The Syracuse Journal, Volume 20, Number 12, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 21 July 1927 — Page 8
OUR COMIC SECTION, ■ „ 0 ——. ■■■■■■■■■■■ ————— - ■ - """ Our Pet Peeve —” S' : • T* rni Im jyw.'iiperms I HOW po W [“ IZ<TI. \jsHPSI>BE Llkt , HUE M *r— (mAgspgfe£,a? wutUOi ■ >R ' jj K >w<d I ilo \ lrf<n I aoa lU—- •■*•■•• BbhOßsEKa. I / - ■ Hm i * * —- - z -' 7 Jii vz I Bj MKy j] m/HY 'IEMBKW o—r ~A— I I v WHAT SI— I U \ I# \ J / ■ A I A ■ v’" 7 " l/zl Fv- 11 J 0? c >^fiinu?/>\ IB ' HIM fy / /ZOE A I■ ■ H. koi vlw wa.s onper ir ft / —nCi ■ l \RwiNfeOUTIHL X/ P JLp '■ KiopeiM’Hpß Ugifß^RiND-_,jCI Jl|\ —//? TVER ■ hapncth'n6 m, ■|H t rV<T leALivne4k 1 eALivne4k^—ml / E <A) k Bbutwke /] mp - Wv&vC s<ai* ■ Bmbihk I u B W ;-; 7T2J IX ol ud| .ÜBkj (^ —> _ -- - - L_ J | qiRBRJRRRIRRRRffI SI ■ . • _ • ■__ FINNEY OF THE FORCE No Respect for Grown-ups / — 7*?'7^& r _ Z. ,\ Z' Z : \l SA/ComC ouPUMlvl’V k /® H ,A F '‘ L ’A C if C \\ f 6O / ' MOT F£ft MESELF.BdT FBQ., DT-V 01S4W vu'iwts \ f / AVfMO ° <** BE4re * \ SQEAT eeuwEaHooo Os mam/ j P A TLLI l ) HV“>*HOU« BUMK AT \ X-yT U HOl SOSHOL STQbCTCMEfe, >S 1 nn\ Tq»ME - — / AttVWAV. IM I / TQEATEMED- CNUZASHIAj / Itt i jVpEPQESSED'— ■ y C\ \HSELT 16 T l. f 1 3sa\\k -1 r A"V **»• I 1 /CbOT HAS ONLY CO*JTtHp' X \ /CIHAT IS DE SboNGEoh * f FM2 a € BLDEGO-DLGaVt>USS \ GENSQASma COM.M' / / FR2 DE DCNfIV OF VEAQSI- \ \ loH / / X)T IF I WfQE lb TELL S*ou DAT \ V / I DE LiTTLE DAMT AMEQC CHUD- ) 'X «rt<&Sa \ ***CH X Just PIQSUMED lb SOIOT/ . r-*1 K-ra" \ A TIN DIME OF, CALLE D Mfi A / 3 '* /'~'\ \ bumU ~ i ask vouee -■ / i i XT W >£2l f<vsw ♦ cC tL i A */'"■■ "ST A i’] nt* • >*IB "■' -C s^a ~{ ? 'i' \ l H . P. No i w->NN r ti (©B>* \\ *■’»»• »n X*u w|Ka|«rr l*ni«»n ai <’ ' ’ <' \jir- > V t *7 • 1 THE FEATHERHEADS A Sure-enough Alibi ill I)^* tL cabcving-on N sacar M aS 'l||| fl I f A6OVT GdMrTbTfeß BnGMAHS I Tb GO AU. O*»R f I,C££> ' 4! LAST NtfHT-l N(SUC£ YOUQ \ W AGAIN 7 Tb-DO ABOUT BLING SO< k \ T«i?QI6LE SCKNiSS HAS D»S- \ — ’ ’7] 1 3UST BECAUSE YOUCANT /I ; \yPPBA®Bb TUiS >< I APPRECIATE SAQAM f/ J ’ - q « Bingham's Goo& jpjt' ✓ Z “*K ”* ?/ —\TbLNTB’-— ” *j / V'\?y “6 s v•tM' Aj^rf/ 1 4 / riT" fr J&Uk IR/ /W : . W so 17 I <j{AS SCK-XM Njiyr A*O ***T, Poev.- I V null [ ALWAYS SKX WHEN ]/ ) !• \ S»C*<**Ss!! ] jll V eoT>lUrß » u liN. \bnGHAMS ? */ Xs **> l‘ . j J* XZ R ■ (Aij\ r/A ■B *j* ‘1 ■■ jj "'A/ 7 vy wwmNowKpoyrvu—-) e
AU Set "I want my people to roll up their sleeves.” declared Mr. Big Business. “That new stenog ought to ault yon." * -How soF •Si«e has no sleeve*.” A Woman of Letters She—Well. I made all m> money In letters. He —Literary, eh? She —Not me! 1, won a breach-of-promise suit with them.
