The Syracuse Journal, Volume 22, Number 49, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 3 April 1930 — Page 7

| Woi*o —""'Are Always Admired w [Ym t»»w«rtt»b« iMWyaMi iiiai>)< W You can h*»« a radiant complexion W and the charm of youth if you urn W MARCELLE Face Powdae. MARC ELL E Paca Powdar qukkly matches your complexion and brings out ths sweet charm that every woman haa. fll MARCELLE Face Powder makee WB your akin feel younper aDd you your- WS •elf look younger. WV Thm People will admire you and JBJ toy — "What lovely akin you hov«!~ Popular etie package*at 15c and 50c. •11 •hadee— at all dealera. Send for free liberal »ample and complexion chart - *■ MARCELLX LABORATORIES wl c. w. eeeet eons a co., ciucaea. in WH Wiaiit I—r''7in* 1 — r ''7in* c-g-ir-rw— For Galled Horses Hanford’s Balsam of Myrrh AJ dsalers art astWrtssJ to r4a»d T**r far tk« first kettle rs »e< raatod. Romance Long Gone From Once Rich Mining Campa Nevada .City arid Gruss Valley were once the two largest cities in California, with wealth on every hand and excitement on every corner. For nearly three-quarters of a century those camps have been producing a steady stream of gold. First it was t . n.Ksl gold. or dust and nuggets washed in the Sluiye boxes of the forty-niners. Then it was placer gold from the immense hydraulic operations that followed the first wild rush. And .today the pound, pound. jHuind of the stamp mills, crushing the quartz to extract t|he precious metal, goes on day anil night. But for the most part the hills and canyons resound to Emptiness. Nature Is effa dng the scars of pick and dynamite with its healing green. Only the ghost towns with their reminiscing dodders recall the most thrilttng treasure hunt in history.— The Golden Book. 11l that . sluggish 111 feeling Put yourself right with nature by chewing Feen -a - mint. Works mildly but effectively in small doses. Modern — safe — scientific. For the family. Feenamint ! * s * '^'Ux£: Rk . TX| ORIGINAL I I 7 Jeetva-niinv I The Chewing Gum 1 1 LAXATIVE I ■ < No Taitr Bui the Mint j 1 I ■ K ChtlV It A ■ I FOR CONSTIPATION 'Th.XTnH. I»ean Herbert Hawkes of Colum bin was talking about the revised curriculum to go into effect in the autumn. "The change." he said, “will hytke university life pleasanter, but it won’t make it laxer. Quite the contrary. / “I think It will do away with the student of Exes tyj»e. “Young Exe sauntered into a telegraph office. and w rote nuj a .telegram. The clerk ran over it several times, then he said: “‘I can’t make out whether this reads “no funds’’ or “no fun.” ’ “•Oh, well.’ said Exe. what’s t>i« difference-'" ‘ L Tunnel’* Fat* With Quake* Whether the proposed railway tun nel beneath the strait of Gibraltar to connect Europe and Africa is teas ible will depend on the results of artificial earthquake waves sent through the ground. The waves will be sent to reveal what rocks would be encountered. « ■ vW)? ‘ ‘Jj Mothers.. .Watch Children’s COLDS COMMON head colds often “settle” in throat and chest where they may become dangerous. Don’t take a chance — at the first sniffle rub on Children’s MuKtrak once every hour Muiterole. you have known so long, tn milder form. , Working like the trained masseur, this famous blend of oil of mustard, camphor, menthol and other ingredient* brings relief naturally. It penetrate* and stimulate* Ijjood arculanon, help* to draw out infection and pain. Keep full strength Musterole on band, for adults and the milder — Children a Musterole for A 0 dfU O mfc gju>

The Grippled Lady of Peribonka • • .. By James Oliver Curwood WNT Service < A ift». Doubleday Doran 41 C<k* lac.)

CHAPTER IX—Continued —ls—- — If site had been a partner tn the few seconds of his thoughts. Curls spoke softly, giving him her hand again in the night which shut them In. “I want to hear you say it, Pauli I bate dreumed. and even prayed in my wickedness, and have fancied your voice telling me rhe story. For that I have many limes asked God to forgive me. But’ now It Is right and Just, I want to hear you say—you love trie.* ‘‘l do." said Paul. “I know—now—that I have loved you from the beginning of time, before 1 came to the Mistassini, before I was born tn this life—a thousand or a million years 1 have wonshl[»ed the soul that is you. Sometime. It may have l>een ages ago, I know that you belonged to trie." . "I lune always belonged to you." said "Carla. "Yours is the love 1 thought was hopelessly gone, from me —up there. But to die with you Is my rigid, tan there be such a .hlng as doubts for us now ?" ••) am sure there cannot." be said. “You would like to* live?’’ "Without you, n .’ - « "And there is no chance —no hope of saving ourselves?" “1 can con\ebe ot none. No force could contend with the maelstroms In the throat of the chasm. At the other end all physical matter Is ground to pulp as the water comes out through the gorge. We are caught between the two." ■ • . He calmly and frankly stroke the truth to her. She made no reply in w >r<is. but he could feel her response creeping through her finger tips to hltn, could feel the iremltle and thrill <>f it In her body. He bad not frightened her.' but had dispelled from her the beginning of-a fear. She: did not want to live. The truth seized upon and helped, him with a kind,of shock. Yet it was a simple thing, one he should have known without intuition or discovery. For Carla was—not only a woman, but a soul Back there. In Claires world, she wcijld be lost to hitn—no matter what he might do In the way ofher men Lad solved such problems. Only here. It a beginning and an end all their own. could she belong to him. Again she was In his heart, listen Ing to his thoughts. "Lt is strange, but I want to sing In this darkness." she said. “I did not know that blindness could be so beautiful "Nor I!" he answered. CHAPTER X Purlng the night following Paul’s incident ahd Carla s leap, men were active beloyir the g'» r ge. I‘erwent tost no time in racing back to the Mistas sinl -and the presence of a hundred men below the chasm before midnight was the result. Every device of en ginoering science and unlimited . resource which might be employed came with them. The big pool at the foot <>f the gorge was a glare of Illumination, hnd men went down the river with their flaming torches, afoot along lt.v hanks and In canoes between them, questing for a shred of—eomethlng which a few hours before might have been a t art of Paul ot Carla. Lucy-Helle, stiocked Into sickness, was taken her home. But Claire remained. Men who saw her In the weird glow of the tights will never be able to forget the Image of her face as It was phofographed upon their ’memories. Her blue eyes were so wide-open and staring, so filled with nn unwavering sapphire flame that at times Herwent thought of her as a spirit god<less Instead of a woman. Could Paul have seen her he would have known that at lust she had con quered her fear and repugnance of the wilderness. She had come with the first men before a trail was cut. Her drew and shoes were torn, her .soft skin bruised and bleeding. Where the wither crashed and thundered loudest out from between the chasm walls she stood unafraid, until Hvrwent twice drew her back from the nearness and danger of it. She resented his appeal to leave the search to other*, and Derwent made It only once. A white face, watching fnr Its dean]—that was what men would rememloer. Eyes flamingly blue, hun-

Find Relation Between Moon and Earthquakes

After studying the records of mor< than IJlN) earthquakes In California which have occurred since 1812 a Pa clfic coast scientist comes to the In terestlng conclusion that all the quake* *came when the moon was in acer tain quarter. The quakes occur on a fault-line, or crack In the substructure of the earth’s crust. It was found that when the fault-line ran In a northwesterly direction the earthquake would come when the moon was betwevn the meridian and the western horizon, or when It had not yet arisen and was In the directly opposite position. When the quake occurred on a faultCar« of Waxed Floor Never use water on your waxed fl«Hirs. Water spilled upon them will turn the wax white, if this happens, nib the spot lightly with a doth aoaked in alcohoL Then apply more wax.

grily searching the black- stream as It came from the mountain. A fragile form that seemed tireless, as steeL A woman, and yer more than woman—an unforgettable spirit, a vision that was like tragic music, always to be remembered. She did not give up with the first hours of evening, but continued- to watch through the night She did not move from'the foot of the gorge and the pool, as if she were sure that whatever came to her would be found there. Derwent was frequently with her, and tried to talk, but her lips framed few words. Not until came again did something give way in her. and hopelessness take its place. Then he took her home to Lucy-Belle. “I waited too long,” she said to him, and afterward, back with the searching men, he wondered what she had meant. These searchers, could they have looked through the rock, would have seen a fire, it was the second night for Pan! and Carla in a place where night and day were the same. Paul had found drifts of wood along the edge of the sand, mixed with pitchy pine, and a little spot in their world was Illumined by light. In the tire glow sat Carla, combing her long, silky hair with her fingers. Paul watched her as she smoothed and braided the tresses, employing as great care as .though she were in. her bedroom at home. This was the third E’T jJi BK at WBkK WLI fM SttH * v wm In the Fire Glow Sat Carla. Combing Her Long, Silky Hair With Her Fingers. ' time she had given It such attention In their thirty-six hours of entombment At other times he had held a light for her at the edge of the water while she bathed her face and hands, and once she had said to him: “It is wonderful water, almost as soft as that which comes with rain." She spoke as If they might have been camping on one of the streams they loved, rfith the sky atove and flowers about them. It was her utter acceptance of their fate as a thing of happiness 4vhich transformed what would haxe been a hell for him Into a heaven. She had sat in the soft sand at his feet, a few moments before, with her bead pillowed against his kimes. and there she had unbraided her him to caress, as she watched anti, pointed out for him, the unusual and beautiful pictures that built themselves in the changing coals and crumbling embers of the fire. Now she was a little distance from him,' and no sense of dread or fear oppressed him as he followed the rhythmic movements of her; slim white fingers braiding her hair again. If It were madness whicii possessed him It was a beautiful madness, a sense of Joyous living where there should have been despair. At first the lighting part of him tmd Instinctively struggled against it. but n’ow he accepted It fully, until, seeing Carla ns she was. death seemed vague and far away and thp glory of life very near. They had made no effort to hide from themselves the coming of the end, and Carla thought of it as a beautiful thing, a little Journey, which they were making gladly together. Never had Paul believed so surely In a God. He had found himself fond of telling her how be loved her hair more than any other physical thing about her, and she had said: “lam going to spread It .out so you may put your face in It when we lie down to sleep.” This was the way she si»oke of what was to come—as sleep. To drift off like this, his arms about her, seemed to Paul the fruition of a great privilege and Joy. and not a trlumpa of fleshly dissolution. He had told her little stories about his mother and of the time they had spent sun-filled hoyra in the Indian burial place as Brantford, where the proudest of her forest ancestors were buried. • (TO BK CONTINVCD) R«*t Imperative Take a rest; a field that has rested gives a bountiful crop.—Ovid.

line running east and west, tt was found that the moon would be in the corresponding quadrants of the sky. Four out of five of the strongest shocks occurring in one place would come when the moon was In the same position it had been tn during the main shock. Just why this relationship between the moon’s position and earthquakes Is so consistent has not yet been explained. In Praise of October From the health viewpoint. October Is the best month of the year. People get up In the morning full of eneqfc and work with joy and vigor. Headaches. colds, and other minor complaints. as well as serious illnesses,'are fewer than at other times and the total number of deaths is also usually less.—New York Herald Tribute. ; Practically all Tnkay grapesgroWP in this country are from-California.

THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL.

Improved Uniform International Sunday School ' Lesson' (By REV. P. B FITZWATER. D.D.. Member of Faculty. Moody Bible Institute , of Chicago.) <©. 1930. Western Newspaper Union.)

Lesson for April 6 THE LAW OF THE CROSS i LESSON TEXT—Matthew Iti .13-26 GOLDEN TEXT—If any man will i ?ome after Me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow Me PRIMARY TOPlC—Proving our- Love I for Jesus. i JUNIOR TOPlC—Proving our Love tor Jesus. j, v IN I’EK.MEDIATE AND SENIOR TOPIC —Denying Self for Christ. YOL’NG PEOPLE AND ADULT TOP i IC—Cross-bearing in the Christian life The lesson topic is narrywej than the Scripture text. It im lud.es t'lirist taking account of His ministry. Peter s confession. Christ’s prediction con cerning His death and His teaching concerning the cost ot discipleship. I. Christ, the King. Taking Account of His Ministry (vv. 13-I7). 1. The place (v. 13).' It was at Caesarea Pliilippi. the northern limit of .Jewish territory, practically In Gentile territory. 2. Tiie time in Christ's ministry. The (cross whs only a few months away. King had already been re jected. They had charged Him with being in league with- the devil and sought to kill Him. it was highly important that the disciples have clear views as to Christ’s person in ordet i to stand the test of His trial and crucifixion. 3: Peter’s confession (vv. I!‘.-1G): (1) The occasion (vv. 12 15) Two questions asked by -lesiis Christ pro voked this confession, a. As to the opinion of tb.e people concerning Him (vv; 13. 14). They recognized Him as a teacher and prophet of mofe than human authority and power Had He | been content with this. He would not have been molested in .Jerusalem. It was His persistent claim of' being the God-man. the very Son of /God. that sent Him t<> the cross*, b. As to the. personal opinion of the' disciples (v. 15).fd,! was not enough for them to I be rattle to tell what opinion the pcof pie held concerning Jesus, It was necessary that they have definite, irrect and personal knowledge >f and belief In Him. (2) The content (v 1(>). It ■ consisted of two parts, a. "Thou art the Christ." This avowed Jesus to be the Messiah—the fulfiller of the'Jew ish hopes and expectations, b. “The Son of the living God ".This acknowledge! Him to he divine. It was the ' recognition of His glorious person In keeping with the Jewish hope (Isa. 9:6. 7). 4. Christ’s confession of Peter (v. 17). Those who confess Christ shall be confessed by Him (Matt. 10:32. 33) Christ a blessing upon ! Peter—not. in -the nature of reward, hut a declaration of the,spiritual condition of Peter because of his clear I apprehension’of his Lord. ! 5. Christ’s charge to the disciples (v. 20). He asked them riot to tell.any man that He was the -Messiah. The time ■was not ripe for-sqcli testimony. l 11. The New Body, the Church. An- ' nounced IS. TO). Following Jthe confession of Peter His intention of bringing into existence a new body, to the membersT'Aif w hich He would ■ give eternal life, and into whose hands He would entrust the keys of the K! gdom. Peter was to have a distinguished place in this body. Assc 'a tion In this new body cannot he rok en by death, for the gates of Hades ’shall not prevail against it. 111. The King Predicts His Death (vv. 21. 23). , This prediction was no doubt star ; fling to the disciples. They did, not yet realize that redemption .was to be j accomplished through the passion < f the cross. Sb unwelcome was this an nouncenient that Pe:er cried. “This shall not "be unto Thee." Peter saw through tire darkness to the sun light on the hilltops beyond. A new hope filled his-breast (I Pet. 1:3. 4). ' Victory through death is yet the : stumbling block of many. IV. The Cost of Discipleship (vv. i 24-26). Life can be saved only by losing it. If we are going to be (’hristians. we must share Christ’s suffering. 1. There must be dental of self (▼. I 24). There.'is .a w ide difference between self-denial and denial of self i All people practice self-denial. ■ hut only real disciples of f'hrist deny self i 2. "Take up His cross" (v. 21). This cross Is the shame and suffer Ing which lie in the path of loyalty so | Christ. 3. Follow Christ (v. 24). This means to have rhe mind of Christ—to be like Christ. The Lover of Mankind Our Ix-rd. the lover of mankind, was a lover also of the world of nature. It called Him and calling spoke to Him; It was His Inspiration and His rest. When you love a person you can never quite hide It. There are some ; secrets nobody can hide. Yon say I shall never mention the beloved, but the birds of the air a»-e carrying the | tidings. So. In the go«q»els. given for our redemption, one Is never far from nature, just because the Master loved it so. He loved Peter, and you ran see Peter there. He loved John, and John Is in the picture. Rut He also , loved the sparrows and the lilies, and the wind that bloweth where ft listeth —and the gospels have to give house i room to them all. —George H. Morri son. Trjist in tbs Father Do nor look forward to what might happen tomorrow; the same everlast ing Father who rates for you today will take care of you tomorrow, and every day. Either He will shield yon from suffering, or He will give you unfailing strength to hear It. Be at peace then, and put aside all anxious thoughts and Imaginations.—SL Fran cis de Sales. ....

Drives 23 Miles To Buy Gold Medal Flour "Gold Medal kitchen-tested 7 Flour Never Fails —Makes More Bread Per Sack" Says Miss Pearson prove my preference for Gold Medal ‘Kitchen-tested* Flour by driving 23 miles to buy it,” says Miss Pearson. WKsf. “Gold Medal Flour never fails. Makes more bread per sack than any other flour, and the pie crusts I make with jifcfex y it are the flakiest I’ve ever seen.” BMB in?’ —bread, cakes, biscuits, pastries —in an oven just like yours. Only Hour which acts the same wl Sh perfect way every time is allowed Btyl to go out to you. Thus you know in advance exactly what your results will be. gg| iitfpflull", J Special "Kitchen-tested 1 ' fin * Recipes In Every Sack This New-Type Flour M K ' (Changed Every 3 Month,) Banishes Baking Failures K| M Please accept. free of charge, simWOMEN all over the country H plifled reJpes for 12 of Bett 7 declare they have taken the AHCDEnrieSial BQ Crocker’s most delicious baking "guess work" out of baking . . . creations. Recipes for the dainti-. Now they get perfect results every est cakes, the finest cookies, the time with bread, cakes, pies and most popular pastries known, biscuits. Each one is ‘ * simplified" until it is They use a new-type flour for all ' remarkably easy. too. baking purposes—Gold Medal of the same flour often aded differ- All 12 of these simplified “Kitchen- " Kitchen-tested” Flour —that sim- ent -ly, even with the same recipe... tested' recipes are inside every sack; plifies baking remarkably and ban- was in o\en_a£tion. o f Gold Medal “ Kitchen-tested” ishes the cause of most baking now gold Medal Flour is You get a fullß6l today failures. • Kitchen-tested” before it comes to “ simply ask y L our f ° r GoLI> Failures, experts found, were you. As each batch comes through M EDAL Kitchen-tested. our. mostly due to the fact that 2 sacks the mill it is tested by actual bak- Washburn Crosby Company ‘‘Listen in to Betty Crocker, 9:45 to 10:00 A. M. Tuesday and Thursday, Central Standard Time, Stations: KYW, WOC, or KSD.” GOLD MEDAL FLOUR “Kitchen-tested” Always sold in trade-marked sack —never in bulk

Radio Playlet, “Romance of the West’’ The Lincoln Country bitter factional tight in New Mexico in the early seventies, is the background for the Conoco Adventurers’ radio playlet of the western country. Billy the Kid, one of the most famous outlaws of the Old West, who, when he was* still a beardless youth of eighteen, carried several notches on his gun. is one of the princ|pa,l characters in the radio playlet. “A Romance of the West.” It tells the story of the three days of continuous battle.whiclr finally ended a bit ter factional strife centering around the town of Lincoln. There is wov en into the sketch an interesting love story, illuminated by the chronicle of th& bravery <if a settler’s , daughter, who is finally won by one of the participants in the. “Lincoln County War.’’ Special musical effects have been devised to lend a. convincing sound background to the action, and there is a touch' of comedy., too, in the character of the pioneer wife who owned the only pftfflo for miles around, and was ready to defend it . with her life. The Conoco adventurers may be heard each Thursday at 10 p. in.. CST, over the NBC network.’ “It Was of Wonderful Benefit to Me”

Danville, 111. —1 was in poor health and was advised to take Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription. I did so. and it was of wonderful benefit to me. I “When I had die ‘Hu’ I was again in need of something to give me strength and restore my vitality to

uL' ~ jTx Mr*. McCUUaa

a normal condition, and at this time I took Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery. I received satisfactory benefit ■» I had’before from the ‘Favorite Prescription,’ so I believe Dr. Pierce’s remedies are very reliable." — Mrs. Chas. McClellan, 1003 Fera St All dealers. Write to Dr. Pierce’s Qinic in Buffalo, N. Y, for free medical advice. SJfidless Highway* . Slightly more than 100 miles of skidless highways have been experimentally laid in the state of Oregon. The material consists of a mixture of asphalt and crushed rock or coarse gravel and is spread over an asphalt road and oiled -shoulders, this ' Incidently widening the road for motor traffic. This composition is not regarded as easy on the tires, but it does offer more resistance and is practically proof against skidding Dost Be Dlsflgured. Keep Cole's Carbolisalve in the house. It stops pain from burn or cut quickly and heals without scars. At all good druggists. JOc and 60c. or J. W. Cole Co., Rocifford. IlL—Advertisement. Prosperity From Bed Quilts Villagers of South Wales are en-; joying temporary prosperity Just because Princess Mary of England took a fancy to a Welsh wheel-pattern bed quilt at Harrogate recently. The princess bought the quilt, and now all English society is demanding similar bed Coverings. Gave Radium to World Radium was first obtained from pitchblende by M. and Mme. Curie and M. Eeinuut in 1898.

Fashion Foremost Gallant Passenger (on sinking ship) —Here, lady, take njy life preserver; it will save you. Miss Highbrow—Sir! That lllfitting thing! It’s way out of style and you insult me. Keep it; 1 would rather drown first.—Pathfinder Mag azine. Bug v*. Bug A Internal parasite named coccophagus guerneyi. introduced into California from Australia last year, has attacked as many as 50 per cent of the mealy bugs in some orchards.

: --- .... . yi " MILDRED CAN'T COME BECAUSE -- ’ - ( IT'S WASHDAY. SHE'S SCRUBBING HER CLOTHES —JUST IMAGINE! V / HOW OLD * FASHIONEDI I y LET'S TELL HER ABOUT f JWHK Ifir * OUR "NO-WORK" WAY I W\ : ,fn .5 ■’ ■ ■ cWI < ■* t ** xvl,.. NEXT WASH DAY SO YOU TOOK OUR ADVICE. MILDRED! ONLY RINSO CAN " GET CLOTHES SO WHITE „ ' X —ESPECIALLY IN THIS - HARD WATER " 7. YES, AND IT SAVES Wh f S SCRUBBING AND V'--BOILING TOO « tt ■ ' 1 kXXu F^kZZ^dedwS tWs r® ««P I-. abUofha rdlu bB . .„t ren etwith ßiMO* I I A“ 3 ’ ou^al" e Cupf ulfot . c {;f fU puffSw | ■ grancleanmg. I I gjnso I

National Military Parks There are 11 national military and other parks under the jurisdiction of the secretary of war. They are: Chickamauga, Ga.; Chattanooga, t Shiloh, Tenn.; Gettysburg. pPa.; Vicksburg. Miss.; Antietam bat--1 tlebeltjx Md.; Guilford Court House, X. C-l Petersburg. Va.; FredericksI burg, Va.; Spotsylvania, Va., and I Stones River, Tenn. .About all the average reformer i | does when he gets busy is, talk. Money invested in knowledge pays the best interest.,