New Britain Herald Newspaper, September 26, 1930, Page 24

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1930. Love’s Reawakening The Story of a Wife’s Triumph Over Jealousy By ADELE GARRISON i s - BC 1 Baichels * New Bedroom " Fumishings Follow the Trend to Pater! Office = Dalntiness in Fa“ 7Styles Colin Cameron’s Obvious Attempt to | orchids with the touch of green just Monopolize Mary Rouses Noel's makes it perfect. And you don't Jealousy and Madge Fears An look any older than we do. I don't Upset of All Her Plans, wonder Mr. Veritzen is crazy—" *“Yes, dear,” I said, as Mary hes-' She broke off sharply biting her itated. “What about Noel?" lips “I'm afraid he's going to be fool-| “Flease forgive me," she said| ish about that Mr. Cameron, she | humbly. ~ “Honestl that just| said. “I don't know whether you no- slipped out. I didn't mean it. ticed at dinner.” | “See that you never say anything | “Yes, I did notice,” T returned |like it again I said sternly, then| emphatically, for I had seen with |relented g aw her sensitive fac uneasiness that the young talkie ' shadow star was doing his best to monopo-| I know you didn't mean lize Mary's attention. In the old sweetheart,”” I said softly, *'s0 wives' parlance “didn't take his won't think of it again. d eyes from her,” and when he was thank you for all the pretty not talking to her he s 1i: you've said of me, even i to her replies as if ! areer 100 extravagant to be t hung upon her words ) = A Slip of the Tongue “I really tried hard to t Noel, too,” Mary said, 0 Cameron was too clever f 5 h c n t t to let !!flr| couldn’t dodge talking to h e for more than an instant. In| out being actually rude to 1 and | sim admit that I though you wouldn't want me to i Zen's € r to me| be that, because he ig Mr.” Veritzen's 1 1 t a com-| friend. it not| “You are rig car,” 1 told her. | spoken, it was a problem which I “I haven't decided yet wh 1 e definitely before | Noel's father som y ¥ s T had just told | thing unpl 3 —but | vanted to avoid all friction | it I have any chanc mvent | wit temperamental employer, him it will depend a great deal upon | unti er the party. It would nol: his being kept in good humor. I'v 1 only a few more ho sacrificed something to the caus an he had been in the juey I smiled, as I touched Dicky’s three of hum The appreciation of his| | ¥ R gl ! T i ; roscbuds at my girdle and the showy n gestures of flowers . - ! & 5 i R, [ 723 ; (Courtesy of Gimbel Bros., New York.) cluster of Philip V. 's white or- | theat ‘kets. the fact t { i 14 1ioia f # A corner of a very feminine bedroom shows the spriged blue and green wallpaper, the frilled white glass chids at shoulde I don’t worn his orct the marked atten- | g . R / curtaing and bluc glazed chintz over-drapes, a maple dresser and chest of drawers, an arm chair uphols ¥ ¢ % s i . Ly MR . ; stered in figured chintz and hooked rugs introducing pinks into the coior scheme. Silhouettes adorn the know w r unpl itness tion ‘olin Comeron was giving may be in store for me. But I don't d Mar; mitting — I guessed wall and the lamp shades are flowered. t only things all Il these things were factors in i3 ; / = 235 F ; ; S 3 | j = g There is a renaissance in ultra- right. We are all th v of sel sfaction, which | A X - 3 @ - in n to humor Mr. Veritzen t tently wrapped his soul. ] -, o 3 | Ty - g, feminine bedrooms for women this lks p |1ittle one's face will tell clearly that this party, and one of the s ust not be permitted to t G g ot | A A% 5 4 4 4 autumn. . you have said exactly the right ways of angering him would b hings. I mad v way to the| ; . “ iR g % e K Of course it is in line with the thing, treat his friend cavalierly b1 yom which sor £ the| ¢ 0 & g it AR ¢ s new modes in dress, music and Attention-getting questions which mind telling you, dearest, th men had con @ 1 the Un-| i A= 2 x 4 0/ P 5 e manners. The business woman, | spring from neither a desire for managed things beautifu u derwood a and spoke un-| ¥ PN g : % S o g even more than the stay-at-home, | m s knowledge not the wish to impart dinner. You didn't d: t " " X N 2 A appreciates the softening influence 2 S (et i onithal whole fibel s spoiled young man of a woman's room. Instead of eotased: would ha done, bu t the *“den” of former years that QUESTIONS | They develop in the child an ex- QURILY Incerented. Tqul 1 servedjasglivingfroonigandislesping cessive leaning toward the kind of trouble at the dance, because we I room, as many as can afford it are Byjaliceigudson, Beale | satistaction which makes him self= have three more young men than , 1. But I shook my % enjoying the beauties of a very| If all the questions children ask| . cioue and self-centered. there are young girls, and the stag- ughir pdgN ol feminine bedroom, with frills, [ were motivated by a genuine Wish| ppoc fend to make him depend- line, éven though on =0 miniature | ed 1 the kitchen, dainty curtains, soft pretty colors for knowledge, jt would clearly be oyt ypon the adults in his environ- a scale, ought to keep any young the door before speak- s 3 and even four-poster beds, with our duty to answer each one as Well | \on¢ instead of throwing him upon man from having a monopoly of | “Ah, that's, from ‘Der Ring des Nibelungen'—‘Gotterdamerung,’ canopies. Mothers with adolescent |as we could. his own resources and developing a any young girl's time, which is as v Yo n Noel to be precise.” etahicaall e e 3 ! : ; benefiting by the | Close observation, however, shows | genuine absorption in things outside it shou ve at dances. Run along beg: E his Y T S T T U AT A i vogue to try the psychological ef-|that the greater number are not|pimeelf. Fo doana e enlnv e Ll Bl g iz vt etbionRlack ers b st ofbraut fect of such “gentle” rooms on |really questions at all. - e ealels o e tlonn fo the utmost. I'l manage a word L th n going to A s o R SR ot alginien e ons Smpia St LR £ It is natural that, along with'the question form brings adults at- |ne wants information should be an- s Jhrcins flooruhat s mneb o ot Jancind Joial : s such a vogue, Colonial furhiture tention amd social response gener-|swered simply and in a way which want, fan’t it? i man was 1 the other chaps he re i e i e R L et e P 1Yo Deart abont l( carly American pieces fit in just| He discovers a means of putting |experience and vocabulary » fene sineed. 8RB = s dlmeetias grést & ead qam beautifully with 4 scheme that [himself across [ o et el 15 a1 [kn S an’h Ris;‘;’f.‘fii el LR R SR e e calls for frilled organdic or dotted | 1t is his way of making conversu-|to know he will question you fur- " - o ¥ g |Swiss curtains, flowered wall pa-|tion and as such should meet With a | ther, but if you tell him {oo much 1;'::‘: -"z:‘m'}:"'f‘ ~“:1d';‘;‘j:’11'“”:’-“’” QU DATLY —pc— SOy e = : EA L [per, hooked rugs and delicate col- {friendly response if not with an in-|you kill his interest and dull his e § a nderful pict 0 | /o < |ors such as baby blue, soft ros:|formational answer. | curlosity. Y Anntis dfdgs, wiih your balr and (Continucd Tomorrow) pink the lightest of greens and| Most often a child asks a ques- green gown. And those jade things | Copyr 30, Newspaper Feature i T 1 1 buttercup yellow: [tion because he knows the answer Uncle Dicky gave you, and the whits " Service, Inc. | | | Cost Necdn't Be Great and wants to tell it to you. \ you, an " ! | : Jt is not necessary to spend| To this type of question the cor- i sontriv istic a|rect answer is, of course, Y Ediced by : | mlilions to contrive as artistic a course, “You ) J bedroom as any feminine heart |Know, you tell m Dr. lago Galdston ~ ~ Academy of Medicine | \.ou1q ask. Good taste is the first| The delighted expression on the | N o SrRerD 0F 0 An '—I v YOU WHAT IS METABOLISM? |essary pieccs of furniture and handy needle to make curtains, Crrclon st e o B et ol slip covers, lamp shades and so FaShlon Plaque les steal into the lan- on. ! “the man in the street™ with little or no appreciation of | Wall paper is very important in Drecise meaning; the new bedrooms. If you want | daintily eprigged wallpaper, then 1t | |it is wise to choose plain glazed | Rl i maan es of plain ma- | ' S W ; ‘1»‘4‘.‘1‘:‘1“');(1 :;lmnoh m were loosely wiciiag oAt IMPY BRINGS HOME A PRIZE ¢ S = g ! i |the wallpaper's predominating ton i T I Yet t terms are meant to By all means have ruffled glass cu By Thornton W. Burgess cover a number of important ideas tains, for they add such a lot to a BEoats : f 4 1 conceptions which it is bota |rgom's softness. And, it possible, | Say what you please, most folk wh 1 céting and profitable to under- 4o have a drapery valance over the eat 3 / f St top of the window and the over-| Are better for a little meat ; \ / Implied and expre i e |drapes hang clear to the flabr. It | —Impy the Chipmunl ( ! ), { terms “nutrition” and sm” [ makes the window more dignified. e \ ; | s : - |is the whole scheme of the intake.| KFor an ecarly American bed- ) | Blorizontal | preparation, absorption, distribu- (room, a four-poster maple bed Is| ‘munk, did a little hunti | Yo 4 Dressed tion and utilization of materials es- [used, with a low chest of driewers | don't think that Impy and little Mrs ) ¥ > sential for the work and :towth of [and mirror for the dressing table| | A note of beauty or a dash of Impy lived entirely on nuts and \ b . 2 i body. and a high chest of drawers for| | |humor can be added to a room by seeds and things of that kind. Ali| | (V% | Gt ertal 3 wrting from scratch, we know [more space. Remember, women | |the use of some of the new littls the members of the Squirrel family. { ; R N 1 Jugle § t A 3 g that all energy ultimately comes to |will need more space this winter, | | Sy shade pulls, instead of the usual and of course this includes th K : n of z A s from the sun. for they are wearing a multitude | tassel or ring for curtains. Chipmunks, like a little meat n » o 15 ices Ll Animals (man included) cannoi,|of extra this-and-that's that they | A bunch of crystal grapes or a and then. Yes, sir, they do so. They o 6 Cl L A h r, directly * sun. |did not dream of wearing last| |little group of crystal roses, with not only like it, but they get it s s 7, Dor N "his is accompliched by the | year. bright cord to match, add a color- S0, this particy morning Imp g y 3 the chur r 7 table kingdom, which makes 1 of [ The wallpaper is cream, with | ful note to windows this winter. had started out to look for som 2 la.1=1 g energy in building out of non- tiny spr of blue forget-me-nots Black suede and blacl: alligator| Or if you use some of the,new meat. He felt hungry for ¢ . s s 5 % = < ‘chemical substances their|with a tiny touch of green leaf. are combined in this opera pump for [tiny glass elephants, cats, mice, course, some good b v ) own living tissues. The chair in the corner is covered |falll An interesting variation is the [dogs or other pets attached to do very nicely. He thoug P o oo T atsdecrunat Steeple 3 I An s build their animal tis-|with glazed chintz in a blue-green |open slit at the side and the perky | bright cords. you will find them e I tif out of the living plant tissues. pattern and the over-drapes are (little stand-up bow of alligator. most amusing. ) - Man consumes both plant and ani- |plain glazed chintz, In blue. Hook- | olthe thy e Bt mal tissues to maintain his own|ed rugs on the floor have some | a little out of season. Nevert e Ao AhanTinE . (heasen | body. |blue and much green in them and | Impy started out to look for some.|young of the nests of birds who 4 2 e ) Distinctive theory | In order to mainfain health and |in addition sprinkle the gaiety of| He knew that if he could only fir > ballal i Ama o e S nelnE ¢ 1 To obzerve normal growth, it is important that [several tones of pink into the| some, they would be casier to catch e - i vasl htly. the body should be supplied u.»;mom, The dresser lamp and the | now than they had been earlier i SEE AR St To picce la necessary raw materials. [corner reading lamp both are | the season when it was warmer. ) $ ‘ with paper ese include the three basic|parchment, the former with da-| _Impy had hunted about for som: . g ot gl Ak r \ food clements — carbohydrates |sign like the wallpaper and the| . - time in places where he had found | . i Mias Tanya® S Fale (‘tarches, sukar), fais and pro-|latter depicting an old-fashioned | BECOMING MORNING DRESS grasshoppers before [ with donit s 5 ry The latter are the nitrogen- |garden scene. success this time. He was getting |y, 000y o ning foods. Silhouettes Are Smart Pattern 2029 discouraged when he noticed a lit- Tidon Al T : 7 iddition, the body nceds wa-| With this dressy a room, noth- tle movement in t grass just|po o ek resthe " mineral salts, and vitamines§ |ing in the way of pictures is love- ahead of him. ly he was all G 5 iilts Ui . g L rair 3 e science of nutrition, there- |lier than the note introduced by | alertness. He stolr il e e ! ; i lischicvou . deals with all the intricate |good silhouettes. If you have any| F;;q:?rd:u HAe el ¥ 2] LR e ) g “(‘r \“l‘wl selection, prepara- |old-timers in the family, dig them By ANNE ADAMS E SER = T . bl : , an te use of these |out and have them framed in the whatever m he there. Som ‘ AL A 4 cted 00d substances, | nagrowest of fram If your fam-| Cottons continue their popularity or some one, was mov ; 4 3 ) 4 4 L £ e ily possesses nome, vou can pur- | through the Fall season in a de- 't:iant:;m.n Presently he sz o : 2 3 = , - SRR |chase quantities, already framed, [Hghtful variety of color and design. en. s n % ; 4 ADPE N AV Ithat are quaint, many of them |Add to the practicability of the a\o)‘l!alfr-:lr?']\r; 2 v i g ’ r Your bedspread can be fashion- [day's model, and you have an ideal eyes sparkled o he 1 R }1@]‘7{”& ey 4 e st ! e en /z cd of dotted Swiss, like the frilled |frock, inexpensive and easy to make. Eyuseded ; ey L BN Wine oft e : : . L glass curtains, and made over |Buttons lend a chic touch. Just then the 1w hi s blue, or if that is too dainty for| Yattern 2029 makes up smartly in In the I reducing-crabe” pe- riod, the terms nutrition, malnutri- hoppers, but he hadn't had luck getting grasshoppers of snake-ht hey do, however, New Britain Herald 15c Practical Pattern and faced him. The : [ T el F A s e ! v 25 mir ! f X your tastes, you can make one of |Percale, pongee, pique, madras, cowardly about the little s ! O; me n':!\\ %’-J sapril N i $ § ) Lok 2 o / |the glazed chintz of your over-|Shantung, linen or rayon. A solid raised his head 1 1 (! = ' il AL g 1 | i) A > e ! : 2 s |drapes, with a big medallion in [color or a print will be equally out at Tmpy, and 5 iR y ; LI ey g b silhouette design of black and [Smart in soft or vivid colorings. he didn't show it v danced this | gy ALBXANDER GEORGL S b 4 4 i % W 4 ¢ " |white in the center. May be obtained only iIn sizes 16, way and d.‘ vr;»-‘l t at way lookin A ; v This is merely one room of hun- |18, 20, 34, 36, 38 ‘and 40. Size 16 ::;'nl]:nir\;IZXkl:‘ Ir‘ £ 1: i d sei Trenlctist {dreds of combinations possible | Fequires 5 yards of 40 inch material. oo i ‘ G now s o | . [this fall. If pink becomes you| No dressmaking experience is S A L e n i ! W Garenttana S AR . 1ow p ne: on reer more than blue, try . pink scheme, |Recessary to make this model with little snake. The .latter struggled ‘ 7 P 12 . epicce whe i | To be successtul, a woman's bed- |Our pattern. Yardage for every size, > sna e . 4 5 Sl e et e Lt 1 « Although a |room should be the most flatter-|and simple, exact instructions are and struggled but in v r (e snsen ful searck it was r 1" Ly Y |ing of backgrounds. She sees her- |8lven. pr_oudly Impy started home 7 ¥ ( at uld not f 1 t o 3 ® |self there first thing each mora- Send FIFTEEN CENTS (15¢) in trize ’ 3 j i 5 i fuct ‘ rLail k ing. Her entire behavior through |¢0ms carefully wrapped or stamps, o r:'. )l‘xv:w\x"\ ‘(:,\\ o ‘ ; y RIS ¥ : . t copt 2 lit X ‘ / % the day is apt to reflect just how |f{OF each pattern. Write plainly your at he 1 W e s « . | % chamingly the room set her off. No [Rame, address and style number. BI3 manded : ’ ‘ B i ; . o « 3 / |citort should seem too much to|SURE TO STATE SIZE WANTED. resh meat.” replied It < b / | |perfect the proper setting. OUR NEW FALL AND WINTER as very meat hun N Lok : g V5 BT KO0 a0 | Y e s FASHION BOOK, containing ex- seeds and mushrooms i ; g =y i TIMBER WOLE SEEN quisite models for adults and chil- well, but one needs a little me 3 2 . KE ~ 7 Hor P |dren and an excellent assortment of g0 with them once in a whilp L : e 7 | PFortiand, Ind. (UP) — A large |transfer patterns and stamped nov “Quite right. my dear,” repl 53 : : [ {8ty timber wolf was reported near | eltjes, is NOW READY. Price FIF. Mrs. Impy. “I was 1ient, hungr . : o L : | {Portland by Charles Kanter. He|TEEN CENTS. Book with patern, e i on ot Iooking for : < /|l |s1id the animal casily was identl- |25 conts. Address all mail and or. a mouse, I couldn’t ‘ind on» i |fied as it was crossing a field. Dur- |ders to New Britain Herald Pattern Bl T a0 0t aatw i | s only knew what most fing the last two wintors, several ro- | pepartment. 24 - S0 Impy and Mrs. lmpy dined on | stenographers think of their hus- |ports have been made of stock killed |New Yorkt City. o L1 Streets | pands, Lh'/\‘d stop worrying. by wolves in Jay countyf Stuffed Veal for Sunday Low i v for 2 ; L o s 4 %) ¥ [

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