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MY HUSBAND’S LOVE Adele Garrison’ REVELATIONS OF A WIFE | s New Phase of FPTVIFIITVTICOPIIIITFINITTETIIOINITTIGY Why Madge Couldn’t Resist Calling Junior Before Dicky There was cockily mirthfu surauce in Dicky's made his wager, on to him first, that If our mental been already electric, thrown all my good the discard and tak much arrogance as he I knew that it needed quiet and non-ir to bring my baby to my of*all But weary 1 wished to avoid : friction, forced mure meekness feeling and murmured smilingly *1 never bet against a > thing Dicky laughed. “Wise lady,” he and with the words up to the eranda springing down, helped we went up the steps together, The door opened before we reached it and Katie answered r greetings smilingly, but with a e be- traying the iron repression which my mother-in-law always puts upon my little maid in my absence - all right?"” wondering why young da down the a manner as Junior's running pigued 1 atmo re 1 would solutions with as had not his het display nly absolute on my part arms first was and dispirite 1 r cause of to a m Ly de- from so I very said 1 ngly car Dicky out and patroni drew the steps. me 1 ashed neithe ghter, hali to Suinor breathlessly, he nor Lillian Marion, was racing meet us Katie's lips pursed disapprovingly, “Yah, he all right!"” she said. "He living room by hec's grandmud- She say you coom dare. Mother Graham's Plot Wondering a little, I walked the hall toward the living room, Dicky lagging behind to hang up his topcoat. As I entered the room 1 saw the reason for Junior's tardi- ness in running to greet us. His grandmother, seated In an arm- chair, held him lightly, but closely beside her, and when he joyously ex- claimed “Mama!” as he caught sight of me and struggled to get down, 1 saw her tighten her clasp upon him and heard her whisper: Wait !" Ro that was it ! T did not need the unconscious disapproval written wpon Marion’'s lovely young face to t me that my mother-in-law, with one her occasiohal spells of mean jeal- ousy, had trained the small boy to greet his father first. When Dicky appeared at the door, 1 watching closely, saw her release the little with a tiny push and a whisper: “Now." Everything that malicious in my own to the top in, the mental caldron that was in my mind at that mo- ment, As if 1 had noticed nothing, 1 opened my arms to the advancing lite tle figure and called softly “Oh, Junior darling!™ He ran directly into with a glad lttie cry, and ond or two 1 forgot everything else in the sheer delight of cuddling him close to me. When he 1 kissed me rapturously, he wriggled uneasily, and announced in a conscience-stricken tone “Oh, in der, down ealous and nature bubbled was my. arms, for a sece 1 fordot “You T stole a glanee at law's crimson unctuous question “Forgot what, sweetheart 2" “My piece vot Danzie taught He released himself from my and turned toward his father, gie sald 1 was to come first not to Mama/™ he might one reciting VS to say—vot \as fordot.” e there snapped, but Junior was persistent, Wi — my and mother-in. face asked an me." arms to announcen ‘and n lesson, it, Dansfe that'm a grandmaot het you 1= e forgeticn to 1" his —_— Ledlie Proscott Filington Conti o tuth You much i going the n Kar cee mor . In whit went IF SKIN BREAKS Q0T AND [TGHES APPLY SULPHUR of | \ “\ot vas Marion?" he asked. | "You know Lillian's oy ot ized that derstood daughter cast oddly glance me, ar young she was, the ri underly i tculous feminine ousy the whole ird situatior “You home, 1o con- to say, ‘Weleom managing disapproval in voman might mior's tone he to were “Oh, 3 oli Weld Dic had mi i o \ast- ved and ran his father, outstretched home, arms. Daddy! yme he car- was study He the ineident, child, 1 no of my from shot phase 1 at cheer the furtive, and ully ew that ed boxed had in instant Then, he mes b e e rs of every relative room, inciunding for e i king clearing as insti caugh ustice iatm he at him, his chivalry and bLatted with him up his little son battled with his up irritation, his sense eyes twink “Yon said tantalizingly won on a foul,” he EAT AND LOSE. WEIGHT tablespoons shredded pine- "apple, 4 tablespoons crab meat cock- ‘tail, 1 head lettuce, 2 tablespoon ‘straberry ice, 2 macaroons, 4 ounces boned loin of lamb, 1 tablespoon mint jelly slices pikled 1 baked onion, 1 pint skimmed milk, 2 thin plece rolled oats bread, 1 thin piece rye bread. Total cale 141 fat, 319; carbohydrate, M208 gram, Two tablespoons prepared ecocktail included in the erab-meat ocktail. One tablespoon catsup or 'enili sance or the cocktail suuce means about 10 calories The lamb is roasted and is included in the serving It you calorie allowance is calories per day may add Jevel teaspoons of butter and use it as Four heet, 284; Iron, F rotein, LLEN ries. sauce are no gravy 1200 you two you please | You see you can eat you must them sparingly sacrifice some place else, The straw berry fce and macaroons “stand” you about 300 calories and only one-four- teenth of them are protein, the and hohydrate. head of leftuce, pineapple provide the mineral salts “sweets,” but eat and are fat | The onion vitamina, EAT AND GAIN WEIGHT shredded pine “ able bacon, mufline, 1 table. tablespoons cral triangles table- table creamed Four apple, apoons potators broijed " marmalade, spoons), ounces calves corn 2 tablespoons butter, 4 Newburg two 1 head e with | Spoons strawberey ice, 2 ma spoon e meat oons, hoTangle s % § annoyed | 19 NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, MAY 29, 1924, JAILY EANHION NERVICK, FOR BRIDE’S TROUSSEAU The white satin dinnergown is fashion’s whim at the moment and the June bride can find them as sim- ple or as she wishes. This one strikes a b of | absolute simplicity as to a floral design beads in of red at the left front, elaborate as medium line with shades ppy cup cream asparags soup, 4 ounces boned loin of lamb, 1 large po- tato rousted with meat, 2 tablespoons avy,' 2 tablespoons mint ices pickled beet, 1 baked onion with tablespoon butter, 4 tablespoons 1 chocolate ecclair, arge stusfed | 2 hard rolls, jelly, 5 weet cherry salad, s 1 1 whole milk, s with Iettuce butte Total calori 4182 t, 1729; earbohydrate pint prunc s hoons P'rotein 1821, tron, | There how am 80 many inquiries the mcnus for planned the six items. be arranged and nceds of have to ar the day that 1 huive b Kkfast using the first Luncheon and dinner cai | to suit the the individual. Remove the sweet ¢l che with a as to convenience from large Neuf with heavy with finely hearts of | whipped eream dress- stones ries and fill maoisten combir with lehatel cream chopped ce Serve on ing (Copyright, 1924, NIEA Ser Ine.) SHOWER FOR MIsS A miscellaneous s was ten- derer Miss Ilorence Roberston at the Bome of Miss Mildred Helberg on Lin- coln strect, last evening. Miss Itobert- son received many beautiful gifts, The table was attractively decorated in pink and white with Mrs, H. A, Mor- ris of Hartford pouring. Miss Itobert- son will become the bride Clifford Hellberg on June 21 LOBLIESC ower N of LIKE FATHER, LIKE SON reling Mrs father, reference I wish you would stop qua The old son,” docs saying: “Like not have entire to heredity. A tremendous respon- | sibility fa upon parents during [the child’s impressionable years, presence of child as they the they should expect the child to behave, ample they set a foct upon the hehavi the time a child reaches six his hab its are very well formed, impressionable | according to several authorities as Mra. Mann | Parents should remomber that they its elders at |ean ironment, and should make this as fipe as possible, {in the e of the baby," Mann rebuked Mr had presen Mann one evening when he been particularly {ll- they child as they The il tempered, “One of theze days you why he mishehaves, ar him say words where he heard them. him talk back never for a moment self.” In the the should act act i won- You will 1o and wonder | You will hear | and you will blame your- expect ehave ox- of- By will have to me child's likely to be child is to an amazing degree knew well, It mimics