New Britain Herald Newspaper, January 13, 1927, Page 10

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NEW BRITAIN DATLY HERALD, THURSDAY, JANUARY 13, 1 Quicksands of Love ola iR Ad Garrison’s New Phase of Revelations of a Wife—— Daucing Discourse with Jack Leslic Sladge's At Dicky'’s excited ~ a muttering, Lillian reached laid a placating d upon “Cut the cheeping, Dicky- she told him, “and remem you are. You'll laughing st broke who had Leslie, way toward stepped cl beside niyself to re dance with him Lillian warned me T must accept, but to my great relief, and 1 think fo the tonishment of both men, the hent low b Lillian prompt arising. whirled her him our cive nvitation w fore v Dic said, but ed Lil rath 1y afterwa another tabls Madge Dances With Jack T relaxed in my ses feeli of relief, which, tined to be but shor the dancer had 1 women to their tables way back to ours, ar 1 with elaborate courtesy dar with him. With Lillian's my ears, T T stant, feeling mo embarrassed that T ever ha my life, I was whirling around the floor in Jack Leslie's arms, I had taken but a few steps, how ever, before I realized that never be- fore had I known what rhythm and beauty there could be in hows rediate- r from stiffly to me 1 che for when 1 two young he made his nition still in 1 the next in- » conspicuous and d done in I toward dancing ' Jack Speaks of Mary You ar onderful Gt tected in his voies a trace 1 which was his the the his son Peter Doesn’'t Wonder Long By Thornton W. Burgess Scek for trouble and you'll find The thing on which you've sct your mind. —O11 Mother Nature looking for ways lookl Tt is foolish to g trouble. Trouble for vou, so why go looking it It you do go looking for it you are pretty sure to find it. Much the better plan is to watch out for if. but. not look for it. 1 think you know what I mean. Now Peter Rabbit was in enough as it was, Reddy Fox hard after him and Peter where there were no fe hiding- places. Mr. Grouse I t done Teter a good turn b; udden- 1y in front of Reddy Fox and throw- ing snow in his face. This had given Peter a chance to gain a littie. But now Reddy was hard after him again, and Peter was wondering what would happen next. In Peter’s life something is alwa happening. He says his life is on¢ happening after another. The ap- pearance of Mr. Grouse just at the right minute had been most unex- pected. As Peter would have ex- pressed it, Mr. Grouse just happen- el to be there at the right minute. So perhaps it is no wonder that I’ ter was s0 sure that something more would happen. He didn't h to wonder long. No, sir, he didn’t have to wonder long. As he raced, lipper ty-lipperty-lipperty-iip over the “now he was watching all the time .n all directions as best he could. Reddy Fox was behind him, but there was no knowing who might be in front of him. It was well that Peter was keeping his eyes wide o Yo sir, it was well that he v op- ing his eyes wide open. Otherwise, this would be the last story about him, On the top of a fall stub of an old dead tr or thought he saw, bit of movement. He suspiciously, not stopping r because t wonld e done all. There t or top of that old sh gray, the g the top. The top w noticed it “That’, self. should the top of t and the rest of i Xeep away fro Jook that tree 1 white. T wo But Pete Fe wondered old stump ¢ of great w out, I the right in those gre is ouble was ) stumyp, 11 Peter s the looked just as no m vord ter, sir, 1 kne Ul ha 1y and T came out. I .1 had stayed at home in the dear 8,011 Briar-pateh.” {5 All the time Pever was runnin i e 4 1 t my bones Lee s 1 can. Oh. o under tl ocks, can get me if | ered Idenly spread a p wings and came flo The white fop of stump Yo n him. So Pet dancing underne hemlock tre from one s er his he emed be. You Whitey the Snowy Owl swoop at him by T. W. Fox was still 2 1S run th thos And ch hid snow- when he ran place to anot or it had a c (Copyrig] rgoss) Mix-up. Erts Menus for the Family (By Bre thin kfast lamb chops, canned 1\ French Dinner — Stew ken noodl potatocs, salad bran rolls but sed cook of t ked Apple Dump spoon ). 1-4 thout p of cup of hoiling 666 Is a Prescription for Bilious Fever and Malaria Colds, Grippe. Flu, Dengue, Y It kills tne germs, { rt was in his '”“”‘h'i , then 1 White | with | Your Health How to Keep It— Causes of Illness BY Editor Medical DR, ISHBEIN MORI nal ASSO0C Health the other monly cc number of pe symptoms may 1 of Maga in throbbing. or T culiar associated | The itsc 1 vast number of causes. se | ways In the ear the ¢ turt at con- the nerves infections of iy d endings of ire located. can result in | ind in most annoying | and ringing Pressure on Blood Vessel blood vessel which passes or arries head through | skull near to the person lies down cad in ma erfere with tion in this blood ve th hear metimes thro cir-| the such » will ng o blood cumstan, | dead ©1926 NFA SERVICE INC./ WHAT HAS GONE 1 To the home of Prof and Mol Elwell in Camdenville, Ind.. one | night in October, 1888, is hrought | woman who had fainted on a| That night twin girls born | dies without reveal- | EFORE a train, to her and she ing her namc. 1o story then moves forward 18 The twing, now growing to beautiful womanhood. have been | idopted and named Margaret and | Elizabeth. They are called Rusty and | Betty, ! Jin Elwell. the son enlists in the | World War. He then discoters that | | years one of th twins loves him., He is shell-shocked at the bat of Sedan and at first is reported Lat he is identified in a | New York hospital and his mothe and father hasten to b to find | his memory and s on Specialists despair of his recov before parents e da h to! him Are home, Jim wanders aw Nellie Downin Af wreh is hegun. that night is founs Late levue side, | there is no pressure | el avoid the 4 ht neckband Iy may rid himself In I h in arrange that on opposite vessel, o1 wear- | he freque his sympton. | roi consultation most ringing. noises shoull 1 indi- wi cation pert If the su it tling of the ex- dvic | in the nerve, help trouble cal opers all, Tre difticuity u o or Ir 0 or in cong he canal lead- 1 or of the ti -drum, treat- throat and ear and frequ infeet car-d the the nos s of henefit a enre. sues beyond | ment of | usually | 1y produc Sometim. . felt by the tion with this of a general hich must iministration the routine of ient in symptom nervous be controlled of remec on D is excite by part ment proper | %Crisp and | S[igfléefr "THERE'S “only one way for pancakes to be — crispand tender; and there’s only one way fo make thern—with Grandma's For Grandma’s Pancake Flour Pancake Flour. is especially milled to make pancakes. You can find no bettor helper if you would have your cakes come light and tender from the griddle. Grandma’s PANCAKE FLOUR - My Smile Shows a row of pearls By Edna Wallace Hopper. people | thought ween the cth to neu- ! the his skull frac- He was hit Lospltal, + cion tured, expected to die. by a t The twins are in Indi the home of their uncle, ton, the mysiery having been cleared up while was in Franee, They make prepara- tions for his hom 2 not knowing of the accident, but when train in the Elwel: | not anoard NOW BEGIN STORY CHAPTI VI “Why, tliey didn't come sth I and | dismal truth in the hody questioned ir statement. What could have happened?” in they spoke in concert no one answered. The crowd to disintegrate. The band silently | packed its pieces and shuffled off. Harvey Weir swore and found him- self a pleasant spot to sit in the park. To gone out and got so expensively illuminated for an | ccasion that failed to materialize was something of a disappoiniment ! to Harvey. He had wasted some- thing. Martha Dalton clbowed her up to the two gi “Something must have happenec Tt seemed the obvious thing fo s 0 she said it. There was very little else to & The girls nodded their heads Words had failed them for the mo- ment. The old nurse slipped an arm around the waist of each of them and escorted them back to the Jil- well cottage. Once inside and from the sympathetic looks of t lifelong acquaintances the two vent to their disappointment accord- ing to the prescribed form. They cried. With the passing of this came the regulation question again, altered ] slightly but in purport the san “What do you suppose could 1 happened 2" 5 Martha Dalton ~ hegan probing among the multitude of possibilities for the most likely one. “They might have missed their connection in Chicago; they might have missed their train in New York; they might have—or else they didn't start. Why, a hundred and one things might have happgned.” “Yes,” Belty said miserably, “a hundred and one things—a thousand and one things. Among them the possibility that something has hap- pened to Jim. b g cried Margaret, “do you suppose—do you think—" Now, be quiet, d Anything ght have happened, of course, but don’t you suppose they'd have tele- graphed if it had been something serious? They knew you'd be here expecting them on the seven o'clock train, Margaret twisted rervously and sigh sighed with her. | "hat's it, I'm afraid, Dalty dear,” said Margaret with an odd little | smile that was wanly pathetic, “We | have no reason for thinking that Mollle and Prof really expeeted us to be here to mect them. In her | letter, written more than a week | ago, she just named the day they uld leave New York and t train they would arrive home on." Mollie, ad hadn't asked them to mect the tr suggest Jim are THE the words, No- supplemented san or nd n| ve way, ave = and fingers Betty she 1it. “We waited for her to n but she didn't, ¥ we decid John told us—that is, he— Rusty had flounds round until * had finally got into a cross cur- between the devil She must s0 the deep either lie now, back up or o Like the game littl went ahead friend the truth | pointed out to | The { to tell for | Betty | the truth truth was nor s untit shown them “And he didn't think wait for Mollie to shou Molli nation think rribly. o you see, » wound up finally, ing to keep from cryin obably is th Jim would 1 ¢ now “Well, 1he Uncle John had we should ntly that s T'm ¢ neglec Dalty Mal ted ) . “that ve put it, we'r i up thing for us to do," de- | elared Martha Dalton with her cus- || For Free Tr f Quindent Tooth P: Willate: Bapper, i| 23 | tumary cisions, “is to teieg Staten Tsland hospi 1 to Jim m char al people it possible, sromptness in aching iph them at U, If something cither of them their plans, probably will or abo It was hey might that lock she added ten o arrive on the and the tr of Mollie and Prof girls rward )n sent a n Elwell, in care Jim had been request for any infor- ertaining to them and | had left the institution e they might be found. Iwin (. hospital wher tient mation whether t and wh of the a pa- | tha, | formea n—hadn’t even | | ana 927, rictions th next day receipt of they the wer fol- lowing “JTM NIGHT BADLY IN HLU W TUF YORK STOP NOW HOSPITAL STOV UNCONSCIOUS AND LIT- TLE HOPE FORR RECOVERY 8T0P WILL INFORM OIF ANY CHAN MOLLTE CAS AY RO Martha Dalton si bowed her head girls cried ont in spirit and one nk slowly “ hed heavily in prayer 1em and s Tn New York they had been de gram, The third day after dent Mollie Elwell 1 Awell's hedside, ans said, was imminen Dr. or thing instead of heing cal cd in to see what he could do for Jim Elwell, was sumr care of Mollie., He p at the hospital issned that 1o one her. Even barred. The ceipt to b orders exc Nel S 10 s Downing was afternoon of their went hack to Daiton 1 suspense and toll M Gri hearts tanapolis and with now gripped fo lay went days the under hotne a pall of our hours ) received e first telegram they g another one, signed by Neilie Dow- nin, This stated that Jim was st alive, thouzh unconscious, them of Mollie'. brain fever. 'rof, the tele of will pow Two days after Mollie Ely t her son's | was sifting 1 Pros cye pale, d to the thing She sid, ixed AWN fuce nxionsly nurs room and said she to tell him, lifted up “Now, he quict. on account of he eated the bed where la Prof stare eyes and nodd haggard worry. He on tiptor lad some- a warning fing No noisc, and Mollic ple sh roout of tired face was lined h L not thro eeplessness and shaved for | two day The nurse gained consciousns ) slowly mea he be e will live hat T can't that he Prof son has re- got 1o his m “You i cagerly, “you mean is something is conscious once looked at his s “I want her to know he said, *“Meanwhi for Dr. Lawson ut instructions, you ed in ¢ of a more eping wife, 15 soon i 1k nd ft. noti W 3 onee le know, t Ie ment, he lowed nurse her, t into Mc son,"” even char tiptoed out. Prof fol- be a good lady you you in to se Mollie's face d co o nd let’s se well, him.” was can get so0 worl, Tt and then sive 11 while n to cour down “Can't 1 sec my Iut “No, Not until 1t you'll behave you to vourselt. We risk any scthacks for him now too nearly all in for that." But n doctor lof Lope was shining in the eyes ie Blwell and 1'rof ¢ riul coing,” she said to hin I real soon now told hér, lecping prove can He's in to find “He's Dr. Lawson is watc “We'll never be Lawson ¢ , Her il Pr shook his head I'm afraid not. Nor Nellie Downing. lIiveryone has been kind to us, JMollie, We've never known s0 and thou | face and form a | dor, and as old, would still be beau- | thoughtfully | her ir i new: !of her uncle’ | man’'s heart and mind. In her efforts ou Shouid Use “SALADA" TEA TE63 No other tea is so delicious. to show the loveliness of Prof and Mollie she inadvertently has pro- duced a perfect picture of her own lovable character and her unselfish- | ness. 1 shomld like to know her better."” “Mollie twenty-four and very pretty, Rusty’s hurried contribution. Her uncle smiled. “Beauty and youth, coupled to a fine character, eertainly make for a very lovable woman,” he said, “but | this woman, if she were as ugly in the Witch of En- said that Nellie Downing tiful and lovable, I know something | of the way she has nursed Jim and | been his constant servant.” | Tt was he added softly and! a very beautiful thing. must see to it we don't forget our happiness over this good oy ¢ Rusty, from her perch on the arm chair, declared that o could love Nellie Downing | whether she was pretty or homely. | “Because she’ been so good to Mol- | lie and Prof and Jim. i with there were | this happened. wonderful n this It mak doesn't it 2" people world until s it Shortly afterward, Prof sent an- um fo the girls and John i carried the informa- that Jim hiad regained con- ss and had a chance to pull He howeve in the| dition mentally as previous | 1ceident, as he had not talk- | Mollie was recovering rapidly, | to the promise held out to | Tim's life being spared. Prof ming to hope again him- tion thro was, same co to the ed thanks life,” remarked &k with Martha 1 ever known ubjected to a hearts and Mollie have in the last year. There w people, in my opinion, come throngh such a v their belief in supreme of them rin my John Clayton .in Dalton that day, “hav of two persons being on the n Prof and I'm sure both \Martha Dalton opened her lips to speak and the twing bounced into the room and inferrupted her. | CHAPTE XVir ' * said John Clayton, “read | this The o had been out all morning, did so, and little squeals of | them they got the S purport. ped 10 1 twins, wi oy aped as almost abbed ssed her. ched them in- wo girls—young and it cmed but yes- | had brought their | : home of Llwells, | ere born, old nurse resumed m with John ¢ has tried too good Tier sister's | her con- | | a swift, startled look a better place to live in, | 3, “But just the same,” she continued refreshing disingenuousness, “I'll bet she's got faults as well as certain ‘charming young ladies who have been living in a rarefied at- mosphere of late.” This naive remark got a rise from Uncle John, whom it had hit, and ¢ seemed to find something ac- tually funny about it. “What are you talking about, Martha Dalton asked. getting back at me John Clayton told her, “I shouldn't wonder a bit my dear”—turning to | Rusty—"if the young lady is hlessed with-a little flavoring temper of her own. That would make her just 0. K.—lend to her just that happy balance, you know Unqualified goodne in one package, led, even though it w sled “lovely wo- man,” would cloy soon if it didn’t carry a little pepper sauce with it Martha Dalton’s eyes were twink- | ling. Had the twin watching Ler a little more attentive they would have guessed that she was up to some mischief. She waited for a while and then spoke musingly. “Wouldn't it be wonderful if this | Nellie Downing who nursed Jim in ance and then found and restored his name to him should enable him finally to regain his memory and then marry him? T just couldn't imagine anything more romantic than for Jim to fall in love with her and marry her. It reads like a story in a book, doesn’t it, Mr. Clayton It did, he agreed. gravely. He was glancing sidewise rather sharply at the gir “It wrapped up be L and certainly would added Martha Dalton o(tled back in her chair as if to let her mind revolve around this new pos- sibility. There was nothing that even re- motely ri mbled motive in her sen- tences. But Martha Dalton had a motive just the same and few things aped her sharp old On this occasion all her alert faculties were being used, for she wanted to find out something. And the result of her query was | not wholly disappointing to her nor vet was it just what she had tried to spear, It con ed of nothing more than that pa | between the girl sitfing on the arm rtm art apple news nt that almo of tha Jim wa broke, for Jim | Then | ive, day they 0 {0 New York to sce him, | lmost wild with the joy 1 for her to get there and | im with his brain paraly | vas awful, Martha Dalton went | All through the summer, 1 now, she has lived in the hope of | one being able to restore Jim's | And then that finally was | rd now comes this blow, | nd nly trouble 1y, 11'.'4! time, on think, for to brighten up for them.” | wins were silent. They, too, | ould have told of a great deal of | 1 if they had cared to. | lays later John Clayton ter from at the behest of 1 addressed