New Britain Herald Newspaper, April 16, 1930, Page 12

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)

e Synopsis: different social positions tween Teddy Montrose and Jacque: % line Grey and the her riches soon will vanish, mines to forget finds it difficult, of the wealthy devoid of the thrill they once gave her. She agrees to accompany Mr. Carew on a motor trip to see Mrs, to find after the car breaks that Mr. Carew His caveman iactics fill Jacqueline with fury and Mr. C the sccond mistake in pursuing her. simulates a fant vainly seeks to runs for help and aculously scene. TERRORS OF THE There was only onc queline’s mind as she walked dow the road—to get as far Mr. Carew as possible before he dis- | an covered how neatly foiled by a mere girl stood the potent effect on a man of | To an artistic faint. She knew it was about 10 o'cloc} that from London dark countr anywhere. They She liept walking as fast Twice fog time she fell. | She had been hurrying down the and could. the road when road Carew. This was only the found rainutes, car, fainting girl covercd and vanished. Tlumination realized that he had been sold faint was a staged for his benefit, fallen into the trap. the dead In the road, one direction only take. To make maiters worse powerful with Tedges as he ran, was not crouching som in hiding. Jacqueline, who had started run- ning directly, flying feet, torch at the same time at hand. It was the to climb the stile the other side. runner straight on flashing the the Jacqueline now there was. a path, I it could | wheels b= so called. A narro, from one and she followed this by of the and she of the saw The went, On which selt across feet. When she had crossed two mov stiles she felt safec ghe heard the ing of steps behind her lof v she Somebody towards a rage he went pelting down \at harder NEW BRITAIN DATI.Y HERALD, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 16, 1930. JACQUEL][N]E by RICHARD STARR there were ; to fa lost. i | a bumpy and stock- The age old barrier of [was concerned, but other side, Jooms be- |plenty of other troubles | was now completely realizing | wandered forlornly in deter- | meadow, her thin shoes Teddy. But she|ings already wet through with th and the pleasures | dew. And she was frightened. Much more frightencd than she had been of Mr. Carew and his melodramatic plot. speeding latter, she up. |my child,” thing. Porter Mason only |one.” down | There were nge inconsisten deceived her. | about Jacqueline. She would | stroll serenely down such pla | P ise Itoy, Poplar, where oll Dobbin had lived, with perfect un- {concern. She would have gone just| [n the |as light-heartedly into the worst revive her, the A e S acqueline mir- repute. She never dreamed of flees the | dangers in the streets of London | where she had lived all life, | and had never been interfered with. NIGHT | Other things, too, she was not | thing in Jac- | scary about. But she alw 1| to sing to keep her courage up, if | from | she had to %o upstairs in the dark; | urned com she could not imagine The man been | thing more dreadful than to be|car we under- falone in a count at night. ‘\ ason h alone in the middle , far worse. stumbled over | f5ce somethin thought it was al| e | mound of carth. and went sprawling across it. But the mound was warni, and it rosc - bencath her with protesting bellow, spilling her oif | |the other side on her hands anid | Lnees. Jacqueline ran like a wild thing after the encounter with the cow, and was led at last by kindly for- tune to another stile, on the step sank exhausted anl str has cies catch the rew learns fo has made Jacquelin and Mr. Cz seen time he the f night a metallic revives and something,” began to ru Chapter 27 She was Dbreathless the car. away had who he lane of a | foggy ficld Suddenly she She as {3 side. There she was some 45 miles Also she did not love anes miles away froi frightened her. s she she tried to run, but too thick, and each was white car were headl The Was a tremulou But how hold of tb with her more than 10 minuts quick pound- | was running along tf r te her. It must After the adyc venturau suessed. this Fortune ps en- ntures of day she was perha titled to a r But she Inot indulse cakness £or | rails 4 back to|long. g to discover that the | had marvellously re- | teo truc. farmhouse in a and had hu only few by the at pile She for some minutes so leng or so. bing n che shook he suw the 1 shoulders and dricd her cyes carc-| She chos fully with her dkercief, under the “What a time I'm havin lever {told herself, commiseratingly. all her had [bet my nose s red. What w ouldn’* | or two | Lgive 1o be back in the old dormi- | Byra having an Emily Gibbs? If girl could | this is the & of thing onc althy! Oh, Tedc him, H2 The hoax, specially and he came to was ‘Can ms, car off vou that tk the knowing man With the chest, it speak at al Jacquelin man d reck. H owiy, an queline he 1 electric torch with him,| Then she cried this was searching the!stopped abru with a gulp. to make su atlit only 1 could find a read som:- where | yhere. a main road for preference.” | But she was afr red not expl she heard the thud|terrors that say on w the glimmer of |side of this hospitable g toward her, anl! felt that ile was from it. he ail don with a her V| was clear move ont. It that if a co | minut appeared on one side she” could | [ would ha climb over to ihe other. What -0 She. hely appearcd on both side I do if a cow did ‘not slacken, but|she d not think. i all had considered th past the stil and trembling for a | str » th com work of the moment and crouch on point in fear meadow quarter found he--| light on it articular i idden roar ar hir 1 E fe and s which had { flew past her ar, and m ot-track led|{the stile. e him to anothe It was a motor-car going at hi soone the peed. fi bl All the time she had been con- | sidering the hopelessne of her i position, the road—and a main | road, too—was only just on th on the other si winding fo stile ground under e quelin 50' far as Carey to rejoic dircction the “You're not rushing hair trimmed beard. hts were man was | tricd to lift it. with hér eff than fie (Copyright, ON HER OWN In a moment’she down. the car had faken. was out of breath she pullcd 3 she said. have gone out for Better great car recklessly stillness said in again right. pletely was back, WS § an old wait S0 she followed mo: it so happened that she did after all which she had through .of the that and his head volling and a |to kelp him. The of the stile. was road in the When for car Jacqueline, When she s on the scene of the acci- man, short, wheels of in the air, but the clectric still burning. conscious, tone asked Jucqueline 1 to help him he edge pathetic She caught of the little hand an:d nd there very over an going to catch thart, “Your brains a walk or some- the nex soberly, but has mct and arrived s used | dent, she found a man pinned under It had run up a bank and over. in a bad way. Iving across his hody arms outspread from side to ome blood on his and he was moaning fecbly. with | 00, well car Dbos The result may be and her own quick brain | fovored hier. | omebody had been cutting fence roadside, ¢ of stout poles cight feet Jacqueline wa of onc of these. e a pole, car, able by 12" she t of the car on his was all hic do tay L e neaved on her himself clear of the rew you crawl out did it d before wa hi crash you I ve don bed Lh was ver, his weight on her d heen 1 couldn't have old put and using it as exertion of strength to move it an inch he could the en it T left the sked. * whisvered the old gentle painfully an he te and panting | e let immediately 02 which an they ed him tehed held on, m was ‘clea the ancther But m to his tottery ang were muen looked. to the spring cushio: heen thrown out of th ade r had sl 1930, t him coni- fainted a comforta Nk sea Richard Starr) her o proves 5 101107 oW at the mec "I WAS ONCE AS GOBDAS ANY ONEOT YOI Jasped the HUMAN BERELICT “Let him speak,” said Sir Sudberry Lampwick . the throng. A hush fe 1l o’er “Joe and I both loved Henrietta. We were train announcers. My voice grew hoarser, but, Joe, curse him, smoked OLD GOLDS and his voice grew sweeter. You can guess the rest.”’ A shower of coins greeted his words. For those elegant people saw the great lesson in his story. Not a cough in a carload. FASTEST GROWING CIGARETTE IN HISTORY eveveeae..NOTA COUGH IN A CARLOAD resource destined country she heard a distant thud and thud “Sounds as if The He the and in quickiy lever. car slim banlk. FIND PISTOL USED IN BUILDING ACTIVITY INSTATE GROWING Survey for March, 1930, Reveals .+ Increase in Many Gities Judges Simpson and Foster pointed to Sit on Bench in Trial Which Opens April 23 Hartford, April since Wedn the state’s attorney Frank Luckingham, riverman, yesterday afternoon 1 covered 2 . 5 office Counnecticut i Duilding. activity in towns and cities made sweeping gainy during the month of March as compared with February, according to the monthly survey conducted t [ through the office of E. L. Taylor, industrial commissioner of the New Maven railroad. The total value of the building permits issued in the 23 communities | covered in the raiiroad survey during | March cxcceded the tofal of the | same group of cities und towns in | Irebruary by approximately $1,800,- 000. Not onl, the cheap .32 pistol which Henry O. Lorenz in Killing Nils . Wethersfield, March 31. | | v did these 23 communitics | 1| show a large increase in the total | value of the permits issued by the | 1| &roup, but, according to the survey. | the gains we spread generaily throughout the state among the in- dividual towns and cities. Tifteen of | the communities reported upon en- | joyed increases over their building | ful callouses, tender bunions permit figures of I¥ebruary. These | —these troublesome foot" ail- were Bristol, Danbury, Greenwich, | ments are relieved in one Hamden, Hartford, Middletown, | Naugatuck, New Britain, New Hav- en, Norwich, Stamford, Torringto Wallingford, Waterbury and \““‘-i Aching corns, sore toes, pain= pads. Their soothmg, healing med- i | maf:on gives you this _qmcl\ re= “| " New Haven headed the list for the lief. At the same time they month with permits valued at $1 cushion the sore spot—remove the 55,915, while Hartford and Green- cause—friction and pressure of wich followed in second and third fhics, Ziopals aie, sbselot 1y SaiaEs safe, sure. Doctors recommend them. Dl Made in special sizes for each cd showed gains over their Muv\llnll‘\rn;.,‘ f;‘:e&;"("‘:fl;f’g'fofil‘fg’;‘:Sb:o: permit figures of ) J were Danbury, Middle- | Drs h 11; ord and Willimantic. | Z ot C. (1) ) Put one um—thcp ain is gone! d towns lisf | town, Naugatuck, > Haven, Wallir New Britain figures were $96,- $57 for March. 1920, and $185,900 for March, MURDER OF ANDERSON Ap- 16 — Grappling | ', Henry Mahoney of | and | Bast Martford | automatic used Anderson in In his confession, Lorenz said he CORNS CALLOUSES-BUNIONS SAFE INSTANT RELIEF minute by Dr. Scholl’s Zino- threw the gun into the Willimantic river after the murder. The youth was preparing to flee thelcountry when he disposed of .the weapon. It is of aSpanish make and was pur- chased at a State street store. Judge Marnest C. Simpson and Judge Carl Foster have been as- igned to sit on the case with Judge well Jennings. The trial will open | Wednesday, E R BYRD Wallmgford,, April 16—A gold, silver and enamel sword to com- memorate the achievements of Rear Admiral Byrd as geograph flyer and seam. will be made here by the International Silver company. It will be presented to Byrd by the state of Virginia. 1 This Daris Set $2.50 other sets $1.50 to $5 Don't experiment! Using harsh liquids or plasters o cutting your corns or callouses is dangerous. 1 a 1 GILLETTE | BLADE and re-tighten, rinse under hot running water and shake dry. Think what this means. Think of the time and temper saved. No more cut towels! No more tedious fiddling with razor parts that always scem tofind the drain pipe. This one improvement alone is worth the price of the New Gillette. Yet it is only onc of many pleasing changes that you will find in this new razor and blade. “Razor pull,” for instance, won't bother you any more. “Razor pull,” Gillette engineers found, is caused by nicks and dents that are put in the corners of a razor when it is dropped. In a precision instrument such as NEW GIiLLETTE RAZ.OR, L b New Gilletie B. conpilsic ) Other De Luxe models at $5.00 to $75.00 24K. gold flated, 1 . PRICE SHORTEN your daily shaving time; 10 Tmore wz'pz'ng—zzo more cut towels OUR WORK ends when your shave ends, with this New Gillette Blade and Razor. Simply turn guard at ‘right angles, Gillette, the s ¢ out of pe the nallest dent is enough to throw the blac fect alignment, to make it “pull.” The New Gillette prevents “pull” First, the corners of the razor are reinforced with sturdy lugs of extra metal that stand a lot of abuse. for two reasons: ccond, even if vou should dent these lugs the blade is no longer held at the corners, so no harm results from dropping. Look at the new blade, and note how the corners are cut out. The old center posts are gone. They stuck through the blade and accidentally caught and dulled the blade cdges. Notice how the guard teeth are rounded back farther to meet the skin more smoothly, more comfort- ably. Please note, too, that the new blade-ends are square, not round, for safer handling with wet fingers. These ends shave closer around the tight little corners of mouth, nose and ears. "The price of the New Gillette Razor, 24K. gold plated, cazed in a beautiful box, and equipped with New Gil- Jette Blade, is one dollar. The New Gillettc Blade is one dollar for ten and 50c for five. Don’t wait a minute to enjoy the comfort of this new and perfect shave. Visit the nearest Gillette dealer today. GILLETTE SAFETY RAZOR CO., BOSTON, U.S. A. “The Smart Set” This is one of the many Smart Sets by Paris. . .a superfine Paris Suspender fashioned to match per- fectly its manly partner— the famous Paris Garter. Both richly styled. ... « smartly tailored. . .By the set o separately. Always pause long enough to ask, distinctly, for Paris. . .i8 will mean many months of satisfaction for you..e GARTERS and SUSPENDERS No metal can touch you Keep UP your good appearance QUICK FACTS . Newprocessedsteel; newblade resists rust Cut-out corners of blade pre- vent “razor pull” . Toclean, turri guard at right angles. .. then re-tighten ... rinse. .. shake dry . Channel guard gives full shaving clearance . New shape guard tecth mect skin smoothly, naturally . No projecting posts to dull blade edges . Reinforced razor corners pre- vent damage if dropped . Square blade-ends safer to handle . Shaves easier around mouth, nose, ears . New blades same price as old New razor, 24K. gold plated, with one new blade, incase, §1 The New Gl lette Blades in the new green packet

Other pages from this issue: