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SOOLLLHDHDHLLOLSLHLHEDHLELLHSSLLSEHOHLOLELL LS L L LY 2 MY HUSBAND’S LOVE: Adele Garrison's New Phase of REVELATIONS OF A WIFE s ERRPPIPTIL PITTIRIPTGPIITIIIIVITPIIINIID long I got What Katie Displayed to Madge's Astonished Fyes The attic the far entire housc storing of a whole ture. Not having any and Dicky having f to fill more than a «qu. his collections of theater prc and ma he i space under highest Toof for a Jos place, whe look over his beloved pos: It was to this fortable, if dil rocking chairs and a placed, that Katie led myself gnedly k there was no hurrying maid. She would tell the story was 80 anxious to relate in her own time, with .all the digressions so characteristic of her volubility, “8Sit down, Katie,” T said, drawing @ chair near to mine. “You might as well be comfortable wkh you at m cove with ample room for houseful of zines, as spot, where com- pidated-appearing, table we me. I seated that little owing re my giggled relaxin Dot’s right,” she cial muscles suddenly temsion. She slumped into th ing her hands in her ly preparing to take my advice eomfort, while I sent my mind da ing in a dozen directions wondering whether Katie was indeed menaced by some one, who, in her own phrase chalr, » and patent- ology, “was trying to hang something | whole thing fm- or whether the of her movie-fed on her, was a figment agination, Yes, Madge Knows Mamie But her first sentence brought erect, tense, in my chair: “Missis Graham, you Mamie ‘cross road?” 1 did not answer for a second, for I was busy visualizing Mamie who had helped atie and Mrs, Ticer *clean house” under Mother Gra- ham’s supervision, before the arrival of the Braithwaites, I had been much impressed with the bright mentality and resourcefulness of the girl upon the night when the state troopers scarched the home of her parents for the escaping murderer, incidentally discovering a still in full eperation, The discovery of a photograph elosely, resembling Mrs, Marks, my flamboyant neighbor of the city apart- ment, and the statement that the pic- ture was of Mamie's half-aunt 1 intrigued my interest. Also, I membered the sudden whiteness of Mrs. Marks' face when ‘I made a casual reference to the east end of the island 1 the picture I had seen resombling her. She had denied ever being cast of Patchogue, had mentally commented that was falsifying. What might I have stumbled upon? I was careful to make my volee casual, however, Katle must be per- mitted to tell her story in her own way or I should get nowherc “Yes, 1 know Mamie.” 1 stopped short me know dot she not id and on Shoost Vait You mean her,” Katie unconscious you tink know returned, with superbly fmpertiner “Me, 1 tink I know her, too; but T know notings. She deep vun, dot girl, und I tink she got me in vun nice mess* “Oh, 1 Ka 1 en elaimed, startled out of my non-com- mittal attitude, for the girl's t you hope not, distross dripped mystery alvays doing nice time coming mit by movies eream sodas 1 smiled ture, for 1 eould gt sedas, no Jim to go v or twice a Mamie 8 my little ‘Cod 1 » plaving n vait!” Katie's voice “After you go, tings for me, r, vant me und getting all of 1o go me iee 1 Katie or and tir oluntarily at knew t ough pie cinemas — s o | whiskey | and 1| some hom {dem ‘ My sistit herse und me troul coom! e La lips Tk quen | blue mari La | | AT | Streng moaps | never be u The carpet ven d e tir for it coom o smell vur {morning und I know dot und I get so womans, a Jeen o ¢ ed how much this last possibility led t Wi 3 it ey ev she say: gs 1 m find mit Katie ire ler Von't coom sooch a ‘Oh, don't y mu dem! dear, keep by m lick me tle \its 008t ¥ I right fir er two, 1 I no 00 tell her, N ) & ow how ar he a bund th a s, th en maid's whining id voice wa mimickry an Katie counsele oder side It he time times [ m tree dead er have a ked in mou 1 d bundles dare tell tink he him.” old take bedslat t Katie's giggl “Und 1 ) glad ven yo von shoost sit still vunce you sometings d went to the ttic, coming le which she dramatic extrem back wit had ree my fur cloaks unpracticed ran_into four fi ng of !Gossip’s Corner || Long Tunics tunics of white 1ustr scarf tly Euit, set made |garters and