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A Wife’s Confessional Adele Garrison's New Phase of REVELATIONS OF A WIFE S18IIIIEEIIEERESLRIIIIITINITTININILLL Aresend that hot Where ¢ you were able to get Lrought that girl! Dicky, Discovering the Counterfeit Money, Is Worrled It is an unusual experience for me to be chiding Lilllan and prod ding her out of nervous weakness and inefficlency in time of stress is always the leads us al! any calamity, heartening us by wonderful courage and competesn But she has driven herself eo pit) lessly in her battle with life that any attack of {liness weakens her body and nerves to an alarmingy degree. My crude attempts bolstering her courage W the hnowledge that was not herself since her nt breakdown, But the cmbarrass- | woman ment of playing the unusual role of [ quictly to his insistenc mentor to her, combined with my | into bed aching throat muecles to make my “What ecan 1 utterance halting and ineffective, [ and then before I could answer, he and as 1 finished n what was al-|spied the upturned valise and the most a spasm of choking, I felt that |array of bMa scattered on the floor T had staged but a sorry perform-|as I'a Powell had left them. ance indeed. “Agonizing elephants, what's; It served its at?" he exclalmed Toudly. | poor as it was. Lillian put her|“Money?" hands upon my arms and pulled | T pointed to the door, for T found herself up from her kneeling posi- | that my effort of speaking to Lilllan tion by Katherine's bedside, had hurt my throat cruel nk you, Ma U “Katie mustn't see—or V| quietly, and there w whispered tude, with no trace o #Right-0!** he dashed to the door, volee, “I'll shut and locked it, then stooped to game again, I'm the floor and picked up the bills, his | made yon talk with 1 and set. such a condition. Now T'm going | cd gravely to turn the tables. There is noth- a fortune, ing here that Mother Graham and 1| been involy cannot do for Katherine, and you need taking care of pretty ly yourself.” “Give Her to Me." “That's the first sensible thing T've heard anybody say,” Dicky in- terrupted with masculine, unreason- ing irritability. ve her to mic, | Lil. I'll take her away and take care of her, that is,"—conscientious- Iy—"if vou don’t need me here.” Never needed anybody less,” Lil- lMan returned promptly, and then Mother Graham struck in with (i brugquencss which marks the eff clent domestic woman's reaction to | h the helplessness of men in fllness, “I'or goodness sake, Richard, don't stand there gabbing and clut- terlng up the room, Get out of there and take Margaret with you, unless | 's something we can do for her. ls there, Margaret? 1 haven about you because | Drat | hand, and drew of the room. all about you, you come back to selze unobtrus Mother's forgotten my out who aom n and_ get through much Katherine re up working your fool of your- pretty carly as has, b and yet, you head c with no thought elf, as usual." “What Does This Mean?" cre t in L ecolding in which 1 re T knows, and s born of distinetly | his ery tted get she was a tenderness eled 1 rec subr that get you?" he asked, = purpose, however, | that she eald | hear,” al i-| ncor in her gum up the beast to have your throat in g 5 aven not. That 1ge as bills represent irl must have bank robbery.” “Look at them vhispered. He looked “Phoney T noddec 1 the t under bove T held up “Put them back fir ing to smile weakly. ard.” “Oh! I'll scold you all right” h but with a grin “Or rather, Il haul old | She's the one ed in a | I I more closely,” at me instead leepened stormed canopy wo ] L starry protesting har " T said try- “Scold me af the coals. for this thing. enjoy it, won't you, and when you're avrested on the char aving counterfeit money in ession and hauled Into cour (Copyright, 1925, by Newspaper ! rvice, Inc. responsible so will worrie ) Letiey Prom John Alden Prescott to | t sydney Carton—Continued. what sald | girl,” YOU | e cons: ‘em pnt 1 §tim to stand for young womar daughter. “If wat the life out of you with fury. jerfon saw the girl stepped to cr and put her arms aron or ave “You'lll h o his 5 insane W .00k A She over . ndin | car an- I'll put you out of thi done it 1 this ral vord her “Yon'il beci nd v kind t home | matte rl ot do n nothir | g You s taking s over twenty out of her v for | with ine you ke 1 my i alking hypo woman, son dri you ar rm This is ers Mrs, something no ing woman, let alone a 1dle by Mr . can nis n ne said vasting your ing “your your woman jaughter in this positio You'll | ¢ 1 sible away and 1 her d went port! Bhe ABSOLUTE RELIEF FROM INDIGESTIOK Shoepherd's P —_— It wor this 10 8 2, Born. . To open u door . Bottom . Slender; a1 38, Ughting | 4 41 . To rub ont . To employ. . Dagger. L/ he doesn't NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, OCTOBER CROSSWORD PUZZLE y&i know a t many short s you should le to woflk puzzle quickly. Time yourself ce how long it takes yon zrea Feminine pronoun be Since Harmonizes as co To mention. Devout. Natural Horizontal hind repr Almost Chaire, « donkey notiem Promised art of Huntsmen. Ebb and flow Winter carr Lion (constellation) Child. Devoured i.imb. 1.adis Mis To subsist, To gt a pri use promise le, arrange 1sehood Very dark wood Pertaining to the part of a cloth niogt poles room Malecat. A puddle, Composition of two performers. | Morindin dye ke expectorate Opposite of Variant of ecent, Accepte A work To depart, Prescribed Rim Myself. "o oner of aweather " ¢ of good he havior, Fourth note in scale Trunk of@uman hou Expeeted. Pertaining Considers To genjus place Kelike Call for help To piece ont eight (pl.) Ethical Tron Cooking ntensil Moisture Ringe Lair. Trregular Womargin Vertical Canjunction 1 Beverage regret To portion out Mariner, Vapor on plants from adly COLOR CLT-0UTS ~—= Join the voic Joan of Arc ‘ == ___.__11! 1l RO as merely spoken liv deliveranee o to bring isten plain sh ol Iy showed her t wvas filled L modest | governor o conll e fivst step. How coul th Hov experi amon i s ant Vauer 1 with no more had venture a rms? Witl whom sl audi i1 gained unel an ed at peasant’s her the youn I 1stis an BOVErNO i < Tor Faening own with Baked Potatoes 1k imon Yon 1O THE GOVERNOR know that Resinol w ould clear skin her I on &0, 1925 0N B Too Much E e “Iourth snapplly, as floor next sald Hedge | he produced a fresh | set of blanks. | Horace led the way. At the head | the stairs e turned sharply to | the left and walked along a short hallway that ended at a closed | The butler lald his hand on | BEGIN HERE p W. Brooke, hardware facturer and widower, arr n of of TODAY: h man- nges to expert taks old while for a perlod wes fown with- his grown Billy and eficiency his ho he | of out months. telling Iren, the city He ¢ Nis plans to Constance, of door, the knob and paused. Most. other side curious sounds came from of the door. There was a rapid, steady, and hollow beating nolse, for one thing, with an accelerating tempo, There was operations, He is In the li- | a nolse of stamping fect, at irregu- brary, turned into an office, |lar Intervals, mingled with soft The ldren are discussing this thuds < slx or seven stampa to | altogether strange situation thrust ' each thud, There was a screeching, | upon them 24 hours previous. They | wheezing of nolse, accompan- | re trying to decide which of them all inform Hedge that their | monthly allowance is due | NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY | ippose you try first,” sug- | Constance to her brother. | | | “You've got to do something once | n a dear. | che smiled maliciously, she could | «tild afford to. Billy and Alice were | broke, bhut nearly three dollurs | | stood hetw: humiliation. Whey verftable bul- ! wark A caught | rooke chitdren “We will first Brooke's suite ! ! was saying. “Then partments to the fob. Brooke mansion over owner's sleeping and proceeds to systema- . the the the ivee ks anarters tize now sort | | i | { | it gested while en her and loomed big, a of ricl the hall three sound in o6 of the inventory Mr. feney man will take the this floor in other an "y 1 After sir’ said sub- Horace wiul minute the door looked out. ar t e single file, tiptoed and wp the stairs that floor Hedge went a ki with that could in the relie voice Al Con- Then an softly 1 and ele | {ithree B nfo the [ led M o the 0N e out | inven- and cer- Horace, who, jve no sinse jtself, none | mitted to bheing done manner, the quick, missing noth- explanation good cenkus he an case ¢ amazed peres | whatever work o ntly himself that it was i worliman-like of He required no Like a n all speed that w g He briskly from one | room to another. inexorably record- |ing their contents on large printed | bla To lorace it Hedga it The third floor and. but there ildren in hy the He ie guide. put do ing. from | man aid it with saw s an passed The missile strock in the middle of his forchead, was foolishness: loly crusade. followed the re no Brooke Horace knew efficicney wa to by as ied st there The a metallic rattling. Horace turned the was a boisterous langh hutler stepped respectfnlly aside, and the efticiency man stood the threshold of a lar van the full width Then knoh was a si but man & on {hat e room of ME STORES 2 teter Tries (o Make a 10 look, He began by looking stumps and dead trees ‘for holes. He found several, but he had no way of climbing up to these holw. and looking fn them. You know Peter cannot climb. So he no | wiser than hefore. d of | “It's of no nse for Mouse, fo In s or stumps’ to call on him | his is fhen say that those places 1 certainly can't that minute | find 1. But if it isn’t up in a tree disappear in np 1 ought to be able to But is | 1 in all ¢ Jurgess rely i many Old Mot \Who trusts Will get full & eves surprise, ier Nature. was 1t real inddy v 18 most d-backed Rabbit and home me fo look muttered home is up in one up Pete his home vas going indacty ont of ] at he did to in One front L he £ very rig ter's Ve Peter 1 inatant I Instant did s, sir, so. | just rious then on ingui sorts o round hig Peter the ¢ nlaces. he would und h for A new made began ground. little to look He poked into all Every now and find a little hole in a hole just ahout big Ruddy to go in, That idea into Peter's hiead lis mind right then that Ruddy's home was ground, and that that way he couldn’t find it. So then decided watch those liitle holes that he found. He had a feel- ing that Ruddy would put his head 1 van me ished nanner ' there in im, and isapprared, tr 1o nose next You se of his Ruddy then the eno put He and n he : K with that lit- it was an easy 1o disappear up ist slipped in then on fhe hara Ty 1 \mongst ty still. @ min- minute call the Hald 1o “Wait make that nd | efly still, although | Of cou 15 chuckliy e | this it staring cagerly and R way right nim and right ont all to every way. | T 1ddy with wanted Peter | to laugh hezan inally to hunt hack uld abont T Onee he | dyv =0 close pulled the, nothing presen gave 1id of up hunting for to hunt etarted for fom Pe talks people “Tt tuddy's home When ter s Y el? he mse There Peter {n this| said far frol far. T look around his home | where he could watch one He | little holes. After a while nothing )f.| having happened, he grew tired. Then he moved to another hole and did the same thing. So in | turn he watched all those little it Poter gis- | holes. But despite all his watching 4idn't know where | he saw nothihg of Ruddy. than once he had| “Well” sald Peter at last, T sitting on a stump. | guess I'll wait until some other day that Ruddy | to call on Rudd thought of | at's too bad Mouse and | little voice love to have you made | call on me today.” Conld §t| Peter whirled around. There ne thing? | Ruddy the Red-backed Mouse uddy's nearest [an old stump. He was sitting sel- | cating a beechnut (Copyright, 1925, by T. W. Burgeess) Ruddy | — 4" Tt was right then Peter| The next story: “Where Ruddy's realized that he didnit know where | Home Really Was" e L vt H(aoy many like AL Potor,| So then Peter began to look \snt 1 on the ground one with snc Ahle lifficu in t belleve at 1 el out to So Peter s 1 ray by do all himse e his T any smart hi 1 can | find Tt w wered that he look. More Ruddy of course Pe Wood said a squeaky on Mouse, and nearly | in the| as that {end of the cord | teft i n set Hedge fairly | of those | lttle | sat | fficiency Rath Cy house, First in his vision, and to occupy 1t for a period of several interested second came Constance Brooke 8he stood beneath a large wooden disk, suspended horizontally from the celling. From the center ®f the disk hung a cord, and from the dangled a bag. enugly Inflated with air, Ier hands were doubled Into fists and the fsts were smashing rhythmically -= right, left, against) the swaying Every time a fist drove the bag agalnst the wooden digk, the bag rebounded only to meet another bag. | fist Iying craftily in wait. Constance | was breathing sharply; her ecyes were glistening with excitement, For an Instant the eficlency man's gaze roved. Alice, garbed much as her sister, with the ex- ception that she wore loose knick- erbockers instead of a skirt, was just clearing a bar that was bal- anced some four feet from the floor. Rilly was pulling viciously at of pulley )ts attached ther wall. attered ahout several pleces wel S ~of idle apparatus. a sharp snap and of the bag aguinst its wooden barricr ceased abruptly. F. Hedge turned his head, just n time globular obfect approachi- W appalling spead Thers time to dodge, The missil struek him i the middle of s forehead, hownded back with pqual’ suddenncss, and rolled the floor fo a far corner. A broken cord wi Constance Brook stond rlgid for ing heavily and the his fe and here was ing to see a ing him was no fairly along instant, breath- wit an staring fency man chead N a retarning hew shrick of laug an “I'll " from eyes at 1 rubbing cred way There Al from Billy The bag-puncher frowned, but said Uniling oft her gloves them aside. marched rapidly to the door. brushed past Hedge and appeared. Hor: noted a glint triumph in her eyes The eflicieney across the mnasium and trieved the bag from the ¢ it Jay. He examined onsly, mnoting the broken bit cord that was attached to it and nodding his head in eyident ap- proval. As he turned the leather |ephere in his hands he rved "{hat it had been marked upon, ap- parently with chalk. The {areription palf obliteratea ny busy still ble. 1t safd: H, HEDGE. E2E. “It seems that edeh one has her own way of producing an tmpres- sion,” muscd the efiiciency man. “I'I admit I'm impressed!” PR made Alice do it, after furtive fnepeetion Alice; e bit her never lip, woril tossed of strojled T corn.. it curl- man ol was yet They din- A of leather | right, | toll o the | of fists, | the | H. Hedge began to write flgures on a pad. “And this" added Alice, the day that all the money la due.” Hed continued to figure for & moment, “] find from your statement,” he sald, looking up, “that your father distributes to you three chlldren gratultles amounting in all to $6,« 000 annually.” “Really, so much as that?" ask= ed Alice deprecatingly. “But you gee, 1U's only a little at a tine, And father has sgeh a lot more Billy, wha had_strolled close to | Conetance, leaned over and sald in | a growling whispe “(loarse work. “Hush, Billy, Wait." #1 suppose,” (he efficlency man observed, “that this Is a request for e to continue a distribution of the | gratuities.” he's flummuxed." | Next Chap Nedge dictates terms, Your Health How to Keep It— Causes of [liness | ’ I B i DR HUGH & General Iublic Health shouid yon The persistence abduction the foot symplom CUMMING United States Servie Surge weak atti- out- char- all | How care | fovt? tude ward weak (e Certa Shar strudned st hehind instep o in or turning is the one comnion of vi ) n n arehes i the yuptoms n the pain the ap- wl overs vither the (] nie- not or in strain or Injury the and the ligaments, It comes on long before any deforunity 1 1§ noticed, This pain is often falsely at- to rheumatism, 1t is usi- accompantod fatigue and a abit stand or u when is off 1f such sppuar w0 to A to have the fect treated buy ready-made arch consult ortho- oot or | or calves of the 1hi and s K. The pain is foot ix Nat nsed, bt evn in e, times in Dhecauss improperiy cansed the everted crnsed ot by musele is tribnted ally iminished 1o walk., It he person iy feet. not aympto. do sho store and o not bt on. peddie surg Any orthopedist will definitely the fret il one and whether He will and spe cxamination - by a thorough determine i or not. arch supports shos he following for efrengthening preseribed: Rise as high toes and, while on the heels outward and the | side of the foot upward. then {1y come down again. Repeat 30 times, | Bluce the feet with the tors tnn- ~d n and stand on the outer hor- | der of the foot. Then rise as high as possible on the toes and slowly | sink down. turning the foot so that | the weight vests on the outer bor- | der, Repeat 20 or 30 times, When sitting down, it is a good habit to cross the fect (not the logs). This brings the feet fo rest is a are we eribe sial rei 3 1 " the 0 the turn fnner slow- 20 or a3 possible on the toes, i ney man revealed no sears as|on their outer border. Bicycling im of his encounter with the g he displayed no dis- result punching 1 crnible sign of a grudge scemed as propitions as the need was dire and ur Alice played thar she . and presently looked mag: and murmurced up from soft- i her Iy: “There’s an here, Mr. Hedge, ful” “Sinful,” about must article It pover Lo aw- e afirmed, “Were you ever poor:” 17 Indeed, yes” He Ler sharply, gt you're “Not—exactly." “Uany” said Al 1. Hedge made with his eyes. “1 dont own | added Alice, | And Connie nine.” She continu “But- Pay yrinkling “Why included the Constance serving the | tinued Kkeen of | missed a word. “1 didw't know you emarked Hedge, indeed! Once a month not poor now an plaintively. exclamation solitury huek,” docs 13lly. Iwo-seventy- 1 cither has only impressively, then 1ia day day his Is pay cchoed H forelicad, * our Resture other fir artistic neither, Brookes. _studiousiy while Billy ramble, as ob- o his howe pay Yes, you kno “That's interesting, I'm [ Who pays you?" ather, of course Wiho What for?"” “Why -— why, children, of cou Allce stared him | then ventured a sidelong Constance. That young lady's wag turned away. for being Mr, Brooke's children?” Allowance, 1 suppose you'd call it,”” answered Alice with a hesitant smile. “Oh!" said the efficiency man, his bewilderment vanishing. “You | mean that each of you recelves a stated gratuity from your father.” illy glared blac at Hed | who falled lo perceive the expree- jon. Constance, her head still averted, was frowning. “He never calls it that,” faltered ’\l angry, vyet mindful of the | end rather than the means, “He— | ne just pays 1 | “And what | for it?” “We? Why, we just love him!" Constance cleared her throat os- tentatiously. It was a signal. She ‘le not favor Alice's flank attack: just for I being at uneasily ance at t do you do in return t ehe had counseled a frontal as. eault, boldly and swiftly executed. Besldew Alice seemed about to commit the family to an impossible | policy. Ly said the efficiency man And how much does he pay you?" “Billy and Connie, two hundred | dollars a month. Me, one hundred. I'm 1o be ralsed at my next birth-' |4 The time ver, | sure. else head | salaries zood exercise for the feet. Skating Is Bad for the Feet SKating, however, is very bad for weak feet. In most cases the cor- rect arch support, the proper shoes and suitable exercises will glve re- licf and sometimes ffect a cure, ien, if the feet are rot abused, | the h supports may, in many sce, be dispensed with, here are certain common ditions of the feet which some- times can be remedied hy home treatment, Cracks or abrasions be- tween the toes should be carefully nsed with soap and wafer, dried with absorbent cotton ana covered with zine ointment. Au- cotton ould be uscd to raw surfaces apart, Excessive sweating of the may be treated by cleansing the feet with soap and water and then them for 15 minutes in a cent gsolution of formalde- | I | also o | con- ent & keep the fect soaking 1 hyde per and moved by the but they should one, Insista ting corns shonld callonse: 1ocal orns can bhe pplications, prevented. Tt advice on cut- and callouses, care be taken to have the knife | or scissors sterile and to paint the surl with tincture of iodine, both before and after trimming. 1f blood is accidently drawn, an anti- [ septic dressing &hould be applied. The pain of inflamed hunfons can be relieved by rest and hot ap- plications, but the bunions them- equire attention of an \opedic surgeon. How to Correct Deformities of re- | i against ce Ives or Deformed Feet the feet, such as outward turned big toe and over- {1apping, can, in many cases, be successfully treated by the varlous appliances which can be bought in ttores selling orthopsdjc sup- Pl For Instance, a eplint inner side there can chased which {s attached to the of the foot with strap and to which is strapped big toc. This splint keeps the in proper position. 1t can be worn at night, and, if persisted in, will sometimes straighten the ab- normality, Small pads placed, between be pur- the toe | of cotton the toes at night keep them apart. If large, omy shoes are worn, the splint 1 the cotton may be left in place Jduring the day. Many sysfematic diseages first manifest themselves by symptoms in the feet. Gout is one of these diseases and shows itself in the foot by inflam- ! mation of the joint of the big toe. Diabetes is another of these dis. eases and it may first manifest it- selt by ulceration or gangrene of the toes. Arterio-sclerosis and narrowing ' of the caliber of the arteries often first manifest themselves by ciren- 'mnry disturbances in the feet, | srene. may be i which reeult in ulceration and gan- The Sash Retums The sash is of increasing impor | tance, and is frequently the point a which the trimming and color of & frock is concentrated. { | |