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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1929. Love’s Reawakening The Story of a Wife's Triumph Over Jealousy By ADELE GARRISON Her Tather's 1 Planning the “Fortune ave Madzc pusual Precautions in Transporting th Loy to a safety Vault wil( 1 4 Guards 1 less ti (Continued Mong ght, 1929, N« THE CUNNING OF 1 POSSUNM By Thornton W. Burge BILLY ying Une ) sum. Fa Bow started back for the barn Plaque Menus for the Family . By C. D. Batchelor |to-measure figure is the latest. | !dresses to one's figure, |she craves. {der walstline | sesses, AMERICA FOR “THE Anericans 1 5AY., THERES MO PLACE FOR THESE 1CNORANT Fug- EFIENERS IN OUR MIDST. 5 THEYRE A MENACE, 13} £D THAT NICHT IN SAFETY BE- (AYSE SOME 1ENORANT FOREINER " HAP WALKED THE TIRACK THAT DAY AND INSPECTEY THE HITHWAY LF [ | | | EXPRESS coss- | THE CON TINENTAL DIvIoF | STEEL MEN, ALEXANDE Macaroni and Oysters ! GEORGE Cnusoal Breakfast Date Cookics, Crisp Ones HERALD king rs and I more CLASSIFIED ADS |conrse, fen out 10 have ALICE JUDSON PEALE from hard sticed even by the very The art of escap reality is pri young There are all sorts of things from dren, like the are | to seck eseape. competition 1l justments are all among the | which children sometimes try | methods of cscape things to ¢ The I “Ther has an Monday are endless. lingerer, the boy who until after 9 o'clock | rning. There is t dreamer; instead of working | vd on the athietic field, he sits at with & book upon his lap. and vines himself hero of the! rried on the shoul |decolletage that would shame {overly plump shoulders. [Not at |noble in |lishment, is |or how spots and {the requirements! |50ever to a | strictions, | every failure and shortcoming he has | an | 2 dozen more | | means of escape Figures New York, Nov. 23—The made- | It ous development of the | silhouette instead of an ing Now, fitting n the figure lored to fit the dress! Suppose @ none-too-perfect-33 | sees just a dream of a little frock | Alas, it has that slen- she no longer pos- tight hips she cannot quitc | ide into, and a very low rear| her | d she sigh and pass it b all. She may take it and med down to fit it! | is what was done, first of ! o a Swedish noblewoman who nted to wear her mother's wed- | g gown, but was too big around for it, and later to others equally | their aesthetic ideals, by ultra-modern Silhouette Shop | Saks Fifth Avenue has open- that ed Reducing by Inches | Reducing, to this novel estab- not a matter of | pounds. Scales do not enter into it. But the vardstici | and the tape measure do. It is inches, not pounds. that fly out the little te cotta and silver | door and disappear into oblivion. This shop cmphasizes the fact that the day of the standardized, flat-chested. straight-up-and-down figure is no more, Curves are in. But no woman can tell another woman what her curves should ba, E; oman is her own form and {wo things determine just how big little should be the arc of her feminine contours. These de- terminants are her height and her bone structure. They and decide inches there should then ounces and measure how man be in variou reduce her to it | The principle of reducing is not | by diet. Weight is no index wh figure’s beauty. Thiy as passe as the flapper fig- Three meals a day, no diet re- but the right combina- of foods are the rules. the muscles or the nerves worked on. But the fat is at- ed vigorously and the bedy is| put in prime circulatory condition | idea is ure, {on the theory that excellent circu- | lation will prevent there and no women wants it Waistline is Attacked main line of attack in manner of reducing the waistline. Light lost pursuit of lumping of fat | elsewhere—whera | The modern this | is, of | wom- | their flapper does sil- walstlines in Lips. That conves bulge nothing whatever for the new liouette. Low-belted frocks con- aled But princess lines throw it in high relief. Having it reduced is preferable to wearing corsets, in the opinion of | the | styles ask of women. Tt is i Viagame has only 3 SUMchance re Tai]o_ril_To Fit The Dress - of MEASURING uptothe shles ---but she gets her reducing down TAT--- and has FITat the result!! modern women. Healthy, normal proportion is ideal striven for by this meth Too figures that have been concealed in styles of tl past few years are, as, mere sortments of odd lumps of fat. Spreading upper arms that be- speak the middle-aged spread, | heavy diaphrams, bulging thigh: fatty shoulders, inside-the-knee| lumps of fat, and thick ankles are the most insidious foes of the graceful feminine beauty that new od. many as- | har- | ony of face and figure now—or | a girl gets nowhere! Some of the shop's osting work is done on side-the-knee Jumps of make a woman because they when she with ungraceful come in sage. So most inter- those in- fat which look bow-legged | spread her knees her feet posture., for their does ait apart, a Upper share that telling roll of most arm; | ruddily-healthy, Iks and cause her to|selves as (hey are of mas- | made that are over Lvery sign of vears is a foe to be battered down Tair Foes of Fat Strong - arm strong - finger glowing Norwe- sian girls attack these beauty foes and reduce the figures to perfec proportions. They are proudes perhaps, of the grand opera sing who lost nine Inches around her waist, two around her upper arm our around her hips and thre around each knee! “She looke ltke her own daughter when sl finished!” they bragged. For as the lumps of fat disappear, tha dead, flat look of faces over 4 gives way to the live, healthy glon that follows good circulation Women themselves could, p hape, make their figures over. [ is not that some might not be handy in remodelling theni- their clothes. fow persii It is so much to “ave fthe alterations for ene. And. of course, in this day and age it is so mueh But so easier many | fat across the baek of some nmecks more modern: ders of his classmates. | There {s the artist in evasion. For | a ready promise, a ready alibi, and ingratiating mianner. There are All of these making their ir voung people ar inations serve as a rather than as a means of adjustment It is our business to help them to | face about and meet their problems tairly. The malingerer should have his bluff called. He need not know | that we know his iliness is assumed. | Indeed, he himself may not be | aware that he is shamming, but he | hould be put to bed with a good | Nov. There nm[ first ¢ vriters in New York who gnaw at the prover- | 1 crust rather than suffer their ctforts to be printed in v pub- magazine living discomforts rath- | enpyring a sccond place in lication save the {op than o riting on other nt writers of w hand, many tal- om the world malke cnough money to live comfortably, rear families and | perhaps go to Europe for a few weeks each year. They have no high | blown literary irations or desire | cting fam Writing, they teel, is a trade—Tlike | Most of them have had | their try at the big magazines and | The Great American Novel, with | congequent disillusionments andd | ith the skimmed milk. | known “literary they eat regularly. lances juggle carpentry are The may hacks” but ich free diversity of writin il dash off anything from ad jingle ort story for aler program write for trade | niagazines, pot boilers for cheap flc- tion thrillers, Sunday page terrors | and other odd literary marts. Their output is stupendous. They | content as to a s become expert not <o much in ideas | of quality but in quantity. Certain | formulas fit certain requirements | ) ter voar and they have only | to cmploy them, work at high pres- | sure and triple the wage of the av- | erage reporter. | Quite a number have press agent | jobs on the side that require only | or so daily but providing meal ticket.” Some have mark- < with certain syndicates for fea- | ture stories with pictures. These pay from $25 to $60 cach and one lady | made $6,000 from this source alone | in a year. ral fictionists write for a half publications under various expert has 11 fairly | peeudonyms among There is a himself Paris for a year line editori spaper chain, | known magazines maintained cheaper rellow who an apartment in writing pith thre | paragraphs for a ne { die Guest, it may | 2 speclal market and Wynne. and | | boldly named and portr | quartered in Malta. | case occurring in other parts of the |k dose of there, with little or no amusement to relieve the tedium of his heurs. The child who spends his time day | definite relationship | dreaming instead of doing should be glven some insight into the reasons | | for his behavior and should be help- | | ed eith to compete in the fleld | where his ambition les, or to find a | satisfactory substitute expression. | The child who uses the technic of | evasion never should be allowed to | get away with it. He should be | made to face the facts, and act vpon them in a straight-forward way. YOUR HEALTH BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN Editor Journal of the American Medican Association and of Hygeia, | the Health Magazine Years ago considerable attention was paid to a disease called Malta | fever which had occurred demic form among British The same in epi- soldi dis astor oil, and made to stay | has been more fréquent in cattley ‘anul!gamu for the United States | public health service have shown a Letween the germ causing contagious abortion in cattle and the one causing malta fever or undulant fever in mun The germ is found in the milk of infected cows, but this is not ap- parently the chief mode of infection, since the disease affects yvoung men more frequeitly than it affects wom - en and children. In Denmark, investigators found most of the cases among agricultural workers, especially those coming into close contact with cattle, and in this country many cases have heen found in workers in packing houses deal- ingwith swine, sheep and cattle gen- erally. Tt seems likely that infection prob- bly oce from direct contact with, | discased material rather than froim | the drinking of infected milk or eat- ing Infected butter or chrese, al- | though it is quite possible that thq | latter may be a source. Workers for the Ith departments various and stalq for t | world carries the name of Mediter- | United States public health service { ranean fever and undulant fever, the the and | Bd- | Berton Braley, perhaps is known, highest ralaried most prolific frec lance poet. be explained, has Braley, as a ven- | der of pale me, takes on all comers if thay will pay his price. He writes calendar verse, frontis page sonnets, advertising jingles. | yndicated postical cheer, greeting card couplets—and now and then a | book of poetry. He has heen known | to receive a poctical suggestion ovor | the telephone and dash off the verse | »nd deliver it before hanging up | the phone. He thinks in rhyme, —00— Many pen and ink artists made hilarious contributions to theatrical back drops this season. Their exag- gerated whimsicalities are in black and white and when unfolded usu- ally get what Variety calls “a belly laugh.” The chief conspirators have | been Rube Goldberg, Peter Arno| hest —_00-— Incidentally, a chain of restaurants | a department store front are ved on two revue skit drops. It may be en the level but to most of us sillies out front appears to be cheap advertis- ing. —00— Also it seems to me the screen should once in a while disassociate wealth from vice. A rich young man ts almost invariably portraved as idling through lite, gulping cock- talls and tossing diamonds hidden in bouquets over the footlights. Be- cause thay are not wastrels is why most rich young men are rich. —00— And while T think of it, if T were selecting the most graceful perforri- ance of any young actress on the New York stage this season it would be Linda Watkins in “June Moon." What a girl! —fofa— “If you will wire this radio station we will offer your fa- vorite tune on any instrument name next Sunday eveniug.” Nothing rounds out my day like | “Asloep in the Deep” on the zithe (Copyright, 1929, MeNaught Syndicate, - Inc.) Telegram: ter because of the aracter Of recent years this disease has tended to occur in increasing num- bers in other parts of the world, so {het within the past vear 15 cases Jive been reported as developing in Great Britaln; in Denmark, there are =aid to be 500 cases a year, and several hundreds of cases have de- veloped in the United State Al the same time that this dis- case has appeared in man, the dis- ease known as contagious abortion intermittent ‘4’!{6 attempting to find out how fre« quently the disease contaglous abors | tion occurs in cattle. Examinationy | of specimens of milk are studied as to the occurrence of the germ of | tuberculosis and also as to the pos. | sible presence of the germ of malt: fover. The menace of undulant fever iy not the menace of a great plagua like the’great epidemics of influenzay but rather the danger of a new cond gition which insidfously crecps intd the population and gradually affecty increasing numbers of people. vou ! PATTERN 1786 New Britain Herald 15¢ Practical Pattern A new and attractive version of the bolero facket is illustrated in this charming model. The crossed bodice and the simulated pockets are cleverly lined in a fabric of con- trasting color. The eftect is rav-’ The waistline is raised and skirt lengthened in accepted fashion. Many fabrics suggest themselves the development of Design 1786. Moire, wool crepe, feather-weight tweed. heavy satin or covert cloth may be selected and the results will be equally lovely. Stunning are thd red, purple, blue and green shades shown this season. May De obtained only in sizes 16, 38 and 40. Size 16 1-8 yards of 54 inch ma« dressmaking experience ig necessary to make this model. Thg pattern has ample and exact in« structions. Yardage is given for every size. A perfect fit is guare anteed. Patterns will be delivered upon receipt of FIFTEEN CENTS (15c) in ceins carefully wrapped o stamps. Be sure to write plainly vour NAME, ADDRESS, STYLR NUMBER and SIZE wanted. The NEW WINTER FASHIOX BOOK is ready for delivery. Pricg PIFTEEN CENTS, but only TEN {ENTS when ordered with a pat tern. Address all mail and order to New Britain Herald Pattern Deg partment, 243 West 1Tth St., Ney York City.