New Britain Herald Newspaper, December 17, 1927, Page 10

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Love’s Embers Adele Garr “Revelations of a Wife” Beginning a New Serial The Beach Picnic At Lillian's su Veritzen ask me ty” he sh employer turne voluntarily, and Is Decided Upon what kind o to take when it “Please, be o zenue when 1 give you t lan said, and accord structions, 1 looked up Ao look as i nd deferential as I 11 mu “Did you ever go to a be Mr. Veritzen, and e could I Lilifan § e ab hands tos wvouid. A thought of it be Aying of ennul = Lknows.” Tt was dlff, strajght at t does not cars | pieni work sport involve anship doing her ending one, I her to display any ngs which Tt s commente the last pinion, T'll radio cast,” Lillian dec doesn't rig darn fop over her Lng g0 ‘to’ a beach picni ‘on’ one. Then you're su the right thing . 1 envy it you've never been eaten a ‘pirate steak.’ “Tt evidently is £omething should be preceded by tand,” Mr. Veritzen smiled please enlighten my ignorar me what it is, and what 1 about it Lilllan chair and latively “No,” she said at last: “it wonld be too bad to spoil it for you until ST ¢ You don't You go e yon have h. and which a marine “Rut in the ne him down looked sat at « wondered t he k i was T three i son”s Absorbing Sequel To schie “Al v son yo! a ipproval of his his 1 oln 10 You and to the me. he hesi- Miss u do yot conven- list. icsitation nt ta in- proposed Inc. By Thornton W. Burgess What Reddy Fox Saw The cleverest may sometimes slip And e'en the boldest sometinies trip. —O0ld Mother Nature Reddy Fox knew, did Farmer Brown's Boy, the from which Terror the Goshawk often watched the chickenyard. It was the tip-top of a certain tele- phone pole, far enough from Farm- er Brown's house to be safe from a terrible gun, but near enou chickenyard to swoop down catch a chicken when thers be a chance. Reddy nover went the edge of the Green Itorest est to that telephone pole will looking over to see if Terror there. And whenever he sa Reddy ground his teeth, for Terror were sworn enecmies. It happened that on this lar morning cddy was along in the Green Fore distance from a place could look ou phone pol to look. Then ter of him. Il¢ for several day just couldn’t sce if Terror was on 1} pole. So Reddy tur ont to the edge of the est, When where he 1 50 startled by walked right “My gracions What does all t and stared with open and his ging, 1d of that telepic hroad- flapping from somet curely. Reddy r Goshawk at or I do beli trap!” know, kno who would A telephone Just t Brown's just as well as and along ne passing intend bet- hadn't 1 Tervor ot an felt that he pass without looking to at telephone trotted en For- | plac and Gr excla ol Doy Farme > ho climbe d xot his sack Then he n wing Terror wi and all Dol nag vonder if he'll | Jteddy. “T wonder or it he'll jus Nim. My, th <pread through the Yes, sir, this will be spread through the Inow a lot of p make very happy it casler for some of tl it fellow spoiled my aid so, Tie spoiled 1y to think that Terror ople ind it 1 And b should pereh gh to the | &honld | <1 wonder i he'll kil him,” ed Reddy tr 15t go right ip! home that! rerror Mo, lay Hrown, in o the st story wondering W him, R My, reat LN and the of hat w 1y Pastu T W pri my tell N (a1 mutter- my Mrs. Goshawk, | first time in all his | barn Farmer as geing Fox was to tell Urgess) at soner Menus for the Family 1Y SISTEIR MARY wiforn pota- string appre X 1 melted more pour world Money Love .. vour ! Fif curious that ha owns hi pany vention of di stre As she 1 him, make Tess than a int disapi and Ca her | founc | disch: the pi about refus ingto her Slie t cay | his o Lexin, think miothe Pat's a job Lily with are terso | ters [but says she v NN The abou S peopl ! forta (T at 1 o'clock, cold hot r Aftery for I law charge in to He a wh rou o ik as he own es and Lily I« ciding goes to I night. NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY, By Beatrice Burton | of “Sally’s Shoulders,” *“Honey Lou,” | “The Hollywood Girl,” Ete. ; | right one Lily sat between Pat and Florence el “You'd let lome,” Sue advised from him for a week or two, and | then see if - you still feel this way about him. You might ¢ your mind, you know." Lily shook her head with violence that the little sun-gold curls | solf-contained Ann, who around her ears, shook too. *An | had heen in love with Staley for so | he might change his, too!” she cried. | ars that everyone knew the | “No, I can't take a chance on that! of her heart. Ann was the typa | Sue, I'm going to marry I'at tomor- | 5 herself away, when she is | row. My nind’s made up, and I want | love with a man, not by ever You to be with me-—just you iking of it, but by the way ehe Were going te be my maid-of-honor at him and flushes up when |on June the tenth. Will you? Sue, Poor old | somebody's got to stand hy me in | this! T love Pat just as much as you | the | love Jack Eastman, and I'll never | he happy until 'm married to him. | He's everything in the world 10 me.” | Sue looked out into the neat, hum- | | ble Jittla street beyond the snowy curtains. Her eyes were thonghtful. “Poor Staley,” she said, “I'm sorry for him.” | Then she looked at Lily, “Of | | course, T'II stand by you. You know { T will—bnt T don't feel happy about | it the least hit.” Her doubt had its effect on Lily. When she was gone she sat in the little cool. darkened parlor, a-d | thought over the things that Sne had | | said. . Pat had left her standing | n the misty rain that day in Albe- marle strect! And she had pursued | himt— Then, lke a ray of sunshine, came hhn thought that he had gone to her ' I father's house just to he near her | | during tha wrcks before her mar- irlage. 1Ie had cut her picture out | of the paper and put it in his mirror {where B conld look ut it when he €d and dressed. He had | never even telephoned Flizaheth Ertz once after he had glimpsed her that day in Albemarle street. Te came into the little room and stood inside the door for a minute, {looking at her. “T can't helieve o ! you'ra here he said. quictly, and Ann seld she would call her, and 0178 PTG A0 S A in a moment Sue's high, eager voice g L of her mind. G e re: “Hell I 4 g ovetiloenire suHello inin She swent into his arms that walt- | What's on your mind 1 ink Tl call up Ann and bettor she said to herself, ¢ Ann's number to Central. her face Roing to me drive “You stay away you | news,” a farm to 1 1l her I'm ey, after alk® she She could imagiWe how ould enjoy that picee of news see not such yproposes Lily man chum, : waich- ¢ through Dmany ye that hie is taxi driver, | o ) heside foets and st him rns is Pat France and own eab in a com Roy Jetterson. o piston ring in- | he and his cab the downtown owd or mgly 1 at- | j a 1 tows | ards She leoks | ne comes near her, Ann! any tebonn headed by it to finance Lis, and from aybe she'll get " thought Lily, standing in the little hallway with fts faded | Bruesels carpet and its wall paper bat | that was cracked in places, although with | it was spotlessly and beautifully Staley on pear tha days pass Lily 1 nisses him and s in bt about the time sho | . s up her mind to break off her | ent to Staley Drummond, xington annonnces *it s is printed in the paper. b fore the hire a new Mrs. Lex- | who knows noth of the air between him and Lily, is ic when Lily and her chanfteur pear for lon together, rrie, 1 shows picture has 1 in Lily irrie is irged and goos lo Staley with icture, and fries to el him Lily's infatuation. But Sialey s 10 let her, the wedding be- 0 near at hand, and Mrs. Lex- n decides to take matters into | h, to get rid of Pat.! Us him he'll have to wait on and help around the house. Te | s with him, de- aley and just the, . herself, answered * felephone. Iiar- | ard | "his is Lily Lexington.” Lily told “I'm so sorry, Ann, that Y t he at your house for the card me today—and T ghould have let vou know ahout it hefore this, but 1 never thonght of it until just this minute sy all right” answered Ann, who never seemed annoyed and | | ruffled. Her voice sounded cold and way. She never had particular- liked Lily—and Lily knew ft. | And since the day she had told her | bout her engagement fo Staley | Drummond, Ann had been slowly backing into her shell, so far as Lily was concerned ~ had not even telephoned to et Iily know abonut the meeting of the card club at her hous~ that day, and Lily would not have heard about it except througl Sue Cain, who was wiys good friends with everybody ind poverty Mrs. | ofg gue there?” Lily asked. “May har, 1001 speak to her, please? month tons Pat quite at last to ¢ = noney for Pat gfon malkes things over Pat’s home, r lets her share the ister, Florence. e oup N promise hours, and | where his | rooin of young | was trembling | at &he DECEMBER 17, 1927. for her, and stood close to him, all of her Life that had beeu crowded With happiness. “I love you,” he whispered. He “I've never and 1 never shall.” anyone else could I huve doubted him?” | sked herself. anything better What's money? Nothing!” “And how can 1 That was the way she fclt about | | Kets. it—then. At 6 o'clock the France meal they called “supper’ al that would have been served at 7 in the Lexington house and called “dinner, That night in the 1 wall paper, its red light globes, 1 its golden-oak