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SMHu 01971 BEGIN HERE TODAY Bignificant but apparently trivial differ ences af taste have puggested to MARK SABRE that he and his wife MABEL fall to undérstand one unotler, After elght years of mgreied lifs ¢ knowa that his delights in postiy, i whimsical humor and in democratic fdenls are not shared by the prosic and knol. hish Mabel, Babre haw n comfortable position in the “ftm of Fortune, Kast and Rubre, a chureh and wchool supply house, The firm I8 dom nated by Rov. Sebastian Kortune, chief sRareholder, GO ON WITH THE STORY : TIT, % Sabre had been promised full part- nership by Mr. Fortune., He desired ft very greatly. The apportionment of dutles in the establishment was that Sabre managed the publishing department. Twyning supervised the factory and workshops wherein the ecclesiastical and scholastic furniture was preduced, and Fortune supervised Hils two principals and every least em- ploye and smallest detail of all the business. In 1912 Sabre felt that he had now brought the publishing into line with the established departments. He lad £mphasized the firm's reputation in this activity by the considerable suc- ¢ess that attended two textbooks bearing (one in cellaboration) own name. ‘“Sabre and Owen's ile- Mméntary Mathematiés” and ‘‘Sabre’s Médern History." The tributes with which this slim history primer of ene hundred and fitty pages for eightéen pence had beén greeted inspired Sabre towards & much bolder work, on ‘which the early summer of 1912 saw him be- ginning and into which he found him- #elf able to pour in surprising vol- ume thoughts and feelings which he had scarcely known to beé his until the pen and the paper began to at- tract them. The title he had con- _eeived alone stirred them in his mind and dréw them from it as a magnet stirs and draws iron filings. “Eng- land.” Just “England.” CHAPTER VI. - I. Mabel called Sabre's books ‘‘those lesson books.” After she had thus referred to them two or three times he gave up nz to intérest her in them. Tho expression hurt him, but when he theught upon it he reasoned with himself that he had no cause to be hurt. Later he néver mentioned “Eng- 1apd” to her. But he most desper- ately wanted to talk about it to some- ene. He was not aetively awara of it, but what, in these years, he came to cravé for as a starved child (‘ra\cu food was sympathy of mind. He found it, in Penny Green, with what Mabel called ‘‘the most extra- ordinary -people,”” . “What you can find in that Mr. Ifargus and that youtig Perch and his everlasting méther,” she ‘used to say, “I simply cannot imagine."” 11, Mr. Fargus, who lived next door down the Green, was a gray little man with. gray whiskers and always in a gray suit. H®& had a large and very red wife and six thin and rather yellowish daughters. h And there were the Perches— “Young Perch and that everlasting old mothér of his,” as Mabel called them. ' Habre always spoke of them “Young Rod, Pole or Pereh,” “Odd Mrs. Rod, Pole or Perch.” was out of what Mabel called yéhildish and incomprehensible school text- as and This his habit his | of giving nicknames—-High Jinks.and ' Léow Jinks the outstanding and never- forgotten example of it. Mrs. Perch was a fragile little body|: ° whose life should have been and PIMPLY? WELL, DON'TBE People \I\)Lwe Lt. Drive Them ff witn Dr. Edwards’ ve Ta itute hr.a‘rmvl theie's or pain after taling them. > Oive Taby s do that ces, and just as effec- uVelv. but taeir action is gentle and safe instead cof severe and irmitating. No one takes Olive Tablets is ever cursed with a **dark brown taste,” 3 bad breath, a dull, listless, “no good” fecling, constipation, tnrp.d liver, bad disposition or pimply fa live Tablets are a ‘[l)urely vegetable compound mixed with olive oil; you will know them by their olive color. Dr. Edwards spent fears among pa- tients afflict~d with liver and bowel Olive Tablets are the immensely eficctive result. Take one or two nightly for a week. See how much ‘"better you feel and look. 13¢ and 30c, [ — e PALACE—Starting Sunday RICHARD BARTHELMESS “TOL’'ABLE DAVID” His Finest Photoplay BRING HOME THE OYSTERS FROM HONISS’S ALWAYS FRESH 20-30 State Street Hartford Telephone 3374—3375 |vailway that was to link up the Penny i Lerd Tybar, P wm}::f},.