New Britain Herald Newspaper, March 18, 1930, Page 16

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, T ’SDAY, MARCH 18, 1930. The Story of a Wife’s Triumph Over Jealousy By ADELE TRobert Holds Up Bravely as Madge | Informs Him of Lillian’s Presenc Robert Savarin's nurse, a pleas- ant, capable-Jooking woman of mil- dle age, was waiting for me at th door of his room. “I do not think he will need much preparation, for — your friend,” sl said. “He expects something or someone very eagerly. I can tell that.” She ushered me into the room where propped against his pilloss Robert Savarin, reclined, smiling at me. It was a gallant little smilc knightly in its effort to banish th sadness of this meeting, and I not.d that his artist's preceptions had banished the white pillows and cov- | erings of the ordinary sick bed and | substituted soft silken-covered on-s of old gold shot with crimson. I dressing gown was of sar colors, and the result justified | forethought. There was nothing rifying in his appearance, though close look showed me that he wis = much worn and emaciated. But his pallor was not only mitigated b; - color surrounding him, but by the | lush of excitement on his cheeks, | here was nothing about him to| repel even momentarily the woman | whom he so loved, and T menta.ly * saluted the indomitable chivalrous . spirit which had thus prepared for | her visit. “Ah! Margaret!” he said—he had used father’s name for me i stead of the shorter “Madge '—"it s0 good of you to come”—he broke “oft the perfunctory words wit gasping question. “Lillian—where The nurse moved quickly past me, and put her fingers upon 1 " pulse. . “Just a second, and she shall teii » vou,” she said soothingly, and he submitted docilely to her touch. The next instant sh id down his hari - and turned to me “Tell him anything he wishes to know,” she said. “I shall be just outside the door, but I shall not n unless you call me. I do not vou will need me, however. He is a very good boy tonight, with good strong pulses. But you must stay only five minute She smiled indulgently at h patient in the bedside manner of all | good nurses, and went swifth nojselessly, gut of the room, closing the door behind her. And I answei- ed the question which Robert Sav|® arin had just uttered, and whicn | was still in his fevered brilliant eyes. | “Lillian is here with me,” T said, | watching him narrowly. * ES GARRISON downstairs. She came s she received your let He closed his eyes for a nd there was something in hi which made me think 1 offering up a little prayer of tl giving for the boon he had receive Then he opened them and look: ) at me bending anxiously abo. hin v al illia he 1 ance—of—anyone—or T put my hands firn beginning to twist tremulousl Tobert's Sceret Underwood was T willing that she should comic deed aided toid him sing the m *he I also omitted to Harry had accompanied Catskills, But 1 saw that he pa in which a reference fo | Lillian’s husband 1 t brit He | ad but two thought he hesitat- | ed before the gates of eternity, th wish to s s beloved once 1m0 and the desire to shicld her pain unpleasantne . 1 wa it look he spoke, The upon misunde am not thin} her divine pit - face : tryin, hand from hi ed it tenacion “Not yet call Lillian imme o out explosivel o, I can't tell my money whicl Listen while 1 t I have done. It won't take ite or two, and someonc r must know about i (Continued Tomorrow) Copyright S GAVE OLT | By Thornton W. Burgess Your limitations are defined, So always keep the fact in min —Dipper the Grebe Dipper the Grebe had spent the winter as far north as he could find open water all the time. Grebes arc | birds who spend their whole lives on and in the water. They are wonderful | livers. In this respect they are like Dippy the Loon. Their legs are very short and are at the very ends of | their bodies, g0 that when they stand | up they stand almost straight. Their feet are not webbed like the feet of the ducks and the geese and the | swans. However, along the inside of each toe are lobes or flaps of skin which act as webs. S8 they are won- derful swimmers. Now the wings of Dipper the | Grebe are narrow. He can move | them very swiftly, which means that he can fly very fast. But it takes him some time to get up in the air. That is, he has to get going before he can rise. So, of course, cannot from the land. You see, he cannot run with those little short 1 In| order to get up in the air 15t rise from the water and get up speed. | 1t is like a fast acroplane. You know the fastest aeroplanes have n wings and have to get going very fast indeed on the ound befor they can rise. It ust 80 with Dip- per the Grebe. The approach of spring Dipper impatient to get g | ons day he took it into his head to | fly north. He was heading for the | Big River, where it flows near Farmer Brown's. To reach it from | the place where he had started h. must fly a very long distance. Now, he thought there would be one or two ponds of open er th h could drop down into f he felt tircd. H happened t the left those p. reached the last very tired. Howes ing to do but to With ever wings Dipper felt more and 1o tired. He 1 1 to worry. Would | be able to reach the Big River he- fore his wings gave out? If he didr reach {t, what would become of him? Anxiously he strained his « for a glimpse of the B . he saw it, It was ju far away in the dist knew what it was gave him new cour Dipper is not onc to give up His wings ached 8o that it tee if he could not take another with them. Still he kept on could see the Big River clen cvery stroke of lis nearer, At last hie I cdge of the Green Meado could just get ncross Meadows, it would b lie couldn’'t. His win beat any longer. Down, down he came and landed with a on the Green Meadow in all his life had Dipper f 50 helpless as he felt the ~ (Copyright, 1930 W. B The next story: “Dipper Good Mcal.” ] %;.,, You sce, he cannot run with those little short legs Taiks To B, Parents Spice Cookies for Lunch Breaklast Diced Qrarv real and Ciea Luncheon alloped T pple Sau Tea, Dinner Covoanut 1 ; . 'Once Quvers Love’s Reawakening | 0 By C. D. Batchelor 1ORIZONTAL t canal 1pital of Czeche irm VERTICAL lova HEALTH v for Ediad by thé New York Dr. lago Galdston ~ ~ Academy of Medicine OOD MAKES THE MAN It is many a vear since Captain Cook made his famous voyage and Iproved that Dby proper sanitation and the inclusion of lime juice in INVALID CHILDREN, TOO, BENEFIT BY “GIRL SCOUTING” IN ENGLAND New York, March 15.—Lady; Eaden-Powell, of Englad, mother of | the Girl Scout movement, has| Lrought to this country a moving | tale of the health value of “scout- | > to little sick-a-beds in her own | country. The very word “girl scouts” con- | jures up in most minds a pleasant | | picture of healthy little girls in the | | open, cooking wiecners over a canp e, building bird houses, or heln- Mother with her work and th younger children. But England, according to Lady Gaden-Powell, has discovered that | cripples, children in tuberculos liomes and those born either dea {or blind can be helped to a bigger degree of health and happiness by B 1t takes mental therapy. *Doctors are recommending ‘reouting” fi their ¢ patients,” - M LA > is affection- | known f{o thousands of | Scouts, told me. “By adapting the | me to handicapped children’s bilities s 7 5 ar given a| c on life and happiness. A source of Joy | “I visited a hospital shortly be [tore I sailed where, on rows of [vhite beds, crippled girls werc drillir by using their little hand to march, to turn, to stand at a- | | tention. T'heir 1apt expression told | the joy they derived from partici- ration in what is so thoroughly a normal and healthy activity as our | Girl Guide and your Girl Scout | movement. i We have about 1300 Girl| Guides now in hospitals and | | hemes, in England. They joinad | in the sisterhood and work for | badges. Leaders change the wor | adjust it to the peculiar needs of | this or that little group, and are received euthusiastically both by | the patients and those in charge. “Of course, this is or lcast of the bencfits of € ternational movement, but it new and very nificant, it scems | to me.” World Conference Planned Lady Baden-Powell stopped in America from a trip o the W |Indies where she inspected tl Girl Scout work there while her fumous husband, Lord Badea- Powell, father of the Boy Scouts, | incpected the work of the bovs. | While here they were joint guests-of-honor at the first offici | hanquet ever given at which th Lcads of both the Girl and the Boy | | | | | | | | Baden-Powell are shown here, at right, as Miss Jane Dee | tional girection of the Girl Scouts, gt {number of badges g | represented, too, indicatin Founders of the Boy Scout and Girl Scout movements, Lord and Ladw Rippin, na« ted them in New York upon their arrival from Bermuda oundation for the right thinking |and the right actin ces the Girl Scout | Building World Unity movement from the international| The third great value of the Girl angle, and is makinz plans for the | Scout movemen ich the public orld co nce to be held mest|ii to Lady summer at Toxlease, England,| B ship it when delegates representing 787, | buil ries now have 000 Gifl Scouts will be entertained | companies of Hcou ose n “When one gets a bird's ey2|Hungary write to tho Ame:- view of the movement all over the |inca, those rinland to those world, one wonders why there 1s|the West Indies, and so on. Great- so much worry about wividual corres of the world,” she said. E 9 the way “Girls are still tremen i irls in ¢ countries have terested in learni ught ne spirit of. the Gicl Do vyou know that the gres Scou 4 girls, ) have Laundry, | morc of a sense of w friend- and world peace than they could have had without tiie Girl Scout movemen to discuss these tw were taken in cooki sewing and all the other so-calle ‘old-fashioned’ homely arts there is a much more normal at-| In short, titude towards life am youns than scare-head storicz| would tell us. Girls the world one Bo the Girl Scout over are more interested cach year|and its sister movements are good {thusiastic | mother of a couy |in sane, healthy, out-of-door | tor the healthy child, good for the creation that builds the body, | sick, good for wch community, strengthens the mind and lays the | and good for 1 at large. \Census To Ask Housewives Personal Questions But Are Swom To Hold Answers in Secrecy STHIRTY SIX, o BUT DON'T TELL A SOUL. uT TLE BILLY IS HAVING A BIRTHDAY, the diet of his crew, his sailors| could kept in good health anl spared from the r: ges of scury his time much las been 1 hout foods and their role in the begetting and maintaining of good health. What, however, has been learned by science about |foods and nutrition during the last | haif-century amounts to more than all that was discovered and known previously. The vitamins that loom so large today in all matters that pertain to nutrition belong to the science of this century, and despile the vast| |wmount of study that has already |been spent on thein still represent | realm of vast unexplored territo- | rics | Despite the fact, however, that there is so much more to be learned about foods and nutrition, there is cevidence present that confirms the old conclusion that is not clothes but food that makes the real man. 16 ever-advancing science of nu- ition serves to confirm the worth of what has becn justly termed the staples of life. The practicul re- sulls of our rescarches lead to the primary conclusion that good ilth and normal growth and de- lopment depend 1pon proper feed on the othe wd ¢ ume any fin- Ky diet made up largely of manu- ctured substances with artificial but rather implies an all- clusive diet in which the old tandby foodstuffs such as milk, f green and her veg |tables and meats ost proni nent There is a d wing the la satisfaction in | e science confirm the soundncss of the advice offered by physicians for centuries past, BLUFE, SHOES You polish your mnew blue with cream dressing befor U wear them even once, you will they stay looking like new. should be polished bue stitching in mod- | | | | | we March 18. (P—U) | cle Sam is preparing to count noses | An army of 100,000 census-takers | will begin knocking at house doo throughout the country Apr the nation's 15th decennial count of its population. Many new questions, along with | the old ones, are to be asked this | time. The 1930 census will delve | deeply into the countr cconomis life as well as providing the usual basis for reavportionment of seats | u the house of representatives. | At least 24 questions have be prepared for each interview ach person quizzed may without fear that mily figurs will be made public. The law - | poses severe penalties if secreey I not kept by the enumerator | One new question asks the 1 of a home, if ewned, or the month- [1v rental, if rented. Answers to | this will make possible a classifica- | tion of familics’ buying power. | Secking the relative age at mar- riage of persons in different racial and economic groups, the gove ment’s agents will ask “age at fir. marriage.” Answers {0 this query will pedite tabulations of data on sizs of familics, based on the number {0 children reported in familics of RED.U.S. PAT. OFF. | FLAPPER FANNY SAYS: | llgra | design sed cffectively on | |white kid glaves for spring. The iu:u is faced with bl Kid, 3 Today's generation apparently (oo young to mend, PARTY. ”. weomen who sta numt A question regarding ownership | without pay for a t of radio sets will give a direct an-| Workers in rural districts) also swer as to of the nation's po-|will gather pertinent information tential radio audience [or tiral condition | laid oft Women doing housework in their| The population will be announcod own homes and carrying other re-|this time by the supervisor of the sponsibilities of home will be des- | district upon completion of com- ignated as “home-makers.” This| pilation in any subdivi of hig designaton will be entercd in ther than in one ann .- amily relationship” or the whc try. This cr than under “occupation.” thorougin Special cffor to be mad i ¢ list gainful workers accordi occupation and indy New questions on mployn have been designed to m at the distinction between pe Herald’s Daily Pattern fervice Dzinty Irock For Home Sewing Paltern 1863 Herald 15¢ Practi ANNLE ADAMS ming. on adds of Alt chosen for « 3 stlts: Botor- on shou e 1 ribbon nee 18 nee- 1e] with our every size, tions are CENTS (15¢)_ip ully wrapped, or stamps, Be sure to write NAME, ADDR S NUMBER and SIZE wanted PATTERN BOOK of NEW ulSUMMER STYLES is CENTS, but only TEN 1 ordered with a pattern mail and orders te Department, - 248 ew York City,

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