New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 11, 1924, Page 18

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MY HUSBAND'’S LOVE Adels Gasrison's Now Fham o REVELATIONS OF A WIFE FRPPPLIVIRIIRIT IR IR RII TR TV I savedeee What Mrs, Marks Had 10 sy 1o ] Don't let M famie and Madg | uo trouble if you be. diseredit J I assured her coldly, for 1 realized the iy of keeping | Mamie tervified, though pity for the trightened whiech 1 flercely | ast taking pos ~ ' her hit me \ yourself y ¢ “Am 1 eternally 19" Har ry Underwood queried with a smile at Lillian and me, Then | saw his ey parrow quickly as b Mam head bowed against the alr back but he gave other that he poticed Anything unusual in the men tal atmosphere “Alme Lillian ¢ ing your record, we wers eall out the police when knocked, We fgured you were in one of three places o “Morgue, hospital or poli tien?" he interrupted, grinning im- pudently at her. “That's what it Is to have & reputation for punctus aliny" suddenly changed his euliar tone to a dolorous Whine as he turned to me—"if you ever depart from it, there's & panie among your triends and relatives," I interpreted the flicker of Lil- Han's eyes toward Mamie correctly, remembering that she had asked me to take the girl into the kitchen while she talked to Mr, Underwood, “I think you should be discl. plined,” 1 told him smiling, “hut ¥il. Jan is past mistress of that art, so T'Il leave the task ro her, Come Mamle, I want you to go to the tehen with me" : MH- was standing nearest me, and | the kind they are, h ( his impudent whisper, “Lauc real venom If they'd let me, 1'd " eand by | BIVe you such a hidin' as you'd car- Mamiel was, T am sire, UnheA™ Y| fy (o marke of to your dyin' day. I gave no sign that 1 had heard [ I'll do it anyway if you so much as him, but crossed quickly to Mamie, [lift the tip of your little nnlgr for who had arisen obediently, but had any lnlnrlunrlu:mn. 41{., l:ut I'm so stumbled when she attempted to ashamed, Mis' Graham She turned walk, because she was still child. [to me dramatically, “To think any ishly hiding her face in the crook |Felation of mine should do you any of her arm, '“l;!- I put my hand upon her arm and | “Oh. by the guided her through the door, con-|'Dld you see the hands sclous that Harry Underwood was |let in the door a ml’umt making absurd laughter-provoking | Sald he was a friend of yours, gestures in the pretense that I was | an “animal tamer in a clrcus. TLil- nec ginl 1 mandii e Marks 1ed the door, she curiously peered | into the room, and | smoths desira to laugh as | saw dis- in transparent face She patiently had hoped that 1 was entertaining Mp, Underwood in the kitehen, and that she would have a chance to sce him again, Then she saw Mamie shrinking as fas as she could out of sight, and her lightened with subeonselons, but very real delight at the chance to her ehagrin without betray. Ing the cause of it “Did Y See the Man " “So you're down herc, now, " she snarled advancing into the kitchen, but keeping her voice low, evidently with the hypnosis of Lillian still upon her, “You've got A crust, even breathin' the same alr as Mis' Graham, after tryin' to do for her the way you did t's a lucky thing for Graham and her lady friend " she hissed AW s fubb was session of Mrs 100r As 1| knoek ¥ | | “ low op past me ered a \ppointment Knows 1o rted ahout you o slas oyen vent are you?' you Mis are with she smiled, me man 1 go? He way," NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, DALY FARHION SERVIOR IN ROSE-COLORED CREPE Man shout the door upon his non- 9 sense, and I swiftly turned upon G . c “There is no one to see you now oss'p s omer but me,” I told her curtly, “so take your arm down and walk along here as you should.” Mamie {s Terrified 8he dropped the arm promptly, but kept her eyes obstinately lowered, nor did she speak even after we had reached the kitchen, and she had seated herself in the chair I placed Soap Spots. for her. Her silence was distinctly | Badly soiled garments should have pleasing to me, however, for 1 had |the dirtiest parts dipped in water, no knowledge of what Lilllan had “‘”“ soaped and tightly rolled up be- #aid to her, and I would have had to |fore they are put in the tub to souk. | weigh my words most carefully had | . the girl tried to question me. [ Prevents Skidding. | 1 knew that If you wish to sct a dish of food |n TALNRTI L WAL L R0- LRty b the Job, puE o can rubs| 0N