New Britain Herald Newspaper, November 6, 1926, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

uicksands of Love Adele Garrison’s New Phase of Revelations of a Wife —— Mary Tells Why Leslie Was Bitter | Toward Veritzen | 1 walted for Mary Harrison's an- | swer to my belittling speech con- cerning Jack Leslie with far more | tension than I permitted to appe: in my face. I had made it purpose- ly to see if it would draw from her the resentment and impassioned de- fense of the cabarct dancer which she had uttered before. For the discovery that “Paul” yth, an invention of her own, and that Jack L was the tirst young man to whom had ever talked, had made me realize | that the problem presented by her| acquaintanceship with the night club entertainer was one to which 1 must bring every bit of nmssuthmlpos-; sessed, and concerning which I| must neglect no bit of information, however slight, that I could gather. | But cither her first tempestuous | defense of the youth had been only | such as she would accord anyone whom she thought unjustly malign- | ed, or else she had decided that my uneasiness concerning him— which | she had shrewdly fathomed — de- manded especial wariness on her part. At any rate, her voice was not rancorous; instead it held an amusing note as she said calmly: “I don’t know, of course, what Uncle Dicky's reasons are for dis-| liking him, but don’t you thnk that your prejudice against him may ge partly because you cnly have heard | Mr. Veritzen's side of the story?” | Jack Leslie’s Defense “Have you heard Mr. Lesie's side, Mary?” 1 asked quietly. She flushed, but her eyes met mine | steadfas She sald. “He told me how Mr. Verltzen had hounded him out of college because of something, which his own son bad done With the memory of Noel Verit- zen's sensitive, tortured face before | | answered hef. | sure was plausible. | studying with Mr. Veritzen he made | mention of Philip Veritzen’s name t c t r al me, and my knowledge of the an- guish which both he and his father | had endured because of Jack Leslie's | despicable treachery, I found it hard | to keep my own voice steady as I b f & o q “Forgive me, Mary, dear,” 1 sald| g at last. “I know how distasteful ad- verse comments upon one's friends are, but surely your atquaintance- ship with this young cabaret dancer has not progressed to the point where you would believe his story against almost overwhelming proof that another version was the correct one.” She looked at me thoughtfully, and 1 saw that my shaft had penetrated the outer defense of her emotions and reached her brain. “No, it hasn't,” she said, "but he The Dancer’'s Cunning Revealed “He would be,” I returned, trying to keep the bitterness out of my voice, “but has it not occurred to you that it was rather a presump- tuous thing for him to bother you with his personal history upon so slight an acquaintance?” “He didn't until today,” she sald, “and then I really had to drag it out of him. When I said that I was an involuntary exclamation of such disgust that I insisted he tell me what he meant. So, you see you're blaming the poor fish for something that wasn't his fault at all.” Heroically 1 suppressed the de- risive smile at her gullibility which alrcady was wreathing my lips. How adroitly the cabaret dancer had {m- proved the opportunity which her had given him, an opportunity for which T knew he must have been walting with all the persistence of a cat at a mouse hole. Copyright, 1926, by Newspaper Feature Service, Inc. Danny’s Troubles End By Thornton W. Burgess The truth of this I pray attend; There is no trouble but will end. —O0id Mother Nature know want n and didn’t V't Danny Meadow Mouse what to do. He Meadow him in her bo it to leave | t didr 2 loss 2 He was still mind when low Mo y M look=d leadow e los he sat in the do home, L faced and Nanny,” said me. I-I-1 Jnl mean find me here. You to see whi then Chatter came and There was | cing up at for you to I just had living, and the Squirrel replicd He wasn't at all cor ‘was ill at ease. "I gues: be golng along, few minutes “Going wh “Oh, anywhere s I'd better ing was a funny, sque Danny looked didn’t know ju You're funny,” sir, you're ow Mouse. The about going away when you've &ot ho: “But this isn't my Dann; This is your Nanny looked up L says it isn't your home! Ju wred N m‘\). M Just said ATTRACTED BY BOULLE Read of Other Women Who Found Health Brooklyn, Hegmann of sctable Cow pound Be ped them, t s i s 't IEY |2 [t s houette a 1 v ] e a tended for formal occasions on ac- e The s n sf that ove young Meadow here” he ‘ It ? 5 y remembered the I stranger with whom 'What was that doing over Mouse could giggle, would have giggled. “I sus- 2, looking very demure, coming to me. think him handsome, 1t you| Ll | would 1 leave r “T'Il 1e M ¢ down he me you're glad to se Nanny. *l want to you've been and why you went and all about ft.” Danny looked long and hard at Nanny. He saw that she really meant It. With a little sigh of hap- piness he climb: half way down t her as she siarted to N.mb t I i al tl ‘lnl an to go, nny. You know 't reaily mean to go." lod her wise litt she, “I kne hy I felt so sure really 1 ead. all the that Meadow and peace ny me urgoss) sirrel Cou- t E you made you proved. meat utiets, t patsh Crocgue dried bread crumbs, pepper and cream to molst enough and Roll in crumbs, dip in egg slightly beaten with 1 teaspoon milk and fat afternoon ‘“out.” A Sheath-like Evening Frock of | gown sketched togda mented on one slde with an applique | leaves. as the dress, embroidercd and out- lined with silver bugles and smalil brilliants. ditor Journal of that affect the human body, one cf patches which are red at their base never developing continuing disease usually begins on the backs | of legs, knees, tion, except by its sp waste conserved for uscful treatiaent. Bake a good sized squash, scrape rom shell and rub pulp through a olander. Add nuts, butter, salt and 0 handle. Form into small balls let stand until cold and firm. © JOHNSO oll in crumbs. Fry in deep hot fat nd draln on crumpled paper. The should be hot enough to rown an inch cube of bread in orty seconds. The baking and mixing and rumbing and egging can all be done arly in the day. This makes a uick and delicious vegetable to erve when the cook has spent the READ THIS FIRST: 3 Honey Lou Huntley 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 against her will. Jack Wallack, who comes to his father's mills to learn the business, falls in love with Honey 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 pretends to be a friend of Honey Lou and tells her not to take Jack seriously. Jack is FASHIONS By Sally Milgrim Peach Pink Satin Featurces a Dec- orative Applique Trimming | A daring and highly ornamental | rimming is a feature of the evening| A sheath-like | lip of peach-colored satin is orna-| “Do You Steve Mayhew, Honey Lou's ry jealeus of Dr. fricnd of Margret, r. | Honey Lou goes to work with Margret in the office of Holy Cross ospital. One day she goes to tea with the wily Angela and meets Jack's mother, whom Jaek calls he Head, because she manages hing at home. She tells y Lou that Grumpy is not sat- isfied with his new sec: Ann Ludlow, the office v Jack his with mises n the shape of large flowers and ! This is velvet the Same color This trimming alone would in- ure distinction. But in addition here are delicate fringes of bugles nd rhinestones attached to the ppliques on the lower portion of he skirt. This feature breaks the tiff look of the very straight as well as supplying dditional note of brilliance. The ooped sash on one is pink elvet held in place by a band of hinestones. A frock of this character is an ssentiol item in the wardrobe of well-dressed woman. It is in- vho is at h nbago, and Honey Lou that she will. Lou Honey me Angela, who iou calls up Tim Donc mined to have him take same place. Honey Lou goes with Tim to tk restaurant and he has Ing. The place is rai agents and Hone with Jack Wal Honey Lou that was tr ing her that he loves her ‘nor to marry him. Honey Lou's eng nounced and plans wedding. o meets Angela ersuades her 10 o account under the Jack Wallack, Jr | shoes she is buyi some lingerie, on at home with through Ang ount of its sumptuous trimming. clinging lines of the narrow | kirt, the sash and the V-shaped | cck-line, both back and front, trike the final note of smartness. Appliques of peach velvet are rimmed with sliver bugles and dged with bugle and r vinge. | Your Hezlth How to eep It— Causes of Illness BY DR. MORRIS FISHI the American fedical Association and of Hygcia the Heallh Magazale Of all the diseases of the for the shoes f Jack and quiect home weddir heir honeymoon ¢ amay. In the visits the flat and the realization that lost to him now. Jack and Honey Lou return fr honeymoon ai acks while for themselves. for furniture. Wallack Mills Ludlow. Ann skin he most annoying is called psoriasis. n this disease, the skin becomes nflamed and there develop round Honey Lou is nd which are covered by dry, white These patches slowly enlarge, into blisters, but off scales. The sh office to give stops to at the see Ann the arms and the front of the just below the elbows and and may involve also the lp and the lower part of the but seldom appears on the tells Honey sent for her. Ho Meadows and tel marry Ann at once to do so. Honey Lou and their own flat the coo with Honey eve Mayhew she Joe Lou w Lou him and t he must he « continues for months Jack nes better, some- . The patient is scldom | in gene the condi- ng appear- development of the in laney, home nd Ma Lou calls lsturbed and the comes to hi o Honey Lou A re: discase of this ty; ed by all of the m science, and t nethods have t with them, y Lou's w much 5000 Spec n 18 al 1 use of proper recommends a t involving reduc- ces and of by the s of the t was pointed ay are nent, with at- hyglene of the va- ns of treatment al literature have r the her s up her mi 1 so much, Honey Lou to th to have her hair dc 30 ON WITH THE “HAPTER XXXVIII that's what That's monc liscase w falist follow bt in di the ) o e STORY chronic charact ise and its person cific curative method 1, they will this funds which mig in I think. shook the croppe d‘ ust lovely, Lou Yours Honey t better be is j | slender ey ‘1 too N FEATURES INC, ourly head that made her look like a beautiful boy. “No, I'd never have bleached—not in a hundred years, she firmly declared. “If it turned as gray as an elephant’s trunk, I'd never have a thing done to it.” In the glass she could see Matle smile tp herself. “Oh, yes you would, Mrs. Wallack,” she sai¢ out of her wisdom. “You wait 'til you start getting old, and you'll be like all the rest of the women. Dieting and bleaching and painting them- selves up—trying to Kkeep some man in love with them.” The girl wondered about it, as she watched the reflection of mine Ever Do Anything To Your Hair?” She Asked Marie's deft clever fingers rub ome kind of sweet-smelling oint- into her hair, “My mother never uses anything but a little rice powder to take the shine off her nose,” she began. And then, all at once, she dered to what leugths her mother might have gone to keep her 3 and good looks, if her hushand ad lived—the bhandsome, devil- may-care husband who bad squan- | dered a fortune on cards and race- horses and swift living. sut Jack would love same if T looked lile day of a woek-end pariy,) rerself. “I'm not ng old. Perfect me just the last xhi the afraic love cas were p ioor of v pearl-gray silk v cnder g stands be On a is one great bottle fat white jar of room, and and .ittle lav- der smok- ide them. case in one corner of perfume, one cold cream, one nil, one Lox of Just one of nds of doilars a sobered suddenly. r from the sale of ther ¢, when into the room shop, stood d Daisy Dcane. helio, DBea! ' they ceted her. “Wher Lou looke know,” coming down here this Suzanne was cn Marie's contralto voice She just left,” she told care of her just before Mrs. w lhauz’ ts flew stood on in that room Could it by ul color of e o t down while nails done and we'll ther,” Suzanne pr hall we trot down to a r «nd put on a couple weight instead? Or we have b 20T what have ey wound up by “I can always arking ow tired I am in the world— everything else cn, movies and v pping.” Lou drove home y darknes: I'd give anything world to your shoes.” Honey Lou a keen glance oKe, and nodded her head Do you know ve HONEY LOUZz: 1926 I | one that crackled like ice. [ | outh | ‘had | like a |any to| our | 50 to a movie | aurant | | thing to it going shop- | won- | zled. > kept her | rried life — I he cleared out. You see, Honey Lou, he was the quiet, serlous kind like your Jack, and I was doing the big parade all the time—always on the jump. It he'd come back to I'll bet I'd settle down like & pricked balloon. You hang on to Jack, Honey Lou." “Do you think Jack's quiet and serious?” Honey Lou asked. “Oh, sure. Most men are the sit-by-the-fire kind,” Suzanne an- swered, taking one hand from the wheel to reach for a cigarette in her silk handbag. “T always thought he'd marry Angela Allen,” she sald in her blunt honest way. “I'll bet Angela Suzanne laughed. It appy laugh, but a sharp, bitter “You have !} ant,” she said. “What?" Honey Lou was puz- “It sccms to me you have everything there is to have, Su-| zanne. You're pretty and smart and brainy—" “Well, I wasn’t brainy enough to keep my husband happy when I him.” Suzanne's voice knife. “When he wanted | to have children I told him I 't going to turn my hou: into cubator. And we never had | time to ourselves. the place with people and had| parties all the time, until he just | t good and sick of nyway we had one awful row and | uld knock you for a couple of | Gene Tunneys her to-it. She was always about Jack, and still is, it you ask| me." For Lou was everything that me was 1 the hundredth time, Honey‘ thought how much Suzanne | like One-Armed Annie. Su-| nne had more money and more cducation and better cloth under her skin, she was Ann's sis- | ter, just as Rosie O dy Coloncl's lady are sisters under and then her face s about Jack it's would love a she answered of course, she test kind of ¢'re like sisters, almost.” for Suzanne's reply. wne merely blew a long rct smoke from her lips, to htim “Horses" in her Angcla o way ther, the brof And, I want to about something,” m.rm Lou went on. “Drop me at house instead of my own, will| inds me. > found Angela dressing to go | to the theater with Timothy Done- gal. She was sitting before her silver-lined toilet table in a white kimono, and