New Britain Herald Newspaper, November 27, 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)

Quicksands of Love Adele Garrison’s New Phase of Revelations of a Wife Madge Decides to Give Hugh One Afternoon Hugh Grantland’s face lost its disappointed look at my apparently enthusiastic acceptance of his invi- tation to drive and lunch with him, and I saw that 1 had made amends for the embarrassed, rather stilted | subject manner of my first reception of him. | I am very glad,” he sald. have quite looked forward to a talk with you. WI can you go? Shall Tgoa and come back for you?' “Indeed, no,” I told him. “T shall ave to dress and see to one or two ngs before T go. But T shall be n half hour. red to a lou he big window look- ont upon the Drive and the on. “will you take a box seat? L dramatic spectacle out 1 assure you, but there are books the an te someti tire of zines upon there, if yon and ‘m: tabl “T shall be most comfortable,” he joined with a = 3 D0 not hurry, but I do hope that you will not have to hasten home either.” Sacrifice for an Outing T made a quick mental computa- tion of the work 1 had to do before reporting at Philip Veritzen's office the next day, adding an b ning, and the followin, age the work sing two hours earlier morning, T could without slighting an; portion of it. It was burning th candlo at hoth ends, but T surel owed this outing to the old fr who had done so much for me. “If T get home for dinner time, T shall be able to spare vou the rest of time,” T said. “You have become a working wom: I saw you last.” My hand was on the knob of the door as I spoke, and I could not help a smile at the start he gave. Straightway I revised my impression that Lillian or someone else had pt him informed concerning me his abse for it ich he tu a the du 4 upon oy | mit. | skimmer and fishing reading | and decided that by | ur or two in the eve- | | you SES—— me. “No, I have not heard,” he began. “Then we shall have a brand new of conversation,’ I said laughingly. “Prepare to be bored, for I am very enthusiastic over my | w job." With another smile at his startled, almost shocked face, I hurried into my room, and then to the kitchen- | ette, where Katie was busily b up waffle batter. o breakfast for me, Katie,” I| unced, and le spoon in the batter astonishment. Katie Makes a Prophecy “Now see vot you do, ven you fool | our poor Kati she said re- achfully, seizing a long handled the spoon ting | in out. “But I'm not fooling,” I returned. t's nearly luncheon time, and I'm going out to lunch with Major Grantland.” My little maid shot a quick glane at me, and suddenly I felt oddly un- comfortable. The expres had flashed into her eyes was gone the next minute, but it one of astonished disapproval. was nothing in her voi but concern over my missed brea go for dot loonch?" : ht around here, go drive first? Do dot Major Grantland know you have no breakfast so get you sometings | eat qveec are “We But fruit one juice, waff a cup of cof- only one re- grap and member.” Katie grinned impishly. “I no dare call names,” she said, yut you might be hoongry befo get dot loonch, you bet Copyright, 1926, by 2 Feature Service, Inc. Is Mr. Grouse Almost Envious Jurgess Thornton W. mmy has a \f curiosity Not even ous than s mor As a mat ng could have kept ¢ from Farmer Brown's. m long to ov- Sammy & Tt didn ar that where didn't that the first vell fed. wheat she ery fond of h chance Grouse. I ¢ how sorry he rown's Doy 1t her up. “I'm Grouse and shut would hav f had WONAH 0O8- QUERS FEARS Husband Delighted and Hoeme Ha"mer seribin the Comps afraid in daylight nd pul nobody could booklet adv Compound she read it ti ghe found a | whose cor own. T Compound, r 1inued, “and have The condition burden hi prisoner; I'm a patient,” plied Mrs. Grouse prison, they're prisoners, are shut up in the hos- I In ncither some- ore g is be a I know ut up to 1 harr 1d that when Farm Mea ng is quite s will let buc me go oise I'm And Mr. Grouse to tell heat that she nts said buclkw yon Mr. up. exclairm to d Sam- He did so. 1 like to he. taste “You Menas for the Family STER MARY steamed 10le nd mineed, combined dressing to make moist | she dropped the | her | fon which | had been | There | ce, however, | NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY, HONEY © JOHNSON FEATURES and put between crisp lettuce and thin slices of graham bread and but- ter. | Scalloped Potatoes and Ham | oOne slice