not only is the original special endow- e | the also are the conditioning T o which play upon each individual. RIS TR Brothers and sisters are by no Hint ol means subjected to the ame influ- T i, ence, the psychological environment | ) AR y child in the family heing | 18 a toiian one rily different from that of A v other. Veatric Verle, W of ug are such wholly mia- i ture individuals that as parents, we Gy g have not some ax to grind with our o children. We are forever trying to | 2 make them strive for the very ideals | which we ourselves have failed to attain, or we a ! in our re lationship with and responses we clsewhere. them isfac ould have found | And so we find fault because they are not what we expected them to be. They are themselves, individ the als as they were born to be, mould- all ed by influences ely outside of tpped ap either their control or ours. | 1sclves to Since our real children inevitably | attention differ from the ideal children wo | o unyone else would like them to he, it is wise at | the outset to accord them the r I have to be different and to measure | ) at all success only in te of their ! fulfillment, whatever may be. direc Mrs. Bryan Il The sclentific side of medicine | has for almost a century empha- | sized the actual changes that may | be observed in the body after | death and medical diagnosis de- | [mands scientific recognition of | | such changes. i | The human being the animal in the de differs from lopment of | physical responscs occur. 1t a per- £on feels happy, he is likely o smile {or laugh, and, in smiling or laugh- | ing. certain muscles of his face will | |take certain positions. In som. forms of paralysis affecting one-halr | [the brain, the patient is unablo to | move the face on the paralyzed gide There are, however, certain movements which are involun. | |tary; that is, they are controlled | |from the nerve centers without | | the patient's wish. In case such | |a patient has an emotional reac- | tion, the side of the face which is | usually without expression will re. | veal emotion. This indicates that | the nerves responsible for these ac- | tivitles are not cut off by the pro- | cess which injures the brain | Professor Cannon points out | that an evening's meal may re. | main undigested all night in the | | stomach if there is persistent worry. | The saliva, the gastric and the par creatic Juices responsible for diges- | tion do not flow when a person is | worrled or frightened, [ Eminent cliniclans estimate that ‘.'mywhere from one-third to one- | half of all the people who suffer | with digestive disturbances have dis- | ordered emotional states and the digestive disturbance is relieved | When the emotional conditions i | | restored to normal. These facts | | should not be taken as a warrant for disregarding physical causes or for neglecting physical measures in | treatment. The assumption that emo- tional agencies are causing the dis- | turbances, Professor Cannon be licves, should always be held as a | | last resort. Bighteen years were required to | make the huge gates of Henry his brain, lunce the behavior of | |the human bLeings is not always | |the simple mechanical response | J |that takes place in the animal| | following & definite stimulation. | Whenever a2 human being ex- | Presses fear, joy or grief, certain VIII's chapel in Westminster Abbey. ‘ POTTING LIRS VEGLTABI If you put o layer of charcosl o S hl " for the hottom of pots or 1 « 1o TN ehd L a for age and sprink S0 the children and husband to through the dirt on which vou pl r develops the casserole {your ferns, the sc bit. Vi rich cheese and the fern's foliage s i CassdTola fon color. th Mrs. William Jennings Bryan widow of the Great Commoa although not above s ll, critically, in Washin “Clever Neckline 1 Pattern 8991 atment” ton. Since the death of her hus- 1 is achicved in band, Mrs. Bryan has been in retire frock with an unusual neck tr ment, spending practically all her nient of collar and side jabot. Tk {time secluded with friends in Wash- d skirt is further enhanced by ington and Florid. godet which s e ttached to the by means of a pointed tah ponding with the bodice trim- art cuffs finish the long corr REG. U. 5. PAT. OFF. crepe or satin 1 for the making of = with plain silk for the icn woon | White and green dots el B ialt on an olive green ground: white on bl beige dots on dull re few color schemes that mselves for this delight- in sizes 14, . 38, 40 and 42 1-2 yards of 40 requires 5 inch material and 1 yard trimming. nodel is easy to make. No ssmaking exp ce is neces- h pattern comes to von with simple and exact instructior including yar for every size. A perfect guaranteed, tlerns will be delivered upon re- ceipt of FIFTEEN CEN (15¢ in coins carcfully wrapped or sure to write plainly ADDR STYLE a SIZ13 want HION BOOK is SN (15} but only TEN CENTS when ordered with a pattern. Address all mail and orders to B tatn It's hard for a nurse to let well Herald Pattern Department, 243 enough alone, when they're hungry. West 17th street, New York city.