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PAGE FOUR
MM® WOMAN’S
WHEN A WOMAN JELLS
BY RUTH AGNES ABELING
START HERE TODAY
Helga Sorensen breaks her en
gagement to Tom Bradford, whom
she has pursued for his money. and'
becomes Mrs. John Ames’ s.,ctal sec
retary. Philip Amps philanders w.th
Mrs. Ames and also with Helga. Af
fairs reach a climax who;: Philip
Ames and Tom Bradford come to
blows and John Ames disappears.
Helga, eager to regain Tom, is tor
tured by fear that he may love Grace
Cameron, a maid in the Aims home
whom Tom has rescued fri m a life
of shame.
GO ON WITH STORY
’T'HAT evening the Ames hoi i w. i.i!
* more like a grave than anything!
else. Lila wandered from place io;
place. She was beyoird comfort.
Finally she came and sat down’
beside me.
She had been pacing t’.e long lit - j
ing room, while 1, sitting in a shad- 1
owy corner, watched her and suf- |
fercd with her. for I too h id a sense
of loss. 1 felt t at even if Tom io h?
back there was somethin. I had I
lost. For there had been a tim. when |
lie could not. have put our affati | I
firmly aside for something els.-. 1 '
was 1 urt and I was ready *'■ ■ | ‘
pathize with Lila, who too had *i. t
discovered her lo .
“Helga,” she said as she -o <iov. a ■
beside me among the cushion'
the huge divan. “I’m appalled at 'ln* •’
little I know of my own affair:., 1
didn’t realize how completely John I
and I were living apart - he wa
supporting me, that was all. I don t I
even know where the money came
from. His affairs are a complet
myslery to me.
“Why, I don’t, know where he docs) t
his banking,” she added. “I htidnl.l
known before that two people ■ "ule
be married and yet live itch sep
£ WB B
'HJ ULJ
Select Now
YOUR NEW FALL MEN’S’ BOYS AND
LADIES’ SUITS AND FURS
Really this is the proper time to begin your selection of new
Fall Suits and Dresses. If you come in now and we don’t
happen to have just the size you require in the Dress or Suit
that you like, we will order it for you and have it here in plenty
of time for you to wear it at the beginning of the season. And
remember you make a reasonable Cash payment down and
balance on liberal terms.
I
W. J. JOSEY
AMERICUS, GA.
Your Credit Is Good Here.
Price or Value
Price is the question of a moment—
Value, a proof of worth.
People who buy solely by the figures
on the price tag often pay dearly for
the service rendered. People who con
sider value frequently find it cheaper
in the end pay slightly higher prices
for a far greater amount of service
received. Our prices are low when
quality is considered.
G.M. ELDRIDGE
Jeweler
“THE PUBLIC BE PLEASED.”
FIRE, LIFE, CASUALTY
INSURANCE
HERBERT HAWKINS
Phone 18ft 14-16 Planters Bnnk B'liMiaa
SAVE THE PENNIES |
' A \ Why pay 8 cents—when you
\ can get an ALL HAVANA I
b CIGAR FOR 5 cents
& ■sy ask f ° r
Cw CENCIBLES ...... 5c
: * Also h) 10c Size .
H MAkIV or saie Cigar Stands.
. » • IVIrMi-l Made us Americus JBy
EDWARDS CIGAR CQMPANY
arate lives. John’s business is ab
solute Greek to me—l could be fool
ed out of every penny he had and
would not know how to protect my
self.
"I have been filling my life with a
lot of petty things while I let. (hr
most precious thing I could have
had rust away. If he could only
know’ how sorry I am—”
Mrs. Ames was up again pacing
the room.
“Do you think 1 should notify ’he
police?’’ she asked at length.
“That would mean no<ori‘iy,”
I said.
“I’m willing to stand it -anything
I Tom said we should keep it quiet,
but I can’t, let it go on this way much
longer.”
“If Tom said not ' . let it get out,
don’t you think we’d 'letter give him
a day or two anyway '” I question.* d.
“But surely you w ntldti • just sit
here and not do anything if it was
your bu band?” Her voice w.o: nigh
pitched. 1 knew Him. Mr- \me.s wa; :
beginning to feel t !, e strain.
“If it had teen my husband
hope- -I ’.•.•i.1.1 have f re hr--ght
e hi gnt- 1 ”i don - someth mg long
ago.” I said not unkindly.
“And th: is just my pay,!’ Mis.
Arne:.’ voice was weary. "I’ll just
have t'i : uffer it out—,l know. I’m
the one who has been in the wrong
all along.”
There was a light tap on the (loot
frame. Grace appeared. “Have you
heard anything?” she asked anxious
ly-
“Nothing.” My voice was ragged
Grace disappeared silently.
Slowly Mrs. Ames and I went up
the stairs .each into our separate
lonely rooms each to our own fears
(To Be Continued).
(Copyright, 1:>21)
toll ADVEHTUftb-Srnlt, "1
U J OF TUB TWINS r'-J
mv, by Olive Roberts’ Barton
THE BAIT
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1 ■ J/ rki ' -rCL- t J A- v. / j
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J,7 A kr- '■*=—
Look out’ Don’t tout h it’ its dangerous.”
DY’N’BY Spike Starfish got his oys-
*■* ter open just a little, and pretty I
ion the other starfish had his oys ;
ter open, too. Everybody could seel
whai was happening ami everybody!
was surprised, for the oysters had
bei i> shut up as tight as sardine cans. I
‘'Sillies’” declared Capn’ Penny->
winkle. “They don't, know when they!
are safe. What did they ipen up'
for?”
“They’re tuckered out," explained,
Tub Terrapin. “When Spike Star-■
fish gets his. arms around an oyster I
ami keeps pulling, that’s all there is
to it. He gets it open every time.”
“Oh, look!” cried Nancy, pointing.
But everybody could see without
being told. Spike Starfi.'i was pro
ceeding to eat. I.is oyster with great
relish and care. Slowly but surely
the poor thing was disappearing
fiom view'.
“The idea,” said Cap’ll Penny-
Winkle indignantly.
“Yes, the very idea!” I Curley!
the seahorse. “It’s ou‘rageous.”
Everybody there said almost the|
same thing and held a consultation
LEMON CARAMELS
Stir some syrup which las been i
boiled to the hard snap stage the,
grated rind of lemon which has been j
mixed with confectioners sugar and j
lemon juice. If you use 3 cups of j
syrup, u-e the juice and grated rind’
of 1 lemon and 1 cup sugar.
IF YOU ARE WELL BRED
You will greet the patronesses at
a formal dam e as you enter Ihe bail
room, but you will not. consider it a
duty to lake formal leave of them.
A pleasant “good night!" if they arc
near, should suffice.
You will enclose wedding invita-1
Hon which you are sending in towl
envelopes. The outer one may be i
larger and is usually of not quite fix |
I costly fabric of the inner one, which
NEW wrr. NEW
SILKS TRIMMINGS
Mn . , .. n n - US LACES—AII Kinds
Malhnson s IJrapella
Mallinson’s Crepe Satin RIBBONS —
Skinner’s Satins F' O r S as h es
Skinner’s I affetas NEXT* f or Girdles
Canton Crepes f or g ags
For Vest Fronts
MALLINSON S — MONDAY or Camisoles
Indestructable Voiles "
Satin Messalines ’ “Krimmer” Bands
Wool Suitings Asfrachan Bands
Wool Serges ‘ SURE Beads in Bunches
40 Inch Dress Velvets ’ Scale Bands
Scale Motifs
SPECIAL AND L °”P B ™ ids ,
V r coaftVJ Plain Braids
Canton Crepe, $2.98 Yd. Beks and Neck Wear
V IK I »jnrrr,l WEFKTWMLWXTVMW
NEW AT ANSLEY’S
<kk» wi mm inn rx"~jxi~jruii._ii u mi. ii full in 117 ir mir
GLOVES
Check Ginghams IHE LONG KIDS I
Plaid Ginghams H IL Are J | ere |
Check Percales dHE SHOR 1 KIDS I
Shirt Madras NEW Are ere
Outing Flannels THE SUEDE FABRICS
Wool Flannels | | -Are Here
T will pay you to see our I ® UNGS
r i .. r r l i| ‘ Ihe Best Colors Are
fresh patterns or Check I ' ■
Ginghams—They’re just JUST Shown in All |
what you've wanted. ’ AND ALL ARE |
NEW ' R ,< l v, n NEW
ini—m— iwii i—i ii . . {
THE AMERICUS TIMES RECORDER,,
about what to do. The worst of it
I was. that as soon as Spt.-e ami his
I brother had finished their oyaers,
I they proceeded to pull open some
|oth'. i:-. which disappear'd in the
| same manner.
But something was going lo hap
! pen. Rigi t over their heads a bi?
I fat worm was dangling, a worm mil
something at (he end of a line.
Curley was in t about to * ike a nip
at it whi n Nick called, “Look oul !
Don’t touch it! It’s dan on !’’
Tub Terrapin said “I’oob! It!
looked all right. He’d :> notion to try!
it himself.” 1
“Well,” said Nick, “yon may know;
something about the sea, Mr. Ter-j
rapin. but I've lived ; vcral ycat .i
on land. Let’s wait and see what;
happens.
Pretty soon the worm wiggled!
I away over the sea-w'end grove and!
! over to the oyster bed where Spike;
I Starfish was feasiine. There it liung j
! right over Spike’s head.
(To Be Continued).
((Copyright, 192!.').
! must match the invitation. The inner j
! envelope is not sealed and has on it ■
■ only the name of the one for whom it |
j is intended. The outer one, which i
I sealed ami stamped, bears Hie full!
: address.
You will immediately join the !
amu omen! your ho les ha arranged i
instead of standing back and looking!
on and thus seeming upappreciativc :
of her thought of you.
TABLE MARKED?
The marks on your higly polished
table, such as those made by heal.:
will yield to paraffin. Rub it on with I
, a soft cloth.
BAMBOO.
When bamboo furniture becomes; i
I dingy wash it in water in which ai
little, salt has been put. .
SISTER MARY’S
KITCHEN
IJ J i
DRIED FRUITS IN DELICIOUS i
DESSERTS.
By Sister Mary.
Learn to use dried fruits as well •
as canned ones. If during the canning!
season it was impossible for you to |
can, there are all kinds of dried I
fruits on the market that will make I
quite as delicious desserts as the I
rather expensive factory canned i
I fruits.
Dried fruits lose none of their :
sweetness and minerals during t'he !
preserving process and retain their
I natural richness of flavor to a great
! er extent than canned fruits do.
Apricot Bouchees.
! One-half cup dried apricots, flaky
I pie crust, sugar, 1-2 cup whipping
I cream.
j Wash fruit thoroughly throng’ll I
: five waters, (’over with hike warm;
water and let stand over night. Cook 1
fruit: in the same water for two,
hmirs. Rub through a coarse sieve. ,
Measure and add t'l’ree-fourths as'
much sugar as there is fruit puree.!
Cook until Illi' sirup jellies when a
little is tried on a saucer. Pour this !
into individual baked shells. Top:
each with a spoonful of slightly
sweetened whipped < ream.
Apricot Pudding.
One'l'alf cup dried apricots, 1 1-"
cups slab' bread crumbs, 1-2 cup :-u
--gar, I 1-2 cups, mill . 2 eggs, juice I
lemon.
Wash fruit and lot stand in v.aler
;to cover over night. Stew in the
same water for two hours. Let the
! water cook away as much as pos-
I siblo without burning the fruit. Rub
1 the fruit through a fine sieve. Add
; ugar, lemon juice and the yolks of
! Ihe eggs well beaten. Mix well. Scald
| the milk and pour over the bread
trumbs. Let stand half an hour.
: Combine the two mixture , ami pour
| into a buttered baking dish. Bake
.in a moderate oven until set. Then
cover with the whiles of the eggs
I beaten till si iff and dry with 4 table
i spoons of sugar. Pul in the oven
!to brown the top. Serve warm or
j cold.
Apricot Souffle.
Three-quarters cup apricots, 1”,
■up flour, 4 tablcsnoons butler, 1-'!
cup sugar, milk and apricot juice to
mal:<“ 1 cun. 3 egg a
I Wash, and soak ppricots. Cook Iwo
i hours and drain from iuice. Rub
! through a fine seive. Measure the
I iuice and it: e as much more milk a‘;
| is necessary to make 1 cup liquid
I Med butter, stir in flour ami when
I perfectly smooth add the fruit juice
I slowly, stirring constantly. Add milk
I and cool; until the mixture is very
I.‘ I.iff and leaves ihe T’rdes of f'e pan
; Let this cool while beating Ihe yolks
i-f the
Colored. Then beat in yolks, sugar
I ami apricot pulp. Fold in ihe white! 1
J of the eggs beaten stiff and dry. Pour
tn/*A
9 (JU(Jf~Jr I
FOOL OR HYPOCR’TE?
; A NAIVE betrayal o f how her
! * * emotions can trick a woman is
j contained in this bit of war after
[ math:
I “Since my husband returned from
i France, he has had letters from an
j American widow who was overseas
! in some kind of war work.” explains
I A WAR BRIDE. “She is now in New
: York. Iler letters come to our home
when they might as well go to my
husband’s office.
“‘That woman sends them here to
get me into trouble with you,’ says]
my husband.
“Now the widow virtuously refuses
to give him her present address;
nevertheless, she has iust sent, him
: that of another girl whom they both
‘ knew in Paris. My husband is both
annoyed ami disgusted. Sincerely so
|—l know him so well! Plainly he
1 c< i.ild easily get into correspondence
! with ‘Mona Marion,’ if he caVed to.”
tho intruder.
i Let’s interrupt right here, I’m; an
hie. Women whose husbands and
sweethearts became romantically in
terested overseas often complain bit
terlv because they were so complete.
:)v f.ngidten i- i.ii there’s comfort in
that fact Just as the man forgot her
for the foreign girl, so now he has
j completelv forgotten the foreign wo
' man for her! Unless he is pursued.
‘ The above letter continues:
' “The widow wrote to my husband,
into a buttered baking di< ami bake
.: in :> moderate oven for twenty-live
minutes. Serve at once with stewed
, ‘ apricot sauce.
Apricot Sauce.
Rub stewed apricots through a
sieve. There should be 1 1-2 cups.
I Add the juice of one enio", ”-4 cup
I ugar, 1 tablespoon constarch. There
should be some juice with the apri
cots, but if there isn’t, add enough
1 water to make 2 cups of apricot
puree. Mix Ihe constarch well with
tlu ugar and stir this into the fruit.
Stir and cool: until the sauce thick-
ens
I Memorial I
Fund Week I
One-Half of All Receipts For The
Week Given To The Memorial
Fund
Program I
FOR THE WEEK
OCT. 3 THROUGH BTH
Monday I
IP Frederick in
‘THE STING OF THE LASH’
Also Pathe News
Tuesday I
Viola Dana in
‘LIFE’S DARN FUNNY’ I
Also a Mack Sennett Comedy
‘Call A Cop’ I
Wednesday I
A Paramount Picture
Ethel Clayton in
‘WEALTH’
Also Pathe News
Thursday I
I I A hirst National Attraction—John M.
Stahl Presents
‘THE CHILD THOU GA VEST ME’ |
With Barbara Castleton and Dick
Headright W
Also Pathe Review W
Friday and I
Saturday I
One of Paramount’s Greatest Pictures
PAYING THE PIPER’
Presented by George Fitzmaurice
A Gorgeous Drama of Life and Lights
Os New York
Also Torchey Comedy
THE RYLAM |
SATURDAY, OCTOBER I, 1971
‘I can’t give you my address becau
I don’t want you to write to me It
hurt your wife before. She didn\
understand. Just know I am as a ■
ways—Mona Marion.’
“Now I want to know just what a
wife is Supposed to ‘understand'
when another woman pesters her
husband with mail? Am I prudish ami
narrow-minded because I resent,
Mona Marion’s pursuit of the man I
married before she ever saw him?
“if she were truly a high class in,
dividual, as one isl accustomed to
think of war workers, why does she
remind the father of my children
that she is always—Mona Marion?
“Am I a fool? Or is she a hypo
crite?”
This letter is a positive joy to the
student of human emotions. So also
is the intelligence of the little wit.
who refuses to be tricked. She com
prehends intuitively the hypocrisy of
ini ruder.
Mona Marion’s “innocent” letter to
an< I her girl’s husband is a splendid
exhibit of the folly in which her de
: ire can snare a woman.
Subconsciously, Mona Marion
wishes ardently to hear from the man
who was her friend in Paris. She ac
tually wrot" with the intention of
II nipt ing him to correspond. She
placed all her cards so that the man
could see. and play her game She
reminds him of her unalterable
friendship— while protesting that
she doesn’t want to hurt his wife!
The lady doth protest too much.
Some psychologists would say that
her ease simply proves, once more,
bi w human beings delight in deceiv
ing themselves.
But a few, of sterner philosophy,
exalt will as an important ingredient
of normal humans.
Tried by this standard. M-omt
Marion is a conscious intriguer who
knows better than to trespass on an
other wcVnan’s rights—- and who
should be treated accordingly.
Milk will stay sweet longer if kept
in a shallow nan than if put in a
deep pail or jug.