New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 14, 1927, Page 16

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)

NEW BRITAIN DAILY fiERALD, THURSDAY, JULY 14, 1927. The secrets of the glands of in-| ternal secretion are cnly recently | 3 r . 4 von from the mystery which Love’s Embers | SallyS Shoulders/ s ==at=22] ATTENTION Adele Garrison’s Absorbing Sequel to by BEATRICE BURTON, Auffbr of GIRLY ETC. o st “Revelations of a Wife” act as an interlocking chain, some P AT g : ’ 7 - - » | being able to take up the virtues of Beginnin ew Serial READ THIS FIRST: | mono tight around her lovely slen-| “Hello," he sald shortly, when hp 4 g a Seri Sally Jerome, 20 and pretty and | derness, and trailed off into her own | came in and took his usual seat on |the others when the latter become b Mary or Eleanor—Which One Lures | ing,' Mr. Veritzen. Yes, Noel s the | clever, is the prop end mainstay of | room. Her veice drifted back to the | oné cornsr of the well-scrubbed ta- | deficient. Noel? | young man upon whom Miss Lin- | her ly in the absence of her | dining room lazily: ble. “Where were you tonight?” At Philip Verltzen's unexpected | ° cy appeared to be fixed |father, who has been separated | “Sally, make some liquid soap for | She looked up at him with her | READ AERA}D CLASSIFIED ADS . Etiens ‘?co e expact on the day we called upon her. |from her mother for nine years. |me, Will you, lovey?” clear, eager gaze. FOR BEST RESULTS c a e mCe o T had T comia et SunE | Nocl happened to be at the house | The family consists of Mrs. Je-| When Millie wanted Sally to do| “Why, out at Aunt Emily's” she | ::om bet‘;’-‘ni;g‘ ,l“’““ B0 o ,“‘_‘_‘ 1d we took him with t rome, the twins, Beau, a son, and | Something special for her she al- | told him, wordering why he looked | 3 ters 3t s | A grim little smile curved my em- | Millie, a daughter, and Sally her- | Ways called her “Lovey” and|so grim and serious and why he| FLAPPER FANNY SAY: & i ::;;-a‘l;‘:: (1,1 ; "dn 5 s , | plover's lips self. Mrs. Jerome Is a semi-invalid, | “Sugar” and “Honey baby. | seemed so moody and down-at-the- B Are completely equip] 5 T bt Tt vicre forelon to0s e would be hard to fix an occa- | so Sally does the housework morn | Sally rose mow at the sound of ‘mouth. 2 5 and ready to serve you—again! aintance or his desire for inform. | $107 When he didn’t ‘happen’ to be | ings and works for Mr. Peevey |her voice. “All right” she called,| He said nothing more, but chewed Rpalniag 18 desire for InfOrM= | theore, wouldn't it?" he asked. “At|downtown afternoons. and then turned to M Jerome. | the stem of his pipe thoughtfully | i her Lillian nor 1 had . Mary In the flat below the Jeromes ‘“Mumsie, don't touch these dishes.| while she went in and out of the \ The Expert Peno“a] Servwe Neither Lillian nor il Fols: lives young Ted Sloan, who's in|I'll be back to clear them away just | room, stacking the soiled dishes on | D a1 s dahaat e Shew of Me o love with sally. Mrs, Jerome is|as soon as I change my dress” | the sink. | You are familiar with. R . Ao : O0E | at my hear | dreadfully afraid that Sally will| “All right, T guess I'l go and lle| Wrapped in that same heavy sl- Titho ,1,‘ ¢ o K s marry . but Sally has nothing | down in the porch swing for a bit | lence, he watched her wash and - e whlla Wa . ¢ ¢ watching the | for him but friendship. The only | then,” sighed Mrs, Jerome, rising | wipe them, and put them neatly % Tan. Y Bad deonosd o ¥ ¢ | move xeept | man she is interested in is John | heavily to her feet. “I wish I hadn't | away on the shelves. His eyes fol- rc ee B evkits o eque 4 E hose office is across the hall | €aten a bite of supper. My stomach | lowed the quick play of her hands e rs in the Nye-Naylor bufld- | feels like lead.” as she poured Millie'’s shampoo into | | Eafonentloned; 6o du | "“She often said this atter a meal. |a howl, and poured cold water into REAR WILLARD BATTERY STATIO} e it P .| Millie drops In to Sally's office | But she never missed one. the pan where it had been made. Ny > nless Katherine or T were cne day with the news that she has | In the bathroom was a glass fruit | “Be barck in a jiffy!"” she told him, . L > b % % & Py 4 k,“lx! ':,s o ' ¢ 4 e t just quit her job. Millie is always | jar where Sally saved all the odds | disappearing with it. Ready When You Are e oty 1o : t the farmhouse,” T e iy quitting her jobs because her em- and ends of soap. It was half full | When she came back he was e 1 v lips were | ploy make love to her. At least, | NOW. standing out' on the back porch. | 5 “.[:,"nr'ie,l,‘,m g5 r that he held oth- | her story always. | She took it into the kitchen and | Through the screen door she could | COME IN — YOU'RE WELCOME s : . 8 re terrifying knowledge off She catches a gllmpse of John cmptied it intc a little kettle with |see his stocky figure, outlined R h1 from | Mary behigd his smiling mask. b s for " and threatens Some water. Then she dropped a against the darkness. hing blow : ; - ;,': .‘,' st r ed at me steadily, and 1 sk him for a job. Sally prevents | pinch of borax into it and left it| At the sound of her footsteps be- y Telephone 2245 (Emergency 3607.,) —T won- | her from doing this, but later, when | to boil down into liquid shampoo for | hind him on the floor of the kitch- mockery — in his | he asks Sally if she knows of any- | Millie's hair. | en he called to her: “Come here a ek eyes, one to take the place of his secre- | “Don’t forget to squeeze some |minute. I want to talk to you." not commend his diserim- | tary, who is getting married, she | lemon juice into it, too,” Millle said | “Wait a half a second,” Sally an- he said, and bencath the | tells him about Millie. He is called§to her when she went into her bed- | swered. “I've got a couple of things you're kee g cases on Nocl now, are you, time you be you're the par- Fitnas f 1 ! | J¢ 1¥ext 1005 WHo s of my coz fingers invol- fout of town suddenly, but Millie | Foom to get into her bungalow | to do. Py Sy athae tarily contracted into & fist With | promisas to wait until he returns. In | apron. Like most blondes, Millle | She did them with that same deft 5 F 0 k R U H ld Cl -fied Ad f,”,'niii“n;l ;'z,: " which I could have struck him for | the meantime she takes a rest, and | had an idea that lemon juice would | quickness of hers. The bread was Every boy-friend Is & warn or Qlllc eturns Use Hera assl S. Remembering the glim his inane repetition of the personal | borrows some money from Sally to | help to keep her hair light. Some- | rolled in a clean white cloth and | admiver fn the summertime, had had of Philip Veritzen's anguish lien my nerves were So taut | “tide her over’—only $2 for car | times she talked about adding some | laid in the bread-box. The cold over the estrangement from his son, : fear that he already knew | fare, etc. This, however, is quite an | peroxide to the rinse-water, too, but | sliced meat that was left over from which he was too obst e to end, Mary’s escapade as the masked | jtem to Sally, for she earns only $21 | so far she had not done it. . | the evening meal went into waxed Lillians speech seemed tal to nd thus would make abso- | a weck and Beau and Millie con- | How to keep her hair was one f | paper. So did a head of lettuce and | e her intended contession | tribute very little to the family's | life's great problems to Millie. So| half a cucumber that Millie had | me. Yet T knew that even with her | 2 $trong sympathy for Noel she ‘ere was a note of con- | support. Most of the financial bur- | was the kind of lip-stick to use, the | left in the kitchen an hour before, | would not have uttered the words if [ [“MPt in my anger also. It was 80 | den belongs to Sally. brand of perfume, the right shade | when she helped to get supper. ! 5 it had not heen ; 1 thing for so brilliant a man | Beau's girl, Mabel Wilmot, gives | of powder. Then Sally filled a lard pail at the | #lighting referenc r. It was the sort of thing, ja party at the flat and asks Sally | She gave long, contented hours to | sink and went out on the porch to | There was no ch: in Mr, Vi I in different language per-|to provide the refreshments. Sally | her beauty—rubbing cold cream | water her geraniums and to see | B which Otto, the ~chauffeur, | does, expecting Beau or Mabel to|into her fresh skin—blackening her | what Tel Sloan wanted. She 2en's face or eves as she spoke. 5 2 his body stiffencd ever so slig olidly behind the wheel of | return to her the money she spends, | brows and lashes—polishing and | thought she knew— | and his head lifted exactly as if he | 1@ great car, might say to the par- | but they cheerfully refuse to do it. | pointing her finger-nails. “Move away from my flower box,” Just had received a sl ctrie | Jormaid of the Veritzen household. | Sally is almost “flat broke” and| But she never sewed a button on | she told him with elaborate care- 2 DRESS SHOP shock. He was still looking in = And T felt that the parlormaid's an- | goes to her Aunt Emily Jerome for | her clothes, never mended a single | lessness when she stood beside him direction, as if wa for an g 5 could be no silller | 4 Joan, but Aunt Emily is going into | pair of her gauzy stockings, never | at the porch railing. “I want to wa- swer to the query he had put to than th chanical grimace With | the restaurant business. Disappoint- | cleaned a pair of her little slippers. | ter my goranjums.” There were only Branch of Hartford Store and with a nonchalance which which T answercd Mr. Veritzen's | eq, Sally goes home to find Beau | It fell to Sally to do all of these|three of them in the wooden box | lian's interruption had given me lly as T waited uneasily for his ading an ad for musical instru-|things for her, just as she did them |that was nailed against the railing. | 3 time to assume, I said: 1ext words. ments, preparing to buy one. | for Beau and for Mrs. Jerome. But Sally loved to see their red “You're what a neighbor of mine Copyright ewspaper NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY | “I'm going out for dinner tomor- | blooms nodding in the wind when . would cal! ‘a master hand at g e Service " CHAPTER IX row night with Jimmy Davidson,” | she stood at the kitchen washing Beau glanced up from his news- to | dishes, She held a passion for flow- | Millle announced, leaning close paper sullenly. | her mirror to inspect a tiny redness | ers. “I don't know why it's any of |on her forehead. “Well, what's on your arr;knd, < - your business whether T buy myself | “Dear mie, T wonder it that's a|Theodore Roosevel:?” she ed A w k f R d al P C 0 a guitar or not," he said. “You don’t | hive or a mosquito bite,” she mur- [ him when she had finished. Ted's eek o adic rice Cuts On have to pay for it, do you?" | mured, half to herself, scowling at /name really was Theodore Roosevelt Sally did not answer him at once. | jt, | Stoan. She dropped down into a chair be- | Then she went on: “He's a won- | ou” he said, without turning side the untidy table and began to | derful guy, Sally. T want you to i to look at her. His arms were brush the crumbs up into a 1it¥: meet him some time. . . . I've!crossed over his