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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 7. Quicksands of Love | Adele Garrison’s New Phase of —-—Revelations of a Wife —— Jack Leslic Succeeds in Arousing | v Mary's Interest < said d Jack Leslie was 1 at my ment took my Riverside Gra- erentially, gre wish us 1o se relieved ot var itehed 1 em all her ps and | The color am il part htiny t hou th dismisse to t ectly walks in as she P e Sy < and 1 rigl ark )| was apartm a truc 1 misled ¥ ) morning park Drive n | sury him as I r ¥ ! iy a plied i P | Uit ular r presently,” | nortl upor Ike the find she needs |, of wessed the the same 1e that resembli into Jack Leslie' the natural considerate,' you sur hird?? | about | y mind was ihe for e eyes, L of my bet reason his il “And of no more been ad, the steps 1 saw h an th nothi 1 I can be b st it service m now encour Surely Te are I really or | world Instead with un- as he howed himself Mary looking 014, speculative ssion. Sh her arm | and climbed the steps | t In that fashion hird that “capering | clear, I knew could| anyone in the | a remembranc curiosity just aided | come 1 had the feeling| that her door on the fourth floor | 1< open and that she was listening ation inciden the your for any mor spoke tr been and I put mind for listened to hi swer to my That is meet vou, th Baker fell in the section Madge Pretends an Tnterest Tmme 1 switched the con- versation the safe topic Mrs, Baker. g man action ¢ him X slipped distin through mine the que way nen r consideration as same the 1 in called Dic kroact tones W} be eard by s above. With overweening Mary ca-| aia ch not | roling Mrs. son we to of the whom had home, to n to of 158 it until we t's wait | q rea h our own | ed with 1 swhisper than 1 f anyone with *She wouldn't her, Auntie Madge,” Mary st “But 1 don't thin really Mr. Lesli 1 t 5 caba “Isn iterated I had any topic initiation Mary nodded $a comprehension, | 1 T was glad of the respite, for I w that 1 must school my o warine the discussion of t ddnc 1 not have anybod of she's tongue the in r the soon 2" she door commented that intere in t days of her same one re- as the mentally sing in Copyright, ew work sted New imagin paper Danny Watches a 1 nton W. virtue D his friends running around. to them t a By Patlenc Tho st beyond hir re was | s a nding in the v took it is ater s, ¥ for a stick. iy balance anid 1t stick sud fell | lenly | | Danny | 25 the m at He's well, that than from 1 I've seen and T know s Lon in on the Peep the Teas fis] learned ongh Today's Ofier— Stomach Agony Boes | Back Pharmacy or Money Axelrod's tinue to st bel pains scttled hiv back between S0 he with his head drawn his shoulders ATHREE DAYS COUGH 18 YOUR DANGER SIGNAL - if hadn't be how way ha.fi ling out rned W. Burgess) | Her Ghost | point {compiled and | deaty This enviable positioy | factors 1 el had |r Your Health How to Keep It— Causes of [llness BY Fditor Medical DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN Journal of the American Association and of Hygeia the Health Magazine Although general mortality steadily ~ for mortality rates Nt pace reasons for q rates many have pped ears, infant infant mortality taken as an general sanitary condi- ealth education qualifica- community concerned is made on the latter irly hecause education hefore 1 of the varied may. i1 th and h of the Emj are index of tion phasis particu mother is one factors in assuring rth and life beyond the Last vear, cording published American Child Health cities in the birth regist in this country had a rate of of infants per thousan including all bables dying vear of nge. ost important its sucees first ye: by Associat births, fore reaching one village 'wo under and Winona, records, 32 per New York ha 10 64 with popu Stonington, Minn.—had the lowest thousand. 5,000 citfes thonsand, 1 to ma among all la lowest the but rate of th gost co ith con attle ntain its supremacy citfes in the birt ith a rate of 45 has heen held | Seattle for the four years. Tn southern cities infant mortality increased hecause colored dren aths among Negroes, first year of life, than among th per istration area by st ites are greatly f the number since infant d particularly in 1} e more white population. The lowest infant ords claimed by any New Zealan ave combine constantly aroun mg the t emp » public by T health narses who frequent mortality community are ere many produce a rec- those of 40, concerned s on breast fe AT factg ding ucation a pub- habies ghly trai thoronghly tors involved mortality. ar onversant with the fac in controlling infant No doubt the dissemin population and the climatic tions pl some part, but tionubly constant ng.special lines a inevitably the ives of many FASHIONS By Sally Milgrim [l condi- unaues tion of emphasis s mentioned, t be means of The New Beret Shapes Combine Simplicity of Line With a Pleas- ing Sophistication in the Matter of Treatment atile millinery wide variety of are the loose sponsors a \pes, heret crowns fussy trim- velvet are kind. When surs, it simple and «d looking as the charm gay in- ief among which wodels with their soft nl g absence of and thi asing Both hats of ac is it s its alr of tel an in the rosk today is t band in heret ep wine tone this case con the brim in the er's plush f bla re rimm o This ha NArrow quid Zemo s to stop Ttehing Trritation Pimp Zemo, Freguen ar overnig ' promptly aling liqul me. Al zemo FOR §KIN (RRITATIONS ful | Conn., | directed | HONEY LOU © JOHNSON LEAD Honey THIS FIRST: Lou } tley old A Wallack Fabric Mills hired Honey Lou, not is quick and clev- ¢ is nice to clse at the 100, from head of t “Grumpy only bec er, but b around. Iveryc likes Hou L.ou, Ludlo office vamp, to Meadow hipping clerk, But Honey Lou is half afraid of Joc {.\1 lows, who is always asking her ‘\U g0 out with him. Young Jack Wallack ork his father's arn the busin He Honcy Lou's b then with her ways. He hen won't for it, more for girl of his honestly have mills Ann Joe comes to tory to falls in love auty first, prim old-fash- to kiss her let him, he and findg him- her than fo acquaintance tells him that petted in her life, nk | with mnd ioned and itiea ts her ing any other Honey Lou she never has nor taken a d But a week 1 by Jack's Honey lLou the onts s on how ter, at nefghbor, a party given Angela” Allen, arinks o cocktalls, fruit punch, and lets Jack make way home, not has disill he pays | thinking AS50S love realizi him to her the s wonders when further attention, what is the matter. Tim Donegal, a f egins to be atten | Honey Lou many long drives o a neight town where Tim seoms 10 mysterious er rand, Honey wonders wh he gets his money He never worl | bt fs always in funds. One ut when two are dancing with Lo Dr. by of He Jack's and end take a Joring have some nt, Honey Margret Moody and Steve Mavhew, ¢ are joined Angela and Margret sums | Angela up cat,” but Honey Lou insists s wrong. A few weeks later, Jack telephones THone l.ou asks if he may come to see her on the following night. Hon Lou says that afternoon Aungela d takes with er. NOW as that s he may into Lou out for tea comes Honey GO ON WITH STORY CHAPTER Angela’s big closed or them down in tae lusk of the street, Angela sniffed .t ite disgust Irove along ind w THE XI1 waited gra with deli- Honey Lou factories 1 either he air and 1 18 she between at roce high wall No matter how brightl , or how much springtime the air with its perfumed that street was alwass ind muddy and evil-smell- rehouses o of them like | filled glory murky ing Hon | ent y Tou felt as if she v new world r carried them clean streets, the he smart tea rooms, in the lemon-colorcd late aft smartest town to the ing shin- rnoon, o tea rooms was Sahine's valls were silver, and velvet it. and Honey rush 1t carp s0 @ tabl iirs that 1 Alle door, a d th odor fresh Money Lou little vase Ty ol tables, s gray, and th Tou warm heavy n - “ © the violets o chocolate saw the of the Angela vase at ook the was a of vio- small, took their water one iolets from the and m. [ own ! from r st | “Here, Honey Lou, h 1, and handed them to b was the first time she had called Honey Lou by first name, when q smiled in et table s put them on,” her nd E {the sweetest ndliest w “Don't nn)ul waitr who stood to take the order You may put them on the bill.” No charge, Aller itress rep 1 naturedly Angela gave the for and and cakes. “You flowers exce Honey Lou tle table at know it? You'd {ple hat with [ of the brim i No on tery. And sart warm Margret must Allen. catty he friendly Honey “rn some imag- me, Mari St Miss the good tea ssorted I | | L sandwiches little it to weer said (o lit- vour you pur side never oug violets.” ling a “They o any 't she : ross the nake wple. Do y in a one her. almost be love viol on Honey 1 Honey to e hro inst flat- Lou felt her rowords, Sur wrong about jeal- t and is proof | Angela said Margre A5 sWe was s she cou Lou's ey« ake you to milliner. in chair und ded ght chatter hink back looked around 1t room at hummed women's t with t china r of silver Do you wal when pouring much of Ja wsked my house did not calmly squeezed \ tiny sandwich it before ned across dove 1y brown look a broke bbled at she 1 ahe Then ind her wid, fixed Honey Lot 1. what to you Jack, Honey clasping her long the snowy | “womd you think — w would you \.w.fiyl\ i1 imkly abe 2 ghe asked the talke Lou ingers at tablecloth Honey for cdge of racking spoke Lou a reply was \ she ain (gair “You know my life,” she sald entle G flmol' better than mrl' And—T1 do any wrong ideas of him !00 well."” “Wrong known Jack all in her slow. 1 know him Kknows him- t want you to get T like you T've nk way idea? echoed Honey JHe oned | 10 FEATURES INC, 1926 {Lou. There litt black pucker was 1 eyebrows, between her level “What do you mean well I don't hurt,” the gentl went on like the murmur of a stream. “Jack has a of having violent love airs and then get over rushed Suzanne Clemens b marriage to Jim Clemens the time Suzanne heginning to think orange blossoms, and the from ! LLohengrin, he went on the road for h and forgot all about lit- uzs He did almost the thing to me—" Her voice off and a melancholy look into her soft eyes. want you to he voics them fore and her to just about of march is father e sam. trailed came a that up. “I don’t want you to be hurt Honey Lou,” she wound ‘s the nicest boy 1 know bu ust don't take im seriously.’ | She laid her slender white hand on Honey lLou's hrown and patted it “T just felt that vou,” gaid Honey Lou noon with two ideas her mind of Wallack not the “meant husin The other was that her very way Jack smal one, had to warn an April smile. left her that after- firmly fixed in them was that kind of g5 with An- good 1 shé with One rok was man any gela frie who girl Allen a *T had t Sabine’'s with Allen told Margret seven that night sitting in her low rock- her looked up youn sharp was An- at half y Margre er “doing and gave ter a loo i llack T did “Why not? T shouldn't that Jack to sec a laugl Lou, you told her coming over with onfessed Honey There's no reason told her. is ther her head. “Not u can’'t see one.” she replied. threw all her madicure ar- ticles down on the top of the dress- and stood facing tpe W was she said have shook o up, other girl don's trust that said decidedly on why T ghouldn’t just don’t. T feel sure that at the hottom of all the tween you and Jack Wal- | Lou, T she 1 no rea b " Honey on was “0h Lou answered her sherry-brown perfectly lovely hou. lovely 1t and That's sill spraying perfume hair. “She to me that night and she's been per- | ever since. T got tipsy disgusted Jack, suppose. That was what was the hottom of the trouble between him and me.” | She pulled on gun-metal silk stockings with a thoughtful air. AT ia stood wup for night, too.,” she zaid, slipping slim et into the re eled “She told Jac wasn't no! at her fectly that ni 1 at | that her slip- | used me pers. to drinkin Margret thitk ey brows. “Did you hear her? { ked | “No, t | “And she | raised her too retorted Mar Use ad you You elther, your 1 vourselt, too. tells yon Honey. o else vour use Because ost hink everyhody trust paople too much.” An hour later, Jack came. Hr wanted Honey Lou to go for a drive with him, But it had bhegun to . and Mrs. Huntley put her foot refused to let Honey Lou flat. ar might skid told ry firmly, lad a you're is, rai lown, and leave the G pave o wet Wal- “and on the nents,” she mildly but ve Desi Honey Lou has throat for two days.” 3ut T haven't one, Honey Lou. * K feel flddle Nev out. no a as fit as a rtheless, they did not They sat in the pretty «mmz‘ room with its mellow lamplight. Phe night was warm and ains swayed and billowed wind that came through the | windows. Outside the rain pattered, pattered on the sidewalks. Within the room. Mrs. Huntley | talked on and on. She tol Jack all | her Kentucky girlhood, about | former wealth and grandeur about Honcy Lou when she a baby She asked him all about his fam- fly—where they had come from— what church they attended—where | they spent their summers left nothing unasked. Honey lLou groaned She had looked forward evening alone with Jack Wallack, and now her mother was ruining | it. Absolutely ruining it. I At 10 o'clock, Jack got up to go. “Suzanne Clemens is having a | plenic out at the lake tomorrow,” | he said to Honey Lou. “She wants m- to bring you. Will you go?| We'll start out from the mills, it vou will.” Honey love to go and the | in th open ahout her and | i W | inwardiy. so0 to this told him would gravely sald “Good- | night” to him. She banged the door shut when® he had gone and turned | to her mother, her hands flung out in exasperation and helpless fury Weren't yon te she crfed, “To stick In this room every minute Ja Wallack W here, i trust him met he think TLou alone of you didn’t What will just with me?” Mra, Huntley's whole to quiver. “Why, I think that I'm the kind of mother who looks after her daughter.” she srely. “That's what T want think, Honey Lou. That's he's think now." her hands. she re- face seemed suppose he'll o said sev him to what I hope Honey Lou clenched “I hink vou're awfu marked. slumped down into a chair, and began to kick the floor with her litlle red heels. “You knew 1 didn't have a sore throat, too. You KNEW I didn't. T knew nothing of the her mother angwered “And anyway it's too wet for you to be out. Youwll not go to that plenie tomorrow if it rains during the day, either.” Honey Lou ground her teeth. But the next day it did not rafn, The sun came up in a rose-col- ored sky the next morning and 1t was golng down fn a rose-colored | west when Honey Lou and Jack kind,” quietly. stu of | ehilled believe ool i Beatrice Burton author & !] E BOUND, ER MAN' Wallack set out for the the late afternoon. The woods were shadows wh zanne's fire, Jake in filled with found red about ng. brown en they Su- crowd gatt they were br gay a where steaks. up to Honey Suzanne them Lot on the che “Hello, Honey, she kissed Jack, too. ing like beavers, all I'm going to set you away you're up soms Honey vou ask will you?" Ho Lou turning her, she caught her by “Here ] want you to m people took Ilone from one roduced came wctually ks runt and Kiss 1. Then work- And right over she cric We to werk o come grape juice 1 and mix for me. la what to do, ve An, Just as from arm. \way the laugh these Sahara she 't some She iround’ the person nother, “Miss Sahara Lou group, to and i Huntley I call dry as the “She can soak up m \whody you ever saw Honey Lou blushed “But, of course ding told take it ok She glad ¥ though I have lled to h “You hur with him we'll her as becanse she's as she explained » drinks than her that desert, painfully, just G Kid- must she as a s from Suzanne “Here, Angela ¢ the nd go wood job for you from the up D some get al fire- these fire t or never done o gave Honey the should:r Donegal top of her lovely then Honey Lou sa standing i 1he yards o (TO BE CONTINUED) Honey Loy comes back 1o the campfire uncxpectedly and does a litthe cavesdropping in tomorrow’s steaks Lou a little push Dblades. * ghe called voice, and e adows a ween L of Iy chapter. Menus for the Family Mary) juice. eggs on fresh peach (Ry t—Or Sister ng; ned Breakfi cereal thin ere: toas crisp whole wheat toast, utter, milk, Luncheon—Corn and tomatoes on toast, bran rolls, apple sauce, gin- ger bread, milk, tea. Dinner—Pork tenderloin, scallop- od potatoes, buttered spinach. cab- | and celery salad, health bread, watermelon, milk, coffee. Order the tenderloin “frenched.” This means that the strip of loin is cut in lengths of 2 1-2 or 3 inche Bach piece is placed on end ar tened with one blow of the side of a meat cleaver, Cook thoroughly, allowing about minutes. Corn and Tomatoes on Toast Six sweet cory 1 onion, 2 sweet n pepper 2 tablespoons salt and pepper, tr coffee. broad the meat ears of small 1 grec tomatoes, butter, poon sugar, angles of toast Score corn through row kernels. of crape out milk and heart. Pecl Scald peppers and Remove secds mi the of Cut of tops and nd mince onion rub off thin coating. ar white pith and seald tomatoes and slip Chop. Melt butter in a deep frying Add vegetables and cook sason with salt and serve on hot of pan, minutes. pepper toast, (Copyright, sugar and buttered 1926, NEA Service, Tne.) READ HERAL DCLASSIFIED FOR RESULTS Dollars | b nd flat- | {do ADS other HE OWN WAY aGirl of Today . Then he turn, hind him and THE IIRI‘ 1 could not is the real love would I until death do us Is it the kind of love that m would consummate malse I did not know. There was only thing did know—it would probably never be so thrilling as to keep me catch- ing my that came hot cold to minister to the lover. to the crowd be- shouted: “Don’t push; I don’t know what is happening any more than yousbut I am sure if the men in this crowd will keep showing their yellow streaks walk slowly ahead, everything be—-" Again another hell there will,” buildi TOMORROW : king that part? wrria holy? help and P will one 1 explosion “The someone screamed, and front of the whole moods of my John’s Chance. Could one mosphere of Would onc get and only live in ssionate the rari lov used to the of companior 1l Umness sweetness Again, on the other John Meredit] me, Judy, {himking about side of me Look at and tell me at you arc What makes your | eyes narrow? What makes you pull that soft red mouth which my lips are aching to kiss, info that decisive straight line? Judy, you must be, to- night, all softness and swectness, | you must be to my dream of love “God, was like often came would a me only girl, 1 this; it hurts, d of Jove to me as som: makeeme incapable of think- Tonight my brain is full long, long thoughts, g Judy, m a 1 mar did not thini hnn: hurts, but it only | hing which Makes Hair Behave But Duesn’t SHOW! ay kecp your S o m that “plastered-down" look. a few drops of Danderine through hair. or use a Danderines towel—you'll he amazed your hair then behaves, utiful lustre! you know does to dandruff! hit it Puts of condition drean of o vou st its, reat do god, | tio; am 1o hair ohjec- Just ~comb splendid ambit know that tonight T and perfect than a god—I am an who can Tove and loved" again there came the insistent crooning whisper, “You o love me don't you, Judy?" Without war most deafening detonation. Tt sound- ed as though it were in room ahove us. In a moment everything agai a silly coward me a panic-st outside door, ions. just-so, ves, use more a a alit dampened at the way | and its b Of conrse derine i pink what Dane Dissolves scalp in the Tnvigorates hair Why use anything iing there ne a It the oy of cls shouted nd there hec h toward the gainst them all opened inward John reached for me and caught from under the maddened feet of a h unken 4 who muttering, “Let me get out; ot out,” and mowing down one in the way. of his exit, “Here, here, damn who think you arc!” shonted a m as he casually knocked him do and yelled: “Say, is this another baked Alaska?"” No” answercd Jerry, who was helping Mamie and Judy toward the door. Sick Man Offers $50 for Stomach Medicine “I was a sufforer {rom: indigestion |tinal Stasis, a disease due to modern antil ol ways of living and which is often S the true cause of sour stomach, gas bloating, nervous dyspepsia and restless sleep. Doctors Praise Adlerika Dr. H. L. 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