The Syracuse Journal, Volume 29, Number 15, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 6 August 1936 — Page 3

0 HURBDAY, AUGUST 6, 1986.

Quilt'of Applique Is Popular; Easy to Do (w^xvlr) Pattern 1191 You can have good luck tokens ’round you year in, year out, if you make this Bluebird quilt, and such a simple one it is too, in easy applique, with each bird all in one patch. You may make the birds uniform in color, or vary them by using up colorful scraps. Thus using but three materials. ,j\ | Pattern 1191 Comes to you with complete, simple instructions for cutting, sewing and finishing, together with yardage chart, diagram of quilt to help arrange the blocks for single and double bed size, and a diagram of block which serves as a guide for placing the patches and suggests contrasting materials. " Send 15 cents ji stamps or coins (coins preferred) for this pattern to The Sewing Circle Needlecraft Department, 82 Eighth Ave., New York. N. Y Write plainly pattern number, your name and address. Unavailing Remorse \\7 E NEED to be careful Kow we deal with those about us, for Death carries with it to some small circle of. survivors thoughts of so many things forgotten, ana so many more which might have been repaired. Such recollections are among the bitterest. we can have. There is no remorse so deep as that which is unavailing; if we Would be spared its pains, let us remember in time,—Dickens. Taste is something quite different from fashion, superior to fashion.—Thackeray. ""V M: THERE CERTAINLY IS! PE-KO EDGE JAR RINGS ARE MADE OF LIVE. RED RUBBER THAT SEALS THE fm twfpfc FLAVOR IN TIGHT * Rir niFTTR ...ANO THEIR A BIG DIFFER- * ENCE BETWEEN Sl JhEM EASY GENUINE PE KO APM Y FAST EDGE JAR RINGS 1° J^)L £ASY ANO ORDINARY V U KtMUVt - u (WJBBERS i tidSk Pe-Ko Edge JAR RUBBERS INITEO STATES ROBBER COiPAN! iniiwa»i«M,u.aww Most Be Heal Hero worshipers can easily make a fool out of a man unless he is a real hero. PL ALL FUES asvsss'Marffi I Cusrsmscd, AcSm l|S I — Cub** *pni— ■ winnotwttlortniumsartoiis*. I I ISO 1» Kalb At*JMjtLny; I WNU—A 32—36 MISCELLANEOUS IMwII thifnk "Body Ckrariltoy." Accurate Chemical Reading ItoUo* ToeiUonj, dial*. diseases. «(c. Stamp brines «w«urauir*(ttru Box 3. Um«Ctlj,lU. ImproT. T*u Eye*: No optical or medical treatment oecexaary. Keller* headache, eyestrain. condition* doe to poor eyesight. W«*«mo G. Nt Merlin*. Brooklyn, \.I. AGENTS SALESMEN Sift OR MORE DAIIT-LIN insurance lowest coat. Legal reserve family group. Triple indemnity pay* death any caoae; doable accidental: triple aotomo14)#, Mlftoxs MiHitrujr . EHinimlbh.l tm, RL FOR SALE BARGAIN—Mft ACRES IN Oil. LEASING district. » cattle. 3 mates. I mare, tools. iSS iu..

Synthetic Gentleman By Charming Pollock OomrrisM. Chen Bln* Pollock ______

CHAPTER Xll—Continued " 1 21— Hiss Hambldge was “In.” “Mummery?" “Play acting," Rldder snapped. “1 observed that you'd feathered your peat. I was wrong. Why didn't you •ay tor “I did." The old man was looking at Barry's ! check. | “Can you write?” he asked. | "1 don't know." ! “Harwood thinks you can. He Jnst left here. He says you earned what w« paid you. Well, you'd better go .am earning It" ! “Yon mean I’m hired —" *■ “Hired r Bidder repeated. “Too were hired two months ago. Who ever flred yon?” | There didn’t seem to be any answer to that “Mr. Rldder wants you to work with Jack." Mrs. Rldder remarked. "Keep an eye on him." “You're going to take Jack—“ "We're taking him home tonight And Peggy. We hope you'll come out Sometimes." “1 want Jack to carry on.” Rldder declared, “when I’m through." He waa back at his desk now. and he looked up. almost smiling. "You said 1 was a tough bird.” he ; told Barry. “I heard you. Don’t apologize. The world needs tough birds. -You don't win battles with pigeons. Somebody's got to do a little clear thinking. Somebody’s got to know what he's about We're a soft •race. Coddled. Self-Indulgent. We need hard going and discipline." Ills voice was crisp and sure. “What's the matter with this young generation? It’s fathers had too much money. I was a tough bird because I .knew the fight Jack bad made, and I didn't help him. I’d tried that, hadn't I? The other way was my only chance to make a man of my son." There was no lack of emotion In his tone now. “And yon. How did I know yon weren't Just a cheap swindler? By listening; to a lot of warm-hearted generalities? How did I know you weren't a blackmailer—until 1 saw you were going to give yourself up without squealing?" “Then you were play-acting?” “Not on your life. 1 was watching you like a hawk, but there was a cop out there, and 1 thought you had a date with him, until I saw your face when I asked you why you sent that wireless to Mrs. Bidder." Again, he almost smiled. “There waa a cop waiting behind that door, and a girl behind that one. A nice girl I had to be sure 1 wasn't ■ messing things up for her." He glanced at his watch. “Four o’clock. You people have got ito get out of here. I can't s|*end the day being a sentimental Idiot." “You’re neither.” Mrs. Kidder said. "Neither what?” | * "Neither sentimental nor an Idiot You're a tough bird.' but I like 'em that way.” She was holding on to bis arm when Barry closed the big door behind them. Barry thought she was crying. “She is my mother, after all.” Barry thought “She’s all the mother J never bad.” He told Winslow most of It. late that same afternoon. Peter sat at bis desk, looking restless and tired, but happier than be had seemed in some time. "Pat said she was going to propose to you," he smiled. "Meant U, too; we knew that. Women are funny. Snooted you while things were going right, didn’t she?” Barry laughed. “I was coming back for her when 1 got out of Jail.” ”Y our dope on the old man waa all wrong," Winslow commented. "lie has been cold and hungry. Trucked on a dock once And as>to being ‘nuts about anybody.' can’t you see that’s why be went Into reverse when the boy disappointed him?” He opened the right top drawer of his desk, probing Its inscrutable Jumble for something to play with. “You had a close call, though. Rldder knew what he owed you. People forgive what you do to them, but rarely what yoa do for then)." "You’ve done an awful tot for me. all right” “Nonsense!” The top drawer hadn’t yielded anything promising, and Peter picked u|p bis little red magnet “It'S all ended well" be remarked; “even for Luis Moraoo. He cheated the chair, and that's what he wanted to do.” ”1 thought you were so sure of his Innocence.* “His innocence of this crime, yea,” Peter answered. Then he rose and touched the magnet to tils thermometer. "When are yoo Bailing?" "Wednesday." “Good hick,” Barry said, extending his hand across the desk. Peter turned to take It, freeing bis | own hand by trying to slip the magr*®» , over thjs book from wbicb the tb r • mometer hung. The magnet promptly fell Into the | open desk drawer. “Damn!” Peter exclaimed, probing j again. He retrieved it, at last, from somewhere near the bottom of that astound- ■ ing accumulation of rubber bauds, penwipers. and wbat not Clinging to the metal, held by Its magnetic attraction, was another bit of metaL As Peter dropped the magnet onto bis desk, that other bit of metal detached itself, and fell almost at Barry’s feet* « Barry picked it up, looked at It looked again, and then looked at Peter. Peter was staring at him. *

Barry took a notebook out of his pocket ' “A 66152." be said. “Tea, that’s Kelly’s latch-key." Peter nodded. “I most have thrown It here weeks ago. and forgotten It” “I’d throw It somewhere else now," Barry advised. “Somewhere Just a little bit safer. Well, good luck, again, and good by.” He bad reached the door when Peter said: “Waft a minute.” Barry waited. “How long have yoo known?" “That you killed Mike Kelly?" Barry asked. "Since last Thursday. I Was on the train coming In from Southampton, and I'd Just read of Morano’s death. •One of my suspects was guilty.’ I , thought ’Peter Winslow can't laugh that off.’" He was back In the room now. “I remembered." he went on. “how you did laugh when I suggested Morano. And bow sure you were that I was wrong about every one else. But you never said anything that might’ve started me on the right track. On the contrary, when I asked you If there was a Mrs. Kelly, you answered. ’Yes. r "I Doped That Out, Too." She sued for divorce recently and with drew the case ’ You'd just read that in the Herald Tribune, and the same sen tence revealed that, at the time of the murder. Mrs. Kelly was In Harlem. But you didn't mention that. Why? Only one explanation occurred to me. and that was your willingness to keep me on the trail of some one who couldn’t possibly he convicted.” Barry sat down again, the other side of the desk “Go on.” Peter urged. “I’m very much Interested." He was sitting, too. now. “My Interest.” he continued. “Is strangely Impersonal. Almost wholly professional. I think it is That's very curious. Pin Just a criminal lawyer in terested In a crime.” His weariness explained that. Barry thought. As Hambldge had heen. and Morano. and Barry himself when talking with Bidder. Peter Winslow was “glad It’s over." "AS a criminal lawyer.” Barry said, "and a shrewd one. you'd be surprised to know how much you overlooked. Bits of evidence that fitted like a jigsaw puzzle the Inoment suspicion start ed anyone putting them together.” "As for Instance?” Barry smiled “You’ told me Morano phoned you at one o'clock the morning of the murder ’to say that one of his girls wns In Jail.* and would you ’take the case.* But Peggy wasn't In Jail, at one o’clock She'd been released hours before, ant? Morano knew It. 1 know that he did phone you. What Hbout? Why, about Kelly’s visit to the t’oeoannt Bar. of course, and the threat of something In his pocket that wns not only a menace to Morano hut Kellv’s hold over Judge Hambldge. A paper every one seemed to want, and that had disappeared when the body was found. “Wbat had that paper to do with you?

German Dog Is Credited With “Solving” Slayings; Cleverest in Police Kennels

What to said to be the best detective- have enough money to employ sufficient dog In the world belongs to the dog police officers, every policeman on duty section of the Berlin police. The dog. was ordered to take a shepherd dog named Schimmel. has “solved" eight with him. murder cases and numerous robberies. A year later Captain von SStephanits holdups and other crimes, according spread the Idea of using dogs in the to a Berlin United Press correspondent police force as scouts and trackers. Schimmel Is eight years old. and has * ~ ~ been s member of the Berlin police Salt Mine Clean force since 1928. Totally unlike a coal mine, a salt In a recent care the dog gave another mine I* • ««ropto of cieanllproof of its ability when eight other »«■ and orderliness, observes a writer dogs had failed. It found a murdered ,D the Cleveland Plato Dealer. Aiboy* concealed about half a meter un- though the mtoe . .hicitiv ennriwi rnr»«t neither workmen nor machines are t« derground In a thickly wooded fonst mining consist* 0 t This little “detective” proved his m&n tbaD . wri es of water cleverness to 80 Jurists, among whom which continually spray the were both-foreign and German Judges 0 f tbe m tne with water under and attorneya The Jurists walked bißb prewur e. This water, bringing over a field to destroy and stamp ont wJtb , t from the walls of the all trace of scent on the d“g'a trail. m j ne> fails to the bottom of the shaft But it took Schimmel less than three j t accumulated In reservoirs and minutes to find the scent take the lead tbeo pressed overhead where the salt again, and find the hidden object crystals are retained In large pans. Schimmel’* trainer is Paul Boettger, About 120,000.000 pounds of salt are chief of the dog-detective section. The extracted every year from the Satodog to entirely white, a rare color for burg mice in Austria, one of the most German shepherds, which are usually famous in the worldbrown. black, or spotted black and — — white. This pecutorfty explains Its Hudson’* Daring name Schimmel. which in German When Henry Hudson set qnt on his means “white horse." last voyage In 1607 he crossed the AtTbe Idea of using dogs for detective lantic in the “cock boat" Hopewell, work originated with Herr Laufer, a with a crew of only ten men and a boy former attorney. In 1901. when the with the avowed Intention of reaching Town of Schwelm, Westphalia, did not India by sailing over the North pole. \ , ~

SYRACUSE JOURKAI

“If this were a detective story, and you read it, you'd find twenty answers to that question. Judge Hambldge said be couldn't tell the truth because of a woman. Pat said the woman was her dead mother. And, plainly, that bad something to do with Morano." He leaned forward across the desk. “I couldn’t see any link between the two. And then I remembered that Pat's mother was your wife’s sister. Pat told me her mother was ’brought up In a little town called Warrenton.’ That meant your wife came from Warrenton. too. And Morano had told me he came from Fauquier county. 1 went to my atlas. Warrenton’s In Fnuquler county. There used to be a military school there. Mrs. Winslow ran away with her first husband while he waa a ’cadet In a military school.” Peter leaned forward, too. “And Morano —he began, tensely. “I don’t know whether Morano went to a military school or not “But George Selby did. "Morano and George Selby were the same man, weren’t they?” It was after six o’clock now. The outside offices were deserted and silent. But the noise of traffic drifted np from the street For almost a minute, that was the only sound In the room where there two men sat facing each other. Then Peter said, “Yes, they were the same man.” “I was sure of It,” Barry resumed. “The papers reported that Selby was drowned In Philadelphia. But the body they Identified had been In the water two weeks. Fresh water. So that Identification didn't amount to much. Violet Fane had told me Morano bought the house down town because he was married onct.’ and he and his wife lived there. The sob-story I dug out of the tabloids said Selby was ’blissfully happy' with his bride In a house he’d rented down town. Obviously, the same house. Sentimental? Yes. but Morano was a sentimental cuss. So sentimental that he might-have died rather than have It discovered that your wife was really his wife." Barry saw Peter wince, bnt went on “Os course, he had another reason for resisting arrest —that ‘hot spot’ with which Kelly threatened him. If Morano had been arrested, and fingerprinted. they’d*ve leaned that he was George Selby, and wanted for murder. Morano made certain of that. The 2:12 train he caught at the Penn sta tlon went to Philadelphia. That's where he was all the next day—checking up on the finger-prints taken when Selby was sent to the State penitentiary, perhaps, trying, through underground channels, to have them removed from the files. “1 had the motive for the murder now. "Kelly knew Morano was Selby, and so that your wife was technically a bigamist That was the threat he held over Morano. and Judge Hambidge. The threat that persuaded the Judge to write a ‘crooked decision. The paper Kelly had In his pocket was a marriage certificate, or something of the sort, he'd found somewhere.” “In an old trunk,” Peter said; “In the house he bought at 24 Jefferson street.” Barry nodded. "I doped that ont. too. Both Morano and Hambldge had plenty of reason to kill Kelly. "But neither had as much reason as you had. “If yoo knew of of that patter. * “And you did. didn’t you? That’s where Morano’s / telephone message came in. That's Why he called you up from the OoeoSßßt Bar. To tell you he’d seen the palter, and Kelly had It” ’•Right," Wlnsfow said, simply. “My Inquiry was narrowing down to you and Morano. But how did either of you get In to Kelly? And then I remembered that, the day 1 first saw Mrs. Kelly, she came Into that house and left her key In the door. I did the same thing this week. Anybody might. Especially a drunken man That would explain why the key wasn’t on Kelly’s body. It would explain ho» our third caller entered while Kelly was talking to Judge Hambidge.” t \ "Right." Winslow repeated. (TO BE COXTIMED)

IMPROVED UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL SUNDAY I chool Lesson By REV. HAROLD L. LtJNDQUIST. Dean of the Moody Bible Institute of Chicago. C Western Newspaper Union. Lesson for August 9 SAUL CONVERTED AND COMMISSIONED LESSON TEXT—Acts 9:1-9. 17-19; I Timothy 1:12-14. GOLDEN TEXT—I was not disobedient unto the heavenly vision.—Acts 25:19. PRIMARY TOPIC—SauI Become* Jesus' Friend. JUNIOR TOPIC—On the Road to Damascus. INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR TOPIC —Appointed for Service. YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADULT TOPIC —After Conversion, What? The conversion of Saul of Tarsus is on of the outstanding events of Bible history. It presents one of the strongest evidences of the truth of the Christian faith, for only on the ground of regeneration can we account for the change in Saul’s life, and only on the assurance that he met the Living and Risen Christ can we account for his conversion. As our lesson opens we find the brilliant, zealous, young Jew, Saul, SIS! I. A Bold Persecutor (9:1, 2). He was “yet breathing out threatening and slaughter against the disciples of the Lord.” The death of the godly Stephen had only increased his determination to wipe out those who were “of this way’ — the followers of the One who is “the way.” But as he carries letters from the high priest to Damascus which would authorize him to imprison them, he meets the Christ whom he persecutes and he becomes 11. A Convicted Sinner (w. 3-9). Stricken down by a brilliant heavenly light, he finds himself talking to the Lord Jesus. He hears from his holy lips the solemn indictment of those who persecute God’s people—“ Why persecutest thou me?” He who lays unkind hands, or untrue accusation upon God’s children had best beware, for so closely is our Lord identified with his people that when they suffer, it is he who bears the hurt. In a single sentence the Lord disposes of the persecuting zeal and the sinful skepticism of this proud young Pharisee, and Saul enters into Damascus not as the haughty persecutes but as a man trembling and astonished at his own sin. He spends three days shut in with his own soul and God, not seeing, not caring to eat, losing all consciousness of earth, but entering into communion with God. By God’s grace the old life is pulled up by the roots as it is displaced by the new life in s Christ Jesus. And now God is ready to send his servant Ananias to address Paul as 111. A Converted Brother (w. 1719). The fears of Ananias that Saul might still be a worker of evil (v. 13) are soon overcome by God’s assurance that in the praying Saul he had prepared for himself “a chosen vessel” (v. 15) to bear the gospel to the Gentiles and to kings, as well as to the children of Israel. Let us not fail to note carefully that the greatest of all Christian leaders, the apostle Paul, was led out into his life of loyalty and service to Christ by a humble layman. Repeatedly God’s Word by precept and example stresses the vital importance of personal work on the part of lay men and women. The leaders of Christian work during the coming generation are now in the Sunday School classes of our churches, perhaps in a tittle wayside chapel in the country, in the village church, in the mission or settlement house, or in the great city church. Reader, he or she may be in your Sunday school class. Have you -really tried to win him for Christ? Saul knew nothing of that subtle hypocrisy known as being “a secret believer,” for at once he made open confession of his faith in baptism, and “Straightway he preached Christ in the synagogues that he is the Son of God” (v. 20). He became indeed IV. A Mighty Preacher (I Tim. 1:12-14). In this passage Paul is writing to his son in the faith, Timothy, about thirty-four years after his conversion. As he looks back over the years he forgets the trials and sorrows, the beating with rods, the shipwrecks, the bitter disappointment over false brethren (Read II Cor. ll:S-28). He remembers only the matchless grace of God that showed mercy toward a blasphemer and persecuter, and counted him faithful, appointing him with “his service.” Paul summarizes that which we know to have been the great life of the world’s mightiest preacher by attributing it all in true humility to “the grace of our Lord” which “abounded exceedingly with faith and love which is in Christ Jesus.” For to him “to live was Christ” (Phil 1:21). Life was cherished by him as giving opportunity to preach Christ. Source of Greatness In these two things the greatest ol man consists, to have God so dwelling ip us as to impart his character to us, and to have him so dwelling, in us that we recognize his presence, and know that we are his, and he is ours. The one is salvation; the other the assurance of it. Follow Tour Bent Whatever you are by nature, keep to it; never desert your own line of talent. Be what nature intended you for, and.you will succeed; be anything else and you will be ten thousand times worse than nothing.— Sydney Smith. Great and Small Acts The one who will be found in trial capable of great acts of love is ever the one who is always doing considerate small ones.—F. W. Robertson. * « u -gjyj,

Captivating Daytime Frock

M&i* auc I ipJli ■ Pattern No. 1916-B This clever dress features a flattering yoke which dips to a point in front and is equipped with twin slashes a tew inci.es below the neckline to accommodate a ribbon bow of any colpr you wish to use. Most women like several different ones to which they match their accessories. Radiating tucks at the yoke and waist contribute a smooth fit and flattering effect, while center seams in front and back terminate in two kick pleats for reserved fullness where it will do the most good. The pointed pockets with shaped turned over flaps are novel. You’ll want to make more than one dress, because the pattern is so easy to follow and the fabrics so numerous to choose from. How about

Household 0 @> Ques/lojif Although there is no known way to sweeten rancid fat it can be used for making soap. * to to Drain all boiled vegetables as soon as tender. They become soggy if they are allowed to stand unstrained after cooking. The water drained off may be saved for soup stock. to to to When mending a rip in the glove, button hole the two edges with a fine needle and fine thread, never silk. Now catch these threads together in a button hole stitch and you will have a neat and lasting repair. • * * If it can be avoided, never wash combs, as water often makes the teeth split. A small brush made purposely to clean combs can be bought. With this the comb should be well brushed and then cleansed with a cloth. ** * ■ When the cork breaks in a bottle pour out the liquid it contains and put enough ammonia in the bottle to float the cork. Set away until the cork crumbles. to to to Baking soda will keep the baby’s bottles sweet. After using wash the bottles carefully in hot soapy water, sterilize by scalding, then shake in a little baking soda and fill with cold water. Let stand until bottles are used again. 9 Associated Newspapers.—WNU Sendee.

jBWpFFouR^jHBB BK^IU<OFMAGNESufIH ONE TAsn^H| jWHHFKHFHMHHBffBBTHWK thti sscs!")? ws_ The Original Milk ol Magnesia Wafer «

seersucker, novelty cotton, linen, crash or silk. Barbara Bell Pattern No.-1916-B is available for sizes 12,; 14, 16, 18 and 20. Size 14 requires 3 1-2 yards of 39 inch material.* Send 15 cents in coins. Send for the Summer Pattern Book containing 100 Barbara Bell well-planned, easy-to-make patterns. Exclusive fashions for children, young women, and matrons. Send 15 cents for your copy. Send your order to The Sewing Circle Pattern Dept.. 367 W. Adams St., Chicago, 111. vfißell Syndicate.— WNU Service. _ ■ f The Parts Books Play in Our Lives. Books may play two different parts in the lives of men. They maj build for us the walls of another and quite separate world in which we can take refuge from all that wounds and limits and frustrates us in this one. Or they may be the daily bread of our thought and action. But whichever part they play whether they are to us the quiet garden in which the spirit dwells apart, or the fuel which feeds the active, militant mind and ..arms it for its encounter with hard facts,' they become an integral part of the texture of our being.— Lady Violet Bonham Carter. Tree 12,000 Years Old Where most countries base their claims for interest on historic and pre-historic dead things, Queensland, Australia, boasts of possessing the oldest living thing in the world. It is a macrozamia tree about twenty feet in height and estimated to be more than 12,000 years old. In the Tamborine mountain reserve there is a grove of macrozamia trees, the youngest of which, only three feet in height, is 3,000 years old. Accurate scientific data on the macrozamia trees of Australia has been collected and established by the University of Chicago.

KEEPS £y£S toft CLEAR ... -J HD ' I VAL LVE * V , /Os eves

Lonely Road Even having your own way isn’t the road to happiness.

Black Leaf 40B^^| ill 1 i I OR SPREAD ON ROOSTS

Watch Your Kidneys,/

Be Sure They Properly Cleanse the Blood

WOUR kidneys are constantly filter- • ing waste matter from the blood stream. But kidneys sometimes lag in their work—do not set as nature in-tended-fail to remove impurities that poison the system when retained. Then you may suffer nagging backache, dizziness, scanty or too frequent urination, getting up at night, puffiness under the eyes/ feel nervous, miserable —all upset Don’t delay? Use Doan’s Pills. Doan's are especially for poorly functioning kidneys. They art recommended by grateful users the country over. Get them from any druggist

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