New Britain Herald Newspaper, October 23, 1930, Page 18

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EW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1930. ‘ E ROSE IROYETCKERS] .. -Synopsis: Hallic _beautiful youag nurse, [ “keep a rendezvous with he " young fiance, Lester Broon gHEf above Long Island Sound, bu nstead finds therc Lester's older half-brother. Saxely Grannock “Grannock, already half blind sdon to underzo a treatment may cure him or may stotally blind. He and Hallie attracted to each other, fuses to let her tell ! He gives her a tiny ivory ros says if he ired he will ige ““To Ivory Rose— home.” Later it develops that ter camnot inherit Broon fortune until he girl approved by G he has nicknamed decides does Meanwhile nurse for imowledge undergo his o) duty will b Symptoms to Dr. ag they develop. “home late v Hallie to the hall to car ion him tfo be quiet, he car e off to the drawing room, away the key, she out until past time to call tor, and Grannock's eye practically destroyed. Chapter DEPTHS OF DESPAIR “I blame myse ten. I was too sure b~ no change in Gr tion before four o'clock “I don't consider that attaches to you {urned Dr. Russcl, is which his share m; annock she on very dru Whe steps whatever e ' 1d called, T'd tackled it according to your inst Aons,” said 1 Lyttor wasn't called. Grannoc by the time his t the inflammation realized he out to get ups that time it w was coming fcund him gropi the hall. he nur back to the study. Nurse appeared out of the dr: a quarter of an hour later. Broon was asleep on the floor.” Has he anything to say”” “He woke up about midday. i saw him for a few minutes in his rcom—couldn’'t make much impre sion on him. He mentioned that he wasn't going to have the girl bullied as he intended marry her.” “Just go and bring the girl here avill you? Don't send a servant.® “If you've any kind of defense, Russell said to Hallie when she ap- peared, “I want to hear it. We're anxious to be fair to you. You were with your patient Mr. Lester Broon come home?” “I know quite well, Dr. frat” 1 disobeyed orders’with fatu Tesults to Mr. Grannock and that been lone airs and nearly down was find me our a anywa s wa 11 got Ellesmor g acr N ing-roosi to make him | and you heard | I Russell, | _therefore 1 shall be dismissed from | my profession.” #0h, you know that, do you “It’s obvious. And therefore appreciate your attitude but — should prefer to leave the hous without this cross-examination."” #‘You needn’t waste that kind of thing on me,” Russell told her galmly. I know that you were .kept in this room against your will The point is —how did you enter s “I didn't want to enter it at all,” (she admitted. Then her twitched violently and she flung “out her hands. “Oh, don't toriur: me ®0!" she begged. “Dr. Ru you must know by now what dam- age has been done to Mr. Gran- nock’s eyes. It's the on thing that matters to me, to know about Mr. Grannock.” *“The treatment your desertion. A the original f{roubl mediate result Mr yery mearly blind + glimmer of there is onc cha i tkat somec fresh treatment be discovered, may cure him personally. 1 have no lops She stood very still “There’s one thing vou to wer “Did you give Mr. Broon cation at all that vou wer to _leave your patient ¢ moment?"” “Yes, Hallie faintl *That settles it, | 1 Fou'll writ the hospital. 1 take it e getting back to tow s~ Hallic in- the 1 Lester car ingly zond vanced U medical profe “Tg that the 1 1 face . iled, owing to avation of was the Grannocl He I'll troubl barked indi- willing for onc answered 1 yiton the sary report 1o I must vas alone, still standi Oh, den't torture me t riding trie have been Lytton him up. to work I shut You come it out be useful. | tol t night fectly said, her | turned Hallie. ‘can yvou pos t your brothe Hus luck. It wa pre is by really? so!” cried Hallie “Thought youw'd gone off with the other one. I think 1 told vou that [N Ellesmore and I are going to be married ?” “Did you?" rasped Lytton T between the two of you, or course, It -won't ny report to the hospital ttitude to Miss Ellesmore under my orders. “Mr. or as a my 200 iz mistaken,"” “He to marry him but I've “What on earth’s biting you, Hal 2 Look here, Lytton, T don't mind telling you in confidence that [ we've been engaged for weeks | “It's between the two of you,” re- has asked me refused.” | 1ie ut him blind by | peated the doctor. orry a 1o t. you couldn’ You're poor ol not N symptoms they appe 1 it's all Lester, job in hand, he ought to hav throug imself. An he old Sol “Then counte the red casily scen ay, we can't poor trouble. Our to our e «C sent “I'm not going arry vou You know Yo I feit for Anyw nything you Ay, | at loathing. admit Lyt think I don't fecl I you now, not even The door opened to ter “Oh, hello!™ said Lester, amiably Has to Keep on Her Feet- “My work is keepingaroom- ing house in New York and 1 have to keep on my feet. I was weak and tired and didn’t seem to feel well at all. Some of my friends told me how good Ly- dia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound was and I decided to try it. I took it four times a day and it helped me very much. I feel better in all ways now.”—Mrs. Marie Vriesenga, 2002 Lexington Ave., New York, N. Y. Endorsed by Half a Million Women Lydia- E. -Pinkham's ‘Vegetable-Compound AUNT HET BY ROBERT QUILLEN hoped my oldest girl would raise a family, but she says three is plenty replace the old ones an’ I one spare.” Gopyright. to 13 AR el POOR PA BY CLAUDE CALLAN that poor people have to Lo | good. talks real sal about it, as if that's the main disadvantage by e 1 vourself! 1 t s to get him to ten Lester. you will make sce Mr. Grannock.” Chapter 6 A MERCIFUL MISTAKE “You will, of cou malke no at- tempt to sce Mr. Grannock.” The words hammered on in Hal- taxi will be Tere for you in Lytton said. ignoring have your things And, needless to no ittempt to minutes, lea then. sav, “If he had |lie's brain. So sure was Dr. Lytton | that she would speak to Saxely she loft the housc into th shut the door. She began to soh: obs that wrenched ind deft hag tremblin one hand against her sound and another (o her breast to e1sr the wrenching pain tha: lodged ther Under the stiff wwint and ealizo ¢f her uniform her rs could trace the outline of the ke no attempt to Grannock before that he had gone bhack drawing-room an4 long, her pu: lips to stifl ¢ it out and gazed at it. Ior one wili moment she wanted to throw herself down somewhere | —anywhere in the darkness, alons with the rose—and let the full tida | ot her grief rise over her and bear her away; let the shame and the | pity and the agonizing remors | snatter her and break her and have dcne with it. | She stood rigid, fighting for self | control. The voices in the draw ing-room rose and fell. Upstairs servants ipicd; they | oved from one bedroom to an other. She told Tierself that she could not possibly face them. She <ecided that would leave -he | house now, Just Wi v possessions had to we sh it or s she she with Lier could be sent ber lodgings Half-blinded by threw aside her apron opened the front door and ran down the The drive led past the | | nd cap, | 1 | ¢rawing-room window but there was i | steps. onother way of getting out into the she had accompanied Dr. | Lytton that way on the previous| cvening when he had given her his final instructions about—about— She clenched her hand sharply upon |the ivory senselc to recall |that at this moment! she turned the corner stood still. 8! unknowingly, to the In front of it, path, was Saxely | i woman-— rose; | the hal window stand- | Gran- | of house—and 3 ceme of the study ing on the nock The sight of him took the strength | from her limbs and the blood from | lier face. She stood stricken, dumb, unable to move forward or back- | | d. Her hand opened slackly | nd the ivory rose slipped on to the | | “Who is that?” | nock, She demanded Gran- | had assumed that he woulij| in bed or at most moving uncer- | tainly about cd room. | Who is I—I can't see |at all, now. l Hallie could never afterwards re- | member what the words were th | were torn from her, Whar had she cried to him —that her heart was breaking, that her life was there at | his feet, that the ivory rose had Letrayved them both to loss and de- his she please She could the 15 C with could never say remember only that her hand umbled towards her vering groan— You! Oh, you! Don't Didn't Lytton in re- | but you know tell it shouldn’t it you to “Yes, he¢ She closed Grannock: [ “Ye: she whispe Bui—hut [ her prayed {might strike her. Kill her, if h» liked. She hardly knew what she was saying. “But the rose is vours Here—here it is. I'm not what you thought, am 1? . Oh, what | vou doing? Don't—don't you under- stand 2 And then in eye that are a blinding instant realized the profound depths of nnock's misunderstandi His groping hand had found hers, had closed upon it and upon the ros |in its palm, and had carried both to his lips. “It was wonderful of you to come to me” he told her. “But now you must go away. You have vour life t live and T can’t offer you any- | thing at all. I'm all but blind, you I suppose Lytton told you all it devil of woman ruined my chance and I shall never ¢e you now. . Oh, don’t cry so. 1 Why, hardly know —you'll soon forget."” “Never, never tween her don't unde cannot tell | “You mean love each othe | about Some we of tears. Y and 1 nnot . It's too terrible. terriblz that we hat we met and |leved in that short hour by the sea | and that we - we mustn't love any miore it's terrible ticzema on Hand Caused Eruptions. Healed by Cuticura. “Eczema started on the first finger of my left hand, and was in a rash, and after a while I noticed that it was spreading over my other fingers and the palm of my hand. It itched and burned so that I had to scratch. This caused eruptions that prevented me from putting my me from sleeping. sample. Mass. Soap %5 Qintment 25 and 50¢ I Soap 2 intment 25 and 50c. Talcum : “Cuticura Laboratories, Dept. hand in water or doing my daily housework. The irritation prevented “I noticed Cuticura Soap and Ointment advertised so sent for a free I purchased more and within two months w healed.” (Signed) Miss Anne N. Trainovich, 613 Main St., Cambridge, as completely A fi\\d ey here. Sample each free. H, Malden, M. her misery, she | you, cach other | she gasped be- | | perhaps it's casier.” His arms were ‘ rcund her, his face against her hair. “It can't happen to two people in a thousand years, to meet like that nd know in a moment that it's the real thing forever. . . ., [t was the real thing with you, too, wasn't it?” L Oh, I know it now, God { help me! The real thing, forever and ever. “And if —you'd have married me?” “I want to mu you now. To make up for—for—to make up to To serve you. To be your | eyes. Oh, don't send me away! if | you send me away I'll kill myself! “It's madnes: muttered Gran- nock. “You don’t know all it means. 1 know—I ought to know —and vet, I can't let you go. Oh, I | can’t think sanely about that wo- n—that nurse — that Ellesmor> who blinded me!” His | arms crushed her so fiercely to him that she smothered a protest. “Don’t think of her!” she g “No, I won't.” His arm and dropped to his side, thotigh he feared she had left him, his hand sought hers n and held it. “I won't think of anything ex cept this wonderful madness you're offering me, maddest thing even know your what it i (Copyrig of all, that T don't name? Tell m2 1930, by Roy lie spoil Grannoc nd her own by identity? See Vickers) s hap- ing tomorrow’s Flashes of Life L the Associated Pross. Princeton, N. J. |is coming to the Navy football game Saturday. Before the game she will be a luncheon guest of President and Mrs. Hibben. N. S. W. flier, has rs. Hoover Princeton Kingsford boomerang, Sydney, Smith, the be shouldn't” | keep For || Museular Soreness and Skin Irritation LWAYS keep Rabalm ready for emergencies. || It is a bland, healing oint- ment for injuries or irritation Rabalm pene- trates deep into the pores and relieves without rubbing. of the skin. and yet | At your druggist’s The tube 50e Large jar $1.00 RABALM I¥’s a soothing antiscptic POLLY AND HER PALS Not Good Encugh to Wipe Her l';éét Onr I'd been able to ask you | . And isn’t this the| symbolic, as the mayor said at a| | F"R LATEST TASK | police, and studied police methods s |in England and Belgium. air service gets there and always gets back. N | As chiet personnel officer of the Did Similar Work Atter Glose of 2, =573, e vans: London — George Bernard Shaw | during the he ac- wor[d war | There are two distinct problems | to cope teacher, but gave it up in favor of becoming a reporter. Before becom- {ing policc commissioner under | Mayor John Purroy Mitchel he was is to make his radio debut next| { secretary of a citizen’s committee on Tuesday. He will speak for 40 min- | utes at a dinner of the British com- mittee for promotion of physical | and cconomic welfare of eastern | ! Jewry. There will be chain radio- ing of his speech in the United | h in each unemployment su, Brazil length enhora Ros | life is given by relatives as a century | New York, Oct. 23 (UP) — Col.| and a half. She is dead, leaving 18 | Arthur Woods, new head of Presi- | children, 124 grandchildren, 14 |dent Hoover's unemployment com. |[¢5Ult of unemploym e sl i | “The other to prevent a recur- great-grandchildren. | mission, brings to the job of finding | ; : ence of the conditions which make |"New York — There's great fish-| work for the millions of unemployed | T°nC® of the condi 1 ved |44 hossible for so widespread a ca- ing in summer on the beach at men in this country a wide and di-| " ROl S | Coney Island—rfor milk bottles. The | e versified experienc e e | average daily recovery by milk dis-| T 8 exad 4, *with tribu g compani it develops o Sn abnis nst an established order under from a survey of an anti-litter com- g e ; . IS which he is unable to find work to | mittec looking forward to mext e e e son, is 7,050 bottles, mostly intact. | keep y a 1 tog ; it out. As 4 tant secretary of war S 1 ’ r rk b is Tegucigalpa, Honduras — €ocoa ! e = oy | he is not only eager to work but i P after the armistice he has faced with| qualified fo do so has given under indictment, the whole of it, B | qualified to do so, a e SRR Sk isk of finding jobs for millions | oot of hy his good work in pros- alliilelascitizensiota topnlotithaL oldiers returning to civilian life.| nerous times name AGrafciiiitne alesalio LI la0 o fimomvhentindustoy been | IODDOSN\OH papers say the real rea- OppOS| P the real rea-! o ied to get along without them. |+ . T none prevent the 273 voting next A FEL R v presiaent | Injured in School Yard e e AR SO | L AN e () 2L Sl 05 sEn ehioph And Wants City to Pay town of Alvin York, war hero, is to | Conference on ”"’“”‘““\"‘f"‘" and | 3o 0. Hoosigian has filed with a railroad at last. A nine-mile latenissniatan Ao K00y he city clerk notice of a claim Onelin Lmennis w1 e ELSRCr et R OTHICOMINETes) gainst the city for injurics sustain- operation around | Charse of national relief measures.toq py Given D. Hoosigian. a pupil at | Col. Woods is a director of thel\y,chington school, on October 13. Banker's Trust company, and holds [y ™ enila climbed to the top of a a leading and well-established posi- |, 440r of a chute and fell off while tion in financial circles. He has been | o taacher was looki A e associated with the Rockefellers in|{o the claim, The i SRS | their various philanthropies. cture of the arm. The child Boston Native Kindergarten. | o1d. | e was born in Boston. and was | { san Salvador ‘en convicts are | graduated from Harvard, later {0 receive Christmas presents in the |studying at the University of Ber- | form of pardons from President Ro- |lin. He rted work a school {mere Bosque in commemoration of | ! the centenary of the death of Simon | Bolivar, liberator. Col. Woods said in 1921. e is to bring immediate re- lief to those who are suffering as a > © Decost: t sympathy, he ans resentment He was police commissionsr of 2 New York in 1915 and 1916, when | unemployment was great, and took a leading pa \ h | have extension from he rea for Thanksgiving. Los Angeles — Mitzi is to have a| | $15,000 home for life with $15,000 lin trust to pay for a housekeeper. food and other expenses. The will of Mrs. Maude . Ide. physician, | vides for her cat. Mitzi is 18 years | i i in The population nada cording to the latest census more than 8 8,500, ac- in | The total number of counties in the United States .070. The | tetal does not include indepen- dent cities. o YOUR ENERGY STEP Energy comes from food that contains the elements of nutrition in well- balanced proportion and easily di- gested form. Get into partnership with Nature and step up your energy by eating Shredded Wheat with milk. All the carbohydrates you need to furnish heat and energy, all the min- eral salts for bones and teeth. Deli- cious for any meal with sliced bananas or stewed fruits. *Varicose Veins Satisfactory resuits have been reported by many who have used Rabalm in the treatment of Vari cose Veins, WITH ALL THE BRAN OF THE WHOLE WHEAT By CLIFF STERRET MY STARS! | DONT TELL ME BTHATS A | sSNoBBY SCHOOLY 1 | YES, SAMUEL DEAREST WAS ACCEPTED To-DAY! THE "JUMPS’ ER SOMETHIN'G OBSERVING AN OLD SNOBBY SCHOOLY SHE'S NOT DANCING, MY G00D MAN SHES ANNIHILATING HER CULTURA P ACADEMY UNIFORM! . TERES NO B or, I DonT KrOW SCHOOL SPIRIT & eyeN AT PUBLIC LIKE THE GOOD 7 51001, WE USTER oD .. Slefi_.‘S HAVE OUR — OR A REFEREE NOW JUusy THL R B ) =2l o | WHAT s THE CAUSE OF ALL /WERE JES MPLG T \PUSL —CGQWE MISS ANN FER A (7", MEDDIN PRESENT=: 'S ' \ TRYIN ~—"To DECICE WHAT 10 mesc FATHEAD WONT TAKE MY S /) ;\E", A FATHEAD : ‘ '»’ z})\»\\sim u’; 1. ' AWFU L 100 BUSY 1O | [ WELL MY BOY- WHEN A ConDITION MAD ALK ABOUT LT NOW | o icy AS AFOREMENT |ONE D —ciel ([N AND 3 l ‘HJ‘ E WE| SEE YOUR Z, DADDY ARSES - THE CUSTOMARY MODEL CANT AGREE— o OF PROCEDURE \S T ! ON WHRT TO GIVE S Oy ¥ MISS ANN FER A/ %)\ i | {APPOINT A COMMTTEE /- [To REACH A L WEDDIN' loecision s ) QIFT /" WiLL THE COMMITTEE R E BN s |To DECIDE [ HOW THE | THR EE DOLLARS ANT TWENTY- ENTS TORYE NT Wi THOUT A FEW BLACK EYES AND SOME MISSING TEETH 2 — S %

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