a hou. rge wor v tor wi surfaces, remoy ,the same with the paint and varnish Had Your Spina ton e 8 Rrass fen water cold or tepid, the wy little bands of white or black seen with T Strik square k to crepe ous black satin Red Searf of brilliant red wit the black or nav New Type | There is a new type of bathing cor- in lghtweight rubber with brassiere attached, ace Gowns A gown of varicolored lase printed in floral patterns Is banded with gray king Brafflets stoncs, matrix most strikin make Combmations Combinations of black with | Scalloped | faint lace hre |trim dresses of dotted swies, Co for blueing A good plan is to blue chiffon Jr—— Mes and Lace ruffles edged a charming way wit ld or Tepid should b slightly at first, addin more from time to time, After Sweeping sweeping it th a is well to dust cloth has been added, Strong Soaps beca is valu Prof o and alkilis #houl q ed on painted or \nl'mshu* while o dirt they quickly use softe they d Yer? lowly spinach, 1 and scorned by found to be one o able for known ¢ W. M. Bunker Tnstitute of Te 1'ed onelisive man; ow ehnolog: whit On « valu to ing growth immedi on a it, wa Retter From Ruth Fllington 1o Tesic Prescott, Continmed This was my e woman who eannc! unt irre- tings dis hid- gesture she and displayed, to my aston- whose eyes over are | usually accompanied by fackets of the | !satin with ermine or rabbit fur. is most fre or . are placed in a row in a silver | or appliqued flowers in bril- liant colors are accordion pleated and edged with black lace, g ~fi§e Adve\\fures wrung very dry | |out of elear water or water to which a little ammonia served of spinach NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, JUNE 2, 1924, DAILY EASHION SERVI( ! e FAVORITE FOR SUMMER - = of and fa- he eombination plain fabrics is of Ifashion's vorites this summer, Here tl bands of the plain material give a charming bouffant cffect to the skirt | and ! forms the only other trimming besides the bows | on the sleeve s a feminine and alluring touch. printed bY one g * e L s sash necessary alwa e . BEGIN HERE TODAY Big Chris Larson, Alaska 10 v | New VIR MARSHAL INSISTS launch small in a into a world story | the outside driven by a L) Haven Official Wants Churches To Install Detter Escapes New Haven, Ju “The contro- b3 v aroused by the attempt of the fire marshal to compel local churches | with the ney building code | with re nce to fire hazards, remains unchanged. The fire marshal will in- voke a state statute giving him auth- | crity to inspect all public buildigs to | see that they are' properly protccted against fire and report violations of the law to the prosccuting authorities, of When the marshal recommended | ¢ changes in local churches to comply : 4 el hier 5 t ; with fire regulations a storm of pro- R | Dorothy Newhall receives a test arose. Some of the older cnurEhvs ] |home in Augusta, Ga., & telegram especially those on the New Haven | from Pirate Cove, Alaska, then faints, { Green objected to the changes on the | ©lground that fire exits would have to| D be built through expensive stained | glass windows and that removal of pew doors, which have existed, in the chur for generations would prove a hardship. The enforcement of the | law to the letter was held in abeyance | when an opinion of the corporation | | counsel cast doub®upon the authority |of the fire marshal to t upon the | ‘ichanp s. ] whom he had met that cove for the sea launch to answer a dis- e 2 Man, ve the anner: 5 signal. 'he Remittance Man forces | Chris to put on his sca jacket | Remittance Man finds comfort | fact that he cannot return |thy and his home in Georgia, from | which he had fled {launeh ride on the Savannah river. While so musing, the ship strikes a |reef and he is hurled nto darkness d f k n open to comply u NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY Mrs, Peter Newhall, Walton Way, Augusta, Georgia Papers found on dead hody of man {plcked up on beach identify him as | Peter Newhall of Augusta, Georgla, {though known locally by iname, Death resulted from drown | ing and mutilation by reefs. He left and personal sdd contrast to grain youngsters-— h the & cattle the vorth and your and care of children are in Yot and her to | e B a it was just In for expected {cover n 0| mur invisil onen deck | what he 1 on the it was the i veral &he \had dared Peter could esc of of veritably from not to jrve ape the raised was known throughout ident city e of her and y A% subseguently . wish ine appeara ya bright fn fro hobbed curls, ¢ ry cheeks and s ks dainty ustering head & he ti r fountain, it abou er fo that such friends had a “Now her brown « mouth agony nice “uous ! effects be sent you, | s ON HEAL forwarded. Body was embaimed and FARKLES ON: REALTE given decent burial by my crew near CHILDREN AND HOGS Captain Jehassen, Steamer Norwood, Just yesterday, it seemed to her, | road and stopped to talk with a \08e aren't your | this—the sudden taking off of some tarmer, he started. jone sho loved, “Hum--those gre mighty fine hogs | “Yep,” said farmer sadly. | She had loved this man who had ou bet,” said the farmer pride-{ The moral of the tale is quite ob- understand her—that he was careless fully, “I raise the hest hogs in this vious, and the condition 1is more of her needs, that he had been in- country. I've got some of the high- prevalent than people realize. | #ancly jealous without cause— | “And your corn-—" marveled the of cattle from n small farm, but he hard woeeks before the trage afte | traveler. doesn't give his children one-half | his drinking had ceased being a jok Yep, it's the best in the country. the attention and care he gives the o her and her friends and had be quite sickly in appearance, came are worth feeding !v: ‘l‘n ‘|<“I-'.w:v'rw1'-va]»-‘n «1.'1\1::1-:‘“ {runhing ont tq get a look at the vis- | finest your iy s SSmands -;“\,n g n {itor who noted them with astonish- [ten times as mu panionship, 3 ha €| give J ~ 3 At present it did not occur to her | 3 that she had perhaps failed to Inder- had been sent from Alaska, the far North, thousands of weary miles dis- tant from her and thousands of miles hiding. 8he had not dreamed but fthat he had fled to South America, ° a nn as Tvan Ishmin had advised Cer- tainly he had gone to Savannah and 9 K a bad boarded the disreputable trader "u a gedy “Ay him up In the far North rather than in Rio de Janelro The sotters Ivan had given him ' to his great ;Hnr'ln r—h. evidently been no out and frightened Banzan's magical | them past Dorothy had lived in eonstant | Hobby Horse!” Raggedy Ann said to| “You keep running!” Raggedy Andy|fear of his capture. Such news she Hobby Hor £8 . iittle Rags puppy dog. “For I am sure | #aid, he was very brave, “And Iljaq in the telogram today, little Rags puppy B n find a good place to hide!" carry us back to the soda water| 8o Raggedy Andy stopped and hid|arm of the law had seized him at last, spring!” | behind a tree until the Hobby Horse | jyvan had withheld his testimony to in sight very tast, running the sk I was running after youn, and T am|on his back he thomght, odness! | charge of assisti i erer 1o sure it was the magic the econjurer| Banzan s madahimeelf . elling the tragic story of sent after the Hobby Hores!" [ How can I ever wrestle, him now seen and taken part In we fell off the Hobby 1 and 1t wax | horse and cried. “Stop Hobby Horse. 1 tater, but better to fall off than to be captured | T Bhall wrestle old Banman, the con that by Banzan and shut up in the chicken | jurer! The Hobby Horse stopped and pravis od. “But 1ot us lonk over behind these | do yonu to wrostle the conjurer, | heautiful re “ | ferns. 1 believe 1 hear the tinkle of cgedy Andy 7" t orse asked Afling jor an Jeo- eream moda w tountain, se 1 d@o not wish him to 8 alw | not a moda 1 Horze told R Andy how |a plain drinking w congurer him with a stic) it was nice and co and he wonld not belong to we must was running to catch up with you %6 had faded, her se p Yo “cape This gEa iy ndy ¥ 80 ¥ r dark b place of finding. If I can be of any | There's an old story about a man |ment, They were a in girihood, she had tried to imagine you have over there,” comments the very well. Don't know Just|died. No one dared deny that. It est priced catt too. Sell 'em for Many & man can build fortune hgd loved him and had continued to akes Jots of carc though.' other matte come a subject avoided in his pres him her love, her hand, a few of stand him, too, farther from the corner of the earth @f which Ivan had told him; but some e\l L‘y Jo ““y Gr““ e friends in the Brazilian capital—let. the conjurer must have worked magic | will stop and wrestie the conjurer un- [ta¢ jn spite of Tvan's herole efforts to “Yeos!” little Rags puppy dog res [ came : When Raggedy Andy |1he y “Well, ggedy Andy | Dut just the same Raggedy Andy the motor boat until coop again!” | 1coked at ¥ dy Andy wit an tha 14t us #ce and have a Arink!’ gedy Ann and Berty Bear!” qual were very th , the mean pers ve ki her Horse hurry and with much hes 1 and with a nt- !that you be notified gervica please command me, who was driving drown a country [the healthy cattle and | how she would receive such news as stranger. |what to do about ‘em was true that he had often failed to Sebading L1t Svek trom a few dollars and a fine herd ' love him throughout al Ithese cold, Just then two scrawny youngsters, It your business ence, He had falled to best years—indeed, all she had She read the message again 1t where she had thought he had been adventure of the journey had fetched | ters to facilitate his flight back to the “We ase so glad that you jumped louded until use to him, after all For months upon the Hobbhy Horse to make him | til you ! up the fugltive's tracks, the plled. 1 feit some magic go by me as|saw th y Horse with no one up- "1,,,,,‘: haled int® court himself on the ¢ | langhea, bit when | jumped out in front the hobby forecd him at windeed it was!” Berty Bear laugh- | expression in his woodcn eyes, “Why Dorot) hepll ot stlng ndy replied. Then the Hoh cold dvink “And #6,” the Hobby Horse said, “T|dul 1 glow on in | brov “» She or Iy, he of the divan whs here the was inte t 1ehion of teass She mi the mammy us Hobhy Panzan any le Rage) her colored her grief and t to comfort her; and whom, in thes had 1 n to e with the his ¢ £y out of it more orse’s ba iy rom the mean a v n 7~ 600D MANNERS— Don’t Cross split communion tucked under practieed lovi gods car aroused a the t was rp ring e shuff g steps 3 Nora girl, who went 1o anss 1oment later the setvant came to it's Mist mi the “He want 1o de Is er stolidly like el comi epeat A messag to the 'phone her se heard t in his go ear girl, 1 he have s hegan g voice, ! 1 read it, fin the pape nd they ran and they / nt and I'm wondering i ad to stop and rest ould make you fesl any 14 hear the we Wk A a®%e me come ott—" Ho Hors i to come CLOMPITY " ¥ ered simp! you'd r ont later Aforti T t it on, woree - want you very much, an Per 1 come phone wet et when his put her 1 Tike to be aps as " vou do not eross A L on, effort 1a ins OMPITY be you can help in any way, 1 am cannery foreman, seeking beat connections for is cove. He and the hard-drinking Remittance evening, in | the Big The in the to Dorg- following a tragic her another | instructions for immediate burial also These are being but she | understand | given of | to bt i, fater, 1 aye, Widels kuowa in the theater of Pet- | (Copyright, 1924, NEA Service, lne.) FORGOTTEN MEN O by Cdison JMarshall Released, by NEA Sevvice, Inc, ready.” ! “No, I really want you to And bring the Stradivarius, if will 1 think it will help—to that.” Ivan hung up, and as she waited for him to come she sent Nora after latest paper. She had not ex- pected that the news would be made public so soon. found the article on the first page, and saw with relief it entirely fair: Pirate Cove, Alaska ~—The body of Peter qus a, Georgia, was picked on the beach on the north come, you hear s December 2nd Newhall of Au- up coas EWHALL HAD HURLED HIM INTO THE WATER. Alaska Peninsula, He was a victim of the wreck of the cannery-boat Jupiter that went to picces on the rocks in her effort to aid the auxiii- ary schooner Vigten, which was in distress, The above news came as a great shock to the entire city today. Mr, Newhall wes a member of one of the Soutlh’s most ancient and Qstin- unished families; and although the last part of his life has been over- with tragedy, his friends re- ngember hime for the good friend, |*l\:\\rnn.