vete Awusaiive anew, Ko 1 dld 1o o5l Sith to prevent alippin not expect an immediate summons 2 _i‘ IpRng; back to the living room, and made mysels a8 comfortable as possiblo In| . &y powter dishes with' fowdered the rocking chair we had brought | ..o “sione applied on flannel wet down. . There was a creak in it and | iy |inseed oil and turpentine. Then though I stopped rocking after the |\wag nin hot soapsuds and dry with first raucous sound or two, I was t00 | o <t chamois or flannel. late to keep my neighbor in the next | & room from shearing it through the | thin partition, _ : Never iron woolens until they are T heard the sound of slippered feet | nearly dry and then turn wrong side striking the floor—then the opening |out and cover with a piece of muslin of her door and the patter of the |pefore introducing the flat. feet up the passage to my kitchen. Mamie's face filled with terror, lifted | at the sound, and she put out her Yellow spots on porcelain, if they hand in childish supplication to me, are not caused hy iron rust, may be “She's awful mad by me,” she lrmm\‘ed with household ammonia. Make Bit Estra. | When making white or cr it is advisable to make more [you will need and keep the rest |the icebox for use another day. m sauce than in | | i For Pewt Ironing Woolens, 11 Yellow Spots Sl Tangles. Letter from John Alden Prescott to Sydney Carton, n 1 canot help but think, Syd old boy, that the colncidence that we alwa think i& so strange 1is more natural than we suppose. You remember, | don’t you, Byd, that you visited Paula Perler one wezk before my marriage three years ago and now you tell me you are going to meet her in New York just the week before the third anniversary celebration of my wed- ding. Paula didn't say what she wanted to see you for, did she? Perhaps she has designs upon you, for 1 am sure that the incident with me is close®. I hope to heaven it is. I'm going to confess gomething to she made the remark that she had comething to tell me, and she has| referred to it once since, but she has | sald nothing about it lately. 1 haven't | wanted to refer to it because, of| course, you know that T would trust| Leslie with my life. It is probahly some foolish Jittle thing that she he magnified into a mountain, but I am waiting impatiently until she tells me., I guess that young sister of hers is | a hellion. Teslie hasn't told me very much, but from what she said 1 read | between the lines that her sister, | Alice, not content with getting Karl | Whitney for herselt is now jealous | of her own sister, and makes it un- | comfortable for hoth Whitney, who you, 8yd, Leslie is like a brand-new | Seems rather a decent of a fel- ewestheart with her bobbed hair, It's|low—and surely one can’t hlame him | much more hecoming to her. Of|for having been in love with Leslie, | eourse T haven't told her this, as it | ¥ou know—and for Leslie, would give her an unfair advantage, | 1 think Ruth Ellington is going to but I'll confess it to you. Don't give | Marry Waiter Burke. She has been me away. { very suceessful with that lingerie | . Besides, there seems to be a kind nf‘iflllmi. T have always wanted to know mysteriousness about Leslie lately, | Who put up the money for her, and which invites in the most intriguing | I have now come to the conclusion way my curlosity. A long time ago | it was Burke. If he did it, T am | not sure that he didn't put up the money for his own funeral pyre, for Ruth is 80 crazy about her own busi- | ness ability that I'm not sure she'll | give up the shop even if she marries Burke, | sor ge, isn't it, how a little eco- independence goes to a wom- | an’s head. That is the only fault I| have to find with Mrs. Atherton—she | is €0 cocky @hout her business ability. | Ily &ee the logic of the American | { of not giving a girl about to be | married a dot. She's 1:1‘Irpr‘mlnmi | enough as it is. I think Mr. Mamil- ton’s stand in not giving Leslie much | moey on her marriage was perfectly | | correct, although t time 1 | thought he was a tightwad. If Les- liec had money of her now, or a busi- | neas that was bringing her in money, she wouldn't he as sweet and docile as #hen is. I'm all euriosity to know | Paula Perier wants to Atherton informed | that my curiosity was the thing | that was always getti me into tron- hie. Tt T took her for going onut to dinner with a strange man,‘and by the way that she made this remark she g to under. stand that it busi who she