New Britain Herald Newspaper, November 7, 1929, Page 20

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER Madge, Back Confers with the Missing Keys ent The Larches REDDY AND MRS, WORK TOGETHER By Thornton W Mr ing nos: to know Love’s Reawakening The Story of a Wife’s Triumph Over Jealousy By ADELE GARRISON Farmhouse ideout — Once Overs Registered U. 8. Patent 0ffice TOUR HEALTH MORRIS FISHBEIN By C. D. Batchelor on of Duelists ITACHMENT school teacher motional detach | ing and unruly a child's nursery school t | preserves a manner of serenity, firm | Two-year-old lirnest gocs up | potatoes, bread, buttc It By NEA Service Washington, Nov. T The American home is having its face | lifted. Architectural su ow houses oul of ol Gay cott and great mansions in the modern mods erging from the chrysales of ugly, ba like structures of the past. Archi- s, builders, lumber dealers have united 1o trans form old-fashioncd homes into up- te houses “as good as new.' New possibilities in recre is making typical old dwellings have been r vealed here by architects tor the ni tional lumber 1 ciation who 1 eight antiquat style popular more than 35 years ago ken as mode 1 houses—ecach of a ent-day manner. Frames May [emain Few of these tr orfuation A typical cld-fashioned homestead like Pr could e transformed into the modern windows, larger chimneys and supplementary rooms. have neys, freque | estate men and | | associz and may be nstead of small cost, it wetnrers’ usso- | stairwa added. Living rooms enlar w flooring laid upsta | Fireplaces a Houses that are res two-story house shown at ri volve any change in the frames pictured at le ht, with dormers, Colonial porch, ba <ident Hoo ver's vi-thplace of | ern but built before the v t. at West Branch, Ia e of sup- old buildings. The revisions| plementary rooms had preven their ts and the addition of sev dern architectural improvemen Outstanding features, such as en- | sure. pd chim-| One of the most use 2 either | windows v are enls convenience or new beauty. porche: 01d houses, with their senitmen Iy traditions. need not be discarded os wrecked ade @ material asset | lability, often at a ions and fa s pointed out. may be raised. 1 1ses out of cotta rooms. sun roor attics, porches, often s Adding New been confined to small details | —the removal of unsightly orna- | 1z two- 5. Secon:l dormers, ed nd down. | s installed. mod- wvorth may be rearranged to provide |the housewife with th facilities | which nsform a task into a plea- ful additions is 2 small breakfast room. conven- |ient to the kitchen and the rear porch. A breakfast room saves man ¢ steps in preparing the morn- ing meal and all other informal meals. A b porch may be a haven of rest on hot days and both the poi d the breakfast room add to the ral attractiveness of the house. Dormers moke attic spacc usable as a children's play room or provide additional sleeping quarte Houses old before their time can become architectural flappers—at -ldom more than half the expense f a brand-ne structur:, scinated by the h Ernest was merely f act of pouring. The average n would have shown her dikpleasure in scolding and perhaps even in punishment ther. She merely takes the small sinner by hand and ieads him at another tabl She knows that just before meal time is not the occasion tor tr to his own place ing To take him {o tash milk would he to act according to adult rather than child values. At suitable tinie Irnest will learn about spilled the art of pouring It is not eca ind ob; ing moments to be thus calm thick of tr ctive rs who, unli teacher, T on their nds besides child train- in t the more detachment we rn to cultivate in difficult situ- tions the more successful we will e in training our children Menu.:for t/z;Famin; By Mrs. Alexander George Caramel Bars Are Deliclous Breakfast -wed prunes, chilled cornmeal real and m poache 1 eggs on toast, coffee. Luncheon—Tuna a la King on toast, bread, currant jelly, caramel | bars, tea. Dinner—Baked fish, escalloped a let- ng, choc- ce and chow chow dr To crack. 1Fish Collections of ' 4 6. Beverage. 3 o listel Conclusion, VERTICAL P H eart To depart. 2. Wrath Breaker To put or 7. Black. 4. Co o s, To sect Roof's ‘od Rod 10. Home of a heast Possesse 42, God of the s 43. Opposed to ir 14, Unit . om did Aaron Burr No to escape, clear and, it possit : ou oves all o ; 1 1 dowr fected bor g C Obvic Iy the X-ray point. at 1t the infection | most importance in detern D ce. tenderness to the touck | fore the operation the exte : e of in.|injury and the point v‘ « ick is se operation is to be do 2 and| One of the chicf w W woid the spread of ¢ i ¢ tion by f the blood white b bo than one ir iginally occ of osteomyelitis in which other, because the A to the virulence of the |the y - e A et failed to develop r R extend up and down covering case t Little colo + child | pink. blue, yello prints or near t point of the bone | narrow frames, make ¢h the hor issne grows, | orative border around the the bo the bathroom's til e it hite bathroom they are ondition ocenrs, |1y effective The newest boudoir cowl collar @ surface, the neatest little over point lvet jacket that nips the infoctious ma- | wall, Broadway, | shrinks from anything s t of bread under vaited their cars |“*went up the river " the bread in the gutter so that | sympathetic people wil shower him | flim-flam, collared the fellow and piloted him to a station house, | They have acq | appear as nothing more t geon found he ing from acuic does Broadw often seem leedless | ory of a woman com- a wayfarer dog refused to permit soon as possit i front stepg the dog had to be shot by a police red. There | #hip pa have heen infected o made a sizeable one on the strect would pay a dol- | 1ar for a perfectly good $50 bill. It was tried out | were stopped, shown the BATHROOM DECORATION had been made fourteenth called an offtrer. BOUDOIR JACKLT paradise of every {ype of confidence lilady in-a stunning gg: of something | pajama suit, with full 1o thoughtout schemes for quic bank swindle and fits like the pope a mn-wcuouflA The famous Gondorf brothers, scholarly and silver-haired wire-tap- ping fleecers, tried to operate in many citi sfore landing on Broadway. Almost invariahly they 1ad to leave town over night. But they manipulated the flimsiest of boob-baiting tricks unmolested for | seven years in that sophisticated strip on Broadway between the Cir- cle and Herald Square. Th ed several millions before they —00— The polished crook of the melo- | it| dramatic thriller and mystery novel Perhaps | | the most convincing of the guild is is often seen in real li the oc n grayhound who plies the frans-Atlantic liner as a card sharp. of red the & the scasoned voyager. an ples ant fellows with monocles. When they are barred on th: Atlantic they switch to the Pacific until they are forgotten. -00— The usual companion of the grayhound has the appearance of benign church deacon or perhaps « retired middle-west store keeper on his first ship voyage. He seems re- luctant to join an rd game and will only submit by assurances of rming manner low stakes. His d almost invariably allays suspicion. o= A sea captain once told me all eng Once he ge his confede into high play. such a game sf Despite all the ship warnings. | more than a million is collected ! every season by card sharps. Thirteen | only safe card game at sca is soli- The | taire, — 00— One of the new cigareties ad-| vertises: “A cigarette for swift smart banter and the lengthy so- phisticated alibi We wish someone would think ette that would make a fellow get off things like Wilson up a ci Mizner, (Copyright. 1929, McNaught Syndicate, Inc.) (Other The nursery school teacher does! choped ing in matters less important than | ticularly for | @ nursery school e a good many things|1-4 t ccokie jar. their fr spoon celery chopped chow-chow. Mix the ingredients. Beat for | minut gredients s they are combined olate cottage pudding, hard sauce coffee. - Tuha a la King, Serving fish or leftover meat may be substituted for the tuna) beaten Melt the butter and add the flour. Blend papri k for 2 minut Serve at once. Caramel Bars (A chewy, waxy cor ection) -4 cup fat, 1 cup dark brown 1 teaspoon v 1spoon salt, 1 cup flour, cup nuts, 2 cup chopped dates. Cream the fat and sugar. rest of 1he ingredic pour into a shallow pan which h been fitted with waxed pape | for 25 minutes in While warm cut into bars 1 inch | wide and 2 inches long. Roll powdered sugar and tore in bars will retain Th ness for some time, Ohow-Chow Dressing (Serving Four) 1-3 cup French dressing, 1 table- seed, 2 tublespoons Serve on lettuce All Fashion Plaque A galosh for the new sketched above, in two- tone rubber combinations such dark brown and beige. | oxford type ¢ garner- | Four cup tuna, 4 tablespoons but- 4 tablespoons flour, 2 cups Slit it down about 1 milk, 1-2 teaspoon salt, 1-4 tea-| spoon paprika > tablespoons pimicntos, 1 egg, well 1 pimientos Add -t well and cook for 1 min- Add| s ‘ana| When hemming linen tablecloths, Bakc a moderate oven. ould be chilled before n is the CLOTHES BAGS | The easicst clothes bag to make is the coat hanger type. Use square of material, sew up both {sides and round it across the top to fit a clothes hanger you hang it on inches from the hanger, on one side LEFT-OVER MEATS | You can make excellent fupper andwiches hy grinding up any left- and add the milk, salt and |over bits of meat, mixing them with ook until a creamy sauee forms. Add the tuna ar ind co mayonnaise and serving single slices of hot toast. GINGERBREAD MEN Hot gingerbread men, served with whipped cream, make nice desserts for children’s parties, e sure to put in the raisin buttons and the spiced features or children will be | disappointed RAVELLINGS SAV save the threads that come off when vouw even the ends. Put them in an envelope and mark. When your cloth needs darning, they excel any | other threads for the job. TLINOLEUM CARE Since soap is hard on linoleum, |vou wuse two tablespoonfuls of | paraftin in a pan of water it will | clean the floor thoroughly without soap. Varnishing linolenm is an- other saver. FLAPPER, FANNY SAYS: ARG, U. 3. PAT. Whenever a dentist has ground [it's an acher. should Leware of | the cautious fellow, who warns of club | card sharks and collects only those wager that no | in whom he has confidence of “a quiet little game.” He is dynamite. ted ates soon manoeuvre it e Practical House Frock” Pattern 1771 T'rocks fo he worn when working about the home, should be practical and becoming. Today's housedress slips casily over the head and 1s ticd with a pert bow to fit the figure. The stitched neck - trimming and the cuffs are made of contrast- ing material, which may also be used for the pockets and tash if one desires. Design 1771 may be made of ging- ham, percale, rayon or cotton broadcloth and trimmed with pique. Th fabrics may be selected in piain colors, or printed in gay pat- terns of flowers, checks, dots or geometric design May be obtained only in size: 55, 40, 42, 44 and 46. Size 36 re- qui 3-4 vards of 3¢ inch ma- terial and 1-2 yard trimming. No dressmaking experience is nec- cssary to make this model. The pattern has simple and exact in- structions. Yardage is given for every size. A perfect fit is guaran- tecd. Patterns will be deliverad upon r ceipt of FIFTEEN TS (15¢) in coins carcfully wrapped or stamps. Be sure to write plainly your RAME, ADDR STYL 36, NUMBER and SIZE wanted. The NEW WINTER FASHION BOOK is rea for delivery. Price FII N CENTS, but only TEN {i S when ordered with a pat- tern. Address all mail and orders to New Britain Herald Paftern De- partment, 243 West 17th streef, New York city.

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