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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, Quicksands of Love Adele Garrison’s New Phase of Revelations of a Wife—— ’ Madge and Hugh Find a Quict Luncheon Spot After his comment that he was glad my connection with the theater had not robbed me of my love for the country, Hugh Grantland did not speak again until wé had reached the end of Riverside Drive and turn- ed into Broadway. T was equally silent for fear of saying somethin which should rouse the queer jeal- ousy which he evidently was feeling hecause of my work for Philip Veritzen.. I had the psychic littic convictiop that despite his promise I should hear mare from him con- cerning my new work and especially concerning my employ But I meant to postpone that hour as long as possible. When he next spoke, however, his | volce was matter of fact, but fancied I detected in it a tens: which betrayed how rigidly holding himself in check. “I have been told that Bronx Parkway Is very b he said. An deal Yancheon Nook “Oh, it 1§ lovely,” glad to have soma I ceuld enthusiasticall him. about it was charming, and showed subtly that the people who kept it | ad a pride in their name and in the vice they gave. | ‘How do you like this?” Hugh | asked, as we approached it, slowing | his car down. | “Very much indeed,” I returned, | “‘especially because I can’t detect a single 'Ye,’ or ‘Olde’ about it, and I| don't believe there's a hint of a t' or antique ‘shoppe’ on the laughed pe nctorily ad spoken every word si 1 him not to discuss my Philiy Veritzen any fur Alone at Last try our luck as he| asked work with = “Shall then?” h here, | anywhere car into the drivew v,} soon seated at one of the | s and being served with | reon which did not need the of our drive-induced hunger | pronounced unusual in ex- b7 gnd, en we had finished, the rotund | proprictor of the inn told us of an | 1gly pretty walk and view | which formed part of his extensive “Would you like up that | grounds. Walking a f way and scout around for a good |the house, we n place?” he ask selves in e wh think of any mor fascinating,” I rejoined, and the next two hours were on of delight s we drove one of the the world t yet at the to drive ew steps from denly found our- | h had been | neval in its wilder- | were but a few world of bustle and s in any part of the grove, time, but when we had led to the bank a little | and scated ourselves upon a nch there, we might have en upon 2 lonely mountain top or any indication of intrusion upon our solituc with the Bronx river, veliest of streams, glinting ide of the ro: which did finally found a he trees with lawn. The red simply, there was no But (-\'t‘ryll\m;:I rustic tables swinging sf — 192 Copyright, Featur by Newspaper attempt at display, rvice, Inc.) |Three | |pers there is a Peter Goes the Rounds Who wants the news must go about For that's the way to find things out. Peter Rabbit. By Thornton W. Burgess " | [ [ Peter Rabbit was much concerned | about his neighbors now that winter | really had arrived. That is to say, he | ed to know where each was and | ach was planning to spend the So Peter promptl [ to make the rounds. started out the very night after Johnny Chuck closed his door and went to hed for the rest of the winter. John- as,the first place Peter visited. He knew that Johnny had | Leen awake on the day prev be- | cause he had stopped to pass the time of day with him. Then during the night Jack Frost and Rough Brother North Wind had spread a blanket of snow. As soon as it begaj thought of Johnny Chuck der what Johnny will do now?” Peter ‘to himself. “I wonder will keep on with that silly i his of keeping awake throu winter 2" So Peter had remainc the dear Old Briar-p wa how win He kicked wvay he Lis long heels and sta lipperty-lipperty-lip | ks. There were other tracks | on Johnny's doorstep. There | the footprints of Blacky the there were the footprints of | Meadow Mouse. But, though looked all about, he couldn’t a single footprint that looked the footprint of Johnny Chuck. | Peter poked his head inside. “Hello, | Johnny CI said he. fust as sdon as the first Black| Peter got no reply. He shouldn't | Shadows came creeping out from the | have exjiccted one, beeause even had | Purple Hills he had kicked up his to bed for the win- | heels in the jolliest way, for Peter have been asleep at dearly loves the_ snow, and started t, but he didn't lipperty-lipperty-lip straight for i gone but a little Johnny Chuck’s house. When he bumped his nose he got there he looked for Johnny's 11 of He unde | “Johnr s given up, to himselr s gone to bed for the I won't see | Johnr or Polly until rext spri Th sighed. “I | must be nice,” “to be sure being g comes, But, Glube [:Iuthmg Huusn SILK HOSE For Women rig were Crow; Danny Peter find ter would that hour, stood then said Peter er id he, alive when sy oh my goodness, wha iling Pool brought nd When Jumper nowshaes. long on 00d Silk Hose for every All