Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
USED CARS YouCanBuyOneotOur’ USED CARS For a Small Down Payment LONG TERMS AND TRADES 1926 Ford Sedan, $175 1926 Star 6 Bedan, $325 1926 Ford Runabout, $110 1926 Ford Touring $100 1926 Ford Dump Truck, $175 We have a choice line of used cars that cannot be beat any- ! - NO AUCTION BUT Three Fine Used Car Values At Lowest Possible Prices 1928 DODGE Sedan PRICED WAY BELOW ANY OTHER USED CARS IN TOWN THESE At a Price You Want to Pay 1926 C';f:& ofiandau Sedan 1925 Ford 4-Door Sedan $100.00 (Good) Yearly Order Rates Upon Application ' THE HERALD o [ittie Yeflow House| | =2 Alphabetically Arranged for Quick ] and Ready Referemce for CON!I’:‘(‘?’I;:I#‘;?IIR‘"O}JI 7 DUR SSN | | Charge Prepatd READ THIS FIRST: “I told you T took her home that nearer to the house she saw that it| 10 The little yellow house never‘!lr-l day—that 1s, I drove home with | was her mother's white apron. She showed its true dinginess because 'her in her car™ he answered. “And |w tanding—a small slight shadow 1 day ...1 line 3 days...1 line 2 24 i days...1 line “8 “3 s s A Mrs. Milburn refused to let anyone when I saw where she Hved-lnd'— gainst the shifting shadows of the see it. Her love transformed it tofound out that she knows a lot of inight, at the top of the porch steps. | & shining palace where sacrificing devotion made everything out of nothing. Emmy, the only daughter, | ‘wanted te lift herself from the sor- didnegs of the little street she lived in, to the heights where she felt she properly belonged. After a party given by her rich cousin, Marianna, she resolved to better herself some day. Meantime she took a business course, paid for Pentland, and snubbed, as well as she could, Robb, the boy down the street, who worked in a mill, and who worked in a mill and who rep- resented the life she determined never to let herself sink into. One day Emmy met once more the mun who looked like Robb. 8he remem- bered their first meeting at the ice skating rink. He had taken her home, Her mother had sald, “Never g make yourselt even a and common, Emmy." (NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY) DAY little cheap CHAPTER XX Bitting there in the warmth and brightness, sipping clam bouillon from a thick white cup, Emmy lis- tened to what he had to say to her. “You remember the day I saw you at the rink—the day your cousin left you?" he began, and Emmy nodded. “Well, you remember that when I took you home that night you wouldn't tell me your name or make & date with me?" Emmy nodded her head again. Her deep gray eyes were fixed upon his face intently, and she had set her steaming bouillon down on the counter before her. “The next day was Thanksgiving, | and I'd been invited to a girl's house for dinner,” the man went on with his story. “But I called her up and told her I couldn’t come. I went out to the rink instead, hoping that maybe you'd be there again.” Emmy shook her head. She had been at home all Thanksgiving aft- ernoon. That had been the day when Perry had brought Lovey to the house for .his parents’ blessing. “You weren't there, but your cou- sin, Miss Pentland, was. We've been seeing each other almost every day since,” he finished lamely. “I drove a8 far as her house with her that night, and then footed it back for my own car. I was keen as mustard about her right from the start.” “Were you introduced to her or 4id you—just talk to her the way you talked to me?” Emmy sald. “I just talked to her and helped ' her on with her skates.” He was perfectly frank about the manner of their meeting. *Did you tell her your own name or did you say you were ‘Jim 8paulding’ 7" “I told her my own name—Jim Baldwin—of course.” “I don't understand this at all,” sald Emmy, shaking her head with ita live-gold hair shining under her soaked hat. “You scratch an ac- quaintance with & cousin of mine and tell her your own name. Then why did you tell me a false one—a made-up one?” Jim Baldwin seemed to think this over for a minute. He looked em- barrassed, and he ran his hand over his head as it he were trying to rub some plausible explanation from his ®* he sald finally with a you see I didn’t know what kind of girl you were. . . Youi didn’t know me from Adam, but you | skated with me and let me pick you up and drive you home—" He strug- gled visibly for more tactful words to explain his point of view. “But you dldn’t know what kind of girl my cousin was, cither. And you didn't lie to her about your name. You didn't sail under false colors with her,” ly. The man gave his short embar- rassed laugh again. He was plainly uncomfortable. He began to stroke his head again. POOR PA BY CLAUDE CALLAN “Cora thinks that all chil- dren are terribly spoilt that won’t let her little son Ves- tro have his way about everything.” (Copyright, 1228, Purliswers S;ndlcate) by Grandmother ' !people that I know—why, natural- =" “You told her your right name!" | Emmy finished his halting sentence for him. I sce. . . . And now you're {afraid that I'll tell her that I knew you as Jim Spaulding and that you met me just as you met her. You're afraid she’ll get the impr on that you're the kind of man who goes around flirting with girls in public ¢ was o solt and her eyes 50 calm and candid that young Mr. Baldwin did not sce how angry sh was. He thousit that she under- | \t(md him and his way of looking t the whole affa t Youse got the idea” ‘1 can see tlat I've wran- 158 g prebly w4 HE turned his head to s she left him and [ walke hie drug store between the counters heaped high with pow- | der and soap &nd magazines ana | chest protectors, | | She opened the door and the rain took her. It scemed to close around her like quiet walls and she was thankful for it. It sang on the pud- dles as she started home. She walk- the four miles to Flower street, and all the way there somcthing her mother once had sald to her Kept coming back to her to beat against her brain: “Don’t ever make yourself even a little cheap and common, Emmy. Remember that when men are bables they start crying for the moon, and they keep on wanting it adl their lives, The moon—out of | reach.” It had not meant much to Emmy when she sald it to her. But now she understood exactly what she had | meant. If she had been “the mo out of reach” she never would have had her feelings trampled upon lhe way Jim Baldwin had just tram; upon them. She never would lme spoken to him in the first place. If she had not made herself cheap and common by riding home with him that November day, this would never have happened to her. “He got a wrong impression of | me first at the rink,” thought Em. | my, flying along through the winter | rain like a lost redbird in her scarlet | oilskin “slicker.” “And then when I jumped into his car as if it were| | nothing to me to ride with strangers, | and he brought me to Flower street | and saw the awful place where I lived, he just made up his mind that he didn’t ant to have a real friend- | it all out. “He decided I was the kind of girl who wouldn't expect to know his right name—the kind who'd go to meet him in public places— She remembered how he had gone to the rink calmly expecting her to come there to carry on their flirta- tion, and he had met Marianna in- stead. i | "I ought to go straight to Marl- anna and tell her the kind of cad he 1s!" Emmy sald hotly to herself. | But, after all, what was the use | |of stirring up trouble? . . . And anyway, Marianna was certainly [top step of the And all at once a half-forgotten ' memory came into Emmy's mind of | another time when she had come up this strect, feeling as hurt shamed as she felt now. It had happened years and years' before when she was six years old. | She had fallen in the school yard during a hilarious game of pom-pom- bull-away, and she had skinned her nee. That wouldn't have been so , but some of her playmates had wghed at the way she had tumbled nto the mud. And Emmy, foolishly cositive us she always had been, had come rushing home. She could still remember how her mother had been standing on the porch when she rounded the corner, and how at the sight of her white apron and her arms and her gentle eyes, she had burst into loud and childish weep ing. She could remember, as if it were yesterday, how Mrs. Milbur had stroked her hair and murmur lod, “Yes, yes, my pet, I know"—ar it she really had known just what had happened. As if she had under stood in some vague mother-way and | had come out to wait for her. It sccmed to Emmy now that it would be the deepest relief to rusk 10 her, as she had rushed then with her troubles, and to cry on her small singham_shoulder because she war urt and ashamed now, just as ahe had been on that other day so long ago. But instead of that she shook i herself and called out through the T “Great night for a shipwreck, Mother, eh what?" She wasn't six years old any more. She must settle these things for her self, (TO BE CONTINUED) z I’EASE T0 BE NAMED AS LEGION'S LEADER (Continued from First Page) | |was one of the biggest observances ever held in this city. He has been chairman of the boy's camp com- mittece of the post since the camp was first started and the success which attended his efforts in this | directron attest to his abllity as an organizer. He has always been included in the membership of all the important ship with me,” she went on tlgurln:‘tcor;;\lmme;'s 1:; thmon. A ans for the observance of Arm- !istice day on Sunday and Monday will be perfected at the meeting to- night. A large number of the mem- | bers of the post, headed by its drum corps, will take part in the World War dedication in West Haven 8un day afternoon. These will return tc this city in time to attend the com munity patriotic rally under the auspices of the post and clergy of the city at the Stanley Arena in the evening. Monday morning, members of the post and other ex-servicemen of the city will assemble at the post head- and 1924 Nash Coach $200.00 1925 Ford Coach $100.00 TERMS—TERMS—TERMS CHHALL[nc 18 Main St. | Open Evenings and Sundny 1926 NASH Spec. 6 Sedan 1925 NASH Spec. 6 Sedan TERMS and TRADES Count 6 words to & line. 14 lines to an inch. Minimuro space 3 linea Ainimum Book charge. 38 centa Telephone 925. Ask for six time rate. Closing time 1 & m. Saturdsy, READ HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS FOR BEST RESULTS where with prices ranging from $35 upwards. . Automotive Sales & Service Co New Britain’s Only Ford Dealer 248 ELM .STRFET AUCTION SALE! TOMORROW Nov. 10th, 100 AUTOMOBILES 100 The Used Cars of the Following Reputable Dealers BUICK—Capitol Buick Co.—1139 Stanley Street CHEVROLET—Patterson Chevrolet—1141 Stan]e); Street CADILLAC—LASALLE—Lash Motors, Inc—411 West Main Street OAKLAND—PONTIAC—C. A. Bence, 50 Chestnut Street The widest selection of the finest used cars ever offered for sale in New Britain including cars in every price class such a Cadillacs—LaSalles—Buicks—Oaklands—Pontiacs—Chevrolets and trucks of standard makes. These cars now on display and will be demonstrated to anyone calling at the sales rooms of the above dealers before Saturday, November 10th. . TERMS—AII cars of $50 and under, cash—above that amount 40% down, balance easy monthly payments. SALE TO BE HELD TOMORROW 1:30 p. m. and 6:30 p. m. Rain or Shine more than able to 100k after herself, duarters on Washington street and especially where men were concern. Proceed to the memorial atop Wal ed. Better to be silent and lock her nut Hill park where a short servic | humiliation in her own heart. will be held at 11 o'clock and a Flower street was black with rain Wreath placed there in honor of the at the sald Emmy blunt. | and darkness that night. The down- | pour of days seemed to have washed {all Kinds of stale and woolly odours {out of the mud and the dead leaves {in the gutters. In spite of herself Emmy found | herself seemg the place as it must | jhdve looked a month before to the critical and snobbish eyes of Jim Baldwin on the night when he had brought her home. “Well, in another month I'll be out of it anyway,” she told herself, “it I have any luck at all in landing a job.” Through the gloom and the rain she could make out a faint glimmer of whtie ahead of her. As she came AUNT HET BY ROBERT QUILLEN “People ought to move once in a while, just to get rid of the half-empty medi- cine hottle they've been . AL R AR AU FOR SALE WONDERFUL APARTMENT SITE WEST MAIN ST. COMMERCIAL COMPANY INSURANCE REAL ESTATE Commercial Tram Compaay Bullding Tel. 6000 war dead. Business will cease for two minutes at 11 o'clock Monday morning in memory of the armistice. Under a new order issued to the police of England and Wales, the tafls of stray dogs must be meas- |ured 8o that the figure may appear dog. New Home of Buick and Chevrolet 1141 Stanley Street Phone 211 'in the “identity certificate” of the | HEY-MU&H—YOU? MOM MW [savs IF YOU KNOW WHATS GODD FER YOU~ YOU SHOULD COME HOME THIS MINU ! . WOTS THE GOOD OFF D 'H': 86 ANY BULLETS lA GLN wmou*ra' FEK ' THAT GUNZ SUTTENLY, SuSIE 1| [\WAL, |LLTAKE‘CAEEG-EMTILL‘/ER = GONNA SHOOT BULLETS? GOSKH! I was JESS PRACTICIN' BREAKIN' THE BREECH AN’ SOME- HOW ER OTHER SHE FLEW UP AW SOCKED "New Britain We need room on account of our recent fire and to get this room we must sell these cars at once, LOW DOWN PAYMENTS 1928 Hudson Sedan 1928 Studebaker Coupe 1927 Studebaker Coupe 1928 Essex Sedan 1926 Packard Sedan 1925 Stutz Sedan 1927 Essex Sedan 1926 Essex Sedan 1924 Hudson Sedan 1925 Hudson Sedan MANY OTHERS $50 UP Terms and Trades The Honeyman Auto Sales 139 ARCH STREET 200 EAST MAIN STREET Open Evenings | See Whitmore at 250 Arch St. ‘WE GUARANTEE SATISFACTION PAIGE “6-72," 1926 Sedanm, re- finished, latest ¢ wheel brakes, balloon tires. $625 including slip covers. CADILLAC “61,” 8 cyl. Sedan. From select private use, per- fect operating, $450. NASH “6-99,” 1924 Sedan. Re- finished and overhauled, $295. 1925 Sedan. From very careful owner. Splendid mechanical condition, $385. REO, 1921 Sedan, 6 cyl. appearance, fine motor, Good $95. VELIE 6 cyl. S8edan. Easy rid- ing. b passenger. Price $125. PAIGE 6-72 5 pass. 2 door S8edan, $695. Remarkably fine condi- tion. This model noted for its satisfactory service, STUDEBAKER, Special 8ix Tour- ing, honestly good throughout. Price $85 to close out our last open car. JEWETT Six Sedan. One of the toughest little 5 passengers ever built. Power and speed. $250. HOWARD W. WHITMORE 250 Arch Street Tel. 2810 Open Evenings READ THE HERALD ICLASSIFIED ADS LONG DISTANCE RANGE OSWALD OSHAUGHNESSY B STEBBING-T WANT You TO ME IN THE EVE! HER:-. Baw' sb.\ Hud’c&mTWS’ [LL KEEP THAT CANNON, TiLL You G'TS To THE BIG wWOODS TOO!