New Britain Herald Newspaper, August 26, 1930, Page 14

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, AUGUST 26, 1930. Love’s Reawakening “The Story of a Wife’s Triumph Over Jealousy By ADELE GARRISON ake m) Dicks's Offer of a Corsage Places r orsage at Madge in a Dilemma—she Must (hoose Between His Flowers and Phil Veritzen's. WHAT REDDY'S MISTARKE WAS Burgess Chipmunk cot to look of all the holes Once or t scent of Chipmunk just enough to excite her but she knew that it was old By and by Black Pussy sat at a poin®™vhere fallen out of the per the Kingbird ) sver in the Old Orchar P at with her back looking ifito the Old Orchard what the fuss was about. Now know that, no matter how still | bailing tomato soup. 1-2 cup Black: Pussy hérself faay be, the tip | miento cheese) 1 cup diced cuct of her tail is apt to keep moving, [hers. 1-2 cup diced celery, ccpecially if she is interested or ex-[spoon salt, 1-4 teaspoon th got It w smell stones. faint between ice she By Menn Mrs. Alexander George for a Warm Day am, creamed potatoes snappy salad dressing, rliced bananas iced coffee Snappy Salad tablespoons granulated gela iblespoons cold vater. 1 rant j ad rramel cookies, o see Yol 4 n- 1-2 tea- paprika, v ' Once Overs e | Question Registerss T. & Patent Office By C. D. Batchelor on A VERTICAL mold Top with more salad Dressing 4 egg volks, 5 tablespoons salt, 1-4 teaspoo teaspoon papri lemon 4 tab 1-2 cup water, 1t Beat egg sugar, salt Blend thoroughly and add of the ingredients. Cook soiler until th 1 frequently. . Pour into jar and chill. When this dressing it juice, poons espoon and add flour and vinegar, th n in creamy. Stir cool, cover ready to use can be thinned with sweet, sour or whipped | cream Caramel Cookies (Deliclous with frozen desserts) butter. | double | lespoons blespoons vanilla lowly add s ergs Add 1d syrup mixtu d cream Beat 2 min Add rest of ingredients. Drop por- tions from end of spoon onto greased baking sheets lattan knifc Bake nutes in oven with VALUABLE RAIN yargo, N. D. (UP) dollar rain” that farmers ta often a 17 million s J. B. Kincer of t department of agriculture | weather bureau if computed on the illion About dollar United 1k | basis of average prices for the past | 10 years, HEALTH v for Eded by thé New York Dr. lago Galdston Academy of Medicine 3,000,000 Deaf Children United States under the classifi fened. This constitu ess in the child is substan different and much more geri deafness in the adult 5ed. For the business of youth argely to learn th is task important role deafened apped and ne get to overcoms d to a I e productive Ieh its disabili a D in society. 1 problem of the deafened child | érations could be materially lightened if par. school chil- | whose imparied to tion es an | or is e ways of life and the hearing sense plays competence 1able it to take an active | © By HELEN WELSHIMER New York, August 26—The pic- ture frame-up is going back to its old tricks. * The very same that the walls at Mt. Vernon, and Eng- lish duchesses chose for their' din- ing rcoms, in the days when peo- ple had time to ecat long break- fusts and appreciate art, are hang- ing high today. Maybe clustered curls and trail- ing skirts have instituted an era of dignity and charm in pictures. Be that as it may, the new mode is in keeping with the candle-glow period. Colonial furniture has re- turned and with it, colonial art. Colonial prints, French prints, and English prints are gisking their quiet simplicity hodge-podge When merely heavy round attractive. Silhouettes Used in Paris Old-time silhouettes, glass, are being framed in heavy maple, or black walnut, ex- actly as they were when your great-grandmother danced the minuet. They go well in pairs gracing the tops of narrow' Book cases or mantelpieces. Square molding, void of curves 1s the vogue for all modarn art, both new and revived s,fis mold- ing, it is sometimes called, cause of thg way it is blocked. The boat scenes, so popular for a long time, have disappeared down the river, and the old stage coach has taken its place. Eng- lish and early colonial scenes, showing a stage pulling up at the | village tavern, are immensely pop- |ular. They should be used in nar- rew black frames, the | better. The tendency is to call at- |tention to the scenes itself. - The d. ornate frames are distinctly ut of the modern picture, Hunting scenes are being ap- proved everywhere, especially for use in libraries, dining rooms and |ralls. Horses, hounds, and the {gay crimson coats which colonial |riders favored add a vivid touch color to an otherwise sombre type of pictures of modernistic color. the faces are used, gilt frames are very wide, be- {or | wall Hunting Pictures Popular These hunting pictures, all of which are reproductions of famous scenes, appeal to horse lovers views, showing a favorite taling a fence, or standing barn favorites. For winner of the Epsom 1830, even he hangs on a Bowton, Legle Stakes also is fram- Smal horse in his irstance Derby are also Prim, Stakes at the as multitude of wall ner of the Great §t at Doncaster in 1520 ed for posterity In choosing vour Then ist sents be & proper Prints in order Now striking win- your pictures put the age which your guide frame. require to it repre- in selecting a wide matting give them spacious- and then some unusually color will be repeated in e wood of the frame. Van Gaugh's famous “Zouave" which shows a man gaily dressed in wide {red pantaloons, has been framed today in the new step molding, {the inner edge being painted the me Chinese red which the artist | used.. Blue in this ~ | ner. too, frames, | Silver and gold are a relief, now |and then, from the monotony of black, but here again, the frame narrow and square when ap- » to the old prints. ol For Framing in Maple French art from yesterday, also | immensely popular at the present | Moment, deals mainly with figures women clad in the softly color- | ed, pastel costumes of a few g ago. The maple frames considered best for this type is often used in the new man- | are ents and teachers were on the look. | Of picture. out for evidence Not infrequently nd with a long-standing schoo cord of alieged mental lisobedie inattentiveness and in osed al undiagr inde digability. chological ef. ke o of the child’ grievous. and prec 10 rable follaw retation been helped ts handicap Futhermore nized early ed, may some progressive and if and competently be arrested. are Tecog. treat of impaired hear- a child may be dullness, child overcome types of deaf-|of Modernistic art, especially that | 07 the French school. is also good today. A mad splash of colors is | | perfectly permissible and desira- ble if it is done with that free, 1| wide-sweeping touch which can catch and hold the attention Studied of photographic clearness particularly desir- able now Many 1, s of th are e old French prin used against i1 charming fashion with a narrow gold fram Bird pictu which show daubs flaming color, are popular for - | porches, and colored glass mats, designed especially for rooms in }vhu"h gay draperies are used, add flower Psychologists and educator® now |a cheerful note. appreciate hom important the senses of sight and hearing are to | into the normanl mental ‘and psychologic development of the child Hence, it behooves ever patien to have the sight and hearing o their children tested regulary. First wom ¢f the Westarn Theological semin Y. Chicago, & Mrs. Robert Grego * FLAPPER FANNY SAYS: The average college student ca ]understudy anyone, 2n 10 be elected trustee B The odern blend of the pictured scene in Claude Monet's !'which the small boats are resting t|leisurely on a green'gold sea, and f|the matching green frame catches | the same golden glint Unless a "room can reflect its pictures all over again in a mirror or two, it has lost one of its strangest charm points. Mirrors 2dd light and spaciousness. And |any kind of frame will do today { Colonial, Italian, Japanese all re approved by those who know | the hang of a looking glass. | Variety in F'rames | Modernistic carved | frames, metal frames, |ish pewter frames good. A picture the upper part of | long mirror places Mount Vernon above surface. \ Any shape, no matter how |ed and twisted, is accepted. What vou choose must depend on thu type of room in which it is to be | placed, and the harmony of vour | other furniture. | Pictures and mirrors today are not” considered as works of art in | themselves, 50 much as a part of a | charming ensemble. So get the hang of your room, before you start’ on Then whatever you do, you will be | properly framed frames is shown fishing scene in wooden round Swed- all are may be used in the glass. One a View of the cury- HOOKS RECORD FISH Rhindlander, Wis. (UP)—Stephan Heimer, Detroit, caught the largest fish of the year in Oneida county waters when he landed 12 pound wall-eyed pike while trolling in In- dian lake near here, n Martha Washington hang on | against the | painted on | horses can | emphasis on the scene itself. | shining | the walls. | Simplicity Is In Vogue In Modem Picture Frames | | | | | | | | | simpler the | l | (Photos from Wanamaker's} n paiating by E. L. Henry, black frame, the suggested method Claude M t's fishing scene stepladder art n their wood or m Ameri W Below modernisiic color favered sullen, resente wer 10 mise lack of love shs break a ounger ful ways were {handling and felt at home It took only the ordinary friend- liness of an understanding adult to work the change. in possessing Her her the sister. INTOXMANTS GROW ALICE JUDSON PEALE Phoenix, Ariz. (UP)—Guaranteed Nan and Janics produce intoxication, natnre's and eight years old. Their mother. |latest beverage has come to worry| in sending to camp together prohibition officers. Whiskey in the for the summer, took great pains to | form of cactus e El Peyote, or dryj director that w whiskey cactus, has been discovered] s s could be guided growing in Arizona by certain im. reasoning and gentleness bibers, who have been found inj thods were necessary with Janice. dazed conditions. They probably would have to pun- ish her frequently, especially at f until she learned who had the upp: hapd. Her worst fault was her ‘e dency to bully chiMdren, A‘r\fclall}‘l her little sister. I During the first two weeks Janice | fulflled her mother's predictions. | She was disobedient, defiant, and mcan to her playmates. Punishment |- checked her, did nothing to sweeten her attitude The director watched her care- fully durfng those first weeks and | [then. proceeded with methods of her St occasions to 1k now and t A Child Made Over were sisters, six to them th severer W Fashion _Plé?que but her often in a! friendly fashion and with very little | offort established a pleasant feeling of confidence between them. Janice, | who had flatly refused to obey com- mands save under threat of punish- | ment, learned to reaspond to friend- ly suggestion. Disciplinary situations became less frequent. By the end of the sum- mer. Janice could be counted on fo a willing. cooperative spirit This So Janice not to he a | which oblem simply a child lucky is Tyrolean type of ha promises to he greatly favore, all. The brim is of double fe rolls high up over the left side, all had B ou She for and who an 1 Herald’s Daily Pattern Service MAKE THIS MODEL AT HOME | The School Room Is Often Warm Pattern 1946 Herald 15c Practical Pattern New Britain by ANNE ADAMS And then your small girl will wel- come a dainty, cool frock like the one pictured today. There are shoul- | der capelets to replace sleeves and |a square neckline in front that is most becoming. Pin tucks afford ad- | ditional fullness in the frock. There are French panties with the pattern Pattern 1946 is charming made of dimity, lawn, batiste, wash silk or gingham. The trimming bands are lof constrasting color or white. | Checks. plaids, flowers and geomet- |ric designs are cunning for small | fashionables, in pastel shades or vivid colorings May be obtained only in sizes 4 | 6,8 and 10. Size 4 requires 2 3 |vards of 36-inch fabric and 1 |vard of trimming 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 cach pattern. Write plainly your name. address and style number. Be sure to state size wanted Our new fall and winter fashion hook, containing exquisite models | for adults and children and an ex- |ceNent assortment of transfer pat- [terns and stamped novelties, is now | ready. Price fifteen cents. Book with pattern, cents. Address all mail |and orders to w Britain Herald Pattern department. 243 West 17th street, New York city. -4 -4

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