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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 2, 1930. Love’s Reawakening The Story of a Wife’s Triumph Over Jealousy By ADELE GARRISON A Huck Tinn Stunt Awakens Mary, | and the Early Travelers Preparc | for a Speedy Get-Away. Mary must have been standing | ‘just inside out door, listening for | my return, for she swung the door |k open noiselessly at my first light tap. When she had drawn me in “and closed it again, she faced me, her face and eyes animated ques- tion marks. “Well!” she whispered and be- gan to look worried as I sat down without speaking. “Has something gons she asked next. “No,” I replied, after a sccond. “The Hasbroucks are wonderful, are arranging ever for us to get out.” Hastily I recounted what our host and hostess were planning, but added sober “It all depends| upon Mrs. Unierwood. 1f she isp't “able to go z Early Breakfast what Mrs. Ticer al- " Mary interposed h an engaging impertinence that was like a tonic. “Don’t cross your = bridges vou get to them. You| “¥now h ! » Mrs. Underwood | -comes back from any illness, she almost as wonderful as you , and—you don't need 1o/ ling 10 her until it's time | . do you? “No, I don't,” I returned, adding r my breath, “I couldn't an vay,” for 1 knew that the sedati I had given to Lillian upon her re- turn from her nerve-wracking last visit to Robert Savarin would keep her soundly asleep for several Tour: wrong?2” “Remen ~ways tells K hen, T suppose we'd better got | 0 bed right away. What time acs | ou going to get up?” | “Three o'clock. Mrs. Hasbrouck | will have breakfast at half-past three and we start at four. That's the general schedule. I'll let you pack the bags while T help Mres. Underwood get ready. We can man- age it in half an hour, I'm sure.” “Ot course, loads of time.,” sha agreed. “But how are you going to vake up? I showed her the cord which Mrs. Hasbrouck had given me and ex-| plained what she had told me to . Mary flung herself on the bed, tuffed a corner of the pillow into ~lier mouth and shook with laugh-| “ter. T was smiling myself when s 2| came up for air. Shades of Huck Finn! “Oh, oh!" she gurgled, ‘“thal's “ihe biggest scream I've ever heard. | I'd have shri d enough to wake | the dead in: d of that extremely Lve gentleman down the hall, if I hadn’t dived into the pillow: k,'om:; on, Auntie Madge, be a sport, let| me tie it around my wrist, too. If .1 wasn't afraid the old girl down ~stairs would jerk too hard, I'd put -it around my big toe. I've always| wanted to pull a stunt of that sort ever since I read, ‘Tom Sawyer’ and ‘Huckleberry Finn'” I smiled at her enthusiasm wi a little tug at my heart. To age again with her joy of lif:! 11 tell you a secret, Mar: said. “I always had a ycarning to be wakened that way, too.” hen you ought to get a out of it tomorrow evenir e grinned. But I could have told her there would be no such awakening for me, I tied the cord around m st as M Hasbrouck had d rected, found another one which Mary fastened upon her own W and we dropped the two cor through the radiator. But I awak- ened a good half hour before thre-, and was unable to go to sleep again. T untied the cord from my wrist, but mindful of Mary's wish, T did not drop it down to the floor below, but drew it up, leaving the cord on the girl's wrist still dang- ing. Then 1 dressed noiselessly, shading the iight so that Mavy would not awaken. When I heard Mrs. Hasbrouck come into the room below, I moved over to Mary's side, my hand held close to her lips that T might ctifle any exclamation she might make at the tug upon Ler wrist. But I might have spared my pre- caution: I couid see the cord tau- ten, then relav, as Mrs. Hasbrouck gave successive tugs upon it. Mary stirred and brushed at her wrist. “Hush!" I whispered. “Take hold of the cord, and pull it, to show har veu're awake. Then untie it and drop the cord through the gr ing.”” She obeved me, and then sprang out of bed, with a gamin grin at me. “I got my LKick, all right,” she