The Syracuse Journal, Volume 23, Number 47, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 19 March 1931 — Page 3

The Plains Os Abraham, By Janies s.abiji-T' Oliver WMj'W®* > CurwoodW;* uiux* i*at4o*« ** v 'JiW'W/ \*T WJLU C>n.~At By Po"»* wG>J*4- i Z .7 SERVICE

THE STORY With his Encli»h wife, Catherfne . aiui -t*oh. Jeems. Henry Bu’atn. French pettier in Canada in 174'* .-u!tii a' farm adJKcenf- ♦ o the Tonteur seigneqrie. As the xtory opens the Fiulaxtie are returning /rom ■' .visit to the Tont -urs Catherine's wandering brother. . Hepslbah. meets them with presents for the family ■ To .'Jeem's he gives a pistol, bidding '; him perfect himself In marksman- . R Heps • ,<h f. are for the '■ • • of "the Buiains in the r .. • • - ■■- s. flgh■ a . with I’attl Tit he cousin of Tol- ■ nette Tonteur. whom the> both 'adt-r?*. . ’ ' CHAPTER lll—Continued Jeems was |wnre <>f her presence and :'physically] sensible of h»T ■ e«»mb:sti\ *•»••-*. bull in tile v mplexity of notion, which 'inr-t’ , i o'er and about him he could Hfford no discrimination in the manner ,**f usit _• his arms. less, tcelh. in I lie.aW. and at last, find'n ," tierself disentangled, Toinette scrambled to I er ,f.-<*t < onsiderably hru <ed titiii Ib'jmch disorder that no one would have recognized her as the splendid little j lady of the seigncurie who h .d . ott e so proudly to Lt.-- • - I nee n short lime Before. Her handsome bat was a crumpled w fleck in the mud Her- dress wus fwi-ted an*l 1 • -draggle I H*r ' nds and ’ t ■■•• w.-re discolored witp soil. tt,d her hair wits so tanvletj ib.p.it ler that she wss al-ino-t smothered in JU. l>e*plte' tins I ■ \*i*:il <-o l >d ' on.-., • r ment:i! *•■ f w <« more than ever ir.'! :n>* <! with the *!*• s rate •■-■bt. -did si g the hard and wiMwliikel st:i.lk of.-a last years sunflower whlich l.iv in the dirt, she succeeded In ' l»rin_;ng It down with such force that. m!*sitig. deems. It caught Paul on the side of the head i<nd laid •' tn «■; raw : it:g flat on h - fine. This terminated tie conflict , for 'T.dnetto. wt o gave-'alAry of apprehenfdoti Win n »> <• x.<w w h:it she had ■' • Paul ! .id rel O'. fe.j' from T*.;r. I tilnw before Jeems o*ul«I take t»«i-, vantage of It. and what happened during the, find! found of ri.nlrlitinn retnalned larg4*ly a matt.er <‘>f *|>ecu'ati.*ji II ■ • lie wag lifting %p after a little, and tliera was no one ,t" strike at. Paul and Toinette were out of id* roai-h yet he heard, their vo .-e* oddi> Indistinct-, movnig in the direction of iJtjssan's house He tried tn call'Ont. inking that Tache was • scaph-.g like |a coward, but something tn tii* throat choked him until it was tinpossitde'for,' him t<> get breath enought<> ni.d,,.- a sojutid. He made.an effort to ri*e that tie might pursue Ills l-ei'eti enemy. The 'art.h atxmt him swam dirzi 1., He wn« gasping. - h:s stoma, h. 1 and hi 1 wa* tlr.pp.ng' fr -m Ids tio*|e A 10-rr . u.-l t leapt upon bitn. }tl id so s-:dd. j> ••• tl e 5i.,., kof It that be sat staritk *Talg>.t abend, b.ireiv «..-s.-io-:* of two t _ur,-s emerging from the <jon< ealment of a thick ■ ’ : • • ' ' • ', ! away. The ■ thought became eomietlon. lb- had not whipped Paul Tache! Paul 4>a«l wfiippisl him ami his enemy’a n-com; : shn-ent had bm-n *o thorough thlil he Could- still. feel th * tinstnbillty df the world about him as be <)rew ldFr|*elf to his feet. His eie* and head cleared ns the Fi’allration of defeat sWej.t over him. Then he re-, ogniz.ed tire two wh<? had appeared in th** edge of the open, one was tils t'm-le Hepsibah the other Tolnette** father. Both were grinning broadly at the spectacle which tie made, and as they drew nearer he heard Tontmir’s /voice .In wliat was nuamt to bi a conthiential wh'tsper. “Is It reu|‘y your petit tieveu, friend • Adam*. i*r one of l.u*san's pig* come «>ut of lt« wallow? Hold tne. or what 1 have seem will make me split!“ But Jis-nts - heard no resjmnst* fratu Hepsibah. for the trader s f ;l .-e slid «|enly lost its humor, and in place of ft entile *i look which had no glint of dumile or lajtghter In it. ... . CHAPTER IV Next Sunday morning Jeems set out for Tonteur manor with the tbought steeply Intram-bed In bi* mind that ,he would not tight. I’aul Ttndie that <tay no matter wh.it temptation might be pa- ,-d In his (»ath. He had t<>l<l his. mother where he was going and w-hat lie was planning to do. and with her . encouragement to spur him on he felt eager and hopeful as he made his way toward the sei'giieurie... This feeling was unlike the one with which he had set out to fight Paul Tache.” and what he had to do loomed even rm-re ImjHurtant th«n any physical vanqulshment which he might bring U|mn his rival. To soften Tollette’s heart, now so bitterly against him. to bring back the friendliness of her smile, and to see her eyes alight with the sweetness which shfe had been on the ixdnt of yiehling to him at Lussan s place were fobeigost in his mind. He wigs anxious tb see Toinette and to offer her all that his small world held. If thereby he could make amends for the ruin and humiliation he had brought upon her. A spirit of chivalry in him. older than his years, rose above the lowly consideration of rights find wrai/-*- He W:is sure he was right. Y»*t he wanted to say he was ‘wrong. Though he did m»t know it. years had pa*sed since two days ago, and he was a new Jeems going to a new Toinette. His fear of her had vanished. He was no longer borne down by a faeiing of littleness and unimportance. and for the first time he waa visiting Tonteur manor without

