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

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Love’s Eimbers Adele Garrison’s Absorbing Sequel to “Revelations of a Wife” Beginning a New Serial—————————"/ Mary | don't think he's lifted a little finger | to attract her—he's too much in I love with Mary to look at anybody but t} sn't make any dif- Madge Warmed to Guard Against Elcanor Lincoln 1 was =0 relieved by my moth | elsc In-law's decision that it w dvi rence with a girl of Miss Lincoln's able to continue the acquaintance |type. The more indifferent a man with Eleanor Lincoln upon the| he 1 is attracted by Pim same basis on which it alrcady be absolutely ruth- rested, that for nd or ‘wo, T thot did not grasp t ificanc of her prohibitior Mary.| She extended her han When the me words Y did dawn upon her in amazement. “You mean that j Lincoln n physical injury She compres before again, wouldn't t hi 2 prou T E sire, I ore s e would who concerning 1 toward me I looked at Margaret, that yo she op - | while or t sbusing some sudden freedom advi srrogance of hers, though s! I gy 5 to conceal it, comes from one of The Larches, when that girl those two things, you may depend | Sy ehbyan ook autln ns mpon it.” ion together. And I Not for the first time I marveled 1d tell me discoverie Bt the way my mother-in-la make."” Bervations and deductions dove-tail- s an unconsclous @d with my own. I had found the volce which aro same thoughts con Miss Lin- v compassic ¢ red poln when I opened the compart- ays lis- ment of my brain where I had fil- ac- pd away my consideration of the t service puzzling problem the girl presented. mber- But T did not ag fuges 's ob- | wist- 1sed ith the pro- § St Imise that Eleanor Lincoln would of- i oriar fer physical violence to anyone Moth : believe who displeased her or thwarted her | seeret es- purpose. That the idea was fix other-in-law’s mind, h znlhed as she went on. Lillian was in my | wever, I E hing 1 | out, you may be sure,” I told her, “In the second place” she said, [and n he words, for 1 could ¥she's got the idea in her silly head | see no p reason why I couid that young Veritzen would make & | rot keep my promise &good pet poodle for her to drag Copyright, 1927, around, To do the chap justice, 1 Ieature find Newspaper Service, Inc. A Frightened Baby By Thornton W. Burgess That often fright |is pain, Experience worse makes ve —0ld plain. Mother Nature Mrs. Bear has her ha when she has a pair of cubs to look cut for. Yes, sir, she does < is a worried pe is Mrs, most of the time. You s the Great World there is no mischievous youngster ti Bear. Little cubs are just bri over with mischief, curiosi fun. They can no ke for any length of time than can a popular leaf in a breeze. Bear never knows what to expect. These two little cubs which was taking daily into the patch in the Old ture w Hvely youngsters as she had ever had. What one didn't think of, t other did. It seemed to her that they simply jumped from one scrape into_another. That meant that they were spanked pretty often. Mother | Bear believes that a good spanking for a disobedient little cub is the best way of teaching it to mind. But those little cubs were like other children in that they had short memories. They were no soonsr cut of one trouble than they were hunt ing around for another one to get | Into. | Now, aceldents happen to little | w114 folk babies, just as they do to | little human foik. Yes, sir, they do 0! It happened one day that on.: of | these cubs bezan digging up in the | ©1d Pasture. He had found a bum- | blebee’s nest and he was after the | little bit of honey that would he in that nest. You know there is no ng In the world that tickles a bea stomach like honey and he will almost anywhere and do Rnything to get it So this little cub’s nose told him that there were hidden there, he straightwa digging. His sister wasn’t with him at the time. She was busy pickirg | * berries a little way off. His mother | was doing the same thing. The it tle cub was chuckling hims over the treat he when suddenl nim by one paw frightened him 1 him. He iricd conldn’t. The more it h vened paw roots. e in such spring paw tog or spanking for a disobedient little Cub is the best way of teach- ing it to mind she ber) | | Y | i | | what %oots. H caught of those two r own paw that probably would at those rocts so in time to ma 1 it heer she have with would som« for t gone to er teeth, et h didn’t I B and tri and she herself seer as bad mother awing and think to do this She Lim to comfort him® > toel- is the ow cked over s5) The News Gets About.” BY SISTER MARY ced g gan to to more h seks. Moth didn’t k it first he knew tho t In ¢ ealled i AD HERALD CLASSIFIED FOR BEST RESULTS ADS dreac or sets. fly as she paw to find the By this time that litt hegun to swell, wl t iter, Yes, sir Mother B tle Bear @ pitifully topped all aro to find that trap, hut of course there wasn't any Tt was just those two roots, somehow Mother Bear didn't lit took h a old of but he eri trap. and know you wish vou | you | the | So Mother | Mother Bear believes that a good Menas for the Family | NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, AUGUST 16, 1927. Sally heard' her. | Sally had never known her to cry |like this. She had often cried to | get her own way, or when she was frightened about the pains that | came from over-eating, or when she was upset ahout Beau or Mabel. But this was different. She cried READ THIS FIRST: Sally Jerome, pretty and clever, Is | the prop and mainstay of her fam- ily in absence of her father, who has not lived with her mother for years. The fam consists of the twins, Beau and { Ml d Sally herself. Mrs. Je- | ¥ espa . b -hearted sort s MO e <o Sally | In @ despairing, broken-hearted Goes the housework momings, and | Of Way, and Sally kaew that there JE08% S NONSONOX S oM 5SRO0 | iwaa wome vesll cause‘for herigriet office work for Mr. Preve down | L 10W0 | 4is time. A R a0as, | Helpless for once, she sat back on In the tlat below the . e S Al S heels and for the s o S £ And 10 minutes or an, who wants Sally to marry SR d keep on working. But ol valsen only man who Interests her is faie John N se real esta 1 from M Pec s gone—again!” | up and reaching | L . £ that lay on the | ”‘)‘ i wiped Tier brim- | ISR yre she we deal, or she went sales- | eromes | 7 | her waited | her i | to nobhil pass. 1y swollen for her han o table eves with ¢ vo “I thought everything was going <o miccly. I got his breakfast for 11 then we sat down and had him talk. After that ot sandwiches yo oot | know—" she broke off mece or twice, and strug | self-control. littte | “After lunch we dressed and toward the upkeep of the house, | VNt fo the hotpial to Appnd (e and Sally frequently Borrows from | 2fternoon WAL BE S L TR Hc | her aunt, Emily Jerome. Aunt Em- | ¥hen we got homeabout 7 and T sat to turn 1 down to read a little bit in "The Princess Ragomar,” never thinking | but what yvou'd be home soon to fix up the and get supper.” lephoned—but no one an- Sally cut “T wo home at but me to what hee too."” looked at her coldly, in some way of blindsy But Millie woni she likes him a g honestly prefers a man namad Davidson, ¢ to get him a job with son develops a great sally, who will have She begs him to keep office, though, sence there will n Millie and N Beau and Millie give very | she tries David- Dess for I got lunch | fixed, you swallowed led for of away feeling 1ake trouble got jily home ally 2(raid Peevey. Beau g by means of rows the mo ¥ Nir. P nd cau, Tt Beau us girl, Mahel W Mabel use Mrs. Jerome’s present of m to buy a car, and Sally to pay both Ted and Mr Millie gocs o the hospital for an | Ti(ortune operation, and John Nye foots the | oy Py i vou should have been R A nd then ran on with her stor for John Nye, who offers her a per- IVEILRATonS Sl gt Bl manent p in his office when Mr n or so, your fathe e e the sitting room where 1 is to do. But Sally makes up ; ould you belicve | her mind not to take it. One night | /28 all packed and | while is working late for him | LM 8oing.’ he | Ted Sloan calls for her, telling her | JUSt the way it | that her mother wants her at home 0y foseny SN ™€ | house the same old pi at onee. Sally thinks it is for the ! 2ol ! e . I'm going back » | e purpose g supy ; & me rom.” And with tha he and Mr. Jerome and starts home ls i b { ed out just the She leaves Ted at the hack door of B it nine years ago!” She covered her | | face with her handkerchief again i rocked to and fro in hey very al agony / Sally watehed her for a minute or that there was noth- for her to do fter all, | no one of us can do anything in the and it of the hig misfortunes imagin- | come to those we love. Real trou- Lle has to he conquered alone, al- way | ir hut > job to fous from Ted o Sally bor- | to pay him from | turns it ov it to elope wi Lot ts some n 5 siv, bad chec work conld T ed and and to me, frs. Jerome 1 sally saw t r own, ally wan him, do but 10! was to hlame for whatever evey lie does her work 1t came was—and had his in his hand! ‘Bverything to no made, the wl as ho said. used she o als re s wa on me Sally had nes little kiteh way it looke side It was able The with with light in the wildest disorder was face iner was piled high | orange pecl, | hel More | floor under ket had | had spen r and it spilled soil- | Within the bed he linoleum ash-tray still fill g over the !and ashes, one was | papers. Two In t} “filled wit reigned , stood on the kitehen table. fand wrinkled, lay on the floor. The in board was stacked With | tub had not been serubbed out. Nor dirty dishes. There was a splash | had the wash bowl, a tomato catsup on the white wall bé- (B o ateatsmndse ot de the cuphoard. * from shavi A soiled bung: pronhadbeen| On the table in the dining room rolled into a & ball and thrown upon | Jay the dried-up remnants of the the little shelf that held the kitchen | ham sandwiches. and four soiled clock. Hidden beneath it the clock | napkins ticked loudly, as if it w The sitting thus being thrust out of s Jerome had been sink coffoe 1 cru shells st after a | ot left fier The Sally lay door of the the sink the nicht in stood open. been tipped ov the ed papers out onto A wet dish towel hy ck of a chair. Anothe 15 unmade, 1 with ci 1 floor litte nds thie with the same chaos cold mat, still damp r above soap. room dusty fr have had down wasn't so bad, and it did not i look that it As Sally stood mournfully at the bloszom her hegzonia hehind with ex- bt it have 11 shonld nt Tessie!” gasped | lookin nding her | pal Joor, taking it | plant her her Keepin Au st with Tie o gainst the mes i there another sound | came to her quick ears—the mutfled sound of sobbing from the front | part of t Lik h untidy kitchen, room and into her 10ther e and spoke once trem hitterness, “Of course there man behind all th man leaves his wife was across the | a meal isn't on time, across the dining | always have heen mother's this ¢ hor | rapa cares for more thah but through | for me and his children.” d of mourning | Sally wondercd. . She thought listress ca r again. | about the men she knew. They all witched o | 1 to love order and comfort. them—>r. Peevey, with 1y lunch that had to bhe s recintion of her neat side her coat and .| and her of sandwiches, to her kner Ted, who managed to arms around { lincn every day, althor p shoulders. | his suits until they b atolan late. Mrs. Yes, men we ever [ mals, and m must be a wo- ' she said. “No just beeanse There oman vour cares must bed- | in hat he And o mic { to him | his 2 upon y figur we ed with worlk Fven wear clean e wore sliny with a creaked v 5 on s bheside came her—tri But sign that she tried to comf d out what was wi no ng re nea f, orderly 14 ani- [ Jevome gave i - “IUs S0 nice to have a man at the head of the table again S Shoulders by BEATRICE BURTON, Aufhor o | that her father had told the unkind { of November. Mr. | overtime | n so good to Mil- | a4 figured it out that | to him. !'to see him. misfortune had just occurred in the | into | iy he did | { when "she that | & up and | he had | be a good thing for me to get away room her father | | this place! 1 on the mir- | { for her supper. well belicve | won't be véry happy when she finds that Beau and Mabel have taken her room away from her.” She was. pretty sure that there would be fireworks when Millie did find it out, as a matter of fact. And her eyes were full of shadow as she watched Beau hack the mcat to picces with a clumsy knife. Beau did not know anything about carv- ing. But he thought he did. He thought very well of himself, most of the time. And Mrs. Jerome help- ed him out. (TO BE CONTINUED) Your Health How to Keep [t— Causes of I/ness *HER MAN " / * HONEY LOU THE HOLLYWOOD: GIRLY ETC. he walked out of his v, luzy, careless truth when wife's happy-go-luc! life. But she did not say so. She saw that her mother wanted to think that another woman Yad stolen him from her—that she did rot want to blame herself for the thing that had happened. Poor lit- tle helpless Mother! So unable to manage things and make 4 go of them! - Let's forget all about est,” she said tenderl We'll get along together, you and T. Don't you worry.” And her mother clung to her as if she were the one safe and solid thing in.a wotld that \-:\Sl slipping away from her. Sally felt her tears on her cheeks and kissed them away. 1 it, dear- BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN To determine what happens to the enlarged heart of the athlete, two German investigators, Drs. Felix Deutsch and Emil Kauf of On the last .day of October Mr. |the heart station in Vienna, extend- lly that he was going e his office on the last day | of five years, examining repeatedly athletes who had shown enlarge- ment of the’heart following com- petitive training. Four hundred and forty-six ath- letes were examined in this study, some of them from four to six time For instance, to clos He told her just as he was leav- ing late in the gray, rainy afterncon. And after he was gone, Sally sat at her desk, staring at the ground- glass pane of the door that led into the hall. Through that pane she seemed to see John Nye at work in his office across the hall, as she had seen him so often. Hi k head hent over Dis task, his long, fine fingers drum- ming on the desk or nervously fid- dling with a lead pencil. Her heart | seemed to close around the thought | of him. Moved by one of those strong, ir- | resistible impulses that come 0 peo- ple only a few times In all their | lives, she stood up and walked across the hall fo his door. She had no idea of what she wanted to say he simply felt that she had one oarsman was first examined after he had had a half year training in rgwing. He then rowed less strenuously vear and followed this with some track training, after which there was again four months of the hardest kind of training in ro ing this -time he developed marked palpitation of the heart after rowing, and it that his heart had si He tinue his tra enlarged ing tentatively for two weeks, during which his heart [ apparently accommodated itself new conditions o that all of the symptoms disappeared. Evidertly the heart had enlarged to accom. modate new demands and was able to compensate for these demands when the demands were con- tinued. : The cohservers were also abls to study the hearts of some persons who had bheen examined fifteen cars before by another investi- gator. Apparently the hearts of some of the athletes had enlarzed steadily over this period. A phy- sician 45 years old who had been a champion swimmeér and up to the age of 43 had a sufficient change to indicate actual damage to the heart. On the whole, the obs does mnot vary greatly during period of at least four years athletics, sometimes five, the heart will develop rapidly and return to normal. Sometinses the of Mr. Peevey's office. | cnlargement is Indicated by symp- heaven that he wasn't | toms of palpitation, difficulty in there! Goodness knows how T would | breathing and a feeling of weight have explained my rushing in, if | over the heart, but in most in- been there! I guess it will stances the complaints are slight and so little noticed that the person trains on without dis- turbing himself about them. The physicians believe his near-sighted office alone, busily tap-tapping typewriter. Me stopped | glanced up as Sally came Miss Kri girl, sat jon her work and Mr. Nye fsn't here,”” she sald, as s eves go straight to the door of the privdte office. ‘He's | going out to a dinner party tonight, and he left early. I think he was going to stop in at Bethlehem hos- pital on his way home."” Bethlehem hospital! Where Mil- | lie, almost well now, lay waiting for him, surrounded by his roses. “1 sec,” said $ally, dully. whatever he might have said to him died in her heart, then and there. The eager light in her eyes went out, too, as Miss Kriss might have seen it she had not been so liear-sighted, poor thing. must have been crazy to go there at all,” thought Sall was back in the quiet And | outstanding a of over from this building next month. I'm losing my common sense around that That night when she turned into Trell ‘et the first thing she saw was Beaw's fiery red car standing beforg the house 1t was then that she remembered that tomorrow would be the first of the month and that he and Mabel had arranged to give up thelr flat on that day. When she went upstairs she found t they had not waited for the first, hut had moved in alread Their trunk stood fn the hallway outside Beau's old room, and within they were hard at work unpacking their suit-ca “Isn't it lovely to have Beau at home again?” Mrs. Jerome wanted to know when Sally went into her room to ask what she would like FLAPPER FANNY SAYS: e TANNY SAY [l Sally said nothing. She loved Beau with all her heart, but she | was not the least bit sure that it was & good thing for him to be living at home now that he was married. She hoped for the best, and secretly feared the worst But Mrs. Jerome had no such misgivings. Sally had not scen her so light-hearted since the departure of her hushand, two weeks before. “It's 50 nice to have a man at the head of the table again!” she cooed, beaming upon him like a round- faced sun as he carved the pot-roast at supper time. Well, I'm glad to be here. Moth- " answered Beau, grandly, as if were doing them a great favor by coming back home to live. “I wonder what Millie will say when she knows ahout it,” thought Sally, anxious m afraid she | REG. L. 5. PAT. OFF. ©1927 BY NEA SERVICE, INC. at nine saves time, TREE-TOD SNeORIES LADIES' HANDS ARJORIE'S Mother had a M room-full of ladies to tea one day. Marjoric sat on a chair and folded her hands, and held her back straight. . . . for a while. One lady sang a tong and all the other ladies listened, with emiles on their faces and their heads tip- ped 10 one side. The singing-lady shut her eyes some of the time. .. . and opened her mouth wide to let the high words come out. “When she was through," Mar- jorie eaid, “all the ladies’ hands flew up and clapped and fluttered like leaves in the wind.” 666 is a Prescription for Colds, Grippe, Flu, Dengue, dilious Fever and Malaria. I kills the guomse Mrs. Jerome beamed ed their observations over a period | { 50 it | for af was found in | was permitted to con- ! to | athlete ! rvation was that the heart size | in which ; | | is wise to study the heart in ath letes regularly and to find out whether or not an enlarged heart shows a tendency to increase in size or to remain unchanged. it tends to decrease or to remain for some time unchanged, son may be allowed with exercise control. The age of the individual con- It the per- | to proceed | but under careful | but athletic activities of men well cerned -is important. With ade- qQuate medical inspeciion, Athletic training may be perpitied 10 every person who possciees requi- site muscular development frrespec- tive of his age. The danger of com- petition for the voung scems to bave been somcwhat exzggerated, cn in adult life should not be per- mitted without rigid control. Quality Fresh Beef . Now Branded Swift & Company now brands the better grades * of Swift's fresh beef as shown below, in order that the retail trade and the consumer may readily identify them. Swift & Company New Britain Branch, 29-43 Commercial Street J. R. Andrews, Manager The Nationally Known VICTOR SAFE Improved The best for the office, home, rectory or li- brary. Sample now or our floor. You will be interested in the new features. ADKINS PRINTERS AND_STATIONERS 66 CHURCH STREEBT

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