Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
Love’s Reawakening The Story of a Wife’s Triumph Over Jealousy By ADELE Madge Wins Dicky's Her Plan and His Consent to Her Wearing Veritzen's Flowers —but with Reservations There was that in Dicky's tons which made me loath to answer his query concerning the method of handling Philip Veritzen which Lil- lian had aévised. But I dared not hesitate. T did not wish him to feel that I attachnd any especial impor- tance to the proposition I was about to make. And I did wish him o understaud the truth, that the idea was Lillian's from inception to possibie con :lusion “Lillian thinks we ought mor him as far as possit same manner that one mentally sick person.” Dicky struck his fist upon the ta- ble and I shot a side glance toward the end of the room where Purnell was working which brought a switt, muttered apology. Dicky Becomes Tractable “Sorfy, 1 won't explo again. But when you talk about humoring that hyena—the way I'd humor him would be with a club studded with jagged nails—I red all over the place. Go ahead. light. In jus you and Lil wish the dez humored?” I felt my courage snatched at it and held “It's about this party,” I said. “I have counted so on Mary having perfect evening and 1 was that Mr. Veritzen wonld spoil it I sdome exhibition of his to- ward her. But instead he I ed unusually interest know, mot only. o boxes at his house for party, but also insisted upon all the cut flowers and co quets for all the women g wonderful of him to do her. I had kept up bravely up to this point, though conscious that Dicky's quizzical eyes fixed on me held sar- donic mockery. But when he gave an exasperated little snort I faltered and flushed. “You'd better blush,” he said, but 1 was relieved to hear nothing but amused mockery in his voice. “I" fall for the humoring stunt, and a lot of others, but when you calmly state that Phil Veritzen's playing the bountiful caliph this party because of Mary, you tax my credu- lity, or that of anybody else a bit | too far. Mary could go without flo ers until she had to go out and pick dandelions in the backyard for all| Phil Veritzen cares, and you know | it better than anybody. And for all your modesty and inferiority com- to hu- in the treats any slipping, it steadily. a as vou the Support of | GARRISON plex and all the rest of the inhibi- tions, you know whom he's showering all the preity posies. But that's neither here, nor yet there. I see your point and Li nd I sup- pose the gist of the whole matter is that we mustn't risk wounding the vanity of the great aultan by refus- ing to wear his flowers. Is that it? I looked at him with sudden in- spiration on that | ar one for me. 1 the remotest idea that either for policy's L | own account—or from preference, I would exchange a delion | blossom from you for the cos bouquet Philip Veritzen or any oth- er man could send m My eves held his steadily, and with a little leap of my pulses 1| saw his face soften and a tender | smile curve his lips | | | before T you to answer i “I'll admit I'm fatuous cnough to ad hom in't you my | and the order h X conceded airily. “But—I don't want you to, even extravagant. I Mr. Veritzen's flowers as a shoulder knot, but I'm going to take two or three blossoms m yours and tuck them in at my The I'll have in my 1 suppose I'm terribly senti- 1, but I'd like to feel blossoms yours close—" Another Cause of Trritation “To your heart?” Dicky asked tly, 3 ith whimsically curving being terribly banal rest men of lips, We I knew, ba S¥er wiftly put Then his lace dar that some fresh camse of had jusi come to him “Look hers!” he said, withdraws- ing hand, “I don't mind your wearing tnat old goat's flowers as long as he's sending them to all the women guests, but I do mind his getting the idea that he's beating me out on the proposition. When 1 came into the dining-room a few minutes ago, T d him ask vyou it you had decided whose flowers you were to wear, and of course t meant he 1 was sending you a bouquet. Yet 1o one save you knew that little thing.” T looked at him steadily “Aren't you forgettng Edith?” 1| asked. (Continued Tomorrow) (Copyright. 1930, by Newspaper Feature Service, Inc.) I cared no whit. wledged, and he hand over mine. ned and T knew irritation 1ckn w " IMPY BECOMES JEALOUS By Thornton W. Burgess There's truth in what we have been told. THat love will make the timid hold —Old Mother Nature Impy, the black Chipmunk. was certain there wasn't another Chip- munk in all the Great World as beautiful as little Miss Fri . You see, Infpy had fallen in love with little Miss Frisky. She was a very shy little person. She seemed to| Impy to be a very timid little per- son. Sometimes she would run away frem Impy; sometimes she would stdy for a little while, but if he tried to approach closely she would Tun away. It got so that most of the time while he was awake Impy was thinking of little Miss Fris Impy had tried find where little £0 far he ha knew that it tance from h Lnew in a ge 5 was. But though he ha hunted he had not fo trance. When little N not come over to see him he would g0 to see her; that is, he would go over near where che lived me- times he saw her and sometimes he did not. Now, it happened one morning that Impy waited in vain for little Miss. Fricky to appes o started to lock for most. over to the thought she glimpse of aléng a fence was that and he start he could real good look at this little doubt crept into “If that i has grown ove “Yes, overnigt coat are them. Can it own home sir, not other Chi was just in front he heard a rust and there was the after little Miss he- could go. Hr place, he was d to do there and TMy pris ood he's ch chasing Fr knows Frisky Impy started Presently he c Little Miss big stone ting on another stone ky. she certainl ht,” though Impy. ke was Impy could see the hig stranger mired en and there jealous: of Impy the black alous of that didn't want n. He did- d hnla" Reglatered U. B. Potent Office AN ACCOMPL CAIN SELF C FRIENDS = PUB G OURNEW METHOD LAUGH OR CRY LARYNX INSTITUTE If not, why not? 24 HORIZONTAL Island in the Indian Ocean Alabama port. Region To expiate. Variant of Wayside hotel Note in scale. Removed the center. Stream Pierced Augured Tatt To unweave Exclamation Supped. Aqua Prophet Northeas: Prank Lzg-shaped To exile Globe. VERTICAL Capital of Egvpt I Monetars Minor note unit of Japan | | n | | | | [ETR] ISISIOIN] [RIE[LIAYINADIE] AMUSERETITE] [DRIOINTEIMONIETY] DDEEF OR] To come in High Rescuad. Intended. Horses. Hut. Mountain defile. Apple drink Short coat. preducer of irst woman Company Exclamation Mother won't love you respond. s seldom notional love for sis which onstration s her aw well-loved child does not 1 vou" opl 1t unemotional not been faught Ros art of azo opera co 10 last scasoi. he, nter- . makes much she i 1der George savory Meat Savory meat loaf, baked potatoes, oscalloped cabbage. bread, butter, | head lettuce and French dressing. peach pudding. coffee savory Meat TLoaf (Serving Eight) pound chopped round of heef. > pound chapped round of vea cup bread crumbs, 2 af for Dinner of | to finely | spices. Pour into a shallow, greased | blespoon butter, 1 cup sugar. By C. D. Batchelor N MAKE OF SHED SPEAKER ONEIDENCE = Lic \ES"'EEH x '~ MAKE THEM AT Wikl = ING. N Peach Pudding 3 cups sliced peaches, 1-2 cup sugar, 2 tablespoons flour, 1 tea- spoon cinnamon, 1.2 teaspoon nut- meg, 2 tablespoons lemon juice, 1 cup water, 2 tablespoons butter. ding. 2 tablespoons lemong juice, 1 Mix the peaches, sugar, flour and baking pan. Add rest-of ingredients and cover with the doug Dough “2 cups flour, 2 teaspoons baking powder, 1-4 reacpoon sali, 4 table- spoons lard, 2-3 cup milk. Mix the tlour, baking powder and salt. Cut in the lard with a knife. Slowly add the milk until a soft dough forms. Pat it out on a floured board. Fit on top the peach mix- ture. Make 4 holes in the top .of the dough. Bake 15 minutes in moderate oven. Add the syrup mix- ture and bake 20 minutes. Syrup Mixture 2-3 cup light brown sugar, 1 ta- Mix ingredients and beil 2 min- utes. To remove blueberry stains from linens, pour boiling water through the stains and wash in warm wa- ter and let dry. DEMURE £poons choppe r. 1 tablesponn f nion, 1 easp0on € hoon | pri cup ‘omatocs, 4 slices ba- con Mix the meat, ings, s Iour ir crumbs sea paprika and tomatoes. | greased loaf pan. Ar- | the bacon slices on the top. | ran Fake 1 hour in moderate oven. Ur carefully and serve hot or lessary touch of formality, s a devastating demureness to Molyneaux's new affernoon en-| semble of blue and white printed | moire. Although it is composed of a coat and dress. at first sight it | looks like a dress becaure of the manner in which the hem of the coat is made to blend with the flounces of the dress. The cape col- lar adds a distinctly feminine touch and the large fox cuffs lend the nec- SHE HELPS TO SAVE FOLK DANCES OF THE WORLD New York, Sept. 9—Miss Eliza- beth Burchenal looked over the girls who had gathered on the gym fleor at Teachers’ College, Columbia University. There they stood, long lines of them, dressed in bulging black bloomers and heavy white middies. They were taking gym because they had to, she decided. They weren't especially happy about it, either. Public schools didn't offer such training. This was new to them. So Elizabeth Burchenal decided to put a theory she had into prac- tice. “People have to exercise their minds and enjoy what they are do- ing, if physical training is going to do them any good.” she said. “I'll try folk dancing! She started the girls on the dances which people of all the coun- tries of the world had used to ex- press their reactions when they were very sad or very glad, or a little bit wistful. A Changed Attitude The girls forgot the bare gym. They thought of village greens and peasants in the red and gold and blues of far lands who danced till the sun went down. They straightened their shoul- ders and relaxed, and were happy! “It's just fun,” Elizabeth Bur- chenal said. ‘“After all, there isn't any physical training offered to school girls, and I want to make my students feel a desire to teach others and maybe sometime the spirit will spread.” That was back in 1907. But just the other day, Eliza- beth Burchenal, the slender, laughing-eved girl who tried to tcach people to be happy while they exercised, sailed away to Belgium, as the delegate of the United States Government, to the International Commission of Pop- ular Arts. She is America's first official representative in the world- wide attempt to save the folk lore of the world. Miss Burchenal went with a whole string of honors trailing after her. She is president of the American Folk Dance Society. She is the world's best authority on folk dances of every nation. She has written or edited eleven volumes on the subject. She is the founder of physical education for women in the United States. And it all came she has delved into about because folk customs Elizabeth Burchenal of anywhere and everywhere and discovered that the freedom and Leauty of the dances, which were characteristic of the emotions of a people, gave the propei exercise to the development of girls' minds and bodies. Miss Burchenal's who is secretary of the Tolk Dance Society, likes the story. “One morning Elizabeth was eating breakfast when Dr. Luther G. Gulick, forther head of the rhysical education department at Teachers' College, walked in. He insisted that she had to resign and come to work with him in the pub- lic school system ot New York, of which he was then the head. There was no physical education provision made for girls anywhere at that time. “While my sister finished break- fast he wrote out her resignation. Then he went with her while she delivered it. “After that' she was given a school and told to experiment. She found that folk dances gave the sister, Ruth, American to tell body balgnce. Minds and bodies both received recreation. Her reports formu- lated the principles: which have ever since been basic in physical education.” There was a demand for teach- ers for the new art. Only Eliza- beth Burchenal knew the secret. 86 she traveled over the country training 27,000 instructors. Lady Aberdeen, wite of the viceroy of Ircland, saw an exhi- bition staged in Central Park in New York City. Ireland needed recreation. She took Miss Bur- chenal back to Dublin With her. ‘Teachers came flocking to learn this new rhythmic expression that was really so old. When 600 were enrolled the course had to close its doors against tht people who still came. ‘Widely Known as Experts All through the internal troubles in Ireland tha folk dances have gone on. Other nations have restor- ed the customs of dancing on the green, letting their emotions out in a rhythmic beauty, too. And no matter where people dance, or what they dance, in the folk lore world, Elizabeth and Ruth Burchenal are hailed as experts. The Folk Dance society, which wag formed in 1916, is endeaver- ing to documentize folk dances, music and games of American ori- gin, and those which have Dbeen brought to America. Miss Ruth Burchenal is secretary, and ane cther sister, Miss Emma Bur- chenal, is accompanist for Miss Elizabeth Burchenal, president of the institution and the world's most highly recognized folk danc- ing authority. The League of Nations, in 1927, called a Folk Art Congress, Dances and songs of people, given from the heart, are much alike. The world leaders thought that the people might get closer to- gether by going back to the very teginning. Besides, as Elizabeth once said, “If people can enjoy what they are doing it is more helpful.” And whenever the congress meets, in France, Italy or Belgium, Elizabeth Burchenal is there, proving that America has a folk- lore of her own, born of her mountaineers. And &lso helping other rediscover theirs. girls the proper nations HOW'S yo HMEALTH . for Edeedby thé New Yok Dr. logo Galdston ~ Acadeny of Medicine SNAKES AND SNAKEBITES v Snakes are at one and the same time both useful and destructive. Most of the non-poisonous snakes are usgeful in that they live upon rodents which are destructive to agriculture. On the other hand, poisonous snakes are responsible for hundreds of thousands of deaths, and constitute, in India for example, a major health problem. Unless one knows snakes inti- mately, and can quickly recognize their forms and markings, it is impossible to distinguish the poi- sonous varieties from the innocuous ones from mere external general appearance. For practical purposes, except where the territory is positively known to be free from poisonoy snakes, every snakebite should be treated with the greatest precau. tion. Again, even if the snake the non-venomous variety, its bits produces a puncture-type wound, which is always liable to become infected. ‘Wherever there are snakes, and even in snakeless places, there are many so-called popular snakebite remedies. One of the most common is whiskey. hundreds of othere Practically all of them are inef- fective. Some. like too much al- cohol, are positively injurious. The only known remedy for poi- sonous snakebites, effective if ad- ministered quickly enough, is the anti-venin specific for the biting snake, or else a compounded anti- venin specific for a variety of the snakes common to a given terri- tory. This anti-venin, like diphtheria anti-toxin, is produced by injecting the venom (snake poison) info horses, and after a time abstrating from the blood of the horse the immunizing subctance. When this is injected into the person bitten, it counteracts or neutralizes the snake poison. AAVE YOU HEARD? be of 1t is easy to clean the bottéms of percolators, the cerners of waffle irons, and the inside of milk bot- tles, when you own one of the new ieng-handled brushes of especially treated palm fibre, designed pur- pesely for reaching the out-of-the- way places. A long handle makes the brush very easy to manage. But there are literally | FUR BOWS A beige frock for early fall has a round collar and bow brim of |brown shaved caracul. The beige | hat topping it has a flat bow trim of the caracul. DIFFERENT SIDES New hats are likely to have one |side revealing, one side concealing the face. The rolled double-brim is the one to have, if you like brims. FLAPPER FANNY SAYS:| The girl in love with herself never has any rivals. SAVING PLUMBERS’ BILLS A small force pump, kept under the kitchen sink for use when the drain becomes clogged, will save a large number of plumbers’ bills. MAGIC IN CUSHIONS Colored cushions, strewn erously through a room, brighten a dull atmosphere siderably. gen- will con- Fashion Plaque This new evening dress of black chiffon and gold paillettes was seen in Southampton. The paillettes, in groups of three, are arranged very thickly about the waist, thinning out over the skirt and bedice. The very low cut back is accented with large chartreuse velvet roses. MAKE THIS MODEL AT HOME Smart Top Coat For Youngster Pattern 1361 Herald 15c Practical Pattern by ANNE ADAMS The cape mode has been adapted by the younger fashionable set, and no wonder, when we note the becom- ing and youthful lines it creates. The model presented today may, of course, be made without the cape, but your small girl will find it gives added warmth as well as chic. There are useful pockets, too, for various kiddie necessities. Pattern 1961 Is serviceable made of serge, tweed, covert cloth or | broadeloth in navy blue. brown, maroon or bottle green. If the coat is to be lined, a plain sateen lining |the color of the coat is practical. | May be obtained only in sizes 4, 6, $. 10 and 12. Size 4 requires 1% l‘)’ards of 54-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. Write plainly your | name, address and style number. BE SURE TO STATE SIZE WANTED. OUR NEW FALL AND WINTER PASHION BOOK, containing ex- quisite models for adults and chil- dren and an excellent assortment of | transfer patterns and stamped novel- |ties, 15 NOW READY. Price FIF- TEEN CENTS. Book with pattern, | 25 cents. Address all mail and orders to Herald Pattern Department, 243 West 17th Street, New York City.