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DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, JULY 8, 1930. Love’s Reawakening The Story of a Wife’s Triumph Over Jealousy By ADELE GARRIS Madge is Relieved at Noel's Quick Acceptance of Their Plan and They Tcave the Farmhouse wit but a Moment to Spare. Noel waiting a ed him w the ne ws she was THE LAST LITTLE MUSKRAT By Thornton W Jurgess Who got the other?" asked Jerry you 1astior the certain that t into the Great V for them ing another laft saying goodby. straight across the kept on down toward the Big was but one lef This one the R to Jerry said i J 0 go. Came apparently d want a time when Mrs. Muskrat thought it high time that this last one of her fanilly should go out into the Great World. The young t didn’t think so. She was quite satistied to keep with her n h as possible. Then Musk- rat-lost patience. One day she led | here, the under skirt usually is ten- the way down the Laughing Brook. | nis length, just covering the knees The young Muskrat followed, AH | easily, T. W. Burgess) NGTH UNDER SKIRTS J §.—(P—No matter long the outer skirt is for eve- ning on the shirred chiffon and tulle models are ich in vegue Paris Once Qvers §. Patent Office no opening. Vertical Dr. lago Galdston ~ Academy of Medicine Vacation. ited to ex- Its root s, inactiv- e fitting term recreation would per- for a vacation, . should bg that it recon- worth w in the compene es and to secure such dei some little thougnt given to the choice of e and manner of vacationing. To choose haphazardly, seashore or mountains, hotel or country cot- tage js o / to gamble on the out- i come, with the odds again you. needs to be By C. D. Batchelor { Sliced Ham to keep narrow. We need ct to overcome monotony, need rest | 1 our spent vitality er, does not ed cessation al effort sided and we fmpl of find rest T ng and boating. or woman whose work who stands or walks all a soft chair and a office worl H BY MRS ALEXANDER GEORGE Planning a Day Breakf Berries Poached Mutfins Lurcheon 4 Nut Sandwiches Tea okies ced Bananas Dinzer Creamed Potatoes Bread Butter Head Lettuce and French Dressing Fresh Apricots West Virginia Cake Cotfee Olive and Nut Filling for 12 Sand- wiches cup chopped pimiento stuffed ves, 1-2 cup broken nut meats, 4 lespoons Menus Fresh s and ered of thinly Add bits of s spread on cut white edded lettuce r white bread With sharp rrange in bas- West Virginia Cake (With hot milk) | 4 eggs, cups sugar, 1 teaspoon lla, 1-4 teaspoon lemon extract, | 1-4 teaspoon salt, 2 cups flour, 2 teaspoons baking powder, 1 cup hot milk, 4 teaspoons butter. Beat eggs. add sugar and beat un- til creamy. Add extracts, salt, flour d b g powder. Add butter to hot milk and mix well, combine th egg ire and beat 2 min- P nto shallow pan lined with wax pap Bake 25 minutes in moderately slow oven. Tt makes quite a large that will cut into 20 slices B ix utes t of cake squares. recipe sh Chocolate Frosting (Quickly made) 1 square chocolate, 1-3 cup water, tablespoon butter, 1 tablespoon | cream, 1-8 teaspoon salt, 1 teaspoon | vanilla, 1 2-3 cup sifted confection-| er's sugar. Cook slowly, stirring constantly, the chocolate, water and butter un-| chocolate has melted. Add other ingredients and beat thoroughly. Let stand several minutes and then beat well and frost the cake. arthenware or gl be baking dish- ssed when making deep or pudding. The food can X in the dish in which aked. | | front of her bodice neatly embroid- Fashion Plaque | | | | gt bigger with the longer days | ped her chic Jane Swope Mrs. George La Branch In the White Race to Fashion Natalie Hess New York, July §.—With | one who is anyone getting out the open for horse shows, m yachting events and plain golf and tennis, the s importance of white is emphas! A woman may look flamingo, young and green, end demu nine times out of t most devastatingly white. Everyhc I was interested in ot diversity of types that cos- | tumes can illustrate, last week down | on Long Island. Mrs. William Steers wore a white ng boating | of circular skirt and tuck-in blou with long sleeves and shirt cu | Mrs. Herbert Swope wore a sle less little sports frock with crew neck and front worked in ed colors Oliver took s entire wr | Newport, rangir | breasted coat la delectable fon, with trail and bows. In White Mode the Huntington Horse show. looked sweeter than Natalie linen suit, nd white linen beret. wore some of the new ventilated sports shoes, made of -out open- trice Gastry launch- cap sleeve in her | white flat crepe frock, a tight very | f—r=—— —y5 = short cap, with & four-inch pieated| FLAPPER FANNY SAYS: ruffle of the silk attached to it | BEd. U 5 PATLOFF, Weeks Durant. Princess Mrs. Norman Whitehouse, Mrs. Thomas N. McCarter and Mrs. Paul Abbott were others who had unusually smart white outfits on. Mrs. Whitehouse wore a little red jacket with her white it which lent a nice note of gaiety. Hats Grow Bigger The Hun show was well attended, with almost every- one lunching at the Huntington Bay club and driving over. As us- ual, most everyone stuck to their cars, roaming along the rail and then coming back for a place. T noted that the made the majority shed gloves didn't sec a single parasol, but hats ever _parents Marjory's Fight By ALICE JUDSON PEALE Marjory had waitedVpatiently for her turn at the swing, and then just as she went up to take it another little girl rushed in ahead of her. Without preface, Marjory attack- ed her. She pounded her with her fists and had drawn blood with her nails by the time the teacher reach- ed her and pulled her away. She removed Marjory from the scene and allowed her to become quiet before they talked things over. Marjory was on the defensive That girl made you very . didn't she?" the teacher be- tly. she did—and and—" hesi- Iy—then in a sudden burst of esson, “I just hate her!” , 1 know you hated her and I don't blame you. I get angry at people too sometimes when they do things like that to me. But I don't hit them because I know that if I did 1 would only get into a lot of trouble. “You mustn’t hit people either, especially someone who is smaller tches, e fs - Mrs little double- | an flat crepe to ga afternoon chi ruffles, flo n quie At none very Something new in buttoned jack- | ets was worn by Jane Runyon, land- | ing from abroad. She has a tweed | suit with buttons from the collar | down half way on the right side, and the rest of the way to the bottom, the jacket closes by actnally button- ing over on the left de. It has bands of fur too, narrow Lapin Out at her Long Island home Mrs. Monroe Robinson wears a lit- tle rouzh-surface woolen jacket, slightly fitted, with notched collz nd buttoned smartly up the front GLEDHS PARKER LY The saying, “We get out of things pertain to slot machines. just what we put into them,” doesn't | I'll go back with you now and you can explain to her that it was your turn and I'm sur the swing to you.” | They went back to the playe ground. The atmosphere was clear= ed and there was no further trouble, That little episode was wisely handled from more than one point | of view. The child learned the prac- tical solution to her difficulty. She was not made to feel guilty through the forms of repe having given vent to un: wholly natural impulses. She was made to understand that it pays to cultivate self-control, Tiny Umbreila Hidden In Confines of Purse Washineton: ¢ 8. —(P—A trick handbag concealing a small umbrel- la is carried by Mrs. Richard Yates, ewl elected resident of the Chevy C of the League of American Pen Women Mrs. Yates was T S fit of red whi shoes and stockings, red gauntlet gloves, red hat and the flat red purse which, when opened, revealed the small red umbrella. Indian Girl Defies Tribe To Get Government Post ‘Washington, July S.—(#—Against opposition of her tribe, Juanita Cris« pin, full blood Pueblo Indian girl, has worked her way to a govern= ment post which pays $1,080 a year. Juanita, who is 20, has passed a civil service examination for matron and seamstress and has been ap= pointed to a position. Her examination papers, on file at the department of the interior, are written in a tiny, copperplate hand which would do credit to & college graduate. She discourses learnedly on the care of living quar- | ters, sanitation and diet ‘Light Gloves for D;y, | Dark for Night Wear | | than you are, as that little girl was, she will give up at a couns suit Paris, July 8.—(f—Gloves have upset the style applecart by making rules of their own for color. Paris is wearing them lighter than the costume for daytime, on the with evening gloves generally e deeper th the dress, or contrasting boldly. | Th light gloves for day wear:ara a result of the vogue for touches of | white on dresses, hats and acces- | sories. fashion in London is to wear jewels on the back, and to fasten brooches under the left | shoulder blade. The nev She has a nonchalant little beret of the same tone and wears this in mornings over light frocks, to be shed when it really gets hot. | Longer coats for riding habits seem to be coming into favore. Mrs. | John T. Cole wears . fitted tan one, | flaring very low, almost to the knees. Other smart riders are beginning to shed their coats, now that summet's heat is upon us. Jane Swope lookad awfully well at Huntington without one. Monograms dot the front of many a smart frock this summer, either in modernistic design that defies anyone to detect jus at initials are used, or else stre across one side in rather bold fashion Loew wore a modified shirtwaist | suit at the Sands Point club the other noon which had a tab at the | Florence | ered in her Chapin has her initials geometric design on a sports frock. A Nautical Note ‘The Interest in yachting is reflect- ed in many a smart spectator sports frock this season. At a recent boat race, Mrs. George La Branch top- white sports frock, with scalloped edges, with a nauti- cal little blue coat, also scalioped as to its edges, and added a gaily striped blue and white bag. Something new in necklaces was worn by Mrs. John Van S. Blood- injtials. Mrs. Lowe.l doie in summery stack of books the best part of a| vacation A good vacation really means a change in occupation and in environ- ~ation time is an opportune pe- riod for checking up on one’s phys- ical self. You m 1 doctor to prescribe the sort of vaca- | tion you ought to have It would make a pleasant medi- | cine to prescribe and one equally as | pleasant to take. The sub-debs of Southampton are — extremely partial to berets. A very The Topaz derives its name from |distinctive models is this of white ‘Topazos, an island in the Red Sea. ‘!elt with a punched design, | good, lunching at the Huntingten | Bay club, a string of graduated rose quartz, with a wide brooch of carv- ed quartz right under her chin | through which the necklace slipped, | which held the nacklace like an old- | fashioned watch chain guard. Speak- ing of pink jewelry reminds me of | | the lovely big diamond and rose quartz pin that Mrs. Frank Vance Storrs wears in a pink turban, top- ping a pink frock of the same flan- nel. Women's dirt-track motorcycle | races are to be held in Europe, ) MAKE THIS MODEL AT HOME Ravishing Warm Weather Frock Pattern 1967 New Britain Herald 15c Practical Pattern by ANNE ADAMS This delightful model boasts twe outstanding style features . . . tha graceful capelet and the pleated skirt section, both decidedly becorm.- ing to every type of figure. There are sleeves with the pattern if you prefer them. Pattern 1967 makes up beautiful- Iy in pique, shantung, flat crepe or dimity. White with red dots, pale green with brewn dots, tan with green dots and blue with white dots, are popular color combinations. this season. May be ordered only in sizes 14, 16; .38, 20,2 34, 36, 33 and 40, Size 16 requires 4 yards of 39 inch material. No dressmaking experience is ne« cessary to make this model with our pattern. Yardage for every size, and simple, exact instructions are given. Send FIFTEEN CENTS (15c) in coins carefully wrapped, or stamps, for each pattern. Be sure to write plainly your NAME, ADDRESS STYLE NUMBER and SIZE wanted Our BOOK of PATTEENS for adults and children including trans. fer patterns, is FIFTE. CENTS. Book with pattern, 25c. Address all mail and orders to New Britain Herald Pattern Department, 243 West 17th street, New York City.