New Britain Herald Newspaper, September 6, 1930, Page 12

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

“a -~-the zero mark. ! determined to force the issue of my |instead were querulously defensive, | Love’s Reawakening The Story of 8 Wife’s Triumph Over Jealousy By ADELE Madge Comes Through With Flying Colors in the Tense Few Minutes of “Explaining” to Dicky. At Dicky's ultimatum my mental temperature began a journey toward He evidently was _wearing his flowers or those of Philip . Veritzen to Mary's party, although -he apparently had forgotten the choler which had been his a few moments before at overhearing my colloquy with my employer. I was facing now, I knew, what Harry Underwood would have laugh- | ingly described as a ‘crew-w-ci-al moment.” But I am afraid that my spirit was aroused not so much by the fear—absurd, but poignant—that the future welfare of Noel and Mary might hang on my decision, as by the knowledge that Edith Fairfax was responsible for Dicky's cogni- .zance of Philip Veritzen's plan. I was able, however, to let my common sense rule my resentment, and I threw my little grenade with a smiling face. “May 1 ask where you secured this apparently exclusive informa- wearing Mr. Verit- dith’s Shrine Dicky is never Machiavellian, and therefore is easily caught off guard. At my question he started and, pat- »-vently forgetting the important fact that he had overheard Mr. Veritzen ask me if T had decided whose flow- -ers I meant to wear, he blurted out “Why, Ede—"" then stopped short, his face crimsoning with angry chagrin, “Exactly,” T said coolly. “I knew she would as soon as she heard of | Mr. Veritzen's plan to send flowers to all the women of the party, old and young. But really, Dicky, I ac- | quitted you of falling for her little scheme until vou telephoned me. ““What scheme?” Dicky growled. “To force me into a position where I should have to decide either fo accept the compliment offered to every woman of the party, and of- fend you, or to make myself con- spicuous, refuse Mr. Veritzen's bou- .quet and/wear the flowers which | you in all probability would Mgt | have sent save for Edith's sugges- tion.” “I supposs T never flewers for a party “_said hotly. “Of course sent before,” you | he vou have. You are always most lavish—and consider- ate”” T answered with emphasis. | “But this party is for school and college youngsters. You know as well as I do that no one of the| & chaperons would have thought of ~wearing flowers if it had not been —for Mr. Veritzen's flamboyant ges. _ture.” I tried to make my voice derisive, | nell’s inquiring eves. | “Dicky, dear,” I said softly, | utes or less. There GARRISON | knowing that Dicky was always |absurdly pleased when T said any- thing derogatory of my employer. That the ruse had worked I saw when his next words ignored entire- |1y the subject of Mr. Veritzen, and | with no trace of the illy-suppressed | fury which had been in them be- | tore. “All right, all right, have it your lown way,” he said impatiently. | “But why is it that you always ‘ha\'c to pick on Ede? She had no ‘scheme.’ She simply was so delight- ed at the prospect of one of old Phil's nosegays for herself that she blatted about it. But why should she want to know especially that you | were going to wear his flowers, too?" Dicky never had been guilty of a smirk, but the second cousin of that expression was undeniably | touching his lips. T knew that a successful formula for placating him—Iletting him think that I was jealous of Edith Fairfax — was working. It is a ruse of which I am | rot particularly proud, and one which I use only in a grave emer- oney 1 looked at him steadily gave an airy little laugh Not Worth a Quarrel “If you do not know the answer |to that T surely am not going to tell you,” I said. “But you do know it. even better than I However, hat has nothing to do with it, so suppose we forget that part of it Indeed, the whole affair isn't worth the hint of a quarrel between you and_me, Dicky." “Right you are.” he said