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MY HUSBAND'S LOVE REVELATIONS OF A WIFE s There Something Jim Wishes to Tell Madge Alone? It was my flashlight whose rays found Jim first, and though the light from Xatie's played upon his bound figure but a few second later, I had | time to clap my hand over her mouth and silence the terrified scream which tore from her throat at the sight of | her husband. “Keep quiet,” I muttered sternly. “He isn't hurt, I'm sure, but you| don’t know who may be near us.” “I be so goot,"” she whispered hum- | bly, “eef you shoost let me go by my | man.” “Of course, silly,” I whispered back. “Put out the flashlight, keep cloge to me and don't utter a sound.” “I not breathe, me," she promised earnestly, and in the darkness, we groped our way toward Jim. T fumbled first with the gag, and found that it had been so carelessly tied that its remowval was an easy| thing. ® | “Don't try to speak, Jim, for a lit- ‘ tle,” I warned in a whisper, ‘L ol the stiffness wear away from your| mouth first. Katie, spread your coat| over Jim's hands and hold your flash- | light under it, so that I can see “hat I'm doing.” She obeyed me scrupulously, and I set to work on the securely-knotted | bonds. It was a tedious task, and| Katie's sense of deference was not proof against feminine instinct to say, “I told you so0.” ‘ Jim is Oddly Excited “Maybe you wish now you had dot beg knife yon make me put down— no?—yes?” she whispered slyly. | Jim saved me the admission T would have felt bound to make. From | hig stiffened lips came the one word explosively “Pocket !" I grasped his meaning at once, it was several seconds afterward that I realized he had almost shouted the| word, taking no precaution agai being overheard. “Look in his pockets, Katie,” I said quickly, “I think he has a knife| gleaned from the situation. “Jeem ! Jeem !" ghe pleaded in a stage whisper. "Did dot Bootlegger replied in or- get avay?” Ta a whistle.” “He sure did,” Ji dinary tones, “‘clean “Hush-h !" Kgtie warned drama- tically, “Maybe somebody hear.” “The whole world can hear now,” fellow's gone, and the man- He stopped short, went back labor- iously. "The fellow’s gone a long ways by now, and there's nobody else around to hear, so there is no use whisper- ing." “The trooper didn't pass your way then?” I asked. Jim wae unconsciously long in an- | swering, 1 thought. “'Ye-es,” he said at last, “but what's | that 2" BY SISTER MARY JELLY MAKING but‘l Be sure that the sugar you use for ‘cz\nn!ng. preserving and jelly making is pure cane sugar. Beet sugar will not make good jelly. Clear sparkling jelly is the result of quick work in boiling the fruit juice i |and great care in extracting the ther. |jvice. The first juise which comes "I know eet,” che answered, hand- | through the jelly baz will make the ing me the flashilght and rumaging| ciearest jelly, through the pockets of her spouse, It is better not to try to make too “I beg fool no tink of dot before.|much jelly at one time. The wider Here ect is.’ |the kettle the bettter because quick She held up her hand triumphantly, | evaporation means a light colored and the next moment, with the aid of |Jelly. Heat the sugar before adding ; her strong teeth, had opened the it to the juice This does not cool blade. But she did not hand the knife | the juice or retard boiling as much as to me. if cold gugar were used. The sugar “You better hold coat and flash-|js heated in the oven after measur- light let me cut,” she said uneasily|ing, but authoritatively. “I most used to knife like dees.” “You are right, Katie,” I assented | readily. Within a few seconds she gkilfully had cut the bands confining Jim's wrists and ankles, and with both o6f us heiping him, he got up to his feet, staggered a bit and the spoke, | slowly as is his wont, but with no| marked effects of the treatment to Apple Jelly Astrakan apples can be used for jelly it practicaly ripe.. The jelly will not be as light colored Other aarie- re used for jelly when quite green, Wash and quarter apples. any bad spots and defective cores. Put in preserving kettle with just R 2bund bedn subjected. [[EpaEn Mhssne Lo urerent Subpning o apidly to a pulp. Put into “I’ mall right,” he assured us, and 3 v b jelly bag and let drain over night. 1 knew by his volce that he was speak-| ™" yjo.0yve juice , Put juice in clean ing the truth. | preserving kettle and boil rapidly. But there was a suppressed excite-| gy im oo much as possible and add ment in his tone, foreign indeed to| ) 04 sugar sowly. Do not let stolid Jim, and something ““k“‘"'l"lmhn" stop while adding sugar. Toil indefinable in his manner as | rapidly until a teaspoonful of juice moved forward with aKtie's arm un-|ueq on g cold plate forms jelly, derneath his—she persisted in the -hq Pour into sterilized glasses “and lusion that he could not walk without | | cover with paraffin when cold. Ani. her ald—gave me a sudden queer lit-| trakan apples will “jell” if three- tle intuition that his excitment con-|{ourths cup of sugar is used for every cerned me in some manner, and that cup of juice. Most other varieties, he was only waiting Katie's temporary | contalning loss pectin, require mea- absence to tell me about it, |sure for measure of sugarand juice. “What's That?" Old-time jelly ‘makers put a rose Batie had no intention of being ab- | geranium leaf in the botton part of gent for some time to gome, however. | the jelly glasses. The boiling sirup Her anxiety for Jim's safety allayed, | extracted enough of the real she was ready to.indulge her rmr-mnvw ance to delicately flavor the fed soul with all the thrills to be|Mint was often used in the Remove jelly same Ax It Sty of bocvost ) Evomins Ruviated m Larmems J — & 1923 XKLA SEPVIcE D - Extract From the Morning Argus. The friends of Mr. Mrs. John Alden Prescott have been much con- cerned for many weeks over Mri Prescott's health to M Pre e Ever since her accident on the old | 2 T IEROOLE Post Road, Mrs, Prescott has seemed | ' n arms, to grow wealer and weaker, both in|SiNce her lllness she seemed to be body and mind. She seemed to think | PETfeCt!Y rational The little baby of nothing but the child she | 13Nd8 Broping about her breast have lost at that time, and it was an open | 10N something that the secret among her friends that unless|5“8°0ns and physicians in the something, either a great shock or |!"Y c0uld not do. They have brought a great happiness, would change the | N€r back to sanity and a perfectly| eurrent of her thoughts, her mind, if| "ormal outlook upon life. In a mo- not her life, would be in great dan- | TNt she had forgotten everything ger. except that she held a tiny morsel After innumerabie=" consultations of humanity within her arms: with the greatest physicians in the |, MIT- and Mrs. Prescott immediately ebuntry, 1t was decided that the only | 100k Steps to adopt the child, upon thing that would do her any good | V0S¢ clothing there was nothing would be the adoption of a baby. Be.|that could possibly s i (par fore this decision was carried into °"tA8€. except the finoness and deli effect, however, Mrs. Joseph Hamil-| “2¢Y of the material and the loving ton, the motHer of Mrs. Prescott, | Care expended upon the embro opened the door of apartment | Which beautified ¢ last evening—to find Of course it i baby in the traditional some poor mc had not been placed upon f'vr'xmsv':nmli gtep, because the traditional ¢ her child people nowadays live in an Prescott's sad instead of'a house it was' IN8 that she on the floor before the for baby To say that the family and | joyed iv is putting it mildly. To them seemed a direct gift from Provi- dence, The child, ‘vm physician, and upon was taken immediately who welcomed it open For the first time bries that intoward to easy traditional - basket Tt the the ther was unahle And hearing condition and fully ahle Mr; know door for of young ipartment was to care the greatest she placed it But there her it forts ziving Tuxuries door com Was over- ",, made Pres nefther This epis great stir in socie scotts are most popular, put them would a any inveatiga tion which wonid lead to the bat Whoever pla id Mr. Pre ntly ga accepted it be known vishes.” The physicians led by M pecting a Nmety-Fight Out OF Every Hundred Women who Lydia F Vegetable Compound for cultar to their sex, have ed by it. What a for any medicine to hold women replied to a que cently sent out by the Lydia F ham Medicine Co. of Lynn, Mas per cent of whom definitely &t that they had bheen benefited stored to health b this old-fashioned root and herb medicine. Thiz is a|aiready the young mat most wonderful record for efficiency of her most inti and thould induce every woman who |to whom she has proudl suffers from any ailment peculiar to|adopted baby, which has been ST sex to give it & fads trial John Alden Prescott, Jr. of ow have tried Pinkham identin ilments pe benefit rece Over 50,0 cation of the beer baby marvelong ra A “evide fresly as tionnaire re Pink- |t or 1 ex- very for friends, some ate named Jim returned a bit despondently, “The " | frag- | the suggestion of | greatest | coun- | shown her | There's the gown and there's the bow. For some frocks one seems quite necessary to the other if the costume is to appear in fashionable society. A bow at the back gives the bustle silhouette, a bow in the front gives the Indo-Chinese effect. When the style for bows began, the question came up: “How large, of what material and how to be worn?” | DAILY FASHION SERVICF BOWS FEATURE NEW GOWNS | bows on the arm, All these seemingly momentous questions were wiped away by the ap- pearance of all sort of bows, lace, moire, organdie and ribbon. « Little bows at the neck, butterfly bustle bows, tiny ribbon bows flecking the skirt-bows of all sorts and sizes are used as trimming. The only rule the fashionable bow adheres to is the first principle of smartness, fashion except that the sprig was re- moved from the glass before the Jjelly hardened Grape Jelly | Grape jelly should be made before the grapes ripen. Strip grapes from stems and wash. Put in preserving kettle with a very iittle water, just enough to prevent burning. Bring to the boiling point and boil rapidly. until the skins burst open. Put in jely bag and let over night. If grapes are cooked early in the morning five or six hours will extract the juice, and jelly can be | made the same day. | Do not squeeze the jely bag as this| makes the juice cloudy and the jely will not be clear, Measure juice and return to the fire. Bring quickly tm the boiling point and boil ten minutes. Add as many cups of sugar as therel were cups of juice. Bofl rnpldly‘ vntil juice “jells” when tried on a| cold plate, l Blackberry and Apple Jelly Use equal parts of apple and black» berry juice. Add the juice of one | lemon to four cups of the combined | juices. Boil ten minutets, add 3 cups warm sugar and boil until sirup jellm when tried on a cold plate, Moy frutth e E T ot el sby | themselves can be combined with ap- ple juice, This makes a firm jelly with the “other” fruit flavor pre- | deminating . . | (Copyright, 1923, NEA Service, Inm)l Flannel Dress The flannel sport costume is fre- quently sleeveless and usually consists in a pleated skirt and belted over- blouse worn with a tailored silk blouse. Paint Stains Paint stains will dieappear from glass if you rub them with hot vine- gar. e Celery for Salad Celery for a salad should be cut with a knife rather than chopped in 2 chopping bowl. Setting Color Set the color in your pink garments by dipping them in turpentine. Discolored Ceilings When ceilings are discolored with smoke and dust, they may be cleaned with a cloth dampened in soda water. Fancy Scarfs Absolutely straightline frocks are shown in Paris with only faney scarfs of georgette or printed silk adorn- Foulard Ties Very smart tles of blue foulard with dots are worn with tailored blouses of dimity and batiste. TFre- quently the hat band is of the same material, Stored Clothes 1t you will put light washable cov- ers over your dresses that ‘hang in the clothes closet, they will be saved much dirt and dust and will need cleaning less frequentlys | MR. BEAR LIKES TO FISH, It took some time for Mr. Bear to| recover from his diving accident. His fall had knocked the breath out of | him. His family laid him gently on | the shore of the lake, AWd after a| while he said he felt better, But he| was faint. He told them he needed | | tood. | | “It's time we all ate, anyhow," said Mrs. Bear. "“We'll go a-berrying.” | “No!" exclaimed Mr, Bear. “I don't | want any berries’”” And that wasn't surprising, because he had eaten ten | and a half quarts of huckleberries earlier in the day, befere he left home Then what would you like¥’ \Irfi ‘ Bear asked him. “Fish!" he said. would taste good.” “Then we'll all go a-fishing," Mrs. Bear. | Mr. Bear struggued to his feet. If they had been going to have any other kind of dinnar he would have lain the and let the others get it He wonldn't have picked berries. ‘or looked for grubs in old stumps, or caught erickets. But he loved to fish. | Trey all crept out upon the rocks near the shore and squatted close to the water, Mr. Bear told everybody exactly what to do. Tt ap- peared that he was the most famous fisherman for miles around. Talking in a low volce, 80 he wouldn't fright fish, he related wonderful ries of the big fish he had caught Now, the Bear family used no fish ing rods, nor lines. They used hooks, | however. Every one of them had a t of hooks in each paw. But didn’t bait their hooks, the way Green baited his They d their to sconp the fish out of the ater and tose them upon the shore Whenever I'm with a fishing party Iways catch the first fish,” Mr boasted The words were hardly out of his mouth when ha plun paw into the lake. There wa aplash [Rut that was ail. No fish came flying out of the water. ‘Missed him!” sald Mr. Bear with a| grunt It was only a few minutes later that| “A fish dmner_ said | | the fine eat ) MORIEETALES OF CUFFY BEAR BYJARTHUR SCOTT BAILEL there, | | big fish I'm going to ¢ TALES (Teademat Registaredd Cufty Bear sent a fish flopping upon the land. Mr. Bear wheeled about and set one of his huge paws upon it. | “I've caught the first fish, Pa"' Cuffy cried. “This is only a little one,” said his' father. “Little ones don’t count.” “Why not?” Cuffy demanded. “Because they aren't big enough. This fish is no more than a mouthful. | He isn't worth catching.” And then Mr. Bear shifted the paw that he had clasped upon the fish, and ate him. Cuffy began to howl. eep still!” said Mr. Bear crossly. “That fish wasn't worth eatmg It was only & fcwxmmnuhurth\t ! Bear seut fish flopping upon the land “Rut you ate him, Pa,” Cuffy pro-| OU want to relieve baby's tormenting pain and itching juet 89 Best for Baby-BestforYou MUTE CONGREGATION T0 HAVE CHICAGO CHURCH Many of 2,000 Deaf in Middle Western City to Become Members of Large Church Chicago, Aug. 8.—Chicago's silent church congregation, composed of many of the 2,000 deaf of the city, will have a permanént church home when the new City Temple is dedi- cated, according to the Rev. Philip J. Hasenstab, pastor. The members of the deaf mission have been without a place of meeting of their own since the old First church, on the site of the new edifice, ‘was pulled down. “But the deaf congregation still holds its services once a week,” says Constance E. Hasenstab, assistant pas- tor. “Every Sunday afternoon they come together from all parts of the city for their worship service of Serip- ture reading, sermon and hymns in the sign language. “There is an {llustrated stereopti- con lecture, and by watching the signs of the interpreter they enjoy pro- grams of readings, plays and songs. We also have study courses with 85 members of the deaf congregation en rolled.” Chicago’s work for the deaf begun in 1889. The permanent church was organized fn 1893. The Rev. Mr. Has- enstab came here from the state school for the deaf at Jacksonville to organize a congregation. Recently the work has grown to include three state schools tor the deaf in 50 cities. THE YflUNG LADY ACROSS THE WAY The young lady across the way says | | | Bulgaria wants a loan, and while we may never get it back, she supposes we ought to stand by our allles in the late war. H !|ii1 Unless otherwise indicated, theatrical noti written by the press agencles for th> ’l!llq Al FINE SHOW AT LYCEUM “Nine Points of the Law,” a sterl- ing drama, tense in situations, strong in dramatic contents and teeming with romance and thrills, is pleasing the Lyceum patrons and will continue through tomorrow and will then give way to a Sunday double feature pro- gram and a complete change of pro- gram on Monday. With the special featureh on Sun- day will be the latest round in “Fight- ing Blood,” which will' continue through Wednesday. On Monday however, James Oliver Curwood’s big story of the great out- doors, Jacqueline, will be shown. PERSONALS Michael Igoe, for over 25 years a conductor on the New Britain troliey lines, left today for New York, where he will émbark tomorrow on the Adriatic for a trip to Irelandy Mrs. M. T. Kerwin and son, George, of Union street, will spend the next week with Mrs. Kerwin's mother in ‘Windsor Locks. Dr. and Mrs. H. R. Lasch and fam- ily will leave tomorrow for Pleasure Beach, New London, to spend the next two weeks. Mrs. Josepi E. Hultgren and daughter, Ella, of Wallace street are expected home ‘today from Chicago, Omaha and other western cities where they have been spending the past two months. John A. Anderson of the Farrell Clothing company is on his vacation. Miss Ella' R. Ferguson will spend her vacation at Morgan Point, East Haven, and New York city. Mr, and Mrs. N. Samuel, of Seymour street, Saratoga Springs, N. Y, weeks. E. Mag and son, are at for two Miss Margaret Gatting of Cliff street and Miss Mary Warren of Berlin are spending the week-end at Myrtle Beach, Milford. E. W. Nt Bennett of Isincoln street will leave tomorrow for Bridgehamp- ton, L. I, returning next week with his wife and son, Carrol, who have been on a vacation there. Mr. and Mrs. Charles P. McCarthy and daughter of 86 Vine street left this morning for Baltimore, Md,, where they will visit a relative of Mrs. McCarthy, who is ill. | pol's PALACE HARTFORD STARTING TONIGHT AND ALL WEEK Dally Matinee, 2:15—Evening, 8:15. NO RAISE IN PRICES. Special Engagement for One Week Only, As Guest Star, With the POLI PLAYERS The Eminent Italian Comedian Mr. Wm. Ricciardi —in— “PAPA JOE” | With 100 Supporting Cast of Poli Players. o ol v |m|m| 'th! I ces and reviews in this column “are reapective amusement company. !ll!n LILTT | LON CHANEY AT PALACE *“The Trap,” Lon Chaney's new dra~- ‘matic photoplay opened a three days engagement at the Palace yesterday and in conjunction with the vaude- ville bill the many patrons witnessed an excellent show. The vaudeville bill shows four very entertaining acts that present a mixture of all kinds of varfeties seen in vaudeville. Binns and Grill were well llked yesterday for their very fine athletic & work. This pair of boys show some excellent and difficult hand balancing to very gooil results; John Harrigan sings and tals himself into favor with his pleasing personality and scores with a topical song; Will and Gladys Ahearn are quite versatile and sing, dance, talk and spin the lariat much to the entertainment of everyone; closing the bill is Casey and Warren Co. in a very fine skit “In the Fog,” in which numerous laughs are provoked by an Finglish comedian who gives an excel- lent characterization of the London chapple. Starting next week Monday a photoplay of quality will be offered fn the presentation of “Racing Hearts” Paramount's special produc- tion with Theodore Roberts and Agnes ,Ayres. PALACE TONIGHT AND SAT. Continuous Shows Sat. Lon Chaney the man of a thousand, faces in ‘THE TRAP’ VAUDEVILLE 4—Great Acts—4 Binns and Grill John Harrigan Will and Gladys Ahearn Casey and Warren Co, LYCEUM TONIGHT AND SATURDAY DOUBLE FEATURE BILL WONDERS OF THE SEA NINE POINTS OF THE LAW COMING MONDAY “JACQUELINE" GOLDENBLUM MILLINERY CO. Final Clearaway SALE To Close Out At Midsummer Hats Three Special Prices Perfectly beautiful models. thought of their cost to us And without any we have ruthlessly slashed the prices, They must be cleared out mlmedxatelv The loveliest and highest priced of the season’s mod- els are included. Values to $10 and $12. Trimmed Hats tested “1 merely wanted to get him ou# of the way,” Mr, Bear retorted But that excuse didn't satisfy Cuffy He made such an uproar that his mother suggested that everybody | should eat such fish as he himself | caught | Mr. Bear suited him I shan't have to declared that that plan | share any of the| atch,” he cried gleefuily | (Copyright, 1923, by Metropolitan Newspaper Service.) 2l $2.oo Trimmed Hats Goldenblum Millinery Co. ‘188 MAIN ST., New Britain On The Square . M. C. A, BLDG.