New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 6, 1929, Page 16

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R R et AU RIVALWVIN © 1929 & NEC THIS HAS HAPPENED After working three yedrs as pri- vate secretary to John Curtis Mor- gan, attorney, Nan Carroll discove she is in love with him and de mines to resign. She postpones her resignation when she learns Mc is staking his professional in on the innocence of Crawford, indicted ment. his Nan distrusts Crawford Morgan, beauti £ th yer. On the last day of the trial tle Curtis old son of Morgans, tly places i hands a took from his m note is his guilt 1 Iris when Morgan ford his fr: Nan is relieved when the courtroom and guilty” verdict does not have to proof of his wi faithlessness. " Crawford town. A few days la for a supposed pleasure York. Later saying she does not lo that she will not retu no mention of Crawford Morgan not to search fc Morgan Morgan in despr place his chil Nan dissuade stay with goes to the capital on b (NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY) | CHAPTER XX the maid, opened t1 could reply to question who obvi d the w lit- the from e show and immediately es from Iris Morgan and She 1 2 letter cor akes is crus s 1 the child wh Estelle Before N embarrassing usly r Nan's intry after a curt ing, up staircase to the second R child’s voluble chatter more made up for any co on Estelle’s part owr vou works for my father she's going to be a lawyer foo wl she's grown- you, Nana?" “I'm already g Nan laughed, “but a lawyer. Mayhe father and I will all t gether some da “Uh huh,” Curtis ing on ahead to open the guest room tha signed to Nan. “Listen, a polic puppy 1 na=gd him? Cop i fhe snow and he can pretty nea Jump throuzh p. I'ni te id ¥ our room, N in vo gree Nan; n his office Nana Zuess w s s case man-and-wife, are Nana man mean husband, Nan “Yes, and I haven't Curtis, so T'll need only or pretty beds,” Nan ed she looked about the larg ful guest chamber with dazzle “You're not listening, Nana tis stormed with sudder T said—if you ain’t m could I sleep in here with you ir other twin bed? Clara's gone explained proudly. “T threw at her and it stack in her che ain’t got a nurse any not gonna have one other kids make f T have a nurse. Bu Nana? I—T d 1f that Does hi petular ~and-wife, Nan knew to bargain with the for his good behavior, something so mourr in the liquid black eye pleading with ed with and-so." gained with Curtis a ed a new me Nan still h: what that met! Il be glad to And now. suppose 3 with Cop until d might even have t a new trick unpack ot I'm gc and dres id Mr wanted 1 while he The n saw that s Miss Carro to have a fire as yo words tumb —*“that about. The mind you shape for t what Curtis su bein mot from his f told you his “T didn't wa tested, break wit Maude—t cook listenineg morning. you tempora 1 says to M tell you, Ma coming back “Curtis kitchen ther tantrums, devil's own come, Miss you can own mot good with r nurse and 1 d SERYICE INC, P in y. Do I KiDS | a little hastily, ing | added | down room have to wash » knew that the ach other. “Go on with your dishwashing, O'Brien,” Nan suggested, look- i bout the immaculate kitchen with frankly approving eyes. *“I know you want to get through as As vou can 1o you 1oy oon There's and we can't miss,” the cook illy voluble. I did as to ask Mrs. Morgan to let us live in the servants’ the garage, seeing as Big Pat—that's me husband, lled that because of Littl me boy, you know—tends the furnace here nights and mornings. Big Pat offered to mind the furnace and do odd jobs to for the but the miss she band be sep- answered me pay rent ‘lowed didn’t want her boy playing with her | bhoy— old is Little Pat Nan interrupted is, and Mr smart as a whip. f 1 do say so as I shouldn't. Full of but a mean streak little Trish body whout le P eak out and play with night. It's a lonely lad he little one. Nan suddenly miss, not s wholr felt as excited as if she were stumbling upon the solu- tion of a murder mystery. “I'd like to meet Big Pat and Little Pat, Mrs. O'Brien. Perhaps Mrs. Morgan spoke without really kno Pat. Mrs. Morgan,” she in a carefully casual voice, “is to be abroad for several hs, according to her present ind Mr. Morgan has ask to help arr matters here d Little oir ins, 1 me ng absence 1f you'd like to sec Little Pat. ement the furr Big Pat they" n ry minute the night. T'll usually wait for till I'm through then we go home to- her, and 1 stir up a bit of sup- for the three of us, but it is d — us livi the tra night snow ground Yoo-hoo, Big Pat.’” called in a strident but pl voice, down the laundry chu tall, broad-shouldered tired and masculine ¢ blue-eye O'Brien ito the hen from the Nt stairs, 1 1t som their o they saw perched kitchen stool. Big Pat be- ard and shuffling, bnt planted his feet 1s into ned up at nscious Ior at sight, and th fixing call me with this fo hey there work them. m the man, and red- lition of Maud joke of Nan, in pon the amber chiffon, wide which could 1 Little “Mrs. Pat,” . Mrs. O'Brien?” | Maude O'Brien we have like to make dollar a life!" his his ind your mother took the do you Curtis to Say, Littl Pat some money “Betcha would you Little Pat broad grin cars. replied almost vou and rooms over the think you'd like and from school— public with has a you Kknow ure, T know ga- the neare —and noons? piay He him in the after- wondcerful police Py It was me that d that puppy,” Little Pat 1 off nonchalantly. Al . kid,' T said, and he did like the job. Gee! Itd ll—a“dollar a week for noth Can't 1, Mom?" sensible young lady you Maude O'Brien told with apparent irrel “Public school! It'll be the z of the poor little mother- 1d — motherless only te I mean, miss,’ the miss,”" Carroll she hastened is a six blocks from e Nan mused 1ding head thoughtfully. Big Pat, that you're willin 1 to the furnace in ex- for the rent of the rooms 1 be her I under. | two would like You don't ‘live in,’ | make so | his | O'Brien | fa-| to] school, of course | over the garage.” “Yes, miss, and glad of the | chance,” Big Pat acknowledged. |after clearing his throat politely. | “You see, miss, I have a job day. times, but the extra money comas in handy, o I tend the furnace in this house and the next. Me and Maude's saving up to send the boy to coll-:ge He wants to be a doz- tor, and doctor it'll be, if Fecp our strength.” “I really haven't what to do,” Nan confessed frankly “Mr. Morgan thought I'd better try to find a housckeeper, in addition |to the cook and maid, but it docs cem rather ridiculous to have | three grown people all working for |one lone man and boy, doesn’t it? | So I've been wondering, since tall ing with you, Mrs. O'Brien, if yo and Estelle between you couldn’t manage to look after Curtis the that Mr. Morgan will late or dining out. If you he hastened to add, Mr. Morgan will be gial I'to pay you both a little more salar than Mrs. Morgan arranged for, ) elle could ha two evenings a well as one woon a week out, it you co arranga with her to be here the other evenings, or at least when Mr. Morgan asks yon to stay. What do you think, Mrs O'Brien?” we vorking could sure that The cook considered, as she un- rolled her her work done for the night he part about Cur- tis is easy, Lord, I can keep on two rapscallions as weli as one. But I'm just thinking, it you don't mind me saying so, that |a house without woman hoss it is like 2 ship with mutiny on it Estelle’s a nice en girl, and I I'm to-middlin’ easy to | get along but neither of knowin » is to take hold and give . Me—for instance, 1 like to have the lady of the house write out the mee-nus for me, not having much gift that way. though being a fair cook— “You're a wonderful cook, Mr: O'Brien,” Nan corrected her warm- “But 1 do nnderstand what yon mean, and 1 thi of you to put it so honestly. I won- ;wlflr if you and Estelle would much mind my keeping an eye on !things? 1 could give you the me- | nus for the v Monday, and | you conld be ible for marketing. I'm snre you would tr to be as economical as if you were buying food for your own table.” she flattercd the cook. “That 1 weuld, miss, and glad do it for the poor lone man O'Brien veed heartily rand idea. miss, if could spare the time.” “Then suppose we figure on that ,” Nan be “I'll have all adesmen’s bills sent to me at the |of ind will check them with your duplicates once a month ra too, and sce that rais.s come they're Men don’t notice about such things, you And T'll do the shopping hous~, if you and Estelle list and give it to me Curtis' clothes. too Docs the laundry go sleeves, miss! eye es wit us which orders, to Maude ba alari whe earned. | know for the Will keep a lonce a week | of course, ont No, Hattie, a colored wo- man, comes two days a Monday for washing and for ironing and mending,” Mauc inswered. “She keeps the clothes in order, as the linena. She's good, Hattie is.” ne!™ Nan cried {last of her most pressing problen !slipping away. “When could voa | move into the rooms ahove the miss. Tuesday as well secing 1 2 Pat his smorrow grinning roval decisions. 1 take Jike to see the little shaver while you're here, miss. and Maude and Little Pat premises you won't need to v about ti lad, 2 miss, an settled With n | on wor mis When she returned to the living mournful at the his gazing upward | the fireplace, life grade school just | portrait of his exquisite mother, his | {phe languid fingers pulling absent-minc edly at the ears of 4 sleeping pupp: Nan's heart, which had been so Il of pity and love for the deseri- 1 husband, swelled suddenly room for the forlorn littl known exactly | be | 1 am| | miss. awfully nice | very | the | you | i week— | to | boy who had been made wors than motherless by Iris' guilty pas | sion for Bert Crawford “Bed time, man-child, blithely, but with tears. “Man-child | dreamily hat calls me — man-child. he ays Sonny-boy, too. calls me ‘lovs What's Nana?” | “One who loves, of {m\»d gaily, but there |stab of pain in her heart at thought that some day Curtis would know a different, less simple, more sinister meaning of the word, and that he might hear it appliel to the man who had stolen his she called Curtis repeated what Father Sometimes Mother a lover course Nan was a® switt son. “Come along, now. It's eight o'clock. And I've got something awfully exciting to tell you whilz you get ready for bed.” The girl and the child were walk ing up the swairs together, hand in hand. when the telephone rang. lonz distance!* Curtis beginning to jump up ani on the stairs. “The phone's library, Nana. Whoopee! Betcha it's Mother! T knew E |telle was a liar when she said Mother wasn't coming bac] “And I bet it's your h cried, bounding down the two steps at a time. But oh, what if it was Iris” Could she possibly make herself rejoice, if Iris was coming home? (TO BE CONTINUED) D. OF I, DELEGATES LEAVE " POR DENVER CONVENTION hat's shrilled down |in the Nan stairs Mre, Edward L. Habnon and Miss 1 Mary McCabe Depart for Colorado Today. present almest 200 nembers of the Daughters of Tsa- | bella, Mrs. Edward L. Hannon, 46 | Gra and Miss Mary McCabe left for Denver 9:49 this morning convention of th I Ta ve | for or- | the national zanization. I The loral wome | Sprinsfield, M the New Lngland delog take a special train for In Chicago they will mak: stop Sunday morning to attend mass in one of the larger churches and picls up the delegates from tl west. A similar stop will be s City, where the de the corn helt will bhoard the Monday evenin the led to arrive at will they first to will | meet and west mid- at Ka from train train is sched ver. speeia Den- The convention will I: or five days. and the | from the convention will for to take fou and six ip |Hoovers at Camp at Week-End Holiday ! Criglersville, Va.. July § (UP)— | President and Mrs. Hoover, their son | Herbert, Jr., and a party of friends |were enjoying a week-end sojourn today at the president’s Shenandoah National Park fishir rve. The president arrived at the camp |late last night aft>r an uneventi%l motor ftrip from Washington. He was met hy Mrs. Hoover and ther |son. who had preceded the president |by a few hours. In the party were Dr. Vernon Kellogg, old friend and neighbor of the president; Walter Newton, White House sccretary; Li. Commander |Joel T. Boone, White House phy- {sician; and Mark Sullivan and Wil- n Hard, Washington journal The party will remain in ean {til Sunday afternoon morning. o1 ‘S\\'arm of Bees Follows i Its Owner to the Grave | Durham, N. H, July 6 (UP)—Do ipo- [room Nan found Curtis lying befors | bees learn to love their keepe black | | This question of bees arose formerly owned ate Dr. Charles James of the ity of New Hampshire was | found on a cluster of flowers on his | grave in a cemetery about two miles from here. The bees had left the hive where Dr. James previously had cared for them. | by her voice was husky | the | mother from her husband and her | locai | when a ANDY'S FOURTH A HEGTIC DAY His Lizzie Had a Hilarious Time as Well Dear Mary Ann, Nothing much to write you e to tell you how my flivver had a hi- | larious time over the Fourth dodg- ing the mischief makers to keep |from going up in smoke. As my pul Noah Count and me was returing | from a ball zame which our side lost cept | because we couldn't get a run even |if it was raffled off and we held all | the tickets but on>, we slows down 's not to toss a gang of young fel- s who were taking up half the road | for off-side losses. These lads were lin nt spirits on account of the Fourth and was carrying a load which wa 1 fireworks 1 | makes ordinary days seem like cele- | brating ones, | Like most lads they were out for | whoopee times and didn't care who | knew it. One guy turas loose a mean bunch of discords by package of firecrackers into the back seat and judging from ihe racket you'd think all the tires, in- cluding the spare, had gone flatte: exuber throwing a | than the bottom side of a dishpan. Lizzie so mud begins back-fir- This made poor old she boils over and ing. She was now an all taikis what a vocabulary she had we were used fo riding in second- hand gas wagens and so had no trouble hanging on. although at any inute we expected to start on a cross-country flight withour waiting | for the stowaway | Another wild throw cans | | | uckily to look around in tim: “cannon cracker” big «n for a hit-hing pos a door. Just as ho | everything” the Bix Bertha, which must of been ioadal with enough stuff to move any army front line back five feet, spa.ks its picee. The explosion kno, the Zlivver off ince like a flapper's memory, | door off the ropes that v tituting for hina to the upholst v wins fella should repea: n front of ni people, let alone his relations. If the hole it mals in che top was placed in the gronnd -—ou'd hafia spread a cellar Joo= aver it 10 keep from falling ‘n ha: one wasted,” chuckl:s Naah, reaching for 1eky ai of aw kelly which got knock=1 off the top of nm oaco runring- “What do you mean. wast- ed?" T asks kind: peeved gazing at the tonnean which resembled some- thing a 1t of moths had nsed 0 ‘Because,” grins bimbo who wonld cven get a outa being socked with a leg off he kitchen t “there was 10 at drivers the full hen- ugh to use teaning against vells to “hold something no al inst his st e board for c: thi mp grou ki 1hic te get it “Another homenial that,"” T says to toss our stery that ckel cigar fire laddies windows, ‘and we'll | and T don’t m He w 1bout this would Te drive into answers re carthqua ke stopping ihe tliv- upiol- like ver parts of ¢ was snmounldering or the mattre throw s The tonement zoing up on hills s somethirg 1 good time to fire station. “Yeah," T stic. coughing and spluttering mor» than the enginc with two cylinders missing the smoke almost smos into auto ‘cemetery Although the woar mostly on Lizzie T w hick to e hody offe outa an in isccrack as ers me, “or an 2. and for an only to hnld coat ides T didn’t want te see anyore hurt too much of man to enzeas when thers is six rinting days cver. i Andy Dale 1S ga my 10- ang 1 gentle esper, one with reraps ally sgains my 'Y DRIVE 6.—After cight months of driving through all va- rieties of climate and country, two Indians, M. Canagasaby and G. Pil- lay have arrived here. completing an [ 11.800-mile trip in a motor car from Penang. Th passed through 17 ! countries on the long trip VAR London, July and Noah | was | | would i e e L How Endurance Record Has Risen in 25 Years Steadily and surely during the last generation aviators have ex- tended the record for sustained flight in heavier-than-air ma- chines. Some high spots among the record performances are: 1906—Santos-Dumont, 21 second. 1908—He min. 39 secs. 1905—Wilbur Wright, 2 hours, 20 min. 23 101 Frane 17 min. 57 secs. 1920—Bessoutrot and Bernard, ance, 24 hours, 19 min. 7 secs. 1921 — Stinson and Bertaud, Mineola, N. Y., 26 hours, 18 min. 35 secs ; 1924—Coupet and Drouhin, of *rance, 37 hours, 59 min. 10 sees. — Drouhin and Landry. 45 hours, 11 min. 59 secs —Chamberlin and Acosta, Mineola, 51 hours, 11 min. 25 1927—Risticz and Edzard, Ger- many, 52 hours, 22 min. 31 secs 1328—Haldeman and _ Stinson, Jacksonville, Fla., 53 hours, 36 min. 41 secs. x1929—Army Mark”, Los Angeles, 40 min. 15 secs. x1929 — Robbins and Fort Worth, Tex.,, 172 hours, min. 1 sec. x1829—Newcomb and Mitchell, Cleveland, 0., 174 hours, 59 secs. x—Refueling flight _— France, Farman, ¥rance, 3 France, 13 hrs. I'rance plane “'Question 150 hours Kelly, 32 What They Won’t Say To Keep $2 in Pocket Two dollars is not much money; with it one can go to the movies four time: can buy a fairly decent shirt; or, it one knows the right people, he can get a quart of accept- | avle gin. But when they come to the police | station, a ticket in one hand, ac- quired through the violation of some parking ordinance, and in the other and $2 which they hope to save, it is surprising what people will do for that same §2. And that whyv polic is one of the reasons lieutenants and sergeants lead a hectic life; they must sep- urate the wheat from the chan somehow, and must know rather in- stinctively when a man is telling the truth, or when he is just trying to cave his §2. But Licutenant, I wasn't in that parking space for over five minutgs,” is the usual wail of the man with the ticket. However, ihe lieutenant us- ually knows better for he knows his officers and he knows that they not report a man when he lidn't violate a parking ordinance. And then there is the story of the supreme chisler of New Britain the man who ve confidentiall went to the mayor’'s secretary, hand- «d him a $2 parking ticket, and asled him to do what he could to gt rid of it. Police officers will swear as to its authenticit Jewclryfand Caserone From Winter St. House One lady's gold wrist watch, one man's gold watch, $10 in cash and @ gold signet ring were taken from the home of Witalis Broden, 47 Win- ter street, sometime July 4. accord- ing to a report made to the- New Britein police department Friday night. Rroden, according to his repori, helieves that the house was entered Thursday, for when he returned to his home today he found the doors unlocked. The matter has been re- ferred to the detectives. WORE OUT MANY SHO! London, July “King of the Hoboes of the United States,” Jo- seph Leon Lazarowitz, dropped off here recently and anounced he in- tended visiting a and Russia soon, the only two places in the 1 he has not traveled in. The king has been at his occupation of hoboing for nine years and has traveled a distance of 362,500 miles. He was clected 'to office at a conven- tion in Minneapolis in 1 READ HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS FOR BEST RESULTS PROBABLY THE TRUTH AT THAT i covsiy, MARRY, IS QUITE RICH AN' HE'S BOUGHT SOME| WHAT WOULD BE A Aw, L BET 1 couro s STOCK I'D BUY SOME O' THAT ETHIS 1S T HE }GARAGT: IMAGINE WHAT THE HOUSEY [MUST BE NOT M COULD: “VEN IMAGINE A GARAGE A JAISH 7 3 S SWELL AS 9, TEN CARS, RBYCRACKIE! E= SEEIN' IS = RELIEVIN'! I WOTEVER ITS LIKE, ITLL RE A COUPLA MILES WALK FROM HERE, MOST LIKELY! wHY WALK, WHEN WE KIN RIDE IN ONE O'THEM TEN CARS, INSIDE? DERN IT ALL, ASH. You DO HAVE YOUR MOMENTS! o) LI e

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