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Adele Garrison's New Phase of REVELATICNS OF A WIFE BIEESIIIIIIIINITIIIINILIIILIILL The Surprising Reques Graham Made Mother 0 Madge the monosy lttle 2 s to set it tn mo- “Y Didn’t Dare Scream™” for help, wat really w my sweater u Letter from Mrs. Mary Alden Pres- cott to Leclie Prescott, Continued, John d a cause © let Ru of mine = people k business support Of cou a word Priscilla hardly be it does not & wife would from her 1 been going I sha IF MOTHERS ONLY KNEW During t dren arc Feverishnes Irregula easily. It Mother do for would e use w! #0 camy ar fective mothers wh mothers for drugeists age sent FR tell N. Y. side us, an me past her. Your mother-in-law {nsist: heard you outside,” across tt son had been room, she whispered. "I m to you Why Is Mother Graham n affected t Mother Gr tn me alone,” " THE YOUNG LADY ACROSS THE WAY DAILY FASHI ON SERVICE NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1924. PRINTED SILK COSTUME The decorative quality of printed silks Is demonstrated by this Pari- slan frock designed by a famous French designer, It Is a black and white model of decidedly Spanish feeling. with a heavily fringed |scart and wide-brimmed hat. Wewry hoxly back “sendd FRoAnEd “Anything in My Power" ¢k == the — door,” she whis- | \ ighbors | oy G ; ud then star Rut | I obeyed her and returned to the | . Mother Graham put out a weak hand and essayed down to a seat er. T hume hrought t R i at her mouth bringin to consclousness clutching me on the ed her, and ad down 8o o good 1t em b was close to my must hear," she whispered hoarsely, Nobody can,” T whispere ind 1 with patent I'm in terrible trouble, Mar- garet," sha and though 1 felt that she did not mean her fall and its consequences, there was no Al ternative nie but to interpret it that own cur reason back, relief, for 0 way:, and s a strange- 1 him it Mrs around new A into hoarscly, A qulc something bgolute terr s morn- she croaked ing 0 whisper. intuition that the real behind her that it was not a ha c gulded my answer, “I know that I went on Graham here. The follow, but he'd | 50 he said he! . What do you of re was terror, ink tnation, 1 from reply by | opening of a 1 the appearance of a had a bad smoothly as if 1 had not heard n.v»xrummmi but 1 do not think there will be any terrible consequences. There | broken bones, Mrs. Durkee tells me, and “Oh, that!" she finterrupted with disdainful gesture of feeble nd relegating the fall to the un- | nsidered limbo of inconsequential | ings, “I know I'm not hurt dan- gerously. I almost wish 1 were, Margaret. It it were not wicked, 1 could wish that 1 Xilled me you door just | fa Ler " ahe ham—' ire no on me t s Mrs. her murmured assent loor wide and gestured my the she inute T had e room to the b next Nifty Mules of brilliant red Juilted licels of Popular Hat or tam type TI—EMANCIPATION OF MISS SUON-HENG It was the purest accident that gave Donald White the opportunity he had been looking for cver since the voyage began. He was down in that Holy of Holies to which access is only given at stated times, the storehouse of all Juggage labeled “Wanted on the Voyage." He wasn't at all clear how it happened, but a heavy, iron- lish activities of a baggage steward, descended suddenly upon the un- | protected head of a fat Chinese gen- |tleman who was pensively sorting |out & bunch of small brass imples Iments that looked more like fish- hooks than keys. There are limits | even the resisting powers of Chinese skulls, and Mr, Oel-Kuang- Yin uttered & peculiar little grunt ,and | to the floor in a state of unconsclousness, The two male passengers who nearest lifted the offending m the legs of the prostrate orfental; the baggage steward sent ifor the doctor; & woman screamed, and White made for the upper deck [to Lreak the news to Miss Suon- Heng. He adjusted his rimless glasses. “What Is it?" asked Miss Heng, raising her sweeping lashes, | White looked hard at a long chair |where & book had been turned |face downward to mark the page. | “On!" sald White with an effor |“The—er—Chinese gentieman who accompanies you has met with an accident. I thought I'd better tell {you, s | The girl did not display the slight- est sign of dismay or surprise, She inclined her head slightly to one side to are and of hat + or very soft felt is and honored him with a smile he ir now with women who did not quite understand lard lines of the square v husband's mot , with her FABLES hsuch n urning | wondered affected me no word of Do you give vour u exerotse? the right ! lv out the talk n stared at the dent question. Active use of a toc ¢xcellent but careful all alone.” brush is an the mouth, of the food Terrified L 01 and Secretive? g - feeling strong v n nother-in-law's mind her fall, T tu urse 3. Durkee ham wishes to speak ! 1 said a bit diffident- ation erels walking my teeth 1 Hep ness saw curiosity and she hur-| arse | oN HEALTH EXERCISE FOR TEETH bread do. what ex for it makes them stronger. chewed b eeth do need cert be found paragus, Calc ads and foods. d exercise. 1 - and > m Most people insist on soft, easlly & B! Also they n calcium salts that can 1 buttermilk, spinach, She re. moved the book from Mr. Kuang- Yin's chalr. | “I believe you are rather glad,” |she said. | White gasped and collapsed in the | place she had made for him at her side. “Really, Miss Heng!" ‘ * Glad of this opportunity, T mean,” she told him “Yeu've done nothing but stare at me since we left Southampton. You've no idea nhow much your s magnify. It has been most rrassing!"” ‘m awfully sorry!" t apologize. T'm hon- 1" She allowed her beautiful ong hand with its wonderfully polished nails to rest on his sleeve "8 for the fraction of a second. “1 e That's frightfully good oul” stammered White, | “Not at al” sald Miss Heng. | “Now please tell me what has hap- pened to my fat but honorable | Raole | A trunk tell on him and laid him |out. “He looked pretty bad when I left. They sent for the docto gums 1uscles glas! ut the “Please dc as- woman's p u a but if she xets ou must 1 upon me” 1 ¥, and as she in turn 8 chee e did the ca ol her and KZ\ by Jo in oy Ragge and Ann ho. )by horae y Ann replied. | he explained, thatGiants and a great | of gl | giant ‘8o many S are ked 1 iren are afra tly comfortable many ch re con- R HUSBAND'S from Teslie Ruth Burke cram Prescott 24, NEA Ser captain romise hirough the deep, deep woods on the | hard Gruelle nd gave ups, “Blump Magician Mu, Ann Adventures f RaggedyAm gedy Andy < up a it the magician I pushed Raggedy shal n the hoat |T'm afraid he'll be laid up for the whole trip. She uttered a sigh of relie “Isn't it providential!” exclaimed the amazing Miss Heng. “You s <he continued before White could break in, “I'm just a poor, little fluttering bird in a cage, a prisc |bound by the conventions of my own ountry, and hating to leave the d |lightful wunconventions of She passed her hand, with g quent gesture, down tha (surfacc of her coat st | prison-dress!” “But T like it," up . "It suits you amaz- ~ f. an elo- “Behold my three warn ingly She looked along the nervously, “Yon are sure you were not mis- rbing taken? It is not possible he will recover—soon ! | He shook his head. | “You can stake your life on tha*.” “Listen,” she began, reassured. "“Mr. Xuaig-Yin is my uncle, sym bolical of dear old China as it used to be, under whose customs I am condemned to marry a man I have not see ce T was a child. Iam a daughter of the new era. You cannot the thickness of the I had to break down before I send me to Europe to t 13 all finished,” s} adly., and 1 hate it rotten luck?" 18:" said White fer- rfeat command of amazed hi arry Blump! deck, half ma- lioma. realize English © Isn't 80 hack In't be 1, she laugh s Mrs. 1 and my j any 1 merrily i-Ho very soor will be in wiser & t hox pops you know NEW LAMP BURNS 4% Al Beats Electric or Gas new R [ He is what you c g He are ever Malacca—-" * White ! rick 0. erked uld thi He's ) an near Kin t from Jacobson's exec Heng,” he cried excite know we ghall be nelghbors regarded him sad t will be suburban, she said “Chinese women never know their nelghbors, especially when they are English!” White's face dropped H clasped his hands hetween his knees and looked down at the deck Sud- t a gen tug at eard of I k so! estate Miss ‘D'you 't you tell me about my fu- sband,” she sald softly. “Good Lord!" exclaimed the Eng- n “Of course you don't ary know what he's like!" ald White leaned on the white the boat deck and looked ily out over the dark waters. He stood alone t after eleven and the stars blinked down at m a sky of infinite blackness. The fifteen days since his first meet- ing with So had lo- siipped b the fleeting moments ¥ ream Soon they happy memory. k on the Orang- ging his sweating supreme efforts, planting fresh rubber ,toiling under the ever- was im fr e one Heng w would be only He would be Pueth Kabu coolies to ice a how out ~0 %aa & NEA SERVTCE 2ve {bound trunk, disturbed by tha fever- | sweetly. | . I never see you | "{ A man with a glistening | otested Whito, ! his | watchful eye of the great Corrigan. i Miss Heng had breken down a wall that countless centurles had built, and was going back through the gap she had made, to sce the great stones plled in thelr place again, held fast by ever-enduring mortar; every instinct in White's being want- HIM SHE LOOKED UP THROUGH HER TEARS, AT e ed to scale that grim barricr, the | Great Divifle of east and west, and | pluck the forbidden fruit that grew | [therein. The dragon that guarded the tree had many heads and the stout heart in his small frame | qualled, not for himself, but for| Miss Suon-Heng. | Suddenly a sitm form crept to his side from the shadow of a boat. His arm stole round her and she fell sobbing on his coat. The sweet | spices of the mys®rious orlent rose 1o his nostrils, intoxicating him; the | rich silk of her jacket was pleasant | to the touch, | She looked up at him through her tears. “I had to come to you, Donald,” | she murmured. “My uncle is al- most well . Tomorrow he will get up, and my prison doors will close on me foreve He felt her trembling in his arms » a frightened bird. | “Is there no way out?” he asked softly. | She shook her head. I “To disobey—i adeat | pered. | “I'm not atrald of death, Susle,” {he told her, using the pet name he had invented his dreams, | She smiled proudly. | “It can never be'" she sald. *1 ! must go to my cage on the one side of the way. I shall know you are there—on the other side ,but I shail Will you mind— very much, Donald?” He crushed her to him. “It'll be hell,”” he cried hoarsely and kissed her lips, * she whis- bandaged Jead, who had just come up from the decht below, saw the two flgures by the | rall. His yellow face, as he turned to retrace his was utterly devold of expression. foa DS, “Come in, Mr Ho!" The stout Chinese rubber king | handed his red umbrella to & servant |and eame sl up the steps to where Corrigan was waiting. Corri- gan ,huge, clean-shaven, and genlal, | held out a wr ing hand. The "oriental, claspiug his sun heimet to | | his chest ,sat down in the chair the | | Englishman had placed for him | “Thanks" he murmured, with a peculiar guttural intonation. Corri- | | gan pushed forward an open tin of cigaret | “Iam tapy Corrigan raised his brows | “No,” he agreed politely. T should scarcely have thought so.” The oriental flicked the ash from his cigarette and sat back in the | long krosi, his dark eyes regarding | Corrigan through diagonal siits. “When T have a fliend,” pursued | Tal-Ho. “I do evelything that I can for him ;but”—a malevolent light flashed suddenly from his eyes—*if Mr. Colligan, it | ctter for him if he had lind,” he said present- ng his temple with a fore- ot | sald | nds in his pockets; my fliend and mber, Mr my nirable code,” is why You the cir- Fol- | it | Colligan ma customs of my countly, ght my wife to her new home.” is head slowly from side ‘The world we live in is nd” ed with a stray end that had somchotw rom the arm of hi cl ttle he knew of this ori- he felt convineed he 1 there without a pu pose . He knew ,too, that his nel bor was not prone to wasting words; but he ¢ for the life of him to what end the conversa- cading. He had ne Mrs. Lai-Ho, to his kno assumed an expression of of bambe From t ental magnate air. ver set TH—EMANCIPATION OF MIS§ SUON-HENG » was sent to your coun- &he study—and she learn your : He appeared to be lean- and further forward in e friendly tone he had 1 seemed to have grown 1, until each sentence rang out like a bitter The teachings of the old orgotten; the I 11 iror iave taker inside, she has a at 18 led and warm, Mr. Col- it beats not for me, b 1y who must forever be heart t | igan some | enemy (Continued on Page ) | sugar. pple. | apple, This black ereation is not as fear- ful as it looks. True, the plan of this puzzle leaves many unkeyed letters in the vertical columns, but it is splendid workout in four and five lotter words, every word of which should be found in an abridged dic- tionary, though not necessarily a pocket dictionary. HORIZONTAL. 1. Any .... fn a etorm. 5. A couch. 10, Soft mud or slime. 12, pigress. 14, Give forth, 16. Skillful. 18, She deer. A friend in —— is a friend in- deed, . You and T, objective, . Not false. 25. A emall island. 7. A mark left by a wound. Persuade onward, . Nominative case of 22 horizon- tal, . Slight. . Blood color. . Surface, * . By mouth. . A plot of ground. . To see at a distance. . A sac containing diseased mat- ter. 1 nakes crossword puzzlers have been reminding you Cleopatra made famous. A mythical, and, incidentally, very large bird. Not fat. beginning of and the end of bias, The bolshies killed the fast one, ame a8 horizontal. A preposition with the sense! of “from the outside in.” ‘Wings of houses. A masculine, singular pro-| noun, | . Semi-clreular recess terminat- ing in the choir or sanctuary of a church, | Even, contracted Globes. Fragrance, VE that assinimity A danderer, but more easily identified as a common name for a dog. . A preposition formed by twentieth and fift Breakfast — Grapes, whole wheat real, thin eream, scrambled eggs , toasted corn bread, milk, cheon — Cream of potato croutons, lima bean salad, lem- on jelly, whipped ere oatme drop cookles,milk, tea. Dinner — Cream of brolled cod steaks, riced potatoes, squash croquettes, head lettuce with Thousand Isiand dressing. fruit cuseard, rye bread, milk, coffee. am, 1l 'ry soup, i to children under 10 years Frenchdre. ded lettuce s Lima Bean Salad. cup canned lima beans, 1 celery, 1 teaspoon mine bleepoons grated cheese, dreesing. a pla n under ing on ad for childre One oniona and salad inkle wit h eaves and serve a beans t have been their of the ith ¢ Dried sp celery 1 serve used in place not considered in| a t salad, > tab! s minced green pepper add nuch to the mixture. Oatmeal Drop Cookies. vn sugar, 1 cup eced- 1 raisins, % cup but- nd lard combined, 2 eggs, 6| tablespoons buttermilk or sour milk, 1 teaspoon cinnamon, 1% teaspoons s0da 1.4 teaspoon salt, 2 cups 113 cups oatmeal Cream shortening and beat Add eggs well beaten, Mix r and add to mix- soda in buttermilk Ixtur Mix cinnamon th oa Mix thorou spoor in ns wi Dissc and add to and salt mixture m a teaspoon onto L fiour pans. Bake 2 noderate oven ‘ruit Custard. diced bananas, 3% cup diced pine led grapes, 1 cup ip finely chopped s (yolked), ve hly and drop ered and minutes Two - 1 1 orang 1 cup s cup cn 14 cup - 1eal and stir into | 1 | mixture The squash croguettes should not spoon. 4 teaspoon salt, % teaspoon ananas a scrape entire of the alphabet. 5. Location. Location, 3. Supplies with food. An overgrown hatchet. . Consumed., . Divisions of a play. . A small, three-masted ship. Opposite a worker, To accustom. A flare used as a night rail- road aignal. A fish-eating member of the weasel family, . A downy feathered duck. ustomary. Soothes, . Triendly realtions. (Do not confuse this with friendly rel- ative.) . Color of white mixed black. (Plural.) A thin cake or biscuit, . Way or road traveled. cum or refuse of metal, . Long narrative poems cerning heroic deeds. . Countless yeare. . The nut of an oak. . A divislon or a section of a wall or ceiling. 5. A one-masted veasel, . To analyze by the rules grammar. Exposed to the air. Tunes. A look of malice. . What hits your income. . Human limb. Westward, —— . Ac. . Opposits of with melted con- ot Cut into cubes. Peel oranges and remove &kin from aections. Cut pulp into cubes. Combine fruit and nuts, cover and let stand on ice or in a very cold place for an hour. Drain off julce if necessary. Mix cornstarch and eugar thor- oughly. Beat eggs slightly, stir in sugar and salt. Scald milk and slowly pour onto egg mixture, stir- ring constantly. Cook over hot wa- ter, stirring to keep smosth until ‘thickene and coats the Let cool and add vanilla When ready to serve pour over fruit. Save the fruit juice for a desse a party drink. The bananas and apples may absorb much of the juice, but it the oranges are very uicy there will be some In the bot- tom of the dish. The whites of the cggs should be saved for a cake or a nge” Jossert. “opyright, 1924, NEA Ser Gossip’s Corner | Velvet Tunic A long velvet tunic slashed in the front to show the under: printed silk is a favorite of at the present time. ice, Inc) Corded Silk Used Velveteen is very smart this sea- son and of all trimmings nothing is more effective than corded silk in the same shade as the frock. New Blouses The very newest blouses have high, close eollars and buttons down the back with a row of but- tons sct very close to each other. Night Gowns Very attractive night gowns are made of tin Lrocaded crepe iey are finished with a picot edge \d untrimmed save for a bouquet of French flowers. Ribbed Silk White moire or ribbed silk is be- coming as popular as satin and crepe de chine for evening gowns. Vanity Case vanity case vakelite with tasscl in which is conc: A novelty liant sk bril- | a long aled & | surface with tie blunt edge of knife. | lipstick.