New Britain Herald Newspaper, August 3, 1925, Page 4

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Adele Garrison's New REVELATIONS OF A WIFE 22333280 020222 103238012320 Mrs. Meredith's Arrival Consternation Katherine almost a in Katle's volc 1 looked llan in consternation tic as that echo outside the d LAl- fran m to or. " 1 sald helg * Kathe had dow overlonking and she turned ba her ine hands outsp futdlity, “Di b ad Ippose verand whispered last as 1 threw open and stopped Katle's outc only expedient maid — clapping my mouth “Hush!” T saic want Mrs. Meredith to hear yoi Katie shook her head vigorounsly, and then wriggled It appeali “Will yon er if Pand away?” I 1 8he nodded wi was afraid she would dislocate the vertebra of and 1 the possible with “Do you her nee toolk the hall window downstalrs Do you suppose she heard aming her name” “I not know,” Katle r bit sullenly. “All I tink her, {s how like old Nich house look.” “Say You Will Call Me!” “I know, Katle," I said dolefully, for the full force of my little house- had struck me. go down let that you will call into living rned a ven T sre lees wh keeping “But them in a me. Take you must and kay them the room— “Rugs all eop returned. Dot cutside, shoost Katie dem Joem he vere dey cn room 1 got tings all upset in pail of vater ready fo choost il The my clean as vou to begin L ana T took d ay bell pealed 2 Catie by the she 1 Hat i owitditn saa0 then,” 1 . turne muet. ¥ living room sald ember to act just as It every E 1 will do the expla ere ke in the house Katie any Ietter from Sally Atherton to Tee . lie Prescott—Continued 1 bt comeor tading the atl 1m can he done " And now An hugbma‘& declaze they like Salads/ /( o | v ike a snappie ads t} a he are ligh Thes ressing M moderatec mild-flavored Tt adds the s tory tast are mights Try it to-night At all grocers Produces I'hase of i fe1tttetaiiasizaiaaies vy someting her have her cake, ve as you “Do You Supposc She Heard 2" Al T do? Do you she ne'll realize that just on pur- oh! 1 can't fuoe an't! I can o foc g he g0 down and stumbleq over anid broken your murely. “Dr. eclalist, he requested to set hat you! rubhing pail T aid Meredith fan 't to he von't expe it, ana—" o thing," 1 wish T could break sonie- d desperately, but Lil- nonsensical ion had steadied as sl knew it would. T went aver to the mirror and took hat which T had not yet after 1 st Mrs. Mechanically T began to but Lilllan and Katherine hoth exclaimed in pro- s SUERE me, off my re- moved, to Ticer's mooth my hair t ruffled that wa It T wouldn't wo noticing aken up h that to notice t1 How could she tragically. “All the Kath- atd wonderfully Lu 50 frames your 100 much. She'll in wondering 1f anq has fallen in ldve she won't have time ia romantic with yon rooms 1elp 117 1 asked rtieres off the up Drat her. to change her it's awful What did & atherine want dis- said he Hal prot Katie ¢ immon vou. Good tace | ry about | be | hey back | he it here's | 'l follow NEW BRITAI FABLEN ON HEALTH SET UP A HEALTH MARGIN silly old man to his other day. dropped near Chicago the gotten or did not know that thers reed of & health margin. ¢ a youn girl he attempted | AD _ enlightened business man i A ; knows that a safety margin is es- [# boxing bout and a foot rase. and |niial in any business to meet sud- | his heart stopped beating. den stress in finances. Banks al- The Incident was glven wide pub- ways carry a reserve to nicet a sud- Heity the peculiar condi- den and unexpected demand entering into the story. Hunian bodies, like businesses, Deaths from similar causcs are must have a margin to make not uncommon, however. Nature sate when an unusual stress comes heavy toll in “eath from | Whe wonmen aroumd B0 years |of vigorous excreisc think they possess the |result is the same 1 strength of youth. Hthere is sufficient nen and wonen have for- | offer resistance, th To pl because exacts a men and who still is ~death, unless health margin to l | | | | . \ Drugged 4R Withered Hy name applied to Vork this puzzle verage 1 44 4 t card 40 48 4% snds and f Matching grou 5 Money paid To love exceedin Defendant's answ for prisoner's e's nest To To ¢ pronoun weld with wander Graided declaim nois Witticism Wanted Corded rloth Tn annoy Honse nf To break th Rive Conjunction biv r nymph Mythica e Goy Bottom of n a st COT-O0TS = | | ——— oronr ; | The Water-Sorite | TOMORROW Aiherion Letter from sally slie Prescott Gossin’s Corner al Pencil Bloe Youtl}ful ————eeee) PLAN TO RUN AWAY 1ated Edi-| life | er this stress is in the form | disease, the | | oy | plots. | Honeybun, | | custeq, DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, AUGUST 8, 1925. Je RED RA MYSTERY 4 wm HEADON HILL am BEGIN HERE TODAY fainuel Honeybun, aliay S8amuel Jessick, believing that Sir as the younger Honeybun. I also| {dentified the man in charge of his| Francis | car at the garage as Wilmot, who whrop had wronged his daughter, [ till a day or two before had worked after years of brooding conspires|for Mr. Symes of Long Paston with his son to murder Sir Francis.| Manor. I was now a firm believer in| Lathrop's daughter, Margaret, 5| the rain gauge clew.” cngoged to Sir Guy Lathrop, and| “with your advantages 1 the Honeybuns attempt to have him | have heen the same,” convictad of the murder. bled. Wilmot, a chauffeur, called Mon-| Kilyne bowed in courteous agree- shonld Roake rum-| Face, learna of. the crime and | jeng. Leging a serles of hlackmailing | Tni REARHCEHo kIR IR R o BANCACATEN Ot Bls was of supreme interest,”” he pro- cecded, "With the name Jessick to work from I encountered no great difficultfes, 1 learned that Sir I'ran- cis, long before he came into the| title, was infatuated with a music- hall ginger of that name, and that he marrled her and had a son — probably the owner of the liftle I'ranc Wilmot, under arrest and hand- escapes. Ho s recaptured | while attempting to force the elder Honeybun to file through the| shackles. Confronted with the evi-| dence unearthed by Klyne, Samucl| Honeybun has related the plot ch led t o A | which led to the murder ot Sir| o aon horse, Mother and son both Francis. He asks Klyne whether he | died within a few years of the mar- creste 3 s interested in details about the | o AR ST aled by zeaRrain. [ Prancts from his family and ev AOW GO ON WITH THE STORY TR \ one clse. The Jessic bellevi Kiyne shook his head. “No, thank ¢ | % that there had been no marria vou, Mr. Jessick.” ha replied. Tl oy (angrance agalnst the heart- have got the hang of it, I think. | N R | himself occasionally | be | | | low?" pursued Roake | virtual prisoner 1 pre- | 000 > > 0> 0 R m oM 2| >0 0Ci—HI>MX N >0 10, Z || THT Harvey & Lewis Co. »5% West Main Street New Britain, Conn. OPTICTANS BETTER PHOTO WORK | thought “You knew that sooner or later | 1°"% #fUcer, &8 they deemed him, you would fall under suspleion. You |4t S5 IE SLener: TRAR BS IO that by finding the | bl "red | : tled down hereabouts as Mr. Sam- rain’ and immediately re iimmedia yireportng "\ ucl Honevbun, sn as to seize any 10 polics authorities, you would eon- o iy S opportunity for gratifying his re- fear from them, thereby establish-! ** %" ing your innocence. il Sir __Francls “And when you learned the Mr. | MArried Miss Margaret Ronko belleved that the blood had | ™29 not a bachelor, b nothing to do with the murder, you | | bribed the Reverend Larkin to have the performanca repeated in his 3 | in gauge, and again in the gauge ; | . Stampage. You hoped that Wi would prote to Koake that his theory was right, and the blood was placed by praetical jokers.” Mr. Honeybun sighed in assent. Roake cleared his throat. Though he had fallen info line with his “up- start” competitor, he had to assert and the tima hen &ir eventually mother he a widower. | for it had come “You are not oblized to answer, hut if you do whatever you say m used against you,” b pro- nounced the ancient police wheeze, “Sir Francis Lathrop was killed in the car, T presume?” i “That is so. Halt way between the Grangs and this house.” “Bearing in mind the warning T have given you and that T am taking notes, who struck the actual Just T should have done it it T had had the strength, but — T had not," the old man avolded positive accu- sation of hiz dead son. “Handsomely spoken said pocketing his note- Remembering the promise pledged to Monkey Face's victim, he added: “T shall not arrest you tonight. T must confer with my su- periors at the Yard as to the pre- rcice charge to be brought. You can at home, but a local con- will he on duty at your bed- D the inspector. boe cleep stable room door ‘Qleep” God zroaned t bell was that?" afraid that it was the front “What “Iam door.” The question was put by Sir Guy | he Ry THOR . A Pricone When yvou with Whate'er came along sld long the pnny sat. Danny He feel to un It wus a b and stopy board on which 1lmost squeuled his hair begine vight along his plekerel, which Kr is lind of fish. and Danny knew that that pickerel ulg made no trouble at all swallowing him whole, omchow the thaught being by that fish with its great mouth full of sharp teeth was cver than the thought of ldy Fox or Old Mink, or Reds« On a Raft anger have falls cling fast —Danny Meadoy as 10 cape to hope. out ning Lack. conlil stand *That's that," Mou sald Danny Meadow tehey Biilly Mink disa along the farther slon of the iiling Pool. Danny hud had the narrowest of narrow Billy Mink had swum the old board on which sitting. He had passed so elose that he almost fouched the end of that old board, and use Danny hadn't moved he h This was the third Danny had had since Smiling Pool, but he narrow capes t was over he didn't thought, of escupes, right past Danny was caught 50 much worss Man Coyc dn't narrow escape he reached the was €0 used 10 " that it another heen seen, now give it “There thin, all my may Danny. when you come to think of is & very good of is that ti 1o to think of have happened; 1 nreed e to think of thing: at N 1ime it ooking at | matters Just cerne now Danny wae chiefiy with getting to shore back ho The picce of heard on whieh he siting raft for It caught con and so we on the Green Meadow made a the the end Smiling Pool. From it to the was quite a distance for sueh a small fellow as Danny Meadow Mon. However, he felt quite equal to th swim. He wasn't at all afrald of ! | cl dre £ Baye Danny looked through zs all th T right where 1 am” said to I 1£. “Yes I'll stay where 1, am. T wouldn't trust myself in the water a half a second with that W Whatever to the Smiling First it was Mr, it was Longlegs was Billy Mink; sh. 1 wonder t with an ap- fte for Meadow Mause. Why fs it t a fellow doeen't know when he \n well off? Here T am prioner on th e 1 wasn't zatis- fied at home." T. W. Burgess) n Danny rielies at ose at hand ceen & ipper of e o pick shore tail th worse b s Probably anse | s a new hal Danny seen a big at hand. Just looks him little chilly, cemed thought, it er heto v the wait imself, the way is clear, rushes over towar hore sajd | sure th won't take me a few minutes,” nst | Danny ms air to make 1t far. 1 it out right long to swim that to make sure that that Billy Mink is way I can't think of any one that I But just same | a minute, There nothing like heing sure So Danuy waited. Ingide of a min ute he w glad, oh =0 glad, that had waited. He was just about to plunge in when he saw a little movement in the water _between him and the shore. Danny kept still and watched, Presently he made out a long, rather slim shape in the water. Tt moved slowly towards the raft on which Danny was sitting. 1t | mst aronnd Afe. N the Now dig T come aver here Pool for, anyway? nee the | Rlacksnake; then wait is t & Heron; then it is this big who'll com= along ne to stay (Copyright, 1825, 1 The next étory Grows Tncomfortable,” BY SISTER MARY Breakfast — Chilled melon real, thin cream, soft cooked eggs, graham toast, milk, coffee, Luncheon ~— Baked celery and | With the exception of the huckle. berry ple there are no dishes sug- gested in the menus not suitable for a child of four Baked Celery and Rice ce rice, lettuce sandwiches, peach cus- tard, milk, tea. Dinner — Salisbury steak, baked bananas, creamed potatoes, buttere Two cups diced celery, 1-2 cup ice, 2 cups bolling water, 1 tea- spoon salt, 2 fablespoons butter, 3 tablespoons grated cheese. | dimiy-lit | work | found hakancmer Margaret, whe had un 1o the priest's hole to ses the fugitive nothing night Lathrop; by at more But midnight, hardiy his cousin wanted for the It was now very — past -— and the lovers ve that the police household at such ke inquiries down and see, in fact beld coutd would hour merely to m “I had betre ret added stepped out to the land- and after the movabl deseended the stairs into the dis on ing closing panel nall in time to witness the admission by the gasping Jevons of Inspector Roake and Mr. Adrian Klyne “It is all right, Miss TLathrop," Roake reassured the shrinking girl on the bottom step of the grand stafrcase, “1 neither in sor- row nor in anger, but with a very admiration for the gallant played in this in- Kiyne and 1 want rest, and to let Your father's come sincere have friend mind nose you My part quiry. tn el your Sir Guy ain, nurderer is dead, which is as good | as saying that the murderer wasi't Sir Guy.” When. a minutes later. young baronet entered the ltoake stood np and made stiff little bow be facetious library, him & Sir Guy,” he tried to “You will be glad to ear it you. '"Twas them Honeybuns, aiter all. The young one is dead, and the old boy is as good as in custody at his own Dy wasn't Jove, that's deuced smart of y ex-suspect addressed the Scotland Yard officer, though his vink was 4 1 at Kiyne. "What- r did nant to murder poor le ¥rank for? I don't think that ven acquainted with old “It talls to me to explain that,” said Klyne. "It the toy horse that stand on that clock that gave me the idea of looking the early lifs of Sir ourse, Inspector Hoake because 1 had of borrowing it be- the 80 he the same facilities. prior J 1o that lucky Inspiration 1 stgns park wall of having been the spot where the There was the dis- chelin tire on the rear of vellow paint cen impressed of the rain T learned at the that a yellow car had he on the night of the murder. I set to to trace it was v in Francs never saw the toy Iiber cams on scene, the outside of the motor car was fonnd and / by story been eeen at 1 ran it in Brendan that it o ground at a garage Kensington, and belonged to a city merchant named James Jessick. 1 paid him a visit and identified him was tendered | the | backed | Honeybun homse | “YOUR FATHER'S MURDERER | | IS DEAD!" | | “I established these facts from a| | photograph which 1 found in this| | very room, and I later verified them | by “personal research at Putney, | | where Sir Irancis resided during| }the perfod of his first marriage. As usual in my experience, there was |a gossipy old maid neighbor to fill| in all the blanks about Mr. and Mrs | Holloway and their infant son. ‘Hol- | loway' was the name under which ¥r is concealed his identity during his brief residence at Put- ney. sir | The past being satistactorily ac- | counted for, T tackled this end of | the job, finding & much harder nut to orack. My difficulty arose from the intervention of one who ought to huve Kknown better, the everend Mr. Larkin, Reclor of Cheverel. This gentleman was bribed by old Honeybun to mystify the police and | the public by procuring repetitions of the ruin gauge mysiery. He en- listed the aid of his brother-in-1 {a retired London surgeon living at | Ruxton in Suftolk, and between th duplicity and cupidity of tliese two worthles 1 very nearly misired Stampuge, the brother-in-law, went to the length of writing Larkin to have me done in by Wilmot, and| but for my rescue by an unexpected | ally the would have pulled it off “That ally was the Rector's| daughter, Miss Adela Larkin, to! whom 1 owe not only my life but| success in this care, Poor girl, she nearly paid for it with her own Iife. But as she has made me the happiest of men by promising to be | my wife I must not glorify her as | she deserves.” | A thousand congratulations Kiyne," said Margaret. “I have known for some time that 1 had misjudged Adela and 1 decply re- gret it. You have won a charming mate who will be & real partner to my Mr. are right growled Roake is cut out for a private sleuth Sir Guy atoned for the ill-natured praise by coming forward and Miss La “That dame | quits | huckleberry ple, string beans, jelliad cabbage salad bran rolle, milk, Wash rice and put in top of double boiler with boiling water and salt. Cover and cook over boiling water until water is absorbed. Cook celery in boiling water to prevent burning until tender, If the water {8 not all cooked away do not drain but let cook, uncovered until as dry as possible. Add rice, cheese and butter and mix well. Turn into a { well-buttered baking dish and baks |16 minutes in a moderately hot oven. Serve from baking dish. ‘ (Copyright, 1925, NEA Service, coffee. Btewed prunes or apple cauce should be served to children nnder six years of age in place of the breakfast melon, Pearl Rings Smart Two rings, one with a natural and the other with a tinted or black pearl are worn on the same finger | by smartly dressed women. Tn Porcelain Blue A popular dance frock is of creps | fn porcelain blue with a cape which | hangs to the waistline in the back. | | Bound with Orandie | Attractive linen frocks have scal- ‘m,.q edges bound with white ore | gandie or pique. | Callouses | Quick, safe, sure relief from | painful callouses on the feet. } At drug and shoe stores Dr Scholl’s Forieon | Zino-pads M & Many a young couple right with what is left, ooler Wives And cooler kitchens this way QUICK QUAKER cooks in 3 to 5 minutes No hot kitchen, no muss, no bother LAVORY and delicious . . . the sum- mer breakfast your appetite calls for and your health demands, cooked in 3 to 5 minutes! warmly shaking Kiyne's hand 1t only remains fo that elder Jessick did not share the fate | overtook the murderer of his n due cc Wilmot was con- | victed of the murd sick and of Roake's assistant. E ett, explatl crimes on t fiold. Rut the devis ¢ the red n ruse was stricken with paraly «is and n the oung posted Roake kept vIgil outside his bedroom door The firm of Adrian Klyne & Co. exceedir s of James Jes- his died on the constable, | prosper: only t to know wh e privilege of a append=d The kitchen stays cool. And so do yom. No frying, no stewing, no morning’s fuss and trouble. Just get Quick Quaker at your grocer's. It's a new kind of Quaker Oats that’s made to order for women who seek easier ways in housekeeping. All that rare Quaker flavor is there. All the richness that made Quaker Oats famous, Cooks faster, that's the only dif- ference. to the brass plate on the office door | THFE. END pyright, 1925, NEA Bervics, Inc.)

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