New Britain Herald Newspaper, November 16, 1926, Page 12

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Quicksands of Love NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, 1 NOVEMBER 16, 1926. Adele Garrison’s New Phase of Revelations of a Wife —— Bladge Plays Servant to a Neophyte | Actress. I 1 do not know how long I stood |& brooding over Mary Harrison's joy- less childhood and young girlhood with their cumulative effect of re- bellion against rigid routine of her present life, I remember that 1 did no work of my own that n t for T found that even after 1 severely scored myself for m dering thoughts, 1 could headway with anything but plans for modifi ion of the rigid regime which Philip Veritzen had laid down for the young novice of the Common sense told me t useless for me to formulat scher for T gr producer had t reputation of never reversing o made, but something p in my sub-conscious- ness whispered a bope that I might be able to effect some compromise between the martinet of Mr. Veritzen, d th bellious lor of his latest “find,” whose had promised, would be 1 theatrical world, if the rigidity of her T The Star’s Dressing Koom Before 1 kn come which 1 Junior, and recollection of the m I hcd promised Mary, 1 went into the kitchen, placed sauce- pan, glass, spoon, bowl of milk, and plate of cr 1 cov third and 1 wan no edict, on ni ideas a 1 b hour had voted to floor wh Junior Marion Katherine bed, and 1 tray with an expression w have been sour disapprov less winsome. I guessed that she thought I was bringing the child something to eat and did not blame her for resenting such an interfe ence with the admirable routine of diet and care she was giving him during the year I had contracted to do Philip Veritzen's work. T )3 T 1 05 n smilin room.” 1 Y shamefaced have known bette shooter my de it b Katrina.” I wor 1y derful ay. f ni 1 nd he of fer b ¥ 'a a littl whim . Copyrisht, e ble obj explanation, disabuse her mind of an was trying to interfere in any way with her cz his isn't for tl “It's for the star' didn forc 1 or flush ar irt Wi up and sound and ghtly fairly o to experin knoc ent was looking very ime ped beds ook d up » dolor 0 f any like la F hour with which he and 1 looked fo as finz I took up my would d @ she to ser her no chance to voi ction, s0 n't,” Katherine d a ret did o grin, “Buf X than your ed with nd the laste warm my en he v asleep made my room, telling myself Dicky the iced were fruit j prepare well bev o od tice wor ay deman ntion. ked 1 ed in tly it her bed as like in on low 1 a ally, ide lamp threy mischirvously of ed. ¥y van ueen has anything on me, |ous combination in high favor this sh half emba ) 1 hy cature Service, of Junior. nurser:; ol pleasure little 1l through the won- ittle isically t only home to him, i ar M had v pink gainst her snowy v N 1 fairly leaping into | ager was 1 idea di fusedly, then her sturdy native hon- tion of her word * she said with I ou, You're a square nd nobody k d g 1 S 1y 1 n de her undk o Con di 10 T it ading, s L v earlier mood soi s¢ wsp ne. > any to that T I sald ressing n con- 2 ght to friend, t low her t ad tuc, sk which | woull | an who had planned | W work | | s door | e in,” | hought pajamas [suave lines of this luxurious evening villows. | on nd she sntered | d with d, half | apar The Bad New: By THORNTON W. BUR Bad news travels like the wind; 1t always leaves good news behind. —Peter Rabbit. Sprea Funny, isn't it, that it should Le #0? But it is. I know of nothing that can travel faster than For some reason or otl delight in passing on bed ne would think they would take greater delight in passing on good | news, but good news travels slow- ly compared with bad news. So it | was that in almost no time at all, it | was all over e Green Meadows and through the Green Forest, and even way up in the Old Pasture, that N Grouse had been killed by a hunt with a terrible gun. At first, the friends were slow to believe it. but when | they heard at Peter Rabbit ad seen her shot, and d watehed the hunter run to pick her up, they naturally had to believe i shook their heads and said how it was, and how th should miss Mrs. Grouee; and what a dreadful thing it was that hunters with ter- rible guns should be allowed in the Green Forest. And the little people who lived on the Green Meadowws, when they heard the dreadful news, began te worry. They hadn't felt it nece sary to watch out for hunters with terrible guns, although it was now | the hunting son. You see, they | much | Irs. Grouse | into a great | always Sa t wh dreadful thing had happened. 1 felt quite s r B terrible : in Farm ws togeth mmy Ap; with o stil a Jay part of the B could Green on terrible rown. gun the pear that White looked worried. White warned their childr be sure to keep per- | should s e on the it if 4 hunter with | sh Forest, the Green I3 He and Mrs 1 een la 100t un. t | | "ox in Forest and of Mr: he Mead- Bob | hunt- | r with a terribie gun on the Green | till, ne! W Meadows. you explaincd some of you will be sure to be just as was poor Mrs. How she will be n n R {going to | |r b Hot From The Griddle |of i {hl e ssed ut 1l Forest im C er o as a ion wasn’ 1 felt be smart enough with obbed him of Mrs, 1 ape 4 may ¢ Dob. 1dy st heard t rage that e me So he the terrible opinion atter of much a4 littl 1t people » Green M r had be came ining perfectly being seen you n You see, )l thoug Grouse s, b 1 h to seen, shot Dear | la he flew | he had e was | cateh | hat this gun had He ex- h that the dow. 14 t Lunter, opin- fferent from that Green But own a ful, It Sammy Jay who had brought {he iy Grous | he | | | “Ni “Of con you say IN OTHING tastes better than pancakes from the griddle. And if there's a square of melting hot butier—a pool of syrup— and a crisp morning out- [ side, 50 much the better. They taste better when baked with Grandma's ‘Pancake Flour. Compare 41! with any other. Grandmas PA’ HE mmy part wi ne inquired lidn't sa Did hunter v ¥ the I ‘Hg the her saw m 1 and run fc replicd Jay of the Gree nnter o T might Jic Reddy. r 1 ward sa y that k up Mrs down ont ¢ 1 Sam- he got her.” 1 | his lips fr ile others are back and front, in are nt, v in re high eddy. | with- | others front low in in the both {urious fur collar. |of sparkling trimming in connection [namented with gl dr FASHIONS By Sally Milgrim | A Wrap to Shinc in the Night Is Trimmed With Wide Bands of Bead Embroidery. The debutante will appreciate the | | wrap, its gleaming fabric and lux- Her more ting elder sister also finds it ble on account of its daring nse crimin desir luxuri- with shining metal cloth—a season, | I have used very supple silver | lame for this wrap on account of its sparkle and youthful appearance. | And to further accent the note of elegance, the wide collar which reaches to the waist is of fluffy white fox These features alone would in- | sure distinction. But in addition, there is an engaging trimming con- sting of pale pink and blue beads | eve | with [ real Beatrice ,Burton aulhor ‘Love sot?;ao' ) and™HER MAN' ETC. HONEY LOU © JOHNSON FEATURES INC., 1926 READ THIS FI Honey Lou Huntley Is priva retary to old head of the W Honey Lou likes evervone at mills except Joe Meadows, the ship- ping clerk, who makes love to her against her will. e Jack Wallack, who comes to lis father's mills to learn the busine falls in love with Honey Lou minute 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 friend of Honey Lou and tells her not to take Jack seriousl Jack is very jealous of Dr, eve M friend of Margret, Honcy sister. | Angela tells Honey Lou she is like a magician's trick—now you te scc- going to have a party foc her and |see It, now you don't see it!'* She Vi ck, | Jack urday night. Honey Lou [laughed nervously. govs home finds reading | Tim had his arms crossed on the about little in the [table, and he was looking at her filled with happi- | steadily and without the shadow of Honey Lou decides to let|a smile on his usually gay face. in the morning, do her |All at once he turned to Angela. work, and try to make the| “Now, what dd you think of her, home Jack The next [Angel?” he alked her.sarcasti Angela and asks |ally 'r name ought to be Hawk- g0 to town with her [shaw instead of Honey Lou. You'd new dr for the |think a girl with a name like Honey Lou wouldn't have any Honey TLou |brains, wouldn't you? And instead knows she |of that she's a young detective!” tells Hon, But he did not explain the mys- much inter- | tery of the rugs, and no one spoke new secretary, Miss [of them again, daring th meal. When the last crumb of the de- licious pie was caten and the last drop of nd ho love a [ poem country Mary own kind of g Lou to a s, morn cels Honey Dick pick h in party Influenced by Angela bu, dress which she cannot ord. Angela Lou seems very Jack d in his Lou's | erhears Angela tell she tricd to stop Honey g the dress because |Tim got p and oA Mot attord 1t “I want to see if the garage peo- tells of the card |ple have fixed it” he said. “You Honey Lou have to-&irls go and buy next morning d your spinning wheels, and T'll Lou to have meet you ‘here at—five o’clock, their house. say “Oh, Lou begged an hour and ind T must must get home he didn't want come driving up with Angela or Tim. She wanted to be there to reet him tonight—to put her arms around him and tell him would bd a better and more wife from now on. “Maybe I can borrow * Mary's white apron for a home . nd TI'll move all my things back rooms." ov Honey T.ou goes to work with Margret in the office of Holy Cross hospital. One day she goes to tea with the wily Angela and ack's mother, whom Jack The Head, because she ything a home.. Honey Lou that “Grumpy” satisfied with his new etary, Ann Ludlow, the office vamp. Jack asks Honey Lou to work for his father, who is at home lumbago, and Honcy promises that she will. Honey Lou m tells her that Ja ing her out to dance Honey Lou calls up Tim determined to have him to the same place. Honey Lou goes with restaurant and he has been ing. The place Is raided agents and Honey Lou with jack Wallack. Honey Lou that he thought she was tricking him and ends by tell- ing her that he loves her and wants her to marry him. Honey Lou's engi nonnced and plans are the wedding. Jack and quiet home their honeymoon camping Tamay. Tn the meantime vl the flat and breaks n zation that Honey Lou is to him now. meets » and ind the Honey calls a manag She te is not gal in | that!” will take us than him. “It a half be there before Jack J se gered by Jack's earlier Donegal, leaves the home r- no reason to Lou to, T sick six. Lou Ayres, Honey Lou 1 ts Angela, who follows, Wallack is that evening. Donegal, take her guest her lent l.ou moves into t further complicates affairs by her *of Jac Jou on nd Don K's W S sensi- Ang ide with | blc vs to fol- rd to motor dec of Tim to the one drink- b escapc I tel ezal AN touch,” she set the table, into « Donegal —ju; NOW GO ON WITH ORY |thou CHAPT is down THE XLVI here in this burg.” Donegal said car swept around to inn. d, turn- on him. own her nd Jack a e o'clock she and Angela at the inn with their Angela had bought an -th Thomas clock, and a pair 155 andirons—and Honey Lou, wonder, had bought nothing 1s the At four is an- la ask for rment made iy it get d spend Lake Honey T.ou wedding and Donegal z mo have to walt for asked Angela when of the clock in the inn, four-thirty, “T really back to town. o we Tim it pointc ler the lost was some that so0 often visit hands betwor 1 to town he t tion n to and spangles, making a decorative | flower design. Wide bands of this | ornament trim * e sleeves and low- er portion of the skirt section. Evening wraps this season are not- | able for their use of brilliant trim- | ming in combination with lame or metal brocade. Frequently the de- coration consists of velvet applique, | emproidered in tinsel thread and or- | ming heads. | The trimmint of this silver lame | wrap cor sists of hands of pink and | blue beads and spangles. | Copyright, 1926 ( rs) READ HERALD CLASSIFTED ADS | ‘To All Who Suffer | Stomach Agony, Gas and Indigestion Axelrod Makes This Offer Your Money Cheerfully Refunded If One Bottle of Dare's Mentha Pepsin Doesn’t Do You More Good Than Anything You _.ver Used | During the past year thousands of | s from chronic and acute in- tion have biessed the day they t head of this grandest of all| stomach medicines. Not only will Dare’s Mentha Pep- sin, a pleasant tasting elixir, relieve the most acute attacks of stomach | agony, but taken