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'W BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1925, out beyond Los Altos now.,” she|my oil deal with me," Dan {nforme Goldle's face brightened, *“Why, [ter . . . but that's all" y that's where I'm going!" she cried. May eald nothing, only shrugged “T didnt know Fishback was filming | her expressive shoulders, _— y B the ‘Rose of Spain!’ A director 1| ‘“How do you happen to bs going Adele Garrison’s New Phase of ' u used 1o work for gave me g little |0 see her? You sald you were go- part in it . . . it's Fishback's | ing to spend the winter in Kurope," REVELATIONS OF A WIFE 2 : Mo, Muh? They sy he hoe hia| DAn asked then. "Aud f sou have finger In every plel |all the money you're supposed to As i she was filled with a sud- | have, how does it happen you're " DEATDICE DUDTON @ 4en need for action, Goldie took oyt | around begging Lemuel Fishback : her lipstick and began to color her | for a job in the movies? Ton must About Dramatic Climax back till late tonight. Goo'by. t'omu‘ e T (T e e s pn 8 olantrg PATHO IR For a second, 1 did not under. |210n&!" This peremptorily to Steve. May Seymour, whose husband |their sweethearts. Today knights of| “Fishback's Pim, huh!" she re.|lips curled a little, “Your friend, BEal | Maee's masaing Thon 1| WAUAEAG & Waisnin to me Aven Killed himeelt because of her love | (¢ Whisky flask and the Ford car | peated, with e slow smile of Gla.| Mr. Waterbury, eaw to It that f 88 he shoved HBteve toward the| honked their horna loudly to call [ conda on he rface. “And he gave|havent a cent left in the world Tealized tit he wished me to un- | door. 1 did not see them go. Spent affair with another man. returns to | thejr “cutles” forth to drive to the|you the lead part of it? T don’t|As vou probably knosw derstand he would turn “stool|And trembling, 1 fell back in the her home town after a vear's ab- | nearest cabaret. think!" “Why do you say that T probably plgeon” If his own satety was guar. | rickety old chalr Lee Chow had sence. She sells her property, and| Love. thess days, thought May,| She looked defantly at May know about 117" Dan usked, “I've anteed, and would give up Informa- | provided for me and covered my with her tiny fortune in cash, sets|Was a farce. . “Serena §mith,'" she said, naming| told vou T don’t hear from Water« tion concerning the mail robbery in | face with my hands. 1 was sure| out to find and marry a man with| Then a sudden memory flashed|a famous star. "has the part. She'd [ bury.” which 1 had discovered he was in-|that I had effectively banished the money . across her mind. Hadn't she, her-|tear Fishback's halr out by the| “And I'm felling vou that 1 know volved. T voluntarily stepped back-| menace of Steve from my mother- | At Atlantic Clty she meets Her. | ¢¢lf, made a farce of love when she | roota If he starred anyone but her|vou do!™ May seid sharply Are wais withial feeling ot loathinginslawie lite,fror T balsvedithe manij bert Waterbury and Dan Sprague|had promlsed to marry Herbert|in this Spanish ehow! 1t you | lotta told me that you and he are that 1 did not try to diaguiss. |to be too terror-stricken ever to through a divorcee, Carlotta Frol- | Waterbury because she thought he{think you've got the inside track | both crooks that you werk fo- “Honor among thieves!” 1 had |risk communicating with us again, | king. Both men pay suit to May, | vas rich? . . . Hadn't she, her-| with Fishback, dearie, 1ot me tell | gother to flecen people! . . And heard the time worn platitude despite his protests fo the contrary. | greatly to the distress of Carlotta|self, heen only looking for a cheap!von. vow're standing on the wrong | anyway. I know, myself. that vou're often, and belleved it to be a virtue | But my consclence, smothered by| who has long been in love with | little thrill when she had let young | foof!" crooked without her telling me!™ to which criminals clung. Yet this | my terror of disgrace to my little Dan. She and May become great|Jack Darnley kiss her under the| And she tossed her lipstick Into Her puplls dilated with anger and man appeared willing to betray his|son, and by Lilllan's taclt encour-| friends, however, and Carlotta asks | stars of Atlantle City? . . . Of|the bag and snapped it shut with | her eyes met Dan Sprague’s. withe BORIRAGH At eLdiRin SRINAGE TR S RS 0T May to spend the winter with her | course, she had! 28 much spirlt s i she had heen |0ut & aign of toar “Better take it." he sald with a |having its way with me — 1 told| in her California home. S0, Who was she to sit in judg-|snapping May's head off. Shel T know you're crooked about sardonic grin. “Then when you've [myself with savage self-scoring. | May finds Dan much more at-|ment on Dan Sprague? | glared, nodding, for a minute or| money herauge you're not, on the cliecked up on me and found out | when the thing was now out of my tractive than Waterbury. But she| He was only doing what men had two and then pushed past Dan | squars with women." she said slow- that I'm real blood kin to your ) hands decides that Waterbury fs the rich | done since the beginning of time|and left him and May facing each!l¥, with fce in her voice, “T've husband, you'll know where to send | But I had no time, T reminded husband she s looking for. So she . . kissed and ridden away. Tt | other. never known a man who was for me so that we can have a fam-| myself sternly, for maudiin intro- sets her cap for him. He finally [was In the nature of men to do| Dan laughed. “What did you {ell| crooked with women who was on \ly reunlo! | spection. I must get back to the proposes and May accepts him.|that, careless brutes that they|her a lie Iike that for. May?" he|the level with men! “You may mall it to me later, if| house and by going to Lilllan's When he offers to invest her money | were! asked virtuously ‘or Instance, you onught te vou wish,” I gald firmly. “I do not|room, apprise her, without telling| «Under the ——*" s one of Rnd for her ghe turns it all over to him. O L) May tossed her liead marry Carlotta. But vou don't. Tne wish to take it now.” her anything definite, that my part!,arg Kipling's famous works, T Musical instrumenta Almost immediately he disappears At that instant Dan raised his| “Well, hback offered me what | stead vou ask me to marry yvou be ear tips of the colored | of the affair was finished. Then T|missing word is found in 26 vern-| 3. Perlods of time and the money with him! eves and saw her watching him.|he sald was the hest part in his|cause you think 1 have a lot of in the wondpile are|knew she would arise from the| ) TLiterary folk ought to discover| 9. Yals Penniless, May sells her furs and | Without anv show of shame or sur-| film . the part of a mediacval | money, But in the meantime, you emerging,” Bteve gibed. “You want | felgned nap which she had taken it without looking up the definition. Accomplish diamonds to a railroad ticket | prise, he flashed his fvery smile at|duchess.” she sald defensively.|can't keep your hands off any *a ba able to look Innocent and an-|in order fo keep herself in fgno- HORIZONTAL 2, Put in tuna to California, where Carlotta lives. | her, quite as if it were the most|“And vou know. yourself, Dan, that| weman who happens to ba around nounce that you never heard tell of | rance of my activities, and prepare e . Someone else (pl) On the way she stops off in her | ordinary thing in the world to beithe star isn't the whole show an this little movie actress, for ine a nobody like me.” herself to meet the operative whom Reptaining o the fain . Recuperate home town to see her friends, Dick | eaught Tlissing a blondined movs: | more on the screen. But let'a]stance! . . . There's nothing Consclously or unconsclously, he | Allen Drake had wired to come to & Tou (biblical) 12, To rush in on Gregory and Glorla, his wife, Thers | actress whom you had just met. |not talk about that. T want fo ask | stralght or honest about von!" had plerced the bull's eye of truth |the farm for the purpose of appre- Elioknsh The first garden | she meets a widower, Ulysses For-| Then he shoved Goldie gently out | you something, and I want you to| “Well” Dan commented drily with his verbal arrow. Instead of | hending Steve. Later, I knew that|13. That which holds the car By some means zan, who falls in love with her at|of his arms, said something to her| answer me fairly." when she had finished, “Well replving, T looked at my wrist|1 must prepare some plausible [ 15. Fur-bearing animals Indian trees | first sight and asks her to marry | out of the corner of his mouth, and| She drew a long breath and | well well. we're going to have watch. story for my mother-in-law's ears, Ghost tizen ot Rome him. But May refuses him in spite | came toward May, smiling his en-|faced him a pleasant winter, living in the “T told you before that there fs|but for that T needed Lilllan's as- Heeay Covering of his wealth . . . for the reason | gaging smils as he cama, “Dan, don't yen think vou ought | same town together, you and 1. 1 no time to waste,” 1 said impatient- | sistance, and it was something| Anclent Perslan viceroys To tear |that she likes him too well 1| “Were you looking for me?" he|to marry Cariotta? . . . Here you can see that!” Iy, “When vou think it safe, von may | which could be postponed to an-| 20, Hasten Bhoivaar marry him without love! asked cheerfully, as he straighten-|are, going to see her again, going (To Be Continued) write me your address.” other day. Large birds Urgant On the train bound for Los Al-|ed his rumpled necktie to make her think you're rr'n\" 1 took a bill from my purse and | Carefully reconnoltering to sea| 24 Approaches Areas away from the ocean | tes she meets Dan Sprague. Not| “Why, yes, T was" May answer-| about her and you're break- | Meat As A Flavoring held it out to the Chinese, but he|that no ons was in sight, 1 made Document Haraseed i knowing that she has lost all her|ed, and her I-should-worry smile|ing her heart.” | When vou have not enough meat backed away as If it were a weapon | my way back to the farmhouse, T} Spanish gentleman % Thin dhir EDiR S o R s Bl | vt dlant AL “But T'm not golng to see her.|to make a dish of flself use 1 as & aimed fn his direction. passed my mother-in-law's room 28 Tree Between two hills May is interested in the proposal of | I was looking for you to tell| I'm going to ee a man who's in en | flavoring “Les Chow no need boss lady's|where she and Katie were keeping| 2% To wait on nstn Mezilaiinterssied lnsthepropent of | WAL was i lookinefion son liojtell) he sald, and then as if by|each other from spying upon me, . Vibratory motion " Bolshevists Backl (ol kiyaiheriatnart {akainen | attart ot marriass: arell mant onil a pre-arranged signal he and his|and went to Lilllan's room. T en-| 32 Appointed P A e OGS S L L S o brawny assoclate ranged themselves| tered without knocking, finding her, | 33. To give forth Teah s PRt jandiane Jiaion Dan Lo nand Tha deckded Rdon nangison) upon either side of Steve. a8 1 expected, in a pretended slum- | 34. Entreated H “No more time, come quick,” he|ber, Keeplng up the fietion, T beng |35 Accident . A game a would-he film actress. May dis- | bad, fsn't it?” She laughed alond, d it b b earin i To vex covers the pair locked in each|a little devil of malice in her eyce. adjured. Then to me, he gpoke|over her and shook her slightly, Sma aring anima Whare lmbar comes (rom meaningly. emiling at her when she opened Labor organization i Lee Chow's Alibl | her eyes, - Beverage skill “Remember, Les Chow know| *“It you want to he dressed in|4f. Commerce 58, Male sheep nothing. He go by Missee Ticer, sell | time to see that operafive when he Killed some tea, this man say he want go| comes, you'd bLefter get up.” T ad- {25 To sing ME to Riverhead, pay good money. I|monished. “He should be here in- |50, To coast (past tense) 5 say yes, here money.” He fished a|side of an hour.” . \n'mnf.vmlfl license plate ragged ten dollar bill from his| She stretched her arms lazily One who thinks pocket and held it up. Missee Ticer | then glanced up at me meaningly. 1. Pounds (abbr.) she hear man ask me, so she !Mnki “Did you get all your errands Closer everything all right. Lee Chow have | done?" she asked 57. An evergreen shrub = . To speak to Attempted To put to proof To appear VERTICAT Article of clothing Fixtends J Sraves |he dies i Letter From Mrs, Joseph (mws‘l \'“‘] S . To run again (past tense) Hamilton to Leslie Prescott IRL IS AL 3 food {mean it, my de vou treated him My dear daughter: [rather cavalierly whea you fell in Dlo|0]=zim e XEo—rBx<Hl> >z >0 (= [ wet all the time makes me feel shivery, and there fan't anything to do but eat and eleep, “Huh,” cried a squeaky little Tou naught may ever hope te gain | voice, “you ought to be thankful By grumbling at the falling rain. that you can do that, Peter Rab- —O011 Mother Nature, bit. If you can do that I don't sce that you have anything to grumble Tt was raining. It had been rain-| gpout.” ing all day. It had rained all the| Peter looked np, for that squeaky day before and the day before {hat.| voice had come frem above his Of course it didn't rain every min- [ head. Flitter, the Bat swooped low ute of all that time but there |iUSt Over him, Peter opsned his 2 * | eyes very wide in surprise. “What PO T > S[>|olm Mo —MZ00 TR0 00| 3> |0 oo El> OOl ™) mOZ>XIo>IRCD> > OmMOJR G000 o2 E L L S| S U Tl U R —[>=] M S s sl SizimjoimoRlm) >imjo o] — | | | here was a short paragraph in love with Jack, and it very effectu- Creamed Soups 3 PRI wasn't & minute when it wasn't|are you doing et this time of the London paper this morning to |ally spoiled l\m_.\ life L}lrml think Y H l h o ( nranlwl soups :m tr)vlu heavy for 4 3 e v \ cither raining or promising to rain.| day?” he cried as Flitter swooped the effect that someone had been | 1¢ ‘]‘““:‘h' Sl e L our ea t i i s nfm:e..rgr.‘fr‘;‘xlfl:: / / B b3 7 Peter Rabbit didn't like it. No, sir, | down close to him again Lreaking into your house again. Uiy s rop you was more of an obses- How to Keep It [or a less nourishing fish, g / ! he didn't ilke it. JU had kept him| “T:ying lo get something to eat” am very much worried. I do wish | g o 150 LcGon e Emardaa s pii— I NG EINT J Z i - at home In the dear old Briarpatch, | Squeaked Flitter, FHiAL othertmiin ‘cauliibefienpturadl | n i SIS, RS HIATEES (Causes of Tliness R He didn't like &0 much wetness, But T thought you never hunted I'm afraid something is going to | . h could make her happy by zligees of chiffon velvet in pur- \ g ? { Much of the time he spent in ,,A‘I‘:,v "73.‘;‘\15!'\'. cried ‘lxc;nr.' :‘ didn't T would even be 11018 €OM- | joiye o and e fhousht he would | By DR. HUGH S. CUMMING [ple, Chinese blue and deep lavender ! : ' hole In the ground In the middlo of | Know that you could hunt by gox: fortable if 1 thought he had the old |, 1% i B8 N Sur General, United St are now being displayed, They are Y X the dear old Briarpatch. It had|lght. T thought light hurt your rial 3 ) Evevont Ceneral Bt n el o splayed, They a g oo, / once been the home of Johnny pearls. | But T eannot eamplain of Karl embroider te N elf f . ol a & Boge tar! alwaye wely neatlysnos e sianial COBISRRle hatl Public Health Seryice emirciieredlniwh st oriiades i / Chuck’s grandfather. In there Peter| Flitter gave a squeaky little side himself when anything fs sald || \00 oCiha o co heon better fo a i i ‘ ( Al e Eslenuers - leas ey S LR s about them, for he scems to feel that | : Nowtie ialnfimadefino irealfd{r=|ifonithe Slast fihuee Hdsys ywonidnle he 18 to blame for the whole thing—— 1|, ro i hoie vounger daughter, ference to Peter, excepting that it hurt anybody's eyes” he cried. not only your having the pearls, but | 5o o1 e the other night that |13 L¥0-fold; first, to relieve the suf- " Y 1‘\\;\91 hl"m at h{,,,,,‘_ Pirvately little | "T've seen more light long after Alice's death. 1 was awfully €0UFY [apo e : e el s of the indigent sick and to D 'd C f' ld i ! Mrs. Peter = thqught this a good | agranh i e paper, | s g |/ 7 t . She 0 € 1 he taw this paragraph in the paper, |3 o < was raifing at you [see that they have comfortabls sur- avi opperiie \ / A hing. She hoped it would kecp on for he had been more DHHECIR e A e et R raining. It didn't begin to make as Jately than T have known him sines | : 5 ; much difference to Peter as it did Altce’s death. This news ttem, how- |y 580 s [2£900D, to prevent the spread of ds- / to some other little folk. Of course, | ever, has tent him back into melan- | p.fagul pearis have gona out of all [4% and to protect the well from | / 7/ Lisie mare acio, hho redoiced i cholla again. {our livea, T have tricd not fa he |infection ) 7/ Uf‘,lm ks S porabiblilyidiing | Up to date we have been having oo siions, hut von must arknow! 0 see that the cick have proper aiy. Stle Mco Olcer, Baiy s Turile, such a wonderful time. As you sec | that 1n the eases of both vy |care and attention it s necessary ; Grandfather Frox, Paddy the| by this letter, wa are tack In BNE- oy and Alice they have spelled |that their existence be known and ’ Beaver, Mr. and Mrs. Quack, and | land. We came back to 8lay for a [joiee™ poieciv. T hepe von win |1hat some means of finding out their & : ! a few others who delight in w ter, | couple of weeks at Betty Stokely's | . nd them: T would |needs be provided. The existencs of | A enjoyed '}vr rain. Their wat»rprn.o(i house party. You remember she was | () vou as 2 the money, [€2 a ascertained only by re- . ts]fl's :;11 dn r' hn'{m 'll;roml)n l-\h money \ acticing physicians to re- sldes, 8 water that fell from the| fore they ware marred. She mar-| o) hanpiness, | ctice ta the health department % T 5 L £ . = A | Into the Smiling Pool and the| M e GG OERER e I D et T wouldn't eare if you kissed every actress in Americal ¢ ] ‘ Laughing Brook for some of them. 7 nexed a wonderful eanntry es % lanks like ven! He,cured information concerning the | | The purpese of municipal care | = ————— woman than he was to my peor 3 | ind supervision of the tuberculons | pe——==- (QLOR CUT-QUTS treated | 4 1 1 iroundings and proper care, and, im so hadly panr Alice’s best friend, and both Allee and Karl staved with her be thers' the rear platform Then, as Dan said noth ol chu I SRNALe olnors fuhoseicoats c others' arms on the rear e said nothing, she | o o wate ; \ ving W o 01 o ha whe o I Tef¥a et {en aports romn vsicians, = N i~ - 4 s X ik Jack B¢ > “hattere: A NN heen staying with her for tho Inst |hag when vow were a Iittie girl. |0 roports from physiclans, can | NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY that vou did ask me to marry you, | o quirrel and Chatterer the ‘_.‘"‘m,/l‘y ! ten dave, and sl wan «;x o Stray fen't it { ttle Jack : ""H te " H*«:'j"‘”'.l”'” v"““lfl of | May's first impulse was to turn|about an hour ago! Just before you| untll the end of the month. 4| lakeitao myghi ikp ez an | the tuberedlonsioy ating e comne. ) ¢ and run before the shameless pair | (el for this blond who seems to be| Retty's \'Hmtr‘P =(“r : wonld a was really jtent person visit each case for tha {on the platform could look np and!the newest ‘only-woman-T-eve up and is a lovely gir She s father h a will never | purpose ! see her. loved' in your young life!” squeaked Flitte : Tt P I i, L p ALy see her. young Chuck. And €o they did not enjoy : Sdu¢aked Flitter. staying h PR ! 15 not = | A sanitarium for the care of both | But the sight of them there \ As if she divined that May was| ' g noSen oy Batween us, my r, 1 think the ey have just s or me to{the advanced and early eases should | laced In each other's arms, held | falking * about her, Goldie at this| .. : jolly round Mr. Sun has gone te Stokelys and the Carnovans would leome down and have tea, so with a | ! nro = { er have T seen such weath- S X 3 K 2 , |be provi Tt should admit both | her to the spot in staring astonish- moment came swaying into the cari . TR e Bararki h ”*; bed behind the Purpls Hills than like to make a m tween Mary [kiss fo the hova and love to John !|payv patients and free patients. Dis- )" grum eter dn the middle | tnere fs now, and it is only the ent. { stood at Dan's elbow, looking | MR il Teur] Whos N ere nieinsette e : |pensaries shauld also be maintained | 5 Why. they never had even | ?a:dm e S oy ermioon, 25 he poked IS middl of the afterncon. Of course, They haye many-tastos inicomm dnst Mother. in charge of competent pald physi- | seen sach other until two hours| nocence. Then she calmly Mt a|qor ,Cjo OF 1h° fer old Briarpateh | 1 ought to be asleep. It s my time 1 do wish he would fall in Jove T ; A Service, Inc.) elans. Periodical physical examina- ago! Yet here they stood now. as| cigaret, and smoked it, blowing the| for 2 100K around. It had stopped| for glecping. People should always raining, but it looked as if it might | py ggleep at the proper time. 1t her, for ha has heen so unfortunate Itions for the carly detection of dis- | i R ke s ey et i LY v trils in his heart affairs. T wonld like to | Tomorrow—Clipping from Pitts- [ cico chonld be encouraged. Anihonyiandqlconatraymisbighayelismoke rominErirouged noutrlie raln again any minute. “I should | ovarvhody slept at the time fthey think O1d Moiher Nature wos try-|gnoyiq sleep it would save a lot of | | stood toget ith t an's head | » er, ¢ that have him have a great love hefore bhurgh Sun ’ Open alr sehnois for weakly chil | - ood together, with the man's h | 1 do remember, now that you - | ing to drown some of us out. Good- 18 51 % - | one. his mouth pressed down upon “But to tell the truth, it did slip trouble in this world. Yes, sir, it ) hent to the woman's straw-colored | remind me of It.” Dan snid coolly. bhreakfasts and lunches should alen | : s ness, T would like fo know what REaaE NowiT b e R iR | pets 8y mind o R ouisa e | real hot sunshine feels like. Being | 1o thot voo vad ';M,“",Z: i [ a FeReot nirse shaulatcisitiall hames The train rushed past a group of His tene was impudent, and | ling tha '.,'1 hadn a\_‘ ng to do | 3 e "v,“r"\r;x r%w‘ Mexican workmen who waved their| May's slow-gathering anger flared 1‘}]' to eat and sleep. My goodness, P 4 Sloeotek condftishe { hats and jeered at the sight of this|up suddenly. Peter Rabblt, it T could éat and [ i f | ) e surely as much the duty of petting parly. Nelther Dan noc| T hope you realize that what vou sleep T certainly wouldn't grumble, D o o s tatsatithatwell Goldle Gay so much as stirred.| do doesn't mean a thing in my life, | T can't see that you have anything b | They seemed to be deaf and blind | Dan Sprague!” she cried. “I| fo_grumble about. No, sir, I can't it 5o IS AN ENEWS FROMIHOM to everything on earth but them- | wouldn't care If you Kissed every| 'A% 3 see that You have anyfhing to lihe ik of whose existence he is| This is one day's chapter of the|selves actress in America! But what fins| y | rumble about. 4 re i the function and re- ' famous story of “David Copperfield. A spasm of disgust twisted May's| me with fury is that you can treat| 4 nz,\\,::' I,“l;",; '\M i :mm(',‘, --m,“.‘ 2 ¥ ~ AT e 1ie hic- | face 2 v | 2 slec ou wa " e jriadietion over its milk sup- | complete set of David Copperfield| horself. “They can’t possibly care 3 m sure it's my own busi- | - ; sleep Why ean't you cat and sleep?” s safe raw milk is milk | dolls at the end of this week. a rap for each other! They're just|ness if 1 chat with a young woman | f 1. ‘ account of the rain," replied o e akmerds Sand whtee making love for the sake of a cheap | for ten or fifteen minutes. . . ." | Flitter. “On account of the rain. 1 : tested herds the| One day David was called into Mr.{1ittle thrill » “Yes, and hesides, we hunted all| ) should think you'd know that.” United Sta publie health serviee Creakle's office. He often received a GRS over for vou and couldn’t find you,” y W : “But the rain doesn’t got you any | he which at some | package of goodies from Peggotty Heavens! what was the world | Goldie Gay fibbed, still with that B e n wetter than it does me,” repled fima or other were subjected fo the | 80 he hurried in excitedly, thinking| coming fo if people kept on behav- | babyish look in her eyes. “We hunt- 4t i ' {{ Peter. “T doti’t helieve my fur coat {iiberoulin test v herds | that was what it was. But no sooner| ing in this free-and-easy way? ed all over the station Where y w00 ) {| |is any more waterproof than your | ahich are periodic st ance [ had he seen the solemn face of the The petting party had already | were you?" fur coat. 1 rn\'_:rv:w.h!q because e biec (e aMD the - o| principal than he knew it was for|faken the place of honest courtship.; At that May laughed sgain | b there is too much rain, but you “hich no additions are made except | samething far different that he had|In the old days a man had “kept| “Well" she eaid with cruel sweet- may be rv:.rr that T do 't let it in- P of cows proving tive to this test. | been summoned this time. company” with a girl, had finally ness, “If it'll be any satisfaction to y ere with my weals i bread sa P ic 1 vy i stirring yorough pasteurization of milk “My dear boy.” began the prin | asked r to marry him, and then| you to know it I.\ls with i | 8 f'“ re lucky mvwn_\ L] Hmw’; drop nut cookis ty hanit 1 Mmoot | et IkfTithe: sefm: atituhorlosis cipal, “I & fo tell you that I|had kissed her to seal the bargain!| Lemuel Fishback, and he's just of- by You're lucky and don't know it. These me . anned 5 . r add to City authorities may also render | have ard this morning that your But nowadays, a man kissed a fered to star me!” : (Copyright, 1325, by T. W. Burgéss) MIXtUre. | ofactive aid in the campaign against | mother is ill. She s very danger-|girl the first time he met her, kept|{ That, of course, was not strictly ¢ == guest . st- | Mix w : be ANt |{)ia: soresdl of. {ubarculosis: By ens | oy Al right on Kissing her so long as he | true. Fishback had not ofered to o The next stors: “Why Flitter Had ed need r 1 t k Ations against the wse| David began to tremble. He|wanted to . . . and later, if he|star her In his films, but only to \ to Go Hungr: prepa ; ! \ \ well heate 0 3 y drinking cups in public | knew it even before Mr. Creakle| wanted to, he asked her to marry|give her a small part in one of WS, s, - -— tion 1s not « axt . enforcing anti-spitting | told him. “Alas,” said Mr. Creakle,| him. Maybe. |them. But May wanted to teach Variety in Your Bread “vour dear mother is dead!” Love was no longer the tender| Goldie Gay mot to try to steal a . Do not have the same kind of (This coat of Steerforth’s 1Is of{and romantic thing of which poets| man from under her nose again, so - p——— bread with cach meal. By alternat- mold . ¢ r | Pia 1 n \t o\ | dark red velvet. His hat should be| had sung . . of which lovers had | she nodded emphatically when ing white, rye, brown, whoéle-wheat, 188’ £ox. tot . 1 . BBED HAIR looks wonderful | black.) whispered eir ladies at twi- | Goldie echoed graham and other variefies of breads AR St A with the tiny tint of Golden Glint| (Copyright, 1925, Assoclated Editors,{ light in hushed gardens. ‘He's offered fo star you" A husband likes to brag about|with yéur meals at differént times parate course, | (Copyright. 1925, NEA Service, Inc.) Shampoo.—Advt. ‘ Ine.), 5 Troubadours no longer stood be- “Yes, he's on his way to locatton taking his wife to a ehow. |you will add more 26t to the dinner. Red Squirrel, and Striped Chip- munk, and Timmy the ¥lying Squirrel, and Whitefoot the Wood 5 “Trying to get something to eat,® ™" | Mousc, and Reddy Fox and Johnny Sk drer, sheuld he provided, where Timba woman ellied salads