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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 30, 1927. Adele Garrison”s Absorbing Sequel To “Revelations of a Wife” Beginning a New Serial : READ THIS FIRST: Iways goes there lmmedl-| = ry "y icion, spoiled daughter roing from the clty. | o ;0 oyrum Texingtons, Is engaged oL |to marry a rich bachelor named Staley Drummond. {love at tirst sight with a taxi driver whom she sces on the street. He takes her home and on the way he {tells her his name is Pat France {and that he owns his own cab in a which | compan aded by his friend, Ro; ¥ | Jetterson. He adds that he is going |10 sell it to finance a piston ring that |he has invented ‘0 He and his cab vanish from the pose for | gt fter a or two, during hich she ch time Lily sees him every day, begins to miss him so much trying she decides she cannot marry when Miss Lin- | Drommond. But her mother an- “You 100k fnounces the engagement and the plans for the wedding on June tenth are made. About May tenth Mrs. exington hiree a new chauffeur, and when he comes he is—Pat | France! After that there is no |thought of marrying Drummond in |141y's mind. With her wedding dress Asks for Dicky's Address for 1 ely upon re I'll write Eleanor Lincoln Office it down for ncoln’s request that i the with dress written upon then or afterward hile with evide fru h,” she d vou 163t lio ther Lt to mt munication with D! within me the old ger which has - t n son w But I knew, ist dr consent to th Fedo 1to pre Lillian 1ted voice of thing whic alo 1t T could my j i hars su v good pupil, : s has good 1 and knows how to use it. But wanted Dicky's address. “Did you give it to her? But of | . vou did. There was nothing | to do. Did she condescend to | sive you a.reason for wishing it?” fore asking me to know if the! cky was making vogue out- {the tickets bought for a eca-voyage honeymoon, ete., leaves the house with Pat one day after he disagrees with her mother about u'n'm;: on table, and the following |@ay she marrles him in his parents home next to their little grocery |store. The only guest f Li world is her chum, Sue Cain. The only wedding present is a check from Lily father, which she spends on clothes. She quarrels with Pat's mother, and the 0 exclaimed sitting | PIr of them take a flat of their v that again with | ©Wn. Lily knows she will have to do her own work, but she hates to do 1 the dishes go half-washed, she "0 flam pu ll lw E The you was waitin CRnsEenoLile L fon for unwillir “I was just wondering w be quickest and surest,” banaily enough, but confident that my face and voice betraved no of the way my pulses were behaving. “You see my husband is a very ur a certain quantity, e is supposed to| I repe my young necighbor' S| be at his studio, but he 18 apt to be | question and Lillian ticked off each | ds. half-made, the house half- called out of town at a m e's no- | slowly spoken word on her fingers | QUSty, and the laun piles up until tice and go in half that time.” |in the childish fashion twhich she |Pat hasn't a single shirt left. He 1 smiled at my own e ation, | some affects. [R(\_\' Jetterson, whose wife, Sady and she gave a little functory | © “Another seam finished,” she said | 408 her best to get along with Lily, SR anser el | have rented o tiny machine shop for “However,” T went on, “T H'HZHW (Cm. the marnufacture of the piston ring, the: studio address will be the best| and Pat leaves for it early every | morning—so early that Lily refuses | to get his breakfast. So he goes to a. near-by lunchroom for it, morning, when he and Lity ha quarreled because of the lack of “clean clothes for him, she follow: d just all o8 sid pauses.” the ¥ e me: Newspaper Tea- ervice, Inc.) him to the little restaurant to make up. She finds him having breakfast with his old sweetheart, Elizabeth Frtz, a nurse. abeth is just lea ing when Lily begins to accuse Pat of infidelity to her. Lily created con- |siderable of a scene in the restau- rant. Finally, Pat accompanied her home and told her she must trust {him, and that, in the future, she {must take better care of the home. | Lily tried, and their domestic ship sailed smoother for a few months. One day, Lily met Sue Cain, an old friend, on the ':VH £ rd party? Lily, went to a store and tried to charg |some clothes to her father, She was {informed her mother had left word | that “Mrs. Patrick France | charge things to Mr. Lexington.” (NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY) . . | CHAPTER XXXTIT | With her {the box, Lily herself. Suppose T take it,” she thought, "I might be arrested for a. thief. Then another her: “But they never would arrest me—not in this shop:” . Why, she had been buying clothes here m | Angouleme’s for years and yi They ought to have been ashamed to even telephone her mother to ask | whether she still coula said Whitefoot | clothies to her father or not! “Cherrystones! 