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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