The Syracuse Journal, Volume 22, Number 50, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 10 April 1930 — Page 3

The Crippled Lady ! ; Peribonka H II- - ■ I ' ' f WNU Serrie« (©. 1K». Doubleday Doran A Co.. Inc.) ] '

CHAPTER X—Continued —-15— “I could not understand her then, when she told me how gladly she •would give her life, were it not for we, to live for a single year the glorious freedom of Molly Brant." said PauL “But I do—nyw. In that one year she knew she would find some thing which would more than make up for all the other years she might live. Just hr every hour here wit tv you is more to me than ten thousand back , there:** As he said these things, and believed ami felt them, there, was In him a will to live which would not' utterly extinguish itself. It was scarcely more ’ban a spark, a smoldering era ber that was bound to die, for his eyes, his brain, and every facility of reason which he possessed told him there was no hope of finding away — beyond rhe walls which “shut them in.- A few mlnutet before, when Carla had sat at tris knees, with his fingers feeling the warmth and sweetness of her hair, this spark had leaped into flame. It Mill remained as Carla yielded at last to ris demand, and gave herself to the bed he had mad/ for her, with bls* coat for her pillow. “It seems almost "a sin to .sleep,’ she said ;, and if slumber were near, or evi-c the necessity for It. he could And -no shadow of It tn ber face. Sire might have risen fn.in her bed an hour ago, so freshly clt-af and lovely were her eyes, so deep their lustrous content and happiness whetiV she iookvrf at him. Yet after t? little, tier lashes droo|>edl as if do veil the love behind them, snd lay In velvet dart*. . ness against ■ the \whiteness of her. cheeks. For ti while Paul sat <•!>.*-♦• and watched tier, any! with each breath the flame In him grew stronger, the. demand that sotm-tlring ’ happen, through force of God or man, to break down the walls of death which environed tier. Alone, with Curias unconscious form lending faith ami Inspiration to i bls thought, he fixed bls attention, ns a dozen rimes before, on the smoke which rose from the burning wood. Where did It go? | ' .. Hours ago he Imd asked himself this question, and until he tmd tliitvovered a thin fog of. smoke settling over the water, and drifting away with the rush of It. his blood hud run swiftly with a thrill of hope. And now. in spite of the fact that be knew where It went, the question remained, as if, a voice Inside his bead , had been trained to ask It, parrot-like, and could not be made to stop . He “and Carla find collected n pile of pitchwood. As they had found each stick they had acclaimed It a treasure discovered, until the thrill of a game had become part of their en deavor. He chose a stick heavily weighted with pitch and lighted the end of it In the tire. Then tie walked off into the gloom waero he and Carla had gMiie. many times tore, it was like 'oilowing the inside of a great rock drum which was tint on one side •—flat where (he water thundered and raced through the mountain Whep his torch burned short he returned 'for another.' t’arla had not Dioved In her sleep, and tie buried himself in blackness again, following, the rock so closely- that bls body touched It. trying at every step to pierce with his vision a little farther Into the stygian pit oxer tds head. It into this pit that -the smoke '"■went, mounting In drifting spirals, like Ptpoke tn it) Indian tepee. Up there, he rtiotighl. It was taken by aAslowly dragging current of’ nit mole’ by the suction of the stream, and descvndy<l to exit from the mountain with it ■'There.' was only one break in! the’rtr- , icular wall of gruesomely black and ; water worn rock, against which. In ages past, a suitterranean tim’d had washed and roared. This was where a small section of it had given way from overhead and had plied up a mass of broken stone which he had climbed, with Carla watching from below. Here the smoke from his torch did not go upward ,but settled about his head an<* disappeared . toward the vent In the mountain through which the river rushed with ‘great force. He went to' this outlet. It was a hole which bls eyes were nimble to measure, choked to within • foot of Its upper Jaw by a seething flood of water, and out of which—though the space for sound was small —came sqeh a sullen rumbling that his blood was chilled as he listened to IL Alone, he would have plunged Into this. To die lighting, bitting his small strength against all the forces ■which might oppose him. wap the urge which was refusing to subdue Itself within him. He thing out His fluming torch and saw it swallowed in in-

Possible to Float for Days in This Garment

suit of clothes In which It wool J be a positive pleasure to be shipwrecked has been perfected. Except for the face the costume covers the entire body like an overall; Fitted to the head' Is a hood like that of the conventional monk’s gown, but larger and thicker. In the material of this hood and also between the outer layer and the lining of the rest of the costume spaces •re provided which can be Inflated -with air or stuffed with light material like spongy paper fiber. The outer layer of the garment is ■waterproofed and arrangements are provided to keep water from seeping Inside the suit at the wrists and neck. Thus the wearer Is encased completely in a floating garment which serves both as life preserver and as protection for many hours against the cold. The large, thick hood floats highest in the water, thus making It Impossible for the wearer to “capsize" and jtod his bead downward, as has hap-

I stnnt. Like that he would have gone if Carla had not been there to go with him. He turned back to the fire and put on a fresh stick of resinous wood before he sat in the sand near enough to Carla to touch her with his hand. He wondered If fear had begun to seize upon him as he looked at her nn- | conscious form, foreseeing the tor- i ment of impending hours when mad- j ness would be for him alone. Unless they died together, he must outlive i Carla —to save her from a realization ! of that which he, in pis greater strength, should bear. CHAPTER XI Pau( knew be must keep moving, dr rouse’ Carla from her sleep. The nakedness and desolation of aloneness were turning him Into « coward. Not a coward who.was afraid of death, but oue who felt Increasing horror In | passively wafting for it. He went to ! the debris of rock again. He had no ! reason for this. no thought, except that it offered him ‘be one chance to do something physical besides fumhlng his way over unstably and shifty sand. The desire for n Work to do was an . ache tn’his body as well, as his brain, and he began to Climb the broken mass, as he had done once before. He had gone about thirty or forty feet above the floor of their dungeon then, but this time tie found *potholds > which carried him e little farthe.r. I until, from the point he reached, he ; could look over the bulge In the rock J which had previously concealed thelf 1 fire, and could clearly see Carla in tiie glow, of it. He had the desire to call to her, to feel her glorious life a part of their existence again. . Sleeping, she seemed gone from him.. He swung Ids torch, I making a writing of fire in the black j ness. and his lips almost cried her • name. Then he recognized the went j in to pull him- j self a little .more Up the broken wall. I if Carla had axvakened and turned > her eyes toward him. she would have seen a strange and weird thing. The i burning piece of plfchw<M>d was a spout of yellow flame, ilhiitiining at times the ghostly figure fhiit bore it. mid then floating atone In a limbo of midnight emptiness at» If borne by shades that In color end spirit were a part of the gloom. She might hirve j thought reusing herself from slumber . that tui.nds which were no longer ; I'nui’s were bearing it toward the re.if ' of their world Steadily up into this j pit of Acheron It went? nod there It disappeared, as if smitten by a mighty i breath that extinguished It in a second. For a time utter darkness lay j where the light had been. Then- the ' torch reappeared as suddenly as sable I wings had engulfed it. and in another j moment It was plunging down through j space. In a few where It had fallen sj uttering in the I sand, and picked It up again. More than ever his face was like that of a ghost. His cheek was marked by a -bleeding wound. His shirt was in I shreds on his breast. His eyes blazed In a. «ay that would have startled Carla. He went to the etjge of the water and t*a(lied hl’s face and hands. Then he returned io the fire and knelt tiesideCuria. He ruised ber head gently In liis arms, and she did not awaken. He held it against his breast and kissed her hair “(.’aria!“ he whispered. Her lips moved, her hishes trembled, and opened slowly tv unveil her eyes. .“You have slept a long rltue." he said.. “A-t .least-r-it aeemvd; tong—and i l took a torch and climbed the pile of rocks iigalh. 1 went higher (han be- ■ fore —so high that I came to a ledge. i find followed It—and then I came tea great crack in the wall. and. there, at i 1 the end of it —I saw — IlghL” “Light IT site breathed. “Yes. IlghL From the sun. 1 bare ! found away oul" There was silence - then. Almost ■ without effort. It seemed to I’aul. : Carta crept out of his arms He knew that something was going with her—forever, Her face was whiter than bls own. What he had dreided to, see lay in her eyes—a thing tight Ing back and crushing the glory which had lived In them for a tittle while. The .understanding of what his discovery meant came, quickly to her. and he saw a fabric of assembled dreams go Ing to pieces, like one of the odd Jumble pictures on a screen. When its hundred disintegrated parts came together again, they formed Claires face, waiting for him at the end of the trail of light sent to guide them back to an earthly destiny still unful- ' filled, and which, for a time, had passed centuries stray from them. (TO DE CONTINUED)

pened with some previous life saving garments. , I If the wearer ptakes no effort at all : he will float automatically on his back, as though lying tn bed. and almost as warmly. It Is claimed, however, that one advantage of the new garment Is that inactivity is not necessary. The wearer can paddle himself about. Bokhara Tea Drinkers The manner of drinking tea varies from country to country. In Bokhara every man carries a small bag of tea about with him and. when assailed by thirst, hunts up the nearest tea booth and teas the boothkeeper brew a pot of tea. The Bokhara breakfast beverage Is Schircchaj—-tea in which bread Is soaked and which is flavored with mllkJ; cream or mutton fat. During the day the drinker takes tea with cakes of flour and mutton suet. After drinking he eats the tea leaves...which are considered a great delicacy.

■ LACE ADORNS BOUDOIR MODES; NEW COATS FOR LITTLE GIRLS a

« LACE, lace,, lace and then some—speaking in regard to those exquisite intimate garments of the boudcir, the lure of which no normalminded woman can or even cares to I resist. With all the lavishment of lace which goes to enhance lingerie and negligee types of the present mode,

IT I ■ I r i -Wi I ! A a i: x'r.rvflHl H 1 . . ' WH I: \ , JLM tV* vSr ' ~ : klLj feJtiwKlrw i \ A ■ | ■ -RIHS ft 'lk (i HB&. ft ' Handsome Boudoir Envemlale.

the fact Is outstanding that quality Is not sacrificed to quantity. dinary laces there seems no place in the scheme of boudoir fashions. Even the laces on the l/ss expensive gar ments are amazingly tine and lovely, while the-higher priced garments are , garni tured with laces the beauty and finesse of which cannot be told in words. Not only does the loveliness of the laces employed call for admiration, but one is impressed with the artistry displayed in* lace work as *it enters into the creation of boudoir ensembles, of night robes and daytime negligees, of the new costume slips which after so long a time without lace are again lavishly lace-trimmed, and especially the cunning little ingenue dance sets which youth so adores. A fascinating story of lace is told in the picture herewith of a boudoir ensemble made of shell pink satin. The

Ik •L) ' ’ A I fl®*? i ■■ X ’ hM® t 7 i if rWUI ■h • H 'vL / " EHEB xA. I Li. j, f .. J ~ .-:x *-w L

t , X 1 y /w 'wk MM Pretty Juvenile Coat. mellow-toned antique alencon lace which so generously borders its hemlines, Is adroitly worked in. until it becomes a very part of its back--1 ground. This method of cutting around the lace design, then insetting it Into the silk or satin of the garLment is a favorite treatment this seai son, and as the picture shows it is wonderfully effective. | The long-coat pajama ensemble as here shown bespeaks that which is most chic and charming in lingerie modes. In fact the coat or jacket set is highly important in ? ,4ts varying moods and combinations stock as the j costume slip with its matching jacket or the sleeveless nightgo&a coinpleExotic Black It was only natural that black lingerie should return when the styles ! grew subtle. Black chiffon is flati tering to the skin, unless the com ■ plexioq Is distinctly sallow, and black 1 chiffon dotted all over with small appliqued lozenges of silk in brilliant colors is particularly interesting. Pugilistic Colors The rich shadings of a bad bruise are chosen for some of the newest iuita; dark green skirt and coat, rich

THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL.

mented with a bed jacket of self mar terials. The vogue for deeply toned laces in the lingerie realm Is on the wane, according to latest word from Parisian style headquarters. Not that white , laces have returned, but fancy is turning to laces of creamy and light beige tints. Pale rose beige and very light*

castor shades continue in vogue. There is also a growing tendency to j tint the lace to match the fabric it trims. Coats for Juveniles. Little folks’ coats “say it" with color this seascfli. Whether the Ju venile coat be of lacy, tweed, of has ket cloth or of flannel or a similarly smooth surfaced weave, color is the first consideration. Emphasis is placed firet of all on lovely springlike green tones. Smart indeed is the coat of soft green cloth which is neatly tailored in the regu lation style, with double-breast fas tening. notched collar and self-fabric belt. Pastel tweed mixtures also afe favored media for these ,simply tailored coat models. These include 4yellow, rose, and blue effects, some of the weaves being lacy and light in weight. The coat in the picture departs

| from the strictly tailored type in that it indulges in a collar whose widened lapels are bordered in twocolor effect. The body of this coat is of a navy and white tweed mixture, *tbe flannel bordering repeating these coiors. A note of particular interest Is the broadfl brimmed hat which foretells a milJ linery trend which will be observed | increasingly with the arrival of ■ mild spring and summer days. This » vogue for wide brims has revived s _ interest in large picturesque leg horns for children.® ’as well as shapes of flnest Milan straw. In regard to children’s coats the mode is expressing itself in two directions: one which features, as already mentioned, the strictly tailored type usually double-breasted and with notched lapels. Every whit as Important, however, are the new caped versions. Indeed, in discussing spring fashions for the younger generation, tooynuch cannot be said on the subject of the Coat with a cape. The princess silhouette offers still another angle in regard to stylish coats for young fashionables; Shallow capes which fall just over the shoulifers vie with-capes of waistline depth. In fact, all .x>rts of cape variations enter into the junior coat mode. JULIA BOTTOMLEY. <©. 1)39. Western Newspaper Union.) green blouse with a purplish blue tie. The effect is good, as It happens. Some of the suits break out into clever little bows on cuff and pocket, too the bows being severely tailored but none the less feminine. For Long Treues Paris has revived the “French roll," which crosses the crown of the head from ear to ear, and added to It a turn-under roll along the back of the neck. It’s all very intricate and feminine.

The 1930, Western Newspaper Union.) It is not growing like a tree In bulk, doth make man better be: Or standing long an oak, threa hundred year To fall a log at last, dry, bald and sere: A Illy of a day Is fairer far in May Although it fall,and die at night— It was the plafnt and flower of , light; In small proportions we just beauties see And in short measures life may perfect be. —Ben Jonson. THIS AND THAT OF COOKERY Any consideration of economy in the cuisine must, include the meat ques-

tion. It Is the most expensive item on the menu and the sensible way to economize after using every bit Is to eat less of it Those who enjoy statistics tell us that we eat In America, per person, one hundred and eighty pounds of meat yearly. The Swiss manage very

well on sixty, without making undernourished patients of themselves. We would feel better, live longer and escape many diseases caused from overeating if we would cut our diet. Beans, peas arid lentils with cheese and milk, supply us all .the ’building power we need, sb a person may be perfectly strong, hale and hearty without, meat. -However. as we are' accus- ’ tomed to various meats and fish, if j eaten wisely, there can be no harm in L using them in our menus, vegetarians ! to the contrary. I With the supervision .of our food . stuffs We need not fear buy-bacon, r dried beef and such prphucis in the J bulk and save 200 or/3<*i per cent. I . Bacon in glass and dried beef also * looks very attractive,, but it will be ; found not a bit - more appealing- to | the family than a side of bacon sliced In the kitchen, or if preferred, at the I market. Stale bread and crumbs are the : base of a score of most delicious pud-- | dings. Not a crust should be wasted, i Cooked cereal. If a tablespoonful or. j two is left in the cooking dish, adds | to the gravy for thickening, or pU£ it I into the mfifliirs or griddle cake batter. Save the liquor from vegetables for sauces and use it in gravy instead of water, thus you are conserving the dissolved mineral matters so valuable for the hetilth- of, the body. Meat scraps, bones, trimmings, all go into the soup pot. A cupful of stock is an asset in many meat sauces. ATTRACTIVE FOODS No one cares to feast The eye at the expense of taste, yet "good digestion

waits on the appetite-' which has been stirred by a p p e t i zingly appealing foods. Thus we serve ■ little garnishes of ! slices of lemon I dipped into parsley, | small molds of j

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jelly, dainty fritters, pipings of cream and mayonnaise, sprigs of fresh green, j and we know that the extra time and trouble is well worth the pleasure it affin <ls. ‘ A fair trial of tie art of garnishing will prove that the relish of a dish properly and tastefully served is much enhanced. , I One must be consistent In the u,se > of gamishings. Taste will have much | . with |he result. Flowers except nasturtiums are used only with ; sweet dishes. Ribbons are used by | some artists in decorating foods, but ' the only really appropriate food that ■ a ribbon seems to fit is the wedding cake, when tied up in a box. A stew or dish of creamed vegetable or fish, if heaped daintily on a. hot platter, surrodnded with a 'ring of delicately browned potato, shoe strings or chips, will awaken the desire to partake much more than if it is dished up any old way. The esthetic side of serving food ..should be in the mother’s mind, if will be easier to teach proper table manners and the children will more quickly learn to eat foods good for them if they are nicely seasoned, garnished and served. One must avoid extremes, as it is not necessary for ordinary occasions to dress up a dish elaborate enough for an exhibition, neither should it call forth the remark, “it tastes better than it looks.’’ * The poor as well as the rich may use this art, for simple bread and butter with a cup of tea, if nicely served. cannot.be done any better in a house of wealth, except for more expensive accessories. Where there are young chfldren-and expense is an important item, plain dishes- with small decorations ate the best, buying from an open stock so mat the broken dishes may be replaced. . ■ The overworked mother will say “It Is Is hard enough to get the food cooked and served, without thinking of trimmings.” But even the hard worked mother can be dainty in her • serving and one may grow all kinds of simple garnishes In the vegetable garden. Chives, parsley chervil, mint peppergrass, mustard, should all have a place in the family garden. Help to Fight Disease In a bulletin on the United States’ role In fighting disease all around the world the National Geographic .society points out that cattle, horses, snakes, nibbits and guinea pigs are the living machines of the biological industry. In this country they manufacture $20,-000.000-worth of products annually. Men Who Help The men who are lifting the world upward and onward are those who encourage more than criticize. —Elizabeth Harrison. .

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Tht Cone in Bo»ton “Little Waldo seems impressed with Hie ice cream stand.” "Yes; they serve it in such interring comic sections.’’ —Capper’s Weekly. When people are talking of table manners, there are some who never seem to hear what is said.

How One Woman Lost 20 Pounds of Fat * _ -x

— Lost Her Double Chin Lost Her Prominent Hips Lost Her Sluggishness Gained Physical Vigor Gained in Vivaciousness Gained a Shapely Figure If vou’re fat—remove the cause! KRUSCHEN .SALTS -contain the 6 mineral salts your body organs, glands and nerves must halve to function properly. vital organs fail to perform their work correctly—your bowels and kidneys can’t throw off that waste material—before you realize it—you’re growing hideously fat! The Country for Virtue Senator Thomas Os Oklahoma said tn an after dinner speech in New | York: “The country is m>>re virtuous than the town. The Words ’fast’ jind ’slow.’ for instance, have one meaning in the town, while in the country their meaning is more virtuous. "A city girl on her vacation was trying to flirt w-ith a young farmer. " ‘I suppose.’, she said, with a wink —'l suppose the girls around here are pretty slow.’ “‘Slow?’ said the young farmer solemnly. ’By heck, no. Why, my sister Samanthy milked 27 cows and -churned 14 pounds of butter this morning before breakfast’” Poverty Is no sin.—Herbert.

Bride Tells Her Secret

TOR a young bride of twentyone to lose her vitality and pep is disastrous, almost a sacrilege,” says Mrs. George E. Pillow, of Franklin, Va. “That, however,” she continues, “is just what I did.” ’T had only been married a few months to an athletic husband, who went everywhere and did everything. I tried to keep up with his pace, and simply collapsed under the strain. I never was really ill; just sallow-skinned, depressed, and lifeless. Swimming, dancing, golf, I just couldn’t face them. When I began to lose my clear complexion, I was desperate. “Then one day a girl friend came to pay me a visit. In the bottom of her little bag of clothes lay a crystalclear bottle —Nujol! A short wo- • man-to-woman talk —a telephone call to a neighboring drug store —and my future happiness was settled. “That was a year ago. Now I too am never without Nujol, which has brightened and cleansed my body like a cake of pure soaj). I eat, sleep, swim, and hike with the enthusiasm of a child. My complexion is all it used to be —and best of all —I am my husband’s little pal again.” The wonderful thing about crystaldear Nujol is that it is not a medicine; it contains no cannot hurt even a baby. It is simply the normal internal lubrication which i .

Unfailing Supply It’s easy to Entertain guests in the city because you can get plenty of food just by opening a can, and plenty of music just by opening a window. —Life. Perhaps the eagle is too warlike as an emblematic bird, but the dove is too much the opposite.

Take half a. teaspoonful of KRUSCHEN SALTS in a glass of hot water every morning-r-do not overeat and—in 3 weeks get on the scales and note how many pounds of fat have vanished. Notice also that you have gained in energy—your skin is clearer —your eyes sparkle with glorious health—you. feel younger in body—keener in mind. KRUSCHEN will give any fat person a joyous surprise. Get an Ssc bottle-of KRUSCHEN SALTS (lasts 4 weeks). If even this first bottle doesn’t convince you this 'is the easiest, safest and surest way to lose fat —if you don't feel a superb improvement in health —-so gloriously energetic—vigorously alive—your money gladly returned. Leading druggists all over the world are selling lots of Kruschen Salts. PARKER’S HAIR BALSAM Removes Dandruff-Stops Hair EaJßntr 1 Imparts Color and Beauty to Gray and Faded Hair Sue and JI.OO at Druggist*. Hiscox Chetn. Wks., Patehogue.N.Y. FLO RESTON SHAMPOO — Ideal for use in connection with Parker’s Hair Balsam. Makes tbn hair soft and fluffy. 60 cents by mail or at druggists. Hiscox Chemical Works, Patchogue. N.Y. Shocking And now another ideal takes ■ tumble when M. Plieurpet, one of th, well-known Parisian designers, d» Clares: “The young lady who dresses in neutral tones is frequently catalogued as dowdy, quiet dr demure; when more than likely, she is verj clever in that she desires to fit Inta the color scheme of any auto that may come along.”

* Beauty, Charm, Clear SkinHow Can They be Won? your body needs. Let Nujol dear the poisons out of your body (we all have them), and flood the sunshine of happiness into your life. It sounds like a fairy tale, but millions of people have proved it. So can you. Get Nujol at any drug store —sold only in sealed padcages, with the Nujol trademark. It costs but a few cents and it will make you feel like a million dollars!