chest and he drew heap. told him all about you. How smart | on his pipe thou, ully. “Well, Beau.” she began. after a |you are and everything. He likes| Suddenly he did turn with a of the Newest Mode—Entire Stock Reduced minute, “I don’t suppose it IS any | clever girls who have something on | single movement that brought him s of my business if you want to buy | their minds besides their hats, 80 |so close to her that one of his bare a guitar, only—" | he says. T don't know what he ever | arms touchec her shoulder. She stopped for a second and | did see in poor little me. . . . Do| “You,” he said again, and slowly FEATURED FOR 01d Man Coyote Tries a Clever emptied the contents of her little | hurry up with the dishes, Sugar, so | and deliberately took his pipe from | Tric leather coin purse upon the table- | you can rinse my hair for me, won't | his mouth and laid it on the railing TOMORROW & SA"[" [RDAY cloth. ou? I never get the soap out, and | in front of him. Then he put his | REQ. U. 8. PAT. OFF. What you alone may never do, t 3 Wednesda: for tomorrow night.” lean back to look at him. He Quite easily is done by two. s There were four dollar bills and | «sll right,” Sally answered ab-|scemed very serious and grave, New —O0ld Man Coyote some loose siiver. Sally scooped it | sently. She was standing at the open | Jooking back at her through the 3 g 2 up into her palm and dropped it |door of her clothes closet, looking | dim star-light - Dresses Early For These Thornton W. Burgess “Here's all the money we have to | jt's always so sticky when T do it hands on her shoulders and drew fl | last all week, and this is only | myself. And I DO want to look nice | her so near to him that she had to 35 $5 Come No one likes to have it said | 4 back into the little purse. at a black satin dress she had been | “Tired?” he asked quickly. they do things they do not do. | Her troubled blue eyes went from | wearing to the office for almost a She shook her head. . . She e e e e ) Rk Coyote TEN Lol noousef of B, e Beau to Millie, who was languidly | year. was hardly ever tired. he,was dead | 130___$13.95 234__315 catching one of Johnny Chuck's | \ p smoking a cigaret and dropping the | “That gress s just about worn | for sleep many a night: children. He hadn’t, for he hadn't 7 ashes into her empty coffee cup. out,” she added. “There's a hole in | strong, vibrant young body hardly had a chance. But he was blamed | s “I may have to ask Millle for part | cach sleeve. T don't know whether | ever ached with sheer weariness. ° DRESSB DRESSES for it just the same hecause that | 3 0 50 of the two dollars T let her have the | T could fix it up or not.” She hung 0, I'm not tired,” she answer-! young Chuck has disappeared. | N\ %7 other day” she said. |it over the foot of ber bed and went | ed him, moving uneasily under the 817 15 bod) enougs. s blawed | NI 7 Millie laughed. “T. A. G. 1. she | out to the dining room. pressure of his hands. She didmt 95 95 for things one does do, but to be Jl/,k,// // 2 answered lightly. “T. A. G. T Mrs. Jerome was still sitting | like to have him hold her in tkat . ° blamed for things one doesn't do - i) i'/',,/;// Mrs. Jerome leaned forward.|there, arms crossed over the pages|way—as if she belonged to him. | not to be torne. No, sir, it isn't. I| F 3 4 Rt 7 ‘f// “What does that mean—"T. A. G.|of the woman's magazine she was|She hated it. | haven't caught on of those young | S e T e ; 72 hsnzl askcdkhmumessl She | looking through. “Let’s go in and make some lem- | : Chucks, but I will. Yes, sir, I will,” | Instead of looking disappointed an ad hard work keeping up with the | “I was just wondering if I could | onade,” she went on, after a tiny hi " 3 5 uttered O1d Man Coyote. | angry he grinned slang that Millie and Beau brought |cut the sleeves of that old black | pause. She was sure that there 7 White Flannel Sport Coats’ Closing ?“t Al 510'9‘)'. & So then Old Man Coyote began | N home from the workaday world. | dress ot mine” said Safly, leaning |wasn't a lemon in the house. She 186 MAIN ST. BLOOMBERG’S SILK and WOOLEN STORE huck had disappeared, Then he | It means ‘Try and get it,’ * Sally | over her shoulder to look at & page | had used the last one in . Millie's ran over to Polly Chuck's house and | gpgwered her solemnly. “In other |of fashion prints. “I hate long |shampoo. But she had & sudden i o Ohuch | did the same thing there. That Was | worgs, ft means that Millie has | sleeves anyway, and they say short | panicky wish to get away from “What are you studying about so | 0 Mke Jolnny and Polly Chuck | spent it all, and that for that rea- | ones are coming back into st 4 | him. To get back to the lights of Rard?” demanded Mrs. Coyote, com- 5“\ _down below for a while. son I can't get it from her.” “They are. Just look here,” hd | the kitchen. To get out of the soft, { Ing up behind him Meanw AMrs. Coyote came up | w1t certainly does. It means just | mother replied. “Here'$a pleture of | concealing datkness. “How can T catch one of those i M In the grass hack of Polly | that, TNl tell the waiting world,” |a dress with hardly any sleeves at | She turned to go. too, but he 4 [ Soungsters of Johnny Chuck's,” re- | _.\Ck's house Then 01d Man Cov- | agreed Millie. “It also means that, |all. Just tiny set-in ones. Who's | stopped her with a tighter grasp | plied O1d Man Coyote. 5""1‘-‘:“'“1 LY :"}055”31}1: G“’-e’; [ since the family is dead broke, little | that knocking at the back door?” |on her shoulders. - r u OIS en lon “Why be satistied with one—why | *%( % & }ip‘;“f_"?‘,[ -hurf\‘f‘”’;" [ Millle had better get busy and wash | Sally went into the kitchen. Out- | “T sald T wanted to talk to you,” [J (] mot two?” inquired Mrs. Coyote | ..\ took his time. He knew ver: | her hair instead of having it done |side on the back porch stood Ted | he told her quietly. “Don’t be in archly. | OfE it i Y lin a beauty shop tomorrov Sloan, pipe ir mouth, hands in |such a hurry.” Old Man Cosote grinned. “of | Yo that rtly Johnny Chuck | 1t sure 45 fough to be poor, isn't 1t2” | trousers pockets, silently waiting for (TO BE CONTINUED) course, my dear,” said he, “it 1 'OVl Deep out to see what had be- | " gpo got up pulling her crepe ki- | her to open the screen door. caught only one you should have it. | C°" ““',”‘n WK Snlaying Ha But sinca you mentioned catching | et ¢ Eloanaovclel - two, two it shall be. We must put by T. W. Burgess) ur heads ther and see what S O] e G ; | 2 SR T . - Your Health 80 014 Man Coyote and Mrs. Coy- . [ dte put their heads together and Menus for tlne Family @ How to Keep H— Yo think and scheme and plan how he could catch one of the four re- after a while they trotted down . the Green Meadows. There they 2l 1 Causes of liiness > arated. Old Man Coyote m v 5 TEL. 1589 straight for the home the Chuck SISTER MARY . o % family. Mrs. Coyote headed in the dreakfast—Fresh apricots, ready- . - BL DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN PLAINVILLE ROAD oposite direction, They could sce - 3 S eream, creamed Editor Journal of the American Medical Association and of Hygeia, hnny Chuck sitting up on his h wit n toast, crisp | - : o 4 . Rt SRR i S ki B the Health Magazine With pleasure we are celebrating our first anniversary of Farr Hydraulic Sy ote, as he drew near the home | el loeio Dalilon: ’ One of the most mysterious of the . : = " oA SEoy Coyote, as h near omato bonillon, ; P e tem. Will begin July 