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ife’s Confessional REVELATIONS OF A WIFE he Way Dr hero fort rat Pettit Brought Com-.ginning to consider himselt the o Junior Jof a wonderful adventure d stepe of the ad ust bearing Junior lothing in the Katle and Mar- announced Dr m ste the only the most perf! hut s v finished locker Pettit, physi- tory Ku best As we hospl in m fon tr fr driv t 1 o with stor v in with lama car m oW for Junior ) adores him, engaged in a thorough examina ace and ¢ 1 a most ce, having broken blatehes 1 ) Ratherir 1dc happene I saw a , BAW 8 What § appear great fie nutes since I had the ) a physiclan spoke ad th turned to me aud cal my sud r my ary that it oF her y ar vl v in the ofvssiona y q against ¥ e examir with a la nt e shs put 7 av "W Yias he been eating?’ Tt him, and In the teliing in- srmed him of the beach plenie from which 'we had just come, fin with the banal query think it i 1 ay from “You Assent wer k. He ¢ e main want to sec said, t on wait Dr. = ¢ of in a | | | 1shir g v &econd : other Do you two you'd ha 1issed him fust finished 1 my patlent has one more call to muke & And 1 don't ha until € because I wished ething concerning n help you. Just sit unt!l I unroll a yard or two of taps s0 you can have the pr ot a room and Dr. Petit's soncerning Junior without any &e- ny.™ Eatherine was walking with me ahe epoke and finlshed just as whe put e gentiy into a e an end of the corridor. Tt walked swiftly away in the direc- tion of e office, and I noted how eharsoteristie {t was of her that she had wasted no time in qu Tt was but two three before Katherina was back wi key im her han follow hew, she gave Marion a hurried admonition to re- maln whers they were and led me | up & fght of stairs and al “It's notk he but wmhort eorridor to the door of cne |thing he got T of the private rooms through which 'perhape before she ushered me when she had un-|beach. He'll be able to go home in locked it an hour or two, but he needs some She had wob offered to carry vrrum»v first. I'll go down and tell Junior for me, as another equally {0 etay on an hour kindly bwt less Mscerning woman might have done. But the moment the dodr closed behind us she came |and got some supper ints the bar- wp to me and held out her arms to |gain. Here is what I wish done.” him. | He outlined the things he wanted “Come, darling,”” she said coax- {n low, concise speech, shook Jun- ingly but with a ring of authority ior's hand in almost boisterous in her voics which Junior fashion — which sharply contrasted been accustomed since her so n | with the formal In our home and her care of him|— and With a parting kindly word when he had been 1ll. “Tou must|to Katherine slipped out of the let Aunt Katherine wndress you now, |room. &0 that Dr. Petit tan see th hcr-' Smart Blouse rid stuff which is hurtiog you.” Junior Jooked at her undecided- then drew his arms closer around ' | t.” Katherine eoun-| A very smart overblouse of erepe ng to help de chine has a yoke fitted onto an B ne on, Madge, accordeon pleated section and held neck. ‘But my mama mustn’t go aw: a racs. You mkv cne foot |in place about the walst by a double g""" arrangement. e saild firmly. ot that de- | ol was the clams doctor If 1t had been you wouldu't have able to get here with him,” turned {n his most lordly man- but I had no resentment | although 1 was conscious a of triumph Lee Chow, had persisted in eaying the clams were not responsible for Jun- for's affilction in the face of Katle's impassioned denunclat of him, “Where did he play on the (beach?” he asked next. “Were vou |with him all the time? Did he han- | has an te eoma wit . leaves, he re an duty to ock 1 to ask the case me, who for here ed up o nthe “Not while he was with me” T nswered the last question first, but he took a short walk with Katle and Marion after the and back | ginning to swell.” - couldn’t have acted that : Peotit ral, as t 'G himself: he stood watch- ing Junior for a minute before he turned to Katherine briskly. beach?" came or cay.” Dr. then ate 4 of somewhere — he went to the some- have time to fix this little lad up to . Gossip’s Corner my eot tared qu me undr tn High Collars Upstanding collars are frequently fashioned from a scarf coiled twice hospital night-|about the neck with the ends hang- gown Katherine tucked Junior into|ing down the back. The high the enowy bed, he patontly was be- | lar undoubtedly less gale o 1 col- Sl Tanglon Fetter from John Alden Prescott to io so. Sald Condon Teslie Preseott. |effictent in a business way Deag Teslia Arrived here confirmed morning 8ll safs anc