The Syracuse Journal, Volume 29, Number 25, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 8 October 1936 — Page 5
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1836.
Handsome Cloth Is Quickly Crocheted Here’s Fun for you—end Beauty foi your dinner or tea table— In a lacy pattern which you can crochet so easily of string. It won’t take you any time at all to lean* Patten 5193 the “sample” square design, on which all the others are based, and to crochet a goodly number of squares. When you’ve enough, join them to make a beautiful table cloth, bedspread, dresser scarf or pillow cover. Then sit back and wait for compliments! In pattern 5193 you will find complete instructions for making the square shown; an illustration of it, of the stitches needed; material requirements. To obtain this pattern send 13 cents in stamps or coins (coins preferred) to The Sewing Circle Household Arts Dept., 259 W. Fourteenth St., New York, N. Y.' Write plainly pattern number, your name and address. Our Mistakes When you make a mistake of the head, report it promptly to the head of the organization and be forgiven and have the matter forgotten in a hurry. But, an error made, after the fashion of a wrong heart, and all the whitewash in the world will not cover it up.—* Van Amburgh. GENUINE QUICK-ACTING Bayer Aspirin V A tablet/ Beyer Tablets Dissolve Almost Instantly ff W -altfa i (■■■ill* — SATES Awbhi table! C. B-i end feta work. Itn, ■ fj* Bvm Aw*rt» tablet ta- ill ta • (!■■■ W water. By ill U» tea* It bill tbe bet- ill tali «T the (Uta tt hi 111 i eWßUfratia«. Wfaat Ilf S. ft gfawa | 1 *•* I For Amazingly Quick Relief Get Genuine Bayer Aspirin You can now get Genuine BAYER ASPIRIN for virtually If a tablet at any drug store. Two full down now, in a flat pocket tin, for 251! Try this new package. Enjoy the real Bayer article now without thought of price! Do this especially if you want quick relief from a had headache, neuritis or neuralgia pains. Note illustration above, and remember, BAYER ASPIRIN works fast. Aim! ask forit by its full name — BAYER ASPIRIN —not by the name "aspirin” alone when you buy. Get H next time you want quick rtli'f. uoost rest rue marem watt Hava Served Well So much has been stolen from * the classics of literature that now the classics seem stale. Heat Resource** makes ugly Itchy PIMPLES DISAPPEAR IN 3 WEEKS M Ditagreeahle surface ptmplee anq Orlgnl XwKia DR%vuvj DTT)aw Out on my face and forehead. They Itched and my Appear*™** made mm miserable. I tried aeveral ointments to no avafl. Then I purchased some OtUarnm Bam «A Ointment and la three weeks my S. Fortier, MWareotw Ate, Pasadena, CaL W on d .^ul
1- -, nr r _ - _ - - -1.1 J-IJ-I i-irrrr -—ta—■—ta—w— DRAGONS DRIVE YOU By EDWIN BALMER Copyrigrht by Edwin Bslmer WNTJ Service n _ l - LrLI - L - l .n_‘ L n r
SYNOPSIS J«b Braddon, young end fantastically successful broker of Chicago, la infatuated with A(dm Otaaelth, beautiful daughter of e retired manufacturer. Rodney, e doctor. In love with Agnes, vtalta hie brother. Jeb, Rod plans work at Rochester. Jeb suggests that hs tanks n try for Agass hsfors leaving. In Rod there to n deeper, obstinate decency than In Jeb, Agnes believes to be happy, a girl must hind herself entirely to n man and have adorable babies. Rod visits Agnes end tells her of hie great desire, but realises It can never he fulfilled. Agnes’ mother to attempting to regain her husband's love. Agnes has disturbing doubts as to what attracts her father In New York. Jeb tells Agnes he to going to merry her. and together they view an apartment In Chicago. Jeb asks Agnss to set an early date, but she tells him shs cannot marry him. When the agent, Mr. Colver, offers to show them a furnished apartment. Jeb aska Agnes to eee It atone, saying he must return to his office. Agnes consents end Jeb leave*. A radio to blaring terrifically from on* of the apartment*. Colver raps upon the doer, which Is opened by a scantily clad girl, who draws Agnes Into ths room. Colver finds her husband, Charles Lorrie, fatally shot He calls the police. Myrtle Lorrie asks Agnes to phone Cathal O'Mar*, a lawyer, to come at once. Agnes does. Ths police take charge. O'Mara arrises. The officers ars - antagontatle to him. Agnes aides with O’Mara. Agnes Is to bs a witness at the coming trial. Cathal'a grandfather and father had lost their lives In ths lint es duty as city firemen, and his grandmother, Winnie, has built her all around Cathal. who, being ambitious, had worked hla way through law school and. heeding the appeal of the desperate and the despised cause, has committed himself to the defense of criminal case* Thoughts of Agnes disturb Cathal. Mr. Lorrie had cast off the wife who had borne him hla daughter to marry Myrtle, and after two years of wedded life she had killed him. CHAPTER IV—Continued Agnes’ mother tried to keep tier In bed all day. “If we had gone to Florida. as we should have.” her mother repeated. “this wouldn't have happened.” "Not to me.” said Agnes, and wondered who. instead, would first have stepped into that room, and been seised by Myrtle, and who would have summoned, for Myrtle, Martin O’Mara. She could not wish that It was not she. Florida had been the winter playground for her father and mother In their years of happiness; and while Mother held the romantic Illusion that, by returning together, they could recapture what they had had. Father lately had become more of a realist He knew it would he dancing on the grave of their ecstasy. Agnes lay looking at her mother hot thinking of her father, who, though turned realist toward hla wife, remained romantic—with whom? Som% one younger, much younger, and perhaps like Myrtle? She couldn’t imagine it; but— She pulled the newspaper to her again, and looked at Charles Lorrie, You wouldn’t think s man like that would marry Myrtle; he looked as if he’d have more sense. But sense didn't enter In. One day he'd wanted Myrtle* hla dragons of desire had driven him. and he'd married her. Who was In New Tork for Father? Agnes arose to he a witness at the inquest, and the coroner’s jury decreed that there was cause to “hold” Myrtle Btlver Lorrie to the Grand Jury, which took up the case early nest week. Jeb was to he a witness too, so Agnes and he went together; and they called her In, before him. So In she went alone, and stood before the 28 men, and swore to tell the truth and all of It Mr. Colver had just come out of the room, white and very nervous; and Agnes, trembling as she faced the 23 solemn men. wondered what Mr. Colver just had told them. Especially, bad he told them of Bert? Agnes repeated what she bad related before. "Now yon have told os all that yon saw or heard happen la your presence?” the foreman challenged her. -Yen." "Yon ars sure there is nothing more?” "Nothing." Bat her face was horning. "You hare remembered something else?” "Yea; I have.* And then there was no retreat; she had to teU them. And It was plain that word of Bert was new to all of them, that it was what they had needed—and that It was of great damage to Myrtle. She waited outside the grand-jury room, while Jeb was giving his testimony. corroborating her account at to bow she happened to come to the Lorrie apartment, Agnes sat on a bench, avoiding others, and unable to control her trembling at what she had doosL Jeb came out, straight and strong and at ease; for be had matte a good appearance and had nothing to tell that disturbed him Ha helped Agnes up from her net and brought her down to the street, wtlh news-cameras cttcktng at team as they left the Criminal Coarts bonding. He had left his car oa Dearborn street oa the ride across from the jail, aad as they approached it, Agnes saw a man standing beside tt wham shs recognised snddesiy as Martin O’Mara. She started a Uttle; and when, the nest latent, aha felt Jeb's fingers M|h»—» oq her ana. -*yt knew that ha suspected who this was. "That’s ths lawyer yarn celled T he spoke to sach other. She felt—almost as when O'Mara had coma Into the CM*- to MB to*
the Lorrie apartment by Mias Agnes Gleneith.” That Infuriated Jeb; and Agnes could feel It rising in him as they approached O’Mara. Cathal O’Mara stood bareheaded, having taken off hla hat, and bolding It after Agnes spoke to him. Cathal was excited, seeing her; but he did not show It. "How do yon do, Mr. Braddon?” be said. "What do you want?" "Os you,” said Cathal. auddenly hot inside, and because of .that, only cooler without, "little I was in the Jail," he explained to Agnes, as though he had not retorted to her companion at all and nothing had passed between them; “and coming out, I saw Mr. Braddon’s car. And 1 knew yon were both before the Grand jury." "They’ll Indict yonr client by night," said Jeb. “Yes." said CatuaL "I told her so." And he glanced toward the grim, blackbarred walls connected to the Courts building by the covered passage known, most aptly, as “the Bridge of Sighs” Over it, to and fro, trudged the accused to their trials and acquittals or condemnations. O’Mara’s thought was returned, for the moment, within the jail; and Agnes wondered at what, within those gray wails, his mind caught; with what miseries and repentances he dealt with; with what hopes and despairs. She wished she could follow his thought In its flight She looked up at Jeb. Often his mfnd, momentarily, fled away; but she never had wished to follow its abstraction. O'Mara recollected her. “After the indictment Is found. *as it will be, Miss Gleneith.” he said, looking down at her, “shall 1 see yon?” “Why?” objected Jeb. “I’ll be preparing the case. In doing it 1 must go over the evidence of my witnesses.” “Yours," said Jeb. “Yon imply she’s yours. You’ve the hell of a nerve. Miss Gleneith is a witness for the state” Cathal felt the pleasant furies dancing within him. Oh, he liked a fight; and this man would give him one. He met Jeb's contempt straight without nL TO J "1 Was in the Jail," He Explained to Agnes. anger. “The state may call Miss Gleneith; but so shall the defense; and whether or not the state calls her,” Cathal said. "So It Is my right and duty to review with my witnesses the testimony they will give. For that Miss Gleneith. I’ll go wherever yon say. Some witnesses come to my office; I neither ask nor suggest that of yon. With other witnesses. I go to them, to their offices. Yon having none, it wooid be at yonr father’s office, perhaps, we best may meet." “My office," said Jeb, If you must confer with her. Her father's away." “My mother’s not" said Agnes, "so come to the boose. Tomorrow—in the afternoon," said Agnes, baeathless at this defiance of Jeb. "Thank yon. Tomorrow It will be" CHAPTER V Cathal O’Mara set oot from the city et three on the following day. He had been in court on another ease; and srben the hearing %ns adjourned, he took bis car aad drove north alone It was a sunny, warm, indolent March afternoon, with gutters running off the melt of the thawing snow, and the still air Iridescent from the rising moisture People appeared everywhere, amt they e***tp*d wnaenDy pleasant and patient Far north along the lake shore were great Georgian homesteads, Ellsabetban manors, French chateaux and Florentins psltnot which men, who made money in’Chicago, gave to their wives to enhance and occupy *i>”" white they, erperetely. followed their own occupations and interests and their own transgressions, each after his own way. struck Cathal with particular force as ha cmnpared the fact that whereas he knew as few es the an who lived along these shares, he had never so much as spokes to one of the women on til Agnes Gleneith had —n*e him, e*er the phone, to come to the aid es won them for him) ran an Incurable
SYRACUSE JOURNAL
son, and turn about and idealize the next. In this best damn lawyer In town abode a little boy who had been reared by Winnie on ancient fairy and folk-tales never Intrusted to aught by tongue, never learned or taught from a page, but recited with all the mystic phrase and credence of oral tradition. So Cathal became steeped In the lore of heroes (and had not his grandfather proved himself one?) and of dragons, and of fair and utterly loyal ladles who would wait for their true love. In whatever guise he came and through whatever ordeal, until life’s end. Os course long ago these had thinned to symbols, bat they had endured within him; end their delightful relics led him to constant emotional contradictions to the revelations of bis own experiences. So now Cathal drove, denying himself illusions ss to the greater nature of the men who dwelt In these splendid places; he knew that save for their possessions, they were as all men; yet as to the ladies, held so aloof from him, he was letting his fancies ran. One be had met; and she was as none other out of sll his encounters with women. When he reached the house, Cathal discerned that instructions had been left concerning him. He asked for Miss Gleneith; but the man—lt was Cravath —replied that he would teU Mrs. Gleneith that he was here. Two girls (as Cathal first supposed) appeared on the stairs; the lighthatred one was Agnes Gleneith, and the dark o:ie he took for her sister until they were almost downstairs, and he saw that she was older. He was familiar. In his profession, with women who kept into middle age, and through tt, slender and youthfullooking figures and faces which denied, more or less successfully, the last decade of their years—women once greatly desired, who now desperately were “holding" their men, or striving to hold them against younger women. Cathal Martin O'Mara, attorney-at-law, knew such women well; and he had learned to read the signs of success, or of failure, in their struggle. Here, he knew at least one was going on. “You are the lawyer?" the mother asked him coldly. “Yes." said Cathal. She did not immediately proceed; and he was aware how she regarded him. His visit find himself, composed for her an unavoidable, disagreeable incident. Her daughter for a moment had stepped out of the affairs of her own life, and Intruded upon a tragic event in another’s which bad nothing whatever to do with her. Since they were unable to escape some further participation in the consequences of the intrusion, she must make tt as formal and impersonal as possible. That was the mother’s feeling. It was not, even here, the daughter’s. Cathal warmed, gratefully, as he glanced at her and she gave him her hand, which firmly pressed his for the Instant; but her mother did not relax her feeling of offense at him. “You approve of what your client did?” she demanded. “Approve?” Cathal repeated; and this charge he had met before. “To represent an accused person Is not to approve of her,” he replied. “Then what is it?" “Mother!" said Agnes. "1 asked him. what Is It?" She turned again to CathaL “You are try- * lug to prevent that woman from being punished, are you not? And you are here because you imagine my daughter will help yon!" “Yes.” said Cathal; he knew there was no arguing with her now. “I understand,” Beatrice Gleneith said, less bostllely at his lack of opposition, “you have certain righto to question her." Agnes stepped forward from beside her mother, and she took hie hat. "Cravath." she called, before her mother could Interfere, "take Mr. O'Mara’a coat” A minute later she led him. and her mother. Into the drawing-room. Cathal looked about He had never been received la such a bouse before, and he made no attempt to conceal his Interest in, nor bis unfamilUrity with, such a big room. His eyes went back to Mrs. Gleneith, and he better understood her. With no more effort of her own than was Involved in marriage to a man who made money, she had come to this; but though she had It she must starve herself slender, — end she had done so,—and she must keep herself over-young. And that she was endeavoring to do. "Sit down now, won’t you please?” nid Agues, the warmth within her spreading to her skin. He waited until they both were seated separately and a Uttle opposite each other. M they had came to hs la their fedyafe*. He dropped Into a soft stuffed chair, facing them. (TO BE CONTINUED) At 8 —* 1 That Never Was You know the Boyal Arms, with the y.yw on we ride and the Unicorn an the other. The Lion to all right; it has been the royal exabtem since ths days of Richard too Lion heart. Bed *bat is the idea es the Uatesrn a creature tost «mr exteted? asks s writer in Pearson's Weakly* Well, the Unicorn was the emblem es the oU kings of Scotland, and when James YI of Scotland came teralgaever England. he Introduced toe Unicorn tsfes the Boyal Arms. How did the Unicom got to Scotland? From the Gkmmde* It is believed. Scottish knights fighting to the tom* raw tears as Into their own country. Althougfa the f \J RHivA SS i
Comfort, Style in Pajamas
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