New Britain Herald Newspaper, March 15, 1924, Page 10

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BOBBLILLLBLELLABLLLNLYY, 5 & Adele Garrison's $588000820208 .. FPPETIITIITFITEITICEIATITGGS Midge Tokd Alrred Dicky Mo *Her W L3 mld Lad pri 1 1 of you i & wrong and this sincerity in ) around with the Dicky only told inserted halt cally. st ; stant on t time there bir me know lated, ke my AlY parent in his ment “Then you | t any harm i quickly. “lLeila jected if T'd ta around much Wouldn't {ronically with a blindness of Alfred's linity, but aloud 1 demurely: Not Sauce ¥ *Of course not, would obiect to around with Dicky tent.” I glanciéd from elosed eyelashes at ed at the queer flashed into his face Bauce for the gander distinetly not sauce for the goose in this pir- ticular case, 1 saw clearly, and with a mental calculation that the sub- way journcy remaining was just about long rnough for the things | meant to say, 1 turned to him reso- lutely, “It's not particularly sy what 1'm going to, but “Just one sccond,” he interrupted “You've got to know this first, be- fore you say anything, I’ cut Bess out, haven't telephoned her, or taken her anywhere or anything since Mother's operation when Leila lapsed. Remember?” 1 nodded with « of his gentle to voice now was: h & 1 did 1 1 asked grin type of only myself at the masci- she " murm 1 the Goose than you running same ex- any more Leila's to the under my half- him, and chuckl- expression which at the thurst, elubby col- vivid wife's memors tortured weuldn't ntly— Dess her, office up? riend to tty small know | Leila signitic to hurt You ought do anything to ally now”-—he added “and I don’t intend to go near again, But I can't be rude to can I, when she comes to the us she did today, or calls me Bhe's always b corking us all, and it like pr potatoes to “A Corking -8 " “She's been a corking pest I 1 exploded, but eful to keep my | voice discreetly lowers “It's tim you knew the trut you weren't us blind as a seen it long m Alf—if bat you'd Dean have Tess isn't REVELATIONS Ci¥ A WII'E AR AR R AR that it you |} forbi ths St me ave D you'll ine com offi warrant th good-comrade o wonin r glimpse you you bebin n a of real that Yo exterior wh A : into hered Aifred me. don't ong for all made our way ough [ helieve ust'ces to say heard me--what the hammer?-——on before. But T think, Dicky flatly he wil world 1've id” my cloak a springing to esi You to talke wor said need my this,” 1 to the yon that will do me t yo er it Wy w e acquaintan it yom rat is I Gossip’s Corner = To Repair Velvet raise the erushe w n pile it tace You can o velvet by stretehing cloth laid dh the 1 Lirush over very the Wid G Kin awi m cver put your gloves crumpled et them the hand until dry, drap In tissue paper i fro then put aw open and Pss i Suds A good way to wash a swi to press it in suds until it is cle . White Enamclw Tollét ware of lighter #d safer nursery. enamel china for white than tl Milk Basins hasing them ith sanitar Scour your milk W sa cvery week to keep and clean, rosted Cake very » frosting is sof in bolling water slice and you can It your dip the kni cutting each neat job of preparing it for the table befor do — A Inrare Sroev of hordmont !msm&fnmllm Letter 1'ron 10 dames sally Athert Condon, Oh Jimmie, Jimmic, you are! You say: “Do you realiz have been y over two months and not a onc has heard from At least, 1'have not heard from you and as Swin has made no mention of your name 1 didn't feel priviieged to a him if he had heard Has it been only two left home? Positively, me though 1 had ever, 1 fevl as thoughved 1 g I want to do most | 1t's i in what a boy you you? months it as minut ind 1 ny constant advertisin q his am nover Loss is g or grow! | kitty 50 trmper- HELPED HER IN EVERY WAY So Writes Mr;. T;onialgy of Sharon, V., Concerning Lydia E. Pink- bam's Vegetable Compound Sharon, Vermont. — *‘I was weak and run-down, had a tired fecling and - bearing-down pains. saw an advertise jment in the news- | Fapvrabnml vdiali. Pinkham’s Vegeta- began taking it. It bhas stopped these bearing-down pains and other bad feel- ings, and has heiped ery way. | bave so much faith aem——edin the Vepetable Compound that I keep it on hand ail of the time and recommend it whenever 1 have the opportunity.”—Mrs, LEWIS TroMeLEY, Sharon, Vermont. Glad to Help Others “1 had pains in my k and sides for many months, and n 0 be left undo » E gister told me what good Lydia E. Pink ham’s Vegetable Compound was doing her, 8o 1 tried it, and from the thirc bottle | was well and every one thought 1 Jooked better. 1 am glad to help others regain their health, and you m use my testimonial.”” — Manel, Hae? MANK. 1824 Greere Ave , Brooklyn N.Y You must belicve that 2 medicine that has helped other women will belp you. You sbould try it. amental But that makes him csting, Jim 1 didn't your You 1 kind of 4 you did vantir admiration Poor rea smi ou you i phistica write, bu m 1oss n't it true o You 1ot m Ay a Good yon sity, Air to grow, te that hamper R R Y A RN ¥ 4 n et a his ] t ¥ It ry a MY HUSBAND5 LOVE smooth, e ALY rimn ith he rom a monotony tablespon me dritd de ned eggs. dium sized lettiee, 1 broile pinach £ With s st ton “with won inned po1 2 thin « whole whole rotein, small 1 isp pie 1 piece roli, 1 pint 1044 rhohydr L) stuffed Tomato, linm sized tomato, dvied celery, 1 tables chees 1 tablespoon e, 42 o poon cot- choppo el of and pulp » through tomato Put etrftin. and from stem seeds and the senop ont nd move Mix putp with onion pu secds, Ileserye ulp ul er to ch jnice to pepper ”in on' a celery and " nice, with moist son and and o little tom bed juice to mixture SCePVe of tuc Weight P'rotein, 23 t Iron, 0004 andd Fat Gain Total 119 earhohydrate, gram One Turg 1 slice salt pork ¥ tonst, 1 with it It (2t stuire with cream on cup uncooked cercal sliced na the heef poons), 1 salt pork 1l to- bird, with hre dish and the witl 18t serambled cgg medinm sized lettue 1 potatocs . . 1% cup spinach with cream atce, 1y ocup bhutt peas, 4 tabl poons prunc whip, 1 tablesp boiled custard, 4 nut cookies, 1 canged pear with 1 nuts and 1 tablespoon cream, 2 cornmeal muifing, wut b slices pint whole mato, 'y head veal 1 tahlespoons sealloped red ns whole tablespoon chop- whipped B r ped risin tablo. byead, 1 spoons huttey Total calories, fat, 1182; carbohydw 078 gram As sweethre S0 milk, 3 Preggein, 3 IA:\I. very veal of 104; Tron, 1287 te ds are the rest expensive Dbir the fami prefes luncheon, can be and the family, who a th as in are suggested It the the dieting redue “hearty” broakfast cggs and dried the breakfast dish with cream gravy ‘for luncheon The tomato swathed mayonnaise, Neufehatel the cheese, as well places, for the memboer of " " 1o beet nse salf pork in in chevs moist stufled oil rey eream o8 cottage as tomato juice t mixturc the ehee Cake ruisi N rol nsed i hutter then It s well ling hefore they cakes them the sink to the in hiatte hottom or addi will not P Lot by Johmy Mrs, e Hoolygooly i ni Andy wugh 11 TRIMMING IS ABSENT | ORTURNES | —e © RATALL SABATINI 1923, RELEA BEGIN HE Colonel Holles, soldier and adven- turer, returns to England, his native |land, when war with Holland is de- clared. His Grace of Buckingham hires Holles to abduct the actress, Sylvia Farquharson. 1t is dark when the Colonel carries her to the house Buckinghem has rented. Upon their arrivel Holles rified to see that Sylvia is | sweetheart, The servants of the Duke the colonel unconscious, When Buckingham attempts to embrace Sylvia,her dress falls from her throat, revealing a purple blotch, token of the plague. The Duke and his servants flee. Holles nurses Sylvia and saves her life. Then Holles dieappears in the night. Ivia cngages to nuree the plague victims. Holles d-inks too heavily and, falling on the street is picked up by a plague cart AE TODAY is an hor. old render NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY “He'll stiil swarm, Larry,” he said querulously. Larry approached, pulling at his i He growled a lewd oath, ex- ive of contempt and indifference, | ‘What odds?" he added cynicall “He'll be cold enough or cver we comes to Aldgate.” And he laughed as he took the doublet Nick flung at \ him. {to the terrible load that aiready half- slaying him, SOMI: DI really sloy SULTS remarkable what a chang cating, accompanied by thorough chewing of food, will do for the betterment of your bodily health, In hasty eating, one does not really get the frue taste or flavor. of food. Careful tasting by retaining the food in the mouth until all the goodness of taste has obtained is a great It is sat The real val f thi that one is satisgfied with of and overcating & process is s amount the le food is avoided The real value of a not only a loss of the but in otercoming ma discases, It is well known, in cases of ohesity, that the heagt, lungs, liver| and kidneys are H'l‘v(llvm\ the suffers | ers, The relief experienced in the working of these ng from a satis- factory reducing dict is worth all the time one may give to it ! In thirty-one cases whe investigation in a large hospital, it that dicting, besides reducing weight, also reduced the blood sure The another Heth wheezi sweats wer In sixte foot reducing dict is non-working fat ¥ other bodily o out of forty, carried out was foun:d the pros. olty improvement in respiration was distinet gain through this program, Shortwindedness and were stopped. Iixcessive rrected, ! ut of forty, seri. had developed, and lack of veducing diet 150 cases trouble overweight The one prosy o exercis correctod every ‘;J"j'_'fi\em_ve\\;f_umfi Rz\giéd};Afii\_ By .ufaggedy Andy Gruelle arni runy drink to the Wild Gazook and coman made very cur little puppy dogs and they jump- ot Itaggedy Ann her barked lowdly to t them Ann said hi it puppy v them did not this L they canmy back 8o pupp. it e and anid Tog do stay when wonld dogs | two house They jumped about Nageedy An by putting sor Puppy them at_policeman and | Thess two we 1 back again, really puppy s and are 1 4 nice 1d Gazook, docs A puppy dog: not even fog with brown ow that rv advintuse turn- agnin f licine on th ble to chang Py revents Sthirinkin Lonsly, The next moment their filthy hooks were in the garments they had left upon Holles, and they had added him filled their cart. They backed the vehicle out of the alley, and then trundled on, going eastward, their destination being the pit at Aldgate, They were already their destination, and the first light of dawn, pallid, cold, and colorless as a moonstone, was beginning to dispel the darkness, when, be it from the approaching van AWAKE NRANDAT, you AT LAST." Jolting of the cart, or from the flow of blood where one of those foul hooks had seraped his thigh, or yet from presevering Nature, quickening bis wits that he might have himself from suffocation, the Colonel was aronsed from his drunken trance. He awakened, thrusting fiereely for air, and seeking to dislodge a heavy mass that | across his face, He braced himselt and heaved more strenuously, until at length he won clear, so far, at least, as his head was coneerned, He saw the paling stars above and was able at last to breathe freely and without effort, But the burden which he had suceeeded in thrusting from his head, now lay across his breast, and the weight of it was troublesome and painful. He put forth a hand, and realizing by the sense of touch that what he grasped was & human arm, he shook it vigor- Eliciting no response, he be- gan to grow angry. “Afoot there, ye growled in a thick voice, "G ) Get up! O my life! take me for a bed that you put self to slcep across me? Gerrup roared, his iger inereasing beforc that continued lack of response, “Gerrip, or ' » He ceased abruptly, blinking in the glare of light that suddenly struck across his cyes from the fig@hing head of the toreh which had come to a standstill, and above the tall sides of it, rising into his field of vi<ion, ¢ the two horrible figures of the cart whom the sound of his voice brought to mount the wheels of vehicle, In plaintive nasal voice of I told ye warm, Latrry.” “Aye! We quoth the other W fling But Holles of their assistanc he saw of that he was a part last his ghastly Wimself clear, his knes side the cart, feet, lung a leg over mbling as he did full length upon drunken lob” had the inpatienee carce the those ghouls, EONLry-cove was one of the And what now? yuerilously im oul, o' course.” s ho longer in need Their words and grim load of made him real- situation. He nd struggled, Thenee he pulled what which he at el asping, ripyed himself 1 the hi and leaped down, st 73 and spraw! ground By the time r the ¢ ling on again, and the obscens langhter from were ringing hideously silent street. . Mechanically he trudged on and on, aimlessly now, a man walking in nightmare At last he paused, without knowl- edge or care of where he wa utter- y bereft of strength, he sank pres- 1 gathered him tready trund- neals of hoarse, the carters through the seif up, ently into the shelter of the doorway | of a deserted house, and, there fell asleep. When he a sun that He himse niterls he awakene full glare of igh in tiv next in the ready abont rrounding to on of mid-street s o heavens, him 1 found that that § o conid form a - him trays in had In man |~ GOOD MANNERS™ A Man to Man Meeting ool E BY *+ RAFAEL » SABATIN| ** © ILLUSTRATED By R, SATFERFIELD - o . l SED BY NEA SERVICE, INC, steeple hat dressed in black, leaning {upon a red wand and regarding him attentively., ‘ “What ails you?" the man asked | hint. seeing him awake and conscious. Disgruntied, Holles glared at him. {*The sight of you,” he snapped, and | struggled stiffly up. aught else. Vel even as he gained his feet, a giddiness assailed him. He steadied mself a moment against the door- | post: then reeled and sank down {again upon the step that had been his | couch. For some few seconds he sat there bemused, marveling at his| If @ man has a lctter of introduc- condition. Then, acting on a sudden |fion to another man, he mails it | thought, he tore open the breast of | Then it is customary for the recipient | big shirt. {to call up the sender and invite him |77 “I'liea?” he shouted wildly, When |t0 his home, offer to take to next he looked up, he was laughing, a |lunch or do anything elsethe situa- ringing, exultant laugh. “1 lied! | tion might call for. | There is something clse, TLook!" And | he pulled his shirt wider apart, sol |that the man might see what he had | found. And that was the last thing| |that he remembered. | On his breast the flower of the | plague had blossomed while he slept. CHAPTER XXVII. The Pest-House | There ensued for Colonel Holles on | |some plane other than that of mun- !dane life a period of fevered activity, | of dread encounters and terrible com- bats, of continual strife with a re-| lentless opponent dressed in black and white satin who wore the counten- | ance of His Grace of Buckingham and who was ever on the point of | vet, being unmerciful, | him “THE YOUNG LADY ACROSS THE WAY | never slayed. The fact is that Holles liven in a! | world of delirium, hence at last he| awakened one day to sanity-—awak- ened to die, as he thought, when he had taken stock of his surroundings and realized them by the aid of mem- ories he assembled of his last waking | conscious hours, | He found himself lying on a pallet, | near a window, through which he had ia glimpse of foliage and of a strip of indigo sky. Tears gathered in his eyes, {rolled down his wasted cheeks, | Steps were softly approaching his | bedside, Some one was leaning over him. He turned his head once more and looked up. ’ e fear toolk possension. of Biam, ‘b0 ThAL | oy rer S 0OR €poct ofber peeple Lo for a moment his heart seemed to| wh,:l\:em‘,fir::lux‘:. :'r;n pallla ] contract, Aloud, he explained !o;m“ e . himself that apparition. | I am at my dreams again complained in a whisper. At his bedside stood a woman, young and comely in the gray home- | (spun, with the white bands and wig {and coif that made up the garb of | Puritans, Her face was small and |pale and oval, her eyes were long, of |a color between blue and green,, very | wistful now in their expression, and |from under the wings of her coif escaped one or two heavy chestnut curls, to lie upon her white cheek. A fine cool hand sought his own where |1C lay upon the coverlet, o volce that |was full of soft, sad music answered | him | “Nay, and | The young lady across the way says he COMMUNICATED ON VACCINATION Editor of The Herald: First, I want to thank you for the |space allotted me, By the physician who worships ut the medical shrine of vaccinopathy, 1 expect to be censorcd but here gocs, nevertheless, You may make this world s democracy,” but it will not he safe to live in as long as from the cradie 1o the grave we are made victims of the prevailing fnoculation with vaceines and bacteria. For gencrations w have endured this vaceinating utro- And now he saw that those long | ¢ity in silence, helpless to help our- wistiul eyes were aswim in tears, sclves against the governmentally en- “Where am 1, then?" he asked, in |forced will of the medical profession. his first bewilderment since| What profiteth us to live it our God- awakening. {made blood is periodically and pore “In the pest-house Bunhin | petually tainted with deadly pus vac- ¥ields,” she told him, only |cines? Why introduce a blood infec- served to increase the in | tion where none exists one might his mind, |develop, or as we s he caught? “That is . T can understand | Maintain the purity of the blood and [that. T have the plague, I know, § I|the body will be in health, Can vac- remember being stricken with jt, | cination improve on its purity as But you? How come you here formed in the Jaboratory of nature in a pest-house?" Eminent physicians, 1 admit, sup- “There was nowhere else for me to | Port and sponsor vaccination, but go after after 1 1eft that house | caually eminent physicians and aise in Knight Ryder Street,” And very renowned bacteriologists and statise briefly she cxplained the circum. |ticians have condemncd it as produe- stances, tive of serious injuries, Who wins? “And you tended me? You?”|lct us look up the statistics, Incredulous amazement lent strength| These show Japan the most intens to his enfeebled voice, |sively and thoroughly vaccinated “Did not you tend country in the world, suffers the most. swered him seyeroly from smallpox. The official He made a gesture of repudiation |statistics show that smallpox epi- With one of his hands, grown so pale |demics progressively increased in and thin, {Japan as the compulsory vaccination Then he Jooked al her with piteous|law was more and more enforced. hope that yowll | During the period of 1886-1908, {there occurred in Japan, 285,999 1 have |cascs of emallpox, with 77,415 deaths, a death rate of over per cent, | which is far in excess of the death |rate for the insanity and unvaceinated England of over a hundred ycars ago, | According to the 1918 report bf thel Philippine health service, 5,876} | persons were vaceinated in the prov inces and the death rate in their last What matter | epidentic of smallpox was 65.51 § cent. l.ooks very must as though vaccina4 v for Randal, You are awake at | last ank God!™ real in which confusion me?" ghe an- eyes, *1 scarce dare forgive em all “Rut 1 do, Randal. 1 do. long since forgiven you. 1 gave vou my forgivencss and gratitude when 1 knew what you had done for me, how you risked your life in reparation, 1f 1 could forgive you then, can 1 har- bor resentment now that 1 know all? 1 do forgive—frecly, uttcrly, com- pletely, Randal dear.” “Then T am content. all my unte d dreams of crowned knight-er, all my high-flown ambitions? this must 1 have |tion is a giant delusion. come in the end. T was a fool not to| However, there’s one thing sure have taken the quiet good to which 1! Any man or woman who will take the was born. Then might we have been [time to read the literature on the in happy, Nan, and neither of us would | feetion of vaccine and the morbidity have felt the need 1o seek the hollow |Statistics of smalipox, and its Ypop. triumphs of the world.” cyed little brother, vaccination, called “You talk as if you were die,” | vaccinia for short, will receive, som e reproved him through his tears, |startling worth while knowledge, “But you shall get well again.” Yours truly, “That surely were a crowning folly oLV when 1 may %0 happily And then the doctor supervencd to interrupt them, and to confirm cir- cumstantially Ther assertiol that Holirs was now out of danger. The truth is that, he had done for her when plaguc- stricken, she had for him. Iy unremitting him in the endiess hours of delirtum, reck- less of how she ed herself in the effort, had brought him safe- | from infection duc to vaccination a Iy through the Valley of the Shadow, [far as we know. Unguestionably thy and already, cven as he spoke of |figures quoted from Japan do not cor dying, deluded by his weakness and | respond with the figures from U. the great lassitude that attends ex-|service circles, This, also, may bq haustion into belleving that already | chance—but then, life is a chance he stood upon the threshold, his re- | One may be taking a chance when ong covery was assured. is vaccinated, deaths have occurre |from impure vaceine; one may b taking a chance when he goes withou vaccination, deaths have certainly oc curred from smallpox—right here if ew Writain, within a few weeks, 1 is just a question of which chance on | wishes to take. Tt the person wh elects to go without vaceinatio; showld have enough consideration fo & fellow b the contami » b Tise he hould keep pr i ry, o0 10 ‘R 1. DAVIE The writer of above is quotin from statistics that knowledge of, he may not in a position to say. servicemen, army, thoroughly nd typhoi antness and dherd of smallpos or 1y they any fataliticd the we e of L marines were pinst smallpox tate unpl no epidemie nor were navy and vaceina durin what 8 ehe v now done he wore phoid, of his or exha she (Continued in Our Next Issue) Ixather Coats Coats of very soft, supple leather, vsually in gray or ttan are worn with wraparound skirt of pain or striped wool. Red and Henna chane 1 a% 1o avoid tin, might v ¢ "e it ot othe i e 4 henm: - rrying 1 4 oSt much to himsell, popular shades.

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