‘”s‘?”; copld have been divided between her bed and a bath chair, She was intensely weak-sighted, but she never could find her glusses; and she kept locked everything that would lock, but she never could find ter keys. S8he held off ail acquaint- ances by the rigld handle of “that" before their names, but she was very fond of “that Mr. Sabre,” and Sabre veturned a great affection for her, Young Perch was a tal! and slight! young man with n happy laugh and an air which sugmested to Sabre, aft- er puzzlement, that his spirit was only |alighted in his body as a bird alights and swings upon o twig, not engrossed in his body. Sabre was extraordinarily attracted by the devotion between the pair, Their interests, their habits, their thoughts were as widely sundered as! their years, yet each was wholly and | cempletely bound up in the other.| When Sabre sat and tglked with, Young Perch of an cvening, old Mrs, ! Perch would sit with them, next her| ison, in an armchair asleep. At inter- vals she would start awake and spy ‘qur’ruloumy “Now I sunpnstc I must be driven off to bed." { Young I’erch, not pausing in what he might be saying, would stretch a hand and lay it on his mother's. Mra. Perch, as though dlie's hand touched away ocnormo weariness and care, would sigh restfully and sleep again. It gave fabre extraordivary tions. If he had been particular friends he wo them constanti another, Qn back into his life. Nona réturned into' i PART TWO NONA CHAPTER 1 1. Sabre, ambling his bicycle along the | pleasant lanes towards Tidborough one fine morning in the carly sum- Sensa- I asked to name his| were the i suddenly ife. HER HORSE TOSSED ITS HEAD. “SHALL. WE COME DOWN NOW?" SHE SAID. mer of 1812, was met in hi: —nmugth by eobservation, as hé toppcd a rise, of the galloping progtess of the light Green Garden Home with Tidnerough and Chovensbury. Here was a subject that interested him apd that intensely interested Mabel, and yet it eeyid never be men- tioned between them without . . . Oniy that very merning at breakfast . And June—he always rvemem- bered it—was the anniversary month of their wedding . . . Eight years ago . . . Kight years . . . 1I. A genial shouting and the ciatter of agitated hoofs jerked Sabre from his thoughts. “Hullo! Hi! Help! mats. Step the cab! bre! Sabre!" He suddenly pecgme aware—-and he jammed en his brakes and dis- mounted by straddling a leg to the i—that in the narrew lane he ¢cen fwo plunging horses. 1ers had divided to malie way for his brinused approach. On one side the lane was banked steeply up in 4 eutfing. The horse of the rider on this side stood qn its hind legs and appeared to be per. ferming a series of postman’s double knocks en the bank with its forelega. who bestrpde it, and who did not seem to be at all eon- coerned by his horse copying a post- man, looked over his shoulder at 83- bre, showing an amused grin, &nd said, “Thanks, Sabre. 'This is jolly. 1 like this, Come on, oid girl. This way down. I{eep passing on, please.” “Ass!” laughed a voice above them; and Sabre, who had almost forgetten there was another horse when he had abruptly wakened and dismounted, looked up at it. The other horse was standing with complete and entirely unconcerned statuesqueness on the low bank which bounded the lane on his other side. Lady Tybar had taken it—or it had taken Lady Tybar—out of danger in a sideways bound, and horse and rider remained precisely where the side- ways bound had taken them as if it were éxactly where they had intendéd te go all that morning, and as if they were now settled there tor all time as a living equestrian statue—-a sia- gularly striking and beautiful statue. “We aré¢ here,” sald Lady Tybar. Her voice had a very clear, fide note. “We are rather beautiful up Hhére, den't you think? Rather darlings? No one takes the faintest notice of us; we might be off the earth. But wa don’t mind a bit. Hullo, Derry and Toms, Marko is actually taking Out collisien- Leok out, Sa- PALACE—COMING “THE ADVENTURES OF ROBINSON CRUSOE” A Serial for the Children ‘gniling upon him. He steod helding NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 29, 1922 AVOlD COLDS IN WINTER Keep |he Body Nourished with Gude’s Pepto-Mangan and Prevent Colds Under-nourishment or loss of vital- ity makes one an easy prey (o celds. Gude's Pepto-Mangan tuken regular- ly three times a day, either in liguld or tablet form, builds strength and thus prevents colds, ‘Také no chances during the winter months and kéep your entire pody fit, and you will have a héalthy, happy season. DBuy some of it now from your druggist, and hefore it 18 all gone have another bhottle ready. Several bottles will make you feel lilke & new person. Gude's Pepto-Mangan in both liquid and tablet form is for sale by all (|PII'K|I|I Ask for it by the full name, "Gude's Pepto- Mangan,"—advt, W |oft his hat to us. Bow, Derry.' Her horse, as if he perrecll) under- stood, tossed his head, and she drew attention to it with a deprecatory little