the late s1 t shade and $1.95 Blohe Clothing Ho Cor, Main and W, Main St. New Britain TUeR d“fi'('ii:n | plici . crepe satin is | with this gown. lare always smart and |one shoulder of |crepe frock. |ana | tries, lar or sateen dress worker has not ! |school -0t public health to make |a small shop to a large " |creates new FASHIONS By Sally Milgrim Simplicity of Line, With FLovely Fabrics, Makes the Smart Dinner Gown Line is the first requisite chic frock. No matter what the c acter of the frock is, nor of vhat material it is fashioned, irst and last st have good lines o attain the much-deserved tone of smartne: among th ell-gowned women of today:. Slegance in fabric but sim- in the final effect is essential. A delightful dinner frock of white almost severe in its simplicity. It is straight and short and has a low V-shaped decolletage back and front. The arm-holes are cut in deep V's under the arms also. white feathered camelli: {droop from the right shoulder. The skirt has three flounces, | first the | the third forming the bottom of the | | skirt. All three slope in the back and open in front. With the variety of styles in slip- wide selection to would be correct Metal kid slippers in combined hiful. choose from tha with metal kid are del Three feathered this smart satin The skirt has three tiers open in front. Copyright, 1926, EFS Your Health How to Keep It— Causes of Illness BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN itor Journal of the Medical Assoclation and of Hy- geia, the Health Magazine. Althou scientific investigators public health workers have given much of workers in many indys- the health of the white ¢ received a proportionate amount of | attention. Perhaps it has scemed to the in- | vestigators that conditions in stores obviously were satisfactory. An investigation made under th auspices of the Harvard medical school, however, has revealed con- ditions beneath the apparcntly beautiful surface that some consideration. Stores Co-operate Beginning with 1919, the heads of 25 department stores in Boston, | Pittsburgh, New York, Cleveland | ind o r eastern cities combined | with the. authorities of the Harvard a irvey of this problem in the 25 co-operating stores. The survey revealed the nece: tion. The promptly growing of a store from thousands of workers Tiealth problems. health habits may the health of the store with onal fere with group. Exposure to infection is much more likely to occur in tho crowd- shop than on the street or in home. In fon or inflammation intestines may result from associated with constant at- counter, or in other department store work. es due to fa ue from anxiety, or from rain, lon nding or bad ventilation, was ot infrequent symp- partment clerk. Shopping Rush st ml,. of th routine or n, nd to be a in th The st ahout time As told in activity in stores. Arthur B. Emmons of Harvard tore will weeks is a o his 4 p will b prot lth medical and i o ave not nt on, Nest: ttenti Personal Hygiene, " The New FreelyLathering uticura Shgvmg Stick For Tender Faces EMOLLIENT MEDICINAL ANTISEPTIC of (ht:“ it | Simplicity Is the by-word | one beginning at the hip Iino,‘ camellias adorn | American | attention in the past | to the probelms associated with the | | health - | “It must seem pretty sad demand | ssity for such an investiga- | department | in- | TUESDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1926. HONEY OJOHNSON FEATURES INC, l926 | READ THIS FIRST: Honey Lou Huntley is private secretary 1o old “Grumpy” Wallack, head of the Wallack Fabric Mills. Honey Lous 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, | talls 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 very jealous of Dr, Steve Mayhew, a frlend of Margret, Honey Lou's sister. Honey Lou's engagement to Jack is announced and plans are made for the weddng. Jack and Honey Lou have a quiet home wedding and spend their honeymoon camping at Lake Tamay. Honey Lou stops at the Wallack Mills office to see Ann Ludlow. Ann tells Honey Lou why she sent for her. Héhey Lou sees Joe Meadows and tells him he must | marry Ann at once and he agrees to do so. | Honey Lou and Jack settle down |in their own flat with Mary De- | laney, the cook. Angela tells Honey Lou she is going to have a party for her and Jack Saturday night. Honey Lou | goes home and finds Jack reading poems ahout little houses in the country filled with love and happi- ness. Honey Lou decides to let Mary go in the morning, do her own work, and try to make the | kind of home Jack wants. | Tim Donegal tells of the card | games he and Honey Lou hav | together and Jack forbids Hone: Lou to have Tim Doncgal in their | house. | Honey Lou, angered by Jack's | objections to Donegal, leaves the flat for her mother's home. Mar- gret tells her she has no reason to 2 jealous of Jane Ayres, Jack's| {\r‘(‘rmwr\. but to watch Angela ‘ s to the flat, a | (‘11\10\’:?:‘] ]18\‘1‘0“?““ i | But as she turned and startéd to | Honey Lou moves into the gum g0 away, a voice hailed her. | room and further complicates At first she didn’t know where domestic affairs by her it was coming from. But when it | treatment” of Jack. | hailed “her a second time, she Honey. Low, on & motor. Tid |looked up and saw Joe 'Meadows | Angela and Done decides to { leaning out from one of the second- | follow Jack’s wishes in regard to | floor windows toward the back of DoneEal | the building. Doncgal's arrest delays Honey| He had on the blue overalls and | Low's and Angela’s return until two | blue cap that he always wore, and in the morning. as she waved her hand at him, he | The published news of Donegal’s | called to her again. arrest in connection with the names | *“Wait a minute, | of Angela and Honey Lou, to- {o you!" gether with Angela’s duplicity, | gho waitea, finally culminates in the separation | Tt scomeq an endless time unm\ of Jack and Honey T.ou. she finally heard slip back NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY | 51tc on the gate marked CHAPTER LXIV PLOYEES ONLY,” and the next day vhile Honey " open. e | He stood tn the opening, with his | Al indsvas | cap in one hand and his other hand | " She could not imagine the mills [4nd “mwvc'_l it :\lm?st al.r;ncu_ g | shut down. It sccmed impossible | “Have you heard about Ann that the weaving room quitting me?” he asked her, was not [filled with deafening moise and e mpd e | lightning-like machinery and the [ The fellow | smell of wool and oil. 44 ane She could not believe that the | Defore. | shipping room with its bales and | its boxes was empty, and that blustering, swearing Joe Meadows | was gone—that the office was | cmpty, THE GATES WE I want to talk swing it | Al on the k | secmed to be worried | His big dark handsome was more serions than usual, | |and there was no constant flash of strong white teeth as he smiled. “Come in, won't you?” he asked and just as she was about to sa down | N0 he explained to her that he had {o her- | to shut the gate, | “Orders are to lock it and keep | it locked,” he said. “Well Honey Lou followed him into the small paved courtyard and from there into the weaving . lroom. She was careful to leave | the door hehind her open, though. | “IUs silly,” she thought, “but I still am afraid of him. Not e: actly “afraid—but just uncomfort- able” That was it! She was just | uncomfortable when she was with | him, | “sit down” he mid, taking a| { corncob pipe and a bag of tobacco | from the pocket of his overalls. “I want to tell you about this” She sat down on the top of a packing case “You see, too. | at the old place,” she said self, thinking of it in an unhappy | | homesick way. For she had loved | it, in spite of its ugliness and its | noise and its filth, Hadn't she met | Jack there? J | She closed | came before had scen { it that first hlond hair | | shining above the tanned face and the blue, blue eyes. { Other things came hack to her. | The night he had Kissed her amj she had struck him. The night h had t her home from Angela’s house. The wag he had looked at her on the afternoon of | their wedding. And the gentle | | possessive way he had taken her| | in his arms that night on the clat- | tering, roaring, rushing train. | | She shook her head, he hent over one of Uncle Henry's thick | 1eds wonde®ing how Jack felt over the shutting down of the mills. “Pretty herself. At noon she put on her hat and | went out for lunch in a little Greek | arant across the road from warchous t She stood, door of it, for a long minute. glanced swiftly at her wrist- atch. She had threc-quarters of \ hour for lunch. Uncle Henry liked his people to work as much possible, and he took only fif- minute for lunch himself, | day. mustn’t be late,” Honey V.fju aloud to it rinlistening and then turned on her high leels and dashed along ‘he | street car she it was like this” he | [ began. “I didn't want to get mar- ried to Ann in the first plac can say that to you, becau )D\l' know it already. I was just about | ready to duck out from town that | | day when you came down here and | told me T had to marry her or you'd | find out the reason why! But any- | way, I did marry her, and I was doggoned nice to her until | blue, T reckon,” she told mean your babhy, don't vou?” asked Honey T.ou grave He smiled and flushed y. | “All righf, the baby, then,” h e- peated it after her. “But when the bahy came I told her she could go Ler way and I'd go mine. T said I'd send her all the money she needed, and I did send it to hel Every week! T neyer missed.” “But you didn’ in the same | house with e asked Honey Lou. “Not on your life. I went baclk ! to my old boarding house," Joe | answered “Well, there r girl there, 1 thought nice little kid, when I with her hand on the Then she as said street, slender sidewalk to the In twenty ixchange street and dirty as it Above it the at blue, and the silvery was she | first met her—" “Hush! What was that?" Honey Lou, looking over her shoulder. The place scemed full of | ghostly shadows today. It was so big, so emvty. e laughed. That's just the cat we keep here,” he amswered, and as he spoke a huge black cat with yellow | eyes came sliding around the cor- | ner of some piled-up bales. ‘ | (o be continued) i alwi WAL 45 was -cold- had umn sKy the clouds scur white sails cC fairy = asked 1y like ships But i} itself, looked vinter Jooked just the today as a day two years o when she had first entgred it. he mills looked just the same, The hig red wooden gate with [PLOYEES ONLY" painted it in tall %, The | door that opened,onfto the | leading up to the offices. | Leu tried that door, It was ho strect, same summer, It o Hone 1 looked to her on white Menas for the Family door set in the Breakfast—Apples baked in prune juice, cercal, thin cream, waffles, up, milk, coffee. Luncheon—Creamed | poached eggs on toast, canned white cherries, milk, tea Dinner Baked halibut steaks, | cottage fried potatoes, scalloped to- | matoes, stuffed pepper ring galad through “which she black-and-nickel ro door celery with rye muffing, nut cookies, “Not a sign of life any- I LOU | pineapple sponge, coffee. Two fish steaks cut about 3-4 lnch | are baked sandwich fashion with a bread stuffing for the filling. | An egg or oyster sauce can be served | with them if wanted, but if scalloped | tomatoes are used a sauce is not nec- { thick diced | cheese, 2 |lad yled by Bu rton 'Lox': .oé’fi ;'c‘ RE LOCKED essary. Staffed Pepper Ring Salad Two green peppers, 1-4 cup finely cream tablespoons orange marma- nut celery, 1 package 4 tablespoons chopped meats. Tarboil peppers for five minutes. the | Drajn and plunge into cold water. “EM- | Rub oft thin skin. stem end of peppers seeds and white pith. and Chill. heese with a fork until Till peppers with mixture and stand in a cold place for half hour or until the filling is firm. Cut and | in half inch slices and serve on a | bed of lettuce with French dressing. Each pepper is calenlated to cut in | as she never had seen him worried | four slices and two slices are used for each serving. Today's Offer— ‘Stomach Agony Goes or Money Back, Says Axelrod An e T pains, foul breath, dizziness, Jjust because—that's all, other reason. there is Dare's Mentha Pepsin will stop minutes; dyspeptic agony in flve will conquer obstinate cases of digestion, and turn the old stomach| into a new one in a few weeks. If you want quick and lasting lief get & bottle today. It is dispens- | Pharmacy and| Axelrod's druggists everywhere. | — rye bread, milk, Cut slice from remove Work creamy, adding celery, marmalade and nuts. still there are stubborn peo- ht in this part of the coun- try who won't accept this offer, but continue to suffer from gas on stom- ach, belching or sour food, stomach bilfous- ness and headaches, just because— let an no in- re-| UNEQUA*LED! ‘On all counts—perfect leavamng—even texture — good appearance —wholesome- nuu—dlsuhblhty—economy! Allare yours in the baking whaen you use RUMFORD |: The Wholesome BAKING POWDER —a PROTECT Your Doctor and Yourself HILLIPS Milk of Magnesia SAY “PHILLIPS” to your druggist, or you may not get genttine Phillips Milk of Magnesia prescribed by physicians for 50 years, Refuse imitations of genuine “Phillips” 25-cent and 50-cent bottles contain full directions and uses, ;Milk of Magnesia” has been the U. 8. Registered Trade Mark of The Charles + H. Phillips Chemical Company and its predecessor Charle: Faster and Finer : ~CHIGF « Santa Fe de-Luxe Dailv beginning November 14,1926 Leave Chicago each evening Kansas City next morning Arrive Los Angeles in morning Only two business days on the way— You remember the once.a-week Santa Fe de Luxe, operated a few years ago—the first and ONLY extra fare train to Southern California. THE CHIEF will be a finer train and operated DAILY. Extra fare only $10 from Chicago—$8 from Kansas City. You speed through the magical wonderland of the Scenic Southwest, along the old Santa Fé Trail, in luxury and supreme com. fort—“SANTA FE ALL THE WAY”—the shortest route between Chicago and Los Angeles. Observation sunparlor—ladies’ lounge —ladies’ maid—barber and valet service, also bath—and the world-famous Fred Harvey Club and Dining car service, “ reservations, and details mmm——Sg 8. Cnlmsn‘ Dist. Pass. Agent an Fe Ry. 212 014 South Bl(l oston, Mags, g, Phoncs: Liberty 1044 and 7945 extra fas -extraiine-extr fare ANNOUNCEMENT We have just installed one of the Automatic Engraving Machines such as used at the Waterman, Sheaffer and Parker pen factories, We can now engrave names on pens and pencils while you wait, We know you will appreciate this service during the Christmas season as the gift pen with the recipient’s name on it has the per- sonal touch that increases the appreciation and also renders a valuable protection against loss. We engrave the name free on every pen or pencil purchased here. Come in and watch this marvelous machine in operation. ADKINS 66 CHURCH STREET “You Get More For Your Pen Money Here.”