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TREARYIrERG L TREEMREL ;. BT TR r s o TEEETRR R Love’s Reawakening The Story of a Wife’s Triumph Over Jealousy By ADELE The Prospect of Having Phil Verit- zen — and His “Schemes” —as a Christmas Dinner Guest Is the “Last Straw” to Madge At Lilllan's comment that when- -ever she heard Philip Veritzen talk- | ing to me she wanted to lay back her ears and bleat I felt even my neck grow crimson, for I had hoped mo one else had noticed the effu- siveness of my employer's manner | _whenever he spoke to me. Even her | assertion that she thought I not only would be able to win him over to the cause of Neel and Mary, but would also be able to “tame him” s0 he wouldn't be ‘“everlastingly | ‘bothering” me brought me no com- | fort. Another Formidable Problem But she regally ignored not only my flaming face, but my frantic protest of “Lillian, don't say such | things.” “Ot course, the Dicky-bird's reac- | tions are going to be the only prob- | lem,” she swept on, as if I had not | ‘spoken, and I mentally repeated a sardonic “Only!” “But that cant bo helped, and—you never can teul | — he may be as docile as a little | cherub with wings. Look at the| way he's acted tonight. Would any- | body ever believe that he could be as swell as all that? I'll bet you've tried some new recipe on him. But | you needn’t tell me what it was. | Just use it again when needed. Po- | lice! Look at that clock! I didn't realize wed been talking so ong. | And I haven't asked you the other | halt of what I came in to spill, al- though primarily I wanted to put | you wise about Phil and the Christ- | mas dinner invitation before he sprang something on you unaware. But the other will keep. Come with | me before they think the official | chaperons have gone back on their Job. She turned abruptly amd led the way back to the ballroom. I fol- lowed her, feeling much as if I were a puppet with my movements the result of mechanically pulled wires T wag so dazed by the prospect her | words had thrust upon me that for the moment I could think of noth-| ing ciearly. | Philip Veritzen a guest at our| Christmas dinner, invited into the .intimacy of that time! It would be | ‘bad enough if there was no other | complication, for he was a stranger, | and would be the odd one who would have to be considered. But when 1 considered the persecution to which he had subjected his son and Mary, when I visualized the| possible schemes he might even now | be concocting against them, with perhaps my home as the place of thefr fruition, and when I, above |#ancing | sensing that the GARRISON my employer, I felt as if this last cemplication of my Christmas prob- lem was the straw too much upon my laden back. A Test ot Noel's Love 1 slipped into the chair beside Lillian, hoping that no one would ask me to dance. Mr. Veritzen was with Mrs. Brixton and Dicky with Edith. So numbed was I by the news Lillian had given me that even the sight of Edith smil- ing up into Dicky’s eyes did not stir me to resentment. There was no older man free save Charles Owen, and I did not think he would ask me to dance, for I never had at- tempted to conceal my antipathy to him. But even as I settled back into my chair Noel crossed to me from the stag line and bowed with the almost foreign grace which is his. I rose and danced with him, troubled boy, for his face reflected his disquiet, want- ed to falk rather than dance. And we had made but a few turns when he broke out impetuously, but in a low voice: “Did you see that -— that dance, Mrs. Graham?” “You mean that wonderful exhi- bition Mary and young Mr. Cam- eron were giving?" I asked. “Wasn't marvelous, and weren't you proud Mary?” He was too surprised for speech, but his eyes looked his astonish- ment. He had expected disapproval, I knew. “Do you mean that you —that you——" he stammered. “Approve of Mary's dancing those steps with Mr. Cameron?” I finish- §d. “Why, of course I do. What Farm is there in it?” 1 felt somewhat as if, in Dicky's kdlfln(‘r‘. I had “hit him below the " But I knew that for Mary's ke, as well as for his own I must give him no hint that my own chol- er had risen at the sight of that dance, beautiful though it had Leen, “I don't, suppose there harm in it,” he said slowly, didn’t think Mary would——' “Look here, Noel,” 1 said—he had guidéd me into a corner of the room where we were out of earshot of the others—‘“there are several things you will have to face with Mary.” T racked my brain to re- member what Dicky had aid about his niece. “One is that dancing is the breath of life to her, and ths other is that she loves the limelight. as’do almost all theatrical people. 1¢ you love her you must recognize and accept those two things.” (Continued Tamorrow) is any “but 1 Copyright, 1930, by Newspaper Feature Service, Inc. all, remembered Dicky's jealousy of | THE BATTLE THAT DIDN'T END | By Thornton W. Burgess If‘strength doth youth take boastful pride, And scorns to run away or hide. —Old Mother Nature. Never had these been such a| battle in the Green Forest as thu battle between Lightfoot the Deer| and the strange Deer who had sud- | denly appeared. I'or a time they| “would separate every once‘in a while for a moment's rest; then come to- gether again, rising on their hind | feet to strike with their fore feet;| and then, head to head, pushing| with all their might. The ground | all about was trampled up. Now | and then one would have a small | advantage, but never for long. In strength they seemed to be about equal. Lightfoot was thé older. He had the experience, but the stranger | had the advantage of vouth. So, after all, they were quite equally matched. { All the little people of the Green “Forest who could get there were present looking on. Somehow, the news had spread. As you know, all the Squirrel cousins were present. They were all in the trees, even | Striped Chipmunk and Impy the black Chipmunk. Sammy Jay and _Blacky the Crow were present al moet from the start. Other feather. ed folk came. Unc’ Billy Possum, | Bobby Coon, Billy Mink from the Laughing Brook, which was not far | away; Reddy Fox, Mrs. Reddy, Old | Man Coyote, Buster Bear, even| Yowler the Bobeat, all were look- ing on. No one made a sou y only sounds were the snorts two fighters and the clash of antlers and the stamping of thei feet. It was shortly after jolly, round, red Mr. Sun began his daily climb -up Into the blue, blue sky that the battle started. When he was right overhead, looking down, they were still there, head to head, pushi and shoving. Never had a battle been known to last so long. It was Reddy Fox who first noticed some- thing odd on the part of the two fighters. “Do you notice that back off any more?” sail he to Mrs, Reddy. “When they stop to rest they Keep head to head. I won- | der if each is afraid that the other | may run away. See, they've stopped | to rest now! Sure enough, the two were standing still head to head and nose to nose. They were pant- ing for breath. It was plain to see that both were tired. They very tired. ther one seemed be hurt much. There w tnarks of sharp hort Swas hurt badly. al ey stood there ds down “head to forehead. Then once more began to stranger backed a little he set his legs and and pushed, and Lightfoot went back a little way. Both slipped down to| they don't fighters | werd to re but e 1 “Do you notice that they don't back off any more?” said he to Mrs, Reddy their knees and continued to push. It was after noon. One by one the onlookers slipped away to get omething to One by one they returned to find the two fighters still at it. It was growing late. Jolly, round, red Mr. Sun was close to the Purple Hills, behind which he would go to bed. The Black Shadows crept out across the Green Meadows and into the Green For- est. They found the two fighters still standing head to head, now aed then pushing a little, but for he most part standing there, tired out, yet neither seeming willing to quit. Pretty Mrs. Lightfoot was still looking on, but there was a queer| expression on her face. It was as if there were something she did 'not understand. The little people of parted for their homes people of places. sion of all. Lightfoot and the equally handsome strange Deer had fought all day and it looked as v intended to fight all night. (Cop 1930, T. W. Burgess) The next : “Sammy Jay Dis- covers the Tr | da the took de- little their | the | Menus (v tAeD y By Mrs. Alexander George Stuffed Eggs for Luncheon Breakfast — Cantaloupe, wheat creal and cres buttered toast, coffee. Luncheon-—St tuce, salad dre wiches, tea Dinner — Escallopec buttered beets Iy, head lettuce essing, peach coffee ffed eggs on let- ing, nut bread sand- bread and betty, hard | Stuffed Eggs 6 hard cooked eggs, spoons chopped celery, spoons chopped left-over 3 table- 4 tabl. cooked NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1930. Once Overs Question on Columbus P —— HORIZONTAL Columbus reached 2 the Flower part. Platform. Ability. Farewell! Truthful. Road. Pronoun, Wasp. Taro paste. To say again Cogwheel. Wan. To bang. To labor. Human. Ancient. Depended. Toward. Italian river. One fastidious of his speech. To sin. To cease, Region. Horn instrument. Largest city in Australia. VERTICAL Where is “Craters Moon” park? Hub, To perish. Exists. Place of business. Iey rain, Examination. Insect. Mountain. The lowest point. Where is the U. S. Academy? To expect. To, wander about. Nether world. To chime. Foray. Pleased. Sport. Let it stand. Theme. Worth. Scratches. To pillage. Wile Maple. Sty. Eagle. Doctor. Paid publicity. Naval of 2 tablespoons finely chopped |teaspoon cinnamon, 1.8 gr:en peppers, 1 teaspoon chopped fsalt, 1 teaspoon vanilla, 1 onion, 1-8 teaspoon salt, 1-4.tea- |gr, melted, 1 c spoon paprika, 1 tablespoon salad | i dressing. 3 tered b Cut YR minute: celer meat, teaspoon cup but- p water, ingredients. kiug dish. n slow Pour Cover oven. into bu ggs In halves, cros and mash egg yoll meat, seasonings ing and mix with fork. egg ceses, press the gether, leaving band of that it can be seen. lettuce and dressing. Chopped ham, pork makes very tasty fillings. Nut Bread (Always popular for sandwiches) | 2 cups flour, 1 1-2 \cupg graham oons baking pow- der, 1 teaspoon salt, 1 cup ugar, 1 cup nuts, chopped, 1 egg, 1 2-3 milk Mix ingredients. greased bread pans ‘small ones) or arge pan. Let stand 15 min- utes. Bake 1 hour in slow oven. Peach Betty 4 cups sliced peaches. soft bread crumbs, 2-3 cup sugar, 1| ways. Add ad dress- Refill the| Afternoon Party Refreshments halves to-| Chicken salad, cheesed filling 30 | pineapple sherbet, .chocolate Chill, serve on |coffee. surround with salad | Metal door hinges should washed frequently in warm soap beef |suds and when wiped dry the hinges should be rubbed with oil o prevent rusting. wafer calke, be or RIAL CITY his city last degree Los Angeles. Pour into engine manufacturers, 2 200 licensed women pfots o | the country reside here, therelare 2 1 cups | aviation schools in operation with an attendance of 1,500, and 49 air dealers sell planes in the county, DESTRUCTIVENESS By Alice Judson Peale are in a certain naturally destructive, They 1i! to manipulate, to pull, twist, tear, throw and hit. i In the ordinary home environ- \ment these impulses inevitably re- | sult in a good deal of destruction. | For this reason a child should | |have both an indoor and outdoor play space, and materials to work on which give him an outlet | tor what adults call destructiveness without causing damage and teach- ing him a disregard for property. To this end he should be fur- nished with a good set of floor blocks for use in his nursery and {large hollow blocks and boxes for {outdoor play. With these he builds | !and knocks down and builds agaln. | He should have a sand box in which | he makes all sorts of things only %o | destroy them with a large sweep of | the arm when he is tired of therf. For rainy days, mother may have on hand special boxes of paper and | 0ld magazines and old laundry car- | tons which are given to him with the express understanding that he may cut and ‘tear them just as he pleases. Nests of boxes are also good. The child takes them apart, piles them up in order, knocks them down and puts them back in place again. simple picture puzzles are s fying in much the same wa) ‘When mother has time for super- vision a two vear old can have a fine time crushing a box of gravel with a hammer. About a year later he will enjoy | sawing wood to pieces. Still later on, the same impulse which made him delight simply in sawing and pounding and seeing things broken will make him want to build and construct. All children | sense tis- HAVE YOU | | You can make & serviceable and pretty cover for inexpensive paper back books by using. cardboard backers and some decorative paper. Cut the backers to fit the book from cardboard the thickness of that that comes home from the laundry in men's shirts. Then take a sheet of décorative or gift pap colorful design and fold it n about the outgide of the hoo turning the edges back inside a pasting them Not only will these tect your paper boo! {them ornamental for ly covers pro- they makz2 your book ‘Embroidery returns to the scene o ment of the cut. BY JEAX PATOU Paris, Oct. 9—In the mode, which is a living thing and one subject to | continual change, the too regular | use of any one decorative element is certain to cause a sense of lassi- | tude and monotony. | No more striking example could be'given than in the use of em- brodery. After years of popularity deemed excessive by any style cre- ator, it disappeared over night. The fate that awaited the wholesale use of embroidery was obvious. It had served its purpose in the days of standardized_cclothes, but with French couture restored to its for- mer supremacy, embroidery is occu- pying its proper bug much more humble place. Embroidery’s Return There is a small number of em- broidered models to be seen in my present colléction. It is a charm- ing and artistic decoration, and these few gowns must not be in- <erpreted as an attémpt on my part to gencralize this form of trimming. I give it exactly the importance it should have today in any repre- sentative collection. 2 There has been no hesitation at all in the use I have made of em- broidery. - One of the models has a tunic almost entirely covered with | this work. But it must be clearly understood that a perfect cut alone | can give a gown its line, its char- acter and its distipction—embroid- ery merely adds#he decoratlve and oftentimes sumptuous note to the whole. In the case of very formal evening models, I have had recourse to it where the use pf fur was im-| possible. | No Style Conflict In no creation should embroid-| ery, however, be allowed to interfere | or destroy its three principles—line, cut and character. To this end, the design and style of the work should be most carefull studied. Where em- | broidery is used to emphasize a draped effect or any other movi ment, the result is eminently suc- cessful. Simple, designs are the bes Present styles are devoid of all ec-| | centricity, the apparently unimport-| ant detail is considered. Thesc fac-| tors call for great discretion in re- | gard to any trimming and especially | to embroidery, from which all glit- tering must be banned. T have used a good deal of silver on white, gold and yellow for for- mal gowns and favor this following the color of the dress in every in- stance, both for day and cvening clothes. HOW'S jo HEALTH fo & New York Academy of Medicing v Edicedby Dr. lago Galdston t And The Child 'To reason by analogy is a fasci- nating though hazardous practic Yet within limits the “picture idea” expressed Dby the unalogy often helps to make a complidated matter easy to understand. The "human body, for example, has been frequently compared to a machine. The fact Is that there is no sin- gle machine that even remotely ap- proximates the human body. In many respects the human body i3 a machine, and that many of its functions and processes ‘are ren- dered more comprehensible when thought of in terms parallel to the workings of a man-made machine. ‘Where the human machine dif- fers most radically from all others is in its capacity to grow and to repair its “wear and tear.” This phase of human life and function is most intense in the early years of life, and it is during this period that thought and at- tention should most urgently be given to the matter of growth and recreation. In children adequate growth fis promoted chiefly through the agen- cies of good food and rest. Food supplies the raw material out of which energy and building substances are abstracted by the body. But if a disproportlionat shelves or library table. amount of the food ingested is ex- georgette tunic blouse almost entirely embroidered in pearls; evening ensemble (center) ‘shows the same embroidery as the dress, emphasizing the downward Another formal ensemble (right)from Patou reveals a modernizad version of the use f chic via Paris. On a white satin of embroidery as a t¥imming; the pattern is carried out in tubes and pailletes in silver and er. bined with very pale gold and copper thteads on dead white crepe Bilitis. note the long sleeves. w evening skirt (left) Patdu places a The cape of an move- tal come pended in movement and is used for epergy purposes, what remains may "not be adequate for optimal growth. Time also enters into this pic- ture, for growth cannot be rushed. Time taken from rest and sleep is time taken from growth. Every parent should learn what is the normal rest schedule for their chil- dren and insist upon close adher- ence to this schedule. » SAFETY INCREASES London—Flying in England to- day is about four times as safe as |1t was five years ago, according to | figures on British air fatdlities, Be- tween 1925 and 1929, 1,279,000 miles were flown {n this country for every accident involving death or | injury to the occupants of a plane. the previous five accident to every The figure for yoars was one 357,000 miles. A Co-Ed At 13 Miss Carol Bryan of Ensign, Kan., is believed to be the youngest col- |lcge girl in the country. Only 13, she has enrolled at the University of Wichita, taking‘a course in journal- ism. ———e Herald’s MAKE THIS MODEL AT HOME « Bloomer Dress—Appliques Pattern 2040 Transfer 701 Herald 15c Practical Pattern by Anne Adams Just as casy to make as it isMove- ly to wear, this bloomer frock in cotorful cotton print. The deep col- lar is extremely becoming, and the scalloped side trimming adds a chic touch. Sleeves may be cut long or short, but the long ones sketched are | quite new gathered into cuff bands, Pattern 2040 may be obtained only in sizes 4, 6, 8 and 10. Size 4 re- quires 23 yards of 36 inch material. Trausfer Pattern 701 consists of 10 dog motifs in three different po- sitions. They are the vogue appli- qued on pillow tops. May also be used for nursery sets. Price Tiftcen Cents. No dressmaking experience is necessary to make this model with our pattern. Yardage for every size, and simple, exact instructions are given. Send FIFTEEN CENTS (15¢) in coing carefully wrapped, or stamps, for each pattern. Write plainly your name, address and style num- ber. BE SURE TO STATE SIZE | WANTED. | D FOR OUR NEW FALL AND WINTER ASHION BOOK, containing exquisite models for lults and chikdren and an excellent sortment of transfer patter: stamped novelties. Price IIF | CENTS. Book with pattern, 25 cent. |Address all mail and orders to |Herald Pattern Department, 243 ‘West 17th street, New York City. Fashion Plaque The sole trimming of a white moire | @vening gown consists of two knots of two tones of green velvet ribbon ‘nm arbitrarily to the shoulder strap, | FLAPPER FANNY SAYS Some girls say: “If the shoe fits, take it off and get one smaller.” Daily Pattern Servicel ‘