New Britain Herald Newspaper, October 23, 1929, Page 16

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, Love’s Reawakening The Story of a Wife’s Triumph Over Jealousy By ADELE GARRISON Mrs. Ticer's Know of U Farmhouse Barglary Leads 1o Conversation About Her Mysteri- ous, Well- Boarder Mrs. that refl “Why secret suspicior that told her own Wo the But shut you folks tal sured he 1 had recei code of 1 in God ¢ more nea else Ti Tove teristics, an come which many women fashioned that rivals thatched co was home ture. The Mysterious Boarder I know inspiratien, non followed her m beautifying both terior of terest and as much unot off has a fierce litt But [ have pere char, and in retu SHADOW BECOMES SATISELE By Thornton W. Burgess dis ing tro w P of | acros er dic & Rats As he tur great surpris ah o leaving hurry big s didn't fanlt cit e and squ fore he Pres of that barn possibly ta them r Regiatersd Q. Patent Offtce PPN oy By C. D. Batchelor ortzontal et Menus GRILLED PORK CHOPS I'OR DINNER Breakfast ruit Dinner Potatoes salad int t Squares | Coffee chops, cut 1 inch thick spoons cold water | [rolled dried bread crumbs, 4 table- spoons bacon fat, 3 tablespoons wa- ter. eat the egg and add the cold and seasonings. Dip the chops into this mixture and then dip in the erumbs. Brown well in the fat h been heated, Add the wa- d a lid. Cook very slowly for hour. Turn frequently to permit even cooking. Stuffed Prune Salad Sixteen cooked prun 1-4 cup | diced celery, 1-4 cup cottage cheese. 1-4 cup chopped nuts, 1-8 teaspoon salt, 1-2 cup salad dressir Remove the sceds from the prunes with 1 tablespoon of salad 128 heen mixed with ingredients. and top with lad dressing. Menu For Halloween Fruit Salad in Apple Cups Cheese Wafers Iumpkin Pies opped With Ice Cream Salted Nuts in Pumpkin Cases Candy Corn Coffee OCTOBER 23, 1929 New York, Oct Several din | ner decorators in New York average from $20,000 to §30.000 yearly pl ning and exec ng ideas for pri- | vatc s. They are not concern- | ed with the preparation or servin the meal, but merely lend the ariistry to flossing up the tal They charge from $200 to 31,00 sed is paid for by dinner. This often o thousan © prohibi- tion expensive re are generally given in the h and at times the decorations spread through the en tire house. he miost talked-about dinner in town perhaps was the famous Seely fair, when iraped ladies with merry-eyed audacity popped out of ster pic. This merely happened to ach the first pages in a gust of scandal, but as matter of fact hundreds of dinners have had more | original and costly decoration The most claborate was given sev- eral years ago to a small group of millionaire railroad executives. The table was a panorima of lakes, fo & rivers and hills with an elec | trically propelled train weaving up and down hills, across prairies and spension bridges It was so mechanically intricate [ that more than two years were re- | quired in the construction. At an- other dinner tendered a wealthy bride and groom the desert was an |ice crcam moulded into an amaz | likeness of the couple as they ap- | peared in bridal costume, costing | about $100 for caca dish A New York publisher, the guest of honor at a hanquet, saw an exact | replica of the first page of his news- per done on top of a h ake in black and white add a climax when t parted they were handed per detailing each specch word for | word. Then there was the banker tiring from active affairs, who gave a spread to six men who had con- tributed largely o his succ Dur- ing the process of the meal the place was invaded by a group of | policemen who handed every onc what seemed to be a summo side was a certified check for $5 000 for cach. o Woven in the doormat at the trance of No Fifth avenue leng in a nume disp Latin inseripti “Nil Extra N erum.” And furthermore don't me. —00, Sheridan o longer Hubert's, quaint cafeteria for ribblers and others of | el Jiterati fill waritan | you There are a hundred or miore cxpert panhandling flim- flammers who make 1 business, In this way they are often able to form “contacts” with people of im- portance and employ it as a lever| in fake promotions, hurried loans et —o0- In \tally, a aumber have bec ypped for sums around $100 by slicker who said he had the contrac to re-paint and re-name skiffs for rent in Central Park. He, in lieu of money, promised to name boats for the gullible. o An ultra cafe has a relish of ripe | olives soaked in an onion and gar- lic s which is not on the menus b “bootlegged” by whispering waiters and is one of the most popular items on the fare. —00, | One of the old rounders who seemed to think 1e needed a young Broadway wilding to whip up stalc blood was jockeved by her into the commodious calm of an avenue jewelry establishment v with a strand of p | “Now what shall we do?" she ex- claimed, zhtly. “I'll trust you to think up some- thing,” he replied—not so brightly. Soge rom a theatrical = ome special newspaper should be peddling peanuts pop corn.” | Who'll have a Horton? (Copyrigh McNaught Herald’s Daily | That fattering velvet toush pleases | New York, Oct The dressier {of winter fashions demands s |with a softness about them. | Therefore, the “dressmaker” hat. or as some prefer to call it, the milliner-made” mode, is in g or with women who insist that tire cnsemble express the fecling. is exceptionally successful for th Most of them prefer dressier, ow line. Since this may be hard and unbecoming en done in stiff materials velvet ases the change and is apt to b flattering. For velvet is essentially a wom- fabric. It takes lights and dows gracefully, th avoiding difficulty that women expe { teaspoon paprika, | ence when wearing a hard, static aspoon celery salt, 1 1-2 cups jtone, atmosphere th des the realm | Milady this winter. .eft) Reboux (Center) Marie Christiane develops a cute “baby’s bonnet” turd oy | brim fof tlle Famt[y velvet has adjustable fullness. (Right) Henri Bendel uses Chinese red v elvet to fashion a most youthful litt | Velyet Turbans Lead Most of the new velvet hats for afternoon are of the turban varic- | ty. If velvet fashions a large- brimmed hat, it is either used in conjunction with felt or some other fabric, or clse it s uniquely differ- ent, 1 1c to top the flowing silhou- ette of an claborate afternoon frock There are, on the other hand dozens of lovaly, dressy little hats, smart for fur coat wear, chic with the crepe, velvet or 1 Afternoon frock or suit The line of one's little velvet hat is determined somewhat by the cos- tume it tops. There should be har- mony in line, in other words, be- tween frock and its hat or a coat B fup to an ir UNLEARNING FEARS (By Alice Judson Peale) During their carly years, children are apt to acquire a great number of unserviceable fears which, un- less they are unlearn. frequently persist as a part of the personality through life. A certain young man of my ac- intance actually beecame pale th fear if he is forced to remain in the room in which there is a This attitude dates back to an o sion when, at the age of three, \woke in the middle of the night, sereaming with terror, to see in the dark a pair of baleful green cyes, and to feel upon his chest the weight {of a huge cat which had walked in through the window. His subscquent fear of all cats has remained with him and no ration ding of its foolish rves to drive it away ears of this sort may he un- casily during the growing y he boy who grew jonal fear would have overcome it, had he been helped to grow accustomed to them un nt circumstances. A soft little kitten which would nused him with its pretty ulness, while mother's reassur- g presence gave him a fecling of security, might have been a means of reassociating his feelings toward cats with pleasure, instead of fear The child who has become afraid of the dark may be taught to love it, through spending half hours with father or mother looking out at ths quict starry s and listening to the friendly noises of the night. Almost any fear of childhood may thus be displaced by feclings of sc- d satisfaction. Pattern Service unning Tweed Frock” Pattern 1753 Smartness is achicved in this wool- en frock, in trim tailored effect. A rounded neckline repeated in rounded vestee is quite unusual. The separate skirt is pleat=d in front, and attached to a Lund. so that it may be worn with other blouses. Small pockets adorn the over blouse. Design 1753 may be made of tweed, jersey, covert cloth of velvete Tweed mixiures of black, red white, or brown and be lightful. Tha narrow belt made of the dress fabric, or leather may be chosen. If velveteen 1s 1w for the frock, we print May be oltained only in sizes 14, z 34, 38 and 49. 14 requires rds of #4 inch aterial This model is easy to make. No dressmaking experience is neces- sary. FEach pattern comes to you with simple d act instractions including yvardage for every size. A perfec fit is guaranteed. Patterns will be delivered upon re- ceipt of FIFTEEN CENTS (1ic) in coins carefully wrapped or tam 3e sure to write plainly vour ME, ADDRET NUMBER and SIZE wante IH HION BOOK is CENTS, but only TEN ¢ rdered with a patterr Add mail and orders to New ain Herald Pattern Department, 243 West 17th streef, New Yor city. N(;w Hats Give Dressy Enserfibles A rHead é{art T akes a rosewood chiffon velvet turban with long-skirted side and rear yan of jade green milliners’ velvet |vet turban should have a swaying brim, also. wood chiffon velvet. The crown is deftly moulded to fit the head and yet with fullness enough around it to gather it gently into a tight head- band. The brim is full and droop- very low on one side, with er rear line. It slopes up to scarcely a suggestion of a drooping brim over the other side. The eye- brow line slopes upward on - this side. Young, jaunty and yet softly feminine is a little Chinese ed vel- vet turban, of heret inspiration 1t was made to top an ensemble of red velvet coat and frock of gorgeous 1 its hat. Where the frock takes crepe black satin in a figured de- the long, swaying hemline, with sign. It has a triple drape, which greater length in the rear, the vel- | suggests the drooping back hem- Reboux makes one of the love-| liest hats of this type. It is of rose- (Below) An Agnes turban in dahlia le turban. line of both the frock and the coat. A Dressy Turban Agnes makes a velvet turban for dressy afternoon wear of one of the new dahlia shades, with the entire front of it shirred in a manner to est the fashionable yoke that ircssmakers like so much this year. This turban hag fullness that is ad- Jjustable. It can be thrown back for the youthful face, pulled down on both sides and the back for the more sedate person or occasion, or can be worn straight back, as in the picture. An interesting development of the cap is one from Marie Christiane in jade green milliner's velvet, shirred high across the front, just like a baby's bonnet. Tt is charming on a young girl. A little how of the green velvet placed at the back xhcightcns the bonnet effect.

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