Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, March 09, 1953, Page 9, Image 9

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BY CARL ANDERSON
Henry
10 Capital Journal, Salem. Ore Monday. March 9, 1953
Ht'oBcath, My Darling!
- ly AMELIA REYNOLDS LONG
... (AT wafMtarte)
Cbapter V s .coyer to almost In place, Amedee
W looked at each other with Jerked It off again.
m.. . "Than ami - wmv h OOUld have
"'"n7,' " U hTWt.- hVaa OAUetly. "I
"ItouroUceTk a good bit to get dklnt mention it to the aheriff. be
lwS oi aftiT all at once with- cause I thought then that Lee ac
oWhli knowing- I said a little tually committed ulcWe.''
SoifctfuflydTf It bad been given "What waa ltT I breathed, a!-
SUrThav. SpUTthMnh.0 he replied.
- Soukl ht begtm to Wup be-l-errTh. war you and Bob-
'or he'd sot enowh to prove oy got m snai
mnmu been to New Orleans, and Aunt
."J?"? J!""?".!. KLCTSJ oS' wodool'of course! I had
tnt7 tSiEfbooVasId. and pfc- when ahe told the .sheriff ahe-dae.ii
Tmnnther someone come in tnrougu u wmu.
-iXnSenU there arent any." he Only none of us would pay any at-
SSSnl: ass igrs.?
Kldenly ana wi wa- - rj-v "i for . lew
at'habeen. anla-Irrte. In aUence.
SfSrTbelTevri to" to admit ttiaT It ell fit. together
LWauMd andpert Uectlyr But In apt of every-
were pipe faejmel, ddenly What was his motive? I mean, why
"?hJlrl raShige Pipe and should he have killed Orandpere to
me Scttoathad utoen the first place? What could Orand
nngodly odors mat naa a have found out about him that
o.t.r t heUev we're getting was bad enough to make him com
S hCa'ocSSd Thad been thinking about that
f, TT Sui told him something tow us wnat ne naa n
H. . viVtat tSl tS? rest of Mr. Duval that afternoon, you re-
' forgotten temporarily about JWeJSi S&M
. the, that.- I said slowly, 'or 1-!?
ntn I stopped as I realised where P-" hav. the answer to
3S&rAaXm prompted "1 a feel tt not
t Aitnt m n crasy at mat," ne repuro wow-
HHHr1 1 ,ln- rfo ass
T?o Vr" Anisdee said. 1 cant both trying to think of some logical
..ZS E'thirSn than explanation of why Henri, the
Sh?wCS. Sn, nK?
M.i ft. - ua.u Ainmrt tMi.V
u. VMUU . . w - '
thirl ng the night without your know
ing I stopped with the sudden,
tarring feeling that I had stepped
from solid earth Into an open man
hole; and that to make lt worm,
somebody was about to slap the
cover on.
Oh I" I said in voice that
sounded as though lt had been drop
ped down the manhole too. "I for
got. The house was locked and
bolted; he couldnt have got In. That
that was why we all decided that
Tjee's death had to be suicide in the
first place."
And then, Just as the manbote
-
-fci
ii
nr.
AS & UiMTU W Uliai a
Ithe pocketo of my Wrt. I wu wear-
the ftftcrnoon of the old man fu
neral; and now my fingers encoun-
that Aunt Delphlne had given me,
and which I had put there after
the interlude with Claude, and for
gotten. I broueht them out, and
began to twist them absently.
iuneoee guuicea wn w, won
"Whcm In the world did vou ret
those?" he inquired.
I told him.
"Aunt Ttelrihln WMnM ftA think
they were important," I finished.
"And so, I believe, did Claude, for
he tried to make me give them to
. , . . , T Bd,.t
rum. 1 asaca ucwjs xwyi wni.
they were, but ne sata ne naa no
IH no vau know?"
An odd exDreeslon had come mto
his face.
"Know what they are?" he re
peated. "Yes, Peter, I know what
tney are. ineyTe u expunaMon
of the thing Orandpere heard, and
uj ,A KaIIava vu -t alliwtn.
jtlon. They're the reason Orandpere
senc xor xienri, kiiu fiio iwwi wiij
DO onjy XIV, UUk iwjuo
nt nnr.l Raoul aa well were mur-
deredl"
I (T ne tonunaeoi
Cerro Curtis Pattern
2207
srzts u
Bomething ta Sew Abeutt New ex,
nreulan at the easv-to-make shirt'
waist I It'a a caD sleeved basks with
skirt flare, wing revers and pocket
cuffs. Use casual cotton plaid or
stripes, pique; or adapt It to town
wear in linen snarmingi
No. 22OT is cut In sizes 11, 14, 16,
18. 20. 36, 88 and 40. Slae 16: 3 yds.
36-ln.
Patlrrna ml ta ftD arders tm-
nriltrl.. Vnr inerlsl handUns sf
rder via first class mall include
aa extra Se per pattern,
price Just 2&c
Juxt off the press! The hew
Spring-Summer Fashion Book, agog
from cover to cover with soores of
the latest style trends, all trans
lated into delightfully wearable, ea-ay-to-sew
pattern designs for every
age, every type, all ilses, all occas
ions. Send now for this sewing in-
snlration . . . net k.
fAffTEl-
Nararrv Rax Formal Rag. Two
laundenble, cotton yarn rugs oi
mxi alar, lntereatliur deslsn and
easy-to-make praoticaUty are given
in this pattern. urocneHu on wa
needles; the cowboy and Indian
design rug for a child's room la
done In ecru and brown (or any
jiM twn deMired colora) and meas
ures 34 by 36 inches. Trie lormausea
modern "slg-iag rug for living or
bedroom is knitted, measures 24 by
40 inches and is completely hand
im In dark sreen. salmon, whit
and Hunter's green or m any four
color combination. Knitting is done
in hwvka ami men roinea.
Send 30o for the ckouhkiteu
NUR8FRY RUO and the DIAGO
NAL STRIPED KNTTTEU KUg
trn No. M7) all deslsn charts,
working instructions, YOUR NAME,
ADDRESS, PATTERN NUMBER to
CAROL CURTIS, Capital Journal,
639 Mission street, ean rrancisoo a
Oauf.
Vatterna ready to fill arders In)
mediately. Far special handling ef
rder via first class mail tnclede
an extra V per pattern.
fcaap a packag handy
as p-il vT- , f f ! r r-
If iMY OUT A letCAi nonjury - dkwn ikuvisk . ravw. y a miwn yva nwara rwier toy' w. ("'. ' omvt i
t ( tr tfmtfttsLif MmxsmLAssi mmELLjnw-M
I . I 1 1 tLJ rlcl!StprsTVraTsV
N m i intra m Jva',n i i
ini ii i iii vi (fln? isi&i i c
I' I IIW LkSLS n A II
it i
ii irrriTSK r ikiz i cave-j "?. kp strrni ihj i
7 I W WBV THET CHIUt-V II 1 , " 1 1 VlzX?il!?!r'm J 1 1 HI IV fTT'llH fin in
: ,
i . . ,.' . 5 i r
V3 S35cwr-J THE PlL-ATEAU PD lWTHt3UT BETWEEN HERE AND THE
I u -TVT. 1 IrZJhFlzrri vSSSiijrVSS I I mumtie -station at i
U CASSE7 ) lic'Z.rS THE ;EHN' THUNDER VALLEY.WE'Re
I" . 'uocVVT 7ml I TRAIL. 'EM, THE" I N DOUBLING BACK. I
t Jr" " 'uSSve BEEN 'crvSrF DIDN'T. I , '
iii3w. raccs-s.io ra r zv stw4t. w-tjyAW
I ItXtTT? L I ZTIREEeeR.vooTou )are no, ingoing JKfcWUCfc when r fire voo
I liSUrT.JXf. M r" ' , 1 ME TO PAV VOU SOU Vjl TO REDUCE IT? BUT j VOO'LU. ONLV BE OUT )j
I MKV CWJ'. U S VrST y S W H AT "HAT t TH0O6HT I GONNA fc--!T( THATS NO. I K HALF A9 WUC-ri
jrJvJTiJPK I r ogv sum fMfjAKLrnij, wnww ATi llr . Hmj kxown bach otveh fo j-ir
w2rf w'ro'SNOw'r 5QM8 1
rm 1 if m rnr i i
; .i " iji & sa, ii u-ii 3 1
I . - a a- xaaw MSsaw-aaw-y--aaaxaxa iiajaawaaaM.saaw IT-"Hrl
.. i PnL. 1 jfcv-jiiOW ra i u. .mot mure!., im a wtu.r j -
-I A TAKlMlA10THt- U "K,J,5'"'1,; ' I-1 Y LiV' Von FOUND vfl
tv
" ejaw. fa. on sWAWTawl msMTaim fct. wm UUIIt tratSfSja aWawMavl
East Salem 4-H Clubs Plan
Exhibitions of Handicraft
East Salem East Salem Na
tional 4-H Club week will be
observed by all East Salem clubs
In some special way.
The three clubs of Washing
ton school community will have
exhibits at the Mangui variety
store on Portland road.
The following" girls will have
exhibits of something they have
made this year from lessons giv
en them at 4-H club meetings.
Exhibiting for the "Sew and
Sew" club, Sewing I and III,
will be Wyetta Capps, Gay Lee
Keppinger, Sherilyn Filer, De-
lores Watklns and Joyce Capps.
Exhibiting for the 'Tee Wee
Thimble" club will be Sharon
Suran, Janice Pah, Joyce Guth
rie, Darlene Clark, Marilyn
Page, Ruth Bowers, Jackie
Smalley.
"The Kooky Kutups" Cooking
club members exhibiting are
Ruth Bowers, Sharon Suran, Ei
leen Smalley, Jackie Smalley,
Elizabeth Mets. Sharon Mulling,
Patricia Stubfield, Marilyn
Page, Darlene Clark and Mari
etta Pendergast.
Leaders of these clubs are
Mrs. Cleo Keppinger, Mrs. Har
vey Page, Mrs. Samuel' Pahl,
Mrs. Fred Smalley and Mrs. Al
bert Suran.
The first home extension
meeting for East Salem units in
March was held Friday in the
home of Mrs. Robert Fromm on
Silverton road.
Lancaster unit had the pro
ect, "Becoming a Good Buyer."
County Extension Agent Pau
line Schaplowsky was leader,
r?
IFILIEIX L pFSlElLlLlfelRl
ACROSS II Military
1. Crackles suUtant
6. Watch pocket T. MaatachuMtts
(.Salamander . cape
sb. Aiieciea wnn
12. Of the feet
13. Small nan
14. River:
SDa man
IS. Humble
16. Grating
18. Company ot
slayers
20. Food from
heaven
21. Saturates
24. Ever: contr.
2i. Leaping
amoniDian
24. Tropical fruit
31, Transgress
3J. Restrain
13. Regret
34. Rover
vapor
40. Separate
43. Confined
44. Parisian
fortress
46. Above:
prefix
50. Silkworm
51. Born
62. Day'a march
S3. Afternoon
party
M. Orxan of
bearing
IS. tend payment
DOWN
L Mineral
spring
elutlen sf aturday'a Puszle
1 Bird's beak
I. Feminine
name
4. Clued
5. Slumber
g Business house
9I I
m,
S"-!8"
" -ir-A
"'mir mrr
j-r
T. Room In a
harem -I.
Besmirch
. Ireland
10. Native of
Finland
1L Roman
garment
IT. Young salmoa
lt. In the rear
21. Cook slowly
in water
22. North African
antelope
23. Acquire by
labor
24. Com forth
27. Devoured .
28. Part ot the '
29. Unclothed
30. Act
32. Covering ot
the teeth
IS. Arrow
38. Crafty
3D. Oenul ot
gees
40. Encourage .
41. Peel
42. Largert
continent
41. Nobleman
4S. Pasture
47. Old card
gam
41. Slender On la
it. Soak up
president, Mrs. Bert Hulst an
nounced that the unit will ex
hibit "Gifts from Cloth" and be
auditorium hostesses in the
morning at the spring festival.
Another workshop for textile
painting will b held by this
unit's members at the Mayflow
er hall March 13.
The unit will name one girl
who is interested in attending -
Oregon State College, and want
to stay at Azelea house to be
considered by the county com
mission which will chose three
for Marion county.
The 4-H chairman, Mrs. AI-
bery Fabry, reported on plans
for the Washington school clubs
exhibits this week.
Hostesses for the social hour
were Mrs. Claude Talmadge.
Mrs. Harvey Page and Mrs. Flor
ence Van Cleave.
Other members attending were
Mrs. Ernest Barker, Mrs. Ernest
Butler, Mrs. Covil Case, Mrs.
Wade Carter, Mrs. L, A. Grimes,
Mrs. Fabry, Mrs. Fromm, Mrs.
L. L. Hansen, Mrs. Charles Hag
an, Mrs. Hulst, Mrs. J. A. Jack
son, Mrs. Anna Jess, Mrs. Frank
Neiswander, Mrs. Harvey Page,
Mrs. R. Gordon S. Scott, Mrs.
Ben Schmoker, Mrs. Joe Slimak,
Mrs. Claude Talmadge and J.
Irving Wagels.
Fruitland Unit Meeting
Frultland Home Extension unit
will meet at the home of Mrs.
George Van Tuesday, March 10,
at 10:30 a.m. The project will be
"Herbs for Variety and Accent"
Mrs. Arthur Dalke is chairman
At the business meeting the of this unit.
.i
ROOM l BOARD
By Germ Ahtrn
r WHATS THAT QUEER.
ODOR OUT HERE IN THE
HALL?... SWELLS LIKE A
MIXTURE Of SHOE POLISH
AND FLY SPRAt7..H0PE
IT ISNT SOMETHING WELL
HAVE FOR. SUPPER
THE JUDGE tS IN THE PERRJWE
BUSINESS AND USES HIS ROOM FDR
THE LABORATORY. , JLL WARM HIM
TO LEAVE A WINDOW OPEN, Oft.,
THE AMBULANCE ATTENDANTS
WILL HAVE A TOUGH TIME TRYING
TO CARRY HIS BULK ABOUND THAT.
SHARP TURN
ON THE
STAIRS
" y
. in purs or peKr
wntiiir
WMttofeeHPP'
She
JUDGE'S
FIRST
cLEMD
. KflML t f lIHM II sr it, i r I LLl iTaJliT,W-