The Syracuse Journal, Volume 29, Number 16, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 13 August 1936 — Page 5
THURSDAY, AUGUST 13, 1936.
Chic, Cool Frock Gives Sleek Effect s Wl ;. <1 J I re wk wi\ r< JU’/’nMJcI// > * J g|- s m q q\ y Bpk 1/ i 9 ii \ '■ I j I v i’ n T w ’/I .\- r) [ • 11 r I'ILU J T IM, Pattern 1889-B There is nothing smarter for cool summer wear than silk .linen, novelty crepe, dotted swiss, or printed silks, especially when fashioned into a slim and trim model like this stunning design. Who isn’t excited about the new wider shoulder width that tends to slenderize the waistline and a pattern that goes together as quickly as a slide fastener. Note the unusual bodice lines, the panel extending to the hem, and the kick pleats that contribute dash and ease. The natty turn-down collar affords versatility and this is where your discriminating taste becomes apparent. Cost is small, yardage scant, the effect superb, and sewing simple. Send for this gorgeous frock now. Barbara Bell Pattern No. 1889-B is available for sizes: 14, 16, 18, 20; 40 and 42. Size 16 requires 4 1-8 yards of 39-inch material. Send 15 cents in coins. Send for the Summer Pattern Book containing 100 Barbara Bell veil-planned, easy-to-make patterns. Exclusive fashions for children, young women, and matrons. Send 15 cents foi your copy. Send your order to The Sewing Circle Pattern Dept., 367 W. Adams St., Chicago, 111. © Bell Bjrt>dic«t» —WNU Scrvtoa. f Heart in Puppet Show A puppet show in a marionette theater in New York City often so affects the audience, chiefly adults, that it stops the show with its cheers and hisses. At times it even shouts encouragement to the hero and hurls eggs at the villain. w B B r SBLF-MtATINO IRON uin. ta»U»Utttaat kw. AH ro« *»<*•!• tore • wlw. (trtta, • Mtek Md it Kcb» ln«ai>tlT. You don’t hm tn tatart t »w> f,l nr- __ ta » «» - hww* vx*w M *«■*“ ZWe hß gfwWW < Tho CihtMi tMsta tai a Jiffy; la uoKkly rnodr for®.. Baum Irwin* anrfa® ta"hasM with Mil* tha taettrrt. MamtaWM Ila twat owa far the fart wartwr. &>nr»!y Mi'-tMMsnf. Owrrtrt toe Mff a* how. Yon do yoor trwia« with tert effort, ta a*e-«hted tea* lime. Be eoro year neat ho* la Cha COWM lartart-Uatatan* Cnlaaaa. H a the Iron every womb want*. Ifaa wtarfal than aaff labor aavw-aottata* Mie ta. The ( nliani la the May way to Iran. . aaaanosraaaarw race awe. ooa reaawM. th« col a man lamr ano ereve ca nwawum www. u.i cww*. m ■ Wail mi a r»4 ira laadw,cut. mnmo Skin Sufferers find ready relief from itching of 00> zema, rashes and similar ills. In the oentle medication of fl Resinol v • ■ • . • • W/HEN kidneys function badly and w yo u suffer a nagging badcadw, with dizziness, burning, scanty or too freouent urination and getting up at night; when you feel tired, nervous, M ail upwt... use Doan’s Fills. Doan’s are especially lor poorly working kidneys. Millions of boxes are used every year. They are recommended the country over. Ask yoer neighbod WNU-A 33-31 REMEDIES Improve Yawr Kyaai No optical er medical treatznaat neCMwary. Ralleva haadadM, •yaetrala, condition* doe to peer eyaeifftat. Faegemaan G-, Sat Sterlln*. Breekiya. N.Y. AGENTS
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CHAPTER Xll—Continued —-22— “Was the third caller you or Morano? And then I remembered two things. Morano took the 2:12 to Philadelphia to check on those finger prints. He wouldn't,’ve done that If he’d known Kelly was dead. The bouse was dark and silent when Morano got to Sixteenth street. He thought Keliy'd gone to bed, and so he went to Philadelphia. J was sure of that And I was sure that the man who killed Kelly wore gloves. “On a hot night “Not because he’d thought of fingerprints. but because he was accustomed to wearing gloves, even In summer. “It was red-hot the day I came here to tell you about Nolan. \ “And your gloves were lying there with your hat’* Peter smiled, faintly. “I remember, too." be said. “You picked one of them up. But. of course. ■ I might merely have been carrying them.” Barry smiled, also. “You might." he admitted. "But the glove that fell on the floor was turned inside out People don't carry gloves that way." •Well," Winslow observed. “Harwood didn't make any mistake when he said you were a good newspaper man. You’re right about everything. My I wife was Mrs. Selby. She thought I Selby was dead, of course, when she married me. Two or three years ago, . I met him on the street He was d—d decent 'Believe it or not, I was terribly In love with Julie,* he said. *1 still am. But God knows I’m no husband for her, and you are. You've nothing to fear from me.’ he said. * * "But I did fear. AU my life. I’ve had one conviction. Murder will out Everything comes to the surface sooner or later. I urged Julie to get 'I can't.' she said, ‘without more dreadful publicity. It would ruin your caI reer.' she said. Always thinking of me. Julie Is." Be touched the tell tale magnet, almost lovingly. "We were still talking about It," he ’continued, “when Julie went all to ' pieces again. Just as she bad when i the tabloids printed the story you saw. | I took her to Europe. When we came | back, Selby’d disappeared. I didn’t even know his new name, and, of course, I didn't look for him. I persuaded myself the danger was over. “Then came the Jefferson street grab. “1 was upset about what the newspapers said of Judge Hambldge. I'd no Idea of what was back of that, of course, and he didn't tell me. I figured that they’d got to him. somehow. And then Morano telephoned, the night of the murder, to say Keliy'd been to the Cocoanut Bat. He’d had the marriage certificate some time, and, through an underworld connection, he knew Selby was alive, but he'd only just found out that Selby was Morano. Someone bad I told him that afternoon—probably the , same man who tipped off Lula’ tele- | phone message to Harwood. Kelly bad said to Morano, ‘Now I’ve got you. and Hambldge. and Winslow? 'He has. i too,* Luts added, 'unless you ’an find away out of It.’" Winslow's band closed tightly. “Julie was upstairs, asleep," he said. “She'd left me an hour before, radiantly happy. 1 went to see Kelly. Heaven knows what 1 intended to da Certainly not murder. I was about to ring the bell, when I saw the key in the door, and used It Kelly was talking to Hambldge. I recognised the I Judge's voice, and slipped into tbe dining room. Listening. 1 learned why he bad written that decision. And I beard
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Kelly say, ’lf it ain’t filed by noon today, I’ll have your sister-in-law arrested for bigamy? “Hambldge said. ‘You can do what you like; I won’t file It’ “The cut-glass decanter was on the table In front of me. I picked it up. almost mechanically. Kelly was in the hall then, shouting 'squealers' and ‘beat it? I suppose I had some vague idea of helping my brother-in-law. I don’t know. Anyway. I opened the door between the dining room and the drawing room. And. as I did so, Kelly came in from the hall, closing that door behind him. His left hand was still on tbe knob when he saw me. “ 'More squealers "he shouted. ‘Witnesses! So you heard, did you? Well, by God. you're not going to tell anybody !’ “He lifted his right hand, and there was a revolver in it “Another instant, and he'd've fired. “I hurled the decanter. “It was just instinct I didn’t take alm. There wasn’t time. If I meant to do anything. It was to hit his pistol arm. I don’t really know where the bottle did strike. The side of Kelly’s head, probably, for It landed against a metal door-hinge, rebounded, fell into a chair, and rolled off to the floor. A moment afterward. Kelly went down in a heap. “He wasn’t dead. A long way from It. for the gun had dropped out of his hand, and be reached for it I picked It up. Ten seconds later, Hambidga was on the other side of that door, trying to open it, and calling Kelly. I turned the lights out. Hambldge left. I put the revolver Into my pocket, and got the certificate out of Kelly's. There was a white push button In Ihe door-frame. I pressed It—or thought I did —and hurried through the dining room into the street. Evidently, the bell didn’t ring, for It seems that no one came to Kelly's assistance. “It never occurred to me that Kelly was anything more than stunned. I went home, and burned that marriage certificate. There was no other record; I'd made sure of that. A few hours later, Hambldge phoned to say he'd filed bls decision. There was nothing about Kelly In the morning paper. I’d no Idea he was dead until long after dinner that night at Southampton." Barry nodded. “Os course, my first impulse was to give myself up." Winslow said. “But what good would that've done? They couldn’t convict me. I’d killed in selfdefense. and could come mighty near proving it. But, in doing so, I’d've given away the secret I’d struggled to keep all these years. I’d’ve smashed Julie utterly, and ruined Hambldge, and Pat. Nobody was harmed by my keeping my moutb shut. There wasn’t a chance of their finding Ridder guilty, or anyone else. If they’d done that, Td’ve confessed in a moment" “I know." Barry declared. “That’s what you meant when you said. ’lf wei have to get the guilty man to feed Rogers, we’ll do It. but let's give tbl court a chance first’" fl “Yes." A Peter rose, and went to the “Tbe difficult thing,” he “was not to confess. With that Jail. But It was letting an man suffer a few weeks, or an innßg| woman all her life. If Juiie's face, wheif she io-arim: of Selbv's arrest — ” of Course, neither She nor knows 1 killed Kelly.” Barry said. "They’H nevejfl through me. "Bon voyage.” ne addeu. iri-*:int later, his hat in his come hack soon. I'd like two at my wedding.” (THE
SYRACUSE JOURNAL
IMPROVED UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL SUNDAY I chool L>csson By REV. HAROLD L. LUNDQUIST, Dean ot the Moody ot ChieeyoX \ • Western Newspaper Union. Lesson for August SOWING AND REAPING LESSON TEXT—Galatians 8:1-10. GOLDEN TEXT—Be not deceived; God is not mocked; for whatsoever a -man nweth. that shall be also reap.—Galatian* 8:7. PRIMARY TOPIC—How to Behave. JUNIOR TOPIC—When We Choose. INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR TOPIC Sowing and Reaping. (Effects of Alcohol). YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADULT TOPIC '—Sowing and Reaping. (Effects of Alcohol). Satan is “the god of this world.” And as such he has wrought confusion in every realm and particularly in the field of moral distinctions and responsibility. Instead of clear-cut lines of right and wrong, white and black, he has managed to befuddle the minds of many so that they see only a twilight gray of moral indifference. He has lulled many a man and woman into a false security that somehow sin may be yielded to with impunity. To some he says there is no God, and no punishment for sin. To those who will not yield to such a bold attack he more subtly suggests that God is love and that there will be no judgment. Some there are who think that formal association with religious organizations will somehow atone for all their carelessness of life. How great is the need to emphasize the truth of this lesson that “God is not mocked, for whatsoever a man soweth that shall he also reap” (v. 7). These are eternal and immutable principles. The epistle to the Galatians expounds Christian liberty as based on justification by faith. This life of liberty is a life in the Spirit, and this means walking in the Spirit. The chapter beford us (ch. 6) states the attitude of the Christian toward others, and toward his own life in the light of his responsibility to God. I. The Christian’s Attitude Toward Others (vv. 1,2). The spiritual concerns of life are far more important than the material, therefore the writer points out that the believer is 1. Considerate in spiritual matters (v.l). Sin is in the world. Men, even Christian men, fall. Who is to help them? and how? Fellow sinners and spiritual weaklings cannot help. Sanctimonious and “holier than thou” folk will only criticize and hinder. The spiritually strong must help the weak, doing it gently, not judging severely, for they too are only sinners “saved by grace.” But not all the problems of the world are spiritual and the Christians will be 2. Helpful in bearing the burdens of Use (v. 2). The Christ spirit leads a man to bear his neighbor’s burden. In this “grabbing,” selfish generation we need a revival of Christlike burdenJill
Uncommon john blare e Ben Syndicate.—WNU Servlee.
I am writing this on a hot day—a very hot day. The thermometer on my porch I Don’t Watch the informs me that Thermometer it is a hundred degrees Fahrenheit I could believe that it is very . much hotter than that. The people that pass my door i have taken off their coats—if they are men. ” The women, who refuse to be beaten even if they can’t really keep cool, are wearing filmy raiment, but they don’t pant the way men do. But while I admit that I am inconvenienced, and wish 1 could be in Alaska and lean against an ice floe like a polar bear, I know that if I stop thinking about the weather . and go to work I will soon lose myself in my job. • e « A little way down the street is a fire-engine house. The firemen have rigged a pipe up in front ol the building and from its mouth spouts a continuous manmade geyser. All the children in the neighborhood, and they make as much noise as all the children ir. town, are stripped to their little buffs and are shouting joyfully as they bend down their backs and let the spray from the pipe run over them. Every time there is a lull in 1 — 1 il — Foreign Words and Phrases Ab ovo usque ad mala. (L.) From the eggs to the apples; from the beginning to the end. Avanti. (It.) Come in. Beaute du diable. (F.) That transient type of beauty doomed to fade early with loss of the glow of youth. Comme il faut. (F.) As it should be; perfect; in good taste. En plein jour. (F.) In broad daylight. Facon de parlor. (F.) A manner of speaking. Homme d’affaires. (F.) Business man. Genus irritabile vatum. (L.) The irritable race of poets. Ipso facto. (L.) In the fact itself; obvious from the facts in the case. Les affaires sont les affaires. (F.) Business is business.
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the proceedings to change children—for there are too many of them to soak all at once—a flock ot sparrows alight to have their turn at the cooling process. • • * But in the suburban town where I live, and in the great city which is not far away, men and women are doing their regular work. If a fire should break out in another part of the town, the firemen who are now watching the children enjoy their shower baths would mount their ladder trucks and man their engines, and be off with a blare of sirens to do their appointed job. If they decided they didn’t .want to get any hotter and stayed where they were perhaps the town might be consumed. • • • Men and women can do in a pinch what they have to do, whether the temperature is up or down. When the need arises, especially the need to help others out of danger, their courage crops out and they all become heroes for the time being. And I, who have nothing to do for the present but pound a typewriting machine would do well to forget the fact that it is uncomfortable, and stop breathing hard and making continuous trips to the refrigerator for ice cubes to fill my glass. • • •* Rain or snow, cold or hot, one is easier in his mind if he forgets the discomforts that are bound to come, and to continue with his work. As long as it is not humanly possible to change the weather, the only intelligent thing to do is to forget about it.
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The Meaning of ‘Hot’ or ‘Bootleg* Oil Most of the oil states, in an effort to conserve the supply or limit production, have passed laws making it illegal to pump more than a given amount from the ground. To get around these laws, some operators have resorted to pumping the oil out of' the fields through secret pipelines and hauling it away in trucks. Such oil is called “hot,” or “bootleg.” But Nature produces a hot oil. In the great petroleum fields near Tampico, Mexico, the oil is hot as it comes from the ground, at times reaching a temperature of 180 degrees.—Washington Post. BOYS! GIRLS! Read the Grape Nuts ad in another column of this paper and learn how to join the Dizzy Dean Winners and win valuable free prizes.—Adv. Blind Justice Justice when equal scales she holds, is blind; nor cruelty, nor mercy, change her mind; when some escape for that which others die, mercy to those is cruelty.
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