~ gentleman, and soclal fa- vorite that he was throughout the years of his young manhood. Peter Newhall was born in clty years ago, the son of Colonel Newhall of Gettysburg Fame, He was married two years ago to Miss Dorothy Stanhope of S8avannah, ‘The affair that led to his downfall occurred fn a motor-boat party on the Savannah river a year ago last summer, ccording to testimony brought out at the inquiry Peter had sought a bitter quarrel with Mr, Ivan Ishman, a violinist of international fame who was spending the scason at ! Alken, South Carolina. When the aken Sarichef, Tshmin's secretary, inter- fered in Ishmin's behalf, and turning on him in a fury, Newhall was heard {to threaten to throw him out of the boat into the river, Ishmin himself was the sole ob- server of the tragic outcome of the quarrel, and torn between grief at {the death of his secretary and loyalty |to W fricnd Newhall, it was with the | greatest difficulty that |was drawn from him at the inguiry, Later this same night Ishmin was {aroused by angry voices, and he left his stateroom to find his wecretary, Paul Sarichef, and Newhall struggling on the deck; and before he could in- |terfere, Newhall had hurled the {fortunate Russlan into the water. Ishmin immediately dived to reseue him, but he saw the man go down for the third time before he eould reach his side Almost crazed with gricf, Ishmin spent most of the night in the river trying to his friend’s body, but though once Iw saw it drifting, We lost it in the dark- ness and it was neve Not even the o thongh making « rescie recovered leors of the law ery effort to appre kend Newhall, believed that it was a Wilful, premeditated murde®, New- hall was decply under the influence of lauor at the time, and it is believed that committed the crime in a burst of drunken rage. According to Newhall's testimony Newhall had ened from a drunken stupor the morning no memory what atening Sarichef on of throwing him fled to Western A the Peninsnla toward Si- 4 the above telegraphic dis- completes the tragic he next with ever of either thr the deck ¢ He on bonrd ont story, She read the piece through, then vashad ar-reddencd ey valted for the soundl of Iva low roadster on the solved at once to keep a brave front in his prescnce, mostly because of a great good-sportsmanship that Peter ad found and loved in her long ago and partly, perhaps, for purely femi- nine reasons that were—by a long 1 of the imagination—almost ty to Peter's memory. Ehe wondered If this were not, after all, an indication that what he had begged for Was his at last—her Had these her to and n's long, She drive re- dislo; secret her love gone out to him past, bleak, miscrable of mourning? He fascibated her, this master violinist from the East. And there was no barrier between them The d Ivan had urged upsn her woul@ not now be necessary; the news from far Alaska Whd made her free. Ina Ivan himself wae standing by her side, hie countenance clouded in sympathy for her She s ever amazed at this man. He was tall and looked slender; but she knew the iron in those long, casily flowing musele There was a dark- ness, a foreign 100k in his handsome that fascinated her even as it estranged her, something oriental and mysterious that she could not ex- actly trace or analyze He had come out of Russia at the beginning of the revelution, and was hailed at once as a new master of the vinlin Before that in moment f time he was this | men were at the verge of blows, Paul | un- | months | | rograd and the Ruasian court, but he | had not cared to seek laurels abroad. | “My dear girl!” he told her, his | thin face lighting. He took ‘her | hand, bowed, and touched it to his ips. Then they took seats, side by side, on the big divan, His voice streamed on, comforting, cheering not only with his earefully chosen | though swift-flowing words, but by exquisite modulation of its tones. “I suppoze youw'll never forgive ' me,” he said at last, In a more quiet hour. . “T don't see how T owe you thing but gratitude—" “You know what I mean. | rtemember-—that morning—after trouble, You remember that Peter wakened from his drunken sleep and could not remember the fight on the deck at all, he wanted to stay and fight the thing through the courts? It was I, you remember of course with your help—who in- duced him to flee. And his flight ha | ended—by that.” He pointed to the | telegram. “I don't see how it can be held | against you, in the least degree,” [ Dorothy assured him earnestly, “You were Kind—generous—wonderful all the way through.” Her voice dropped a tone. “Besides, this is no worse- better, in fact—that he should dio | doing a decent thing—going to the help of a sinking ship—than to die— in the prison on Elbert street!"” “There would have been some way | out! Life imprisonment, at the worst—" “Life imprisonmen No, Tvan— not for Peter. Liberty was always a passion with him-——with all his race, for that matter—and he'd rather be dead than in prison. I've got that consolation at least." Tfow amazed 1 am that should come from the North we both supposed he was in Ameriga.” She looked at him quickiy. Ther was no doubt about the genuinene: | of this amazement. He saw her look of surprise and turned quickly in ex- planation. “He took such a chance, Dorothy! T had a perfect course |1aid out for him-—one that no one could have followed—but up there, | in American territory, he w#s in hour Iy riek of arrest! Tt frightens me to think of the risk he ran- “But there is no ri told him grimly. “He's that—"" | “Yes. Perhaps it's for the | Try not to mourn teo much, gir,” To turn the eurrent of her thought I‘ho took his voilin—a marvelous thing | of shell-like mahogany-~from its case, and standing beside the window, he | began to play. He was telling her of his love—a |love that would go through tiro or water, triumph or disgrace. It was a love that glorified her, but yet it |some way appalled her, too. It was not the kind of love that | Peter had given her—tender, almost fatherly, a tolerant, protective love |and yet strong with that external strength of the Anglo-Saxon, Peter | had been bitterly jedlous at last, but it ‘had taken many little indiscretions —harmless, truly, but yet doubtiess {intolerable from his point of view-—to | make him so. 8he would not dare play thus with Tvan! His jealousy | would be like a firebrand, his hate like a dagger blade, (Continued in Our Next any- You the when this when South now!" past ahe all best little Tssue) his testimony | | [ FAT AND 1LOSE WEIGHT | Three large unsweetened stewdd prunes, 1 ramekin of crab meat, 1 |cup fruit salad, 1 cup tomato bouil lon, 4 ounces broiled sweethreads, 10 asparagus, % head lettuce teaspoon Roquefort cheese tablespoons lemon juice, toasted water cracker, toast, .1 gluten roll, bread, 1 pint skim | stalks with 1, worked into 1 split and slices glutten thin slices gluten med milk Total calories, fat,, 303; 423 gram. Ramekins of Crab Meat One cup flaked meat, 2 table spoons butter, 115 tablespasn tlour, 1 cup milk, ¢ teaspoon salt, 2 egg yolke, paprika. Melt butter, add milk, stirring constan Season with ®alt and paprika. Re- move from fire anid add egg volks, Beat thoroughly. Add crab meat and mix lightly but well, Turn into buttered rameking and bake in a pan of hot water in a moderate oven for ) minwtes. This rule will make four ramcking Total calories, 697 fat, 408; carbohydr: gram. FAT AND GAIN WEIGHT large sweetened stewed prune 1 cup uncooked e with 1 sliced banana and 1 tablespoon sugar and 1-4 cup cream, cup creamed cod fish on toast, 1 cup cream of potato soup, 1 ramckin of crab meat, 4 table- spoons creamed peas, 1 cup fruit sa ad with 2 tablespoons mayonnaise and 2 tablespoons whipped cream, 1 cup tomato bouillon, 1 eup creamed sweetbreads and mushrooms in 2 pat- ty shells, 1 Jarge twice baked potato 10 stalks asparagus with table | spoon melted butter, 13 head lettuce 2 tablespoons Roquefort cheese dressing, 2 split and toasted water crackers, 4 tabiespoons strawberry i cream, tablespoons crouton for soup, 4 wafers for bouillon, T lunch 1 tablespoon jstly, 1 dinne roll, 3 tablespoons butter, 1 pint whole milk Total calories, 4.386. Protein, fat, 1,844; carbohydrate, 1,963 02 gram. eamed 1,158 carbohyd Protein, Iron crab stir in flonr and slow Iy Protein, 201; §8. 1lron Rix real with eon roll dishes always add many {calorics of fats and carbohydrates to the dict and are rich In vitamins (I the flour, is cooked thoroughly be- {fore the milk is added the cream sanuce need not be boiled and those | vitamins in m that are lost by |great and prolonged heat will b8 ]