New Britain Herald Newspaper, October 20, 1926, Page 11

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1926. 1 Quicksan Adele Garrison ds oi; Love o | s New Phase of Revelations of a Wife —— Bladge Recelves a Parental Warning. I was glad of the shadows in the intorior of 1 which my father ar s he told me he herited the cansed his o my face w ence which unconscio had hee b ha words as I never had beer For only too upon my hear of wha had meant to my mother When 1 four had led him to beli madly in love with -my mother’s friend. In th that belief he had deserted my mother and me and fled with the woman, who for years had made his lfe a hell. tI had been | ow months b e he r rible mistake and that t Tieart worth having belonged in the ping of his deserted wife. But never had he been able to find her, and ad died while he scarching for her and for me It had been a struggle for forgive that old treachery, give to him the love my mother had begged me to upon him if ever he But the thought that within me might lie the same impulses which Dad led him to that cowardly act of long ago, made me burst forth with a choking cry: “Father! rely you do not think s wh nhappiness, at the nyone u astounding Ve furfous in my indelibly life. ingrain was ars of ter- is sl was to nd to dying 1 A contrite cry escaped him, and | he caught my hands in his, crush- ing them. “My preclous girl! No! no! I see now how that must have sounded in your ears. But I know you to be incapable of anything which would lower the lofty ideals your dear mother insthted into you. Re- member you are her daughter even more than mine, and her principles bestow | hould find me, | lways was that my you inherit might sometime | you unhappine That was | all.” \ He was so patently my rpretation of ittle that I rc away me all the which bring S5, able over his unlucky olutely put | niisgivings | his cu and turned to him on of cheerfulne rom fecling. forget all about this on until after our dinper,” htly 1 am not nearly @ 1 “I am sure eed, and w by my ed T had thought sion. But try us could torge bheen di tacitly everyth or p mis speecl, from oret 4 aro assur it - sio 1 with an 1! which T was fa mistaken s S0 ev decision that we i 4 things we had though we hoth o the background & that smacked of serious rsonal discussion, T am mind, as befor: mory of the thias and th anticipation of the meant to say before he bade me the “good G { T had thought that hod s prised and shocked me so that noth- could say rile me en after dinner we once more > seated in the limousine, he said something which shook me to the center of my som “Margaret, you asked dgo, with horror I thought you love better than your husk answer you then I answer you ow in the negative. But I should not ba doing my duty did | that for a long time the image of Hugh Grantland has been rivaling | Richard's in your heart, and that | within the last few weeks both your emotions and your Inteliect have been dangerously intrigued by Philip | Veritzen, for whom you doing | this research worl \ Copyright, 1926, by N ussing, ¢ legated e refore his had saic things he 0 ¢ wonld s me in your voi v other man I did not are spaper Feature Service, Inc. Of course, ths first thing he did was to run out The Great Storm By Thomton W. Burgess Nature sometimes you'll find grutf, And in her ways a little rough. —O01d Mother West Wind. Danny Meadow Mouse was way down In a tall, hollow stub of a tree, a tree on the edge of a cer- tain meadow. Killy the Hawk had dropped him there, Killy hadn’t intended to drop him there, for Killy had intended to have Dan- ny for his dinner. “It's pretty comfortable down here,” thought Danny, when he had felt himself ali over and found there was nothing serious the matter. *“I don’t know how I'm going to get out of here, but I guess I'll get out somehow. If I have to, I suppose I can climb way up there to the top. Then I should have to climb down on the outside, and I don't like to do that. During the day Killy the S8parrow Hawk would be watching s ——— Cuticura Healed Intense Itching Burning Rash ‘' My trouble started with a rash which spread over the back of my head causing intense itching and tuning which prevented sleep. Thic trouble kept spreading over my head, 2ad y bair began to fall out leaving o bald spot about two and a half inches across the back of| many remedies without any results, Fisally I sent for a free sample of Cuticura Soap and Ointment and it seemad to relieve me. I used the sample, also two. cakes of Cuticura Soap and two '] vozss of Cuticura Ointment which banied me.” (Signed) Miss Cecilia Turkard, 22 Wittich P1., W. Quincy, | Mass., March 21, 1926. Daily use of Cuticura Soap, with |ftouches of Cuticura Ointment now {Jand then, keeps the skin fresh, 1§ smooth and clear. Cuticura Talcum also is ideal for the skin. “0ut Labors! Gl W™ Cuticura smrs‘:fifik‘“ Why do so praise, The dishes made with mayonnaise? Because the Chef has learned to buy, BLUE RIBBON — that's the reason why. " [ Write for free Recipe Book, Calendar and + Cooking time table to BLUE RIBBON Mayonnaise Sparrow for me to do just that thing. T hawve an idea that at night there is usually an Owl hanging around here. Well, I'm thankful I'm here, and T won't worry about getting out until I have to get out.” Now, this is what wlse men call | Philosophy, and Danny was proving | himself to be a philosopher. He was | making tha best of w not worrying about what was to The next story: Nelghbor." “Danny Has a come, Most of the things that folks worry about never happen. A good philosopher doesn’t worry. Just to show you how good a philosopher Danny was, he curled up and went to sleep. Now, late in the afternoon Old Mother West Wind came hurrying up some great clouds. They were | very black clouds. They were full of rain and thunder and ligatning and wind. Yes, sir, they were just as| full of those things as they could be. They were 80 full of those things that by the time thoy got right over that meadow they just couldn’t hold | them any longer. So the lightning | | flashed and the thunder roared, the rain fell and the wind blew. Dan- ny awoke at once, He looked up. He no longer could see any light at the top. It was as dark as it it were night. Danny was scared. Dan- ny wasn't the only one who was scared In that storm. You see, it was a very dreadful storm. That tree began to rock. It began to creak and began to groan. You see, the wind was doing dreadful things to trees. It was pulling some up by the roots and it was breaking, the tops and great branches from others, | Back and forth, back and forth, | | rocked that old stub. There was a! snapping and a cracking. Every tima | there a snap or a crack, Dan- ny's heart jumped right up into his mouth or seemed to. When the | lightning flashed he squealed right | out. Never had he known such a storm Fin and snaj ly there w ing sh n ever, and | with a cr over went that When it struck, that hollow broke into several pieces. Danny was almost smothered in the dust from the rotted wood inside. But he | sn't serlously hurt, He was simply aken up. Of course, the very first a worse (‘rm‘l\mgi then | tree. | stub | ' wve guided you. All that 1| Editor Journal | Medical Associ: il mine, | he | if | T tell you | hat he had and | | Your Constipation Your Health g | How to Keep It— l‘ Causes of Illness Il ; Hair and Skin Tell 17 Body Needs Repairs MORRIS IISHEEIN of the Amer 1 I \ fon and of Hygela, | | BY DR. the Health Maeazine hair of the } normally is plentiful und {have & luster, which is due presence of sufficient oil, It is sufticlently pliable its bein kept rions {1t may long o | coarse, ght or ¢ o hereditary factors wh |amenable to control | may be hronght cat or now sold in eve | ment. ul child | to the| to permit position short, fine iy stra h about waxes v co by, th of stift i A Siznal of Danger | n diseasag, from deficiency of the seeretion, the halr becom dry and brittle. Tn such i treatment with oil or kind is only ter the cert < reach which is primarily ve inly a child should have t T cal tention im rdiately. | Another symptom of a preper thyroid scerction reme dryness of tha skin in A normal skin tly moist and smooth. T or vonsible, Cer- is cou le medi- In erculosis G t ove ckets | seems to be rmoist muct time, If there are difficult gestion of some foods n eczematons acially sensitiy | while 10 child may Te it | eating | op red or it g of the skin, or| 8. | s The child th other | {children in sc 1lso bee: me | | affocted with or other | {skin par ling of the skin {of the advantages of leal o ation lles in tection of such complain !avoidance not only for ua' but the group. All 5o prevalent havae lis es |of of | spots | biister ringworms which produce seal- | cdness, One |# regular physi- [! he early de- and their individ as to prop {wallking. Children are told to to out or toe-In and are fitted with queer shocs of various types to foree them into unusual postures | The foot normally is held straight | Dr. Hugh Chaplin points out in his | consideration of the healthful child | | this position not only enables it to | | cover the ground more rapidly, also favors the maintena | strong areh and helps to preserve |, {the balance. | | Type of Shoe r methods of | ones, shonld peint straight forward It the shoes are 100 narrow the toes may be forced one over the other | to the serious disadvantage of proper | | locomotion. If t {short there is tend P { hammer-toe. so that the ends of the {toes point downward instead of for- wi This is also a disabling de- fect. Much is said eoncerning weakness of the arch. There was a time when high arches were considered the nor- mal type and, indeed, the aristocratic type. Modern study foot indicates that is not as desirable as on ate height, and that a low arch can- be constantly condemned. The v real test of the arch it lity to carry the person properly without pain or fatigue. shoes 10y to devel of the arch of the a very high arch of moder- Women Now keep fresh, charming under hygienichandicap—neg way provides true security— discards like tissue a | st IFMVHE wncertainty and insecurity of the old-time “sanitary pad” jhas been ended. Scientific protection now supplants it. Wear sheer gowns, keep up with social and b all times . . . “KOTEX" is a new and remark- able way . . . five times as absorbent as ordinary cotton pads. You discard it as easily asa piece of tissuc. No laundry, No embarrassment. Absorbs and deodorizes at the same time. Thus ending ALL fear of offending. You get it for a few cents at any ug or department store simply by saving “KOTEX.” Women ask for it without hesitancy. " Try Kotex. Comes 12 in a pack- age.” Proves cld ways an unneces- sary risk. KOTEX No laundry—discard like tissue it | | N 1 . Can Be Relieved Take it in hand today. Clean out iour bowels with the pure quality fierb laxative used for over seventye | thing he did was to run out. Then he promptly ran in again. You see, he felt sure that he would drown if he stayed out, for the rain was coming down in sheets. It was | coming down so fast that the ground couldn’t soak it up, and the water stood in great puddl So Danny remained in that piece of fallen stub and shivered and shook aend | waited and hoped. | (Copyright, 1026, b / T. W. Burgess) | | The Australian cricket team on arrival at Montreal en route home, | will travel to New York, thence to | Buftalo, Chicago and through Cal- |gary to Vancouver. The True Family Laxative Mrs. F. E. Smith, 112 Huntington Ave., Boston, wrote: “‘I have been +aking Dr. True's Elixir for constipa- tion and find it to be more effective than anything I ever used.” | You know the symptoms of chronic ' constipation: Sour stomach, belch-~ Ing, offensive breath, heavy, dull ' eyes, constant headaches, an?gencr- al out-of-sorts, grouchy feeling. Let Dr. True's Elixir bring you relief. Family size $1.20; other sizes 60c ' and doc. | Successfully used for over 75 years should | o | An and [ brown in a butter | eurran hining house, rt of I jon th the appetizing | Honey Lou tried to e | eho | {told her mot her chair 50 | s | his room sn now |to spend Aft of in Lucy long dining room. poor that's wrong wi she and | that or tired—of dashing pl or with mean down with bea sho | And so it was | wa gal with utter w dr don't know 1AD THIS FIT Lou Hu v to old the W nely 1 one ayhew, come she The big ton, as well as the smaller | me plac GO ON WITH CHAPTER re was icken cream, 11 Ma thu & it w king, an 1 odor o n when jelly, its bn plat fudi cam in g T rore are won nd women housekeepit y m It g more menided well-cooked me litt round ta cloth siiver shi: than “Dear, I'm just under ous cyes. a bear with lled just took of reckon it “I tol that r all, it? She rolled into what up her n a give and walie As went, she quietly to S kid's tired hasn't had a vac er.” But Honey Lou way r sl vibra with yi had re woman She bloomi But she every later. T was aro to the next, nother was her time to the O Man, everything to h It 0 of to m. She had met th had fallen in 1 living ard to an ever 1 “r id to herself, of hate to go out tal i why ss out 1 in the first place.’ She put It on, and studied hersels{ Us baly face with & plume ofthrow you out on your head Do as woul he to the not two ing out breast and him THE XX 1 Hone | 1 thought you said you w with 1 Donegal man Huntley 1. glancing B too!" I'm going to He Lou coil of r mother's to dar W crow up her 1 this lovely new dress i ! . Wallack saw her in clothes mind in a f there There was And so it in that L mber nig til they he had Dbeen his aye hair 3 rumpl “lipped s 00d-looking fac Lou unst + of little ta own corner its were blood 1 was weak owed she adily through Ho! the | wd, he linime ad iglow above ette smoke, its red-plush ! against the wall, its and its clatter. From the big round tabl ight, | Jack Wallack sat with Honey Lou col | him——pass ~ him—without as a glar His ayed alon lowi T away my noise 1 Don 1 him t here Kk owd" toward much | o saw s0 rself | im. | sw out as she flower | ways | her, little She eyes followed like a its stalk think, freshness 1 s n apkin, slippe n somehow ped | flower. The that, Aunt|grance—and the frailty ) For him, the charm of Lou had lain in her sweetne ency, her almost child-like rather than in her The wera ¥, many irls these days, when ty depended on powd am, paint and curling irons | The blow she had given him he had, taken her joy-ridi 1 her had meant mors Pt che of ation all sum- g t tired in n nt vith lif kiss h. time 0oné terribly from one | man | - even wh his still smarted with it. He had believed her at 1e told him t it wi lie had believed 1 him that she iquor. He 1 been touched For no matter how iay cut their hair a -no matter how mu smoke or drink or paint tl man’'s ideal of a w mains t Nied sweetness he sweetness of an 1 th aches tired ! t when | first hen her nev 1 kil with one e tasted fall who in love | should | To scttle olemn and | married nging to by 1 th it women er. - skirts may c sclves some- ne and him Man, ove with + looked Tim Done- | | high-wail By the | Donegal 1 garden, tin were o seated, from them finally f helping Suzanne, and he Jack tonight,’ she fall | he I wanted to go, away When she he he Clemens to but her fort him with uzanne wi it her new s clos eves, was ar-old o | ‘f i “Love souns B | and’HER MAN' ETC, curling out from the On the oth la, all in filmy like an ang 2outh! 1 over in the muttered | had fin- ¥ Lou § oall em too, but n to “Valenci e said to Honey Donegal r hov always had once he two matt con o and dance hat what far as the murmured 50 close softly | to him said 1rply s ail people We're som tiat on the floor. . b yours had gone very white, have Honey under the o Alanta ple You shoul tonight." it was very uld hardly and ir own in corner. the 1 chair he ly down His hot under the one next to hers. hand found hers ‘Do something for a favor,” he said t anybody sec me, Do me ly. “Ri’ now, Give me a ttl ick one—I'm Honey Luly. | n away | ir acro between hefore 8 us. from trom her, him them He slid o and A look it. It made when Joe M the stairs be room at the Wa She looked wi room, wonder up and leav ving Di ' Tim asked next to her, once sobered. hated came into ember the day lows had stopped her ind lack 1d1 ing th it on the shipping Mills. around the could get l without 1ake a scene, s the smoke-filled | that Jack Waliack | em, Reside him, ! ne Clemens was rolling her | g cyes at him flirtatiously, but he id not sce her. FFor an instant 1esitate, Then he TC | he seemed to| got up and (-u-m-i toward Honey Lou through the little tables with a care- | He was smiling a little, | d was up. i matter, Honey Lou?" | and sat down 1ze of under the d. | ned with almost | out of 1 her s out | of I can't| | picked up his glass of | it slipped out of his| fell to the floor with a | | drin} zal and and Done water fingers rash. “Butter-fingers,” he scolded him- | “Now come on, Honey Luly,| soclable. You get away | that touch-m stuff any with me. He shook Then he laid one v and pulled her he not longer See?" his finger at her. hand on h ard him t out o above and here HeH he said, Jack's don't Weo're hic- 1 foney v third party ourselves.” W 1 ay by od and looked him re in the “Listen to he sald very ¢ Huntley over <qu ¢ . you pienic cggt” “You let Miss I'm going to 1y alone or you hear | Donegal head. “I'm| answered, | alki | He stopped, and gazed unsteadily oss the r At the top of the three velvet-covered steps that led »wn into the room stood two men | in plain dark clot It seemed when you're Honey b Lou t n.up like in his had Magle Lantern ind him on t the Rtlizror with Jack W instellment of FASHIONS By Sally Milgrim outcome of Honey the restaurant in tomorrow's “Honey Lou.” | | | Gay Little Bodice of White | Brocade Tops a Pleated SKirt of Black Juin That -surfaced jnina cloth—has been used and skirt of the outfit sketched today. cause all black, or black comb with brilllant color is the siarte in the day aterial— | for the | three-piece et And o naw mode, and skirt of { me are plain black | To offset this rather sombre color | note 1 have added a bodlce of gleaming white and silver brocade— | a striking and decorative feature | against the dark ound. Addi-| tional color notes are introduced by the coat collar and cuffs of natural kolinsky in a lovely golden brown | | n, this cos- tone. When the tume {llus new silhouette which is slender in the upper por- | tion, flaring at the hips and slender | again in skirt part. IHere the bodice olds the figure ahove the nist-line, flaring out in a narrow | peplum below, A straight, hip-length coat lavish- trimmed with fur and notable | this b jacket is o tes the 1y s | for its graceful tie fastening com- pletes this outfit The skirt and jacket of this smart street outfit are black juina cloth. The bodice is white and sil- ver brocade Copyr thoroughly distinctive Menas for the Family BY SISTER MARY Breakfast—Casaba melon, thin cream, broiled hamburg creamed potator . coffec Potato soup, stuffed s, brown bread, b date and mer- cereal, balls, erisp whole wheat toa nut of mut- and boiled whole \ches w onge cake, coffee, mutton should * be Trim N oysi a more s of butter thirty mir THEIR DREAM FAILI Two Boys, O to Sce the World, Rounded Up By Police. (P —Walter Tt 1 A. K 15 post travele rday mor tion where of the night. 1 who or some ftir Fir officers all. They ied fo show & their own way trip before the ms was their first ob- vere picked up early taken to th ro lodged for They were un- ver and had could world ma A in South they Japan's population, excluding For- Korea other overdas zones, increased §75,385 during 1925. 1t r by 131,811 than the 1924 mosa, and Hair Styles In Paris By Edna Wallace Hopper girls and wor Paris when 1 al es th hair dress, such Far It keeps t s hair flufiy, Or it keeps nd glossy without grease. same time it gives t ces the col nd a hair dress to All toilet counters now dre. Ed thing vou must try. It keeps the_curl or the flufl. Or it leck without grease gives will th ust thi wive keeps the b GIRLS OF SCHOOL AGE LEARN VALUABLE LESSON Find Lydia E.Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound a De}fldable Medicine LOUISE LOUTNAN ROUTE 2, CHARLESTON, ILLINOIS. From the days of the polonaise to the days of the radio, mothers have given this dependable medicice to their daughters. School girls are often careless. They get wet feet They overstudy or they tire them- selves with too many dances and parti They get run down. Many an active girl of today, like the demure maiden of the 1870's, has found that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetat'e Compound is helping her to find better health and psrgy. “I gave my fifteen-yearold girl Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com- pound, and it did her a wonderful lot of good. She had been out of school for four months. I read the advertisements of the Vegetable Compound, and since she has taken it she has improved and has gone back to school again. I recommend the Vegetable Compound to other mothers with girls who are not as strong as they should be.”—Mgs. Avice LovTHAN, Route 2, Charles- ton, Illinols “My daughter out of school two terms. I have known about Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com- pound all my life and finally decided that she should try it. Three bot- tles helped her in various ways for the next couple of years,"—Mgs. W. B. GiuerTe, 986 E. 52ad Place, Los Angeles, Calif. “I have always been sickly, and until I was fourteen my father was very strict about my perfect attend- ance at grammar school. I have gone to school through hard storms and often_taken cold. When I was fourteen I took to my bed and did not get up for eighteen months. Everyone thought I could not live, Just four months ago I began tak- ing your wonderful medicine, Lydia B. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and I could notice a great change almost at once. Now I feel like & new person. I wish all girls would try Lydia B. Pinkham’s wonderful gs. C. M, Bumx®, Union V1

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