New Britain Herald Newspaper, April 4, 1930, Page 26

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FEEII NS IWE S SCEVECAN PPN FRERTA S PUAR L SEEFINAD & BRI DT T AT TL FUPVTE RE LIS £33 M 20 i TG ST B AR P e, NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, APRIL 4, 1930. Love’s Reawakening The Story of a Wife’s Triumph Over Jealousy By ADELE ! Mrs. Hasbrouck's agitated query | roncerning the hurried footsteps out. #ide in the hall needed no oral an- &wer. Each one of us knew whose . footsteps they were, and I hoped | that my face reflected the “poker” | calmness of Lillian's instead of the | panic-tinged excitement in Mary's young eyes. “Open the door, Pa Mrs. Has: Jbrouck whispered, but her big hus- band shook his head, and we all sat motionless, breathless, until the _footsteps stopped outside the door, and a rap sounded upon pane “‘Then Mr. Hasbrouck strode to t door and threw it op fhe:man who had trailed sblack roadster. * “Good morning. eyes going from one of other with a scrutiny wl inventory. That t d an unusually e and it was going task than we had tempt to keep him closely upon our ney. us in t An Alert Detective “Good mornin hoomed, and I paid a tribute to his poise. trace of astor ner, nothing: to the arising. “Did you smell t asked with a broad grin. “T tell Ma I coffee and baco her for 40 years a on & des: and without knowing she was th with a ¢ 43 “Get along with you, Jvife interrupted, playi <ue. She gave an amused and turnad to the man in way, “Would vou like yo aki now, 1007 she asked plec LG agan get it for you now just as well as not, or I can wait til the time you told me last night | “Just a cup of coffee, please,” th stocky man in the doorway replied “I must have been crazy last night not to have had that car fixed and brought over here before T slept. T woke up about half an hour ago and | remembered that there was some- | thing which T had forgotten to sce to in New York. I've got to ¢ ] my plans and go directly back there And I want to get there before nine o'clock.” Mr. Hasbrouck's rejoined so0 prompt and plausibly encour Jhat for a second I was dis; ‘Then I caught his was suddenly reassured. “There's no reason you can't,” our | host was saying. “provided vou can ! gzet Miller to open up and give yo your car. What itme did he promise it, did vou say?" “I told you last night,’ rejoined impatiently seven.” Hasbrouck omy could to his | little laugh the door- by ¢ 1! was ging ayed wife's eve and > man past { morning. | Mrs. | Long Island if | T get a di | Qu GARRISON A Trying Moment “Well, the chances that it's a1l ready, for you. The next thing is o get Miller out at this hour of the 1l you what I'll do. You get your breakfast, and and what luck 1 g Miller out. Ma, for him. Let's see, seaseley, T think you are Mrs. Underwood. m and Miss Harrison. out it, Mrs. Graham, Do you to help you start your car or will you wait until are, sit down anc I'll go over have in routi pl make a your nan aid, and N How vant me I come b 0l sure it 1 said, f ly that it was the answer 1. He patently did newcomer to t hink will start casily instictive- he wish- not want the his entrance in our getting enot ling to would ca haste “I tell you I don't anything man re- h you up go along » M Just pour him his co here. I haven't s bill, but od Ma, Hasbrouck as you and then come fixed up Mrs. it won't take cay. what 1 had of the k menage, 1 did not think istress of the house 1id or direction in mak- N, and my s From hron seen Ha the able eded any out cased their into pul in- o as she followed room after plac nd plate of ore the stocky man wio himself opposite me, As e spoke, look- other A cup of cof muffins o had seated he lifted his coffee dircetly at me. What Route? getting away t00," 1d the words were a ques- I answered volubly. want to get through cight o'clock, out on possible. I dread ing “You're he sald tion w “Oh! yes, v York early we Ne¢ by traffic 1 saw dance m ful that plainly s0." Mary's widen, then hievously and was thank- she had not giggled as she wished, Tor she knows that inct thrill from piloting a 1 crowded traffic and, eh? v Lillian and through the remainder of our break- fast while attempting an appearance of slower tempo. “Did you Point ferry Purpos -ly o eyes) throu Out on Lon Mary, ever try the College « startled air, his words “ollege Point ferry?” T “Yes, I've gone hom that but today I have to g ht through fo the city first, then over ensborough Brid Had he read what an from my wo cstion ten I put on confu peated way str T wished him ds? T asked Mr back as Hasbrouck and his wife came o the dining room (Continued Ton Copyright, Ieature ow) spa Service, Inc. wmeaWHY SOME DUCKS BEHIND By Thornton W. Burgess These menfolk seem might Is all that's needed to make rig frs. Quack. Mrs. Quack had told Peter {hat oil was the cause of som Ter troubles on her long journey from the Sunny South. even know what oil course he was curiou about it. “It is somethir water—something explained Mrs. Q mix with the water, top. If a Duck. or of swims on tb at and gets into tro Yes, sir, it is dre “Why is it Peter. “Because “it gets our feath gether. Birds often dition that they ¢ 1o leave two of ou two days ago.” AMrs this sadly. “Do you hind becau ter asked. Quaclk. were sick made the worse." “But wher from?" cried “I don't 1 comes fror “but & lot of ships. Of cour what a ship boat that ever live on at o on the ocean what the oce body of water 4 “I shouldn “Oh, th, Quack, “when water when when you some Ducl get all their Of course our food in we are journcyi spend some of ter; especially runs Ay up int t does in many places of these places that oil two days ago. got into the oil We missed or th When new to think tha it. Dbit np but of know all tha an hot fl mean Yo co o, that li ood in Mallard our before 1l ome think v “Why don't on what to them they 1 the Peter didn't | of | Why don't they Petet Ve o/t Day B, RECIPE 1O GOLDY WALELES Meals Cune N BROWN re- | Once Qvers Registered U. 8. Palent 0ffce Booby Hatch Inventions. By C. D. Batchelor Sereen designed to assist amiability in those first critical moments of the day. [ras— e b i * Hox 1 0Of that Kind. Fodder vat. Myall tree. Imbecile. Puma. To deduce 15 Pulls 16 One who lays roads 17 Animal. § Calendar period. 5 ) Doo To el Oleor o rea Amatory B0 ndebted Vertical But Not Easy | o e Dr. lago Galdston ~ Academy of Medicine Chopin and Tuberculosis Chopin, as i from tuberculosis. It is told was tr: of him that once, when ling in southern France, 1o in the inn of a No one there knew the © or his companion, George noticed that Chopin ated and il His constant ing, his periodic fevers and his al debility zoon led some of the natives to recognize that he wa fering from consumption. Soon the entire town was th estranger who so evidentl bringing a plague into their mid he opposition to his presence be- came o intenge that the inn keeper as obliged to insist upon his re- moval, that, as the tale runs, George Sand was obliged to cart his sick composer out of town in & wheelbarrow, the only vehicle avail- able. Such is the tale ntic in fact, it is in spirit. Were then the citi southern France so heartl they would countenance the remo in a wheelbarrow of a man- That is hardly the point. 1t not the sick man they thought of. but the children at home whom. they though. they thus shield- ed horrors of contamin- 20 and if not au- uthentic enough wi azainst the | ation fiirm. Nautical Embankment Alloited In the midst o plunge into watcr rnir rge decr. jui spoon s o the Golden Brown Waiiles (A poons er th til 1 water cups v uice cup lemon nd for latin cold nit oil inntes, | rons i the ind 1 latin dissolved. (ool of the ingredicnts, old and set i Unmold 1 dr Dr cream ugar cup o misture and 1 I'our old place and il the whit poon chopped p up. 1-4 teaspoon m the t of t Chill ve on the Doctors thought into | COLORED SHOES ne colored problen B ould Iy or GIEEN PLAS nt e cr rfect color o they which are coc The cause of tnberculosis was at this time, the carly part of the 19th century, entirely unknown. The man- r of its spread was much disputed the discase heredi- tary Een Laenncc leading student at that period of the disease, b lieved it nsmitted from pa t to offspring. Was not mother stricken down by the disease, nd was le not suffering from it? Most people on other hand, inclined to helieve the disea ous and took measurcs 1o iso- meelyes from contact with i, Later obscrvations cominon peop Zhi. was 1 were in the Faéllion P[a;]ue atin with { o the o usg 1ed a charming to clasp and make new bag ening. well known, suffered | was | mortally ill his own demonstrated | ew York, April 4.—Smartness this spring often hangs by a single hair! It is essential that your coiffure top your chic costume in just the right manner, or the “beau- titully groomed” reputation will never be yours. Coiffures, naturally, have changed with the new silhouette in clothes. In fact, the drive on Fashion's part for long hair preceded the long- skirted movement and was a part of the whole trend towards more lady- likeness in modes and manners. One hairdresser,Martin of Vienna, still staunchly supports bobbed heads. “No woman over 30 should con- sider letting her hair grow,” Martin emphatically stated. “Long hair adds 10 years to the looks of a woman over 30. , With the suggestion of added ycars goes an impression of placidity. ~What woman today wants to look ‘set- tled’?” Martin goes farther than just to issue an edict about hair length. He cvolves individual bobs with soft curls, swirls and waves, to suit different types, different moods, and different times of day and when the candlelight gleams over the dinner table, he adds little chignons or clusters of artificial curls to the nape of a lady’s neck and gives an exquisitely gentle touch to her Dbobbed head. Shape of head, color of ha height of forehead, length and width of face, size of eyes and nosc, | time of day and type of costume all | must be considered before your coif- | fures can be called perfection. Jewels should be considered, too, | cspecially earrings. For the way | you part your hair, wave it, where you put most of it and how you fix the back of it all have definite re- lation to these points. In the first place, your hair should be parted on the less perfect side of | your face. Everyone has a less per- fect side and the part does a little something for it. Your part should slant in a line parallel to your nose. | You should think twice about a cen- ter part. It asks much. In the second place, generally speaking, blonde hair should be fluffy, dark hair sleek, even if curled. Low forcheaded ladies should wear their hair back and up with elabora- tion at the back or low at the sides, back of the ears. Sophisticates can fford simplicity, with that ravish- ing effect of smoothly drawn locks until they reach the nape of the neck where they may become curls or have a chignon added. Ingenues should heighten their charm by soft sweet curls. With the new land Greey influence, [low their spirit of | modify th | days. zowns of Tmpire | coiffures fol- | adventure and coiffures of those other | Bandeaus are worn in some | |instances with Greck costumes, but | |instead of crossing the front of the | head, they hold up pretty curls be- being placed across the- nape | The Bmpire gowns en- | v fine little curls, remi- | niseent those ‘“spit-curls” of | indma’s But gene s dangerou, coiffures are | a generalities. 10 one and only way fo the | most complimentary and suitable | coiffure is to experiment. You can | do it yourself if you have taste and ingenuity, Or you can go to some rood hairdresser and get his advice. But one or the other should be done, If you kecp vour old haircut and | the same manner of arranging your | locks, one of these days you will he weht with that let-down feeling, s if you had attended a glamorous evening party where romantic ladie held court, with you yourself a rank outsider in skirts above the knees and no waistific whatsoever to save you. Talks Tog2, &j. Parents FOLLOWING THROUGH By Alice Judson Peale | Fathers and mothers nowhere he- ¥ defects of character fo clearly in their common inability to ollow things through with their children. Real adherence to routine small child’s life mother a steadfast and wholcheart- | |ed devotion to the task which proves too much for many of us Unless we watch oursclves there ! more and more exceptions to {rules. Meal time and“bed time more |and more frequently miss the sched- | uled hour and more and more often are letting the children do this, and that “for just this once.” | Unless she can arange for certain | | daily hours of frecdom from jamily | | cares it is difficult for any woman | ! consistently to follow through the | routine on which children thrive. | For cevery mother who tends to | grow slipshod in mattcrs of physical | {routine there probably five who 50 in the training of their chil- character: | Kkknows that she her bed before she [on saturday | again ny got tr in the requir of iis we |35 | Ma | must make ocs out to play morning, but time and ie is allowed to leave the | house with her bed unmade. Tom- "m\ may have been told that if he | draws ahead of his allowance there | | will be a lean scason. but when it | | arrives he pleads the misery of his | | penniless state and a good natured | | father gives him the price of a | movie. | Tollowing through with our chil- | dren requires a degree of self con-| trol which most of us have not| achieved. If we are not to fall| down on the job we must first mukn\ up our minds as to what we are| zoing to demand. Having made | sure that we are asking only what | and reasonable we must set | about the difficult task of disciplin- ing ourselves to follow through. ‘ dainty | ppetiz- | nd pies. | eat up a | is wise As chille ing Berry days grow desserts are mol than hot puddings whips are lovely. hox of hulled nd washe berri s | two whites of cggs and | when stiff. Chill i th refrigerator and serve cither | 1 dash of whipped cream 1\\ hole berry on top. warmer, with | with or a Sweet and just a little pert {now and then will b is the ingenuc bob covering ears TFor the girl with low forehead, brush the hair baek and down How To Keep A Head Of Style soft wave, with curls on cheeks, A ] softens the long, oval face Demure and appealing is this off« the-ear coiffure for an ingenue PICTURE ARRAN It is considered smart oration now to a ange four small pictures alongside each other over a table or desk. Frame them ir very narrow frames, perhaps u ing the lacquer red or Nile green of vour color scheme. Little etch- ings from abroad are good usel this w MENT wall dec- PRING APP It the children arc refusing ccoked cereals, give them uncool ed ones dressed up with a little fresh fruit such as a few straw- Lerries. Their color appeals fo the appetite and makes the chil- dren eat. TRESH FLOWERS is the time of vear to yourgelf and buy a f flowers for the house. can be had for 2 flower cvery k no one. in- W This dul fresh gle flower vas ten cents and a Won -ésafivt;r Crown Associated Press I'icoto Helen Moser Hannizan of Perrybur; O of Sin- | | | — Two rows of curls low on the neck accent a sophisticate’s charm. (Coiffures by Martin of Vienna) DATE figs, Jates or cereal about twice |and you will notice how the | dren consume their portions cle | to the last spoonful. FOOD | Cook your sins with weric chil- r LACE EDGED white chiffon blouse for an woman has marrow black edging narrow {ucks that run | vertically to fashion a little frovt | vestee. A older lace FLAPPER FANNY SAYS: REG. U . PAT. OFF. Only when you're broke do you find out how many close friends you have. Herald’s Daily Pattern Service MAKE THIS MODEL AT HOME Stunning Outfit for Easter Pattern 1529 Herald 15¢ Practical Pattern By ANNE ADAMS The voungster exiremely Ketched chic in her bol Jjacket, skirt and blouse Inss bodice is separate will need frequent wa the smart, pleated skirt is attached to it with bone buttons. The bole- ro fastens at the neck under the cole Jar of the blou Several fabric and color combi tions suggest themselves for Design 1520. Bolero and skirt of rcd Jasha, the blouse of white linen; blue serge or wool crepe with linen or dimity: brown cashmere with pon- i colored and white pique, cte. Designed only for sizes 4, 6, 8 and -0. Size 4 requires 1 1-4 yards jacket and skirt fabric and 1 1-§ yards bo- dice fabric. No dressmaking experience is nec- ry to make this model with our pattern. Yarda ! simple, exact instructions are given. CENTS (15¢) in illy wrapped, or stamps, for pattern e to w plainly your STYLIE NUMB Our DA NG and today 1x ro suit ot The sleeve- because it hings, and IR and SIZE wanted. \ BOOK of NEW MMER STYLL but only T ordered with 2 pat- Address all mail and orders to 4 Pattern Department, 243 17th St, New York City, when tern. 17¢

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