gesture of her hand and then said, “Shall we come down now? All right. We'll descend. This is us de- gcending. Lady Tybar, who is a superb horséwoman, descending a precipjce on her beautiful half-bred Derry and Toms, a winner at several shows." Derry and Toms stéppéd down off the bank with complete agsurance and superh dignity. With equal precision, meving his feet as though there were marked for them certain exact &pots which he covered with infinité light- imess and exactitude, he turned about and stond beside his partner in ex- quisite and immobile pose. 111 Thus the fwo riders faced Sabre, his bieycle immediately in frent of The mare continued te quiver ‘ nostrils at him; every then she blew a little agi- puf through them, causing thein to expand and reveal yet mere idelicacy. Sabre thought that the ridérs, with their horses, made the meést striking, and somehow affecting pleture of virile and graceful bheauty he could ever have imagined. Lord Tybar, whe was thirty-twe, was debonaic and attractive of coun- tenance to a legree. His eves, which were gray, Twere extraordinarily mitthful, miséhievous. A L airy and carcless and hnld looked through these eyes ant through their flashes 2nd "‘h 3 rnfl' face seemed to say to the worid, ehal-| lengingly, “I am here! I have ar- rived! PBring out your begt and watch me!” There weré people.—women— who said he had a cruel meuth. 'l‘hey. said this, nét with cepsure of regret, but with a deliciousiy fearful rapture| as though the cruel imouth (if it were| cruel) were not the least part of his attraction. (Continuce in Our Next Issue). Comfort Your Siu: WlthCuhcuraSoa FOOLISH WIVES It Cost $1,400,000 constables of Woodbridge, were given a hearing on charges of manslaughter hefore Judge Frank A ough court yesterday Dr. Charles Larkin, assistant medical examiner, and Coroner John T. Moenzani were among the witnesses. The hearing was continued to April 3. The two constables are alleged to have shot and killed Antonio Babia on February 24 when they went to his home to ar- rest him on minor charges, MANSLAUGHTER CHARGED Naugatuck Constablés Accused of Sér- tayv8 On P T el nto PROHIBITION VO Apin, British Samoa, March -A plebiseite of the population of tax- payers to determine whether prohi- bition should be lifted will be request- ed of Premier Massey of New Zea- land on his proposed visit here, it was announced today hy officers of the newly formed Cijizens' association, Iv(vlnpm«-:) of white residents. Sears in hor- e fous Offense When Urisoner Dies From Shoating, Naugatuck, March 24 Mathewson and Wm, ~Clarence H. Tompkins, In Kansas as fur back us 1849, Atlantic Medium is the motor oil choice of 4 vast and growing army of motorists and truck owners. Not only because this oil meets the requirements of practically every type of motor, but because of its ex- traordinary efficiency range—its thoroughly dependable lubricating and piston-sealing qualities under all sorts of operating conditions. Atlantic Medium is composed of only those crude-oil hydrocarbons best suited for the work assigned to it. Atlantic laboratory research, based on twenty-five years of special study of automotive lubrication; has determined what those hydrocarbons are. Atlantic refining engineers have found the way to extract them— to separate them from the elements less capable of resist- ing the onslaughts of heat, friction and pressure a motor oil encounters. Atlantic Medium is right. You cannot buy a finer lubricant for your engine. In proof of this, check up— note the quiet smoothness of your motor, its sustained power, its low upkeep. Do that thing, not only after a month or so, but after six or twelve months of regular use of Atlantic Medium. You will marvel at the results! TLANTIC MOTOR OIL Keeps Upkeep Down Look for the Atlantic tank in front of good garages and oil.stations. DOINGS OF THE DUFFS I’D LIKE TO GET A COUPLE OF THESE SILK SHIRTS FOR MY HUSBAND BUT | DON'T REMEMBER WHAT SIZE HE TAKES - WHAT 8iz SHOR WEAR? Tom’s Fe:t Are In a Class Of Their Own NO,| DIDN'T BULY You s»ou BUT | DIDN'T REMEMBER THE SIZE SHIRT You WEAR AND | TOLD HIM You WORE A NUMBER ELEVEN SHOE AND HE SAID THESE WOULD FIT You~= TOM, | SAW A BARGAIN IN SILK SHIRTS TODAY AND | BOUGHT Yoo TWO OF THEM - WHAT SIZE SHOE You DIDN'T BUY ME suoas | I THINK HE WEARS A SIZE ELEVEN SHOE! OH THEN HE'LL TAKEIZZ] ABOUT A SIZE EIGHTEEN SHIRT! Sam Has No Head For Detauls AN' THEN TH' NEXT DAY WE COULD TRAKE A LITILE SPIN OUT \NTH COUNTRY AND TH' NEXT DAY BUT, MY GOODNF.SS MR, HOWDV, DON'T YOU EVER HAVE. TO WORW ¢ AW SHUCKS - | KNEW TRERE WAS SOMETHING | WAS FORGETT\NG Women could vote ih city éléctions