New Britain Herald Newspaper, March 24, 1926, Page 10

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— uicksands of Love Adele Garrison’s New Phase of Revelations of a Wife —— Madge Discovers a Strange Woman N feel At Her Door I s “But you haven't told me," Mary sald, w [ 1 1 fin your 1 ex miration over Mary, clad only inderthings. ing the meas around her and edge of Philij 1 herselt ready, 1 summoned and 1 guessed into the room and sta ly wa vith me in armchalr room facing the hig rlpoking the Hud- v sl “Interpretutive daneing!” Lillian ured as we seated ourselves, tonk was the annoyed T my#elf had felt when I Mary's preparations. “I id strangle, you!” “wait!" ['said, and it few minutes before she % forwapd on her chair done the might before in the hot bedrooni, Itently watching the giil" posturing and pantomime flittin and Hstening the soft crooni amd the snatches of impassioned spocah with which the young girl cmbellished dancing. Hefore Mary had been silhouctt agdinst the sunlit windows for tu fminutes 1 rose noiselessly and sto! wvay a es that Pmig! Lillian's face. T did not realize t “You might just as well have no 1 was standing to the lock at all,” said at last. 11l door of the apartment until T heard bet almost. every room in this house breathing upon the other can be unlocked with the same key. M. It a sound which And that's no good business in any |wonld not have been audible to most New York apartment house. I'd Iy T am blessed with unusually change the lo put chains on te hearing—hut when T heard if 1 hing to live here my hand almost involuntarily se “And ruin these lovely old doors!™ |the door, slid it back, and a won 1 eried. on her other side of | Tillian han 1lmost forward into hack to me and exasperated how, *You'd have murr and weariy in her sure had missed noth Ing of “Let me see thoge keys a will : out her hand for the bn which the housekeeper had me. T put them in her hand flipping aside the small ones, frowningly studied the two keys which the honsekeepor sured as would “unlock either door of our rooms. Then walked | to the door we had entered, mserted the key. turned it. extracted it, and examined the still with dis- approving. kuitted cycbrows, minute, |a holding h of four glven and she large had to ns- her lock t wal W os¢ oute somone side of onle et sin knees on the Al pitched hunch of keys exaggerated | room (Copyright Feature Se 1906 hy Newspaper e thbat rvice, Tne your HER OWN WAY 6y Girl of Today A MANK PROTECTION “Voire cnifivated!” T said stupid- ty to Jerry Hathaway “1 didn't know t ley could sing! oy and said I couldn't with, In less than a week evgryons vduld knoy I loved yop and uld bec ah would alyays b for work you e Wt Mamie R ome cr ona ambition uzed to be sing in opeya. I met lier some y ago when fhigt ambition seemed | fulr way Ao be realized. But all onge sopiething seemed to go T and th4 next time at tke Beaux Arts chec {rjed to get som but she wo! “T didn't Mawmie could Ing. I re ever heard her sing a Even as I m that one offire voice trying ars | Judy 2| “Oh 1 of gossiy to to 1 way 1 thous! immediately rant 1 of giving you a joh on leaving the restau hut when sober sccond thought 1 saw her she was came T knew it would be impossible ing hats. T T knew it would be onlv a of a few days until your place there 4 be made as uncomfortable as the urant. Your understand don't Why, dear, if it e I in the office 1 happy to have question will it that know vou ta i L too ust you uld vou th note.” be only 1 re had o that remarl ing 1 gin to sing. Ther had said in morr relleved at his I the same, T the chance to given me the membered heard Mamie b at once Mrs. Riley 1 given me L that work together. As it was no alternative except to erstood, quernlons, yke, Mamig say anling agail u into, horoughly un sion not to give m office came from time 1 had again run up 11 man (Copyrig TOMORROW His UEA Ser A Man's FLAPPER FANNY stys a| Horlzontal Masculine pronoun Those who earn a cutting hair Standard type measure Fury Burden Teon Those who color hair To decay To remove hair means of a razor Existed Company (abbrey.) Moth Therefore Minor note Fault Unemployed Yellow Pastry from matter from a sore 1/To sink as a bed spring Marble used as a shoot Morindin dye A kind of rolled tea Globe To accomplish Washed as hair Pattern 41 |1¢ er Common laborers in Mexico Act of giving hair d sealp special massage and tonic Vertical of enipping hair | K Second not in seale Deity Driven To mention Method of kneading the face to preserve youthful texture Rodent Drops of moisture mornings srass Dad Pattering ine Women's haircuts To cut e closely Suave Entrance Delicately To guide Possessing fl Opposite of hest To scorch Robust 1h Part of verh to be 41 Yellow Hawaiian bir {3 Subsisted (p. p.) 15 To place ’ tap lightly fe fr ound colored jewel LIOW olver, which Jimmy wrests from i and kicks down the stairs, NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER XLIX snarling in pain, had fall but now he crowded slowly toward Rand, his glant paws outstretched, biding his time vaifing to get,this mere etripling in his clutches. He ripped I'll break you von in half! And Jimmy, cornered, ape and rush down the and the pistol he er, read murder in the nd ‘cursed himself for u fool for not having kept the weapon himself; ursed himself again and again for having taken this man so lightly vhom he chanced to thra when th d met before. Dancin' master, eh?" sneered. *“Well, you won't IN HERE HENRY KAND, 18 found 1 TODAY + business eheap G find in's en, of ticket RAND, his s to OLAA MAYNARD, aind LOWELL s in Later arin love e out oath in an half “You break unable stalrs had glver other's ton: 10 10 ands stub mi, on of u m 1) Vo nights be- v urder With Jimm ind Mary estranged, Church gets Mary's promise to mar- him. Jimmy and Olga, out onv s the man they are looking Jensen find any And then the stair rail gave way, and Jenser: went crashing through. | (RY DR. HUGH 8§ Surgeon General, United CUMMIN / Your Health How to Keep It— Causes of Iliness ) States Public Health Service There is little to be gained from a health viewpoint by lolling in the a effe water for several hours at obtain the beneficial swin one ould not water longer than 30 minut It is much better to water several times daily, brisk rub after each chapge into dry chlthes, allowing the clothing to dr body as some do at the sea Everyone who swims h in: time. To cts of a remain in the enter the taking a wim and ead of ry on the hore. should know to protect himself while in the water and also be familiar with life saving methods. water, unnece: yond reach of rily long & Diving in shallow wims be- sistance and swim- ming beneath. fixed objects are of poor.judgment uding artificial re known as the Shafer metho {be known by every embodied in the swimmer. « were too good |mediate application of the principles Shaffer method will The prone method of resuscitation spiration d, should Im- | sometimes save life even when prac- inexperienced Desceriptions of th allable from nong which may be | American Red ( bullatins and g strutions of life-s: wimmi aged 1 and der and [ticed by the various ment s practica is a spo anse of it div soon val T discovers lon fir than has be xercise vailable fi methods are sources, foned the ch issue 1 demon- aving methods. to he en- ue as ex- used limited elder- provided nie impairment eact well t hardy exer « invblved: o the me tived ntor of fatigue ip their stead And exhilarat gpor* worth ¢ pecessary safeg swin E produ 1t ting s ar of W pr sensible should do ing t r an intelligent { Mere pl bathers sure they ¢ ar ise planting ell being tly a vided the vided in manner the e water Gossip’s Corner o ugh. It ill experts at one the other tI Mary Garden, tried being mar Opera Cor ager of t lady's $36,000 d cause she bought lady who had ne duty due on it. Do you fully sorry for her? Nei We however, over the day's news of the whos child was enter this land be tion. it not mond necklace from er paid the be another 1 dread- jo we do permit our sympathy to work, in foreign permitted the sam mother to malnutri- Two-Thing Spreads “Our clab thing: can only serve two besides water and toothpicks." a worried social butterfly writes me. ‘And heen hunches For a vo thing sprea bination go fills the bill sheer dessert course of ices or sherbert and cak wiches and a drink. M milk shakes, tea with vary the usual coffee or so many kinds of sandwi ties! Cream ch nuts, lobster celery and served ginger the other ed two o ofter o or hard or boil Hands “I noticc before How many times have that bromide? Will yc ogling glance? Yes, 1 cures cost. But how 2 one evening a your own? Bowl of soaj manicure sc cuticle remove needed. Soak File sors, 1 and or the and round Put some stick and mover. Pu nails in water polish and give t splendent nails Don't T dip s<h t 1s himselp breathing | n his cus- not the Don't Be Don't neglect tc thrown right roof of your mntual cau; a you haven't You should have less the rabl but a joint introduction and log will cause the n't be in Fecently | n racquet es 1t 1 "ot h th have new ngs' Any no com sither a cream or or sand- ed milks, on, could 0a. And possibili- olives or | meat eRE, with pre- 1 do face you rs now ut en you W 1 ake o os8 in “ia n nutton heard bear the mani- least do ater, file, polish, stick are water talons. r itiel inder the just be- troduced urse, un- 1y thick, kes an imp on a Harlequin ) \ —————r ith 1 . the new ith pat- strap has be- | for—the man she says got the stul Ho escapes, but they identify himi | He reached out a long arm. v his police photo as IKE JENSE And Jimmy, retreating, was sud Church, motoring with Mary, runs |denly surprised to find there was ng a d She breaks her en- | wall behind hing, but the doorway ro ragement. the room Jensen had just left. Zi¢ Jimmy felt space behind him, and he step- Olg: ped back into the pitch blackness of He the room. her gone Jensen, framed in the doorway come newspaper sensation. a shadowy bulk. He kept on He valking with his friend. 'Suddenly he was inside the room and BARY COLVIN, when he spies KID ihe door slammed shut behind him. DIVIS, a known intimate of Ike Jen Now, cocky, let's see you try and sen, hoard treet r. Jimmy trail out.” He laughed that throaty him through lonely streets and dis- l1umble of his, “One of us is goin mal fog a house. He hears a out, see, but it ain't gonna be you.” woman's voice c It is Olga’s Jimmy, retreating to the end of and he er [the room, beside the window that Jensen, Divis and Olga are in a opened . on - foggy blackness, said room. Jensen joes nupstairs to an- sharply: “Look here, Jensen, if you swer the phone and Jimmy creeps in take another step, 1'll fill you full of and hits Divis with a Lroken and- |lead.” iron. Then he goes upstairs to over- ! “You're a liar. You ain't hear Jensen gun. I'm gonna strike light.” Jensen sees him and draws a re- “Jensen, so help me, if you strike room up here for your fancy steps, ov gets a phone call from has found Jensen rushes to h apartment to find Her disappearance be- saying she v out. ors Reddy Fox Doesn't Know What (tried some of the simpler tricks and To Think |had failed to fool Bowser. He knew that Bowser knew all about those tricks, and he chuckled at the idea |that this stranger should think |Bowser could be fooled in such |simple ways. But by and by ahead of him he found Bowser's voice change. He be- gan to bark in an entirely different way. He was barking just as he was in the habit of barking when he had |driven Bobby Coon up a tree or | when he had run a young Fox into a let it go at that. [hole in the ground. Reddy recognized guess right, and |it right away. quite often they gue | “Can it be that that stranger has taken to a hole in the ground or is |in a hollow log?" “It sounds that way. lieve that he would® run only so short a- distance and let Bowser fight him in his hiding place.” Very, very softly and carefully Reddy crept forward until where, by peeping around the trunk of a tree, he could see Bowser. Bowser was at the foot of a big looking up in 1t and barking with great excitement. Yes, sir, that is just what Bowser was doing. He was say- ing just as plainly as it he had used words, “I've“got this fellow up a trec! I've got this fellow up a By Thornton W. Burgess The very smartest must confess sometimes they can or -Reddy Fox. guess, but he knows it sometimes. Smart folk never that they don't have to do it or else he can only is true do like Bi to confess the and Sometimes they It's hard to be- tree!" ¥ | Reddy blinked both eyes. “This is LAVANS queer,” sald he. “What is Bowser «Thls s |100King up in the top of that tree for? 1f T didn’t know differently I should think that he had been chas- ing Bubby Coon, and that Bobby is up in that tree. I wonder if it can be that that stranger and Bowser Reddy blinked both eyes. queer,” said he 2 is not at Reddy Fox, and thinking himself very, very E t, trotted along through th Gireen Forest just'far enough behind |the stranger in the excitement of Bowser the Hound to be that |seeing Bobby Coon? Still, there is a by no chance would Bowser discover |different note in Bowser's voice, If {hat he was there. Bowser was fol- |[Foxes climbed trees I should think lowing a trail with that wonderful (that he had a .Fox up that tree nose of his and growing more and |But that is foolish. Foxes don't climb excited as the trall grew fresh- [tree. That is, they don't climb way It was the trail of the stranger |UP in trees, and Boweer is looking who had come to the Green Forest, |Way up high.” but Be er thought it was the trail Reddy began to ddy Fox, it had |But the braches on that hemlock the Fox smell tree were thick, and though he You know that Reddy Fox is very |thought he saw some one high up clever logs who may be |in the tree, he couldn't be sure of follo He is very clever |it. So Reddy dMn't know what to 1t fooling Bo Hound, think. No, sir, he didn't know what though sometimes he has hard work |10 think. If ever there was a puzzled doinz it and has to use a lot of [Fox that Fox w Reddy as he ricks. Some of these tricks he work- |Wwatched Bowser the Hound bark- ed out for himsel he learned |ing excitedly at the foot of the big from Old Granny Fox. Now as he [hemlock tr trotted he wondered if (Copyright all satis gri ory. ning to himselt sure me look and look for certainly in fooling ing his t al- by T. W Burgess) stranger would fool Bowser. {wh four The next story Climbs the Tree “Prickly Porky t the stranger had Rot no | muttered Reddy. | hemlock tree, | met Bobby Coon and Bowser forgot | 1 lighy 'l shoot.! Bug the other laughed, crazily, and limghy realized that he hud to deal vith @ man gone Berserk with ligfior, “Go on, shoot,” he taunted, wd Jimmy could hear himn tumbling |1hrough his pockets, He thought of making one mad rush, of kpocking Jensen to the floor ind then grabbing for the door. But what if he sliould miss the door? “Hell!" sold Jensen, and Jimmy nesw must have discovered he vas out of matches He dared o hreathe Jensen oona got I'm ¥ her he uid son, you're nty of time. against the door. Plenty gf time to say your prayers.” “Jengen, I'm not afraid of you. Divis 1s out of the way now. And 1 cun ek you. I licked you once be- fore.” Ho continued, craftily: “Why don't yon go down and what's "happened to Divis?" ce “Hell with Divis.” Again that orzy laugh. His whisky-laden broath | reached Jimmy across the room. And then he said something that Jimuy Rand had waited months to he, Silled your old gonna finish the Jimmy e inst his b L steadying ealm. He said, bet taut lips: "1 lnow you did, Jensen, I've been vailing to hwear you say it before 1 Killed you. T've known for weeks that you did it.! He felt that, after it made little diff to hi what happened, so long as he could bury hig fingers in the other’s throat ind choke the brutal, drunken lify out of him. You did, eh?” s sneering taunt. “He t so smart? Hell, kill me? You don't helieve I'v U'm waiting, too, Jensen, v have you tell me what 1 know before 1 use ft.” What a gig crazy bluff thought. And what a still cr: thing to be doing —- to sit and handy words with a man who had him trapped in a dark room, man ob." en cold —like et and with it came and Jeneen's voies 'd yon Hub! ot a gun? aiting to want to ntic, he move, biding his time to get him in his crushing hands. Still, he thought, and prised at the calm with which he was able to contemplate it, if the other was going to get him he would o down fighting, armed with a liatred he had never felt before Meanwhile, if Jensen would talk— vell, he would find out what he could.. . . “What T want to know,” he said, ‘is who' hired you to kill my father. TI've known all along you did it. You thought you planting that handkerchief {room. But you that stub of wasnY €o smart who was behind it." | “You'd like to know, eh?" was a crafty ring to Jensen's voice. |“Well, I'm not tellin'. Sure, 1 bumped him off, sure. . . . . Called {him up at his office. Told him I had \news of his father—what's his name?—oh, yes, Thaddeus Rand.” Jensen laughed again. . . . Jim- my thought the sound of it would drive him crazy. “No harm tellin’ vou about it. You're gonna get yours anyway. Well, he comes right down to the room, see? The room 1 have in the hotel. Falls for it just like a fish. . . Pretty smart of me, eh?" | Jimmy's hands twitched. He bit his lip savagely to down the hot anger that was leaping up to destroy was EuT- in the didn't intend to leave theater ticket. That a his forced calm. And Jensen's voice | went on, maddeningly, tauntingly: “Yefh, pretty smart of me, I'll say. Comes right upstairs an' knocks on the door. . in' Just like says. Huh-huh-ha | Again that thick, crazy laughter. | he comes in, an' I says, do you want?' an’ he says, ‘Are you the man,' ha says, ‘that called me up and said he had news of Thaddeus Rand?' No.' I says. ‘You must'a made a mistake. You got the wrong room, I guess’ Pretty slick, eh, Rand? Oh, I'm not'so dumb. | He paused. and the short silence was again broken with a laugh. | Jimmy said, his voice liks chilled |steel: ‘And then what?" | "An' then he turns te vour pardon,' he says. Rand, Tl say that for him. He's turned around, with his hat in one hand an’ his other hand on the door- knob. An' then I lets him have it— Bingo." He made a loud smacking sound, of fist on palm. “With the old black- jack, Rand, understand . Good blackjack. Made it myself, Best blackjack in th’ world Damn you, you got it away from me that night, didn't you? . Never mind, you're gonna get vours in a coupla minutes Plenty of time. | “That's an that. ‘Come £0. ‘Beg Real polite, T turned on the gas N pa- | tiently waiting for him to make a | were shrewd, Jensen, . - An' I says, ‘Come | in' I ) |salt [and teft him. Preuy swar, 17 1t don't make no ditference about the ticket stub, Rand, because 1'i (soln’ away from here where they won't find me First ot all, |though, I'mi break you in half—" Jensen, who put you up to ft? Who paid you? The same man that Ipaid you that thousand dollars to- What do you know about any- bhody givin' me a thousand—ah hell, |you heard me on the phone. Sure. “Like to know, wouldn't you? But |I'm not goin' back on him. Pretiy zood pay, he fs. ol you what, | Rand. Come on over here an' let {me get my hands on you. Then 1'll :'"H you—while I'm breakin' |apart. Huh-huh." | “Jensen," said Jimmy. in a voice that he did not recognize as his own, [“I don't know whether you cun | understand—you probably can't— but I just want you to know that whether you kill me or not I don't give a damn. “Ten minutes ago I cared—but not Jimmy himself strange laugh. “Jensen, 1 feel sorry for you, L cause—well, just because you ¢ | understand and never would lived to be a thousand years, 1 swore one day, in a morgue in | Grafton, that T'd Kill the man who murdered my father. I've thought |about that many times. 1 didn't know |that when that chance came T was 5oing to find myself in a closed room l\with a man T can't eve as I'm | talking. | “Jensen, you're drunk—but you're 10t 0 drunk that vou're not afraid {to dle. And T tell you, that as truth- tully as I stand here, I'm not. Not {now. You don't understand that, do vou? With that at heavy thing | on your conscience that you just told me about, you can't rci.ize that it's possible for a man to look d |the eye and laugh. | “Here's why I'm 5 | sen—because my longing to kill you —to get my hands on your throat is stronger even thau the desire to [1ive. melodrama, you under- | stand: just this—that somehow it'll e all right if T go down trying fo zet even for what you did to my father. “That's all.” He the dark. “Jensen, |vou | “You are, [ pretty litt you {but it don’t mean anything. You think you're not afrald. but you will —when 1 get my hands on you an’ start breakin' vou up.” “\Why don't venu epen “AD' Jet doin" “on gonna You have then hard might now.” And laughed, a n't if yon h in not afr ot took 'm a st waltiy P in eh? Well, > specch hat ie. the daor so vou Jimmy said get away? Nothin' all right. 1 kinda like to see T'm operatin® on vou There was a sound made turning of the knob, and they en's shape Himned shadow-like in the doorway. dim light behind himn from the refracted beam on t taircase, The opening of t auickly done, but even nsen was turning the lknob, Jimmy was starting forward, and all his strength s behind t blow that landed tlush on Jensen's lips. The other staggered. caught him- cIf against the door-jamb, and then 1ddenly, his arms were aro and. 1 g him in a grip t vas i might vise. “You would, would you laughed again, th 4 1 right in Jimmy's ear, and that | or, his ribs eracking under that ¢ le pressure could only struggl feebly to resist He was Hfted off his feet, J swung him around, then set hint own agaln, and all the time fthe pressure of those mighty srowing sironger Jimmy has never been able to ex- plain how it happened, but suddenly Jensen shifted his grip and his hands vere arousd Jimmy's throat. And in t same fractional part of s ond during which his huge hands moved, Jimmy had thrown his welght forward adn pushed out against Jensen with his arms. Jimmy heard cracking of wood, and the other's hands werc loose on his throat And then the stalr rall gave way and Jensen went crashing through (To Be Continued) open it mys e door had heen arms mas Menusvfor the Family Come on, tell me Breakfast—Grape ({ruit, cereal, thin cream, crisp toast, French ome- let, milk, coffe Luncheon—New toasted crackers, tea. | Dinner — Roast veal, bolled ma- |caroni, beets in orange sauce, head lettuce with Thoueand' Island dress- | whip, graham bread, carrot fig custard, pugee, ! milk; |ing, prune milk, coffee. | Macaroni which has been caretully i"(‘flk’d and blanched makes a deli. |cious accompaniment for roast veal. The macaroni should be well sea- soned with salt, pepper and butter {iust as potatoes would be. One or two tablespoonfuls of grated cheese |added during the reheating gives a certaln richness to the dish. New Carrot Puree Two cups milk, 1-2 cup thin {eream, 2 tablespoons butter, 2 table- spoons flour, 1.2 teaspoon salt, 1-8 teaspoon pepper, 1-4 teaspoon onion juice, 1 cup grated raw carrot. Melt butter, stir in flour and slow- 1y ad milk, stirring constantly. Bring to the bolling point and add cream, and pepper and onion juice. | Bring agaln to the boiling point and {add tha grated raw carrot. Cook {over hot water for ten minutes and {serve. | The carrot must | tinely chopped. If veal or chicken stock is avail- able it can be used in place of the milk. The stock makes a rather bet- ter pures than the milk but is less nourishing. be grated, not “ask for Horlick: "The ORIGINAL Malted Milk Forlnfant: Invalids, TheAged for All Ages Nourishing—} ] The Home Food-Drink

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