New Britain Herald Newspaper, October 23, 1930, Page 14

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1930 Love’s Reawakening The Story of a Wife’s Triumph Over Jealousy By ADELE With Heart Gladdened Approval and Praise for Her Success in Staging the Party, Madge Takes Up a New Task. by Dicky’s As it he dlvined my doubt, Dicky stood looking quizzically at me with | eyes half closed in a teasing way he has, “Well! old dear,” he said at last ou sure turned more than on2 trick tonight. You slung the swell- est party that's been seen around | these here parts for yal and yars, and you perched old Phil Veritzen | upon a steel girder that'll keep him teetering for some hours to come. The tension of my nerves relaxed, for his tones were wholly approv- 1 faltered banally. lhat you struck exactly the right note when you asked him| what he would say to that offer of Cameron’s if Mary were still a po- tential Veritzen star. It stretched | him out right along the limb where | he'll have to stay unless he wants to | leap down among the clamoring heunds below.” I laughed at Dicky's collection of xed metaphors, and he frowned | with mock solemnity. | “Don’ yoh mak no game ob me, Woman!" he adjured me, and I the question which I had been wait- ing to ask him. “What do you think of that offer of Cameron “If T didn't “You mea at see old Phil's fine Ttalian hand behind it, 1'd be in- clined to consider it seriously. But anything that old lad's sponsoring for Mary, has a kink in it some- vihere, so I think we'll say ‘thumbs down, don't you?" “I've been thinking the same {king,” T told him, careful not to let him see how delighted I was at his decision. T knew that he was not s0 enthusiastic over either the Ver- | itzen stardom or the Veritzen mat- rimonial alliance for his niece, as 1 was, and did not think it wise to stress the faint hopc, almost van- ished now, I had cherished of re- conciling the elder Veritzen to his | son’s choice of brides. | Then we surely can't get into an | argument over that” Dicky said. grinning at me and then stretchin his arms over his head and yawning undisguisedly. ‘I don't know how you fecl about | " he said, “but it's the hay for | mine immediately.” < “I'm going to bed myself very shortly,” I said. “I have to jot down | a few memoranda for tomorrow shopping.” “I thought you all done.” i “I said the presenis all were| bought. But I haven't the dinner decorations completed. I've looked i over town for the things I want | =nd I can’t find them.” Dicky frowned suddenly. = “What are vou triyng to do, beat =ld Phil at his own game?” he de- )mndfld. “I don’t mind you're doing 3¢ sometime, when we're giving <crmal dinner, but Christmas tim: | *—you'd only make yourself look | Jidiculous. You can't combine 4| Aurkey dinner with orchids you aid you héd it | a | have | @ thousand pardons. might have known. led | light. GARRISON I interruped him and irately. Madge Upbraids Dicky “Look here, Dicky Graham,” 1 exclaimed in fishwife style. “Christ- mas is Junior's day. I'm planning the Christmas dinner decorations with a view to his pleasure alone— been planning them for months. If you think that I'd change the tiniest detail of them for the sake of a million old theatrical pro- ducers, —you've, you've t think coming,” Dicky finished mischievously. “That's what you' mean, isn't it, only your schoolma'ams tongue won't quite twist itself to such bar- barisms of speech? All right. I beg You win. Now kiss me nicely and I'll get out of your way But I was not quite ready to let summarily — another | nim_ go. “I haven't told you yet,” T said, “Low much it meant to me tonight to have you so wonderful about the flcwers and the Christmas dinner invitation, with Mr. Veritzen, I niean. You carried it off so beauti- fully and made it impossible for him—impossible :or him to—" My voice trailed off abashed, and cky grinned mischievously “Impossible for him to get ideas? Yes, T flatter myself he isn't cher- ishing any pleasing picture of hus- band biting finger nails in anguish- ed jealousy over him. But you play- up yourself, old dear in right pretty fashion. 1 was proud of you. Oh! we're a great pair, we are. We ought to go far. Good-night. Don’t stay up too late over your lists I was in an agony of apprehen- sin for fear he would say “Prom- ise now s he so often does, when he gives me an admonition to go to sleep and leave some bit of work until the next day. I did nst wish ak & promise to him, but I had that before me which must be done if possible before I returned to the farm and the doing of it, togeth- er with keeping Dicky in ignorance ol it, as I meant, would tax all my ingenuity as well as my physical strength. I sat down at my pleted every detail mas memoranda. Then, seeing no light through the crack of Dicky's door and knowing his propensity to drop off to sleep immediately when he is extremely fatigued, T took off my cvening slippers and padded in my stocking feet to Mary's door, beneath which 1 saw a gleam of T turned the knob softly, and hushed her startied exclamation with a finger on my lips. With the air of a conspirator — Mary loves intrigue of any sort with a schoolgirl's zest—she drew forward a chair for me and perch- ed herself on the arm of it with her r close to my lips. “What is it?” she whispered. ant to go out of the city rly in the morning, and 1 an’'t return until the afternoon,” I answered. “But I don't want anyone to know I'm gone. Can you help me manage it?” (Continued Tomorrow) Copyright, 1930, by Newspaper IPeature Inc. D desk, and com- of my Christ- Mother Brown's Great Surprise By Thornton W. Burgess The obstinate will always find It difficult to change his mind —Farmer Brown's Boy Farmer TBrown's ¥lip the Terricr of stealing Black Pussy’s milk cach night. Mother Brown was sure that Flip had noth- | ing to do with it. In si.c of the fact that Black Pussy I zrown more and more thin, Mother Brown was certain that she got her big dinner just the same. She insisted that Flip | had no chance to get it. Howeve Jarmer Brown's Boy wasn't satisfied and decided to keep an eye on Flip “I have it!” said Farmer Brown's | Boy to himself. “I'll take Flip for a | walk about the time that Black Pus- sv's dinner is put out in the shed for her.” | So that evening Farmer Brown's Hoy whistled to Bowser the Hound and Flip the Terrier and they 100k a long wall down on the Green Meadows. When they returned Farmer Brown's Boy saw at once that Black Pussy’s dishes were emp- ty. Black Pussy hersclf. however. nowhere about. Presently, she came from the barn. She rubbed up against one of Farmer Brown's Boy's legs, ar her back and purring and Meow!” It was the way she had always done when she was hungry and was teasing for something to eaf. She acted exactly g it she hadn't had mouthful Farmer Brown's Boy the house and her a saucer f Bluck Puss) Her s doing Boy suspected went into 1t seer lap it wateh hard thinkin “Black Puss that dinner tor ther did Flip nor Bow But somebody got it body of whom Black It must be bod Tt must be body through that round doo niade for Bla have A look # haps 11l learn He went over hole. hy which cnter and fuily ex In a me o1 couldn't o1 Nei Hound was some- r the It Puss tron is afraid sot outsid som something little round could nd care sround a picked i pick from the e« much e black-and Black know. all own's Boy grinned, Pus: Farmer ou black | “Nothing but a hai Has | said he, “but it tells the whole story “Nothing hut hair,” said 'but it fells the whole story To- night Black Pussy shall have her supper. I'm going to put out anoth- er supper and just close this little doorwa. So I Black I went out into the . little sliding door that F 1N he to the to prepare a good Puss) a he, Brown's Boy took then he closed over the door- Pussy used. After and be- for issy into the house d and thi ga Blac What are you Mother Brown kitchen getting something Brow s, went pantry meal doing as she demand- ed came into am this 10 Boy eat!? “Why iteful of already wn's half-starved cat” replied exclaimed that Cat has food and Boy took t merely food hed and Black Pussy Kitchen door and he acted as if took a lot of Farmer k Pussy food. But us only Mother looking to the di did come tarved vod she can eat doorw hout (Copyright ' Xt Another Surprise, 1 | af Once Overs Registered U. §. Patent Offico “Well, you see—candidly—his wife—" “You're engaged.” By C. D. Batchelor “Be quite candid. Did you leave your last employer?” e s 5 i i | e e Question on Balboa e EaWEEaE B dEE JdEE EEENE HE JEE SEEEEN H NN GEEEE N AdEE dNEEE aN wlE SEENRE 6 dl JdENND sNEE H dEEEE N B WidEEEE dEE SN WAlEEE SN SEE Wil EAEEEEEe HORIZONTAL did Balboa dis- What cover Age. Strife Container. Belief Neuter pronoun Eternity Coverin Spikelet Dog. of Good Hope Aches. Spanish To be in LRI Devoured Fuel 9. la Follette Northeast > Revolves. Kernel To slop Play on words Whole, House Either. Loop in « lasso Nominal valuc Verb Hurral! Country ocean debt. represents wha state To originatc The Granite S Sheep. Dimes. Monkey. To frequent Reverence Tip Perched. Distance Cotton machir Cut To place. Portico. Elf Neither Chum. Coin Rive Sloth canary touching Chil¢ VERTICAL To stroke Measure Portrait statue. Ventilating machin« Into. Merits, Peels. Western Salad ibicspoons spoons cold d ducumbers, cup diced celery, water, 1 diee cheese, 1 chiopped green peppers, 1- a chiopped pimicntos, 1 sult, 1-4 teaspoon paprika, ST spoons lemon juice tables \ PG | sugar, salad dressing. Menu Innn(l ‘. Seak and cold water 501 bultered green | minutes over pan of oread, « jelly, western | ing water. Cool. Cream chees coffec with a fork. Add cots, including gelatin | Pour into loaf mold which h, 4 cup gelatin Dissolve for Codfish fle beans, salad vrant peach cak Codfish Souffie, serving 6 | cup cod- | rinsed out of cold water table- | cold place 1o stiffen spoon sal 1| lettuce and serve cut ik 1 eg it 1 More salad dressing hites, b ed with ths alad i Peach Cake 4 ups boiled d), 1 cup rice, 1 Set milk Unmold on spoons butt toaspoon pa may b " v desired To soak codfish, cove colil let Drain| 2 cups teaspoons 1 add to the rice, milk, | powder, $ teaspoon vanilla salt, paprika ollks Fold in it 1 « « 1 T elt ned pe baking ased bk in slo nd pour 8 1ches 35 minu h or (lour in which baked. | Mix the t granulated gelatin, cup 1 cup white eream 1-4 cup cup teaspoon table- oons b boil- st ot ingredi- mixture. s been in n in thin slices. f baking 1 cup milk, [ cups | powder, sugar and salt. Add eggs, extracts, milk and butter. Beat 3 minutes. Pour over the peaches which have been placed in greased shallow pan. Bake 25 minutes in moderate oven. Turn out upside down and serve warm or cold. Place bits of hard sauce on top the cake just before 3 served. Getting Well By ALICE JUDSON PEAL When a child is sick his sickness is the most important thing abou him. In concentrating upon it we are likely to forget about him. At least part of the care of a sick child is mental. We must make things pleasant and comfortable for him for the sake of his illness, but for his own sake we must not make his illness so pleasant that the life of an invalid offers him too many gratifications. We must guard against making him feel that being sick is a source of importance or in any sense an achievement. We should make him more interested in getting well than in prolonging his status as a pa- tient. If there is an unusual show of af- fection, if brothers and sisters are made to give in to his whims, if he is receiving the entire attention of tho houschold, it is not to be won- | dered at that he is reluctant to re- !t'nquish privileges that under no other circumstances can be his, As he gets better we should find pleasant things he as he gets well. Our attentions and solicitude can gradually diminish as he recovers so his invalidism will become lesy and less satisfacto and the thought of being just himself again more and more alluring. It is likely that at least one rca son that some children frequently vjoy 1l health is that their moth- take such pleasure in having them sick | To those women who have littl: other outlet for their encrgy or , emotions, such a situation has suf- | ticient compensation to cause them unconsciously to cultivate invalid- lism in their children. can do as soon | (fternoon worn on Ihe model chain bow black enamel, fashion 1s the plain opera illustrated is combined with clip a pump silver ways of reminding him of all the) | a Colorful Metal By MARGERY TAYLOR Interior Decoration Editor, McCall's Magazine. Written for the Herald. Now tole is coming back. In its quaint and colorful variety it is making many delightful places for itself—and serving many useful purposes, too. The designs now being revived are so diverse because tole has been made for centuries in such different countries with different inspirations as France, Russia and England. 1t originally became popular after the French revolution, when deco- rative things had to be economical and artists had to live; and tole, made of an alloy of iron and lead or zinc, and painted, was just right for democratic luxury. French in every line are the grace- ful pieces in Louis XV style, fre- quently decorated with those deli- | cately sophisticated pastoral scenes which the painters of those times thought were back to nature and the soil. Harmony with many color schemes of today may be achieved with the foundation colors of most of these pieces—light blues, dull gold and black. S Because tole was growing up in England about the time Chippen- dale was discovering the Chinese, much of the English ware was dec- orated to look like beautiful pieces of cloisonne or enamel. Chinese black and red were the popular colors and these, too, fit in- to modern schemes. Royal blues and creams are also found in Eng- lish pieces. The most popular foundation col- ors in tole of any orgin, chartreuse, lacquer, red, black, yellow and light blue, offer all the variety which al- most any color scheme demands. ‘Particularly congenial is tole against a background of papered walls and painted woodwork. There are tole every room. Candelsticks. columnar lamps and baskets, curtain hold cases, flower holders, smoking sets. Even center lighting fixtures and wall brackets are now made in tole. For the dining room there are trays and for the bedroom dressing table sets. HOW'S yaur HEALTH v Ediedby Dr. lago Galdston Near-Sightedness Near-sightedness probably is the most important of the common structural defects affecting the eye. It it is not adequately cared for, it way lead to blindnes: In near-sightedness the eye-ball | becomes enlarged. Because of the ! distortion of its shape, the retina, which is the sensitive lining of tha eye-ball, may become detached and pertions of it destroyed with seri- ous impairment of vision or blind- ness resulting. The true cause of near-sighted- ness has not as yet been deter- mined. The child is not born near- sighted —the condition develops as the child grows older. Heredity is regarded by many as the principal cause of near-sighted- ne; but certain unhygicnic prac- tices undoubtedly aggravate myo- pia. This is particularly common in the rapidly growing school child ery child, and particularly the nera-sighted child, should prac proper hygiene of the eves. One of the most important items is the pesition of the body during close work. The child’s posture should be up- right, and his cyes the distance of one foot from the desk, book or paper on which it is working. The child should not be permitted to work in twilight, or in poor arti- ficial light. nor on the other hand, in too brilliant or direct sunlight The home work of near-sighted children should be reduced to an absolute wminimum, and the near- sighted child should have its de- fective vision corrected by glasses. It should be borne in mind that near-sightedness may give rise to a large number of constitutional symptoms, such as fatigue, head- aches, and gastric disturbances. Tomorrow—Freckles accessories urn and clock and bac boxes for hé Now Yokt deny &f Medic CARING FOR BERRIES Before placing berries within the refrigerator spread them over a flat surface so they will not crowd one another. g Some monkeys arc today. | Pufly walks by stay having a picnic and they He has a great time, he goes pale When Father Monk hang by his taill but from pink ashs him ‘o for | sk him to | Alloy \YE Has a Dozen Uses Tole is used for accessories from flower holders to lamps. Pajama Gown | | | | | Demure as ladies in the old cru- sade days—smart as women of to- day—is this pajima gown of regal black velvet over gray cerise' geor- gette, designed for the tea hour. This lovely costume, designed by Jay-Thorpe for the autumn fashion show at the Central Park Casino in MAKE 1T New York, is really a redingotd fastened over a pleated cerise geor= gette slip, with ties of georgette, & quaint standing collar and full pleated sleeve ruflfes o the geors gette. The cerise is cut in full pas juma fashion and the black velvef is undivided. plain inexpensive parchment shade in the pe you wish and glue on the labels. When perfectly dry, shellac the entire shade in neutral or any colored tone you wish, right Designed to bring college cheers | of thanks is the Christmas gift for | the school boy or g\rl of a modern- | little lamp with a “tourist” sha especially if a fow forelgn labels are | included The ticular ment picked ping at If you gathered a your lamp shade this par- | you orn tricky shade with up thing about is tha baggage labels summer while ropean or Asiatic lot you can stick full of them, in over a hodge-podge or modernistic de- | ambiti you can get sign. But a single stamp on cach|and make your own shade, and any side of the shade will suffice, how- | department store with an arts de- ever. | partment will gladly aid you in thie To undertaking. it stop- hotels. bel. If vou ary iment us, make if, get a perfectly e Herald’s Daily Pattern Service HOUSE DRESS 2043 15¢ SMART Pattern Britain Herald Pattern | By ANNE ADAMS | This good looking dress has point {ed collar, tic and pockets that make {it smart as well as becoming, and |there are two inverted pleats in the front skirt giving additional frce- {dom and grace. Sleeves may be |made long or short, whichever you prefer. Several shoulder tucks at- |ford ample bust fullness Pattern 2043 is practical and love- {1y made of percale, gingham, cotton broadcloth, rayon, dimity, ete. There are any number of delightful gayiy colored prints from which you may choose. The {rimming may also be in a contrasting color. be obtained only in sizes 18, 34 40, 42 and 44 {Size 16 requires '3 -4 yards of 3 inch material. No dressmaking neces: to make this model with {our pattern. Yardage for every size, and simple, exact instructions are given. | Send FIFTEEN,CENTS (15¢) coins carcfully wrapped, or stamps, |for ecach paitern. Write plainly your !name, address and style number. BE SURE TO STATE SIZE WANTED. SEND FOR OUR NEW FALL AND WINTER FASHION BOOX, containing exquisite models for |adults and children and an ! |lent assortment of transfer patierns nd stamped novelties. Price FIL- EN CENTS. Book with patter 25 cents. Address all mail and or- ders to New Britain Herald Pattern Department, 243 West 17th street, New York City. | New Practical made May 36, 3 CRRS resese se~e experience i3 seNelell seNeva IS in exc

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