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ST 351 $AIITINIILS 31 i MY HUSBAND'S LOVE Adele Garrison’ New Phase of REVELATIONS OF A WIFE 33T 42030 BTN RI0INTIIRIIRIIIILNLINNIINS: But—1'00 1 LSRR Harrviet Made Her—I ki a Graceial ust ol Aamissic conr e ‘ Leen A do far Super- comms ndomi ndzed owr imypnl Harriet siste led yet which rotund Sure, | get r all rea ight Harrict was weking vher report Mott bright of p versa whi two spots o cheeks, efficient]y ossip’s Corner of faces combing disheve ive Cloche ersin-law no o g, ting with Mour and ther she compress resent ) haua t 1 s ¢ hou Hem the sh Hizh Crowns 1w hats plainly trimmed sh g promoted in Parls for wed is applice T SHAEPen . Scissors sharper Alden Continmesd Letter (rom John Prescon sydney Carton You w when 1 my new ®he kn ertor but wire wit Los SCHOOLGIRL STYLES —— ke torest for older Just the properly low waistiine atured on the censer frock with pointed collar which you (nly to the shoulders and ar at 1 in back. he third frock ulates a erblouse and pleated skirt both with detachable and cufis of wash material of the dress fabric. tieir wwest lines are wri does and uvres 0t served an appetite, mixed own sauce, vegetables highly before the infere in their Julienne—mixed strips. a soup served cut without me | (au)=—plain fois gras—a filled with a posc livers, Pommes de terre—potatoes, Pommes de terre a la Lyonnaise toes coked with shredded a smooth puip, ubbed through a sieve thick sc ). small pie aste made ures Ke a SISTER MARY out highly scasoned me enu cards you p m . Rechaufls estaurants pu daaite eneh culing ¢ or bntter in a fr ihled bl n punch Iemone dish. that I any od » e Toulouse (a 1a) of white megts, used for 3 ole filling cortain style S NnE Vinaigrette 1 il pepper and Copyr EERITES of herbe rumbs starch Substtinte Lorax water instead of ffening voiles, dimities, re and cuffs o any pped she Knittewl Underwear your fabric in shape knitted underwear by nhroidery to make wh hoop. noug smooth Rubber Gloves ot vour rubber gloves time, carc for cm and pat them dry with Imst them absorh all moisture.” The Adventures f RaggedyAun B aafaggedy Andy by Johmy Gruelle reaches not smart | collars with those seasoned | soup | vegetables oniol o warmed-over dishe lightly and quiekly | rorused to take the matter seriously, literally f fore I'll still pin my hopes u rich white stew | gegperate; but faith mushrooms, truffles, patties or gar- vinegar, , 1024, NEA Service, Ine)) starch | faney means | tort conquered all Streteh only | tiona in her, them this After cach wearing wash and with taleum NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1924, © RAFALL SABATINI 423, TODAY \ Colonel Holles, soldier and adven- turer, comes to lodge with Martha | Quinn, hostess of the Paul's Head in Paul's Yard, lLondon. Mrs., Quinn, pessessed of -a discerning eye for a fine figure of a man, assigns to the colonel’s exelusive use a cosy parlor. The colonel informs Martha that he has business in town at Court. With an to the future, Mrs. Quinn - lavishly entertains Holles and sees in him an ideal husband. of humble birth, Martha longs to marry a gentleman born, The colonel is in rediced circum- stances and Martha, seeing this, re- solvés to impress upon his mind that she is a wealthy woman willing to fall victim - to his charms. The | colonel is mildly puzzled when Mrs, Quinn suggests to him that he take unto himself a wife, BEGIN HERE NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY “Now there I vow you do yourself injustice.” “Faith, it's a trick I've cthers.” “You ar | proper man.” “Aye! But proper for what She pursued her theme without pausing to answer his frivolous ques- tion. “And there's many a woman is|of substance who needs a man to its|care for her and guard her—such a man as yourself, C‘olon¢l; one who knows his world and commands a worthy place m it.” “I command that, do On my is|soul you give me news of myself, “1f ye don’t command it, it is that lack the means, perhaps. But |the place is yours by right.” “By what right, good hostess’" “By the right of your birth d | breeding and military, rank, whicn is plain upon you. Sir, why {will you be undevaluing yourself? ‘Thr means that would enable you to [take your proper place would be pro- {vided by the wife who would be glad {to share it with yo @t He shook his head, again, | "Do you know of such a lady?" or | Because her courage failed her at of lthis moment, Destiny pursued the forging of that curious chain of cir- | cumstances which it is my task to veveal to you link by link. think,” she sald slowly at learnt from when all is said, a very in and laughed last, Vegetables | that 1 should not be sorely put to it 10 to find her. -1 I have far to seek, AL It is & flattering conyiction. Alas, {ma’am, 1 do not share it. He was S \sardonic. He made it clear that he 1 should not ¥=lthat with him it never ‘morv than a peg for jests, smiling a little crookedly. could be He rose Albemarie, he %0 grace of They may they're nene lesperate as hopes of wedlock.” He took up his sword as he spoke, | passing the baldric over his head and settling it on his shoulder, Then he i‘rhnchml for his hat, Mrs, Quinn re- garding him the while in mingling wistfulness and hesitation. At last she roused herself, ighed. “We shall see; we shall see, we'll talk of it again. “Not if you love imatchmaker,” he lo depart, Solicitude for and Maybe me, delectable protested, turning | his immediate other com- considera- “You'll other tyou” 101 She posscased herself ggain of the empty tankar He paused and amiled, "I may need fortifying,” Al ke confessed, thinking of all the dis- |appointment that had waited upon | his every previous attempt to see the Duke, “You think of everything,” | he praised her, “You are not Mrs, | Quinn of the Paul's Head, vou are benign gortune pouring gifts from an inexhaustible cornucopia.” “TLa, sir!” she Jaughed, as she not go forth without draught to . . . to ane fortify RELEASED BY NEA SERVICE, INC, Vhim, NES ool { ! BY +¢ RAFAEL [} SABATINI o ~LLusTRATED BY RV, SATTERFIELD - BY DR, CLIFFORD €. ROBINS? PREVENTING VOICE. SIDIAIN Children should be encouraged to sing. As a health mecasure singing is invaluable, A light heart—a heart that can sing to itself—that is the thing to carry you through life. Singing is an excellent method of exercising and strengthening the muscies ajd other throat structures, When we fully realize how many diseases seek their point of attack from throat infection, and how a heaithy mouth, thropt and tonsils can save us from a world of suffering, we can appreciate the health value of a singing voicé and a strong, healthy larynx. For the child who is at all inclined to sing, use the greatest precautions to prevent any possible injury or oo oo cnough, those were never the times in which dire necéssity drove him to contemplate its sale. So surely as he came to consider that, so surely did the old superstition, begotten of and steadily nourishedl by his fancy, seize upon him to bid him hold his hand and suffer all but death before thus pufchasing redemption. » Therefore was it that, as he took his way now up Fleet Hill, he left that jewel out of his calculations.in his assessment of his utterly inade- Guate means. Westward through the mire of the Strand he moved, with his swinging soldierly stride, and so, by Charing A Cross, at_last into Whitehall itself.|Stralning of the vocal structures in Down this he passed toward the|carly years. When the little one be- chequered embattled Cockpit Gate|&ins to sing and trill, use your pow- ers of direction and help to preyent any strain. At the period when the voice is changing, singing and use of the voice, in anything but the simplest exercises, should be carefully avoided. Singing is one of the very best forms of respiratory gymnastics | and tends to develop a full, well-form- {ed chest. The adult person must be careful not to use the singing voice too soon after an’ attack, no matter how slight, of colds, catarrh or acute laryngitis. The laryngeal muscles are 50 much swollen and disturbed that, if persisted in, actual loss of the sing- ing veice may resuit. Do not strain your voice by im- proper methods or ufidue inuscular tension. The straining of your vocal structures in too forceful vocal- izing may permanently injure and stiffen the throat and larynx aection. Their adjustment is thereby slow and untimely; in other words, they become muscle-bound, Your health is thereby injured and your general resistance lowered. MANNING SAYS MUST BELIEVE REED End of Doctrinal Strile in Epis- copal Church Is Seen New York, Feb, 4.—Conservative clergymen of the Protestant Episco- pal church today saw an end of the church's doctrinal strife in the pro- nouncement of Bishop William T, Manning yesterday that belfef in the Aposties’ Creed was obligatory on ciergymen of the church, The bishop's statement, the first he has publicly made on the issues raised by morernist clergymen of the church was regarded by some as tantamount to a declaration that any minists who would not su'sscribe to tie toory of the creed ought not to ho!d office in the church. Particular interest attached to D, A DOORKEEPER BARRED HIS PROGRE that linked one side of the with the other. It was close upon curial thoroughfare was more than ordinarily thronged, the war with Holland—now &n accomplished fact— being responsible for the anxious, feverish bustle hereabouts, Opposite the Horse Guards the Colonel came (0 a momentary halt on the skirts of a knot of idlers, stand- ing at gaze to observe the workmen on the palace roof who were engaged in erecting there a weather-vane, A gentleman whom he questioned in- fermed him that this was for the convenience of the Lord High Ad. miral, the Duke of York, so that his grace might observe from his win- dows how the wind served the plaguey Dutch fleet which was ex- pected now to leave the Texel at any hour. Colonel Holles moved on, glancing across at the windows of the ban- queting-house, whence, as a lad of twenty, a cornet of horse, some six. teen years ago, he had seen the late King step forth into the sunlight of TheTieD, Sanuary morning to SUMST|sianning's smphasis, that afirmation lie remembered that his own father, |Of the Virgin birth of Christ was an long since dead—and so beyond lhm'"'bo""“' part of the creed, as thus reach of any Stuart \'nkelncov—lla:l,"mc'""" has been declared by prom- been one of the signatories of the insnt . metabers of the " Satornte rant under which that deed was|8TQUP to be “unneceasary.” done, Acceptance of the creed in full, the He passed on, from the sunlight bishop declared was -an ‘.’h“"'m‘ into the shadow of Holbein's noble | YOluntary accepted by all Episcopal- gateway, and then, emerging beyond, | Jan ministers before their ordination he turned to his right, past the Duke (It Was not a question of liberty of , ol e, he econtinued, but of of Moucouth's lodging into the court. | COnscience, yard of the Cockpit, where the Duke | Whether those who accepted church of Albemarie had his residence, Here | Offices were obliged 1o teach the his Jingering doubt on the score of |fAith held by the church. whether his grace were yet returned | Pishop Manning referred to a sug- {0 Town was set at rest by the bustie | £C5tion that public announcement of in which he found himself, jsut | his standpoint on the issue might hin. there remained another doubt; which | 4°F the progress of the campaign to was whether his grace, being now re. | Talse funds for the eompletion of the turned, would condescend to receive | SAthedral. 1e asserted that he did 8ix times in the cofrse of the | "%t believe this, but If u‘wern true, past four wecks had he vainly sought | 18 answer would be that “a thousand admission On thres of those occa- cathedrals are of less imptorance than ions he had been shortly answered [On® foundation gact of the Christian that his grace was out of town; on |ToIth.” one of them-—the last—more circums- stantially that his grace was at Ports- the fleet, pal noon, and that bustled out. It would be wrong to | mouth about the business of |say that she did not understand him; | Twice it was admitted—and he had |for she perfectly understood that he |abundant evidences, as now-—that paid her some high and flowery |the Duke was at home and receiving; |compliment, which was what she but the Colonel's shabbiness had most desired of him as an carnest of |aroused the mistrust of the ushers, better things to follow, CHAPTER I {and they had barred his way to ask him superciliously was he commanded nice policemagl and Hag- or 1 knew without vappencd and it strange man just right, too Hoolygooly said, “Well, sir! iamed to laugh at him, rubning so him a push, h his head and heels and Albermarie’s Antechamber {by the Duke, Upon his confession Through the noisy bustle of Paul's|that he was not, they informed him Yard the Colonel took his way He |that the Duke was over-busy to re- moved with a certain arrogant jecive any but those whom he had swaggering assurance, despite his commanded, and they bade him shabby finery, come again some other day. He had Below lLudgate, in that evil not imagined that George Monk watered by the Ileet’ Diteh, would be wo difficult of access, re- | were hackney-coaches in plenty, membering his homely republican | and, considering the distance which |disregard of forms in other days, 1| he must go and the desirability of | But being twice repulsed from his| |coming to bis destination cleanly |threshold ingthis fashion, he had *hod, Coloncl: Holles was momen. laken the precaution of writing be- tarily tempted. He bethought him— | fore presenting himself now, begging and sighed wearily over the reflection | his grace to give orders that he of the alarming heaviness of his|should be admitted, he no scote at the Paul's Head, where he longer held a place in grace’s had so culpably lacked the strength | memory. of mind to deny himself any of those | The present usuries with which in e past|fateful. A refusal now must re. month he had been javished, and for Rard as final, in which case he would A hich, should Albermarie fail him in | be 1eft to curse the impuise that had | the end, he knew not how to pay, | brought him back to England, where There was that ruby In his ear, a |t Was very likely he wonld starve. | jewel that being venverted inte gold A dogrkeeper with a halbert barred should kerp a8 man in case for the his progress the threshold best part of a twelve.month For |* Your husiness, sir” fifteen years and through many a| “I8 with His Grace of Albermarie.” stress of fortune it had hung and The Colonel's tone was sharp and 'glowed there amid his clustering confident. Thanks to this the next gold-brown hair. He attached to Guestion was Jess chaliengingly de- | that bright gem a sentimental value |livered, |that had become a superstition.| “You are commanded, sir?” There had grown up in his mind the “1 have reason to believe 1 am absolute conviction that this jewel, awaited His grace is appraised of i mice policeman and Warey Hooly- | e girt of an unknown whose life |my comine.” lit their pipes. {be had arrested on the black thres-| The doorkeeper looked o | hold of eternily, was a tallsman and again, end then made way not, i you follow me | give you a hard crack |Something more—that, as #t had He was past the outer guard, and i Wis hopes rose. Put at the end of a h 20 1 walked back to |Played a part in the fortunes of an- o had left the other sticks, |Other, so should it yet piay & part|long gallery o wooden-faced usher | v _ red them into a pile and carried | the fortanes of himself and of |confronted him, and the questions re- - ‘ t . v . r Then 1 found ont, when | that other jointly. There abode with commenced When Holles an- iven if cross, feverish, wilio mfl"d vied to urn «¥5k that #t was | Mm the onconguerable feeling |h."‘v'n'|h""_'| that he had written to beg stipated or full of ,.,,,,!v y x magle stick and would fight |this ruby was & bend between himeelf jan andicnce- | the !"'_"-re taste ,:( a3 wished & fire sould go |84 the unknown, a lodestone tha : Syrup.” A teaspoonful neer e thrgugh with it and |Showld draw sach 1o the other uiti- *d In Our Next Is clean er and boweis : i @ SIS other | MAtSly across a whole world of ob- Ask drugeist 1o Barh 15-eont 1 stacies and that the meeting should “a Fig Syrap” «v b Dres containe policaman | be mutgally fatefu! mbies a0l @Ry woman can . Harry Hoo worn, faded thing . ‘ . 2 1he B¢ Thers were times when, hott thing more soberly, he Bas never dyed hel Soilor st Arug sore. at Wis ceaz; Hele’ Vet % 18t what valley there his head over Mist 18 Te-ngcam tick ologe nose ° MOTHER! Clean Child's Bowels with “California Fig Syrup” e ninless his S visit, therefore, was he on WOMEN! DYE OLDTHINGS NEW - - Sweaters W rape s 4 wry Skirts Coats him 1 Dres Kimonos Stockings chilirar iove ona Fig 3 aile to oh (Contin SAierd Hard Fgge or To wiice hard-boiled egge reviewing | without erumbiing use 2 knife aoghed in bolling water and wiped 4ry 0441y | peat as oftes as it cools Tipped wmet printed on say “Cafifornia ‘ean imltation fg =5:up. ange ' 1he againi”