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4 EE— s A Wife's Confessional Adele Oarrisen’s New Phase of REVELATIONS OF A WIFE Ratistp st i itens Madge's 1T0I2stTIIIIsIIININIIILITILILIILILLISLLLLLILLL Se23sesslpnies Diversion for Lilllan's Boredom “The Advendures § ?aggedyAnn G wafaggedy Andy weth by Ao‘\m\y Gruelle n 1 We c r This at - f WHE \ NEWD SRV ROW NEWEST hing with NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, N SHE GOES “HUNTING” el ]’ Jhe THI rin Go marries Dicl young fun | work ket is no longe ¢ of the huntsma eminine version that de trimmed wit) ind red. The hat rand leathy ut-of-door gir attractive layer. and or chi babies, Dick Maggie | But she re Maggle, di wild parties Gloria to ford a muld Then she Ireds of do aw fnsists ST COATS a LESS COATS ment on the oy | whom she LEATHER : | scen by Mot l ) | Gloria 10 me ' i | Gloria neur, | and May's A Dick | guests o |~ Beca Iy wife | house. A fol where wor s Glor Waybhurn in to find that home 11l by iary, who s GIRDLES Dick. | for Gloria, when she fine borrows invites Wayburn, of her May Seymour is snubbed every- s momentarily in. Howaver, sha visits | returns n hrought his secre- | by womer MAY 11, 1925, FLAPDER T STORY SO l,\ rdon, beautiful i Gregory, eafflce Burton ©10es wea smvics mc. flapper, a struggling | Her idea of marriage is clothes Idren. teach fuses Gloria to to learn. sgusted with quits her job goes into debt worth of a new oAr. for lars' 1pon new one, | Gloria goes riding in the car with ‘ Wayburn, an s infatuated her Gregory, nd her ways actor who May of Dr. John ver, Jim Carewe, Iy party is in pro clothes, They but no She scorna | friend, Lola Hough, for having threc her cook. | Later, | Gloria's Then hires Ranghild Swanson, al- though Dick tells her they can't af- hun D sells his old rondster to make a pe with are ! begs | Next day | gross returns and puts th { the house. aftair with N T rooms. £h Dick has by Miss Briggs, in love with him In his delirium he but Ca Miss calls pushes her away goes to him. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY e A s l AN OLD-FASHIONED REMEDY of su irin or Gloria we ON BEALTH | doors f must i Glory q s voice ' It ke a er in ' un netroke the p ks give conl poverty, With a s tha front do In the liage in the e | yellow color Lin- is § rays k. 1 from t hat “What in pened 7" she front ste 14 has hee it was case pour body, is good or the cc 1 and haled, it ! been @ CROSSWORD PUZZLE - - HOR Vi - noon in cold of his } ans m house, Tother ( with egan r tone Gloria w o had for her Presently Halfw I 1 here's wanting may as well niphati ber, it's He's be weeks a how rowdy e n al vou your 1ZONTATL RTICAT away 18 hall door Glor was haggard her large to ery. very her eyes and = e downstairs, She t nt and elt that, from nioaning "Gl pt repeating itself her ears. somehow the pleasant hard work and hated them with all of or and we was ight it out up streame a coul Motlier Gregory, the world 1 asked, as ps n phoning k. Dr. John says as A wered Glorla 10ther-ir law back o ) gory capat covered her r God o o voice of hed her sur wouldn't have beli tenderness Gregory. that the was the grim mother might or She lov an son Mot he arted r Gregory for the s turned ing v to you, y it “If Dic 1 who'y in do 1 Glory, she somet! ve now,” K dies e ki to go out She hands, put of she sound of over oria’s impulse was always to es. things of life sick- het he opened the d out 1 sce Her [ K0 with anxiety. | hap- came “Maggie snys R for me. church guild all after- | ! tha eloped into pneu- fol- | into face and | H‘l prayer wa rise eved soft- had &h kind have Irted alr to the firat landing she been and 1 said nem him! o1l WOrTY Maggie's told worn him out and vour ve parties YO other day ather ot ad some of spring ir late he for your any the seemed to be of a en t {ne n tr lils mother's maid, | {ot Seymour, | to the | Briggs’ sister, Mrs, O'Hara, comes to | * 3 ! she see t on nor Stanley ey was T ther of t g for | were > sym ir | had come becauss she was in trou- | ble, without being told, Upstairs in the blg front bed- | room the twins, in nightles and red | bathrobes, were having bread and milk for their supper. Before the grate fire a bath basin was waiting for young Teddy, On | stood in yeadiness. Gloria sank Into covered with clean an armehalr | faded cretonne, [ bathe her baby, he a little ald kewpls laughed, as she took him out | the tub and bundled him into | nis sleeping-bag. “Isn't Lola Teddy didn't say Lola's eyes, itiful as In Gloria's opinton, far too fat, but She knew that, thres bables ubs wis h she in were be Lola tucked them tenderly into their little beds and turned out the light. 30odnight, baby birds,” softly closing the door, she raid, Gloria followed her silently down- stairs to the dining room, A cold supper was lald there for {one. Bliced corned beef, bread and | | butter, and a bowl of canned | peaches, l.ola an china closet. and have a bite of supper with lonesome woman,” segged. “And while I'm boiling the water for tha tea, you can tell mc what's on your mind, something’s hothering you." Everything!” My whole Hfe's wrong from start to finish, and T'm just heginning to find it out, . , . Lola I'm married to a man I don't love.” Lola stared at her with wide- | cyed astonishment, “You don’t asked ineredulovsly, “why, you must be Glory! Dick's the very nicest man 1 know. . . ." Gloria interrupted harsh langlh. “And not T that, “but the do sn't glve snap of for me!" “Who's th ow?" Lola “Yes, you know him. going v who he is B 1hbornly, took extra plate from the | vstay a “Something? sloria eriew, care for Dick she craz; her with a she said his fingers about dor Anyone I riously. But I'm not ' Gloria an- so don't ask 0s Lola was silent She measured tea into the little brown pot on the | bl thoughtful. exclaimed pres- e 2" Gloria asked why you come to me wi Lola sald, 1 red you'd picked me . .. It's Bill sk tor wonde why thre vildly you're in Gloria aughed T nk n “ln-n‘lw was too funny! at he was fat an and had pufs under that was the loved their h Wt everybody too a bae was 1 aged, women wio They thou, ove wi “Bii Gloria reason Lola sonse h them Not in answered I told you is hecause than the kn And over, either tell somebody! 17 million erly, *“No, ahout mysel! the gir 'L ULlab it 1 just had would you do you > of more [ o all rest wol And What ow. you if you were o l.ola pundered Well,” she gaid it 1 I'd go right home and tell Dick the only lo, so far as 1 can at last vou sout it for you to That's the square ook hir s ovely stened Glorla er frown, Slowly cad eyebrows strai into a “Of course, < 1 can’t do that, mu He's dow ed forgot t u monia,” Gloria answer 1 had to get out of thr There's a murse thers ry, besides. And ounds and sme she lis s awfu minu . Oh, For a te e to you is 1 can four my advic =oon as We home ried s you had mn.mum o Tanglem Yetter from Leslie Prescott to the |and then he treated me {n the mo: Little Marquise, of the Secret Drawer, Continued Tt is very strange, little Marquise, how differently the accounts in the w T suppose in your | no newspapers, but T am sure often | With' somber eyes she watched Lola | you re. My most sromed f n | storten youreelf and very different from wha party, brilllant urrent would overwhe il of the Tn to he hetween ane he Sydney, | almost that oc; the a your heart there very hapy which m all ston first | kind of fon Jack and § ame over to almost the the the mantel shelf, his bottle of milk | newspapers and the real knew on the outside, affair, hut were S0 many followed and drag down to | superficlal truth of | | certain occurrences may be, that th wor Everyon: 1 could under. time you had | Ellington, were being told about your reactions t they really was a | 1 ant, Joy there seemed strained dney, who had party, to extravagange, relatior Jack wa n | s| and | who knew him must have real- ized th band a my ) had sent me him, pletely me. th 1t Two or t my meant, He diq not p all ! feast, at Lwritten 1 can sce that | intnition had changed mcheon routons, waffles, fles might od The Hov W this was n 1 1ir that 1 Woma th the dance on the other morose or twice on helng the death's head | but he wouldn't hree times ot lke ) allied could nlike, wed prunes, and, my hus wa him ever not i com ce onco N help she | wondering it Syd had told Jack that the letter Jack had had an t whatever it was that natures so of thess two men, concernod | It was on the tongue to ask Syd wha He seemed 80 strange. | with me but ence, crisp whole wheat malade, » Ton molded milk, t Dinner — Broiled onion nmber ver, dmira par 1 ¥ aspe until to X butter and flour and stie ir nd in mixtur a ragus. until t 1, froze ts bread, ncoction be ser o St asp hoth of the milk, nato asparagus, mb ed pot n rice milk, co alled ed at e ragus ad for a incheo th ordina ry coffee, houillon, Ma nrg K atoes, cu v pudding, May a w break e - 3 sason. | furnishes “hig! n a ry hom Asparagus 1 fresh 1 cup water, 2 with tender, wat ep one ¢ Stir w ick beat dover ( sp pping or Beat er over and oon cream, and a cERs a1 wel h hes fit flour, hot water formal manner, and all the whil we were dancing 1 saw Jack stand ing off in one cerner of the room | watching us carefully, | After we had finished dancing | Syd Jolned Jack and they talked | very earnestly for a long while. e Jeft him with a laugh and | turned his attentlon to little Zoe with whom he danced many times. sally Atherton, who down to the par thoreby breaking | one of her established rules which was never 1o go to any real soclety ir, got Juck Into a corner for a fow minutes just before supper and | T saw her trying to give him a small bundle of letters which she took from her elaborate party bag. Jack fingered the bundle for an instant and then from his panto- mime I knew that he was telling | her that he had no pockets in his dress clothes large enough to carry the package easily. Atter a littls hesitation, Sally took the packet back and put it {n her bag. 1 knew that one of those lstters, | which had been going from hand |to hand between Sally and Jack, as mine; consequently 1 was in a fever of nervousness, I danced continually. T haq to keep moving. I knew that I would break if T started to think for a moment. T knew how women felt who are on the verge of hysteria. At last, just as I had determined |to go to Sally and ask her to give | me back my letter, a velvety volce from hehind my shoulder apoks. | (Copyright, 1925, NEA Service, | Tne.) had come TOMORROW — This letter coms | tinued. from the fire and fold In the eream pped untll solid, Turn {nto six molds rubbed with olive oil and when cool place on ice to chill. Un- mold and serve on lettuce, May Waffles cup butter, 2 eggs, 1 cup flour, 1 teaspoon baking pow- ler, 1-4 teaspoon salt, 1-2 cup milk, L quart strawberrics, 1 cup sugar, ablespoons butter. n butter, Beat yolks of eggs 4 lemon colored. Beat nd sift flour, baking salt. Add alternately 1id mixture to creamed but- Beat the batter well when e in gredlents are in and fold in whites of the eggs beaten until a dry fust before baking the s Jwith the and mixed i butter. It this mixture stand on the while baking the irm sauce is prefer- o Ka cold as the \ffles. f batter will make ©s, depending on the size of your iron, One-half o " powder Hit a o8, o waffles crushed zar an rdecnshira Tias to ba carried in as the supply has heen st Ju 16 to leaky (Eng.) ¥ the pu lis The mare 1 K hi il il and made certainly In fact n i y ha 1 trou- have! picked up the telephone to give May's number. Mrs. O'Hur;.x was talking. goodness there! You n xt ten days to Gloria hov were Gloria listened intently . up in Dick's room. Glorla pretty rs. O'llara say. another vo ered her. I'm at his ‘office. Phone nything happens,” it said. It Miss Briggs' She and ter were talking ahout Diek! Be Continued Tomorrow voice!