furniture. Lily sat between Pat and Florence, 4 ate pot roast and boiled onions, without knowing what she w me Mrs. France set the cochanted with happiness and she beld ber fork awkwardly in her left hand beca! i his, Afterward, when she and Florence ere getting dressed for Sadye Jets terson’s “blow out”, Florence began to talk about Elizabeth Ertz “She'll probably be there tonight, and Sadye are boon ' she said, combing her ining dark hair before the glass. “You know, she and Pat have been runnir aro d together for a cou- ple of years “Yes, he told me,” Lily answered. “But you don’t think she'll really be | Jettersons,’ do you? Why, a girl whose sweetie had for another girl, I'd cyes on him, would Lecause she cempanion, th I owe Gropp I 1 me never want to you Flor hook her head and be- #un 1o dust rose-scented talcum pows 1L over her neck and arms. She 4 at Lily in slass, “You'rs ever s with frank “And you | said 1 in her eyes. loveliest Her eyes ran over the gold oiley artielss in Lily's dressing bak, 1 osergdhehonehidsalln 1 that she dresscd. “You'll nev 1ded, softly. “1 man who make she gov live with Pat,” she wouldn't marry a as little as Pat does 1T'm not used to the things you're used to! I give you and Pat about six months before the crash in the little strect, an au- nd then the There was a Outside, tomohile horn honke door bell rang loudly. { rush of feet on the stairs, and then Pat's voice: “Lil Lere to see you (TO 135 CONTINT Your Health How To Keep It— Causes of Illness your folks arc » BY DI, MORRIS FISHBEIN Lditor Jownal of the American Medical Assoctation and of Hy- geia, the Health Magazine A fe that hur vears ago it was discovered an lieings could be infected the handling of wild rahe with an infection now known as | Apparently the same an be had from the bites of eer- in ticks or fl s well as from the dressing of wild rabbits. An Investigation made by United States Publie Health Ser- in Roy Jetterson's garage, tel the Jettersons will “stand up! them when they marry, and oing to give them a party that | Lily, who has met Sadye Jet- dislikos to g0 to their house, | . GO ON WITH THE CHAPTER NXII was nothing fashionable | t the France family. : { ed. and hung up the recelver before | d did not put on ai Lilv could say another word. ance set the Kitehen table | p oo tmay half an hour she was with a colored cloth, set . Her new, snow-white road- meat and fried potatoes and | (Ul pekel trimmings—§ue olls upon it, and anvounced | .;jjaq jt her Turkish Bath—came per was rendy. | tearing up the street and stopped rd 1 wiped with a jerk and a shrirk of brakes ] wer, and then went Lefore the low, white picket fence | to the g front of the hous: | of it w little and d > his bright red hat ate it in hix shivt sle up to the door ite linen grocer's were trying to nd him, and his s ¢ ke 1'at's smil led 1o dier. “Plenty,” said Lily, with a laugh, and then she told her what she Jad done. H There wae a long silence. At the | end of it Sue gave a little gasp. “Well, that slays my soul!" she d in her breezy, slangy, breath- loss way. “I can’t believe you're | making such an idiot of yoursel Look here, Lily! where are you? Lily told her. n, TORY | ble s. T the acr dishes s to ither came the | ake ory L | in stor and flashing | and dress, came | and rang the | wake Sue, h 5 with ticd was ly 1pron that flashing at v were lost your mind, the first words | ¢ opened the door she stepped into the hall. | stood still and looked at her narrowed, scarching eyes, as if | ally b seen her best | in all the years of their hie 100 o m life vas live won't this new sibly. e lLonest 1o prot the same Kk v of friends 1 will 17 t him from over | iy A majority of the words are of | four letters. Even the large num- unkeyed letters should not great speed in solving this | 1y asked now that she ask- sody but me § ted on in this house?" Iod the wuy into the with its starched white dried flowers its gray-green plush doilics pinned on | and arms of them — a old-fashioned room that hers when Lily at parior Ains, its vases of the wantel, divs with 1s Horizontal Marsh To go Slipsoidal figure. in spite of its Masculine pronoun furnishings. Oune who offers a proposition for does.” adontion by a legislative body breathed a great sigh of re- (16 Two fives “Well, thank heaven for that!" To rant said sharply ow, look . To plunge headfirst into water you can’t stay here. You've got Lpon to go home and think this over. To rely upon for support best friend, and I Lair of a wild bheast and 1 won't It you Billow Drone bee Paid publicity To prohibit a legislutive Spike Third note in scale Wing part of a seed The physical actuality as tinguished from theory Before An agrecment hetween two na- tions made by diplomacy Mother Dulls Net weight of a container Boy Stranger Sun_ god To laccrate Epistle To increase o 1. hacks 6 Strg P vas ape ceful place tyle “Mothicr S and you-may think it ont-of like 1 . ' your you heaps, » this wild thing Her Lily b W his i luck eyes pleaded with . You hardly mind his way, but 1 don't awiully much can't help remembering down town when he wouldi't let you get irto his cah and off, leaving you sianding in rain Her face was filled with distress, shrng . of cour bilt Lnow 't being poor, in a ¢ g I cares so married Pat. trom 1 old It to tor that you. 1 nffeur. | ve i Lily her shonlders, .1 don’t know how it me, but T think t deal, Sue,” she said. did his best to Keep me from him becanse he knew Il sn't the type of girl he ought to | g marry—and, Sue, T did chase him! at Really, 151 just followed him | voier at a nervous lit- Eingine e informed at ihe thought of the way Baker on a stove a that Pat, in the Hastened pursned poor club 1 s of their friendship. | Morindin dye still ot up hear ich e care from her Kiteho d her i with the tecth the intensity of Vertical She gave her bridg dis- | Four-Letter Words III B N— S Iigure Standard of type Seed bag ireed To disclose Tendency Night preceding Insurrection To finish Admitted facts To give You and I Animated Masterful Neuter pronoun Badge of valor Branch of learning Practical unit of electrical pacity To load To send forth Organ of hearing Hushand or wife To harden Portion of the mouth Point of compass To exist measure holiday ca- than this? | dining room, with its | infection the | | s vating. She was dazed and | | Puat was holding her | vice indicates happier than she ever had been im |cember and January have the mouths of onsct | of tularemia occurring east of the | Misaissippi loved ¢ from | tail ravbits for food. These months son for the hunting of the cotton- tail . period that sale i The jack-rabbit is unive river, { laws, M curres have ! October, 4 months when the jack-rabbits are carrots and | killed and chicken sonie The have ticks months the season the ti seven round Tw reported from these of princi round Dr. it ll'uilnd States Publi¢ vice, fof thi most cerning it, ona t I sale | I the rabbits infected tiest human being | dressing | had slipped into white |~ 1 | | | ton, T that dlsease 17 pa clothes ana | died. Wh | Heavy moire the from June months of greatest Yiorse- there has wsually been an injury of the hand of the person who dresses the rabbit and the germs gained their entranc to the body through the injury. | The rabbit mec thoroughly | cooked, is harml food, grees F. will Kill the 1t is, thercfore, suggested those who skin and dress the wild rab- bits should wear rubber gloves while handling them. | The | against that November, De- been of 165 cases from a rabbit, river, and resulting the dressing of wild cotton- as of 133 germ. that are the open sea- Py abbit, and it is they are n great numbers during this offered for in the mar- Jack-Rabbits found almost | sally west of the Mississippi| hecn 1t is unprotected by game | v hich as it is @ pest to the farmers. | oy, of 'the cases that have ouv- | gjck wost of the Mississippi | 1ot 1) taken place from April 10 [pe shoots, there s I chane since these a the | that he will shoot a sick rabbit, cut up for fish hml,! feed, dog feed, and, in| instances, for the table. | cases of tularemia that | occurred from the bltes or" i authorities also the wild rabbit that has ught by a dog or cat, or a boy has killed with a Such a rabbit is usually a rabbit. 1f the hunter will rahbit run 74 ya before warn d FLAPPEPR. FANNY SAY. D have taken place in the from March to August, of greatest activity of | ck, which has caused twenty. | cases in Montuna and sur- | ing states. | enty-thres cases Jave heen | fly Wtes, and ail of | occurred in the period | to September, th ctivity of the | fly. These cases occurred | pally In Utah and in the sur- | ing states, { Edward Francis of the Health Ser- who discovered the existence is disease and who has maae | of the investigations con- examined the livers of | rabbits offered for | matkets of Wi shins{-l and found about 170 of with the germ | causes tularemia. While the | i3 not especially serions, | tients out of 420 that had u" have housand n the NG, Point of Infection the infection has Th | the sooner come lage ter you travel, en catehes you, silk is the medium used in the novel draped gown left while fur is lavishly combined with lame to accen- uate the richness of the evening coat at the right. 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