New Britain Herald Newspaper, March 21, 1924, Page 20

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AILY FASHION SERVICE. ORIGINAL IN TRIMMING 2$HLHEH L HLLHLHHHLHHIHLHHLHLESSHLL 55868095 H0EH 598959 MY HUSBAND’S LOVE{ * This @ satin suit’ has nothing origin- 2lal to ofi | s v in the way of line, but it @ | devotes its originality to trimming. | Heavy silk‘floss and wooden sbeads, t shade of the silk, adorn the front of the belted Adele Garrison’s New Phase of o the ¢ REVELATIONS OF A WIFE § /i L T e e L L S down on both sides back there and | move over in the corner back of me. | Il attend to thes | To my great disgust 1 found my fingers. trembling as 1 released the | spring in the curtains, for both men | eve. for traffic officers he drove | Were Visibly tense and exeited, and I | r Tiion faon: thrangic) ) d - what might ngt have | Srooklyn to Jamaica, and thence|SOnC wrong at Mrs. Bird's house along the picturesque country road I made no attempt to find out, how- | which copwects that bustling borough | YT and the next minute we were ith Fhishing, off again, the interior of the car se Al ok we | cure| shielded from any ul..wrmllpn. o tatfic, and then |Uthough from my position behind sensing that the boy, for he |Uhe driver I was able to see where was so brimful of | W Were soins. his experiences that he needed the | What T EehAre ot elliie them the| Tt was not long before we came to | Slence with a thniative the sidesroad which led toward the | “r yau ‘Kave your ar il and from which the driver | Sk giTn turned to the ash-strewn alley at the | Ho hifahed around rear of the row of ample old home ruptly, so that he wateh the | Steads of which rs. Bird's house w: road and talk at the sane time, one. The alley was as deserted as, “You bet !” he happily. we had left it save for a costly high- didn’'t take long after 1 powered gar drawn up at one side for me to get my friend on the tele- | Near the entrance, its nose turfed phone He changed the license |toward thie boulevard strect plates on my car for a pair he| The driver shot a sharp glance at snaked off another in the shop, and | it then chuckled audibly ‘ than with along, too, he beat | Whoever owns that isn't going to it down to the Manhattan Bridge— |take any chances” he suid. “If the Queenshboro was too near where | an¥body comes out from our house that bird lamped me'to want to|OVer this route tonight, that lad travel that way tod We met in|is ready to follow ‘em to the hot a garage we both know mnot very far|place and back agnin. ‘There's an- from the Manhattan Bridge, changed | Other one, I'll bet, loitering around for my own license plates again, and the boulevard in the front of the then I beat it over here, while he |house.” vk 3 Joafed uptown again. T closed my lips tightly, for T did “You didn't see anything, not wish the frantic query on my of the man you'—I started to -say |liPs to escape. With all exits from “reared”, but changed it abruptly to | the house guarded in this way, how “encountered.” were we going to spirit the Harri- “Neither hide nor son children off to the steamship on turned, unconsciously relapsing into [Which Alfred Durkee had engaged the vernacular of his unmistakable [their passag country childhood. *“I suppose he's T~ THE YOUNG LA still cruising around the corner of The Startled Query That Nearly Lscaped Madge Mrs. Bird's youthful driver lost no | time in obeying Lillian's instruction “beat it to I7lushin, With a wonde speak to him until of the ibled Mad broke 1 see own R MARY | A daily menu for the stout and thin) in his seat ab- coyid EAT AND LOSE WEIGHT One large orange, 1 cup consomme with 1 poached ¢ 1 large serving broiled shad, 1 cup stewed tomatles, head curly endive, 6 blades celery, tablespoons strawberry fluff on 1 | split lady finger, 2 slices gluten toast, |2 gluten rolls, 1 pint buttermitk. Total calovies, 1611. Protein, 300; at, carbohydrate, 4 Tron, [.0179 gram | Drop a poached egg on a plate of | consomme and serve with hread sticks tonsted crisp. The entire family will enjoy broiled shad. For those wHo are not dieting to rediee, lemon butter should be served. For the reducing diet nothing but lemon, salt and pepper should be used for seasoning. The strawberry flulf is made by beating the white of one cgg, one cup fresh striwberries and three-quarters cup sugar until the niixture is very Sliff. This is then piled on sponge cake or lady fingers, As this menu is lacking in fats onc tablespoon of I'rench dressing can be used on the endive if a strict diet need not be followed. EAT AND GAIN WEIGHT One large orange, 1 cup cooked | cereal with dates, 1 cup consomme with 1 poached egg, 3 tablespbons macaroni and cheese, 1 large serving {broiled shad with 2 tublespoons lemon butter, tAblespoons potatoes | an gratin, 1 cup stewed tomatoes with | tcast cubes, 1 head curly endive, Llades celery, 2-inch square cottage pudding with maple sauce, table- spoons strawberry flufl on lady fingers, tablespoons dressing, 1 tablespoon sugar, 1 cream, 2 corn meal mulfing, 6 toast bread sticks, 2 slices gr m bread, 2 dinner rolls, 3 tablespoons butter, 1 fpint whole milk “It then, | hair,” he re- DY AGROSS THE WAY Fifty-eighth and Lexington, or wateh- Ing the Queensboro Bridge, Well, he'll wait quite a while ford this rab- bit to stick his head into the trap! And I've passed the word to some chaps that'll take care of him pro- per.” T shivered involuntarily, for there was Something vaguely sinister in the boy's manner, and although T was sure that there was full justi- fication@for anything he might have planped for the “taking ea of the escaped criminal ‘who as revenge- fully tracking him, yet I coutd not help wishing my . journey in his en- forced companionship was over, * “Can You Pix 12" We came into Flushing, of course, upon another route than the one I bad traveled, and in the outskirts of | the borough the lad, with a quick look behind him, swerved his car suddenly into the open door of a (By Dr, Clifiord C. Rob ECT O DREAMS There is no doubt that gt times some forms of bodily disease, which | real menace to health, are disclosed [ by dreams, What are ¢ gists a8 recurrent times,#n certain type real indication of case, Recurrent dreams are those which apparently are able to focus the dream world or thought, which is our real world while we sleep, on the existent trouble, In one ca, Bleep every of two wecks, son) 1 4 by the dreams are of persons, trouble or dis- Protien, 406; | bohydrates, 1588: Iron, 01682 gram, Maple Sance One cup maple sirup, 2 egg whites, | Beat whites of eggs until stiff, and dry. Beat in sicup cooked until a soft.ball is formed when tried in cold water, Beat until cool, Total' calories, §50, carbohydral dream came to the few nights for a period He felta knawing sation in the abnominal region, dream would always cause him awake and at times he admitted even felt_pain, where the sensation occurred, The attending physician decided to [ try Xeray and an nlecr was dis- covercd and a successful operation performed, There is no doubt that dreams are frequently caused by trouble, Whers recurrent, n | se, the garage. i “There's n bolt loose on the llr‘-vr-‘ hg gear, Mas” he announced loudly s a short rusty-haired man stubbed up to us. “Can you fix it, quick? U'm in an awful hurry."” | The man beént his head over the tng gear, and I heard & mur- futerchange of quick ques- and answers whose purport I could not catch until the last any from the % of my driver—"Any- body here? “Only me,” the short man replied “hen, M My driver turned | te me—"please plll those curtains Protien, 50; Limit of ¥ Washington—Harey Jameson, ar- rested for assault and battery, told the judge how it came about: “We was shootin’' ¢ yo' honor, an' when Ah d one ‘of them other boys was playin’ with Joaded dice, Ah couldn’t forbear myself. So Ah crowned him.” Inagmuch ar the eoronation ceres mony was performed with a brick, Jameson had to pay and costs,” lurance Ll mu tons an a The young lady across the way says suspense is always the hardest thing to bear and she supposes a ghilty man suffers most when his sentence is suspended, discoy ams occur and are glandular diagnosis should be m it the one offlicted Is at all in doult as to some trouble that affects the physica) health, such 1 Lasily the before - - 1 Keeps Air Pure Hold tomatoes over Keep small box filled with quick- for a few seconds lime in the pantry or cellar and the [them and the air will be dry and pure, without tearing the vege flame peel gas you skin is ecasily ihle, Letter From Leslie Prescott to Treslie | that if I told her 1 had found it, if i he ever,visited us, she would want Prescolt, Cqre-of the Secret |\, 50k futo it and you know, dear Drawer. o | little Marquise, that you and I could | never allow that. ~ The Adventures f Raggedy/Am ¥ou, do not know, dear little Mar-/ T wonder if your ingly lover had M‘ gedy A“Ay quiss, how wonderful it secms to belgy mother, little Marquise, 1 wonder | heme Wgain, to be among My OWN it you had trouble with trying 1o L J% g “ H . o y 0 “\y rugie possessions; to open this little drawer | pake yourselg agreeable 1o her, where the utmose secrets of my heart | | . bLeen down to visit Jack's are laid; to know that no one In all |yother and for his sake 1 tried to do| “Nope!” the 1 Magiclan the world except you has access to my e but, oh, it was so said, “I shall not tell you what 1 did them. hard, lit Marquise, For at least| with the Magical Burning Stick, nor Jack's mother was quite curlous yyoniy.five years, is not lopger, Mrs, | what 1 did with the Wild Ga about this dear old desk and wanted | progegtt, Sr., has been buried in her | Granma nor anything more! fo know i I hagd found the secrel |, cogiral home in ittle New Eng-| This made the Wild Gazook @rawer that she always knew Was| ja;q town and most of that time, like | very sad and he crled upin Mrs od ! And or she though 1 ys have to 1¢ re my my nice old has hidden " Wi G 1 can jus rom where do not main a i mean o care alwa best, ok the st of Gra ver “Ha! ange rescue r ima hie 1 the will whall Ma- very e Hoo you all int a w you me up rimals! hem you ygooly's shoulder trien held ground, " o's and "y a promiscd, orry, I'll bet' “I do not belic he it polic conld never would somewhere enclosed within it. the Ghisess, she has ey I evaded the answer for I knew 4o per ancastors, 1 gus tainly talked very gfl"wv—w i hing els« « eried too they any- he says!” he into ani- word little about e nican old Magician upon obnoxious to "y hange ¥ o yes mals, he said v W ty an old it if om i pron Magician, she lamenting ittle Jack, m fact that my darling baby, had no ancestors to speak Of course 1 knew that J mother i that brilliant Pavia 1" and 1 sirongly suspeet that his is Jack's best friend, Sydney Carton the edy to the mean old Magician whe Wil 1t ald you like some very shouid into your little por sides 1 \ ' Ay your ma too ve a| psycliolo- some- | to gnawing some glandulur | removed be | about you-0-0 what yon DOUGLAS BEGIN HERE TODAY Ballie Peck, employe of the Fair | Deal ¥Five & Ten, on her way home to supper, meets the crippled son of a’'railroad switchman. The Jad teils ‘Sallie that his father is drinking and that he is worried for ‘ear he may he | the cause of disaster. | Sallie passes him on to the home |of Ma Brennan, with whom she lives, | Ma is reading in a New York paper an account of a big diamond robbery in New York. She tells Sallie she has something to ask Michael, a po- liceman, when he comes to call on| Sallie. Sallie is heartbroken and angry be- | cause her friend Michael is seen at |the Empire Theater with Mame Dor- | She is told that Michael has | taken Mame home more than once {lately, Ma prepares a steak for | Sallie but Sallie can not eat it. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY “Mike won’t be here.” Sallie rose. | “Sit still, Ma, T'll do up my dishes ! *“You're ate nothin'! That store'll be the death of’ ye an’ glad T'll be to | | see ye out o' it for good an’ all!” Ma | Brennan exclaimed meaningly. “It| |don't seem that Michael was anny sconer out o' the army and back on |the Force than he joses the uniform { again, this time for a shield! Young- lest plainclothes man—Why Sallie, { chila!” “Don’t talk about Mike any more, |Ma!” The girl spoke thfough set teeth, “I—I don’t ever want to hear { his name again!—Oh, there's some- Ibody on the porch! I'm going up- stairs!” But she was too late, for after one | stupefied glance Ma Brennan waddled to the door and opened it, admitting the stalwart subject of her inter- rupted eulogy. | “Hello, Ma! The hearty voice of | Detective Sergeant Michael Curtis | boomed through the little kitchen as he shook her hand. “How are you tonight ?—Where's Sallie—!" His roving glance had passed her and stopped and the eagerly expect- ant smile died 8n his lips for the girl cenfronted him from the stairway | with blazing eyes. “I thought you were on duty right,” She epoke jerkily in cifort at calm, , last night- * ‘Last night! Sallie caught him up with withering scorn. “I'm wise to where you were last night, Mike | Curtis, and other evenipgs besides when you were pulling this ‘duty’ {stuff and getting away with it—nor: | Why ain’t you at the Empirve tonight, | listening to her tickle the ivories?” His face whitened beneath the tan and then colored a dull red while a hurt, half-bewildered Jook ecame into | his brown eyes, like those of a faith- ful dog which has been kicked when he expected a caress, “Ballie—girl! You don't under- stand!" He advanced a step or two pleadingly as Ma Drennan gasped and looked from one to the other of | them, “You've got to listen to me | T've got a right to tell you, to ex | pain- | “There's some things that don't need explaining!™ Sallie struck the Lanister rail sharply with her small fist, “What you done ix your busi- ness, Mike, and who yon run around with; thank goodness, N never give you any reason to think you had to band me an excuse!” | “No--reason! Michael's jaw set, “I told you T was on duty; I couldn't say any more before—"' Awd you can't now, not to me! | Bay, listen, Mike, and get this | etraight,” Khe paused and then sald slowly through lips grown suddenly { white, “T don’t want o see you cgain, not ever I hate lies, and I'm | through!™ For a moment longer he gazed at her and back of the hurt look in his cyes something else dawned which she had never seen there lbefore, Then he drew himself up, bowed stiff- Iy and wheeled as though on parade, to lay his hand for a moment on Ma | Brennan's shoulder and then pass | with a firm tread out into the night. Sallie flew up to- her room like a {small whirlwind and Jocked the door | before hier trembling hands sought aj match. Mechanically but with fever. | to- an <|1sh huste she undressed, avolding her | own eyes in thte Jittle mirror over the | dresser, then turning out' the gas she {opened her window and flung herself | her whole body shak- | | | cried | across the bed | ing. | “'Nobody licd—said that 1 * One of lise Thorkin sen’s new records blared mockingly | from the phonograph next door, and | [ from theskitchen below on the left of | | their own two-family house came the | sickening odors of vinegar, spices and bot grease as Mrs, Sehmidt and her s|son Oscar prepared the following |day's supply for their . delicatesson | store Lut sound and odor were alike swiftly annihilated when the Western iAmited voared past, shaking the | | | honses and leaving the i Gstham |ging clotheslines heavy with {grasp and the first which éanid to her | fresh flow: {cologne, yete parttaking of a myriad | scents blended Into a perfect whole, {er and glass of cut Gossip’s Corner Moire Bags Black moire bags with silver frames are appropriate to carry when one wears & tailored suit or frock. Kerchiefs Match The newest handkerchiefs to carry with the evening frock are of chiffon |tint matches the frock In color, edged with gold or silver lace. GRANT © 1924 NEA SERVICE INC linen that's worth hundreds o' doi- lars!” Ma mourned. ‘T would have to be done over annyways from the sut of the thrains but with the rain it’ll be ruint entirely, and ime legs are that swole—!" “Don’t you bother, Ma! I'll get it all in quicker'n you'd have cne piece off the line!” Oxford Gray Szlly van down the stairs, dripping| Oxford gray s becoming a strorx her slippers by the way and unlatch- | competitor of navy blue and the hair- ing the kitchen door, stepped out|:ine stripe when it comes to the smart barefooted into the cold, eery mist of | tailleur. rain. Nearly half past iive! The milk train was late and the famous Arrow almost dve—there, she could hear the distant humming of the rails which toid of its ap- proach, Soon it would go nurtling by with its streak of tiny electric lights in the gray dawn. H Shivering, Sallie gatihered the thin robe about her and started down the Lack yard between the rows of eag- their Lizard Handle . A azmart parasol of crimson #ilk |has a handie of lizard skin colored red to match. Play Safe Ffiave your rings examined ocea- sionally to see that the settings still hold. Alpaca Popular Alpaca is the smartest material for morning frocks gt the present time and it comes in"a most interesting range of colors. curtains of damp, grimy linen. Then iike a bo!t from the heaveus a clangorous, reverberating crosh shook th eearth and hefore Sallie could turn, before the first shriek of rending wood and steam and human agony fose upon the air something struck her a violent blow on the head, a huge weight rushed upon her 2 from behind, pinning her down and ! biatter, on which the meat is to be r world was blotted out, | served, directly under the meat and CHAPTER IL |all the juices will be saved. Also it The Changeling | obviates the necessity of washing the The girl 1n the Marie Antoinctte [ dripping pan. bed stirred without opening her eyes. One sensation at a time was enough reating Bird When a bird is sick, a simple home remedy is to give it a few drops of olive oil and then feed it green leaves of cabbage, lettuce or cejery tops. Save Juices When you broil meat put the meat Treshen Flowers o freshen crushed and faded flow- touch the backs .of the petals Ky with gum arabic and jet that then dip in gasoline and remove quickly’ and rinse in clean gasoline to which a ‘ube of oil paint has heen added. Save Floors Glue rounds of felt to all your chairs and tables (hat do not have castors and there will be no marks on your polished floors, % Tulle used considerably dinner gowns, many-pointed Bl Black tulle is notw for evening and ‘requently with full, skirts and close bodices. Home Plans In planning a howe, always try to keep doors and closets so that they break up the spoce as litile as possible, HE LAID HIS HAND ON BRENNAN'S SHOULDHKR. erything fyfitates me—1 am a bundle of nerves, I.ache all over and camnot sleep and am so despondent,” This cxtract from a letter written from one woman to another describes the condition of many women who suffer from feminine ailments, Noth- ing will relicve this distressing condi- ton so sar w8 Lydia 15, Pinkham's Vegetable ompound, made from roots and herbs, 1'or {ifty years it has been restoring sick and alling women of America to health and strength, DRINK WATER IF KIDNEYS HURT Take o tablespoontul of Salts i Back waking to for her consciousess was the cool, slippery feeling of the sheets, She turned her head, burrowing into the pillow that seemed wo strangely soft, and a delicate elusive perfume greoted her, not as saweet as rs nor sharply pungent like A silvery chime like the twinkle of | faint, fairy bells stole upon the air and the girl lstened dreamily at first | then with a sudden tensity as the notes died away, and slowly, cautions. ly she opened hier hine eyes They widened in a series of utter incredul. ity, If this were a dream it resembled nothing she had ever seen in all her | iifel A ceiling painted like the palest blue with flecey pink-tipped clonds floating 'round on it; wills paneled in pale blue and wreathed with tiny rosesbuds, spindley gold fur niture draped in blues and pinks and the softh subdued light of day filter- | ing through lavers like creamy veils! Warily -her glance traveled to the side of the bed and there upon a slender gold stand she beheld a pitehs crystal and a Pains or Bladder Bothers, Too much meat may produce uric acid, says a well known authority, who warns us 1o be constantly on guard against kidney trouble The kidneys do their utmost to free the blood of this irritating acid, but become weak from the overwork; they get sluggish: the eliminative tis- w clog and thus the waste is re- ined In the vlood to poison the en- tire system, When your kidneys ache and feel Jike lumps of lcad, - and you have stinging pains in the back, or the urine is cloudy, full of sediment, or foarm lace of the sleeve which fell|yne pladder is irritable, obliging you from it and then' grasped that bell. iy geek relief during the night; when fhe rang it not on languid sln.\.:‘(m have scvere headaches, nervous mons but with determination and its|,.4 aj sy spells, @loeplossness, acld mellow tones shrilled in sudden com- | jonach or rhetimatism in bad weathe plaint, but the first notes had barely | oy gat from your pharmacist about sounded when a doo ropencd and a | roue sunces of Jad Salts; take 1a- tall, dark woman appeared dressed in | ploynoons in a glass of water before black and white just exactly like a|jrogktast each morning, and in a few i maid in a movie, g ryoace ™ ) our kidneys may act fine. This “Mademoisee rang-"% Her ‘hin|oye your kidney 4 " ' A famous gaite is made from the acid of lips smiled but the bright black eves |y aha jomon juice, combined with seemed searchoing, alert on guard \]lhlifl, and has been used for gener There —was rvecognition in them.|iiong to flush and stimulate clogged though, and that was something. |y oo 1o mely neatralize the acids Mademoiselle regarded her thought- | ;5 e 6o 1t is no longer & source of fvily for a moment and then ob-|y . iiation, thus often ending urinary orved: f nd bladder disorders. Come again? Jad Salts is inexpensive and cannot B A injure; makes a delightful efferves- tiny, golden bell, Was ghe asicep, after all? What wouldhappen if she ng that beil? Once normally activi@er brain was given to quick decisions rather than fdle speculation and drawing one thin arm from beneath the coverlet she stretehed it forth, glanced at the | s T didn't get you | have rigg? 1‘).:-[ cent lithia water drink, and nobody fimsy frame {maid smiled again and_advancing to| creeping stench of conl-gas in its|the bed she took the bell from the| . “roio o mistake by taking & little wake, Poor crippled Hughie Rob- EIrl's unresisting hand and replaced | oo ginaty to help to keep the kid- bins' pa was not so fat gone in drink |it Within reach on the stand. There| . o ioan and active. Drink plenty that he had forgotten his job. |was something dry and repulsive in| 050 oy Ui imes, Presently Ma Brennan, sniffing|the smooth, deft touch qf her fingers, audibly, crept with heavy-footed cau- | “Mces Tidmarsh is resting. | tion up the stairs to listeh for a mo-| “Oh, she is, s she?” Not for et ot B door and then pass | ¥orlds wou'd the girl have asked who | on to her own. The odors of sauer- | Miss Tidmarsh” was; her own iden- | Lrate Wi bolling -neats | Hty was still puzzling her, but who| ceased 1o rise from below the | could have wished such a name as| eezy phonograph was sitent but at| “Alva” on anybod 5 intervals a siow freight bellowed past, | __“Shall 1 bring the chocolate now? puffing and grir ding on the rails, or a | 11he question was innocent enovgh but | jate iocal chugged fussily ajong, jte|the maid’s cool, metatilic tones held | recking breath blowing in at her | Something insinuating as-she leaned a window, and still the girl lay with |trifle closer and added: “Madame Wot. dry eses staring inio the dark- [Copeland your mother, will be de. ne 5 {1ighted to know that you are so much The triine grew less frequent and | better, Mees Alva, A trifie of toast in & perlod of silence a distant clock | With the chocolate : boomed the hour of midnight. | The girl called "AlvA’ nodded, not Dawn brought a sharp nip of cold ltru ting herself to speak and still and the gentle slow fall of rain pre- | Smiling the woman glided away. soging a steady downpour., With uwl i | first paiter of drops on the tin roof Ma Brennan's bedsprings just beyond the thin partition creaked and her| > Sirictly Spraking groans were audible a8 she shuffied [ “What's romance®” iInquired Wil- havily about the room. In a twinks |Viem, looking up from his history Ting Sallie spr rom her own bad, | book. Father would have answored | \fumbled for slippers and a flimsy | LUt other was too quick for him. | o and unlecked her door “Romance, My dear.”” she said, ‘i | forgot an’ 157t me clathes out a man’s way of explaining thin | Never be withous MUELLER'S in your pantry the hand-embryded Lendon Morning Pest. B o o This was particula | Beware of Imitations me because kept a you ry strange at Sydney W 1 K You maoy think it knowing this I stiil think Carton is one of the hest Why 1 should feel this 1 do not know, for 1 have Wim once, except tim k at my father's on arrag \ Magician growle “Onh! B wutioned, premised tha 1! If you wonld feel W m vay u careful agge “itememiy 1 you would not ¥ [ " i dy At e ayed any he b, your Mama L We a of course 1 wouid to Harry 1 Wi Gazook's menn oundly it start Hooiygools so much 50 1 darry man Magici tond to his fe (Continued in Our Next Issue) MUELLER'S el | EGG NOODLES | a1 an i( Harrs " did make mp 1 1 am his wi Moz 1 ) cFy, it an sprang ou what!” Just yo d 1 s place th my . kimo 1 might, Aepir p o8 nti versiey Pa Sgideser of £ali

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