ham cut 1 1-2 inches| | thick, three or four potatoes, three or four medium sized onions, salt,| \pzppcr. ginger, mustard, milk. | | Trim rind from ham and let stand |in cold water to cover for two hours. Choose a deep baking dish and half | fill with alternate layers of thinly sliced potatoes and onions. Season cach layer with pepper and a tiny | bit of salt. Pour In milk to barely cover vegetables. Do not trim fat| from ham. Put ham on top of pota- | toes and onions and sprinkle ginger | and mustard over it, using not more | | than 1-8 teaspoon combined. Cover baking dish and bake 1 1-2 hours in a moderately hot oven. | (Copyright, 1926, NEA Service, Inc.) FASHIONS By Sally Milgrim or | to| your | | READ THIS FIR Colorful Afternoon Frock Bor- rows Roumania's Pictur- esque Fashion In this day of varied fashions In | | dress, to express one's individuality becomingly is to be chic. Smartne is no longer a matter of a single style. The bouffant gown rivals the straight silhouctte. Bright colors st with black and white. ternoon frock that is unus- inctive is one which bor- rows its manner from Roumania. It combines the picture gaioty of that country with the s that Parisi: ators dictate. A sleeve- less black satin blou a low cut circular neck. The skirt is hort and box-pleated. A wide sh of burgundy crepe tics around o hips and the ends striped in gold, deep blue and vivid green fall a few inches below the hem of the skirt. A blouse of white chiffon with a atean neck emby red in red under the black slip. The ves are tight-fitting > the el- and heavily embroidered in From elbow to wrist bishop | sleeves of the chiffon flow. At the| wr a tight embroidered band holds them ir | This frock is charmingly youth- 1 and able for any afternoon occasion. Its lack of formality Is made up for by its individua | This Dblack satin frock has a White chiffon blouse embroidercd A A ually que has ic | sl bow | red, |in red and a broad sash with vivid- Iy-striped ends. BOTHERED FOR FVE YEARS Forehead Covered With Pimples. Cuticura Heals. “ For over five years I waa both- ered with pimples. My forehe: was completcly covered with red,| swollen pimples that would fester, break and then scale over. They itched badly and my forehead was disfigured on account of them. **1 sent for a free sample of Cuti cura Soap and Ointment and uacd | it with good results, I purc! more end in a short time mpletely healed.” (Sign Charlotte” Ortscifer, 139 Ashmun St., New Haven, Conn, Make Cuticura Soap and Oi ment your every-day toil | tions and have a clear, swea soft, smooth hands and a hea scalp with good hair. Florida “THE EVERGLADES” Through Train From New England 7 Through Trains Daily FROM PENNA. STA,, NEW YORK Via Double Track-Sea Level Route Everglades Ltd. (2 Treins) 12:30 a.m. E&W. Coasts Indlan Led. =1 Night Ont 9:20 a.m. na Speclal — | Night Out 12:30 p.m. —~ 1 Night Out — Coast Line Fiorida Mail 8:40 p.m. Atiantic Coast Line The Standard Railroad of the South tions, information from B. F. FULLER, G.E. P.A 1248 Broadway, New York Tel. Lackewanna 7080 Asic for “Tropical Trips™ Booklet | ping cler | against | Lou is a mixture | objections Lou Hu to old “Gru the Wallack Lou ot Honey hr likes everyon Joe M c Mills at th ship- to her }‘mnl of Honey mills exc , the s love h"r “HI Jack Wallack, ather's mills to le falls in love with I minute he sees her. B an old-fashione mot flapp: comes to his n the iness, ney Lou the ht up by who of clinging vine. Angela Allen friend of Honey Lou not to take Jack seriou very jealous of Dr. a friend of Margret, sister. Honey Lou's en announced an the wedding. Jack and Hone nrete Hone ent to Ja moon Honey Lou Mills office to see Ann Lul Ann tells Honey Lou sent for Honey Lou Meadow: tells him mary Ann onee and to do so, Honey Lou and Ja in their own flat laney, the cool Angela tells going to have Jac urday goes home and poems about country filled with love ness. Honey Lon de Mary go in the morn own work, and try kind of home Jack wa Tim Donegal games he together and Lou to have house. Honey sto d at down Hor party v Honey f Donegal and Ja Tim angered to Doncg her mo Lou, fiat for gret tells her she jealous of secretary, but to Honecy ILou returns quarrel follows. Honey TLou moy room and further domestic affai treatment” of Jac Honey Lou, on Angela and Donc foliow Jack's wis Dones Do Lou's in the The arrest in connec of Ar S no I Lson 2 es nto ti by her k. motor gal’s arrest 