Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1931-10-15, Page 6" a as vi ih3 4'. urder Cam. �► PHILP- VANCE STORY What •New . York. Is Wearing BY Al!IhIEB'l LE' W'ORTHINGTak flluati'aied 111:essrrockite Lessors Fir • ttislioel W". ktoryI- P'¢ite-n HOW' TO ORDER PATTERNS•. • Write your name and address plain - y, giving "number and size •of such patterns as•you want. Enclose 20c in ,,stemps•or•coin' ,(,eosin, preferred;.wrap it carefully) for each number,, and address your;: order. to Wilson Pattern Serviee, 73 West•Adelaide,St., Toronto.. .This cunning. peplum model will' win instant ;appeal with. smart girls of 6, '8,10,,.12. and 14 years; - : It bas such a ,grown-up air, yet. it. it practical as can)* for classroom.. A wool challis printinrich: brown. . tone made the - original. The tricky' little tab collar is 'vivid red to. match the narrow• cuff bands of the 'slightly full ••sle eve:. The belt .repeats the plain red challis. In its place,' a red patent leather. 'belt may be': worn, if pre- ferred. snd it's surprisingly easy to make tyle No. 3291. may also be worn for "best" with short puffed- sleeves as in miniature back view, fashioned of-pasteLred�fla.�crepe,sig or of dark .green wool crepe. Size 8 requires • 2', • yards' 35 -inch, - with U. yard 35 -inch contrasting., Rayon flecked wool voile and sheer worsteds in prints are ever so smart. Wintex. Bulbs'; M. S,rrtsce'Ss7" vith bulbs depends mote than, anything else on ' proper root growtly, and"hi?st�of the failure and anti -a riieagsth�os Gave ;;po%teala ,p a 'x eve bulbs and grown .them •on, with the. only result 'a few leaves of stunted growth. and no bloom can be traced to ,this cause. If 'the plants were turned out of the got it': would be Bund 'in. `many • csees that: there were very•few• roots., Some Varieties of bulbs: will not stand fore- ing at all, others will: stand a certain amount , and some attn. be forced. tai .come antob]ooam several weeks ahead, of time.. The easiest' grown aid the Onesthat offer. the most chance of sue- eess when grown in the house.are'the 'Paper , White' Narch,sus and the: the: Chinese . Sacred Lily which.. can be. grown in..pots; in. •the usual manner' or in fiat bowls of water,'the bulbs'. being kept in place ,by pebbles—these bowls 0r•• pots should, he; kept in. a 'dark cool place -until -roots have -been :formed; and 'when brobght to the light they. should .be placed ' wh'ere, they .can get ,the most 'sunshine, ,otherwise the leav "'and lower stalks will grow verso `a 'and: wea ' .' . " ase: p u bs are for indoor use only, -not being suitable,, or outdoor planting in Canada. If *albs -are plante&irrsuccession-a week ar-iwo.,spat#the-perioci:.o bttLQ c a be 'lengthened considerably.—T It. t® B.Y 8. S. VAN DINE w • CHAPTER ?.L.—(C:ont'd.) Meridian . was .glaring at Vance. with dazed comprehension: • "Oh, I've half suspected the truth ver.- aeincu-aP-ard..e s—death ".: n; went on, in answer to th"e other's .un= spoken. question. • "But I .wasn't sura, of it until, last night when he went out of his 'sway",tbhang the -guilt an Mr.; Arneseon ". • "Ear? - What's•.. that?" Arnesson turned from the •telephone. "Oh', yes," nodded Vaadh.. were tp'pay the penalty., You'd:peen chosen•`from the first as ':he victim..`I1.c 'even suggepted the possibility of your , Arnesson. did not seem as surprised: as .one would have expected.. `,`r knew the prafessorihetetlme,"'km said. ,.,"He ,was. Intensely jealous of --jag _iiia .,.intellectual .griit�—I_ve_ seen that for months: ' ..I've done all the work, on his;new book, and he's resent- ed every academic honor paid' me..l've had an idea he was, back • of aU this,', deviltry; but. I wasn't sure. I didn't think; though, • he'd try to •send me to the electric chair.' • • • . • Vance got up and,' going to Arne; - son, held out his hand. - ' -"There- was no'dang er of;that. And I want to apologize- for the. way I've treate(,you.this ;past half hour. Mere- ly. a : matter : of tactics. 'Y' see, we hadn'•t'.any, rear -;evidence, .arid I waa Itopi`n' "to "force his hand." Arnesson grinned sombrely. "`No apology necessary, old son. I knew you didn't have your.' eye, on me. .When you began riding ane I saw it was only technique. Didn't know, what you were after, but I followed your cues the hest I could. „ Hope;I didn't bungle tae. job.' • • Corned -aha mick" Iiled''Our ''attentio to' -'The P'rete'n = er- howis"-any' laughter-:gett,rg-or?'= "Did I?" Arnesson' frowned with . »�. e i T ens , commented Markham... D'you think she will make a great. ;deep perplexity. "But what I don't "The fact is, he didn't ;expect to'singer?'', understand+_is�vlh.y he;.shooOld..... lasse-.have'to-do-ist$atrall�He-thought-we'�,---The teacher coughe<lrand seethed at taken, the cyanide when he thought it sero ger the name for ourselves.' a loss for a reply. was you• suspected. Markham did not .speak . for sever': "1 -it is very hard"too-'say'," &aain m the.`11�Iontreal Star. "That particular point we 11iriever moments: • He sat frowning reproach_ at last. e of Trill ,, ' ed the•. girl's•identificatun. Or he may the blotter:' the qualifications?" 1, wrath against Arnesson, for Arnes- son, d' ye see, was to play the penalty. Such a Fevgnge was more potent, and ,henee' more satisfying than the melt killin e of the.. n .o it .waS the .great grim joke behind the lesser, jokes . of .the murders them-, selves . "Hewever, • this fiendish scheme had one great disadvantages :though the professor did not see it. .It laid the -affair open '•to .psyc,hological atialysi , and at the outset' I was able .to poste- late a mathe•ri'atieian as the :criminal .r agent.: 'The difficulty. of nainingt the murderer lay in the fact .that nearly every, passlble'.suspect wasa.a• rnafhe=- inatiei'an:j •The.:only ane I.knew tv, l e innocent' was Arnesson,- for -he Was. the only one who consistently meitair,.; ed • a psychic .balance—that is, who earns tsar fly—iii ach a aged=the==e o do arising, frons his protected-. ab_struse speculations.` Giving. full rein to one's cynicism. ,as one goes along., produces a •normal:outlet and maintains an-emo tional equilIbruim. The man, who re- presses his.'sadism-:.and accumulates his cynicism beneath a grave "and stoical `exterior` is always ' liable to dangerous -culminations. This is'why I knew Arnesson :was ncapable of the _Bishop-: murders:" ... ,•.. ..: 'Markham smoked moodily ''for ' a •time. "You say you were,convinced of",Dil- lard'1, guilt last night when' you' re membered the' Character of .Bishop Arnesson. .. ?" " "Yes-oh,•,yes. That gave me cite,. motive: . At that moment I realized that • the.'professor's object was- to shoulder Arnesson ;with the ,guilt, aid. that' the signature'to. the notes had been : chosen for that purpose.", "He waited, a long •time before :he „ Packed_ full. of ' tendert plump,; unc'rusbrd Sultanas,. retainirit; the fine flavor of the fresh fruit. ;Just. • atiwholesome as.,they are deliclyous., dog his day 'in court,;'' : I felt 'no more, compunction in aiding a mo'nster• like Dillard into the beyond.:that 'I 'would have in crushing Out a poisonous• rep'. tile' in the act. of "striking." • *-•.,,* The "suicide of .Prof. Dillard, ter- minated the 'famous -Bishop murder case. ' The» f�•ollowing year Arness�•n. and 'Belle "Dillard were anarri'ed quiet- ly and sailed for Norway, where' their made their home. (The •End•.) • , • - Good Start Dora was in 'the middle of her sing- Can. and Cannot . Astronomer`s can weigh a star; • . And tell a planet's girth, And bring. the moon from skies afar Well. nigh in touch wi•th,earth.• r. But who can tune: the throstle's throat -Or Match the streamlet's song. Or' estimate the joyous note Upon the skylark's tongue? ,11y. mathematics 'men can cc The motions atoms make, And calculate the.vast amount Of force when billows break. But love's' equation cannot be. 'My sign or Aguires ,given,. - ing lesson When her mother came into. For, bqundless as eternity, the room, and t en broke in•. "Ahs- It; touches .earth: an'd. heaven, -Cao:per, in::the. Methodist ' Magazine. • ' . —y 1.. Truth --.ow," said Vance. "Maybe h fear= fully; his' fingers tapping. a tattoo .on .. • "But surely she possesses some :T.ittle,.. rairla..gras-eyarda .. • outh • p a s he .sudden! revolter' ne the :dei .Neat and trial. they�'stand" p y not tell us last night that the •pro- fainly." • , • Eloguejnt of progress. �- Through4hervirairiland. - Wide new fields, in tillage Cattled slope and knoll From each little 'village Nature taking toll; • ' Ere she yields her treasures „ • Recompense for toil, Thus she holds the living Bonded . '. Bonded to the soil. -Lynette; in the 'Calgary Herald. - ,w. • TAI D . If you are sure of omnipotent aid, what, can be too heavy for you? ' Be- gin, the. day joyously, and let no shade of doubt come between thee and the eternal • sunshine. - have;seen through m reception. Per= "*hy,' he asked at lend "did: you _:'well=-ler=:shes` aot-a m r ce of'shouldering you wvith the onus. , . • essor and not Arnesson was the B'ish- -,a--- ' As.h o himself the human a knows what ' » .�. __ y i The worlds larges. g _ .4 goes' n eheart during op" Y dear Markham.. What else. laRtti•ra$e vine .has let us think _ the last dark hour." could I do? In 'the first place, you, been found in the Great Smoky Moun- Arnesson did not move. He was 'wouldn't have believed me, and would tains National Park, according to an looking straight into Vance's eyes mast. likely , have suggested another announcement from • the Department of with penetrating, shrewdness. ocean trip, what? Furthermore, it the Interior. " 1.:- "Oh, "Oh, *ell," he said at length "we'll • "we > was essential to let the •profess.rr This giantfound, by Dr: Herman 'S.. let it go at that:.' : Anyway, thanks!", think we' suspected Arnesson. 'Other baboon, Porhi,erly .of the University of wise we'd have had no chance to force 'Chicago, is desc:ibed as ninety inches. M klia 'CHAPTER XLI. •. " � the issue as we did. Subterfuge .wase 'incircumference at a point twelve feet C'HA' T ,� and V.ance,.and 1 .our only hope; and •I knew that if you from the. ground.. It. i's supported .by When ar m_ departed from the Dillard house an and the Sergeant suspected-hiim you'd -eve -large -trees, and'. Is estimated to be hour latera I thought the Bishop affair : be sure to. give the game away. As it Was -oven, And --it-was-over=as far.as.,.was,youul didn't' haveio dissemble; and the public was. concerned. But there lot it all worked out beautifully." was another revelation' to 'come; and. The Sergeant shifted his positien it was, in al way;: the most astounding uneasily,, took his cigar slowly from of all the factsthat had been brought to,light that day.' ' Heath joined us at the District ;At= torney's• office after lunch for there were. several delicate 'officialmatters to be discussed; and later that after- noon Vance reviewed the entire case, e5cplaining• mans of its obscure points.: "Arnesson has alieady . suggested OA motive for these -insane crimes,'". he began. "The professor knew that his .position in the world of science was •being, 'usurped by: the younger man. His Mind died begun to lose its fore() and penetration; and 'he real- ized that • lois new book on atomic• structure - was being _.made -..possible, only through Arnesson's help. A 01- ossal hate grew tip in him for, his fos- ter son;' Arnesson'became in his eyes •a kind of monster whom- he himself, turned, to Heath with mock reproach'. like Frankenstein, had created, And "Behold ,what you've got one in: for, who was now rising to destroy him. Sergeant." Try this salad dressing .. it keepsfor weeks! • 7 4A1T•PmOirtNEtSrco MONYAK/e� KRAFT Salad Dressing 1q so thoroughly blended, it will keep for weeks;' ir•stays �,.. good tight down re the fast tangy tea ' ' • gpotmfn[. �i Best at all, it .costs lust one-ballche price von re used to paying. -A generous I/ouiice ler sells tot only 25 :ants. Get some today. • KRAFT Salmi Dressing • Made to goad: or the Makers of Kraft CheeseandV-lveeta •, his mouth, and asked a startling quer. tion. ' "Why, when you hopped • up and pointed at that plate on the mantel, did you switch Arnesson's and. the old gent's glasses?" Vance sighed deeply and gave. a .hopeless -wag:-of--the head: , . "I might' have known that clothing could escape your eagle. eye, Ser- geant." er geant "„ , ' .. Markham thrust- himself , forward over the desk and glared at Vince with angry beat iiderment. ' • "What's this?" he spluttered, his usual self-restraint deserting hill. "You changed the glasses?- You--d•c-- Iibe'ately—" 1 - - "Oh, I say 1" pleaded Vanee. "fat notyour wrathful passions rise." lie' And this -intellectual enmity was aug- mented by- a primitive emotional jail - •oust. ' For ten years he had ceiitre?I in Belle Dillard the accumulated affec- tion of a life of solit'ry bachelorhood; and when he saw that Arnesson was "This is no time,for evasion." Mark - ham's voice Was cold and inexoral.le. "I want an explanation." Vance made a resigned gesture. "My idea, as I've explained, was to fall in with the professes'•s pian and likely to take her from. him, his hat- ,appear • te suspect Arnesson. ibis red and resentment were doubled' in, horning I purposely let hirir see that rote-at-'rty.• ' "we' h-adanci id-eirCe- an -d -that, even -if fi "The motive is nd le �standabie," we arrested Arnesson; it was doubtful said Markham, "but it does not ex• if we could hold him. I knew that i ;1 plain ti., .crimes" the Circumstances hew trld take omen "The ru..tive acted asa spark to the action. Then the win? 'gave me aril dry powder of his pent -tip emotions. inspiration. ' Knowing he had rya iirle in his possession, I brought up the' • subject of suicide and thus planted II. .the id.ra in his mind. He fell int.rthe These n •orders gave relief .o his re- trap, end attempted to poison Arnes • j pressicns, they, met his rsychic need son 'and make it appear like suicide. i for violLnt • expression; and at the saw him surreptitiously empty a snail l same time they answered the dark ' phial of eott.c lhcc fluid, into Arne-4,11's:ouestion, in his mind how he could .iis; ' glass at the ideboard when he paired pose of Arnesson and keep•,Belle Dol-' the wine. , •first intention was to' lard for himself." halt the nitro ler and have' .the 'wino f' "Chit why," Markham asked,'"didn't; analyzed; i coold have search+•;1 he merely murder Ariiessoli and have him and found the phial, and 1 could i done with it?" ; have testified to the act that 1 on • "Yoe overlookthe psychological i him' poison the wine. This evidort'e. aspects of the situation. The, profes-1 in addition to the identification -o4 the sot's mind had disintegrated through •. child, might have answered our'war- long intense repression, Nature, was ' pose, But 1 • decided on a simpler demanding; an outlet. And it'was his I coarse--" • . passionate hatred' of Arnesson that ` ' "'You took the law in yratir tw'i brought the pressure to an explosion haridsl" pain • The--twv--rmpulses•-were�-t-hii•s--••- P a•Da-yo a attlesn, ke to the .contbIneil. It•comnlitting the murders' bar of•.justice? no von give a and ' he wag not only relieving his inhibi i °' 6ISSUE No. 4r. f ' � -- titans; w ns' but he as also ventinghis r least 150 years old. Dr.. Pepoon are, a chestnut tree more Other giants found in the park . by than thirty feet in . dirqumference and a tui.) tree which measures eighteen feet around. He also found a giant _mushroom weighing more than twelve. pounds.. It was not poisonous, but was; too tough for the -table. ' "Even in motion pictures there should be a suggestion that marriage. night be a, lovely thing" A A. Milne itanyone wij t illatee_how_t�Cuth rout • 1 spoken •*ltla:nt otfend'j'ng . some,, T '• • will spare i►o •labor to learn ' theart of it.—Bishop Horne. Send !for ' This FREE BOOK.' Mail the attached eoupon end we will send yon a copy. of our new cook 'book: The (3god Provider," with aver,. hundred delightful Yeeipes Yot p addinge; pier. .ealces. pastries. Rn.. and a wide variety of other things yen can make better with•- . ST.CHARLES' MILK UNSWEETENED I EVAPORATED ' Borden Co.. Limited 115 George St.. Toronto send me a free copy of your new rank book.' N.m...»..».«....»..pee » ddf e,,. . ».. Se.C.i i 'ale CANAdb StAscH (.0 t:MITEO M0NTRE A,. In looking about for a means to- da- stroy Arnesson, he hit upon •the oia. bolica' 'est of the Bishop murders. . -. _._.._�_ y E ,URAL GIA. • THE agonizing aches from neuralgia can be quieted in the same way you would end a •headache. • Take some Aspirin tablets. Take enough to bring complete relief, Aspirin can't hurt anybody. Men and women hent with rheumatism wi'll,. find e same_r�iiondeefuLeomfrrt_ in these tablets.. They aren't rust for hea aches or Bolds,. Read the p ' veb directions covering a dozen anther 'uses; iieuritis, sciatica, . lumbago; muscular pains. - Cold, damp days which penetrate to the -very bones have lost .their terror for those who carts Aspirin tablets with themr AII''drug stores, in t -he familiar little box: '