The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, June 14, 1935, Image 7

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    23
8
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i
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- are in the light for a brief second
From the screen play by W. P. Lipscomb
© starring
X FREDRIC MARCH
CHARLES LAUGHTON
a 20th CENTURY PICTURE
Released thru United Artists
CHAPTER 6 Jean batters through the steel gaie
WHAT HAS GONE BEFORE they pass through.
Jean Valjean, fugitive from the
. French authorities and one Javert in | = poo Druond,
that bars them from the river and
Through dark alleys they wind
their way back to Jean's house in
Cosette, on her
particular, plans to escape once and | knees before a small altar, rises and
for all to England. His plans are in-| comes forward to Marius eagerly.
terrupted by a students’ law reform | For a moment it looks as though .she
. revolt which sweeps over the entire | has forgotten everything Jean has
, city. He attempts to rescue its ring- | done.
leader, young Marius, in love with
i his ward, Cosette. Javert appears on
| the scene, decides Jean is the “man
higher up,” senses his opportunity to | where are you?”
Jean closes the door on them and
backs into the hall.
presence of another person.
“Javert! You're here, I know it—
He senses the
right all previous humiliations and A shadowy form moves and Javert
goes after him with a vengeance. steps out into the light.
“Im ready. All I ask is a few
: moments to say goodbye.”
i ~ Free at Last “The law allows you nothing.”
Jean raises his head to Javert, a
face so agonized helpless and hope-
less that even Javert is moved.
nods slowly. He knows this man
{5a
| Jean and Eponine come out. They
{
as they look around cautiously. Ja-
He
vert has the house spotted from an |y,4 saved his life but still he can’t
_ opposite window. help himself.
| “Valjean!” To a gendarme, “Come “It’s not I—it’s the law that wants
on—follow—that’s the man I want.” | vo, the law. I can’t help myself.”
_ As they start off, two students|{ashamed of his
fighting with a gendarme emerge | ahead, I'll wait.”
weakness)
“Go
from a doorway. Instinctively the Jean goes in. “Cosette, I've come
gendarme with Javert stops to aid to say goodbye. It has to be—there
his comrade and Javert goes on |gare reasons. My dear, what little I
alone. could do I have done—in my poor,
.. Through narrow streets around |gstupid way I have tried to do what
dark corners and then up a dozen or | could. Now I give her. to you (to
so stone steps rush Jean and Epo- | Marius)—Ilet her be as precious to
nine.
“Omick! He's following us — get | after him, Cosette.
you as she has been to me.
Look after her.”
Look
up » stairs—we’re there!” gasps His face is bathed in perspiration
Hy e. 2 : from the struggle going on within
' Jayert arrives just as they disap- | him. He turns, looks back and takes
pear into “he building. He fires with | down the two candlesticks which he
a commana to “Stop!” has kept with him all this time.
He fingers
companions are barricaded is a blind | them. “Silver, they say—but more
The street where Marius and his “Keep these always.”
alley. A house nearby is afire and [than gold to me.”
over the barricade of doors, paving Cosatte kisses him and clings to
stones, ete., the defenders are firing. | him, overcome with emotion.
one by one. Wounded are strewn | moves over to Marius with her.
about the streets. “Love each other—there’s scarcely
Javert is caught in the dead-end | anything more in the world but that.
passage when a student steps behind | Remember, as was once told me—
him, Joined by others, breathless, | Life is ‘to give, not to take.
dishevelled, they bar the way. I give—take, and give again.”
“Police! Spy!” is the warning cry. The door clicks and he is gone.
“Spy, possibly; police, certainly,” |is over. He has given up Cosette
fs Javert’s calm reply. and now he has to face the other—
“Ha! We've got one of them. The | the galleys. He tries to move to the
guillotine will run here and now!” | door to the street, but his strength
shouts one, fingering a wicked-look- | cracks and he drops to one knee.
ing blade. \ “Father of all—I’ve done what I
could—take what
“He’s Mine!” given all I can—I'm ready!”
“Tet me. This man has persecuted | With a great effort he rises and
me for ten years—he's mine!” It's marches towards the open doorway
Jean's. voice. to the street, his hands in front of
“Do it then!” The knife is thrust | him, his wrists drawn together to re-
into his hand. ceive Javert’s handcuffs,
He
‘What
It
You will—I've
his eyes
“Ill do it as it was done in the | half-closed, repeating in a whisper
galleys—the pistol in the mouth.” the word “Give!”
Cries in the distance attract the Javert Disappears
others and they rush off, leaving
i
Jean and Javert alone. Jean turns But there is no Javert. The moon-
to his old enemy, his thoughts flood- | lit street beyond is empty.
To Jean
ed with revenge. it is unbelievable — Javert is gone.
“Now, Javert, the hunt ends.” He has .Jeft him.
We can almost
“End it then.” hear the voice of the old bishop over
“It had to be one of us. You |the scene. “Well done, my son. Well
hounded me; you pursued me—it’s | done!”
you who drive me to this—you and His eyes go up to the heavens—
your law!” to the voice—his face lights up with
‘Do your part. I've done mine. |a smile as if the whole soul were
I stand by everything I've done. I |lifted—at last he is free.
take what comes.” Excited cries of
|
“Down here!
Jean can’t bring himself to do it. | Down here! Hurry!” snap him out!
There is a terrific struggle going on | of his, trance. Through a narrow
within him. He shakes his head. opening in the street opposite is an '
“Go, before the others do what I |alley leading to the river. There is |
can’t.” a small crowd gathered—others are
“You fool, you know what'll hap- | coming up.
pen. I shall take you in the end. Jean pulls himself together and as
You know I will—you know I must | if drawn by a magnet races to tho
I can’t help myself—I am what I | scene.
m.,”” What “isoit?”
“1 take what comes. Go!” “Suicide—must be—"
Jean remains looking after Javert “I tried to stop him,” adds an-
then fires the pistol into the air. He | other onlooker, “but he pushed me
returns to the barricade. Eponine [away and jumped in—The river’s in
tries to pull him down from his ex- | flood.”
posed position and herself falls dead. Still another, “Look!
Mounted gendarmes begin to at- |liceman’s cloak—"
It’s a po-
tack with drawn sabres. There is a A gendarme takes it and looks it
scrimmage. Marius is felled with a [ over. Jean immediately recognizes
blow on the head. Jean pulls him |it as Javert’s. He turns and. looks
down through a half-open manhole | at the river. The water is swirling
into the sewers, picks up the uncon- | past. He now realizes that Javert
He is free,
the tunnel in water up to his knees. | indeed—free to go back to Cosette
scions boy and staggers along down | has left him for good.
Marius comes to enough to nod to |and Marius.
Jean and flounder along himself. THE END
=
The Dallas Post
ANNOUNCES
A New Serial
"NO MORE LADIES"
HERE'S a laugh and a
romantic thrill in every
line of this sophisticat-
ed novel of how a spirited
girl cured her sweetheart of
his weakness for bright eyes
and ruby lips.
BEGIN IT NEXT WEEK
ANOTHER $2 NOVEL—THE THIRD
IN THE POST IN TWO MONTHS!
rr
THE DALLAS POST, DALLAS, PA. FRIDAY, JUNE 14, 1935.
ee po .s
GREAT MOTHERS
Anna Mathilda McNeill Whistler
F'TYHE mother of James McNeill
Whistler has been variously de-
-L scribed as “one of the saints on
earth” and as a strict Puritan. If she
was a Puritan, it came perhaps from
her Scottish inheritance, for she was
descended from the clan of the
MecNeills of Skye, a number of whom,
with their chief Donald, emigrated in
1746 to North Carolina, where her
father—Dr. Charles Donald McNeill
— practiced medicine in Wilmington.
Art as culture and art as career’
seemed, in Mrs. Whistler’s philosophy
of life, vastly different things. When
her son James was small, she had
encouraged him in his childish at-
tempts at drawing for his own amuse-
ment. She also made her children read
the Bible and recite a verse every
morning before breakfast. But when
James announced his intention of | ANNA MATHILDA WHISTLER
devoting his life to art, he was not
met with encouragement—at first. |
Her ambition for him had been a |figure. It was, perhaps, two minutes
commission in the United States |before he spoke. ‘Yes,’ very slowly
Army. He went to West Point, where |and very softly, ‘Yes, one does like
—to her intense disappointment—he [to make one’s mummy just as nice
failed. Bowing with grace to the |as possible!” :
inevitable, she saw him depart for | Friends bore witness that no one
Paris as an art student. She remained [could have been a better son than
in America, but during the Civil War, | Whistler. He never forgot her birth-
when her other son was a surgeon in |day, he told her all his confidences.
the Confederate Army, she ran the |Good news he shared with her, but
blockade to visit James in London. |he tried not to tell her of his debts
It was in 1872 that Whistler sent |and disappointments. Beside being
to the Academy in London the pic- | his mother, she was his good friend.
ture called ‘“Arrangement in Gray |When in 1881 she died suddenly,
and Black: Portrait of the Painter’s |there was no one who could fill her
Mother,” often and erroneously re- | place. >
ferred to as ‘““Whistler’s Mother.” : * ® *
It was refused. Sir William Boxall, wo £
friendly to Whistler, threatened to Thiy is the ‘sixth of 3 series o
resign from the Council if the decision | Plosraphies of “Great Mothers”
di not altered. The picture was| Prepared by the Golden Rule Moth-
hung. 3 ers’ Day Committee, of which Mrs.
In 1881, the portrait was exhibited | James Roosevelt is honorary chair-
for the first time in America at the| man. The committee, which spon-
Pennsylvania Academy, and the next | sored the nation-wide observance
year was on view at the Society of | of Mothers’ Day, suggested the fol-
American Artists.in New York. It| lowing paraphrase of the Golden
served to make Whistler widely | Rule: “Whatsoever you would that
known in his own country as a| others should do for your mother
painter. if she were in need, and whatsoever
As a contrast to the legends about | your mother would do for the
Whistler’s irrepressible temperament | needy if she had an opportunity, do
and his vitriolic tongue there is) for other mothers and children, vic-
Harper Pennington’s story: “Once in| {img of present-ray economic mal-
his studio we were looking at the' ii ctments.”
‘ ’ 2 2 J o
Mother.’ I said some string of words Next Week: Susannah Annesley
about the beauty of the face and’ Wesley
p—
FOOD MARKET A] )
vice—
N general the housewife has real | This season sizes brought to market
reason to be contented with pres- | are large in contrast to last year’s
ent market conditions. Although | “tinker” or small mackerel. All other
MEATS are relatively high the peak | seasonable varieties with the excep-
seems to have been reached, FRUITS | tion of BLUEFISH are plentiful and
and VEGETABLES are cheap or rea- | cheap. Next week’s fast days should
sonable and BUTTER and EGGS very | be easy to observe.
moderate. Butter in fact is one-third ; z
‘heaper than it was a few weeks ago. Forequarter Cuts Economical
. 4 Forequarter cuts of all the MEAT
Local Produce Dominates Market ‘animals are economical at present.
Local grown produce is becoming a | BEEF is a little cheaper than in recent
sigger factor each week in our mar- | weeks. VEAL and LAMB are moderate
kets. Although each section of the | and PORK a trifle easier. ;
wountry is always dependent on others POULTRY is relatively inexpensive,
;o maintain the wide choice we are | particularly BROILERS. FOWLS are
accustomed to find in our markets, we | somewhat lower and DUCKLJINGS are
are all more nearly self-supporting | unusually good value.
during the summer months.
Jutstanding among the Yona Siow Berry Season Here
- oods are ASPARAGUS, BEETS, | gome STRAWBERRIES are still in
PEAS, SPINACH, RADISHES, SHAL- \ 100et and along with BLACKBER-
2 m g
LOTS, LETTUCE, SCALLIONS, | pips HUCKLEBERRIES and red
LEEKS, RHUBARB and STRAWBER- | RASPBERRIES offer a wide choice to
RIES. + 2 sh 3 the shopper seeking variety.
California is shipping -Valencia Here is a menu* made og rom sea-
ORANGES, CANTALOUPES and | g,;aple foods which are moderate in
RASPBERRIES. It is also responsible price:
for many of She CARROTS and Fras | Roast Shoulder of Veal
in market. Georgia is contributing hed Potat Green Peas
early clingstone PEACHES and LIMA | Mashed Jotatoes mato Salad
BEANS. TOMATOES are plentiful and : Bread and Butter
inexpensive. | Blackberry Roly Poly
Seafood Cheap and Plentiful i Coffee. (hoi or iced)
Boston MACKEREL are more plen- *This menu tested and tasted in the
tiful and cheap than in many seasons A&P Kitchen.
-:- Fifth Avenue Fashions -:-
‘Here is an unusual collar for: the
v-necked dress. It has graceful and
flattering roll around the neck and
ends in a jabot of delicate mesh,
caught with a bar pin. We suggest a
smart wooden bar or a colorful com-
position one. The collar is crocheted
of soft mercerized crochet cotton and
adds a washable, wearable touch of
white to a dark dress.
Address The Crochet Bureau,
“ Dallas Post
For FREE instructions tp crochet
this collar.
(LOOK FOR WATT-A-MAN ON PAGE 4 AND 8)
YOU MAY HAVE A QUESTION
. . . to ask Dr. E. A. Farrington, who is writ-
ing the series of articles on “Problem Children” for
The Post. If you have Dr. Farrington will reply
to questions addressed to him at The Post.
%
MyF avorite Recipes Note Barly Signs |
Vi by ~ of Problem Child
Frances hos
Les Weak, Under-Developed, Men-
Barton tally Retarded Babies Should
Be Examined Carefully
HESE are the days when I want . By Dr. E. A. Farrington
to be out in the garden, or Director, Bancroft School;
cleaning up the attic, or freshening | Secretary, Special School
my kitchen with a can of paint. So Association
I'm apt io use some of these deli- Perfectly healthy parents, with
cious time-saving desserts. They families of robust children brim-
are quick and easy to make, and ming over with vitality, are some-
thanks to the coconut, are as fes- times faced with the arrival of &
tive and spring-like as any dessert child who is “differ-
I know. y : ent.” The baby is
weak, under-devel-
oped, slow in growth,
Peaches Marguerite
4 dales. finely chopped; Ys cup pecans,
finely chopped; Y% cup shredded coconut,
finely chopped; 1 tablespoon cream; 2 tea-
spoons lemon juice; 6 halves canned
peaches; 1 cup peach juice.
Combine dates, pecans, coconut, and
cream, mixing thoroughly. Add 1 teaspoon
lemon juice. Shape into: small balls and 5
place in cavities of peach halves. Serve Dr. Farrington
with peach juice to which remaining
lemon juice has been added. Serve 6.
} 7
are sensible, they
will recognize that
they have to deal
primarily with a
‘physical - condition,
and one that probably can be im-
\ proved.
it Compote : : ok
Coconut Fruit Comp Perhaps the most important
%2 can shredded coconut; 2 oranges, free int i 3
from membrane and cut in small pieces; poi 1b in the Tuo problem, at least x
2 tart apples, pared, cored, and diced; 2 during the first few years, is early
bananas, sliced; Y% cup dates, chopped; 8 recognition of the fact that retar-
marshmallows, quartere: . 2 hb
Mix coconut, fruits. and marshmallows dation is present. Parents ought
together lightly. Chill. Serves 6. never to depend on their own judg-
ment in the matter, but should con- 2
CocgnutiBanana. Snow sult a qualified expert without de-
3 bananas, cut in small pieces; %2 cup 3x13 :
powdered sugar; 2 teaspoons lemon juice; lay. A few indications must be dis.
1 ‘egg white, stiffly beaten; %2 cup cream, cernible, however, before the ques-
whipped; 2 can shredded coconut. tion even arises in the parents’ §
Combine bananas, sugar, and lemon nd
juice. Chill. Force through sieve. Fold minds. Ny
fruit into egg white; then fold in cream Signs to Observe 3 ¥
Bea ye * What are these indications? If
Tropical Delight the child is physically abnormal, or
;
4 ripe bananas; juice of 1 orange; 4 fails inh some important function,
tablespoons brown sugar; '2 can shredded the indication is clear. Many chil-
coconut. re
Peel bananas and cut in half lengthwise. , dren, however, show no symptoms,
Arrange in layers in greased baking dish. or such slight ones that they are 5
DE rong ond easily overlooked, especially as the
pour over bananas. prinkle thic a . >
coconut. Bake in hot oven until bananas tendency is always to ignore them, 3
are tender and coconut is brown. Serve and believe that everything will be
nmediotely. uServesia. all right if the baby is let alone.
And since left-over bread is one Even trained observers are some-
of our constant problems, how times in doubt as to the real situa-
about solving. it wih oo de luxe tion, and advise waiting for more
coconut bread pudding? definite indications, knowing, as
Coconut Bread Pudding they do, that the variation between
2 cups milk, scalded, 2 tablespoons | normal limits may be very wide.
melted butter; 1 cup stale prong, cut in So-called “blue” babies should al.
l5-inch cubes; 1/3 cup sugar; Ya teaspoon "
salt; Yi teaspoon vanilla; % teaspoon wa be carefully watched. They pA
almond extract; 2 eggs, Stightly beaten, are not getting enough oxygen, and
1 cup shredded coconut, toasted. . oi
Combine milk, butter, and bread cubes harmful toxemia may result. Over-
in greased baking dish. Add sugar, seit. fat inmants should also be regarded
and flavoring to eggs and beat slightly. + * Shadi :
Add to milk mixture and stir in coconut. closely, particularly if they are dull 3
Place in pan of hot water and bake in and inactive. A glandular or meta-
moderate oven (350° F.) 45 to 50 minutes. bolic disturbance may be the cause,
Serves 6, Bi RA
Fashion Flashes |
L——By MARY LOUISE KENT ——
6005—Send only three cents in
stamps and we will send you cor
plete instructions for knitting this
| 8278—Charming afternoon dress|sweater—so plain and slick in line
designed for matrons—the long|—it will fill an endless number of
narrow V shaped front helps its|needs—very easy and inexpensive
slenderizing effect—as does the|to make, and every one is knitting
gored skirt with circular fulness|these days—
very low adding both comfort and 3456—Hat, Kerchief, Bag and
style—Prints in silk, cotton or lin-| Gloves great fun to make them,
en will make up nicely in this|even the gloves present no great
model. Sizes 36 to 50 inches bust| problem, very satisfactory and use-
measurement. Size 36 sleeveless re-| ful as well—Sizes large small and
quires 8 5/8 yards 39 inch material | medium—material required for all
: and with sleeves 4l4 yards— in medium size 1 5/8 yards 39 inch.
| Book of Summer Fashions now ready—Filled with ideas—Illustrated
in Color—Pretty Clothes, made easily, quickly and inexpensively—The
price 15 cents—Stamps or coins to cover cost of printing and delivery—
DALLAS POST FASHION SERVICE 2
21 EAST 57th STREET
NEW YORK CITY : 7
——— 3
Enclosed is 15 cents for PATTERN NO. ..vssessoinss SIZ .oinsne.
{ (Wrap coins carefully). y
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