New Britain Herald Newspaper, November 2, 1926, Page 12

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Quicksands of Love Adele Garrison’s New Phase of s of a Wife — Revelation Bfary Tells Madge of Her Relation- | ship with Leslie. It was Mary's turn to wince when I told her that if I could not in- terpret her furious specch as being the result of an unhinged mind, 1 must rescind by opinion of her as a thoroughbred with fair play as one of her tenets. I could ha said | nothing more cutting to her, for she prides herself upon her sportsman- ship. The angry flush faded from her face, leaving a pallor which frightened me for the second. The: admirably for a girl so young, sh pulled herself together, and an- swered me. “I suppose you are right, Auntie Madge,” she said slowly, but though there was acknowledgment of l*."r‘ fault in the glance she sent me, there was none of her usual friend- liness, and my spirits made a hur- ried descent, while my anger flam- ed hot against Jack Leslie. “It is horrid and unsportsmanlike for me to speak that way of Mr. Weritzen without giving him a chance to disprove the ‘things Jaclk Leslle said of him,” she went on * with a touch “I don't hear | 1 your cor- said of her old impudence, any loud apologies fre ner for the things you Jack.” “Jack” a Fast Worker My mental thermometer dropped to zero. So the cabaret dancer was already “Jack” to th heltered girl. Deliberately I commented upon it, hoping that in her probable angry reaction to my crit 1 mig some inkling of how far the u ly friendship had gone. “How long have you heen ca this young man ‘Jack,’ M asked quietly, yet trying to infuse a faint contempt into m “Your uncle Dicky certainly would be—interested—io put it mildly, in learning of this sudden intimacy be- tween you and the man he so dis- | likes. To my astonishment Mary threw j back her head and laughed with un- | mistakable malicious glee. | ‘Mary’ ever | ten the ou darling old fos claimed, “I see'it all takes all the mad out wonder you were ho; on one foot with the plaster cast. You though . called Mr. Leslie ‘Jack,’ quot il 1 4 some of his opinions and got sore when you slammed him, that I must have been weeks with him. meeting him every Wake up day and must be madly in love untie Madge! | The bus is going by, and it won't t for you. Remember we ing in the year of Girls and boys don't wa y've worked side by side fol they drop the ss thing. Life's nowaday useless we've called eath other before wore Jac in the p today is the him, includin fourth time that first ti b d 'o run into me. a -mighty - intercsting egg, ter what he'may h done t too & liv- our Lord 1926. it until r thre Mister hort So and ince that first morning And as for meeting him T've secen | one. this park the same as I He lo, st he’ no mat- | o sour Uncle Dicky and you on him." Watching the Lizard irits shot up 1 gone down. almost old fashioned you speec real re decorum which is no true index terous phrases d not doubt There had been but dental mee that \m."v over, Mary's hoped had swaye en I had criticized , however, b meetings were part of Jack ned them adroitl doubt engineer [ ome plan of thwarting h Copyright, Feature Inc. ieredible laxity among the people of today, a freedom of | him. O as quickly as| 1 had forgot- of | of the tons of the people using the word. four acc , and I |¢ d h )f one im. L Danny’s Tail Is Discovered By Thornton W. Burgess The clever mer never sleeps, But constant vigil ever keeps | —O0ld Mother Nature. s Danny M in the gr: r little paths of Nanny Meadow Mouse. He was quite hidden in that grass. Nothing was to be seen | of him from the path but his fun- | 2 little short tall, which was stick- ing out right in the path. You know, Danny had left that tail out th ere | on purpose. He was planning to | bleak the news of his homecoming Mouse ide one c little, and he thought the to do it would be for her to d er his tail first. Perhaps Danny| wasn't thinking of Nanny altogeth- er. I don't know anything about | it, but perhaps he ¥ thinking that if Nanny should discover that tail he might have a chance to find out just how she felt about him without having to face her. You see, he wasn't at all certain how wel- come he would he after having been away all summer. Now Danny was very tired, you know he had done a lot traveling. It was very quiet and peaceful there. Danr began to doze. Two or three times his eves almost closed, only to be opened hurriedly. But at last they dld close and remained closed. Danny was taking a nap and out in the little path lay Danny's funny e short | tail. It was a short tail, too. Some- times Danny had been ashamed of that short tail. Sometimes he had been envious of his cousing with long tails. Many a time he had ad- mired the long slim ts foot the Wood Mouse, 2 longer tail of Nimbleheels Jumping Mouse. But now he quite satisfled with that little s tall. You see, he hoped that tall was going to be a sort of an bassador for him. Ambassador is s big word, isn’t it? But its mea is quite simple. Tt means some who smooths the w ny hoped that his for of am- one Dan- mooth y for you. Lift Off-No Pain! 0 SO Drop a lit tle “Freezonc orn, instantly that then shortly you with fingers. Your druggist sells a of “Freezone for ficlent to remove ry hard moft corn, or corn between the and the foot calluses, without mess or Irritatin, lift a few cer toes, | sore-l Ahead of him, lying in the was a little worm the way for him with Nanr Now it just happened that the half-grown children of neck the Pheasant happenct that way. Young Ringneck w in the Great World and ve of it. He had perfect faith ability to pick up a i bright eyes, which were very cyes, in search of good eating. worm and insect and many seed those bright eves and stout bill picked up! s, he was still hungry. In f ad an extra good appetite It w Ringnec throug t by found chance that It he foll sharp cyes that little looked this way and tha dige path, tne of leng out y proud in his His sharp t wa ny a plump over act, he that young path was a good ved it. of his t before, s a worm. fore > coc ked He reach- studied th like th himself, all worm never saw one said he to I'm hungry alike to me. Just then Dan dreamir ow tehe o that to get took a young pick at be- “but | s look Mouse a his latter Try the New / Cuticura ) Shaving Stick Freely Lathering 5\Medicinal and Emollient for | - | spoon d | Despite FASHIONS By Sally Milgrim | Velvet Is the Outstanding Material in Both the Aficrnoon and Lvening Mode The present insistence on ele- | gance is nly responsi for the wide use of velvet for daytime cos- This luxurious material is no r reserved for formal evening wraps, the mode having decreed its acceptance for afternoon frocks as well as for the less formal street outfits and sport dresses. That velvet is an ideal fabric for ormal strect s appar- ent in the youthful model sketche today. This smart outfit is deep | brown yelvet trimmed with match- |ing fur and completed by an over- {blouse of gold and silver metal | cloth. In addition fabrics there {new and ver | The short cket | natural waist line, from where it flares into a narrow peplum. This | widening of the lines just below | the hips has boen called the “pa | boy" contour, so remi of the costumes worn b pages in the Middle The skirt is fincly a | the hips and looped under at | hem-line. | The short jack | velvet costume is belted at a nor- mal walst-line and trimmed dark brown fur. to these luxurious the interest of a youthful sithouette. is belted at the is about the t of this brown | Menas for the Family| R MARY ey h dew Sl 5 toast, milk, etabla soup, dwiches, baked quinee Dinner — | mashed po ze and custard, cabb tomato s | apple rve bread, milk, | < vegetable soup seasonable for November Vegetable Soup our tablespoons hut 2 lecks, 2 good s n carrots (1 pe zed te , 4 cups chic 1 teaspoon Worceste: 3 tablespoons flour, 1 !0 a- t, 1 teaspoon sugar, 1 more tablespoon butter. Melt 4 tablespoon sauce pan. Add cele ¥ celer | dium s broth, sauce, butter in a in thin 8 ly sliced and carrots cut in over a low the pan an burttt Add tomat cut in sl Drir simmer t colande n to prevent . pared and the bolling ites, Rub or coarse through a fine sieve = {which a fowl h lis made by diss houillon cul in Combine brot and add \Il\ ’l'wvr, E § r and ftened but- Add to t t MAKY SCHOOL ClnipREM Ah.. ‘-}h,r\LY value their aid the of theirchildren, Sweet Pov childrenfor: orders, mach HTUIE | 0 yoar Al J for over 5 oo, ffar To ANl mach Agony Iead What A R About Dare's Mentha Big 0 Has to Say ]' has helped thousand ]nn doubt help you, with | i 4 mml s. | meets An © JOHNSON FEATURES INC,, color. There was a fern box of carved teak-wood that ran along the silk hung windows of the sun-room. | Four love birds fiuttered about in a big wicker cage above them. Kitchen Mary, the new READ THIS FIRST: Honey Lou Huntley is private sec- ‘ retary to old “Grumpy” Wa head of the Wallack Fabric Mills. Honey Lou likes everyone at the mills except Joe Meadows, the ship- ping clerk, who makes love to her against her will. Jack Wallack, who comes to his| father's mills to lcarn the business, falls tn love with Honey Lou the | minute he sces her. Brought up by an old-fashioned mother, Honey Lou is a mixture of flapper and | clinging vine. Angela Allen pretends to be a triend of Honey Lou and tells her not to take J ¢ is | very jealous of Di nd of Margret, sister. Honey Lou irst dinner in the new flat. ary Delaney had been The Hmis cook until a year ugo Then she had left because of *‘words” | |that she ha® with Grumpy. But| The Head ad forgiven her and sent her to Honey Lou. She was fat and talkative—much too talkative. But her striped dresses were crisp and clean and she settled down into the Kkitchen of the flat he had worked there all her life. 1d place you have, " she told Honey Lou afternoon s she passed through the h ay to answer the Honey Lou's | goes to work w th; Margret in the office of Holy Cross hospital. One day she gocs to tea | with the w Angela and mets | Jack's moth vhom Jack calls|doorbell. “Evervthing of the best, | The Head, use she manages ! if you're not happy here ‘tis everything home. She tells | own fault, I'm saying. Honey Lou that “Grumpy' is not | ut, of course, I'm going to be satisfied with his new 4 happy here,” Honey Lou answered. Ana Ludlow, the office ed. “Don't asks Honcy Lou {o wor said gloomily. “None father, who is at home sick snips that's getting lumbago, and Honey Lou promises days is happy. The | that she will. T worked was at Honey Lou house—and that tells her that Jack Wallack i That little Mrs. ing her out to dance that evening. | |Honey Lou ecalls up Tim Donegal, | at s | sure!! of the young married |Mr. Jim Clemens’ little wife of his! mects Angela, Whatever she was going to say “Is It Stephtn?” She Asked. | deterr | the ined to have him tal me place. Honey Lou goes with Tim to t restaurant and he has been drink- |new home. The place is raided by dry| “Hmm— ats and Honey Lou escapes with |grunt in Jack Wallack. Jack tells Hon |took in the Lou t he thought s vs, the ing him and ends by |that he s | to marry Honey L : her to about Suzanne Clemens was cut ort by the arri of The Head, ho had come to look over Jack's " She made a little her throat as her ey rainbow-hued floor pil- love bird r mother that she is to mar W the | next day but her mother asks her | | to wait and have a wedding, uwwvh, | Lou's en ment s {and plans made for | ding. room to room. The Head shook her magnifi- head. “I su se I'm old-fash- " she £aid with a little smile. the wed- | “But it looks like an Itallan street {fair to me. All such stuff—" She scornfully picked up a powder box from Iloncy Lou's dressing table. It was a pale blue box, and when the cover was taken from it, it played a plece of music. Angela gave that to me,” Honey Lou told her, “and Angecla helped me furnish my house. e knew vouldn't know what to buy.” looks to me as if you'd bought out all of down town,” The Head |retorted. “But if you like it and ‘H suits Jack, that's all that's nec- announced |ione re downtown and she persuades he h |account under the m s, | Wallack, Jr, and to put the | is buying, along with on fhe But with Margret, who sces h Angela, she decides to take k the lingerie and Margret pay: the shoes for a wedding gift. 1ck and Honey Lou have a quiet home wedding and their honeymoon camping at Ta- In the meantime visits flat and breaks under the reali- | ation that Honey Lou is lost to iim now. Jack and Honey Lou rc cir honeymoon and s llacks while look themsely Jack shoes spend Lake sult Jack. Man-ltke, he knew nothing of house furnishings |and the cozy rooms with their deep {soft rugs and easy chairs and chcerful-looking lamps sulted him n to the ground Then, on the first of November, the bills started to come in. Lvery mor when Mary brought Hon Lou her breakfast there were bills | ks and The Head says |on the the coffee pot Uoney Lou coul ur to breakfast ay from them. |in bed, / Lon declarced in the Lou and ginnin it to get up and why cat with 1 own husband.” And for a few mornings she did up. It scemed wonderful the rer at first, to be sitting there Ann Ludl ¥ him pepper his Lou about him was Lou verything about b he ferful to a bride 1 his hair eve wer, the in two min- ald, even ti paper in one s with the other k or two Ho p latc mor s not to do keeping, on the next en-room f told tray un n't like Ho! ) ave ney nd cool lerst s0 tow Lou stops a Honey o i0 ON WITH T IAPTER on Dulcimer onee belonged. something beautif o of the house, shone out—a mirror or a Chines Angela and Suzanne Clemens were )bowl of yellow and blue and rose,never ready to go shopping or driv- when she did ge Mary tonk c up early. every corner HONEY [OUZz 1926 as hard at work cooking the | s 1t | you be too | and flowered | bric-a- | it?” asked Honey | s she led her from | to| al and | D!l ing until ten or eleven o'clock. | “I wish wo didn’t have Mary,” Honey Lou complained to Jack on a cold crisp December morning. “I could do all my housework in two hours myself."” | “Well, you aren’t going to,” Jack came back at her firmly. “I didn't marry you to put you to work for me. I'm the one that's going to do the work in this family.” In a way was fun not to have | anything to do. It was fun to meet Angela and Suzanne down town and go Christmas shopping With them. It scemed like a dream come truc to be able to walk into Sa- | bine's Juxurious tea-room and order what she wanted, and sign her name at the bottom of the check. | To buy fresh violets at the shop | where Angela bought hers, and tell thé clerk to charge them to “Mrs. Jack Wallack, junior,” and then walk out with them! She opened a charge account at | The Powder Box, the clever little beauty shop where Angela went to have her nails manicured and her hair washed. | She went there |a week to have hair washed and treated with sweet-smelling lotions, to have her nails polished until they shone like pink glass, to have cold cream | rubbed into a skin that certainly | did not necd cold cream. two afternoons her own healthy Late one afternoon into Sabine's to buy | take she walked some cakes to home with her and bumped into Margret. Margret looked blue and un- |happy. “You're golng to come |home with me,” Homey Lou told her. ‘“I've scarcely seen you since I got married and I have millions of things to tell you. Jack's work- ing late tonight and it'll be like old times. She could not walt to take her hat off when they got home, but ran excitedly about, showing Mar- | gret all her treasures. | “We'll have some tea in the sun-room, Mar: she said, putting her head in at the kitchen door. “My sister, Miss Moody’'s here, and she's going to stay and have sup- per with me.” Every now and then Honey Lou forgot and sald “supper” instead ot “dinner.” Mrs. Huntley had al- ways called the evening meal “sup- per,” as they had on the southern plantation where she had been | born and brought up. “What are you so blue about, anyway?”" she asked Margret, when she came back into the sun- room. For Margret was sitting on the long cushioned seat that ran along under the windows, staring |down moodily intQ the street be- | low. “Nothing,” she said, looking up. “Is it Steve—is Steve treating you rough or something?" Honey ‘l ou went on. But Margret shook her head. “No,” she answered, {ing down into still look- the violet twilight that covered Dulcimer street. *No, it's just—everything. I know 1 | ought to be happy. I have a good job and everything that I nced. But, don't you know, Honey Lou, |a woman wasn't born to live out all her days in an office.” She ised her head and looked around the sun-room, with its heerful flowers and its bright cushiorls, and the love birds in their cage. “I suppose I'm going to be an old maid, and I ought {o make up my mind to it she said tensely. “But I can't. 1'd marry almost any man who came along and offered me a roof over my head and a meal a day:. t for the sake of having a4 home and some bables of my own." Yes—and then you'd be think- [with police |but that more than 60 per cent of |pedestrians are '~ +|ing in th> middle of the block. Grocers Endorse TEA As 1009% Quality and Flavor ‘READ HERALD CLAN FOR YOUR W of your life,” Honey Lou told her sensibly. "“Don’'t be a fool and marry anybody who comes along. Wait for Steve. You watch, every- thing’s going to turn out all right for you and Steve.' ' Margret dropped a lump of sugar into her tea. “Well—perhaps,” she sighed. “But I couldn't help think- ing the other day, when Ann Lud- low married that Meadows, how gladly I'd have changed places with her.” “Oh, no!” gasped Honey TLou. “You don't know what you're talk- ing about, or you wouldn’t say such a thing. He’s the most terrible creature who ever drew breath, He's dreadful. Keep away from him.” Margret stared. *“Why, of course! What would I go near him for?” she asked, amazed at Honey Lou's outburst. “What I meant was that I wished I was going to be married when I heard that Ann Ludiow was leaving to get married.” That night Steve Mayhew came to the flat to take Margret home. Mrs. Huntley telephoned to say that he was on his way, and two minutes later the doorbell rang sharply through the rooms, (TO BE CONTINUED) How does Jack meet Steve May- hew. Read it in tomorrow’s instal- ment. stopped. Efl“r! Hals can e topeed: wte a’l:lxm?m Lucky ""fi.:‘; “CASCARETS” FOR HEADACHE, COLDS, and stop headache, colds, sour stomach G 7 you | you *0-cent box. scaret tonight to cleanse omach and bowels, and irely feel great by morn- ing. You raen and women who have headache, coated tongue, a bad cold, are billous, nervous, upsct, bothered with a sick, gassy, disordered stom- ach, or have backache and feel all worn out. Are you keeping your bowels clean with Cascarets — or merely forcing a passageway every few days with salts, cathartic pills or castor oil? Cascarets immediately cleanse and regulate the stomach, remove the |sour, undigested and fermenting |food and foul gases; take the ex- |cess bile from the liver and carry off the constipated waste matter and poison from the bowels. Remember, a Cascaret tonight will straighten you out by morning. A 10-cont box from your druggist means healthy bowel action; a clear head and cheerfulness for months. Don't forget the children. Your Heslth How to Keep It— Causes of Illness BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN Editor Journal of the American Medical Association and of Hygeia, the Health Magazine. Four-wheel brakes have perhaps helped to lessen the severity of many accidents, though they do not seem to have greatly v creased their num- ber. A. A. Mowbray of the Safety Council has pointed out a perfect system of traffic signals, officers at every busy corner, which will do much for safc- ty. But these things have no ad- vantage if an automobile with a drunken driver speeds through the warning signal section. 2,000 Hurt Daily There is evidence that more than 2,000 persons are i jured by auto- mobiles every day in the United | States, and that at least one-third of | these are under 15 years of age. In most instances, the pedestrian is in jured, rather than the driver. Statistics show that most of th traffic accidents occur between 5 and 7 p. m, that more than halt of them take place at street corners, National Tanlac Helps Entire Family Mother of 3 Children Says Fam- ter FHealth Than Ever Before, Claims Own Case Is Without Parailel My oldest son and m the Guilbert, ‘Kingsley St., pringficld, Mass. “When I was 20 ars old T devel- oped rhenmatism at never left ne until T began wking Tanlac. child was born I could not regain my strength. For 8 weeks I could not do a thing. I did not leave the house. My arms legs swelled and pained me. There wasn't a spot on my body that did not ache. My stomach was always sour and burned like fire. We spent a lot of money in {search of rellef when a friend re- |commendea Tanlac, ju ed while cross- The most dangerous driver is the one who contests the right of way, | whe tries to pass the street car on the opposite track, who drives on the wrong side and who djsregards safe- ty zones. After my la Child and Adult The child who dashes out into the | street to recover some plaything, the | timld woma who gocs half way across and then changes her mind, the absent-minded citizen who reads |°% his paper in the middle of a busy| 1 bcsan to gain strength. T street are special types who con- |82ined 6 pounds and color returned stantly tease the fool-killer. [to my checks. Rheumatism van- Englneers who have studied this ished. Now I feel 100 per cent bet- problom have fourd that the most |ter than ever before. No backache, important factors in preventing |[N0 Jumpy nerves or constipation. street accidents are engineering re- [An1 what Tanlac Aid for me it did vision of streets, t. make vision clear [for my son. It gave him an appe- and room sufficient; regulation of |tite, strength, vitality and banished the traffic and enforcement of the |the dizziness that ca him so traffic laws, so that both the motor- |much suffering. He now has robust ist and the pedestrlan may know |health.” what to expect when moving about, | Made from roots, barks and herbs, and education of motorists and pe- |this tonic glves amazing results, Get destrians to dangers and how to |vour first bottle from your drugeist avold them. —now. ed FLOURS YOU CANNOT BUY IN STORES —her own ingredients mixed just as she used them Never before a recipe so many women have tried and liked! And yet no cook book gives it. Some of the in- gredients for this old-time recipe can- not even be bought in stores today. For years down on the old planta- tion Aunt Jemima would not reveal to asoul how she mixed the batter for her tender, golden-brown cakes. Only her master and his guests could enjoy their matchless flavor. Today you get her own ingredients ready-mixed—proportioned exactly as she used them—in Aunt Jemima Pan- cake Flour. \\c grind her special flours with ma Lrydf‘sl,nedluxthe purpose. Only in this way is it pos- sible for so many families to have cakes just like her own, always light and fluffy, with that old-time planta- tion flavor. Watch the plates come back for more when you serve Aunt Jemima's cak Plan now to test her famous recipe—ready-mixed. Your grocer has Aunt Jemima Pancake Flour and her Prepared Buckwheat Flour, Coupons for valuable premiums come in every Aunt Jemima package. AUNT JEMIMA Pancake Flour ~also Prepased Buckwheat Flour ing of Steve Mayhew all the rest "SALADA" CONSTIPATION .. To- mght' clean your bowels Dy \ " |

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