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PEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1927. Love’s Embers Adele Garrison”s Absorbing Sequel To fons p ife” “Revelations of a Wife Beginning a New Serial Mrs, Townsend Breaks Monotony at the Farmhousc As Katie at th od the name To abruptly to my f an excitement proportion to “Do you sout Mrs o8 with en T went right well oonts ity in which v 4 which more vivid- ) you mean to trailed off genulinely 1i) the bustlir promptly forg ) nd if it had not be ersistent n ory my brain, responding phione call would ny thrills 4 r to the butcl frs. Graham " voice, excited, almost my, ears. “Are you wgine it is shoes distributed Newspay Inc By Thornton W. Burgess The Last Goaxl Night While winter's s their vigil keep AlL little bears are fast aslecp. )1d Mother Nature Cubby heard his mother growl that deep, ugly-sounding growl of hers and he knew that some one llad looked in at their hedroon. Who it was he didn’ Tt Cubby felt perfectly he was With Mother she growled only once got it. Somehow he couldn’t sleepy. He twisted and turned once his mother reached out touched him to make him keép still. e had asked questions until Moth- cr Bear was quite out of patien: but there were other questions wanted to ask, Jt scemed such strange thing to curl up there und £o to sleep, knowing that he would | not waken for a lo , long time “It must be that W 16 thought Cubly. You Cubby, like all little ) of curiosity. “There m go on in our sleep that e e e X ey closcd for a long seem right to me. 1 PIETAN opened once mor were heing cheat his mother, out t+ Without thin} lig could sue ter aloud, and rig ne. “(00U-g004 aald In her said Cubby pily voice: “What b ere cheated out o “Of all the f hat go on plied Cubl “Huh plied *“You'd better storms and ather p everl can s know. until he | a “What do you feel that el A out o Just to 3 yawned. He had then Cubly e, Tt was py vawn, By time he had finished that yawn lad forgotten what it was he was Jout miss th know o wonder eyes closed. They opened - time Lookin the little ough on door, one twink away his mothe Mother fast asloen, main <o until of eot Mistre i rumbly-grum feel t you o you ‘good twins un and all the while oniin 55) i Rabbit [lis . Friends neig and in co he Pudding, 4 table- hear of 1 que grow Cubby to ¢ winter | wond: cup su- | and Sinus Trouble MOST ANNOYING OF ALL AILMENTS THE s, ear this up Ale according vorize CAMPHOROLE, and i CAMPHOROLE opens 1 the nose, and gets K the germs that mu This 18 narder to for germs 10 live jeed by CAM. and we at the PHOROLE. Keep a jar han! rst sign of a Watch For Particulars in the Newspaper At Next Weel [ An | Draggists Dr.Bri ’ Beare of <35) Substitutes you were | night, | pring | Menus for the Family 3 Severe Ilead Colfls_ . Money Love .. 1EAD Lily child ot THIS FII Lexington is the spoiled onl cxingtons, who TN she ibition when ey | older ! he he Cy | far beyond her com readizes highest a to wchelor lay after Wi town r chum, and s through oddly Drummond, ! « Impulsively forgetting Sue, home. She learns | s cab but is going | 1o finance | He | e other that will give him to work on the pis In the meantime Lily sces Lim as possible, and be- eply infatuated with him, ! seems tather indiffer- ward her after he her and reads about their in the paper. The date | wedding for carly in | and Lily decides that she is| wise thing in marrying whom she has a great and admiration. Sue Cain, 5 to be her maid of honor, tells her she's silly to even think of L poor cab driver when can a man like Staley, Lily almost contented the wedding go ahead. | butler | hired, money iion of his. ing into work that tim | Staley, gugement th is set June, Going the for and as liave comes plans for the One day Buller, the new that Mrs. Lexington has drives Mr. Lexington and Lily down town and runs his machine into a vy truck. Lily is hurt and knows | until she comes to in | with a train- her. She | badly n- | NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY | CHAPTER X | The nurse shook her head. “No, | {your father wasn't hurt very seri- ously,” she said, in her cool, low | voice—the kind of voice that all trained nur e supposed to cul- | tivate. “His arm was broken—that was | “Yes, and it would have heen his | he'd been killed out- | was Mrs. Lexington's | brisk voice from the doorway. She khad come into the room just in | fime to hear the end of the nurse's nswer to Lily's question. | “For y T've been begging him | to get 4 good driver for that