New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 18, 1929, Page 16

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

o P NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, JULY 18, 1929. "RIVALQVIVE © 1929 & SERVICE INC. dered on not hat a—a regardless of her obvious 10 know the details— monthly provision of— §400 a month. She has used to—a degree of luxu has no judgment at all about THIS HAS HAPPENED | Nan Carroll, sccretary, finds her- self in love with her employer, Jehn Curtis Morgan, successful lawyer, and determines 1o Her resignation is postponed when she learns Morgan is to defend an alleged friend, Bert Crawford. Morgan wins Crawford's acquitta Crawford followe “Now, 1 think I'll go up to closely by who | Curtis. He'll be ill if I don't gt :r return. | him calmed down before his bed- omits referenc to Crawford |time, poor darling. By the does not suspect. Nan | way,” she added, with every ap. more deeply into his casualness, *has—his s saving him from mother asked that he be given For six months she acts as | her?” listance housekeeper for him, | She felt rather the of Morgan flushed 1 bringing con o e i AN ironically loves an “AL of passes her bar examinations quite Morgan takes her into the this a junior partner. Morgan reaso news to Nan that that i Tris and stressing his hild need begs her fatliar hi e Their farcical marriag tinued for three months, resolves to leave. The ne Iris, apparently tord, returns fo knees. Nan rn the doctor remove her to a hospital At dinne f ing Iris t0 obey desire say, resign. | been and Nan inter- firmly, as she rose from the Anything you say,” leaves town Iris, Morgan's wife, gan she will ne She pearance of despair. long winning that voice than saw His answered She love darkly low as he course son who was— ysterical about it. But— firm as she was m th divorci rnoon ich more 1 In fa vohld breaks t, she—agreed better for the t to be taken from his Under the cireur thought 1 coulddo > hoy than she would be And you swallowed that ne is ind Cu ¢ to marry no stanc accepts, more for able to. whole, has con- when Nan t morning, with bitter disgust aw - > | an't you see what her game is ess she doesn’t w taking care the second, more potent this "ouse the first piace an e to be with of in much gainst me in ild possibly be in hers. she coldly: she knows {hat the court the child othered 1d. and knows he is a say- . det to fight, has | the ch Curtis refu: told Nan. He and Morgan tells Nan face the problen: NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER XXXIX Out of n’s cold hands gripped h | saw convulsiy s to eat did not to his they him he have | than Aloud or he co room is sen however said the Mcrzan breast eye she upon that, e how losing his mother should corner of her how his head “Yes—she knows if she insisted, 1 let Nan, no matter I should suffer child and parted—" “She t him,” forbear his hiffon o fher lap. “It i But would 9ing to i ich him. A not he m and back,” “Yes a voice ‘o0 her They th sr turned the fire the seat. he in sh Jol that Nan him Morgan 100 paid could not ling that 1ustn’t be remi own ear admits said hard pretty all upon Iris Nan felt ppi heavily hose N portrait gan had « his eyt 50 WaS | on her has AhOVe | pigh oy Nan ‘ should sing gl i bring her—mistak: 10sen upon turned sharply so that h the cynical smils her childish mouth nt she was able to “I'm as been generous about would bhreak my heart now.” But as soon as the words were uttered, she could have bitten her in two. Would he interpret those words as v veiled, indirect bid for his sym- pathy and for his loyalty? She ild die rather than plead for th continuation of a relationshin that had become hateful to him. “I must go to Curtis now id hastily. “Then I think I'll to bed, John. I'm—tired. I'll good night now—" She was about to walk away from him offering him even her hand when she heard him spring 201 | to his feet closed abont v, hel against his breast her life she could lax his arms. though e nerve in her 15— clamored for her to forget pride cling to tt n he the not see twisted hich ould After was all, it nothing she herse 1p After & mome with o meet him. There to do but wait The man nervously, his hand ing. 1 say nuine feeling Curtis. It clearcd hi e lose him th and about that this had began with slow she c to unlock and R | you if I could wonderful today, floundered on She wanted to help him say, “I'll be more Tl give you y can be words stuck in He cleared his wo suddenly warm e tongue close roowr you how—- hap. him his. Net rotectad sor pen, Nan but v 1am 1o I wo pity force 1 curl would ihout have You'y this morning— g0 sy been—so he without be wonderf r freedom arranged, her throat throat wis sped it 1d- i her close not al- body and loved other 1s orci imsel “Tris to say sick, Na had a — rotten time She didn't tell zathered she stage you k as b sorcly She's whether of it, it seems. loved me—muck but 1 had tried to go on the had’ failed. No t and not—not so cinners should be.” D A antii] Gan forced e encourage 2oy young! Th Was say in conncction didn’t seem to have beauty and lure But she must b Nan calculated swift- ly. Yes, Iris must he at 1 perhaps older, for she and had been married nine fore, and Iris admitted o 2§ “She could have made tk of course,” Morgan obvious pain and re even the chorus training and Iris wanted dre star, or nothin “Of course,” Nan # Iy, entirely “Well, couldn't hai her as much as he ot ttle ily, his vom or “Dear Nan!" lips You'll me you, won't erself to nod way of men odd with Ir any age “Nan for it's you but 1 an Iris, ¥ wife said those words or them, Nan's nd John," she that sounded arms incarnate bt hody unyielding, answered impatient dropped as if she them from her. “Good night, Nan dear. slowly avily, like a man mto death mained stiff ast 8 course » in a The had Morgan cars be- 7 man’s struck chorus on uctance. he said weary went ! requires arduous to “Good 1 John. You tonight won't you? It to have him die, could heip young David so he 108 Di ziin natic g 1o sec how lic would be terrible wit i didn’t 1 get a AT when he she much His her low-voiced “Yes® up th gring heart into followed she »een promised a par e =0, crooks nd weary sadness 1 her door o ot rather holt en tr it. St s knelt with a down, called fter trying door me to to ted well his heart called out cried I tears wer you're ed. woi Iris despairir tention My—our- enough nc afford dragged Nan head. She this. “Pleast clearly, firmly Iris that you v ing tha Whatever my eyes naturall felt questionin you you d She his ey again, But still was afraid was sure couldn't she tell him he “1 had thought—" she could to fa they b was to | [the call | the best. | loyally | up | I'd love you best—Ilots But—" Conscientiousness, :nd grieved bewilderment gave he battle then, routed by sleep. Nan stood looking down upon him for a long minute, and there | was no laughter in her heart or | Then she tiptoed from the her load of despair a littis lighter. That naive confession of Curtis’ had, crystallized her indc cision—turned it into firm detcr- mination. She would fight Iris Morgau to the last ditch. Iris was poison for the man and the chilil No matter if they cried for that sugar-coated poison, it was her duty to protect them. Standing in the middle of her room Nan Morgan cried out to tha God she so sorely needed: “Dear God, help me to win—for their sukes! You Kpow it isn't becausc I'm in love with John Curtis Mor- in that I want to hold him against Of course 1 love him with all bpAnneAustin, duthor of heDlack Pieonts the from,” might, for you'll have materials | room, and the plans to work Nan laugh and pushed down an un- | comfortable feeling of shame. This was the first time had ever tried to bribe the child. Was she stooping to Iris’ “Now shall I tell you just Wright brothers set about their first plane She perched on the side of his| bed, but still refrained from fouch- ing the boy, who listened with grow- ing eagerness, the hostile gleam slowly dying out of his eyes. Sh had her reward when, the exciting tale finished, his hot little hand |g inched slyly toward hers. Suddenly | Iris. the fingers closed convulsively my heart, but if it were for his hers. good, 1 would leave him tonight “It ain't—T mean, it isn't You know I'm sinfully proud, that is it. Nan, that you won't let my if I listened to my pride, I'd mak mother come home him choose beiween us this min- Nan's heart stood still in- | ute. But oh, dear God, he neecds stant. What could she Was and the child needs me. Help he old enough to be told a part of humble my pride, so that I the truth? No matter. . . . She can fizht the harder. Help me (o could not lie to him. win." “Curtis darling, Nan plain all the reasons father can't have two it's against the law. dear, if your mother comes back Nan will have to leave.” The black eyes widened wilderment. and the beautiful, curly mouth, so like Iris, trembled. “But I want both of you and I bet IPather does 100, Curtis inststed stubborly. “It's a silly old law Listen Nan, did Mother known that ol4 law before—hefore went away?" of she methods? how the building over true for an say me me to can't bhut ex- | your wives, It— So you see. Her heart was almost at peace when she crept into bed. Both her doors w » unlocked. Her husband could come to her, if he But she did not listen for his foot steps, for she was sure that h« would not come. Because bitterness had melted out of her heart she | was able to put herself in his place that night. She felt the grief and pain he must e suffering. Recoiled from the thought of love-making, even of sceking comfort, just as he must be recoiling. Poor John! Poor. | forn victim of a passion he had thought dead, and of & love that was still too new and delicate to weather the storm of that fierce, re- | viving passion for a woman who! was unworthy but incredibly desir- able. Poor John! She could almost | hear him groan: “God forgive me. i wished in be- about she ER XL Nan Morgan re- would be a second wife un. but to be to explain and justify to the seven-year-oll first wife. hoy's in demand tion 3 Nan know kirmish in “Heaven Knows, flec airingly, it hard enough to be rany circumstances, called upon one's status child of the But the upon her, childlike ted des: for 1 love two women. . . That night rather than for eves were fixed incxorable, un- an answer o answering could win the battle between and Iris the loyalty of child. For he was jus and logical beyond his vears. And the answer would be the simple truth. | followed immediately upon Tris Iris had known that she was giv- | Morgan's return, Her husband was ing John Curtis Morgan his free- |a man, though he tried dom to marry again when she du- obvious and heartbreaking serted him. But somehow she could | conscientiousness, to present a nor- not fight that way. In later mally cheerful face to his family Curtis could not truthfully say that|and to his downtown world. He stepmother had destroyed his | was pathetically grateful for Nan's ideal of his mother. If It were (0 | quict accoptance of his moodiness, destroyed, Iris herself must be | and, believed, for her the destroyer. . . . takably firm “Good night” in the And so Nan answered: “I drawing-rooni each evening. Some- think your mother thought times, when she was thus making the law she went it clear that she did not expect him darling, But you see, your to play the or hushand while dldn’t know she ever ¢ his heart battleground. his back—" Her eyes met with wistful ques- Ihat was true, true! 1f he had | toning, as If they were mutely ask- had the faintest hope, he would |ing: “Do you really understand and never have married again. “And so | fo Nan? Do you see how he macried Curtis, because he | it is 2 Don't you know thought needed me.” too, but that 1 can't Curtis nodded forlornly, “I just yet?” him he admitted slowly. own round, I was awful glad told him live with Don't you nother ahout me now you « fter Tris' return presented smart 1i awkwardly prosperous to be able to afford two cars, vyou think? I want you to fecl free to come and go as you pleas without bothering about how 1'm R0ing fo get around.” As she thanked him contracted sharply. clumsy attempt Surely he did not bribe her to Nan wept for him herself, and so heal- | |ing the temporary forgetful that soon she slept, and | morning felt more light- and strong than che had hoped ) feel again. She needed comiic and strerg 1o carry her through the days that an for simply she the for was ness of relf the next hearted ever, first herself stricken with years be she unmis- don’t ahom away, father oming a sob when lover was wasa voice choked on hers ve, me, with me that I love you, come And wis: me, you both told “And when you came to But my real bk He was wrestling prohi- an's heart pity watched he then s to you to, her childish but “I do under- worry your dear But love me eyes stand, head as much as Two us. now ‘s cor abviously lem. as with the ached with him. Finally quivering breath, “Mother said 1'd between and she mean you'd go back, it I—if 1 days Morgs with a ining John legal > coupe, ex- she Curtis his drew a blurted to out choose Nan. Did she'd come wife vl her, A and | ought said | don't hav you firm like ours 50 Nan's impuls of her pride thing then and there on choice. She couldn’t stay wher she s not w ted! DBut as the hot little fingers gripped her hand they sent an ge to her brain. boy was fever- ish. In one brief visit, Iris had done that to him, by feeding him all the choeolates he could stuff Biting her tongue to hold back a too hasty the girl studied | the child, mental picture him as he had been a year ago the boy he had become sines she had been in charge of his life, The Curtis of a year ago had thin, anemic, neurotic; lonely, wist- fully unhappy. violent of temper The product of more than six y Iris Mor mothering. In los than one year Nan—had changed that into a sturdy healthy, happy obedient little boy beautifully adjusted to school life Did she have the him now? Him who h 1 and care > quick demand - was to stake every the boy's Nan's heart Was the car at peace-making? think he had to patient and cheer- full Then she dismissed the suspi cion as unworthy of both of them. The car would be a great ience. 1t would permit stay at home later in t so that she could put a gr phasis upon her home-making. against enough home. those imperative The me be conven- her to mornings, ater housekeeping Another weapon who had not cared to turn the house into a Of course, would miss companionable trips down- town together, Nan reflected ru fully, but these last two days they had been a strain upon hoth of them, Was that, possibly, the r son he had contrived to make them | unnecessary ? answer i em- | placin ot and beside Tels heen she of sh Curtis and rig nl home o de to see them and self upon first day, four days father and Afternoon trips to the the son to abandon father sorely under m hospital woman who had deserted who had now flung her- their mercy. After {hat those trips were not men- tioned. Not even Curtis referred to them, but each evening he had no ppetite for his dinner, and Nan helplessly, that Iris was him with unwholesome And she could not forbid pt could imagine the Kk retort: “I guess my own nows what's good f | g hands were tied fourth duy after Christ E her her 2 slowly swered: “No, didn’'t mean whether 1 w ery and carefully Curtis that away and she father uniess he and poss i she an- Your mother you could choos cam ik, I am your and must wife now know, zo. 1 18 happy as I wants m sty make by rawing you She can s qui th ) Then, ry don't 1 Curtis s me her I'm we to Iris Na carpent as well as all could turn had | ring the con- ause | t It niother | Ol for think ex- war ither | claborate S You to stiy Curtis he anyway, can’t 2 terials ru ther need in airplan ulted her 1ously bility of giving the Knowing Curtis" pas- the wheel, Nan its purchase, with that he would obey their injunctions to rid on walks, 3ut the bicycle not cen - bought On Christmas Mors; hesitatingly His mother was afrald of un ae. cident. - She—I thought perhups a | toy automobile would be more safe, big. Operates with pedals, know. I hope he'll like ) t he 2 i Nay ed hotly as she a choice with ng a had o advisi bicycle His con a io had ate desire for encouraged \ssurance only Live i confessed th nearly It's quite to love his ow you pplaud- apparent. cheer course Iris had put had Toh son's very was in long hild's ‘ s Of Hay fecl dun- control of wrong, made life Nan had olved Nai © covers ahg the Christnias ftree the who hovered during 0od-night ghastly ordeal, foy Gool the living mother heen and the there airl man her, 1h “No hox forced throat her helped an I'll b over!"” But dawned | ache rible ai Morgan pretend posed the | daylight. and presents, possible for but wl had be Vaguel walke cyed hour T grave, an ups “And I've as an example on my gently, down on John standing her. for barr doctor ing the hack tween over ti rowed pan. B to tam heiboy. At t day ca tis Mor; Miss Ever Picked for Event Marb] An 18- Hovey United Germ choice womin comept Corintl Hovey impre. | here yesterd Com Yankec o Oriole. the girl Germa chosen and th places nately owned Miss perienc strong: ing a whole ceremony. " Morgan warned Nan, pre “I wonder Chrismas pr help as with GIRL T0 PILOT ! KING HAAKON THRIFTY, * GIVES UP BIG CASTLE Kaugen Too Expensive to Maintain, fair peeping or shaking the | with a | jocularity that made her | ache with tears, as he tied | sent to a branch of the tree. if he’s giving Iris a sent.” she could not cing herself. “Of course he | Curtis choose something for | Family By nd T'm glad he did. But oh, relieved when Christmas is Norwegian Monarch Finds—Royal v No Means Rich Oslo, July 18 (UP)—King Haa- kon's recent decision that the up- g TR | keep of Kaugen Castle would be too when Christmas Day actually | ooy %, ‘girain on the resources of 1. 2ll her own private heart- |\ " 0w prince and his bride was swallowed up in a ter- | pyincegs Martha of Sweden, and nxiety about Curtis. Nan and | o the project to inhabit it woul- 1 had said to each other with |y, o {5 he abandoned, is in lin: ded rucfulness that they sub- |\ith the king's conception of pro- | boy would be up before | por economy. whooping over his tree | " The Norwegian royal family is by | and making it im- no means rich. and does not live in anyone else to sleep. igreat state. The crown prince's re- | hen eight o'clock came there | sources, for instance, amount to only | en no sound from his room. | 325,000 a years considerably less v worried, Nan went to [than one-sixth of the income of the him and found him heavy- | Prince of Wales. fever, Within half an| King Haakon himself >r. Black was there, looking |the cconomy that he preaches for | and pronouncing the trouble [his son, and when he travels by ot digestion. train it is seldom that he takes the been holding trouble to reserve a special compart- to all the ment. He often walks from the list,”” the doctor Toyal castle to the street-car line on “Have you !the Karl Johanns gate, or to the your job?” entrance of the subway station | Curtis Morgan, who was | Which leads to the hill outside Oslo | beside his wife, answered | Where winter sports are the order his face flushed with em- |Of the day six months of the year. } ment. “Ill take the blame, | ON Such occasions he often carri T'm afraid T've been induls- | his skis or skates under his arm. |, R SUFFIE!ENT HELIUM FOR YEARS FOUND meals, bu I—" He stumbled 1e lie, shifted his eyes. Gommercial Company Discovers New Deposits in Colorado practic you up mothers chided Nan been falling doctor nodded, his eves n:\rA “I think T understand, Mor- Jut no one must be permitte \] per with Nan's discipline of | No onc!” he end o me a telegram gan. (TO BE CONTIN fthe long, for anxious John Cur- l)-h) Detroit, Mich., cers of the Detroit ation, whose subsidiary concern, ‘Uw Aircraft Developing corpora- ation, is building the first all-metu! | lgible for the United States navy ‘m posits of helium gas had been | Hovey Is First Woman July 18 Aircraft corpor- (P—Offi- | found in Colorado which will pro-| vide sufficient lifting gas for infla- |tion and operation of all United | States airships for the next 20 years. Company Announces Kind Col. Turney Gratz and W. R the Helium company, producers of the gas. announcement of the Detroit Aircraft corporation said. Or- com- “n- dis- lehead. Mass., 18 (P— year-old girl, Miss Elizabcth of Brookline, will race for the States In the international ¢ meter yacht races with ny here next month. The of the first American yachts- cver picked for internationi ™ ition was announced by th hian Yecht club after Miss had skippered the Oriole in sive fashion at the trials races futt, of mercial thorized covery, oiricials The new field is by far the ost helium deposit ret found, Helium company officers said, zas having a helium content of per cent. The best previous tent was 3.6 per cent. “While it is impossible to deter. mine accurately the total volume of this new field,” Col. Gratz sail “our corps of chemical research en ipler ITI, will race beside the estimated that the depos't owned by Chandler Hover, | will meet the demands of airship | skipper's father, against the builders and operators for a mini- n boats. The Yankee was|mum of 20 years sometime ago but the Oriole Location is Secret Tipler 1T gained their Col. Gratz said he could not re- by winning first honors altes. vtal the exact location at which de m Lwo races with the Rima, ‘clopment work was being conduci- o A Chase, ed, but announced construction al e T YA e (o e T started on a pro- od rivals of the so.callei duction plant at a southern Colorado r sex fp the first race by tak- | POt diffecent tack and beating con modore » and . Charles A. Welch's Arthur Schumanu, | gineers hec them both around the half way Berger Still (utlcal mark. conds, onds, ¢ and “The Ti of the with casions, L. the crew W order: by Professor George the far Tipler Kingr To Show Imorovement T.ond George ham palace this m said he was making satisfctory gress f morning. The of just a stayed was 12 Ori York issued. 28 sce- triangu- ‘The Oriole won by covering the six milc overing the six mile triangu- scconds in o strong breu: pler raced in 35 seconds aheai Oriole in the sccond he Rima third on both Pneumonia Is Feared Milwaukee, July 18 (#— Notice thle improvement was reported to- day in the condition of Victor L. Jeraer, former socialist congress whese skull s fractured diy when h struck by a street car. His condition, however, w said still to be critical, and fear was expressed that pneumonia might Jdevelop. Berger appeared to realize the ser- iousness of his condition for shortly mous Harvard athlete, and e | afier regaining consciousness yester- 11T by Gordon Munroe. day he said to his wife: 1 am a very = —_— sick man " George Continues race Ot was rancis Herreshoff, iole, was a member of the working under Miss Hovey's The Yankee was designed Owen, father of designer of FIRLE AT PORTER HOML ight damage done to the | property of Maxwell S. Porter, 501 Lincoln” street, when fire of unde- termined origin broke out in rub- hish in the rear yard at 3:33 o'clock Wednesday afternoon. Co. No. 6 was called on a still alarm. The fire was extinguished quickiy. and the Duke ~ to the pala~s| Parisiennes have a new left and | pigskin hand with bulletin | swivels and gold staples ing. 18 (A — King 's doctors were at Bucking- only about 45 minutes When they left they pro- rom the operation of Monday lon, July orning. Prince of Wales both drove the physicians some time. No novelty in dog for fter hags for chain fasten- Fill your salt shakers and forget them DOES rainy weather set you to pounding stubborn salt shakers on the table top? Ever bend a knite blade on the contents of your salt cellar? : : : Ordinary salt always hardens on humid days. International Salt never does. It's smooth and fine and free from lumps in any weather. We guarantee it. And it's as clean and pure as salt can be. A big blue-and-gray package costs only a nickel at your grocer’s. | Hills to the | of afier | out hlin was condition of Mrs. McLaug orted satisfactory The McLaughlizs are parents of 1085 SLO0D000 1N SERIDUS DOCK FIRE ‘Seaflle Firemen Have Hard | Battle—Six Men Are Injured Seattle, J 13 (A—Tire which destroyed the Union Pacific dock here late yesterday caused a loss of almost §1,000,000 and sent five fire- men and a dock worker to the hus pital burned or overcome by smoke. Thirty-one companics of firemen and three fireboats fought the blaz- for an hour before getting it under control. A cigarette, thrown careless- ly aside by an employe, was blamed by officials for the blaze. Traffic was stilled in Seattle's business street a. company after company of fire ap paratus roared down the Cypress wateriront. Thousands con shoppers congregated | on Railroad avenue where the pier was built and scores of policemen were called out to maintain order The steamship Mauna Ala, from {awaii, canght fire but was backed into the bay and the blaze cx- tinguished before much damage was done. Creosoted pilings made the firc specacular one with a pall of smake hanging over the southern part o the city. Five British A Avnatms Injured in Accident Aldershot, Eng.; July 18 (P—Five British army airmen were seriously |injured today in the wreck of a giant Royal Air IForce Virginia bomber bo- tween Altom and Basingstoke. The plane had flown from an air- drome near Winchester after nigit operations and the pilot was making a forced landing in a thick fog. The plane struck a nank sand somer- suulted into a fleld. Nearby residents awakened by the crash rushed to help the fliers and took them to a hospital. \ daughter, Barbara, now three and half years old. Give freely P/ Children Cry for It who K onv simple 2ldom worr Fletcher's Castor in the house they can do what the! doctor would tell them to do, whea ‘h(lh_\' is fretful, feverish, colicky constipated or stuffed-up with coid few drops of this pure pleasant-tasting prepara- tion. It comforts DBaby and soothes | him to slecp in a jiffy. It's perfs Iy safe for the youngest infant. U it freely and as often as needed, ! specialists advise. A more liberal | dose is all it takes to comfort and Former Irene Castle | vetieve older children, when feve Has Bahy Boy Tuesdav' bad breath, no appetits Chicago, July 18 (P—Another | LenRahom stheysnean e e oo child, this time a boy, has betn bern | PUrEing. ‘The mark of genuine Cas. {o Major ond Mrs, Urederic Me-[foria i the Iictcher signature on Laughlin. Mrs, McLaughlin is the |the wrapper. Look L CoRavO former Irene Castle, dancer. Her | imitations. hushand is a prominent spor ‘he son was born' Tuesday ni t Michael Reese hospital, Yesterday ihe baby was placed in the hospital cubator and doctors said it had a | goed chance to grow and thrive. The Mothers, precaution, Vith a bottle ar of —give a | vegetable, for Yes, its flavor is wonderful, and this | * 1—"Canada Dry" made from high-qual- ity Jamaica ginger and through our ex- clusive extraction process retains all the flavor and aroma of the ginger root. 2—‘Canada Dry" is made from abso- lutely pure ingre- dients, blended and balanced in exact proportions. A secret serve it. Leading phy= process of carbona- sicians prescribe it. tion enables it to re- Here is a better, tain its sparkle long purer ginger ale. after the bottle is opened. —“Canada Dry is tested iy under laboratory methods to assure its purity. Leading hospitals | THEREFORE, “Canada Dry” is rightly served the wide world over. Rightly has it won the approving nod of connoisseurs. And the witchery of its matchless flavor is known to countless homes in this country and Canada. Serve it at home when friends call. Drink it with dinner. Order it when you dine out. Mellow . .. “dry” . . . refreshing . . . it is indeed The Champagne of Ginger Ales. - 'CANADA DRY" Reg. U.§. Pat. 08, The Champagne of Ginger Ales Is Your Tenement for Rent? Telephone 925 “A Well Written Rent Ad in the Herald Classified Section Always Brings Results’

Other pages from this issue: