New Britain Herald Newspaper, October 16, 1929, Page 14

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a i NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD. WFD\'ISDAY OCTOBF Love’s Reawakening The Story of a Wife’s Triumph Over Jealousy By ADELE GARRISON Madge's First Glimpse of Marion's eas Room, on Which the Marauders e Had Centered Their Attention. you ocugh Strengthens Mother Graham's heaidnth Theory dow had the ed ous tha tabl, ed v seen sion rs into my n be far mar good Mrs. t to want palms 3 vouldn't put and fonier had been tu I i 1ough, and it's ipside do cont sca hould rought up ¢ B . enough, and and jerk msense out of her. I she’s even thought ont : Mother Out of the Kitchen theory,” I & and ind ter fell rapidly ed no plausible concl cffect one of < disciplinary ses- does, Mother upon my emotional that's what 1 R v that nothing hus it 1 to suggest 11 airingly told h b Us 10tion- a most t « 0 e would worth of s io € th Mot m But he y 11 | finish, session with Maybe vou can find out, but N harpened my wits. nohody el o can. I do . as one sure way of divert- you'll b o i mother-in-1 tention & whil oug and I took it "Why?" 1 asled i ‘Mother, dear.” T said, “can't “Didn’'t Mrs. Bicke a little? 1ts hours to But no. T heard h I do so need your promise she wouldn thing that is troub- He didn't see 1 thou Could you give me a not bound. and you r ought to it time bef ore you tackle Katie? know, I think.’ “Why, ves; I suppose s0," she said | ather's Injury with feigned reluc I had to remind my that 85, for nev woman was old, childish, and ore fond of giv o than is most sendle delight in my moth law e into m todian of inform oom,” she added can talk could e out sctter there, Mrs. Bickett will come afraid that she would in to look after Richard Second.” herself so Jut as I followed her down the mande lor to 1, T wondered knowin which of the ser of things that method of t d me a bring myself to | from her, 1 t to her scrutiny. luc from near it, Ka ith to Ance But orrow) Newspap Service, Inc. a ter- me, lez er vo ¥o wi 50 him FLIP CONSULTS By Thornton W BOWSER Bur; speared the 1 10 % they could s munk's Handy Pockets, in 1 the 1 A Real Brain Teaser Overs - | Registered U. 5. Patent Office By C. D. Batchelc I “Some people just natcherly likes to be conspicuous.” Taiks TOZ, &g, Parents DAWDLER | Alice Judson Peale | | S | e e e b b 1 e e e et e e et e e e ot e j By | Dressing herselt in the morning | takes Katherine the better part or | |an hour and requires a good deal of | | within call f B X she comes running to bhe assured i | that she 18 doing it | times she isreminded that br. Ly |is w she must hurry . llllfl EIIIII every properly, 2 3¢ t | | she is six years old, buttons must be | buttoned for her and shoe laces tied. Katherine'’s helplessness the more marked in view of the fact hat her younger brother long ago mastered the intricacies of dressing | nimeelf. | It is, of course, possible that Katherine is one of those children who 13 exceptionally slow in acquir- | ng manual dexterity, but anyone who has seen much of children in the setting of the family would sus- pect that her dawdling was due to | other causes. It would occur to him at once that through it she had discovered a way of playing baby and of attract- \Menus for the Family By Mrs. Alexander George fasty Meals from Leftovers Whatever the cause, it will not S A i SRERRUL ER help to nag or hurry her. When it is Bsa G ¢ ) - necessary for her to dress quickly d creamm, muf (i 11 [CIO] AILIAK [b'l]"[![! she should be helped without com- | ment, at other times she should be | ILIATIE TR [1S] ers, frui | ) MHH g]l:.“ | left to do the whole process for her- | Dinner self, no matter how long she take esealloped [TIREAMBMRIQTIARY] Never should she be reminded of the contrast between herself and her | brother. To tell her she ought to try | to be as quick and clever as he i3 would serve only to intensify her HORIZONTAL bl Swamp Sword handles Having limits. Vegetable Soup, Serving Four | 1.2 cup cooked peas, 1-4 cup| difficulty and 8o fan those sparks ol g % . Imbeciles, i B | diced celery, 1-3 cup green bean F e Jealousy which may be present. chopped, 2 tablespoons chopped or e More than anything, Katherine Door. Razor clam. To depart Sooncr than, Publishes. Guided. 