Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
Qulcksands of Love Adele Garrison’s New Phase of Revelations of a Wife -—-—J} Ihatie Abandons the Conductor 1 K Railroad to a Relicf. hear tuperat tor and had r world have arid ) you? “What i the tore v with of Mary Harri- ther-in-law's gs you -nice put Watie Leaves the Train “Why, Kat xpostula ain Pan ce #inzs? hug guarding o tings und leetla hage v more Und in itout your stlve same china | n you gif tn dose | market | 1nd ples ed to have | iehes vou alw hoondles T backet dere’s gl Glrl of Today TEMPTRESS ™ Tin LOGIC OT want to biting some ice (Cops TOMORROW: Gossip’s Corner Temptation Wins Chatterings shury’s . 2st Flour for Pastry, Biscuits«dBread 0 Y NEW B ITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUE ""\l’, MARCH 1926, |' CROSSWORD PUZZLE Verbal Last Absiin . €hest bone Injury God of lov Exclam 2 Dealers To o Highest form of affecrion Crowd acting as . Morindin Negative To allow To pree To slant. Sea ecagle To stitch 1. The baker on o To free. . Masts. . To devour. Paid publicity . To enliven enth note in rial of To expectorate, Sandpiper To wager. M mada Leaf of a book To restrict To elude Almost g Yertical Bone Yelle Cmatter from prick with Glance Point Dedty, Houss pl d amerons! of comy ous eircle move r e old p“hl‘~'w!~ fourth will Wil Modarn and oing sugar longe ATl i3 tender. na not ona-fo trom mavl onl ing out of t ths ' books. 1t we Your Heal How to Keep It— Causes of lllnv“ fohes sliee of 4 dash of lemon » Wunne h and lettuc al Ty CUMMING § Public Healt] r ma berry pl taced variety o cream fering from or hydropho The Printed Page ning Washir scribe Christian on merchants of tt tlowers, to 1 coat, & and lace, or ruf. the discas actically al ‘or human | claim an occa mals, bu He s*nds & copious 1s Woman Free? v on 1Y appen ev m mot ost compls in summer as much - o 1™haylor nera . Huma arily run wiid ath or carry the tai v sup- tition, is that a \Menus for the Family READ HERALD CLASSIFTED ADS SINVA 410X U0 3 hours they do not RYELIOW STUBEE ~_COPYRIG 1 1 Ik HENRY , 18 found el in . LERL AND, mut on. TODAY A | 1 in a i nin &am Chur him of T's house, accus- having hired Jensen to » murder Chure point of a rev 1sIness re al Polic a th AND, JIMMY R ub 18 trac v‘l‘ ¢ Jinn kill capon irch leaps for ot ' 10 OLGA MAYN & GO ON WITH CHAPTER rder VOW TH! LIV was fn a m Chureh's. STORY 0 And ‘“There are The other—1 two reasons why I didn’t kill you, Church, wave my word to O'Day.” CH{RCH TN ion of vho “picked her up” two 1 fore the man they identif descril him by his polic Lowell promises gagement. M saying she h to her gone. her apartment Her d appearance be- could he jest manner? A sud- king fear aesailed ¥ n intimat to a lonely house re holdir aits for them to goes upstalrs hits Divis goes u and y don't yeu choot, o the Jimmy wit] p the telophone on staire In the hen my brol andiron fight that through the his néck tollows, stair rail Jimmy is Jeneen and next It ten minutes be- Gray Tox Is Timid By Thornton W. Burge {Without a cause the timid And this is silly, you'll ~—Re Reddy Fox and Mis. R last made the a cousin, Gray F how he had happened to come orest. He had been gouth, but the wa ft had entercd into him a 4 started to travel tle he had come farther until last he en Torest I like it sald Gray ‘and T mean to s Ye it here and I'm going to make home here." Reddy and Mrs ticularly delighte “M' up (l‘”'- in the nizht, but they | and they ag: it wa long before they dis- i that Gray Fox was very As long as he cov a in the Green For would to the ow ig afraid her day T ig near him and q his own shadow. ped on a dry umped and ran as it frig It is all rig} reached \\n half to death. from real d be afraid of I seen such a fe race to the invite him to zo witl sald 2 lead towards henhonse and 1 silly to here.” r have us on W Farmer Brot Reddy were at w1 try it hunted up thelr cousin and invited him to go t that ening Fox said he would be very pleased to go with them > hadows had the Green Forest a Moon had begun irfve them back, Reddy dv and Gray Fox met on the of the Green Forest. “Whe: to hunt?” asked Gray Fox you follow us” sald Reddy ou follow us and we'll take vou to a place where we have found mors than one good feast.” So Gray Fox trotted along be his two cousins, with Reddy the way. Along the edge Green Forest to the heginning of 1 Orchard, then over t%e old & wall into the Old Orchard Reddy led » way. Gray Fox began to hang “Where are we going?" he st arllow andiyou'll see,”" Redds 1 tied € as litt hi 1 back, and headed towa possibl Brown's henhouse. driven him t as they turned the corner of Bowser the Hound n's dooryard barked just once. Reddr, glanced i him. Gray Fox was running e G Forest #s fast as t} s of his could take him t did T tell you?” sald Reddy Fox, 2 with v opt &l nd Sweet to try and Mrs. y to i Where are we to hunt? Gray Fox asked people Reddy deal that he kept door y often Forest away |vara Rrown's The next story: he Voice in the con- | t to run | is a dis- |} So, after | éw'u rnest T 1926 nY it again, and again the hammu.: snapped on an empty chamber. Rand's taunting laugh was in hi npty, Chureh. Only one and 1 wasted that on he said, “do you think | Do you think I'd delib. away from that gun if i ¢ 1?7 1 thought you'd do that very thing, Church—confess and '!n-n repudiate it the moment inew You s played nitting “hurch, and it v of tecth of ed for th 1 vou. y was in his way, anc uld reach the tabl was a loud t a corn t well These men a court ster ord, didn’t Jimmy turned ng beside him, erved, and hlr“ d his back Jimmy opened ‘\‘!1\;"'1 n"‘ Churel flung it he ta He leaned towa till held tigh i tly from b why I he said. * know what one of them was— 1 we hoth know. The other— & my word to O'Day." He h to relax, and to think which had him since death was the thought for it stood posed and ught that Lowell tvould be wating for of tragic before him, beaten, nered. That and Mar him. . ‘\ Ar nt realization ha who had been meshed in this thing | foted about, was lying alone on a hospital bed—friendless, with- Ou! cheer and comfort . Some. 1 it duiled the keen edge of d>’ ht of the victory he had n triumph was hollow Blind, hot as he regarded Church, sponsible not only murder but for O] well His face wit ‘wi . his h him 1im, {would have n innocent wou e had somet} aynard, lga's plight as lm«h s of Church's, tly clenched to keep trol and not strike ‘The really contempti- vyou is that you d ths blame on to an. You knew that £ on you ever since n in that automobils. And then b d- out, 80 w, that ehe you fc | was suspec | inned the kidnaping. and in her apartment. Church, it I could forgive vthing else you have done—which I ¢ of course—1 could never forgive that." He turned to O'Day, his face twist- ing with pity. “Lieutenant, they beat her—th ta a confession. they'd have done r atter she had.” Killed_her, than :rowled O'Day. fool. T'm eorry for thinkin' what T} 1id about her, an’ I'm man enough 5 apologize when I see her again. this here bird,” and he {ndl- e cowering Church. “is There's st him, t imber of other th! likely." t abdu ings tion an' a r surged over him | man re- | or his father's | ynard and 1 eaw | er's picture planted | n Jensen—because | ho wus speaking to O'Day, I be. hieve that's all, Lisutenan Oney more dull dep fon gettled on him, |and the draught of victory was b |ter on his lips, There was Mary, the girl he loved, no longer unattainably |but waiting to hear from him. And (now that he knew she was his and |his agonized longing was at an end Ihis triumph was suddenly flat, like that of some sgeeker who, blind to verything but his goal, finds it, and when it is in his graps pauses to lnn'\ behind him and whut Leen overlooked in his quest, | Thera was Olen, broken in spirit, hurt, with nothing to look for q to. . . . And she loved him; had told {him with her lips, with her eyes with faithful devetion ta him, What a debt he owed her has {eaid, with facted Indiffer, | Rand. You win, | now vou can 1 | they happily | 81 yo | He had missed not rare quality of symp: | standing b 1 | 1t nad | ha was wealthy. He it even then, e supposa I can—und tr | poor girl you dragged int [~ ro ch } | “You'll r { donc forced smil¢ lved t up, ot oceur tougl :d 1o Jin failed to ht, o this.” 1 quietly, ou'va been indiffe sensiti- ¢ natur elsp— is path had seom it branched, and one 150 el | But now lay desire {duty? {and sayi | new. {yon « t your ¢ | But the words | mere erapty pi | nothing short | thought, He groaned aloud, aying her back. T owe her nd was startled wher 1 on his ghould D'Day was saying. You ed to \‘1 of a strain. of “Lord, hat's | sleep it over You'rs tir {him along, {Churen When he spoke again t anner was | T 1ell vou how Moorey from Mexico City? called me 1 |gram on as confirn I'd want {t. €sems I friend who used to be on t! vears ago in Grafton iown to Mexico, zuage an' then siness or othér, “Moonev got fn touch s an' this fellow did sent the tel ifon. 1 told hi: work an' front deor cping glan sald. “Fine house you've g and. Do you realize, my boy, that it's § millionaire, And 1ad, buek vou pulle that guy 1t has been through on fop. ) But i s hope you put it to better use. I hope,” sald Ji though 1“1 hepe I'll be generous, that's all He watched dully while the offi- cers climbed into the autemobile an pulled reh in with them. He climbed in alongside O'Day |and sat silent, his mind a muddy mble of thoughts as he tried to reach some kind of decision. then, frowning, he set his testh. {knew. “Want me to drep vyou off at home?* O'Day asked, “or are rou coming down with us?” “I'm going down there later to meet Barry Colvin,” sald Jimmy. “First of all, though, I've got to see Olga Maynard.” (To Be Concluded Tomorrow) | | TREE =TQD SEOIPRES WRITING-STONES “LL0OK what 1 foud! They make marks on the side-walk!™ called Betty. She held up two eolored stones for Billie to see. “They must he Indita writing: stones™ exelaimed Billy. “Let's stick feathers in our hair, and play we're Indians™ said Billy. “Get your Indisn suit. Tl wear the coat and you wear the trousers. Then well do sorae Tndian writing.™ When Daddy carme bome be found wigwama, and houses and signa all over the walk. “Ahal™ be said ina loud whisper, “there must i »be Indians around »hm And just Rand, I'm an old | not only murder | * the way, Church.” he contin- | ued, your “what was that you pocket?” H hand thre Chur hed out a folded pape on the table. “It's a wiil, Thaddeus Rand yours." stuck in f it 1 a Rand—the will of I guess this is e care of it." said Jimmy. y'll be wanting it as evidence ater on. Hold ¢n, though, guess T'll read it over | “Yep,” he sald later, when he had gone over it, “it's just as Mooney's nforr v e was eald Henry R r his heirs ... Sam- «hurch executor.” | He looked at Church again, but fumbled with his | 1 spread | INSISY UPOW KEMP'S BALSAM for that COUGH4 | |