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e B g ey o~ NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, Love’s Reawakening Once Overs The Story of a Wife’s Triumph Over Jealousy By ADELE GARRISON With Mary Bubbling Over with Happiness at Thought of Her “First Party” Madge Feels that all the “Annoyances” Where Worth While. As I looked at Mary's happy face and heard the caroling note in her volce as she said she never had been so happy in her life 1 for, I the annoyances which had been mine during the preparations for the party we were giving her the first she ever had had. Edith Fairfax's attem Dicky jealous becau sent by Mr. Veritzen, ployer's continual soundin personal note to me-—even these, told myself were bearable if I could kéep that ecstatic look in the of my huband's lovely young «'You needn't be afraid " I told her smiling. * ging to be late. You believe you call ‘scs t A Gibe Without Malice “Her tenseness relaxed into a laugh ™I know I'm the prize idiot said, “but I never was so excited my whole life.” *If it's a sign of idiocy to b wildly excited over your first part I began— 4Then there have been a Iof of morons in the last yéars or so” she finished wi ith gamin grin at me. “Oh bu dress is too adorable to ogght to be put in a gl Will you help me get it of Madge?I'm afraid of rtu trfumph of the hairdres Bhe gestured toward her co and then gave a little ofdismay “But you even haven't h hfir done, have yot took off my hat displayed the pins of a ‘wa comcealed bencath it *Blessed be cl “L.had this don today, and the woma in“a few minutes ¥She sighed with and I realized with a little tug at My heatstrings that she adficerned for my creditable appear- anpe as she was for her own £But will you have time'to drass?’ she asked anxiously Plenty,” 1 assured her alll ready except your gown you?" “Ab-so-lute-ly," she said. TThen don't put it on (< Instead slip on one of those sleeve- less cotton morning frocks—I'm all retdy, I'll put on one, and then we'll sifp on our motor coats and * go downstairs to look over the dining roem. Mr. Veritzen has planned a sfprise for you in the dinner dec- nice an n absurd relief. was as “You're aren't just 3 orations, but it won't be until half after five.” “For me?” Mary echoed. “Yeah?" | She drawled word with gay| impertinence, but there was no mal- | ice in the gible, and she hurried on | before 1 could reprove her. “But| how perfectly spiffy” I'll bet it's a immer, too. He never | o without putting at least extra layers of iceing on it. von't have to stay long down there, | want to be in the liv-| here, before the first| ve you seen the| wood has fixed up| {4 and Aren't in place | | : | Untimely Awakening | 0oms where and to after 1 s them finally gownI g room to e. I was Dicky, for I time to urb have 1ste i would be to this fear- eaction the in- sounded finished partment on my to tell cora 1 said softly a into your motor | down to lh"' Mary iroom door coat. We're goir dining room, now I doubt it,” Mary as Dick'y voice room. Madge! Madg (Continued T b truck horses.” retorted sounded grin- from are you?" el LT IMPY RU By Thornton W. Burgess rrtarer ettt Oseasions come when there can be \0‘ stigma on the ones who flee » —Impy the Chipmunk #I guess I'm the unhappiest Chip mfink that ever lived,” moaned [mpy as he lay in his bed and nursed his wounds and thought of his first fight and how he lost it. “I feel as it ] never want to see any one that T know,” he continued. *T want {o go+»'way off where nobody knows mé&and I don't know anybody. Oh, Impy felt a litte better. Still, he was very far from haPpy. For a long time he sat vers close to his doorway. He had no appetite. The sun was shinning brightly, and usually Impy rejoices in_bright_sunlight. 1t warmed hin buk it didn’t make him happy. After quite a while he ventured to 100k for something to eat. He very stiff and lame: also he vesy mnervous. Every unexpected lithe sound made him start. Con- stdhtly he was looking over fi ong shoulder. then the other. As matter of fact, Impy really afraid. He was afraid stringer with whom he might appear again. He wanted to litt Frisky; vet he didn't want he, He felt that in her eves disgraced. He tried not to thir her, but he couldn’t help t of*her. “She won't « no%.” thought he gone off w dear! Wha here for? litffe olde ¢ I hope I'll me welll see who' did T come 00 big for Impy heard faif, He Just th leaves, 1t w rustle mads od_ha which t glimpse glifip xvranfl‘r N '.‘”f”H car sound el hi Impy ran neighbo! fierea O Al th Impy way. He vag a cow cayse he | that in killéd AllLhe peace ver all™his life stiff and 12 was nothing t So he wan Ne IRV of his Horizontal Fairyland To broil found that d and he stop- down to try to| 4 to go place for a o wait un hack until ew h I will do.’ “I don't feel Disputes. From this time To love exceedingly Chold's toys Vertical I Registered U. 8. Patent Office By C. D. Batchelor “The trouble is we have a world of truck horses and race horses.” “A worse trouble, Auntie, none of the race horses think they are .,._._..._..._.._.-.._n..._.._-_.._.._.....,._._.._.._.._._.._..,.x 'We Ask and You Answer| —— [ m|x<[m = > S| mim[—| EEe S HEE| UEESEEERE . EEE BEES BE 2EaE) Hoo|lc[zim|K > <[>[= e e HEE ZmiH |0 >[O 8 —|m O M (0] = [m[m o[>[® Z (> @) = > Heavy shoes. Revokes Garment. Paddle, Total. Heron Pennies. Hidden Couples Small body of land powder and knife Add forms, pat f chicken mix- in top and mixed with s in mod- Relish Salad Chicken Pot Chicken Pot Pie 1 fork. Add ¢ into mold hours in 1 part of t in slice Menn for Sunday | Southampton SR CONTRASTS with ‘dark fur ts with light fur will popular this winter, | Il vhite § th em blue < and nav an- een at the Beach club. and HEALTH for thé New Yok~ Acadeiny of Medicine v Edited by Dr. lago Galdston THE SICK BED To the person “flat on_his back" | because of illness, his bed may be |a rack of torture or a hayen of | comfort. The proper care and arrange- ment of the sick bed therefore may contribute much to the patient's | comfort, and the longer the illness the more important the bed be- comes, The person usually is best off in a single bed. It is easier to handle the patient in a bed not too wide, and it is easier to move the | bed about from place to place. ‘, In making up the bed, thought should be given to the condition of the patient and to the probable ser- | vices he will need. This is particu- |larly important in the nursing of in- ! fants and children. Where there is a risk of the mat- tress being soiled, it is advisable to place a rubber sheet over it. Oil- “loth may be used where rubber heeting is not available. This, as vell as the rubber sheet, should be irmly fixed to the mattress to pre- ent shifting and wrinkling. The number of sheets and blank- cts that will be required for the comfort of the patient depends on the nature of the patient's disease and the season of the year. In general, no more covering \~hou|d be placed on the patient than is absolutely necessary to keep |him warm and comfortable. The | usual tendency is to over-heat the | patient through too much covering. The bed should be taken care of | so that pillows, blankets, sheets and the mattress are smooth, |and comfortable. In keeping the hed in order, the patient should be bothered as little |as possible. Tt is possible, as any properly trained nurse can demon- strate in a jiffy, to remake a bed without turning the patient more than from one side to the other, HE Thick pottery cups and tain heat better th | wares. saucers re- the thinner '—LAI’[’ER FA\'\Y SAYS: S PAT. OFF. 1 leeae i S SN T | | The girl | ward, who looks back is for-| straight | 1930. Fall Brings Smart Modes For College Miss; Tweeds Favored For Coats, Wool For Frocks ' may find her wearing a coat of monotone tweed Trim models galore await the college girl for her fall and winter a short satin-lined jacket of lapin (left) in shades from eggshell to tan of colorful tweed knit material (center), with detachable pique collar and wide suede belt, and winter days lined with dyed rabbit and with collar of raccoon. (cénter), wardrobe. Chic for sports wear For class she may choose a dress New York, Sept. 12 (P—The col- lege girl who starts in quest of her B. A. this fall also will hope to ac- qftire a B. S. (Bachelor of Style), for the clothes she wears to class marks she receives, The campus girl of 1930-31 may not wear her winter woolens under- neath her frock as her grand- mother did, but they will be an out- standing note of her class and play- time wardrobe, nevertheless. Wool frocks, three-piece suits and | coats will be the things she gener- ally dons when she trips to class on {frosty mornings or to football games on sunny afternoons. Her campus coat may be of mono- tone tweed in green, brown. black or blue, collared with faccoon and lined with dyed rabbit, say style experts of John Wanamaker's, which has opened a department catering o needs of the college girl. | Or she may choose a belted mod- el of alpaca pile, lined with gav polka dot crepe. If she can have a fur coat, too, to wear to afternoon teas amd such, 1t may be a semi-fitted model of krim- mer or lapin, belted or not as she likes. 