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18 . - 0N NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 27, 1926, / 8 = = — 5 ————— icksands of L | CROSSWORD PUZZLE | Quicksands of Love | . Adele Garrison’s New Phase of t lations of a Wif ———— Reve at’ons ora e S © 1925 by NEA SERVICE LN, sl < A Strange New EQith Iairfax Greets |left the bus and were threading our i BEGIN HERE TODAY Dormott, |staring blankly after her. And there |swung creakily upon one hiuge. She Madge way 1o the sidowalk through the | BARBARA HAWLEY waats NOW GO ON WITH' THE STORY [were tittors on ull sides from diners went up the steps and rang the 1 did not have to walt long for |rushing motors. “The woman who | e e CHAPTER LVII {who had seen the incident. 1t was |doorbell. It falled to sound in the ' Tdith Fairfax. Five minutes after 1!lcases the building and furnishes to see Mife, Sho filts Ner fiance | R the most perfect example 1 ever saw {depths of the house, and she knock- had left our rooms upon the sccond | the apartments for rent s a clever BRUCE REYNOLDS, architect, and | For a moment there sllence. e g guilty party taking spite out |ed with her knuckles upon the door. floor she came briskly into the small | little thing with good taste. But 1 [s0ts a job on tho New Britain Tele- Then MeDermott shrugged i &1 it BUE R A ST (O 000y answered. Barbara's eyes lobby of the hotel which was my [think yow'll like it, for it has distinct graph, Sho meety BOB JEFFRIES. |[shoulders slightly, and Wt a tresh § T 088 E0CPE FRCIRUEO0 (0t |wandered to the living room wind- temporary home and Dicky's {possibillties, and the view, of course, Polies veporler. ~Mud JHROMY jcigarch = . |bear the siglit of the man, becanse low, but the blinds were closely “i5adge” Ko sald as the came |is incomparable, Hero we are.” BALL, _inan about town. Bruoe Lydia Stacy 18 back In town.' | 4.5 g o0cq njured him. Wut evi- 'drawn. The porch was bare of furni- upto me, and it sho felt any cone | &ho had halted before an impos- | lasts LYLIN BUACYAea|thsEn suid, “Blow in o couple of WeGks | 0"y 0 " ohitect docsn't know ture, but a mop leaned ugainst the straint at the sight of me, she gavo |ing stons h with an exquisitely | ow, who Is attracted {m, roman- ugo from Cape Town, with a mon- | /00 By TR CR T 0 Wwith | post by the steps. o nevavidenceiof fbasbicky welisRmelrouRt ERLS AN vIREACH uen: %, @ llitle black boy servant, and fihg vate Aores expose:” Lumbering footsteps within the .y you're interested in that T Kainst the steps. 1t was of the type A prominent man’ kills himselt niffeent black diamond trom |1, 0l A ped Barbara. |Nouse announeed the approach of Drive apartment Il we go right |used only to guard homes of great Barba vering the story, finds a Kimberly works, cut at Tit-] uNo, and s a crime, too. She's somcone. Barbara braced herself up? W got @ bus a Dblock | wealt! 1 T remurked upon it ay [ 9 linkeiwithin drosw bos|(anye: gofting all the crodit for freeing him and moistened her dry lips. Tho R L longing to Mrs, Stacy, Bruce, who They-say her wardrobe fa Afrl. |ERCNE S0 118 S T00 e robably |door swung open slowly, and a T A ier s hrdas N Tae e i with o real estato firm promoting | can, oo, with daazling whito lnon | T TSR 00 B SR RO (GOl T eared. With her right words clipped short, and for an i a neat, kindly | a civie project, refects the advances [and a leopard skin coat and what [ (8O 18 TARAE HOE (T KO0 R larm akimbo, sho glared at Barbara stat T stared at her fasclnated—she opened t and stalked away, Some day, when Her hair streaked about lier faco way 80 unlike the old Edith Fairfax With cordially I got & good chance, I'm going to &nd her mouth was insolent. I had known. T had seen very litt ou won't need me, will you?" tell that young man where we got | “Well" she drawled, “ont with it of her in the last year, and sudd she asked. “Just go up and look | the tip on Vale Acres. {What do you want I'm not buyl 1y 1 felt as it 1 were golng on this [uronnd the same as if the Pres- | “I'm not a crusader for justice, "my hooks today. apartment inspecting expedition | col's were there,” | or anything 1iKe that, but something | Barbara answered boldly with a stra It was evidently a “walk up" | within me erles for Lydia to get not selling books. T came to a & “Yes, surcly,” T answered, and partment, for 1 saw no lift, and | { hers |{o rent mo . room for a fou we walked ont of the hotel lobby, |Jidith started immediately up the | " MeDermatt Tooked Tarbara [I'm told that some of the houses she shot a quick amused glance at staire, W erc of the ordinary | and she dropped her cyes. “He used |here have rooms to let.” me. apar type, distinetly in- | to be o0o0d friend of mine,” she | The woman looked at Barbata “Don't quite mal do you the entrance door |satd, “and he always gave me the |suspiclously. “Why'd you pick this Madge?' ‘she querled. “Well, 1 most durk in the | | credit for that cxpose house?” she snapped. not so very zo. I'm not sure hen fter | | All the more reason for me fo Just took a fancy to it as 1 that T make myself all of the time the | 4 S set him right,” declared MeDermott sed,” lied Barbara. “T think T'd There's one thing I'm cortaln of |housckeeper had glven her, sudden- | ¢ Lie=al s Joed. - |“Butte11 me about Faney. 1t scems that room upstairs with the however, 1'm no longer the feckless « door, T caught my [ o 4 ing metal {we misiudged that whippersnapper (bay window. : : nonenity T used to me. 1've learned t space into which 1.'; Mo Zondle 12 | husband of hers, after all.” Ihe woman shook the mir. ont o to be a serapper, and I'm going 1o 13 S0 condle: 14. Searlet O 00 {nor eves and considered a ‘r!.?n]:«nh have what 1 to. me in, life lio room info which she| ;' 500 o0 varh to be 07 DI G G | When Barbara came out of Me- [Oh all right,” she "‘] 1 l"}f; from now on 4 me was an fmmense thing | 130 A0 ; 15, Infana, I ermott's office, It was lunch time, |Pen8 to be empty. But 1 get elght Was there a covert threat In her ast thirty fect square and with |15 (18U Wand She. looked nround for someona to |dollars a week for it single.” She words? Did she mean that Dicky vilings, The woods of the i"' Beam of light, eat with. But Miss Badger the ,Was surveying l‘nr!rnrnu clothes. ‘. 1 refned in my tion and hob- doors, windows and mantel | 2l Label lonly woman in the room. Brabnra | All right. I don't cara to see i bled it, as the Riverside Drive bus 'wcre rare, highly polished and hand Hawe oo 2 Porridge. glanced at the m Every one of | OV May I '«’ll\"{ p?n.«-ssmn thl:} halted for us. awailan food, Short poems, edlendlatiat il cvening, when T've checked out at Will you join me outslde?” she| Thc ind ceilings were cov- ancients e 7. Wants. Bob Jeffries was the one she |the hotel and brought my baggage? laughed as she s 1 to mount the |ere Ja tapestry i’:v{{;m‘q lettuce, e Taaln wanted, of course, but Bob was fn { I";”z‘l‘_ffin“:l"‘ tepiiod e wom- ateps. Again T startled at the leloth, with elaborate Whoo frete ACBAIL Blous Now York clly, and by this time, |2 UNEra v, ) ) Sitference between the mew Edith |work outllning it. Eight bamboo Existec * Nullines. probably married, 100, Barbara left | Darbara hurried down the steps Fairfax and the old. The girl, she |1 pancls of painted sille, un- Sea journeys. 