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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD Love’s Embers Adele Garrison Absorbing Sequel To “Revelations of a Wife” Beginning a New Serial Madge Undertakes Tutor Miss Jing He turn ahall fly f as 1" she that refers to 3 tell you old Sir Walter didn't adge or he'd have m that ¢ refer to her. Better let her ou won't get you will from ten to four * I reminded him, Lincoln would better k hours most suited to q 1ot urned att numpe s resi nd her face looked e about to bre R she torted, “ot ou stand fit, from ahout away wo days before 1th until adway an astonishment | hard work to conceal to speech. For 1f ever voman who genuinely life ring the She could not y from t t i3 Lillian, to stay aw W a little different Wit everybody acts as v had died and been By Thornton W. Burgess Terror 1s ¥ooled When plans of oth We scldom face the unex: —O1d Mother ipset b Te hiding. 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Grouse, fn the part of the and 1 just Why, we A MERDER WIDOW GUARDED P N 1 1 -On R \ tirst prize ranking senior co-ed iu p he University Utah, Salt Lake City. o concern- | Money Lov READ THIS FIRST: Lily Lex ghter r moth Pl W of the Cyr fc s Lexingtons. ms are comes engaged chelor named Staley Drummond and the wedding date fs set for J The poses Lily goes down town to meet her friend, Sue Cain, and on the way sees a man watching her through the crowd. She is instantly attracted by him and then ehe sces that he is a taxi driver. She jumps into his cab, forgetting Sue. and s driven thit his name s owns the cab in by his friend, to a rich I a compar caded Roy Jetterson. He is going 1o sell it, 50 to r money toward marketing a piston ring that he has invented. s the days go by that she is too much in love him to marry Staley who has learned of her friendship with Pat and is suspicious of it. But Mrs. Lexington announces engagement and the plans for wedding go forward. Just about the time Lily slened herself to life h Pat comes to work at the house Mrs. Lexington's chauffeur! He taken the job, he admits to Lily, just ccause he wouldn't resist the temp- | tation to be near her for even a few wecks before her marriage. From | that moment they are together con- stantly, and Carrie, one of the I housemaids, who is in love with Pat herself, gocs to Mrs. Lexington with | the story of their attachment and then leaves, ordered out of the house by I with | marry Staley, because she | would make a poor man's wife. He takes Lily to his own home, intro- duc to his father and mothe: who both work in their little grocery next door, and to his sister, Flor. | ence, a snappy young flapper who is overwhelmed by Lily's clothes and | diamonds and furs. The next morn- ! ing Mrs. Lexington tells Pat he is to | wait on table that, night, and when he refuses to do it, discharges him. {Lily hears the argument, dress I herself in the best clothes she land goes out to his room above the garage, to see him. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER ton is the spoiled only | day after Le pro- | Lily realizes ‘ Drummond, | | | | both shaken | as standing beside the table | |in the middle of the room his suit as Lily threw open the stepped inside, shutting i her. She stood there for a moment { 1ooking at him from under her thick lushes—as unbelievably beautiful as a magazine-cover portrait of a mod- {ern girl. Perfect from the crown of spun copper hair on her head to the | toes of her pale-pink kid “spo 1se, door ;L won't He glanced up startled, | and | it behind | | shoes with their high French heels. | Later on Pat was to learn that all | that breath-t money—tha treatmer \king loveliness the bright hair I and shampoos e week, that the ivory skin owed much | of its mat whiteness to a certain | pearl powder, and {opened c {1ar shade hec: lipstick that very heaut aid particu- small French stick and . Lily but 1y always, S mon Rut lid not know all of the things on that May morniv Lily scomed to him like the very nification of the epringtime v outside the windows of his room — part of the apple-blossoms on a tree across the road, part of the sunshine, part of the green and 1d and the blue of May. you're not going’ pered so that Agnes, ing up dish towels In the yard out- si would not hear her. “You're ng without e, Pat! T won't T can't.” me close to him and her arms around his neck. She him a kiss that all warmth and perfume and soft silken lure, you don't take me mow, Pat, Tll ver hava the courage to leave (ter you're gone. Tl think lon't want me. Truly, T will.” Pat held her v from him, his hard, hrown fin, ts, his eyes on hers. it it means i you go with me? wsked. “It means hard work and dresses and a tiny place doing all your own work. 1, naturs to looks he ve wr live in and | | say e whis- | who was hang- | | chin when it whimpers. The change put. | S| | of shock sprang to her eyes. | you | closed on her | on know | to | ind ironing and scrubbing | ind eooking.” For a second Lily he Not hecause that him. She knew she loved thinking of old ircss, who washing every of her hands, ter and soap suds, Jing calico apron, with Il of clothes pins. She i looked at her smooth fingers. Could they 1and wrinkled like old itated sl s loved Tut she Herb e lau ons’ She tho from ot so) pockets ddered ik-tipped ome sh Anni “Well my own ¥ De- T reckon T could do even " she whis- smiled up at him. "I mind washing your shirts, * She laid her head against snowy pocket of the one he had could feel his heat beating she held him closer to red the most precions rtul person i the whole T can't live if you don't take solemnly, and meant had meant anyth don't take with ver you me & way she want- ver really had wanted iyt ore. ANl the things had had seemed than not to her in that moment when she was Pat France to marry he harely thought of an; barcly thought of Staley Drum- mond and the suite he had engaged liner for June the fif- Nothing was real to hands red-brown \ding her wril ing steadily v pocket of his shirt 1like a thief,”” he sald, low in ir, “taking you away from all | this and giving you notBing but a 1 hin less them, her « | 10oked at it—not THURSDAY, “Pat, you're not going!” she whispered, Pat tells Lily the best thing ‘ lot of hard work and no fun at all. | bit now than it was for her to be he can do is leave, too, and let her | . . We won't even have an auto- never | mobile unless I can borrow one fron Roy every now and then.” Lily crinkled her nosc up at him and laughed. Her eyes were starry with happiness. “Oh, you foolish kid!” she said to Lim. “Don't you know that your piston ring is going | to make us ri I'll have ever thing that Staley Drummond's wife ve in a few years, and I'l ave my own Loy begides.” &he kissed her own boy on the tip of his hin, and was smothered in hi and swept from her feet in a wild embrace that left them and breathless. o and pack up a few things, too!” she told him after a minut or two. “And we'll go right away we?" Still quivering and tingling with cxcitement, she ran into the house nd up the back stairs to her own | room. Her mother was walting for her. | was sitting in the window seat and in her hands she held the pad- ded hanger that had held Lily's | orchid-and-pink dress a few minutes before. Her eyes were narrowed un- til they were gleaming slits in her face, and one foot tapped the floor | in nervous anger. “I didn't com » said. a on ah | in here to sp “But o your wedding morning, to the very last pearl embroidery, and I it in here to hang it up. hen T found this"—she waved | like a flag—"lying on the closct fioor. And here you in one of your trousseau dre Now, what did you put it on for? Just to bye to that chauffeur it finisl o say goo¢ out in the “I didn't say good-bye to him. wered Lily, wid yed a an in- 1t child. “I'm not going to say good-bye to him. . . . I'm going to good-bye to you, Mother and e. I'm leaving with Pat.” It she had struck her mother o hard blow between the eyes she! could not have amazed or hurt her more. Mrs. Lexington's proud, cold ce lost its look of pride and cold- ness in an instant. It seemed to crumple up like a withered flower, and her chin shook like a child's | to this ho) o swift that it wes like magic Her hands flew to her face, pre ing it hard as If she were trying to hold it in shape — to keep from breaking down and sobbing. Tears Tell she to You don’t mean it! don't meant thi You mean you want marry that—that ehanffeur?” Lily nodded, and dragged her pale-gray bags from the closet. As she bent down to do it, the looped- of Tier wedding dress “Lily! me you hegged. up court-trai brushed her fa She took it its hanger and | it it belonged vere some other | satin and embrof from as if it 1 of white d-pearl to her, bu rl's brida soft lace safd to her | speaking 1o | mother, ual A half hour hefore, stood in the Little writing 1 hegeed her mother 1o to do about Pat Fran she would have been ready and will- | ing to take advice and orders. . | She had felt young and helpless and hen she had | oom down- 1 |in need of her mother then, | hov | de I by jiltir | shell- | er's skirts eft t {do any | | mother's mis | But now she had made her own | decision-—her decision to leave the | e and marry Pat France. Her | ision to set a whole town talking | one, its wealthiest | almost the altar, with penni of bachelors at and running away a chauff | She her tortoise- articles into | As she did it, she lo of her moth- he She to put toilet hag room 5 herse . 