New Britain Herald Newspaper, March 22, 1926, Page 4

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r A”n ry, b that Dicky's ing the truth, looked intently o sreeting to Lilli in the look, nition, and di was the sort from the some man W terious history, terest of The look, another convict which sent check girl a that I contented bricfly say Mr. Haf with a grin. *So0 you'r od Sellers dowr for you, old cl at black eye, s much worse at guy has ha for gome time ar I had been the Into the minutes after card everyone racas. “T was Have you seen *No. I've not st three days.' “Well any longer, W1 soing to dine, mind T'l ho had Iis hat In gre . P who ¢ ¥'s niec at Lilliar slangy comment ane fear lift Jealousy of Marion nd 1) girl which 1 ince their . My fricnd woul no longer first controversy ins “Did you see though?" Mary me wi y. “Or rather, was you he body could tell that, was on earth.” 1 was furiously at the flus It was Yo ght ther ard upon the board desk, wl proffered loan of {he to dischars for the long-dis He had coun g onsity which v 50 prominent in th artistic annals of 1l Thankful indeed who saved me answering “Oh, your smasher. ad the name eyes had seen both Philip V look and my conf ‘strong men prone! glitter of her good to he HEROWN WAY 1 of Today vour money v Ha 50 pos Y! dn’t NEW BRIT Quicksands of Love Adele Garrison’s New Phase of Revelations of a Wife —— Mary Terms Heart: Smasher, Lillian smiled indulg a8 the gl made Jery concerning ntly at Mary housekecper opening and “and the o yo ¥ magn ol compunion- 1 frou Morton's mother will unlock the doors of hoth 1 remi eyes dancing T looked over the if you need t ; ant me to cc Loint of comy Overwhelming wonder Puppies or cubs which 1 help you, you'll find a big, Plant used for a ind Tl com * you to come brief Yellow Hawaiian bird sk you what ever 1 > You could hear mie if an ordinary fone, couldn't es of an unusually hand- lamatlon of sorrow almost brief ladies don't r elimbing means, te to call on me if you Bird similar amount neces- Strip of leather indebtedness nvhody yet who work- B as 1 to Lillian, ) o] Mary. Auntie Madge is o nething hesides warmed with jealons of her prowess, so into . Hf \f\‘r‘ the sl“llhu mr‘ s0 Is a good chafing d Garnish and Serve % a Girl A 1I'ROMISL, you by tomor- in flour and pudding with the t twithout hims way ther » COver with erg :nnr.l fi e the person who knock- abonut something. looking f 1 guess T n TOMORROW: Lmbarrassiy Tt was full of clear There Who think it clever to be mean. Gosszp s Corner ped some ont aw( \mxni 1S \\unmll Stuff! suceeed, appear to think these tricks very smart. It ney | med Mother Jaughed to call them ‘Scitter-wi, “T wonder if they Enow when they certainty to S ing Piles, Physicians PAZO OINTMENT in and in tin L contains facts about Pil PARIS MEDICINE ¢ ./ PAZO | OINTMERNT is Applied, because it Is Fositive in Action. zs Great Reli aind Quickly Relieves [rri V'\hnn. which everybody shoul Besumont and Pine Streets, St. Louis. Mo, jeurio LD, MONDAY, MARCH 22, 1426, | Iroken-off end of & heavy Lruss und. iron. 3’ e Then he carefully wet it yown” again and pulled off his overco:, Emst and hat, These he laid on the thuor Just inside the front room, lu picked up the breken andiron s COPYRIGHY 1926 BY NEA sutwct fand held 1t firmly o his right hand, BEGIN HERL TODAY hair-ralsing or perilous \l\.nn this: m.x dim, vm{luwll\' glow through Ho stood there in the hall, won- HENRY BAND, a5, w business 'and this, strangely, wag real life, 1t [the shad 5 {dering what ha should do-—what Lo man, is found m rod ina cheap fwas impossibleg and yet it was true, HY stralned forward, lstening, and |COULD do, He wished for Lieuton. Potel in Grufton Hee find o He knew, instiuetively, that inside (wuddenly he thought he heard a | ant O'Day's powerful prescn woman's hendlorehiof and thg yel- honge wos the gecrct to thase volon rising op u nofe of anger, And, |Strange (houghts flashed throt tub of @ theater tivket JANLED RAND, di ngage et with rious warnings b had |whilo he Nasté nuL the vol his mind . . . the heroes of 1 to Olga Maynard's fate; to | There was a brief silence, boyhood detective thrillers . . . Low vliereabouts; cven to his [from the room eame the sound of a | feeble and incompetent he looked Y COLVIN beenuse of the s murder. !woman's seream. . . . bestde them . . . he was scared— race.” JIMMY ILAND, his gon, gocs {1 only this place wasn't so far | He checked the cry that sprang to [scared sUff=yet he knew that ign where the theater 1 [from nowhere,” he complained |his own lips. The voice was Olga |Jensen laid his hands on Olga again traced to OLGA MAY-. [“Foolish 1o try snything alone, Even | May [ he would dash madly, blindly, into NARD, a calaret singer, }wmw fooligh to take the time to get He turned around helplegsly, [that room and strike out with the Jimmy mects and talls in love out here, They might clear Should he run for assistance, or \nnl-- weapon thot he lisld fn his with MARY LOWELL, Latgr he ~H~L Ishould he try to enter the house |hand, counters Olga, Sho fuints at hearin, thought of running to the alone? Would it ¢o any gooc It He grasped the lroken iron police want Ler for murder. Mar I]\v”yr»y( house and asking for help. seemyd so foolhardy, und yet—God! [more firmly. From the room came out with SAMUEL CHURCH, lJensen's drink - thickened ey althy luwyer, sces Jimmy m | " n again, his words a Indistingisha Olza into a tuxi and misunderstands, | e blur as they floated throngh Olza tells police the stub might | the hall, :ome into posscssion of ‘a man | Then another sound - from wp- ked her up™ two nights be- | stairs, He jumped nervously., Lond fove the murder. Jimmy recelves {and cloar it came to his ears, the ringing ot a telephone bLell, 1t sound.- od strangely forcign to this ald nivsterious warnings to leave | Brideeport and later fa attacked by men, but escapes. house, It came again, an jnsistont, With Jimmy and Mury estranged |tonz ring Clinreh gets Mary's promise to m | Me heard a cholr scrape In the room where he had seen Jensen uni [the others. Then Jensen's voiee, | “Damn telephone. Naw, st wtill, {Kid, T answer it. . . . Probably the i\rlg feller wantin' to talk to u nuikance, the phone's ap. ry. Jimmy and Olga, out one night, see 2 man they hoth recognize— as the man who got the stub, he as | one of his assailants. The man es- | capes, hut they fdentify him by &is | police photo as 1KE JEN | Chinreh, motoring with \I.nry THNS | dog. flie breaks her eng [ it alrs, [ Jimmy heard Jensen's heavy foot- | move out n fanta and writes Jimmy abont it e office boy forgets to mail the let. Jimmy gets & phone call from | ing €he has found Jensen. | $ 1o her apartment to find Ver pone. Her disappearance he- newspaper sensation, O'Day ilis Jimmy's mind with new doubts by telling him he found a picture of Henry Rand in Olga's room. Jimmy, walking with Barry, sud- lenly gocs Kid Divis. 2 known in- | boarding a street in pursuit, swings ar. When Divis gets off, ond of the line, Jimmy fol- lows Nim through lonely strebts and | Ha sees Divis enfer a after the door close he approaches {he {the ron the earpet. He stepped quickly inte the friond. darkn of the front roun. y ‘ing thie andiron ag Jen. sen passed to e up the stalrs? Swing at his head with all his might {and then leap madly in at Divis? He declded against it, There that telephone call. He wanted to know who was calling—wl.om n had referred to when le spoke of the "lr\g foller,” { He stood « as and let | Jensen pi ave ta two short steps and reached out iwnh his 1 1 tou him a8 he turned to mount the stairs, A |sudden plan flashed through his |38 he saw Jensen's broad back mov- {ing upward He wait the man jreached the floor above, heard grunt “hello” into thic phone, Ny Iy a8 i | and, 11 NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER XLVII Jimmy, a gloom-shrouded figure in the foz, his pulscs racing madly taut, his nerves tense, ——whet from fear or excitement ihe =oftly tip-toed toward the lghted he did not know—slowly approached room. j the house where he had seen Kid i sealed in the ir Divis disappear. with lis back to the door, bis coinfortably propped on the Lare itable. He was sipping slowly fromn lthe heavy tunmbler th ensen had heen using. ad eried out for help. She As silently as a ¢ A, e could still er 1o lils question, | Wuffled Ly the pain. T time it one, it alow moan. | And now he stood framed cried, “I'r There was Olga & in.” and he n as swiftly ,drooping wearily, She w onld around to the fr the chair, Jimmy 1o stood now just In front of it E flight of steps led up to | There was a brief silence. and then from the room came the <ound of the front door, another rt flight a woman's scream. down to the basement entrance. | Tt was the basement entrance |DBut which Divis had used and Jimmy quarts made his cnutious way down the how steps. He stood just outslde the door, | Would be ‘riend or foe living there? ir pressed against a panel. But | T imbed the s heard nothing and for just a brief [found himself at 1) nd he debated whether to try |window. T1 peere within, but ssw not the t Jimmy moved, arest hi mile a & he to know w in s tied in . He too one d at the door and see if he could slip 'n . entr in unheard and unseen. the gilence was oppressiy Before the deor lie pauscd, Mm,.] cautious step toward Divls and s But he had a change of mind. “Bet |ful. he try to rush holdly in Ly suddenly look up, eaw ter look around first.” and his voics, | Slowiy he raade his way around breaking a window—-and frust to fhe horror on her face as she a low whisper, was eerie-like in the [to side—the side whence he had surprise 2ck? Or should o1d hini. for. o light = slining down the inc steaith ? And Divis—Divis saw i1, Again he was suddenly eold, his 'road. Tie lizht was still cast hurry, Do somethinz,” €t the glass down slowly m wn His voice was o desperate whispe He cantionsly tried the knob of | And th 4 opencd fn answer Telsing the hand He was somehow en andiron. SR e (To Re Continued the door heninid | Ry &P!)FQFANNY Adys the knob all duti glow thra Jimmy bent Llood running chill. An involuntary |fn shiver shoolk him us he stood in the basement entrance trying to decide [looked. the door that plan of action that would | He thorght: "If anyone comes 'to Divis' kno m o see inside the house betwesn the 1i nd the window, If Leing dizeove Tl see his shadow." of He conld detect a low v side v ices, hut they seemed far on some enable Flecting memorics can 0od mights hefor: the fi i o S 1 110 one moved hetween the Hght with a silent he thought. none of it twas more and the window, There was just | prayver oor swing open withont betraying squeak. he L e e O spen until there way | for him to push his cnough spi Lody cfully hie elosed it behing him, felt the laich click home faint sound d stood durk in w hallw To his left, the door swung open 8 an unlighted room. Jimim; i ed that it mizht he a living room or, more probably of thote eold 1shio parlors,” Just ahe him, and to his right, 1t of stairs with thin carpet nearly worn through. And |time, Nie didn't at all like the idea o little farther down the hall of having another Iox living so his left, & door stood ajar, letti R o He went off by himself to broad heam of light sift into the | | ' think things over. Hce wanted to darkne think of some way of driving that He judged it was the room ! stranger out of the Green Forest. |through whose window he had first | I re some folk we all have scen | At first he thought in vain. How |scen the light and outside which be ! could he drive a stranger out with- Dad just been listening. He heard out even secing the stranger? In the voices—a man's heavy bass, another gecond place, he couldn’t think of /man's voice, higher pitched. | any one big enough fo drive the| He had rd that first one. Tt | stranger out who would be willing s Jensen. And he heard the la- Many a poor fish has money. to do it just hecause he, Rreddy, [bored, catehy breathing of a woman | ced him as he lay enrled up try to suppress her sobs, { -—Peter Rabbit. vople of that kind are the ones > always are trying to play mean *ks on others, and who, when they is smart to be .. No, sir, it never on a hig 10ck, taking a sun bath, he | Thep carefully, his hand support- | » mean, Just ‘mkv kept thinking and thinking and |ing him against the wall, he tip- | Iox and the tric J thinking. ocd down the hall and peered into 1ger in the Green Fo ad almost given up hiape of |the room, taking pains to keep clear | v Fox, ¢f course, had heard | ving of a plan to drive the of the heam of light. | ger in the Green Iorest, Siranger was a cousin News like that would be 4 T out, when way off in the P There, sittin ) » Y he a chair, his back | 1 Divis. He had | L his cap still d & sound Which [to the door, w caused him to prick up Lis ears. T (taken off his coat, { nt barking of Bowser on the back of his head. | | grin crept over Red opposite Divis was Olga, | fty face. He got to!likewise sitting in a chair. Her head foet and stood listening. Then was down on ler breast. Jimmy rock on could not be sure, but he thought | s sun on indicated she was held ard chair. possibly by a rope s, e jumped down from the which he ha n and heade Farmer Brown's dooryvard. He knew und her arms that it was up there that he had standi He ard Bowser barking vy glass tum- Now, Reddy is not in the h ering Farmer Brown's do broad daylight. But this w £ filled with whisky, or what Jimmy took for whisky. He drained | it d sgt it down. He turned to very specizl oceasion. He first made |Olga, his face trutal with drunken- sure f distance that there |ness was no danger. Then he deliber-| “Stop vour eniffin’.” he growled. |ately trotted across that doorvard He raised a heavy paw threaten. | in pla ght of Rowser the Hound. |ingly. | | For a moment Bowser just stood Jimmy stiffened. 1f he sh(\uldi ~ N there, staring at Reddy Fox. He strike he would t everything looked for all the world as if heito the winds and rush blindly in. Tt The stubbier the umbrella. the Tor a moment Bowser just stood |doubted what his eves saw. But it |was more than he could bear, | smarter one's appearance. This one there, staring at Reddy Fox s ouly for a moment. Then with | But Jensen changed his mind. |is of new Matador silk with woven a roar of his great voice, he started |His hand fell to his side and he | border of Cr h 5 | 2 e old gold. The handle is choe of his neighbors had iafter Reddy. shrugged, poured himself another | of carved e A asked Reddy if it was true that this| pgain Reddy grinned, He whirled ! drink. —_— stranger was a cousin of his. Reddy jabout and headed back to the| “Go easy, Ike” said Divis. “Aln't o SESQUI-CENTENNIAL THIS YEAR When the Centennial Exhibition was held # Philadelphia In 1876, was quite sure that he had no cous- |Green Forest. He kept just far |v ins excepting in the FFar North. But |enongh ahead of Bowser to leave not having seen the stranger, he lgood fresh scent without heing wor- ' make me sick. lidn't dare say so. Reddy long since (ried by having Rowser too close | Jimmy retreated slowly along the |l-¥dia E. Pinkham, a woman in ned that it is never safe to be 2 through the Green Forest iwall. He found himself again before | 400, Mass., was just beginning to 100 positive had found [the door that opened on the living |Market her root and herb medicine. Of cours he promptly began room. His foot—luckily, it made no |Her first large order was for ng most s time in the 1ding Bowser the Hound |noise—came in contact with a hard |eiShteen dollas worth. for the {ever the the liope that he would [ohject on the floor. He reached | Philadelphia is now celebrating 't find him. but e [follow the seent of this stranger. and down for it half groping, for he |the 15 Oth anniversary of the sign- had enough Aw shut up!” came from Jensen. | _where he <pend Gireen siranger, Hd find ¥ footprints in some soft out of the Green For. [could not distinguish it in the dark- |IN§ of the Declaration of Indepen- ) found the scent of A mean trick. Yes. sir, |ness. !dence. In Lynn the Lydia E. Pink- T footprints v n trick that Reddy pro- | Ho picked it up, and to his fouch |ham Mediclne Company occupy six ¥ it felt like a heavy. round metal | buildings in the manufacture of 1926, by T with a crudely fashioned |their root and h»rb medicine, InE ndle, Hu.?‘ * it up toward the Nearly 5,000 0 bottles of Lydia that sifted from the ofher room. |E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compou what apparently was the jwere 20ld last year.

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