New Britain Herald Newspaper, June 3, 1924, Page 10

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

MY HUSBAND’S LOVE Adele Garrison’s New Phase o1 REVELATIONS OF A WIFE FPETFPITIVITTIPTIIPTPIIITTIPIITIOIFICTT The Reason Katie's Remorse n High se 1f Katie had he he the Meduss think my muscles could not hi incapable of than for the first had displayed the cloaks more motion w she Iy fur 1) dilierent raid whiskey- had jumped Katie had told me o quest to “hide thing Mamie had taken advantag guillibility to band That expected something With the Mamic memori s home wher n cond upon stise discover to the usion, w the girl's for her, ti of Katie® attic 1 bad enough, secret beverages would 1 told myself, a end of the s paradise of bootlegs: miles of lonely coastline, but one chance in a million that even irresponsible Katie would be involved ta any such trouble But the astonishing contents ¢3¢ bundle she so dramatically palded were potential with grave em- Sarrassment if not danger for all of #s. After the first shock of <hem my thoughts began to swiftly from our New York ment and back again, sorting, fying and filing the many odd dents which my acquaintance Mrs. Marks had brought me. Something Drastic Required The hurried roughness with which “Petey” Marks had smothered his wife's comment upon the gorgeous tur coat which she had worn upon their first visit to our apartment, the quick slamming of her closet door by Mrs. Marks upon a later oc- casion when I had glimpsed several fur coats within, the dumping upon my bed of an armful of similar gar- ments the day before T leit for the farm, when my neighbor had been mistakenly alarmed hy the visit of the private detective in search of the Harrison children—all these thing: pointed to only one sinister interpre- tation, clarified by the unmistak- able deduction that Mamie was a relative of Mrs. Marks, and must bo in ecommunication with her, 1 had forgotten Katie in my men- tal travels, but she recalled herself to my mind by the half-tearful, wholly curlous question you tink, Missis € cabbage someve in ot have bee with cust becoming a because its there hough was of un- secing travel apart- lassi- inei- with aham? es—not of of realm need at ame back from the speculation to the urgdnt doing something drastic The garments must not remain in the house ten minutes, But what do ning my knowledge they a matter wos most of Marks her me once another 1 was I to concer That were action 1 a yet the remembrance Kulleles in Mrs, lly contrasting with I famboyance—made n final f them? v police certafy v certain an pronounce hesitate Judgment “I'm only Katle," 1 = gt these things At once, Are ke pronouncing thinking sternly one ng, now W from must away there many bundles these Two “Bring Whatever of the incident Katie with the " fed ) said shortly, t he the ant 1 Katie meel ; them mig outcome 1 enormity m 7 impress of her action — o ngles Tetter from Mary Alden Prescott Mrs, Leslie Prescott to My 1 1&h Dear '3 hope glad to = T know very m very He with CEEE— Operation Aovisep FRIEND SiD “Bow't Do Iy Try Lydia E. Pinkham’s Veg- etable Compound First, Proved Good Advice Chicago. lllinoia. - ** Just a few linee w know what Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound did for lime. "1 was mar_ied ll zoing on for three years, and went to 2 doctor and wzs ta ingtreatments twic a week for poinc e lery month, 1 used to lie in bed three or & with them call and inject some- thing into ar t put me asleep 5o | wouid nei fo] the pains. At last she said | would have to be operated on if | wanted any ch dren. - Weil, | just happened 1o go to #ce a friend with her first bat v and 1 oM her 1 was going to the hospital, and #he said, ‘Don’t do it! You go and get a bottle of Lydia E. Pinkham s Vegeta. ble Compound and you won't need any operation.” So my hushand got me bottle right ",,.’ Now 1 F‘;VP ".: lovely children. Believe me, | recom. mend the Vegetable Compound to any woran | know has any kind of female trouble. it has helpe d me and a ot of rr; lnan1~ Mr A McAxtiess, ® 8. Morgan Si., Chicagn, Gl For -lelyydruxm'se erywhere, hiding things “How out t wo first, e Jar to 1he Homethin h “What g this doi containing st i You bun " nd o [N made what she notings © body a ceat “Then W else, Know when she Katie you did Katir mir at brought looked like d 1 Mami m 1 e consider she P her gif me very sheep.” said was i wil for Know pron nalie tie's @ an) yone Dot ? 