rubbing toilet ater into her scalp. Her gilt hair was all around her In a shin- ing cloud. What wonderful hair you have!” Honey Louw's eves wera full of ad- miration as she dropped down on & cushioned stool beside her. “But tell me something—do you ever do any- She was startled by the look of fury that flashed into the gentle! face between the of shining yellow h It was o look that| stung like a cupful of ice being thrown full in her own face. “What do you mean Angela asked. “Is that why you stopped in to 'sce me? To ask me it I, bleach my hair like a burlesque | queen " | She looked as if she burst into tears, | | were going | and Honey up and put her arms “No no, Angle, dear,” soothe her. to she tricd to know (TO BE CONTINUED) {attractive surprises may be expected. lall over New England was not a | cut ln[ becauso you beat | § crazy | & and tho | § “But you | it is—almost too beautiful to | be real.” STAGE AND SCREEN Thursday should be an auspicious day for local theater-goers since it will see the opening of the new Strand theater, the city’s million dol- lar playhouse. The management is not announcing the opening program | in its entirety and some wonderfully To the older heater patrons who remember the opening night of Fox's theater more than a decade | ago there is no doubt but that the | opening bill will be exceptionally | good. Those fortunate enough to see | thy other opening saw a bill which | brought some of the country's fore- most talent and I J. Hoffman and the contaras Brothers and Perakos certainly will not be outdone by that ten yegr old memory. The management will have as it: guests on the open!:.g night some of the leading theatrical magnates from and New York. For the opening night only, all seats are reserved and go on sale Monday. Thereafter however, one block will be reserved each night while the other seats will be of “first come, first served” variety. The entrance to the Strand will without doubt bt the mast brilliant- ly lighted of any in New England, say the owners. This seems like an | elaborate statement, but the man- agement insists it is a fact and prom- ises a wonderfully pleasant surprise LYCEUM |of legitimate plays, |ly to go back land “Whispering Wires.” | junior Paramount stars in {af in this respect. The male ushers at the Strand have been selected with care and were chosen from among 200 appli- cants who were personally interview- ed. Courtesy and accommodation is to be the watchword. Once again the New Palace, for many years in the old days the home later the real, original home of vaudeville here, then switched to a picture house on- a vaudeville policy last spring, is about to change its poilcy. From now on it will be a strictly movie house and the close of this week's vaudeville bill ends such shows there. Starting Sunday night on the new | policy, the ‘\ew Palace features Red 'Grange in “One Minute to Play,” The last named is from the mystery drama of he same name, with Anita Stewart as the star. The new policy brings about fea- tures all week, the bill being chang- ed every Sunday and Thursday. There also is a change downward in | prices, afternoons being 10 and .20 |cents and evenings 20 and 30 cems. A new serial, “Fighting Hearts,” jrun ten weeks, starts next Thursday which offers the “Fascin- in on the same bill ting Youth,” and Buck Jones “The Flying Horseman.” This theater also has booked Tom (Continued on Following Page) Continuous Shows Daily SUN.—MON.—TUES.—WED. The Season’s Best Double Feature Program 2—Complete Shows Sunday Eve.—2 SJEENA OWE ADAPYED BV FINIS F FROM THE STORY eroouceo ov M ETRCPD! wiTh N a0 ARNOLD GRAY OX AND WILL M RITCHEY BY MONTE KATYERUOWN f} onecreo sy GEORGE MELFORD LITAN PICTURES CORPORATION | it, 1 guess, | Men Loved Her Women En- vied Her GENE TUNNEY Also —FIGHTING MARINE—Epis. 8 Children After School PARSONS’ FAREWELL APPEARANCE! 10c HARTFORD ALL NEXT WEEK Prior to His Europcan Tour WORLD’S GREATEST ENTERTAINER Mail Ord Nights Orcheatra, $1.00; 1st Balcony, 84 Mat. Orchesira, 52.88; 1st Baicos . SMat., Orchestra, 5. PLEASE ENCLOSE SELF PHONE ORDERS. Joseph S. Lis ers NOW .03, §3.45, $2.88; 20d Balcony, §! 3 20d flalmm tro, presents St — Capitol Theater, Hartfor d—Tomorrow 3 P. M. CHALIAPIN World’s Greatest and Highest With His Own Grar IN OPERATI Assist of the Metropolitan Opera Cobbey, Ginomo Luchini, J Moncrieff and others. Tel. 2-8279. (Open C. L. PIERCE Music Store, Tel. Tickets at LANDAY HALL, Seats: $1.75, $2.30, $2.90, $3. Singing Actor Paid Artist nd Opera Company C CONCERT ed By ELVIRA DE HIDALGO Comp’m\, and M oseph Bobrovich, Giuseppe La Puma, Anna Lissetzkaya, Giorgio Durando, John SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA — BRILLIANT CHORUS 981 Main St., Hartford. daily until 10 p. m.) 246 Main S 497-3 45, $4, $4.60, tax included , New Britain.

Other pages from this issue: