New Britain Herald Newspaper, November 4, 1926, Page 12

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uicksands B —— of Love Adele Garrison’s New Phase of Revelations of a Wife —— {{Madgo Realizes Mary's Dangerous Flirtation with Leslie Dicky's young niece is very like him in her lightning-like changes from anger to mirth.. As the name “Paul” feli from my lips, all the wrath and grieving reproach faded swiftly fom her lovely face, and she laughed in so care-free a fashion that there swiftly vanished in her mirth, my last doubt of the truth-| fulness of her astounding statement th * she never had spoken to any man except Jack Leslie. as great a triumph as a city could have. Her aunt e, Harriet and Edwin Braithwaite had warned me that she was Interested in a mysterious young man pamed “Paul” whom they had never seen but whose let- ters to her and her answers they had found, fervid epistles which caused her relatives much concern, but about which she would tell them nothing. And In addition to that overwhelming evidence, I my- self, upon Mary’s first night with me, had heard her murmur, while dreaming, “Kiss me again, Paul!” Yet is spite of all that evidence, I believed her and waited patiently for the explanation of her laughter. Paul the Phantom “pour Auntie Madge!" she said at | last between gigles. “So Aunt Har riet spilied the beans about ‘Paul,’ | 4id she? No wonder you thought I was spoofing when 1 told you I never had talked to any shelk! He had all the boy friends of the girls at school beaten a mile. They used to sit around with their mouths open- ing and shutting like hooked fish when I read them his letters. Darned g00d letters they were too, if I do say it as I shouldn't.” “Mary!" 1 gasped comprehending- Iy as she drawled out the old time phrase, with a last reminiscent gig- [8le. “You wrote those letters your. |self! You invented Psul!” | "Best guess you ever made in | your life,” she retorted, her eyes | dancing with glee, and all her re- | sentment apparently vanished. “And |I'Il radio the cross-eyed world he was some invention. He was so spiffy that Ralf the time I almoat | believed he was real myself.” I drew a deep breath, and' thanked my particular little joss that I had sald no word to Mary of the gords I had heard her utter in | her sleep For I knew that the hu- | miliation of a very young and In- |tense girl—than which there '3- | nothing more terrible—would be |hers should she find out that I |knew, what I guessed she hardlly {admitted to herself—that the youth |she had invented as & means of triumphing over her schoolmates had become & dream lover. Planned to Be Adored But I trembled for the future of |a girl so intense, so imaginative, so | divinely planned to adore and be |adored as was thls lovely young | niece of Dicky' In a flash I had to revise my estimate of her. Al her surface sophistications had | been simply & clever imitation of her mates at school who had been llowed far more latitude then had been hers under Harrlet Braith- waite's rigid regime. Not until now had T been serl- ously alarmed over Jack Leslie’s | pursuit of her, for I had thought | her a young modern, a veteran of a | dozen mild schoolgirl tlirtations. But | with the knowledge that the eabaret | dancer was {n reality the first man with whom she ever had talked, 1 realized that the girl was in even more danger than I had thought. Copyright, 1926, by Newspaper Feature Syndicate, Inc. A Funny Game of Hide and Seek By Thornton Burgess You know, if you have ever tried, How hard it is from self to hide. —O0ld Mother Nature Danny Meadow Mouse was all up- set. Yes, sir, he was all upset. He didn’t know what to do. He had put to flight the handsome stranger who had heen saying nice things to Nan- ny Meadow Mouse .but.instead of Aing proud of it. and going back with his head up and his chest out, | WELCOME dish on wintry mornings — pancakes steaming hat and with butter, syrup or jelly. It's breakfasts like this that keep us warm and cheer- ful. Cakes are unbelievably better when Grandma’s Pancake them. It's specially milled and blended to make them so. bountifilly ~served Flour bakes Grandma's PANCAKE FLOU No More Piles clan Who Discovered This Common s the only nt known as -ROID, s Doctor's tre move the cau Dr. Leonhardt wants er to benefit by his dis that there will be delay, the T and all ¢ gell HEM-I it will do n that sufferer s Dr. Leonh no i Depart HEM-ROID today { | “He'll come back,” said she to herself anny to admire, he was sud- denly dreadfully afraid that she would see him. Here he was, home lat last, yet afraid to meet Nanny {face to face. Prescntly, he heard her foosteps eoming along the lit- tle path. Danny took to his heels. | Then began a funny game of hide and seek. Danny was trying to keep out of Nanny's sight and Nanny was doing her best to get a good view of him. You see, when she had seen him attack the stranger there was something strangely familiar about him. He had looked strangely like her beloved Danny. She couldn't believe that it was Danny. for she s sure that something dreadful 1 happened to him long ago; but must make sure. | Now somehow a great of }shame had taken posscssion of Dan- ny. He was ashamed to face Nan- ny after having been away so long. he tried to hide from her. Really » wasn't hiding from her, you he was hiding from himself {1t he hadn't had a guilty feeling he wouldn't have hidden. But he have a guilty feeling and so he fed to hide. Time after time he hcught that he safely hidden only to have to take to his heels stent. But been per- inny couldn't remember when Nanny hadn't had her way. It was like her to st in trying to find him. Now Danny was at a d'sadvan. | tage. Nanny knew all the little paths where they led to. Danny re any of them You sce, he had never been sense in that particular part of the | fore. Nanny had Danny had been never knew just . y was coming out | when he started along a little path {Two or three s the path e v < nothing for his Green Meadows be moved there whil away, Danny ers he led Danny to do pa and W truthful merely way he nt 1 To be qu glven up. D: n't to n up. make in the old nest of Dr b she had roofed as she was out of od around and a look out \ou back."” he He'll come a good look much like sir. it is that Dan- lead, T should say that s Danny. But, of course, it he w 't have hidden ing os, Meanwhile I liscovered that he was no longer baing sought by Nanny. Then, strangely enough, he was disappeinted. He wanted to be found. Yes, sir, he wanted to be found. When you some to think of it, Meadow Mice are queer people, aren’t they? But so are some others. (Copyright, 1936, by T. W. Burgess) The next atory: *“No One at FASHIONS By Sally Milgrim | Novelty Trimmings Are Features of the New Felt Street Hats The smartest street hat at the present time is a small shape of either black felt or velvet featur- ing a band of novelty trimmlng‘ around the crown. The band may be a narrow affair of braided metal | |ending in.a buckle in front. or a| | wide band of gold or silver leather | | punctuated with decorative cut-out | |designs. Or the band may be| |trimmed with metal ornaments or | small sections of glass in the man- | {mer of the hat shown in the upper | | sketch today, | This small shape of black felt | reveals the high-creased crown and the narrow turned-down brim char-| acteristics of the best of this se |son's models. The trimming con- | sists of a band of black kid orna- |mented with silver and alternating rosettes erystal and red glass. Equally smart is the shape below —a graceful turban in a combina- tlon of black felt and satin. The high brim of this is satin trimmed with a narrow band of ribbon, end ing in a bow. Over this falls the soft crown of black felt. The band on the black felt hat at the top is trimmed with silver | metal and glass rosettes. Below is |a smart turban of black felt and | satin. Y Engaging Black metal pleces | made of Meras for the Family| | | BY SISTER MARY | BREAKFAST—Qrange juice, ce- veal, thin cream, pork sausage, fried apples, pancalkes, syrup, milk coffee. | "LUNCHEON — Cream of mush- | |room soup, croutons, jellled tomato alad, rye bread, rice pudding with raisins, milk, tea. DINNER—Stewed chicken with | |rice, creamed peppers, stuffed cel- lery and endive salad, bran rolls, | milk, coffee, pumpkin pie. This menu is planned for a week- |end when the whole family are at home for all their meols. “Big |brather” will delight in the break- {fast of sausage and pancakes with | |apples. This same combination | makes a good luncheon eccasionally. No potatees arc snggested in the | dinner menu. Rice Is served as a| Is\lhflill!l& | Children under six years of age| should not indulge in the fried ap- | Iples, but older persons will find |them so much to their liking that [the recipe fallows. | Fried Apples | Four large tart apples, !'spoon cinnamon, 2 table: 3 tablespoons butter. | wash apples and wipe ary. Re- | ! move cores but do mot pare. Cut in| 'quarter-inch elices. Melt butter in frying pan, add app co and \cnok over a hot five for several min- | lutes. Reduce hest, sprinkle with | sugar and cinnamon and cook until apnles are tender and brown. | | It the epples are pared they will | | fall apart during the eooking. Clos watching and a low fira ars neees- h:.n- hecause the apples will burn | quic ter the sugar is added. | Tart apples are the best for fry- | Ing but acid" fruit ean be used ! Hif generon sprinkled with lemon julee. HEEP L0 | 12 tea- | poans sugar The secret of keeping young ls to feel young—to do this you must wateh your liver and bowels there's no need of having a saliow complexion—dark rings under your cyes—pimples—a lools ell you nin comes from i er. a well known physi erfected a vegetable compound mixed with olive oil as a |substitute for calomsl to act on the {liver and bowels, which he gave to his 7 ts for years | Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets are gentle in their action yet always e "h-cn.n. They bring about that na- | tura) buoyancy which all shouid en- | joy by toning up the liver and| {clearing the system of {mpnritics Dr. Edw ds' Olive Tablets known by their olive color. jand 6oc. are 15¢, 30c | This ange i laney, 0KING YOUNG in ONEY © JOHNSON READ THIS FIRST: Honey Lou Huyntley is private sec. retary to old “Grumpy” Wallack 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 agalnst her will, Jack Wallack, who comes to his father’s mills te learn the business, falls in Jove with Homey Lou the minute he sees her. Brought up by an old-fashioned mother, Honey Lou is a mixture of flapper and clinging vine. Angela Allen pratends to be a friend of Honey Lou and.tells her not to take Jack seriously. Jack is very jealous of Dr. Bteve Mayhew, a friend of Margret, Honey Lou's sister. ‘ Honey Lou goes to work with Margret in the office of Holy Cross hospital. One day she goes to tea with the wily Angela and meats Jack's mother, whom Jack calls The Head, beecause she manages everything at home. Bhe tells Honey Loy that “Grumpy” is not satistied with his new secretary, Ann Ludlow, the offies vamp. Jack asks Honey Lou to work for his father, who is at home sick with lumbage, and Honey Lou promises that she wiil, Honey Lou meets Angela, whe tells her that Jack Wallack is tak- ing her out to dance that evening. Honey Lou calls up Tim Donegal, determined to have him take her to the same place. Honey Lou goes with Tim to the restaurant and he has been drink- ing. The place {s ralded by dry agents and Honey Lou eacapes with Jack Wallack, Jack tells Honey Lou that he thought she was tricking him and ends by telling her that he loves her and wants her to marry him. Honey Lou tells her mother that she is to marry Jack Wallack the {next day but her mother asks her to wait and have a wedding. Honey | Lou's engagement iy announced and plans are made for the wedding. She meets Angela downtown and she persuades her to open a charge account under the name of Mrs. Jack Wallack, Jr.,, and to put the shoes she is ‘buying, along with some lingerie, on the account. But at home with Margret, who sees through Angela, she decides to take back the lingerie and Margret pays for the shoes for a wedding gift. Jack and Honey Lou have a quiet home wedding and spend their honeymoon camping at Lake Ta- may, In the meantime Steve visits th flat and breals under the reali- zation that Honey Lou is lost ta him now. Jack and Honey Lou return from their honeymoon and stay with the Wallacks while looking for a flat for themselves. Honey Lou télls Angela that they are anxious to start housekeeping. They find a seven-room flat on the next street to the Wallacks and The Head says Angela told her Honey Leu coyld not wait to get away from them. s Honey Lou and she cannot understand why Jack's mother is so cool toward her. Honey Lou starts &shopping for furniture. She stops at the Wal- lack Mills office ta see Ann Ludlow. Ann tells Honey Lou why she sent for her. Honey Lou sees Joe ! Mecadows and tells him he must[ marry Ann at once and he agrees ta de so. Honey Lou and Jack settle dewn in their own flat with Mary De- the cook. Margret comes home with Honey Lou for dinner and Stcve Mayhew calls to take he home. Angela comes over to help Honey Lou prepare dinner on Mary's night Jack phones he will not be home and Angela & sh will call Tiry Donegal and ask him to play cards with them, much against Honey Lou's wishes. NOW GO ON WITH ™HE STORY CHAPTER XXXV1 Angela spoke into the telephone. “Hello, Tim. This {is Angela Allen,” she said. *V/ait just a min- ute.” She laid ome of her long white hands over the littla black mouth- | piece and turned her dove's eyes up to Honey Lou. “Dear,” ghe “there is po reason why Tim shouldn’t come over here. You can tell Jack that he came with me—that I brought him. You're | just the chaperon for us. See?" Honey Lou only shrugged halt whispered. | | shoulders and turned back to the up the card | living room to set table. As she went she heard Angcla sk Donegal if he'd like to come over to the flat to play cards with “two lonesome women who don't know what to do te amuse them- selv “I know Jack will be furious when he hears about it,” Honcy Lou said while they waited for Donegal to come. he saw Tim was that night when he threatened to throw him out of the Magic Lantern, you know.” “Don't be silly,” Angela told her with a soft laugh. “He and Tim | Donegal have been friends ever since they were lttlo boys. There's no [lll-fecling between them, Of course, Tim does a lot of things hat aren't exactly straight, but—" 3efore Honey Lou had time te ask her what those things were, there was the sound of a car stop- ping down in the street, and Done- al rang the bell in the vestibule below—and that was how it b pened that he came back Honey Lou Wallaek's lifs. s oe e intc was less than a week after- that she saw him again. and Angela were buying hocolates {n Sabine's when he came through the &winging street | doors with a broad smile of greet- ing on his very good-looking face “Isn't this luck!™ he grected | them. window as I was passing. down and T'll buy you some tea or whatever it is that women eat at | this time of day.” “Oh, T can't stay—I've got [to go! You two have tea, here!" And Honey Lou almost ran out of the ehe It She rful, noisy, giittering place, lleaving them behind her, She jusi|as they went along, thelr arms her | “1 saw you twe through the| FEATURES INC, 1926 couldn't have tea with Tim Done- gal. If Jack heard about it—— She drew a deep braath when she was safely outside the shop, and in the spangled dusk of Nicholson boulevard, 8he loved it on a crisp winter's day like this~—with the shop windows aglow with light and color, and the crowds hurrying by under the yellow blobs of lamplight —with the sound of wheels and newsboys’ shrill cries and hurrying feet like the very hum of life itself, in her eara, That njght she showed Jack the bills, when they were together in their bedroom bhefore dinner. Jack rushed home from the Mills every night in his overalls and changed at home, 80 as not to waste a moment away from her. She watched him tonight, as he sat in a deep chair and pulled off his old shoes with broken-nalled, grease-stained hands. “What an old peach you arel” she said to him suddenly, thinking that he was worth a dozen Done gals and Btephen Mayhews — oh, easily a dozen. She went across the room and dropped a kiss on the back of his neck, He grinned as he glanced up at her. “What are you getting ready to spring on me now, Vamp?” he chaffed her. “I'll bet you've got a whole raft of bills behind your back.” Honey Lou's lashes fluttered down and then flashed up again. She giggled. “Well, I have some, now that you remind me of jt,” she lilted, and ran in to get the bills from the drawer of her little French desk. Jack's fuce was very grave as he went through them with her. “Holy Mackinaw, Heney Lou! How did you spend all this?” h asked, shaking his head. “You ow these stores aimost as much as I'm earning this year."” Honey Lou curled | rose-colored sk eover of the helpless “We had to have furniture and | things for this house,” she said in a little voice, *“And Angela helped | me pick it out, at the places where | ‘your mother buys things Haven't | you any meney in the bank?” | Jack nodded, still scowling down “The last time | at the sheaf of bills—billa for very | nearly four thousand dollars. ‘ “Your autemobile must have cost {a lot of money, too,” Heney Lou | went on wistfully. “And having a lulcc house ia 8@ much more impor- |tant than having a grand automo- bile. And—and I dld so want to va you 8 lovely, comfortable, |restful home—" She could feel !tears welling up into her throat ! and eyes, and she stopped, afraid they would spill over. “Yes, but—" Jack began, and then as he looked at his wife's forlorn little figure he got up and came across the room ta her. “It's all right. dearest,” he said, and the overwhelming tenderness that he felt for ler was face and hig voice as he bent over her. “FThe heuse is worth every nickel you spent en it. Only next |time you go shopping take my { mother or yours with you, instead | of Angela, will you? $he has so |mueh money that she just doesn't | know the meaning of a dollar bill.”” | An hour Ilater they walked Sit laround the blook te the low white | liouse on Summit street, to spend |the evening with The Head and | Grumpy. | “We ought to have a gate tn our |baek fe:ce se that we could just |run out of our backyard into your | mother’s,” Honey Lou remarked o| 881d when they came into the room. locked and thelr feet koeping step. “Wait a minute—I want to dash in to see Angela for a jiffy,” she added, and ran up the stone steps of the Allens’ house. Angela, herself, came to the door. Bhe was all in shimmering white silk, and”thres or four strands of big pearls were looped around her neck. 6he looked Ilke a child's dream of a Bnow Queen as she stood there, and Honey Lou was struck, as she often was, with her pure cold beauty. “You're going out, aren’t you?” she asked. “I just stopped in to tell you that I showed Jack my bills tonight and that everything’s all right. I knew you'd be glad to hear it.” Angela smiled. “I told you everything would be all right, didn't I?” she asked. Honey Lou nodded. “You did, and you sure know your groceries,” she declared, and Angela frowned a little as she always did when Honey Lou used a slang phrase. “I'm awfully glad I made a clean breast of it. Now the bills will all be pald, and I feel like & free woman again. Everything's off my chest, thank goodness.” “Did you remember to tell Jack that we'd seen Donegal a couple of times, too, while you were con- fessing to him?” Angela asked gently. “Or did you have sense enough to keep that to yourself?” in the parior under a glass lamp. reading. “Jack, your father's up In bed with that pain fn his back again. I think he'd Hke ¢o see you,” she Her sharp black eyes went to Honey Lou. “And I want to talk to you my dear girl,” she went on in a severe tone. “You sit down here. And, Jack, close the door when you go out.” (TO BE CONTINUED) Your Health How to Keep It— Causes of Miness BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN Editor Journal of the American Medical Association and of Hygela the Health Magazine One of the most common ques- tlons that disturbs the “minds of many people is whether the mar- rlage of first cousins is desirable. There is a sort of superstition that the offspring of such a union are bound to be defective either men- tally or physically. Flrst cousins who have married watch with the greatest of anxiety to find out whether the children who are apparently healthful and intelligent will begin to deteriorate as they increase in age. Accentuating Types The actual facts are that close relationship of persons who are married is likely to accentuate dominant characteristics in the off- spring, whether good or evil. Any traits’ manifested by the children are & reflection of the traits of their ancestors. If certain de- fects are prominent, these will be developed with results that are dis- astrous. Every person carries in his body not only evident character- istics, but innumerable latent fea- tures which he himself has inherit- ed from ancestors, but which have no‘ become manifest. When two such concealed tenden- cles are brought together, as is more likely to occur in cousin marriages than in the mating between unrelat- ed persons, these latent characteris- tics are more likely to become fully expressed in the children, Revealing Traits Among the characteristics which Pape’s Dispepsin Ends Ges Pressure, Sickening Sour Ris- ings, Acid Dyspepsia. Five Minutes the Limit Nome of That Dyspeptic Goawing of False Appetite Since I Discov~ ered Pape’s Diapepsin Help, Help! Something you ate or drank is on the rampage! Get a 60 cent package of Pape's Diapeps sin at nearest drug store. Instant« ly you feel good. In five minutes stomach {8 calm and sweet. No belching, bloat, gas on stomach, nor any other evidence of acid dyspep< sla, Eat what you like, drink what you like; never fear when Pape's Diapepsin is at hand. Try it and prove it. {Watch Your Frail, Puny.Child Grow {Strong--Take on Weight Cod Liver Ofl In Sugar Coated Tablets Puts on Flesh and Builds Them Up. sometimes remain dormant in a sound stock are epilepsy, various in- | sanities and types of hody atructure associated with such