The Syracuse Journal, Volume 19, Number 23, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 7 October 1926 — Page 7
Scene at Fatal Rear-End Collision in Chicago h» at wreck of ?he Northwest- B ern at Chirt so, <n kllkrt so injured It w;i.« a rear I^iEßßl HRL. end- -olllMon between tra:n« return- ■ Ing torn Labor day excursions. Hfc’V-x--V Veterans in Hospital Visited by President p / (■ ivl • rT^^Oßc, jry WKS wi y ’ ' [ k »r H HL® L t >- ; /il HbL - Ljklsbs President Coolidge paid a visit the other day to the war veterans' hospital camp at Tupper Lake, N. X. Above he Is seen surrounded by patients from the hospital.
MRS. B. P. BRUEGGEMAN i WE r / Mr*. Bessie 'l*. Brueggeman. chairman of the United States employees' compensation commission, bold* <« unique position In Uncle Sams sere •ce. The commission is responsible * for aid tn the form of money or hoe-1 pital care to the 000.000 civil em- < ployees and members of the naval | ' reserve. From 1.000 to 3.000 cases of injury are reported to Mr*. Brueg geman monthly. GLASSES FOR POPE K. s" mi >37 ■ L>r. j. i. Lucey. Chicano optician, who was requested by Pope Pius XI to go to Rome to fit his holiness with a pair of spectacles. Doctor Lucey performed a similar service for Cardinal Boasano. papal legate to the Jfiachartatlc congress tn Chicago recently. He has sailed for Italy. j¥<rf Frail Creatures "Mid la the frail creature, woman the strong." is a recent pronouncement of Sir Arbuthnot Lane, surgeon vs worldwide repute. “Nature has endowed them with greater powers of resistance and endurance than men.** Poor Owtfoo* far Pad Walker (in hot argument)—The pedestrian was here first, you have to admit that. Motonst—Yre. and so was the Indian. hut where *» h « now -
Bridge Across Unguarded Border nr* .. _ nn \ll sz&fs . •’ir* w&l! •; i ~ ~yy P 11 H II A now view of the peace bridge being built across the Niagara river, at Buffalo. It i-ommemorates one hundred years of peace between Canada and the United States. Army’s Best Machine Gunner AW i - 7' * -*3 / * • ft? *' > ’ u * WE ~ % 1-* **w a£mm dflHa f* kbl. v Sk. A 1 / / i w ’ * '"'.ll I AaJ Corporal Roes C. Thomas. Company D, Twenty-eighth Infantry. Fort Niagara, who, with a machine, gun caliber JO, made a world’s record score of 415 out of a possible SQ&
FROM HERE AND THERE
•■ ' • Tbe fellow who keeps his troubles to hlmwlf is the quickest to loee them. An author’s brightness isn’t always due to the burning of the midnight oiL A party of Kansans, with sunflowers pointed aU over their baggage, and a sunflower in tbe lapel of every man in the party, will be seen in ten foreign cities this summer. For two months they will tour Europe, advertising Kansas as tbe Sunflower state.
A cynic is a person who makes a specialty of telling tbe tmth. Many a man’s hypocrisy is due to the fact that be has a scolding artfe. Any man is likely to make mistakes, but It'S the other fellow who blunders. | An acetylene metal cutting outfit, designed by a San Francisco man for the use of firemen, is carried by two men like a stretcher, one end being raised on a tripod when it is used.
THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL
|| _.. r g 1 jwl i . lugs r iwaiF’lar ' > ‘ 'll if BL I § 22 OF KSB.. JG 0B ilISz l- B-*—* EH »a i? > H !®5 PvJ>--'rW aa,3 ™ agi^g- .! -1-Bj SjpM I 1 ■ k-ig gj IU I BODY BY FISHER-SYMBOL OF THE BEST Fisher Bodies are the choice of the and construction which makes their foremost car designers and manu- products instantly pre-eminent, facturers—proved by their adoption, And long experience has taught you, exclusively, for all General Motors as shown the industry’s greatcars. est engineers that, the hallmark of the Only in Bodies by Fisher can the best is the emblem-Body by Fisher, builders of Cadillac, Buick, Chev- Best because safest, most beautiful, rolet, Oakland, Oldsmobile and most comfortable, most convenient, Pontiac cars find the skill in design most luxurious—in all price classes. _ FISHER ■ ■ BODIES |H !■ .jU GENERAL MOTORS I 1- ■- ~ :
Inference “Jitn has a superiority complex.” “Then he must be associating with } people who don’t amount to much.” I -==—7=:: i Dressing Children no Problem Now! I It doesn’t cost much to keep the I youngsters dressed in all the pretty colors of the season I Buy less, sew : less —and Diamond dye their dresses, waists, blouses, etc. I Home dyeing is easy. It’s lots of fun. The results are perfect, when you ; use real dye. Right over other colors, ■ any kind of material, in an hour's | time! Keep your own clothes in style. • too, by making them the newest shades, j Also, the drape* and hangings in your ihome. FR££.-f«r the asking, at any drugstore: the Diamond Dye Cyclopedia, I full of suggestions, with easy direeI tions. See actual piece-goods color I samples. Or write for free illustrated book Color Craft to DIAMOND DYES. i Dept. NlO, Burlington. Vermont. Make it NEW hr IS ct»r High Flyara Willie—Say. mom. do you believe , man was ever a bird? Mother —1 certainly do—and 1 don’t believe there ever was a man who wasn’t a bird, my son.—Louisville Cou-rier-Journal. Sure Relief CvWi 6 Bell-an s I g I Hot water Sure Relief Bell-ans FOR INDIGESTION 25< and 75t PkrfkSdd Everywhere RLACKHEADS ~ M cannot be hiddea. Get rid of them Mw by regular treatments with Resinol I W. N. U-. FORT WAYNE, NO. 39-192®.
Betty’s Comment Also Straight From Heart Little Betty, age two. was Just be-. . ginning to talk more or less fluently ‘ and had acquired the habit of pick- ; ing up expressions from other members of the family andj using them, though she had no idea of their meaning. She had somewhere learned the exclamation, “For heaven’s sake.” and though her elders tried to prevent i her she persisted in its use. One evening she accompanied the hired man to milk and was much j interested, drawing very near the cow and asking questions. Suddenly Bossy, sleepily chewing her cud and , apparently without malice afore- , thought, gave a vicious swish of her tail, narrowly missing Betty and hitI ting the hired man full in the face. , He was irritated, to say the least, and ’ what he said to the cow came straight ' r from the heart. It may have shocked the cow. but Betty looked on with ’! the greatest composure till he ended, j . then she spoke. “Well, for heaven's sake,” she said, s 1 —lndianapolis News. Hospital Color Scheme An ideal color scheme has been J worked out for the different rooms at j | the new medical school and hospital at i the University of Denver. The X-ray room has wails of a vio- ' ’ let red, which has great light absorpi tion power, yet exerts a quieting influ- , ence on the patient, and is slightly stimulating to the operator. ’ I In the operating room a soft gray Is I used. The wards for disturbed patients have yellowish green walls, because this . color has been found to . have a tranquillizing and cheerful influence. Rooms with a northern exposure ■ have yellpw walls, and those with a ! southern outlook have sunshine gray > walls and furnishings. Shade Trees Bear Nuts I Col. Charles Goodnight of Amarillo, ! I Texas, has completed experiments for ' I growing nuts on trees that are well : i suited for shade. In this way he | j made trees productive as well as suit- ’ j able for shade so much needed in that i section. Colonel Goodnight is ninety I years old and his task has been a laI borious and long one. Saif Water in Fire Mains Seaside cities such as Lynn. Mass., may soon be fighting their downtown fires with* salt water driven through high-pressure mains by electric pumps that are started by the fire alarm system. This type of fire protection is considered to be cheaper and more dependable than the ordinary method of using fresh city water for the purpose. The Trouble Willis—“Do you approve of marriage by proxy?” Gillis—“Yes; if yon could stay married that way.”— Life. All the transactions of the past differ very little from those of the present.—Antonius.
It is better to marry for wealth than for a chance to get even.
I . ■ ' ■’ ’ FIRST p ' . to adopt DUCO The General Motors Researck Laboratories cooperated with E. L du Pont de Nemours &. Company, Inc., in the development of Duco —an achievement ranking in importance with the invention of the self-starter. DUCO is not only far more lasting than paint and varnish; it is finer, more beautiful and more economical to apply in factory production. DUCO was first adopted by Oakland, and immediately thereafter by the rest, of the General Motors cars. BUYERS of General Motors cars have profited by the development of this finer, more enduring finish. Their cars wear well longer. GENERAL MOTORS •*A car for every purse and purpose” CHEVROLET - PONTIAC * OLDSMOBILE OAKLAND * BUICK * CADILLAC TRUCKS YELLOW CABS, BUSES AND TRUCKS * r r FRIGID AIRE—The Electric Refrigerator
Put not your trust in money, b put your money in trust. —Holmes.