car,” | she explaincd, coming 1o the bed- | side and sitting down. “You only have one car, so somebody has | to take him down town evcry morn- ling if we're to have any use of it | during the We really need a | chauffeur—or else another car in the family | The nurse looked puzzled. “But 1 thought you did have a driver m; the car this morning,” she mur-| | her a bitter driving. said, “And it | was the fi had ever taken | r out, I in his life. Of | | course I shouldn't have let him go| fon a rainy day like this, but T did | and that's all there is to it.” ! Was Buller hurt? asked < her head a little on the pile There was a sharp pain at the peck as she did it. She as if had been nothing ted in ) more r own room, vering over father was own fault if right:” It we day. mure Mr: smile. Our house xington Onr gave or | was man,” she st time e self, turr lows back of her v ached all over, | pounded. “Not much—but the car was crumpled up 1k dion,” replicd Mrs. Lexington, her | mouth tightening and her thick, | light eyebrows coming together in | ta frown. “It will cost a small for- | [ tune to @ it repaired. T just told | your father that we'd better get a new one instead of fooling with the | old one. 1U1l be cheaper in the long | ! | » gilt telephone | from the table beside Lily's bed and | held it in her big, white hands, | whilé she went on | “I made a mistake when T hired | ! uller,” she said firmly. “Instead of | hiring a house man, and then teach- ing him to drive the car, T ghould have hired a driver for the car and {hen taught him te wait on table and polish the silver—and that's T'm zoing to do now!" put the reeciver to lier big, e« number 10 she hood of the i accor- | he picked up t She 1o ear, ral Lily k vunber of down town number, Tt was the employment office | where Mrs, Lexington serub women and far W the the had gardeners for could remember. Mrs. Cyrs hack as | “Hello ton Tex- hegan in an then went on This 1kin is ingi important voic that feur “An A-1 stand?” she best you have list. (L want him for all sorts of house- Told dutics, 100" LAy “po 1o say she to hire a under- | very you “The on your finished. one the eyes and of her voic: who knows what some hook clost s swift flow L womin Kk upen nd looked r daughter's eyelids and 1 forchead Staley, poor ton too,” s soft 1 litt] times tod said, her “He's e “n here three nt a whol Jwnstair dear slowly and L damp air, com- windows, lled of lilacs con of ross open Tt s and of 1 sweet Yo down in the fill 1) fow weeks th lding. would marry S eep them down Mot he ithout lifting her heavy 11 of flowers makes ves yar wer te house with roses again in Yellow roses For the day when ley Drummond. oW airs, o s iy without moving or speak- il her mother and Miss nurse, went downstairs cir ecarly dinner and she was left alone in the darkened room. Perhaps it w the smell | |of the wet fragrant air brought back | s hecans | Pat | theater trihps with him, | cation cara. 1like 2 ing 1o | hersclf By Beatrice Burton of “Sally’s Shoulders,” “Honey Lou,” “The Hollywood Girl,” Ete. | “Everybody has a closed car these d ays,” she said plaintively. Iaid it on Lily'’s breaktast tr On the following Wednesday as well cnough to go down on to her the memory of another rainy day, only a few weeks before, that she found herself thinking again of France. Lily | town shopping trip with her mother. | They were going, not to pick out | clothes, for once, but to buy a n automobile “Wasn't it just like not she ‘asked Lil | stood outside with ma’ e All through the month of April she had been so busy with = Staley that it had been casy to stick to her resolution to forget Pat and his blue eyes and his piston ring. The your father | bitterly, as they a show window filled | polished cars of an expensive | neve Knew ch a man. He ™ st ha to spend a -cent | piece, doesn’t he? He told me he | couldn’t afford to keep up the in- | surance, it you ever heard of any- thing so silly!” She gave a sharp and bitter sigh. | wish the closed the me price as the open ones,” sl said, plaintively. “But T suppose we'd better get another limousine. | rybody has closed these ~and it would look odi to sce chauffeur driving an open one of | anyway wouldn't it?" i Did the v med | chauffeur?” asked nt, | the idea of ridin herself. Mrs. Lexington nodded, opening door of the show room and pushing Lily in ahead of her, “Yeos. He out to the house early this morning—hefore you we awake, I guess,” she answered, | very nice looking voung chap he too. . 