15 and end July 24th. We offer to make this first anniver- Qodie. youns e ala cloves . ¢ called the thymus, which lies in the sary a success by offering SOCONY GASOLINE AT TWENTY CENTS A GALLON creep very cars gt currant sponge, cocoanut grass. He did exactly as L 1 wear 1lic, tea | chest below the sternum, or breast bone. Have done h he thou | inner— ! steak, ma- | kT TOF ol s el it | Since the earliest times this | gland has attracted medical inter- o e S e T e ] B : A cst, and there have been all sorts %gsméom 5-Gallon Cans | NO. 990 FOR FORDS 2 ‘ . ' o of theories as to its functions in the BIL E OIL SOCONY AIRCRAFT , | 1-Gallon Cans When he g y « before meat is home of th ) ohnny in fat t extra fat is y 4 human body. It has been accused 5 T ; s of producing all sorts of symptoms, 1 gallon can i | $100 Iy Polly Chuck replied. T 7| when done i ! ..} | especially coughing spells of vari- | No.2 ......... $5.00 Chuck gave a < v t eded, Season with salt and pepper 5 | | ; {mm' '"‘"""IV ‘ ; 4 ; ¥ ; g 1 jous 1‘\‘1;:.!1 and it has been ass(;)ec::?;—‘ SPECIAL PRICE NG e S e $5.10 iB|_|]k Rt 20c quart vor | ed cases of sudden when apparently not only the thy- { | mus gland but also much of the 1 SOCONY AIRCRAFT 1-1b can them ) llymph gland tissue of the body was ) Then 014 Man Coyote, pretending | B . - d i lar | Bulk........ 25¢ quart i CUP GREASE to be gry. jumy ug r and salt and beat into i <) : _‘ o In @ recent survey of our knowl- and rus ht towar nny | g \lding point in : 4 Ige of this gland, Dr. Edith Boyd 20¢ Chuck, was sitting at the en- | top of double boiler, Slowly add to | : i s indicated her belief that the . trance of anc ! rt dis- | opg 8 constantly. | . ‘ ; thymus gland sometimes produces BULK OIL ONY MEDIU! FEEsTT tance awav nv W nly | turn to double boiler and cook | " . ms by enlargement and me- Quaker State Oil Soc = UM i BULK OIL long enough to show teeth and | ping carefully until mixture cc 3 B ! hanical pressure. In the position e & S o snarl. Then he holted rst |t ¥ emove n heat and | ‘ s 1 which it lies, it may press upon Weaverly 0il i SOCONY HEAVY down into that o t co e : Bl 8 [ & iportant structures, particularly | 1009, Penn. Oil | then that OI1 Mar )t pped until firm. Turn into 4 F blood vessels and the breathing 1-Gallon Can more grinn r 1 1 and freeze in six parts ice to 3 J |tubes. In such cases it is possible DURING THIS SALE Tnstea king int Y i m salt. Tt will take | 1 4 : b 4 | to reduce the size of tfie gland by | i ; : At e . y 3 § | cxposing the chess to the X-ray. | 25¢ quart (v C quart hadn't e catet of | out stirrin - ] Dr. Boyd was unable, however, : ; £ {to find that the thymus is nearly so pointed. As a matter of fact, every- = : ] requently associated with sudden thing was working just ‘ - For Safety’s Sake - demand 1 3 E ath as has been believed in the ed it to. All the Cluck % now | N n : i ; ¢ | past. She has found that children Oil purchased at crank case service given at the above price - Socony Heavy Socony Medium underground. Poll {with enlarged thymus glands not NOTICE—We carry a SOCONY FLUSHING OIL given at each crank case service children we frequently were subject to sudden Johnny Ck | death, but this was not directly re- at 50¢ a gallon |lated to an enlarged thymus. It € {seemed to her that the weight of Sh t\\asncm}:nn wif "r ‘ix By t'he thymus was quite definitely as fast as she c 1. Old Man rre vit y W en- - Coyote niffed loud e s e fif;"fl?;i‘l’“(;";;‘ :;:’a"[‘ o;*’g]’;‘ 11‘;';(;}" A SPECIAL DISCOUNT of 25% off on Bulbs, Spark Plugs, Tube Patches and Tubes. trance to the hole where Johnny | G e She gave long contente d hours to her beauty glands and other lyymphoid tissue.? t i i

Other pages from this issue: