New Britain Herald Newspaper, September 17, 1926, Page 20

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'Quicksands of Love Adele Garrison Revelations of a Wife —— Madge Tells Veritzen He's Wrong About His Son saw the amused, Phillp V n's here by Dicky's in tion of our luncheon with sage from Edith Fairfax, atraid that he might eemment upon the dislike werking outside my h Dieky had evinced. But I need not 1s too much an artist to do banal, and when I turned him r my gesture of to Edith he immediately re our former topic of co But with my sion upon ta him. find out who was her interest in Dicky was many hours older. “But Invardly I Qualled “So you believe me to be #ald with his keen black « fascrutably upon my f wardly I maintained an untroubled ealm, but inwardly I quailed, for I vemember what I had heard of the vuthlessness of this man and of his eaprices. To cross him, to express disapprobation of his conduct might mean the sudden ending of my work with him. My contract ar ewn sense of honor would fnsure e the money he had promised me, but to me that was the least part of this wonderful new opportunity which had opened to me Something ingrained in me pre- wented me from hedging, however, and I replied steadily— “Forgive me, Mr. Veritzen, but T €e. Even it he were guilty of the erimp of which he were accused, 1 ghould think you remiss in your duty 4§ you did not stand by him, but you say vourselt you are convineed of his {nnocence, and yet you main- taip this Implacable attitude ward him. Can you not how the boy is suffering?—even as you are” I drew the When I leok in brought a I was some for my ave feare rsation. experi is pas- eve apps b O lightning then. a furious glance from his eyes calen- | lated to annihilate the boldest ad- But the next instant it 8ad vanished to ba replaced by an BY THORNTON W. BURG: Reasons that do not appear Make some partnerships seem queer. —Old Mother Nature. There are many of these queer partnerships among the little people of the Great Out-of-Doors. Some of them are most surprising. T! ter and little Mrs. Oyster Crab form one of these queer parinerships, as Reddy Fox had explained to him by Graywing the Gull. But there are others quite as curious. Reddy dis- covered one of these I one of the little pools among the rocks on the beach. He discovered it without knowing that he had discovered it. That it he didn’'t know what he had digcovered. Reddy was looking down Oys- in the *Hub!" sald Reddy. “If I Crab I'd get rld of that fellow in a burry.” water to see If he could see one of Mose queer fellows called Squid. You will yemember he was one who made the water all black with ink one time. He didn't see the ink maker, but he sav g else that su prised him quite as much. "He saw one of those so-called “flowers- the-ocean,” the Sea Anemone, which he had learned was not a flower at all, but belonged to the animal world. But the surprising thing that this one was moving rapidly while all those he had seen befos had appeared unable to travel abont “Now, what do you know about thet?” exclaimed Reddy. "Am I really secing things, or not?” His friend Graywing the Gull something of- was his | NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, ’s New Phase of infinitely more disturb- pr ssion | ex i for rrore oma Setly tand me i in to some a sort of | liately should him under the care of the But, un- be- pe the from m s expul don: to me— he n stoon L me 11 put rests with him f im out It now ver he chooses to com Il me the trutl 11l not ask an him—things will before. And th to me eve be as n 1 shall m were BY Posed b r the st and my ting upon able shorn young | own e| the m.” 1 like an impla ificent in his s appearance, and I that any further appeal to vould be useless. But I felt neve theless that I had something to! work on if I could but gain Noel itzen's confidence and liking. T 1d this thought closely through rest of the meal and, ind through the rest of the day w I was at work In the living room of the Riverside Drive apartment It was shared only by anot thought, speculation as to what my husband would say concerning the | | luncheon tneident when he returned | |home. I knew his jealous temper | |too well to hope that he would be | | as repressed as he was when I saw | him In the restaurant. (Copyright, 1926, b Features Service, Newspaper Inc.) | just Bohbed hair is so casy to wash the job. Alw rub 1 the p with your 1g wet and dr; ion, an c s abou friction are 1y with e or allow it scalp ar circula The Beauty Do ctor NINO Hazel Hurd 15y to dry that many of us ar ry, with a turkish towel, o expose it to extre This friction 18 excelien ficial as the actual cleans: your el, fingers. y for its d is as ber * i ! Jf CAROLYN | BEGIN HERE TODAY | Mrs. Prentiss sees my |lights in the Heath househ |door one night and the |Harbor Gardens, Long Island, is |agog over the murder of MYRA |HEATH and the disappearance of |her husband, PERRY House the Heaths LAWRE MAN, heir to Myra's fortune, and BUNNY MOORF - |tiful, vivacious, to whom suspicion | points Lecause of her strange ac- tions, Myra Heath never used cosmetics never wore colors, yet wien he body {was found she was heavily rouged. |She was a collector of glass, and it was a rare eld bottle from her col- {lection that the murderer used to| [Kill her. Candles were burning at |her head and feet; nearby |card marked, erious next next day 1d “The Work Heath's and doors wer ight bef8re and were found t} ‘way in the morning. Fingerp: Bu and Inman were found on the s of |bottle. i Club the murdegr | AM ANDERSON, 1 for the elub presiden- y; AL CUNNINGHAM, who is tr: ing to solve the crime, and of ile, TODHUNTER BUC Prentiss’ nephew, has met Bun- nd fallen in love with her Bunny d te get a phone i o r "\]“v is am be a v but to me. of your it at false philosc reat comfort “If 1 go out I am sure someone else into it who will make you h As I said this, my h Heavy, for T was beginni that no one could come [lite who would make “Howe 1 may sophistry it has been a John, come life, art g to grew fee into my me happy. inued gravely, ir, there arc many other thin that you must find and keep and the greatest of all these is to find and keep your- self.” While had been had an uneasy feeling Symington had been he near, and I was grea when T heard him walk across the drawing room and enter the hall wiere we were standing I knew by his expression that h was eonsumed with curiosity what his friend and had been saying to me what had been talking aho (Copyright, 1 NEA Service, Inc). TOMORROW: Judy “you know, we talking, T that Mr ering about relieved et we Wonders. enough to overhear him. “Now, | {what is it?” he asked. “Come, look down into this pool,” replied Reddy, “and tell me whether lor not that Anemone down there is | movin Grayw led. “No,” he said It {8 being moved.” | “What do you mean by that?" de- | manded Reddy. | “Just what I say” replied Gray- wing. “Look a closer and you will see for yourself.” | Réddy looked a little closer. Then | he discovered that that Sea Ane- mone on the back of a Cr [Yes, sir, it was so! The Crab was | carrying the Sca Anemone about, | | “Hu id Reddy. “If T was that Crab T'd get rid of that fellow in a | hurry. |+ “No, you wouldn't," replied Gray- | wing. hose two fellows are part- ners. That Crab likes to have the |Sea Anemone on his back and the Sea Anemone like to be there. So htere you are!” | “T don't it yet" sald Redd 1 can understand why the Sea A | mone should like to b ecar hout but T don't understand why the Crab | shonld 1 |near g looked down and chuck- ‘it isn't moving. | o w like to carry him.' | | “All you saw when you first looked | was ‘ea Anemone, Yon didn't | see the Crab at all, did you?" asked | |Graywing. “No,” said Reddy. there's Your answer. ing. “Crabs other people have. With Anemone pretty well cov- | that Crab isn't likely to his enemies. The s 10 he rried abou asier to get plenty to cat in that way. Having to stay in | one and trust to luc that enouzh food will come her way isn't | alwavs satisfactory. So the Crab | and ti a Anemone have formed | 4 it works out | for both. It may seem it isn't queer as it T didn't.” | re. im by because it is 1 er, but as rubbed his nose thought- | and learn,” sald he. “T'm | I don't dare call any- Reddy fully. “Live getting where thing queer.” is a good place to get to” re- ywing. 6, pl (Copy Burg by T. W. The next story: “Reddy’s \vmnhe."“ | HE A STORY OF JOHN'S '~ A GIRL OF TRIBUTE TODAY sighe John Meredith wmswered him liked me to, “I expect You have stead of elf-contained town at taken my medicine would have be everyone concerned I certainly would hav ¢ sister from the great sorrow going through. But Ju one excuse, T was e merely g child when I had my great declsion, wet [ am 2rhamed of all those years that I was skylking behind my crippled you sk ing so o I had mother's my home and much b e er i 1 have to make ROWN WAY a Girl of Today mptations of the world after other died I had only someone to show me the right e you | way, 1 Ave what a weakling ward 1 seen was, Judy, of lif have com- you in the hours that I I have learned that have gone [ vely fe ¥n ¥ 1l the 2 g have | in years ore Oh, T don't w to lose you | you." won't4 found you . 1 Don't Jose me 1 knew T had to be fiiy |it T was not, I should break down | and “When 1 was a very little | my mother told me that nothing | would go out of my life thatseme- when I h worry, John, | tor| o or ot girl, a | heart. | come | the u |s Your Health How to Keep It— Causes of Illness PREVENTION IS TREATMENT FOR HEART DISEASES DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN Journal of the Medical Association and of Hygeia the Health Magazine One of the most serious forms of heart discase is that which fects the blood vessels that supply the itself with blood. When these blood vessels become harden- ed as the r¢ It of disease or ob- structed as the result of infection or some mechanical factor, the nu- trition of the tissues of the heart suffe i result is a train of symp- toms pointing directly to a weak- ness of the heart, not the least of which may be the exceedingly painful condition known as angina pectoris, or severe pain in 1ih When these blood vessels become obstructed, the progress of repair {8 similar to that which oc- curs when blood elsewhere in the body succumb interfer- ence. Sometimes By Editor American rt vessels to blood other vest Mtake up to some extent the nece sary circulation, In other instances the tissues that are destroyed be- fibrous and are scarred. It patient is sufficiently youthful, muscle fibers may develop. Prevention Best Correction of these conditions 1s clearly a matter somewhat beyond the help of the physician. Ob- viously his duty Hes in preventing disturbances of the heart by proper attention to the hygiene of the body and by eliminating soon possible in the course of the life of the people who look to him for guidance such focl of in- fection as may exist in the throat, the nose, digestive tract or other places in the body. The available seems that tions may produce changes in heart when they but changes do ars latest evidence such infee- secondary the time that these not become after, when rculation the d, or the walls of bload els become changed fation with atural of old age. The indication is for prompt treatment of the infections that have heen men- tioned at the earlfest possible mo- ment ta_indicate the ocenr, at sometimes st un the mod v serhaps of Jlood is ves 550¢ the clear After Eating heen noted that pain in in persons suffering from wses i likely to come on meal. Indeed physi- perform post-mortem s on the per- suddenly of such heart infrec find the ended with food which the stomach hardly to d by the It the has h dis after W nati dyin a clans ) sar bodies of not jent tomach di has been long enov process of When itir in h digestion ath urs suddenly, large meal is some- symptom. A3 & r constantly warn pectoris to be affe 1 : of an early physicians sons with angina sparingly, or to t little at frequent {intervals, rather than to overload the stomach with a b y and heavy meal When the blood vessels which supply the heart are diseased, a ac vo tin 1t ¥ ke a W ead lep, while I left Joan to |thing better would not eome into|glight bending upward of the heart ppy." | or by a distended stomach may o in terfere ith the ecirculation t blood vessels that it tate a "re T sev | pa | | BY CIST BREAKPA m R MARY Apples, cereal crisp graham toast, m malade, bacon, creamed po toes, millk, coffee. | LUNCHEON | matoes, ole {hearts, ¥ DINNT | [ thin cre | Stuffed baked wheat bread, c delight, milk, tea. “reamed salt codfish, 1toes, lima beans in cream cahbage salad, -cott ple, graham bread, milk, cof to ut red apple served “au na 1" is most appetizing on a ho morning. An astraken apple, so tarf v whets the most jaded ap. for those who prefer frult the old-fashioned s apple is quite perfect 0ose a sweet apple for fruit because it may sati 1 Don’t Lreak te ‘))05(’, Peach delight is delightfully sim Dle. Peach Delight One cup granulated s water, 4 or 6 p lemon_juice, coanut, 1 gar, 1 tablespoon cup grated fresh co cup heavy cream. | Cook sugar and water until a thick syrup is formed, about eight min ute Add lemon ju and peac pared but not cut in halv syrup to 1 g point ar heat. Simmer fl ‘[rnn\ fire and let the syrup until cold. Drain and rol in coco: Serve with plain crean and some of the peach syrup. he boil reduc Fleur de { given thi: natives of 2 {the smart women of this resort { They are made “of small pa colored shells and fastened by tin wires, The one shown is of pa !green and pink, with bright grecr {1eaves and stem. TREE-TOD STORIES BeD TIME C/ JN | 'I'LL beat you undressingl Billie shouted. Then up into the air went Billie's left shoa. and up into the air went Betty’ left shoe, “Here's my right shoel" Betty cried. And Bilfxe'- right shoe flew up at the samg time. “Whee! My suit's offI” yelled Billie. “So's my dressl” Betty an- swered. "And my unywares... and now ... my nightie’s on me. | beat youl” -ze squealed. "Now let's surprise Mommy and get into bed and be asleep! Here she - comes!” “We're asleep!” they called. “Hear us snore?” oty ek Mer is the romantic name w jewel {Menus for the Family aj al the appetite and defeat its pur- | cup | Bring | minutes. Remove | peaches stand in ¢ mada by'the au and taken up by {call from H He phones her azain, saying Inman is the 1 ! faints under a_grilling JCTIVE MOTT, and Inman s to Buck that he saw Bunny rs after the mu ott questions all the serv em to Keep quiet on invites Cunning! » and there, while waiting or Bis host, Cunningham is sudden- Iy confronted by Perry Heath, who |disappears as mysteriously as he had appeared. Shortly afterward Ander- | son ecomes in and reproaches | Cunningham for letting Heath es- | cap, & Biick, meantime, s determined to He resoives to have a | his Y [clear Bunny. |good talk with her. | '[NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY | CHAPTER XXXVI | And then the objecj of Toddy's ~lanxious thought came and herself on a low chair beside his own. So softly had she come, that he had no idea of her presence until he heard her soft, low voice saying: “| “Mrs. Irentiss bid me came and talk to you for a few minutes before | I go to my room. | “I'm glad to have you,” he said, | speaking quietly, too, and involun- rily laying his hand on the little |one that rested on his chalr arm. Bunny looked up at him, her eves of *wind-flower blue” dimly visible |in the faint light that glimmered from the doorway. “Yon are yery good to me! she ®lsaid, with a sad little sigh. “You |and your aunt both. But I wish I could go home,” “I wish you could exclaimed |Tod, his hand tightening its clasp lon her own. “Why do vou speak like that? Yon she exclaimed, for his {tone had been emphatic. “I am frightenc1 about you," he murmured. “Tell me, Bunny, tell me, dear, do you trust me? “Yes" she said, and her voice was | cloar and frank. There was no trace | |of coyness or shyness, it was as if | fsoul spoke to soul, and with his {power of reading the intent of an- other's words, Buck believed her. He turned to face her more fully. | “Do you know you are in danger? Grave danger?” “1 suppose I am. I do? 1 am very much alone— Her voice quivered and tears came into the blue eyes. “No," Buck declared, alone. You have two staunch friends beneath this roof, and one of us, at least, would die for you This was dangerously close to melodrama, but was saved therefrom by Toddy's obvious earnestness and the ringing note of affection in his tone. But Bunny shuddered. “Don't mention death, she said, “we've had enough of that for the pre: it ! So we have” he too, want to avoid the subject, but it T am to help you, and Lord knows lyou need help, I'll have to ask you |some pretty t questions.” You may.” Bunny gaid, but her voice had taken on a cold formality, almost as if she spoke to an offictal t |frighten me 1 | | | But what can ou are not " said, “and I, i “on, groaned, “don’t speak to me that way, or I can't talk at alll Phe girl laughed outright. | “Go on with your blunt questions [she commanded, but the laughter |soemed to linger In her intonation. Tod plucked up a morsel of cour- Surely a murderer could not !laugh like that! | “When daid you |Heath after asked. “Oh, T can't tell you that!” she gasped as if in horrified surprise, and started to rise from her chair. No, sit still. Don't tell me any- thing you don’t choose to, but do,— oh, Bunny, do confide in me! You| | must have help—I will help you.| Dear Heart, tell me all—all about (T4 [ “I—T've nothing to tell,” and now | slte spoke really coldly, and with an accent of displeasure. “I thought | detectives found out the truth from clues and things, not from asking people questions.” “Both methods are used,” and now Toddy was stern and grave. “So you wont' help me to help you?” L me a—about it! Don't!" Her little hands twisted themselves nervously together and one foot beat a tattoo on the porch floor. “Well, tell me this.” Buck felt he mightn't get a betetr chance and he must find out some things, “Did you go downstairs and come up again late that night? After you hn, gone to your room for the night, didn't n | | |age. | Mrs. he first was see dead?” mean.” “Why-—no—of course, Why should it?" But the mald sald she saw you." “Do you take her word jn prefers 1 WELLS | starting from can't—oh, I can't—don't ask} ence to mine? “No, I do not. However, Inmay iCTION Wy also says he saw you." “Larry said that!” gireved, rather than an then it's his word ag: 't T Bra: 1o had come to her ald. Her air was almost saucy, her tone al- most gay. Buck was annoyed. How could she treat such a serious matter so Aippantly? “Bunny lat you G she sounded gry “Well, t mine aid, is! “I can't And, too, dear,” she go on like t before vou go any further, there is | I must tell you. I love you, . and T want you to learn to love me. I want you. to promise that when this awful affai is all over, you will let me try to win your art, try to make you see how dore and worship you, something else h I to win your love in return. | hout it, little fact that no repul lis overtures made Toddy's leap high with joy, and he caught the girl to him. But she drew away, her hands gently pu off his eager arms, “Don" whispered, “at1 not new You don't know, you don't swee she —not yet. Toddy, dear, know——" “You're going to tell me all T don't kno h ng hands and held them o going to let me be vour father con- 1 your guide, philosopher and friend, as well as your slave and adorer and—and, my darling, your future husband.” She sighed. and for a moment he thought she was going to surrender her sweet gelf to his embrace, then she turned®away from him, tears in her voice she se don't touch me at to say or do! And -T must go through e to.—oh, T have to!” but Tl go through too. Tl be with you every the way. You can depend -oh, Bunny, you can depend oh, fessor a “No, oh, 1 “Yes with it step of on me. on me! T well must go alone: And with that walkde slowly house. dear, believe that—but, no, 1 alone.” she back left and into the CHAPTER 2 Vit Ruek lenked after Bunny, sorely tempted to follo but concluded not to, feeling it was better to let her think things over by herself He went back to his chair on the poreh, w tering vin he numberless eigars, His aunt came out and said, in her crisp wa “Come, Toddy Boy. it's late. ¥, can think about her in your dreams instead of catching vour death of cold out on this porch. Come along Tt No, Aunt E sat and smoked You run along to and I'll go up when T get ready. | ve the door open, I'll lock it ren T go in.” “Oh, all right, have v. but if You get hay blame me¢ “I won't. “Good night, Boy. You'll anything you want in the pantry 50 be, you can think of anything s prosaic as food!” Buck smiled tion, and left swered. He sat there for hours, unhees the flight of time. ing, and sat, almost motionless, gl ing himself up to dreams far re moved from detectives and murder wi your own Good night, auntie find at his aunt's intui- her ralliery unan- ding | mysteries. How sweet and dear she was! And |that little wistful smile—that alone | betokened her utter innocence. If she had a secret, it was that she w: shiclding somebody clsg—from some mistaken sense of duty. Well, he would discover her s cret—he had a right to, for his mo- tives were all for her good, his in- terests only hers, from now on and forever. Some day. would be at an end, some da this awful investigation y she would be free to o or come as she | | pleased {and he would follow. He would Then she would go home, meet her people, interview her father, and all would be shipshape and proper. Whether it was the mental picture of the wedding feast, or the increas- 1l of the night air, something thoughts to his aunt had so casually referred to. He was just contemplating a move in that direction, when he saw some one coming out of 1!;odrnnt door. The door had been d, though not locked, and the one who came through it was Bunny—ves, surely, Bunn He sat very still, his eyes almost his head. Was she, turned b Flies neverrevivewhen Tanglefoot Spray is used. Here's a powerful in- secticide equally effective against all common household insects. Tokill moths, roach- es, mosquitoes, bedbugs, fleas and ants you need ‘Tanglefoot quality Quart $1.35; pint 75¢; % pint 5Go;Super-Sprayer3So Vsorav THR TANGLYFOOT COMPANY Grand Rapids, Michigan oM him and | ere sheltered by the clus-| fever, don't | He ceased $mok- | the pantry | 7 %.,‘m 4 ©1926 .P PUTNAM SONS could she be, walking in her | No. he saw at once that st not She had on a dark frock, =and ack shoes and stockings, and she ked slowly, looking ahout her as | she stepped She could not see Buck, as he sat | back in the shadow, | no sound, so that she did not even | pause to look that way. | . She went softly, slowly, but stead- ily on, to the edge of the porch and down the steps. | As she went down the path te the side gate, Buck rose and quletly ollowed 1 He felt this, he w no hesitancy about doing s her protector, and he meant to watch over her. | 1t was not necessary to be ver cautious, for the soft lawn deaden- ed his steps, and appare she had no thought she was not alone. Across the lawn she made for the small piece of woods that was not far away. | In the shelter of a tree Teddy + | waited, and then as she went into [ths woodi: he cautiously |l)n| at a distance. He had no wish to pry, but also, | ha must sce that no danger came to {ner. shadows, followed, qa I ppeared in the deep edged nearer, and saw, with a sudden pang at his heart, |that she met somebody, and that omebody was a man. Like a flash, Buck the letter Bunny had lunch time. How she | without comment, membered, a heigt queer little frown. | Could it I been from this man, making an appointment for this meeting ? Buck was sure that it could have becn, but was. His heart was torn with fears tried to keep his faith in Bunny, but he had left the house secretly, and | very late. She had come to meet a Iman who was waiting for her in a lonely wood didn’t seem as if much more eded to make the girl blame- beyond power of explana- i remembered received at had read it but with, he re- ened color, and a | not only |c | He dark, It lwere worth tion. He watched through the darkn not daring, nor in¢ |nearer, and it seemed te him t the two human shadows merged into As if Bunny had been lost in man's and it sh no resistance to such condi- at embrace as mada | tions. Toddy turned sick was the girl he love ored, to the point of idolatry. But 5 was also the girl he honored, | respeeted and believed 4anocent of any guilty knowiedge er connivance lin her friend’s death. What was the truth? For once | Buck’s power of discernment was lat fault | He knew not | what to believe. More than willing to give Bunn every possible benefit of the doubly how could h ieve her in all ways innocent, whe e would do such a thing as this? He tried to find an explanation. But if this interview were in the in- ts of law and justic why so the meeting? Why so late an v a departure from h Th what to think— So stealt | the house? | It was inexplicable. Tod began to |focl a rising anger—yes, even his Bunny could arouse his resentment at this treatment of his proffered help. Why hadn’t she confided in { him, and let him go with her to sce | this man? Then he bethought himself of an- {other explanation, and his wrath | turned to great and grievous woe. Suppose this man Wwere Bunny's lover! Suppose it all had nothing to do with the murder mystery, but that this chap, confound him! h {come from Bunny's home with mes- s or warnings or help of some sort in her dreadful dilemma Maybe they were affianced sweet- | hearts, and the girl { flirting with him, and, he had to ad- mit, she had done very littie of that | Indeed, she had really repulsed him, and it may have been only his imagination that made him hope she ‘T\'(V\ll“ vet turn to him with love and | afrection. He knew little about tuitions might not be ones, maybe she was the typical flapper of whom he heard so much and so | after Well, he must know a little more, land with a feeling of defiance of his |own better nature, he crept softly | nearer the pair in the woods. | They now sat on a fallen log, ear- | nestly engaged in conversation. He could not make out the tenor of their talk. She hated himself for trying to, but he edged still closer, and though he could sce & shadowy outlines of their figures, i at last managed to make out a few | words. | “Don't care?” Bunny said, | passionately, her voice raised a |trifle, as it in amazed agony. “Have her, his in- true u ©1828 BY NEA SEAVICE, INC. Chewing gum is better than chew- i9g the rag. ced wishing to go | worshipped, | had only been | and he made | | | joriginality ;ru’h\ r effect Wraps. |ing |invariably finished with a luxurious | | one you no pity, no regret? Oh, T don't know what to do “Don’t do anything man's volce said. Buck could not place that voice, it was unfamiliar, though he realized he might have heard it before “But T can't be still and say noth ing—you noticed the putty The man, at that hand across her mouth, “Hus id. “I fancied heard a sound. Somebody may about.” dear,” the see—1 clapped his he s 1 be FASHIONS By Sally Milgrim Lavish Embroidery Ts a Significant Feature of the Newest Eve- ning Wraps. elaboration and unusually luxurious fabrics are features of the present evening mod This is p ticularly true of the new wra which for beauty of materizl and of trimming have never been surpassed. To create an ever the mode further in vish use of fur. The most sumptuous of the new evening materials is metal brocads —a fabric uesd for both frocks and When used for coats it y ornamented with g idery of some sists on a A 15 frequent embr & fur trimming. ch is the coit sketched to combines feminine the trim effect of lines. Here the se %ot ays [ the smart a model that with ilored metal str material is |brocade in gold and chartreuse col- or, richly embroidered in gold cloth and chartreuse satin in stri ed effect, and the collar and cu are of fox, dyed a chartreuse tone A straight line evening wrap of metal hrocade in gold and chartreuse and lis emBroidered in green beads trim- med with fox dyed chartrcuse color. Copyright, 1926 (EFS) Wife Asks Divorce and Custody of Daughter Charging intolerable cruelty, Stel la Zisk Boyle of Berlin has broyght suit for divorce against John Pat ck Boyle of this city. Hunger- ford & Saxe represent the plaintif and the writ is returnable in the superior court, Hartford, the first Tuesday of October. Constable 1 Winkle served the papers ves- terday The principals were married o November 1, 1917, and they have child, a daughter, seven years age. Mrs. Boyle secks custody the child. of of Suit for $1,125 ‘Fl;l‘lo“s Automobile Collision Suit for $1,125 has been brought the Auburn /Transportation Co. inst Battista Virgadaula, through Attorney §. G._Casale. The action is the outcome of an accident on Beaver street several weeks ago, in which one of the Auburn company’ vehicles and a car owned by Vir gadaula were involved. The writ is returnable in the court of com mon pleas the first Tuesday of Oc- tober. Paolo Vasques of Hartford has brought suit for $300 against Paul R. Cianci and Lucia Cianci of this ty, alleging non-payment on a note The plantiff i3 represented by At- torney Harry Schwolski. The writ is returnable in the city court, Hart- ford, on September 30. ¢ Hair Dresser By Edna Wallace Hopper ‘That curl, that fluff, thatsheen in my hair are due to no expert care. 1 never go to a hairdresser, never have a Marcel wave. My work on the stage allows no time for that. *1 simply apply twice weekly a hair dress which great experts made for me. I call it my Wave and Sheen. To that my curly, abundant, glossy hair is due. It will be a joy to you—I prom- ise that. My guarantce comes with each bottle. Unless your hair beau- ty is doubled in an hour, I'll retumn the cost. All_toilet counters sup) lg Fdna Wal- Wave and’ Sheen 3¢ 75 lace Hopper' Fer botder Go try it now,

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