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Adele Garrison's New Phase of REVELATIONS OF A WIFE ;mmuxmmx:mxmxmmxmxxxxxxmzmmnwmmxmxmmnmmnmx Dick Tusists Upon a Confidential Chat morning." ity in the morning noy 1o i do not and vith w time 1 cupying T returned ready ¢ Katie She and at once il up T thi He put out a protestin “And have ning yhole between spreading the oftily ets!” imed. “No, thank | hi s bedding and 1 wi but fel- de- took refuge t @ sort of ness ny own i is her liste nor. o, X ard hat girl trouble ¥ 1 “I wiil sted even his | course,” I 0 than mentioned Katie bec: Tt been | you wanted to save fered I would only which | ing to the door than | sce which ear she sopp ms W myself, of only | worse ought 1 could time W none at convinced embrace it sprang a casual g seemed unre ing roles in a ened every farce, and yet of tragedy in it. “You will pardon me i, I} moving toward joor, stopped me with an impera ture. T must ask you to pardon me in- stead,” he sald with elaborate court- “There are things which | I must talk over with you before I k to the city. I had intended h 1 did not s the time, but what 1 came have coaxed » row wve wasted it go- | ry seconds to had glued to it," retorted. Then with his hands in his pockets he began striding up and down the room, invariable performance of his he is at his wits' end for in i work, or for a plausible ation of soma unpleasant occurence, Un 1y 1 slid into an armchair quietly waiting. Suddenly d, wheeled and came tow me, stopping beside my chair glowering down at me, “Mother sald she gave you her tter from me read.” he said “Then you know something of what I am up against,” ‘I know wl | answered quie from my volce is permitting me 8004 | hig financial difficulties in so round- back | ahout u way. “Oh! for the and rest, stuff,” he down fo case lsten to what 1 b 19 rom g more whole 4 106 anythi re. The hng | ye we drama which cond to turn into ich had possibilities when an idea exp and sy, some to he vegan, 1 have told Lillian down to tell he Junior out of his over Fanny romp with him be to sleep, and have that her Southern question just now, few things to go over with if you will be 80 good as {atie to get me an carly Wt first train ment 1 ot to learn of Powe convinced Mother is out of t only a Then ask Mike and Pat ut the martyr exclaimed, “and let's get . Will you or will you s 1o say? love of trip cu So I have you, to wspaper LETTER FROM SALLY TON TO LESLIE ¥ —CONTINU ATHER- - s ISCoTT e men you thing 1y, ost with te Paula Perive like you. Y somcthing ind wo ou have—both of within you, some- arrived at som been try- | able to. you and D As 1 sayin raph, T il through that 5 Paula purifying ht how a moment, conneeted Why, you lat 1 have ing to reach and n ome 1 nla wil thing much That me un my he Maggi | strating to mc ter all T did n m ake In giving her a « \'anm You remember T took »m her Perier fires triumphant ) 1 te m for silly hope eit you or : how thi always you got of suffering > wanted 8o | Hamil | Leslie PPresec 18 e oled par n sk nts canty apppy when 1 ghow anyone gre Stimpson I s m ook in nd in i now nally iving blossoming rom You with me, now her 't know would 1 » Condon's fot im mb, ather gh devotion to e iink that 1 | and s only camoufl M 10 not &ee 1k ing his iIn; should at T in my old I'm Beor age ting happy and — Letter from Prescott, Aear TOMORROW 1t Sally Atherton to Leslie /‘\enus for a Jo mlly Graham Popovers is oaked for a when you have no 1 ror it will last your heart. LWL one (o reign day in NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, ©) WV.J.Watt and Co. BEGIN HERE TODAY t, could sec Hedge JOHN W. BROUKE, widow: hardware nate, ar weat om, “it ex firm of effi ¥ engine Wngs. It explaing why man atter an | two mont} I w s afrald dren, Const RERE LA 1 was giving them a But how could 1 you, Conni you combin: H, HEDGE, 1ed 10 1 to have You ng t saying ‘Counie,’ do to turn socret which Hedlg ring 1o t ary eply, being a trifle | amples of “Lmean the part about you nounces ind making me belleve into the oy you really liked all that effi-, Hedge BEXE few You did fool me, of ore you got through he orders Constance to was watching him hi frnat rply. | letters: On nders HORIZONTAL 1 Sprains Boat 5 Group of Child To lov To tear Mercl Work Pronoun rai skil Opposite of Affirmative Corre To ring a Name Measure Rodent Egg of To be Shootin M difficult Pronoun Nay It lative b river wation Lixhibits indigna 3 To Digit o Beer 7 Too Wiy mpt the To analyzs Portion o Behold 1in To prick 1oint Yellow of co bugle Banishing Wing part Mirks Rowing Narrow Crystaliine niry imple Hermit way ¢ i ar npass surprise displeast (flower ing ment paths klot fixedly procedure ulin 10t hing found to the ) wion to him NOw ON WI momy and you fool yourself " | ol v f 1 unwarily. fonately. " hated me, loving me.' was your | : and | GO up by I . | 9 1ty Now you say I vou?" | up other sure publicity flighticss Paid 10 Extinet 11 Mistake 12 To draw tism ratite bird we'r ot t I'm happ you lie an-! | back force red You lo not pr i lenry sank b i stared ¢ 1 Harry did “Hones his eyes, me think it ou ore you goi rig ere | Don't fo io sume, Mr, Hedge 4 my name | to littte | I think | | pre that you're mine | sume mes 1 oused he added a Connie, As from m. aded | t said be- | liow mixed a | But 1 be Butcher § Pertaining 16 10 it 8 Reverential 9 Adverbial 11 To mimic IFeminine prononn understa simult of love d od with it Last night d H. Hedge, * . (oW d the s ont n 1 Hedge ¢ Wit you, I was still an « I'm plain He and as such I'm en Yo nd “I'm sorvy if 1 s I'm vout o to a meti smell 0 b done not 5 fear s in love, And - you'll to consider.” Lad hut e such b that she un sure of it gifmit over only stop nee Lirooke 17 To 18 ol 19 Depot b To breathe id Malady Yellow or g | 38 Adored 5. 1 59 Chickenpox ‘ ancously ore, ver on ought to tur igl 1out delay bl | engincer, on me cason for continued ist feel it in | ol 1 guesy love 1o v utterly nel They N apps atehed him et hones unlike Lun slid in cagle Sea wn from the table his had . and | s | ning | not and | W, tront o 15 he eve did serious having an heart in her < no doubt that As 1l tha Connie, 1 had to, Kuppose that's have |‘“|“ She g | She g | ety We're g n listen a That's proves him It mger lay gor there clficiency stranger, why course was like to put up wi ve're mie- an had vanished. sped and turned pink, nly; aft ¢'re m in 1 know. tn't run, dear You minut love 1 iid I've 1 Doesn't ain, Tove think | me, 1 1 sted | yon must O Mz > 1> 08 annoyed | GG Gm =D Y~ m o ! — = mMOAO T = aom Hioomom - — conon \ Miles Standnsh l BATTLE ECALESE IT ;8 absoiutel heamfiess PERT teasin and he the the dr of the ¢ heref re, bef \ 1| | j will grim dolls. When t men coming with v advaneed to mect . outwardly fricndly, full of hatred. lish," 1hey said in carned yogeed The Coon That Wasn't below m point around daf and began knew that him that trec. | shiight up By Thornto Burg it moving by they were ' in return for the 10t exactly what seem. “Th offered When v Coon. “le is ont nd said onld | v from for mus- | Some things ried one of the on that branch Don't | nd shake g Kl 1 possibly way up oot him! him off and i He can't tiawa- . 1his \greed tree and the When he on which he could just a black mass out there in light from the flashlight | didn’t enter that man's t it 1 be but Coon, so he didn't look as might have, He be- that branch trying to | by Coon of is, he was Bobby (‘n()l\ he was off. But this wasn't | 'he man stood up | holding to & jumping up a sudden| lown went that| Porky, | in the tree branch in the © men 1 r rickly e He v it br work with | spears whi was ! at in | This « ind mneh im go orky Porky Prickly is © en had 1 quills droppe Prickly Porky's Bobl stepped on it in such a wa had enter didn 1 orange with rious colo med fur with ar s, con anybody rp po Make by : that t 1 it 1 iy ring ¥ velled as above and! round the trunk of | hunters down below | w what they supp yon ing from cir yells were noth- of that dog a mo- he sprang in and bit rky. Of he got those spears, | | course 1 little hurt. They were in his ton- | ks and his lips. No won- ed. He backed v as Hlaoy | Bohby ome saw the between the 1ooking down, bohbing along trees nd eryir him Like a flash th around this time Porky. from the cen minutes or a busy time and a lot amations as those 1 that hunt- while the they knew | re pulled out for the \\r‘-i | ind e s were pulled out of s master, one of the ashlight You s 11d keep work- her. Mean- had climbed disappeared. As limbed across | re branches 1 then down that tree He was safe he ndition to Bobhy Coon nter. is par the all- ong 1 the hunt another. ers callir Presently effeetiv “Buster Bear Is | stume. with excitedly xt they were gat eularly to one story: white c h- | out | am | I'm let lespair and | ar | silence ran her fingers lightly |12 | You resigned. | rn . Rurgess) | Y “Lon't dear,” he pleaded, She pushed the hand away, lid not finish the sentence, she Rath Instead, changed her course, for no con- selous reason, and went over to one the windows, where she stood with her back toward him, H wed, The floundering uncertainty went his eyes and he beamed at the r head, He took her gent- houlders and turned her aroun “Let's quit fooling," he said. “So—s0 yow've been then,” she murmured, * The rest of :d as H. onstance hen 1—* the sentence W smothe with in his arms, heart pounding a hundred beats to the minute, He did not dare speak. Constance did not try; it was too. zing. After several minutes, cd a pleading appeal. “l don't know whether T can talk | straight yet,"” id. “1 suppose due for anoth bungle, But I've kissed the top of your head so often that 1 just wondered me She lifted her head—and “L don't deserve th humbly after an interval, “I1 don't think I do, either—aft the way you' treated me," she swered intly. “I—I think 1 he ventur- he said st b cr Why?" “For loving you.” ‘onnie!” He held her off ‘s length. “Honestly,—do you?" : looked at him in amazement. “H. Hedge, you are insufferabi she exclaimed. “Do you lct you--Kiss me—and almost crush me to death—if I didn't love you?" He scized her again, and they be- ;an once more, they had quit fooling. It was Constance who broke fina “It seems {o me," sald, as she almost c¢ur ¥, over his hair, “that for a per- who has abandoned cfficiency, still a rather scientific There—didn't 1 he o son man- tell e wer. O-0-oh! you so, dear you ¢ s Half Hed they an lour later Constanc were gravely could cver ex H. ilow it to T T . SCT but | . Hedge | fooling, | Hedge stood there | his | it you'd | let him. | think I'd| from the point where | the | wondering | “I don't want him to,"" suid Co stan And don't you luy u (il | on him, Billy boy, because he break you Into litle pic il —can't you, E, | Her eyes kindied | memories of the Hedge. with pride prowess o NEXT CHAPTET | incfiicient celehration, Your Health | How to Keep It— Causes of Iliness it | BY DR, Surgeon HUGH & Gene | was one t disoricr | convulsion The manit have usug cording to thelr sey The eties o pileptic | these ha cen applied | grand mal, petit mal, | cpilepsy. Any of these alone but it | that grand mal and petit n be found to exist in the same ir vidual, Grand mal, if not the m common, is at least th whie] tracts 08 | what ally [ 1eptic | nervous scal and miay somictimes the is gen fit. Althought in most attack comes on suddenly, in some cases preceded by fnli tions or warnings, often vuricd | character; a temporary change lisposltion, for example, an unusu depression or elevation ¢ some change in T e seizure Itself ceded by a loud scream or ery. Tl cry or scream is due to the convil sive ction the muscles o larynx and the pulsion column of air and 1s not due, | was one time supposcd, to terror pain. If a patient Is stunding medlately falls and grave injury. Unconsci | be complete and the muscl erally are in a state of gr ness. The head is turned by a ser of jerks toward of the shoul- ders. The breathing is arvested for | moment, the tace tirst | then 1ivid, the pupils of the eyes i | late and the pulse hecomes rapid. | R t stags the seizur ally lasts for about half a mnin- nd is followed by spasm of t muscles in which the whole b drawn into violent agitution, eyes roll, the teeth are gnashed t | gether, the tongue and cf often severely bitten. The breat ing is noisy and fowm, somciim tinged with blood from the biting o the tongue issues m the mouth This stage lasts for a period vars i ing from a few seconds to mever minut when the convul ments gradually muscles rc turn to con attention, known instan an spivits, appearance 18 usually pre . of of a Te one Brows of ve mov . This stage {s soon followed drowsiness and stupor which m continue for several hours When the patient awakes he muay parently recovered or fatimi ed. Sometimes he | & state of excitement | pileptic fits of this sort suce | each other with vurying | frequency and ocea; ly, | frequently, at regular periods. | In the treatment of epilepsy, no | | degrees « | general rules can be laid down. T | mere administration mended drug, including bromid: | without studying the indications 1 |its use will do no good but v | harm the patient. | As a general plan of treatuient | effort should be made to mainta ‘a condition of blood ciren | | | some recom bl lation so that the biood pressu upon {he brain 1 under sudden, rapid or great chang this reason heart stimnlants and | datlves form an Important par the treatment and these may combined with remedics specific effects upon the nerves In no ¢ shonld a patien ject to epilepsy undertake to not " | himselt, “Connie—I love you.” anybody. n it The she sald, “Absolutely none,” he agreed, “It's impossible to give any good reason."” “Tmpossible.” And yet—well, They could not even ex- to themselves. it's done.” explainable part t—it's done. Nobody knows how; not even us.'" “Yet we've got course. “You bet we have! tell everybody, before you your mind." “No fear, E. E." Iy. to tell them, of I'm going to change she sald grave- I told you F. E. was dead—ex- | tinc Neverth: ways call you that—or H. Hedge. I'm s0 used to it. Do you suppose father will consent?"” “What's he got to say about demanded the ex-efficiency “I consent, and that's enough. 38, man. I'm your guardian, you know. I give | my offical sanction.” “But you're too late, my dear. And this—this hap- pened afterward.” “Then I reinstate myself long enough to express my approval.” warned Con- . if you reinstate your- ch as a solitary second stance. "F self for as m break the engagement. want to know any more men. Heavens! Wasn't one bad | enough? 1 guess I was awful,” he ad- mitted What—in—blazes!” said a volce. As they d abruptly, Billy Brooke strode into the room. Hello, Bill," said Hedge easily. “When did you float in?” “Wha—what's this?" Constance smiled at her brother i linked an arm around one of H. Hedge's. “Connie ™ cried Billy. “Why, what's wrong, Billy?" ask- the retired efficiency engineer. “Didn’t you ever see anything like is?" And he kissed Constance. "I Billy menacing! growled and this time he | plainly meant it. €'s absolutely no sense in it," | I'm afrald T'll al-| I don't| efficlency | e In most cases of epllepsy it is « first importance to ascertain the length of the finterval hetween at- tacks, the time of the day such tacks occur and the patien dition. As a rule, diets and ures which are designed to the dralnage of the intestines the prevention of intoxication Important considerations in treatment of epilepsy. You should remember t tient suffering from epilep: be placed In a comfor quict country environment, ably removed from his family. | attempt should be made to mak epileptic a new individus {same time always to keep him der surroundings where he properly cared for in casc | oceurs. The colonization of epilepti now been under way in this cour for a sufficlent number of 3 prove that it is a very huma wise provision for the many & ers from epilepsy who are no because of poverty, to provide care and treatment for th . e e meas- seeure and are able, #hcn ems Medical treatment of epilepsy can, | of course, only be briefly alluded to | here. You should know that during a fit of epilpsey little can be done beyond preventing, as far as possi | ble, the patient from injuring Lim- | selt while he is In an unconscious | condition. Tight clothing should he loosened and a cork or pad should be inserted between the t When | the seizure is of long duration co water may be dashed upon the face and chest. | Tn general, however, the minates without the necessit | sorting to this measure. Once the | seizure is over the patient st 1 be |allowed to sleep. You should ba {sure in such cases that the head |and shoulders of the patient are raised. | Advertised cures for | should be avolded. Under no circur ances should a patient undertake treat himself for this condition. (Copyright, 1925, NEA Service, Inc.) Whitens White Walls Water in which onlons have been |bolling 18 excellent for cleaning white painted walla fit ter- of re-