The Syracuse Journal, Volume 29, Number 36, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 7 January 1937 — Page 9
Thursday, January 7, 1937
Crochet Tot Snug and Warm Three-Piece Set Pattern 1097 Miss Five-to-Twelve will be snug, warm and proud in a hand-crocheted cap, scarf, and muff-set of plain crochet, with picot-stitch trim. Pattern 1097 contains directions for making the set in 5 through 12 year size (all given in one pattern); illustrations of it and of all stitches used; material requirements. Send 15 cents in stamps or coins (coins preferred) for this pattern to The Sewing Circle Needlecraft Dept., 82 Eighth Ave., New York, "N. Y. Write plainly your name,' address and pattern number. Ambition of Man At four—to wear pants. At eight — to miss Sunday School. At twelve—to be President. At eighteen — to have monogrammed cigarettes. At twenty—to take a show girl out to dinner. <? At twenty-five — to have the price of a dinner. . At thirty-five—to eat dinner. At fifty-five—to digest dinner.— Excelsior Springs Standard. If You're Told to “Alkalize” Try This Remarkable “Phillips” Way Thousands are Adopting On every side today people are being urged to alkalize their stomach. And thus ease symptoms of “acid indigestion,” naiftea and stomach upsets. To gain quick alkalization, rust do this: Take two teaspoons of PHILLIPS’ MILK OF MAGNESIA 30 minutes after eating. OR — take two Phillips’ Milk of Magnesia Tablets, which have the same antacid effect. Relief comes almost at once — usually in a few minutes. Nausea, “gas” — fullness after eating and “acid indigestion” pains leave. You . feel like a new person. Try this way. You’ll be surprised at results. Get either the liquid “Phillips” or the remarkable, new Phillips’ Milk of Magnesia Tablets. Delightful to take and easy to carry with you. Only a box at all drug stores. ALSO IN TABLET FORM: Each tiny tablet is the equivalent of a (-“{-’•■-•-i) teaspoonful of genuine Phillips' *' H Milk of Mag- I WW Phillips* m,| - kof ■ niLi.ir'a magnesia “I Had a Friend” “What is the secret of your life?” asked Mrs. Browning of Charles Kingsley: “tell me, that I may make,mine beautiful, too.” He replied: “I had a friend.” CHECK THAT COUGH BEFORE IT GETS WORSE Check it before it gets you down. Cheek it before others, maybe the children, catch it. Check it with FOLEY’S HONEY & TAR. This double-acting compound gives quick relief and speeds recovery. Soothes raw, irritated tissues: quickly allays tickling, hacking. Spoonful on retiring makes fora cough-free sleep. No habit-forming, stomach-upsetting drugs. Ideal for children, too. Don’t let that cough due to a cold hang on! For quick relief and speeded ncornry insist on FOLEY’S HONEY & TAR. WNU—A ’ 1—37
Watch Your I .Kidneys/|
Be Sure They Properly Cleanse the Blood WOUR kidneys are constantly filter. I ing waste matter from the blobd stream. But kidneys sometimes lag in \ their work—do not act as nature in- y 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, misera-ble-all upset Don’t delay?’Use Doan’s Pilli. Doan’s are especially for poorly func* tioning kidneys. They are recom- , mended by grateful users the country over. Get them from any druggist.
IDOANSPILLS]
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Dragons Drive You
By EDWIN BALMER Copyright by Edwin Balmer WNU Service CHAPTER XlV—Continued 21— Between their interludes of delight she watched him for sign of restlessness; for she knew that never, since he was a little boy. had he thrown off the burden of care cast upon him; but now he had! He climbed with her gayly, strongly, singing; snouting where an echo answered; and they’d camp, sometimes, high on the mountain together. By their camp-fire they’d talk —she as never before to any one, even to her sister; and he with a freedom that surprised himself as he told her of his life before he met her, his struggles, his hopes and liis dreams, which he had kept even from Winnie. “Do you know one thing love is—if it’s nothing else?” he said to her once just before they fell asleep. “What?” “It’s the end of the loneliness^ you’re born to and live in—and not knowing —till you’ve her in your arms.” They returned to a Chicago of accented madness, with more banks and businesses failing. They went to a hotel where they took “temporary” quarters, but where they remained for nearly a year. Agnes said to her friends: “It’s’ my fault. I don’t look anywhere else.” As a matter of fact, she didn’t care to. Cathal was working day and night for weeks on end, as his cases came up in court; and the hotel was as convenient as any place could be to the criminal courts, to his office and to the homes of his clients. - Agnes put nothing, in these days, before his cqnvenience and the chance to be with him whenever he dropped his work. Their Interludes, between the excitement of his appearances in court, exceeded even their happinesses on the fountain. The excitements and strainings, by which he lived, were exhausting to her; so she rested a good deal by day, when he was away. She dwelt, indeed. In a very maelstrom of madness. No other city surpassed Chicago in display of the Insanities of civilization. There it stood, the grain-market of the world, on the edge of a prairie afflicted with no plague but that of plenty—or surplusage, Indeed, of all crops and cattle; and men would have starved by the thousand but for the bread-lines, one of them given by a gangster. School-teachers worked unpaid; and a committee, well financed by separate funds, proceeded to gather proud exhibits of a Century of Progress—and day after day the bulletin-boards of the city’s best clubs posted another and another black-bordered card bearing the name of a member who had been In perfect health yesterday. They went by their own hands; and all did not choose death to escape the consequences of their’ failures; many chose fraud, embezzlement and betrayal of trust. The bulletin-boards of their clubs took no cognizance of this choice, when they made it; but their names blackened the pages of the newspapers and crowded the court calendars. And some of them sent, as had Philip Linsdale and Ormstead, for Cathal Martin D’Mara. Agnes always kept awake till lie returned to her after he responded to such a call; sometimes it would be three or four o’clock in the morning. Always he returned wide awake, excited, intent, thoughtful. He seized her and held her, and she liked to lie in his arms whether or not he felt like going over with her, just then, the new “case” he had just ’ taken. Lying still awake sometimes, after Cathal had told her of his case and dropped to sleep, Agnes regarded, from this poignant viewpoint, her own family and her ow&old life. Money-hunger was the driving dragon within these men—the hunger for money, the root of evil from the oldest reported time. They must have money, these men; and especially, having had money, they must regain* their losses and have more and more and more. For what? She thought of her mother and father, and of the woman in New York. She thought of Bee and Davis—and Jeb, Davis was at work again in still another new association with Ken Kemble; and Bee’s third baby, another boy, was born and growing up. Agnes went “home” a good deal; for her mother had “forgiven” her. Indeed, Beatrice Gleneith had found far less to overlook than she had expected; for her friends had been surprisingly mild in their criticisms, and decidedly interested. Things were very, very bad in Chicago. They were as bad as could be, people said; they could get no worse. But they did get worse—much, much worse. Insull crashed. Insull, the strongest man of the city! Instill, the emperor of power and transit; Insull, the mighty man of millions, who almost alone" had stood through nearly three years of the panic—Insull crashed. And the crash all but carried down —Chicago. Not millions; hundreds of millions In money was lost —the fortunes of the great and the little. Jeb was utterly wiped out; and so was Ojai. Robert Gleneith was ruined. His loans at the banks, which Jeb had helped to arrange, were secured by stocks tn holding-companies, which had dropped from a “high” of hundreds of dollars a share to threeeighths of a dollar. The banks had been unable to sell him out fast enough; he owned nothing but the idle and now worthless buildings of his plant; and he owed three hundred thousand dollars. He offered his home for sale, and received no bid as great as the mortgage; he would have moved out his 'family — and Davis — but the bank preferred to ha-ve the house Occupied; so they camped (they called it) in the house, without servants, except Rogna, who asked to stay without wages, for her food and shelter.
One item went to the credit side of the ledger. Bob sent no more checks to “Cash” and he ceased to frequent New York city. He had given up “Cash” and he informed his wife of the fact Bob was able to supply his family with funds enough to keep going; for. In spite of his debts—or because of them—he succeeded In negotiating further loans. ‘ ’■ Jeb owed plenty of money to several banks; but none of them deemed him worth the further risk of a penny. Rod came to his help—Rod with his Massachusetts and Andover bonds he had never sold at Jeb’s urgings. It was the week after the complete and Ignominious collapse of Jeb’s affairs, following the fall of Insull, that Davis paid Cathal an unannounced visit at his office. “Jeb knew his stuff. He was just a damn fool! Just be a hinny, a nitwit !” Davis burst out! frantically. “Think you know everything, but you don’t know a damn thing. Take away the last dollar of everybody you know; bust ’em, ruin ’em; rob ’em!” “What are you talking about?” Cathal inquired, studying his brother-in-law. “Jeb. The recently great and wise J. E. Braddon! He’s just Jost his friends’ and customers’ millions —millions, but was such a complete ninny —knowing absolutely nothing when he posed to know it all—that nobody even thinks of getting after him. Whereas I—l, Cathal —’’ “AU right,” said CathaL “What are you in for?” It proved to be more serious than Cathal had suspected, (hough he never had trusted Ken Remble. Ken—and Davis —had sold certain stocks, making some representations that were not accurate. The point was that Ken - /« I Her Little Daughter, a Light One, Like Herself. knew better; he deliberately had misrepresented; and Davis, desperate again, had gone along with Ken. It would be extremely hard to prove that Davis had not known as much as Ken; and they both had used the mails for selling. Cathal heard Davis out, and then said “ “There is only one thing to do. You’ve got to buy back every share of stock, and immediately. What’s the total?” It proved to be over a hundred thousand dollars. “And how can I possibly get that?” Davis demanded. Cathal wasted no time. He went to Agnes at once. “Davis,” Cathal told her, “has to have about a hundred and thirty thousand dollars or go to jail.” And he told her why. * It left Agnes white and shaky. “Now what can we do for him?” “I want you to let me do something of the sort I should tell you about but won’t —this time. Years ago I got a certain big man out of a big jam. He never paid me for it; he wasn’t able to then; and—later I wouldn’t take it. But how he can pay me twice a hundred thousand and never feel it If 1 merely suggest’ it he’ll do it I ask you to take my word that it’s all right. We can put up thirty thousand; I can get a hundred thousand from that man. It’ll be wholly for services rendered, involving no new obligation. All right?” - Agnes fought with herself. “For yourself, Cathal; for ns, no,” he replied. “You’d never ask it For Davis
IN THE NEXT ISSUE
Patterns ;of I Wolfpen I A Gripping f Story of Kentucky | Pioneers By I HARLAN HATCHER ' The Patterns had lived at Wolfpen for four generations. Loving the land, proud of their heritage, their daily routine a design of tranquil, independent, self-suffi-cient harmony, of a gracious, simple and truly cultivated practice of life. But the outside world
WATCH FOR THE FIRST IHSTAUMEHT
SYRACUSE JOURNAL
and Bee—and the boys—l guess sa” And so Cathal got the money and cleared Daria, To the O’Maras a child was born the following spring, upon one of those days marked tn memory by the closing of every bank In the United States. The tiny girl, some day to find herself standing in the stream of Time, came at the end of one phase of adjustment of human affairs which we call an epoch. Os course an end of one epoch must mark the beginning of another. This began from “the bottom,” men said. Improvement appeared, values in general became higher.. Prices have not yet risen sufficiently to bring Robert Glenelth’s holdings into the clear. Bob’s books do not yet balance; but he Is operating his plants and making a little money. And he’s living aga’n in the same “little” house on Easter Lane to which he brought Triete as a bride and where, for many years, they were happy. They are tender again together. Are they happy? Well, what is happiness? Tricie has not “forgiven” him; she was never to make that mistake. She has succeeded in never referring to her husband's association with Cash. Jeb has a job. He’s a customer’s man, selling stock, and people are believing him again. Davis has a job in a creamery company; he’s district superintendent at fifty dollars a week. Bee has a job, life-insurance; and she’s good at it. She means to keep at it; she has declared her child-bearing days at an end. Davis and she rented a very small house near Easter Lane. Bee keeps a middle-aged maid who wears spectacles and who is only a plain cook but who is completely reliable with the little boys. At noon, Bee often drops in on her sister at Agnes’ apartment on the north side. It Is almost “down town” yet It overlooks the lake; and the wind sweeps off the water, clean and clear. Agnes adores the place. Bee likes to linger there. “It’s fun to fight for business and to get some,” said Bee. “You feel good about it —at least until your husband gets home. It’s certainly hell on the husband to have his wife good at anything practical, but what can I do? Flop?” “Os course you can’t flop,” said Agnes. “And, I won’t! I’m going to make some money for my boys; and I’m going to pay you back some day, Agnes—you and Cathal.” “No!” Agnes begged her. “I don’t want it; and he doesn’t either.” “I know ypu don’t; but it’s our debt and you can’t deny It, Agnes.” Alone, after Bee had gone, Agnes went In to her baby—her little daughter, a Light One/~like herself. At ten months, she has soft flaxen hair and eyes of deep blue; she has skin like pale petals of wild rose, an adorable little mouth, and tiny, formed chin and most perfect little hands. Her hair Is like Agnes’ in texture and hue. Her name Is Winifred Agnes; an,d the kingdom of the happiness of her father and mother encloses her. Will that kingdom fall in a few years? Agnes does not believe it; for her love and Cathal’s differs from that which once held her father and mother. And Bee and Davis never knew anything likejAhis. They tried to improvise a kingdoft on material possessions; and even those were taken from them. Standing and gazing down at her baby, Agnes wonders suddenly what she shall tell this child, some time, of the glory of the Gleneiths* that is gone? Should she relate how the# had a little money, and were happy; but had to have more and more? So they made it; and her father became unfaithful; and Davis tried to kill himself; and failing at that, he went crooked? What, out of all the past, should Agnes preserve and pass on to her child? What, out of all her family who so highly prospered for years? What really memorable and Inspiring act or occasion? On her side, Agnes realized, standing there over her eping child—oh the side of the Glengths, nothing. Nothing 4 a compare with that which entered si largely into the making of the man ho is this baby’s father; nothing r oiupare, In its effect when Winnto j r pass it on (Agnes prays) to be own children! How Cathal Martin O’Mara went up with Fitzpatrick, his chief of battalion, to the tower with the building ablaze below, and how he died there, and his wife stood and watched him. [THE END.]
1 closes in. Industry, crying for more timber, marches into the Cumberlands, bringing ugliness, disease and violent death. But beauty is not altogether lost For the lovely Cynthia Pattern, at least, there is an intimate rewarding, an exquisite condensation.
IMPROVED UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL SUNDAY I chool Lesson I!. REV. HAROLD U LUHDOUIST. 0< IW Mood, KH. lutititt. of Chicago. • Westers Newspaper Union. Lesson for January 10 NEW LIFE IN CHRIST LESSON TEXT—John 3:1-17. " GOLDEN TEXT—Verily, verily. I B*y unto thee. Except a man be born again, he cannot see the kingdom of C xi.—John 3:3. PRIMARY TOPlC—Jesus Answering a Man's Question. JUNIOR TOPIC —the Most Important Question. INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR TOPIC— How the Christian Life Begins. YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADULT TOPIC— New Life in Christ. The only entrance into the Christian life is by the door of the new birth. Regeneration is the act of God whereby the divine nature is imparted to the believing sinner and he becomes the child of God. He who has not entered by this way has not entered at all. He is still dead in trespasses and sins, without God “ and without hope (Eph. 2:1, 12). Men are seeking to enter the household of God by almost any other means—culture, reform, character building—and are neglecting God’s way. This lesson shculd therefore be studied and taught with earnest prayer that this foundation truth may lay hold upon the hearts of the hearers of the Word. Let no one who is not born again attempt to teach it to others, lest the blind attempt to lead the blind, and both fall into the ditch (Luke 6:39). The coming of Nicodemus to our Lord took place at the time when he was in Jerusalem for the Passover* Jesus had chosen six of his disciples, had l een at Cana of Galilee, where he performed his first miracle, and had made a brief visit to Capernaum, after which he came to Jerusalem for the feast. In high and holy indignation he had driven the money changers out of the temple. The Pharisees who looked for the coming of the Messiah as a secular conqueror wondered at this new spiritual leader. It was probably as much on their behalf as his own that Nicodemus came to inquire of Jesus. In answering his questions Jesus reveals the necessity, the nature, and the method of regeneration—in other words, the Why, What, and ’ jw of the New Birth. I. Why? (w. 1-7.) Jesus was not unduly impressed by the dignity and high station of his visitor, nor byjhe visitor’s courteous acknowledgment of his own position as a great teacher.'. With decisive boldness Jesus declares that this man, a cultured and distinguished ruler of the Jews, must be born again, if he is to see the kingdom of God. God is no respecter of persons. This “doctor of divinity” must be born again, just as was the illiterate fisherman. D. L. Moody once said that he was thankful it was to such a man as Nicodemus that Jesus presented the necessity of the new birth—or men would have said that only the down-and-outer needed to be saved. Two reasons are given by our Lord for the “must” of verse 7: (1) The Kingdom of God is a spiritual kingdom, and cannot be entered byway of our human nature; and (2) “That which is born of the flesh is flesh” and is radically and essentially bad. To learn why the flesh is bad read Jeremiah 13:23, and Galatians 5:19-21. Scripture ou this point is almost diametrically opposed to much of the teachings in our schools and colleges. But God’s Word is right; let us follow it. 11. What? (w. 8-13). The new birth is a divine mystery, not fathomable by human reason. Those who insist that all spiritual truth be put through the little norm of their intelligence will never understand it or receive its blessing. The striding illustration of the life-giving and energizing wind used by our Lord is most illuminating. Wind is unseen, but the results of its movement are evident. Even so the spiritual rebirth of men is an enigma to the worldly man, but even he can see its results in godly living. 111. How? (w. 14-17.) Just as there was healing and life in a look at the uplifted serpent (Num. 21:3), so there is life for a look at the Crucified One. Faith receives God’s perfect provision for sin. Verse 16 may well be regarded as the greatest sentence in the greatest Book in the world. It presents the whole plan of salvation—its source, its ground, its recipients, its condition, and its result. This glorious salvation is for all men — “whosoever” — but some reject it. Notice that God does not condemn them. Their own evil works and desires condemn them (w. 17-20). God in his grace is ready and willing to save, but men love “darkness rather than light”; for their works are evil. Influence of Prayer Prayer is the mightiest influence men can use. Like the dew in summer it makes no noise—it is unseen, tut produces immense results.— George. Moore. But the Beginning This is but the nursery ground, from which we are to be tiansplanted into the great forest of God’s eternal universe. The Sabbath “The Sabbath was made for man”—every man. It is the priceless heritage of every member of the race. We do well to prize and defend it Essence of Prayer Prayer in its essence is not so much the cxpiession of our desire for thirigs at all as of our desire for God Himself.
HOUSEHOLD QUESTIONS pa Items of Interest io rte Hoiwew-tfe K
Instead of sewing ribbon belt to a buckle to he worn on wash dresses, use a snap fastener. Buckle may then be easily removed when washing. • • • To remove marks on paint which have been made with matches, rub them with lemon, then with whiting and finally wash with soap and water. * * * When potatoes have been overboiled and gone to broth, lay a strong cloth in the colander and empty the contents of the saucepan into it. Gather up the cloth as if for a pudding, and squeeze tightly until every drop of mois-
AMei/ae Mrs. Thomas A. Edison
' I ■ i
Cheese Souffle In Ramekins 4 rounded tablespoonfuls of cheese cut up. 1 heaping cupful of fine breadcrumbs. Full half cupful of milk. 2 rounded tablespoonfuls of butter. % teaspoonful of dry mustard. % teaspoonful of salt. Sprinkle of cayenne. 2 eggs. Boil the breadcrumbs in the milk, and then add the cheese, then the butter, already seasoned with the salt, mustard and cayenne, then the well - beaten yolks, then the whites beaten to a stiff froth. Bake in a buttered dish for twenty minutes in a moderate oven. Copyright.—WNU Service. A Purpose in Life We are escorted on every hand through life by spiritual agents, and a beneficent purpose lies in wait for us.—Emerson.
Here's Simple Way to Ease a Cold
I
Two Quick-Acting, Quick-Dissolving Bayer Aspirin Tablets with a Glass of Water
The modern way to ease a cold is this: Two Bayer Aspirin tablets the moment you feel a
cold coming on. Then repeat, if necessary, according to instructions in the box. At the same time, if you have a sore throat, crush and dissolve three BAYER tablets in one-third glass of water. And gargle with this mixture twice. The Bayer Aspirin you take internally will act to combat fever and the pains which usually accompany colds. The gargle will act as a medicinal gargle to provide almost instant relief from rawness and pain. It is really marvelous; for it acts like a local anesthetic on the irritated membrane of your throat
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tu re is out, and you will find that you have a light, floury ball. Dates filled with cheese or nuts make a good accompaniment to serve on fruit salads. • • e Mix ingredients for ginger cookies with cold coffee instead of water. It improves them. • • • Crumbled dried bacon is delicious when added to egg omelet. Left-over bacon can be used this way. • '• • If mayonnaise curdles while it is being made, put another yolk of egg into an empty basin, add the curdled sauce gradually to it, stirring all the time, and it will become right again. • « « If the range is wiped carefully with brown paper after cooking greasy food it can be kept bright with little difficulty. • • • Don’t whisper in a sick person’s presence, and don’t look gloomy after the doctor’s visit. Imagination runs riot when one is ill and sick people miss nothing. • • • A clove of garlic rubbed around the salad bowl will season the salad, but will not give it too strong a flavor. © Associated Newspapers.—WNU Service. eeSc I Coleman air-pressurb kgfl Mantle LAMPS Protect your eight with 1 this eye-eaving Coleman Bghtl Kerosene and Gasoline Preaeure Mantle lamps provide a high candlepower of live light... nearest like natural daylight.. . kina to your eyes. You can enjoy the finest light foe only te • night. No home can afford to be without a Coleroan. Buy It from your local Coleman dealer. FREE FoMara-Send Postcard Nowl OITO THE COLEMAN LAMP AND STOVE CO,
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Try this way. Your doctor, we, know, will endorse it. For it is a quick, effective means of combating a cold. Ask for Bayer Aspirin by the . full name at your druggist’s — not s. for “aspirin” alone. 15 C FOR A DOZEN 2 FULL DOZEN FOR 250 VIRTUALLY 10 A TABLET