joint- Martha Dalton and she cer I'a wonl have | about explained Jim's case from the time he first under her care at Metz nt. She gave the ned by the special- » chances for his re- . She dwelt at con- however, on the ¢ manifestation which musie t of emotion in another ut and the possibilities t might lie in this direc- th, John Clayton paused at this point 1f there was any pos- told himself, and money | nything, there were mil- he would not hestitate to | bility, he could lons t The cident ning old the played not o particnlars attaching to Jim's also were given by Nellie md in a postseript she splendid fortitude di only by Mollie but by ially the courage and character he had shown following Jim's col first days nd Mollie’ bore up wonderfully “I have never scen a greater ion of courage and character. is a marvel.” “That leiter,” declared John Clay- ton to the girly and Martha Dalton hen he had finished reading it to them, “is g wonderful document in pse what | iis unintentional revelation of & wo- | look which lived for § !in the faces of the two girls Nurs | Dalton had read the question: “H | girls regarding Jim Elwell, | announc. wyton’s chair and the one wrelessly against the table ng him. But in that fleeting an, in of John leaning and f: you fold?” She sighed inwargy, partly sati . She had at lay, she told her- self, confirmed her h:lief that there was an understandim¢ between these Mollie had dropped the remark in one of their the armistice that Jim's home from the war might mark the 1t of an engagement to one of his girl pals, Which pal it was Mollie evidently hadn't known, Nor did Martha Dal- confidential talks just before | | he had observe I sort of an opinion. | ply 5 | thing did | T'm | th | by ant | return | ive now the other the ton know, but she was posi that whichever girl it was knew and was keeping with her. John Clayton some thinking. secern loi whiit himself was Partly from of the girls' acti on the day they had received word Jim Elwell lived and p from what had just taken place his presence, he had come to som: He was keepin it to himself, but John Clayton ha a way of keeping a gr ey thoughts to himself. Tt all fitted i1 50 well with his practice of huma nature stud “I suppo: remarsed e nurse, “that you think an old maid nurse hasn't mantic, don't on, “I'm not bureau but 1 do mance and it seemns and this Nellie Downing any husinese to ho ro Well exactly a 1 vou? * she love a pr fo me th vould ro Jim sup- 00d one. That is,” she a1 N ont 1 his nien is. ory Jim hap: old did get ory being 100 optimist but youn my en throngh a great dea! secn very unhappy situations out happily. Yourselves, where you now n years it would find out t ret your tragic lir Mink it would b * came Rusty's smiling of course,” Iy, “ther your inary irne, Dalty darli Jim tinally lie Downin heart of T plained quickly, “one over Jim perfection as U 15t surcly have il sorts of eli Her uncle smiled. This little certainly knew how to hold her own in a tilt of tongues. He turned ex pectantly toward Rusty's sister, Whereupon Elizabeth seemed t get her cue. al she filed Tier contributio r own particula Iy unobtrusive and sweetly detachcd ner. But contributions her observant uncle had noted oo various occasions, almost i 1 carried crackers in their {2 this little fre 1o very shortly, had the c bit hooked into it. “Aren't you two something?” she wanted to know her casual manner of ki “Supposing, for instance—just to 1 supposing—that this paragon lady ble to give Jim his memory and with the gift throws in heart for good measure—hos Jim? “Isn't it reasonable that Jim, with his mind back, wou know nothing of what Neliie De ning had done for while J mind was a blank i “What does Jim know men?’ n for inst and for that 1ook are see we sur- oly is little in romance coning she met S of n ught after Betty's overlooki spe to supposs im » scems to 1 now 1 may be cured n tinic nest chapters, Ever Jim But—read the STOP FALLING IRENE LE M'RE (Formerly of Milon B MILDRED BEILMAN Now Conducting the Christien Beauty Parlor $2 Church St. Opp. Beloin Hotel ! Telephone 1189 It Pays to Be Sure! ILK is such a vital part of one's menu that every precau- tion should be taken to be sure that it is of the very finest quality. Many folks here in New Britain have learned that to get their milk from us is an assurance of superi- ority. J.E. SEIBERT & SON Pasteurized MilIR & Cream Make Sure Is Seiberts” PHONE 1720 437 PARK ST, NEW BRITAIN, CQi:.l

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