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DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, APRIL 17, 1922, s s o | A “Quality” Tea exnet number for which wernight accommodations have been y : e T e R AR R v iy "”’ 2 A S s b ey ey ¢ provided in the village 3 i % § e 2k i vy } #h ik o KACEY PAIR : 2 / 8 g Local Council To Introduce Many 2 y: 2 ! 5 4 L A BEFHY , Novelties And - Entertainments lans are complete for the open M Hiitchinson/ il 8 dh Y, £ Pk Nht R g u{z‘ the fair o b 4uy‘ullwll4\|<l by T T Gon A'Anugcmgsaulnsgo’fi':’ it ot : PRI | Annual Sale Exceeds 30 Million Packets ) 1 or Our Last Issuc brought one woman into my louse bl g 5 b e ¢k onding JMay 10 committea in 0 Nadeonee, 1 howed o the [ AR banned. T wnapesbanle Mo MR ool — BLACK, MIXED or GREEN— Nilian. Wall. you, ' know: pld fhan, ""l;"x.?‘““ see, Hapgood ? !m you e g ; 5 , % " number of novelties will he introdie Steadfastly Refuse All Substitute every fox knows what foxes smell |5€¢ sonventlons are right, SRt ; . od in the hooths ke and T smelt o dear brother |Moral. sound, excellent, admirable, e B R o 4 i R Various councils ahout the state solicitor's smell in that letter, Ak | Pt 0 save thelr own face there's o | BRI RN R4 7 oy i ? AL have signified their intentions of pre ing him to make o home possible for "’,“"" -"‘"" to themy a shut-eye side ) a2 ; ; b g, 2 senting an entertainment a night dur- |[Jave been sentout, - new en-| A opaze for black jewelry and ore & 4 . 't J that side of them and you're all H § fo A ¢ . o s ¢ oof | tertainment is assured every evening, | her to return to so they might re-f Setb 1L M ) 4 § ng the fald and by the number o naments has taken a firm hold on the e AL I1ts. taaethat right, They'll let you alone, They'll s e ? / ; ¢ inawara balng raceived by the locud| Dansing will also ho enjoyod “evory | cprco i i p minve S “I handed it back. 1 sald, ‘H'm'[Pretend they don't sce you, Hut ) b o i e 8 i council to-the invitations which | evening us b arls, agaln, T sald, ‘H'm’ you remember|Pme out and stand In front of them ol man. there was that remark—|and they'll devour you, They'll smush that remark that perhaps the girl |20 Brind and devour you, Hapgood might have a claim on you, Remem- | ThEY e devouring me. Barcthat don'b yeu? ““Fhat's where they've got me fn “By Jovo. T thought for o minute|thelr daws, Hupgood; and wh he was going to flare up and let me|NEY'Ve Kot Eftie in their jaws is just have it. But he laughed as if 1 was|Precisely again on a blind, shut-cye a fool and sald, ‘Oh, good Lord, man, * * They're rightly od, that's ufterly ridiculous, Man alive, absolutely just, you can't with all my faults, my wife knows oy them, but to.gave thelr face; me." . they're indomitably blind and g f to the hideous eruclties in their CHA application. They mean well, They cause the most frightful iffering, On a day a month later—in May—|the most frightful tragedics, but Hapgood said: “Now T'll tell you, Old Sabre —by Jove, it's frightful, Ie's erashed, “Look here, it's in two parts, this sudden development. T'wo parts a bit today. And of all extraordinary 3 S LYNN STARLI places to happen & ir s 4G : " 2 & 1.'” ‘x;,-’i,l,vl)‘,‘ml\: I|‘ “-] 'm‘;‘f::\”,'. thata 1 7 Leading Man (ormican Players. for o Saturday to Monday with my Mr. Starling was one of the prinqpal pl:lyolrs with Henry "‘\‘ll”(‘l' Missus. Monday morning we were : and Blanche Bates last season in “The Famous Mrs. sunning on the pier, she and I b “Well, all of a sudden she began, ‘Oh, what a frightfully interesting | the cab with this chap who had come {all bare with his lips contractiy face that man's got!"” S up to him. I said ‘Hullo! Ilullo, arelsaid, ‘Let me alone. Let me alone, 1ot 1 looked across. Old Sabre! g you off? me alone.’ “I went over to him. His face was “He turned round on me a face “And they pushed off. like a shout on a sunny morning. Yes, gray as ashes, absgolutely dead gray. “I tell you what I'm godng to do he was pleased. T like to think how : I'd never seen such a color in a man's| I'm going down there tomorrow. 1'm 2 v Jjolly pleased the old chap wi = face. He said, ‘Yes, I'm off,” and sort|frightencd about him.” ; a e up your s no “1 got old Sabre on to a secluded 8 of fell over his stick into the cab. bench and rted in on him. What : 1 . The man, who was already in, righted (Continued in Our Next Issue) on carth was he doing down at 3 > 3 $ him on the seat and said, ‘Padding That's what Lifebuoy does Brighton, and how were thin ton’ to the driver who was at the door *“He said ‘Things * * *? Things ar shutting it. I said, through the w n [ No'oth did it bef happening with me, Hapgood. Not to s __|dow, Sabre! O1d man, are you il 'i b ! > o other soap ever did it before. me—with me. I had to get away from [ “MY GOD, THE WORLD MAKES| fje put his head towards me and 4 { 2 piRuiny (of i Ty gbigbanis ton | ME oo oo . [leaid in the most exiraordinary voleo; \ ; Lifebuoy cleans to the very depth of the I morrow. flie was right—with Ther peaking between his clenched teeth al 4 g I 0 s baby. She was glad 1 should go— |they won't look at them, they won't|as though he was keeping himselt | i i Ag poreS. It opens them to Lifebuoy’s pure palm ) glad for me, I mean. Top of her own|think of them, they won't speak of |from yelling out, he said, ‘If you love et daon £ and cocoanut oils. [A} misery, Hapgood, she's miserable at]ihem: they mean well * % #° me, Hapgood, right 1y out of what she says she's let me in for.| "Old Sabre put his head in his|it from me and let me alone. This| i T van i ! It puts life into th torn between knowing my house is| “With that he went back to all that now him. We're going down to- R i - G p i £ the only. place where she can have I told you he told me when I|gether. 1 ) \ ] her baby, hatween that and sceing down with him last month. He| “T said, ‘Sabre— £ ywl lGfl[ lesema[on what her coming into the place ha :;l.\wl. his face all pink under his skin, “He clenched his teeh so they were e | caused. She spends her time trying » said, ‘Hapgood, I've got the secret, 3 B s A . & | to do any Jittle thing she can to make|I've got the key to the riddle that's : iy, ""“”“»-v-""- 17 ! Every time you use Lifebuoy you can feel | me comfortable. It's pathetic, youbeen puzling me all my lite. Light,| Y one are feverishly, finishing ; its gentle, thorough, reviving effect. It is a § know. Jumped at this sudden idea|more light. Here it is: God loveS preparatioy r the first performance P . of mine of getting away for a couple | Not this, that, nor the other that the Ay IR e ey wonderful feeling. of days. Fussed over me packing up |intelligence revolts at, and puts aside, 5 o Man T BEs i B . and all that, you know. Look, just|and socs away, and goes on hunger-| People Notice It. Drive Them \:"‘ ”')""’ i ‘””'; And almost day by day you can see your 2 Y ay 9 beforc 1 mber f ( . . 1) number of invite Sk]n 1mprove_ | to show you how she hunts about for |inz, hungering and unsatisticd; ~noth- Off with Dr. Edwards’ Fitsty, e vilage ey Bay the anything to do for me—said my nlxl|1m:)lil}\;‘ u;:n; but _mstl l:\:s:’_ plain for Olive Tablets el dia b ol Lifebuoy’ straw hat was much too shabby forja child, clear as vligh or grown —_ s # i 2 Ky ifebuo s health princi ‘e Brighton and would 1 get her some [Intelligence: God is—lovo. Listen to| A pimply face will notembarrassyou |41 fecd the rorcin and = native ; y A, pri ClP!C is the Sledtent stuff, oxalic acid, and let her clean it|this, Hapgood: “He that dwelleth in| mugh longer if you get a package of Hirhiy oicany ““‘“ i i ¥ advance ever made in the dally care of the skin, up for me. As a matter of fact she|love dwelleth in God and God in him: | Dr.'Edwards’ Olive Tablets. The skin B S ]”f’” il e made such « shocking mess of the hat |for God is love.” Eestasy, Hupgood, | should begin to clear after you have | Oy about (1400 porsons can You CAN have a beautiful skin. that T hardly liked to wear it. Couldn't | costysy!” taken the tablets a few nights. i i ras s ) S ¢ i Ohucited: 1 11 Cleanse the blood, bowels and liver |1ty: Conscquently the Passion Play urt her feelings, though. Chucked it| : Ers with Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets, the | committee has advised that visitors ; . ) ; . into the sea when I got here and When T saw him again was about - Edwards Z0live Tablete; thE - | somaties e alvised Lot | visil \ Lifebuoy’s health odor is delightful * re s ¢ story |three o'clock, and I walke right ccessful substitute for calomel; there’s | should remain only one or two days Y hought this one. Make a funny story | thr 'clock, ; B ! AP TREN Blve SOV for othag Await fo! 5 A : it |into the middle of the development s or pain after taking them. | and then give wdy for others. Appli- r her when T get back about hew it [into the middic ey S i) il sie Tnalonta’ it eistt Al t blew off. That's the sort of life we|that has pretty well let the roof down dwards' Qlive Tabletsdo that | cutions indicate the visitors will tax I . it prio atlsy o i alomel does, and just as effec- | accommodations severcly but it gaiytogether, HnpgoodMGie you an-[on .. . N | tively, but their action is gentle and |said officially “ail will be taken care other example. Just when I had He was in the lobby. No one else| CvEWs s (e SCHOR, iy i brought her the stuff for my hat. Met | the re. Only a man who d just been No ;me who takes Olive ’I“ahlc' . Accommodations Tteady. Die itk Fiad I dost anythitig? Safd 1)epeaking fo im and who 1eft WOy oo oot oith a "darl brown taste,” senline du SAMHE SoEai. was to guess. Guessed at last that it and .“\'.M out as '_"“_".', _"‘~l « hands, | @ bad breath, a dull, listless, *“no good” t L A must be my cigaret case. It was. abre had two papers in his hands. | goping “congtipation, torpid liver, bad | {o illas ninistration and ste She'd found it Iying about and took |He was staring at them and youwd| gionndtion or pimply face. Tinte BAGh, Tl to saveiElermen me to show where she’d put it forjha! thought from his face he wis ™ Gjive Tablets are a purely vegetable | (jose who violate the resuiations and in the back of the clock in|staring at a ghost. Hxn\‘ were nh\wgw compound mixed with olive oil; You | (1o sehedules of prices which will be aid I was always to look [ PaDp€ ‘Irw citation and w“_“'”‘ will know them by their olive color. wailable to visitors, there for any little valuables T might |papers that have tried to be served Dr. Edwards spent years among pa- | * A poroximately 1,000 persons will miss, and wanted to know how she[personally. Divorce papers. His wife| entq afficted with liver and bowel | participate in the play which con- ] liked to be careful of my things like haq finstituted divorce proceedings| complaints and Olive Tablets are the bitifies ‘from moenine AmblL EERlAG that. Fussing over me, ¢'vou sce? against him. Naming the girl, Bflic. | immensely effective result. Take one or ““That's the sort of life we lead| “Yes, you can whistle. He was| two nightly for a week. See how mich together, Hapgood—together; but the|knocked out. T got him up to his| hetter you fecl and look. 15¢ and 30c, | life I'm caught up in, the things that|room. It