42, Local positions. R R the [and out the gate. In the etreet she had been loved warmth and ense. |misiakably the work of Japanese Glusterdoliroiinnbere Acted as a model, street to the little tea shop iwhere |W0lked still faster. s This one, T saw, as she settled urtists, lined the walls hile the Preposition of place Self he hadl lunched 80 often while she |, AS she called for her key at the A . Gl & : u > hotel desk, the clerk consulted a \ nelt {n a vacan. front seat, ri lowers and hirds painted upon the | Ag R S PR e o o | in the tingling Winter wind which vering the lofty celling | To err. n At s T o ek th Game l Tha | card in Her r‘nathx. .lTh"n;‘\\as,:l swept the top of bus. the same gifted handiwork Therefore. 15, A yam. waitresses wore the same green and :nll for you, Miss !}-’m ey, hejsald, 1 studied her s the ared In astonishment at | 'Il‘o o 50. To knock while initorme. (he orange. lamps "l;vvxnt the party wouldn't leave.a e o mi v g em e el | : 5 s a man or woman?" she asked. on. he. as alio moro henutitul. [Ie come mistake. Wo never could |43, Lyrie poom. An unopened flower | : There were the forty-cent hargain |* [IAR Or Avom: iy S But |t wasio % |atrord this.” | 1 et The door swung open and a woman appearcd. ~ With her right arm | G B T G o ouldn't say. New girl at t na dellanto wott's “Wait 1ill vo she sald AL | akimbo, she glarcd at Barbara, “Weli,” she drawied, “out with it What | TG0 IREES REEE T 6 17 switehboard an hnur'ngo. heD sh Hlshusna Taughinely. &he Hota ightly G {1l sou want? I'm not buying any books today e T i H.“{,’lf‘fl Know anything about ..mnm;\ “,’r-\; 1: 1 Izt and :1 ‘r’.' j"x. ;;mhrrr | 49, Hits ;'lwvhm ful ‘;M Mrs. Stacy so she tells ANDREW not. Always the good showman, ;:;:-“:m shop to advantage of | ""p o0 took the key and went to annasHi CrONgRa A OUL RO | . *ortico MeDERMO ditor of the Tele- L i em, Ot The waman oside me could be | of course, 1 ball on the high curve, E e ceedingl) e e e e ey Barhara smiled as sho read _the |(hC ClOVatoR G ruthless, T felt with sudden divina-|the Dicky Bird mu ; to g : Tie e Simpletor e I myself saw a dramatic incident |f2millar list, “Ham sandwich, bean =) tlon, whera 1 ,y;y 1 mm“ nown ceteh his | Tine e cunnat_ re- y‘umm,,. maseullne pronoun. oo’ i rich 1a indictenl aflor a manbar LI the Reatay it theld 5 i tes atie | soup cholpe of ple and | cotrec idoll 4ould do nothing which would harm cooped up in that hotel roor ‘o pull hard b laline ; e P l d B anjother 3 E NoniCte H;(;‘l:’:my ; flofeo Mol Jumbled type. en, V:Hl‘,»yliflv' n ')W) him, g H:lv'\w::vu male hanger-on ‘l:-f I‘V;Uf‘ a The waliress who came to take araso an ag This apart fs an anomaly, | xgp:.r!q-v 10 Male title of courtesy. A ai ol I eraley lectcs Ludin 1o testity in he e Ber order recognized her. Wh}:, e Madge, Arhe et Leniire Exchanged, {half by using the scarf as a ericanized costume, [how do you do, miss? 1 haven't Document eonferring rpecial | | DBruce weds VIOLETTA CRA from her trave seen you in months! Will vou have iy rights on an invention. | lfnmmy girl, advised by Barl “Anyhow, the lady was having a |one of the speclals today?” A Opposite of in. | lovelorn column. Barbara. sh inice time with him, looking over the | “No." said Barbara, with a tonck i b Dlmniehed Kl intze |apartment with McDermott's - ledize of her wine glass at him with [0f asperity, “I'll have some chicken ) To low | ¢, A child is horn to Violet- |those tawny eyes of hers and lolling [#alad and English muffins and a [B Mexican lahorer. | against Barbara's v back in her new African furs. peach Melba." L More intelligent with Jerome Bail “I watched the poor devil with a At | Boundary {bara is loncly and takes Imingled sonse of envy and g The first home editions of the Tetter From Panla Perler To Sydney 1owe everything good that my Iife | VERTICAL | INew York on Footlights !Between the moments of dizzy bliss | Telegraph were on the street when | s Carton has held. T gave my love—myself Part of a chure Barbara seeks companionship in {there were moments when he look- | v emerged from the restau- 1 couldn’t talk to vou last n k—and I went down into the | To allow | cenwich V nt es dis- jed the most wretched man alive. he bought one and strolled Qear Sy was too (1 to pay for it. 1 do not owe | Comp | gusted at uperficlality of the | “At last they arose to go. And to [back to the Burritt Hotel with it Some everything 1[John Alden Prescott anything. 1| Males. | prople she me A spinster fric tonishment, I saw that young junder her arm. have in world cling to was | gave my ambition and hard work to | 5. Bone. { | ELIZABE ¥ IVALL, com itect you used to know ap-| In the lobby she sat down to golng out of my life. t kindly old Jew o made me a! 6. Pertaining to a title. | | mits suicide and Barbara begins to |proaching Lydia from across the !look at it. A two-column plcture of | Tou must Jught that T was |moving picture actress, and I made | 7. Alloged force producing hypno- fear for her own fate. |room. She did not sse him until he |herselt contronted her from the first |: very unappreciative of your kindness very much more meney for him tism. ! - | Barhara meets Fancy and Jerome. {was direetly in front of her, hold- |page. If the pleture in the morgu: and fricndship as I had nothing to |[than I 1 for myself. 1 do not| — - m— - i They talk ]l evening about New ing out his hand. And then with a {had not looked Ilfke a success, this | say when you re leaving your owe him anything. for even hiskind- | = a mineed onfon, Dot lcroup, the child wheezes even Britain and Barbara, in a rush of toss of her head, she gave him the lone did. Barbara smiled at the triends for a long journcy with the [ness was tinged with commercial- | THinly sticed “er munees G L LV ! stirring abor homesickness, takes a train for most heautiful cut you cver saw, and (haughtiness of the shoulder over possibility of never re n ism o [ TS rare an br home that night. The Telegraph swept out of the room, with the |which she looked out from the page. Dear Syd, my heart 100 full. | But you, dear Syd, T can never | Wih salt and sugar. Add an I \s s0on as difficulty fn breathing | publishes the story of her visit and | African oddity following her. The headline sald, “Former \ 1 have not so many friends that 1 repay what you n me. To|laver of rice, cheese, vegetables | 8 TR LN a physiclan should | Barbara goes In to talk with Me- | “Young Reynolds stepped back, |New Britain girl wins in Gotham. { eould 1ot my begt one zo without a (you and Leslia Pr T shall be |and scasonings. Cover with butter- | 52 Ui re Mo aiAlely L Gagos ot | | The story began, “New Britain is { wrenel that uld tear my heart- {in debt. forever. | e erumbs and bake in a moderate- hoarsencss with a croup m‘m:h’mc‘\ e o gz {25 good a town as New York,” says | strings. | T can never tcll you just ho {1y hot oven for 40 minutes. In- ke Mhesr ke el D e el O o 2 i Do you iney Carton, |frel toward Leslie, Syd. Tonestly, | crease hent when the rice i tender |BITC/ERUY SISPCoME (6 01 | e | y1Y, - ola Darascilani bas]cavam? | Whall voii Tivelbeen: tonmen T never Linew th conld be a wo- |t ernmbs, (e b b | siting In town today. Miss Hawley | blo for the south of turquoise shan- Let me tell you. man like her. Up to the time when | NEA Service, | | |comes directly from W York city, | tung. The bag has a Chinese char- g You were the one person, man or she adopted littls Jack when T, al- | | {where she has scored a signal suc- ?":r",‘l?“*;l;;‘;ng?::r:; 3: ;rhfr::flrn t oman, after my buaby came, most insane with hunger and shame e | A TR he paras ‘ :a\": et oatie ol o left him outside her door, 1 falt that | FLAPPER FANNY says | “I'd s soon work for the New |Oof rose macge. the only man in all my life that T|my Land was against oll my fex, | ) 1:%rn\r;ln I'T‘rvlrr:mph as for any paper have really trusted. You have made | her, and it seemed though Y H lth |in Manhattan,' declares Miss Haw- . . e believe in hunuin goodness. ¥ vomen's hiands were against me. ley.” B Cb b B e e sis T e ne [ Y QUL TCA Iom, my measens st marsare, | DIZ CIANGE TN All the ti you we ing. T'm sure T shall miss you in || How to Keep It— under her breath, and laid the sheet there in my liftle drawing room at [the future i Causes of Illness down suddenty. Face Powder the Tlaza, probably thinking T had| Syd, T must tell you something |, She went up to her room and S wn hard and callon s try- |that T would not dare to tell you if | S o stood looking in the mirror for some ,Knr: .',; ,],;.r,,l T : ng : rtoeo 1 -I‘.' o ‘;m": away Iq.nm‘ By DR. HUGH S, CUMMING Out of the I'rying Pan Into the |that they didn't pay any attention [minutes. f{(“r‘ clothes were different (jm'en it v.h» texture a'nd upnemj- eould talk to 1 could only |love | S, e nealn Vire |10 where they were golng. They had |from New Britain clothes. There ?"Le ‘:‘ a ‘”": rose petal! You can't feel its hurt. T conld not apenk of it. | (Copyright, 1926, NFA Service, Inc.) | Surgoon Gencral U, §. Public Hea e but one thought and that was (o get |was more swagger in her bearing, (N¢1P but notice a etriking dlftore- Today 1 am writing fo tell you | Rercice Thornton W. Burgess {5 far as possivle from Shadow the |But there were lines ahout her eyes |€1Ce e Eomentayoul pucicRont that 1t (8 /l0 vou, dear rricnd, that T | TOMORE tter, continued | - W So it was that, instead of |which had not been there when she [NOUTiShes while it beautifles—whit- i ! Measles at first bears some like- | ing §s both old and terse: |leaving the barn from the back as |left six months before. jens, cleanses, Should be left on all = = = = [ hess to the common cold but the | * 1 bad be it might be they had intended to, they came to | She left her key at the desk down. |MEht. Also makes wonderful pow- COLOR CUT-OUTS s— 11 nd that | child is usually sicker than would be | I worse. 5 front door. It was open a crack. [stairs, a few minutes later, and ‘d-‘r base. Not sticky or greasy. Get i et el ol ; 012 Mother Nature. [Danny slipped through with Nanny [turned back to the telephons oper- (thiS new wonderful beauty cream Sep e s e apaty | | ; it at his heels. Danny looked (ator suddenly. “Have there been [CAlled Mello-glo and try it. At all Beauty and the Beast g : It is | | mhat e of courer, the real mean- [around hastily. A short distance |any calls for me this morning. " Toilet Goods counters. | merchant promised, al- |shall not have taken a co [ | ing of the saying, “Out of the frying away was another great building. It |~ “No, there haven't, Miss Hawley." f fteen minutes befo | | pan into the fir When any one was Farmer Brown's house. Danny Barbara turned away. o intended to come back |drink for fifteen minutes | n trouble and in trying to run in't know this, but did know that | She caught th o eished o bid Bis | thermometer is used. In the (S bl it | |lan't know this, but dld know that | She caught the two-thirty motor Jod-hve. Tut when he ar-|Very young or nervous childre :| jfrom it runs info even greater jusually thero were hiding places n- |bus for Berlin. 1 at his home and told of what [rectal temperature is more r able. | [ rouble, they ar ; ¢ Cheno der any big building. He didn't dar ° | It flew between flelds and across r at b T ThA (e e aetor aNoviAdhe KerE s | |“jumped from the frying pan into [sit still in broad daylight; so he led [roads that were like pictures from | IRSERI I Lyptalintecred alantiseniic such as five { |the fire.” It means simply that they the way across the dooryard straight [an old dream. Barbara leaned close | = merchant wald “no,” but |2 antiseptic solution such as five | ara worse off then they were before. | 1o the bhack porch of Tarmer [to the window. She found herself Woll‘en insiatod’ that it was all her} BOE SE00 OO A0t Sl erila nuze b sz v wo svceme ) | Danny and Nanny Meadow Mouse | Brown's house. There was a hole un- |repeating the names of the stops because 8 B Srediested | el cloarsed " cold TR T LR - |having made up their minds to leave [qer it. With a little sigh of relief he |as the coach approached them, say- | RO TioYRRlan sl Rhack Bna | e e ) | Farmer Brown's big barn becauss |dived through that hole with Nanny [Ing the words over again, for thelr auty accompanied her father to|Waler after | - - g r her lifs in his stead plain dress is nd ¢ clated i over here. He will stay in that barn | The bus stoppsd and Barbara Rinvevad flion. {81 freq y as long as there are any Rats there. climbed down. ° was the only . R e il My, but I'm glad to get away from |passenger disembarking at Berlin, Menus for the Family ( O, e Ttk et PBerln feoale ek bl Bt Nanny was just about to reply in (toward her mother's home, there B T sore throat or vomiting. Headachs = ‘hat funny, squeaky little voice of |was not a human being in sight. I FR MARY Rl A g hers, but instead ghe gave the faint- [The houses on either slde were i e oRled | est of gasps. Peering in at that hole [grayer, more hopeless than she re- LA e Grane L e o orea| through which they had come were (membered them. The troop of chil Folls m toast, milk, cof ro sore thr On the con- | e ool two greenish eves. At least, fhat is [dren that used to run from porch | rol p LINELORES,AINIE e et B ranlome Tt tivet 3 the way they looked to Danny and [to porch and scramble over fences rnl e 12 D Onsca]p, Lateron Limbs. y bt geen thoso exes be- |and hedges had vanished. Barbara aked rice and to- v ] mpera § seon them many |listened for the familtar sounds of matoes, brown bread, caramel cus- r ths ordinary tonsi. Caused Much Suffering. s in the big barn. But in the 'the neighborhood. But there were fSenEmIK ten | 1ts. M n S g o barn those eyes didn't frighten no sounds. = Old-fashloned vesetable | Great languor and weakness, how. | | oy 0" made g | THCY Started at once; Danny led the |\ 0 "0y all. Now it was different. | She went on down the street. t sticks, cold aliced yoast|cver, aro mors noticeable in divhe | ] o o gton oy st in'e rash : |Those were the cyes of Black Pussy [The big brick house on the corner tato walad, steamed fig pud- theria aithoug pain on swallow- | |3i fiched terriblyand when I scratche Shadow the Weasel was there, wast- the Cat. In the barn were plenty of [was much the same in appearance lowheat rolls, milk, cof- ing may not be marked | |ed it blisters broke out. Later the] ' eq4 no time , started at ouce. places where they could hide from [as it had alwaye been. But there Troe Croup. eczema broke owt on my limbs,| Danny led the way. Pussy. Here under the porch [was a broken window light upstairs, for Baked rice and e {s an form of diph- | |whichwere badly swollen and very “Where are we going?" wiispered might be no hiding place at [and the grass had not been cut. ' s is a little out of the or¢ vhich is more frequent in red. It kept me awake at night and Nanny as they started. all. You see, they never had been| In front of the bungalow farther nary in that it combines several|\oungor than in older children. This | [caused much pain and suffering. “I don't know,” Danny whispered |under there before. They were so [down, in which Wilma Collins had THE BARGAIN Piffechie R, al; Asvil L alphthe formerly | |When T washed or went near thel '\ 1 SN0 0o R e than here | frightened they didn't know what te |lived, a gray and tattered washing ; o clo savory dish fOF | cait. | e r true er hot stove it was very painful. vith Shadow the Weasel about.” |do, €0 they did nothing. As it hap- [flapped on a line across the lawn. Bea Children 3 B 5 , he i “I'read an edvertisement for Now Danny had intended to make |pens, this was the wisest thing pos- | And on the top step, which was ) n Raked Rice and Tomatoes | gutshed wrincipally | |Cuticura Sosp and Ointment snd| '\ 1 o\¢icor the strawstack in the sible. Blagk Puksy didn’t see them |cracked and paintless there sat, in- t out | One-half cup ooked rice, 2|hy the fact that the child hecd sent for a free sample. 1 purchased barnyard and, after he reached that, land she didn’t hear them, because. |stead of Wilma's spirited Boston 50707 {hé/| cubkcanD 4 foraalosal’ 1 cup arated | dropreasivoly iworass In. f more and in two or t 'm"““' decide where to®go mext. But he |of course, they made no nolse. But [terrier, a grimy poodle, staring at T i{toruniots. 1 cun 8 : valg;omplelélyc:\r:led. Rs;y;:y lidn't get to that strawstack. You |do you know what they wished? |the world with bleared red eyes be- o S kel on 5 sudde o] Ve Ou.36,1928.] s°e. he caught a glimpse of Shadow |Thes actually wished that they were |hind a fringe of hair. : e B - : ¥ . Island Pond, Vt., Oct. 26, . he Weasel and that was enough to |back in that big barn, even with | Barbara walked more slowly. Her b ' ‘, Use Caticura for all toilet purposes ake him turn in the opposite di-|Shadow the Weasel there. They fell [own old home was just ahead. She e : B y e ; - At Turom e tion. My, ms how he g It they were worse oft than be- |did_ not l‘nr\k at it as nhnl “n::z"d 1 i e : R iy A Nanny did run! It was surprising | fore but kept her eyes on the sidewalk. Tt S e “mf, of | Besides hoarse and a barking | S5 Catieurs Shavine Stick 3¢, {how fast those short Iogs of theira (Conyright, 1926, by T. W. Burgess) | At last she turned in at the walk ,‘,X 'm’;m.m you on one con- | grated cheese, tomatoes, cdlery and |cough, whicl occ also in false' ~Z——o.-a-- - - could go. They were so frightened | The next story: “The Separation.” land passed through the gate. M | brown | A lot of girls posc paild by artigs who never get | re is a cough. An READ HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS rovement of the | FOR RESULTS 1t his heels. 1t was quite dark un- {der that porch and it was dry and comfortable, “We'll stay here,” whispered Dauny, “until we have a {ehance to decide what it is best to 10. T don't helieve Shadow will come |curious, unreal gound. | Berlin would be the next stop. |She sat upright and moved toward the inner edge of the seat, as the conductor came through the door, shouting something unintelligible. Secure against fost charm, this new \ way of solving oldest hygienic problem—offers troe protees SHEER gowns and ifl-timed so- cial or business demands hold no, terror for the modern woman. The insecurity of the old-time “sanitary pad” has been ended. “KOTEX,” a new and remarkable way, is now used by 8 in 10 better class women. It's five times as obsorbent as ords- nary cotton pads! You dine, dance, motor for hours in sheerest frocks without a sees ond's doubt or fear. It deodorizes, too. And thus stops ALL danger of offending. 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