The Syracuse Journal, Volume 5, Number 20, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 12 September 1912 — Page 2

PIUS X TAKING OUT DOOR EXERCISE > ■ <■ *• AHk 1 *. - • ■ •>,. f * vSpgr ; ' t $ <-^^ - -_Wly - • a» aMßSsradL_ !<-><■"-»■ - 3^BMm^* f ? ®3T'agjk jO 1 I ~-' iip SM^O»B^^tL-'-- l-fi .'■ »Hr *' 4 THIS photograph, showing Pius X taking a promenade in the gardens of the Vatican, is being given wide publicity as indicating that the pope has recovered front his recent indisposition.

NEED GLOVES NOW

Success of Finger-Print System Hard on Crooks. ’! Has Been Means of Securing Many Convictions and Its Use Is Being \ More Widely by '""''o the Police. Indianapolis.—Burglars operating in Indianapolis in the future will have to wear gloves, as the detective department henceforth will pay more atattention to the practical side of the finger-print system. Captain of Detectives Holtz, on a recent visit to New York, found the detectives there were making use of the finger-print system, and he believes it will be a great help in solving burglaries. The detective department here has used the finger-print ( system since it was adopted by the national bureau of identification. It has been used, however, more in identifying prisoners with the Bertillon system. After a prisoner has been brought in and his Bertillon identification has been completed, the finger-print cards were used to verify the identification more completely. “When I was in New York recently I found the police department using the finger-print system to identify burglars who leave finger prints around the ‘job’ they have done,” said Captain Holtz. “Several large burglaries have been cleared in the east through finger prints, and the detectives there say burglars now wear gloves when they are at work. “I have always believed the finger prints practical in police work. Frequently the finger prints of safe blowers are left on the door, and the ordinary burglar is apt to leave finger prints around a door or window. “The trouble is, the finger print to be of any service to police work, has to be very clear, or the expert is unable to see enough lines to make an identification.” Bert Perrott, Bertillon clerk, is also the finger-print expert. Perrott, since he has taken up the finger prints in connection with the Bertillon work, has shown great skill. Recently, as a test, a glass bottle was taken into the detective department at roll call. Previously the detectives had gone to Perrott’s office and he took the. impression of their finger tips. After leaving the bottle Perrot returned to his office. Detective Frank

BLIND CHARLEY GOES AWAY

Beggar Takes a Whirl at Coney Island and Then, Doesn’t Dare Return to His Old Corner. New York.—Wall street has just lost one of its most interesting and best known characters, and at the same time is minus a flourishing business. The character in question is known as Blind Charley, and the business is that of begging, by‘ which he has accumulated a fortune of tnore than SIOO,OOO. Kind-hearted brokers, fresh from a successful turn in the market, have been cheerful contributors to the battered tin cup of the blind beggar, and so generous have been gifts that there is apparently n’o reason why Blind Charley should not have run his fortune up to the half-million mark if he had only used a bit of discretion. The trouble began when Charley started out for Coney Island last week, all dressed up. He looked about as much like a beggar as Andrew Carnegie or John D. Rockefeller might look If they ever took it in their heads to give Coney a whirl. The little boy who led the way had on a new suit and a bright silk necktie. 4 , They were out for a good time and they didn’t let expense stand in the way. They rode on the merry-go-

Machine Minces Boy's Body. La Crosse, Wls.—The four-year-old son of John Hills fell Into the selffeeder of his father’s threshing machine and was ground to pieces by the sharp teeth of the cylinder. His remains were dug out in small pieces. Honey Crop Is Short. Bloomington, 111.—The honey crop In this state, one of the principal states of supply, will be short this year, j lt is explained that the weather made bees lazy.

