ug That Is Easy to Crochet in Triangles Pattern 1240 Like to turn rug-maker for a time, and both make and design Your own colorful rugs? Easy cro- cheted triangles joined in strips or hexagons make exciting new designs. Crochet them of rug wool, candlewicking or rags. You can make your rug any desired size. Pattern 1240 contains directions for making rugs in various ar- rangements; an illustration of them and of all stitches needed; material requirements; color sug- gestions. Send 15 cents in stamps or coins {coins preferred) for this pattern to The Sewing Circle Needlecraft Dept., 82 Eighth Avenue, New York, N. VY. Write plainly pattern number, your same and address, By Mary Schumann Copyright by Macrae Smith Ce. WNU Bervice SYNOPSIS Kezia Marsh, pretty, selfizh and twenty, ar. rives home in Corinth from school and is met by her older brother, Hugh. He drives her to the Marsh home where her widowed mother, Fluvanna, a warm-hearted, seli-sacrificing and understanding soul, welcomes her. Kezias sis. ter, Margery, plump and matronly with the care of three children, is at lunch with them. Hugh's wife, Dorrie, has pleaded a previous engagement. On the way back to his job at the steel plant founded by one of his fore. bears, Hugh passes Doc Hiller, a boyhood friend whom he no longer sees frequently be. cause of Dorrie’s antipathy, Fluvanna Marsh wakens the next morning from a dream about her late husband, Jim, whose unstable char. acter she fears Kezia has inherited. Ellen Pendleton comes over, She is an artistically inclined gir! who is a distant niece of Flu vanna's and a favorite of Hugh's. She hap- pily tells Fluvanna she has become engaged to Jerry Purdue. Ellen fears that her father and mother, Gavin and Lizzie, will not ap- prove the match. Hugh and Dorrie go out to the Freeland Farms to dance with their friends, Cun and Joan Whitney, Whitney, who has been out of work, announces that he has a new position. Cun and Dorrie dance to. gether and then disappear for a while. Dane. Hugh is amazed to find her in tly she has some secret worry ing with Joan tears. Appar band, Cun. When Fen and Jerry speak about their engagement to Ellen's par. ents, Lizzie is disagreeable until Jerry sym. pathizes with her imagined ailments. The mat. ter is left pending. Unexpectedly Hugh has to visit a neighboring city on business. Return. ing home to ask Dorrie to sccompany him he finds her telephoning. In confusion she quick without saying good by. After agrees to accompany him, course she didn't want him to act dithering in her presence—give her burning glances. She liked him to be reserved. Still, if only once his eyes had flickered in her direction with trust and mutuality, made her aware that he remembered +» She clasped the palms of her hands together. ‘You know, God,” she said soundlessly, ‘‘that I don’t bother You very often, but I do be- lieve in You. For I prayed to go to art school . . Mother was so against it. Suddenly she gave in-— gave in all at once for no reason at alll , . . So You must have done it. . . And this time it is about Jerry . . I love him so terribly that I don’t believe I can go on living if I don't get him. I don’t have to tell You—You understand. Please don't let him stop loving me -—ever . Thank You. Amen.” Three hours before this Kezia switched out the light in her room with the gold and green chintz draperies, snuggled down in her pil- low. The night wind rustled the oaks, stole in with the fragrance of honeysuckle; the window was a framed oblong of silver from the moon; the clock downstairs tinkled the half hour. Kezia was very sleepy, very contented with her- self. The power she had over men was tremendous—simply tremendous. It was all quite easy, just as Lolly had said. It worked every time. You made your eyes soft and in- eerie mers By Louise Brown EMEMBER the days when the family gathered around the celling when general light is desired. supplies light for seeing as well as decoration, providing for the eye tasks of every member of the family. Dark shades are bowl, better qu t the diffusing glass the lamp that stood on the cen- ter table in the living room? Grouped In that pool of light in an otherwise dark room, Mother that are used only for decora did her mending, Dad scanned | tive purposes. the evening paper and the chil In general, dren did their lessons. definitely a thing of the past, and puny little eoclored bulbs are being confined to fixtures ward to the book, newspaper or sewing, and the remainder up- ward into the room where ft helps to {lluminate the area surrounding the chair, desk, or divan. nocent, got your face very close to theirs, spoke low, and said “You” a great many times . It had worked with Walter DeGraffe, with Arthur, with Pete Matthews—Pete Weather Control Scientists can now control the weather of the world if it wants . That, at least, is the opinion of Dr. Frank R. Ruff, life-time CHAPTER IV—Continued sniffs “l am glad I had to go to Con- gress City." He waited. ‘Not pin- the new lamps student of the effect of climate on health. ing to have me go to New York? was almost engaged to that Pease girl, too—with Eric Olsen, with Jer- Those days are happily gone have greater height for better spread and ntilization of light; Cove lighting is beeoming in { Got over it?" “It's all right. If you couldn’t— | you couldn't, I suppose,” she an- | swered. ‘‘Sweet here, isn’t it? Too | bad we have to leave. I could loaf | here all afternoon.” i “And yet at first you said you | couldn't go. When I came in''—his | brows puzzled. “By the way, who creasingly popular, particularly in new bomes. Here the light comes from a cove or trough buflt around the celling with concealed bulbs shedding a soft ry Purdue tonight. Ellen didn't need to think she had that boy on a hook! . . . When he was getting out the ice cubes, he had turned his eyes on her—he had keen eyes, dark brown with a sort of droop to them-—and said, their shades have white linings for greater efficiency and in creased quantities of useful light; their shades are open at the top to contribute larger amounts of {Illumination through- radiance throughout the room out the room. These virtues When combined with appropri combine to help achieve soft. gte floor and table lamps, a ness in lighting result lighting flexibility that assures forever, No room can rightful ly call itself a living room to day, in the real sense of the term, unless every chair has a lamp beside it or nearby, We want to be comfortable at our work or play-—and perfect com- fort depends as much on light for easy seeing as on an easy chair, To bring frigid weather to Eu- rope, for example, he recently said all that is necessary is to close the strip of ocean between the Florida Keys and the main- land. The warm gulf stream flows through here on its way across the Atlantic to Europe. If it were maximum 3 gut off Europe would no longer have the warm current to mod- erate its climate. — Washington Post. MUSCLES FELT STIFF AND SORE Got Quick RELIEF - From Pain JS— If muscles in your legs, arms, chest, back or shoulders feel stiff and sore, get a bottle of Hamlins Wizard Oil and get uick relief. Rub it on—rub it in. { arms—soot hés—gives wonderful com. fort. Will not stain. At all druggists, LLY 18] Ariel 8 For MUSCULAR ACHES and PAINS Due to RKEUMATISM NEURALGIA LUMBAGO CHEST COLDS Strengthening Judgment If you wish to strengthen your fudgment—exercise it. Stomach Gas So Bad Seems To Hurt Heart “The gas on my stomach was so bad § could not eat or sleep. Even my heart seemed to hurt. friend sug- ted Adierika., The first dose | took rought me relief. Now | eat as | wish, sleep fine and never felt better.” =Mrs. Jas. Filler. Adierika acts on BOTH upper and flower bowels while ordinary laxatives act on the lower bowel only. Adlerika ives your system a thorough cleans ng, bringing out old, joisenous matter that you would not believe was in your system and that has been causing gas ains, sour stomach, nervousness and Resdiches Pag” months. ’ . . A a ow ork, ’ “In addivion to intestinal cleansing, Ader thn reduces bocterio and colon boellli.,” Give your bowels a REAL cleansing with Adlerika and see how good Just one spoonful religves and stubborn constipation. Leading Druggists. Resignec to Life What is a philosophy of life but resignation to it, Less Monthly Discomfort Many women, who formerly suf- fered from a weak, run-down con- dition as a result of poor assimila- tion of food, say they benefited by taking CARDUI, a special medicine for women. They found it helped to increase the appetite and improve digestion, thereby bringing them wore strength from thelr food. Naturally there is less discomfort at monthly periods when the system has been strengthened and the vari- ous functions restored and regulated, Cardul, praised by thousands of fs well worth trying. Of course, if benefited, consult a physician. HOT NEWS FROM HOLLYWOOD 1030 P.M; E. 8.7, N. B.C. Red Network LUDEN'S NOW WITH ALKALINE FACTOR You hung up without saying Her body stiffened against his A subterraneous 1 ‘None of my business of course asked you. Ex- cuse me."” He sprang to his feet. “You would ask that!" “I'm not checking your phone calls, my dear. It was just an idle question I didn't think how it sounded when I spoke.” She traced the rock with her fin- In a moment she said: ‘"Any- “Next month—-August." “Well, even then?" she parried The pain vanished. He looked at his watch. “One “Time to go?" “Afraid so.” Ellen switched on her light and looked at the clock on the mantel. Two She poked at the pillow to soften which made you go to sleep? Count- Scenes from the evening over at kept intruding. “Hello, Hello, Jerry!” Kezia had She had helped Ellen with her coat and whispered, just loud enough for Jerry to hear, “He's precious. You're in gorgeous luck, Ellen.” Kezia's hair had been in soft curls all over her head, an effect which looked natural, yet had tak- She wore a long white organdy dress, with a huge scarlet chiffon handkerchief drawn through a bracelet. “Just two tables of bridge—you know Art? And that's Hugh over there . . Hugh, put up the card tables like a love!” she said. Mar. gery and Will Platt, and Mrs. Marsh — Dorrie — beside the man- tel.” And Dorrie had been very cor- dial, had said to Jerry: “Welcome to the family!” Her voice had a rich moving animation sometimes. “We look like the home guard drawn up to receive you, but we're really not so formidable.” Hugh had been fine—always was. “1 wondered why you were so dis- turbingly pretty this spring, Ellen . « +» 80 this is the reason!” Will Platt had told her of the pictures he had seen in the Roerich Gallery recently . . . poetry and symbolic mystery, he called them. That was while Kezia was out fixing the lunch. She had come in and called ~not Art Williams—but Jerry to come out and help her with the ice cubes, They were gone a long time, and came in laughing . . . But the thing which kept her awake was trivial—even ridiculous. All evening long no look from Jer- ry, no quick little glance of re- assurance that said: “Hello, dear . « » all right?” So absorbed in being agreeable to Dorrie, to Mar- gery, to Kezia, that she might have been anyone-—just someone whom he had met for the first time and was not interested inl , + « Of “I'm Not Checking Your Phone Calls, My Dear.” “Don't stand so close; splash that dress. you look charming tonight?’ She answered in a half “I'm not really so- He and replied, phisticated, you know!" had understood. a start, assured herself. Like the others. She might have a little fun with Jerry-— show Ellen—then hand him back to her . . . CHAPTER V The telephone jangled constantly for Kezia. Young people came and went with chatter and laughter, the radio played at all hours and meals frequently were delayed, for Kezia was always hurrying from one en- gagement to another. The constant clamor began to pall on Fluvanna, and her usual serenity was now oo- casionally disturbed. It was a little hard to become ad- justed to the furore of excitement after the quiet winter. Fluvanna assured herself that it was good for her—good to have a gay young person in the house. Kezia must have this youthful time of pleas- ure. This springtime of her life was so fugitive; its memories threaded the pattern of life with shining strands for the years to For the past week, Margery had been having illness in her family and had sent the boys over to stay with her each day. Will were a strenuous pair, Proper home lighting today Perhaps most noteworthy of the features of these new lamps eye-comfort and ox Be Extended 70 Per Cent Wool is a perfectly elastic ma- It is unique in this charac- No matter how much it is Philadelphia wool fiber, if the A single when the stretching force is re- Wool fibers are fine and light in inch. The weight of such a fiber, six inches of an ounce. In fact, if 90s quality one mile the total weight would only be a hundredth of an ounce. There- length. The heat retaining power of cloth- in every climate. Wool has the lowest conductivity of any fabric, and therefore will retain heat in a warm body which it covers for the As wool prevents as slow as cotton in increasing its conductivity due to moisture and will retain heat better even when getting wet. Mammoth Broth was brewed at the revival of the famous old-time Gypsy party at Baildon, Yorks, says London Tit- Bits Magazine. Five thousand guests partook of it, and more than 3,000 pounds sterling was raised for charity in the carnival that followed. The broth, which was made from an ancient recipe, was composed chiefly of 1,000 pounds of vegetables plus 600 pounds of peas, 500 pounds of meat, and 60 pounds of condi- ments. There were also scores of chickens and little-known herbs to give it piquancy. The preparation alone took three days and the cook- ing twenty-four hours! This broth is reminiscent of a certain very holy soup made once in seven years by the monks of a remote monastery in the Keun Lun mountains on the borders of Tibet. It is brewed in immense iron cauldrons, each eight feet high, and the pilgrims walk slowly round the rim of raised plat- forms. Sometimes their religious fervor exceeds their discretion and Plunge head first in, to become 58 Montauk Point History Is Shrouded in Mystery Montauk’s famous lighthouse, a great structure 168 feet above sea level, had its first tower erected in 1796. Some of the history of Mon- tauk is shrouded in mystery. Folks did not talk too loud nor put their thoughts on paper about the slave ships in the 1850s which unloaded there, asserts a writer in the New York Times. There were mutinies, murder, no doubt, and strange black men sometimes swam or rowed ashore and disappeared to- ward Sag harbor, where they could find others speaking Spanish and Portuguese dialects. Eastern Long Island's Indians England Narragansetts amicably. Manhassets on Shelter island, anoth- er brother the Shinnecocks and a third brother, Wyandanch, the Mon- taukett tribe. The last named died in 1658 and his young son, Wyan- combe, became chief. But he died soon of smallpox, which greatly re- duced the Montauk tribe in the next few years. | Now and then they were egged {on to warfare by the Narragan- | setts, but Lion Gardiner, for whom the peacemaker on more than one | occasion. Even up to the 1860s and 1870s Montauk point remained almost a wilderness. Greenland Under Cover of Solid Blanket of Ice Greenland is inhabited by both whites and Eskimos. It is controlled {by Denmark. It is 25 times as large as Ireland, its area being about 827,300 square miles. No for- eigner can live on the island or trade in the country without spe- cial permission from the authorities. Greenland was originally discov- Arrival of Canal Boats Big Event Century Ago New marvels of transportation kept the American public wondering a hundred years ago, records over new waterways being made almost every week, especially in Columbus, where the “‘great Ohio canal’ was within a year of completion to the Ohio river. The week of September 20, 1831, saw some events come to pass that had a tremendous influ. ence on the future of that state. Under the heading ‘More Welcome Arrivals,” the Columbus Sentinel of September 27 said: “On Monday three canal boats ar- rived at this town, viz.: the Cine cinnati, Red Rover and Lady Jane, These were the first boats that had passed the Lick- The first fruits of nav- igable commerce with the lakes and the state of New York to the town of Columbus was welcomed by the firing of a six-pounder, the ringing of the state house bell, a proces- sion of citizens and an address from a committee and a collation, par taken in common by the boats’ com- pany and citizens. The scene was intensely gratifying to the man of business and admirers of internal improvement; and it is hardly less animating to the youth and very many of the adults in this place, who had never seen any watercraft superior to the Orleans flat. The sight of those boats was marvelous to some slow calculating pioneers of these Western wilds, who never believed that in their day a canal boat would reach Columbus from the lake. The first boat was adapted to heighten the marvel. It was the Cincinnati, which was built at the city of New York and actually float- ed on the briny waves in that har bor; had passed up the majestic Hudson; the great Western canal, and plied the Erie and Ohio canal distance of 240 miles.” Such was progress in those days. Fighting Cattie of South France The fighting cattle of South France bear a strong resemblance to the extinct aurochs. Their home is in the Rhone delta and particu larly the Island of Camargue, situ-