New Britain Herald Newspaper, October 2, 1926, Page 4

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY, OCTOB uicksands of Love Adele Garrison’s New Phase of —Revelations of a Wife —— The Curious Lodger Makes Mary's Acquaintance. “Let ma help vou’ “These were the first words which Jack Leslie uttercd as he came to the spot where Mary Harrison bent over the apparently unconscious form of Mrs. Baker, the ridden lodger from the fourth floor They were g0 innocuous natural under the circumst that T began to feel as if I stretching m imagination, pecting AT appea an accident Yet I remembered his open of Mary, and with the reali g girl’s unusual could not rid mys fantastic idea that he trailed her to the apart himself familiar with ing a morning run, z for t such an opport making her nee unusual incident provide From the ge point of the bushes I could see clearly t Mary's face and that of the d There but the chivalrous wish of a gentleman to aid a woman in distress. In Mar expressive face, as she looked up in answer to his qu only relief at his pro quick recognition. 1 she was remembering the mo when she first had seen him, when I had exerted 1y ingen to give her a dispairing impression of the young wastrel, even repeating in an offhand fashion, Dicky's con- temptuous characterization of £8 & “capering cockroach “Oh! thank you!" she said grate. adding with a pretty anxiety She has fainted, T am afraid.” He Jooked closely at Mrs. Baker's tace, “Yes, #he has must get her on the from these hard stones. “I can help lift her, unteered eagerly “That will not be necessary,” returned, smiling at her, but, T o mented, that was no point against him; no one could help smiling at curiosity- ance upon the scen habit her nd w e acquaint 1is va was in this nothing . there was not rred aid, but B a " he agreed " Mary vol- he him | S 1 moveme he pread it on Mary's With deft took off the gras which she held surprise he m no flamhoya theatrical protest against spoilin r coat, h as I sl ve ex- rom his type d that toge out to him. le t, su h I reali he was far more artistic and danger- | tearcd in- for conservative 1 and scion of old N cossed had By he n with and laid it on the coats spread apparent conscious her hanc f and dre cup from his Lesl a col poc “I'll run and get soma r from the drinking h " he said, and he started off, when Mary called him Ok her eyes. ' she sald I'm € s coming he wom she spok - feebly in the s ich she about the genuiness en had wondere she asked, nt and T think,” Mary an- “You fainted, v you sure you're a “Are woman lay still. looking from face to the other as if trying to remember them “You, I know,” she eaid at last to Mary. “You live in the same apart. t house that I do. I often have you. Mary replied, “and 1 have seen you in the hall.” “But you,” the woman one me sce: went on, looking fixedly at young Leslie. “T do not know at all. Vat are you doing here?" Copyright, 1926, by News ture Service, Inc. per Fea- Danny's Long Swim By Thornton W. Burgess Who secks a goal will keep his nerve, And from his pose never swerve 0ld Mother Nature. p v Meadow Mouse wasn't a prisoner very long in the M hole in which he had ¢ Blackcrown the Nigh pressed disappointment over falure to catch Danny and back to his minnow fishing waited only long enough to be that the way was clear; then started on. After a time Danny came to a branch of the creck. He couldn't go on in the direction he wanted to go without getting on the other side of that creck. Now, to you or to me that creek wonldn't have scemed very wide, but to such a ept | Heron ex-| his went Danny sure he imming dreadful ny can Pl who th h vim to y have fa bottom Wi fell In. “A s “There's a snake down there on fhe bottom.” Now it happened tlat / { Peep the testing t th (11 Least Sandpiper came along just then and alighted right close to Dan- | ny. q “What's that you said?” {n- red Peep. gasy ere's a enake d Danny, Peep looked down “Oh,” said he, That's Slipr “That's sai down in the “that's no Zim the Eel." water. snake. “But sir Slim jus “Slipe isn't tell you that n't an ecl a snake?" He | like one, Dan judge folks retorted Pee 1, and an eel is a even hundredth col And t} repli to a snake. “Thank plunging in, he swam as fast as hi ittle Jegs could move. In p had said, lidn't feel easy abont Slippery Slim until that long swim was ended and he crawl on thea other 1926, by T. W. Burgess) re you are!" 1 Danny he el out bank (Copyright story: “Danny gets a pears, in ed tomatoe: milk coffr con is rath- od. and Bacon in red and black , Inc.) Thwisory la- costly to hor insurance m To my | wak | “She's open- | and stirring, | always And | Your Health How to Keep It— Causes of Illness | ! | BY DR. MORRIS FISHBE Editor Journal of the American { Medical Association and of Hygeia the Health Magazine Almost everyone now knows that the removal of the tonsils is desir- 1ble t re infected, in order to prevent repeated sore t but to prevent second- s to occur through infection from the tonsils of the body. rs ago 2000 children in N. Y., had their tonsils removed. After a year 5000 of these hildren e re-cxamined, and at the end of three years 2400 were re- Rr, Albert D. Kaiser of | Rochester has gone over the records | |to find out the benefit the patients rived from the operations. Mouth Breathing of the chief complalints for such an operation is done is ng through the mouth. Out 00 children on whom the oper- | was done, 10 were mouth- | breathers. Out of 1200 children who not operatcd on, 8§64 were | mouth-breathers, Three years after the tonsils and adenolds had been removed, enly 122 of those operatéd on were roported by the parents as still breathing ough the mouth, whercas 830 of | 564 who were operated on | reported ing from originial cond Mouth- | breathing was relieved in 88.5 per nt of the children by removal of the tonsils and adenoids. Among other conditions for which | the operation is done are frequent | sore throats and head colds. It was 1 that head colds had been re- in 75 per cent of the cases. Naturally sore throat, due to infec- tion of the tonsils was relieved in the large majority of cases. Malnutrition An Investigation of children with |infected tonsils and adenoids shows | that many of the rweight r found roved somewh ! removal of the tonsils and though this is not spec the other factors involved also must | be corrected. | In addition to the benefits already | mentioned, it was found that diph- | theria and scarlet fever occur to a lesser extent in children without ton- ils than in those who still carry the | infections of th tissu. Finally, rheumatism, heart disease occurred fn a far smaller percentage in the group | from which the tonsils and adenolds | were removed than in the control- | ling group. H is definite scientific dence, based on investigati | over years, to es e of this type of p FASHIONS By Sally Miigrim ely wtion | were | th not were still suf | Kai Ibe i denoids, ic, since chorea and evi- ex- | | tie well | Honey Beatrice Burton aulhor of o " OVE BOUND, and’HER MAN' ETC, HONEY LOU? © JOHNSON FEATURES INC., 1926 AD THIS FIRS fl th a broken d then it c; to her that this was Sunday. or: ‘and wrapped up like Honey Lou asked, staggered across floundered out into t: hall was very sick and dizzy. “Terribly sick!” she heard her| “To church,” own voice moan above the ringing and sat down in her ears. 1 Then everything went black be fore he s and she felt her: Darkness i room e Honey Lou Huntley is private retarv to old “Grumpy Wallack, head of the Wallack Fabric Mills. “Grumpy” hired Honey Lou, not only beea she s quie clever, b cause she is p: pleasant to have around, s yone at place Lou, from Ann Ludlow vamp, to Joc Meadows, t clerk. But Honey Lou is half of Joe M without exac knowing why Young Jack Walls work in his fatl the business “fromn the : She Margret answered, on the side of the Honey Lou,” she said 1 came home — drunk solemnly last the like Marg | beat about the bush, b straight to the point Honey Lou stared at her. asked, er head. be Not to . t to come hour afterward rondster purred Iy an “Does sh her ly a thin w ret shook 1 ve d gone to sh driving an- THE STORM GATHERS Joan looked thorough! stified he knew nothing aho rs and couldn't unders it was all about. Seeing that Mrs. Tremaine was fussing about someone tab Mamie again partly arose from h chair, but Jerry thrust her back and then we three tried to go on with our dinner as though nothing had happened. Sally Tremaine eat very still for Mam 1 wha t our ¥ Her ey t our hos- not rais g very rapidly. were fixed upon Joan, b God bless her, did her eyes from her plate, except to speak to Jerry who, having a know- ledge of all the undercurrents that were flowing around the n played the game like the good sport R ¥ Mre. Tremaine thoroughly convinced that was going to do anytY note. She knew that she had to ¢ good her threat. Sp Iy she arose from her scat though the man staried u vainly trying to pull her b her place, I, who was w growing discomfort, out of the dining room. But T woke| At that I breathed Jack Wallack | thought the danger of a scene i and 1|crowded restaurant was over. I alas, I didn't quite know the venom | What did | of the woman's scorn. Sally Tremaine had had fust erofigh to drink to make her reck- of the consequences. In & few minutes I caw back to the door with tl tess, t became n Iy, T “T Had A Perfectly Beautifu 1 Time,“ She Declared Firmly. | t He love with Honey Lou! slov and th him. Dut when he drives her home in his car and tries, hand gripped the [ swere His right arm was| up wi around the small limp figure of the | bringing you up the stairs, girl whose fragrant head lay on his | let ou in.” shoulder. The ni, wind lifted | did he say? her hair and blew a strand of ¢2" the younger girl asked | cross his check. He glanced down at her —at this girl who made him believe she better than other girls. In s In His left he f good him Later become face and apologizes and they friends. ‘When he meets Honey Lo red mother and her ster, Mar Moo that she has been as carefully reared | gen- half er come terrible little white | Mrs. swer the door of thi room opcned once mere and intley came in. t ! been so I and he s T knew wou h Foing to mal | door rlose by. Mrs found her face red. qid not sce her for I k sally ov cept Mamie more of the the first night 180, nkind to m had arrived in Chica They looked across at our table ng me and apparently not ed with triumph. now he thought he 1 have a chance to get even with me Quic hack Iy I bent toward Jerry, whosa remaine and * I said, aps you had hetter follow out t6 the Mrs, Tremaine is certain a fuss. You had better re as foon as possible, for t heen at the door point- s manager. and he is determined to make it per- of as hot for me as possible.” Jery wen Excusis abla quie 1f, He I lo g him left the out of a. 4 up to see if still there and ted with hat. that Mamis ew now.that ir d to maka that Mamie would ba orever disgraced Mamie had been much excited ¢ note that had been written 0 Joan and I did not want her to Tremaine s cont I was very glad Trem ek al scene be f e table ex- hing ncident. Joan was per- cctly happy beeause she had seen out of the door. Service, Inc.), TOMORROW: The Insult. the darkness he could just make out the white glimmer of her face, | with closed eyes and its lips arted with her slow, soft breath- Honey Lou shrugged her shoul- ders and managed one of her smile: “I reckon he's throw: down, Ann* she said, as as she “Well,” she sald, " you mus! ful time last night to this morning.” did,” Honey Lou replicd | could was a little catch In her| “You should worry,” “I had a perfectly beautiful | forted her. “There's mothers got sons, you | Honey Lou thought i that night, as she started through the winter twilight. Usually she loved that journey home at night. She was a town girl and the sights and sounds of | town thrilled her the the sight | of mountains will thrill the hill- born—the way the sight and sound of the sea will content those who have spent their lives on ship: But that night her ears were deaf to the great music of the affic, and her eyes were blinded to the golden shop windo with | theit glittering Christmas wares and their green Christmas wreaths. She went along, deep in her own thoughts. What could she have done to make Jack Wallack behave toward her as if she were an utter stranger to him? Was it because she had drunk those two drinks and | “passed out?” Or was it because she had let him kiss her in his car on the way home? What was the old saying that her | mother was always quoting—the old saying about men who “kiss and ride away?" Honey Lou gave her a shrug. at da leep | as any of the girls in his own world fling outside the mills. One night Hon Lou meets one of his friends, An- gela Allen, who lives next door to the Wallack famil | She feels sure that Angela is In| love with Jack and is surprised | when she has an invitation from | to a bir dinner party in his honor. Mrs. H an elaborate party dress, all and rose-colored crepe, and a little wreath to r in her hair. But when Honey Lou arrives at the hou 4 finds only aresse instead lig Sleeping it off,” he said to him- with some bitterness. | There Honey Lou was not asleep. | Volce not quite awake, eitl scd and heavy she knew where But Ann com- time.” Mrs. Huntley's eyes shifted their to the rosc-colored | the foot of the bed. | wasn't your dress alll | rig: he asked brightly. Shei | pickead it up, shook it and hung | it in the close ‘It was j her | ele n home | Lou | dre lace es Honey had no recollection of leav-| the Allen house. She could not re in i k’s car, but she knew per- | fectly that she was in it, alone| with him now. And he was—what was it that little Suzanne | had said?—*"oft his onion her! She opened her heavy eves and his face close to the star-powde She put up one of | and pulled his head | down to hers. She never would have done it i she had been and Jack W k knew it. perfe; Honey Lou told without batting an cye. Not for the world would she have told her anything els “I knew it would be,” her mother sald. “I know what people wear | to a dinner party, Well, tell me| all about it. How many were there? What did you do, dance?” The girl shook her brown head. “Played cards and talked,” she said short “We had a good | time.” She turned her face to the wall with its rosc-patterned paper. There was stillness in the room for a moment, broken only by the| paper s Mrs | Huntley packed the wreath of chif- oes hid the look of bit. | f0n Toses away in a drawer of the was written on his| dresser. | “Mother,” Honey Lou said sud- with her, but half in | denly. She was sitting up in bed now, her small heart-shaped face | her still, he bent his| Hlond head over Honey Lows dark | Véry white above her pink muslin iy '\‘fl (‘:;ul.('l not he ightgown “Mother, I got — tipsy G night. plain 1e5ts t her, of party she how o rth would swallow raressed she i cocktails, not m lined midnight s her hands Lou come } md away. the lack callin 2 selt, “boi N WITH THE STORY) | VIII ng she knew ed out on a ‘Kiss me boy!” said Honey Lot never would have sald it if | had been herself. And Jack knew that, too. She ue | stie 18 Honey | w arge ack strete Lou was and downy 1 cloud | terne ds. T it took em o 1toh it she e shoulders | The Mode Decides That Two | | Fabrics Are Considerably Smarter Than One imes of two fabrics are a bit days than a Cost trastin s apparent full Lecentuated design in red skirt by an embrofdered and This youthful a stunning combi velvet and white ¢ bodice and skirt fernoon frock s ion k. Both are AUBURN TAXI PHONE 611 of black | embroidered | himself, he pulled her closer to him | and his mouth closed down hard ¢ saw her mothe oVar hor rose. cooll mouth as she turned aw He kissed her, despising .W’;:i“l;-o ) for it while he was doing it. A wr “I ought to tell him how I hap-| m_J]\]l]n :‘vl,lr‘['[ Iflm\?' Don't look at | { pened to take that second cocktall,” | 12 € B 5 W Honey Tou (hought drowsily—"how | ZO8°¥ Tou faltered. ! I would have offended Miss Allen s to drink — and T had two. it T haAn't taken 1t | T thought they were frult punch at But she didn’'t tell him. She; Then, after I found out that \s too tired to talk—too tired to| (NCY were cocktails, T had another. anything but stay there in his| L Just couldn't get out of taking encircling arm it «-\“fi:la Allen almost forced it on me— Tomorrow would do. She could pamt s N Well, T reckon that's fust what | they do,” said Honey Lou to her- self, and she made up her troubled mind that she would not care. She would not care. (TO BE CONTINUED) That promising young doctor, tephen Mayhew, begins to compli- cate things for Honcy Lou in Mon- day’s instaliment. shoulders and curt ay from the 's bedroom. 1 she h jerk come l 4 h embered that Angcl sunroom seemed to himself | she T tak- | cocktail 1411 STCDENTS PNROLLED Durham, N. TI, Oct. 2 (P University of New Hampshire, with | i | | | Mrs. Huntley cut Ithe fall term last ycar 1278 st were enrolled. lege in dishes, and keepin; when they were in a weakened condition and had not sufficient strength to perform these duties. health and her family & valiant soldier. students registered this yea est enrollment in its ding to O. V. Hender- T At e opening of 1dents The university is largest state-supported col- w England. aceo 5 THIS WORAN'S ~BATILE Wins Against 11l Health “At times I was hardly able to do my housework,” writes Mrs. Mar- — garet Wallace, of 1547 Safford Ave., Columbus, Ohio. Howmany women hava found them- selves In thig same condition? How many wom. en have fought bravely on, day after day, cook- ing, washing, ironing, doingthe g the house clean, A friend advised her to take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com« p?und and she gave it a fair trial. can't glve enough thanks to it,” she writes. “Now I can eat anvthing at all and T am feeling better than I have for years. shall never be without your medi. cine again.” I A woman who is fighting for her happiness ig She wages her battle in her own kitchen. Sha has no thrilling bugles to cheer her on, no waving banners, Many other women tell us, as Mrs, Wallace did that Lydia E. Pink. ham’s Vegetable Compound has re- stored their health. explain everything to him then. It was a long time before Honey| M- Her Lou had another chance to teil | Strain. lim about Angela and the cocktail. .. voice was harsh “No one can for thing on you that you don't How many did she tak Honey Lou had no Idea how ma of the little orange-colored drinks Angela had taken. She could not remember sceing her take even cne of them. The more she thought it over the more certain she was that Angela had not drank at all. That was queer, wasn't it? I'll have to ask Jack about it?" she caid to herself. S with any- ant. seemed like a v Lou when | She | hefore wild dream to Hon 12 woke up the next morning. d remember parts of the nizht's and there were parts | cre a blank to her. | or instance, she 4 no recol- | lection of coming up the stairs to flat. But could remember t Margret helped her take nfr; hor clothes and get into bed. She could remember that the bed had| But on the next day she had no seemed fo rock like a canoe in|chance to ask him about it. She midocean. | did not even sce him. She raised herself on her elbow| On the next day — which was and looked around the room, pearl| Tuceday—she caught a flying w in the morning light. Over|glimpse of -him as he drove his the foot of her bed the rose-pink|car out of the courtyard at five party dress hung like a limp ghost. | in the afternoon. On the other side of the ‘Why doesn’t he coma up to see M t's bed was tumbled me?” she wondered. “What can cmpty. be the matter with him?" 1 suppose Ann Ludlow asked her that very toward the end of the | | | don't rom T asked happening Then Suz she Jack is sure off his onfon H 1 He spent s to room | and she's gone down hospital already,” she said self. “I wonder what time it §s.” While she swas wondering (h"‘ door opencd and Margret came in. | friend Jack Wallack?" had on her winter coat|on TFriday noon when she and first | and the hat she wore when she went | Honey TLou were having their I can't -to church or to a show with Steve | dally gossip-fest, as they called it | Mavher. “He's glving you the run around, the | “Where lsn't he? to to | auestion | week “What's the matter room swam around “I'm not an old things, he tho going right her hand o such | 1 “I'm | t ind t know with your he inquired out 1 m that They've got to Irinks T had 1t were ones I ever had in my life. iet Jack think I'm a rowdy e put her feet out on those | Sha new are you going, all HENRY B.WALTHALL /» THE ROAD TO AT CAPITOL BEGINNING SUNDAY ;

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