New Britain Herald Newspaper, October 15, 1930, Page 12

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IEREEREE SR AR “ - - - Love’s Reawakening The Story of a Wife’s Triumph Over Jealousy By ADELE “Madge's Suspicions Are Vertified as Mary Tells of the Flattering The- atrical Offer Made Her by Cam- eron. My eyes had seen what Lillian's had., Indeed, I think I had seen Mary's first manoeuvre toward us. Ublquitous, irrepressible Jerry who already had caused Mp. Colin Cani- eron much annoyance by his insis- tence upon cutting in when the talkie star was enjoying a dance with the undeniable belle of the evening, tapped Mr. Cameron on the arm just as Lillian was beginning her comforting little diatribe on Phil Veritzen to me. Mary went to him eagerly, danced a step or two, then said something to him, and he released her and walked rapidly beside her until she had come to us. Then she dismissed him with a charming smile, and a promise. “I'll remember. Nobody else shall have the next dance.” “What 1 can salvage of it,”” Jerry _retorted with an engaging grin and wandered off to take Marion away from Ronald while Mary grasped my arm. “Where is Noel?” she asked My vague fears fled at the anxiety in her tone. Her vanity might have been gratified at Mr. Cameron's constant singling of her out from the other girls, her interest might have been intrigued by his patent appreciation of her gift in dancing but all of her heart, all of her anx- jety—her first thoughts—were for her betrothed husband. ~ *I sent him up to lie said. “He appeared terribly tired, Tand I feared he might overdo. Dirky or Harry will fetch him down Lefore ~supper.” “You're fatigue,” prisingl "guessed—' “Guessed what, Mary?” 1 coun- tered, all my misgivings returned. She looked from side to side, al- most I thought to myself like an animal trying to escape from a trap, and Lillian mistaking rose. down,” ] sure it's nothing but she said, and added sur- “you don't think he's “I'll just stroll out to the supper room, and see if—" she began, but Mary clutched at her arm “Oh please sit down,” treated. “I didn't mean I to see Auntie Madge alone at all You'll have to know about it, too, so I may as well tell you now. But —do you think we all might go in- to the supper room?" “I think it would be advisable if you want to talk,” Lillian advised her dryly, “for that attentive cadet -ambling in this general with Jerry chasing them. 80" We took Mary between us and moved toward the supper room. she en- anted of yours are direction So let's FARMER BROWN'S BOY SAVES THE DEER By Thornton W. Lurgess Blessed he And puts ar —Lig who brings relicf, The moment armer Brown's Boy saw the two Deer lying head tu head, unable to get to their feet, he understood exactly what had happened. He had never seen such a thing before, but he had read about it. “Locked antlers!"” exclaimed s=Farmer Rrown's Eoy. ‘“‘Iny poor __things! Just see how they roll their -eyes at me He ed around the rima d presentl gled to tleir knces r feet. But they were and so weak that they trembled And they aid roll their eyes. It scemed to Farmer Lrown's Boy as those eyes were simplv begging him to do something. He waste any time. He turned on his heel and began to hurry away. Peter Rabbit, who had been peep- ing out and watching hopefully, was appointed. Farmer Brown's I'oy had been there and had done " nothing. “I told you he couldn't my Jay. zorie to g do any- some cne to help him,” to appear hop “1 do Jay, ju less, away a DBrown's Boy : back home. esently thing in his . Sammy Jd waited on Luck ing back!" “What did ter joyfully . Farmer he looked at th and patted L er mind, old won't be lo out of your wrefully studied iich are what r He studicd t locked orns. Mr. Cameron and | didn't | GARRISON three discomfited young men stop- |ping abrutly in the middle of the | floor and pretending that they had |urgent business together. | “It's like this,” Mary began when | we were safely in the supper room, | with only Purnell, too far away to | hear us, in evidence. “You know | Noel and I can wait until the hot | place freezes over before his father | will let up on us.” | “We"ll start from that premise, | Mary,” I told her smiling. ""Whether |it's true or not, we can determine later.” She wheeled on me, her eyes sud- | denly alight. i Colin Cameron's Offer “What do you mean?” she de- manded. ‘Whether it's true or not.’ | Has he—" —she stopped abruptly,; raising flimsy a | while I scored muyself for |any hope of hers on so | with me. “No, he has taken nothing back,” I said truthfully, “but go on.” “And you know it's going to be quite some time—quite—some—time —before Noel's able to earn any- thing much, so it's up to the other half of the sketch to get busy? Are you with me?"” “It depends altogether upon what vou ‘get busy' on,” I told her, and Lillian nodded an assent. “I thought you'd say that,” Mary said, despondently, then threw up her head deflantly. “But this chance isn't like that other time—that cabaret business.” e stopped. averting her eyes 1 T knew that the memory of that hideous experience was gripping her. Lillian spoke quickly. ever mind anything dead and gone. Tell us what this chance is. mething Cameron's proposing. I warrant.” Yes,” Mary returned. “He says, think of it, that there is a part in his next talkie—one they are plan- ning now—for me. 1 don’t have to come on very often, and T don't have to say much, but I have one dance with him, and he says that will be enough to put me across. Did you ever hear anything so glorious “It's splendid, of course. child,” I aid, trying to make my voice hearty for I knew the surest way of arousing Mary's enthusiasm for the plan would be to oppose her without reason. “What did you tell nim?” | “Why—why—T said I'd love to do it, but that I'd have to talk it over with my people first.”" “And by your people, you meant,” “Why—vyou and Uncle Dicky, and, her voice trailed off uncomfortably. | “Not Noel?” I asked quietly. Continued Tomorrow Copyright, 1930, by Newspaper Fea- ture Service, Inc. | | iy Farmer Brown's ached with p at them Boy's heart fairly he looked he cut through the other ad cut at just the right places. Lightfoot, some- what weakly tried to toss his head, found to his surprise that he could | do it. He was free! Farmer Brown's | Boy stepped back. After a moment or two Lightfoot scrambled to his feet. So did the other Deer. For a moment or two both acted as if they didn’t know what to do. They acted as if they couldn't be- lieve that they were free. Lightfoot iook his head, with its crown of other Deer shook part of his ant He seenied to sense ing aside, he slowly the direction Great Mountain, as if in use he no longer had his 1 of antlers. Light- foot took a step forward and blew faint challenge. But there was no left in either Lightfoot e other. The stranger stopped e Laughing Brook and drank and drank; and Light- him re ies were Then 1 Lightfoot turned ©tfoot, who was They didn't even r Brown's Boy who but o lers remained s head, ot the foot followed drank SIS, 1 Burgess) story: “The Stranger By Mrs, Ves! Fricassce \lexander George | toundation as Philip Veritzen's talk N Once Overs Registered U . Patent Office By C. D. Batchelor (N “Anyway, Ann, that bird and me started with the same chassis.” Long_ To restore to life. Billow, Foray Argument More raw. Dry. Nejther. Auction. To yield. Scarf, Measures, To re-rent Portrait statuc Corded cloth. Wild duck Small shark. Before. Tense. Filled with slews Wakes. Sketched. War flyers Divided into small ¢ Vertical ’ Raging o elude To harden nd note in. Motive. Pertaining to tides, | Border Words Existed. Came in. Larva of the stone fly Consequences. Greaser. Frigid. Music drama. More recent. Armistice. Relieved. Monkey Female sheep. Grain, Dye. Luncheon Health Salad Bread Chocolate Cookies Dinner Veal Fricassee Bread Pear Salad Cantaloupe Health Salad e with raw dded | diced carro | table | | spoon’ salt. 1-4 teaspoon 11-3 cup salad dressing | Mix and chin |on lettuce. Veal Fricassee chopped salt, 4 poons {sCut | peppers green tablespoons by flour, 1 1 veal into 1 celery peapers. Peach Jam Boiled Rice | hot, Buttered Spinach Grape Jelly Coffee vege cabbage, 1-2 cup diced celery, poons chopped green peppers, | canned pears. | 1 tablespoon chopped pimientos, 1 | tablespoon chopped onions, 1-2 ingredients. 2 pounds veal (cheap cut). 6 cups | water, 1-2 cup diced celery, 2 table- spoons chopped onions, 2 tablespoons ter, ips milk | cubes onions and slowly until well Tea | stock. serving platter. boiled rice. | parsiey. for soup. Pear Salad (I’sing canned pears) ge lemon flavored gelatin Jles) mixture, 1-2 cup canned pear juict cups boiling water, 2 tablespoons lemon juice, 6 1 pack 1 cup | boiling, 1 1 tea- paprika, | colved. Cool. | ents. Pour in squares and Top with salad dressing. teaspoon | 4 table- | Add green browned, meat and cook until it has browned a little. Add milk and 1 1-2 cups of Cook 3 minutes. Pour Surround Garnish with The remaining stock can be used Pour pear juice and water | gelatin mixture and stir until dis- Add rest of ingredi- q into mold and Serve | cold place to stitfen. Unmold. Cut serve on lettuce, Talks O 55, Increased knowledge of children and swift cumulative changes in the environment have compelled them to reckon with factors of which their own elders were happily obliv- ious. Some parents have met the new situation by refusing to see it. They rely upon their authority. They hedge their children about with | EW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER_ 15, 1930. rules and prohibitions. They insist upon obedience for obedience's sake. Others, determined that their children shal proft by the errors of their own childhood, assert no authority at all. Therr children will have a harder row to hoe than those who are being subjected to the old cast iron meth- ods. They are being given no oppor- tunity to learn the self control, con- sideration for others and perserver- ance in the face of obstacles. There is of course of golden mean. Authority has a place in child training today, s it has always had. Its influence is necessary to | guarantee to the young child health |ana safety, a sense of security and |a routine that enables him to live with a minimum of wasted energy |and friction with his environment. | 1t is unfair to deprive a child of these helps in the difficult business of growng up in a complicated world. Parental authority takes the place of the judgment whick the child lacks. Naturally the occasions when we may with safety leave a child to exercise his own discretion in- crease as his mind develops. lescence it should be safe ta trust him to make all but the most far- rcaching and irrevocable decisions. A NOVEL SANDWICH For. an unusual sandwich, mix lcreamed butter and horseradish |and spread on a round slice of |bread, topping the sandwich with cream cheese and a slice of pimen- |to olive. This is the story of Puffy the Pig big; Who leaves his pen on a Saturday morn To sce the world into which he was born. (Copyright, 1930) By the time he has reached ado- | ‘Who's not very small and not very | HOW' yaur HEALTH v for Blasdby & Now Yok Dr. lago Galdstow * ~ Acadeiny of Madicine Nursing There is a statue at Waterloo Place in London of a gentle, sad- eyed woman in mid-Victorian garb, bearing a symbolic lamp in her right hand, while with the left, she holds her trailing skirt. It is the statue of Florence Night- ingale, heroine of ‘the Crimean war, who brought comfort and solace to soldiers of the battlefield and who later extended her labors to assuage the sorrow and suffer- ing of sick mankind in peaceful times. Florence Nightingale, whose in- terest in nursing was first aroused by the terrible loss of iife which | Herald’s Daily MAKE THIS MODEL AT HOME Simple and Becoming Pattern 2041 i Herald 15c Practical Pattern BY ANNE ADAMS A practical dress for house or sports crosses its bodice in coat fashion and creates fullness in its skirt with front pleats. The short, | kimono sleeves are comfortable and | serviceable while the attractive col- lar with pointed reveres Is a de- lightful finish to the neck. Pattern 2041 makes up smartly in printed percale, cotton broadcloth, gingham, dimity, rayon, etc. Light grounds with gayly colored designs, or dark grounds printed with white figures are lovely. May be obtained only in sizes 16, 18, 20, 34, 36, 38, 40, 42 and 44. Size 16 requires 3 yards of 36-inch matertal. No dressmaking experifhce is nec- essary to make this model with our pattern. Yardage for every size, and simple, exact instructions are given. Send FIFTEEN CENTS (15c) in | coins carefully wrapped, or stamps, | for cach pattern. Write plainly your name, address and style number. BE SURE TO STATE SIZE WANTED. SEND FOR OUR NEW FALL AND WINTER FASHION BOOK, containing exquisite models for adults and children and an excel- lent assortment of transfer patterns and stamped novelties. Price FIF- TEEN CENTS. Book with pattern, 25 cents. Address all mail and ord- ers to Herald Pattern Department, 243 West 17th Street, New York i] City. British soldie: uffered during the Crimean war, set herself a like task ot developing nursing for hos- pitals and homes. As part of her crusade, rhe wrote a popular book of instruction on home nursing. So great was the need for such a work that 15,000 copies were sold within a month and by 1860, the booklet was re- printed and translated into several languages. The art of nursing since the days of Florence Nightingale's “Notes on Nursing” has made great prog- ress, but one main idea which she emphasized therein holds as valid today as ever before. This is the idea that women are, and probably will remain, the nurses of the world—that few if any women escape the responsibil- ity of the care of some sick oOr helpless one, and that in conse- quence, it should be part of every woman's training: to have as much of a qnowledge of nursing as will enable her to take care of those who, in the home or elsewhere, “naturally” look to her for care and protection. Tomorrow—The Tuberculosis Germy Pattern Service The smart careerist budgets and black suede opera pumps. BY JULIA BLANSHARD Newark, N. J., Oct. 15— should budget for appropriaten quite as much as for costs, when you are working out vour clothes expenditures for this winter in scientific manner. Clothes are cheaper and more di- versified in styling. And at the same time, there is mium put on individual rrivate sceretary, b Iibrarian, teacher or look the part quite « should, make no mistake in according to an interesting show held by L. pany's. There are certain you must recognize you are a school teache love color, Black is depreszing. Chil- dren appreciate change. Since you Whether 3 executive considerations groominrg, good taste and prettiness, you should do your olutely mcticulous at all times, r cithes that can be cleaned ¢ and a little h to them. Rust reds, lively blues, purply tones, browns that liven your own yropriately garbed in a Fren: hat is of felt. The librarian or school tcac! Fou | a|an executive spending the a greater pre- | if, for instance, | Children | are, in away, the criterion of good utmost to be | of the type that have | her cl 1 blue | the class room, ceat suce you can buy and several dresses, and ssfull ! Impressiveness Via Black | 1If. one the other hand you are | day at | your desk, black is one of the best bets you can buy. Lines should be ciassic, dignified, a trifle formal to heighten your authority. The addi- tion of an unusual jewelry ensem- ble, one that the clerks will not see fit to copy, may be of far more personality-value to you than all kinds of lingerie touches, though these are one way to achieve var- icty. Your hat | vour frock. Always have a hat to match each costume, whether black or colored. If you are a stylist or if you are ir a responsible position, selling, promoting, or in charge of groups in more stores than one, so that you must look well on the street and in the office, you must your entire ensemble, not frock. Black, an one very just your usual dress, one with la white velvet or iny touch, is excellent. hing has more chic Getting a good salary you can —and consider | Make a Business of Dressing Smartly ! (Costumes from L. Bamberger, Newark, N. J.) | tance. For how can you | others with your inate good taste | that prompts you in your profession | if you do not, in your own appear- |ance, impress them? | Stenographers, office workers, li- brarians and other workers who |are one in a group, get compara- |tively small salaries and yet want | promotion, must realize that ap- pearance is a mighty blg factor. | Look just a iittle neater, a little | more attractive than the others and | get your work done well and see if | you don’t get promoted just a little | quicker than the girls who over- is as important as|dress or are sloppy and careless in | their appearance. | Jersey frocks, with removable | collars, cutts, belts and other white 'or colorful touches are the frocks | for you to buy. Get your | coat first, either a meutral | that goes well with many, a brown | that tones in with all tones of brown, rust, green and beige, or a black coat that will look well with | violet blues, with bright reds, or I black and white or black and col- | ored figured materials. | Be in the Matching Mode | Jumper frocks are good for winter color | you, | es this winter for their suitability to her job. Left to right: The secretary looks both charming " 1) repe frock made with peplum skirt and white pique touches that can be removed for launderi; Dignified and smart is the executive when garbed in a chic flat crepe frock in black, with an unusual belt and necklace of silver. Her bhnci- will look the pact in a pleasing rust red crepe frock, made with fine seaming and pleated skirt and a gay touch of beige and rust red leather flowers on one shoulder. The stylst, or anyone in a position that is built around her cwn good taste should wear clothes with an air. A black flat crepe freck with a white velvet bow at one corner of the neckline and corresponding whit touches at the top of the cuffs is an excellent choice for her. Her little bicorn black velvet hat is perfect with the costume, & 1 as are formal impress| choose a couple of colors and stick to them so that things match than to, have a wide variely of frocks, with your shoes, hats, gloves ang cecats matching none of them any, too well. i For all business or professional girls one fundamental guide to thiy appropriateness budget is sound Buy your coat first and be very sureq when you gelect its color and styld that it will suit your type and col- oring enoush so that all your dresses will blend. One dark or bright hat and one of ncutral tone, belge perhaps, gives vou a suitable change of headgear. Black shoes of brown are the most satisfactory, un- less you can have colored ones for all your different dresses—and have them match. Your stockings this fall are darker than summer's and ' should match up with your gloves. Your purse may match your shoes, vour hat, your suit or your hosicry and gloves. : It doesn’t sound so hard to cress appropriately, with a few rules to g0 by. It i3 a matter, in the last analysls, of knowing your own type and recognlzing what sort of clothes and salt. Cook slowly in | d paret‘is o {covered pan until meat is very ten- led Cereal and 'der. It will take about 1 hour. Re-| H | saw one of those Dreakiast of the antlers o* e Juice, ( who had chal- 'Read rn There was silence I er Brown's Doy that antler wa coloring, and all the wine color: rho\:ld—nflnrd to have your clothes|i* you are quite young and look |best express your position in life, are good choices. Figured frocks |cleaned offen enough to keep them |well in this type of dress. Two-piece [The trouble you take to gct a per- are tired of much sooner than plain |spotless. Your hat, your shoes, |little jersey suits or tweed dresses |fect winter wardrobe is likely fo re. colors, a good point to remember. |gloves, purse, hosiery and even your |that have modest but colorful littlc | pay you, not alone in satistaction, but perhaps in a raise! g Since, you never wear your coat in "handkerchief is of utmost impor-'designs are all good. It is better to The Golden Mean ) move any skin or hones from meat. | By Alice Judson Peals Toast |Reserve stoc! | Never were parents less sure of Melt butter agd add flour. Cook themselves than today. 5

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