was pretty awful. = He sat] _____ SRS ive = { are happening with 1oe, that T'm|on the bed with the papers in his DO’NGS OF THE DUFFS right in the middie of, that I felt I|hand, gibbering. Just gibbering. Was ] had’ to. met away from, for -a: bit— |Dis wife mad? Was she He to astounding, Hapgood, astounding, - = ! morning and afternoon yesterday and } ] f‘ | i It induces a healthy circulation. It wakes the skin to heaith and beauty. | There are 800 resulav players, lof them being soloists or with speak- be guilty of a thing like that? He i : ’ Gmblng &% capable of a heastly think like that? | GUESS IT’s | DOCTOR,| I-IAY?_A ( G ‘ e " Hapgood, 1f 1 kept forty women |A vile, hideous, sordid intrigue with THE ONLY THING | TOOTH THAT’S e Y ALL RIGHT- in different parts of London and made |# &irl employed in his own house? ) TODO- SO BOTHERI):{G ME! > Ho sacret beidt, nothing would be said.|limel His wife to believe that? An , HERE GOES! ————l[//{ SIT DOWN AND \ \IOQRENEXT) unspeakable, beastly thing like that? / | PLL SEE You i ( O I O | ! MK seople would know I was rather a ket Feor He tried to show me with his finger SuT I/ shameless lof my little ways w u” 1, the, \veRds. on the. tankn , s AEer i 7o I |IN A FEW { an open secret, but nothing would be WoR s, | LONEH ¢ sald. I should be received every-|Sheking all over the thing. ‘Hapgood, DENTIST MINOTES (& [ A Hapgood, do you sce this vile, obscene | waLK N - . : | / 3 , o have pisie But Tim thousht 1o WeVe) oo Yera? T gullty of thut? My wite, Mabel, think me capable of that? Adulterer! Adulterer! My God, my God, adulterer! The word makes me ‘ The very word is like poison in my mouth. And T am to swallow it. It is to be me, my name, my title,) my brand. Adulterer! Adulterer!” “I tell you, old man * * %'I tell you * ¥ “I managed to get him talking about the practical side of it. That g fs T managed to make him listen while T talked. Use It Instea “Next morning—that's this morn- ofapoultice or the old-fashioned ing, you understand—he was a little mustard plaster. Simply Rub It more normal, able to realize things a In.Clean,soothing,easy toapply. - | hit, I mean: in a panic fever to be off Its beneficial qualities have and state at the Registrar's that hel made Minard’s Liniment the was going to defend the action; but favorite in thousands of homes normal enough for me to see it was for more than 65 years. all right for him to go straight on| i 9, hf\ml- imms'-li.‘nv\é' after and tell the ; Y 1 G oAy 8055 THF_ e MINARD i sk iy 1nd & S St ey BB T A oy S WAY, 0 FOR PAIN pretty well have to come out now, e % f I/ WIMSKY. A YOURLL \WANNA EAT TH URRY UP AND BRING | “KENT 3 Y 4 e o o HURR! N BRI UCKY N, A iR LIN'MENT nmm.mll_\, \‘\h‘ II]I\ (h'x_\ 1 e v.w]m Y ME. B “KENTCKY BRENKERGT"? DEEFSTENG AN & WHY 00 1 BEEFSTEAK, ras: the girl would practically 1ave 1} 1 s wive b i the’ ERd to tlexr i, . BRENKERST” WHAZNT? / || HOUN' DOG WANT A OF COURSE. You know, I told him that in the cab S ‘// HOUN DOG? going along down. He ground his q tecth over it. 1t was horrible to hear| LOBSTERS AND SHRIMPS |[him. He said he'd kil th chap if he could ever discover him: gvound his FRESH CRAB MEAT teeth and said he'd kill him, now—| SOFT SHELL CRABS atter this. STEAMING CLAMS “Well, he got through his business about twelve—Then a thing happened. | CHOWDER CLAMS Can't think now what it meant. We| were waiting for a cab near the I “l H O N I S S T S Courts. A cab was just pulling in man came out and touchedj when a - ] 31 Sabre and said, ‘Mr. Sabre? Sahre 21-30 State Street d ‘Yes' and the chap said very| Hartford clvilly, “Might I speak to you a minute} Visit Our Dining Room | “Suddenly someone shoved. past mei S 1) (iere wog old Sabre getting into