the thought of inferiority sending its misgivings through his soul. In some mysterious way which hie did not understand. but Which he strongly felt, he had passed away from yesterday forever. S<M>n his feet were in the path which led to the manor. It was so still he could have believed that every one w as asleep as he, courageously mounted ’ the wide step* to the door of Toinette’s home. <»n this door was a great black knocker of battered iron. The face of the. knocker w’as a grinning ogre, a gargoylish head which, from his : earliest •metnory of it. bad fixed itself I upon him as a symbol of the grim and ' unapproachable spirit that guarded the rooms within. His hand reaebe*) 'out ‘ to awaken the-dull thunder .-of its voice. His lingers touched the cold iron. I lie hesitated in the moment he was lifting it. for he observed that the tl*H>r wa< «»pen by a space of a few inches. Through this aperture a voice c.-ime to Mm clehrly. It was a high. ! biting, angry voice, and tie r**cogniz.ed it .is Madam** Tonteurs He ra.-e*i ; the weight from it* metal panel’ and i would have kn<»cke.i when he heard a name which made him pause in rigid silence. It was his own". He heard To n.-tte s'mother say. ‘•'Henri Btiiain w..* a fmd for marrying th * go• for t.o-: g lin-g i'h woman, and Ihlmomi Is a greater fool for not !'drying her from the country when her < * AI §w- z *** • I Ask You to Forgive Me.” Breed ieLtnurdering and killing.almost i‘ as our doors. The Woman was made | for a spy. despite; the .pretty f.o-e J which has softened, Edmotni's silly heart, and that hoy of hers is no Je*s ling’ *!> than she. The two should not be allowaa! t., live so near to us. yet 1 Tonteur maintain* they are his friends. Ti «• place they haie built sh-mp be imrr.ed ami the English woman ard i her boy sent where they belong. Let j Henn Bnlnin go with them if he ; . * -o ■ . ;l rem-ga*!.* inst**m! of a j I rem. liman • l le ( umta jrftu f**r sm-h thoughts, Henriette.” chided* the milder voice of M.uhime Tache. “I *lespis t * the English as much as you or Toinette. but i it Is unfair to voice such invective I agaitist these two. even though the woman Is proud *>f her pretty face and i her b*>y is a mud-siinging little wretch. Edmond is u big-souled man and simply befriends them out of pity ! Are ! you angry because of that. Henriette?” “I am angry because she is English. ! and her boy is English, nnd yet they are allowed to live among us as If they- were French.. I tell you they will t*e traitora When the time for treachery comes!”

German Court Decides Right of Lion Tamer

One of the few remaining prerogatives of free men in these times of restrictions has Just been preserved by the public-spirited action of a German II It is Jhe right not only to go into lions’ demt. but to put your head. If you wish t<>. into the lion’s mouth. For the police of a Prussian townlet. to which the lion tamer came in the course of his wanderings. positively forebade him ter do this. It was dangerous. It was nervCracking to watch, and it simply must tie stopped. Precisely this act. however. was the great concluding <tem of the program, which had earned the tamer and his lions their breath for many a year. . Rightly thieving that far fewer people would pay for admission if Aa Easy Trick It'S one of the most amazing and baffling tricks. And we do it perfectly. The disappearing-Rirl stunt looks like the work of an amateur in eompartaon. °. We take the thing between the third and fourth fingers. Hold it up. Let every one see it. Invite anyone to exanjlne it carefully. Then . . . presto! . . . It’s gone! Vanished. Absolutely and completely. Not our sleeve. Just gone. It’s a weird act. We’ve done It for years. It’s so mystifying we have given up trying to figure It out. Han’t even recall when we learned the trick. But then other people seem to have the same trouble every week with their salaries.—The Jester.

Jeems had stood with his fingers clenched at the unyielding iron of the knocker. Now he heard another voice and knew it was Toinette’s. “I think Jeems’ mother is nice,” she said. “But Jeems is a detestable little English beast I” ! “And some day that beast will help to cut our throats,” added her mother unpleasantly. The great iron knocker fell with a crash, and almost before the sound of it reached a servant’s ears, the door ’swung open and’Jeems stalked In. The women were speechless as he stood in the wide opening to the room in which they were seated. He scarcely seemed to realize they were there and looked only at Toinette. He remained for a moment without movement or speech, his slim figure tense and gripped. Then he bowed his head in a courtesy which Catherine had carefully taught him. When he spoke his words were as calm as those of Madame Tache had been. ”1 have come to tell you I am sorry because of what happened at Lassan’s place. Toinette.” he said, and he bent his 1 head a little lower toward her. ”1 ask you to forgive me.” Even Henriette Tonteur could not have thought of him as a beast after that, for pride and fearlessness were in his bearing in spite of the white- *, x, his far.-. As the occupants of the room stared at him, unable to find rheit .voices, he drew back quietly and. was* gone as suddenly as he had appeared. The big door closed behind him. and turning to a window near her Tidriette saw him go il**wn the steps. An exclamation of Indignation and amazement came -at last from her mother, but this she did not hear. Her eyes were following Jeems. He went across the open and into the field*. As he drew near the foot of Tonteur hill. Odd came cautiously forth to meet him. but not un/il they reached their old rtstlng plack at the > r,-t of (::•* a-vnt did he piufee-JJT seem to notice the dbg. Then he looked i-ack upon the seigneurie; A bit of iron Had sunk, into his soul. His eyes were seeing with a new and . . s : which had be'en the fount of all his dreams they turned to the faint gleam of distant water in the south: where lay Lake t’hamplain. atid beyond which, not far away, wen* the Mo-hawks-and the English and the land . - - - *r s | ....ph*. * It was the blood of that land, running red and strong in tris veins, which Toinette and her mother hated. He dropped a hand upon Odd s head, amt the two started over the homeward trail. The-dog watched the forest and caught its scents, but he watched ami guarded alone, for Jeems gave *mall hied to the passing interests of the woods and thickets. Late spring, then the beginning of summer, followed Hepsibah's arrival at the Bulain home, and still he gave no betrayal of the restlessness which ‘'presaged his usual disappearance-for another long period into the fastnesses of the world. This season of; the year was always one of torment for the forest dwellers because of the wunged pests which crawled the earth ami tilled the air, and Jeems had come to dread it as an indescribable nightmare <>f discomfort and suffering. From the first of June until the middle of August, such plagues of mosquitoes bred and multiplied in the swamps and lowlands, and wrnods that beasts were half devoure*i alive and the pioneers literally fought for their own-existence, smoking their cabins ■ iti*..!y. .cover-ng their fi*-.*h with bog fat and bear grease, and resorting to oyefy known subtlety that they might snatch a little sleep at night. Within a few day*. i< seemed to Jeems. a World that had been a paradise of flowers, of sweet scents, of ripening fruits ami delicious. air was transforrned into a hell of insect life which shut out travel in all directions and which invested with poisonous torture every spot where it .was not partly subjugate*} by tire and smoke. The timber was heavy and dark.'swamps wen- umlraimd. rivers and lakes were shadowed by dense vegetation, ami in the humid', sweating mold of these places, the malevolent pestilence was born and rose in clouds that sometimes obscured the face of the moon. During these weeks a cordon of-de-cayed stumps ami logs smoldered night and day . about the Bulain cabin, screening it in pungent smoke, and outside this small haven, work on the* farm was continued at a price of physical martyrdom, eyeept under a burning sum when the insects sought refuge from the glare and heat. (TO BE CONTINUED.#

there were no risk of his head being ' bitten off, the Hon tamer invoked the law. He appeared in person before a Berlin court to plead his right to put fl ; * b*-tween the lion s jaws if he wislied. The bench decided that ■ each man might do with his head as he wished, the police ban . was quashed* and the lion tamer, having vindicated the rights of man, left the » court in triumph. Silver Fox Fur The name silver fox. as commonly I used by furriers, includes the dark phases of the ordinary red fox, variously called silver. silver-gray, silver- . black or black. The color of the red , . fox of the northeastern states and of Its allies of the colder parts of North - America varies from red to black, and these extremes, with the gradation beI tween them, form four more or less distinct phases, known, respectively, ( as red. cross or patch, silver and black. The silver fox. therefore. Is a color phase of the red fox. It is dark , all over, with silver hairs Intermixed, but not red. and the tip of the tail is ’ generally, but not always, white. The guard hairs which give the silver ap- , pearance to the pelage are not entirely white, but are black with a white band, and some guard hairs are entirely black. * ' Almost Feeds Itself I Although Belgium is the most dense- ? ly populated country tn the world, it r is regarded 80 per cent self-supporting . in food supply.

THE STRACTSE JOURNAL.

LATEST PATTERNS IN PRINTS COPY ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN

THE reproduction of objects surrounding us. beginning with the animal, floral, and later conventional designs. Is as old as is textile art itself. Realistic flowers, scrolls, twists and turns, pastoral and love scenes, turtledoves. interlocked rings, musical instruments and gardeners' tools, all depicted with grace and balance, found their way into textile patterns as far back as history relates. All of which leads up to the very Interesting data in regard to the handsome printed rayon crepe of which the striking frock in the picture is fashioned. When the salesperson calls

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tl '' I' ■W'i U ' at OF PRINTED TRAYON CREPE attention to any of the prints which go to make up this series of patternings, ybu recognize at a glance rhe source of .their inspiration, which is none other than one of the towering skyscrapers such as is America s proud boast, and which in this instance proves to be the tallest building in the world recently erected in New York. One marvels at the skill of the. artist who can symbolize so colossal a theme as attractively as these new prjnts portray, achieving.effects which are not only exceedingly designful. but because of their distinct novelty add zest to the inode. The large designs seem particularly smart. The motifs vary from a striking silhouette « fi mil

| I j s. K II I ’ wJi L JI Ok .. •' If, Sti 1111 wJNKg |J '< “p; Wbl j '* ; ' 111 l-w .) |M||S I g j Up. ?.; HhH I F k -Lt'* I A GORGEOUS EVENING GOWN

of the building to a llght-and-shadow Impression which is especially good looking. As to the scarf which adds a “touch that tells” to the frock illustrated. It is typical of the present style trend. The dress or at or blouse which is minus a striking scarf or at least some sort of a “tricky” scarf neckline is the exception this season., The mission of the new scarfs seems to be to emphasize startling color contrast. In order to accomplish this, materials are seamed together rather

NOTES FROM THE WORLD OF FASHION

Gay printed silks are appearing under fur coats. One of the most noted fashion shops recently featured a group of green printed frocks to wear with black fur coats. « One of rhe new evening wraps Is cut so that the upper part wraps around the figure and ties in a bow at the left side. This particular model was of rose velvet collared with white lox.

than contrasted through design. One might correctly describe them as being pieced together, for that is what they are, strips, diamond shapes, squares and triangles of silk, satin, sheer velvet or crepe in multi-colors ingeniously worked in modernistic design. The scarf pictured seams a strip of black and a strip oif white crepe weave together, thus complementing rhe black and white print which fashions the frock. For Evening Wear. Not within the memory of rhe present generation has the world of fashion been so richly endowed with

beautiful materials. The challenge is I to play up fabric elegance to best ad- ( vantage, which is exactly w bat *»ur I ' creators of cost.ume-beatitifui are do- | trig this season. This is especially I true in regard to evening modes which 3 are styled, for the most part, along simplest lines so as to place the emphasis on the loveliness of their materials. In the exquisite velvet-brocaded chiffons which are so greatly favored in Paris at the present time for evening wear and which are forecasted to repeat their -triumphs the summer through, textile art reach’es- a- high 1 note of achievement. The winsome ; frock in the picture is made of this : enchantirig. material, its pale blue I. chiffon background brocaded with tiny velvet motifs in a slightly darker tone. Which reminds us that colorists in the style realm are, in a mood to play up blue in every possible gradation and combination for spring and summer,’ Note with what restraint the gown pictured, is fashioned in order that nothing shall <1 tract fnrin the gl try of its fabric. A tight silhouette is featured. which is very chic for this sea son. The biased skirt is raised high at the waist, for waistlines in general tire growing noticeably hfghe . In con m-etion with the new close-fitting it is correct for the fullness to begin ‘ nt the knee’as it so gracefully does

in this instance. ■ bodice Is very simpTe, low cut and square, with just a soft frill of self fabric. Adorable little jackets of these new velvet-brocaded chiffons will be worn this summer over frocks of monotone chiffon. One can readily see that the vogue f or ensembles of this type is destined to become widespread. The brocade is available in not only light blue but in a delectable pink; also pale green. CHERTT NICHOLAS. <©. I*3l. Western Newspaper Union.»

Designed for a debutante it is as charming as youth itself, the evening gown of printed Silk in a large design, veiled with pink chiffon sash. Although designed for southern wear, they are bound to make their appearance at other places shortly—'they, to be explicit, being the new jersey frocks with deep yokes of crocheted wool, <h»ne in opeu-work lace stitch.

e77ie .DAIRY, ELDERLY HOLSTEIN STEADY PRODUCER Beauty Segis De Koi Is Winning Renown. Although just an “ordinary” purebred Holstein cow and worth on the block about SSO at present butcher's prices. Beauty Segis De Koi, owned by the Upper Peninsula experiment station of Chatham, Mich., has become famous throughout the state of Michigan and her sturdy production and reproduction year after year are winning renown for herself and her unbroken string of living descendants throughout the nation. Beauty is the sole survivor of a number of cows purchased for the establishment of a foundation herd at rlic Chatham station in 1914. At that tinm the Upper Peninsula was largely undeveloped and animals of rugged constitution were required. Soon after her purchase. Beauty dropped a heifer calf that is still in the herd ; and she and her descendants have pro- , duced more than 70 calves of which , nearly two-thirds have been females, j In the station herd are some 30 head I that are descendants of Beauty that include living daughters, granddaughters. and great - granddaughters. Twenty-nine male descendants of Beauty have been in service and ■ twenty-six of them are in nine different counties of the Upper Michigan peninsula. No advanced registery records have ever been made on Beauty, blit the station herd was put under the -Holstein herdr test plan and she is credited with a herd test record by the Holstein-Freisan Association of America with 11.772 pounds of milk’containing 379.4 pounds of butterfat on three daily milkings itr -'.‘9 days, and \ thia record was bSgun when fifteen ’ years old. Cow-testing records and the barn milk sheets indicate that she has produced in her lifetime a total exceeding l.*>H.OCh> pounds of milk and 4.G1X1 pounds of butterfat since she , first freshened hack in 1915. Her best * record, according to the barn milk sheets, was made in 1920 when at sev- ■ en years of age she produced pounds of milk containing an estimated total of 455.52 pounds of butterfat. Her best C. T. A. record, begun wheql, ' fourteen years old.’amounted to 12."1'D pounds of milk containing 37(1.3.8 pounds of butterfat. Dairy Profits Largely Under Operator's Control A great many dairymen give a lot .note attention to the price of butterfat than they -do to the cost of producing it. Price, of course, is an important factor and is worthy of cun.- ■. sideration, but the cost producing a pound of butterfat,: taking dairy ■ farmers as a .roup, varies a great ■ deal more on different farms than the price thereof, even under the most favorable market conditions. This is i a well known fact among progressive , dairymen, but apparently not among the rank- and tile of those who milk cows regularly. On that account it is a matter' worthy of emphasis—worthy of much thought and study. . , From a summary of the'yearly records of hundreds of thousands qt cows belonging to herd improvement ass<F ! ciations. the disa'ivanjage of maintaining low producing cows has been brought out in a very striking, iiian : net—in away that should make rhe owners of that Class sit up ami take notice. More than that —it ought to cause them to do something..about it. X***-3Hf-*********X********** Daily Facts ************************** Unless a farmer ha,s an abundance j of hay made from alfalfa, the clovers, st>y beans, or other legumes for his cows in milk, it is difficult to make profit. A pen of calves that consumed only four gallons of water daily when it 1 was kept before them at ordinary ternperatures, drank 15 gallons daily when fed warm after feeling. There is no question but alfalfa hay J is one of the best If . not altogether the best and most valuable roughage available to the cattleman and the dairyman in particular. Good cows fed well and properly cared for will return profits even under adverse conditions. Join the local ; cow testing association so the ability I of each cow may tie determined. • • • Get the most from'purchased grains oy feeding dairy cows 16 per cent protein mixtures with alfalfa and clover hay. 20 per cent with mixed, hay. and 24 per cent with timothy. Only 2% per cent or all the cows of milking age In New York state are on test tn dairy, herd, improvement associations or dairy record clubs. • • • In 1930. New York dairymen had I 364 herds that averaged 300 pounds ( of butter fat; in J 929 there were 308 such herds. When a farmer feeds all of the cowx In the herd about the same amount of grain, some are underfed, some are overfed, and others get about what they should have. • • • When cabbage is fed to cows, feed It immediately after milking and at no other time. Ninety herds in the western New York dairy- record club averaged 3.7 per cent fat, and 20.7 pounds of milk , daily. The average number of cows in the herds was ten, • • It pays the dairy farmer to make - sure that his cows are going to have j a supply of green feed throughout the summer. Dry periods with lack • of green feeds cut dairy-cow returns. [

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