diseases as tu- | tul health |tablets called McCoy's Cod Liver Oil In just a few days—quicker than vou ever dreamed up—these wonder- bullding, flesh making STOMACH SWEET |Compound Tablets will start to help berculosis, | {any thin, underweight little one. |told him, taking up on the | In his | “Did ¥ou Remember to Tell Jack 1 hat We'd Scen Donegal a Couple of Times?” They both laughed, and Honey Lou went out of the house to join Jack. “I don't knew why you aren't just crazy about Angela Allen," she hold of his arm. “She’s so perfectly beautiful, and |she’s the sweetest thing that ever drew breath. I suppose I should e terribly jealous of her.” “Don’t make me laugh,” Jack angwered. “I've know her so long that she's like a sister to me. And anyway, you've got It all over {her like a tent." carved hed, looked very small and | Then went house. into the old white The Head was sitting alone TREE-TOP STORIES A BIG JOKE BENN]! was getting his shoes | out of the closet one morn. i bAe“p.ir of Daddy's shoes As Bennie reached down for his right shoe he saw a tiny Brownie sitting inside one of Daddy’s shoes. Brownie was cryi “Well, little Brownie-fellow, what's the matter?" Bennie asked. “O! Oo!” wailed the Brownie, *I'm lost ina GREAT CAVE!" “Why, no you aren't!” Bennie answered. “You're only inside of a big shoe!” Then he lifted the Brownie out, and they bath laughed as hard as they could. As long as these tendencles are dominated by more normal tenden- | cles, they may do no harm, but the marriage of cousins may bring them to light. i ‘There are few families that do not possess some undesirable hereditary | traits. It cousins decide to marry, they should do so with the knowl- edge of extra dangers that they im- pose on their prospective children. If each of the parents is sound physically and mentally and if the ancestry is apparently equally sound there are no more likely to be de- fective children from marriage of cousins than from any other mar- riage. Desirable traits will be mani- fested to the same extent as the un- ASTO There are many ways a baby expressing any health and happiness. A short know that a disordered stoma but in the event of any delay such as Fletcher’s Castoria. and has merited the good will of not equaled by any other baby's And remember this: Castoria not a cure-all for every member Proven directions on each package. Flleierds When Baby Complains. X S in or irregularity or digression from its normal condition of cry, a prolonged irritated cry. Restless- ness, a constant turning of the head or of the whole body, fretful. In these and other ways a baby tells you there is something wrong. Most mothers o inloey bowels that do not act naturally are the cause of most of baby’s sufferings. A call for the doctor is the first thought, should be ready at hand a safe remedy To aveid imitations always look for the signature of After sickne:s and where rickcts are suspected they are especially val. uable. No need to give them any more nasty Cod Liver Oll — these tablets are made to take the place of that good, but evil smelling, stoma ach upsetting medicine wud they surely do ft, A very sick child, age 9, gained 13 pounds in 7 months. Ask any druggist for McCoy’s Cod Liver Oil Compound Tablets—as easy to take as candy—G60 tablets, 60 jcents, and money back if not satis- fled. When Itching Eczema Drives You Mad ‘When the dreadful itching of ec- zema drives you frantic and you are praying for -velief you need Pet- erson‘s Oint.jent. Its mighty healing power is clear- ly shown when used for ulcers, piles, and rashes while as a houschold jremedy for burns, scalds, abrasions, {bruises, insect bites, windburn and {chafing, druggist will tell you it is ]unsurpu:ed. Generous box 35 cents, [ Aucorol-SpeR ceXt AVegelabi reparationorks: similatingiheFood by Re¢uld: tingtheStonachsand Bowlsel. A Tngreby Promoting Ditestn. CheeanessandRestGss either Opium, Morphine e Mineral. NoT NARCOTIC BT SATCELPTIR Senna ik Ahelpful Remedy & Constipationand Diarrtoed ‘and Peyerishness & Loss oF SLEE? has of sharp ch, or TacSimie Signoture L Hatdon. e CENTAUR O NEWYORK] there Castoria has been used for baby’s ailments for over 30 years the family physician in a measure medicine because of its harmless= ness and the good results achieved. is essentially a baby’s remedy and of the family, What might help you is too often dangerous when given to a babe. A Physicians everywhere recommend it \

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