sald. “I thought she'd yank my hand off with that last one. Wh cating the old girl anywa “She had been trying to waken you for several seconds,” I toid "Now that you're up, I'll turn over everything in this room to vou. I am all ready except my hat and coat and my things are all in my bag. Now I'm going in to sez Mrs. Underwood.” The door between our rooms ha:l been left partly ajar. I pushed it farther open, walked over to the bed where Lillian lay and put n: hand on her shoulder. She did no waken at first and I had to shake her gently scveral times before her eyes opened. As she saw me bend. ing over her, her eyes were sudden- 1y terrified. What is it?" s “Has—Robert-—gone ? (Continued Tomorrow) e whispered. Copyright, 1930, Newspaper Feature Serv Inc. PETER GREETS MRS. QUACK . By Thomton W. Burgess ‘What greater pleasure than to greet A friend you had not thought to meet? —Peter Rabbit Peter Rabbit sat among the old, broken-down bullrushes on the edge of the Smiling Pool. He had come over to listen for a while to Peeper the Hyia and his friends, the sweet singers of the Smiling Pool. Peter always feels better for listen- ing to Pecper. Sometimes when the coming of sweet Mistress Spring | scems long delayed and Peter be- | comes discouraged, he finds that he | those who hear feeling. 1 It was late in the afternoon. Pe- ter could see jolly, round, red Mr. Sun getting ready to go to bed be- hind the Purple Hills. Peter moy Instantly the singing in the Smil- ing Pool stopped. It was so silent that you never would have guessed that a singer was anywh ger r all, began to e all the other Hylas b listening to th water. Suddenly tling sound. In stood up st right up. He rec wide oper and his two long cavs histle. Only wi made that w the wings of ducks near. Against t where jolly, v was going to big, bl They turn ng b Gown on a long ard the Smiling Pool rst one landed on plash! Splas tollowe - to hims Muliard Duck and friends. I wonder i some of her “Welcome!™ cried Peter. “Welcome back to the Smiling Tool, Mrs. Quack” ack is with her once Pcter hopped out. At first movement he made Mrs. ¢k turned her head toward hine. Ii. was plain that she was startled and suspicio “Wel- ool ericd Peter Smiling Quacic ¢ farther side of Pool. “Well. well, 1 good to be by the c t coat. because Stuffed Veal Steak. Serving 8 2 pound | | | | ter, leaving the| » cut 1-2 inch | Once Overs Registered U. S. Patent Office By C. D. Batchelor “What's the road like down your way, Parson?” “My profession forbids me to tell you how bad it really is. ” 40 | 47 Horizontal ances ncither vegetable. Red vegetable. Thought. Stream obstruction Pitcher. Moose. Trozen wa To depend. To plague. Relieves. nor Barbarian Made fast. Goat Type of pinc Lrer To season. Devoured Dyeing apparatus Hodge-poige Bever: Mat g Nobleman. Marri ass Vertical Tiny people Fish Born Organ Entrance Lashed T oday’s i i SPREPLEED: 1) e =er Sheep. Snaky fish l10 |11 o attempt |13 Oceans. | verb. Membranous bas. | Lxtractor. |24 Withered Blemish. Self. Recompenses Decoros Reckons as time 6 To harves 17 Anything steeped 39 TPalschood 11 God of the shy 12 1uel 43 Sooncr than fat hick, 1 teaspoon s 1-4 teu- spoon paprika, 5 fablespoons bac tablespoons 2-3 cup off the steak with a damp inkle with the salt and Place on in a ba pan, cover w Shein add the other Dot with | bacon fat and Add the with pa 4 tomat | cup | rudishes peppers er and a 1id |2 quarter hours fix £aspoon va Beat the ¢ for one and n 4 moderate oven frequen Carefully ing platte emove garnish I'resh Vegetable salad diced ¢ spoons choppe re 1 ] the mixture is ve | tully fold in t creamy. C ¢ flour and ther {which have been sifted to; | five times. Add ti vanilla. Pour into deep round angel food cake pan which has been rinsed out of | cold water. Bake for one hour in a Itemove from the oven and invert. When cool, care- fully remove Irom the pan. | With forks and a sharp knifc very slow oven {tcar out the mside of the cake, be- | {ing careful to reserve a shell of iificient thickness to hold the fill- 18, Add the filling. Ieserve the Villing food cake crumbs, 1 cup cup diced candie ] spoon va- 1, sugur st of ti ne-half th Refill th Spread th USE HLERALD CLASSIFILD ADS Answering Questions By Alice Judson Feale One of the s can happen to his curiosity first y S0 cager 1o when and why of everything. Most commonly pens is because he has bee btuffed in his ear out bout things. child may habit of may lose the child. pens that erally and in full every asks. @ receives not the simplified explanation whi on the solar system. | tnow where and is told bees gathered but given as account of the A child’s curiosity may n die of discourager phyxiated with nswering a ¥ consists not ering them all em literally what it is he 1 and presenting child's but in the child answer his own |and investigation, SHABBY UMBRELLA under the U.S. PAT. OFF CIY ture is handicapped by an frame of mind, n ch 3 water. | cuffs of silk piquc shower. Open to|sports dress worn by Mlle, Jeanine lks | damask, and colored linen, lining with backs of sheer muslin, and into laid over the baby's end of the en s table, and are taken along when ddest things that a child is to hav dulled during th rs when his waking mind is know the what and when this hap- ro. efforts to find If mother was s too busy and father bored to amswer his questions the not only give up the asking questions but he urge in which they kad their origin. He may become simply a duller and less interested too On the other hand it often hapn- parents, realizing the importance of encouraging the child's curiosity, succeed only in killing it with Kinduess. Thay conscientiously try to answer lit- (uestion hie He asks wnat makes the sun set short a 3 i suitable to his years but a lecture He wants to honey comes from not simply that the it from the flowers ¢il an exhaustive of the bee. t only t, it may questions in an- or in answerin telling him cally wants to know to him this infor- mation as simply and as concrete- ly as possible. The only thing which is cven better than this is to help ques- tions througn his own observation it It your umbrella looks shabby, open it and wash it with a brush dipped in ammonia FLAPPER FANNY SAYS; | =" Many a girl who is pretty as a pic- Chicago, April 2. (®—The sculp- to; smock has as important a place as the party gown in the wardrobes of Mrs. Louise Lentz Woodruff and Mrs. Robert Maynard Hutchins. Both arc serious students of sculptoring. Mrs. Hutchins held her first exhibition this year, showing 15 portrait busts. Both Mrs. Hutchins, wife of the president of the University of Chi- cago, and Mrs. Woodruff, wife of the chairman of the board of ti Bank of the Republic, and a lead- ing Mid-west financier, have studies in their homes. The Hutchins' home is in a select district near the university, while the Woodruff place is in the heart of the restricted *‘gold coast” front- ing Lake Michigan. Despite domestic duties, the carce of children, the demands of society and the pressure of charitable anl church work, the two women almost daily steal away to their studies for hours with their work. ‘While the youthful university president was winning teaching honors at Yale, his young wife was b with her sculptoring. Before she came to Chicago a year ago sh2 ha executed several domestic ani foreign commission. Mrs. Wood- ruff studied in Paris under Bour- dello. One of Mrs. Hutchins outstanding portraits is that of “Lolly, a South- ern child.” The subject was a South Carolina girl she saw from the wia- dow of a parlor car. Mrs. Woodruff's mos model is a modernistic and Child. recent Madonnu AIRY BLANKE On sunny days, put your blankets on the line to air. Pine your feather pillows out for air, too, hut not on a sunny day as the heat of the sun brings out the oil in the feathers. PINK LINEN Some of the newest table linen is pink. It makes a delightful color scheme for luncheons or breakfast and is worth a little investment, LENTEN DISH Eggs, shirred in ramikins and top- ped by a little spinach and plenty of White sauce, are a delicious means of avoiding meat for lunch during Lent BAB TABLE-CLOTH A considerte mother made sev- cral little try cloths of pretiy this little bag she slipped oblong pieces of rubber eeting. These are mother and baby go visiting. They save much washing when baby spills his food. Golf Mode s t (« Lightwe sy Ma Silk Co.) ht tweed with collar and ashions this Heim Wertheimer, daughter of Paul Wer- theimer, I"rench perfumer. The out- fit illustrates the new Paris mode for Fa&ifiplaque Inlays of beige lizard are used on an umbrella handle of brown wood Two Chicago society matrons, Robert Maynard Hutchins Sculptor's Smock And Party Gown Vie For Favor Of Chicago Women Mrs. Louise Lentz Woodruff (below) (top), have won distinction as HOW'S yau: HEALTH Dr. lago Galdston ~ Academy of Medicine Private and Public Health sore toe is a privat it concerns ani but the sufferer. fsn't “catching:” isn't liable 1o involve the public. Such is not case, however, tuberculosis. afflicted person but the as well is involved. has a public as well a private phase, and the public becomes involved the cure of This typifies meaning of public health. Public health is almost as old as Much of the so- called Mosaic law of the Old Testa- concerning itself with public riptions were aimed stemming of transmissib. the human health. Its pri By the rules laid down therein, it that leprosy Long before municability of diseases was estab- lished quarantine was developed. first applied in the middle ages in Venice and other as a waiting pe- riod for ships arriving from places where pestilence was prevalent when pestilence was aboard. In recent years, however, public health has assumed a more exten- sive and intricate character. the development of medical science it has been discovered that disease, though always a private matter, is also often a matter of public con- Quarantine certain diseases could neither be stemmed nor wiped out save by public intervention and pub- A pointed illustra- this is to be found in ty- phoid control. While typhoid disease affecting the individual, transmission place mainiy milk. Neither two can be conveniently the individual. becomes the health authorities. 1 | They can supervise the collection |and handling of milk, and the gath- |ering, storing and distribution of | water. In fact it is in this manner that typhoid, once the scourge ot the human race, has to so very large an extent been eliminated. Smtart For Day (Courtesy Mallison Silk Co.) The clegant chic that the new sea- son’s costumes attain by varied routes is apparent in this green anl beige printcd ensemble Over the slceveless frock a wide slceved cape ceat is worn. Green kid pumps complete the smart outfit. Herald’s Daily Pattern Service for spring. MAKE THIS MODEL AT HOME Short Sleeves Are Very Smart Pattern 1866 New Britain Herald 15c Practical Pattern (By Anne Adams) By their sleeves shall you know the latest models! The short sleeves finished with soft flares arc not the only smart featurc of this exquisite afternoon frock. The flared skirt which points up to the waist in slenderizing lincs, the dainty lace vestee, the very narrow belt and tha bodice bow are details of decided interest. Design 1866 is charmingly fash- foned of silk crepe, Llizabeth or georgette crepe. In navy blue, aquamarine, opaline pink, red- orange, beige or green, with ecru lace. the model is stunning. Designed only for size 16, 18, 20, 34, 36, 35, 40 and 42. Size 16 re- quires 3 1-§ yards of 39 inch ma- terial. No dressmaking nccessary to make this model with our pattern. rdage for every size, and simple, exact instructions are given, o Send FIFTEEN CENTS (15¢) in coins carefullv wrapped, or stamps, for cach pattcrn. Be sure to write experience 8 ¥ your ME, ADDRESS. STYL NUMBER and SIZE wanted. Our PATTERN BOOK of NEW Sr G and MMER STYLES is TEEN CENTS, but only TEN o) TS when ordered with a pat- tern. Addr all mail and orders to New Britain Herald Pattern Das partment, 243 West 17th stree’y New York city. i