New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 8, 1925, Page 10

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10 feasastsiata s SRR 2 FABLES ON HEALTH: A Wife’s Confessional || GET PLENTY OF FRESH AIR "N ) Every one who {8 able to walk at|one, arouses one to activity. It dcle G A b Adcle Garrison's New Phase of all, should take a walk every day. |awakens, vitalizes, vivifies. Open air walks increase one's lite | Homes should bs provided with § PFVELATIONS OF A WlFE expectaney. sleeping porches. The added cost § A V] t out Into the pure fresh alr; it |they give to the construction of a i# - 1 will revive the body and spirit. house is pald back tenfold by in- ety tasasasystens + . A person breathes in one-seventh |creased health and vigor. BEGIN HERE TODAY along) the! @rive, wondering why & Msdge and EKatherine Plan for can get here. She's visiting friends [More oxygen out of doors than in-| Closed doors and windows are Shen et 5 ¢ & [ia New Hampshire thia v com. | doors: ot 80 common during summer. But| Samuel Honeybun, retired Eng-|man possessing a car should walk jog Lack Iriday, Even if she rushed | Every organ of the body 1 rep- |during the winter, many sleep in g’th"‘;"‘Y-‘"nfl!‘-hfl'flr'l"n the neigh- | five miles out and five miles back. ; R e e o 1 |resented by nerves on the surface. |almost air-tight rooms. orhood with the announcement|gyo y49 reached a point a hundred o Lucia Meredith was beautitul | Fight over hore the same day, you frese y that blood s found in his rain|. : ) ndre [ / ) | %t ST A 1L & Tiivilegs fo|can make it And you can bel Socoldalr and water baths stimu- | TYet cold alr 13 the great blessing 9. H, cards fro 08 W QIS ?'?n‘r»':“;;jfrsw’ 1 :\:‘\Hwfl ..’m? shouting sute she won't be in evi-|12te every organ of the body to ac- |of the human race. gauge. Right on the heels c: vlu.,‘n:'r’mz :‘h’”“: “:djfirifi;’;‘nh“h?n a SAY BAY ER ASP[RIN and le nt b 7 ! asham A et le ok avaz | LIvity: It one would reach the heights of | announcement comes news of the Pl® stle shrille er ears ~ " sl A bieted at |dence Friday No movie star ever [tivi ne L1 | ; LU e ¢ 3 or myself or belng s0 disimieted K| better cars of her personal ap-| One's skin Ia one's kevboard. Cold | health, ho must travel through lite | Strangs murder of- i | —two long blasts tollowed by a| Unless you see the “Bayer Cross” on tablets you are I RRte Katherine ince than does Lucia Meredith, |air has a vitalizing effect. It 1ifts [via the Fresh Alr Trail. Sir Francls Lathrop, (father of|short one—and a movement in the i i Bayer Aspirin proved safe :,Aei‘xl:?-l:\::e e ‘; K harine b e paNtTat Margaret Lathrop. Sir Guy s sus- | shrubbery on the left drewher eyes not 85‘_“”5 the genugne Bayer A.’ RIL B _1 It would have meant |elther you or 1ne eea hor when she : 3 pocted of the murder and when|to a huge dog of the mastint breed| by millions and prescribed by physicians for 25 years. oA B O e If It had not |18 fatlgued from a journey. : : Margaret refuses to marry him he|straining at a rope by which it was AR t > me if it ha & i ; ‘ leaves for London and Is shadowed | fastened to a trec. Again the whis- . " nac o nied by the additional| 1 made a mental caiculatioa on g SMlino. e ackace eh ":,‘m,,"ff'.vf;,dm: in Dicky, her |my fingers. N : by Inspector Roake. tlo shrilled and Margaret saw that “_‘.“_P'_ fl CBayer | ‘?‘“‘. olre Ehat s shoill “weis &t hev{ 'EBurdn ald. " can man- Sir Guy drops a decoy in the|the rope seemed to be almost at which contains proven directions. pertias,” the phraso which my littlenge it i 1 Mrs, Ticer to - £ Thames river, and Roake loses| hreaking point. And the great dog's partias s e TR e O g | nelp me. but 1 must spend tomor- track of him. glare told her that she was his ob- lion-hunting !ndy's husband row In the city. There are a few NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY | jcctive if he could win his freedom. Gnadenly T realized just what this |littlo things which 1 really must | She gathered up her skirts and promised call meant. This beauti- | Purchase—I've been putting them off When Margaret discovered that|raced l?"f thiefhal[ldoor Mslamming 2ol weman, whom Katherine had (100 long as it is—and T need them | her lover had been as good as h In the flerco beast's face as its dubbed “the suabblast of snobs,” was |t slve ',}\‘](::r' ""‘5 1:'””[*: ‘thlw-” word and had left the house before | SAVering jaws snapped at her. Go- | coming to 0 me with her hus-| 'Can't you get them at Southamp- . L] me ik A . | breakfast she bitterly regretteq her | INF 0 @ window, she saw the g bagd, ostens socinlBeally IR HE LAt e ARCE A San o bluntly expressed rojection of hig | balked animal ‘tearlng down _the but in ren GEEVIDIRE MRS el S suggestion for an Immediate mar- | 040, and ‘once more she heard a Andghomars Hjiene \::Tn ’:“ \.(fl‘wr& ov ‘r]l‘lxél':'H;\Fl 1!0 rlage. She still thought that such a |\: ,“\, ; 1‘\‘ . ‘t“v ];mll'“l]fild g to a eritleal Inspection, This T well | VOREET BIOFS OYEF K proceeding would be Injudicious, be- [ "0V ang the hall bell, ’ i re's description, | 4068 ;,‘.-mrr\]nl;vuo‘\‘1l i?(r )n‘ums?mma:le f cause Roake could h od tt| she I..m‘l to the l((m!mn’n By Thornton W. Burgess be merciless. T y vestige | he clty—y = L e she | Who appeared, “I have been at- Aisapproval of the usual fomr 1. | Ways 5o tired when you come back.” ! :;';a‘rl:{fll“fih‘x_::]',”5?"":" e, "]‘,'v:,'\::g‘ tacked Ly a dog who was tied by a SRR iy nishea | That there wa ther rea 1 v 2 2 oy rope 10 a tree shirubbery nine housekeeping hysteria vanished || That there was another reason for blamed herself = for mof = BAMNE| 1ope 10 . tree in the east shrubbery I i Lncla Mededith's Reception Handy “Bayer” boses of 12 tahlots Also hottles of 24 and 100—Druggists. Aspirin 18 the trade mark of Barer Manufacture of Mopcaceticacidester of Eal licaclq =] SALLY SLY GOES SPYING that apple tree, She flew straight to Tis only those by nature sly the place where she I en Mrs, Who ever really like to spy. Chippy go. Sure enougl —O0Ild Mother Nature |little nest made of fine roots and Sally Sly s an outcast. None of |lined with horschair, Sally inspected [the other birds will have anything to |it carefully. do with her. They look down up her. “That nest is just about finished,"” on the ir and it was with as | T e ot et Gyt | Off the avenue, The rope broke, and xcited @ mian as my mother-in-law |She Was too proud to volce—I com- -HA;: ‘.: i '1]“{ ,?'];1 b e T want you to go and fetch what aver wore that I turned to Kath- prehended instantly and scored my- JERS D b na 3 is left of it [he shorter length was 5 2R s 1t for my selfishness. She needed {hisr own coln by multting His own|] © o5 O 0 Son L B \\¥as there ever a worss time for |Me and ehe dreaded being left alone {home on the ellly pretext that (he¥} “\¢hen fhe footman returned from her to call upon us?” 1 demanded, |for & whole day with the difficult would invite scanda) 1t they con- | "0 o) ne was laboring under e CeEh eoeaeey and | problem Fanny Powell presented, tinued to llve under the same roof | " (G Katle has been gone so long and obvions excitement, They consider her lazy, and some- |said she to herself. “I think Ly tos This rope didn't give way of it- [fimes she lled the Lazybird. | morrow there will be an egg in we've been o upset here that the |€specially when Lillian was In no I |without the sanction of the church. 3 5 If, miss,” he said. “Somebody (s Cowbird. Of all the | there, T must keep wateh of this.” “ of T - " 27 28 istence had she so felt the need of | ) ¥ lher real nam owbir E | th must keep wateh of this Most Wonien Would Protest Aot orLahlngeilitanio. | masculine strength to lcan on. must have helped it. See, four of |geathered folk there is none in this| Then she spicd on Sunshine ths Moal momen wonla e protested You're a lifesaver,” 1 declared | the five strands have been hacked Sly that | Housa ia alfrichtl condition to be called on for aid And never before in her young ex- | d country excepting Sally Yellow Warbler. Over in a bush on As the day wore on, her nervous- ) | corc . tryIng to let no hint of the 2/ | £ ) throt a clean cut with a sharp Bt G | a0 Bavd st his statement v er ¢ Sag ess ine! ed o she ed ¢ 1o t ¥ @ 2 leaves her babies to be brought up|one ide of the Old Orchard a is statement mently and would | oiv"aisappointment 1 felt appear | | ness iner d and she walked down 2 | 5 3 37 have assured me that I need not fear TR o | {to the village inn in the hope that by olliers. Sally Sly Is a disgrace toifound the beautiful nest which to present my menage to the in- | g Y <OE ]' never '””'”"l’“ o {60 tenalond would have Tiad & wive vet had expected some |{he name of mother. And all the | hine so dearly loves, There ¢ Von : \at | Southampton anc am sure can | £ Y 1 nee of intention, but st herec 1k fe g way about it P four n Sal Sly lef! spection of anyone, no matter how | oot (o RS L A e Tl announcing the return of Klyne, or feathered folk feel this way were four in it. Sally Sly left it ! 4 oW | get 2 | merely thanked the footman with- teast, and she |another and with a wicked chuckl Gillica 3 herine is t ) | WiHe Rev. Ol nuias A {so ¢ is an outcast, and another and with & wic huckle itical. But € ] 00 loyal | Loy Gver in the morning. Today | rather “the Rev. Charles Danver and sincere a friend to say anything : ; o) ’ Teranty e BRI and. when he was [Joesn't seem to mind it a bit. sneaked out of sigkt aetbes ok memn sl notls iiso s ceonunaCtmSiMER ST iosn cn iz v " 'rm.{\r?}u: cald :v:avuv"‘u\‘Vr\vT»]‘ylnnvIll:f gone, verified his stafoment. 1t was| \hen she saw Mrs. Red-eye Kick | The next day she again visited the s0 thoroughly fominine that 1 knew | T, 2nd Plan things eo she and hours and e might be gone six |25 he had said. The rope was a|ihat egs out of her nest, Sally decl-nest of Mr, and Mrs. Chippy. Tn it she comprehended my problem and | " hmynont confiet. ; | {nours ana he might be eone s\ T UL by ", Tho ded right away that it was quite uso- | was a Jittls blue egg with . circle of ‘mpathized with it. oAt l?ffea‘mf: 1"" { since.” Brek Was ot i o decas. bit 10 |less to try to leave another c&g n |black spot at the g end. Sally Siy Hardly that,” she smiled. “But |walching this patient of mine,” ! e s loming e tnn Aar. | CAFCIUITS Adminisiered sash from |he nest of Mrs. Red-eye. 80 Sally | jeft another ogg to keep it company, f course, iL isn’t up to your usual | Katherine said o “T can polisl garet, was accosted by Adela Larkin, | & Keen ! promptly flew over to the Old|Then she flew over near the Smiling \idera il However: IiouelE notio)| bramssekand Cleantaliver ardt miera who was passing as though by a She “d to reconstruct the |Orchard, But she took thie greatest|Pool and there she found, as she had take very long to get things in shape ‘;n 1 i i T a menc 4 dent ontrage directed against her. She |care to keep out of eight. She was|pheen quite st she “n’wuw, the nest it we all turn in and help. s a | nd beat rugs and do any othe 9, T N R i St had no doubt that Mr. = sneaky. She just sneaked ahon}, SDY- | of Little Eriend the Song Sparrc of rubbing mahogany and |fasks that will make your hands all . rector's daughter, “Not taken to | t¥hun had procured ¢ s 08 | ing on (he other pirds. It didn't take | The next day another of Sally Slv'a polishing brasses and silver—" S e 2 | drink, I hope, tn your old age?” nd trained it 1o ohey the signals of | her long to find several nests. RIEht | cags was in that nest. Then. quite waxing floors and cloaning | vives,” 1 scofted Mriar e B e e dteioy om | the whistle, —especially that ~ of |uway she found the nest of Welcome |satistied Sally wont off to find some I washing and polishing |1 get in a fight place Il being vou | o Margaret could he very statels b | iraining al ifs leash on hearing the | Kobin, but then, any one could fInd lof per own relatives and do nothing s and chin S T e il e (e | pecaston toward those she 44 10!l iwo long Dasts followed by a short |that nest. 1t was too big. All tho |aj) the rest of the summer but have e or ‘ ‘ . o i e one. Ho had then provided himself [nests she found at first were too big |4 good time. But behind her she had ’ | With a rope and damaged it fo suit |for her purpose. They were the nests |jeft trouble. Yes, indesd, she had | s purpose, afterwards seiting out |of birds nearly or quite her own size. | jft trouble. She had left more than [ for the grange with the dog on the |She wanted the nest of birds much | trouble, for in tlhree homes she had Jola, [ oo, 1118 eall to inquive far £hoot. |smaller than she. Do you know 8hy? |jat the unhappinsss which only s=i- Adela. 1 NOPEL g (o 1ent had probably been onl Sally might be too lazy to take | fichnes can cause an exeuse to furnish him with a le. |care of her own babies, but she is| Copyright, 1925, by T. W. Burg for entering the |clever enough to make sure that s , wdy 1up to the |those same bables get the best of| «rne next & et | hous from thelr foster ‘l)aronfi:.oin bl e 2 X ree with p severed rope, |Sally chooses a nest of some one ne o 1 I oo i R e meeting at the lodge |smaller than she, some one whese vspapor staft I;:( n!_',‘:x,;;( » selivered him into the jaws of the ,‘-" it :rh ne f,'m' _“1"015;; e l'\'ahy\ few paces alonz the read before |When they hatch. She knows "‘F’ 1o that her baby being the largest will be the strongest and will be sure to| zet its share of food. As a maiter of | farts revealsd hy he | it gets more than its share of | and this is quite as Sally Sly would have it So Sally kept watch until she sarw groaned ; s ; 1ppy pping Sparrow and greaned N decs he perse- e L £ Eeovns Ridsonstne g E cute me Chippy around Farmer s Baked Farl D! k ‘Whe . Chznge otly & grange, M - L R T s n s T eany rlth e ard. .kn; sr") !S'Irs. (;h::ska\i; laked arina With Cheese 1 g f ; e mvard, s 2, . : e | ittington o e[ ol e s i S s o " went, She knew that the s of lice T e R (he agregious per. | cerlained that the famous investi- | ChIPE Ln D b s Heat nilk in top of double boiler P Dlows horn sor behaved so tor was still v ing for her. B o Chippy fly into ng to the boiling 5. Strips of leather. the park w intr ST e ‘mbfl;: :Jild L 3 . ngltvr}: i cd slenal Jemsiiton ShE anl e arkin ‘—:v:th:;d\ l"hu«vpl‘vnre back at the [Tt didn't take her long to find seve o S =L me old {the man on the wall and she in-[acting in 1t or separately? To|int S S e S BAStdor i o L 1 stinctively swerved from him, s at no answer was forthecoming. : IR e e T like those you mentioned over to Al A kin. desparingly W ver can do it, | Katie.” | one where the poker player Beverage | “One ean have ofher business Katherine, It would he our| “Didn't you ever hear of rubber | can start with 16 horizental 1If you | % weeks ick to be right in the le of [gloves?" she said weakly, and then | don't play poker Legin with the first | all for help at sea il L AU toe R Home of foodstuft | | {than drink at an inn," she sald, s claaning up when sl Bk R e P TR S | n ) S . AR pening | vour business wasn't to call on a| f course, | . Corded eloth [ LREAELS WL S Have It your own way." she sald HORIZONTAL Cordeuicoth | bogus parson Tho is staying there “but 1 don’t envy you when Kate | Puffed |17 0. vou had better inqguire at the ned brisk- | hears the news' | Portable hout . To total \M'm" Bt Oy (£ L Newspaper | ) ¥ vesterday on the ‘false .pre- ibly \ e Thes i To create a disturbance day word, as usual “Quite,” rejoined the dog to the To ventilate, Sun god Sun god “That was cruel of you: but per | [ haps you were cruel to be kind.” retorted Margaret, “No, I haven't Melancholy nate Toreed air naisly through the the leadi ady i nose Blowing his whi Y wae = {ewlfving surmise, fub oltor compass: | been to eall on vour bogus parson only cne that tallied the e Inhuman Y did no o that there was any . To squands 3 inei s i Rut fhat means that ha must| Farth To make «erses - COLOR COT-OUTS Closes w none too ami n my movements, or it for him." she On enteri v tes of the her for employing cup grated Sk worm 1 seemed familiar and A DIOVINE ece, butter = Out of this tanele there emerged the ter problem: Were Mr. Yet he was as polite as he knew | how to be attached to the * Rain" in the , Ay Samuel Honevbun— imding. An enhanced interest was to you, Miss Lathrop,” | Rauge of T have been {rying to the theory rejs Ly the police iet ronstable downwards, 1v. but T find he is trom home. | from fthe ¢ REbE | h h uldile She found herself in bed at last, | T wanted to ask him if he would let - 11 pi: n 4. | me a few hundred acres of rough AR (An intimate. story of innermost whom T was t:o:!‘:ilnu:..y hoping and Not many. | shocting. T am going to spend the nid not think of sleep, ex- | iniotjons revealed in private letters) | planning me‘a inee o Weapens autumn with my father at Latch- though she w ghe dared | | pqTER FROM LESLIE PRES-| I forgot all about the dinner as I o Aslilandla o l5w st have + plunge inta unconsciousness, | held alck in my arms. e - A e her heipless,| COTT TO THE LITTLE MAR- “Sing me 'itty Boy Blue' Jackis T AU e S R c vich she had | QUISE—CONTINUED murmured as he cuddled down in At i i ; \ ang began to read.| T dressed lelsurely, but was near-|my arms. i contempty I Sir Guy went away this But the s a blur, and she |tyk finished when Jack came in. I| “All right, sonnv,” but for a mod oot 2 C L : / ) piral shaped mo | Marciret ‘magistanen i the book |neard him talking in the hall I|ment my throst €0 tull T could 14 | 1 = e s 1 . 2 > r 1denly. the hing ha W e he ha 0 a i z0ssip § Lorner I AV OIN ODOR for its lack of iry lips to reply. “When he com Jdenly. the thing hap- | wondered if he had forgotten his|not speak. I could not sing. 7 VoI ¥ trembling S o p Small article & | baek I will tell him of vour requir ene faint seraping sound, | dinner engagement The arms grew tighter abont my ment, though T don't thin has h L ¢ i as outside her he presently called, | neck, and with a little sigh my toy | e e 1T : 1 her ears. She | “here is old Syd. He is going out|turned as it to go to sleep. e e ot R i 15 Somebody had | with us to the Travelers' club to- Yourself A i B the sill and |night.” ! thing inaudible and sauntered out sill and | nig They Wear Well Y h i into the highway, whers he started | T 1 desired posi- | “llnflv(czd that he :v; nozn;uen:ofi X % " \ | T Sy S v ing it from right to left, | Melville Sartoris an wondere - sl ial M IA;‘?,,M ne i T_.‘, du alor s sa. There w brief | Syd knew we were to be the guests Safe Candy p st § b e stillness of a | of Mr. Sartoris. . - E itz el | t there came the pid-| They came upstairs together and : . ne swiftly asce | T called a gay greeting as Syd passed | my door. carefully fastened | After T had dressed 1 went in to but that |see the children. The- baby was nan de- | asleep. His golden hair lay in clus- tering curls about his face, He had a pane of glass | kicked off the clothes and his little [ And be-|body was almost bare. I stooped NO STREETS OF I i v fore t | decide | down with an ecstatic cry and cov- This is the tF s 3 T n her course if 50 he did it. | ered him with kisses 0 | g | ) p ¥ glass on There was a little wistful sigh | er sash was | from the other bed. I turned to find | pushed up. Jack sitiing up staring at me. Tt was a night of rapid changes. t is my yovely musver,” he sald | Just as a leg appeared over the sill [as thongh he were explaining some- a new sort of sound was audible— | thing to himself. on the ladder,| “Why, Jackie, what do you - lowe red oath and the | mean?" I asked. L~ 4 1l thud of a body striking the| “I waked up and 1 fought it was % ick: $ - 4 A ground by | ‘ittle snow angel.” “asktor Horlick's : 7 ; . fee | IR TE e yous twicked \ The OMGINAL # [in the black void of the open win-|old mother.” I answered, taking Y Malted Milk / | Vi g Iz . P will run down and see if | him up in my arms at the peril of Wy, : gEa reck is broken, and |my perishable finery. “I ought not HEN you were a little fels he s well|{to leave you at all, honey, and I low “store candy” was a bolt, 1 will|don't want to he a snow anget to not as good as it is today. Ree nd claim your hospitality.” | you. 1 just want to be your own member some of that terrible s Guy's vol argaret sat | ownest mother.” stuff you used to buy when you ) sping he 1 | 1 little soft arms about my bare had a few pennies? not on her throat and the moist lips on mine Today fortunately there is an t for his timely rescy made me want to cry. “I yuv you, ideal candy for children—Life o of minutes he re- | muvver,” he whispered, sleepily. 1 Savers—those wonderful mints tering, closed the | hugged him tighter and that darling vith the hole. There are six fla- boy entwined his arms closer about vors and they cost only a nickel ' Guy |my throat. Again 1 thanked my 2 package. A well-balanced, palatable, eas- ed e wasn't|God for my eldest son. Again I ily assimilated food that nour- t except by the r got | searched my brain to see if 1 could Good for ishes and up-builds. Use at meals, . o ¢ R D Pl Ul G e e A e o Tering E e him oft.” | the love T had for him and the love e meals, or Upof . ste who|T had for that other human mite| Safefor and w ying in the other bed Prepared 2¢ h It was & night of rapid changes (To Be Continucd) I could not. They were both my der in hot or cold water. Just as a lez appeared over sill| (Copyright, 1325. NEA Service, |boys, my sons, over whom I was | a new sort of sound was audible L continually dreaming dreams. Forl little tummies would have shot Klyne?

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