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GLOOSELBLALL0500800088088880858800.000080006008065000 Y HUSBAND'S LOVE REVELATIONS OF A WIFE FITIFITITIV Madge Set Forth On a Shopping Expedition a i i : i i 3 Th confl face dence ildrem Are Ready “As big as a | she retorted A discreet tap at the doer p ed her comment, and at her perm slon, a tall & eoloring swung o} “Lunch is &il r #he said, and vauished The tiny chatelaine rose and moved toward t shall serve luncheon mysel she sald, “so please exc me now. And—the taxi will § directly after luncheon “1 shail be re r hint, and 1 rooms where Harris ways, had the c Il readiness for contents of our tr away in bureau drawe 1 signalled Harriet A another room and of little Mrs, Bird" “I shall do everyth passuge for tonig tomorrow,” 1 said, “and 1 can get everything need- ed for the children while I am gone Will you have everything in readiness to m,)n by the time 1 come back < Raisin Sauoe for .\l:\n- “Five minutes will be all 1'll need irec-fourths cup “"“-" Harriet promised. “Not t spoons butter there’s need for more haste poons e Her quiet, oy sapoon salt, fMiment of her promise, but two teaspoon of color showed on ber cheeks, show- ing the tenseness of the upon her nerves, The Little Mrs, ¥ dor brought us bark to the we were all exceedingly ) spite our unxie The ¢ not do better § e 1o the simple delicious meal feh the MHitle an put before did we irl with fresh, healthfu the door Mrs Bird," e door, MARY specified 1 for four p RAISINS s to meats. t, cap s al- adding ralsis g 48 and cakes. g and detel One-fourth cup of finely chopped raising mixed with o t pound i muc A few while bakin, sprinkied o in cider or grape g 1 ean to get meats is 1 meats, t with bo olle art and chop 112 emon | at long, i en voice promised ful- pots -8 . o felt butter, stir 14 a- ng sur i Cellar Garage e g carbohydrate, M Raisin Sauce for Ppddings w! us tha wom- older 5 vou the do not th " having many y masouline.” Letter From Sally Atherton to Jea- trice Grimshaw, Continued. When John Alden Prescott (rathe @ Mstinguished name, ipa't it Pec read that poem called Lo % at for a long nothing I went on typing some eurlogity wer .l At ias ty, “W poem? “1 thoug true, and I realis man's reaction frowped at t T thoug! 1 was r ness. Inst you think ASPIRIN Beware of Imitations! nk 1 ¢ iy, nature wecond wor time« carthquake. 7T from nd 1 = hat VYPTYYTY YT PYIYY & &'\ DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, MARCH By Dr. Clifford €. Robinson COST OF COLDS More time is coldy ¢ Moy in worki any suffer from one ar and proba is a vietim two or lost ours other ' oug cayse coid qurng e average But 2 E vour bodily you are cases great oss of time from oy co colds is ntract a cold owered and an casier prer for other dis- The to the body s , ay bror preu- all respiratory diseases m rheumat 1 add to grand total t) mean lost time later on | Children of schoo ject to great losy eolds. Carele i tim rest cost creass itis, fection Ve age are also sub- time through ess and neglect ar often to biame for ¢ Parents can greatly aid jn cutting this down and saving the childeen from atttacks of infectious diseases later in life. Infections of the middle ear, mas- toiditis, tonsiiit infections of a rheumatic nature cause scrious time losses which 50 per eent of cases may Be traced back to common colds The minute fe tired and while chilly sensations creep cur spine, accompanied by stiff- n the nostrils, look out for Do something at once, A good spray carefully used two or times within 9 minutes| ually t A fresh 10 per cent solution of argyrel will b found effective, Take a hot bath soon as passible. Get inte bed for = good sweat The evhances are your| cold will be checked, The real proventive ageinst a com- mon cold is the Labit of keeping body in good condiion Guard carefully against sudden chils or long- continued exposure, Whether you are strong or weak you can become a ictim of the common eold {f you cave yourself open to attack | Defend yourse!f and your children against sudden drafts, exposure to *t and cold, insufficient ctothing and y severe nervous strain, which ways lowers the bodily resistance, Oll Odors | Krep camphor balls on the top of oil heater tanks to keep the dis. agrerable odor from permeating the| Louse, of e a ney. 1 effective Glass Towels Cotton crepe makes execelient tows) for glassware because it leaves no lint - The Adventuresd ed AILY FASHION SERVICE Gossip’s Corner Braid Trimming braid in cont colors is a at si'k nenizing of trimming frock that is Eting serge to be g Broadeloth Blouse of English broa decorative by 1 embroidery Nightgowns ade of two or three ari-colored ffon are fin- vith a picot edge or a clot hemstitch- RBlouses rade more ing and =ol Nigt uyers of ished simply ribbon bind qular Tunios frreguiar tunics are featured in springg coat dresses, and scalioped flounc most effective, Quills on Hats quills very wide at the end on some of the newest sport ort seer Chambray Blouses blouses witl fine tucks are ating colors a the strictly tuilo mannish shown in most 1 will take well with - Kerosme Better find kerosene better than gasoll removing spots stk or wool goode, but you must be care. ful to sce that no dust gets on the spot hefors the kerosene is entirely evaporate d You w Frying Vish frying fish put and the flavor 1 Wher . e grease | be greatly Impro of 1920 reported 1,758, the United States widows, The eex 308 widowe and 3,917,62 A iy 8 by Johmy Gruelle to escape from an and 5 be back tiving room of the Hoolygoolys fee crcam and eake course, after being iocked the magiclan’s flour bin, the ) the Hoolygoolys were v, but the nics kind rushed them off with told them how he | Medicine, the policeman took it away |Carved oak, {eushions of a cd mag and tonarrcst him and res. a8 magic of | 114 Gazook!” the fat poticeman | I he teld how he had gons| 1 Gazook and knocked with | tone and asked the Gazaok | ng magical. And how the | | Gazook had given him the bottis | mazicdl Whisker Growing .‘!r1.-| through the o n he told how the magician fonied growing whisks red nis ehin and how | had pulled the magi had arrested him Tiaggedy Ann and her . esi Rag: | » mean magician | your prison cell once ible for him 1o ee ints ones on volicrman out of the by ahiskers home and * 8o the policema he could and he T ean teil 3 palicemn " Um { fat tie puppy 465 i3 that? paticema 14 Aog ran eut the po- * the magician n right to own Havent 17 | n ar 17 Of want to & ‘' 7 “Aha! Mister magician!” the po- Herman ericd. “Now I know how you eacaped the other time! But this time T shall we~ that the Magical Medicine tn make rink does not reach you eman sat down upon floor and 1 the door all but a crack just large cnough the puppy dog In. Then, when the puppy en the poli to m him. Now sir! You run home!" the lieaman eried ta the puppy dog “Here, Hector!” the magi called. “Here Hector! Here pos Bt | “Now sir! You run home!” the police man cried o puppy dog. ed pup- ars, of the puppy dog 1 and do sred #ome licine pr py dog for sixtoen Then the § the Mag of the and t mag ma shrink on cach doore, the front ild not The po- 1oor 8o able ugh- hie fear would ieama at t ts get in to And they vd o hear it or faverite or hard are S 1924, FORT © TATAIL SABATING 1433: RELLIASED BY MEA SERVICE INC. BEGIN AERF. TODAY soidier and adven-| England, his na- en war with He is dangerous for Holles commission in the English the name of Randal er of the colonel, appears on the warrant for the executinn of ns. A friend of he named Tucker, is arrested for piotting against the gorernmen Be. Holles has been seen | Tucker's sompany, a warrant is also | out for his arrest. {is Grace to abduct of Buckingham I the actress, S Farn Ho! pSyivia to ieave the th nelp of hired rogy res he screams Holles tells stric delir | rear girt's | them that she is { with the plague, NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY 3 ir swift advance arson, who had over- olonel’s warning and per- i i's paralyzing effect upon those om she had been regard- Heaven-sent, leaned forward, | lin frenfied fear that the trap was| about to close upon her. { Te lies! He les! her terror. “It not the plaguel plag rim, sirs [1ved me trom shricked 1 have ave not the Do not heed t heed him! De- villalns. Oh. of in God's . ion me, or ost woman else | stood at gaze. moved by her| yet hesitating what to es addressed Uw-m‘j The piteous cries | believe. io | speaking sadly: | “She is distraught . poor soul. De- | mented. I am her husband, sirs, and he fancics me an enemy Iam told is a common enough state in those | upon whom this terrible disease has| fustened. It was a truth of which all Lendon was aware by now that the onslaught of the plague was com- { monly attended by derangement of | the mind and edd delusions. “And for your governance, sirs, ! should you that I greatly fear I am, my- |sel?, aiready infected. I beg you.| |then, not to detain me, but to stand | !aside o8 that we may regain our home | before my strength is spent.” Behind him Miss Farquharson con- | |tinued to ecream her furious denials |and her piteous entreatries that they |should deliver her. It they still doubted, yet they dared | not put their doubts to the test. Aghast, spent by her effort, Miss { Farquharson sank back with &' moan, | fecling herself exhausted and aban. doned. But when one of the chair-| men, in obedience to an order from | the Colonel, pulled the apron open,' she at once leaped up and out, and would hate gono speeding thence but {that the other bearer caught her| about her siender body, and held her firmly whilst his fellow wound now about her head a long scarf which Holles had tossed him for the pur- pose. That done, they made fast her hands belind her with a handker. ! chiet, thryst her back into the chair, and shut her in On it went, then away to the left and up the steep gradient of Paul's Chains, and lastly to the right into Kuight Ryder Strect, Before a sub. stantial house on the north side of jt)‘m between Paul's Chains and Ser. b {mon Lanc, the chair came to a final standstiil and wap set down. The | I roof was raised and the aprou pulled | jopen, and hands selzed upon her to {draw her forth. She hung back, m| ;db‘lrl weight, in & last futile a'tempt |at resistance. Then she felt herself | |bodily lifted in strong arms and | {swung to a man’s shoulder, | Thus He bore her into the house, wierein the ehair, the poies! having been removed, was also prrs»l | | | | | entiy bestov The Colonel turned to the righit of the reomy hall | which tro silent figures stood at at- | tention—~Buckingham's other l\'o‘ | French lackeys—and entered a mode- rate-sized square chamber, somberly furnished and somberly mainscoted from bare floor to whitened celling. | In the middie of the room a table with massive corkscrew legs was laid | for supper, and on its polished sur. face crvstal and silver in the light! from the great candie-branch that| occupled its middle. The long win- Jdow overlooking the street was close- shuttered, the shutters barred. Under this stood a daybed of cane and furnished with velvet dull wine eolor, To this daybed Holles conveyed his bur-| den Having set her down, he stooprd to remove the handkerchief that oound ber wrists, It was a compassionate act, for he | knew that the pinioning must be causing pain by now to her arms, Under the broad brim of his hat. his | face, moist from his excrijons, glcamed white, his Jips were tightly compressed. Hitherto intent upon the accomplishment of the business, as he had planned it, he had given littie thought to its ugly nature. Now | suddenly as he bent over this figure, | at once delicate and frall, as a faint sweet perfume that she used assailed his nostrils conves ing to his senscs a suggestion of her | daintiness and femininity, disgust of the thing he did overwhelmed him, like phywical nausea | He turned away, to cigle the door, | tossing aside his hat and cloak, add mopping his brow as he went, for the sweat was running down him like basting on a capon. Whilst he was | crossing the reom she struggied tol her feet, and her hands being now at liberty she tugged and tore at the {scarf until she loosed it so that it {slipped down from her face and hung n folds about her neck and shoyiders bove the line of her low-cut modisk bodice. He closed the ed, 50 graceful, 8o | door and turned again, to facs her, He attempted to smother in a smile the hangdog ex- pression of his countenance “Unless you suffer me to depart at once, you shal » There tense came | Whe rour name He s Hoarse er voler at last What she ar | i turn, checking 1o e | hastening to her side, GOOD MANNERS ™ Introduction Not Needed UNES FOoL © MLESTRATED By R BATEETILS - y aet of mopping his wondering what it was she saw him to be moving her so oddly “You are Randa! Hollea! e cried or a wild, strained note. He advanced a step in a sort of censternation, breathless, some sud- den ghastly emetion tearing at his ng her wildly face livid “Randa! Helles!” she eaving to ano uest who is y wiid has just arr beheld until merei- with her THE YOUNG LADY ACROSS THE WAY now a growing horror, fully she covered her face hands, For & mom He, too, ac ered his face. 4 * he copied her nr(lon.l spasmodically, cov- 1 The years rolled back; | completely ubolished in Utah HE AND STAGG ORWARD FELL ON J g 1 bim, young and clean and honorable He saw him- self a of twenty geing out into | the world with a lady's gldve in his hat—a glove that to this day he cher- po; isbed—=bent upon knight-erra for peer that sweet lady's sake, to eonquer ouused the world, no iess, that he might cast | . 1ap. And he saw her—this rquharson of the Duke’ she had been in those long-dead duys when her name Nancy Syivester, The years had wrought pearance a change that guiscd her, He recled back i came to rest against the closed door, and stared and stared in dazed | amazement, his soul revolted by the | horror of the situation in whic found themselves, “God!" he groaned alowd Nan! My little Nan!" CHAPTER XvII1 The Parley At another time and in place this mecting must filted Fim with horror of a different kind His soul might have been swept by pain and anger to find Nancy Sylves. ter, whom his imagination had placed high and inaccessible as the very stars, whose memory had acted as a beucon to him, casting & pure white 1ight to guide him throngh the quag- mire of many a vile temptation, re- | duced to this rtate of—as he judged B—evil splendor | Just now, howgver, the ness of his own infamou tlotted out all other thot He staggered forw his knees before her, “Nan! Nan!” he cricd in a strangled voice, “I did rot know, 1 did dream . It was enough to confirm the very worst of the frars that were assalling ber, to afford her that explanation of his presence against which she had been desperately struggling in de- tiance of the rwhelming evidences, £he stood before him, a woman of little more than average height and of an almost sapling grace, in- vested with somethfg proud and regal and aloof did not desert her even now in this taprible situation at once of perll and of erueiest dia. illusion. She was dressed, as it chanced tirely in white, and all white stood before him save where the folds | of the blue scarf with which she had been mufficd «till hung about her neck and bosom No whiter than her oval face was her gown of shim- mering ivory satin “What 1 have done, 1 can unde.” | he sald, and, commanding himself | wnder the stress of that urgent neces. wity, he assumed a sudden firmness, “Come’ As 1 carried you hither, in defiance of all, so will T carry you hence again at once while wet there is time.” Bhe recoiled before the he flung out as if to weize compel her. There was fury of anger in her eyes scorn on her lips “You will carry me hence 1 am to trust myself to you!" He never winced under the lash of her contempt. #e intent was he upon that one urgent thing. “Will you stay. them, yourself to Buckingham fiercely back at her. he commanded, oddly masterful Fis overwheiming concern for her. “With you* Oh. not that! 2 with you: Never!” ¥ie beat his hands together in his frenzy of impatience. { (Continwed in Our Next Tssue) porting g ones. A Wo ma sughe noth A8 | the game 'S y do oei xelusively in her ap- utterly dis- | \ his shouiders any other conscious position | t. Never be uithout MUELLER'S in your pantry R e M T T TR and fell on not LENT THE SEASON FOR MACARONI _ VERY year just before Lent the big Mueller factories in Jersey City are keot hustling to supply the enormousdemandforMuell ¢ Spaghetti, Macaroni and Egg Noe- dies, Everybodyseems to knowthae ot a meatless meal nothing is so nourishing and satisfying. Andevery year duringtheLenten season, thousands of housewives find to their surprise that there are scores of tempting and delicious ways of preparing Muellet's—that they can make #0 many tas dainty dishes from Mueller's Foods that the whole family welcome them with delight and pass their plates for more. The resuit is that, afeer Lent is over, they go on esting Mueller's Spaghetti, Macaroni and Egg Neo- dles all the year. They find Mueller's are such noutishing, strengrhening foods thet meat is not missed —thzt the whole family feels more energetic and keeps in better bealth when they eat les meat and more Mueller's. [ yer tha en- she hand that her and a swdden | & fery ot | Macaroni Rarebit Cook one package of Mueller's Maceroni or Spaghetti 9 minutes. 3 tablespoons butter, 215 eups graved cheese, 2 eggs(yolks), Y cup milk, '5 teaspoon mustard, ': tes- spoon salt, s teaspoon cayenne. Method: Melt butter, hdd cheese (grated j; stir until cheese is melted: dd the yolke reaten with the milk, stir until smooth; season with mus- tard, selt, and cavenne, sdd Mac- sroni. Serve on toast or wafers. Send for new recipe book con- wining 43 tempting waysof scring Mueller's and 26 eriginal menus. Addrest C. F. Mueller Co. | Dept. “L" Jersey City,N.J. | MUELLER'S i delicious SPAGHETTI | You! | Is Among The “Painted People” MACARONI BEGG NOODLES Never be withowt MUELLER'S in your pansrs