THE HARD PART Fish —It’S bad enough to get caught, but think of the way that nasty fisherman will lie about mel
— ; - — —, . r Deliberate Coat Deale.—Yes. coal ils *23 a 1«» n today. Customer -That’s *23.(KX).(XX> per million tons. taa’t It? Weil, let me think— .?«*. you might send me » pounds. All Gone Customer —1 want a ciaie's worth of dog meat Butcher—Lm sorry, but the restaurant across the street J o»t took the last I had. J
THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL
State Legislators Visit the Coolidges I I •*£& iA ~ BEX ■ ra>*w yi i dn ■ . - -rr^•_ |\ y. \IKS3i - w \*4 w XoMr F v ’BkR President and Mrs. Coolidge receiving rhe' South Lhtkcta delegation of state legislators on the lawn of the summer White House at the state lodge in the Black Hills. .Naval Reserves Now Have Their Own Ship - tL.. \ W ■KHM w. ....-z-.nr.. -, -. M.. -— ■«. wWQn The 5.176 officers and 27.026 enlisted men in the naval reserves are acquainted with the big guns on the U. S. S. Allen. This is “their own” training ship and it is moored at the Washington navy yard. The Allen served as a destroyer during the World war, in the waters, around Queenstown, Ireland This is the first photograph made on the Allen since it was converted into a naval reserve vessel.
YEARS MEAN NAUGHT R BHHRL w Mt Mrs. Mary A. Waterhouse, one hunired two-years old. is the oldest wman tn the state of Maine and one »f the oldest in the land. She is very tctlve. keen-witted, does chores about he house and other things to show the is far from being “old.” She was >orn in Saco. Maine, April 10. 1825, »nd is now living with her adopted ion and his family at Scarborough. That town gave her one hundred dollars in gold on her one hundredth lirthday. RAS TAFARI IN ROME
Bas TafarL prince regent «*f Abysilnia. photographed on bis arrival in Rome for a state visit to the king »f Ital-
Beautiful Birds Bird of Paradise Is the name of a family of birds found In New Guinea a»d in the neighboring Islands of the South Pacific. The male bird Is noted for the extraordinary beauty and luster of its plumage. To Freshen Furniture Equal parts of olive oil and turpentine, applied with a flannel cloth, form an Ideal polish to keep the shine on the furniture. ■
Chicago’s Youngest Woman Lawyer | -l " | K wW A J. fflww '** ■ « Rose Miller recently became Chicago’s youngest woman lawyer. She is just a few weeks more than twenty-one. Miss Miller graduated from Kent College of Law this spring, the only girl in a class of 200. Father and Son in Motor Tragedy lE”'x«aw : r !i —nn -i int A*,' I fcfY wWA t* I l Ia *d 11 . V....i1l L te-K. S Samuel Klein of Chicago (left) and his father, Morris Klein (right), were killed when the .motor car in which they were attempting to clip seven hours from train time between Chicago and Los Angeles crashed into the side rail of a concrete culvert ten miles east of Council Grove, Kan. The phot<•gr:’■»l• was made j’’"" " **'re their start on rhe tragic run.
Titles Titles are but nicknames, and every nickname is a title. The thing is perfectly harmless in itself, but it marks a sort of foppery in the human character. which degrades It It reduces man into the diminutive of mim in things which are great, and the counterfeit of woman in things which are little. It talks about its fine blue ribbon like a girl, and shows its new garter like a child. A certain writer, es
some antiquity, says: -vvnen i was ■ child, I thought as a child; but when 1 became a man, I put away cblldlsii things.” — Thomas Paine, in “The Rights of Man." Historical Period The “Hundred Days” is the Dame given to the period which elapsed between the departure of Napoleon Bonaparte from the island of Elba, where he was In exile, and his crushing and final defeat at Waterloo oo June 18, 1815.
° WAsiidl ’ fafamAffi PRESSURE TESTER IS OF BIG VALUE (Prepared by ■ the United States Depart* meat of Agriculture.) In determining the proper date for picking apples the adherence of the fruit to the tree, the ground color color of the unblushed portion of the fruit, and the firmness of the tlesh are all important considerations. Says the United States Department of Agriculture. Under some conditions and wjtfc many varieties the time of blooming largely determines the picking date. These facts, have been proved jby tests and observations by the department carried on simultaneously in foxperimental orchards at Amhefst, Mass,; Ithaca, N. Y.; East Lansing Mich.; Wooster, Ohio; Council Blufta Iowa; Rosslyn, Va., and in commercial: orchards at Wenatchee, Wash. Th« results of the studies have been published in Department Bulletin No. 1406-D, “The Ripening, Storage And Handling of Apples.” s j' The rate of softening of apples as they approach picking maturity vabriea greatly under different growing conditions. Apples from regions witjh a long growing season were, on thewhole, softer at picking time than, thosfe from districts having a shdrtet growing season. The mechanical pressure tester, a device to determine when certain varieties are beeojning too soft on the trees, will probably be of value as a measure of picking: maturity. It was observed that when apples ripen under warm conditions, such asprevail during an early ripening: season, the unblushed portion of the fruif is greener when the fruit is in prime picking condition than during ndrmaf seasons. ‘ The bulletin contains a great deal o> data on changes taking place in apples before picking and during storage, as well as information relative to handling apples. Peach Borers Destroyed by Paradichlorobenzene’ The use of paradicblorobenzeae for killing peach borers has come to be a standard practice. There has been) some trouble about selecting thei proper dose of this long-named chranical, and some damage has resulted; frous using an overdose. It seems 1 that Frank H. Beach of the Ohio experiment station has devised a measuring gauge for the chemical: It is quickly made by cutting a piece of smooth paper 4 1-16 inches long and 2% inches wide. Draw a line exactly through the middle and the long way. Mark it • % ounce. Now draw a second line dividing oneof these halves equally. Name this line % ounce. Roll the paper into a cylinder. line» marking the ounces inside, and pasta it into place. Overlap the ends exactly %of an inch. The cylinder will hold an ounce of paradichlorotjenzene, known as PDB by orchardistsj Place the cylinder on any hard surface and fill with PDB to thej line indicating Hie quantity you need. Pour the fine crystals of the chemital intoa small, wide-mouthed bottle ami guage the various amounts op It. A file may be used to cut a mark. Northern peach growers, Mr. Beach says, will find the gas evolving from the chemical most effective if applied after September 15 and befofre October 10; in southern Ohio” from October 1 to 25. Use a half to three-fourtps ounce of PDB on trees three to fire years old, none on younger trees. Mature trees six years old and over may be treated with an ounce. t Horticulture Facts Y Never spray fruits of any kind when they are in bloom. j , • • • In spraying apples the practice is much the same as for plums. Spray cherry trees with lime-sul-phur to prevent leaf spot disease from defoliating the trees. Use one gallon of commercial lime-sulphur to forty gallons of water. • • • Omit none of the first three regular sprays; some years the first is the most important, some the second and some the third. -Each spray helps to make the next more effective and each must be given to insure clean fruit. • • • The coddling moth is the common worm that infests apples;; while the eurculio is a worm often found in cherries and early plums; and the gouger is a bug that prefers the later plums. Pure ground limestone or oyster shell, or both, should be available for the bens at all times. t . •• • J Black raspberries are reproduced ilmost entirely by the tips or ends of lateral branches becoming attached to the ground at the end of the growing season. • • • l Where ir is practical to thin fruit, rare should be taken to pick and destroy all wormy fruit This is especially Important for the first brood of worms. • • • Do not use large openings tn the i Uses of either nozzles or spray guns unless you have 225 pounds pressure or more. They are wasteful make it lifficult to maintain high pressure, ind give too coarse a spray.' • s’ • The custom of piling the manure iround the tree trunks has little to defend it and often results in serious damage to them. The manure should be spread directly over the feeding roots mainly, away from the trunk ind under the spread of the branches.