1ptly 2 of en promise W, promised you a begar m mue a [ ster! n th them over dly al Just in as our ful ¥i for 1. me 1 reluctantly, fe, ui lder hance out t W or an) Ay - to buy you did bundies he att ic ike a trapped thing, then burst into wild tears. “Oh, 1 ham,” tell you out some “Never commande she really she iz s0 s dot shamed, obbed, lte, vay. mind said, termine what to do, , you foolish girl, are probably were found here you " that & but me so that now, Missi no Grs mean A~ to it shoost pop ¥ Katie,” exactly can Don't you real- that these things wh a 1 at e- stolen, and that if they go to prison, and it would mean very great embarvassment for me, ing more serious? if noth- Katie stopped crying, and straight. ened herself with let nodings ey foolishiness, put year: me in she said passionately, Missis prison hurt Grahm, for dignity. you vun for eef hundred my q lGossip’s Corner Checks and Plaids The smartest checked frocks are ming except carrying out colors in the cloth The large mw printed Agures almost ade for na one o without rrow t th and he inted Silk silk costume invariably seart of plain silk. N et Tri i ANy leather heits important ¥ with pla trin ve has oy id m- ry a Embroidered net trims some of the most from exquisite France ored silk are Hand-hemstitching and broidered most be summer, Colla punched signs e are For ing black introdueed broidery. Col lingeries ored trequently used Hemstitching designs of used utiful trim georgette tir some White Collars t white form on tailored kid with Dinner Gowns wi as your =h gown S facin ady Mrs ocked her hi & Pa reat £, me sha ris deal Wy of crepes eyelets conventional frocks, of sashes or em- friends very o Ather wi em- the for | L col m e imported nets and - is featur- equal costliness, | might have to |there are any number of people {abundance col- | or | appearing s death in a Howe g #h even woman h griet r e ad 1 NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, UNUSUAL CAPE A of de that is a part side and quite this very unusual cape the frock on tached on the of almond-green silk with satin overplaids distinetive. The wide flat iding running from shou! is most «cifective on cuff almost fashionable one other gown bands of bra der to hem figured material. covering the hand touch line he is a Good Soup Stock Water in which cr or has been cooked shouid be 1 for stock, lery or asparagus saved and | use 01, Adds= 1o little your Flayor lemon b apy an added flavor. Sprinkle a cinnamon on ked they will have Chenille is used Che broidar It 1s also border, to en fringe, thick itle extensively and f to or looped form a scalloped Vegetables Onions, *potatoes, cabbage and caulifiower are excellent scalloped, Draw Out Salt ats such calt put Salted ham and ing some they should water, corned | ha and % m tongue the be better Irawn cook for out in of to d of T service Plenty best from a re- must well filled | the time, I To get the frigerator it with ice all he kept WHAT ARE VITAMINES? in many tables as vege fat, Mr, read the papers Anytown in quantities reforred it up resistanc B is to b practically Mann of able 1t t is soluble fat in that a professor Columbia had a vitamine, “What's all inquired Mr. isolation in woods, Never interest caus he build Vit als Many benefited this vitamine. Vitamine ! ing health 1t is to br vegetables in milk ' Vitamine for growing children rickets in particn university succeedad in isolating nine and all underweight children have gh diets stuff2" ve of the vitamine who thought living in this Mann terms of throu hier heipful and who vita- has there been is mai in the vitamine and tound and, away frait smaller in 1o a ps frosh had no idea what about best named Iik Mr, Mann, mines are al The three have been B and ¢, Vitamine D is particularly va and infants in oil heen known vitamin alphabetically A 18 10 prevent be found CRES cing a b to be in arly un- leafy found to eream A in skimmed mil) vegetables, such as parsley and in ogg yolks. It is found in smali | is butter, young sprouting or lettuees P me an has physicians of an in 1 by haby n some N /'19 the A ps ntai luak JUNE 3, 1924, to found in grain getables containing n- seurvy. and extent believed is yolk I milk “The Adventures§ Raggedy B and ed A by Jo 2)' g}:uo“t y for Raggedy | Bear Rery That he s In't B kind mouth 1 very fortunate Raggedy Andy Bear and lags puppy Magical Hobby Horse hobby hores, For, when Banzan with a stick to » lag Banza | 1 #ha 1o Horse told Andy. “For make me free countey and 1 like wae Ann and q w!" Nagg that t nzan was & whe Hobby Hors njnr 1 suppose . Ragged Hobhy Hor Ragged at, RNagg asked the horee ‘e ran Ivs escape From " the Hobby Raggedy r did s a hobby s horse away h answ you 1y S from head. “Do Ann now on, ong you! Ragge Ann and & con ith = magie Hors We ong to wi & very Ad 0 Hobhy 1o drink y A thougit Hob An A recom- nn conjur asked the " by 1y was a knot 7 GOOD MANNERS™ Don’t Be Too ” er cleverost taiking esm popular. to BEGIN HERE Peter | engages ist, in a ride, tir Ishmin’s terfering, drun he threw the night. uth his wife, where | Man, | He b [ tress sea | hits | celves | body, | has been | Alaska. { feeling | tentions, | jut Iw sign drowned b NOwW into that awf dream but that lof a conscious battling and the | rocks ment. degree of jacket au Newhall, Ivan arrel Ishmin, % by T | | | y Cdison JMarshall Releued by NEA Sewice, Inc Copvright: 1923 by Little, Biown & Co Augusta, Nuss during a ens to throw secretary, America, Dorothy, oins foreman, al v rocks telegram that identified b she Peter arich overboard Paul 8 awakens n stupor to be told overboard [ an TODAY Ga., who violin- motorhoat arichef, for from a Ishmin during in- by Ishmin urges him to flee Bfe Chris in at 1pon aried but’ unbeknown he flees to Alaska, he is known as the Remit Larso. response and him Dorothy by ne his ar Their Newhall nce cannery to a rees his launch re- her husband's Pirate sea cket, ove, o permits Tshmin to_call, can New W r hall As sole sui anotl CHAT Peter's Rescoed ter her GO ON WITH TF sea instant those agged would Yet, as risis, n sh R1 ceive ivo ip 1 Newhall he had no shade this was THE wa Ther untainous cdges ¢ destre f him i always the i n instant his at- v not was ering rh ans STORY hurled W s his last was no way erue mo- last he n the was one a of marvelops clarity of thought. Not in a likewise whole lreadth t's the one flash In that Dorothy plain, just dawn The spent ous 1 hefore Ty his heave had ¢ and with te to o! wit that out the God had her thought Ther strength i { months {impuise o wented h ast hreat fora he given to reservatio | fir a ' almos pestuons Instinet | the water I his | tinlly | blow T d do and teari the inner heard Again high slicr i | ward through world many of mopely strengthens an Th in d,” T the enhaneed, one ling instant Her in as vivid if h w an nly t her, rrible r l he enchanted b ad ou ars 10 I g in t nst s her pagsed had mus the as it too instant ha s8 of their was his own, g n was st thereafter the son fve to ad, 1 wn ng is wave hi en h an him 3 1ebat in wify im re ah ot destiny of vi folt the vid fir him or in phy d gathers reserve mental encompassing glance, an pe h light al bhody power DWOrS are a the instant imself in thought was A ! in that in the appear before t ife il Al happiness. the woman that | an s 1 iding for a prayer much his he never he and fo! % rol 8 1 these inst ie gray her side, he *had stantane- hours with he world with him side n art eried dong as 8¢ in R wanted vords or lity of last his her last He rene; his consciousness b r, wholly hlow knocked st v but 0 bre he AR al im rug he ak ACTOSS it passages to his ears he w th ke e wa the dge his awhone caug and again t green Half-conscions, shattering b end. But it ent it iropped it that that were Aim of th by mirac welled b or more ashor Vim ghatteri him Vifted keep co m low 1 not ther stant shore through 1y at that N a shattering pact of his hody against the crags was nd im- without o erags unconscion i foree Nt Bray threashoad killing and 1 ack hir hat tem dream about impact par- the the erag gouging through had nly of apart n, lifting was sped for dolphin r e it it a arei a a f im ir iousness ght yod than back and 1 he id t ow hin t smooth w waited mean water t dashing for th the he w ied 1 rocks it gray hundred feet d gap I tir could a ag being A taggeri hi 1" ed te at 1 flow tak to mi lid 1 n dream cyen out a r Jupit arer im in g spirit momen washed i ag laid him he st nm the i and 1rprise s ad ny am some¢ on his 1 exercise from better to risk Tie his ¥ moving nst sor view man evident g trader e appeal Jupiter r there moments possibie in 1 feet a e shor caused wounde a into consideration; th e 1 from loss and sure about him him when sciousness opened his eyes {bunk, and a none of whom ber secing about him. and were ministering to the last of his dim con- departed. When he he was on a clean little group of men— he could ever remem- hefore—were workjng One of them, he guessed presently, ! was acting as ship's doctor: his hands were scrubbed tiil the skin was pink, he wore a white apron, and his look was very businessliike. He was talk- ing quietly with two of the ship's officers as he sterilized a set of villainous-looking surgeon’s tools. Their conversation drifted faintly to | Peter's ears. “Dis is quite a fe'der in your cap, Bill,” one of the sailors was saying