quickly, reaching out his hand and catching mine, regardless of Purnell at the rear of the room busily sorting the blossoms into piles of each variety, as I had instructed him to do. Despite the tenseness of our col- loquy we had spoken in tones in- audible 1o anyone but ourselves. and T indicated Purnell with a warning glancs. But I did not with- draw my hand, and as Dicky ig- norsd my silent warning I came a little closer to him, so that my body shielded the little caress from Pur- and iy want to talk to vou for five min- are things I must tell you, and something.I want to ask vou. Won't you sit down at one of those tables over there,” I| indicated one at the corner of the room farth~-t from Purnell, ‘“and listen to me out comment until Then I'll listen to (Continued Monday) (Copyright, 1930, by Newspaper Feature Service, Inc. BASHFUL MISS FRISKY By Thornton W. Burgess ‘Where'er you go you'll find it true That bashful folk are hard to woo. —Old Mother Nature. It was two days before Impy that strange Chipmunk near his home for the second time. He pop- | ped out from under the fern sur- rounding his doorway just in time to catch a glimpse of the stranger scampering along the rail fence. Rage filled Impy's heart as he start- ed after the stranger. But the +Stranger could run and in a very —short time Impy had lost sight of | _this tormentor. You see, that is the | way that Impy regarded the strang- er. He didn't want any one around Yet this stranger persisted in com- Ing. « Impy turned around ba, He climbed to the highest Flone on the pile of stones, and there he sat and chattered. By ana by he had a feeling that some one Wwas watching him. He turned sud- denly in time to see a tail disappear between some of the stones of tha’ pile. My, but Impy w upset! Never have you seen any one more upset. This was unforgivable im- pudence. He started to hunt for the intruder. In and out he ran be- tween the stones of that pile, but he didn't find the intruder. Once more he climbed to the top stone. /And then shortly the same happened again. This time, however., Ampy got a better look at the stranger and, curiously enough. his ‘anger suddenly melted away. He -couldn’t have told you why; it just ‘melted away, that was all. . This time Impy didn't follow. He remained where he was and it was- 't long before he saw a pair of "bright eves peeping at him from be- hind a stone. He sat perfectly still Those bright eyes remained still | -also. He knew they were watching him. Impy pretended not to sea Jdhem. After a long, long time, the -prettiest Chipmunk Impy had ever ‘seen hopped up on a stone Tdistance away ‘What is your much to his saw and went thing a little own sur) he prett§ me,"” said In and turned toward Miss Frisky stantly she disa He climbed to the highest stonc on | 2 the pile of stones | mpy started toward her. In- | little Miss Frisky darted | away. Impy stopped. - Little Mies | Frisky stopped, but at a safe dis- tance. “I won't hurt you,” sajl Impy you.” Little Miss Frisky said ibut suddenly turned and dartel It was surprising how she could disappear. Impy appointed. He made his way back to his favorite stone and there he hoped and hoped that lit- tle Miss Frisky would come back. But though he waited and waited. | he saw no more of Miss Frisky that | day. That was because she was so | very. very bashtul (Copyright, 1930 nothing. | T.oW. story Burgess) he next | real | their “I promise you I'won't hurt|; NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, .SATURDAY Once (vers » Registered U. 8. Patent “Office. \ ] By C. D. Baichelor. “How do you like my new perfume,’ Cyrano?” P s HORIZONTAL Vehicle. Rutherford Birchard —? Spring. Parsley plant. H20. Back of neck Obstruction. Plant. Devoured. Perforated Joker. To act Dordering on To depart. Talisman lower part Belgium riv Series of epical ¢ Each. Observed Therefore Eth To rest. 3.1416. Tree fluid To get up. Age. Father of camouileg Pagan. VERTICAL Where is Winnipeg? A skeleton. Mature. Pronoun Twelve mon Southwest To pack Pelts. First wife of Henry VIIL Catherine of ——* Southeast. Like Vessel. Soaks fl South Fruit. Lucid. To fail in duty. To consume, To low. Sanskrit dialect Pillar. Blemish Sage. Metal Hurrah! Befor Mesh of lace Taro paste. Dad | 48. Half an em i | n i el | spoon celery salt, 4 tablespoons | chopped green pepper, 4 tablespoons | chopped pimientos, 2 tablespoons chopped parsley, 5 egg volks, 3 cups diced” chicken, 5 egg whites, stiffly { beaten. | Belt butter and add flour. Blend/| {and add milk. Cook until thick sauce forms. Stir constantly. Add | seasonings, egg yolks and chicken {and beat 3 minutes. Fold in egg {whites. Pour into greased baking | dish. Set in pan of hot water and bake 50 minutes in slow oven. Browned Potato Balls 4 cups rotato balls, 1 quart water, | boiling, 1 teaspoon salt, 4 thble- | | spoons butter, 2 tablespoons lard, /1 1-4 teaspoon paprika, 2 tablespoons | chopped parsley. Cut balls with French vegetable cutter from raw potatoes. Mix wa- ter and salt and when bofling add Lalls. Boil vigorously 5 minutes. | Drain well and add other ingreci- {ents. Spread on shallow pan and [bake in moderate ovén until balls are well browned. - | Peach Shortcake | 8 slices white cake, 3 cups fresh peaches, % cup sugar, 1 quart va- nilla fce cream Mix peaches and sugar and chill. Arrange cake on serving plates. Top with ice cream and peaches. -Serve at once with for . - [ It a recipe calls for sour milk and | none is available, add 2 tablespoons | of vinegar to one cup of sweet milk. Let stand for 3 minutes and the milk will sour. HOW'S yaur HEALTH . v for Edited by thé New York Dr. lago Galdston ~ Acadgny of Medicing Temperatures The temperature of a body may | be taken in one of sevéral ways. The most’ common is by inserting the thermometer either in the mouth or |in the rectum the mouth. But in children under | mometer and thus injure themselv In the mouth, the temperature is taken by placing the thermometer under the tongue and keeping. it there, with the mouth closed, for at least one minute. Be sure that the patient has not help from any gayety they really | ver: GROPING BY ALICE JUDSON rents p ot at boys ugh to take then are old « 3 ening parties. to st ahout to e not r boys and and pur- i here a now chool lif h in- nd cial gayety, realitie s to such they Hobbies, har andffor all | are | iRS. ALEXANDER GEORGE @ Chicken Scuflle for Luncheon (A Party) Oriental | Grapefruit Chicken Souftle Sauce had food or drink for at least 15 minutes previous to the taking of the temperature. The readings mdy be appreciably altered if this pre- | caution s not observed In young children, the tempera- | ture should be taken rectally. The thermometer is greased and inserted in the rectum for about an inch. It is held there for a minute |and then extracted and read i Normal rectual temperatures are | approximately one degree “higher The temperature in adults is usu- | |ally taken with the thermometer in | five years of age, this procedure ir!| not safe for they may bite the ther- | SEPTEMBER 6, 1930. Higher Leaming (center) 15 suggested when she has a lazy hoyr or two. New York, Sépt. 6.—When you pack up your dresscs in your ward- robe trunk this year, Miss Collegiate, | you are going to need style, style, style! i Incidentally, you may ‘have to buy your campus chic with a price, $204.50, or a little bit more, but the average girl has enough of the budgeted clothes on hand to give her a long, long long stride toward | collegiate smartness. Three wardrobes have béen planned to carry the mModern college girlfrom her early morning classes throngh the most glamorous week- end of the winter. Ixperts in the special college de- partments, which are a feature | many shops, are planning wardrobes based on the actual. need of the wearers. Don't buy a dress merely because | it is becoming. Or pretty. Or cheap. They are important factors of course, but suitability’ should come first, Tar if -it is going to stay in a moth-proof bag what good will it do you when the orchestra swings| into a gliding waltz? There are some every girl must have. Others which she should have. And if she has a pocketful of money there are a dozen other lines of chic for sale. Tor the girl who- must go very | economically or attend a school with | simple social life, a simple budget s offered, Which answers every need. Frocks—Two dresses knitted ensembles, fér campus wear at $16.50 apiece, $33,00; sweater, $5.005 | skirt, $7.00; a jil shirt, $2.50; one blouse, $1.95; two silk dresses for dinner and Sunday at $16.50 apiece, $33,00; a Saturday night ) frock, $19.50; a tailored dkess or suit for travel and week-ends, $45.00; ' one evening gown, $29.50. Campus Coats—Camel's hair or| untrimmed tweed leather jacket, or | sturdy fur such as raccoon or | muskrat, $29.50; raincoat with zip- | per front, $10.00. | Hats—For town clothes, $6.00; & black beret for campus, $1.00. Shoes—Clod hoppers-for campus, | $8.50; town pumps, $8.50; evening| pumps of tintable satin to match | dress, $6.00; goloshes, $3.00. Gloves—Striped woolen mitts for |active and spectator sport: $1,25; | | fabric gloves for dress, $1. Underthings—Four cotton ensem- bles at $1.60, $6.40; three sil® pan- ties, at $1,75, $5.25; /two slips at $2.95, $5.00; five pairs of campus hose at $1.00, $5.00; one pair for evening, $1.95; two pairs of cotton pajamas, $5.90; striped bathrobe, $7.95; mules, $2.00. Total of budget—$294.50. | A dress coat is important, too, and the usual cost is $59.50, but most | wdRdrobes have one that will do. | The next budget allows $81.90 | more. The differences are found in: | One more campus dress, $16.50; a | Saturday night frock at $20.50; tailored suit for travel and week-4 | enés, $59.50; one transparent velvet | | evening wrap, $39.50; two more| | berets, $2.00; town pumps, $12.50; | dinner pumps, $12.50; chamois or pigskin gloves for campus, $3.75 cvening gloves, 16 button length, $6. stockings at $1.50 a pair, two pairs of evening hose at $3.90; suede or kid gloves for $3.50. The total is $51.90 more than the ‘slmpl("r budget, The highest budget allows $100 | for a dress coat, includes the $16.50 | tinted slippers for evening, more campus dresses at $29.50 or $39.50, |and also includes another. evening dress. This wardrobe may have a fur coat instead of a simple camel's | hair for the campus. * Tt isn’t the number of clothes |that you take with you which will | | proclaim you well dressed on the | campus. It's the line and style and | |color. Black is susgested as the | | basis of the wardrobe if you want| |to be smart and harmonious, 1 things which | or ar Your | | accessories will match much easier. | The Saturday night frock, a dis- | 7 Here ,are pictorial hints for the wardrobe of the going-away as an evening cloak. blouse, answers the question of what to wear on the campus. b she will want to include lounging pajamas (left), with their wide trousers and futuristic design, for wear of |* | popularity, In Chic Démands a Budget For Campus Clothes If Miss splashing the shippers and gowns with color.. Be smart and alluring in simple day time clothes, but in | your evening gown borrow some eighteenth century charm. : The advice - which Shakespeare put into the mouth of one of - his characters who sajd: “Costly thy raiment as thy pufse can buy,” was o-college girl. A long blaék chiffon velvet coat A sheer wool frock (right) with its matghing jacket and white Collegiate's budget is large enough, given to you as an LEnglish quotas tion 2nd nothing else. Because your wardrope doesn't have to be costly. Take what you have. Fill in the empty spots, and yowll answer all the budget's re- quirements. - And it doesn’'t mean spending & whole lump sum of money, either. LEFT -—-FACE! re’s Jauntys Hat in the Fall Mode That Tiits to the Left Side; Perky Bow Adds Chic The asymmetrical little hat of hunter's green felt, shown by the Societe des Modes de Paris, achieves unusual chic by its emphasis on the left side. Its draped brim tilts to that side y bow of matching grosgrain ribbon adds too, which is worn GREET FALL IN CANTON CREPE Pattern 2013 - New Britain Herald 15¢ Practical Pattern BY ANNE ADAMS After a summer of cottons, it is a | delicious feeling to don a new Fall frock of sophisticated silk. I have chosen a particularly lovely model today with smart skirt flares, and becoming lingerie collar and cuffs cut with scalloped edges. The front and back bodice tucks continue in although you may wear Pattern 2013 is equally lovely if made of plain or printed fabric . flat or canton crepe, velvet, heavy Elizabeth crepe, faille, etc. The travel-tweeds, as the new designs are called, are extremely smaft and serviceable in mixed browns, blues, and black and whites. Organdy, silk crepe or batiste is used for trimming. May be obtained only in sizes 16, 18, 20, 34, 36, 38, 40 and 42. Size 16 requires 4 5-§ yards of 3%-inch al. dressmaking experience is necessary to make this model with our pattern. Yardage for every' size, and simple, exact instructions are very bashful—very, very bashful deed. Impy was becoming excited more on “He hunted for her. which n plans for coming g Jvorst thing he could < As a matter of fact hunt was in He returned to not halt his former seat the rock hey wasn't long before he discovered how large and com- Miss sky peeki world in which they | bo ¢ ere do vou live 2 must goon find a place for Miss Frisky I suppose 3 I live | Little Mis o s t harder than eve Qidn't say r to escape from realities “Can't rsis how to face. 1 ——— — mpy. | They st part, grop- | FOR BEST RESULTS Again, little Miss Frisky nodded nishing little | USE. HERALD CLASSIFIED « ¢ ‘ tinct' college feature designed for Saturday night festivities, will re- main alluring a little longer if if's black. Everything Needn't Be New The budgets aren't nearly so large they seem. Most girls have dresses and coats which ‘are still in e. The stylists are insistent| that girls who have watched their wardrobes need just buy the things they ordinarily would and start aways for campus life isn't so dif- ferent from any other. | When the lights are shining and | it is night be as glamorous as you | please in your evening clothes. The | rich, deep colors 'of jewels are“ retry and physics, should heir Is which may seem to s | us 5o useless in the practical world, | often are the v which these young so car > only than normal temperatures taken in ‘lhe mouth—thus normal tergpera- | ture is 99 6-10 in the rectum and | given. Send FIFTEEN CENTS (15c) in coins carefully wrapped, orastamps, fos eath pattern. Write plainly your name, address and styleumber. BE SURE TO STATE SIZE WANTED. OUR NEW FALL AND WINTER FASHION BOOK. containing ex- quisite models for adults and chil- dren and an excellent asgortment of transfer patterns and stamped novelties, is NOW READY. Price FIFTEEN CENTS. Book with pat- tern, 25 cents. Address all mail and orders to New Britain Herald Pat- tern Department, 243 West 17th Street, New York City. « Browned Potato Balls Buttered Peas Hot Rolls Raspberry Preserves g Gucirber Setad | Chessed W {881 SEL U e o] Patih Shorteake Coffes | After the thermometer has been ity | read, it should be “shaken down." Graps TTBltiOrtental { This is done by holding the ther- § halves grapefruit (chilled), || Mmometer at the top end and gently t int ice, § red cherries | snapping the wrist downward. This Laos s of grapofruit, Ar- | Will lower the mercury column to grapef on light green Jbelow normal. er doilies, on serving plates, Top| Thermometers may be sterilized ons of ice and garnish with | by being washed with soap and cold e with spoon. | water and then immersed in alco- Chicken Soufile | hol. 1 cup butter or chicken fat Never wash a thermomtfer in cup flour. 4 cups mills, 1 te water warmer than 110 degrees salt, 1-4 teaspoon pepper, ahrenheit—it may burst. fers vain are as them- | ni ive inview ; disco i nting with Youth r in order | itself 1 they | symy ars of T f range pap with por cherries. of them probiems | opport wh h we car we he friends?" do-mot Vet kne with 2-3| poon tea- ing about

Other pages from this issue: