New Britain Herald Newspaper, October 12, 1925, Page 4

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Adele Garrison's New Phase of REVELATIONS OF A WIFE Two Difffcult Sttuations Rob Madg of Sleep At the sight of the charred | of notepaper bearing the “Dear Dicky-bird" in the bandwriting of Ldith Falr found myself recolling from it as 1f it hud been a poisonous thrust into my hand “Where did yo 1 Junior 1 asked faintly, pulled myse together at the sig ished look upon the three tronting 1 | 1008t tell yo but I interrupted her. “Oh, yes, 1 remember. You said he was-digging in the dump swhere Jim burps the papers from the wastebasket. 1 was so upset for the moment by the thought that he might be cut by glass that I did not understand.” It was an atrociously lame excusc and glad indeed was 1 that no more experlenced eyes than those of (1 three confronting me w insect Katie began, wx::::m::mmm:xaxwmx:fi the little demon of jealousy er until 1 had them under in to present world, s only a mask. who has been « similar experience knows plece of charred notepaper, z salutation to my t followed. yself, as 1 sulutation 80 old a frien bly headed a4 most innocuou . I could iter of that fronted me e and blaz! &t she not forget tha salutation onc from my remem- ark 1 had but which showed irfax had knowledge of 1sband's affairs which had been from me. Sleepless Nights Fill In the first word, which Is it takes you to finish this puazle. tan easy one, and then ses how long | 8 Wearled 9 All right 10 Joined John W. Brooke, manufacturer of | machine tools, drills, pumps, saws, my and flles, and other matters of har ware, sat up straight in an uncom promising chair and wafched the | at that instant vanished through its | Saved ite cost of installation in a mysterious electric juggernaut. The juggernaut went its way along a narrow steel track, which turned corners not only | served Mr. Brooke, staring in fascl- ' (or one. Saves time, money and sor- sidewlse but up and down. The track skirted the wall for the most | part, but occasionally took a short | Jaunt across the celling. maneuvers of a small There was Presldent Sherwood of the Econo- | whose establishment knew none of EfMclency Corporation, | its kind. *“Baves you something, 1 Limited, glanced up from his desk | suppose?” and smiled at the juggernaut, which | “\wouldn't have it it it didn't, hole like a startled prairie dog. ffice boy,” sald Mr. Sherwood “New-fangled business, ¢h?” ob- year and a halt, and is now eeveral hundred dollars ahead of the gaimne. Never took a vacation yet, or asked nation. at the hole in the wall. “Oh, certainly." “Bet 1s cost you a lot of money.” “One thousand, three hundred row." Mr. Brooke, | president of a corporation, nodded | there was no use of arguilng the matter. / “How much is my bill?"” be ask- N ed D replied Mr, “Here it'1s.” “Ouch!" ‘Ten per cent of what we've saved you on a year's operating cost. Is that much?' N N that way, T suppose.” ou admit the saving, don't N of the hardware magnale, who was also the | | his head solemnly, indlcating that | “Twenty-two thousand dollars,” | Sherwood promptly. | “No-0; not when you look at It| pounjed A fist on the desk, an rogistered en- thusiasm. “Basy!" he cried. hay!" Mr. Brooke “Hasy us u wuft smiled bentgnantly |and sympathetically. r do It he asked. difference oes ™ asked Mr, Brook« But—" “And yet you say you know every- thing about anything." interrupted Brooke in a tone of pity. Next Chapteri—Brooke is Brousht to Terms, Your i-l-;;]tb How to Keep It— Causes of lliness ) By DR, HUGH &, CUMMI Surgeon General, United Public Health Service Many prepared cereals are nu tritious and convenient foods, Ihey not only reach the consumer's table in a clean state, byt they also usually have the additional advan- tage of thorough cooking. Prepurel cereals are labor savers and time savers, but they are mnot money savers. In the end you pay for the States S XN | you?" “Got to."” additional convenience, sometimes eeveral hundred per cent, Everybody in the hardware fac- You should realize also that tory over which John W, Brooke |some of the health preparations presided had to admit it. The things [ which are over concenfrated und | 22 Seed sac 4 G g 2 1% that the Economy and FEfficiency |are designed to supply high food Corporation did to that establish- | values should be used sparingly | ment were amazing. The task had A great many people like the | been one of several months in per- | faste of malt. Some malt prepara- | formance, and it had been thorough | tions represented to be pre-digeste in results. ed foods are not really pre-digest- It did not always appear to he|ed. A sufficlent amount of malt | important—but it was, For instance, | present under favorable conditions HORIZONTAL | 11 Entrance 12 Attending | 18 Silly 18 Swift 20 Citric fruit my face. With a little feeling of t 1 have been far better for humiliation at my 12 ky had appeared at the | 1 mo print trol, I erumpled up in my h t 1 » within a few hours of | 7 Abdomen scraps of paper Katie had taken v discovery. My suspicious anger |13 Shaping machine trom Junior's pocket, stepped back {would have flamed then and blazed | 14 wajkeq into Dicky's room and Vn<~vr|IV; L :1; |v:~)1;’ mu,y Vm,w. vh‘o d ;\nr»: on, | 15 Tumult {nto his waste basket. Then I held \with no sign of my husband nor any o | 23: osd out my hand to Junior. word from him, I tried in vain fo i:?;::;‘emy oy [i22 s:::_::d o “Come now, for the free myself from a sudlen brooding Boslsl st Ak peed,” I sald soberly. |which not only made me most miser- e e n ) e L h Marlon looked at me pleadingly. |able, but robbed me of sleep. I had T dl§Slow. durydences “Won't you let me bathe him? Fa(hc;- ¥ ;’; g;:&g;flzjfl |arranged with Katherine to share a she coaxed. “You look so tlred, [watch over Ianny Powell that we o Auntfs Madge. L 85 Lariat bath you {might determihe whether she would Both my common sense and my fnelination fmpelled me to surrender. I kpew that I was in too savage a mood to attempt the discipline whic my little 1ad surely needed for dis- nbeying my repeated injumction to keep away grom the where broken gluss was to . and Marion. frequently had bathed and dressed him. “Go With Marion” “Thank you, eweetheart” T said making a sorry attempt to smile at her. “That is very good of you. Go with Marion, ever she tells you." My small son put his hand con- fdingly in that ot Lillan's winsome yougg daughter and dres a reliafed breath. »*“Gee!” he confided to hcr Anthusi- astically os they - turned away. “What do you ‘hink of that? T don't get any spanking! Say, sm rlad you bet your boots Katie expioded into the gl with which she invariably grec ny Jaughable utterance ot Junior's, and 1 hastily retreated into Dicky's room again. There, with the docr closed A |the hours of my watch, but that duri | duty. Walks through water |1ines etch, unior, and do what- |signs of res | peacefully. | previous nocturnal |there was no sign that § To dress Third note in the e&cals 0 Finished . Edge Claw 6 Portion of a school year have another attack of real or pre- tended somnambulism,and I found that not only was I awake during it was impossible to get to sleep » hours when I was off Chanted Head of a monastery Colors That Katherine was undergoing’a | similar experience to mine, but witth inother reason, I deduced from the d in her face and the look | 42 To cry loudly in her eyes which comes only from Painter sleeplessness. Luckily for us, how- Cowheaded godiess ever, FFanny Powell displayed no Lubricated lessness, but, to all ap- Aged slept the nights through To blossom T Kafherine had prevailed Pald publieity upon Lillian to change rooms with Drone bee me under the pretense of more sun- Verb of permiss shine for her invalid condition. T Negative p left the door unlocked, thus Matching dishes wceess to the closet in which Worldly reted the bag which we were Kiundled Enve wae fhe ob] girl's Snare 1 praw lin OUr| g5 Destined or days and days Wealthy Salary Civilizes To deform Superficlal knowledge VERTICAL tive of {he trap was sot vould ever be sprung. (Copyright 19 Tetter from Leslie Prescott to the | Little Marquise, Care of the seeret Drawer—Continued Although 1 did not understand vd's smile, Little Marquise, from 1 w 1 had answered th one quite as eni al for 1 gpddenly realized that 1 was not moved by unything that ack or 8vd had told me. T did not i about an kind of sc eould descend upon Jack's more or less sinful heag, All T sensed at that moment was that 1 was sleepy, dreadfully gleepy, and 1 wanted to go to bed. 1 was a little horrified at this sensatbon for 1 thought been the right Little 1 gry, angry as 1 occasions Jar cares to t looking: at it s on the outsid 1 was p¢ Jack all 1 could in whateveg anyone ¢ 1 knew that ns f monally concerned and the only ®ish 1 had i world wans that 1 1 get into bed and arquise, as one col willly vas out of all the to my room a slecp of us o ray scemed to have “What sk asked “I {hink tn to go to all 1d fust go up Fortification Stain Upright shaft Neuter pronoun 5 Outer covering of an oyster 6 Hither 7 Had a foot eovering Mre. Atherton | said, “Will you let me take * COLOR CUT-QUTS e all night,” T in- but T d better do that, crs outeide lights in the lon't go think conference ng room and If 1 they probably would accident out, call a all, and get carly in the ou W be | don't mind 1 thing ym- from immie Con s out of my vou carly from | Mar- TOMORBOW — Tetter Lesliec Preseott 1o the Little Menus o | | AELTES, KING OF COLCHIS ! the beginning of the | The Golden Fleece || e | | From the | with many dangers. But the figure- | to tell them the help of her wisdom perils and his, the land of the | yy to court “what are . i ‘ he story of “The Golden a | &' If vou have been saving| New Sleeve 37 Opposite of lost | 58 Male title of respect | 42 Bragged Act of pleading Blow | 47 Kind of metric toot | 43 To suffocate | 50 Amount scttled on wite at mar- riuge 2 To obstruct To allude 56 Female title 59 Marbles ueed as shooters 61 To throw 2 Rents 3 Catalogue To stroke Hghtis To soak flax 9 To depart 71 Mother these out the sto So Joson set out in his galley | and nine of the bravest with for youths of all Greece start they which Argus caped many reached Co Golden Fleec s soon as King Ae e sum “Do you kn eyelng Juson fulfill hefore tlie Golden (Hore getting 16 sliting is gold, his black velvet.) (Copyright, 102 BAYER ASPIRIN | PROVED SAFE Take withoqt Fear as Told paper dolls vou have a whole set with which to act nch of the Speaking Oak had inherited the wisdom Speaking Oak and was able always | just what to do, With | ! Taking more than yon may | fas the look of selfish greed. { above ! Bear still Coon; so was Unc' Billy Possum. | They were still stuffing themselves very the conditions you must possassion o afrald that it they left any for the { would b them. So they kept right on eating. { And Peter ssociated Editors, | 21 OVCrh | id1y “I have an idea T can name one thing you can’t reform” on= peint at which it disappeared from the the wall room, through a hole in The juggernaut had a habit of stopping at desks, dropping papers on them, picking other papers up, | | dropping the where else, and !about its busine silent and ‘preei mechanically uncann: other papers some- eternally going | in an awesomely manner, ‘Tt was “What the blazes John W. Brooke, " demand when the E. and E. folks discovered that one of My, Brooke's files, in the | process of making, traveled 823 vards, passed through 12 machines, | turned 78 corners, and consumed a | total of 63 minutes to make the | trip, the ysald. “All wrong.” When | they got through with that file it | was a domesticated instrument. Tt led but 322 yards, went through i 7 machines, turned 27 corners, and did the whole journey in 31 minutes and 22 seconds. The file | was just as good In every way as | {ts slow.moving predecessor, for it | 8014 for just as much money and it cost a cent and a half less. John W. Brooke mhde an appalling number of “iles. What Egand E. did to the file 1t did to lmost everything In the and twenty-six dollars and forty- sight cents” eaid Mr. Sherwood | briskly, as he blotted a paper and | placed it in the jaws of a steel con- | e trivance, from which presently the |Brooke establishment except th officeboy ‘removed it. “But for main- | ofice boys; an Mr. Brooks was now tenanco—well, hetween elght and |Seriously contemplating their down- nine cents a day. Does the work of |fall, s he watched the silent elec three ordinary boys; never gets sick; | trie youth remove a handful of 1 never sasses the stenograpler, hever | ters from the desk of tlie brurnette g0os to a ball game; never went to | With the pink cheeks and convey (£ gran dmother's funerall {{hem fo the degk of Mr. anr\\ood‘: “Some boy.” »d Mr. Brooke, | with a directness and singleness o SIeiboniee Rl RIS, | purpose that merited loud acclaim. A SQUEARY GOOD-BYE By Thornton W. Burgess need | —Old Mother Nature. Greedy folks er know when | they've hod enough to eat. Gentle | stress Moon came creeping up tree tops and when she looked down through the beech | trees she saw great lLig Buster there; so was Bobby | with beechnuts. You sce they were | next day the Squirrel cousins on hand and get most of hehind bough, Rabbit, eitting nging hemlock continued to watch them. By and by Peter noticed Flitter the Bat circling this way and that disappearing in the Black ows and then reappearing in the moonlight, He was trying to catcl his dinner in the air. Peter) watched him. Suddenly Flitter | swooped right close over Peter, and | in the squeakiest little volce im-| aginable, he cried, “Good by, Pe-| ter!” | Peter s=at up so euddenly he] bumped his head on the branch under which he was sitting. Then | he hopped right out in the open where he could see betfer. Flitter was darting this way and that way, | ¢ for Peter fo| and hy Flitter but was too far a speak to him. By swooped down wery close to Peter. “What do you mean by good by! demanded Peter, “Just that — good by!" squeaked Flitter, and darted up high above| (T think T'Il be starting along to- | 8ce you next summer.” | was talking to e Mr, Brooke had been a -doubter | when the Economy and Efficlency | folks, inspecting his imposing fac- tory, nonchalantly offered to -tave him over two hundred thousand dol- lars a year. In fact, he had laughed | scorntally. e himeelf had builded the John |\, Brooke Hardware and Machine | Tool company, and He thought he | ought to know something about his infant industry. But when E. and | . got through Brooke admitted | that he was wrong. His baby hati afiments of which he never dream- ed. The diagnosls made it appear to be a very sick child. He was wor- | ried about it, “Walt a minute! Wall a minute!” | "y ‘i gnxjety to see his indus- cired Peter, but he soon found he | (a1 offspring cured of its troubles pty air. He Saw|gnq (pereby assured of a green old Flitter dart up oter the tree tops|age Mr. Brooke permitted the E. and disappear toward the South, |, 5, business surgeons to operate and though he waited and waited | anq medicaté, Somehow they man- be saw nothing more of him. At|agud to do It without bringing last Peter decided fthat thatgapoyt a strike, a fire, or an earth- squeaky good by had been a genu-| quake, to the end that John W. ine good by and (hat he had seen | grooke made more hardware and funny little Flitter actually start on | more money, without reducing. the his Jong journey to the land of | yost to the consumer one red cent. winler sunshine and warmth. —which would have been impossible Peter hurrled over to witere 10w, because mobody ever saw a Buster Bear was raking over the leaves looking for heechnuts. I know who It was!” crled Peter ex- | Brooke, citedly, night. Good by, Peter Rabbit. I'll converted,” admitted « Mr. as he examined the DilL { “I've hit the trail. fil have a check “You know was?" | gent this afternoon, I didn't know growledi Buster | you knew so much about the hatd- he animal who spends the cold { ware busiess.” weather down in the land of the Hardwar: echoed President Sunny South of whom Welcome | gherwood. “Man dear, we won't Robin spoke,” sald Peter. “It was| confine oursclves to hardware. It's our business to know all there is to know about any’ business, or if we don't know it to find it out. We haven't failed yet. I'll guarantee to | take any old-fashioned business like yours, put it on its feet, and in- crease its earning capacity in a | year.” Mr. Brooke winced at the descrip- tion of his lusty Infant, but made no comment. “Why, do you reallze what we saved the International people on lead pencilg? We saved 'em two- | fifths of a cent per gross in manu- facturing cost!" “Is that all?” ventured Mr. whom who “Where are you going?” demanded Peter the next time Flitter in a rash moment, Mr. Sherwood's amaze- | ment was blazoned on his,face. “AN!" He choked for an instant. “Why, do you know what two fifths will, of course, change starch into more soluble forms. If you have a good digestive an- paratus, you do not need to haie vyour food pre-digested. If you do not have a good digestive appura- tus you had better consult a rop- utable physician. Your digestive system hae a malt factory of its own. Fer at least’ half an hour after you e the saliva produced by the saliv glands of your body is busy chang- ing starch into maltose and dex- trose, Very few people overcoolk ce- reals. In the praparation of homs cooked cereals for the tablc {hor- {ough cooking is essentiai, Equally important fs You should at your cerva and chew them thoroughly 1t may be well to mix something which requires chewing with your cereals in order that you may he brought to chew your breakfast food properly. You should know alea that ce- reals are like meats in one respect, they are acid forming substances Bake Macaroni Thoroughly Macaroni is another bread-stnff high In popular favor. Macaroni fo he digestible should be baked thor- oughly until it loses its toughnces. Batter cakes made of cornmeal, wheat flour, buckwheat, hominy, or oatmeal when they are light and well cooked are as easily digested and quite as nourlshing as bread. The danger in batter cakes lics in overeating. They do not always agres with young children, Cake, when it does not an excessive amount of sugar, epices, citron, or chocolate, is a good food. The fuel value of ca may be even greater than the principal fish which you have served on your table. Herein lies the danger of ecake cating. Cake 1s usually eaten after a full mea), after the stomach fis already loaded. A doughnut {8 extremely rich in calorles, Many people have a habit of eating doughnuts between meale, or eat several at a meal. If you are doing this vou are taking on much rich food of high caloric value and undoubtedly throwing your ration out of balance. Ple, llke cake, has a high fuel value and contains large quantitics of sugar and fats. A plece of pie is about equal in fuel value to two ordinary servings of roast heef. Thoroughly baked ples with browned crusts, baky and digesti- ble, are as deliclous as they are rare, If you have such pies on your table treat them with respect, be temperate in the quantity you use. OTHERS » WANT IT for croapy children he- causeNqin y.clears clewning e slowl contain alprming etogp whe « erkeeps '} of GHA-M& ADN'S COUGH R DY always on hand in the home. Benefits children and grown persons. No Narcotics. Sold everywhere. | FLAPPER FANNY says b \ ' v e "Sayer i PaCkage of a cent a gross means (o them?' Mr. Brooke shook his head and| | awaited the worst with fortitnde. Merely $68,682.45 a year!"” said Mr. Sherwood, without even gmnC~‘ ing at a memorandum. “I'll take your word for it,” mur- NI Paiay “Where are yon going?” ‘1fm.'ln'lr‘ ed Peter the next time Flitter was Flitter the Bat." near enough. “Huh!” grunted Buster. “Do you | “I'm going away for the winter.”” call that critter an animal?” replied Flitter and once more was' “What else would you call him?” gone. demanded Peter, This time he was o long gonc| Buster rubbed his head thought- | mured Mr, Brooke humbly. Then in among the Black Shadows that fully. *“Well, T suppose you're| he brightcned and there was a glim- Peter was afraid that he really had | righ said he. “T suppose he 1is|mer In his eye, “But T have an idea | 1eft. But sudenly that equeaky lit-|an anfmal, but i's hard work to|T can name one thing you can't e- tle voice sounded almost fn one of | think &o. Well, anyway, he is the | form.” Peter's long ears. “I'm going down only one that doesn't stay the win- | ame 1| | to the Sunny South, Peter Rabbit. ter through. For myself, I'd rather| The hardware king glanced at { Don't you wish you were in my Sleep than take any such 1ong | the E. and E. potentate with a sus- place?” journey as that squeaky flit-about | piclon of malicious delight and | Then it was that it came to Pe- | must make." | paueed in a stantalizing way. | { ter who It was that Welcome Rob-| Peter thought thia- over for a| “Give it a name!" demanded Mr. | bin had been thinking of! Flitter moment. “Well" said he, “you fel- Sherwood impatiently. the Bat was the only animal that lows who sleep all winter miss a| *Did you ever try to reform the make that long|lot. On the whole I think T would | business of running® an American for you know that Flitter|rather go a bit hungry now and|household?” ns and pre-[is tt only mammal that truly|then than to sleep all winter or to| Tha guestion was simple, direct, | twenty. | fles. “Flitter,” cried Peter as Flit-| make the long journey to the Sun-|and apparently innocent; yet it had ter came near, “are you really,ny South. I'm satisfied with things|the effect of plunging the E. and E. | Lumbago |tru ing away down to the Sunny | as they are.” president into profound thought; at | Headache | Sonth, where the birds go?” And when you come to think of |first he was plainly astonished: Rheumatism Not as far as some of thenf !t that was a very sensible way of | then he became studious, preoccu- the r L ain, Pain £o," replied Flitter. “but far looking at it pled, and puzzled by turns. s fo Bayer” package | enough to be comfortable and get (Copyright. 1925, by And then,.after a full minute of ar part is full ‘contatr y lirections. Handy | plenty to eat. T realize it is time T Burgess) silence, his face lighted with an ex- @ g ) while the e E T wrishing and makes for be- hoxes of 1we tablets cost few | was starting. 1t's hard work to e presston of bravado and® defiance.| T know a fellow who won't buy a i comingness. It is particularly love- cents. D sts also sell bottles of pick up enough to eat thess cool The next Iy in velvet or satin. 24 te 104 nights, Yes, sir, It certainly & So!ldea"” was near enough “Raver Cross ets you are ot | cOuld possibly Bayer Aspirin | journey, over ] } DACLE prompily relieved end healed by | iy a fow applications of Spanish Rice cooked teaspoon pepper Meit butter or bacon fat in fry- ing pan. Add onlon peeled and cut r a T W | story: “Peter Has an| He leaned forward In his chair, shot difiner, but he will drive you out te a glance of challenge lnte the eyes a fork in the road and speom. M _ , {

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