opportunity, young create en every The Adventures o RaggedyAun wa Baggedy And by Johmy Gruelle Magical Hobby Horse ggedy Ann, Raggedy At the magiea! r away awiftly through the A here funny He the conjurer n look up from his Iy 5 on came up to ot e dcep, deep woods Little Rags puppy do; he could but conld »up his friends, he tpped 1o and When the Mag He Horsr Ra the ran as fa h ko vou thought, Raggedy Ann v Andy and Berty Bear, had escaped from me! But 1 uring charma and 1 come back 1 not try to s with ®0 a took my « o yzan mad hobby horae ] lys and Ber v Bear tjurer hecame 1 had better hurry vien 1 speak 1o you!' vled a very loud n you, nr Just Hobly Horse thromgh the Adashed wewnls anay p- GOOD MANNERS™ Cards After e moth after a wrdding, a her of the groom. like | Clhe CHAPTER 1. The Remittance Man The idea came to Big Chris, as he the gazing out narrow, darkened and stood through Ibor mouth inte the night on beach the har- the | storm, that this world of his was an ! outcast world, a land that God | cursed and forsaken,” a pariah land from the where the outlawed dly, sun-kissed world races moved and | 1IMH\ML Because it was his home, spirit long | becauke its grim, strange of desolation and death had ago | zot hold of him, it was as if he were |a pariah; too, God-cursed and God- | forsaken, scarcely less so than the | Remittance Man, with whom he had just become acquainted and who now lay in a drunken stupor in one of the tumble-down shacks in. the native village behind him, ich ideas did not haunt him often. { He was huge and blond and rugged I not a dreamer in any sense except as all men of the northern races, know- ing life to its cruel depths, are given to dreams—and his last name was Larson, His job, that of a web fore- man in connection with the fishing that was the one industry in these i far, forsalien waters, kept him too I busy for such moods as this, ut the North was showing its teeth to- night ides, hé was inwardly ill at ease from purely material con- siderations-—he had caught the can- | nery Jaunch, Jupiter, at Nushagak, | with the idea of connecting up with .the mail hoat at Squaw Harbor, the {Jupiter's home port, in a race to the loutside,” bhut the swift-breaking storm had forced the launch into a miniature cove far up in one of the most desolate and stormy stretches of seacoast in the entire North, there to fremain for an uncertain time, Of course it was only a squall in the tradition of seafarers Captain Jim of the Jupiter-—on the way home from a scouting trip for a new trap site—had driven his staunch little ship through s twice as high. But Captain m did not care take a chance when a mere passenger's haste was the only consideration Shiels, at Bellingham, and Bradford it Squaw Harbor had given definite instructions against that very thing, risk of the lives of his crew, Yet, Chris had o admit that this was no night for landiubbers, | In all his travels he fknown a land quite like treeless, storm-blasted peninsula was the fence * hetween Ocean and Bering Sea that was why he hated it, and hy grotesque paradox that no mind such as his could ever explain, loved it, (oo, hill behind him sheltered him from the lash of the wind, vet folt the odd dryness in his head that al- Ways marks weather, and the fey touch of the fro: as of a hand, erept under the heavy shirt, He wished he had his heavy sea-coat that he had left in a cabin in vilinge Thenee his thought tarned {to the Remittance Men, how he was making out, wise, on the Peninsuia, to | needlos had this narrow, that cifig never or) a zero Tt is not 1o soak one. | 1ie in the cold. This was November made a het with himself that the mittance Man—granting that | the drinking pace. he nad which, hecause it surpassed ds in this hard-drinking land, famous to Nusha not participate in the festival with all far. Alaska celebrates the Christ. mas season, As seemod I he | Re | sustained et all was n ral 1tussian and ree ady clear would which western Chris to waves on watched the the beat had a storm of the deeper He had the the Remit. forget his all the increase; the rocks sinister sound sensibie to follow tance Man's example and predicament, the monds it had hrought Yet it was not in his bunk, or should lie in safety The darkness without the suddenly by darting flare Heht, The sig came from s evidently from the shore miles farther up t the clear, icy distinguish it with He almost Ther he more notion storm, and in sleep that he that the in the 1o b should Jupiter harhor harbor er, upward was split a qu of al Ar away o rock-ribhed Peninsula abled him plainnese bt air ¢ stood motionlese was only a short The J yellow fig plier's cours She was not yet to " to ca the h Big Squaw Harbor the Camair, His Chris to water line, Yim!™ he 1 ringi and in the 11t stepped e stain Jim his pitot joor o o and his r sra of ark e “Yas flattey the rk droll ked among m« h-—-saved fr mysterious Tght 1at the rocket made hrough the 4 mmediat expressioy no Jim'e 1 ar a sounded his engineer ng. hrusg uedy as gave ¢ bas t Skiff « ig « Jupiter tow £ the head worl crulse a is o not For INDIGESTION | 81 in distitled sour dough and then ' had i F, GOTTEN MEN ¥ by Cdison Jlarshall P Released by NFA Sewice, Inc, 2 Copynght, 1923 by Little, Brown & Co | pushed out and forgotten him;: they | | i 1 | i { had met only a few days before, and | Ithnrn!urn had no instinet to turn to 'each other in a cr However, it did not so much as occur .to hiwm that he could refrain from wer 'ing personally that distress call from the deep ;or that he was entitied to any special credit for doing so. Captain Jim's brain moved de- liberately and slow, but certain as yoked oxen, It was true, he knew, that no seconds were to be wasted In reaching that sinking ship. Yet i every available man would be needed in the work of rescue, and particu- larly great-muscled, ‘“scooken” fel- lows, such as he had observed BRBig ' Chris to be. At his eommand one of his meager crew pushed off in the "skiff and, standing bent in the boat, rowed in swift, sure strokes to the shore, Big Chris was standing yjump in, but he paused for one stant, Is dar nobody else in village wort’ taking?" he asked. y 0. The storekeeper's a cripple, to in- dis ready @ | TH i s ps! | the | !of charm ‘N HE SAW THE YELLOW FLARE AGAIN There's only village, Geot but Tord, he'll be mad. one other white man in and that's the Remittance Man, in." It that the did they to either of them take natives on this rescue trip. This was a white man’s job, and it would take the white man's steel of heart. And they would not even go to see about the Remittanee Man, Burely he was too 106t to manhood and self-respect to be of any atd in this night's work. Bat they were suddenly brought up ®harp in their work of pushing off by a voice in the darkness behind them. “Wait a second, you fellows,” the sald. It was abrupt, al most commanding in tone, and there was the sound of hurrying feet in the snow. I want to go. Iven his irremediable disgrace-—a disgrace that the northern men not oceur should voiee wondering ' guessed at, but never knew in full- had not destroyed a ccrtain quality In the Remittance Man's 1t was rich, full baritone, and it had an irrepressible boyish quality, frankness and open-heartedness that appealed instinctively even to these hard-fisted men of the North The Remittance Man was from “the ates,” and the particular section of which he was native could usually be recognized WY his accent: a softening voiee, 1of hard consbnants and mellowing of Jvowels that is indigenons to the coun- | “Are you the in to south Mason-Dixon line, that boat heard no show his drunken of men apeech try The thick ness In an pushed hetwee tricd to probe face, two instant n at breadth twe men see his hia them the dusk Br 1o " the e Jupiter asked bluntly Not entire was the “Sober as T ever am, I'l] be by the time we get out sinking ship.” Then pile in a moment sober? man from " answor, a8 wober as a saint to tha I'ush off, Larson.” | were ard the Jupiter powerful, had begun to rumble, was struggling out to a the more three ine launch Jim whee! at the til he \ of danger shallows ain stecred compara close-lying turned east, thern man, and the as in the fiber of his ne tonight b the star-studded He himself wishing was like that unexpected pas the Iemittance Man, too near to understand. He had feeling against going on—not it A knowledge could not trace—and yet he ot back. Tt was not in im to t whes! and steer hack yellow A8 ont of and then there was oy under found really rather a secret could turn irn th to the harbor ts signaled &ca are few and old 1 like iron shackles T at he went on againet his will if he had cuses to turn back through hate; and it was simply part and part of all the sea hreed represented to push on in answer to that signal in the darkness, Rt Man come He turned o Big Cheis Larson mostly a strahger to him but yet one of his own, hard-sailing breed. “Are » asked. stood up from the bunk he Wad been braping. “Yas, ' he answered, with instinetive o spect, 1 sail in win'-yammers for ten year “There's no reason spread her canvas, and that little mainsail will help to hold her steady. Get out on Yhe 1'll give you Eriksen 16 hei when or help. those The laws but they was not that desired Men obey o of the L] could net %0 tea laws not gh thre that he he wondered that the Remittance should voluntarily choose to on a sailor?” § Th e man The wind's fair, man more old have been i b i BAKING ‘ POWDER Gossip’s Corner ‘ Lace Trimmed | Chiffon handkerchiefs daintily trimmed with real lace are shown for 'the bride and her maids, i White Jade Earrings and neeklaces of carved white jade are effective with the al] black gown, | Black Velvet Heavy conventional patterns of black velvet are appliqued on a din- ;nor gown of white georgette crepe, Chinese Skirts All-over embroidered Chinese skirts that used to be emploved by us largely for table runners or scarfs 'are being pombined with plain ma- terials to form skirts and gowns, Leather Collars l.eather Collars and cuffs are very attractive in colors as well as white for linen, serge or jersey dress. Lots of Buitons | Buttons, placed very close to- gether and two or three rows de P {are used on coats and coat frocks, | | Red Gardenia | _The red gardenia is as popular Paris now as the white one has be here all spring, | . | in en - | Flowered Coats Coats of flowered material, larger the flowers the hetter, very picturesque for country wear, the New Sweaters Lightweight sweaters with and without sleeves come in all the pastel shades and are very attractive with flannel skirts, Cleaning Gloves A gobd way to clean kid gloves in o put them in a Mason jar of gaso- line and allow them to soak, shaking the jar oceasionally, When they seem to be clean rinse in a jar of | clean gasoline, Use Damp Duster Picture frames are best dusted wWith a slightly dampened duster and it they are carved it is well to use a small, flexible paint brush, Don’t Sprinkle sk Nilk garments should be {roned while damp, but not sprinkled Sprinkling gives it a spotted appear- ance, MASONS IN BRISTOL Forty-two Royal and Select asons of New Britain motored to Liristol Jast evening to participate in the annual working of the super ex cellent degree in that eity, There were delegations from Winsted, Tor rington, Thomaston, Waterbury, Plain ville, New Britain, Meriden and other towne. A large class of candidates including one from New Britain, wa initiated, Master MRS, ULLMAN COMPORTABLY New Haven( May The dition of Mrs. Isaac M. Ullman, who i= at a hospital, where, yesterday, she underwent an operation, was reported comfortable today. &he had a good night. con N\a re's Danger Signals, N 1ese, melancholia, back headache and pain in thea i1 nature's danger signa's whic some a‘lment peculiar woman., When sich warning symn toms appear women may avoid mu pain and suffering if they will re pon Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetab Compound, as its tonie, strengthening nfluence speedily removes the cause and restores the system 1o a healthy, narmal condition, THE BEST BABY POWDER Formore than 30 years indicate to | tect the skin of Infants ‘nm.ui.l.hl.