went be right at ¢ 1024, NEA ¥ sh, pricklyheat, chaf- ing—th e a few of the trying skin ills which make baby fretful and keep anxions mothers busy i the the torment. OL OINTMENT is the ' 1 n baby's freiful 3 gentle, cooling the itching and t why Mrs, the other day , you. one was whe to task 45 for baby's balr kaeng 7. Acailarugisls esinol ke ands was one of my with She may ! (Copyrignt, |meriest in a gown crepe embroidered in |and flufted up when | problems was why food food is a common one. | ter known as calories. | values so {taking a small portion the sume ef- | fect can be procured as wihen a large |amount of some other bulky food is |eaten. [ which is a concentrated 1\'flgcmhll-x are bulky and several Here's the summer girl at her sum- | searf over one arm, if desired. The of rosc-colored | Wide circular flounce which gives deeper such fullness at the hemline is one of its most important touches much torially. Paris is tiring of the straight- There's a cape-like arrangement line frock and is working out very tones ostrich. in with the back which may be worn as a interesting effects with cireular lnes, | twice I v TABLES ON [EALTH FOOD IS BUT FUEL [pounds would have to be 1get the same calorie result. These are matters that the average person does not stop to consider when |sitting down to eat. The spoonful of lolive oil, or the little pitcher of cream he takes may be giving him a caloric One thing that stumped Mr. Mann eaten to considering dietary cannot be measured in weight or bulk. The mistake of thus measuring he was 1700d is measured in fuel units, bet- food he is eatinu. few instances of this may be by noting the following food articles, cach of which contain 100 | calories; one large egg, one large- ed balked potato, one lamb chop, a dish of sweet corn, an helping of baked beans, two squar of cube sugar, a handful of peanuts, a square of butter, a glass of milk or a quarter of a glass of cream and a large orange. of the A found And many foods have their caloric well concentrated that by of is olive oil, food where- n 300 calories per ounce, or there- abouts, may be found. Ordinary An example this The Adventy 9 and KfiQ o resof RaggedyAmn gedy Anly 43 by Johmy Gruelle You can't imagine how rnmfnr'uhlcl plied. “T looked back and ecould see it was in the magical house on wheels, | them rolling over and over in the "v\:'l":’":'_,‘““'v‘"”"‘l":lffl “",";‘I‘\"‘q‘“::“j‘l“ diteh! Then they limped to the conter three cunning lttle white beds; one|0f the path and shook their fists for Raggedy Aan one for Raggedy|just as if we were to blame Ady and one for the magieal hobby| Raggedy Ann laughed, not beciss orse, {the two mean ereatures had been Then there was a white ice DoX|phumped, but hecahse she knew tha which Raggedy Ann had wished for| those who try to injure others and with her magic hooks and whenever | got hupt doing it always feel that they &he wanted ice cream, or 1ces Or any- [ Jave heen mistreated, thing nice and cold to eat, anyone| oy much nicer it really is, being could go to the jee box aid get t. | Kind and considerate to others!” Rag- ¢ Ad, that is how the Raggedys and | poqy Ann said. “Now take the two old the hobby horse happened 1o be cat- instance, they have n ing the lovely orange ice out on th front porch while the house on whe rolled afong through the deep woods, ! “My!" the poor the roof finished dish of e and passod the plate down 8 us wilches for 'ving to take our house and our magic books and the hobby horse away from us. Now all they get for their efforts is one piece of*trou- ble after another while the nice poor man, sitting upon the roof, has asked nothing from us but, hy .being and friendly to us has been re- man on said his large as he orange ‘ I TR ‘ kind ceiving a s ow which is the best way » agedy Ann asked. ike the nice kind poor man Raggedy Andy and the hobby hors replicd Bvery time!” 1 never get a sp ggudy Ann said. ck of fun out of heing selfish and unkind, for people, | {&oon learn and lcave you to yourself! | But, it we are kindly and generous and sharoe our pleasures with others, then, we not only get a lot of pleasure from secing the happiness give, hut those wh wa serve give us their love in ret “Oh yes aven't been Ann we urn' !" the hobby horse said. made very long, Rag- gedy and Raggedy Andy, but 1 kow iy share in all your pleasures, hut because yon love me! gedy Ann and Raggedy h=ir soft hands on the n's wooden head and felf for as you must know by you your mamma and drar ones, that love } vour heart the wh aggedy Ann and Raggedy nost patted the hohby horses's wooden head, a Andy obby very he the way 1aday brings | than Raggedy Andy. “Didn’t two witches, Minga and Munga hard bumps when they tried to jump upon porch the house on passed them Yee!" th the to Py in the fron a8 ns aheel za My hobby rse re Bar- | value cqual or greater to all the rest ordinary | t | bothering ue for a long, long time and | on wheels | re of every one of our| at I love you, not because you | FRIDAY, JULY 11, 1924, LRE TODAY | 4 man of education | and breeding, bhecomes @ master crook=—preying upon other thieves At & rvesort hotel he unfairly loses | 8500 In a golf het with Ernest Van. | tine, ehief owner of a detective aAFency==a coarse, hoorish Individ- ual, Vantine is enguged to a Miss Kernochan, daughter of a weaithy retired broker Kernochaun an enormous ruby—a present 1o his | daughter, He had acquired the ruby in settling & claim against the estate of a millionaire by the name of Henry Adams, Interviewing Adam's widow, Alnsley finds that the rly woman's husband bhecame indebted to Ker- nochan in a deal which appears on the surface to have heen a swindle, NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY “I am sorry,” 1 told her, And In- deed I was, Bhe Was 50 Courageous, and her yolce when she mentioned her husband’s name was »o sad, that my heart went out te her, I have| known widows who would have he. rated their husbands for leaving them unprovided for, but Mrs, Adams was not that kind, The memory of her| husband was her dearest posscssion, | {infinitely valuable than the Grand Duke's Jewel, 1 felt & wave of sentiment engulfing me; but I me- taphorically swam to shore, My busi- ness held no room for sentiment, And | 80 1 broached the real reason of my | call, “I had hoped,” T said, a photograph of the ruby plan to illustrate my text,"” | I walted for her reply; upon it everything depended, And luck was with me | i1 have a paste copy of the ring,” | |she told me, “Henry had it made Immediutely upon his return to Amer- lea with the stone. You and | | her faded cheeks colored prettily—"I | | wasn't quite honest a moment ago, I | lam a countrywoman; but still, 1 am a |woman, And I did want to wear that ring Everyone knew that Henry |owned if, and—one is as silly at six- ty“as at sixteen, Siille And yet | | the jewel was too precfous, So Hen- ry had the copy made, and once or re it. 1 wonder If all realit- | ies are shams, and all shams realities, | | Any I have the copy, and if that would do you any good, T am quite | !sure that you are welcome to it.” | I turned my head away, lest she ! observe the gleam in my eye, It was | with difficulty that I kept my voice | | steady, as I assured her that T would | | be most grateful if she would Jend | me the imitation for a few weeks, | Half an hour later I left her. 1'or {the first time since I had definitely |adopted my new profession, I felt | sick at heart. Jor Mrs. Adams }mdX insisted that I stay to tea with her, Knowing her poverty, I was loath to | add the slightest expense to her | straitcned budget. Yet it was not that which made me swallow her Ifrmd and drink with effort; it “‘flsi | the fact that this brave old Jady, who [ somehow made me think of a russet apple, wrinkled as to skin, hut sound | and sweet within, thought me to be |as honest as herself, She questioned me about my life, my family, and I | | fed her lies, I was sick and ashamed, | |and wrathful at the weakness which made me feel this way when I left |her. T sent her the finest box of | candy «the eity could provide, yet somehow seemed to feel that my gift | was an insult. For a moment I was | tempted to abandon my project.. | then my own self-disgust roused in ime an anger toward Kernochan, For some things we need no proof susceptible to analysis by the five scnses. A sixth sense'tclls us truth, Just as a child somehow knows truth, by instinct, so we adults occasionally preserve the gift of childhood. 