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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, Love’s Reawakening The Story of a Wife’s Triumph Over Jealousy By ADELE GARRISON BMrs. Ticer, Jolted by Her Suspicion, | be i1 bl Tells More of Jerry's “Real or Wh o Fancied” Connection with the n's ¥Farmhouse Burglary ) R . \ i to “Has she f in- d he Beg heaved a hu, frantic sign for I'| up to J knew Mrs 1- [ wisdom in the world wa scious, only dread wi I feared be hurt by was burd late. She meat v ‘T'h as she str erect. “I r although T guess | pretty rear I think I know what he to it just Graham. 1 door a mir 10ld it o how {he Fou know | likes a bet.” | for « oust L the way he around it, and I spoke quicl assuringly “T Jerry, wor: the couch, would be acqu natured vould bet of flies passing a ¢ wor un time if L lie down tor rject for a wi She stifl T with Sam tha broke away ihe 105t of every "I don out on the inside, #aid obstinately. “I'l a quarter for every opposite you I i wrong. It was 4 my breath Ill tell you h, Sam didn't get | She sank irto a chair, her aybe one or two | trailing aw I1 s it that was | ward her with a of n. He'd spend hours | “I've Got to Tell You! with the fellow to “Don’t tell T look houses that Sam Kknew the painful to you inside of 1il own, then the fel- ulous to u the low would sit down nd draw the Once Overs OCTOBER 25, 1929. Town and Country Present Pictures of Chic By C D Batchelor New York, Oct he leaves | are turning fast—on trees and on| Eogster s UK patont Offte the date-books of smart socicty follk. ,‘ Many are returning from abroad, |others from the country, charity u th fu wi th ou Pe ba th me cia ‘The Rockies She Really Admires, % i wl | m an which inc ed interior for him. It was creepy like Mother Graham how well he could do it. my adjuration, bu on> night last week we her head all sitt around the fire “I've got to tell you,” she said r and t cllow says “But I'm sure of one thir ne here tha never knew what tt B » | me vs. ‘If 1 could draw the to or he'd never have told him wiat | interior of that house without a mis- | he must b But that hain't v take it would be my gre of any excuse for mph, because T know it m him plenty. If he'd 1 — been altered since it was but he didn’ and s at hap- | built. T me big farmho pened! next to you. You know it pretty Her excitem was mak her | well, don't you?' " fncoherent, and I wondered when we My pulses when Mrs. | should ar at the truth conc Ticer stopped as if T were | \cied moth- drawing clos of the nee 1 or far that my ¢ and impatic ing Jerry's part, re the robb 5. X kn er-in-law's curiosi tual pr (Continued Tomorrow) were greater n my own, ar mine were lively enough in all con- Copyr Newspaper science. But I ¢ aw thi would I Service, Inc. FLIP SEIS THE NOISE MAKERS | Thornton W, By Bu Onc ca rstoc Fear will va shou | Mrs. Grou Flip w following T Brown' to his heels Flip was fecln whirri It comifo arm Flip Just t pecting again, would almos The reached two hirds the Pine G noise it would be Flip. "B No, sir what made der what slowly fo ner Brown's | z bri; only knew w 1 : of the Fhicket Great and pevines Every 1 ; L vere so we 1 1 i n's 1 1 at I8 1 all tangle. I 3 1 hers could ] ed i SERArAE around and « 17l 1 put him right 1 N one hand i ( Tes the other ke po S grapevir “Do you sce the i 1 Boy looked whispered. “Look 1 i \ 1 v, s Don't you Y r o sca minute he things r 1 care us. It r Boy 1 e+ know him t eagerly in under t he could s i 1 ( W. Burgess) he did long to go in f } and find i T lip Saves Mrs Brown's B 1 C Then he sud i ears. He had sound i there. Ft soun ) insLare piven E kwit, kwit." FI n . 3 tc ¢ there was son tl y t “Do you I r that E iy lan e B S A AP i Today S Varlety Bazaar | FEAL, S [HIOWARD ISWIETD EIHIUSID]E ISIE Tone in scale W in. Tnlet First woman Silly. To steep. To taunt Herons VERTICAL 11 out Skirmish H haped part person us official. Sour plum Adding @ few drops of ) pastry, when mixing it, it much lighter. SICK-ROOM TRAYS it | A thovghttul woman, who had |fla much sickness in her home, used to | b¢ clip out jokes, pretty pictures, beau- | G! tiful thoughts and wise sayings from it magazines, newspapers and copy |17 ._._..._.._._...—._q complains less and eats more when ©© alone, YOUR HEALTH BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN Editor Journal of the American | Medical Association and of Hy- | gela, the Health Magezine Actually all hair is superfluous for It is generally consid- | Oct Thoughts | New York, Roge L certain amount of halr on various | pai’eq old three-card-monte king— but not every |y, jg now a strect corncr salvation- amount of hair | i ist. Thus, man has | portions of the body, | person has the same on all of the portions. sp ca ex :flln(‘lflir Lewis' freckles. Swank a Erowth of halr on checks, N | motorists who call gasoline petrol. | wheel whiskers and named Meadows. | [and upper Hp AN A e e | Winter is here—the windows are full IT ache to trip him up some day| “):'i\mi{mf o iy o e on | of PAIm Beach toggery! Why is|when the parlor is full of company.| | Feason that women have little or|there always a society boy in the o —o0— | | none on the face. | novels called Tubby? Sidney Holer,| A cortain _chain of arug sto Women with a considerable | the actor ,a Plattsburg Mo., boy who | killed off a Dobu}:lr and highly sc.»n;:}. amount of hair on. the upper lip, | made good in the city. cd soap by insinuating innuendo. | cheeks, chin or chest, get sufficient| Comic paper influence: City de- | The soap was priced so there was | : them into | tectives have abandoned derbies. |no retail profit. When clerks were commiseration to worry | psycho-asthenia over the presence or\ The only Rolls-Rovee tax erally believed by scientific men that | once owned by Foxhall Kcene. And | | the extraordinary hirsuty. It is gen- | what a name for a sportsman! A |in ivory | pe in town— | as | the glandular condition of the body | complete gambling cabinet in and heredity are primarily responsi- | in an exclusive shop. Imported from | The subtlety worked. ble for the exira hair. | Iingland and costing $16.500.00. | —00— It has been stated that the use, Hype Igoe, the spor writer. | At Long Island dinner parties last | of colil cream, vaseline or ointments Dangling ecar ring iin. People | summer, hosts and hostesses follow- + | will stimulate the growth of the | who ride on bws tops in the rain. |ed the California custom of serving Lair, but there scems to be not | Bernard Gimble. Orange | and | the pre-dinner cocktails in the gar- slightest scientific evidence to sup- “Pick-up cocktails of kraut and [ age. In this way they saved the St L S G . tomato juice from 6 a. m. until|carpets, furniture and such in the | The removal of the hair is a con- ;565 @ Buoyant flappers who simu- | house from being all spotted up. atant problem. The halr can be re-|jate guch an eager delight in the [AoxedRbygabaving SthegualBRCILELE a0 i onip e | ou are ever emphasizing your pulled out, it may be removed by | "o ihat liver is up in the world [age,” writes someone from Province [chemical depilatories, it may bef ooan chat's become of its lowly | town, Mai Lots of your reade fiole anad mit, 7”d”’g(”,‘l'"‘g"’“':","nd» kick, the onfon? And where's | figure you to be somewhere in the L R e Y e s daydelat Al Gus T v ds o I know better. y i“;,‘“’f REA e fying trip from Hollywocd. And | What does it matter? No one Tiie alactrle mocdle memoves haie nearingie0nis winn]ing new honors | could be as old z;ZDI look, anyway. antly, but the mothod is dif- |in the talkies. die Cantor’s un- —o0— | et a3t ia oot nossible. Lo ro. | derstudy—Buddy Dovle. As one who nearly mastered the | move more than a few hairs at a| Orchestra musicians still hanging | march of the dwarfs from u-:»r 1 e removal of the hair by the | around Broadway waiting for some- 1 iynt's suite on the mandolin, it is of the X-ray is not permanent |thing to turn up. Freshlv barbered | ch and repeated u may sometimes | racketeers who drift out at dusk for | per club is to feature an entire man- cause the hardening of the skin and | breakfast. Movie ushers at milita delin orchestra. Many of us have | even been related to the devel- | attention. Why do they put those |never forgiven George Ade for | white crosses on windows of new buildings? st opment of cancer. 4 hl AN NAILS The high romance of a New York Before you start doing your|sun-down. That tingling throb pres- dirtiest cleaning or gardening, rub |aging the gayety of a night to come. vour fingernails over and under with soap. This prevents dirt from vinesar | caking under them and all you have tends to|to do is wash your hands and the | nails come pertecty clean. Choir boys gping to vespers. Fire- | tc men tilt back chairs in front of sta- | w tions. Victorias jog to the park with | o hand-holders. A dark plush gashed by the scimitar of a moon. functions are 1 try hunt with positive finished To perfect the | Gould Bishop arrived on it with her coughed sounding the death knell of that in- est, debutantc inning, |balls are scheduled and We | have dotted the days with the fra grance of arange blossoms Bertha Norton, when he became {Mrs. Lawrence Jacob 2nd, wore a | Tovely, lor ained deep ivory satin princess wedding gown that toned in perfectly with the vellow orange and rust colors of attendants’ gowns, When Caroline Olyphan Anderson became Mrs. Aubrey H d, her gown was a rich moyen creation, glorified by regal old rose point lace that flowed down over the court train. Another | recent bride who chose a medi period gown was Adelaide Me; Par ho now is Mrs. John Gra ham Morr Rose point lace fashioned the drop shoulder yoke d long sleeves Hunts Attract Many The Meadow Brook hunts out on and have had an enormous y risers three times a week this fall. Perhaps it's th fine weather. Maybe it is just an- other sign of the supremacy of in- terest King Horse holds. Mrs. W. P. T. Hazard, Mrs. Theodore Gros venor and Mrs. Rohert McAdoo all wore stunning tweed topcoats when they answered the 7:30 call at the Harry Payne Whitney estate near Westhury for a thrilling cross-coun- hounds. dows fall more and more equent on chic Park avenue at nch time these days There's a fad for smart daytime gs in black. One of the very rtest black-clad omen T saw Pierre’s one day . John | Kiser, Her suit of nappy dull worsted w extensively rred in shaved Persian lamb, with | and colla of the fur, eve capes and narrow cuffs and front pancls down tight-w ed coat altoge ravishing black felt hat, with ping it for a tu jeweled pin stuck Rlack sl i vestes de, triangular e skirt of the she had n lamb drs n brim, with a tit, rs rough one A Mother-Daughter The ore. Mode i brought of Isle de than its u prominent in | so0- | Glor] wce 1 quota folk. ptivating little daughter, Gloria, | 10 looks alot like her popular ama. Mrs. Bishop’s little frock d coat ensemble in medium bluc d beige was distinctly Paris in its tle ruff collar and ties and its ring wide cuffs that showed the ige of the frock's figure Little oria wore the Kinds of clothes all tle girls should have—a soft, ess-maker tweed coat with a femi- | them from books, Each day the nine cape and tie, plain felt hat and | !sick-room tray had one of these Plain. little hand-made frock | alongside of the single flower it al- | Deth Leary came on the Jsle de ways carried. She made a practice ance, too, wearing a u-_nm- mm\_ of leaving the patient alone with jI'rench suit, short jacket, fitted then | the tri She found a sick person |flaring skirt, and individually cut llar and cnffs in flat caracul That velvet touch that sets off the | | SR 3 AR | face superbly comes via | W FL chapeaux these da | since Iettuce, rox oF slow Lovejoy wears a 'Olh"‘. L i very often turban with exaggeratedly full sid for salad in the winter, more N1 b o th ’fl'\‘r[n ‘\r’”"{'l'o'[‘l:n“”\ . ! o we cotly atop ¢ | thought should be givento dress- face. She o oe Lierectv alan Bl ling. The cook with imagination jfuit With a huge scarf of broadtai | fur. | will try out everything in the way f s of flavors, added to the regulation AnpAtacy s an | French dressing. Onion salt, Wor- | Cornelia Kip has one of the | ce shire sauce, catsup and chili est little hats I've seen this year—a sauce and only a few of the things verifable little —cap-turban tha that can be used. points up alluringly in front and A wealthy bachelor who has had One of my burning desires is 10 ort one of those tall sardenic musi- 1 comedy butlers with a-hoot owl pression, stiffly crookedl arms, side civilized man. red 1o be a vestige of the time when' pite girolling: Rarcly sec children | valets to command since graduation man roamed about without clothing | " (F FITEE L L, [daxs says—and zip goes our stand- nd required hair for protection | M Child's. George Gershwin ing with valets—that the only way | against wind, winter and sunlight. |Sign: “Skintherapist.” The Fifth (o achieve “valet comfort” is to ac- | In the present state of human de- | avenue doorman who looks like Will | quire a new one every six months. 1\‘ lopment, it is customary to have s—and chews gum. The white- —00— | I ked for it, they lifted eyebrows, behind polite palms and dicated it was used only by highly rfumed and loose living ladies. e Lcering to know a smart new sup- rument with his the mandolin playe —o0 “This is a bid for a lot of dirty let- rs but it scems to me the fellow ho invented the derby had a sensc i humor. (Copyright, 1929, M aught {ple as much |irgs exe and sisters, | have surely | differently from the younze: | parents’ |other children of the Mrs. Deering Howe and Cornelia P, (above) Kip ends in the back in a big flat bow that sticks out both sides. 1 met her walking up I'ark avenue, inc dentally with stenographer shorthand book under her arm (everybody is working now!) and wearing a spray of orange and yel- low orchids pinned against the {leopard collar of her suit Still on the subfeets of hats, the tendency to use two materials in- stead of one grows apace. Natalie John W. Kiser . chic Park Avenue Mrs, on Laimbeer, presiding as chairman at one of the Silver Lance committec informal luncheons, wore a close- fitting black hat, one side felt. one e broadtail. Mrs. Deering Howe has an individual looking navy blue hat, topping a dr cer suit of blue with speck of in it, that has hatters’ plush for the turban, with Dlack felt to match for the brim that swings out rather straight on the sides and back. Talks To g3, Parents ENVIRONME Ar If someone asked you in describi your child's environment you nc doubt would give an account of his rursery, his house, his luck yard 1ou would per 110 cemember t¢ a I tell about his neighborhool Your description wonld have beer incomplete, for the child’s phycho logical environment is no less real than his physical environment. Peo- as physical surround- influence upon him and mother, brother in their re as much nfluerce in ping his_personality s iny phy- circumstance; anil whatever thus affcets your child fro: must rightly be called cnvironment His father a part of his No two children i Samily live any in the same environment, ‘or no two children arouse from their parents identical responses in traning and emotional attitude. Fath itowards his little dan differnt feelings from tho; a little son. The eldest in the vuts out hter quite given to family 1s treated P ffected by the problems of the child who c¢ames dur ental attitudes ar personal Th moment. {ing a period when nts are ppy usually s t them ith much more g 155 ond af fction: than the child aho com when family relations w: under strain When we realize. 0o, the further complicating factor of the cffsct ot cach child’s personality upon the mily we must | be ready to admit that no two chii- dren have been subject to the same environment influences. The en- vironment of every child is unique. | doughnuts, wtion to hin: | 1 without | | hot fat, Menas for the Family By Mrs. Alexander George Sour Milk Doughnuts for Supper Sunday Break fast, Orange juice, poached eggs on but- ered toast, sansage, coffce. Sunday Dinner Roast veal and browned sweet po- | tatoes, bread, nt jelly, vegeta- I ble salad in gelatin, chocolate nut loaf cake, coffee. Sunda, lemon cur Supper quarters, sour apples. Tea, milk Chocolate Nut Loat (Moist and well flavored) 1-8 cup fat, 1 cup light brown su- gar, 2 cges, 1 teaspoon vanilla, 1-8 teaspoon salt, 2 squares chocolate, melted, 2 cups flour, 2 teaspoons baking powder, 1-2 cup nuts. Cream the fat and sugar. Add the rest of the ingredients and beat for 2 minutes. Pour into a loaf pan vhich has been fitted with waxed paper. Bake for 40 minutes in a slow oven Sour Milk Doughnuts (4 dozen) 2 eggs, 1 cup sugar, | teaspoon vanilla, 1 teaspoon nutmeg, 2 table- spoons bhutter, melted, 1-2 teaspoon salt, 1 cup sour milk, 4 cups flour, ! teaspoon soda, 1 teaspoon baking powder. Beat the eggs and sugar. Add the rest of the ingredients. Roll out on floured Dboard. Cut out and fry in deep hot fat. Test fat for frying doughnuts by adding a slice of raw potato to the When it browns quickly on all sides the fat is hot cnough for the doughnuts, ter doughnuts are fried. let m drain by standing upright in illow pan fitted with tissue pa- ver. This paper will absorb any sur- plus fat. To sugar doughnuts, place a few in a paper sack and add 1-3 cup of confectioner's sugar. Tighten the Ack and shake it and the doughnuts Wwill be quickly sugared. Syndicate, Inc ) Pattern Service “ADORABLE LIN] N FROCK” Pattern 7029 Terald 15c¢ Practical Pattern Very smartly garbed In the new tailored mode, is the little girl who wears this linen frock of simple de- sign. The pointed collar, the chic turned back cuffs and the long front panel are interestingly trimmed with narrow pointed lace or embroidery. Groups of buttons {rim the front. Deslgn 7029 may use gingham, pongee, pereale, dimity or challis tn place of linen. All white is always lovely for youngsters, although blue, green or yellow trimmed with white lace would be very smart. May be obtained only in sizes 4, 6 and 8. Size 4 requires 1 1-4 yards of 40 inch material and 3 yards of lace. This model is easy to make. No dressmaking cxperience is neces- sary. Each pattern comes to you with simple and exact instructions, including yardage for every size. A perfect fit is guaranteed. Patterns will be delivered upon re- ceipt of FIFTEEN CENTS (15c) in coins carefully wrapped or Be sure to write plainly your NA ADDRESS, STYLE, NUMBER and SIZE wanted. THE FASHION BOOK is FIF- TEEN CENTS, but only TEN CENTS when ordered with a pattern. Ad- dress all mail and orders to Herald Pattern Department, 243 West 17th Street, New York City.