New Britain Herald Newspaper, April 7, 1930, Page 14

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Love’s Reawakening The Story of a Wife’s Triumph Over Jealousy By ADELE 'The Icy Mountain Road Brings i ew Adventure to the Travelers What d've think, Auntic Madge all T keep up this Mabel—lit Mabel — with-her-face-against- the-pane-stuff,’ or will it be safe to get off my knees for a bit?” Mary's voice held no hint of dis- comfort, was filled instead sheer joy at our bizarre situation. But knowing that the car was stiil cold despite the heater, 1 gave her a quick dismayed command. “Snuggle down under those blank- efs this second.” I said get your death. It's only a waste of energy anyway. I can see the ligh's of any following car in the mir- ror.” That bird probably will drive without lights,” Mary returned, but she changed her kneeling position 17 & sitting one beside Lillian, and 1 heard my friend fussing over her solicitously. “Your teeth are chatteriny, child,” she said. “Here, come cl cr T'll put my arms around you, £o 1 can hold the blanket at your back. There! 1s that better Oh! so much,” Mary “Don’t worry. a minute A Dangerous Road My dismay at her sud for Mary revels in winter was suddenly relieved by standing. My h niece was simply in my attempt to Lillian's mind o occupied with other prot- lems that she would not have tim to brood over the tragic erran: which had brought us to the Cat- shills, Without. wholly compreh ing the situation. for T had confid- ed to her only as mu story as T thought absolutely nee- essary, she realized, T saw, the great sirain under which Mrs. Underwood as laboring, and was doing her oled n chill weather, adorab! ing up to m op is very deed. T realized that as 1 snatches of the almost continuous chatter which the girl kept up from her position beside Lilllan. When she was not giving adroit hints that eyen the heater of the car, now ia full blast, was not conquering her chill, she was exclaiming on the beduty of the snow-wrappeil good, in- mountains on the other side of th: | ice-locked str:am which paralleled the road, or audibly wondering whether the chains would hold upon the precipitous winding scent which we knew was in front of us before we emerged from the| mountains on the Kingston r genuine . I told myself a bit grimly, for the bit. of road she spoke of was the only one I feared in all our journey. It wound aroun.l a mountain’ and curved, it seemed to me, almost every hundred feci. Going ove had hugged th #ountafi,” But™ gofnz” down = e Bhould be on the other side with a #heer drop below us. I knew. an 0 did Mary, that a skidding auto- in with | “You'n | I'll stop shivering 1n | under- | W of Lillian's | caught | GARRISON mobile was about the only thing on [ earth which Lillian feared, it was her pet phobia and I was not sur- prised to hear her speak, suddenly, sharply. “Isn’'t there some other way getting to Kingston, Madge, besides this one?” ‘Yes, there is” I said can turn down near West Hurley. cut over through Wood- ! stock to Saugerties and then down | the main highway to Kingston.” | “How much longer is it?" “Nearly fifteen miles,” T answer- | ed ruefully, for I would have giv- en much to have taken the other read. “Oh! then it won't do. T suppose.” | Lillian answered, and tne appre- | hension in her voice bolstered my | flagging resolve to keep 10 the | shorter but more dang us route. I* was heroic treament, I told my- self grimly, counter-irritant for frayed nmerves, but at least weuld keep her from dwelling upon the farewell to dying Robert Sav- arin which had <o shaken he | “I am afraid not,” I said. “Mre Hasbrouck is going to telephone her | triends in an hour, you know, and | while T cannot m Kingston 11 that time at this pace. to get there as soon after that time as I can. And afier all, therc's noth- i much to worry about. Cars and buces do go over this road erery day, all winter.” | “Here We Go!” | “But they're used to it.” Lillian said, then quickly made amends “Do forgive me, Madge® she | pleaded. “That wasn't a bit clubby, and you know I didn't mean | don’t you “Of ¢ [ returned perfectly true, neverthele: X & thing to do. I'll go the hill in first, and remember to | keep my foot from the clutch. Un- | less it's a perfect glare of ice, which | I'm sure it isn't, we ought to have no trouble.” But when we reached the top of the hill and began the descent, 1 wished fervently that I had chosen the longer but safe route. The | wind had swept the slope clear of | the loose snow which would | helped hold the tires, and thougi | there was no continuous shect o ice, my headlights picked out occa- sional short stretches with the pe- cullar glazed surface which is a motorist’s chief dread. But slowly, gingerly we skirted the mountain d came safely to the last curv. n the descent. And then. éven as I framed a triumphant little ex- clamation of relicf, the wheel twisi- ed in my . and the car began {4 slow circular movement. | “Here we go!" Mary exclaimed, | ana ev the horror of the mo- | ment, T realized that there was no fright in her voice, nothing but ex- cied curious zest of the adventu (Continued Tomorrow) slowly at “but it's Ther down have | Copyright. 1930, Newspaper | Feature Service, Inc. MR. By Thornton W. Burgess In other folks' affairs don't pry; Jt never pays, so never try —Mrs. Quack i Peter Rabbit managed to get around to the Smiling Pool at least fonce every night. Usually he got the Black Shadows t from the Purp's Mcadow Mallard s who hal stopped off at the Smiling ool on their way North. had been there a ‘week now. You e, they were g 1ing mood Farn Brow Boy we putting out. for the Ev a\ he bhrou down corn. There is nothing 1 the Qua than n plump, v ks and One ¢ there ineasin among about the no pa then raised and flapped ones who did M 1 10 b meeive where and M pi IFinal'v th thos r inquired ded to he anything i since they thing ? rething? sald Mrs. Q ou looked Quaci AND MRS. QUACK RETLR.\" veplicd Mrs. Quack, simply getting anxious to move along.” hook their head ot partict along. In fac talked it o to journey so many rather dreac da sometim we . Som that I hows good “Ther Meén ! Uus of e Day ] Usinz Sunday's Loftoyer Chilled and ¢ e NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, APRIL 7, Once QOvers Registered T. S: Patent 0ffice ) “Ah! Cupid.” i By C. D. Batchelor A ‘/\ N RN —— “T” IS [ S E—— HORIZONTAL Registered for appointment. display .of troops. Formal Seraglio. “they | | To befit. Poem Insulates. Impetuou To exchn Male duch Ranted. of | To frec, 41. Unit of enc 42, Rental contr 43. To attempt 44, 45 16, Toved To. observe VLERTICAL a S — Useful Hex:e < d sweet potato it satad hocolate cak cof dressing. tard Pruit Cookies poon & umon, 1t nutmes. i choy ¥ raisiy mill lough Escalloped Meat and Rice, 15p0¢ clopped hoppe Custard Sauce for light| 1-8 cup sugar, flour, 1-§ t Leftoy poon 15po0N poon nutn spoon vanill Add slowly i the Serving 6 BLACK ETAMING coat yoke. ise that t round | Dr. lago Galdston ~ ~ Academy of Medicine | American | population which is at all times of | cent; | woolen coat HEALTH v Edied by for theé New York What Price Sickness? annual sickness bill of the pation is-more than two billion dollar To treat the two per cent The of the the year o ill as to require medical service there are employed in the United States approximately 150,000 physicians, 00 dentists, 140,000 bedside nurse: 150,000 practical nurses and more than 100,000 other workers. There are, it is estimated, about 860,000 hospital beds in the United States, the annual use and mainte- nanee of which costs close to & billion dolla The federa tistics in bureau of labor sta- tudy of 12,000 wage carners’ families found that the average medical expense was a lit- tle over $60 per family per year. Other studies indicate the aver- age annual expense to be a little higher, closer to $50 per family. These sums are apportioned an- proximately as follows: in payment of physici ervices, 40 to 50 por for h s, 6 to 7 per cent dentists, 15 to 20 per cent: for to 5 per cent: and for in- cidentals, 12 10 16 per cent. The studies from which thesc taken al these sums to nursin o point out tht | not liable o s they ar o Ll severcly th family resources 15 1 ap- | proxima often do The rec art as averaze,” sickness burdensome. this are given in | that the aver- provide in budget for sickness costs, and sec- ond. that tcrious illnesses and ma- jor operations cost many times over the annual average of $80. No consideration of costs of s which does not lead to ths | it is cheaper to preven 1 to cure omplete or useful. cost prove for ollows; mily fivst, docs not ts ay the VIOLET COAT Rouff for sided capelet ¢ Magay nakes violst L on.- fos a spring with with blue FLAPPER FANNY SAYS Som¢ husbands. men are flatterers—others ling the 1930. Glassware Adds New Color Note To Table BY MARGERY TAYLOR Interior Decoration Editor McCall's Magazine, Written for The Herald. Every course served in colored glassware—that is to be the newest colorful note in informal entertain- ing this summer. ; From hors d'oeuvre to demi-tass: complete meals are already bein; served in plain-glass sets of many shades —azure, green, rose, amber and topaz. Their grystal coolness 1s expected-to increase their populaz- ity as the thermometer rises. The coffee and tea cups made of glass are a particularly pleasant surprise. This spring finds the rainbow luncheon table with its different color combination for each cours2, in high favor. The table is set with a white cloth, rose goblets, flower bowl and bread and butter plate. combined with pale blue luncheoi plates and service dishes. Green salad plates and mayonnaise set follow. IMinally, rose parfait glasses and vplates and topaz cups anl saucers. Striking effects can be achieved with colored clothes and colored glass. A dinner set in tojaz glass, for instance, will make a rich gol- den dinner with = topaz cloth and vellow candles and flowers. The same glassware may be effectivery set off by a pale green cloth, deli- | cate ropes of smilax, a bowl heaped with green tapes and tall greea wax tapers in candle holders. A blue and topaz table may be created vith the same glass and a blue dumask cloth, a flat dish of lark- spur, and blue candles. Black—lustrous ebony —is the Jatest note in formal table bri'- liance. Square black lay plates with their gold stripes make the utter- most contrast againts a snow white cloth. The black glass centerpiece repeats the beautiful note in exotic lilies. The clear glass tumblers bear their bands of gold and stand on square black bases. Startling as this effect is, it blends in a per- fect ensemble with the alternating black and pastels of the formal dining clothes a the table. Etched decorations are becoming widely accepted—even on colored glass. The designs are modern in simplicity, and an intriguing nov- elty is a set of china and glass em- bellished with the same motit, delicately tinted on the china and etched on the glass. Monogrammed glassware, too, being seen more frequently. The lettering is in silver, gold or a color, and is especially distinetive with a matching band of silver or gold around the top. Talks TO 5 &%, Parents Patiénce Alice Judson Pesle B Patience is one of those old fash- ioned virtues which, for parents at is : Fashion Plaque Shir-down, a new wrinkle in long gloves for afternoon and evening does away with the trouble of kecp- gloye smartly gathered on the arm. Designs Are Modern in Simplicity A Herald’s Daily From the time children learn to crawl until they have passed the painful stage of adolescence their demands upon our patience mever cease. The modern mother knows that patience in the nursery is more than an abstract, ethical duty; it is her contribution to her child’s development. Unless she is patient of his first awkward efforts to pull on his shoes, to turn the water taps, to carry his chair, she knows that she is obstructing his growth and standing in the way of his learning. i Children learn with their hands |and it is for clumsy. blundering Jittle fingers that others need | most vpatience during those early | vears, L] Pattern Service Make This Model at Home Attractive Cotton Frock Pattern 1877 New Britain Herald 135c Practical Pattern By Anne Adams The printed cotton frock grows i popularity as the season ad- vances. Note the charming details of the model shown today ... the rounded neck with dainty voke and graceful jabot, the snug hip band and flared skirt that goin in up- ward curve. Design 1877 may be made of printed silk or cotton with equally charming results ... dimity, pique, shantung, batiste, etc. The yoke cuffs and jabot are cut from con- trasting fabric, preferably piqua. Colored binding is used extensively this season for dainty finish ot seams. This pattern may be ordered only in sizes 14, 16, 18, 20, 32, 34, 36, 38 and 40. Size 14 requires 2 7-3 vards of 36 inch fabric and 1-2 yard trimming. No dressmaking experience is necessary to make this model with our pattern. Yardage for every size, and simple; exact instructions are given. Send FIFTEEN ( TS (15¢) in coins carefully wrapped, or stamp:, for each pattern. Be sure to writa plainly your NAME, ADDRESS, STYLE NUMBER and S1ZB wanted. Our PATTERN BOOK of NEW SPRING and SUMMER STYLES ix FIFTEEN CENTS, but only TEN CENTS when ordered with a pat- ern. Address all mail and ordecs to New Britain Herald Pattern De- partment, 243 West 17th stree:, New York city. Later on our children find more complicated ways to try us. It is during the ages of 6 and 10 that ‘we need to keep in mind that chil- dren are children, not small adulta. For years then we need to remem- ber that they probably will bs noisy, awkward, loud and more or less dirty. They will break in on our pleas- antest social jours. They will leave black marks on the towels and spill things at table. And al- ways we need to bear in mind that children may be trained, may hLe guided, may be taught, but that nothing worth while was ever yet accomplished by the sharp voize and the angry moment which marks the momentary loss of our ‘\ own self-control. Smart Spring Frocks For Evening Wear . dssociated Press Photo Left: White crepe evening gown with separaie blouse and skirt composed entirely of diae mond shaped pieces of fabric fitted to the princess silhouette and sewn with tiny crystals. Center: A unique creation of tulle and lace being exhibited as chic and unusual for spring formal affairs, Right: peplum dress. A velveteen wrap trimmed with Chanel’s ermine and worn with a lace

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