1 say | that ihstinct lives within us all, the | heritage of a thousand gencrations, and that we are fools who disdain it and prefer our lying senses, I knew, as definitely as though I had wit- nessed the performance of the chi- canery, that Kernochan had swindled Adams’ widow, He deserved to lose the ruby There was something else, too. Van- | tine was a famous detective, as well |88 a boorish cheat. At least, he had | inherited a great detective ageney, He had thought me a stupid gull; it {would afford me a certain peculiar satisfaction if I repaid his opinion of | |me by taking his fiancee's ring. 1 do not mind losing a wager to a gentle- |man; but a man who will inveigle | strangers into unfair speculation, is la cad and deserves punishment, | | Besides, if I must behonest—and it affords me, who am a thief, a pe- culiar joy to indulge myself, in these memoirs, in the unusual luxury of honesty—the Grand Duke's ruby was worth three hundred thousand dol- lars. I know no arguments that could seem 8o potent to me, So behold me, two weeks later, driving into the Kernochan estate at | Greenwich. T, who had gone a year without being able to afford a ride in a taxicah, now sat behind the | wheel of my roadster. On the trunk- | rack behind was a box in which were evening clothes, lounge-sults, shirts of finest linen, silken socks, and all | those other concomitants of wealth. | Wedged in the seat beside me were | my golf-sticks. T locked, with all my | furnishings, what I was: a gentleman, |1 al looked what I was not: a mil- lionaire. I had taken the precaution of tele- phoning from the near-by town of | Stamford; and so, when I arrived at | vulgafly ostentatious residence of Kernochan, Vantine was there. It was Saty , and had felt fairly certain that the detective would spend a week-end at the home of his flance. My logic was justified by the event. For Miss Kernochan had answered my tglephone call, had in- vited me to luncheon, and had assur- ed me that Vantine would doubtless be willing to offer me revenge. Vantine was willing; indeed, s anxious, should play on the course of a nea by club, immediately after luncheon, It irked me to accept the Kerno chan h itality: but all profeseions have their disagreeabis eid, 86 1 ate their féods with relish. T BEGIN John Ainsiey, shows Ainsley & ring, | v mora “to obtain ring, 1 1 1 he {and play some bridge later, | Vantine, in vain. { looking at the | And | is about all 1 ean say for hi For not merely was he boastful as to his weaith, but he showed an unpardonable euriosity to. ward myself I indulged myself in & certain gift for fietion, 1 named a| city In the West as my home, 1 skill fully ereated the impression that 1 was Immensely rich, that a wound received in the war had incapacitated | was good, That IUNDIRIED AND TWEN- | TY-FIVE THOUSAND!" | me for active work, ard that I divid- ed my time between America and IBurope, wandering wherever 1| thought T might find amusement, T told them that I had acquired my car at Pinehurst and had motored north, golfing on the way, Also I warned Vantine that my game had improved, and suggested that we make the stakes a thousand dollars this time. He accepted with elation, Three hours later, on the fifteenth green, I handed him' a thousand dol- lars, can't understand it,” T said pettishly, “I just can't get going to- day.” | He grinned, Had he chosen, - he could have won earlier, and my ex- cuse was ridiculous. ““We might play again tomorrow,” he suggested. “For two th#usand dollars,” T cried. He turned away/to hide a smirk. “Just as you sa he replied, I had yielded to Xernochan's solic- | itous invitation that I dine with them In addi- tion to his other disqualifications, Kernochan was a snob. And I fear that my careless mention of certain names highly placed in international society had given the Kernochans a false idea of my own social .position. | They were not going to let depart, too easily, one who might graciously open doors forever barred to a certain class of broker, and to detectives. At dinner Miss Kernochan wore her ruby ring. 1 had not invested in a | motor car, nor in a golf-match with Before 'dinner was half over, Kernochan, learning of to- morrow's match, insisted that T must spend the night in his house. T could offer no valid excuse; and so upon nty | acceptance, the matter was settled, Not until, Miss Xernochan and my- self having lost a rubber, we were cutting again for partners, did I ap- pear to notice the ruby ring. “T see that you've had the setting fixed,” T then remarked. Kernochan nodded. ‘‘Daragon’s of- fered me three hundred and twenty- five thousand for that ring,” he de- clared. “But it ain’t for sale. T guess my girl is good enough to have a ring like that for herself.'” She simpered, not preftily, T could not hut contrast this insolent and gommon-looking woman with the sweetly dignified lady from whom, by chicanery, the ring had been taken. T whistled. “Three hundred and twenty-five thousand dollars!” T ex- claimed. “It doesn’t seem possible. Still, it is beautiful.” I leaned over, stone. Miss Kerno- chan did the obvious thing. 8he slipped the ring from her finger and handed it to me. Now, I had not in- tended to put into effect certain plans, which had brought me to this house, so soon. But a storm had been brew- ing during dinner; it burst now with a clap of thunder and a flash of lightning. And a moment later the lights In the library went out. Miss Kernochan screamed in alarm. Her father laughed, *“They’ll he on again in a minute, Alice,” he told her. “This often happens during a storm, Mr. Ainsl " he said to me, (Continued in Our Next Issue) THE YOUNG LADY ACROSS THE WAY We arranged that we4” The young lady acress the way her father canmake a mighty fine imprompiu speech if he has two or three days to prensse it in. I wili say for Karnothan tiat his cook orns Don't Pare Them! instantly, then the corn loosens comes out. No risk, no constant treu. ble. Get Blue-jay at your druggist. Blue-jay EAT AND LOSE WEIGHT, Breakfast—Ono cup berrles, 1 dish ready cooked cereal with 1.2 cup whole milk, hot water, Luncheon—One open cottage cheese sandwich, 1 glass ice tea, 2 teaspoons sugar, 1 tahlespoon lemon juice, Dinner—Two broiled lamp chops, 2 tablespoons new peas, 1 cup fruit sal- ad, 1 thin slice gluten bread. Bedtime-~One cup skimmed milk, Total calories, 1074, Protein, 198; fat, 288; carbohydrate, 588, Iren 0168 gram, One cup of berries averages about the same total calories. Red rasp- berries have no fat content and are higher in carbohydrate calorles than blackberries, black raspberries, blue- berries and strawherries, One-half cup of whole milk uses as many calories as one whole cup of skimmed milk. The whole milk, of course, is rich in fat and compara- tively lotv in proteins since the allow- ance is cut in half. The iron grams are diminished proportionally. Open Cottage Cheese Sandwich, Two thin slices whole wheat bread, 4 tablespoons cottage cheese, 2 ta- blespoons minced celery, 4 table- spoons chopped new carrots, 8 table. spoons chopped nuts, salt and pep- per, paprika. The cottage cheese should be quite dry. Season well with salt and pep- per bhefore adding remaining ingre- dients. Mix lightly and spread on bread. Sprinkle with paprika serve as an open sandwich, Total calories, 379. Protein, fat, 81; carbohydrate, 186, L0014 gram, and 1181 Iron EAT AND GAIN WEIGHT. Breakfast—One cup berries, 1 dish ready cooked cereal with 1-2 eup cream, 1 soft boiled egg, 2 plece buttered toast, hot water, Mid-morning lunch-—One cup whole milk. Luncheon — Two gaining sand- wiches, 1 giass iced tea, 1 tablespdon sugar, 2 tablespoons lemon juice, 1-2 cup fresh strawberry ice cream, Afternoon tea — One glass i{ced chocolate, 2 brown bread tea sand- wiches. Dinner-—One cup cream of tomato soup, 2 brolled lamb chops, 3 new po- tatoes in cream sauce, 4 tablegpoons buttered peas, 1 cup fruit salad with 3 tablespoons whipped cream dréss- ing, 2 cheese cups, 1 Parker House roll, 1 tablespoon butter, 1.2 cup mint ice. Bedtime-—One cup of whole mitk. Total calories, 3893. Protein, 311; fat, 1686; carbohydrate, 1896. Iron, 0199 gram, You may find that your appdtite will be keener if you restrict the use of sugar during the hot weather. Too much sweet is cloying and makes it impossible for you to feel any desire to eat. Abhove all, do not eat candy between meals. Eat your many meals regularly. And if you find yourself at 10 in the morning dreading the thought of drinking your milk have a large glass of orange juice with a plain bréad and butter sandwich. This will stim- ulate ybur appetite for luncheon well as give you calories and vitamins. Your gaining sandwich should bé made of huttered bread with créam cheese, dates and nuts all moistened with cream as a filling. Second helpings will, of course, add calories if they are necessary for your day's ‘‘ration.” (Copyright, 1924, NEA Ser;lce. né) As a cure for barking dogs, and Austrian town has imposed 4 tax, starting with 100,000 erowns on the first dog kept, and doubling the tax on each additional dog. GOOD MANNERS Maid Goes to The young girl who goes te a pri- | vate ball without a chaperon takes | Hér matd with her. The maid sits in |ths dressing-room threugiiout the evening.

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