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Adele Garrison’s Absorbing Sequel to “Revelations of a Wife” Beginning a New Seria When Philip Veritzen Confronts His | from the desire to soothe her as se my own con- science. ATter all, the girl had said 9 At Katie's apparently innocent |or done nothing upon which I could and natural query concerning the [lay a finger of criticism. Son at Dinner Party from a wish to e use of the best silver, china and lin- The radiance came «n for the dinner which was to wel- | face with a rush. come the arrival of Lillian and Mar-| “Ect von't be till T kick de bucket less you fire me,” she ntly, and prudently I left her to | h {happy plans for the dinner ion, T had occasion again to anath- | ematize the quick race of red to my cheeks. For I knew that undernes my little maid’s seemingly inno- |Was to grect Marion, cuous question lay a very clear and [adores nest to Junior. mischievous realization of just the| It was not only the cu of the dinner which w I had two much more | ng questions hefore guest T had said Lillian might bring, | concerned Dicky's probable nce of Phillip Verita v dinner table. T knew, ot of the great ing to me. |man's being Lillian’s escort to the It was, of course, impossible for farm would dispose of that problem | me to reprove her. She had given As for as Dicky's outward court:#y me no real or open impertinence, | Was concerned. He would be the | But the consciousness that she was |perfect host, no matter ant of my problem |his real feeelings on the subject. tnd amused by it made my voice un- The other problem loomed larger, nted more difficulties. culinary problem which confronted me. T was sure that she even ng me. <uessed the identity of the other|preple ind knew that it was Philip \'Frn-‘(n the pr zen’s expected presence at the wel- |at our f coming dinner which was so fluster- | however, that the mwardly cogni usually cold and my manner stiff as | pre I'repHed to her question. |cerned Noel Veritzen. “We will have things exactly as|violinist had become we always do for our honored guests,” I said. “Please prepare the dinner as you have just outlined them to|omyt him from my guests at le iaughter, and use the prettiest things we have. T will see to the| unthinkable. flowers and the arrangement of Hvr-t T did not believe, table the last thing on Saturday. Ir) you need any other assistance let me | table with his son, know | Katie drew herslf up haughtily and 1 saw that T had grievously of- ving over the d ended her. which the problem pr “Ven T need help feexing dinner | with the reflection th for you peoples T tell you qveck,” | candor was my only course, Noel Veritzen ~he aid, “Den it fime for me to|an opportunity to sc find a smaller place.” alone, “Let us hope that won't be for (Copyright, 1 News, many years yet,” T said, not =0 much tu Love’s Embers { marry him and kecp on work | Nye-N art of the family—he was a daily | nd was so dear a friend of | ith the di Marion likes, | Lillian's, as well, that I could not | dinner list. | me, prepare food for two extra(to have tim and his father — on st, besides our family [terms of total estrangement of years, | nd Mrs. Underwood and her |standing—mect at our dinner table, | unwarned of each other's presence, | Phillip Veritzen would | vounger man were willing to do so. | pent two almost sleepless nights Scivice, { Millie, but Millie Farmer Brown's Boy Becomes BY THORNTON W. BURGESS | If curios should end, | ‘ray, what to life wou —Mrs Iarmer Brown's Roy for the Old Pastu ries. He always likes to go picki blueberr] You s the blueherries in the Old Pasture grow on hi bushes, Some olor en, Coyot 1 started to pick blueber- hlueberrics grow on | very low hushes, so that one must £toop to pick them. Some grow on nigh bushes, <o that you W 1o reach up for them. It is the high- bush kind that grow in the O1a Pas- ture armer Brown’s Boy Mkes to | ing, because he s alwa su to se interesti things hen W great many people are at home in the Old Pasture, and often when he is picking berries Farmer Brown's Boy has an opportunity to watch them, No this is one reason he likes 10 o picking herries, This morning as le approach the Old Pasture he discovercd up in the blue, blue sky OI Mists zzard seeming to stay in one P it he were pinr atching something right down thou t IFarmer Brown's Loy. “I wonder what it can be. Hello, Blacky the Crow and Sarimy Jay are making a great fuss about something! They sound excited. They do s0; they sound excited. 11| | have to ee what is going on up | Long was there, for he had Doy (Copyrizht, 1927, by T. Roy Hesit o ce d there, “He | Fretted Brlm IFarmer DBrown's Boy hegan move quickly but ntly. Long| 120 he learned the need of silence, S0 he has learned row to walk with- out making . nols iom win vou hear the leaves rustle. 8o now he hurried he was taking the fest care to make no noise Onee in a while he would to look up fo see if O Mis rd was still in the same up blue, blue sky, He was, So rmer Brown's Boy would chuckle nd hurry on. 01 Mistah Buzzard | losen’t know 1 ) thiy N Brown's Loy, “hut 1. closely fi ed fo be tent is t in fre s he would- ere in that more noi: will he without that when animal of the dir hut he West i vere not v i i Lut still they were o play with the flowers leay . Soo Farnie Iirow 1 ; pia n ! [ re wo no | | ‘ n ace. You ; e it I I c in fur, and 1927 BY KEA SERVICE, INC o, depend on th s ! v do on their « for warni ering from a1 ry. very earefully takes a lo s Hoy crept over |to go to court. gs of 1 | to cheer her up. After | home, Sally, who has by her work in John Nye's office, is Mr. Peevey, who is shortly. Nye offoers | | her a job in his office, but she | malies up her mind to go with Aunt | given notice ¥ | closing his offic | O Mistah Buzzard scemed 1o stay | he is in the Old Pasture, You know, in one place since he had guessed squalling of Buster Bear's club. | as he crept forward Farmer Brown's watching for bears. The next story: “Farmer honnd with darker brown Al ) time-when WEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, AUGUST 18, 1927. READ THIS FIRST Sally Jerome, pretty and clever, is the prop and mainstay of her fam- ily in the absence of her fathr, who has not lived with her mo’h- er for years. The family consists of Mrs. Jerome, the twins, Beau nd Millie, and Sally, Mrs. Jerome enjoys poor health, so Sally does housework mornings noons. In the tlat below the Jeromes | lives Ted Sloan, who wants Sally to But the only man who interests her is John Nye, whose office is across the hall from Mr. Peevey's in the and he is blindly infatuat- 1 seere ed with her. Millie likes him a intends to marry him for his money | if she can. But she prefers a bond | salesman named Davidson. As luck will have Davidson is in love with’ Sally, whom he barely knows, B wards the upkeep of the home. Sally often has to borrow from her Aunt Emily Jerome, who wants her to £o into business with her when she | turns her country house into a way- side inn. | Beau gets some money from Ted | by means of bad checks. Sally hor- rows the money to pay Ted from and Bean Mr. Peevey, s it and elopes with his girl, Mabel. So Sally has fo start paying his dehts of hon- or. Beau uses the money his mother gives him for a wedding present to huy a cheap car E ed flat. But, although he and M Loth work, they cannot keep up the lome, and o they come bac for Sally fo take care of wecks pass by but tl board. Millio goes to the hosy appendicitis operation, Mrs, Jerom: sends for her husband and he comes but does not stay long. John Ny« ays for the expensive room trained nurse that he provides I not see him. though she asks Davidson to con cor ‘n doi Emily. One night che is wakened by a sound in the flat and dis Beau steathily packing a®suitcase in his room while Mabel slecps. OW GO ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER XXXIX For a minute it seemed to Sally that she must be dreaming. She stood there, rooted to the spot, won- dering why Bean was packing a suitease in he middle of the night Where was he going? . . . Why was he getling ready to leave the | house like a thief in the night? Like a sh the answer wrote Htself across Sally's quick brain: “Money!—It's hecause of money he knew ¥ au and his great weak- Then, like a flash she was in 1he room, bbnding over him. At the Jight touch on lix sho e | jumpea as if he had been shot, and turned auickly. Her whisper was hardly more | than a quick hre : “Come her Without a sound she was out of | the bedroom, across the hall and the dark dining room. She could 1 hehind he him paddling clo he groped for 1l living room to turn on the lights, They flashed up, and she faccd can tensely. Hoer lips dpened | stiffly, not to ask a question, but to state gfact e faken some more money. . . . Tell me how much 1t seemed to her that she had known for weeks that this would happen She was not like a girl of 20 in that moment. & was a woman with a woman's knowledge lookin ont of her blue eyes with their Tieavy shading of lashes But Bean wouldn't mect her look His eyes went from one cor the room fo the other — from x. Finally he ju “Beau, you'v or floor to the ceil flicked her, with that shifty g his. “What do yon mean, more mon- ey ?" he asked hitferly When ever take any money “Why, those had c} Ted Sloan,” replied Sally, w { Fow 1 forget 11 1 | she Tiad only hegun to pay them | for nim. “Oh, those!” Ilis voice w “Aren’t you ever goir throwing thos: Sallys Shoulders/; & RTON, Author GIRLY ETC. | by BEATRICE BU less with surprise. Then she began im—that he would for anything, Lis own thoughts. 5. Jerome preferred to E nd had left her of another woman, instead of admitting that it was because he | couldn’t live the way she wanted to h unmade bed; taken from and untidiness. at's the trouble now, Beau sked gently. “Please tell me never take the nd works | { for Mr. Pecvey down town aiter- ns or delica- it, this time. But maybe I can help.” he could see that he was in des- \e trouble about something. He mal in his ter- Sl lor building. Millle is Nye's HER MAN *HONEY LOU ° e, snapping. She was afrald that Bean might try to get away after all. The next morning at 9 o'clock Sally was marching up River road lon her way to Aunt Emily's. The house on River road looked just as it always did, facing the stern skles, and catching the pale itumn sunshine on its window anes. he only difference was that over the gate a wooden sign hung: THE HOUSE BY THE SIDE OF THE ROAD DINNERS IVED CHICKE! s! FROM 6 TO § He stood still for a minute, pick- | lingat his fingers nervously, looking wround the cozy, familiar room as if wera same place that he Then suddenly 1 and Millie give little to- | had seen before. | abor as suddenly, he swung I hack to Sally, and began to tell was wrong. I've taken some money, see?” he od, and his voige W T've just taken it. through your h Then he dooked squarely his light-blue eye: they'll @ome here for me—and that's | why I'm going now. I'm not going | be arrested, on his small wife | finished | speaking, Sally was ready with her But, Beau, it isn't going to Ticlp matters for you to run | tal for an | place, A 1 stared at her. He shook his handsome blond head dully, and, a | Sally looked at it, i how so handsome a head could hold | 50 many dishonest impuls } | [ want it for? | together with u snap “I would not Iy and sharply, ) and put hack the money you've taken. How much how did you manage to | overs Iy enough to glve m won't tell you how T got the money 1 was one grand.” ? How much i but what T |open the door she deposited a | “You kow I'd give my anything T had, don't you? But the | bitterness was | fiowe Tor {wo or thing to say. Bean's blank his lips har d his shoul haye to get from some- | it back and quit s no place | you'll have to put s\ h in the | yon to work w answered. | 17 YO0 and then think how shirt with whole ged cuffs if Mahel would A his shoulders lon't rub it in? looked ugly. nily.” Sally teld him. “If he'll Tend it nothing—1'a have paid | myself if you ha ‘]Ivf’ i board creaking or ‘By jinks, she's doing business ady!” said Sally to herself with umused twinkle ‘n her eyes. was like Aunt Emily to go ahead with her own plans, saying nothing to anybody about’them. There was nothing namby-pamby Aunt Emily. She stood on her own feet. Only she did not stand. - | &he ran. She galloped ahead. When Sally rang the doorbell a 2 woman answered it. A large, plump, comfortable looking woman with & p blue eyes, pink cheeks, and a smudge of flour on her apron fron Yes, Miss Jerome's here” she «aid in answer to Sally's question. he's in the office.” he led Sally into the small room | hat once had been the linen room f the big old house. It hai nothing in it but a desk | and two straight chair nd on one of the chairs sat Aunt Emily, look- ing very stiff and prim in a dark blue silk dress. “Well, if it isn't little Sally!" she, exelaimed when her niece stepped into the bright husinesslike little 1 what brings you ’‘way out here this morning She always struck straight to the heart of things. Sally wa quick. “Money,” said she. “Aunt Emily, would you lend me a thou- <and dollars and not ask what I s fine, firm lips came Aunt Emil she declared promptly and foreibly, ceause I'd know what you wanted | it for. Tor Millie—or for Beau! And they've had enough of my 1oy, thank you! She got up and brushed the palms of her hands one against the other, mc las it she were washing her hands lof the whole Jerome family. “Let me show you my dining room,"” , and as she Feld she s on Sal velvety flushed cheek. rest of the fami have had the | last nickel T'll ever give them.” The dining room was a beauty. The chairs and tables in it had been painted soft green 1d covered with chint here were black candlesticks on each table, and they Teld jade-green candles. The cu tains were the softest of white Cot- ted muslin, and on the floor were grean-and-white woven rug: At any other time Sally would have gone into raptures over the room. Tt {his morning nothing cculd lift the leaden * cight on her heart. Nothing could .aise the droeping corners of her mouth. dining of November, if aid. “And I'll pay you back that money, some- how or other, if on'y you'll let me have it. Beau some trouble “I don't care what Beauregard Jerome has done!” Aunt Emily shook her head vigorously. “I made for | mysel? poor to give to his father, nd to everybody else in the family, land T'm through!” She brought ler thin hand down flat and firmly on | the edge of the table nearest her to show that she meant what she ald. shily shrugged her shoulders. “Weli, where do I go from here?" 1 herself. 0 BE CONTINUED) she ask i ’ Menus ;07;;;;0!"”}‘ BY SISTER MARY ¢ — Sliced peaches, ed potatoes, bran Tire ham omelet, muffins, milk, Luncheon == ( with broiled tomatc amed spinach s, cress sand- | wiches, blucherry shorteake, milk, fish with vege- ned potatoes, cu- Tioi hro “Would you lend me a thousand dollars and not ask me w hat I want jt for ' Copyright, 1927, NEA Service, Inc. ] Editor Journal of the American health education {in the Teachers College of Columbia University, and Marion Lerrigo have developed a scale for determining whether the behavior of a child in relation to his health is normal and similar to the | age. health und vear. Safety Iy have heen establislied by the time . boys and girls hav sixth grade. Certainly the child should understand early in life the importance of sleep and rest, of proper diet, of fresh aid and sun- shine, of cleanliness, of the care of the teeth, the cars and the eyes. like her—direct and’ have to consider the problems of temperature in relation to stimu- lants of all kinds and perhaps learn and the home will have a signifi- cant part. tha kindergarten, have learned to drink a quart of milk daily in addition to other foods, to drink water several times daily, to eat slowly and chew food well, to wash the hands before eating, to use only an individual drinking cup or bubbling fountain, and not niece Sally | street, set before it without fussing, and to expect to have set before it only the things that are known as good foods for children. time how to play with other chil- dren and s wi games of all kinds. It can stand erect, sit straight, use the feet ternately in going up and down afraid to sleep in the dark and should know the importance of hav- has got himself in(o‘I be relatively obedient to its parents, attend to its bodily functions with- out undue curiosity or handling and be considerate toward bables, pets and weaker llving things. Tt will have enough of a vocabulary to expr B cumber and lettuce salad, pcach sherbet, milk, coffee. Blueberry Shortcake Two cups flour, 1-2 teaspoon zalt, 2 tablespoons butter, 2-3 cup rich sour cream, 1-2 teaspoon soda, 1 egg, 1 tablespoon sugar, 1 cup blue- berries, 1-2 cup sugar, 1 tablespoon flour. Mix and sift flour, salt and 1 tablespoon sugar. Work in butter and out in cream to which soda dissolved in a little warm water “as been added. Cut in egg beaten very stiff. Divide in two equal parts. Roll each part into a round sheet about 3-4 inch thick. Place one sheet in a deep round pan building the dough up the sides. Mix and sift 1 table- spoon flour with 1-2 cup sugar and mix with berries. Fill dough with berries, cover with second sheet of dough, press edges together and bake thirty minutes in a rather hot oxen. Serve warm with butter and maple syrup. Your Health How to Keep It— Causes of Iligess, BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN Medical Association and of Hy- gela, the Health Magazine Dr. Thomas D. Wood, professor of avior of other children of its The scales also permit a decision relative to the child’s success in rstanding from year to habits should natural- completed the As child grows older, it will omething about first-aid and home nursing. In developing these func- tions in the child, both the school The distinguished educators feel a child should, before it enters to cat at regular times, to exchange food with other chil- dren, or eat it after picking it up from the ground, the floor, or the It should expect to cat what s A healthful child knows at this ing to take turns in . throw and catch a ball, lift, or pile blocks, carry a small pail of water without spilling, and play happily. It should not be ing the windows open. It its mentality is right, it will its needs. TREE-TOP STORIES SONGS “ caclah! 0! La..la sang Rosemary. loved to sit on the fence and When ehe stopped she heard a tiny voice in the tree. It said, ‘ Rosemary looked up. There sat a Song-sparrow look- ing at her. “Sweet! Sweet!" laughed Rosem liked my song Once maore th aaid “Sweet! Sweet! And then he pointed his little bill straight upsto the sky and sang the sweetest song Rosemary had cver heard! Song - sparrow Pile Sufferers Can You Answer These Questions? Do you know why ointm s do not gi*e you quick and lasting relief? Wiy outting often fail 1o you know cause of piles 19 fn- 17 Thi’ there is a stngnation of blood elre ‘on in the lower howel? u know that there is a harm I nal remedy discovered by Dr. X t and knewn ae HEM-ROID, now by the Fair Dept. St nd drnect@ rverywhere, that is guarant HEM-R®ID banishes plles by the cause, by frocing bleod cirenly tha lower howe his simple home treatment has an almost unbelievable record for sure, quick and ing retief to thousands of pile sick suf and saves the neediess pain and expense of an operation. There 1s no reason why it FRould met da the eoma far gow Alphabet What did she spell? They were sitting. The sun was setting. He said, “You are the only one I ever loved.” She was a pretzeleer. She grabbed a hand. ful of O-So-Guds from the lunch basket. She bit rapidly and laid each completed letter on the green grass. The first three letters were: ARY Can you supply the other seven letters of this compound word and tell what her answer was? You, too, can pretzeleer, but you'd better cat about seven before you start making letters. The O-So-Guds ate s0 good it’s hard to stop eating to spell—unless you eat first, Uneeda Bakers bake pretzels brown, bake them brittle, bake them crisp, bake them crunchy. That's what makes O-So. Guds so good to eat and so easy to digest. And they’re salty. Pretzeleers eat pretzels with hors d’oeuvres, with soup, with salad, with des- sert, with cheese, with iced drinks, with tea, on picnics, between meals and all the Sther times there are to eat. Good for children. 0-S0-GUD ALo. .6, PAT. o7 0-50-Gud is & [full grown pres- zelalltiedupin knots. Who tied it? “Uneeda Bakers.” Ask JIM AL0. U.S. PAT, OFF. Not so big but just as good to eat. Slim Jim is long, lean, Tanky. Sold in handy NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY “Uneeda Bakers™