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888800089, LRI Y RN SLLLHL209008808 Y < - @ < Y odervick Stird Up Troubie AMoa Cradcal e “1 suppos: ¥¢ k that's s 1 had don on this men clations of this g running I s plac meadow brouvk complicated by advent into their lives of Har- wo the rom no ti iin stream, marita are compu or complications waite's life to But now, wholly unac motherhood, forked into t are sters, with ] he details with The his young Harriet Braith- sturb her serenity customed beer our small irritating child-rgaring. in bewildered the aried is no with her u; to of young connected would most eminent find surgeo old age what fathers first baby—that a with the mood for own foible to point tin Harriet Catches Heryelf “Why, Harrict stanff didn’t mean 2o Of course you plied. “You never could feminine catch with discover wom W care of children in airy persifiage, or mental twists red she reotype sligl in complete th retort, 1 heard th her th and then ¥ altered tone finished Edwin, 1'm a bit I don’t mind really not see her aming endly bewildered answeri m¢ And motori spous th smile his from quirked touched humorous ¢ “I'il be with quic eur o his sorption ir 2200 MY HUSBAND REVELATIONS OF A WIFE' ¢ L] EW BRITAIN DAILY KERALD, TUESDAY, FASHION SERVICL, SUIT FROM PARIS TERREETEEEL S LT — —— VIR AN K P4 P hase suit brown or wool vdes applied collar and shade, Tt i in the casual woman adopts with such good This charming is Parisian widc monizing of typicaily | with | har- about the cuffs are in' tied about fashion every wool in TICGE TETTTCTCT studied t1 the waist 1renc elfeet directions the words as 1 tor ment, that we tak Womer than men as a usual them usually get | One's best sleep is with the stomac practically ecmpty. It is true that fo puts oiy sleep at first blood feom the d but sleep later. need all we and il we can v nes more ¢ rulc sleep Most of 1o by diverti proper re it disturbs and firmiy in my ting Directions viet promptly squciche the compass, so zot - my character of e the mental the nat- 8oing to bed. One should bit bsolutely at bed time. nee in the tis-* the daily fu- ed or burned when the worn- you'll wake— You wouldn't sieep, even if you coulid sleep nands | attitude upon get into dropping directions mind on Iren as to there von memor- ind cares When the st restore prech from oxy until 1 put up the Look climi and eplaced, fom tigne e W ickens,” 1 up by i out rested ant Ay mor suid, smile to the wide reshed e w broke 1't SISTER Marys wi a 1 And 1 wa cor t some cisive discipling tich uted ahove Chea ot the tvoid on 1o o oderiek v ming 1 the shredded calorie are is used more diet, If cream wheat biscuit added to the The brown bi are on fat inconsist my wrat} Wik shredded ner, 1 apple consomme, 1 Fat and Lo orange, ut butter and o wheat cocon sug “afternoon uit wie cup saurkraut, ginger tea,” These those who execllent nersons fresh green suggested for saurkraut, It is and means much from the markets foodstu sauce, 2 menus ip chee 1 tabl to and Roquefort food pint Kimme rolls, pivces erisp carbohydrate, milk, uten ast Iron, wenk coffee withont In the ror ver can | adding 1{ternoon ¥ the d tor breakras 1ot mon must thir amembert substituted fo ies 1o the ten with | Gossip’s Corner By Dr. Clinord €. Robinson) WHAT IS sLEd is in rull who America " be would grow Swiss, § ( ogue Whe without & i flour ot Fat orange, 1 ft-boilr Never allow hes to stand on their bristles while drying. Mo ten them with paraffin oil before put- ting them ay if they are not to be again some time, i should enjoy sound and rolls made pure gluten hreads odily produc ac- nt i th is wvallable, Wl Galn Weight shrodded and tissue vn off for tration al and r \ctors ro e | G O vheat bis. wair starched Clothes starched with bolled e dried thoroughly, then damp and rolled tighter in rloth, They shbuld hours before being the 01 appear to b cuit cup [ table og wieners, potatoes, 4 sauce, 4 cheese, r All articles starch must made very a elean, dry stand a couple cause saurkraut boiled ounee these waste lepend ure th the | sna 1 water 1 1 Roquelort bloo: cup consomme, cup ¢ toast, 1 custard pie, 1 tablespoon peanut b 8 brown bread, 1 cup cocod mitk, 2 two squarces toas i supply to 1 of d as a mon on ironed producs | tor Clean Plood & To have your hardwood floor bright only a I + oil on it vl the oil mop until the floor | lusted with a dry mop or swept with a hair brush 1 presure 181 cup whole nd and Haht du- corn bread, 2 slices tter calories, 34 Protein, 485; A carbohydrate, 1679 1ros | spoons | clean nse Tot never ns 8 peen m Letter From sall Atherton to Beatric Grimshaw, Contin My Prescott ing Pericr “I'w left my Now Bee? cot publicity popu the tow RECOMMENDED BY HER DOCTOR Found St;éngth by Taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege- table Compound Kankakee, 1! medicine , and then n the Chang= of Life it did her so much gond Gu for 8 weakness | had randaha trengthe now 1 h bos that d me to t hes nice bab all my work no ammend Pinkhan's ble Compound whenever 2 portunity. 1 am taking it f weakness my family doctor has ree- commended urpos Mre. Harry Courom, . Harrison Ave., Eankakee, 11inois. Real Evidence of Merit For the relief of female we 58, and backache, nervousness and muhrifics. with other troubles com- mon to women, Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is a dependable Its worth is thoroughly established by such letters as the above. There are women everywhere, who, having o ceived benefit, gladly tell other women about it. For sale by druggists every- where. “The Advendures Raggedyhon and Kaegedy Andy by Johmy Sruelle YEOO!Y *‘Hal' the you don’ 1 Gazook i i me, for | 1 Gazook it 1 Willie: W or that said, ‘1 how wild & This almost never seen a not care to made into ade his large the door real 1 asked the pped the door with 1f 1 should hit the lst, 1 would break it 1 might give you a hing was quict for a shook thinking ok was about theh T heard himself, My &0 much he inust put Witlie groft know can be voies baby ad ch would y #ad. 8o 1 100k k yup have 1 mama stone and o ‘Do you ¥ Wild Gazook. “i t ttie f upor ngoer! my I guess 1 e ont il dragiied Willic Woodd ik into the house, Woodchuck out Pleass do not n for it would plicd. ‘1 shall time, but if 1 ring anyone again, | give it to you!" both se frighg- ardly walk away. Put sened Willie Wood- zook!” Rag- 2t polleeman wughed at the not ever iy | g 1o oh at our an ' FEBRUARY 26, 1024, BY *s RAFAEL L] SABATINI +* < ILLUSTRATED BY R, SATTERFIELD - © RATALL SABATINI 1423+ RELEASED BY NEA SERVICE, INC, L the Duke had’ called for, that he might entertain his guest, BEGIN HERE TODAY Colonel Holles, soldier and adven- '8 his-& i tur'r, returns to England, the land of | “IP my heart,” said Holles, “I al- Lis birth, when war s declared witli | Ways belicved that we should meet {Holland. ~ He comes to lodge with |#&ain one day; which is why I have Martha Quinn, wealthy hostess of thegelung to this jewel. Had T known Paul's Head, in Paul's Yard, |‘omlo,4your name, I should have sought you | It is dangerous for the colonel to out. As it was, I harbored the con- |secure a commisgion in th@ English | viction that chance would bring me |army because the names of Ramdal |#Cross your path. | Wolles, father cf the Colonel, Is on| “Not chance. — Destiny,” said | grace, with quiet conviction, {the warrant for the exceution of the | ; e “Why, destiny, if you prefer to call e Sing it Thi: 1 3 d ery Martha Quinn proposes marriage |1t #0. This jewel now—it is very hs, Q. PEOV ) ' I have clung to it through ail [to the colonel, and when he rcfuses |44 ! t her offer, she tells him to find other |these vears, as I have said; T have lodgings immediately. Holles is|Clung to it through some odd shifts financlally embarrassed. which the sale of it might have re- | His Grace of Buckingham |lieved; clung to it against the day scveral rogues to frighten Sylvia | When we should meet agaln, that it| | Farguharson, actress. Then Buck-|Might serve a8 my credent He |ingham. plays hero by coming to her|did not add that to him the oddest | vescue. . * Sylvia sees through the plot |ting of all was that today, at the land laughs at the Duke. Holles | Yery moment of his meeting, he was | ctamts upon the scene. on his wa¥ to sell the jewel, com- | e sl | pelled to it at last by direst need. Pieas DERREOUEIBAIRE ] el e The Duke was nodding, his face | NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY | oucptrul, “Destiny, you see. It Amazed, the Duke looked him over |was preordained.® The mecting was from head to toe. Conceiving in this | foretold, Did I not say so?" shabby stranger another witness of | And again Holles asked him, as he | bis humiliation, his anger, seeking a | » | flamed out. his hires v he rasped. |¥ou presume to touch me, sirrah? | *I touched you once Lefore, I think, land you suffered it with a . better ‘ grace. I"or then it was to serve you that 1 touched you.” * “Ha! And it will be to remind me of it that you touch me now,” came our fine gentleman's quick, contemp- | {tuous answer. | Stricken by the brutality of the |words. Iolles crimsoned slowly under his tan, what time his steady glance returned the Duke's contempt with | interest., Then, without answering, | he swung on his heel to depart. But there was in this something so odd and so deliberately offensive to | one accustomed to he treated ever| with the deepest courtesy that it wi now the Duke wh> caught him by | |the arm in a grip of sudden ange l‘ |arresting his departure, | “8ir! A moment!” They were face to face again, and now the arrowgance was entirely on| the side of Holles, | Deeper grew the Duke's \\’un:ll)'_j THEY WERE ¥ r “Do you know who I am?"” be asked, | | alter another pause, ‘ “I learnt it five minutes since.” | 1 asked “But I thought you sald that you|whom tdid me a scrvice once.” | This time the Duke answered him | The Colonel laughed a little grim-| «“By whom? By the stars, They . Then shaking the Duke's still | are the only true prophets, and their {detaining grip without ('flrt'lllun."‘mvurmzt‘s are plain to m who ean | |from his arm, he raiscd his hand, and | pead them, 1 «..M.us' you never holding back the light brown curls, | gouzht that lore?" revealed his leit car and the 1ong| Holles stared at 1uby that adorned it, Then he shook his | Buckingham stared an instant,|in 5 manner to imply then leaned nearer to obtain a closer | of charlantanry, view, and he caught his breath in| oF am a soldfer, said, stdden surpriss, [ “Why, so am T—when the occ “How came you by that jewel?” [gion serves, But that does not pri “.' asked, his cyes scanning the sol-|yvent me from being a der of the dier's face as he spoke, heavens, a writer of verse, a law- | And out of his abiding sense of in- | giver in the north, a' here, Jury the Colonel answered him: and several other things besides, Man It was given me after Worcester jn his time plays many parts Who a keepsake by an empty fribble plays one only may as well play none whose life T thought worth saving.” |To ljve, my friend, you must sip at | Oddly enough there was no answer: | many wells of life ing resentment from lhis grace, P “When just now you chanced upon | haps his wonder overwhelmed me,” he concluded. "I was playing stilled at the moment every here and lover, author and mummer emotion. all in one, and playing them all so “So! It was you!" unsuceessfully that 1 never found my- tinued to s self in a more vexatious part, You |vance. “Ave!" he added after a mo- | gaw, perhaps, how the little wanton |ment, and it sounded Iike a sigh. | yged me He laughed, and yet “The man h#M just such a nose and through his laughter ran a note of was of your inches, Bt In no other | pigterness, It is of yourseli, sir respect do. you look like the Crom-|that I would hear What are yor welllan who befriended me that night. | now, that were once a Commonwealth 1 had no ringlets then. Your | yian? hair was g@pped to a godly length, obody's man at present. 1 have and . rou're the man, How |eecn a deal at home and abroad, yet odd to meet you again thus! How it has brought me small gear, as you rassing odd!" . His grace scemed sud- |can see for yourself,” denly bemusef), “They cannot err!” The Duke raised his eyebrows, “Is he muttered, continuing to regard the it so bad? 1 vow 1 am grieved.” His Colonel from under knitted brows, | face settied into the.lines of courte- and his eves were almost the eyes of | ous regret “But it is possible | a visionary “T have been expecting |man be of service to yon There is you," he wafd, and again he used that o debt between us. 1 should wel- cryptic phrase: “They cannot efr.”” |come the opportunity to discharge it It was Holles' turn to be surprised, | What is your hame, sir? You have and out of his surprise he spoke: | pot told me.” “Your Grace has been expecting me?” | “Holles “These many vears. It was fore- colonel of told me that we should meet again-— | service aye, and that for a time our lives, The' Duke frow should run intertwined in their | “Randal Holles conirses,” ¥, questioningly. retdd 2 cjaculated Holles, In-|name of a regicide #ta he bethought him of the su- you cannot be he e fous which had made him cling young by thirty years 40 that jewel through every stress of | “He was my father,” fortune Wiow forctold ? By | Colonel whom 7" he asked, “Oh The guestion scemed to arouse the | Blankly. Duke from the breoding into which |lack employment he had fallen Ay with “Rir,” he to the talking here you ¢ this makes it thus, after all these years, to cult.” again without more.” His manner The hope perished resumed its normal arrogance “IT lin the Colonecl's face you Hhave business, sir, it must wait! “Jt is as 1 feared upoy my ple Come beginning gloomily, Ve, unre curiovs, leaned forward, and set dered, a man w Lis arm. suffercd himself to be led v “I said” difficuit other pleased, as a man lets not impossibic upon the bosom of the told me yet how Colone of Destiny. imes of the Arr CHAPTY X1, wealt and more lately Buckingham's Gratitude of the Stadtholder In a room above-stairs endangering his had commanded in inr Ol Itowiey corner of Paternoster Row, for injuries i aione, the Duke of Ruckingham the man to whom he owed There was no doubt of the ex- tent of the debt, as both well knew. For on that night. long years ago, when his grace lay faint and wounded on that stricken fleld of battle, he had fallen a prey to a pair of those human jackals who scour the battle- {ground to strip the living and the| dead. And then out of the sur- | t before: “Foretold by him moment. head, and smiled his contempt sir,” he coul nd other His cyes con. reh that N countes Holles the Randal horse in lately a Stadtholder's vd reflectively, suid was slow- thy said the The Duke considered him “I do not wonder that you here in England the best intentions great that difri- friend, repay d me, said, “we cannot stand And we have not met you serviee very art new-risen he was the Duke hand upon | bewil- dream ther the Vimsel! stream rriend. 1 did Yon not Holles, some- the Common- the sevr | my say have in happens td b this which his at they King whose “ondiess &race of memory |a lawsuit his| Colonel the matter of tempted to join vers conspiracy Tucker and utmost candor, frankly mistakes he had made by following impulses that were never right. He | spoke of Yhe ill-luck that had dogged | tim, to snatth away each prize in| rounding gloom had sprung young |the moment that he put forth his Holles, brought to that spot by merest | hand to selze it, down to the com- chance. His heavy cut-and-thrust | mand in Bombay which Albemarie blade had opened the skull of the had already practically conferred villlan whiwielded a knife, where- |upon him. vpon his fellow had incontinently fied. Thereafter, bhall supporting, | | half carrying the lovely wounded boy atu—t— whom he had rescued, the young | Canse for Gratitude Cromwetlian officer had assited him| “Alas®! 1 fear T Ja to the safety and Iter of § royalist ' anything that wil . scoman’s cottage | “Cheer ep! e A table #t@od bet ative in spite of what you a avart o o Transerint the sat and him fa he had iN-starred Holies told how the nnder thbone, ing Peen Dan- persuasion of he used the avowing the (Continued in Our Net Jssue) hem. and on Bureunds which ton Iitat taive introdue | proper |woman) and sit down again. | the duced | remain rulé when good old phleg: |and healed by Leonardi's Cough | (Creosoted). iog and has a va Best vemedy for wughs. colds, bronchitis, grippe. croup, sure and pleasant, At your druggist. Rise on Being * * Introduced i be is a to it if Unless inftro- you scated. and a newcomer, shake hands you are are 10 rise, d to whom you younger, person to is much scated Ay Then THE YOUNG LADY AGROSS THE WAY The young lady across the way says what this country needs is a return to was the Frank- economy that Benjamin House he , sensible in was in the White CLOGGED THROATS When your wind is shut off and breathing difficult you try to raise the phlegm by suddenly contracting the Jungs and forcing a X |is bard on your lungs and your throat and dilates the bloo throats are easily and qulcklf s through the thro: his vessels. Clogged opened, soothed yrup events nlru!mnx.infk- able antiseptic action, raised and the throat It‘ nd whooping cough. Safe, SOLD RY CITY DRUG STORE TO'NIGHT Alright a mild, eve bl Por children and adults, you want. clean sugar of the highest quiality, uwant Domino Sugars, N