The Syracuse Journal, Volume 19, Number 9, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 1 July 1926 — Page 7
Naval Officer Highly Honored by Men of His Ship I «» t* - - .ai- 11 ~ ~w > y ~ -ffi-’ * —' ' ~ s i/-*• IJ Si I V 4 I L--B._k , 2^-W^Z--^—adn ■ One of the most remarkable farewells accorded 6 American naval officer was 'tendered Commander Turner f. Caldwell by the officers and crew of the destroyer Henshaw. Commander Caldwell was relieved Os command of th* Henshaw and ordered to the naval war college at Newport. Lieut. M, M. Loberno. on behalf of the officers and men. presented him with a magnificent gold watch and chain and platinum knife. Inscribed on the back of the watch were the words: ‘To a shipmate from the officers and crew of the U. S. S. Henshaw. 1924-26.” He' was piped over the aide with four officers as sideboys, and rowed ashore in a whaleboat manned by six chief petty officers. Tbe HlustruJon shows Caldwell. in center, with the ship’s company. ' Marshal Pilsudski’s Troops on Guard in Warsaw n / z< ii E WsSHKiiPS I lIOSwIrSI .JL 'W "i ■ ■ IJ® yr®fe™fflK V jgh.J laonsraav — ■ ■■■ ♦ ' . K Thot|kh Marshal I’llsmlskl seems to have Warsaw under complete control since Ins revolution, armed troops and field guns are posted throughout the Polish capital to suppress any opposition to the new regime.
DR MOMAINE BUTIN / ' i’ ’ ■k' i L | . B '•****'" Je • - P > r * ■ Rev. l»r. Moinalue Butin. professor of oriental languages and curator of <he Catholic university museum in Washington, has sailed for Palestine ■when* lie will become acting director of.the American School of Oriental Research at Jerusalem. i CASIMIR BARTEL £ •’ *> ■... — I ®FI. 3 A A lkd| Dr. Casimir Bartel is president of the cabinet of Poland, named after the PUsucpU coup d’etat. Education XChen the time for education has gone by. the man must, in ordinary ea»*s. be launched upon the world a benighted being, scarcely elevated above the beasts tbat pwish; and all that fete could have been ahi done, for society and for himself, la wholly lost -Edtjmrd Everett. That’i AU . All that most of us want Is fair play —we to be the judges of what that la. —Boston Transcript
Will Compete With Paris Beauties My P i r ’ I: \ /Li 4F # * /• - ♦ f li I - I I ' Miss Hazel Forbes, the winner of the American beauty ball contest in New York, who will be America’s only representative against the meat beautiful girl- of Paris in a contest to be held this fall. Results of a Gas Main Explosion When a gas main Id Mission road, Loe Angeles, blew up. Lords >xs' chanced to be right there in his little coupe. He was not much injured bet look what happened to the car. LITTLE BITS OF INFORMATION
A moving picture city is being built near Biarrltx. France. To immigrants at Ellis Island are shown moving pictures each Friday night. parachute that can be used in drops of less than 100 feet is being tested. Egyptian mummies are being studied through their wrappings by X-rays.
The London police tended babiei for voters In the recent election. Great waste In the paper industry is due to the decay of pulp and pulp wood. Twenty million pounds of explosives are used yearly on farms tn this conn try. Gas caused more than one-fourth o! American battle casualties tn the Eu ropean war.
THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL
Tattoo Marks on Hogs Tell Owner Simple Method Devised to Identify Owners After Animals Are Killed. (Prepared by the United States Department of Agriculture.' A simple method for placing tattoo marks on hogs so that they may be I readily Identified after slaughter has I been devised by Dr. F. E. Murray. : Veterinarian of the United States Department of Agriculture. The principal need for such identification is for detecting the origin of any diseased hogs found at the slaughtering places tuid to trace the channels through which infection spreads. Uses for Instrument. A description of rhe Instrument j methods of using it, and various practical uses fnr such identification | marks, are described in Miscellaneous , Circular Number 57. just issued by the United States Department of Agri culture. The form of the Instrument considered most suitable for tattooing hogs | consists essentially of a metal holder about eighteen tnche* long, slotted to receive .five blocks of babbit metal In which phonograph needles are embedded with the points protruding about a quarter of an Inch The needles are arranged to fonr numbers and letters. Ordinary black automobile enamel Is used as a tattooing pigment. Tt is applied to the needle points with a brush. The mark is applied by mere ly striking the bog smartly with the instrument, usually on the fore pari of the bark. Tattooing causes no ip Jury to the meat or inconvenience tc the hogs. Work Is Permanent. A tattoo mark, properly applied, resists all attempts to remove It and after death, is as permanent as the skin itself. It is a definite means of preserving the identity of hogs between farm and market. Extensive tests have rlemnnstrated the practicability of the device in tracing the . origin of animat ulseases and In .identifying the ownership of disease*! animals in mixed shipments. Nu tnerous other practical uses suggest themselves, such as tracing the source of animal parasites, expert mental work involving the study ot dressed carcasses and identifying ownership in co-operative marketing A copy of the circylar may be secured its long as the suply lasts by writing to the United States. Department of Agriculture. Washington, D. C Inspection of Butter Is Improving Its Quality . Federal-state shipping point inspection of butter is having a marked influence in Improving the quality of the product, the United States department of Agriculture has announced, publishing figures on the expansion of the service. Beginning with one inspection in July. 1924, the department says, the federal-state butter inspection service In Minnesota has increase*! until at present five inspectors are required. The quantity of butter inspected during the year ending January 31, 1926, reached 80,416.087 pounds. The service is available at Duluth. St. Paul, Minneapolis and Chicago. At the end of the year more than 80 per cent of all butetr Inspected in Minnesota was 92 score or higher, as . compared with less than -VI per cent at the beginning of the year. A marked decrease is shown also tn the percentage of butter scoring 90 or less, the quantity in this class at the end of the year being 8 per cent of all but ter inade, cotnpared with 19 per cent at the beginning of the year. Sire Is of Importance It pays to breed tt mare to a good stallion <r jack. Good young horses and mules are scarce and consequent ly they are bringing better prices thK spring than for several yearst past Indications are that during the next few years prices for good horses and mules will continue to advance because not enough h’ave been raised to sup ply the demand. This scarcity Is being felt this spring and will be more evident in the years to follow. [armEactsu As you exclude burglars from the borne, keep weeds oui of the growing crop. • • • Before the grass gets too high is the time to go over the huyfields tor their annual crop of small stones. • • • It Is highly advisable to give baby chicks fresh ground to grow on. Plow ing and liming the ground will help. • • • Spring-time is nursery-time on the ■ Chicks, pigs and lambs al! pay big returns for time spent on them while they are getting their start. • • • ■ The Jersey Black Giants are con aldered very excellent for general farm flocks as they have the slxe which makes them excellent for the purpose of roasters and capons. Soy beans are a good hay pasture, seed crop and soil improvement crop for most sections. The crop may be grown successfully on acid soil, but If the field has not grown this crop previously. It is necessary to inoculate for best results. • • • Chicks are like little boys. If not kept busy they get Into mischief. Lack of work often means a boy’s bloody nose, while to a chick it means bloody toes. Toe-picking and cannibalism results from close confinement and Idleness. “Keep the Chick Busy,” should be the creed of all- poultrymen. • • • When sweet clover is harvested for hay ft Is necessary to cut quite high or the stand will be destroyed. The new growth of sweet clover cornea from the buds on the old" stem and not from a crown as In the case of alfalfa. If the plants are cut below the buds, new shoots will not appear
OUR COMIC SECTION Along the Concrete J II > WHf . itfsMS»! M l bl a ~ 3 • mil ■ be? kJ / 7 y /-4 4«A ■ ■ jO- ' "feu (C«pyrtc»a.W.N.U.) \ ’ ’ THE FEATHERHEADS Play-money [ FEUX-HOW tfiUCW \ / UtS HALOING \ / QF A CHAP’S NATI DIP Voo LEAVE 1/ [ You Sor-iE. DIRTV ) ( uQAL APPEAQTMAT WATTEQ? A OH I CONNO?- I \ LOOKS- / \ ANCE y EMUF? - WHY ? j (W A’s * ■ Swift Hi —-O fr /1R kW Ju h, , Im ill—l iti,i OF DiQtL THE ?. AV£ ’* ~ YIAumISQV CAME "BACK AMD / j PONT SpPPpSE \ A SURE \ / YOU THB I? WAIT THE UuTToHS I>RoP OFW /y O! j HAD THE I /WELL ItL "B— . \ /y . . ... -nj.- (jnpcjg Ers UKE I ,TAUU% ~ A W£ BuT^s ’/ “ LD J _ K E. Jr ( ? I \ 21 ■ 0,1 - --- —OO (E C “ -v) 2O t 8 00 E * l **‘jlr-n _ r - - / t~- -- m-4— U- I MICKIE, THE PRINTER'S DEVIL ‘ Just a Dream \MWEM YOU GO»M6r TO ME I f " (NOU KJU SEE PER HERSEUF UP TO '6UPPCR. AGAUJ. BOSS* / S WHAT IT DOME FER ME - V GEE-'.-fM STARVED* THAT WAS P o ** l ,U A SWELL PEEP NOU PUT UP \ (? f S A TABLE FULL OF HOT t J LAST I6T TILL V / L, GROCERIES, BOSS « ) -fl O I I THOUGMT I’D BUST . -J k -' / / — * ( \ J/ JHw m llj W-M ' fe3^M > MV AGe w -m- W JMITED STATES, amd MIHM A DREAW'. UMW A /ZZ DREAM*. BUT TVtetMAY /> TUAT boy ate, its mo WELL, I AIMTJ ZZ WOMPER I DREAMT ME MAP L l up to aaaumohm] proportions j ® Br I Jvw ww/ .1 c w— L ALWAYS ON HAND around.” The^Ring—“Oh. yes; what- Some One Will Fall ever’s on foot, v Um always on hand.” “You’d better not go joyriding with I "-—— " Jack Huggins. He’s bad medicine. , ' . Thi» Commercial Age He’s likely to make you walk back ‘ Hood—Are you acquainted with Mr. home.” Roxlelgh? Tm not afraid. There’s certain to ] Hunter—Only In a business way; I be some other optimist to give me a \\ married his daughter. lift on the way back.” , qJ The Difference One of Those — Friend—So youYe married, eh I— Grimes— Yes. I’ve bought a new car. - tt » g John B r p WnnO w. Wtlks-JYhat make? ~, , John—No, it’fT a John Brown & GrimesPoh, about 00 an hour and The Shoe—“ You seem to be alwaya Co.—Allston Recorder. 12 to the gallon- — • ■ — - - : i"/!;." ‘"'k' ■■.