1 her to up an awtul runmpus it Mrs on was far frol and v ery fa from tak- news calmly, as Lily might known is she had stopped to | But she was far too happy to straight-line thinking her- | was caught up into o 1 of sunshiny happiness, from | h she saw such details as satin gowns and jilted lovers as golden mist. Even her y did not mean very just then. “Besides,” thought dimly, “she wouldn't be | happy if 1 married Staley and I was | wretched forever after. No, it was better for her mother | calm ing th have think. solf wh wedding through a much to her to rant and cry and threaten a little | By Beatrice Burton Author of “Sally’s Shoulders,” “Honey Lou,” “The Hollywood Girl,” Etc. | thinking, as sh | herself! | they're .down on their ! Lily |1 conld jago. And I didn't ym: {T'll do what you ask me to, although | down one side. DECEMBER 15, 1927. 1 think it's a silly thing to ask Lily came up to him. He had taken off his working clothes and looked very handsome in a _dark blue suit and a grey felt hat. He put his arm around her. “Your mother doesn’t want us to get married for 24 hours,” he said, looking down at her lovely flushed tace pillowed on his ahoulder. Quite shamelessly she raised it to him for a kiss before she spoke. “Yyby not?" she asked (TO BE CONTINUT | Your Health | How To Keep It— i Causes of Illness | |many and that other (passing through exactly | does not come when I call him? Punishment Many parents are more interest- led in punishment for wrong actions than in the prevention of wrong ac- [stand 15 minutes. tions by studying their causes. One | and stir in flour. of the great advantages of group study is the realization by the par- ehts that their child is only ene of parents ar the sam of experience, he child’s behavior is the result not only of its physical nature, but also of the environment in which it | lives. It reacts to all of the per- sonalities that surround it. An in- telligent parent will sec to it that the child is given an opportunity to react to normal situations. A lack of Intelligence means the building up | of neuroses. | typ Menas for th:fiamibi BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN Editor Journal of the American Medical Association and of Hygeia, | the Health Magazine, | | Some time ago I suggested that | |the most important problem in pub- |lic health of today was to make the | | parent know as much as his child |is learning to know about the or- | ganization and care of the body. The parents of today learned little | lof these things in tha schools of {their time. Today, anatomy, physi | ology and hygicne begin to be a part jof the child's education from the {moment it enters its first school | room. |" w0 meet the deficit, there are, all | over the count parent-teacher soclations and associations for par- ent education which aim to provide | | something in the nature of graduate | | human i {instruction for parents who want to be as helpful as possible. | Face Dificrent Views Many parents have attempted to learn all that is written by special- | ists in psychology and by doctors, | ad find themselves in confusion be- sorry later that she had stopped her |cause of divergent views. They ab- from marrying the man of her choice, even if he was a poor man. . Much better. nd money can’t mean £o much to me after all,” Lily went on packed three tube- like dresses and three sets of silk- en underthings into the big pale- gray suitcase. “For I don't fecl very blue about leaving everything behind and going to ve on bread and heese and kisse But ehe never had tried bread ind cheese and kisses. She knew nothing about poverty, never hav- ing tasted that, cither. And she certainly did not know | Most people don't until luck. She | had heen. | Lugging the two bags, she went | down the back stairs into the yard. | As she reached the back porch the | sound of angry voices came to her— her mother's and Pat's. They were having a heated argument, standing in the driveway under the glare of the sun. A few feet away from them | Agnes was watchiflg them and e tening to them, eyes, "ears and| mouth wide open, ; | “—It's the only fair thing to do!" wight the tail end of some- | thing her mother was saying. “And T insist that you do it. She doesn't Jnow her own mind. You're simply sweeping her off her feet, and you know it!” She brought her palms together smartly. | Pat's lips tightened. “A Al have it your own way, Mrs. L ton,” hie said, with a politencss that | did not hide his anger. “But if I'd wanted to sweep her from her fee have done it eight weeks There were times when I wouldn't let her get into | cab. When I lied to her—told T was busy and drove away. But but they are not provided with the | definite instructions that they need | {to handle specific situations. The parent education groups are planned | primarily to help in systematizing [the knowledge and in aiding in the | specific instances | In a consideration of the sub- | ject, Mi Edith D. Dickson of lhrzl Institute of Minnesota points out that it is necessary for the parent to look for cau ing | : ad of mak- ling judgments concerning the child's | | actions. | | | | sorb great amounts of Phfloaophy,l | | | Instead of asking, “What shall | T do to make John behave?” the parent as “Why is it that Johw ne Saucily Loope;i A saucy chapeau, this, that lifis the veil from the face and loops it | Three and Five Letters Courage. Morindin dye. Sleeps titrully Large fresh-water mussel, Tiny grains of disintegrated rock. Burden. Exists, A tenacious grasp Achieves. Half an em. To revolve. Stowed away Sea eagles. To drive. Baker on a stove. A strong taste ntric wheel, Frozen water. Narrow gully between Yellow Hawalian bird. cdominate In this puzzle. Also, there aro very few unkeyed lotters. HORIZONTAL To ascend. Buckthorn (shrubs) Clearer. Snake-like fish. Collection of facts Coat of mail. Measure of area Peg. Sun god. Card game, Turt. Silkworm. Street boy. Arid land. Objects of very fine grade. aphs in a newspaper. To deca Iistimated perfect score in golf. Toward. Yellow bugle. Within. Answer to Yesterday's Type of prepared tobacco. g%m“ IRIAVIE] Lair of wild beast. Unit. [O[R[EJIH[O[RIN]S IRTIED] Polnted. To monopolize. Apportioned. VERTICAL | brownies, | By SISTER MARY | BREAKFAST—Northern spy ap- | ples, cereal, cream, baked l'rfnch‘ toast, milk, coffee. | Luncheon — Surprise potatoes, hearts of lettuce with French dress- ing, canned strawberrles, chocolate | milk, tea. | Dinner—Breaded veal cutlets with tomato sauce, candied sweet pota- toes, beet and celery salad, rice and cranberry pudding, milk, coffee. The surprise potatoes suggested in the luncheon menu would be nice to serve to yvour luncheon bridge club. | Particularly 1f a “one-plate” lunch- s the custom. Too often th rious concoctions served on one plate seem to spread and everything gets mora or less mixed up. | Surprise Potatoes Four potatoes of uniform size, 3 | tablespoons butter, 1 slice onfon, 2 | tablespoons floor, 1% teaspoon salt, 1% cups milk, 1 can crab meat, pap- | rika. ! Bake potatoes until soft. Cut a | eross on flat side of each potato and fold back the skin. Scoop out in- | | § |a lew fire for three minutes. [:Ade and put through a ricer. Sea- son with salt and pepper and fil’ potato shells about one-third full | Melt butter with onion slice agd let Remove onion Cook and stir over Slow Iy add milk, stirring constantly. Add salt and paprika and bring to the boiling point. Add crab meat and keep hot over hot water while pre- paring the potato ca Fill cases with ereamed h, cover with riced potato and pull corners up toward center. Drop a bit of butter on to; of each potato and slice in a very hot oven to melt and brown potato. The potato should be piled up in the (Copyrig N Service, Inc.) FLAPPER FANNY S REG.U. 5. PAT. OFF, ©1927 BY NEA SERVICE, INC. Stealing a kiss isn't always petty larceny; sometimes it's grand. This model by Lu- cien Lelong is rose pink crepe de chine with a shoulder or- nament of pearl em- broidery. From the ornament float two circular panels of pink chiffon. The dress is cut on sim- ple, straight lines held in with a nar- row belt. Flaky —Light —Tender! Hot biscuits made with Rumford!...for any meal! Always digestibls e when Rum- ford is used. Quick to make—only 20 minutes from start to finish! Serve them often—hbut always use RUMFORD The Wholesome BAKING POWDER Encils a Baking R979 A ] ARRIAGE to the man she loved. A home. Happi- ness. Life could hold no sweeter promise to a girl re- turning home from college to fulfill her destiny as George Abbott’s wife. But from the hour of her return she felt within her soul that some mysterious and sinis- ter influence was at work to destroy her happiness. There were strange fumors lin ing the name of the man she loved with that of @ woman who had becomean outcast of society — rumors that he denied with January Trapped Movie M Married When the Past Inside a Mothe Tsed mercy. Deadly drug. Limb. Constellation To sin. Kingdom. IN[ T G OL D] [o[T]o] 1011 1PIL[O[EMGIEIVISIEIR] (STYNISRIEIEITIREIRIE] “Lion.” Contents She Couldn’t Escape Love BJ Destioy a Her Last Moment Did1 Do Right? ispering Toogues The Two Womea He Hell's Highway He Wanted Children Stronger Thaa Pride fury—yet which hecould not explain. She wanted to believe he was true —that he loved her and her alone— that he was the victim of 2 plot to shield one of the most highly re- spected men in the community. She litle dreamed that even then she herself was the central figure around which a terrible drama was about to unfold. She could notknow that she was 5000 to wage 2 desperate, even tigerish battle for re- spect, honor, all that a good woman holds dear. If you want to peez deep intothe secret re- cesses of a woman's soul, don’t miss this heart-rending story from slx:fe, W)Jnen So- cicty Sins,” in January True Story Magazine. Out Now! t Calls er's Heart True Story AT ALL NEWSSTA NDS — ONLY 25¢