1 never said a word to him abont waiting on table and 50 on. I thought I'd break it to him gently, after he started work.” pat was sensible,” Lily said, in lovely Fou surcly do how age people, with tele- calls from him, that she had to think of anyone | phone had little, time but him. And when she wasn't with him, he was always sending her things | that reminded her of him—flowers, candy, books, magazines, perfutes, Russian ¢ , hook pean tray It almost secmed s if he were putting up a silent battle to keep her from thinking ot anyone but hinr, and o thing but her honeymoon with him and her life afterward, But now, in the still twilight tnis May night, she forget him most. The thought of him to be lifted, like a heavy from her all at once. Her eves went to of the room, where table, draped with lace with silver toilet hottles and brush- stood. Under the ~filled padding of the left-hand drawer was something that she wanted. he sat up in bed. one I to her aching, bands swung her feet ove stepped out upon the rug. Dizzily she went across the room. opened | the d r and groped for the thing she wanted—a taxi driver's identifi- cars woere cars send yon m Lily. who liked S5 around in sty the far corner | lher dressing | and covered the came was, nd held lier know Mother. “I certainly do!” Mrs. Lexington threw up her chin profdly. “If 1 ¢ didn't we couldn’t live as well as we renthing, Hand {do, Lily.-T've managed and twisted Beside the bed was a little green- |2nd turned things all my married shaded lamp with the gayest of but- | life, to make some kind of a show- terflies painted upon it. | ing among our friend Ana 1 It was an effort for Lily to reach | voice, to m When she got back to hed ghe s tived as if she had taken a mile walk. She fell across it, to have the old car insured?” |number of deaths from he made up my mind years ago that vyou'd never have to do it! 1 made {up my mind that you'd marry money | or I'd know the reason why ‘v The automobile salesman came up | to her and she began to tell him | { what she wanted in the way of a | | car, and how much she would pay ’110\\ n on it, and when she would pay | the rest. Lily listened to her in awe admiration. . . She surely wonderful manager! (TO BE CONTINU Your Health How To Keep It— Causes of Illness and | was a | BY DR. MORRIS FISHB Editor Journal of the American | Medical Association and of Hygela, | the Health Magazine | igures continue to accumulate t to the importance of various pations in relation to dis ol in th : accurate available of the number of persons | engaged in various occupations, of the time that they have been en- gaged in such oceupations previous to death, or of other actors that ought to be known in order to judge aceurately in this matter. Heart ments Lead | The department of industrlal hy- giene in Columbia university recent- Iy made a careful study of a select- «d population in New York city con- cerning whom scientific records could be had. It was found that tuberculosis still is excessive in in- Austry as compared with the country as a whole, but that it is now sur- passed in importance by diseases of the heart Cancer is relatively more frequent among those who are not working than among those who do indulge in industrial labcr. The proportionate incr e in cancer L no greater mong workers than among the gen- ral population Apparently the fow ase in the rt disease | is not due to the occupations, but rather to the fact that less persons dic of conditions such as tuberculosis | and they therefore succumb to heart di incr Drain hemorrhage, various forms { of y wd chronic discases of | FLAPPER FANNY SAYS: ik, i REG.u.s. paT. OFF. ¥ (__orse27 oY nea stavice. . The the girl who smokes the most has prettiest hands. ! cver and turn it on. Then she held the card under the light and Pat | rance’s face looked up at her, She | let out a weak little whimper as she saw 1t Pat. Timself, look- ing at her! Pat' The sound of his veice came | to her, and his smile. And her '€ for him—ihe very thing she had tricd o forget—eame rushing back | ten times stronger than it had cver been before. T've got to see herself, her bright h pillews of her bed, and the card crushed together in her clenched Land. “I've got to have him.” t She 1t wis sure of it | as she never had been before—and at the she knew that in liss than o She was going 10 marry Staley Drummond, She must think of no one hu She thought could give he The tri where the most the world were Lor eheck the country Th The him!” she told i down in | ‘ .'7 knew She came st ings e | » to Paris, wonderful clothes in | riting for her and © town house and that were to he monds that she would | (utomobiles. The good boolk bers have times And suddenly she didn't matter a bit ordinary, humble man named Pi rick France. A man who could give | Ler nothing hut poverty and a hard life—and who apparently had no desive to give her even A man 4 humi ed h and shown v ler or Lier company. aid my pieture " she thought, mis- nder the orchid- “he took th thought 7T vhole thing was | knew that they compared to an This fs an extremely cusy puzzle. Time yourself and sec how quickly you can complete it. who h: Although 1 out of the pi crably, curled up silk quilt on the only b pretty hopeless A half founl drying on her face, crumnled pico Lled up in Miss Sykes looked Horizontal Courageous, To ren 0. Like Portal. 1. To accomplish By. . Rich part of milk . To stitch Musical dramas. To cuddlr Having a flat surface. Spot. . Menmber Cover . Seized. Delayed. . Cubic meters. Ruff. . Coppe . Rubs dry. . Seventh letter phabet Abbreviation for “road.” Purifics. Printe: measure. Tiny brown tumor Stepped upon. Vertical No hovr later Miss leep, with and a soils cardboard hand moothad it raph on it euri- ously, I ked down at Pily, with Staloy’s engagement dia- tmond sparkling upon her left hand Sylies ars and | dou- her somnd ont an; of the carp family. “Ho, hum!"” said Miss Sy his doesn’t look like the beginning of a very happy married life for Mr. Staley Drummond, dos [ L Her face Was grave thoughtinl She knew a thi Lt nd about love, nurse finds ont mo i hings than most people do. | 47. Being & kind-hearted soul, she | slipped the card under the embroid- cred of the bedside table where Lily's mother would not find it whe canie upst s to Bee that her daughter was settled for the night. And in the morning she to in the Greek al- or two about too. A trained 45 about hoth of | 46 . Alleged notism . Not broad or general. Pertaining to the ba Aquatic bird. cover force producing k. . To win all the tricks In piquet. | hyp- | TIME THIS PUZZLE —_— | . Domesticates. . Ah! ala 0. Aftermath. . Divided. rond note in scalc . To picture, . Reproves. . To frighten. . More uncouth. . To rob. . Chest hone. . Decorous. smperors. . More recent . Opposite of winner. Eighth part of an ounce (pl.) To strain, L1416, . Sun god . Therefore. ANSWERS TO YESTERDAY the kidneys do not seem to have in- | cial thes » creased greatly among workers in|tect theni from injurious substances the last ten years, nor do they seem 'in their work. They are demanding to show much change in the general short hours in dangerous occupi- population. tions and specified times for Special Clothing tion In Russia, where workers seem to e cvidence be in charge of governmental con- \any occupations contain in- ditions, the People’s Labor commis- hazards and that the in- sion s fostering legislation for in- cr of mechanization of human dustrial hygiene, requiring employ- life is bringing with it new diseases ers to provide employes with spe- and new causes of death. vae, seems to be clear that dustrial One of the prettiest afternoon frocks in Worth's latest col- lection is a blue satin model, suita- ble alike for matron and debutante. It has a scalloped col- lar extending to the of light blue silk which contrasts e cellently with the dark blue. The pleated girdle around the hips is held with a brooch of light blue and dark blue stones and Worth has put a flower on the right shoulder, Christmas Gift Suggestions You will find many attractive and useful gifts on display at our stove. Something for every one, at unusually low prices Boek Ends Photo Albums Scrap Books Pencil Boxes Postage Stamp Albums Key Containers Paper Doll Sets Diaries Paint Boxes Adinco $1.00 Fountain Pens Bridge Sets English Playing Cards Cooking Recipe Books Writing Paper Bill Folds Card Cases Brief Cases Line-a-Day Books Cigarette Cases Sheaffer and Waterman Feuntain Pens and Pencils ADKINS 66 CHURCH STREET Ask fora Freg Bridge Pad when in the store. It Takes Time to learn how to operate a dairy most effectively, just as it takes time to learn pro- ficiency in anything else. The fact, therefore, that we have been engaged in this work since 1886 is an import- ant one. It is an assurance that we have learned how to produce dairy products that please, and continue to please, the people we serve. [DIOMNE [R[R] NTU] NEEN BREN [N [FIAINTG]S B TIS[AIR[S] J.E.SEIBERT & SON Pasteurized MilR & Cream Nake Sure Its Seiberts” PHONE 1720 437 PARK ST, NEW BRITAIN, CONN/