24, Aviator. yoons chopped gr ! cup diced cooked or T alt, 4 ¢ lespoons but- | | needs to wish to grow up. Wheneve therefore, she makes an effort to- ward self reliance she abundant praise as tive to further endeavors in same direction. | potatocs, 1 t spoon ups wa an incen- salt and covered pan | or 2 = | for 25 : rest of the|23. Small flap, VELVET SASH + TR [ To clean. ¢ ir ates, Serve | Rieniy A dainty little pink chiffon frock in r e EALY 0 from Paris has three shades of pink Stuffed Green Peppers, Serving Six Y making a smashing bow in the back, | 6§ large green p 1 cup D with the three ends swinging to chopped. cooked leftover meat floor. 2} To b ankle Il‘n‘g(h or Vlr\r irprise FLAPPER FANNY SAYS: VG, U. 8 PAT, OfF. VERTICAL wler | Old-womanish. | To get up. | | inch of s in a moderate oven de bone. | Peach Detty Ialse gods. (Other fresh fruits can| 8 coins. stewed | { sp 1pleton 4 o frecze. i Golt device. [ Mix all the nd pour Labels dish. T To distribute oderate oven Censure, the first 20 rccharine | Chief. ame i | PATOU COAT 31. To change. | A new, sumptnous black velvet solored i from Jean Pato ted Iixclamation | e the bac the | 39 | | velvet, is cut irreg 1 dipping e —- x oo = _|\ntil §t i3 so %o long that it sweeps| Fortunes have been found be- | Modernistic furniture is all about the floor. l(\nln the pages of discarded Bibles. —but most people don't know what. ¢ selves are luxuriously beautiful | and fine, with the thin, delicate I furg very important. Because of | this, in the sccond place, they are manipulated as it they were fab- |rie. And in the third piacc, ma- nipulated as fabric, the furs take |the fashionable new silho {make much of collars and cv and find the waistline, just as the winter fur coat that tops the | daytime V[n( k that T speak | t Furs Modis] | The flatter the fur this year, the mort ylish for coats. Nothing | takes the place of furs in Milady's wardrobe. Since furs arc ored | not only for their warmth but| bee: they hance voman's | beauty, the n beautiful the fur the greater its aesthetic contribu- tion Certain women look magnificent s for most of the winter's wrap: for daytime, th® turban is a ha igaraisuinto Al o et b ] been properly tra in such i o cadgear. For the sports | ) | coat, a little crocheted beret from | AT Agnes is a good note. For the black | Fw B . ing attention. | the It should re-into the | kind of blister except under sterile the | conditions. If it is not likely to be | accidentally broken, it is best not to R 16, FURS ARE USED LIKE FABRIC IN NEW SILHOUETTED 1929 New York, Oct winter have three acteristics. In the first place, 16.—I7urs this | outstanding char- the furs them- | sowns do. Lengthened waistlin the raised | to bo| found all coats m ols three-qu story. 1t is of | rs is another in brown furs, others wear grey. But the elegant coat for davtime wear| is apt to be the black one For| black has that distinguished some- thing that no other coat ean quite black furs in vogue include hwantz, Persian lamb. car- 1/.‘ alyak, broadtail and pony Breitschwantz combines chic and ity which makes it excoption- | por formal daytime wear, the black broadtail has cnviable distinction E00dE forthie soldRrTer This one ic semi-fitted and has an uneven hemli Pour silver foxes Variety Is Wide trim it sumptuously. A black vehvet tarban is auite in keeping with the 1f one does not want a black | elegance of this garment. Fow football games or a cold day's informal . mink and sable arc the ex-| w beige caracul coat is an excellent choice, Here s one witly pensive choices. Caracul, Pers princess lines and a sucde belt to further emphasize the waistline. The lamb, and numbers of others furs collar fastens wp sungly, slipg one end through a slit on the other give a woman a wide choice in and fashioning a bow for decoration. A knitted jersey beret matches moderately priced coats that are the belt in color, decorative while they r good serv o= - The new fur coat follows th meraly a or SUNDAY EVENING form's li The princess on of 1 hetween Oone « ontributions is ette is suggested, often w b layers of t . froc This is mendous flare at the lower 1 dress, often of black If the coat ltself is cut in exag-| 1 fluid does mot conta te t or lace, made with gerated lines, the collar and cuff | germs, but is made up of fluid ma- SWoep f rat picturesque treatment s apt to more con- | terial filtered in from the blood t th 1o leeves, servative, and vice ver | The bl will not harn Yor sports wear, the belted coat ' long as it is 1 1. o s still excellent, giving that youth- | reason the advice given to let the ul look and giving a note of color | bl alone o that the blood may in the suede belt |absorb the fluid I ha in mind e a sandalwood | coat that The Safe Way to Do It caracul features hoth raised waistline in its shaped sil- | L RS SLCOTAn B e 0e houette and a belt to emphasize |1\ POSSCSSON it i DI, B t. The standing collar has a slit | L0 Temove the fluid thoptollow. through which the fur is pullea, | D8 method: Cleanse 1 s forming a bow which adds to the | NOTOURALY with g vouthfulness of the model sughgasgalconioliRUilciung oL sglo; Tor dress wenr 1 aight sug. | i€ OF mercurochrome; then steril- gest an elegant Letpalg dyed Rus- | 2C & needle by heating it first in a sian broadtail, with silver fox collar | [AMe: tunnel ur el o) B et ars o et e Dlistar, fand dholsluid il come | uneven hemline, for the coat dips o | OU¢ throush the tunnel and the tis- a low point in the back. The coll sues of the body will take care of and cuffs make use of four foxes, | "¢ T8 : most effectively. Of cour safest advice fis not to 0 For both of these coats, as well cedure, major or minor but By Dr. Morris Fishbein Editor Journal of the American Med- ical Association and of Hygela the Health Magazine | e e “| Fashion Plaque HOUR HEALTH 1‘ | The colleges have just received an influx of young men and young women, many of whom have depart- ed from the shelter of home for first t The responsibility for the health of these young people falls promply upon the institutions [to which they go. | The freshman is a freshman In every sense of the word and his greenness constitutes considerable {trial to the medic: uthoritie Dr. | {0. P. Terry, medical adviser in the | student health service at Pure | University, has prepared a few first- | 15 cvenive gowe aid hints which have a much wider ! Bejge galyak is n « ively w back, the su application than the group to which | finish the neckline of wool cre train, and th the pamplet is distributed | of cedat, a lovely new brown. iich it is made. A Seriour Dange | The first hint Never squeeze | — or bruise in any way a hoil or even | pus any You may squeeze the blood. Do not open a pimple. do anything except protect it against mechanical inju Not infrequ “Black Satin ¥ Pattern 89 New Britain Herald 15¢ Pr newspapers tly the ts of deaths after two ctical carry accou Pattern or three days’ illness of some per- 'aon who has inadvertently seratched d above a trim belt, sduces pimp of septic 1nism himself or squeczed who has died promptly | poisoning. The virulent its bodic acl ¢losing is orj beautifully known as strepto-coccus finds way into the blood through the bruise L danty collar of silk or opening into the skin made by < pique and cdged with someone who has no understandi ling of the same fabri | of the meaning of the word “steril 75 is char 1shioned as applied to bacterial infection. or satin. onal colors A pimple ghould never be opened purple, bottle en, navy |except with sterile precautions. By | ind dull red. With any of [this is meant the use of alcohol or colors the trimming may be some other antiseptic substance flesh or beige. The small which will kil the germs on the skin buttons may be of bone, metal or aurrounding the pimple and pr vent covered with fabrie. blood The into the is opened them from getting ay be obt ned only in sizes 18, when the pimple " 36, 40, 42, 44 and 46. Size germs, once in-the blood. multiply 26 requires 3 3-4 yards of 40 inch and develop poisons which attact aterizl and 1 1-2 yards trimming. the human body. This’ model to make. No Very probably the individual who ERE e Byl has been infected will have a chill wry. Jach pattern comes to you as a sign of the infection. The white Dblood s in the blood begin to multiply rapidly in order to over- !come the infection and the physi- clan who makes the examination with simple and exact instructions, including yardage for every size. A perfect fit is guaranteed. Patterns wil be delivered upon re- of the number of white blood cells “H“» r‘fi FIF H \ CENTS (15¢) |is one of the most important tests 1t soolna J curets f\( wrapped or ! that physicians make in order to de- W;:I‘*-\' e -*N\r;”‘;')]‘_*“" 1\1”1)' termine the presence of infection. NUMBE S H’Iy i 5 )] | the blister that forms as o re- NUMBER and SIZE wanted. 3 | sult of irritation of the in by lvm. SHION BOOK is FIFTF | rubbing from a tight shoe or by « but only TEN CENTS when ordered with mail and orders to N Britain Herald Pattern Department, 243 ‘West 17th street, New York city. | pulling on the oars of a boat is an Address all | attempt to protect the tlssues against the irritating force. The | skin which has been raised by an a pattern m lic ar

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