The Syracuse Journal, Volume 17, Number 50, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 9 April 1925 — Page 7

'I~ _ I - Kk z "TI i 1 -i . / II I • «R? "jjk . / ’”rf'k *'■ •*■'■’ -——^ ** ~S£&-~ r ***** JiK^T^ s yaffil . M-' : -- MW I MESob**' C ■ * * - « ■'L ' , . -» .. . a, ■ ... • -T ? ■ sps II CFa ! O ! ! r '.% Vt 3 |;8 Illi Some of Uncle Sam’s pursuit and fighting planes which *lll take part In the army and navy maneuvers in Hawaii * These pursuit planes are the fastest In existence.'

Find Grave 10,000 Years Old in Nevada

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A skeleton and two pieces of ancient pottery were discovered In the grave shown above. The grave was found beneath the ruins of a house in a village believed to have existed ten thousand years ago. The ancient city, erected by an aboriginal American tribe, believed to have been the oldest in the United States, was recently partially dug out of the sandhills In southern Nevada.

Uncle Sam’s Only Sailing Vessel if® / T r’ii Za/i V ‘ / z /■ll • / -i< / * I / z -4 Z UtaKi I t - If i ■/ /f I iti v i 4'* I I WT ' I , ‘ f'i < MTU 1 V; -A. JffffKSSjwfe 1 » - El ■mm Here 1* shown the U . 8. 8. Newport. used as an officers* training vessel, and the only sailing vessel in the United States navy The boat is now In drydocks at the Brooklyn navy yard undergoing repairs.

She Carried the Mail to Bermuda i ( —) I I I |lt** ? j I | • > 4i I Loe Angeles, the navy'* f«*«t dirigible, made her first trip to Bermuda, carrying 200 pounds of mail and Assistant Secretary of the Navy Robinson (left) »nd a wist sat Postmaster General Paul Henderson (right).

MUCH IN LITTLE

At Karatsu. tn Japan, the work of coaling ships la performed by women and girls. • An electric cook Move that weighs only 219 pounds complete with all meosila has been placed «■ tha United States dirigible Shenandoah. The human heart, if working normally. expands with sufficient force to lift a weight of 78 pounds one foot

Ready for the Hawaiian Maneuvers

A device for cleaning the dust from air that enters motor engines, insuring longer wear, is being perfected. Two red-haired people seldom marry, as there seems to be an antipathy between people of opposite sexes with “sunburn** locks. In the coal mines of Nova Scoria there are over (LOGO miles of underground passages, in which are laid over 900 miles of railway

VICTORIA OF SPAIN imfct h ftiMMEg j Li ——l TJds most recent picture of Queen Victoria Eugenia of Spain was made at the time of the dedication by King Alfonso of a new sanatorium for tuber culotds patients. AN EGYPTOLOGER ■F V JBK _4? ->r jL HHMHII ’ .■/F y SHfei V B Above is pictured Dr. George A. Reusner. professor of Egyptology al Harvard, and director of the HarvardBoston museum expedition. Stock Market Term A “sleeper” b a stock which is hibernating in a lethargic market, and owing to neglect, in selling below speculative and demonstrated values without due recognition of its potential!- . ' T«t W Real Worth Seek not the favor of the multi tude; it is seldom got by-honest and lawful means. But seek the testimony of rhe few; and number not voices but weigh —

THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL

’\SidelisHfs

One-Day President Put It in Biography

f ASHINGTON. — “President for a day” is found in the biography of a member of

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the United States senate who served in that body over 80 years ago. David R. Atchison, famous citizen of Missouri, and for whom the city of Atchison. Kan., is named, was president pro tempore of the senate when Zachary Taylor was to have been inaugurated on tly» fourth of March, 1849. The day cmning on Sunday the old rough and ready Whig President refused to have the ceremony on Sunday and negiected to take the oath of office prior to the noon hour of March 5 when President Taylor was sworn In through the regular ceremony on the east front of the capitol. As Senator Atchison was president pro tempore of the senate, and constitutional provision had beeji in force since 1793 for that officer to assume the Presidency in case there was a vacancy for any reason in the office of President and vice president. Senator Atchison being President pro tempore always Insisted that the failure of General Taylor to take the oath left a vacancy in the Presidential succession after the hour of noon on March 4, 1849. to 12 o’clock a. m., March 5, 1849, thus making the presiding officer of the senate technically President of the United States soy 24 hours. Under the constitutional authority

Dawes’ Secretary Won His Spurs Early

ROSS BARTLEY. White House correspondent of the Assocl- , ated Press, has been chosen by Vice President Dawes to be his

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secretary. Mr. Bartley and General Dawes became acquainted when the latter was in Washington as director of the budget. General Dawes was a close personal friend of President Harding, and his visits to the White House were most frequent. It was during these calls that Mr. Bartley and the budget head became well acquainted, ft probably was not until the recent national campaign, when Mr. Bartley was assigned to “cover” General Dawes’ activities throughout the campaign, that the latter had an opportunity to form a real estimation of his newspaper associate. With the election over and confronted with the task of selecting an assistant when he assumed the role of vice president, he thought at once of Mr. Bartley. General Dawes wanted more than just ah ordinary secretary. He has had a wide experience in picking men for important work. He remembered the splendid work of Mr.

New Geographical Areas in Cabinet

.RESIDENT COOLirJUErnte his F immediate predecessors, has introduced new geographical areas into the cabinet group in two In-

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stances. The secretary of state brings Minnesota for the first time into 'the list of such officials, though the state was before represented among the secretaries of the treasury in Wlllinm Windom under President Garfield, and in the war i>ortfbllo in Alexander Ramsay under President Hayes. ' But Doctor Jardine, incoming secretary of agriculture, introduces Kansas for the first time as holder of a portfolio. It is phenomenal how closely cabinet officials were selected from the statesmen of the 13 original states. New York seems to be the source of supply for premiers, for out of the total of 45 holders of this portfolio 11 were sons of the great state. Including the first. John Jay. In 1825. President John Quincy Adams made Henry Clay of Kentucky head of the cabinet, but Kentucky was territory of Virginia during

Embassies Moving Into New Quarters

iHE diplomatic landmarks of old Washington are passing. Recently the announcement was made that the old British

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embassy on lower Connecticut avenue was being abandoned for a more modern and fashionable location. The great Victoriai* building which has housed the British embassy so many years Is to be converted for business purposes. The former Mexican embassy, in the heart of the uptown business section, now is a real estate office, while the embassy occupbM « palace in embassy row on upper Sixteenth street. The Italian embassy aoou is to move into • mlllion-dollar palace across the way. The Russian embassy has stood dosed and boarded up for several years. Built by Mrs. George 11. Pullman of Chicago as her home, she sold It to John Hays Hammond, the mining engineer, who U turn disposed of it to the Russians just before tike collapse of the csariat regime. A number of new legislative build tngs which have brought with them

Leaders’ Busts Are Dedicated in Capitol

EMBERS of the senate and the house and Republican and Democratic leaders in and out of congress met a few morn-

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Ings ago for the dedication of the busts of Champ Clark of Missouri and James K. Mann of Illinois placed in the corridor leading from the house to Statuary bait Tributes were paid Representative Madden (Republican), of Illinois. and Representative Dickinson (Democrat), of Missouri, speaking for their delegations in congress. and by Representative Cannon (Democrat, of Missouri), and Morton D. Hull (Republican), of Illinois, representing the districts formerly served by Mr. Clark and Mr. Mian. In the group gathered before the flag-draped pedestals were Mrs. Mann, widow of Representative Mann, and Mrs. Genevieve Clark Thompson, daughter of the former speaker, and Herbert Adams of New York, who executed the bust of Mr. Mann, regarded as a splendid piece of work sad said to be as truthful and characteristic a

congress in 1793 provided, in case oi vacancy in the office of President and vice president for any reason, the presiding officer of the senate or the speaker of the house should succeed U the Presidency. . President Taylor, it seems, aid not give so much attention to the matter as did the Missouri senator, who wae careful to have the fact that he wa» “President for a day” recorded in fair biography. There have been other inauguration days that fell on Sunday, but the precaution has been taken to administer tire oath before the actual Inauguration ceremony, so that March 5 would be the public swearing in and but a formality, repeated for the benefit of the thousands who come to* Washing ton at our quadrennial occasion of Executive change or succession at tht head of the government. On account of the rumors that Samuel J. Tilden would take the oath for the Presidency on the 3d of March, 1877 (the 4th being on Sunday), President Hayes, it is said, took the oath of office on Saturday, the 3d. and repeated the same on the sth, at the east front of the capitol. The 4th of March came on Sunday at the beginning of President Wilson’s second term. He took the oath of office on Sunday the 4th. and again in front of the capitol on the sth.

Bartley during the campaign trip. Mr. Bartley went into newspaper work immediately upon legviag col lege, and he has been at It ever since. He was born in Brookston. Ind., in 1892. After a public school education he attended Indiana, university. He entered newspaper work as a reporter on the Wilmington (Ind.) Journal in 1915. Within the next 12 months he worked as a reporter for the United Press in Indianapolis and in New York and the Ohio State Journal in Columbus. In 1916 he Joined the staff of the Associated Press, serving first in Pittsburgh. He came to the Washington bureau of this organization in 1918. serving as assistant night editor, night editor, assistant day editor and day editor, in the order named. He then covered the senate during two sessions of Congress and. two years ago was assigned to cover the President. Except for the time he was traveling with General Dawes during the campaign, Mr. Bartley accompanied the President everywhere he went, and he was with the Harding party on the ill-fated Alaskan trip In 1923.

u . ....... the Revolution and at that time was not considered “new country.” In 183 L President Jackson asked Edward Livingston of Louisiana to be his premier, bur this statesman came of distinguished New York parentage and was only politically of the Pelican state. Then there is a lapse until 1857, when President Buchanan asked Lewis Cass of Michigan to become secretary of state. General Grant had KMhu Washburne of Illinois; James Gillespie Blaine of Maine served Garfield and Benjamin Harrison, and John W. Foster of Indiana was for a few months secretary of state under the second Harrison. Waiter Q. Gresham of Illinois served President Cleveland, and there were three Ohioans. John Sherman. William R. Day and John Hay, under McKinley and Roosevelt. With these 12 exceptions, all of the 45 men who have been secretaries of state have come from the commonwealths whose representatives signed the Declaration in 1776.

new faces haw come since the war by the partition of the old European states. Among these are the legations of Cxecho-Slovakia. Egypt. Esthonia. Finland. Latvia. Lithuania and Jugoslavia. Social gatherings find the former- enemies generally on speaking tOffiML The German embassy still occupies the site It did when Count Von Bernstorff presided, and his successors have occupied It. If it could be said that any diplomat in Washington has hard sledding socially. It probably is the representative of Germany. Other historic landmarks which liave changed include the house where Mrs. Surratt lived when she participated in the conspiracy that culminated in the assassination of Lincoln, which is now a radio shop; Daniel Webster’s house and tliat of Slidell, one of the Confederate commissioners, which gave way for the new home of the Chamber of Commerce of the United States, and the old home of John Hay, recently sold and probably soon to be used tor business.

likeness in marble as is the portrait of the late Republican leader painted by Geri Melchers, which now hangs In the National Gallery of Art. The bust of Mr. Clark is by Moses Dykaar. Representative Madden said he esteemed it one of the greatest privileges of his service to have been the instrumentality through which their memories are to be preserved in the halls of congress. “These are the tw«r first men who ever served in the house of representatives who have such a tribute paid to their service, and these two men deserve that tribute as no other men that I ever knew deserved IL” he said. “Champ Clark and James R. Mann were bosom friends; Clark, a great Democrat; Mann, a great Republican; Clark, as speaker of the house; Mann, as leader of his party on the floor. Constant clashes as to parliamentary procedure arose, and always Mr. Mann was ready to meet the situation, whatever it turned out to be: Mr. Clark, always with his judicial fairness, de elded the question Impartially"

FROCK OF STRIPED TUB SILK; TWO-PIECE JUMPER FROCKS

MAYBE the artist who designed the new striped tub silks received inspiration from the gay colored candy canes strung across the confectioner’s window at holiday time, or maybe the barber’s pole with its many stripes had sometihlng to do with it or possibly beach tents and awtjings gave the suggestion. At any rate, the new wash «ilks for spring and summer are beautifully striped. These happy looking rtriped silks are Just about the prettiest material one can choose for little Ctrl’s frocks. The fact that these silks launder so perfectly makes them especially de-

I W- ■ 4 < O i ti Oh _ I’ll i9' J i l l/ ilFvk &r-P_3i I h Iff ) mwHiM ill I® / I Tfflfl Tl -tumumiih-t"—' IR tr i Hlll l M H IB I B B ||i |WM i h ill 1 I S 1 i -s k s ' Every Little Girl Will Want One.

drable for children’s apparel. Then. >oo. stripes always can be manipulated so effectively in the designing of a garment They are a trimming of themselves. The picture shows a Jress which most any little girl will •>eg mother dear to copy for her, that is. unless she prefers to go to the store and buy It ready-made. There Is such n comfortable fullness at the front of the skirt secured through Inverted plaits and those pockets! The horizontal stripes across keep it a secret that they are pockets, but they are! The Idea of laying the material In plaits from neck to skirt hem Is a nopnlar one with dressmakers and designers this season. Another tub fabric which is creating » very favorable Impression for cbil-

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On* of th* Popular Two-Pi*c* Juanpor Suit*.

Iren’s frocks, is quaidt English print. The advantage of this material is that it is new in the realm of childhood’s fashions. Then, too, It comes in such delightful colors which bespeak springtime loveliness, in tones of lavender, yellow and rose. As to laundering, it does up to perfection. Plaid ginghams and plaid silks are among chosen mediums. Ginghatn suspender frocks, or skirts as they really are, are worn over white voile Mouses, made peasant style with full sleeves. The smocking or cross-stitch repeats the gay colors of the plaid. Like smiles and good humor, fashion, style or the vogue, as one may be pleased to term it» la contagioua. For a White Dresa To take the color entirely out of a Mtton dresa after It has become somewhat faded, boil the dress in cream of tartar water. A perfectly white dress results. v Voile Lingerie A dainty lingerie set consists of a colored voile vest with a step-in to match. Lace striped voiles are popular. For trimming, hemMitching and colored fiowers are very dainty.

Just now it Is the idea of the two-pleci dress, jumper-frock as It is called which is spreading like an epidemic throughout the realm of fashion. Th« popularity of these smart separate skirt and bldtase frocks was foretold where all spring fashions have theii tryout—Florida and California wintei resort style centers. Undoubtedly all indications are to ward a record season of separata .skirts and blouses. Nor are these two-piece frocks limited to sportswear, for smart dressed women are favoring these ultra-tailored costumes for lunch eon and informal daytime wear.

The chief characteristic of these fashionable jumper suits Is their extreme simplicity. The material selected for the most exclusive sort Is apt to be a flat crepe of superior quality, a heavy canton crepe or a dull finished wash satin. The majority of them have long flowing ties, just as you see In the model here pictured/ The skirt is usually a wrap-around. There may be a bit of embroidery on the pocket and a touch at the neck. Not always is this so. for severe trims, bone buttons, and stitched bands are noted on many of the most exclusive types. The sleeveless jumper with skirt to match is destined to be one of the most important styles of the coming months. Worn with a colorfully embroidered

or smocked white voile blouse the e's feet is stunning. j The ensemble Idea Is effectively developed in these jumper suits, for there is such excellent opportunity to use two materials. For example. a° printed silk blouse posed over a white crepe plaited skirt has a border around the hemline matching the material of the jumper. Further relation is established between the two. tn that the white crepe of the skirt bands the short sleeves and fashions the wideend man’s tie—-for, as said before, these long ties of the same material as the frock are almost' an inevitable detail throughout all costuming. JULIA BOTTOMLEY. <©. ISM. W««wn Nnwapnpnr Unton.) A Chic Scarf A very chic scarf of white crepe de chine has cuffs of black and white checked fur on the ends through which the hands are passed and the effect of wide cuffs Is obtained. Daffodil Yellow for Frocks The newest party frocks for a young girl are fashioned of daffodil yellow crepe de chine. They are hand-made and simply trimmed with real lace and hand-work.