New Britain Herald Newspaper, April 4, 1925, Page 4

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T A e, 3 M AR Wife's Confessional Adele Garrison's New Phase of REVELATIONS OF A WIFE The Surprise Which Dr. Meredith Recelves There was an emotion other than astonishment In Katherine Bickett's face as she unexpectedly confront- ed Dr. Meredith at the door of her patient's room. That she was glad to see him no one could doubt. J, who knew her so well, saw that memores, powerful ones, had as- sailed her at the sight of the man standing with Dr. Pettit just behind me, He was in front minute, and had grasped Kath- erine’s outstretched hands, “Katherine Sonnot!” he sald vi- brantly, — of course — I re- member the name of that lueky chap was Bickett. But I glve you my word when old Bert here apoke of the nurse, Mrs. Bickett, T didn't connect the names at all. T thought you were in the wilds of South America with that engineer husband of yours.” His movement had brought his face and eyes within direct range of my visslon, and of me the next now, to see that the memorles in Katherlne's expressive face were mirrored in his own. Something tense, emotional, lay between these two, something Which had brought a eurlous gleam of excitement into ayas generally schooled to repress ail emotion. ‘Katherine's Mask The next second, however, per- haps because of tha instinctive knowledge that Dr. Pettit's aston- \sheq eyes and mine were upon them, the professional mask of long training covered hoth faces, and Katherine spoke perfunctorily. “No, T never hava been in South America. I trust Mrs, Meredith is well.” The answer was prompt, but a bit eonstrained. “She's feeling very fif, thank you. 1 expect her out for the week-end, s 1 am staying down here for a few days. Perhaps— He did not finish the tentative suggestion for Katherine managed most admirably to look at Dr. Pet- #Ht expectantly while still listening te his companion. I distinctly eaw Dr. Meredith take his lower lip be- fween his teeth at the tacit snub, but the next instant he smiled bril- Jiantly, it a trifla mechanically, and gestured to his golleague. T must apologize, Dr. Pettit,” he said in the most approved profes- tal, I did not meed, spectacles either physical or men-, AT slonal. - manner, “for wasting your | time. My delight at eeeing an old friend 80 unexpectedly must plead | for me. But 1 am now at your serv- | ice.” He stepped aside with practiced courtesy for me to precede him into the room. I had not intended to in- trude my presence upon the medl- | cal conference, but Dr. Meredith's | smile and gesturing bow were com- pelling, while his eyes conveyed the impression that the room would be an empty one Indeed, If T did not honor t. | 1 wondered how much of this impressive courtesy was meant for Katherine's benefit. Despite the physiclan's professional polse, it was easy to discern the pique which | was his. To my surprise and an- noyance, 1 found that my unworthy vanity was raieing its head preen- ing itself and rejolcing in the mo: mentary preference for my atten- tlon which the personable physician had manifested, even though I guessed wherein the action was rooted. > Dr. Meredith’s Interest For the next few minutes, how- ever, Katherine and I were forgot- | ten, and the emaclated girl upon | the bed occupied thelr whole at- tention. That Dr, Meredith was deeply interested fn the problem | the girl presented was easily to be seen. Though I had no professional knowledge, such as was Kather- tne's, 1o lend me understanding of the quick-fire conversation between the two physiclans, vet I listened | with as keen relish as she did. | Their volces dropped to an in- audible tone after all, and though neither man turned his head, T guessed Intultively that they were speaking of me, in that Dr. Pettit i was relating the supposed recogni- 'tion of me which the girl twice had I made. | ey it Dr Meredith said at| last, imperatively, raising his voice | a trifle. “It su can do no harm {and 1'd like to watch the reaction. Try it I was standing at the side of the room, outside the girl's range of! vigion, having chosen the pnsnlon; purposely when I entered the room. Dr, Pettit beckoned to Katherine | and spoke to her in words inaud- | ible to me, Tmmediately afterward | Katherine crossed to my side. | i “They wish you to speak to the girl to determine if she recognizes | you," she said. “Do you mind?" o Tanslex Letter from Leslie Prescott to the Little Marquise, Care of the Secret Drawer—Continued it was, 1 entered the room a little ahead of Jack and stepped over to little Jack's bed. He lay with one sturdy arm — from which the loose sleeve of his pajamas had slipped — over his head 1 caught my breath, f As dr his post- tion was so exactly like Jack when | he is asleep. “He is even more like you when he is asleep than when he is awake,” I murmured. od grant he grows up very difterent from me,” answered Jack fervently. “0Oh, I don't know, my friend, you have really much to give your boy. My father evidently thought vou were the best business man he knew and I heard you described the other-day as a human dynamo, run by personality plus.” John looked up from the bed over which we were bending. “Do friends flatter as sweetly. as you, my dear Leslle?” he asked with the first smile I had seen on changing the subject | "1 knew he felt he had made a | mistake in even mentioning at this {time that he had ever admired an- other woman. This, ef course, was very silly, because every man ad- | mires other women than his wite- and 1 was not o narrow as to feel | hurt when I knew his emotion was | admiration only. “Little Jack stirred restlessly in | | nis sleep. His father bent down to kiss him, The boy opened his great brown eyves and looked into eyes | exactly like his own. I bent for- ward, for 1 was afraid that he might he frightened before he recognized his father. T need not have worried, | for lttle Jack, with that pecullar acceptance of children, recognized both of us immediately. “Hello daddy,” he said. “Hello old man. Wake up and glve me a kiss." The baby lips, purged themselves up as a dewy kiss lingered thete. Jack bent down and hungril pressed his lips to those of his eon. “Will you take Jackie and muv- ver home with you?" |ed, save a part of a roll for emer- | Lady Pr———r et DALY FARRY ON RERVICY = DINNER FROCK IS CHARMING There is much charm to dinner frock of white erepe chine, draped slightly about hips and” fringed with white silk fringe. It has the ornate skirt and plain bodice that Fashlion decr-e-.k this de the Gossip’s Corner TO CLEAN WINDOW SILLS A small paint brush is an excel- lent implement for sweepiug window sills, and cleaning around a radiator that stands in a corner, USE THE BATH SPRAY You can keep your screens, clean by giving them a bath every week with the bath spray. Then your cur- tains will not soll so ecasily. SAVE WALL PAPER ‘When having a room newly paper- gencles. Often it match paper later. is impossible to IN HOU CLEANING Empty the vacuum cleaner bag in a large papet sack instead of shak- ing it Into a newspaper. This elim- inates flying dust WARM THE MILK When bakng custard, warm the milk befote adding the egg and no water will settle at the bottom of. the dish. WAX CHAIR ROCKERS Wax the bottom of your chalr rockers and they will not make marks on your polished floors. FLYING PANELS Flying panels give a sense of mé- | tion and lightness to dark colored | frocks on very stralght, close lines, r————— A RS ON HEALTH IMAGINARY ILLNESS Nervousness and nervous break- | downs are forms of mental disor- ders, Mrs. Mann leatned. Yet there are few people, suffer- ing from nervous trouble, who will admit that the seat of their trouble | is in their minds. i The technical name of these nerv- ous disorders is psychoneuroses, and among the psychoneurotic are found those individuals who contribute so largely to the discomfort, distress | and unhappiness of many homes and communities. fcally enjoy “ill health.” | The Adventures f Raggedyhm | aud by Raggedy Ann and Raggedy Andy | would pass around the soda ice cream and cake, but there was no need for anyone to pass the things, for the magiclan just wished for whatever he wanted and —the | things floated in the air and came to whoever was {o have the sodas and lee cream and cake. | When all had as many sodas as they wished, the magician said to Lindy and Lundy and Mr.| Tuney and Raggedy Ann and Rag- figgedy wy Sruelle. Mrs. living on another street. A n Mann remembered a woman, her | acquaintances strongly believed that | her physical health was almost per- fect, to say the least. Yet when thes they would asl was the same: “Awfully bad, today just gets worse and worse.” This woman would have her mind only. ndy ture. And the nice prince pretty princess. He ran and came back beside the the queer little ma the powder upon the when he sat down tree, the queer little out and threw some powder upon the changed as suddenly as his p had changed he ran had in man prince would meet her how she was | teeling and invarfably the answer | her | That pain been highly insulted if some one had told | (her that nothing was wrong, 3 and ‘These are the types who chron- i(hu? most of her troubles were in ‘. g | did not | have helped the magiclan | know what had happened and went water and | through the woods in search of his and finally tree where thrown princess and under the reached of his maglc and he | Would take more | Glenister, is folled in his attempt to | destroy his enemy, Norman Slater, BEGIN HERE TODAY 8ir Dudley Glenister, accused of the murder of his cousin, James kept prisoner with his eweetheart, Kathlcen Glenister, in an old mil, while— James Wragge, Scotland Yard de- tective, assigned fo the case, and Stephen Colne, interested in fusten- | ing the crime on Sir Dudley, spoll the filming of a plcture of the burn- ing old mill, which resuits in’fatal injuries to— 3 “Miss Maud Blair,” who on her death bed, accuses Stephen Colne, former cabinet minisfer, of the murder of James Glenister. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY “A fat lot I care about that,”” re- oined Miss Blair. “I only want to square accounts with a blackguard. And now you run away and play, little boy,” she added. “With any luck you may be in time to see Sir Dudley's burning mill. T expect the loony and his fire expert are about somewhere.” With which she fainted, John Grimes had been chafing her hands, but he dropped them | and stood upright. His features were convulsed with horror. “Fire at the mill house?” he murmured dully. “Do you know what she means?” He turned fierce- 1y on his wife. But Mrs. Grimes shook her grizzled head and mouthed a de- nial. That man-monkey shall tell me,” cried the keeper, and he strode from the cottage, followed by Wragge, who unobtrusively at- tached himself to Mr, Colne again. “May God forgive me!" groaned the Kkeeper with sincerity. “I thought I was eerving the family— not a flend. He has got his cousin and her sweetheart shut up there! The deluded worshipper of the Glenister tradition started to run | across the clearing, with Wommers- | | picion for the murder of Mr. George | ley's troupe at lis heels giving tongue like a pack of badly broken | hounds on a false scent. In the tur- moil caueed by the accident to the leading lady the electrician had omitted to switch off the light, and | the mill stood stark and silent, a | ghost haunted memory of other days, in the artificlal gloy. Wragge | glanced at it and decided that the stalwart game-Keeper was comps tent to deal with a situation that had not yet arisen. Just now his| duty lay nearer to hand — the| Land that had once more taken quiet possession of the cabinet min- ister’s arm. B He looked sideways at the refined and clever face that was almost cheek-by-jowl with his own, It was| all sagged, and drawn into unac- | customed lines that indicated tre- mendous emotion — emotion sug- gesting a well-nigh overwhelming dread under a control strained to snapping point. Yet Wragge had looked on that face and quailed before it at in- tervals during the worst moments of his life, He would have been less than human if a note of triumph had not erept into his volce. g “Mr. Colne,” he said, “I am un- der the disadvantage of holding no warrant, but I will take the re- sponsibility of arresting you on sus- ‘out, sir,” he said. ' John Grimes and his motley fol- lowing had vanished in the dark- ness that enshrouded the stepping- stones, but a mighty roar from the keeper's lungs proclaimed that h knew he was too late, Wragge's grip may have relaxed owing to the diversion, Be that as it may, Mr, Colne wrenched himaself gfree and, for a man of his years, ran with | amazing swiftness toward the dam. When he had covered some twenty yards he:halted and called JOHN GRIMES STOOD UP- RIGHT, HI8 FEATURES WERE CONVULSED WITH HORROR. back: “There are lives to be saved. I shall do my best.” The mill was ablaze, and in the| weird blend of smoke and fire found the door human figures were mov- ing wildly, as in some fantastic dance. Wragge could not distin- guish one from the other as he trod the slippery masonry, and the Right Honorable Stephen Colne | had vanished into the heart of the elusive picture. CHAPTER XXVII “Shecp and Goats” Alf Grinstead was met on the threshold of the upper room by Norman and Kathleen when he re- turned from his reconnalssance on | the landing. “We're up against it,” he an-| nounced grimly. “The bart has set | the blooming show afire. Got any water, miss?"” | Kathleen pointed to the ewer and basin on the cheap washstand. The ewer was halt full of clean water; fhe basin contained the rest, which ehe had used during the day. Alf, saturating the towels in the clean | water, bound them round the girl's head and feet. Snatching a couple of sheets from the bed, he soaked them in the basin and made hoods for his master and himself. “Now we will carry her down and “Can you stand it, Katty?" asked| Norman. “Rather!™ the reply came gurg- 1ing through the wet towel, So rapidly did they hear her down the stairs that the deep breath she drew on starting lasted her as long as she had to endure the Glenister on the Tth of June, 1918." | For a few seconds Mr, Colne did not answer. He scemed to be in(@m; on watching the progress of John Srimes, who by now had almost reached the stepping-stones. The! keeper had chosen that route to the | mill as the shortest from the cot-| tage, overlooking the fact that it time to traverse| than that across the top of the dam. The stepping-stones were in darknes¥, whereas the dam was in | smoke that rolled up the well of the staircase, and the rush across| the blazing entry was accomplished with no greater damage than & scorched ehoulder. As they passed through the outer door on to the bank of the mill-race they were met by John Grimes, gesticulating like & madman. “Thank God!" he bellowed, recog- | nizing Norman and Kathleen as they tore off their protective band- ages. “Anyone left inside?"” “sir Dudley is lyiog in the entry,” |43 [ {r=seaas : Four words begin with I, three end | with the letter and quite a few have it tucked away in the mid- dle, The three words ending in I are the ones that will bother, if any. HORIZONTAL 1. Sincere; <hearty. 7. Public epeakers. 13. Color, 14, Liberty. 16. A cavity in ground, 17. Barren. 19, Gave way to dejection, 20, Garments, 21. Adverbial negative. 23. To move rapidly, past tense. 24, European freshwater fish. 26. Pertinacious. 81. Point of compass, 32, Beverage. 34. Crude. 5, An eccentric disc 36. To place, 37. To bark, 38. A grain. 39. Silk worm. 40, Possesses. 41, Judge in a Mohammedan town. 42, An inert gaseous element in the air, Becauee. A dandy. Ocean. To perform. A provident insect. Anger. To devour. Meadow. ! Exists, i Paper embossed In imitation of | leather. | Direction Australla ds from us. To help. * Noise, A ponderous volume, Abstains from food. Fairy. Female sheep. Oll of. turpentine. Grief. . Pertaining to teeth. . A race horse. VERTICAL . Philanthrophy; almsgiving. . Yours and mine, . Strap of bridle, . Whether, 4. 47, 49, 51, b2, 53, 54. 55. 56. 59. 60, 61. 63. 65. 69. 1. . Breakfast — Stewed dried apri- cots, cereal, thin cream, soft boiled | eggs, graham toast, milk, coffee, Luncheon — Baked onlon puff, browa bread and butter sandwiches, ol The I's have It, in this puzzle, ‘5. Human upper limb. . Constellation, Song or hymn, Stick. Part of verb to be. To give access. Inlet. Avenu Narrative poem. Perlod. ‘What most people call gasolinc. T'rightened. Considered, Officers in church. 27. No. Profound reverence. Frozen water, Instrument used to move boat. Meetings of spirituallsts, Independently. A sand bar. . Bwooned. . English coin. . To fondle. . To observe. Organ of hearing. Duskier. " . Falsehood. . Stockings. . The point. . 8o shall it be. . Small salamander. To $e in debt, 5. Pine tree, . Some. 7. Child. iS. Polite form of addressing mal . Fggs of fishes, . Father. Behold. =lo=ZimHIC P> <> == = | ture coats the spoon. Let cool ani flavor with vanllla. Serve with ths frult jelly. Jellied Celery Salad Two cups chopped celery, 2 cu gedy Andy, ow I shall get my ' And when Raggedy Ann and Rag- magic mirror and sec why this gedy Andy and Lady Lindy and Mr. “Will you take Buddy, too?” | pretty lady was changed into a lit- T w this, all cried, “Of course, we couldn't get along | tie old weazened up witch, I am * For as' ithout Buddy, could we?" |sure someone must Thave worked ' goon as the magic powder touched “Come and see your other son, |unkind magic on her and made her | the prince he changed into the like- o] certainly will if mother will| come with u | his facs that evening. “Why, of course, Jack, one of the first bonds of friendship, the one perhaps which binds your friend to veu closest, is the mutual admira- | w tHon which must exist between you.” whipped fruit jelly, drop cakes, | water, 1 tablespoon minced onio milk, tea. |1 tablespoon granulated gelatin, Dinner.— Cream of tomato soup, | tablespoons lemon juice, 1 teaspoo casserole of vegetables, jellied cel. | SUgr, 1-4 teaspoon ealt, 1:2 tca ery salad, parsnip cakes, prune|®Poon paprika, 1 cup diced celer whip, hearts, 1-2 cup nut meats, 1-2 ¢ | full glare of Mr. Wommersley's replied Norman, “I kicked against | electric projector. | someone on the floor and it couldn't The great statesman had the sil- have been anyone else.” ver tones of his beautiful volce| The gamekeeper plunged into the well under control when at last he ! furnace and was out again almost the silence. “Then,” sald Jack emphatically. #“yoy and T should be pretty good Lpriends, for you have just intimated that 1 have some admirable quali- ties and I admire you more than any other woman I have ever known. “So, you think like me,” my Jittle Jack looke Paris Is Wild Over This Parisian belles are wild over the new silk wigs for evening made of colored silk i shades. They usually frock in color or are They have little in common the bob, and are bound to transform the flapper Into a sophisticate. quite pastel white with pure Jusband said, quickly | Jack.” T interrupted, (Copyrigh NEA Service, TOMORROW — This letter con- | tinued. | © 1978 BY NEA SERVICE, WG Many a girl who has noth- ing to do never gets through doing it. | RONCHITIS an unkind witch.” Then he turned tn the pretty lady who used to be| Mrs. Grundy and asked, “Do you{ remember why you were changed into a witch, Mrs. Grundy?” G the pretty lady replied, I remember, but if we look magic mirror, maybe we how it all came to pass!” magician brought out his | can not in your will see So the | magic mirror and said a few magic 1 1t upon the magiclan and The queer little man threw some’ of his magic powder upon the prince e watched, And ¥ lady walking woods picking violets yoking young man young man y Andy said e pretty lady sald. “I remember r it was a prinee and we re b 4 and wifel" Then as our friends watched in the magic mirror, they a strange little old man reach out of a hole in a tree and some magie powder on the lady and she became au old weazened up crea- | words w they & through with a “I'l prince!” “Oh, pret i§ a we 1sba saw ness of a magician J not have re th magiclan said “Oh! 1 am su been me!” the ever having been a pr “Nor could Mrs. Gri membef having been Could you?" Raggs the pretty princess indeed!” the pri Iy the “What had we better “Let me take your ma nd puff it upon yo Ann said to the magicia took the magic powder and in m, magician don" e he stood before d been through the And My! the ond, h; when when the pri She was Ela prinee cras. him course w a ry too. “Ha!" the prince sa must have another wedd brate!” And side of the gentlemer he ra of wall a Raggedy *“This castle with t really belonged to the p princess and through magic knights and ladies “ visibl Now you live ever afterward And the lugged each Raggedy Ann and Mr. Tuney the prince and ady Lindy and I im. And Ant can prin oth and gedy s0 hap a8 no one « ta and lad ghts ar the lovely prince the some prinee!” and a great af : . te fee one avent into late. And it wae ju nice happy fdiry was \ reading a i “Now ing to cele- “For 1 can not rememhber anything about r re- cons. sked | | plied the inspector gravely. | he re- mused. pow- Raggedy So she puffed a sec- ust as walked prin- nd eS8 saW of happy we, | jes walking Veried. len towers e and de 124 &8 AT ever | pickles un all the | in- happily princess hugged Andy ' for he hugged Lindy hugged red even if all s were watch- A ladies all hall and sang ercam and | ister. | bullied { out which was not the st {6t fire broke ‘“What of yourself, Wragge?” he | eaid quictly. “Have you counted the | cost of #he action you are propos- | ing to take? The records of your! | carly lapse from the stralght path |are still in Dbeing, remember.” | not sir,” re- Then | laughed a little and added: | There being no witnesses present, “1 have forgotten, [T do not mind confessing that I am | | hoping for great things from those records now that T have completed my case against you. The authorl- ties will hold it to my credit that I have arrested a highly placed criminal in spite of the fact that he had this pull over me, My lapse, as you call it, was a mere trifie compared with yours, Mr. Colne, and T have atoned for it by years of faithful service to the state” | I see,” sneered the cabinet min- “You funked my pull over vyou till you obtained a greater one over me. What a homily T shoyld be able to deliver to Parifament on the moral rectitude of the police force. But see here, Wragge, as | man to man, if you really intend to brave the perils of your past, will ten thousand pounds and the chief | constableship a induce you to abandon the idea?” “Not on your life, sir. T have too many ignominious vears of being and browbeatén by you to wipe out,” responded Wragge. Mr. Coine sighed aa one who de- plores the folly of a feebler ‘mind. Then a short gasp broke from him, | to be echoed in a deeper exclama- tion from the detective. Preoccu- pled as they both were, the same thing had obtruded on their senses and disteacted their attention si-| multaneously. Away beyond the | mill-raqe_another light had broken | ady glow trie. Red of a county of the Ampphibian ele flames were shooting from the door ' miil-house struggling with smoke, of the jeking tongues belching a cloud of as soon as they realized his inten- tion. His hair and eyebrows were| on fire, but he extinguished them with an impatient gesture as soon as his hands were free of his load. For in his arms he carried the bar- ) onet of Becehwood: Grange, as limp and helpless as a sack of potatoes | and horribly burned in addition to the injuries inflicted by Alf. Merel- fully he had lost all consciousness. Grimes laid him tenderly down‘ on the bank and was beginning 1o shout orders to the ‘Wommersley | crew to tun for the doctor, when from the dam there came, with a rush the Right Honorable Stephen Colne, He was out of breath and no one was surprised when he came to a standstill. The piercing eyes which had so often held the House in thrall were shining like those of | a mystic who sees beyond the veil. | He reised his right hand. | (To Be Continued) | OUCH! BACKACHE RUB LUMBAGOOR STIFENESS AWAY Jacob's Oil stops any pain, S0 when your back is sore and lame, or lumbugo, sciatica or rheumatism has you stiffened up, don’t suffer! Geta small trial bottle of old, honest St. Jacobs Oil at any drug store, pour A little in your hand, and rub it right on your aghing back: and by the time you count fifty the soreness and lameness is gone. Don't stay crippled! ing, penetrating only once. It takes the pain right out and ends the misery. It is mag- st \ This sooth- oil needs to be used | custard sauce, whole wheat | rolls, milk, coffee. i The parsnips should not be| served to children under school age | but with this exception the menu | for the day can be ueed as planned. | Baked Onion Puff | Six or eight good-sized onfons, 3 tablespoons butter, 1 1-2 cups soft | bread crumbs, 1-3 cup water in which onions were cooked, 1-3 cup milk, 3 eggs, salt, paprika. Cook onions in boiling water to cover until soft. Do not cover sauce pan in which onions are cooked. Drain and rub through a sieve. There should be 1 1-3 cups onlon pulp. Melt butter, add bread crumbs and liquid and cook until smooth. Beat yolks of eggs until thick and lemon colored. Add onion pulp to cooked mixture, season with salt and paprika and bring to the poiling point, Remove from the fire and add beaten yolks. Beat whites qf eggs until sHff and dry and fold into mixture. Turn into & buttered baking dish and bake 25 minutes in a moderate oven. Serve at once or the “puff” will fall. ‘Whipped Fruit Jelly One package prepared gelatin, | bananas, 1 orange, 1-2 cup shredded | pineapple, 1 egs, 1-2 eup powdered eugar, 4 tablespoons granulated su- gar, 1 teaspoon flour, 1 1-4 cups; milk, 1-8 teaspoon salt, 1 teaspoon | vanilla. Any preferred flavor of gelatin can be used. Follow directions on package for preparing jelly. When cool, but before the liquld beging to set, beat with a dover beater un- #1 the jelly begins to form. Beat white of egg until stift and dry and beat in the powdered sugar. Beal this into the jelly. Add fruit eut into small pleces and turn into & mold. Set on ice to chill and be-| come firm. Mix granulated ‘sugar, salt and fcal, yot absolutely Harmiess, and doesn’t burn the skin Nothing clse stops lumbago. tiea, backache or rheumatism romptly. It nevér disappolnts! scla 80 { { | our with yolk of egg. When smooth | | and el blended slowly beat in milk scalded in top of double bofl-| er. Cook over hot water until mixz« mayonnaise. The coarse outter stalks ar leaves of the celery are used Ic the chopped celery. Simmer celery onion and salt in water for 156 min utes. Add water to keep two cup over vegetables. Strain and ad gelatin eoftened in cold water, ‘su gar and lemon juice, When begir ning to jelly add diced celery, nul and mayonnaise, Turn into ind vidual molds and place on fce 1 chill and become firm. Servé on bed of lettuce with mayonnaise & garnish with strips of pimento. (Copyright, 1925, NEA Servic Inc.) PIMPLES 0 NECK AND CHIN Irritated_gy-ghaving. Caused Disfigurement. Healed by Cuticura. “ 1 was troubled with & breaking out of pimples around my neck and chin, The pimples were hard and red and after a,day or two festered. When I shaved I irritated. them and they ftched and burned some- thing awful. The breaking out caused disfigurement so that I hated to go out. “1 read an advertisement for Cuticura Sosp and Ointment and sent for a free sample. After using it I could see an improvement so purchased more and now I am . (healed.” (Signed) Edward Die- {sie, N. Y., June 14, 1924, Nothing quicker or safer than Cuticura Soap and Ointment for skin troubles that itch and burn. Soap He. Olntment 25 and Be. Tolcum ™e. everywhere. S Bample encl

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