Zurich Herald, 1947-04-17, Page 7SALADA
oriz:^ ELA.00
111
Gl� GERALD
SYNOPSIS
CITAPT13 R XII: Miss Bigelow. would
like to call off the _ wedding, but Is
unwilling to face the publicity. While
she and McCale are tanking they look
out the window. Suddenly they bear a
shot. McCale notes a woman dressed in
green who is running away. Miss Bigelow.
and McCale reach the front hall, and find
Vallaincourt dying, a bullet wound In his
chest. McCale has the butler call police
lieutenant Donlevy or the homicide squad,
then he slips nut quickly.
CHAPTER XIII
She closed her eyes and let a
shuddering breath escape her lips.
Her hands clasped and unclasped
nervously. He thought she might
faint. She opened her eyes sud-
denly, tense, staggered, but deter-
mined.
"At first there was only Curt
coming up the steps from the path
that cuts across from Charles
Street." The old voice was pained
and hushed. "I knew it was he
from away off. He Jways swag-
gered, sort of, and never wore a
hat. There was also a—a woman—
coming along the outer walk that
conies over the hill from Park
Street."
"A woman in green?"
"Yes, in green." She looked
frightened. "There was someone
along Beacon Street toward the
house. I couldn't see very well. The
person was almost directly under
the window and I was concentrat-
ing -on—on Curt."
"On this side of the street?"
"Yes."
*
Whoever it was had crossed the
street, then, for the figure had been
on the opposite side when McCale
looked. That someone must have
been almost at the door when the
shot was fired? The murderer?
"Man or woman?" he snapped.
"I—I couldn't tell. I was watch-
ing Curt, I told you."
"But the hat. You said the figure
had on a gray raincoat and a gray
hat. Surely you could recognize
the sex from the hat?"
"I'm sorry — I was watching
Curt."
"Yes. Go on."
"I just can't remember what hap-
pened to theni. Curt and the woman
in green almost met at the gate, but
he was a little ahead. I thought
he turned his head to look at her.
. . . I'ni not sure. Then—I'm
sorry. It's all confused. There was
just the shot. I closed my eyes, 1
think. Then you were behind me
and I did notice someone—the wo-
man in green, I believe, running
off into the fog."
* t *
Then she went to an old, battered
desk that stood in a corner of the
room. Pressing a spring that
opened a secret drawer, she took
out a small envelope from which
she shook a piece of paper.
"You'd better have this." She
spoke almost furtively, and added,•
"If the house is searched, they'd
be bound to find it."
He took it over to the light and
saw it was the merest corner off
the edge of a letter.
when you control the dough
you promise to me, lover.
will be ours.
e's to crime. Ha, ha.
"This then,", he said, straighten-
, ing up, "Is what really sent you to
lie."
"Yes,' she murmured. "I found
it in the drawing room grate. It
was, surely a note to Curt. He must
have tried to burn it in this house.
You see how it proved almost all
• my suspicions?"
He returned the fragment to its
envelope, slipped the envelope into
his inside pocket. No time to lose
Mow.
"The woman in green had red
hair, didn't she?" he asked, coldly.
She looked for a moment down
into an abyss of sheer terror,
"I-1 don't know," she faltered.
"I was looking at Curt."
Disappointment and wrath flash-
ed across his eyes, was as quickly
gone. He only said, "Courage, then
111 see you tomorrow."
She put out her hand1111pulsivcly,
as if prompted to explain away his
disilluMon in her, A long 'moment
passed. She turned to the fire. Ile
Went out,
There was 110 ane in the hall.
~' OWN
W.N.W. PUATWEti'
The body of Curt Vallaincour lay
long and dark and lifeless, half in,
half out of the light thrown by the
scones on each side of a console
table,
McCale stopped by the still form.
He knelt and noticed that Curt had
been shot a little above the heart,
at close range, as if someone had
walked up to him and let him have
it. It was a miracle he had man-
aged to get up the steps to the
door. A less virile person would
have dropped dead in his tracks.
* ** *
He frisked the body until he cane
upon a key ring that held a number
of keys. Satisfied that one of these
must be the key to the dead man's
apartment, he rearranged the cloth-
ing, walked to the door, eased it
open and slipped out.
At Park Square, McCale hopped
into a erasing cab which put him
down at 413 Fcnsroad in six min-
utes fiat.
Four -thirteen was a big hunk of
concrete and stainless steel.
The self-service elevator whisked
him to the third floor. He stopped
before the number 13 and listened
carefully, his ear to the door.
After he'd entered, he stood com-
pletely still, testing the silence that
doorway at his right gave entrance
to a large living room.
There were two doorways in bads
and a little to the left of him as he
stood motionless in the center .of
the carpet. Not a board creaked
or a pin dropped, but the hair on
the hack of his head stood up warn-
ingly. :Moisture beaded his palms.
He swiveled slowly, expecting—
anything.
* t *
A woman stood in the first door-
way, Tall, dark, voluptuous, she
lounged, white-faced, breathless, in
a peculiarly familiar attitude, Her
face was so white she seemed all
lipstick in the glare of so many
lights. If she had had a cigarette
in that mouth—Memory tugged at
McCale and he knew it was Shari
Lynn. She wore a dark green wool
dress
"Who are you?" he said huskily.
She moved slowly toward hint, eyes
wary. For a moment he ignored
her.
"You were a fool to cone directly
here," he said then.
Apprehension widened her eyes
for a moment, bringing out unusual
pected lines in her face. She. sat
down unsteadily on a chair and ran
nervous fingers through dark dyed
hair.
* M *
She's scared, McCale thought.
"Curt Vallaincourt has just been
shot," he said.
Watching her closely he was cer-
tain that it wasn't news to her—
that she already knew.
"Who are you—a dick? I didn't
kill him."
"You were there."
She was guarded now. Her eyes
narrowed and she clutched the
glass with shaking fingers. "You've
got to prove that, copper."
"I'm not the police."
"Then who' are you? What are
you doing here?"
"']'n1 a private •dick. 1 am, how-
ever, investigating Curt Vallain-
cotirt's murder."
Curiously, she scented relieved.
He soon found out why. A crafty
look slid into her eyes. She almost
smiled.
"Listen, then. I'm not saying 1
don't know Curt had been killed,
I'll even admit maybe I was near
enough to have seen it done, 1
might give you information as to
wito did, mister."
"I'm listening. But make it quick.
I want to frisk the place before the
cops crawl all over it."
She understood the necessity for
speed and went on hurriedly. "1
was up here having a couple of
drinks with Curt before he went to
the wedding rehearsal. I decided
to wait until he got back. He was
gone a long time—too long. i
grabbed a cab, and got nut at the
music shop near Park Square. 1
was paying off the taxi when f saw
Curt cutting across the path to
Beacon street."
(To be Continued)
HOMES FOR BOMBED.OUT FRENCH
Noisy -le -Sec, a village near Paris, was almost .totally dessroyed in a 1944 bombing raid.
town is building over the ruins. These prefabricated bungalows came from America, The town also
has prefabs made m several European countries.
Today a model
The state allotted new homes to families with three or more children whose homes were more than
85 per cent destroyed. Andre Raimbeaud and family are shown examining the remains of their old
home and enjoying the comfort of their row one. Note pictures of DeGaulle and Roosevelt.
How Can 1?
By Anne Ashley
Q. How can I relieve a sore
throat?
A. One suggested remedy is to
take a tablespoonful of linseed and
boil it for an hour in a pint of
water. Strain and add to it the juice
of one lemon and a tablespoonful
of sugar. Take a teaspoonful oc-
casionally,
Q. How can I remove an odor
from the hands?
A. Put a little dry mustard in
cold water and rub it on the hands;
then rinse in cold water.
Q. How can I prevent green pep-
pers from turning brown?
. A. If green peppers are oiled first
before baking, they will not turn
brown in the oven.
Q. How can I skin boiled po-
tatoes easily?
A. When preparing potatoes for
boiling, instead of peeling the whole
potato, just peel a narrow strip en-
tirely around the middle of each
potato, lengthwise. When cooked,
the skins will slip off easily.
Q. How can I prevent material
from stretching out of shape when
cutting dresses?
A. Baste around the neckline and
arrn holes after cutting, and the
goods will not stretch out of shape,
•
4536
SIZES
12 20, 40
Comfort and style tor gardening,
hiking, beaching! Simple -to -sew
Pattern 4536 brings you overalls, a
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you'll wear it over many outfits.
Pattern 4536 in sizes 12, 14, 10
18, 20; 40. Size 16 overalls 3 yds
35 -in. nap; jacket [% yds,.
Send TWENTY-FIVE CENTS
(25c) in coins (stamps cannot be
accepted) for this pattern to Room
421, 73 Adelaide St. West, Toronto
Print plainly SIZE NAME, AT).
1)RHSS, STYI.R NUMBER.
ISSUE 16 --1017
Sunday School Lesson
THE KINGDOM
STRENGTHENED AND
ENLARGED
2 Samuel 5:3-4, 9-12; 7:8-13
Golden Text.—David went on,
and grew great, and the Lord God
of hosts was with him. -2 Samuel
5:10.
When news,; reached ;England of
,the Battle of Saratoga in the Am-
erican Revolutionary War with the
defeat and surrender of General
Burgoyne;, someone remarked to
the econaunist, Adam Smith, "The
nation is doomed," and the eminent
author of "The Wealth of Nations"
replied, "There is a great deal' of
doom in a station."
The remark is amply illustrated
in the history of nations, but per-
haps nowhere more pointedly than
in the history of Israel. When one
considers alt that happened, the
marvel is that there should have
been survidal at all.
Palestine seemed doomed almost
in the very beginning when the
armies of Israel went down to
defeat, with Saul, who had begun
his rule so"auspiciously, a suicide on
the field of battle. But David, a
pian of .the sword rather than the
harp, soon made his prowess felt,
consolidating, enlarging the king-
dom.
*. * *•t
Then cane the reign of Solomon,
a long period of peace and apparent
prosperity—but with oppression.
Peter says in his eSecond Epistle
that "holy men of God spake as
they were moved by the Holy
Ghost." They were moved to
write with the candor of realism
and truth, for the sins of David,
especially the sin of adultery and
the murder of the man whom he
had wronged, are set down beside
his great' qualities of heroism, ten-
derness.
* * *
The strength of David was in his
'magnanimity. David acknowledged
his wrong -doing. When he ex-
pressed a longing for a drink from
the well of. Bethlehem, three war-'
riors went through the enemy lines
risking their lives to bring it to
him. But it was too sacred for
him to drink
It was, be said, the blood of nien
who had pit their lives in jeopardy.
So he poured it out on the ground
as a sacred offering.
How many of tis have that spirit
toward the many men—and women
—wllo have so recently risked and
given their lives that we may have
life, liberty, and happiness.
The Artistic Bride
A brand new bride decided to
risk asking some people in for
dinner. After a prolonged session
with a cookbook, she selected two
or three recipes she considered
promising, went .to her grocer's
and read off her list of ingredients:
A quarter pound of white seediess
grapes, three oranges, two tart
apples. three cloves, the breast of
a chicken,. a can of pig's feet, a
spring onion, a zuchino, three
leeks and a half pint of dried black-
eyed peas.
The grocer paled as he listened,
"Lady," he said, "what are you
snaking --,a painting?"
Modern Etiquette
By Roberta Lee
1. Should a person write a letter
when in an ugly mood, or' feeling
depressed?
2. Is it obligatory that relatives
and friends send gifts to a newly -
engaged girl?
3. When visiting in a home,
should one address the servants as
Mr. Brown and Miss Jones?
4. Is it necessary to bow each
time when meeting the sante per-
son a number of tines in succes-
sion?
5. If there are to be Three speak-
ers at a public dinner, or banquet,
how much time should be allotted
to each speaker?
6. Is it customary for the bride
to give presents to her bridesmaids?
Answers
1. Absolutely not; and an excel-
lent rule to follow, if one does
write a letter under these circum-
stances, is to hold the letter until
the following morning, then read
it again. In nine cases out of ten,
the letter will not be mailed. 2. No,
but one who is financially able and
generous often does. 3 No; address
them as Charles and Mary. 4. No;
merely smile. 5. Fifteen to twenty
minutes is sufficient. 6. Yes.
C.N.E. BULLETIN
How To Set Ta.bie
For Family Events
Sritable settings representing
the six most important events in
a woman's life, will be artistic-
ally displayed in one section of
the Women's Building at the
Canadian National Exhibition
this year.
They will demonstrate the en-
gagement party, wedding party,
the bride's first dinner, the
Christening, after -theatre party
and informal entertaining.
Set up in the manner of the
Museum of Modern Art and
complete with silver, linen, food
and flowers, home -makers from
coast to coast will talk about
these artistic table : settings
weeks after.
Shopping' lists, recipes and
menus corresponding to all the
meals displayed, will be avail-
able to those visiting the C.N.E.,
it is pointed out. Particulars on
quilting, sewing and baking con-
tests may be obtained now by
writing direct to Women's
Section, C.N.E. Grounds, To-
ronto.
A cracked furnace firebox may
allow fumes to escape into the •
house and cause asphyxiation.
Tim PARTY FAVORITE
among coffees is Maxwell
rouse. It stimulates and
cheers because it's Radiant
Roasted to develop every
last atom of goodness in its
extra -rich blend.
The Worker
The indoor worker is often over
fatigued by the monotony of his work
until it gets on his nerves and brings
headaches, irritability, loss of sleep
and indigestion.
A good way to relieve this condi-
tion is to build up nervous energy
with Dr. Chase's Nerve Food, the
mineral and Vitamin B1 tonic.
Ask for the new econ-
omy size bottle of
Dr. Chase's
Nerve Food
60 pills-60cts.
180 pills—$1.50
*No ration
coupons
required
s IS u . s7•+%::�C%<\ii\`Y'es'
.Delicious
CROWN BRAND
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—particularly
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Its goodness and
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day with Crown Brand Corn Syrup than ever before.
As a sweetener in baking Crown Brand Corn Syrup
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Try it also as a delicious spread on bread, toast, scones;
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CROWN BRAND C ' RN SYRUP
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Also Monufaciurers of Canada Corn Starch
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