New Britain Herald Newspaper, October 15, 1929, Page 17

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)

nd rt THE LUKURY HUSBANDR 4y BY MAXSIE GRELG g s 7B 4 Jo K. It.’ Synopsis: Ralph Henderson's house-party —his ~cheme by which he hopes to induce Barbara to di- vorce Ray and marry him—is more successful than Henderson hoped it might be. Ray is bored and irritated, speaks sharply to Bar- bara and she becomes angry with him. When loses at bridge, he flatly refuses Barbara's offer to pay his debts and insists he will raise the money elsewhere. Ray i3 unable to foin the fox-hunt one morning because he has no riding outfit and Henderson accompanies Barbara. Riding home after the kill. Hender- son suddenly grasps the reins of Barbara's horse, tella Barbara he loves her and asks her to kiss him. Chapter 14 AN ACCIDENT Henderson, holding the reins of Barbara's horse, was lcaning close to her. “Just one Kiss,” he was saying. Through Barbara's mind flashed memories of how trifling a kiss had seemed to her befo omething casier to give than re the stillness of th i woods, Barbara felt she could not continue that sort of thing now she had Ray. But she knew it would be hope- less to explain this to Henderson. Tnstead, she relied upon humor- “Don't ask me to bec mental in the daylight, H chided him. “Let’s push on. Barbara's plunging horse cleared the stream—only to slin and fall. She wanted Ray to fuss over her,|ball in her hands. to pet her a had scrawled in his e | ordinately brav writing: she kept u it T others must be miles ahead al-|impatient to be back. In her mind's bata, dear one ready.” | eves she could sce Ray rushing for- “What I have done will make He did not press his point, but [word to take her down off her| you mad. I r to make you she knew by his moody silence, | horse after which he would carry| feel awful mean to me, too. I'm that he was peevish about it. T him be unp wanted to! t| her up the wide staircase and into| I you for two or three it if he | thefr bedroom adys, but I'll be back in time to take vou ving asant ahout The grooms waiting m‘ from this ‘jolly Now they were out of the woods, | meet them. But now > could she| house rty, haw aw," as that approaching a mill stream. As she | Ray and it Henderson| dumbbell Major Perkins would made towards it, Henderson s | finally who “Don’t attempt to jump it, hall | bara. It's wider than it appea “Is Mr. Lowther upstairs?” she The dictatorial note in his voice | asked the butler. { annoyed her. carried her say. You've got to trust me. “My love, “RAY. into the | » My exc he man raised his eyebrows. him t1 “Poof, poof,” she laughed over| *No, m called me up fo her should If you make | o'cloc audition, if you like it—I guess I can, too.” lin rep H ’ And with in a spirit of | exclumation. ** bravado, she cracked her whip and | gent 1 her brought it down on the horse's|came for him just before noon che flank, urging it forward. Ba Down the grass; nk it plur relaxed limp in Hender- | of ms, tos stupefied at th | son's tossings its head and quiveri moment to s usiness in Lon cagerness as it gathe | don. Y want the spring. A moment—and it was| realization that the | thr over — but in making the opposite | of we looking at her | or break up every stick of furniture Nk its hoofs slipped in the mud » managed to say. in that room and it fell, the ground | At first she appeared unhurt by | the fall, but when she tried to rise, | she discovered that she had twist- ed her . She tried (o laugh | major. about it, iring the man that it | it was of no consequence, Henderson | picked her up in his ¢ and set! ep her on her horse. | bringi Barbara to | Instead s on the bed. bury the e came, did it? We were g 1t, although not until to How very annoying." face in orting the way she took it |told herself, remarked later to the | same towards penny that ng herself her hot pillow. could nim ned on go ow. Hend. he major ad abruptly ds his life though red hot pokers | tootin, bbed continuously in- | 1 she found herself | bed a blasted horn s short in her room swer and a white, 10 her ankle lenging for R: Nothing “Will ¢ to come Order Your Mazpa Lames through our Employees Every employe of The Connecticut Light and Power Company is ready to take your order for Mazda Lamps. You need not even pay for the lamps when ordering. Just sign the order blank and we will deliver the lamps and charge them to your account. The days are growing shorter and you will be needing more light and lamps. Now is the time to make the lighting in your home GOOD LIGHTING —and so much depends on having the right size lamps in all fix- tures and “spares” for emergencies, that everybody should have THE HANDY LAMP KIT 2— 40-Watt Lamps 53— 60-Watt Lamps 1—100-Watt Lamp 6 i $1 .35 Packed in the new lamp shade carton that is made of the sam. material as used for parchment shades—two designs in beautiful colors and from each carton you can cut 2 shades. The Conn. Light & Power Co. NEW BRITAIN PLAINVILLE Tel. 3600 Tel. 560 , untidy | States and securing a s he pulled wa king at the door it doesn't hurt too much he ought to| “Who's ther | » man solicitously than to marry| “It's Hendy I'm ser g the| assu him. But. |a What can one expect | ma ip o look after you. Ist it did hurt. lof a fellow who I can do for you myself down by i w in d al | in | a i\\ B n by n n | | Stadler of the hy o eys erself, remembering that, at “Hi Yo costs, she must keep her end up | N [[] cfore ‘the other guests. Her hazel | ¢ e B forced hers fool out of me for you! tomorrow's chay {Bullet Breaks Window NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1929. e ke to dinner tonight, Barbara?" | | investment promoters than any other She was about to reply decisively | | period in the history of the Unite {in the negative when she stopped | y es and frauds I n ; hardened until they seemed | ke pin points and she called back L temt L Eety. o com. | S10CK PrOMOtionS Curtailed by = | [Tube Company Checking | Keesport, wi tsburgh, Oct. 15 (UP)—Na o died later in a Me < e Keesport hospital ,as well as another Explosion in Factory | ., ¥ } when it came water in a pit undes HERALD FOR B of USE RESUITS ng even if you have to carry me L q D : A o ownstairs. 111 tell the worid 1| L@WS, DAYIS ANDOUDCES mi" | ey She heard his footsteps retreat Quebee, Oct. 15 (P—The passing ng along the corridor and then, of the “gold brick artist” was her- i f Ithough her features contracted |alded to with the convening of or anti-fraud ith the pain of her ankle, she |the 18§ wnual convention of the If to get up off the bed | Investme out the room, as she |America fecble effort to change her | Arthur G secretary of t Dankers' Association of Davis, of Chica the ng herself at the vanity|While the last f S t muttered under her|More opportunities fraudulent | Lic | breath, “I'll show you, Ray Low- - Air-Tight ond time and | Exposure quickly ruins any tea. You're not go a s et away with t! ot going r mind—I'm | to sit around and mops No, sir, I'll have a ml,,' ration. . . . I'll have the time of | Wy life 2 that she arted the cele- suddenly leaning for-| Breating ,,,mh{"'.",;“‘ Beriarnesand SALADA is sealed in metal foil ; (Copy Dial Press) . { e Sl i containers for your | Barbara le: 8 how much she really | protection. SALAD ceds him. Continue the story with | In Ten Acre Road Home When boys practice they shou for one ne a stray bullet will belief of Sergeant police departme o late yesterday afternoon inve aint that boys we woods back of 119 and that one of the | uilets had broken a window of tha | ouse, knows That John C. the Paper Money Has €€ ] L] .99 toasting did 1it"— Gone is that ancient prejudice against cigarettes—Progress has been made. We removed the prejudice against cigarettes when we removed harmful corrosive ACRIDS (pungent irri- tants) from the tobaccos. EARS ago, when cigarettes were made without the aid of modera science, there originated that ancient prejudice against all cigarettes. That criticism is no longer justified. LUCKY STRIKE, the finest cigarette you ever smoked, made of the choicest tobacco, properly aged and skillfully blended—"It's Toasted.” “TOASTING,” the most modern step in cigarette manufacture, removes from LUCKY STRIKE harmful irritants which are pres- ent in cigarettes manufactured in the old-fashioned way. Everyone knows that heat purifies, and so “TOASTING”— LUCKY STRIKE'’S extra secret process —removes harmful cor- rosive ACRIDS (pungent irritants) from LUCKIES which in the old-fashioned manufacture of cigarettes cause threat irritation and coughing. Thus “TOASTING” has destroyed that ancient preju- dice against cigarette smoking by men and by women. “It’s toasted” No Throat [rritation-No Cough. ‘TUNE IN—The Lucky Strike Dance Orchestra, every Saturday night, over a coast-to-coast network of the N. B, G, © 1929, The American Tobacco Co., Mirs, ! » “So the high-life racket got you, you cheat!” The story of a woman who played with fire d to ¢t Partial Con for November Love Bound a nation= vk of 42 stations, My Two Lovers —and 9 other stories Out Now! True Storv At All Newsstands—only 25¢ Value! N ANCIENT PREJUDICE AS BEEN REMOVED An ancient prejudice nursed the ignorant fear and distrust of paper money. AMERICAN INTELLIGENCE inspires the faith which completely accepts the printed obligation. In the interest of convenience and safety, its use is universal, “It’s Toasted”—the phrase that describes the extra “toasting’’ process applied in the manu- facture of Lucky Strike Cigarettes. The finest tobaccos—the Cream of the Crop—are sciens tifically subjected to penetrating heat at mini- mum, 260°—maximum, 300°, Fahrenheit. The exact, expert regulation of such high tempera- tures removes impuritics. More than a slogan, “It’s Toasted” is recognized by millions as the most modern step in cigarette manufacture,

Other pages from this issue: