New Britain Herald Newspaper, March 15, 1930, Page 14

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

EW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY, MARCH 15, 1930. Love’s Reawakening The Story of a Wife’s Triumph Over Jealous; By ADELE GARRISON Ebbs as the Honr | er woman would have met the or- Robert Savarin Nears | deal confronting her. 1 did not have to speak fir omething 1 dreaded doinz, s she turned in her pacing of room, she saw ne standing in the doorway. and came hurricdly going [ toward me with outstretched hands. he du-| “What news—how—" she faltor- door. | ed, and 1 caught her hands anl held them firmly. “He is stronger uickly, searching 1 would allay ner. * Lallian’s Cou of Meetin > Lillian’ to her for the -room is toni, for something the dread co Mrs. Cosgrove and is anxious relax holding her so—zlad fec said after a expect it. When to sce Robert?” tbout an hour,” T red the start, almost of te which “He not are we nswere almost d to sce some visi has given him a will be no dan- ngth failing him at t secing you or His exp; nur he said, paling, no danger of his | Don't gloss things| asting very X\ml]}i I'm able to stand fl‘,»]‘ I returned cquably. | it at that and go on | ve. His sister thinks that 0 go up to him firs,” you would think that she said a litile £ “What will you tell with that, I have a messags vou, and then the truth that downstairs, waiting to see room of our S he ithed, tighter, “how through with jt?" I returned the pressure 1s, but I made my voice sive same brave crisis of your said it will make just pretend that and I'll outline e clutching my am I ever o of her N crisp and d B0 met way you've lite,” 1 it any ea You're a puppei, ery movement for| vou until you cross the threshold of | Robert Savarin’s room. After that | woment 1 cannot help you." | “After that only God can hein i said solemnly. “Only He | what to i every I went back to with Lillian. 1 ranging uy hands me can sl me Robert.’ (Conti Monday) e £2d iron will whiza from f the storm th which a weas Copyri 30, Newspaper ervice, Inc. SAMMY JAY LEARNS THE WHOLE SECRET Thornton W, Burgess to t attend: By you on the edg He had se so I t tail was - tail t tail th tail whose teroot!™ cried S0 this is where Hying™ day. you toot So to this day 2 Red S W MRS ALENANDER GEORGE Luncheon Menu spring Cake—Yellow t tablespoons milk 00! White Part Once Overs “By the way, Ma'am, I've been invited to become a Tiger.” By C. D. Batchelor, | | est What Danc_]y New York, March 13 (P—Clothe men wear today differ little fr ..; clothes men wore 100 years ago. ¥rom lapels of his waistcoat to cuffs on his trousers the business man of 1930 is tailored much lix his forcfathers of 1812—the year long trousers were introduced. | This was the fact confronted by | Lee Simonson. modernist designer, | when commissioned to design suifs | the well-dressed man may be welr- | ing in 1960. The 30 year look foward in mei's fashions was required because the Theater Guild was producing Georse Bernard Sh new play Apple Cart, action in the future. Simonson concluded that men's clothes in 1960 may be pretty much like they are now. But he has definite ideas about | changes that ought to be made in men's sults, and he incorporat:d | them into {he costumes worn by two men-of-1960 in “The Apple| Car He cut away lapels and coll: and had the coats themselves tailor- ed on an excessively simple line with a front that overlaps quires but one concealed button, close to the right hip. The coat has but one outside pocket, a large slash pocket on the left side, which clo. with a zipper. He abolished the vest. Trousers he cut as simply as the coat, climinating cuff: Men's clothes today abound with | uscless survivals from the nine- enth century,” Simonson avers, “Lapels are a relic of the day when a waistcoat was real protection from cold, and men frequently turncd up their coat collars. Ww's with “The three buttons on either coat | sleeve can be traced back to the| day when a man unbuttoned lis sliceves to fasten linen cuffs to his shirt. Simonson has scant expectation | that his reforms will be incorpo ed in men's clothes, although se eral tailors have shown lively inter- in them. But whatever tread | there is in male habiliments is -o- ward greater simplicity, and Simon- son thinks that someday—if not in 30 years, then in 130 years—men will get around to discarding the | obsolete features of their dress, — i A Biblical Question | Horizontal r of popular son City.” Wril “Puritan Age., Coin, HpE - SEEN Revcrance EELRIT R SSROEN Gaiters. ILIE Vegetable. Celestial Lodies To pare. Canal between Africa and Asia Terror. Releases Coaster Torn end of ticl Cot. To eat spar K One in Before. card SHORT SLEEVES gar. Add the and bakin utes. Fold in d pour into 1 laver which has been fitted with paper. Bake fo 1 above the Fashion Plaque wxed minutes in — Frostin Talks I ‘@i, Parents STTING EVEN By Alice Judson Peale Tt will, perhaps. be disquicting to many mothers to realize that a great deal of the deliberate naughtiness of | children is caused by feelings of de- | and revenge o have long learned Al cleanliness revert | to baby ways as; against excessive severity | 1 too much correction e little girl to my gularly this cven with an of perso unconsciously knowledge | means of ting, uscd over-ex make children clders may Leing held up to andards of coh-| duct to the hate cngendered by jeal- | ousy of some other child. A boy who was madc to sleep by | | himself while his sister was permit- | ted to slecp in the same bed with uother showed marvelous en- nuity in driving her to distraction | his uncleanliness and de- | It was not until little bed in a room | wn that his behavior began | aprove. as probably not cnt by ac- | other little boy on the his wother had had his dearly | loved puppy sent to the pou d‘ broke her jardiniere and ruined a| rn of which she was cspecially | fond. Of course, lact this w hat they do o keep our eves on and uncon; with things which ful toward be anything from mipossibly high their nt that children ought not to| but the fact remains | nd it is wise for us| open for this com- | ious technic of get- ups. It will not c¢hild of this mo- 1l not for and mord POINTED GODETS little printed tones that has that point up to a zig: line. ows i fine in in i mak pink Kirt SEPARATE BOLERO and chiffon frocks for spring | have separate bolero which ar Lac venings may ts. witl achabl NEW SCARE spring has bluc the pinl and de- FLAPPER FANNY SAYS: | | e runs into | cells that mak: up the human bodv. | blood system. {tem and bathes . las it exercise. HOW'S yaur WEALTH v for Edied by thé New York Dr. lago Galdston ~ Academy of Medicine Sense In Exercise Scnse in exercise is rare indeed There are some to whom exercis appeals as the mainstay of life an health, There are others who look upon all unnccessary muscular of- | fert as somcthing to be earnestly avoided. | Iixercise of course, not il | niost important item in heal pro- meoetion, but it is important cnoush so that its negleet will lead in tine to appreciable changes in both the | structure and function of the human body. The function of muscular exer- ci: may * best be grasped in the light of their contribution to nutsi- tion. It is common knowledge thut man lives on the food he takes into | his body. This food must be prop- crly prepared and distributed before i. can be utilized by the millions of | is, the food begins | nd Preparation of with its cooking s carried fue- | ther by the mouth, stomach and - | testines. The food is broken dowi | cally and chemically. As it 1caches the appropriate state it 13 taken up and distributed by the Ultimate consumption of the food is carried out the individual cells of the body. 'ihe task is distribu- tion of prepared food to each and wery cell This is blood sytion | i part accomplished Iy busin the Just an- so-called Iymph 15 sueh does not ‘com contact with the ccl! outside of jts own system. But in a manncr still undefived by sciene the fluid part of blood, that is, ths lymph, escapes from the blood 1 the cells of the | body. It is this Iympth that trans- ports with it the food for the cells, Now the crucial point in this coa- sideration is that blood is kept in circulation by the contractions wf the heart, but lymph by the contrace | tions of all thz muscles in the body, | Iixercise, that is, muscular therefore promotes This in turn Lring new food to the Carry away waste It this fact that explains why ¢ wuscle will grow bigger when ereised, It is this, teo. that | counts for the value in massage, is sometimes termed, passive by the Lilood Girec mov.- | mer Iympn circulation. serves io | and i cells, STERILIZE PHONE! telephones ina home or of- cc should be sterilized daily. Witn about, or any mouth troublc, source of spreading not kept sterilized. T colds ey may tion it FINGER NAILS It doing housework. onc shoull p half a lemon on the sink 1 it on her fingernails aft hing dishes or cleaning. Run {vascline in afterwards to keep | them soft, BOLERO SCIT Irench wool volle, in a de navy blue, makes a sweet dress- | maker suit that has a yoked skirt bolero coat that swings to ved line in the sKirt's yoke bazs {as th LVENING SCARF used the accessory, a little top a diaphanous gow: ‘Of & rreen chiffon The ermine is rcally a modern version of tl jo1d collaret. Lrmine is for new ening cape | | collar to on Claude Lee Simonson (right) thinks men in 1960 will wear a suit like that Rains (left.) in there is both ¢ turquoise blue crepe de c has a cape wrap trimme; days without coats, Heim makes a cape dress, of nav Cape the Climax of Sbring Styles t it is no wonder, for Left: A hine evening ensemble from Redfern with black fox. Right: For first blue wool Capes have a future this spring. Bt ce and youth in the cape theme voile, with narrow bands of white voile for trim. pring quarters sl 1y THREE-QUARTL A new with SLEEVE dcloth coat LL-ON GLOVES black g on ul has Long glovy A CHARMING MODEL TO MARI Pattern 1796 Herald zonal bodic holds th in place and with scalloped gracefully flared in smart manner, Pattern 1796 is char fashion« printed f A dack ground with tiny 15 should b Ly . in or- hips the ed o women of figur would ie nk or model with one or cvery si instructions are Send FIFTEEN coins carcfu ray (15¢) 1n tamp plainly your NAMI ADDRIESH, STYLE NUMBER and SIZ1E wanfed Our PATTERN BOOK of NI SPRING IMER STYLI FIFTEEN only CEN1 with a pa tern. Address all mail and orders to New Britain Herald Pattern De- partment 5 W New York City, for cacl nd CENT, b when ordercd

Other pages from this issue: