New Britain Herald Newspaper, August 17, 1926, Page 4

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'Quicksands of Love ‘Adele Garrison’ Revelations of a Wife —— Madge Revels in Her Week of Freedom. The breath of a belated spring was in the air as I left Phillp Veritzen's off and, with the caprice of the season, a strong wind which had spolled the day had died down sudenly as it had come. With the out-of-doors urge upon me, T walked swiftly the nearest point where I could catch a bus going up the Drive, and was fort enough mount to the top upant of the fro seat — my favorite getting out. 1 was in that relaxed mood which comes after happy de- nouement of some undertaking the outcome of which has been tensely uncertain, My first task under the direction of the great producer had been successfully accomplished and bad been given his au ap- proval. 1 was to lhave a whole week’s rest before I began the next plece of work, and as I leaned back in my seat, the smooth rythmic movement of the big vehicle and the Kkaleidoscope of traffic upon the street below un- rolling before my eyes seemed to assure me that my vacation had begun. The word ‘“vacation” brought a smile to my lips. Surely few work- ers anywhere were granted a week of lelsure after so comparatively short a task as mine had been Ethically I knew that I was entitled to it, for I had devoted almost every waking minute to the task and robbed my sleeping time in the as bargain. But pushing through my ' consclousness as persistently as a weed through the first moist soil of spring was the surmise that the boon which Philip Veritzen had given me had not been altogether a reward for the successful comple tion of my task. I did not belie for instance, that a man new to his employ and displaying equal zeal would have been favored thus sig- nally, ‘When I arrived at home, I found Lilllan in my The Collar Made of Sand By Thornton W. Burgess More often than you ever dream Things really are not what they seem. —Jimmy Skunk. Jimmy nk was wandering along the beach, pulling over this and poking his nose into that. Never had Peter Rabbit any more curiosity than Jimmy Skunk possessed. There were so many curious things on the beach that Jimmy was finding some- thing new and unexpected and queer every other thing. Farther along on the beach Red- dy Fox was doing the same thing. | It was curlous how many queer things were washed up with every full tide, Then when the tide went out, ebbed as they say, these queer things were left behind. Jimmy look- | ot “What are you fellows looking at?” he inquired od over toward Reddy. Reddy was looking ve: itently at somethin “T wonder what he's found,” thought Jimmy. “I wonder if it's anything new; anything I haven't ALY believe I'll go over there to sece, So Jimmy Skunk shuffled over toward Reddy Fox. "I sald he, “you look puzzled. have you found “I wish Reddy along tell promptly. "It mede of sand, but I've never seen anything like it before. Anyway, T don't see how sand can hold together this way." Jimmy down at the thir ing at. It looked me replied you'd over looked and ddy was sthre whole lot like came living room indus- e i S e o et Ao i NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, s New Phase of triously seribbling. She did not look fup as I entered, and I knew that she was working out some jingle to use with one sing sketches for wh ady demand. Knowing " spoke to 1d net up, and sitting chair near her, 1 & book and tried to read. of no i wor BT an threw lit- drat looking al Lere, and been ten minutes,” 1 re- g. “If I'd been a Paris plied Apach o0ls you | have had any difficulty | iculty would hi come you tried to get any: thing on them in a pawnsh e retorted dryly with truth, for since on from Harry Unde demanded garish display, worn hut the | when and | s0 they become firr The Beauty Doctor sescemem BY NINON Posed by Mareta George CONDITION—To much soft, flabby ahdomen DIAGNOSIS is is welgist, as this is one of the exercise. Treatment—Lie flat on you ratse one leg until it makes a other once nd hard firs times, then exercise the Then ra se both legs m flesh” about the waist a nerally an indication that you are taking on 1ptoms of obesity. Correct it by diet back, and with your knee perfectly stiff, ght an then alternate This will build up vor le with your body. ¥ apidly eat several s you can. 1 muscles as T simplest of aments, | “But or | don’t waste time discussing | " she said impatient- | I didn't tell you I because I dldn't want thing to attract you, warn you, I'm in-| e ways, Tm her coming, slightest but now, I insatiable.” wait until v you're going to, Prove Hay Fever Not Contagious Editor's Note: This is the first of ive articles by Dr. Morr dealing with hay fever. “I know, a cup of te torted, took t thing water, in, she he re- | “and it's all provided for. I | at liberty. Katie has ready except boiling and if she heard you come already has the kettle on. | every the Junlor is asleep in your bedroom, [eral medical writers mentioned keep an eye on |curiositics pat 1 Katherine is with him only |Sneeze and whee where Katie can him, waiting your return to come in and join the party. So give signals and convene ence,"” Copyright 1926, Feature I by Servic: ewspaper Inc. 1 1 i severe I t your confer- | named symptoms; Iwith itchin® |much running of BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN Editor Journal of American Medical Association d of Hygeia, the Health gazine About one hundred years ago sev- as who ‘began to ze at ghe time of the roske. En inclu ents blooming of t In 1817 an Bostock which an, ell nd sm sh physiclan 1 his own ed a @ heat of the eyes, ting and with tears when one light. This was fol- owed by a fullness In the head and rritation in the nose, with fits of sneezing, sometimes so vio- ent as to cause pain in the chest. Naturally a person afflicted with hese symptoms would feel generally ooked at the {1l 2nd be tired most of the time, because of inability to rest at night. Usua about the beginning or June end of a collar, the shape of one of big white collz that little sometimes wear. It was just that size. But it was made of sand. At least, it looked so. When Jimmy touched it; it felt so. He turned it over and still it didn’t break. That was as puzzling as was the shape of | the thing. How could anything as | thin as that be made ot sand and not break when it was turned over? Jimmy looked at it very closely. It rtainly was made {could see the grains. | Just then Graywing the Gull came flying over. Nothing pes those sharp eyes of Graywing's. He swung in a circle and then flew lo What are you fellows looking at?" he in- quired. “You tell us,” the boys about |4 esc retorted Reddy. Graywing alighted a few feet away. “Oh t?" sald he. “Why, (I that is nothing but a lot E retorted Jimmy scorn- | fully. “Eggs! Say, wh he matte |with yeur eyes, Graywing? Can't | lyou see that this is all sand raywing chuckled. “I see the |sand all right,” said he, “but with | |that sand a lot of eggs are mixed.” Reddy and Jimmy bent over the Sand Collar and looked at it more | ly. But for all their looking they dn't see any eggs. “Where are demanded Jimmy. “Under the sand,” replied Gray- wing. “Do you see that big, round 1 over there? Well, those eggs to her Reddy and Jimmy looked. Sure enough, right close hy was a great big snail of the round kind. It vas T hite and at the time they looked was movipg slowly along vy from that Sand Colla “You ser explained Graywing. tho: ry tiny. and there | r of them, When Mre. Snall, they something stic away belong one sh laid d hey wer by were Cov ith stuck to | the whole were made of f nothing happens lot of of that some what a Sand whole baby snails cor day Collar So now you Mr if must be so J ) conrse vou it t politely, Then hard to helieve (Copyright, nmy | 3ut mo t | The next s vaGirl -~ A QUEER COINCIDENCE It was a strange ride back to eity. Joan the hotel and v her there. Jerry all. He seemed in his thoughts knew that they And I—well, 1 myself think t! was telling myself girl ever had a more voted sweetheart T think we were all glad when we arrived at the Blackstone. Joan started to get out of the car quickly but T held her back a moment to sa: ‘Before you go out to your house tonight, be sure that you phone to My Elkins to make appointment to est him tomorrow morning.” her town c did not speak perfectly by had left rop at ere not pleasant ing to make loved Je 1 that surely no splendid, de- 1 ROWN WAY ay will not 1d of Tod always made for her would not know refused to see her. got out of the car, and told t 1 would o in and help ake her engagement. | v followed me rather reluct- | lidn't relish idea of | tanding in a telephone booth con- suming the time that he might have | spent with the girl he was fond of. | He called up Mr. Elkins' home, | however, and was told that Mr. El- | kins, 8r., would talk to no one, be- canse he was quite {1 Will you please let someone come to the phone that T can talk with" | |sald Jerry impatiently, 1 took the receiver from him. 1 saw he was to unhappy to be polite. disease that some summer and persans in differ country different of sand; he 'kins the symptoms appeared middle of and ai toward the July. Pollens Blamed 2 After more and more cases of the ere studied, it found there were also cases which appeared in the early summer and which came - on in the in the fall, and th ns of the vere likely to succumb at times to the disease very earliest investigator, appeared was The |ot tH, Bostock, gae to the name of “summ also suggested Later investigators that suggestion and with extracts of the flowe nd g earliest observations appearance of t definitely associated pollication of plants. Another English physician, named Blackley, experimented on himself een 1556 and 1877 with the pol- lens of more than one hundred srasses and flowers, inhaling it and applying it to the memt of his nose and eyes. dise the r ca h,” and term "hay fever.” differed with experimented pollens of all The disclosed that = disease with sorts of sses, was the ot Contagious e Later Dunbar proved that it is the protein portion of the pollen which brings on the symptoms in the more intense form, and that neither the whole pollen nor_the protein extract would have any™“ effect on normal persons, although they did produce the most severe symptoms in per- sons who were subYect to the dis- ease. The average particularly inter person may not be sted in the details inve s that have been made, but these have est vond adow of a doubt that hay fever is the result of a definite sitivity of the person to the portions of the pollens of the vari- ous flowers and grasses. The disease is not contagious, but a history of the disease in the an- cestry is found in from 58 to 68 per- sons affected. This may indicate a possible hereditary relations “I would " 1 said, ch Mr. Ell atient voice. “Joan,” I whispered excitedly, my over the mouthpiece of the that it was your at answered this time.” broke in Jer Even, Robinson was there in the with Mr. Elkins, he wouldn't nswering the phone, It was prob. like to talk to Mr. EI- ins?" interrupted if Mr. room of eggs.” |ably Mr. Elkins' man or the butler.” t it was | I tell you 1 am sure th Mr. Robinson,” = I would know reiterated. *T his voice is tonight.” “Here, let me take the receiver,” commanded Joan quickly. Evidently the same man answered, for Joan spoke, “Is that you, Dad?" She smiled and said, “Don’t swear, “PINK Brush?” ON'T disregard that tell-tale streak of blood in your tooth paste foam. Don’t blame the bristles—it's the work of insidious calculus. What is calculus? A“Kquid cement” inyour salivaflow that glues to the tecth | and gradually hardens to the toughness of stone. Only the constant flow of sali- | vapreventsyou feelingits thorny edges. Itcloudstheglisteningenamel. It wedges | its way under the gums, literally prying the tender inside tissue from the teeth. Unless quickly arrested inflammation and pus pockets will develop. “Tri-Calcium Phosphate” is the only agent known to dental science that will mmwe}x remove calculus in its semi- hardened and niear-h: d state. The dentifrice you are usi —or you wouldn’t sé& “pink brush. Here now is this precious “Tri-Calci- um Phosphate” in a pleasant, palatable tooth paste with eleven othér healing and antiseptic ingredients. It is named ORPHOS. . Buy a tabe tonight. Rell out an inch on your brush. Feel its cool, healing sensation in your gums. Note the new whitenessof yourteeth. Run yourtongue over your tee:h—feel the difference the “Tri-Calcium Phosphate” in ORPHOS makes. Or, if you prefer, mail coupon for 20-Time FREE Tube. FREE 20-Time Tube Mail this coupon to Orf d St anywhere | |especially when it is as excited as it | Dad une W wir it is not polite.” T could well rstand the conflagration that s going ,on at the other end of the After a moment's continued, “Well the reason I call- ed up was that I wanted to be sure that Mr. Elkins would be.ready to turn over Bud's and my property day after tomorrow.” Again she listened. NEA Service, listening, Joan Tomorrow — Joan is businesslike. A FLOWER CURTSEY () OOD Morning, Flower: Marjorie called gaily. “You seem to be very happy to- day.” -, The pansies nodded their an- swer, and the poppies bobbed their red paper hats. When Marjorie came to the . rose-bush a large yellow rose made a deep bow and Mar- jorie did the same. She tried to do it just the way the rose did. “Now I'll go in and show Mother how the rose makes a ‘curtsey!’ " Marjorie said. So she lifted one corner of her apron and made a deep curtsey in front of Mother. ‘ Mother smiled and made - ~! one, too. R N #|scented with-perfume, fairly padded CORNS In one minute thepainis Gone!, Gets atthe cause of corns Dr. Scholl's Zino-pads work like magic, because they remove the cause—pressing or rubbing of shoes. The pain goes instantly. Zina-pads are safe, sure, antiseptic, healing, They protect while they hsal No liquids, no tape, no bother. Results guaranteed. Get a box at your drug- gist’s or shoe dealer’s today. DrScholl’s Zino-pads Put one on~the pain is gone! {THE PETTER (Ilustrated and Copyrighted by Johnson Features, Inc., 1818 Broadway, New York City) N nd gay as . is a born flirt. The kind who has no ambition beyond | good time and plenty of | 1 having Ibeaux. a she fafls in her stenographic | and takes a job in Lillie little beauty shop at a small At that time she is having real love r of r life, man in the case is Tony Gaines, voung lawyer who wants to |marry her. Their engagement ends when Tony finds out that she is go- ing nd with other men and let- ting them make love to her. After several weeks of silence, Tony sends her a special delivery letter. Before nce to read it, it mys- anishes from the hall he accuses her older sister, but Cassie ter, Merry Tony Gaines has gone to Montana to live. She tries not to care. arou es her E rich employer, Kaufman. Then Moms, Mer- 1 mother, takes Lillle Mr. Hetflinger, into the boarders, . to help make meet. A year er she marries Mr. Hefflinger. Ji Mer- yéungest elopes with Derrick Jones, who lives next door and goes ti live with his parents Throngh Cassie Merty meets ne, a wealthy hachelor. hecomes en d to him, alt ond of him in only a lswarm fashion. But Bill keeps putting off the wedding. and when Merry gets tangled up in the divorce case Les Purcell and Nonle, his wife, {Bill drops her like a hot cake and | | marries another girl e and a both ends ry's sister. Bil She ough luke- she is f i Merry begins to wonder, she {loses one man after another hat is wrong with her. Morley's sister, Muriel, tells her one day that she is too “easy”—that too many men know she is the kind of 1 that a T es love to, but never mar- Merry wonders®if this can pos- sibly be true. | She hears that Tony become engaged to a girl in Mon- {tana—a niece of his law partner, Judge Bannerman. As the years go on, she supposes that he as mar- ried her and settles down to the ad- |miration of one man, George Leet, {at last. On her twenty-eighth birth- day, while she and Moms are house- keeping, Merry finds Tony's long- ost letter — a proposal of marriage, written t he' was leaving for | ntana, years before. that as ries. Gaines has Sure wide hungty eyes, when Lillie came ] [bustling up to her. “My stars! Every woman 1 is reading that nasty murder story! |said Lillie, Who did not miss a word of it herself. “I don't know why they |print such s‘uff in a decent news- | paper. “I wasn't reading the nasty mur- der story,” Merry ansywered, and tucked the paper under her arm. "I never read murder stories. They make me jumpy.” (TO BE CONTIUUED) “ASHIONS sy Sally Milgrim By Beatrice Burton Author of “Love Bound,” “HER MAN” An Afry Frock of Lace and Chiffon Is Enriched With a Delicate Rhinestones Trimming. Rhinestones are a favored form of trimming for black lace, chiffen or velvet gowns, their hard brilliance !a striking contrast to the soft tex- ture of the background. They are used singly, in dotted effect, in solid bands, or in decorative flower motifs. Frequently a buckle or clasp at the girdle is made entirely of these brilliant stones. The black chiffon frock sketched today featurés rhinestones used in a rather unusual manner. A deep yoke of sheer Chantilly lace, cut in points on the lower edge, is out- lined with a band of small but very Cassfe hid it from her, she starts off to Cassie's house with it. | (NOW, GO ON WITH THE STORY) | CHAPTER LVIII Cassie was giving a party “ANTHONY GAINES, ATTORNEY that |everyone know that Morley mad nhappy mo: ¢ hig luxurious house was fill- [time n Meryy had heard ed with the sound of women's chat- [of Morley's recent love ‘affair |ter. As Merry stood waiting in the [his beautiful blond private secret thall, a maid hurried past her car-! *“Well. Merry, I'm sorry I had |rying a huge silver sand- |keep vou waiting lo | wiches. |sald to her, dropping Through the open door that led |chair by the west into the living room Merry caught [thought those women never would a glimpse of Cassie, herself, in pale |go! And my head is aching—" Her green silk, bending over a card (voice died down on long tired table. |sigh, and che leaned back in her A minute or two later she came ;chmr as if y to drop. out into the hall. There was & puz- |[Four or five glittering bracelets |zled frown between her eyebrows. slipped down to her w from her | “Hello, Merry,” she greeted her |upper arm, as she clasped her hands |young sister. “You wanted to see {dly in her lap, {me?™ 4 “Sometimes I wonder wk | Merry nodded uncertainly. Now'labout,” she sighed [that she here, she wished that japd the gossiy she had not’com! Ime a cj; | She had not seen Cassie in months, |that silver box. Tha and suddenly it scemed to her,as if | She.lit it, and then reached for |Cassle were not her or, but a [the letter that Merry was holding | strange out to her. Tony Gaines' latter. or Mrs. W this?" she asked. Then, days, was a as she téok a second look .at it, pensive pers |dull red flush crept slowly over it she had been born with a gold her facg and neck. Something like Spoon in her mouth. She did not |a shamed smile just touched her lips look as if she had ever seen the |and then fled, She looked more like little house on Chester street | ci Locke, and less like Mrs. And, as a matter of fact, she had |Kaufman, than she almost forgotten the little house and | years and year the old ty ewriting days of her past. | “Where did | She never came near her family, un- asked, jerkily. less she and Morley happened to | Merry knew that be having {rouble no answer to that question “rll tell you she gave her one, anyway do” she said now, unsmilingly. | “I found it stuffed down behind “You'd better run up to my room | the mophoard 1l of our | and wait until all these people have |house, this morr she said quiet- gone, It won't be more than half an |ly, “It hadn't dropped there. Some- hour.” one had folded it carefully and put She spoke to Merry as if she |it there. Hidden it from me.” Sl were a delivery girl, or a new |stopped housekeeper. Seemingly, it never oc- | Cassie’s eves were curred to take her own sister back |yellotved envelope. |into the roomful of women and in- |raised them troduce her to them, “I put “You'll find some magazines up |defiantly. thought it was there on the table beside my bed,” to do — and 1 did it! {she added, lightly, and ‘turned to go | “Why?” Merry was still cool and | back to her guests. A# Merry started |calm and collected. “Why did you |up the stairs, She waved a*hand at [think it was the right thing to do? her and vanished. | Cassie blinked. “Why—why,” she “She-might have stammered, | was from |a cup of tea, at least,” Tony Gaines. he never thought bitterly, as she climbed the |meant to marry you — and I hated | staits to the second floor. to havé him boast around to Mor- | It was six o'clock before Ca ley that he had you on the end of | tinally came to her in the primrose |his string. I—I—I wanted |and white bedroom that overlooked |stick to Bill Erskine. He |the broad lawn before the house. A about you at that time, {room that was like a jewel-box, remember?” Merry did not answer. Not even by a nod of her head. She just sat and looked at Cassie's flushed face. “Why make such®a fu now, after all these yea asked nervously. “It to do, 1 know. But, after all, what difference did it make? Tony Gain: never would have married you any- It would have been another drawn-out affair like Bill her wil to Cassie down on & windows. *I a tray of so a t it's all parties clothes. Give th there, in Morley Kaufman, these | s hard, glittering, onage who looked ssie you get this?" she Cassie needed But what you'd better soiled, she on the Suddenly confessed the it there,” she was Don't craz; you with sil’s cushions and draperies, and all litter with gold-backed {brushes and bottles. The kind of room that almost every g on dreams of owning — and that one lin ten thousand manages to get for herself! Cassie W the one girl in ten thousand. She had made up her mind to get the luxuries she crav- ed, and now she had them. But discontent brooded upon her | face like a shadow, and unhappiness lurked at the bottom of her shallow |green ey | At thirty-three Cassie was sick , silly thing Kine's “Open the letter,” Merry inter- |rupted, “and reaa it!" | But Cassie had no.intention of |reading the letter. Why should she? | It was just like Merry, she said land tired of almost everything she |to herself, to make » mountain out had. Sick and tired of the great |of a mole hill! |house, the soft-footed servants, the | She flung the folded wad of en- {hosts of friends. Sick and tired of [Velope down upon the little French the jewels andthe clothes and the lsmoking stand beside her. endless round of parties. | \"0Of course, I'm not going to read | For the one thing she most want- |it, Sflly!"” she snapped: “Why should |ed she could not have. She had mar- |1 read it? Suppose I dld hide the ried Morley Kaufman and she loved |thing? What difference did it make? him — but she knew he did not love |If Tony Gaines had really wanted | her, at all. He gave her the hdusé land her car and her beautiful {stopped him from taking you! Don't |clothes. not because she woman he loved, but because she |If you'd behaved yourself you might was Mrs. Morley Kaufman — and he |have had some chance with him. But wanted the world to envy his wife. [you were runping aropnd with Der- No one did envy her. For almost lrick Jones and ‘BlllErskine, too, at e had looked for | you to | . |over anot you, one little letter wouldn't have | was the [try to blame your troubles onto mel | |brilliant stones. This same trimming also edges the lace on the sleeves. So soft is the fabric that I have given this dress an unusually full skirt, the fullness achleved by means of godets acrcss the front. It is edged with a narrow border of lace and topped by a slender belt which fastens in front with a rhinestone buckle. The sleeves, tight at the upper portion and flaring below, are typi- cal of soft frocks of this kind. In |this case the lower portion is of turned out all right,” she said quiet- o Iy. “I guess you didn't realize that [P12in chiffon as a contrast to the |lace above. you were spofling everything for me | o 820V il polling my whole life—when you | The Yoke of this black chiffon Tayaole liis, |afternoon gown is lace outlined with fletrer: Did ivon ~la narrow band of brilliants. Lace e went down the hill toward | ¢ atost %o her that 12 also edges the skirt. 24 spolled her life's I | Copyright, 1926 (EFS) ppi- | had certainly ma 1 to| e \Menus for the Family nothing but pity heart, as she FOR MRS. RUCK,” SHE READ. e time No Man you w ngaged to Tony stand for that went talk- words coming thick and and high and shrill ot up, put her r into 1 turned to go, | “No matter what I did, if I'd had that 1 rything would have going to hing: She on came wreck he And there was for her in Merr stood at the foot of the hill and looked back at the proud house| Breakfast — Chilled cantaloupe. where Cassie waited every night for 'scrambled egzs with rice, crisp Morley to come I sullen and [whele wheat toast, milk, coffee. resenttuly Luncheon — Smothered onions, lettuce sandwiches, raspberry pud- ding, milk, te Dinner — Veal cutlets, creamed potatoes, buttered beets, tomato and, cucumber salad, blueberry ginger- bread, graham bread, milk, coffee. | Do you ever chop your beets in- stead of slicing them when prepar- ing them for the table They look |twice as pretty served in tiny pyra- mids and really taste better, since they seem to absorb more of their s e On decided Sunset the to following Saturday Lillie spend the week-end at lake, Shy decided to go on the spur of the moment, and she sent Merry home to pack her bags | for her. “I've got to waves d a facia the middle of the morning, “and I'll have just time to make the train, 1 that's all. You'd beiter hring the |they seen bags_right down to the station, and |S¢asoning. I'll meet you there at half past Raspberry Pudding ey Two cups red raspberries, 1-2 cup L sugar, 1 egg, 1 cup milk, 1 cup two bags with Lillie’s tollet things |fIOUr, 1 teaspoon baking powder, 1-8 e Wiy mew summer clothes, | teaspoon salt, 2 tablespoons melted At fiftee minutes after twelve she |Pufter. P was standing on the platform of the | Beat egc until light. Beat in milk. Faide station walting for Lillle | MiX and stir into first mixture. Add e |melted butter and stir until batter is e i allmg |smooth. Arrange berries in a well !the magazine stall. when a famillar |buttered baking dish. and sprinkle face on the front page of a mews. |Vith sugar. Pour over batter and Rt o catieHt Har gy Ibake in a moderate oven for 40 = me to a dead stop and |minutes. Serve warm with sugar in. It was! It was Tony and cream. wce looking out at her from | Any kind of small fruit can be . black and white page of the |used in this pudding. Larger fruits such as apples or peaches should be pared and cut in thin slices, remov- |ing stones or seeds as the case may be. marcel she said, 1in ve two Moms' help, Merry packed up and down looked picked the sheet Tony's picture was a cut read, “ANTHONY FOR MRS, knew at up. Under ling that GAINES, AT- RUCK. | (Copyright; once who “Mrs. | Her name had been on ront page of every newspaper in the United States for days and days. She was a Montana woman, who had been arr sted on a murder charge— on the .charge of killing her own husband in a fit of rage er woman. | Merry bought the | was staring at the front 1926, NEA Service. Inc.) %‘ASK YOUR BARBER” IIT} He knows what Lacky Tiger will do for your hale . M- Hons of kappy users. Take homea bottle onder Mowey-Beck Guarestus. At Barbers and Druggists. Also makaes'* Whyte-Fox'’ Skin Remedy paper. She page with ARE OF ¥OOD IM The housewife who is “on her job” knows not only that she must give her family good food, fn proper proportions, well-cooked and attractively #erved, but that she can do none of these things unless she knows and practices the science of protecting all kinds of food stuffs from damage, epoilage, and consequent danger to the health of her family and herself, by protecting it properly. Thero are ways—mostly simple ways—of taking care of all kinds of foodstuffs, including the most perishable and ecasily spolled. Onr Wash ton Bureau hns prepared a valuable and attrative bulletin tell- ing her the “ins and outs” of all the tricks of food care and preservation. Fill out the coupon below and mall as directed: ] l FOODS EDITOR, New Washington Bureau, New Britain Herald. York Avenue, Washington, D. C. 1322 CLIP COUPON HERE I want a copy of the bulletin, CARE OF FOOD IN THE HOME, and en- close herewith five cents In loose, uncancelled, U. S. postage stamps or | cotn for same | NAME ADDRESS ciry STATE I am s reader of the HERALD,

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