in the good-humored, | subdued voice that is the peculiar ‘ahar.'u'vf istic of a certain great breed | ship | He would not pay for his passage; | the long days and | shadow of happiness, HE WAS STAGGERRING ON THE EHONE, of sea “I know my skill."” “If there hoat or wouldn't tackled some pretty got away with 'em, too, my years at soa If 1 don't work on that facr he'll he a monster to look at the rest his life, 1 really think I can help m—1 believe if o was he'd tell me to go ahead Peter opened his eyes again ' he said thickly he tried to job for promptly, on the miles 1 -though I've stift jobs, and its a pretty big answered real M. D, a thousand it a Bill was a within tackl conscious “I'm His jaw enuneiate conscious, wobbled as Go ahead.” The sailors | Rreat amazement complication— that LB returned, anesthetie,” “Go ah anyway hasn't any fécling in it, | tecls numb. “I'm afraid I got to work thousand miles and you've got las casy as 1 can | Bill went to work limit of his skill. - He ugly cuts, bandaged strips of flesh, he tied bl he fastened again-—with ness—a torn eyelid that was the sult of a long cut that pasescd onally across hiis face and which the bone of the and tried his best to set the broken Through it all Peter clenched bit the wedge that Bil between his jaws, and with no another conse at him “That's you're “Wa haven't ked fous,” any | face It My at all be numb when But we real help. it won't it from a to have on [ surgeon, rn “ be to the absolute stitched great, | loose, torn 1ing veins, some he re- diag- had he an broken nose, his had id hands, placed nothing The with em boy's got guts,” Bill had said asis, ng, burning pain in his jaws | face woke Peter late in the and he was somewhat surprised Bill sitting at his bedside try talk,” the latter cau- tioned quickly You won't do any king for weeks, my t 1 can better. Peter managed to grin hand if in Bl understood vou It's to Stab) and night; find Don't to to ] some boy see you're wanly and the act promptiy. paper in a lucky for you you read and write, I've those bandages slipped off some strips, sterilized fresh band- 0 he sslonal pride. “You but .you’ll look You wanted & piece second, back of an envel bunk and put a pencil hand. The latter wrote the seafaring man he was e ship moved his as 0 writing. 'l get a piece of how ook at some Hie white pt doing prof g stained wounds I 1 wit e fin~ far t loo ke you, something paper Wait He laid the rail the a ope on r's ike 1 where bound 7 Naturaliy in that - r Dolly and 1 aloud interested you is auxiliary schoone Betti Naknek for Siberia. Rut Il be back to Un- months, and from there 1 hope haven't got ng engagements.’ ter grinned in his bandages, and of some pain shook his | from worry . “ka in sis Frisco. vou the cost ad | “Gooa ', we meet any Don't want to be put off, one?" The castaway indicated “no” again be shipmates for some | The captain’il be glad to sign though you haven't the A seafaring man, there's ways something you cam do. What Then well you up hands of io ca took 1 to yon the writ Peter and the paper Peter gone under occasion to - his during his residence in the vitiage. Tut he halted before e had completed the first word. A sudden, deeply moving thought flashed tike a Jight in his mind. | He was hardly aware that Bill had | picked up the paper. “Pete, eh,” he :!'nll Many men, in this remote end of the North, go by first names only; | and it is not considerad the best man- | as fo what | be. The 1 had friend again Nevi the he had tew e had g | ers 1o in ton ciosely man embarrass matts in & friendly way. no | Ha and, “Life- nan to eeemed perfecty ronf-fact grinned |aboard and was a | auxiliary |among the reef: | Thus | lost, fhe ginning, | line juice Pete! Limejuice Pete! Bill went out and left this southern aristocrat to pon- der on the interesting situation in which he found himself. CHAPTER 1V, Peter Disguised Limejuice Pete! 1t did not sur- prise Peter Newhall that Bill should take him for an Englishman. He was a pure Anglo-Saxon to start with, his features had suggested those of the better class of Britishers, but mostly RBill got the idea from his southern accent—an accent with which the crew of the Dolly Rettis was entirely unfamiliar but whieh, be- cause it was nothing else they knew, became English by the process of elimination. Only the erew of the Dolly Bettis knew that there was a survivor from the disaster of the reefs, In order t)\a( the whole world should be made believe that Peter Newhall, alias lntrr Neville, had gone down on the Jupiter he must tell his shipmates that he, Limejuice I’ete, had been survivor of the schooner that had sunk the ship that the un- fortunate Jupiter had gone forth te &ve. No one living, so far as he knew, could contradict his story. the world would believe that one aboard the Jupiter was Peter Newhall of course among them. THe resolved to get up as soon as possible, take his place in the erew of the ship, ‘and get what companion- he could from his shipmat every in the first place it might arouse suspi- cion of him-~men of the class he was supposed to be do not pay for steam- boat ticketes when they ean work their way—and in the second, the hard work on the deck might fill up give him some He would not bottla again at half-mad dream take to the onee, That was ended, Ten days thereafter he was enough to hegin his first light taske aboard ship; and the captain signed him up. This proceeding was not without an element of humor: the southern gentleman signed the name “Pete Limejuicer” with a flourish, The captain grinned widely, then as. signed him a shift on the paint detail that is always busy on shipboard His wounds healed, his jaw bone of his nese wera sound and now the blond hair had begun to lengthen and mat about his lips and jowls, Because it was gradual, did not at first realize the tre. mendous, incredible change in his ap pearance since the night of the wreck In the first placs health and decent habits had mostly cradicated the re volting signs of dissipation. His eyes were clear, no longer bloodshot and thin; flesh of his face was firm rather than swollen and soft; he was a deep, good brown instead of pasty white, and the network of red lin at his cheek hones was no longe manifest, But this was only the be- His burly form had strip ped down until he weighed but one hundred and sixty pounds, and now he had started to gain slowly as his muscles hardened to But these changes all minor ones compared to the complete trans formation of lis face, RiiI's surgical work had been a huge success as far as repairing his disfiguration, but in so doing he had completely con cealed the man's identity, Mo was as changed as if he wore a mask " Before he had had a rather #ful), extremely youthful face Now it was lean, the cheek bones showed the ehin w progiinent, the eyes looked larger, more luminous and clear, and much more sober, New had come in his brow, his nose was irregular, no langer looked small and rather pursed bul lacge and hu- morous Ha was no longer hand some, not from any pronounced dis- figuration, «Jhut simply, hecause of the new set of his features and, perhaps, the presence of a fow telltals sears His hair had only been faintly touehed vith gray before the disaster: th st months of distress and dissipa tion had shot it full of silver, Final Iy his voice was complately changed in tone since the fracture of his jaw it was still rich and full, and th differences were such as could not b narrated in words, vet the ear would never recognize it as Peter Newhall's voice whiskey wild, well and again, iron " e cruise was done certain simple pleasure the sailor's life, in hoiding his placs as a man ameng men The hardest tasks on the hoat did not ap pall him now. His hands were like iron, his muscles untiring. He liked the regular hours, the plain, abund ant food, the hours of ‘easy speech with his shipmates on wateh, He did not, however, intend to follow the seafarer's life, for the simple reason that he knew it would sooner or later him into danger. When he re Alaske he would get some outdonr joh At one of the he would most! ilization and th Before that found a long he in carry turned to kind of an canneries of touch with where e out ci law The the Unalaska o the ends touched at trip, but because earth foregathered here—be it was the meeting place fm wayfarers that came and pass~d through this empty, far-off edge of the Fast—he wisely decided to stay on board RBut he would net con tinue on down to San Francisce, and thus into the toMs of the law. The captain had agreed to put him off at one of the native villages, farther down the Peninsula boat return the canse of (Continued in Our Next lssus) Reference Required ack-—Lend me 10 dollars, o'd man 1 promise you on the word of a gen. tlemar: to paw it back tomoerrow. Spratt Bring the gentisman around and Tet me see him.—Ameri can Legion Weekly. BE A NURSE Be usetul: honor, dis. e, weady work st 003 day. To women to 35 of age o oTough 30 monthe' stee Nonsectaran. 555 8 month while carnin smusements; good food. lodwing free: best teschers: vaca tion. One year of high schaol needed. Weie RO for baokles. of Nurses MONTEFIORE HOSPITAL

Other pages from this issue: