The Syracuse Journal, Volume 17, Number 31, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 27 November 1924 — Page 2
Beautiful Monument to Stand in St. Nazaire Bay
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' The model. Just completed by the sculptress, of the great St. Nazaire memorial, by Mrs. Harry Payne Whitney, which is to be given by the St. Nazaire Association of America to France, It will stand on a rock jutting 00 feet out of the water In St. Nazaire buy. into which the first American troops to tight In the World war Sidled June 26. 1917. The monuniefit will be of bronze, heroic in size, with vfce soldier 15 feet high und the eagles wings 35 feet In spread, it will b« unveiled June 20. 1836. ''
Stage Children Putting on a “Juvenile Follies”
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The National Stage Ch.ldren's as->. ation v J! present “The Juvenile Follies Revue of 1925." at Cample hall In New York. The children in the revue will compete for 110,000 In scholarships. Winners will give a special perform ance at the White House for President and Mrs. Coolidge. In the photograph Is a group of these stage children.
Trying Novel Method of Eviction
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Because a tribe of Gypsies who had rented a house in Chicago persisted In using the place for Illegal fortune telling, a real estate firm started to brick up the doors and windows. The Gypsies refused to move out but made such a clamor that the police came and stopped the bricklayers.
Earl of Galloway Weds Yank Girl
I 40BL I I n fl v* jP I KI 1 \v • ‘ ! W ■ ■ I /*• jfluk. I ■Ov Na’*’.',\ «F A Vr Lr ii^Mr--~ l -“* 1 * Ul '"_-‘ -— *\wk • t iMr B B Is I ■ I i ilk. x. BvWA jG( V- 1 BJljCAW'*’■ ®o--*sy I lV§3& 1 IHR^^»-4a>-Jl 1 The earl of Galloway vrtUf hia bride, who was Mias Phillipa Weddell, daughter of the late Jacob Wendell of New York, and slater of Lady Caernarvon. They were married In St. Margaret's church. WeFmlmrtrr. The wedding was attended by many prominent society persons. The couple are now bu—ynioontng
AROUND THE WORLD
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Seoul Medical college at, Seoul, Korea, recently held services for the souls of animals sacrificed for science. There la a drop of 2.800 feet In seven miles over one auction of a Brasilian railread. said to be the beet paying road In the world. The superior effectiveness of Chilean nitrate to synthetic and other —... a. fßc&sMfctl tm's&m Ihasm nn. AmsvaallMkA to its radioactivity.
“MOST WONDERFUL GIRL” / 12 - nrns Helen May Martin of Geneva. TIL. Is the only known deaf and blind person whd learned to play the piano well. She has never heard a sound or seen a single object. Miss Martin has extraordinary talent, and has been pronounced the “most wonderful girl in the world'* by Paderewski. tfor whom she has played. She was educated in the Kansas school for the deaf at olanthe. and In addition to het musical talent is able to cook, weave and embroider. She was born blind and deaf. SHOOTING HER COAT / g&w&jKsy * - ** p .... ' The dally limit bag of five every day I since the opening of the season—that’s the squirrel hunting record of pretty Dorothy Hixton of Neillsville. Wb Squirrel potpie every day for the family and a nice squirrel coat befort snow files. North American Specie* Researches of the last 80 years or so have confirmed the opinion that the animals called edentates, wirieh include slbthau anteaters, armadillos, etc. originated In North America and afterward migrated to other parts el the world. Both daeeog Penmcirwa Some take too much trouble is making pleasure and. others too mock
THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL
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Coolidge Puts Up WASHINGTON. — President Coolidge lias taken a long step toward arousing greater interest in athletics in the army and the navy, and In the country generally, by presenting to athletic representatives of rhe army and of the scouting fleet a challenge cup for football between service teams of the two branches. indications are that, as a result of this, one of the great annual athletic events of the future will center about the Coolidge cup, or as It will be officially catted, the “President’s Cup." The President summoned athletic representatives of the army and the navy to the White House. He then formally turned over to them a cup to be contested for every year by two 'ootball teams chosen from officers •nd enlisted men of the two forces. The first contest for the cup was set for November 22. at Griffith stadium. Each team will be composed of one officer and ten enlisted men. President Coolidge himself wiH start the game and there is every indication that it will be a social and athletic event, rivaling the contest between West Point and Annapolis. Maj. Paul Baade, infantry, representing the army, from Fort Benning, and Lieut. Coin. Hamilton V. Bryan, scouting fleet athletic officer, together with Coxswain Claude A. Ezell and
Six New Reclamation Projects Approved
S'X new Western reclamation projects embracing more than 400,000 acres have been approved as feasible from an engineering, economic, agricultural and land development standpoint, by investigating committees whose reports are made public by the Interior department. Studies of the projects were conducted by professors of agricultural colleges in states In which they are' .located, state agricultural officials and bankers. In their development it Is recommended that policies and methods proposed by the committee of special advisors of reclamation be followed. The projects: Vale project, Oregon: 25.305 acres, mainly sage brush, with an estimated gross annual crop return after irrigation of $35 an acre. Baker project. Oregon: Irrigable land estimated at 26,931 acres, which
Flag With Only 40 Stars Causes Stir
Gen. FRANK T. HINES, director of the veterans’ bureau, has begun an Investigation of the origin and history of the flag with only 46 which was displayed by Mrs. IJlllan R Sire before delegates of the New York State Federation of Women’s Clubs in New York. So far as be has been able to learn, only one of the freak flags ever has appeared In the veterans’ bureau service. It was shipped from Perryville. Md.. along with five other flags February 7, 1922. and was received at Hospital No. 49. Philadelphia,- February 16, 1922. At that time Perryville was a United States public health service depot. General Hines deplored published assertions the bureau had contracted for 300.000 cheap, shoddy flags for the coffins of dead veterans. Some time ago, according to the di-Mx-tor, complaint was made that the coffin of a soldier who died in Hospital No. 49 was covered with a flag having only 40 stars. He immediately called on the medical officer in charge of the hospital to report whether the
Airplane vs. the Battleship in Congress
Regardless of the outcome of the investigation now being made* by the general board of the navy under Instructions by the secretary and at the instigation of the President, a showdown fight in the old airplane-battleship controversy looms when congress reopens In December. Whatever the findings of the board, and it Is admitted on all sides that thev must be predicated < n the basis that the battleship-Is still the main reliance In sea power, air enthusiasts are laying plans fora drive on congress t<* fu ll recognition es the increairtng importance of avtattea in the national defense, with a separate air force as their final objective. ' Heartened by President Coolidges recent utterances in which be voiced his belief Ln the possibility of the airplane superseding the surface fighting ship, they projaiee to demand that an impartial tribunal hear tbefr case and that the aerial fighting forces be placed, tn a position .to be developed free from the “obstructionists."
U. S. Forces to Stage Battle for Hawaii
■ THE spring cruise of the battle fleet to Australia and the joint army and' nauy maneuvers at Hawaii are designed, it is learned, to provide a capstone to a ttralegie study painstakingly erected jy both services fluting the last three rears.. The plans, as completed, show a -adical change from those which were irst outlined. An adverse opinion from another department of the government was understood to have led io the modification. It was said to jgve been based on the fear that the moral effect of the Washington conTerence disarmament agreement might be nullified if the proposed war games were staged in the Hawaiian sector so won after the conference. * Because of the change, the War department will not participate to the sxtent of sending troops, Secretary Weeks said. There bad been some discussion of the possibility that a Seat might be made of the speed and ability of the services to get troops
i ‘President’s Cup” Staff Sergt. Harry O. Troupe. repre seating the enlisted men of the army’ nnd the fleet, received the cup. It is of generous proportions, embossed in bine and gold and surmounted by the American eagle. In connection with the presentation the President made this statement: “As President of the United States of America, in the interest of good, clean, healthy recreation for the people of the entire country and to encourage and stimulate athletics among the enlisted men of the services. I offer this cup. to be known as the ‘President's cup.’ for contest between football teams of the army and navy, from units or subdivisions ot forces, under such terms as the secretary of war and the secretary of navy may determine; provided, however. that the teams shall be composed of enlisted men and officers In about the same proportion as are officers and enlisted men In the services. “I desire to mention the great benefits to mind and body that result from participation in good, clean, wholesome sport. The people of the United States have always been devoted to manly contests and I know of no better way to give to them a true example of sport in its best form than to offer such a cup as this for a trophy, to be contested fur by the army and the navy.**
should yield a gross annual return of between $30.50 to $37.50 per acre. Kittitas project. Washington : 90,399 acres of irrigable land, including 48.382 acres of agricultural nature; 21,925 of pasture and 20.071 of waste land. Uwyhee project, Oregon: 58.859 acres of first-class land well adapted to produce satisfactory yield of crops. • while there is 56,140 acres of second class land that cannot produce more thaft about 75 per cent of the yield of the first-elass land. Salt Lake basin project. Utah: 110.000 acres will lje directly benefited and there are excellent marketing and transporting facilities. Mixed crops shonld yield from SSO to SBO per acre a year. Spanish Springs project. Nevada: Including 39.350 acres of high-grade land, adaptable to a wide variety of crops.
bureau instruetiopk regarding flags had been complied with and whether the flag in question had been inspected. The answer to both, questions was in the affirmative. The officer also stated, according to the director, that all other flags in stock had been found to be regulation. A brother of Harry H. Bench, the veteran whose coffin was covered with the improperly made flag had reported the matter to the bureau. The New York City Federation of Women’s Chibs has a committee consisting of Mrs. Belle de Rivera, honorary president; Mrs. Lillian R. Sire, who brought the matter to public attention and who is president of the Women’s National Democratic club, and Mrs. William Albert Lewis. , Charles A. Bench, brother of Harry H. Bench, a soldier who served ’his country 30 years and died in the Veterans’ hospital at Philadelphia, gave Mrs. S.re a cheap, 40-star flag which had been draped about the coffin when it reached the family home in Reading. Pa.
On the other hand, naval officers are gravely concerned over the recent developments, realizing the populai appeal of the aviation propaganda with tts promise of cheap and effective national preparedness. . They fear that, as Intimated by the President. no provision will be made for modernizing the older battleships, for proper maintenance of the fleet and for construction unless the controversy is settled. The round-the-world flight by the army flyers, spectacular and epochal as it was, did not In the opinion of the riiajorlty of experts warrant the conclusions drawn in some quarters. The ope outstanding lesson of the achievement, they suy. was that It demonstrated conclusively the depend ence of aircraft on surface ships in long-distance work. It is pointed out that while the flyers were covering their twenty-odd thousand miles, approximate ly 87.000 miles of steaming was d«me by United States naval vessels in helping to put the flight across.
to the Hawaiian Islands, in connection with the naval cruise. Drawn to furnish the basis for national defense provisions during the next decade, the maneuvers will comprise a theoretical attempt of an enemy force to seize the Hawaiian groups as a Brßt «ep >» fts eastern advance. The possibility of ejecting such a force before its position could be consolidated would be a corollary problem, r Tiie battle fleet, augmented by certain portions of the scouting fleet in the Atlantic, wflk play the attacking role in the first phase, defense of the Islands being left to the army garrison, the National Guard and reserve and naval ships attached to the Fourteenth district, which includes the islands. The marine corps also will participate to a degree not yet worked out. • The American society of New South Wales already has prepared plans for the reception of officers and men from the ships'of the American navy du in Australian waters next July.
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