1t may be short, reaching the hip- | line, or long enough to cover her skirt, according to her figure ani her taste. The frocks she wears to class and | games may be chosen from models galore There are knitted jumper frocks, combining white and brown, green or blue in a zig-zag weave; tweed knits topped by double breasted boleros and finished with patent leather belts; three plece jersey suits with a neat little pointed vest of contrasting color; or a wool tuniz frock with a leather belt. When she wants to dress up a bit for that afternoon date she apt to choose a frock of wool lac |a new fabric of the winter season, or one of the colorful silk crepes There are crepes of green, red, brown and blue, plain. or shot with | silver and gold threads, and de- {signed with tunics, boleros and the fitted waistline and modified flaring skirt that mark the winter mode. A black crepe frock, lightened by touches of white at the neck and | cuffs, will not come amiss in her | afternoon wardrobe. The campus girl's hats generally will be small and chic, worn pulled | back to make a frame for her face | | | | will be as important to her as the | | Interestingly enough she carried from the episode neither physical | nor mental injury. Now as a grown woman she does| |not remember having uffered at |any fime from excessive fear of | high places, of falling, or of being |drowned. Such an episode made much of might have caused a life-long and | unserviceable fear of these things. It was the natural wisdom of her ‘z!andmolh?r that probably saved her from distressing after effects. The fears which children develop |after certain frightening and dan- gerous experiences often are caused ]in good party by the attitude which { have taken toward | the grownups them. Picks Model Mcdel As Model Wife bo:t magazine illustrations. When Helene Haskin, daughter of an aristocratic old southern family, was only a child, she was selected as a “magazine cover” | gir]l by McClelland Barclay, illustrator, commercial artist and society painter of Easthampton, L. L has “come out” in society and has posed for a score of Barclay's And in the intervening years, | Barclay decided that she would make a model wife, and their | engagement has been announced. | inset and, at right, is Barclay at work on a figure for which his =v future bride posed.’ Miss Haskin is now 19, Miss Haskin is shown in the Herald’s Daily and tilted a bit to one side to re- veal her softly-waved hair. It may be a beret of velvet or felt to match or harmonize with | her coat, or a close-fitting felt rolled | up a bit in front and finished side | or back with a jaunty feather. | Talks T3, Parents | JANE'S DISASTER By Alice Judson Peale Wikn Jane was three she |down her grandmother's well. She had been helping grand- | mother lift the bucket in which the | butter and milk were kept cool, somehow she lost her balance fell. As she struck the water, her wild- ly grasping arms clutched a pipe which ran up the side of the well. [She held on silently until uncle, |called to the rescue, climbed down | {the slippery walls and picked her UD in his arms. fell | and | ve Half way up she began to =m\r"( & land did not stop until she was | wrapped in a blanket and held close | in grandmother's arms. They put | her to bed with a hot water bottle, | She lay still for an hour, then she |demanded to be allowed to get up and play. Grandmother permitted no one fo | make a fuss over the accident. Sh- |said that Jane was a bright girl to | remembef to hold on to the pipe |and that she had been very good {o stop crying so quickly. That ws all Thereafter Jane kept a respectful | distance from the brink of the well. | |ored dots, Jw |orders to MAKE THIS MODEL AT HOME Smart and Serviceable for Small Girl 2019 Practical Pattern ADAMS Pattern Herald 15¢ BY ANNE have time for a bit of hand work, this adorable little mo- del is lovely smocked below the | front and back vokes, yet gathering will do very nicely and create just as much fullness. The collar, cuffs and sleeve bands may be cut from contrasting material. There are bloomers, too. Pattern 2019 may be made of dimity, swiss, pique, gingham,' cot- ton broadcloth, etc. White with col- colored smocking and a colored ribbon bow, would he cun- ning; or a color with white dots, etc. you [Brown shantung and natural pongee are very popular with yougsters this season, and are very p May be obtaiged on 4, 6 and 8. Size 4 requires 1 rds of 36-inch material. o dressmaking experience necessary to make this model with our pattern. Yardage for every size |and mnpln exact instructions are Send FIFTEEN CENTS lin coins carefully stamps, for each plainly your name, number. BE SUR NTED. OUR NEW FALL. AND WIN IFASHION BOOK, containing exquis ite models for adults and children and~ an excellent assortment of transfer - patterns and stamped N READY Price TS. Book with pat- ddress all mail and Herald Pattern Depart- ment, 243 West 17th Street, New York City. (15¢) wrapped, or pattern. Write wddress and style TO STATE SIZE tern Pattern Sfervice