regularly will over- | come the most chronic stomach | trouble that e: | Thousands in this part of the stite know it and that Is why every | druggist hereabout is having such | tremendous demand for it. If vour stomach keeps vou feeling | miserahle, start to make it strong and healthy today—one bottle of Dare's Mentha Pepsin is guaranteed by Axelrod's Pharmacy and all ggists to help vou more than fhing you ever tried or money “CASCARETS” HEADACHE, COLDS, CONSTIPATION To-night! Clean your bowels and stop headache, colds, sour stomach Get 10 nt box, Take a Cascaret tonig vour Liver, Stomach and you will surely morning. You men who have headache, a bad cold, are bilious, nervous, up- hothersd with a sick, gassy, d ordered stomach, or have back- | and feel out. Are vou keeping your bowels elean with or merely forcing a few days with pills or castor oil 3 immedia cleanse and remove the fermenting the ex- cars matter Hor nd ,Bowe | great by and women coated tongue, sot ° all worn Cascar: passageway ever, salts, cathartic and m the howels, X 1 Cascaret tonight will straighten you out by morning. ent from your druggist healthy bowel a| 1 cheerfulness for forget the children. hox action; months. Don't pe Try our new Sha Banish Pimples By .Uning uticura ! Soap to Cleanse Ointment to Heal Stick. {sent for her. | he and He told hersel for him here. ne on ahead? anyhow.” of you man's 1 they Jack and Honey Lou return from their hordeymoon and with the V cks while looking for a flat for themselve: Honey TLon stops at the Wallack Mills office to see Ann Ludlow, Ann tells Honey Lon why Honey Lou s tells him once and Honey Lou wondercd if Dons down here s he 1 been in love e m a note we've own car, one Iy, hree times n 5 days whe her your old asked him clean the id in th wi is voice hoth swung faced the owner of it. smallish man with a face under a cap sev- too large for him. ' In hands was a folded \d “Do sked vou em. she and Jos must leopard skins, 1 W little up from had 1 you thinl e un 1 packma eral one before » sitting table s hen w wrklin : room he Meadows and marry Ann at to do so. Honey Lo and Jack s In their own flat with laney, the cook. Angela comes to help Honey Lon prepare dinner on Mary's night ont. ck phones he will not he home and Angela calls Tim Doncgal and him to play cards with them, much against Honey Low's wishes Later they meet at but Honey Lou refuses his invitation to tea. ck and Honey Lou spend th: evening with The Head. sends Jack upstairs to sce father and tells Honey Lou she wants to talk to her. The Head scolds Honey T.ou the money she has spent fur ‘ing her house. Honey Lou mak up her mind she must not spend much, but the nest day Honey Lou goes to the heauty parlor to have hair done and then goes shop- ping with Suzanne Clements. On the way home Honey Lou stops to ce Angela. agrecs sizes hi to him, od of le Mary it De- n 1 waitress nd his b ey e smiling, “Now, wl my leopar her, and hefor s giving order atehed 1t from him. «aid and shook out the te paler mouth when a shr it, and he corners. he v their (&} died pic ham, ! ken soi Hubbard nd coifee. Ho fine,” Honey Why. 1'll tell you he to think of your ri bec with 1 to the ¢ note to Honey “I hack—Read that! 1 stammered as she started e lobby of the quaint and wait for that, girls Lou told v T hap- | away,” handed auash Sieht and you man, T.ou. Sabine's s h pened It car. your you his you of nted spoke 1o s use I've always W thout ru, She turned to Ange flush burned like fla e th down we 0ss “Sit there Lou."” ing paper but it w 1 I ew those \ little in her funniest and e oss the sheet of was Don wohbly, as if n shaking when word please como down hese fools are k on a ac plain his he cheeks. 1gela, to drive and there to tuck wted, and only one back. And one would hand alway Knees when when even ust re \ hail m ing © and p- over, my W we came that sometimes It was | » Can’t Take Him Home Like This,” 2 Always Succeeds NO guesswork—no spoiled food—no waste—no worry--but perfect and uniform results always because Rumford is uniform, dependable, sure. Use RUMFORD The Wholesome BAKING POWDER the perfect coffee drunk, | said he must KKL’ your Bristol glass | Honey | to get home, | does!" | to see her| she | and put it on | Can't | ot of paper that he held out to | writ- | bootlegging | Honey Lou knew she must havu said the word aloud, for the clerk bekind the desk looked up at her. Sh: could sce his teeth flash in the growing twilight as he grinned at | her. Darkness had scttled down over the peaceful little town and lights had begun to twinklé out from the windows like earth-bound stars, when Angela came back. She brought Tim with her. Honey Lou heard him stumble up the steps of the side entranc and she hurried into the dining room. Tim had dropped down at the first table inside the door, and he looked at her w “Hawkshaw, the detective said thickly, wagging his finger at her. “The girl Sherlock Holmes “We can't take him home like He can't drive his own car ' certain,” Angela said calmly looking him over. “And we never could manage him, Honey Lou. W 'll have to stay here until he sobers up.” (TO BE CONTINUED) Honey Lou becomes the victim |of unwelcome publicity as a result of her dinncr with Angela and | Donegal, in tomorrow’s installment. Your Health How to Keep It— Causes of Illness i th t | | BY MORRIS TFISHBEIN Editor Journal of the American |Medical Association and of Hygela, the Health Magazine | As man approaches middle age |and his body begins to lose its pow: of recovery from degencration land disease, certain symptoms may | !appear which must be taken as |danger signals on the road of life, They are definite warnings to slow down, to keep to the center of | the road and to avold complication | Chief among these are obesity, high | | blood pressure, albumin in Kidney excretions, gout, and diabetes. | There is a tendency in persons past middle age to take on fat. All Imedical authoritics are agreed that | it is well fdr a person after 60 years of age to diminish in weight, and | that if he fail to do so, the deposits of fat must be regarded as a bad sign. It is well for the man of mid- dle age to realize that the time to begin to take off fat is before he| reaches 60. Fat Elderly Man The insurance companies have }found from an investigation of their records of death that the elderly man with a large amount of fat is ¢ly to have a shorter life ex- than the one who is lean. amount of fat beneath the <kin probably means also a great amount of fat around the heart and liver. A DR. | ers heart surrounded with fat Adly has sufficient elbow room for ! the extra work it. may be required to accomplish should the person | become infected with pneumonia or some other disease that places an | unusual burden on that organ. The liver, which is a mass of fat, is able to respond only with diffi- | unusual burden which placed upon it by the di gestive tract after middle age High Dblood presure is a d condition associated frequently with | intoxication of the hody of various | types. The person with a very high | blood pressure is placing a burden on his arterial system which may use a rupture at some weakened | |culty to, {may be cquent bleeding of the nose In A person past middle age maye be a sympfom of high hlood pressure and should not be belittled until its im- | portance is understood. | he appearance of albumin in ex- !eretions frem the kidney indicates | that this organ is not functioning adequately. and must be taken as a warning sign. When it is the only symptom, it s not a cause for ex- treme anxiety, but it 1s always a | signal for careful and complete in- vestigation. | Warning Signals is less common now {han Tts exact cause has not, et been establi Gont former howe “big toe tired millionaire is now seldom seen, probably because of increasing tem- perance in both food and drink. When this form appears, or when | son beyond middle age has | —the most widely used of all recipes What an avalanche of new recipes there is to choose from today! Liter- ally thousands to try out every week, if youwish! And yet today thissingle old-time recipe has pleased more women than any other ever recorded. Down on the plantation, as we all know, Aunt Jemima refused to tell a soul how she mixed the ingredients for her golden-brown, fragrant pan- cakes. Only her master and his guests could enjoy their unequalled flavor. And today no cook book gives her recipe. You get it ready-mixed—her own ingredients just as she propor- tioned them—in Aunt Jemima Pan- cake Flour. Only in this way is it possible for so many millions of wom- en to have pansakes just like Aunt Jemima’s own, always tender and fluffy, with that plantation flavor which has made her famous. It is so quick and easy today: Just add a cup of milk (or water) to every cup of AUNT JEMIM s the other manifestations, inclu pains in sthe muscle, nerves and Jjoints, these must be taken as warn- ing signals for lessened speed and lessened quantities of body fuel. Diabetes represents difficulty fn the body’s ability to handle sugars It is a disease that can be controlled easily by modern methods, but un- less seen early, may produce effects that are promptly fatal. It demands ientific consideratio: of the dict, such as only a trained physician can give, ing tMenus for the Family Breakfast—Baked pears, cereal, top milk, crisp broiled bacon, cream ed potatoes, cinnamon toast, milk, coffee. Luncheon—Tomato and barley soup, cgg and lettuce sandwiches, molasses cookies, milk, tea. Dinner—>Meat loaf with tomato sauce, mashed potatoes, creamed turnips, celery, Parker House rolls, grape conserve, cocoanut cream ple, milk. coffee. Tomato and Barley Soup. One pint canned tomatoes, 4 cups holling water, 13 cups pearl barley, 1-8 teaspoon pepper, 2 tablespoons butter, 1 large onfon, 1-4 cup chop- ped calery, 1 teaspoon salt, 1 tea- spoon sugar., Melt butter in kettle, add onion peeled and finely chopped and sim- mer over a low fire for five minute: Add tomatoes, water, celery, barle salt, pepper and sugar and cook two hours over a low fire. Serve without straining. This soup can be brought to the boiling point and boiled for half an Hour and then cooked over hot wa- ter for two hours. This {insures | against burning or sticking. Copyright, 1926, N Service, Inc. EAGER SHOPPERS THRONG STORES Salesgirls Dread Bargain Days Louisa was tired. From morning until night she had been on her feet in the busy de- partment store. No matter how she felt, she must serve her cus- tomers with a smile. Her head throbbed and her feet ached. Week after week, she felt her strength ebbing until she was in a rum- down condition, not fit to work. “My mother suggested that I try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com- pound,” she writes. “I took only three bottles and it brought me about all right.” Through the Vege- ‘table Compound, she found better ealth to do her work and she told the other girls about it. That wasseveral yearsago. Louisa is now Mrs. L. J. Van Dyke of 1246 Spring St., Morrell Park, Baltimore, Md. She is the mother of thres healthy, active children. She says that she found the tonic effect of the Vegetable Compound helpful to her during this entire period, Every working girl knows (hat to do her work properly and easily she must have good health. She can not afford to lose time from her work. Girls who suffer from a run-down condition should try Lydia E. Plnk- ham's Vegetable Compound. WANY SCHOCL CHILDREN ARE SICKLY Mothers who value their own comfort and the weltare of {heirchlldren, should never ba without 2 bOX of Mother Gray's Sweet Powders for childrenforusethrough- out tho season, They Bresk up Colds, Regu- lato the Bowale, Relieve N everishness, Constips- now-r'n:;:r s ‘smm);" ] eadache and Stomach ANY SUBSTITUTE Troubles. Ured by Mothers for over 30 years. These powders give satisfac- on. All Drug Storess Don't accepl any substitute, Trial package sent Free. Address MOTHER GRAY CO., Le Itoy, N. Y. LUCKY TIGER tnhl:‘l:;%kull‘mé the germs. MR Wivee. Fox knocks ime: les. Barbers or 5t LUCKY TIGER NO COOK BOOK GIVESIT Aunt JemimaPancake Flour—andstir! Notice how your family brighten up when they first taste Aunt Jemi- ma’s cakes with that matchless flavor. Plan now to test her recipe. Your gro- cer has Aunt Jemima Pancake Flour and her Prepared Buckwheat Flour. Coupons for valuable premiums come in every Aunt Jemima package. A “Pancake Flour ~also Prepared Buckwheat Flour

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