New Britain Herald Newspaper, March 12, 1925, Page 4

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AILY FASH A Wife's Confessional Adele Garrison's New Phase of 1 | | | ack silk printed with large roses in natural colors makes this very graceful frock. The materlal it so that ch of the and on the | particularly and full snug around the REVELATIONS OF A WIFE [2soosaaiasttassssssanyitonidatiasasonisnnidos How two points on the skirt side front. The sleeves love being very at the armholes, wrist, IS e N Lilllan Triumphs Over Dr have to listen to ''0¢ Pettit’s Obstinacy L % I, with take ally 1 will to given much it returned an affirma. jut his professional 1s exceptionally keen, his many unpleasant ligh-minded gentle- his answer, though promy mnot be moved wdidening to Her- that he of whose pet be- wonen huve tality it possessed Dy a8 | him W traits, b might a he were flatt Then she con wonld have one could huve mey nswer. fence rie ssil despite ow is a 1| will you ¢ hi ent,” at we have counte Mrs. Bickett, m the here, ple the = & ringi waste ing { st scen hor me asc | Gossip’s Corner ‘ proteg as yet but the sketeh- | Upholstered Furniture Upholstered furniture 1 with & brush and wiped wi old silk duster, should 8 with N |an rself was something 2 not concern he Breyen f""l‘ Comed Beef Hint | Corned beot and ham to e - lgerved cold are greatly fmproved in | if you allow them to n in which 1} gleam ¢ professiona Her I it rackin flavor main- e 2 cook o e unconsclous g the aphas 1l vietim, wat eral oy were s &0 caref | v 0 His Comment Maddening | when had finished, his| mment was a maddening | Never Boil fish should never A Pertinent Question nas a Salt be boiled for this girl Soak Light Hours inder the ere- Dried peas and orities,” ¥ ¢ ced in 1d water o way he alwaye is annoyed abruptly and took a hin € spit s bheans e for ed cook should cast in fresh in cold superior 1it »ys when he spoke to 3 1 aros nderwood ean t 10N RERVICE | the roses appear on but | | PRINTED ROSES ON SILK CHAPTER 1 Autumn splendor was ablaze in the coverts of Beechwood Grange. And there was the more material spectacle of a trestle table center of the glade, being loaded | ©1925 by NEA. Seréice Inc. the Ttifie Brigade. Sir garded him with scant Dudley re- fayor and | had only invited him to the Grange in the | with creature comforts by two foot- | men in morning livery. The men worked rapidly, as the | ing indispensable, cries of beaters and the popping of | twelve-bores heralded the approach of the sportsmen for whom the al- fresco feast was laid, The flnhMl\g touches had Just besn put to the | snowy napery and sparkling crystal when three ladles sauntered into the glade from a bridle-path. “Thank goodness!” wheezed the elder of the trio, a stout woman with purple complexion and an au- burn wig. “There is a table to eat oft and chairs to sit on. Knives and forks, too, and quite an array glasses. T was afrald we were ex- | pected to squat on the ground and drink beer out of mugs, “Oh, my dear Lady | that’s a bit rough on Sir Dudley,” | 1aughed a handsome woman of thir Houschold saving The fat from saus: may he for meat nsed ins vegetable bacon, ham and ad of but- sauces. hettar than ' physi not hack 1id but he produced the effect rl “You Underwood hav L A 5 Pettit,” Mrs, | “that 1| vested i t me in tak- | irl it I ch to| torget, Dr said smoothly, rtain author enough to w Most people suffering from o disease heart ars of a Mrs. Ma thoug i mand know th con learned But pain in and around the heart is frequent with a large P and when felt is ing that somewni The pain may a serious heart be to one of conditions having nothing art, such as gas intercostal neuralgia cular rheumatism or pleurisy. Being a bit “puffy” after climbi: a flight of stairs may be the re: employe clous ny pain number of fair warn- g symptom of or it ple. yugh latitude nt stu g is in trouble a gre transfer may miles to tl and t! therine, to do the due I with the h su protest t St io stomach ar care mus- lips compresae 1 line. T knaw ON HEALTH HEART SYMPTOMS nery 1l ex her cond reise I8 wise L troubl: m Swelling which at o Kidr The not standi swelll n the lling sub swe ysid rest | , lack of | pleurisy or onc of | itions | to investigate. | at the botto onsne an ob- disease of the is more patient has been | day. Often after a night's 1es Q%TL%I QA !ff\\e from John Alden i Leslfe Prescott ing out of my you were always g ahou 1 are going back t wife of yours and | and 1T am to sail | differen direction comm 1 can not God should Night TLetter Prescott to ch you by Jo‘\ Mrs, understand make | cruel and toh 1 good Grundy the o w meany!” Raggedy and Rag- as they in Mr, Tun- pityl genero Ar indy ey's g it know that | g with before an ipp ey said ) to do time, ton this you shou it 1 am on {ti" Mr. e S0 Raggedy Andy and Lady all had a lot choco- wished stick Mr. Tun- our friends pretty lit- it it against e 1 coc Ragg i Mr iy ™ r magi dows of tomorrow from you phone. Haggedy e shoe Reeler to John | ¢ Leslic Letter from Mamie Prescott—Opened Prescott Combina salad Dressing vo tablesy ion <aid. “It s castle, Funey the tower wonderful Tomatoes in Ric Fish Omelet Advextures szggedyAnn wafagoedy Andy 2 - Grue“e monkey," v . old were too polite t have to s told the arour tumble 1 to 0 shall sit witc | cd say- | little | shore in trec trunk Raggedy and Lady 1l ran down co trunk home, could reach the | Mrs. Grundy iing out from | ped fnto it her- | with you!" 1 cvery word you getting Lady ng stick away and opportunity: anted the to ride they or no A while one hoat ned across Puzzling But Snap Ry [ who's | paid sinecure, | only the next in point of age, “You of | [ the | tive man with a sharp, hatchet-like Marrables, | | on the other side of Kathleeen, | tor Willoughby Melville, ought to know him well enough to | be sure that he wouldn't treat us ike fthat. Besides, as our hostess you probably made* the arrange- ments and are responsible for all this arcadian Juxur dowager. “I am chaperon to this horic only naughty child, better able to take care of n I am of her. my job i do 1, Kathleen tall girl to whom the was made emiled kindly on t} speaker, but hefore she could reply the head of a little procession ap- peared at the opposite side of the glade, in single file as it dehouched from another woodland path, but bunching into a cluster in the wider space. Discussing the morning's port with the gravit befitting such an occasion, the “guns" of Sir Dudley Glenister's first big advanced to the ekt and I don’t pine, luncheon Not only was it the first big shoot of the season, but th st occa- sion of the kind on which Sir Dud- ley had played the host. He had enjoyed the title and estates for six months, his immediate pre- | decessor having died two years be- fore {n America under circum- stances entailing delay in the suc- cession till presumption of cousin George Glenister's was legally death 1F, CENTER OF It's a well. | appeal | shoot of | | his| a squire, granted by the High lectual countenance was of an al- because the old lady had frankly declined to come herself unless Nor- man was asked. And Lady Mar- rahles, as Kathleen's guardian, be- the young officer fncluded in the small| louse party. Sir Dudley was far too | mueh a man of the world to be rude to a guest whom he lad rea- son to helleve was his rival in love, He had indeed been extra civil to him, allotting to him the beet “stands” at the ghoot and treating him effusively as a kinsman, which he was not. Lady Marrables was & sister of the late Sir Philip Glenis- ter, George and Kathleen's father, and Norman Slater was a son of | one of her deceased husband's sfs- | ters. | Another male guest ing 1n house was the silent, rumina had been face and cavernous eyes, who in an evident fit of abstraction sat down Doc- the nerve | specialist from Harley street, owed | his invitation to professional serv- ices rendered to his host somo years | hefore the latter's succession to the | haronetey. Dudley Glenister, then a | feverish operator in the “Kaffir Cir- cus,” had badly broken down after a week of wild speculation, and was now paying a social debt to the great physician who had healed him The only remaining *“mar house party was ¥ nister, the Eton hoy who would not be separated from his gun. e, also, was of the vounger branch lately brought to the front by the hand of Death. As the son of a br of Dudley, killed in an Indian fron- tier ekirmish, he was heir presump- | tive to the title and estat ince he was an cnkaging youngster, Dudley intended to provide a u direct heir, the new baronet made much of him without any appre- hensive jealousy. | The rest of the “guns” who gath- ered round the table in the glade were gentlemen from neighboring houses, hrick-faced squires, a sport- | 1 ing parson and one other, That ex- ception was the exception who did not fall exactly into either cate- gory. The Right Honorable Stephen Colne, as the owner of Colnbrook Towers, might have been deemed but he was certainly not| His well-bred intel- | | " of the| brick ced THE TABLE I'ELL NCIUEON now words sketch in the center. Only three a designated by arrows, but there are | more. The {llustrated crossword puzale takes the floor. Many i this puzzle refer to the HORIZONTAL Shrewder. o, Pierced with horns . Assembled facts. . Instrument for rowing No, horizontal. The weather side of No. horizontal. Atop. 5, Commanding horizontal. . Half an em, Lyric song. or tusks. 26 officer on a 21. Abounds, Imitate. Father. Point of compass. . See picture in puzzle. Sea-sick passengers on No. 26 horizontal have food brought to them on one. THE GRISLY OBJECT evidence solicitors, without belat pit v carrying & 1 a rent roll of A fine fig- of 1ife 'y man- try s his othes natty leggins a Cabinet m Treasury Bench. long t a8 jater oni{le hours spe arrived of squires One. had take ory ‘Un a 8 Pink ning to the yrds were 1§t mth by g next } is as sittin ed the young s only i t to be 1 alrcady crammed a the br There | o — and raising that by ead. | sharply ow = a8 no t for t his gun s wsailing clean directly in 1 flig t over the tree-tops at the side of the glade t it had evidently for the winged mara ing it to drep ita plunder the nter of the luncheon fell the ot now 1t w a clos Plop intc table SETon fir canr as it grisly obje oni o to rest ars and confe finger from Because She | of the| i Largest and Smallest Light Bulbs Are Made Washington, March 13,—~What are belloved to be the largest and smallest electrie light bulbs * ever mado have arrived here for exhibi- tlon at the Smithsonlan institution from the Edison Electric Light com- pany of New Jersey, The messenger who brought the bulbs yesterday had to engaged a section - on the train to provide space for the pack- ing case that contalned the 40,000~ watt glant, The tiny “graln of wheat” bulb, as it is called, being about that size, he carrled, carefully wrapped in tissue paper and a sealed envelop, In his pocket. 30, Yourself. . Spike of corn. Indebted. Newspaper paragraph. ‘While, . Direction of Scandinavia. . Measure. . A rope for Perched. . Negative, . Instrument for determining di- rection on No, 26 horizontal, . Musical note, 0. Violin selection played by one man. . To dine. Units of electrical resistance. Heathen. . Regulates sails on No. zontal. salling toward catching cattle, 26 hori- RTICAL A magician'a rod. Neuter pronoun. . Bag. . To sew a bolt rope on @ sail. 5. 15.432 grains. 6. No. 26 Borizontal safled the wind. Hebrew for Deity. . Where No. 26 horizontal cis; mee picture. 9. Portals. . Devoured. A hostile ship. The point or place thing occurs. Exists. 20, Living near the ground Charges with air. nimals without feet, Reer mug. To fell trees. 025 acre. . When No. 26 horizontal comes in sight of a bay. . Officers ranking next to No. horlzontal. . A bend of a river. . Behold. . So be it A mineral spring. To glut. . Bone., . Inlets from No, & ve . Small fishing boat. . When in danger on No, zontal the cry for lelp. Sixth tone of diatonie scale. Masculine pronoun, hefore traye where a 26 hori- LovedtllmSo MFWS She was only seventeen, beautiful, fresh and whole- some. He was forty-five and wealthy—gross in appearance, grosser in mind. Her purity, her beauty of body and soul, appealed to his jaded fancy. And she married him — or rather, her parents sold her to him. Then youth and love— strong, clean, fine—cametob siege her heartwithtruerever- encea oration, What did shedo? Whatcouldshe do? She found an answer to that ques- tion—but through a process 50 strange, so startling that it simply proves that no fiction~ ist’s fancy is half so strange as truth. Don’t miss this true- life story, entitied *Playing With Fire” me.SmwM.,- azinefor April. And this is but one of 18 absorbing features. i‘rue Story At all newsstands 25¢ Many a girl who couldn’t think of letting a man kiss her \has her thinking done for her.

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