New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 23, 1930, Page 12

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY. JULY 23, 1930. Love’s Reawakening The Story ot a Wife’s Triumph Over Jealousy By ADELE GARRISON The Old Adage. “Vight Fire With Fire,” 1s Adopted by the Young Lovers as They Plan to Thwart Noel's Lge “Sorry The Lovers Mary's scheme g vou, EGRET GOES HIS WAY By Thornion W. Burgess s possible to catch He that got aw within rea what he wou Brown's Boy thinking of his freedom dreaming of the days when great, broad wings of his him wherever he wanted t he was wondering if e would take long journeys on them. He loved these visits to the Smil Pool, but at the made him homesick Then came a day Brown's Boy untied the leg of gret it. He didn't know mer Brown's Boy ot ow the edge of the miling Pool he was Bive N s g ,I,r HIS FATHER'S SON a short dis- ALICE JUDSON PEALE Iv came to Egret ri's atti toward Iking more freely than usual. Still, he thought nothing to shoot right He (Cop. me time t when F the string from dn’t know when ew mot know tha s a curious mingling of love and contempt, of insolence Once Overs Registered U. B. Patent Office Star’gs_ Off Snappy J0i DEPN | e =) Vertical SQUARE Chilled d hould br A any PLATES PEPPERMINT CREAM Peppermint ice le bit of g | By C. D. Batchelor HOW'S yom HMEALTH Edzedby Dr. lago Galdston Academy of Medicine irts n location of this of th s and the ome con- usu- o he war g of must be ring in quences that d treatment hould not ose properly 7d in the sen- | owths. and il a di- treat- FLAPPER FANNY SAYS: REG.U. 5. PAT. OFF. ey GUD IS, Equestriennes never like to hit|are of black silk cord finished with | the open road. ‘Modern Girl Chooses Career That Will Give Her Social Standing, Says Educator | careerist, she meets an entirely dif- | ferent type of men than she would in other work; she mixes with peo. | ple who have entirely different in- | terests and ideas, and her whole life |is different. Girls instinctively know this. There is no absolute scale of so= 1 standing in work, however, ac= Take By JULIA BLANSHARD EA Service Writer New York, July 23—Now that woman's right to a career is thour- oughly established and everybody | thinks it is smart to work, what,| we might ask, makes girls choose | this kind of work or that ol | | Does the salary they are likely - | 1to receive in a particular line of | work make girls decide upon it?| | Is it, then, economic determinism? Is it the degree of fascination | certain types of activity | which others lack? Is it, then, | they seek expression through thair work ? Or could it be the number of eligible men they are likely to muot | in one kind of work and not in an- | other? It is that they expect to | marry, though careering? 1t really is none of these, primar- | ily, answers a woman who has be:n ia vocational work for the past:10 vears, a woman who has advis:d and consulted with hundreds of girls | who are in the stages of choosing their life work—DMiss Helen Living stone, a prominent New York edu- cator. (3rding to Miss Livingtone New York for an example. Selling Goes “Social” “Ten, years ago girls who clerked in stores got pity. Today, collegs girls and social registerites have been like an invading army marc ing into department store work and the result is that it is quite the so- cial thing to be selling. Specialziag different iypes of department store work has a tremendous vogu=, Who can say but what the future may not see girls going into special i7ed domestic work in the same wav. Some one may make it the thing {0 do. Everybody will do it. Miss Livingstone organized the Cass Technical School's vocational work in Detroit 10 years ago. Now she is principal of the Hebrew Girls" Technical High school. New York, Her work consists not only of studve v ing the possible vocations girls could 1E RPCCAOERISREd | (o1low, but of studying the com- munity and determining what lincs are likely to offer the hest oppor= tunities for placement upon graduae tion. Her school inclu riculum millinery, dressmaking, cose tume designing, the commercial ar nography and all types of clerical vork, at metal work and art weav- ing, this coming year. in responss e of values. to a wide-spread demand, they will hold her |add cosmetology, in all of its espected | branches of beauty Look to Social Position “The most important factor most girls in choosing work is | social position that the job wouid give,” Miss Livingstone told me. "t is the standing in a given cori- | munity that this work or that his |that determines their choice. Work | : are likely which stamps them with social in- | feriority, like domestic service, th.; undoubtedly shun like the plague, though there | standing that her be more pay, mote leisure, an | the deciding factor 1 termines her whole s amount of interest | In a job where she ca number of men | head high, as a comm Menus | _o;_‘ the Dfi}[@ MRS. ALEXANDER GEORGE HOT MILK SPONGE CAKE A Hot Weather Dinner Menu Ham Stuffed Tomato Salads Creamed Be rer ¢ Sliced Banan| Hot Milk Sponge Cake Miss Helen Livingstone help hundreds of girls to choose 1 their life work. they to meet. But work gi her s hecat that d2- tors the Rolis erve Iced Tea Ham Stuffed Tomato Salads £ large tomatoes, 1-4 teaspoon salt 1p diced cooked ham. 1 cup diced cucumbe 1 tablespoon chopped green peppers, 1 tablespoon chopped cnions, 1-4 teaspoon cup salad dressing of the insides and spri Chill. Mix 2 tablespoc prika, 2-3 oop out part kle with salt of dressing umbers, peppers, Stuff tomato aining dressing. e ham < and papr Top with re onio Salad Dressing 4 cgg yolks, 1 teaspoon tahelapoons flour, 1-2 teas salt, 4 dry cup 4 table ‘milespoons blespoon lemon salt Add until thick and creamy. nutes. dressing b Add butter an Pour into glass jar Summer Conserve (Using Fresh Fruits) 2 cups sliced peaches, 2 cups sliced pears, 1 cup diced pineapple, 1 cup | rhubarb diced, 2 teaspoons cinna mon, 4 tablespoons lemon juice, iirts for afternoon Left: Baby a long skirt tri oned rickrack braid ¢ worn by Paris models at the race sseline de soie fashioned a cape 1ed with rows of braid circling the ging the skirt and the cape. Biack de pumps, black purse and black banding on a natuial note of contrast. Right: Orchids in rich beige | browns, der and purple figured a delectable chiffon made with ing skirt, ankle 1 all around, cape sleeves and a yoke of plain heiga net, with orchids appliqued on it. The orchid chiffon scarf of her beixe hat swung its ends through a slit in the brim and hung over one ear. Lor track at Auteuil hips a gloves colored were blue 1el slowly u nd when cool seal Naed Hot Mi'k Sponge Cake 1 cup pastry flour, 1-§ tea salt, 1 teaspoon haking pow. egg yolks, 1 cup sugar, 1 teaspoon lemon ex 1 tea anilla, 6 tablespoons hot milk, 3 egg whites, = stiffly beaten. R Mix the flour ek powder. Beat cgg yo e o light colored and add the sugar N Beat thoroughly. Add flour mixt extracts, hot m fold in whites which & Four into loaf pan fitted with waxed p minutes in moderately slow oven STOCKING SAVER 1t you use adhesive tape around | the corners of your desk chair and desk, you will find it saves your | stockings from getting runs from | snags. ‘ poon act poon IDEAL MAN | 2and. in appearance, he should be idcal man, accord- |tall and dark. Members admitted, women art stu- | however, that ideal men were hard et here, m t | to find. tual - - The state of New York St dancr t liec s wife | red od send fl treat al, exg pla &2 ties never wear MAKE THIS MODEL AT HOME Stunning Lines for Colorful Pring BAG SELECTION Purses should be chosen — as | they almost never are — in front of | a mirror, for they should be be- | coming. Your height and build de- | termines the purses you should buy quite as much as materials do. Pattern 1092 Ierald 15c¢ Practical Pattern By ANNE ADAMS It is smart to have capelets in place of slecves, and particularly smart when the lines of the capes lets continue into the skirt to form 2 panel as in the frock sketched to- day. The skirt is gracefully flared back and front. There are sleeves with the pattern, if you prefer them. Pattern 1992 may be fashioned of silk crepe, voile, chiffon. georgette or dimity. A vividly designed print on a pastel ground would be stun- ning, or one might select black and white, red and white or navy and chartreuse. Fashion Plaque May be obtained only in sizes 18, 18, 20, 34, 38, 40, 42 and 44. Size 16 requires 5 3-8 vards of 39 inch material No dressmaking experience is nec- essary to make this model with our pattern. Yardage for every size, and simple, exact instructions are given. Send FIFTEEN CENTS (15¢) 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 PATTERNS for adults and children including trans- fer patterns, is FIFTEEN CE. Book with pattern, c. Address al} mail and orders to Herald Pattern Department, 243 West 17th St, New York City. A beaded bag of this type is very |new for evening. The model sketch- ed is made of tiny white beads with | onyx and marcasite drops at the| | points and bottom. The drawstrings | ltuscls.

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