1| “Ill just take them, anys cherrystones made up her mi iyself just fo T wonder | worry about it afterward.” it is all Striped Chipmunk has | girl in charge of | desk still had her slender b | ed towards her, and without hought Lily up steboard hox walked out of the stor One or two of saleswomen nodded to went past them Sl them for a long time, not stop her. There was a taxicah in the sireet iiled it, and in two minutes was on ler way home with the box in her arme. She laid it down on the seat beside her and peeped into it fo sce that everything she had ordered was in it— golden bro chiffon dress with a fur-trimmed 1 the end rotl i | ohvek o SEs 2 {efoot nnder his | rown hat of satin ndbag of o , ] | brown sue with dged S handkerchief and a small bottle of corn, or a few | Blue Star” perfume in it, or two, | Tt was half past one when i) { unlocked the door of the little would. ’ | Sue's bridge was at two. down ahe ad S I can make it if 1 hurr, i Shonlt Lily said to hersell, turning on the foot didn 0P 10 | yeater in the bathtub a b 'M”””"H" underthings that MIEERT guiiy and ironed with her Wiio ¢ Most all temptation can withstand. -—0ld Mother Nature, [ | nt | you you at ot riosity is a most It just will not Jus vlien you it up it axpected tir s natural Mouse regard It the persist leave think bobs. ag: Now, that ‘W should to R old foot K the Wood le curious i unk’s hor own under be a| Striped some- began to argue with , Striped Cl k h cdly popped itefoot told h d Chipmunk’s hor 1059 of Ne in‘a while when he about in out all looking f home. H ing for_it it w 1 accou d then quite coverad it. Al ed t rance tared he ground g stons ipmu one ‘ anc was of t “Beechnuts! old and 5t . He sat, in front of the 1d sniffed rrystones!” hreath 1 or didn’t his mi for ile ouldn! it o k turn- he wanted to find out all Striped Chipnnnk torehouse, Whitefoot de- | cided to go on a littl irther, Pretty | oon he came to another littie round | ¥. He d in front of this ttle reund and sniffed. “Becchnuts! Whitefoot un- my, how I do wonder where triped Chipmunk got them. T won- it el 1 beechnuts Al cd Chipmunk hes wor Wbout this, White- little farther, and came to another little poked his nose just in- because So, picked and the s swiftly iff the black-clad her as she 4 known and they did odor ti t there oo stopp 4 doorway said his bre Sy, beechnut 1 ith Vi look ir S selt. rrysto derin ent by e He on s a ch. A corr el nipmunlk cherryston: : rrystol 1 t then down fuist yiwne s White of corn i or <l she had own sen sliad could have iation over the F v owere stained from Poiord i o work of wept tears of hu- hands, themselves, bruised and cut and 1 the bangs housekecping—from of of vegetable EAD COLDS e on; inhale vapors; mil ) foot and the ling £ sconr knives and the mind, T ¢ in the cal had kept the it throhhing street outside nicurd lit an th house T wonderf > dressed. own clothes and Lily rlume on the It v oming, spraying Bhue i i ing of her n t 4 with herself. 1 got then have The; | hadn't walked ! couldn’t have way I could N with them, I gone Lo Sue's party And, even if a store defcetive ¢ New Piayers | h away, now that she Limited © Besides, Lily | er would pay rather than let her Q}k r”“c 1 call him house,” she decided TERMS AS LOW AS $2.00 WEL j Gibbs Piano Co. s best to play safe. But when she 121 CHURCH STREET o ot out me e them had worn them knew that her for the e up Limited disgraced. from Sue's Number W | reached Sue's house she forgot all abont doing it | She was late, | upstairs, where lh'-r coat and pow 1 the guest room went o 1 her nose her she fer girls—with ave was filled with old | fri Then she falls in | finished and hanging in the closet, | il $200 | of | and | and one | 2 invited her | without funds, | could not | fingers almost touching ! thought came to | charge | the credit | ! another | big | golden | d Jaying out | and hard | said to | »in clothes | “and ask im to | By Beatrice Burton Author of “Sally’s Shoulders,” “Honey Lou,” “The Hollywood Girl,* Ete. | | | y pounced upon her with sur- prised squeals and shrieks when they | saw her standing in the doorway |the big, luxurious room: hy, Lily Lexington | you drop from?” “Girls, look | LOOK—" “For goodness' | the runaway bride They might have her wedding gifts or to have ar |'hmg to do with her since her mar- |riage to Pat. But, now that she was ¢ among them again, they friendly as ever. you thi r than you s cousin, Jeanne Angell |asked her, and Lily laughed and {told her that she certainly was. “If you got down on your kneces and scrubbed a kitchen floor and a | bathroom floor every morning of | your life, you'd be thinner, too,” { said, while she ing it, 5 if she were talking about | some other woman—some other {woman who had to mrl- Pat's Iynchbox every morning who had to scrub floors and iron shirts and | darn sock It seemed so natural to be here with these people she h vears. To sit at a car ling a hand of brid, | chocolates from a | light cigarets from cohol lamp heside The fall day was cold, and when the game was over the tea tables | were drawn up before the wood fire and Sue poured tea and chocolate {with whipped erean on the top | 1d served little cakes and sanc where did who's here? Just if here isn't | i 60 on. failed to send Xe, she was table, hold- and her. |a place Jike this * Lily sighed to her when everyone but h had said good-bye and gone, E used to getting up at six and work- ing like a Trojan all day in that flat | with net a soul to talk to but the mitress and the grocer's hoy that I'd forgotten life could be easy and |soft like this—" She looked around e big room where the lshone on silver picture frames and viases of deep red roses, on brocaded chairs and tables of inlaid wood. Tn t hall a silvery-noted bell | ehimed five, | ¥ive o'cloci | home and star [ peel the potatoes Time to go At's supper. Time to 1d put them on to boil. Time to set the table and cut | the bread. Time to fill the water | pitcher and put it in the icebox. ime to go hack to the never-end | round of drudeery, For the fivet time in three months, Lily hated the thought of it. This Hlittle taste of luxury and pleasure tiad seemed to wake her up to the that there was nothing ple ant in her own life but Pat. Her lovely fixed on ancing yellow flames in the clouded with discontent, “Much as 1 love Pat,” she said to f, "I hate being a poor man's ot oy the grate, Jack and T ¢ Drummond was ren long plun her lacquer if T ever | Lily aia not heard and he was {memory 1o he book, the had thi dinner other as she rette it blew @ smoke from “He wondered of « red iy aw you. o answer V'S ni becomi Som She in weeks, simply o figurs td having nothing to very real problem dru < pic out of [ o with “He aske ul not to all that time when 1 im, wasn't I—I ith 3 of 0 know, * 1 was drea hout Pat didu't dur play St didn’t you play fair nswered I think you. Jack other with ue, But franknes: do you lot know il ca ind 1w night, and J too." | The idea that Staley might stil he love with citing to Lily. It stuck in her |all the way home that night Stood in the crowded street-ca iy I hanging to ' ond fostled by the homew -bound crowds | working people, and said to luwl | “One of the richest men in this town (I8 in love with me withent the price of am, hanging to a ap, cash-girl, in a five-and-ten |etore She was full 5 Without knowing what she was do- Sue had stirred up a lot of mis chief that afternoon hy her care trks about Staley Drummond! o e e es abon 2 it over thinks so, curiously ex- mind b. Here like | st of bitterness rem There was no light in the windows of | 1 known for | nibble | tle silver dish or | 1 little silver al- self | firelight | with night,” | A | cent | She gave his number in a voice that trembled. lof the little flat when Lily turne into Derbyshire street at a quarf before six that night | “Thank fortune {sigh of pure reliet . been at home how he have explained the fur-and-vel- | | vet coat to him? The golden brown | 'hat? The chiffon dress with its em- | | broidery of little gold leaves? o breathed a . If Pat had | perfume bottle that I left on the |dreaser.”” she went on thinking. For | | Blue Star per cost $15 an lounce, and Pat would have known that Lily never could have bought it | for herself. As she went up the front walk, searching in her new golden-brown |bag for her latch key a man step- iped out from the vestibule of the ‘flpar‘mvn? building. * | “Mrs. Patrick France?” and Lily answered “Yes” [ thinking. “I'd like a word with you,” |said and stepped into the lighted hall with her. His e down over the coat, and in an in- stant Lily knew what had happencd | . . . The Angouleme Shop had sent | I the store detective for the clothes, or for the money they represented “Do vou mind if T ask you ahout the clothes you're wearing?” the man said, “Oh, no, go right ahe Wi it you want to know about them “There ecems to have been a m understanding about them,” he told [ her in a smooth even tone. without he brightly- i distinetly told you you \nlllll not charge 'he clothes to Mr. rus Lexington—' ‘But he's my own father!” said [ Lly. “And I've always bought things | at Angouleme's—although I never | shall again. You come with me, and {I'l telephone my father—'" | She had just one thought upper- |most In her mind. . . She must get | this man away from the front hall before Pat came! We tricd to get Mr. Lexington this ernoon on the telephone, and his | | office he is out of town,” the | man objected. to see Mr. France Lily's heart scemed to turn coni- Ay over, ey then!” she said. home to dinner—' she knew, but lies Not malicio wicked lies, but small white variety. She never thought of ghem as lies, anyway. She Iions, a2 That was a lig, came easily to the alw The neare: the little The telephone was one n detective Angouleme’s sat on a high white | stool and chewed gum while Lily looked up Staley Drummond’s tele- plione number in the book. . She that He from trembled—his office answered the telephone himself, “Hello” she said to him, “do you | know who this is?” There was a tiny paus know,” Staley answered, suppose 1 could | voice, child, do you? (TO BE,CONTINUED) %es, I ever forget your Life’s Niceties Hints on Etiquette What is one of the show your appreci: How much grac ial law allow one in which to write Yuletide “thank you" letters: 3. Tt is necessary to write letters? best way ion of a gift long The Answers, 1. Acknowledge it at the possible mom-nt, Two week. carliest No. A short letter later s the note now best rule, Menus for the Famtly’ 2 MARY) ved prunes with mbled eggs, crisp hoiled h, syrup, | lemon, s bacon, fried cornmeal mus milk, coffee, Luncheon—Creamed rice on toast, cabbage and carrot salad, apple sauce, molasses cookies, milk, te: Dinner—Tomato bouillon, toast | sticks, cheese souffle, potatoes in | cream sauce, buttered spinach, fruit jelly with whipped cream, milk, coffee. on earth would | “To say nothing ot the Blue Star | he asked, ' went | and Lily alrily answered: | at is | “The | t the credit desk says | My instructions are | 11, we'll go and telephone him | not coming | thought of them as—inspira- | taurant on Boyle street. | gave it to Central in & voice | number, | You don't | does the so- | after the holidays | and a | Creamed Rice on Toast One cup hot cooked- rice, 2 table- spoons butter, 1 1-2 cups milk, 1 1-2 tablespoons flour, 1-2 teaspoon salt, 1-8 teaspoon pepper, 1 cup finely chopped boiled or baked ham, 4 squares hot toast. Melt butter, stir in flour and cook five minutes, stirring constantly. Add milk, stirring, and bring to the boiling point but do not let boil | Season with salt and pepper. Ar- range toast on a hot platter. Cover | with a layer of ham and then a layer of rice. Pour over cream sauce, | garnish with parsley and serve at Inc.) ght, 1927, NEA Service, THERE ARE TWO CHIE CAUSES OF HALITOSI By Ann Alysis. Halitosis, we are tcld, means bad th. Rather an unpleasant stb- ject, yet one that we must consider it we wish to be immacul Offen- |sive body odors suggest unclean | habits, though uncleanliness may Inot be th It may be that the afflicted person simply does not know the proper corrective measures In the case of an unpleasant | breath, the first step toward corre tion is to determine the cause, There lare two people who can help you do this, the physician and the den- [tist. Consult them, Halitosis is often the mouth, fecth or throa not always is this the case. Some- 1es dige sturh or dis- se in oth: s of ths body, 1 | responsible for this annoying condi- | | tion? | Should the cause prove to he de- neglented teeth, discased or tonsils, your physician lor dentist will advise you how to| | proceed. Common sense will tell |you to brush tecth after each | meal so as to remove all particles | of food from them, and for the pur- pose of frecing the mouth of harm- | ful bacteria a good antiseptic mouth | | wash should be used. i 1t your physician has diagnosed | your trouble as involving any of the |internal or: follow his advice in | l\h"‘ matte 1 cause. result of | trouble, but | {cayed or mouth your ns, NEXT: halitosis—cures. (Copyrigit 1 1A Service, Inc.) Your Health How To Keep It— Causes of Illne (BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN) Tditor Journal of the Ameri Medics <ociation and of Hy- B Health Magazine n a, the Since the f of 1918 and statistienns have it influenza epidem 1919, physicians and been attempting to determine the extent to which the amount of luberculosis was in-! creased by the attacks on lung tissue | made by influenza, They also have endeavored to | termine the extent to which per- | sons with tuberculosis suffered as compared with the amount suffered by those who did not have that dis- | case. | Complication A complete survey of the subject | T cently made by the University of Chicago indicates that influenza, as any other cetious diseass a serious complication of tuberculosis | ind that a person who may be re- | | covering from the disease when af flicted with influenza may have his tuberculosis reactiva | However, there has not increase of the death s from tuberculosis in- the years following | Ithe influenza epidemic. | de- | been an | | Not one, but three brown felt | bands encircle and almost make the | ade over the crown of a smart tan t hat. REG. U S, PAT. OFF. ©1927 BY NEA SERVICE, INC. ! name for that part of the hand? The question as to whether per- sons who are attacked with influ- enza are rendered more susceptible to infection by tuberculosis is most | difficult to determine. Many people | are likely to date the beginning of thelr first signs of tuberculosis to an attack of grip or influenza. Discounts Predisposition The fact that the number of deaths from tuberculosis has not in- creased since 1915, but indeed that | there was a decline of unus siz since 1919 and 1920, would indicate that the influenza was not important | in predisposing, persons to infection | by tuberculosis, No doubt, persons who were mild- Iy infected with tuberculosis and Who developed influenza suffered much more than did normal persons | | and theerby were likely their tuberculosis to the attack of |influenza, tuberculosis greatly, but is continuing to decline |at a fairly steady |dence that influenza does ! some peculiar manner make it more 't‘fls)' for a pers | fected with tube to relats Cn the other hand, the fact thai has not increased ite is good evi- not in n to become in- cle baci SKIN IRRITATIONS For their immediate relief and ‘healing doctors presctibe Resinol This which suit, an ac- companying short, close-fitted jacket, owes no small meas- ure of its success to the white satin blouse. The tucked voke efiect is re- peated on the fore- sleeve and the U shaped band ex- tends far down the back as it does down the front, on- i the tucks. has N AlENAEEEE & AENNE" B ANNan _=l filll "R wEEE At this time each year dad would like to have his palm “greased” with l gold. However, do you the It know | tits No. 43 horizontal. Horizontal. What is the name of the larg American owned ship? Active, A pygm Wooly surface of cloth. More uncommen. Wand. Above. Menaces. Variant of “a. Plant from which is secnred. Small depression made knock. Red rye. Indigent. o prattle, The check. o supply with nourishment. Since. Rots flax by exposure. Hastengd. haft of a feather. Sesatue, Half an em. What is the name of the palm of the hand? (PL) What is the abbreyiation for “Virginia?” Detects, Who discovered the circulation | of the blood? | Vertical. On what river is the city of Vienna situated? | | bitter drug by a | 15. Portion of the mouth. Deity. In what state was President Coolidge born? The average woman tries on everything in the store except the lamp shades. What square docs 160 squar Who president? Preposition of pluce. Correlative of neither, Which is the largest A alia? Aperture. Ratite birl. To {mitate. To finish. ‘What is the most famous pic poem? (o jecr. Whitish gray. Principle. Seas. Which is the highest mountain in Canada? Third gramm To liberate. One in cards (1. Brilliant red oceanic fish To kill. Feminine pronoun. Age. Seventh note in scale. Abbreviation for “senior.” measure rods equal our twenty-ninth city 1n jcal case. Answer to Yesterday's Puzzle