New Britain Herald Newspaper, December 22, 1927, Page 14

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Love’s Embers Adele Garrison™s Absorbing Sequel To “Revelations of a Wife” Beginning a New Serial: Young Jackson Is Intensely Int ested in Miss Lincoln's Plans he had emphasized 1 took fast hold of my and said softly. Not ‘now’ perhaps. ago did you give Daye? Weeks? aps? e me a n there conrage but—how that de- Months? I was o0 astounded by young Mr. Juckson's excit Eleanor Lincoln's y sn actress under Philip direction, that 1 hi which to w guessed the reason for my rent 1 knew when h “Ot course you think I a you call--crazy & treading t Am 1ca corner iuto up the car u 1 puiek startled look a4 long 1ninute lence. Then Lie raised his head a decisive gestu o—you know—" he sald That you and Miss Lincoln ot strangers, yes,” I said “Has she told you?" he “How much do vou knov For instant T dallled with nptation. 1 saw clearly that fn | young man's excitement I had | v to pretend that Eleanon | coln had given me her confids 1T would have the solution of t} mystery surrounding her. But the | fecent instinets of my birth and | training rushed to my aid, and I/ spoke quickly, decistvely. i 1o has told me nothing,” 1 | ithfully, “Nor did I 'know’ | thing, But it 3id not take very keen ohservation upon these two encounters of ours to see that you | and ghe were old acqualntances, that ‘ dog Fedor belonged to her, and it for some reason you were tak- care of it for her Who else knows th quickly, and I guessed that thoughts } flown to Mary. As T told you, no one 'knows' thing,” 1 answered, sparring for “And as for guesses upon the rt of other peole, you must ques- tion them. I can only tell you my AL ‘urry-up worker'— | 0Wn Teaction to Miss Lincoln's be- 10 get engaged to Miss Lincoln in | havior when she caught sight of €0 short a time since T have met | you and Fedor that day at the| her. No, T can assure vou Tam not | Station.” | engaged to Miss Lincoin, nor have | Copyright, 1927, Newspaper I now any desire to be. Feature Service, Inc. | | ston wh with are asked fancied i As he spoke a wood 1o r the shade v 1y an menss “Now with smil danger of illed. 1 really a 100 excited to drive and talk, too."” T &ilently agreed with him, for he | patently was greatly excited. And en he released his hand from the vheel T saw that it was shaking “Of course you are wondering what business {t 1s of mine what Miss Lincoln docs, he said, and stopped, looking at me chingly Some lurking spirit of mischies prompted my answer. “Unless, perhaps you are engaged to the young won T said de- murely. “That would account for vour excitement upon the subject of her proposed theatrical career.” He g me another intent look, and then laughed, but with note of vuefulness in his mirth. “Y see that you are spoofing me," he sald. “I =urely would be—w " he asked his e i ay—a By Thopnton W. Burgess Tommy Tit Pitles Terror A tender heart means kindly deeds And thought for other people's needs. —Tommy Tt Of all the little peoplg in the Old y ! Orchard and the Green Forest none | 18 more generally beloved than Tom- my Tit the Chickadee, A lively litt] fellow is Tommy Tit and a cheery | little “Dee, Dae, Chickadee! Sec me! See me!” without feellng better for ) it? There isn't & mean feather in | g1 ¢ | Tomnty Tit. | | Ot course, Tommy Tit was one | of tha first to k what, had hap- pencd to Terror the Goshawk. You ses, at this time of year Tommy spends a great part of his time up n glad of it,” sald Sammy Jay in the Old Orchard and over fn | Tarmer Brown's dooryard. He and [~ S Farmer Brown's Bey are great friends. 8o Tommy was right on| hand when that cage was put out | in the dooryard. Sammy Downy the Woodpecker and Ya Yank the Nuthateh were also near at hand and eaw what was happen ng. They wers excited, of course. es, indeed, they we v mnch exeited. For a while their tongues| 2 falrly flew. ito do “I'm glad of it,” 3 “It serves him right never, never get out news s going to make one around here mi “That's f0,” said ¥ Downy didn't say a roddad his hiead “Well,” sald te Tommy Tit about {t7" Tom little and twinkled and snapped. T think [ “I think I'm sorry “What!" and Do Yanl | . . . . i Life’s Niceties |} Hints on Etiquette | | 1. Doos one leave cards when | calline on New Year's Day? ! What should a caller bhe sure ir the mother and all receive to- fathe family Do sald Sammy Jay. \ children of Rl The Answers hough in eome eds call, they are tess and any of the fam Year's Da lling days. In larg keep while Forousiy Jay, turning |Euest or clder person lo you think s snapped and slowly, twinkled said for Terror, 1 Woad bt 1 J than for others. et er o muck sorricr for for other peopls i ¥ e is Y v e dpecker REG U 8 PAT O 1827 BY NEA BENVICE InC Downy the h 1t me 2 1s no = n that 1 know v a man is broke from buying need them for o0l Terror feels t rest of us W him than mean to us mada him a docsn't Klil } So T dan't care wha sorry for Terror and 'y 10 tell him so0.” With this Tommy er and alighted on cage of Terror, lie told Terror the very uld just how he felt about it Tt Terror understood it he no Nt sig (Copy Thos: T i can't get vou ay going o1 rms in rugs and preadi anish or de- | moves them Lt way to clean ienically 15 to use a Sylphe- | ol solution. Add a tablespoon- | of Sylpha-Nathol to every pail | water mopping, scrub- | bing and aning. Keeps whole house healthful. all dealers e I'he Tit a corne And, 0y \d made h “, Ton h f for 1927, by T. W. Burg u The the Green Fores next story: n t !atter she accepts him, whe | ring that he has invented and NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY | EW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 22, 1927. { READ THIS FIRST: Lily Lexington, #poiled daughter of the Cyrus Lexingtons, iy engaged to marry Staley Drummond, a rich bachelor much older than herself. | She is fond of him, but realizes she | does not really love him the y she omes instantly and violenily infatu- ated with a taxicab driver whom she gees down town when sh: goes to ! mect her chum, Sue Caln. Forgetting jumps into his © heme, She all about Sue, she cab and be drives learns that his name is Pat France | and that he owns his own cab fn & pany headed by his friend, Roy He tells her that he is go- to sell it to finance a plston | he and his cab vanish from the streets Lily misses him terribly and de- cldes she cares too much for him to | marry Staley Drummond. But Mrs Lexington annou: the enga ment, and the date of tha wedding is st for June tenth. Then, on May tenth, Mra. Lexington hires & new | chaufteur, and it 1s Pat France. He | admits to Lily that he could not re- ing | sist taking the job inst to.be near | much | cli- house- her, and ehe tells him ho she loves him. Things reich max when Carrie, one of th i ! naids who is in love with Pat, tells Mrs. Lexington and Staley about the love affair. Lily admits nothing to! taley, who refuses to let her break ; the engagement. But she tells her moth how much €ha cares for Pat, and Mrs. Lexinzton humiliates him | leaves with him, despite the protests and pleadini | Staley and her family, she marries him. Mr. Lexington gives her a check for $200 when her mother re- | fuses to let her have 'any of her ! elothes from the house. On the following Sunday morning, Pat spends several hours at Roy Jet- | terson's house, and Lily goes finally to get him when Pat's sister Flor- ence, tells her dirner s ready. | Sadye, Roy's wife says Pat has just |0 left, and Lily sees another visitor | at the house—Elizabeth Ertz, Sa- 1ye's chum and a former sweetheart of Pat's. In a jealous rage she goes back to the house and locks herself in her bedroom all day. Next morn ing she gets up late, and refu te look after Frances’ grocery store while Pat’s mother gets her break- fast. do th M CHAPTER XXVI | Pat's mother pushed her rimmed glasses up on her forehead | ab and peered at Lily with narrowed | eyes. up out of her way and squinted hard with her brisht. blue eyes. “Well, now, that's not going to hurt you—te stand behind this coun- | ter for a minute and wait on a cus- | Lj tomer or two, my dear child,” she said, In her gentle, sensible way, “I'm waiting en you when T go over to the house to get breakfast fer you? Isn't that so? And somebody's Zot to be in the store while I'm | gome. 1 can't leave it, otherwise.” th yo explaining to a bad ehild why it must. do a eertain thing. And Lily leoked like a paughty child, in spite of her 22 years, as she stood facing her with sulky eyes and pouting mouth. She tossed her head. “"Never mind. 1 ean get my- self something to eat, thanks” she sald, and turned to go. ' ! She did not know how to set about | getting herself even the simplest | kind of breakfast. But she certainly | was not gelng to etand there in| the store and deal out soap and &u- gar and spinach to cash customers! That was a lead-pipe cineh, she told herself, as she pushed open the side | door that led into the Franc th of flowers. Mrs. France made no attempt to stop her. But a gay, ftull voice from | jo the front door hulted her just as she stepping out onto the grass. “Hello, there fotks!' + swung around, etill holding | 10 the screen door in her | ve Jotterson, wiih a ehild zing to each hand, was just com- ing in, c! rful and wholesome-look- g in a green houee dress and white vas slippers. “My laundress ran out of scap,” said to Pat's mother, “so I came to get some.” alked over ‘gan to take down bar after harge six bars of this to m 2 of w u | & | | and Then she turnsd to Lily, s married lifs going, Mr: in an effori to be as | as possible swered ) Beautifully. without anather went out at the side he was on the verge of -n she walked into the nlit kitchen of the little house. |a ffee pot stood on t back of stove, and on the table was a ¢ covered \ a snowy napkin | 14 set with china. There was a tiny vase on it, with one early r from the bushes outside the kitchen door; and beside it the morning pa- per was folded neatly. Mrs. France had dona everything she ovld to meke that breakfast fray wtiractiv Jut Lily lookad at it with un- v eyes, and gave it a contemptu- s ifitle push with ens hand. Tlhen she want upstairs and stood in the doorway of her roer, looking from the powdar-covered dressing table to the tumbled bed with her nightgown on the floor heside it h “And T'm supposed to el this | n she sald to herself, feeling niscrable every minute. The clock on the dressing tablo ' #aid that {t was ten-fifteen. Ju the |w honse on Mentpalier road everything would be in order by this time of day And a ring of the beli beside Lily's bed would have brought a maid with a breakfast tray. It vould have brought Mrs. Lexington tl T T through get word er door. tears clean, &he a N wi ru w f th fe water for L | nieant ! tention. A wave of longing for things swept over Lily as she look d at the small, untidy room, with® e bright sunlight finding | was in perfc t. . o straighten her room every mo ng hefore she Dpity | work: stecl- | for an eye heard | 17re had time to groce phone herself, was leve her, althor v " neat, | he really ca v yard, with its grape-arhor, its | have left her yesterday Jawn ewing and {ts bed of &pring | over to those chea | sons’, where I (o he? Would & nto the took i face gasoline me cle cooking—" ! to her zven to tenc dont to “Honey, you don't have 1 G cook,” By Beatrice Burton of “Sally’s Shoulders,” “Honey Lou,” “The Hollywood Girl,"” Ete. It would have sent her flying to the bath service n of dust— rniture. Florence’s To ot of Did Flo 's sake? Or Jie iminy, they thought house! 1 wo! E to turn in they did they opens out i Downstalrs ling her 1let me te But the e wire before— gh-pitehed it a oics jnnjor, oom to turn on went the | Rushing down *he Later on, when she came to know | dered wildly if it could t | her better, Lily was to find out that | er whenever she wanted to see plainly | ba they'll miss me she did that—pushed the spectacles | they liv or a voicc 1i: have at- bath. It wou euse—Comro; all thes every svery mark on 1 om ucross the rder. Lily sturcd i rence get up in ti to work, for did Mrs. France must do nothing hut Lily. “Everybody in nder if they plow expeci rse, 100 were dus mistake certainly r, and no teleplione Lily her moth “May- 1t rang steps, wor 3 ake Pat on the otl She n's 1sal i before a wor o, “Alis 1 Mrs. t she nt it went on telenhona e in th u could dr | and blueing 1 | 8he spoke patiently, ss if she were | Trinker. when T was what with hearing an' all—" Lily did not wait to hear 9 | e vest of "M sation. She banged and flew t a place to live back W, orders she the room. )t —=what have I done to myself? she began to cry, into her small hands, And the worst tha erything t cked up in th d of bangir &h she stay Suddenty onld not She dragged nder the bed iing, she b things inta them, ll the time sl to the ehelves | 100t y close. inning up th in—t1 hed 1 ) de had Th nd she smeli and Ils that in out on ebud | Jeave your old n altar the With her lo breast, Lily nodded ife for You u, k in the st This wasenot en Lily waat own us vealizing 14 had nc hder to He e ad 1outh har “Honey 1 clo ords with aying our b ve to dc e laundr 1 red (o teach Get Sylpho-Nathol | with the morning's mall and a box | ous coolk.” | of tlowers from Staley Drummond. | Lil in buried agai m-m-mot 1 to ¢ som w This is ) forgot to get then ! S night, on Pa ne up o day wedding * conver ! Trinker up the re upstaire in— come over o4 aloud to the wall h, what have T de And plungi her face of it, she sobbed to at Pat didn't really h she had given up o would he and gone | common Jetter- | izaheth have let her stay room all night, in- the door do=n as 1 she had hoped he wonl e wailed aloud, that she house any Aecided in the from and v all her skelter. And wps doing it, she what Pat would gay hen he Jund her n a second, the t t her into his ery Nt h het over out W his blue of rubher — most v smell to Lily that morning. & poing to you? ( 1, el n the wrong : 1 rer says I've got to ore, or elss do th to twist the tru did it without 13 doing or sisters I’ and hi )y br play fair, it had ieved h nd y vork but 1 dn't want to | he soathed her And in b never own mind she was going to to iearn There were lots good restaurants, and there was ntancous coffee, that you could pouring hot water rn to eook ot ins mak or She subfect. “And sesterday 1o go over to that Ertz girl You siill like ber,” admitfed Pat, who too honest for his But that's nething, . with you, and you' woman in this world for ow get that into your cute lit- and stop acting like a own I'm ve ain, and then he he room to rights lumsy movements of a He unpacked the two hags, the bed in some sort of fash- and dusted the furniture with his poclict handkerchief. And, sitting on the broad window- sill, with the sun in her hair, Lily itehed him do it. “1 must learn do these {hings, darling.” she ying down the huffer been using on finger enough to a ly 1 must.” | 1 at her, colorful as ¢ in the sunshine, She was lovely fignre, carved out painted with the most imaginable. A creature 1d cream and gold hur d her ok to put wit made the ion her . long light t. “Re ci u - all the beauty that 1. The satin-soft, deli- ¥, like the beauty of a rdenia laid in a box of cot- Ble 1 E 1 to be shot for taking 1, with ke of his “I had about as much right to lave would have to » He laughed, ought > sai a st o Queen of Sheba but he meant ft. Lily langhed, too. “That's the proper frame of mind for you to he | keep you under my heel from LoOW | this | | 1 glo wit th the ture. flexibility of ti | museles; thesc in—and see that you stay that way," she told him, lightly, but sahe meant it, too! “The best way to held a husband, I reckon, is to keep your foot on his neck! And I'm going to on!" But when he was gone, she be- came deadly serlous again. “I'll never teave him,” thought, still tingling with the memary of his arms around her. “No matter how poor we are, I eare for him too much—'"* She looked down at the gingham apron she had put on before she be- gan to pack her clothes, and won- dered how many gingham aprons she would wear out before Pat was rich enough to afford a servant for her. . And then, as if the sight of the apron reminded her of them, he thought of her clothes in the scented closet at home on Mont- pelier road. “It's just plaln silly for me not to have them,” she declded, and de- cided at the same instant to get them, by some hook or crook. (TO BE CONTINUED) Your Health How To Keep It— Causes of Illness ehe S BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN Editor Journal of the American Medical Association and of Mygeln, the Health Magazine. At varfous times have swept across There have been slouch” and the others, Today the schools arc the advantages of goo the kindergarten emphasizes proper methods of standing cven in the pre-school age. A person inherlts from his an- cestors a certain type of back and 4 certuin type of posture just as h inherits any other charac ics However, these inherited tendencles n be overcome to a certain extent by proper iraining. Diseascs that affect the musecles, the bones and the ligaments also interfere with proper posture and must be treated according to mod- scientific mcthods. Here aro requirements for posture: Some Rul 1—Stand tall. —Sit tall. Walk tall and “chesty” with ht transmitted to balls of feet. our country the debutante ibson girl” and teaching ern ten >l ) fads in posture | ! posture afd | T thrdwn forward, the abdomen|mashed potatoes, stewed onions, drawn in, the curve of the back |endive with bacon dressing, squash flattened, the shoulders well back | pie, milk, coffee. and upward, and the head upward | Grapefruit salad is delicious {The chin is thrown back also. In|served with a chicken or duck din- position, a man has the ap- ner. Used as a separate cours pearance commonly called “chest just after the fowl it acts as a land he is likely to feel the samo appetizer for the dessert to follow. | Grape Fruit Salad | One grape fruit, 16 or 20 whit grapes, tiny cheese balls, head. Ict tuce, fruit dressing. Choose a large fine grapefrui'. Drop into boiling water for fiv: minutes. Drain and plunge at once iInto cold water. Peel and divide into sections perfectly fre from ekin. Chill. Sced and re skin from grapes and let in white grape juice for one Use any preferred eream 1d make moist with heavy Shape into tiny balls. Ar- ona bed of carefully crisped and serve with fruit dress- BEAUTY ' How and Why | DRY AND CREAMY FACE i POWDERS | By Ann Al Face powders are dry or ereamy, according to weather or not they have cold cream or lanoline—wool | tat—incorporated in them. Usually, {1t these ingredients have been used, | the label ment{ons that fact. For skin that is dry, creamy or lanolated powder is indeed desir- able. Such powders are smooth and adhere well to the skin, pre- venting the dry and scaly appear- ance which povder gives to some faces, When powder contains sufficlent eream within ftself, it Is unneces- sary to give the face the usual pre- paratory treatment with cold (cream. However, 1f your prefer- | ence is for the dry powder, apply a ivery small amount of your favor- ite cream, cold or vanishing, he- | fore using the powder. plving the powder, cover of the face well with it y women make the mistake of ving forehead and mneck un- thus producing a very artistic cffect, the difference in color striking tha eye at oncc, and unpleasantly. Also, do not put or |so muech powder that the face looks like a mask, which is what a | great many women do. Copyright. 1927, NEA Serviee, for the Family MARY Bre: ced canned pineap- ple, cereal, eream, frizzled dried beef, creamed potatoes, bran muf fins, milk, coffce, Luncheon-—Calves liver with spin- ach, grape fruit salad, entire wheat bread, cocoa. | Dinner move stand hour. cream range lettuce ing. Fruit Dressing Two eggs, 4 tablespoons sugar 4 tablespoons pineapple juice, 4 tablespoons lemon juice, 1-4 fea- spoon salt. Reat eggs aufil light, beat in sugar, fruit juices and salt. Cook over hot oven until mixture coats a metal spoon. Stir constantly. Remove at once and chill. Taflored Peags Tne. Menus new ime when they for a black Dressy pearls assume portane to the mode fashion a crescent buckle of rabhit. suede tailored belt. ~Draw in abdonme pulling it nd upward. | shoulders h and lare f Pull chin straight toward col- | bhutton. I'latten hollow of olling pelvis downward. parate shoulders from hips s far as possible 9—Lie tall and 10-—Think tall. The movements suggested in his! 1o on this subject in Hygela | 1clude four simple excreises lead- | i to st 1t standing with back against G ar back by | §—8 i\ flat. i 1 the and buttocks | the heels Let the head ouch the wall Tt orward four inches, atten t viaee i bar (loin) re- attempting to touch the wall the lumbar sp \ | 4—1lolding the body erect, shift! he weight forward to the balls of feet and step off maintaining | body in this position. Correcting Weaknesses Every system of gymnasties s planned to correct weakness in pos- These exercises bring about hones, joiuts and | the strength of lead to an ap- the chest is! increase tissues, and pearance in which New Design Puzzle N ——— o THer smething new in design, Note the long berder words, then see if you can complete the minutes Horizontal ted. creater quantity up. Bay tree To impose Toison. Alluvial tract mouth of some Bound An elector. Abbreviation for “railroad.’ Delir i sary result land at the rvers coast, Sun god Burdened June flower. Perfame obtained from flow Somewhat like. hed. 5 all tricks in piquet Freest from moigture. Follow Dre Made Observed. Solar disc. Wrath, take. puzzie fn 30| 7. 3 Attachment for a reaper used to tie grain into bundles. Compound ether. To apportion eards. Pickled. Class of compounds Pertaining to the slde Resided. Pantries. Fruite of the pine tres Invigorating medicine. Paris occasionally indulges itself in the matter of hand embroidery as in this Philippe and Gaston afternoon dress of apricot colored georgette worked in blue, green and gold. The embroidery appears on the sleeves and long fringed tabs at the side, front and back. Beginners and Old Hands agree that Rumford produces light crisp pastry, is economical, and assures lightness without over-richness, Because of its well ‘&% known healthful properties, Rumford actu- *\ ally adds real food vale to all baked foods. RUMFORD The Wholesome BAKING POWDER IS /,'I,f It Never Spoils a Baking R Years of Service E have been serving and Sourer. Punctuation marke Brightly colored parrot fish To mature. Tarpaulin. Wrongs. Hops kiln, Seventh note in seaje. Answer to Yesterday's (WIAIR[S[AIWENPIAIRISIOIN] liLIAPISIE] YJBE I [DIC[ERN1 [DO]L |AMIO[0] JE [D[1 | TIOIRISIAIT] [SIH[AIO[D[O[RINAI pleasing for forty-one years now. That means some- thing to you; it means that here is a dairy that is giving " service that KEEPS its cus- tomers. Have YOU tried our milk yet? JESEIBERKL Pasteurized Milk & Cream Make Suve Its Seibetts” PHONE ~ 1720 437 PARK ST.. NEW BRITAIN, CONN.

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