New Britain Herald Newspaper, May 27, 1924, Page 10

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{ BILSPSHEHL L3 HLPSLLHHHL559H L HHEHDS5LHL08 565808558 | ——4 MY HUSBAND’S LOVE Adele Garrison’s New Phase of REVELATIONS OF A WIFE L R D e e T L R T T L R T X T and 1 termination to do upsct her FPPTTFVPIILII4ES sure, wa cert tirm The Waming For Lillian That Dicky Gave Madge At Dicky questions Fning Lillian 1 felt my mental bristies rising exactly—I told myself Jy—as might a wary presence of something she did not un- ¢ derstand But my common sense told me that while his first cone: ns for staying in o e, the last Wi ustificd my wished to learn Liilian's ward the Ma Acautiful There must picion in my my husband’s uncert er Wi # s 1o g 3 enough to skirt that 3 1 waited until absolutely unruffic 1 answer TG errt ¢ “I don’t think th ns to them thought.’ I replied mendacionsly, then flea put & query she 1 in the de noth- s concr ing which woulid hefore her journey cided that misun- would contemptuons- 1« the an appars old cat in derstanding his meaning me | and 1 sp with ap- tishy the of firing off the that 2" 1 demanded cross- “I didn’t mean you theught them You'v What's andie iik e Lpartment query )l that said perfectly croo id you one train- them certa uspicion that time ed and lowed that this annc her \ ks an Fawe amily cmale rat my nerves. I was sure my \ 1 before iee I shonld 1 in on, be- Lil's she's given m to put a think em of my own in appurently i on only ghonuld she ing stunts’' in that directior you're prejudiced against the but I think you" sure Lillian g amiss with them. What opportunity has she had to observe t 1 if ahe them M wrong, and hasn't scer anythiv 1em, eve had any suspicion concerning rejudiced against them., 12" Dickey recorted patently seizing upon the words which struck him forcibly *“Where d'you that stuff? Be I didn’t take to the cut of Petey's ji and the buzz-saw of hi is that any reason why 1 should think them a bunch needi eminent investigator their tra Madge Memory Wakes He was actually iting the words, and 1 felt a little shive ing down my spine the idea of Lillian investigating Marks family was not distus ful to him, but actually alarmed him Al the engendered by Dicky’s absorbed st in Mollie Faweett—suspicions which 1 deter- minedly had crushed, scoring myself s ly for what 1 termed my acnseless jealousy—Sprang uddenly Into hydra-headed life What did Dicky know conee the doing of the family in the and how had he obtained the knowl- edge? Of course, 1 realized that there was no element of considera- tion for the Marks family In the con- cern he was unconsciously manifest. Ing. But that he was genninely concerned over Lillian's possible in- vestigations was cvident, and there was but onc possible eonclusion There must be something queer on foot, put it mildly thing in which Mollie Faweett in volved and ‘my hushand knew what it and fear for her memory flew back to the when Dicky had wound upon his h handkerchiefs and later had discovered Faweett's, Indeed Dicky had mitted muc) 1 taxed with the embs fact night before, and forget his sarvag eovery voiee Spouse, on B lnst steal- | realized that the as 1 WEIGHT 1 thin crisp EAT AND LOSE One-all grapefruit, broiled bacon, 1 cup vegetable 2 tablespoons whole wheat croutions, 1 head lettuce, 1 cup clear tomato soup, 1 cup chicken salad, 3 large green olives, 4 button radishes, 1 cup hot chopped spinach with lemon tablespoons strawberry fluff, or 1 small plece sponge skimmed milk, 2 crisp wheat toast, calories, 1173, Protein, carbohydrate, 466, only piece suspicions L inter uice, 1 ladyfinger 1 pint s whole Total fat, 366; 0201 aguin o rning i LLLH Iron, gram Steawherry Fluft v fresh strawberries cut cup powdered sugar, One quarters 1 ogg white, Put all the Beat with a It will take the “heatey Total calories, 15; earbohydra in 1 ingredients in a bow), beater until stift, 20 minutes and very strong. 8b; dover about should be to or was My night with a bound up with sear 1 to Mollie ! cereal EAT AND GAIN W half grape froit with sugar, 2 piecos brofled bacon hotied 1 eup uncook with 1 sliced banana, 1 table. sugnr, 1.4 cup cream, 1 cup soup, 2 tablespoons whole 4 tablespoons scal lopsd eheese and rice, 1 head let thee with tablespoons Thousand Isiand dressing, 1 cup cream of toma to to with 1 tablespoon whipped my polsc and or cup chieken malad with 2 But 1 knew tablespoons mayonn large green o information 1 n radishes, 1 cup apin few min ith 1 hard boiled egg and 2 farmhouse spoons butter apd lemon juice, 4 strawberry fluff on one sponge cake masked with apoonk whipped eream, 1 pint milk, 2 pleces buttered toast, 2 hrown plecos whele poons butter, come hoine RE. which on b soft ad him the «oon dis- wpoon & whe when raseing 1 anger ns vegetable t croutons only «honld at ms “A Vlea Difficult hold my anewer that 1 angor utes we showld where Dicky's awaiting finish her pr with her son to he riet's hom That and her Far” ndeed, v ne wonp temper and oam, 1 hit would Resid 1hly ise, 3 in (] [ ach 2 tahie tallespoons 1ar taly within a br mother arrival the cagerly might trip Har ot that she pirer parations her danghter for r whale Lread bread, 2 ta in alicos ringue lemon m Ko angle s | B Prosontt Ellington Retter Trom to Ruth ease 1 c Foot Beer arme £ ) glases WILLIAMS « ROOT BEER EXTRACT. ° 2%5¢ bottle of W, y x- tract—makes § an I think them Biy i i | yurer NEW BRITAIN DAILY FANHION SERVICE. PRACTICAL COAT e This praisoworthy pletely stylish has It has collar the practical coat features, the frock, 'k and a may be worn about open in a shawl effect a novel trimming s many com- the th throat It also out the neck bands of ow and red hraid, a color- | that might be copied to | year's model more up to cove cape or in has ves consisting of il tonch make a las Protein, 1980, 594; Iron, tal calories, 4302 fat, 1718; carbohydrate, 0214 gram. Boiled rice W se and the ecalloped The more will be the Remember ds that person who would gain in weight. | (Copyright 1924, NEA Service, Inc.) | - | bined with milk until firm for cheese dish. the richer is cor nd cheese you concoction, that bring che by rice of results the for rice quick is one | Flies From Phila. to | 10 Min. | birds owned by Racing Homer This City in4 H Sunday’s race by the Hardware City club was won by the pigeon owned by Shaw of Kensington, The were liberated at Phitadelphia, 50 a. m. and the first bird in this city at 1:55 p. m. was the birds all was very George rived wind a against but the time AW’'s bird good. timed at 919.04 yards per minute; Valentine Wisk, | 906,33 Edward Kella $08.03 yards: fourth, 8§53 street, rds; Ie court, es DeConti, LaSalle yards, er permitting, | will be liberated at Havre | , Maryland. Returns are ex- at about 3:30 p. m. the birds De Grac peeted FABLE l EEP SCALP CLE ’ If b . Mr, gular baths. Mann bit in \air should have it ok the matter of his hair, % I r of his hai child the use Now then renerally rec- be boiled when {t Rev. the training it to take A child with short cleansed twice a In shampooing of pure Castile ommended, T and rubbed upon haw reached a jelly cral*rinsings are acvisalle, should he faken taat the quite dry. To aid in the growth oil voseline rubberd scalp at the end of the to be advised. truth must was himself a careless w the pis P the hrowbeat did and a barber P an n form, but ea hair him into a shampoo, but r he wash it of his own velition, And had it wot n for Mrs. Mann he might not have thought of washing the children’s hair more than once month Hair, allowed to childhood, seldom Training the child 1« hatrwashing times is ¢ “ is olive the is ittle 11 into shampoo unclean in nes beautiful kave regular necessary as beee or \ E&?Mm | a AgS pup- Light in the Ther cept stay gied nt The Adventures f and Kfi by Jo tooled old litile Ra nid as ehe and “That fell down and there I was caught Yanzan, py dog Taggedy aown to "We fAoor and “a vas a fine the conjurer ' Raggedy Ann Andy and Berty rest after their hear the tin W boller crash on vhén you puiled upon the upset the box!"” d didn’t old Banz Jump when he ty Bear laug! thought the whole had fallen down!"” that 1 could have #ttle Rags langhed, “But n glad that 1 rescued you, not much fun being lecked a chicken coop!” and hate “Itiso way yo Rags! What did ar asked, anything box iittle Rags curled up and to wlcep, and 1 alept until some- lifted the Jid, My! 1 was surprised who it was!"” me, littie Berty 13 asn't in the “Ro 1 e wat hard run kets and porch ia rope n to do ex ust one the to wé W Raggedy It wa n, heard d. con rack- must end of was i7" Raggedy Ann and Andy asked in one breath. s old Mug s, the Magician Wttle Rags replied. “Why! what are you doing itle Rags?" he asked. 1 told himthinking all the time he would probably shut the box but 1 was surprised to hea gay, ‘The Raggedys have gone yigh the deep, deep woods in , adventures and 1 fistance . i h Aunt Amy, 1 here to get a few rking ir come and he M oy ° ha o him her o any- at el the sodas goda wate B0« wonder yas magic apring card better puUppy had v and ti mad 1n nice nicest and « rag puppy 1ya for tage him, #0 o to 1attle Page pupps dog took the plass of soda water BEGIN HERE TODAY The marriage of Dolly and Nigel| { Bretherton prives unhappy. When war is declared, Nigel is glad to en- list. He leaves Dolly in the care of Mary Furnival. Nigel is killed and Dolly marries an old sweetheart and | sails for America. When Nigel's brother, David, Nigel's widow, Mary to tell him of Dolly’s |riage. David mistakes Mary Nigel's wife and takes her to with his aunt at Red Grange. Monty Fisher expofes Mary David, Mary disappears. She meets an acquaintance, named Evans, who {sees her run over by a‘eab and taken |to a hospital. Evans tells David [ Where to find Mary. |, |b m calls to ashamed | see gi W W live | NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY | “Where is she—where fis she? { Heavens! man, can't you speak? How | Islow you are! | Evans began to stammer, | _"She was afraid of you, sir. Afraid! | thought you were going to punish She has been hiding, because He stopped; there was no | need to finish his words. The ex- pression of David Bretherton's eyes was a sufficient answer; he stood back !with a sort of pathetic humbleness, [ "It you will come with me, T will take you to her, sir. She is in the T-—— hospital CHAPTER | In No. 4 Ward | She was lying so still—so very still | when David Bretherton followed the nurse down the ward—that for a mo- !ment his heart seemed to stop beat- (ing as he bent over the narrow bed, "with its painfully even folded clothes, and looked at her white face, SL “Ma He spoke her name through the unbearable silence, but |1t fell on deaf ears. The nurse looked at him pityingly. 8} mot hear you--she has not [been conscious ever since they brought her i She smoothed a roarse sheet, David was conscious of a sort of | angry impatience; her calmness got ton his nerves, How could one bhother about a crease in a sheet when death was hovering round the bed? What did anything matter it Mary were dying? o He sat down beside the bed, leaned his face in~ his hands seemed to him now that he had bee very cruel to der in the past; he had held back and kept silent, when a word from hi mmight have lifted the burden she carried and brought peace between them. He had gone hoping would tell him of her own ) believing that some day she would come to him and make a full con- fession of her fnnocent degeption He told himself that he had tried [her too much, that he had allowed the misunderstanding to exist too She her, I she m sa o H little crease in the W Dy b 1 m and It nto ti in de he on, that she free wi w m | natural reserve and coldness | seemed (o be broken up in a sudden ‘flame of passionate remorse; ha felt a8 if he could fall on his knces beside that silent figure, and beg her to speak to him-—beg her passionately to open her eyes and smile at him onee more, | But only sat there for a mo Iment; there was a sort of compossion in her ayes, then she turned slowly away She believed that Mary Bhre did not belfeve that Cver regain consciousiness David had wired to Miss that Mary had been found, |not tell her how or but he {knew that she would ecome up to |town as soon ax she possibly could He stayed at the hospital all night Yhey had drawn a round Mary's bed now; and David sat there 1 the almost unbearable silence watching her in agonized suspense, not daring to hope that she would or speak to him again It was late! Often that knowledge has broken a man's heart to ask forgiveness, too late the word simple under standing and comfort that might ) ed pain wy gray ward like driving 1 lighting who m H Ly ne he m w N was dying. she would Varney He did when, w screen » ta w W too too late w to speak of 80 much and suffering, ' ! ¥i it a timed away the the st M hroke and chi stole into the long vis the " war ted narrow Da t ardly and i ifetime he ight a in a round that T'he in to she eame was gr 1 hagmard You don’t think she will get de her head ook pair is always hope vet umar atitnde! And when and heet one hours dragged by Miss Var the to s ed ar nget straight on he was fright broke dow Mary's sti when - she saw ehilg stnnpe F and dariing th her tears fel] fast e kieseq ® white cheek: a oy 1 mon b entied her sasy o restiese Somahon of A4 him altogether had expreesion ef. 1t was bevo a8 if his he fror e e honra nigh oned Miss Varney can do nothing. bo-d at e anger ey will i v akes i ooked b A ANl his Jorg room beds, and that one with the ominous ] ey reached he remem with ite rows of as t ife bered the \ rawn o1 1 tonging 10 T what had happened revered them as best he counid me,"” %0 rude and off-hand. so glad you never really you would ask her to marry you. could never her- Dora volee was full of compassion, derfully have guessed how he had he asked herself, it Mary died? himself 1] ut it was all such an effort. What did the “how" and the “why" | hatter, when the all-absorbing fact as accomplished and irrevocable? | If she were to die, what did it mat- | ter how her death had been brought | about? “Dora Fisher was bardly rivil Miss Varney sobbed. David, T am | liked that | At one time 1 thought you| rather interested in her. I as dreading that perhaps some day | T| have horne it; I could lived in the house with | would have wanted | | rl not have not that sh [ BUT HE ONLY SAT THERE| FIFERING DUMBLY, [ e T suppose.” The old lady added dly. David colored. He stood looking it of the window into the sunshine, | e laughed rather mirthiessly, | CHAPTER LXI, Convalescent, Dora? Good “I wmarry heavens! ‘hat next Miss Varney looked at his tall figure doubtfully, In her own heart she believed that was quite capable of marrying avid, whether he wished it or not, it she wisely refrained from com- ent, “Well, she might have been kinder me, anyway,” she objected plain. vely, “She must have seen I was great trouble about Mary David, | you think she will die?” No answer, Miss Varney repeated | r question timidly, | He spoke then—spoke with such y passion that Miss Varney was startied, She had of much strong emotion: she had al never believed him capable ays considered him rather cold, “If she dies, T shall never forgive ysolf or be happy again, If whe dies, It will be the end of everything | for me."” “David!” Miss Varney's gentle "'Oh, y poor Davi He dragged his eomposure together. e looked at her half apologetically “I'm so sorry, dear. T thought you tessed that I—that 1" He could ot g0 on , Miss Varney fell to weeping afresh. “It would have been the dream of y life. T always thought how won- well suited you were, even hen T believed that she was poor igel’'s widow, Oh, David, ean't we do anything to save her?"” “They have done all they can.” From his quict voice nobody would had been suf- ring. Miss Varney looked at him onderingly. Much as she had loved David, she never wnderstood him. Would really feel it 8o very terribly, she They had becn waiting In a little rivate room. Presently someone pped at the door, and entered, It as one of the nurses “You are wanted at ence in No. ard.” 8he He 4 looked at David caught his breath hard in his His face was colorless as h« rode from the room, followed by fss Varney He asked no questions, Me knew what h was dead, a the world Mary hole sunshine of otted out forever T med but a flying second be was back again at her afraid to | that he could was now Now he fe not s his eyes Someone touched 1 10 her—try is arm ak 1o rouse her His heart He covered not dead the iing in his throat. n beside her ith his own Ther st the faint- white was the again cyelids epoke more urgently ow the lide weore slowly lift- od, and for a moment her eyes sought is face The faraway, vagie, un eeing look seemed to tremble and Then—just the ghost of a » auiversd about the pailid lips caitate ia Pa Arar He was not quite sure if she rea little word of affectior ether #t was his own passionate ging alone that heard It Rut a #udden abandon he stooped kiesed her Tips, ed in Our Next Tssue) poke the la WOMAN'S GREATEST ASSET js woman's greatest asset lepend arm, beauty, power 1 othe happiness and suec- it is what really makes life ving ronsands of women Hea backache, | I depression and ains, whe could find jm- by takiag lsdia B tatle Com i which ris Vor 2 contur sgnized as remedy for woman's liis. Gossip’s Corner JI “kirt Styles The skirt caught up at the side in a cascade drapery is an ideal relisf for the satin or crepe frock with long sleeves and the simple round or bateau neckline, Dyed Lace The use of lavender dyed iace on pink satin lingerie is very effective and unusual. Dinner Frock A black satin dinner frock nas a wrap-around skirt caught up with a tight cluster of white orange blos- soms, White Flannel White flannel suits on the jine af the tailored scrges for spring are shown for summer, sometimes lined with brilliant colors to match the scarf that is aimost inevitably a part of the costume, Trimming Striped or plaid georgette erepe i frequently used as trimming on froo of plain color, used as ruffles, ban.. or in squares, Wringing Tinens It is best always to wring tal linen by hand ag the wringer mal creases that can scarcely be froned out. Celery for salad Never crop the celery you put in salad in a chopping bowl—use a sharp knife and cut it into the size you desire, Glass Forks Glass forks are preferabls to siver ones for serving pickles or lemon since the acid does not act on it Cutting Hot Bread Dip your knife in hot water befors cutting hot bread or cake, Extra Space It you live In crowded quarter: where storage space is at a premium you might utilize the aspaes under your bed by keeping there one of th flat wooden chests on wooden wher which may be easily pulled, Cleaning Wall Paper The wall paper directly above 11 radiator or gas jet frequently become dark. This may be ecleaned by ap plying starch dampened with wate: to form a thiek paste on flanne! an« brushing off with a brush when It has become thoroughly dry. Clean With Salt To clean up your willow porch fur nitura rub over with A brush, using' #alt instead of soap. Rinsa thor. oughly afterward, Removing Fingerniarks Remove fingermarks from white woodwork by rubbing with a eclean cloth dipped in kerosene, then witlr a cloth wrung out of hot water, Whitening Clothes White clothes that have becom: yeliow from woap or from lyi around in chests or trunks may b whitened by soaking overnight in & tub of clear water to which about a teaspoon of cream of fartar has been added the Old Block M JUNIORS - Little NRs One-third the regu- lar doss. Made of Chips off rse. Nom. 3 5 & month while earming: dunces usemesnt ‘sod. lodging o gembers: e One

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