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1 A Wife's Confessional Adele Garrlson's New Phase of REVELATIONS OF A WIFE Lo tatenesnisiomasniansaniatets Hugh Grantland Causes Sudden Consternation As Hugh Grantland's body, meshed in the porticre, which the force o in s a cr , however, 1 was o slde trying with 6 to undo his crava whirlwine ow ran ir e rt en ot his front of me y crashed to th I could not re The next insta swept me aside, as Lee from the kitchen, and practiced han the stricken n “Missee Gra he said, room I his other 'Missee blanke m feet to fireplace, Preacher ready he hands now. ‘When [ rety he had man's clothing W rugs or lo )rwas en took t basin from take the h " Miss and began to Hugh Grantlanc 2 had several minutes walting before of his eyelids showed that only a swoon ch we w ‘When his eyes oper looked from onec face to finally foc his gaze upon me There was nothing of lun in tha look, simply a great bewildermen through which equally stron me he was rut no stop, sh th ng am, said, we f terrifiec o it wa d finally h comprehension, “It — all — comes — back —" h whiepered. “And—you—did come t find me after all.” Madge “Saves Lee Chow's Face” He closed his eyes again, and the hand which I was chafing gripped mine wi h fiding clagp of a child who has found sud den 'gafety after terror. who had stepped back as Hugk opened his eyes, now set down hi basin of water, and bent forward, studying his master's face intently Then he pulled at ecve and pu his other hand to his mouth with a at first 1 did ourjous gesture whic! not understand. Then compre henslon came to me, The master, whose slightest wish was his law, had forbidden any search on him come to me and obey me. Chinese parlance, Lee Chow wishec me t¢ “save his face,” and I did so promptly ee Chow!” I said with apparen sternness, hy do you wait to lif your master to the couch you hav, prepared for him? Did I not tel LETTER FROM LESLIE PRES. COTT TO LITTLE MARQUISE, CARE OF THE SECRET DRAWE ntinued. me, Little Marquise, J until they were tired, Jackie spoke. “I have been s=o lonesome since you have been gone, Mover, that have wanted to die.” Ot course, 1 e Marquise that my olde did what the die sent and st werd interpose be 15t could just wante and go t I bed up vou prety lackie mean el but Ehe Ehyly. call at's calls of alarm fub hig side until (b water, motioned me to | hut sudden cold water in | gj flickering re facing. another, as forcing itself an clinging Lee Chow, the | part of the Chinese but had bidden In hugged my two boys ] SHIVET [your miover very much, don't ® [T put my arms around I ady |, Aunt vou when I ordered you to come with me upon this search to rhim thut 1 wouid eapluln everythin Doug “You ta then, hout he llited the Grantland in his arms and carried it t1to the improvised couch of rugs and 1| blankets which Lillian had hastily V| prepared in front of the r *| Of course his master was te ©|thin, almost emaciated, but still it wag a feat, which made me realize he unusual streng possessed by the Chinese, for the part of Dr Douglass was eimply a steadyl ono requiring no strength. T had tried to release my when Lee Chow lifted Hugh from the floor, but his grip was too tenacious, o 1 rose and wulked by Chinese deposited | him upon the blankets. That Lillia Douglass could not help t clinging clasp, 1 knew, and unuiterably feh and em- . Whether Hugh psychical- cd this or not I do not know, his tense grip relaxed, his hand fell back to his side and, opening his eyes again, he smiled 1ly at Lee Chow 300d ‘Old Faithful,'" he said dden convu of the throat muecl nese. “Big boss man no talk,” he said. L how get something.” He hurried out of the room to re- {turn almost instantly with a tiny | exquisitely etched glass filled v a liquid whose heady aroma made me | reflect that it Lee Chow's personal lug had been laid open to search | during our journcy he might { be in jall. In the other hand he held an ordinary glass of water which he handed to me without Then he knelt beside Hugh, his head and put the em his lips. “Drink—all,” he said, and Hugh obeyed, choking a bit, however, and grasping eagerly at the ater which Lee Chow from me and gave him immediately fierward, “You—old—scoundrel | ed affectionately when he regained ‘;hla breath, then he reached out a I [ teet,” he suid any apparent cffort, of Hugh and n h ng hand | ly gues T d ve working of the Ch s e 1 ¢ o o 1 raised luss to | t] hand to the little rector hovering , | anxiously over him. than death, Doctor,” he sald, and while the words were extravagant, his voice and eyes were eminently sane. Then, as if sudden recolloction had come to him, he sir sit'ing posture, his ey “But what was that wo ing ahout a lott Copyright, 192 t b o 1 “What do you say Jackie |you want to speak to her? {rather anxious to know what |adopted son calied Miss Perrier, 1 say ‘pretty lady’ and she darling.' Then she tak ) her arms and hugs me just 15 tight as you did a little while ago and s ¥s in a soft kind of sorry |voice a lot of words that T can't un- ;;'!r tand, I asked her what they were and she said ‘at they were neh and I must learn them t away. T told her T did not nch to talk to you ‘De other day she said, ‘you love you, =) when Ked my says 'y |me ir ¢ 4" darling?" And T sald “And her bhe + ‘Better'n anyone. sald ‘you must alwa tter'n anybody as she is ‘at ever | At warm or, and kissed her a lot. It almost seemed {78 thotgh T kissing you. But I 5 (fink T must have hurt her someway ) |Kissing her €0 hard for her cheeks I ars on them and they ra and got into salty. What her ery, Mov- In't hurt her.” n good, Jackie?" | | e M r nee 1 made | “Has brother br T asked ta turn Copyright, 19 TOMORROW: tinued, This letter eon- N THE SUMMERHOUSE about 1t en or b nd of this w make a complete will per dolls w char Althought YA 1 gain able to buy the s wished ter had no id e reward and gs her par {went into iream about tor, the 1 to sce blazing pretty iting over th "0t ecomforts f thy spe t ¢ nd the Of comfort of thy ca | “these spoech b W is red with & indkerchie? for k dots. ciated Editors, now | ceremony. “You've sheltered me from worsc ' my | | CROSSWOLD "CROSSWOLD P NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WE Horlzontal . To rob Mineral spring. . Vapor. To follow a clue 5. Guided. . Concise. Gets up. . Conjunction. 21. Place where hid«s . Ocean. Eyeglast . To knock. . To bind. . Another name for erg . Polynesian chestnuts, Harvesting. a1 athematical line . Refuse, . 'To clumsily spill ¢ . Before. . Evening prayer, . To be indebted. . To rub out. . Point. 65, To malke amends Is defeated. filk worm. One who attudinizes . Saccharin. Carmine. Lmbryo plants. Vertical Long narrow picc . Three times, me used by . One in cards. . In case. of clat ope. . Banner, . Common viy BARDARA HAWLEY, BRUCE REYNOLDS, her f and gets a job on the New Drital Telegraph, She wants 10 see BOB JEFFRIES police report | becomes a elose friend. He duces her to JEROME DAl {about town, and the three are at a roadhouse where a prominent man Jkills hims Barbara finds & red a dropped by the suicide's un- identified woman companion and connects {t with g red dress worn /by LYDIA STACY, wealthy widow. Bruce, mean'ime, enters a real es- | tate firm promoting Vale Acres. Mrs. Stacy Ikes him, but he ignores her advances. She thereupon refuses o invest in the concern and tells AN- DREW MeDERMOTT, managing oditor of the Telegraph, that the irm is crooked. Shortly thereafter Manners, Bruce’s senior partner, absconds with the funds. Bruce blames Dar- »ara for the publicity given the af air, Barbara's invalid mother dies and Barbara takes an apartment, shar- ing it with McDermott's daughter, i‘aney, who is in love with Jerome 1iall, Barbara brings on a quarrel in | her attempt to cure KFaney of her infatuation, Fancy accusing her of trying to get Ball for herself. Bruce, meanwhile, LETTA CRANBY, factory girl. Lar- bara learns she has helped Violetta n him through advice in her | “lovelorn™ column. She plunges into work to forget. McDermott sends her to cover {convention of the National 1'edera | tin f Women's Clubs. She sees | Manncrs, Bruce's absconding partner |in a hotel lobby and wires MecDer- { mott. Manners is arrested and taken er, intro- To remain. = To scatter hay Irregular or worn away. . Quaking Boundaries. Venomous snake. To soak flax White crystalline base. Yeast, baking powder, te, lant having aromatic secd Trascible, . Corded cloth Combustible fluld, Metal. Almost a Prononn To breathe. . Iemale sheep. . Feminine pronoun Indian weapon. 50. Rental contract. 3 aped flower. warm Not secnrely fastencd. donkey. ! nates Bruce. | When Mrs. Stacy refuses 1o help ' arbara reminds her of h she found in the roadhouse. GO ON WITH THL STORY CHAPTER XXNIX Barbara w up the steps of 1 i Now lircction wle for seve Iuces were turned in her ; €he entered the hall and mi nd sho eaw their companio dircetion. 1o made her way betwcen groups s upper hail 10 the door of the room. It was Llocked with peo- elevat nu tnod in her ersons Digit of the foot A baillff, catching sig made a path through th shered her to the pre 7 ich was already surrounded by ‘he representa of other papers. iler coming caused a stir here, too, - more an the accused, Miss Darn glad they 1 1s, bt this yo chap lo0ks 2 a squarc-shoot Do cxpect to be called a wit- to me. to me, as “On, her head. [Your How to Keep It— Causes of Tlness BY DR. HUGH & Surgeon General, U. 8 Service must hav land in order to keep healthy this air should be pure as wecll as suffic 1t we could spend ou on ntly ver The air of our rooms, be healthful, must be ren¢ etantly either by natural or o means. oxygen from [breathe out we and other substances. OX taken from the air we inh bleod which circulates t {lungs and is car aw food build up the body and ener it air, and when add carbon warm and at h is bre of the a that on¢ [ehanged, and ma Carbon dioxido is part of the |that is left over in the bo laxygen and food combine tc up the hody. It is picked up | the blood by the Iungs and ¥ ¢ It is injuricc Y |breathed a lamounts. Have Thought for Others Tn usir ventilation 'should lo not P others shiver and sneeze air. some factories now use bi tric fans so 4 as to drive off foul air or t tl or hoth. Tempera prasence also ba cor given oft by work room 1 caters ¥ ed out in window taken that som bad ai su e and humidity of moisture in tdored. T! worleers by cong in churche d ot} ire and i must heat eated in ma s in the temper tions ¢ In winter, on the other heated air in bufldings ton dry. to as 10w v as low as this and frrit s of the nose Keep Mumidity 30 ¥ To be comfortable a workr i3 v s draws tes >er Cont lm per cent hur auired and mu saving applies to facto as homes. A mper Fahr idity rrees » average physi It yon the hody board about eqnally nas vide, raise the wir i 13 lonz ine diox Oxveen constitites about one-f alf Your Hezlth CUMMING I'ublic Healtl In order to keep living every one sufficient air to breathe, being ficient) mo lives in t open air, away from noxious gases, ilation would take care of itself. in order to ed con- When we breathe in we take is le, by the th the o help keep it fth un- be breathed over, waste when build eare i Wb To renew 1 that is hod Often the humidity f man | marries V1O- | {to New Britain, where he incrimi- | the | | the courthouse wearily. A loud hum | | of volces told of the erowd within. | S ns and | ¢ in | DNESDAY, JANUARY 6, 1926. ed to look about the room. The seats wore filled and a number of persons were slanding against the rear wal The room was filled with a buzzing as of giant bees. Heads nodded and aws worked in ceascless activity, Darbara turned back to the press | group. “Isn’t horrible how people 'erowd trials? Most of the people | here are not involved in this casc |at all. They're here just for curi | osity. The prisoner is going to bLe ! slaughtered to make u Roman holi- | day.” |40y, come now, Miss Hawley.” porter speaking. “Curiosity is an instinct, know. Most human thing world. And, if people weren't curi- ous you and 1 would lose our job: Newspapering is built on curiosity.’ Barbara glanced agaln around the room. “It's morbid," she said. * minds me of Dickens' phrases for courtroom crowd, ‘Blue-bottle fIf secking carrion.’ Ugh!" The man to whom she had spoken looked at her curiously. “I didn't know you felt so strongly ahout this he remarked. “I supposed the more publicity the story got, the better for you. Wow! but you've cleaned up on the Vale Acres crowd one after another, haven't you?" A film came across Darbara's eyes. She could not answer. The crowd increased rapidly as the opening e hearing Parbura leaned her head on her hiand and closed her eyes. She did not open them again until the !stir of the people rising at the en- trance of the judge arouscd her. She rose with the res Bru was seated at a table near the dock He did not sce her. She shrank be- hind the bro houlders of the man reporter, who sut next to her. were seated again, and the v ritual began. Bark and tricd not to i you , an occasional rap for order from the judze's gavel. 'n she heard Brnce's name. yody was swearing him in. She ned her eyes with a start met his full across the inter. vening gpace yes we ming out from dark T hadows. 1Te gave no sign of arbara turned her eyes away and 1in surveyed the crowd. In a wr by a window sat a girl with pretty, childish f Barbara rted and looked again. It was! o girl who had walked with Bruce the rain the y Parbara pa {hew in front of the chocolate shop. Following her gaze, the ncarest| reporter commented, “That’s Re neld's wife. Hard to understand why le married her, Look at her. dumb indiffer- H gomber, of recognition Derfect picture of enee.” ' As they ched her Vieletta took a stizk of chowing gum out of h | pocket, removed the tinfoll and put the whole stick in her mouth af once. | down upon it. in over the top of the s this tisiactory m will | { he that dull, sick feel- | Hing e upon working up ng slept | lated. e your fae- ¢ Workmen, ilate your ! The net s of such | 1 adequate ventilation will in ced health, greater effi- ciency and more econor Such a Silly Quarrel Menus i the Faml Y By Thornton W. Burgess {1t scems to me that, willy-nilly, (Juarrels all are rather silly. —O0ld Mother Nature. n cream, rEES, fast- Grape fruit julce, thin frizzled beef with scrambled sp whole wheat toast, milk, | T potato When Peter Rabbit gave himsclf .way by thumping the danger sig- 1al on the old log on which he was sitting in the moonlight he didn't carrots, endive with | {hink of himsclf at all. His one lemon sponge pud- | (hought was to warn Jumper the caham bread, milk, coffee, | Hare, that big cousin of his, that The lunchcan menu is planned as ' 8reat danger was near. As for Jump- exostion for school ehildren who ©F: he really did no thinking. He home at noon and is suitable | 4idn't know where the danger was for the hearty meal of the day for OF What the danger was. But by ex- Kiddles under school age. 5 | perience he had found out that the The hostess who wints something | SUrest way for him to escape an 1ake the place of the ever faithfy] CNeMY was to dodge. So now, with- potato in her menu win Cut taking time to think, he dodged. (heso baked potato balls as 11t Was lucky for him that he did. “Johnnie” when he rush. |AS it was Hooty the Owl barely "7 imissed him. Hooty's great claws found only enow. But Hooty, big as he is, is quick in the air. Like a flash he turned and struck again, and again Jump- er dodged just in time. But Jumper heon—Tamb patties, baked | creamed carrots, apple milk, tea. . mashed po- a B from school Baked Potato Kalls { potatoes, teaspoon on minced parsley, ns butter, 1 ege, 4| ated cheese, paprika. cs until tender. Re- and put through ricer. 1 spoon or perforated beat in the season- Beat egg until light and beat into potato mixture. Beat fluft pe into small balls -buttered baking apart. Tf wanted for brush over with egg slight- seaten and sprinkle with cheese Put into a hot oven for 15 minutes to brown and beeome thoroughly h ed with sprigs of » masher g and butter. st the fam- ond egg Is not essential adds to the looks of the balls for | npany. ‘“What right had you to steal dinner?” demanded Roddy m; hand-knitted y or green and w attractive with g costume, had no time te seé where he was going as he dodged, and this time he dodged within jumping distance of Reddy Fox. Like a red flash Red- 1y sprang. Had there been no snow certainly would have caught mper. But the snow interfered and & more Jumper dodged. Now Hooty the Great Horned Ow! 1 ned and etruck -ain just as Jumper dodged the ird time and Reddy Fox sprang. it brought Hooty close that one brushed Redd: nose. Instant- y Reddy snapped and his teeth losed on that wing. Then things appened. Reddy didn't have hold of e fleshy part of that wing. He merely hAd a mouthful of the big, stiff feathers. Instantly Hooty began - - ask.for Horlick's ¢ "THE ORIGINAL . - Malted Milk Forlnfant Inoalids, TheAged g~ Digestible— No Cooking. -Drink for All Ages Nourishin, : The Home Food- who I { beating him with that other great | ! wing, and those blows hurt. All the {time Hooty was striking at Reddy | | with his hooked bill and with hi | great claws, and all the time Reddy | was hanging cn and trying to keep | | out of the way of bill and claws. | How the snow flew! It quite hid the two fighters. Peter Rabbit was |50 excited that he almost fell off that hollow log into the dcep snow lle sat up straight and his eyes looked as il they were trying ta pop | right out of his head. He could hear Reddy snarling and he could hear| the snapping of Hooty's bill. Two | or three times Reddy yelped. Peter knew then that Hooty had reached | Reddy with bill or claw. And then the fight ended as sud- | denly as it had begun. Reddy had let | g0 of that wing. Out of the cloud of | snow rose Hooty. Reddy sprang up ! trying to seize a wing again. But he | missed, and then sat in the snow looking up and snarling at Hooty | perehed in a tres and just out of | reach. Reddy's coat was torn, but he | appeared npot to even know it.) | Hooty's wing had lost one big!| | feather and some of the others were | | broken at the ends. He could fly,| but that wing wouldn't be as good | | Hooty didn't appear to bs aware of | this. Those two were too busy quar- reling to think of their injuries. “What right had you to try to! steal my dinner?" demanded Reddy. “It wasn't your dinner; it was mine, angd if you had left me alone | I would have had it" orted | Hooty. “Tt wasn't yours. 1 saw Jumper long before you did, and you know it,” declared Reddy. | “Then why didn't you eateh| him?" jeered Hooty. “You know as well as I do that you didn't have a chanoe in the world to catch that| long-legged dodger. He was play- | ing with you. That {s what he was| | doing, playing with you. You were | just tloudering about in the snow and he was having no troubls at all T tell you, he was my dinner. If he hadn't been warned"— | Hooty didn't finieh, but turned to | stare over at Peter Rabbit. He haa just remembered Peter. Peter didn't | wait a second. He dived into that hollew log before Hooty could meve. Then Hooty and Reddy took up | that silly quarrel again. They called each other names and each stuck to |1t that he had been robbed of a | dinner by the other. And all the time the cause of their silly quarrel, Jumper the Hare, was sitting snug- ly hidden under some hemlock boughs, thankful for Ris escape and in the ! drew | out of the businces and also sug- | ness moral as the other for a long time. But O Barbara searched the erowd for another face, But no red brown (yes | were to be seen, The at notes hearing went on, the press table, n ind then, Brued's o Al three state's attorney was still ing away at his prey on amination, “You mecan to say that as a mem Yer of the firm you did not know Manners' plans?" Bruce set his chin. "No," h ‘I dfdn't “You did not know that th pany bank deposits were in ners' name?" refterated the ney, shaking a finger in Again the crowd saw Druce's chir RNy The attorney plunged into ridicule “Don't you know it will be the jury's duty to decide whether a member {ot a firm consisting of three part- ners could work for half a year with the other two and not know the receipts of the firm were kept, | or whether titles to lots sold were sat avolding clock the hammer Crogs-ex don’t be 80 harsh, It was another re- Bruece's how clear? Barbara moved restle; would go on forever. She her eyes to the outer door. this trial may drag out " sighed the man beside her. “lLooks as if he's going to a bad time of it. Hard to a jury believe he was as close to Man- ners as he was and knew nothing of his One of those blamed cal geniuses, I'l bet. Doesn't w a doilar from a doughnnt.” wt last dismissed from He fumbled at the aril- the dock as he de- ate sunlight ined Joek of v f 1l cad. turned her head away This with | for Kkn. the stund. iug surroun: seended. struck the ir on the irbara Her ¢y s i reaehed for her notehook. noon's hicaring was upparciil to close. A moment room. Drut conferring, their heads close cr over the table. The attorney wus discussing some with his assistant. Bruce sat with his back to the erowd, his cycs lixed vacantly on the wall ghead. “Come on, Miss Hawley, - we'll make a quick g \" whispered the fricndly repol and ir had run over the room. af - he The about of quict had luwyers iped were 1o prose- m the dour at the back a wo- b «d. She swept down and her ivory dress and small coral hat made a vivid sploich aguinst the drab gray of the courtroom. Woien gasped almost audibly as Came. Bark futlowed her. woman w ight to Bruce ignoring I am Mrs, Lydia to the luwyers, the defendant 1in the room. Bruce Barbara watehed beside the at- ey's table, nly. A bailifl had been irying to open a vindow stopped abruptly, pole in hand. The silence was broken by a voice rom Violetta's corner. "My lLord, I've gwallowed my gum. GO mai the ¢ s 8 et t Bruce looked at Bruce. Lydi or No one could figure out why Lydia ad done it. McDcrmott called Bar- ara into his office as soon as she cturned from the courthouse. “What's the swer, Barbara?" he asked. “What made her do it " Darbara evaded his eyes. “How should I know?" she parried. McDermott bit the end off a cigar. “Damn dramatic. In that respect she ran true to form. But 1 got the idea the young chap had turned her down and that was why she got gested the scandal on his company to me.” “Perhaps she thought she done a malielous thing and } clence hurt her,” offered Ba ‘Conscience! Shueks! Women don't have any. The longer 1 live in the world the better I know that | women never repent anything ex- cept the sins they get caught at. They have no more honest-to-good- consclousness than a kitten. They are relentless oppor- tunists. | “Lydla Stacy never came into court because of conscience. I'd be mora willing to believe she came just to star in a spectacle. But even so, where her spite was aroused 4 stopped. | bara, without speaking or smiliig Then he and Violetta went on down the streot, Barbara graph p ( leaned against a teles » Be Continued) BUY GERMAN CONCERN Berlin, Jan. 6 (1) — The entiis hare capital of the Koholyt Ak- tiengesellschaft of Berlin, owning sulphite and pulp mills at Kocnigs- herg, and & paper mill and chemical works on tho Rhine, has heen pur- hased by a group of British finan- fors headed by William Harvison. MOTHER! “California Fig Syrup” Dependable Laxative for Sick Bahy or Child | | 1 | | When baby wind-colie, fove constipated, has rish breath, coate tongue, or diarrhea, a half-tea- spoonful of genuine “California g Syrup” promptly moves the poison; gascs, bile, souring food and waste right out. Never cramps or overact Babies love its de- | tictous taste, Ask vour druggist for genuine “California Fig Syrup” which has | full dircetions for infunts in arms, and children of all ages, plainly printed on bottle, Mother! Yon | must say “California” or you may | get an imitation fig syrup. Bronchitis, Asthma and all throat troubles. Builds new Strength. NO DANGEROUS DRUGS OVER 70 YEARS OF SUCCESS GUARANTEED e — as it was against this gang, I don't think she'd come without pressure | from somewhere." | Barbara moved uncomfortably and | rose to go. “It ought to be a good | story tomorrow,” she said. MeDer- mott's eyes followed her intently as she went out, DY “Reynolds Acquitted.” The high black letters in ths afternoon papers screamed st the message across the | reets of New Britain Barbara, coming out of the Tels- graph building, read the Telegraph extra as she walked. ‘“Mrs testifles for young architect out only half an hour. courthouse." Down the column a passage read, 1 “Mrs. Lydia Stacy testified this | afternoon that Revnolds had asked | her not to {nvest in Vale Acres un- til he had time to fnvestigate some | clrcumstances that puzzled him, “She also presented a letter from Reynolds, written shortly before | Manner's disappearance, in which he told her that he was working on | some &f the Vale Acres titles which seemed doubtful, and that he {n. tended to go to Chicago to investy. | gaté Manners’ life before he cams to | New Britain | “The Witness prosented evidenes | that Reynolds would have expoeed | Manners the day Revnolds returned from his trip to Chieago had not the daily papers printed the story before he had the chance.” Barbara read the paper feverishly. Stacy | Jury Ovatien in {But she was reading it now with | Bruce's eyes. | As she waited fér her car at chuekling as he listened to the silly quarrel over him. (Copyright, 1926, by T. W. Burgess) The next story: “Another Snow- Walker.” Arch and Main strests ehe read the article again. Someone jostled | against her. She looked up. It was | She had written most of the copy. | CAN YOU AFFORD to neglect your eyesight when it costs so little in time and money? Have an examination of your eyves by an expert today. ' Frank E. Goodwin EYESIGHT SPECIALIST 327 Main Street Phone 1905 When Winter Rides— There’s real pleasure in knowing you can shop around from your Easy Chair by using Herald Classi- fied Ads as your shopping guide. Phone Your Ad to 925 THE HERALD | Bruce, with a laughing Vitletta on his arm. He 160ked straight at Bar-