Duncan picked up the bottle and carried it to the other Iside es the room. Perrott then took the bottle to his office and compared the finger prints with those he hud taken of the various detectives. He picked out Duncan as the man who had handled the bottle. The advantage of the finger prints of the burglar to the detective is® if the burglar has ever been under arrest of a larceny charge a record of his finger prints has been taken. The expert goes to the scene of the burglary, takes an impression of the finger prints, and then compares it with the cards he has on file. CRUEL JOKE SHOCKS»WOMAN Post Card Received From Unknown Writer Informs Her of Husband’s Death. Newark, N. J.- —Mrs. Joseph Collins of 37 Cleveland avenue, Harrison, received a postal card stating that her husband had died in the tuberculosis hospital in Laurel Hill, Secaucus, and that unless his body was claimed at once it would be buried there. Collins is an inmate of the institution,

FIND FAMED WARRIOR’S BODY

Workmen Discover Tomb of Andrea Morosini in Venetian Church — Mummy Also Found. Venice. —It always pays to scrape the walls of the churches and palaces of Italy, for almost invariably under the uninteresting outer wash are found frescoes of more or less value. This is just what happened here in the Church Os Sts. John and Paul, where some frescoed figures of the evangelists have come to light near the high altar. What is, perhaps, more interesting to the ordinary traveler is the discovery in the same church at the other side of the high altar of a Gothic sarcophagus of the fourteenth century in which a mummified body was lying on the back with the head turned to the right. One of the feet was detached from the body. From the description it was learned that these were the remains ert Andrea Morosini, a famous warrior and a member of the family which gave four doges to Venice. The remains have been left

$ round, bumped the bumps and looped the loop, and occasionally Charley would break a five-dollar bill to purchase a bag of peanuts. Naturally i they attracted a good deal of attention. People were interested at the sight of an old blind man and a little boy doing Coney together. One man, who on more than one occasion had dropped a dime in Charley’s battered cup, was so interested that he notified the police. As a result the fact was brought to light that Charley was wealthier than many of those who had contributed to his fortune, and consequently he has disappeared from his wonted stand. While Wall street will miss his queer personality, the sting is made still sharper by the realization of many brokers that they let a man with SIOO,OOO in cold Cash Invade their stronghold without ever making a single investment in the securities In which they deal. \ ■ Boys Dynamite a Church. Huntington, W. Va— Dynamite was touched off against the Church of Christ by boys who bad been chased away from the grounds. The explosion rocked the building and broke up the meeting.

GOTHAMCHURCHESEMPTY

:— a Religious Workers Say Church Interest Has Never Been So Slight as This Summer. New York. —According to New York religious publications, the complaint is general among Christian workers in New York that never within recollection has the interest in church matters been so sffght or the attendance so slim as this summer. __ 1 t .......... '

and the last his wife heard from him he was improving rapidly. Mrs. Collins became hysterical and neighbors who heard her cries went to <ponsole her. It was noticed by one of them that the card was unsigned and that the postmark showed it had been mailed in Harrison instead of Sacau cus. When neighbors were consoling Mrs. Collins,, another took the card to the police station, and the sergeant on duty telephoned to the hospital inquiring as to Collins’ condition. Word came back that he was out for a walk. The police w ill try to learn who played the alleged “practical joke” on Mrs. Collins. Footpads’ Novel Methods. Warsaw. —Foodpads who Infest the suburbs of this town have hit on a novel way of robbing peasants’ carts as they drive in laden with provisions. The peasant drives while his wife sits at the back of the cart to keep guard. The thieves jump onto the cart, put their arms round the woman’s waist, kiss her and hustle her off with endearing terms. Off runs the outraged husband to catch his wife. Meanwhile the Don Juan’s accomplices take away the provisions and disappear into the forest. When the peasant finally gets back his wife he finds he has been robbed of all but the cart. The trick is practiced with great success.

intact and the tomb will be exhibited to the public as soon as the restoration of the church Is completed. MAN 70 YEARS YOUNG SKATES Gay Old Boy Just Whirls ' Around to Get an Appetite— Gets It, Too. Tacoma. —Clerks and others ar riving late at their offices have recently been giving an excuse that they have been watching an old man skate. As they reach a certain street they hear the whirr of rollers on the as phalt paving. Rounding a corner they see a little old man, with long chin whiskers, sunken eyesockets, but very bright eyes, speeding along at a reckies rate. His ball-bearing rollers he manipulates with the dexterity of a fourteen-year-old veteran. A reporter approached the septuagenarian skater and was received witt suspicion. “Don’t get it into your head that Lm doing this to revive ice-skating,’ he said. “This is a very healthy way j of spending spare time. I get out here in the early morning and whirl around and have the finest appetite for break fast you ever saw. And I’m nearly seventy. “I used to skate a lot in Holland The doctor says it’s a great thing for me, and I know it is, so that’s al) there is to it.” BETTER EYES, BETTER MAh California Prison Warden Has a The ory Along the Lines of Reform. Sacramento, Cal—To carry out hii theory that steps for all-around bet terment of prisoners should be taken beginning with physical conditions Warden Johnston of Folsom penlten tiary has had thirty-two prisoners ex amined by eye and ear specialists. Jake Oppenheimer, “the Hyena,” un der sentence of death, will be fitted with a pair of glasses. The warded said that Oppenheimer was pleased with the result, as his vision had beei much Impaired in the preparation o> a book he is now writing, entitled “The Thoughts of a Condemned Man.’ Another prisoner will be fitted witl 1 an artificial eye, op the theory thw any improvement in a prisoner’s looki will heighten his self-respect and 1 make him more amenable to effort! for his reform.

» The churches on Fifth and Madison avenues and Trinity on Broadway which usually have their congrega tions swelled in the summer by vis itors from out of town, are sufferinj from the apathy as much as theli smaller neighbors. There were only twenty-six persons at one of thfl wealthiest and most aristocratic uptown churches one Sunday mornint and only forty at another.

BRAXMAR’S CLUE PROVED RIGHT ONE How Cupid Figured in Clearing Up Murder Mystery. Like most persons whose deafness arises from the hardened drums, Braxmar heard best above a continued noise, and as the express pounded its way toward Chicago, he became more and more sensible of some one weepI Ing in an agony of distress. The sound came from the berth above him, and he pushed his bell for the porter. “George,” he called, as an ebon face was thrust through the curtains, “is there a woman in the upper berth?” “Yes, sir,” shouted the porter. “She done got on at Albany.” “She’s in trouble,” he announced. “Can’t you hear her crying?” The porter listened intently, then ■ shook his head. “I don’t hear nothin’,” 1 he reported. “1 do,” persisted Braxman. “See if she needs anything.” He sank back against the pillow, and presently heard the porter climbing the step-ladder. Then the black head was thrust between his curtains again and the man shouted: “She says she’s sorry, but she didn’t think anyone could hear her in this noise, and she just had to cry.” “Is there anything she needs?” he called back. “She says there ain’t puthin’ we kin 1 do.” The black head disappeared and Braxmar settled himself again. Overhead the noise was stilled, save now and then when a little half-choked moan seemed to fight through the girl’s repression. But Braxman comd sleep leaning against a post, and soon he dropped off again. He was one of the first up in the morning, and as the sleeper was the last car on the train he went out on the rear platform for a smoke in the bracing air. The car had been made up and had resumed its daytime aspect when he returned. The other half of his section was occupied b: a slender, girlish figure. She startt ’as he dropped into the seat opposite. “Are you the gentleman whom I disturbed last night?" she asked, leaning forward. “You didn't disturb me,” he corrected. “I heard you crying, and thought perhaps you need help. You see, I hear best when there’s a noise, and I knew that no one else was probably aware of your trouble, &)'ou might have been in need of help.” “I am,” she said, with a wan little smile, “but not such as one’s fellow passengers can give. I am going to my brother, who is accused of murder. I heard of it just In time to catch this train.” “John Findlay?” he asked. The girl started. “How did you know?” she gasped. “I am a detective,” he explained. “They wired me to come on. It was a random guess, but a probable one. 1 I am retained by the Arntons.” She sank back in her place. “In that case,” she said, “I don’t suppose I ought to talk to you. You are engaged to fasten the crime on John.” “Quite the contrary,” he said, moving into the seat beside her. “I am engaged to find the murderer of Caspian Arnton, not to say that this man is guilty.” “But circumstantial evidence is so strong,” she said hopelessly. “I don’t see what hope there is.” “Suppose you tell me what you, know,” he pleaded. “It may help bring the guilty man to justice.” There was something in Braxmar’s manner that inspired confidence, and simply, directly, she told him what she knew. From the press report he had only learned that John Findlay had shot and killed Caspian Arnton as the result of a feud. It was the girl who supplied the motive. They had all lived in the little town of Remsen, in the northern part of Ohio. Helen Findlay had been engaged to Arnton, but had broken the engagement on account of certain stories that had come to her knowledge. Arnton had let it be inferred that he had broken the engagement for reasons he did not care to divulge. The Arntons were wealthy, and leaders of the town’s society and the people had elected to believe Arnton. Helen had gone to visit relatives In Albany until the talk died down, but her brother had stayed on because he could not afford to give up his position with the railroad. There had been several encounters between the two men, and when Arnton had been found dead almost in the shadow of his home, Findlay had been accused. A search of his lodgings discovered a pair of shoes stained with the red earth in that part of the street and in his cash drawer at the station was found a revolver with one chamber discharged. The bullet found in Arnton’s spine was of the same caliber, and. Findlay’s declaration that the revolver had been fully loaded when he left the office found greater credence than his statement that the revolver had been left in the cash drawer. Given the motive, the weapon with which the deed was accomplished and an inability to establish an alibi, and it was not to be wondered at that the case was regarded as good as tried. “The case is too simple to be correct,” he declared. “The breakfast car has been put on. Let us have a cup of coffee.” That afternoon he visited her at her hotel. “I thought you might like to know,” he explained “that I have dropped out of the employ of the Arnton family. They insisted that the facts were clear, and that I had only to bridge certain gaps. I told them that I worked along my own lines or not at all.” “And you have given up the case?” she cried despairingly. “Not at all. I have retained myself to prove the Arntons the fools that they are. I am working for Ham Braxmar now —and for justice.” Braxmar’s words brought comfort, and comfort was sadly needed, for as the days progressed' the web seemed to draw more tightly around her brother. The Arntons arranged with a Chicago detective agency to send

half a dozen- men to work on the case. Braxmar had dropped out of sight af.< - that first cfay. He had warned Helen that he would not remain in town, but that she need not feel any uneasiness on that account Once or twice a letter, mailed in the railway post, assured her of progress, and she took heart of grace, though the detectives were 'building up a mass of evidence that seemed destined to crush Findlay beneath its weight. Finally the case was practically concluded, and the Arntons were insisting upon an immediate trial, but to this Findlay’s lawyer would not consent When Tomlin suddenly disappeared without a word to anyone the last vestige of hope setemed to go. Then, one evening, the operator at the postoffice telegraph station let out a whoop that startled the little company waiting for the distribution of the night mail. “They’ve caught the man who killed Cas Arnton,” he shouted. “This is a telegram to his sister. Listen: ‘Am coming east with Tomlin and the slayer of Caspian Arnton.’ It’s signed by that fellow from New York who was here the day after the murder.” “It’s a bluff;” declared one of the local solons. “They’ve got Cas Arnton’s killer locked up in the jail now.” It was the second day following that Braxmaf and Tomlin stepped from the traid and w ere driven to the hotel. There were just the two of them, and Remsen thrilled with the report that it was Tomlin who had done the murder. Later on, after the prosecuting officers had left the conference, it became known that the person who had fired the shot had been killed in the wreck which had delayed the others, but had made a deposition that entirely exonerated Findlay; “It is a very simple matter,” explained Braxmar, when he and Helen were alone. “There was just one clue that was not being worked on. That was the man who was trying to enter the box car. It w r as a train of empties being rushed west. He could have no incentive to force the door except that he wanted to get away quickly and unobtrusively.” , “But they all thought Tomlin’s story was an untruth,” she said. “That was why they did not follow it up.” “And why I did. It s always the obscure clue that pays best. I found that many of the railroad jnen had jpms like your brother. The hardware store sold about three dozen. Now Arnton had a bullet in his spine. Ko one seemed to see another bullet in a nearby tree. If it was your brother's shot, how was it that there was but one chamber discharged when two shots had been fired?” “Now, your brother was not the only one who had a reason to take Arnton’s life, as you told me on the train, there was that affair of the Gillis girl. It was Gillis who crept into the car station again, satisfied that he had scared the man away.” “And‘to think that you did all this for John,” she said softly. “I told you I was working for Ham Braxmar,” he corrected. “I was angry when they insisted that I should work on the clues ready provided. I wanted to show them that I was right.” “But I can never repay you for your kindness,” she persisted. Braxmar looked as though there might be two sides to that question, but he only smiled. “In the morning,” he said, “they will call the case and make a motion to dismiss. Your brother will be free by noon. Will you remain here?” “I think, we shall,” she said quietly. “I should like to keep in touch with my unofficial client,” he laughed a little awkwardly. Her grave eyes read his secret but respected his reserve, though a rosy flush told Braxmar that he might hope. “But to think it was John Gillis who fired the shot,” she mused. “Hft always seemed such a patient, plodding sort of fellow.” “I didn’t say it was Gillis,” he corrected. “It was the girl. I knew that before we ever reached town.” “Yet you went after her father?” “When I heard the story I realized that the man who climbed into the car was the man who was concerned in the case. Gillis missed his daughter, who was really insane. He knew where he should be most likely to find her, and came up with them just as the shots were fired. “In the excitement of the murder his disappearance passed unnoticed, for he was close mouthed, and few knew the story of his daughter’s disgrace.” “Then that other story must edme out too?” she faltered. “You will both be cleared,” he explained. “Even the Arntons will know your reason for the broken engagement.” "And to think that if we had not both taken that train,” she mused, “1 am so glad.” “I hope that you will always be glad —that we took that train,” he said, and Helen flushed again. Parrot for Every Tree. There seems to be a species of par rot adapted for each of the more con spicuous kind of trees which are found in tropical forests. Thus, if th« tree is a palm, which has a single stem and can afford nourishment foi a bird only at or near the top o! that stem, then the species of parrot that feeds on it is an air bird, capa ble of flying over the forest in searct of such trees. When this is the cast the body of the bird- is light and tht tall long. On the other hand, the par rots which inhabit trees with manj branches have stout bodies and short tails and are short flighted. Wise Provision of Nature. f The homes of the meadow larks and the bobolinks, buried in the long grasses of the meadows, are very diffi cult to find, as the parent birds, 01 bping flushed from the nest, have the habit of running along the ground several feet before flying up, thus de ceiving the searcher for the nest as to its exact location. ‘This trick, char acteristic of ,many of . the ground birds, saves a giteat number of nests froraxfalling into the wanton hands of the egg collector, and is one of the wise provisions nature takes to [ protect her creatures.

THESE JIXLETTERS From New England Women i' ■ Prove that Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound Does Restore the Health of Ailing Women. Boston, Mass. —“I was passing through the Change of Life and suffered from hemorrhages (sometimes lasting for weeks), and could get nothing to check them. I began taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound (tablet form) on Tuesday, ana the following Saturday morning the hemorrhages stopped. I have taken them regularly ever since and am steadily gaining. “ I certainly think that every one who is troubled .as I was should give your Compound Tablets a faithful trial, and they will find relief.”—Mrs. Gaonas Juby, 802 Fifth Street, South Boston, Mass. Letter from Mrs. Julia King, Phoenix, R.I. Phoenix, R.1.—“1 worked steady in the mill from the time I was 12 years old until I had been married a year, and I think that caused my bad feelings. I had soreness in my side near my left hip that went around to my hack, and sometimes I would have to lie in bed for two or three days. I was not able to do my housework. “ Lydia EL Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound has helped me wonderfully in every way. You may use my letter for the good of others. lam only too J lad to do anything within my power to recommend your medicine.”—Mrs, UUA King, Box 282, Phoenix. R.I. Letter from Mrs. Etta Donovan,Willimantic, Conn. Willimantic, Conn.—“ For five years I suffered untold agony from femala troubles causing backache, irregularities, dizziness, and nervotis prostration. It was impossible for me to walk up stairs without stopping on the way. I was all run down in every way. “ I tried three doctors and each told me something different. I received no benefit from any of’them but seemed to suffer more. The last doctor said it was no use for me to take anything as nothing would restore me to health again. So I began taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound to see what it would do, and by taking seven bottles of the Compound and other treatment you advised* I am restored to my natural health.”—Mrs. Etta Donovan, 762 Main Street, Willimantic, Conn. Letter from Mrs. Winfield Dana, Augusta, Me. Augusta, Me.—“ Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound has cured the backache, headache, and the bad pain I had in my right side, and I am perfectly welL”—Mrs. Winfield Dana, R.F.D. No. 2, Augusto, Me. Letter from Mrs. J. A. Thompson, Newport, Vt. Newport, Vt.—“l thank you for the great benefit Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound has done me. I took eight bottles and it did wonders for me, as I was a nervous wreck when I began taking it. I shall always speak a good word for it to my friends.”—Mrs. John A. Thompson, Box 3, Newport Center, Vermont. Letter from Miss Grace Dodds, Bethlehem, N.H. Bethlehem, N.H.—“ By working very hard, sweeping carpets, washing, ironing', lifting heavy baskets of clothes, etc., I got all run down. I was Bick in bed every month. t ** This last Spring my mother got Lydia E. Pinkham s Vegetable Compound for me, and already I feel like another girl. I am regular and do not have the pains that I did, and do not have to go to bed. I will tell all my friends what the Compound is doing for me.’—Miss Gbacie L. Box 133, Bethlehem, N.H.

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MEANING OF "AJ HALF MAST” At First Universal Symbol Was Token of Submission and Respect For Enemy. Perhaps you have noticed that whenever a prominent person dies, especially if he is connected with the government, the flags on public buildings are hoisted only part of the way up, remarks the Toronto Mail and Express. This is called “half mast.” Did you ever stop to think what connection there could be between a flag that was not properly hoisted and the death of a great man? Ever since flags were used in war it has been the custom to have the flag of the superior or conquering nation above that of the Inferior or vanquished. When an army found itself hopelessly beaten it hauled its flag down far enough for the flag of the victors to be placed above it on the same pole. This was a token not; only of submission, but of respect, i ’ In those days when a famous soldier died flags were lowered out of respect to his memory. The custom long ago passed from purely military usage to public life of all kinds, the flag flying at half mast being a sign that the dead man was worthy of universal respect. The spape left above it is for the flag of the great conqueror of all —the angel of death. Robert Browning’s Will. Diligent search is being made at Florence, Italy, for the will of Robert Browning, son of the famous poet, but so far it has not been found. The fact that there apparently Is no will is causing considerable gossip, as the property, of which there is a good deal, both in Asolo and Florence, will pass to his wife, who was Miss Coddington of New York and x from whom he lived apart for years, owing to incompatibility of temper. Browning’s property in Florence included Cass Guidi, where he spent his childhood days. When his mother died the property passed out of the family, and was acquired by. him a few years ago.. Subtle Admonition. “Why do you always ask that regular customer if the razor hurts him?” asked one barber. “Just as a gentle reminder,” replied the other, “that if he forget the tip it’s liable to hurt him next time.” His Weapon. “Did you see where an escaping maniac somewhere struck down his pursuer with a cake of soap?” “Then I suppose he made a clean getaway.” - Norwegian Scientific Expedition. A Noawegian expedition will study the natives, flora and fauna of of almost unknown regions of northern and central Asia. YOU CAN CURE CATARRH By usinsr Cole’s Carbolisalve. It is a moat effective remedy. All druggists. 25andS0c. If you would win life’s battle you must be a hard hitter and a poor quitt€r' Be thrifty on little things like bluing. Don’t accept water for bluing. Ask for Ked Cross Ball Blue, the extra good value blue. I Keep on trying; it’s often the last key of the bunch that opens the dotyr.

■■■■■■ FOR BACKACHE. RHEUMATISM ■ & KIDNEYS and BLADDER I aijiyiiiiflk'irf uiijn Contain No Har«t*Lor. Habit Forming tkug* *1 1 ... \

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