Alrectly to the offic that Mrs. Atherton had regular ¢rooper gsatting thin der way. T imagina that sh be able to leats for Pittst atter tomorre | The Acme people have been mors | than kind The president o company t had ended to arrangs so that 1 hecome a mem the first of the rear. enough had rould a0 was by vour father who had told me that he had prastically w run founa |the plant while he was T hats very mueh to Atherton start in know what that 1a ”Mc the boy up to an t! 1 m of ve Mrs, wil no one knows 2 alone il ehe-devil can ke inks he T 4id o {8 laoking very wel that damned old matd | Bradford, has gotten her al |up agai t is it, brai t told i in love with indeed Prisci st er firm b He was g»m«v eay that he had anyone to hand that I pride Speakir atraid 1 & with that her I told you way in which } Mrs. Athertor been roped in that woman » ast TOMORROW: tinmed. This letier con- THE YOUNG LADY ACROSS THE WAY The young Iady acros the seven to nothing is reqarded a1 0 seors for & footoall game but for her part tbe e o mam dees prety well 1o bous 1 way acress ) agpeneats’ goul line veven time: y -wd! smiling | breught dle any wild plants or anything cast | Then you will| becoming | S g NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1924, ‘F——— DAILY FASHION SERVICE YOUTHFUL The slightly circular flounce of seal fur makes a distinctive trim. ming for this coat of black corded | 811k lined with red crepe de chine | There is & flare to the cuffs as well apd & smart ugstanding collar | the Nr which tends to keep | lines youthtul, | [ | | [ of the {._. "than the lower one, fashionable and f very smartest gow but tured s, It is very on Velvet Blouses Velve with t tin or blouses are very smart kasha skirts. Tlicy are and given a very cut smock fushion casual air, Enmvelope Purses Emvelope purse as to size and hi kets ad d s0 that the Attings are distributed and the purse is kept flat looking i Evening Gowns Evening EgOowWns are very filmy and are made and layers of tulle over have becoms | ¢ many pocs | evenly becoming of layers foundation "|of satin or metal cloth, Be Prej puma It you are to give 2 party your sliver, china, glassware and linen all counted and ready the day | before ko that you have only to ar- range it the day of your part: | Wash Separately | Wash each plece of cut glass sep- | arately fn warm water and am- monia and rinse and at once, have - vl el Rinse Bottle as you have m a e rin cold ater “ave ou are ready ®oap suds | As milk fri removed it with d until in Reep Kettle Dry TWhen the teakettle fs not in us it should be emptied and allowed to dry. 1 o a fille wash it FABLES ON HFALTH | CHILDREN AND FOOD \ | "But tood the children don't lke is good fyr theu | neighbors would sorettmes say Mrs. Mann of Anytown when question of proper feeding ar Mrs. Mann would answer: [why don't you train them the 4 geet thing a or go to o do habit ng the chil- home-cooked X £ then that the dren { is much the same ) of to ! ting them to do err sch or w f any other thing The 1 aside and explair g 18 more tha T ion in t should tale 1 or at arent child to 1 eat- a me im ot n of 1 cive eating for it thin, s he pleased at Children can be spofled in matters of eating fust a little bit easicr than jthey can be spoiled in any other way. Thors are very few, if any which are unpalatable if tand the nighty ir t to do ¢ suffer a that iild ces. Lo0ds properly quen ! The Adve\\furesoj RaggedyAnn aggedy Andy by 3o ohwmy Sruelle n and Ra | Ragredy An and the little ggedy An o pped d plcked tagzed nd picked they wo {atter they When s many ked 0 ever of the gum her ahin r she k '\ much fat Captain were ,,. yon the deck of the Captain's | > {11ttle white magical boat eating fce ho ting v 1 drops, & ur ps. | ed pron carrie ther S more rones and 1 Mr. Henry Hobgoblin and thelr Hobgoblin son Harry They {eream [ Mrs cream puffs with were all good friends now a before two men Hobgoblins had tried to wrest } tle fat Captain frem his boat i 1t but short time tha t Raggedys ha hey capture the little fat Captain and had thrown cbling over the side jof the lit TAnat had bumped their Of course, Mrs, mmediatel f with Henry to was ten 1 the twe hoat find ont bumped their Henry anc she wou bitn ad hat breom- a4t roug Ant not to fiying t ins frien mall Mr must Hobgoblin ! not Titt said, cal wl’. WOMEN NEED S boat Ouyfln amwn I—CORRIGAN’S WAY The little ecoasting-steamer Hau- tah, Dutch owned, made lelsurely for the patch of green which showed on the horizon like jade in | a sea of lapis-lazull, Tha first mate, | a truculent brigand in dirty whites | ind canvas shoes broken at the sides, was getting & motley collec- | | tlon of dark-skinned natives below | alches; protesting Malays with | strange bundles; Japanesc girls, | Iroad-featured and giggling; Chi- | nese coolles, some with flimsy Boxes | resembling violin-cases, others with | thing at all, because they had gambled away everything they had | started with except a strip of rag at the loins; a tall Sikh with curl- ing benrd and effeminate swagger; ramils, coal-black and wearing gold | ornaments fn their lips, noses and | chattering like a monkey col- | clutching their entire worldly they swarmed below afn, wedged like swelt sardines, until the vessel | ch to put to sca again. | Duteh mate, the stump of a black | cheeroot stuck in the corner of his great mouth, hastened their move- | ments with none too delicate prods of an fron bar Trena Matheson, reclining in a long cane chair on the narrow first. !class deck under a patched awn- il raised her eyes {rom the bwk had been th of pily in her soul for these helpless creatures, formed like men and women, yet herded to« gcther ke beasts of the fleld. Su lenly she gasped and leaped for- d. Something that the ship's of- had dome sent a shudder irough her slender frame, In| | dumb protest, she looked at the| broad white back of the man who stood by the rail. She could not see 1is face, but she thought that his ~burned neck was unusually red nd that the big brown hands hich gripped the rope rier had tightened their hold. It was as if a chord of sympathy had passed between these two. The slim girl in felt that the silent mes- sage brown ey had flashed into space had come to rest in & | highly sensitive receiving station encased in a suit of immaculate duck. The shoulders of the man she | knew as Corrigan twitched, Her e widaning with suppressed ex- citement, her tiny hands clutching at the sides of her chair, she saw him vault with the ease of an ath- to the deck below. Half-a- strides sufficed to cover the ice between him and the mate, saw the iron bar descend piti-! lessly on the head of a mnative man who had tried to secure a tion of her personal effects that fallen as she staggered through | that gaping hole, and then — Cor- | rigan's great fist shot out and the | { first mate fcll heavily, the bar roll- ing into the scuppers. Feeling like o fair spectator in a Roman arena, : Matheson clapped her hands. The mate, crawling painfully to w- feet, heard it and threw a ale- | t glance in her direction. &wearing horribly, he 4 out | for the belaving-pin. Corrigan, who was bending over the injured wom |an. caught his eve. The fat fingers {that groped for the bar ceased their fumbling and the little pig eyes of the Dutchman quatled suddenly be that spoke vol eson had never voice. During the res days from Sin silent essly | ering sha a | | | her tghe Mrs. reach neath a stecly ga Mrs, M rrigan's umes heard Ce whols of 1] | gapore, he the Ephynx e Hng [ den enll to action, broken o 1 had gazing o out a man weighed down t Under this sud- the =pell remained | 1 | that my frien {advised Corrigan cired tones far for ms roat,/ oulders and remember Perhaps ht sight of the captain he bridge, the for he and | his eyas ablaze, con sitnatios he n and cleay He hands tween ipper, naster of the hie mean de- | Eng full height. Jossus hip: his hoWing brujsed -2007 Mr, rard t t \ \is face @ still 3 | placed | in wer ginally The | ! | reading. There was| | !'sound ! \ilds too long; T've lost polish -— ed an enfgma which to him, at| least, was absolutely insoluble, | ordered the first mate aft. H clapped down the hatches himself, leaving the.injured woman and Corrigan the sote occupants of that | portion of the ship, and went back to the bridge to bring the Hau-fah safely into the still waters of La- buan, CORRIGAN'S FIST EBHOT ouT | AND THE MATE FELL. Corrigan came to the first-classs slipping something into his| and disappeared into the | cool reecesses of the corridor in search of a clean handkerchief. | Irene Matheson met him at the| door of her cabin. The tune that he had been whistling broke off gbruptly at sight of her, His face as- sumed that mask-like expression it had worn throughout the trip. Mrs. Matheson hesitated. “Mr. Corrigan,” she said, the words forming themselyes with an effort. 3 “Hullo!" He started as if some- thing had struck him, as if the of a woman's voice jarred on his nerves, just wanted to say — to thank you — for what you did. 1 think it was absolutely splendid.” Te erimsoned bencath his tan. “Onh! — That!” He relaxed some- what and faced her squarely, “I've been so wrapped up In myself, you | know, that 1 forgot for the moment | you were here. Women haven't | treated me too kindly in this world; 1 suppose I've been gut in the| and women-folk haven't a lot of use for the unfinished article. But there are some {hings T ean't stand | —and that was one of ‘emn.” i “I know, sald Mrs. Matheson sympathetically. “Perhaps Some women are exacting, but there are times, Mr. Corrigan, when they look round for a man; times when there are wrongs that only a real man can right. 1 wanted you to hit that man.” | Corrigan gasped “You wabted me mered, “I've forgotten a things in these years, Matheson; but T sort of remembered n T was halfway through with it, that T was guilty of a breach of etiquette: 1 felt 1 was doing some- thing that isn't done. 1 ean, T suppose 1 to have checked my primiti jinpulses until had retired te your cabin.” Irene Matheson found with the £ back to primitive woman in me called aloud for all that was primi tive in man,” the said simply, “and 4 it Tm infinitely grateful to you, Mr. Corrigan.” She h out a siim hand and Corrigan, stepping forward impetuously, took it in hi brown paw “Are you he stam lot of | weary Mrs to? ought you Unwill- | elf comparing hushand she he eyes going ashore?” n letting his bloe vest | !tor a moment on hers. “It you take fed, Jooking down tie *ound her ten minutes to the brown: girl on will me,” ghe re later talking the . vared for he eaw that a paper from somewhe perceptible breeze the shore brought to him stakable scent of Eau parasol had and the whic h‘ n ur de crosaed to the the gangway to somewhat rickety g-teage. He called back to a ire on the ship's deck we got here?” hours at least, &ir, had got beyond a grouy ous Chinese emrchants irst ‘mate looked up. He after them J Presently ative ha himeelf. first a ked dial o and moon played an stuifed 1t b and looked anxious bridge. The skipper was carnest conversation Chinese super-cargo. (To Be Continued) ortant part his pocket at the imp He in Many Women Use Glycerme Mixture jate the quick clveerine, scs and powsons. E pendicitis. Help: 7 Main 1ot TEN Castoria is especially -pre- pared to relieve Infants in arms and Children all ages of Conetipation, Flatulengy, Wind Colic and Diarrhea; allaying Feverishness arising there from, and, by regulating the Stomach and Bowels, aids the assimilation of Food; giving healthy and natural sleep. oo ot e i mecarelot M}SML Opiates. Physicians everywhere recommend it. To avoid imitations, alwa Absolutely Harmless - No iiven a iris, rieh It you without re or a rvefer can guess 18 horizontal ence to the cic e book, you inay | proud of vour education. And hiorizontal s the Anglicized sp a French term, which hard. Al of the other cluding 9 and 13 vertical, s found in your abridged dictionary. IS use e fodder. atin the dried roots are used as a scent toman officials build!ngs: polsonous lzards. who i jon in wiich HORIZONTAL. at an angle. Exlsted. . Relation of one num S . Mounted 8. Higheat .m-m male voice . Plerced, as with a horn. Procreated, . Grown w treas, . Closed cony A cit in rcapital there . Ten .Openings in a v.al A flat board f¢ ments, A drain . The ninth day before the jdes in an calendar, . Open courtyard around which a bullt. (From the | Epanis Ficld glass Mighest poini: Third perso! nine prono VERTICAL The de . Ladies. A swine, especlally Ar instrument Small lakes a younge tro for scinin own paint or thin from dis- e Tim ative volumes, of i y Italy mpa rent pleces romnixing pig the Ttor conrt i At fits Lot ) eyes. | singular femi a8 the hand As he approached them. | sidered polished o-serve lamb | . stewed | tomato: foo 1 tons milk, eof- | 1-2 &pin powder, celery, | oon nt Mix grate cwed yquefort e, lLead dre hea tme [ les with suga rind and anet eranberry whole w Juicy unti mixture powder add prey M et milk, coffes prefer to tldrer n in plac cooked cercal whould g lemor 1f you ops 1o ¢ add t flour, baking 1 nls e nche o 1 thor mixtny well blended. Turn int and steam for thr with lemon sauce Suet puddings must be weil coc are th Cranberry Pie ¢ them srink cubes of and until toa wed tomator t Lefore serving. hildren under yea 1 not indulze in the ch berr ther uor the cran wed fruit piece of | anned for I'rench 1 n easily digested ] 5l heir ssert und plain the lettucs 3 cup sugar, essing for s rustarch, plain past Wash and pick over hers i Put in saucepan with wate Add sugar Creamc Three tablespe spoon salt The Rice own Brown boiled br ns butter, 1 cup wmilk cup 1 1-2 rice d 1 f . . starch " r mixture mediately from the ed with » boller crust and baky NEA Service, Inc | For Quick Results Use Herald Classified Ads