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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, DECEMBER 19, Love’s Embers Adele Garrison”s “Revelations of a Wife Beginning a New Serial \bsorbing Sequel To ” Tahes Charge of Preparations hatie from ill to write mmiliatin there 1 long time g noises, ! the not A pre: kno s taker into what had 1o b ust oy e found himse soner W to him sound ot a big Tarmer | g making for | as soon as if held Money Lov EAD THIS FIRST umps he drives ot t ns is Pat owns his ¢ frier ir me 1 by his lls it to finan ntion of r from be with he n't been able nce the da housemai ith W of a Roy and house hy to wait on Staley co have and to y leaves with I she will wait 24 hot with Pat for a marri Mrs. T il xington admits com- Jet- »‘,, By Beatrice Burton s Shoulders,” “Honey Lou,” “The Hollywood Girl,” Etc. Al the | Mrs Their weddi will “stapd up” with them at But ks 8 edding, Lily 2t night when Florence, are the Jetter: and says th house and s sister, - a party at comes upstairs folks a at the GO ON CHAPTER Lily expected tos v and father v he stairs, still v Ik breakfast coat Pat follewed her, but of the parlor sho sic him she would see them matter what going to solemnly, her ha opened the door first person sh mmond. He vont of the munt WITH THE XXIIT only he NOW at 1 pped a alon and t vol Lexington was hol large, white hand in his, He gt up and he 1t but he was one: W | larger than they His o very comforting as he iz | * he so do it you i th nardly Lily know? could feel ves on he He iaianis s if hie pie ¥t s on Itiguette private hom iy to fak ing to dreadful rout—tr She cad of tirncd ddenly, ins t iy 1 don't 1 don't isn't it? to you. goin awful for you, ne e wore. But I porploxed and s hat peopl shake of turne R_FANNY SAYS: how bad e would let were e ad told dignified people who always By e ly dre to he O hand on nave had in the worl ssin marry you t Lil ant to o he w stroki ] ms put around her and patted her shoul- 1 carcd twc STORY tol ‘An I'm the knob. f he mom 1 is —not much taller m seom wer them . using for her 1l you think Run- like t you Drurm- ly wir- | hat 10 s to rious. * Jiis hack upon him how rybody inst body we journey wus a trip to the movie around the corner. t0 keep you from making this fool | 1ar age!” She swept out of fthe without another word, and Mr. Lexington wa oiled daughter. Lily never had felt as she did at e had except as the 0 close to him moment. thought of person who paid seldom bills for her clothes and good | Ic was not a talkative person at any time, and of late y moved through her life 1 a small part in a play of which the star. now he was her father again cr of her childhood, who en her to picture shows 2nd Wo had let her spend & fice sometimes. . drawing pictures his typewriter with gers. circuscs. whole day i sitting at hi; or tapping b 1l fi clung to him. “You Mother send me my clothes told him. I've got to have my clothes!” You tell Agnes to pack them up and sneak them out of the house first time Mother is away from home.” Instead of answering, he put his hand into his hip pocket and took out a billfold. In it was a check made out 1o her—na check for two dred dollars. “I brought this ust in case things turned out ave,” he snid, as he 1 er tight and Jissed her good- Mis eyes were filled with tears, it Lily did not sce them. She stood the middle of the room when the £he make she v they Long Border Words er words and a var ones feature this It Two long bor v of shorter « n puzzle. very difficult. HORIZONTAL 1. Membranous bag. 4. What writer created the char- acter, “Sherlock Holmes"? To what the pincapple belong? A trying experience, led. What s called? Dad Call for help at sea. Preposition of place. Morindin dye. Tlew confiniously on a flute, Paid publicity. T.ower human limb. it is the abbreviation “Virginia"? Most commeon conjunction, nd note in a scale. IFluid in a tree, Point. Small ravine. Venomous snake. What English artist ninctecnth centur Nonsense Songs”? English money, of 15. left alone with his | For ! s he had | like an ector | should not be| class of plants docs | a right-hand page | for | 1927, door closed behind him, and bher gaze was on the check in her pretty useless hands. On the way upstairs Lily made up i her mind that she did not feel like going to the Roy Jettersons’ house | that night, after all. rest,” she told Ilorence, herself down on the bed and folding both the pillows under her head. “I've had a pretty strenuous d and I'm more tired than I thought I was.” She yawned. \Pat's sister swung around from the tollet glass, where she was wav- | | ing her hair with an electric fron. | “You'd better go for a little while, | don't you think?” she asked. “Sady's probably been working hard all day to get ready for this party. And it's in your honor—Pat'’s and yours. Sadye will be hurt if you | don't go.” “Pat can go” Lily answered, | carelessly. “I don't know as I care to meet his old sweetie, anyway. I | think that Jetterson woman had her nerve to invite her.” “Oh, I'm sure she would have | more sense than to come,” Florence | said, rubbing a piece of black satin over her hair to give it gloss. “Well, I'm too tired to go, any- | way,” Lily decided again. “And | when you see Sadye tonight tell her that my friend, Sue Cain, is going | | to come to my wedding tomorrow. Pat said that the Jettersons would ‘stand up’ with us, and if he wants Roy it's all right—but T don't nced her. I have Sue, instead.” Presgntly Pat came upstalrs and | pleaded with her to go to Sadye | Jettergon’s house, but Lily was stub- | born. “I'm dead tired, Pat” she| said. “And besides, T just hate that Jetterson woman. There's no use fn my trying to hide it. T don't want to €0 to her house, and I'm not going | tol” That was the end of it. When | Lily did not want to do a thing, she simply did not do it! The next day Ry Jetterson came to the wedding without his wife. “I suppose she's peeved,” Lily said to herself, and did not care. After their ceremony Roy shook Pat’s hand heartily, gave Lily & sound kiss npon her lovely mouth— Y which shocked Pat's mother—and went home. Sue Cain alone stayed with the family for the simple wed- | ding feast of chicken salad, rolls and ice cream and cake. By six o'clock everything in the little house had settled down into its | regular routine. “It's all over and we're married. It doesn’t seem as if it can be true,” | Lily sald to Pat, twisting the plain gold band on her left hand. Their wedding trip was a to the movie theater around the cor- ner, and Lily told hersclf that she | preferred it to the European trip | | that Staley Drummond had promised her for a honeymoon. She was breathlessly, gloriously happy. (TO BE CONTINUED) Menus for the Family| journey | BY SISTER MARY Breakfast—Stewed dried apricots, cooked whole wheat cereal, cream, eggs and epinach on toast, extra | toast, milk, coffee. i Luncheon—Scalloped onions and macaron!, stewed tomatoes, stewed | stuffed figs with whipped cream, plain cookies, milk, tea. 1 Dinner—Noodle soup, pan broilefl | | | | Father. Bone. To behold. To sin. Believers of a particular cre Grain, Who was the English prime minister at the time of the ‘World War? Tidy. Lifeless. What was the profes:.on of Luther Burbank? Short-billed American rall. Glided. Field. eged force producing notism. Half an em. To ventilate. Constant companion. Sesame. 1 ‘What type of person spcaks the | Slavic langnage as his native | tongue? | Saucy. { Before. i Devoured. 1 By. | To be sick. Correlative of either. Sun god. hyp- | ANSWER TO SATURDAY'S “I think I'll stay right here and | flinging | |fresh air and sunlight | thought | were convinced | urally high resistance { ot | thos pork chops, sweet potatoes with marshmallows, corn custard, stuffed apple salad, raisin ple, milk, coffee. Corn Custard One can corn 3 cggs, 1 teaspoon salt, 1 tablespoon sugar, 1-4 tea- spoon white butter, 2 cups milk. Beat eggs slightly maining ingredients well buttered and add to re- Turn into a baking dish and bake about forty minutes in a moderate oven. When firm to the touch the custard is done. from baking dish. Whenever canned it should be carefully There are often bits of corn husks nd cob found in canned corn that aro not particularly appetizing. 16 Service, corn {s served looked over. Inc. Your Health How To Keep It— Causes of Illness BY DR. MORRIS FISHBE! ditor Journal of the Amel Medical Association and of Hy- geia, the Health Magazine Although it was proved many vears ago that tuberculosis 1s caused by a specific germ, the discase has | not vet been eliminated as one of the major causes of death of man. Specific methods of treatment attacking the germ have not cen satisfactorily established, nor any drug been shown to have fpe- s virtues in overcoming the dis- case. Primary among methods of treatment are the provision of ade- quated nutrition, proper amounts of rest and exercise, and exposure to Special at- tention always has been given to the question of providing adequate food. Apparently this well grounded meth- od of treatment is now supportcd by scientific evidence of great interest. Laboratory Study Workers in the dep Liochemistry and bacte the University of Cir just made public the some investigations on are of great importance connection The white ment of ology of i have results of which in this long been immune to rat has to be almost tuberculosis. veral cxperiment- ers who have studied the affects of the injection of germs into rats that it was of z.1 animals least susceptible fo th | disease, The Cincinnati fnve noting that the rat is sus té deficiencies of vitamins, deter- mined to 1ind out whether the nat- could be low- by decreasing the amount of D in the rat's stigators ptible ered calefum and vitamin diet. They found that rats from nor- mal mothers receiving an abund- ance of both calcium and cod liver were Immune to fairly large doses of tubercle germs, Whercas with 2 dict deficient in cal- ctum and vitamin D developed un- mistakable lesions of tuber in the lungs following the tion of comparatively amounts of tubercle bacilli. Rats receiving adequate diets baked [ pepper, 2 tablespoons | Serve | inocwation four to ot both before and after were able to resist from ten times as large a dosage erms without becoming infected. I Develops Susceptibility Another series of experiments | was planncd to show the effec of a deficiency of v min D witlh- out a deficiency of calcium. Whe the vitamin D was deacreascl greatly, the white rats lost their high immunity to tuberculos and seemed indeed to develop & susceptibility. Gloomy winter weather with « distinct absence of sunlight force: rat as it docs human beings, to obtain a lurge part of their s ply of vitamin D from the diet. If the vitammn D content 3 the diet is lowered, rickets @evelops and there appears to be n in- tenden: to tuberculosis. creased BEAUTY How and Why CLEANLINESS IS THE BASIS YIT ALL (By Ann Aly Judging by the immen spent year in year out on b of all kinds and descriptions, is one gre personal que ways before the American men and women: How to improve personal ance, to approach as necarly ble the standards o ed by the civilized This is not to b ty. Far from it. Cleanliness good health form the basis of ideas of beauty of body, so ow of th cts, t crstand the there on_ al- appear- as possi- accepl- tered vani- and our nore we k se subje we shall 1 - beanty. How it Began When the world voun the human race appeared upo the Lady of the Caves saw he in the clear pool wh come fo bathe. She dis . revived 1 satiny and And lo, for the secr was mirrored she had covered d beautificd . her hair in ¢ that moment beauty was Coincide X Jady's discovery of her improved ap- pearance came her of the great universal beautifier, water. That discovery has spelled ress for the world. Today, hundreds of creams, powds lo- tions and hair preparations used, water is still the universal mediun through which beauty may bk ob- tained. For no one will dispute the 2t the foundation of all bear mple cleanliness. Scrupulous immaculate line and daintiness are the f steps toward the ultimate goal of love The One Essenti; Clothes, decoration ment. may follow later, first step in our quest 4 water, by which all impuritic vemoyed from the body, is essential Famous beauties have at times uscd other cleansir 1ms than water milk, ere: nd even unguent While these may have proved wori- derful benutifiers, the fact still re mains, that water is the best solvent for the waste deposited on the body through its numerous sweat and ofl duct Under certain circumstances, 1t iz necessa to use cther solvent than as well as helpful toilct requisi from quest recognition prog- thot and liness n ater, Modes of the SVloment I _— Moire silk is fre- quently used in ternoon and eve- ning dresses this season. This model, from Lenieff’s Paris collection, is consid- erably longer than the average, the deep scallops of the skirt coming well down. In addition there is a long dra- pery, at the side, to give - even greater length. One fold is of sat 1 and the other of moire, When You Think of Life Insuranee Fire - Casualty or Mortgages Think of NenmefReRutile Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Co. Jish-cating mammal similar to a beaver. An outfit. What hero of the Revolution- ary War was a famous sil- versmith? To clatter. VERTICAL What was the first land seen by Columbus in the World? Collection of facts. Group of tents. wered that | S0 your them. for Pat 1to ne 18 49, Associate General Agent Paul B. Barnes, Mgr, of Casualty-Fire Insurance (0, Booth Block Room 321. CE, INC 1k © Men ouzht 1o give their wives gwelseerciousiUticistioliTh el Cattactin vge accounts, ‘not to be pencd until Christmas,” nd that | to get for you that I tried France with him could pack her would have house il must face he wo done uber