4 Angela’s returs morning. published news of Donegal's tion with e names Hon ney delays T until two Lou, to duplic gela and with A Iminates in 1 Ho GO ON CHAP 0 finally ¢ Jack NOw of Hes Honey Lou the next morr v Lou to dishpan, of the was T ouse Papa’s hout a vou hefore “Papa! me, and tre fami t oof Aloud nou me! sh “r found ting toast w it. W he hailed h n s loat de This is prob 1eal T get old her, pepr acking his ke tal, to see what That 1Is, they're going to see and ing vit! if oty e e INC,, HONEY LOU SHCOK HER HEAD can fec h but bismut next few Lou Hi mouth with at her. they'll oper through mes f “And somet 1k wting table, and off unti o 1 rou a litt a vinly did impy 100} 1 tired he lay 1 his purple 1w pillows nt mill in g mills arer hey should the b n o wip he on So T don't suppose Now, 1 his his napkin and glared me, id. get on the n straight talk t may h you “As T woul men all Grumny p it you w Well you sho tanyway, Hat ried you Now the and nd nst s side m, set ng: Honey Lou i and when he have to c wit months, he'll leclared, ow, don't Hon® Lou,” Yack you Wy for in her wa - way God int Honey Tou t h her It med i bt her, . spoke of her “All my life ling oy of T've Lou. my wife up thelr 1 to have th son W hoth a lot of walk all over ree, ‘Preace a en my motto oman. in ¢ you a lof vou'd Loun bent over t ver re b o t n i doing rig ve he cd ta k told und K's ! he 1o to old man i mi been rule My is av t thet other me f t while, t any T'd know | in like up 1 Tloney at she and gainst 1 vou sCOWl- W it to now. it on’t nred to house- IToney more'n 1 her, your pretty is at s are littlc ‘looked at me for six W a vigorous o not the A lout that neurotic pains and pains of | v Eo | NOVEMBER 27, 1926. LOU? 1926 STAGE AND SCREEN Phil Ohman, formerly of this city, and his plano playing partner, Vic- tor Arden, are one of the features Beatrice B u rton LOVI nouuo' b MAN' ETC| which has taken New York storm. Concerning thelr part in the success of the show, “Variety” says: “That excellent twin-plano team, Victor Arden and Phil Ohman, are a feature in themselves in the or- chestra trench. They are Gershwin and Aarons & Freedley faithfuls, this belng thelr third successive season mated with the sime com- poser and producing team. They do much to enhance the score and they pound their grands on all six. Incl- dentally, the boys who have own dance orcheéstra with he Brunswick (disks), besides record- ing as individuals, scem an excel- lent bet for a class night club with a dance band. Now in clientele is muchly cognizant of the keyboard artists by name and fam and that should react well at the couvert charge! Eva Le Gallienne opened at the Civic Repertory theater in Ne York this week in a quaint little comedy in the old Italian tradition entitled “La Locandiera” (The Mis- tress of the Inn) The first attempt to produce a midnight drama in New York will de by Brock Pemberton at sarrick theater next Wednesday en “Say It With Flower: will be presented after the regu | performance of “Loose Ankle Cowl with her own compo- sition, “The Clock.”” a one-act play. will be at the Pala Theater It New York nest weck. Jane hortly. Then she looked room at Angela. soing to take me hospital in your you'd better get ready,” she said anxiously. “We're due there in fifteen minutes. Jack just called up, and he’s going to meet us there.” Honey returned across the “D; and car, if you'r: Papa to the ar, hed out of the dia not turn her windows of her She wouldn’t go back there now. Not for a million lolla . Let the Wallacks treat Angela Allen like a daughter if | th wanted to! Let them!—She didn’t ¢ “I'm th Lou m | house .. he cad toward the Gwn apartme have ough with the whole kit and kaboodle of them,” said Honey Lou, “Grumpy's the only one of | them who's worth his salt! (To be continued) blended and prepared Your Health How to Keep It— Causes of Illness 16 Established 1780 | of “Oh, Kay," the musical comedy | by | their ' their third | year on Broadway. the very smart | W | found necessar; The Vagabond King,” seen and enjoyed by many from this city who have visited New York, is to be continue at the Century Theater until December 4. Mozart, the Sasha Guitry play, starring Irene Bordini, opened at the Music Box theater in New York | this week. Another new play this week fs Up the Line,” the Harvard prize | play, opened at the Morosco theater. Passable but nothing to get excited about, is the way the critics summed it up. “Pals in Paradise” a picturs bhooked for showing at the Lyceum here on Thursday now is on at the | Hippodrome in New York. This |is a Peter B. Kyne story with Mar« | guerite De LaMotte, John Powers, | Rudolph Schildkraut and May Robson. The story starts with a big punch when the leading man narrowly escapes death as his flive {ver dived over a cliff, as a result |of which accident he discovers a gold mine. Indicating the fnternational scops of the coming biblical production “The King of Kings.” it has been to film titles for | this pictoral story of Jesus in twenty seven different languages. Pauline Garon, who fis Mrs, Lowell Sherman in private life, ha been signed by Gloria Swanson for a part in “Sunya.” In this picture Gloria herself will give five charace terizations. She will be the incarna« tion of an Egyption girl centuries ago; a young Egyptian girl sought by a reincarnate Yogi; a temperae mental opera singer and the tons of Paris; the purchased wife of millionaire and a prematurely aged (Continued on Page Five) made Baker's Breakfast Cocoa The Household Choice for many Generations A delicious, pure and wholesome food beverage, made only of high grade cocoa beans, carefully by a perfect mechanical process, no chemicals being used. WALTER BAKER & CO. Ltd. DORCHESTER, MASS. ) | Canadian Mills at Montreal | BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN Fditor Journal of the American | Medical ation and of Hygeia i Magazine | A person who suddenly has a pain the heart or in the region of the heart is likely to become frightened | hecause of thee importance ‘“which this organ has long held in the T |public mind igy relation to disease and death. | Dr. Alexander Lambert pointed , slight degree originating elsewhere $lin the body may be referred to the was d by mother they n way own men, or the t hum- i bet tell hacky and r, Grum T turn over 110! done ng tha old ¥ oor an her own hold th Do it ¥ i t ha 11 1 ¢ he d in her trac the wi glory mornin o in morning D n't he? 1 her Honey crisp taffc new that n the stairs v do but to \hout her her head. ““He to &pe o looks 1k me roc the ir hus- | ous valves in action, mal _ {and measuring the size ) leave he If for 00, ex- ppencd e din- to siip 3 the I om . she An- white 1 1dy Wallack loc pot Hed nswer business. ot to standing Mrs. “Good mornin morning. W to her s pret Lou heard the | 1 wa 8 wid Angcla to me," ok Jack's | beside lack."” Honey Lou,” she | but | on of the heart and may easily | about a condition of fright or worry. they arouse fear of sude death, which is common in many nervous persons. | Iard to Distinguish Physicians understand that all pains in the region of the heart are not necesarily due to heart disease. | Pains due to heart disease and thosc due to other conditions in the region of the heart cannot be di n ted, however, except by some one with scientific knowledge of body ucture and the symptoms of heart brin, 2= prie Now. JUST s in which the he affected, there are likely to be sical symptoms related to the \ccomplishment of work, to breath- i and to the body nutrition. A physician who makes a careful amination of the heart, listening to the sounds given off by the vari- g an in- blood ]»H of the on the 1\~\t lor and hy the u things rt itself vestigation of the by tapping of dullness, ay learns many | both that of importa He fs able th whether the pain | disease of the he tual physical c t = ting, Worry, Cold ases, persons who suffer pain from heart disease have severe attacks when they cat too much, when they are subjected to unusual worry, or to col | Emotional excitement alone or | combined with extra physical exer- | tion is likely to bring on an attack of pain. | Leaving a warm room and going | out into the cold may start the pain, and in other instances undressing in a coid room may be responsible for | an attack. | Above all other disea the heart demand ti fentific investi n to determine associated with the rt is due to an ac- | § ange in its tissues or | > reaction. | result of | Overe [ Tn many c those of highest type of is a Prescription for Bilious Fever and Malaria Colds, Grippe. Flu, Dengue, It kills tne germs, Booklet of Choice Recipes sent free Wet Wash Service Why wash your life away ? You know it doesn’t pay; Just send them to our Laundry, They'll come back the same day. SAY— THREE TWO ONE Lvery Lyvening HNartfordRoadewBritain

Other pages from this issue: