The Syracuse Journal, Volume 20, Number 18, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 1 September 1927 — Page 6
General Wood Laid to Rest in Arlington
Ail* tea ifl^tMzfe k * \<*T PW Mw—m a jXS3L>A • -- .V<WS&y BW‘«” "“*’ . EagAiyw •*••* —9M ■
In compliance with his last wish, Maj. Gen. Leonard Wood, famous soldier and governor general of the Philippine Islands who died in Boston, was laid to rest in Arlington National cemetery among the departed Rough Riders he so gallantly led in battle in Cuba 27 years ago
Chief Leading 0 Eagle Receives His Headdress
** -3^' v Afex QrSw* ? >. rOTftfT KX llYfi hA —B (/' fwiiF'R ’Wi J — - - n.-nWfili-H «« -d- ®Hr\B - JSttJW W * DM, »iri ft wßir ■ Alws ;(■ B.C/W prywk»' ■ ®^ : « \ - i .«£■■■** 111 * ■
President Coolidge being initiated Into the tribe of the Ogalala Sioux at Deadwood and receiving from Princess Rose Rud Yellow Robe the headdress of feathers as he was named Chief Leading Eagle.
Dawes and Wales Open Peace Bridge
| JPv 7 -7 fe, « /‘AteftSk •*-> \?W | y£fa||fi r « Majnki■Bl£|S . - K 'IHFt" W ; ■BIH I ’ t 'W^B|p^®-“*Jfctf'"''*' > ’* l *^>*jHhr-' i ' fr ~~^.^j»‘"'" r * ff! *'» -~ ■• - Whii mK 't (SWO kx-- j*S«iw#^7o-. m.i,££*. ... »Jl
Vice President Dawes shaking hands with the prince of Wales at the center of the new peace bridge connecting Fort Erie. Canada, and Buffalo. N. Y. They are shown at the ribbons which were cut to open the bridge officially.
New Jersey Has a Serious Flood
I "jl I \ .> IhMrK . /
Heavy rainstorms caused floods In the vicinity of Newark. N. X, that were the worst experienced there In forty years. In South Orange the water was ten feet deep, and the street car seen in the photograph was completely swamped. Like a good sea captain, Patrick Reilly, operator of the car, stuck to the last, until every man, woman and child bad left the “ship."
OF INTEREST TO EVERYBODY
Australia Is producing a sear fruit tailed the cucumber apple The ancient Egyptians colored their textiles chiefly red, Wue, yellow and peen. The African explorer Livingstone reported that some natives used mow fuitoes as food. Economic distress caused by a hailstorm July IX 1788. helped to start off the French revolution.
Tobacco demands more work an acre than any other big crop in this country. Bagdad citixens put their savings In tiroes of plenty into the purchase of rugs, and sell these possessions in hard times. A party of explorers has set out to reach the source of the Maranon river, one of the chief tributaries of the A—ffTffl*
MISS ILLINOIS
■.I Ml EA a I / w S' x *"* / I ' "TlllK •■'■&• V“J I M -fll *W*J*tt? I .. . A, . j'w II ■< h B 5 W ■SI K .ife' t ■ * i < tfjfiffi&wßwm mlMhitihK*te ft MOBBBk
Miss Lois Delander of Joliet, BL* was selected as Miss Illinois to compete In the Atlantic City beauty tournament She is seventeen years old. weighs 122 pounds and has gray eyes and unbobbed brown hair.
HUGHITT WONT QUIT
•ZU i ** i ■
Marvin Hughilt of Chicago, retired head of the North Western railroad, who, at .ninety, refuses to act his age and pass out of the picture. He still “works at railroading** in his office as chairman of the finance committee of the road, and sayg that is what keeps him young and spry. Won Fame as Nmriffater Martin Belhalm. celebrated navigator and ereuaographer died July 29. 150®. Be was a friend ot Columbus. The Nuremberg globe, preserved tn that city, was constructed by him tn 1492. It shows an interesting conception of the world. Beoxtfy’s Fleeting Spell The beauty that addresses ItseM to the eyes is only the spell of the moment; the eye of the body Is not always that of the souL—George Sand.
THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL '
OUR COMIC SECTION
Catching
4 >n Q V (^ BUSIHES£ _ I -t _ i C\ tSMI-V S' <^ r/ '' Xs 'y f hAILV ,/ F rz j [ -• \ I I V \ ~~— i s—\ j i \\ m r I twi.y A |K TN <r T L-—-~~l_ Jr — | y Business] j J |Mr. business ’ A \ I NEXT f\ fe? I S \ Iv\ > I v \ \ r PA'/ I < J)^ QOnc I JTl\ I r \ I [next I |<c»tw«k#.n.u.)\ |¥&y >— —* ) I PAV I
FINNEY OF THE FORCE
"/btfloPQY Finney! 'W/ lUs IS AX, 111/ °' VE B * N NO.CASSiDy/- ( ©l'm gladyez dropped ky gprenr day z LLU Finney-/*/ Goin ) /Tbo many people- \ IN- O' VE BIN "MINKIN - '* S * E| 2 I \'NTEta VAVJCYVIUB \S / HUV SEEN YEi CLOM4 JX. S^/J^7 ,CAS3,C!tV * J / \ AQOUNO FEQ NcyHiN’. _X\. ~ / / / SfeX \ nowanwuoPAY lA~7 75 ’ V*> SEE yez y Kfl\ vF * QtfjTXJmPo yeh X.l n Vr-Vik XJ WjWi ■... ..-LL »ub The house- \v • t / ycpe a ye®v \ MH ' A, ( 6ooc> BAQBEP JT U iL SWIMMER AN' * J/A \ N’B TFIRAINEC* A'XssX p 1 v C. '- nk buulits —7. \ 6 l\>° 2 oSj : : C o r rJI ? /% ‘ryC <y j / °\ # • *vX_ ZPAv-'V“P 3 wX/zw®<B/" T 3 Is °Y ft *s* 111 1 I © "> s tern Newspaper — kJh»jMßßßßßfcJawßaasßßßß«na«Bfc«awaw««wwwß"tw«"B»—•
THE FEATHERHEADS
W M» ?eVW good on Tm& V~=J I 2S-tSrt T i~ nrt*jF? }/ S 7 s lUE vwhv when i pB V-oF WELL DONE;; i i bTDGIve CIPCUBES ASA / ■7 '7 J>K HA * Ar4j4P 1 jay/- I KEPT lUEAUDCNCE/ I 77\ c V '*^[/! ! f| . f WUN&’-« om Wstu — ■ j SwJ-T-JjW > JJjHxwt) ▼tL I /1 \ — yAKtsP" 'I J ya‘"S’iii r-~“» ’ \jiii f , : f .1 ®| GT ' | reu. wheh'«x>vE P= I Ll I '^ 5_ WITTY— SooKHa..’ J Isl I l ß fe^r u “ V,l 'y I M *1 ■©» A y ~'- <SsL © We9ter ° Newspaper Union ~~~ * l l i•' / f \$?X. |
NOT POSSIBLE ■ ■■■■«■■ Uli Dusty Hobo (at the public bath)—
He’s So Original
I think that I got my last bath here. Attendant—That couldn’t be —this bash has only been open for three years. Worn Ones First Main street was in extraordinary confusion. Piles of stone along the car tracks, exposed rails and slowly creeping trolleys showed that some extensive repair work was going on. “What are they doing!” asked Miss Jenkins of her practical uncle. “They are taking *up some unused
Hair- raisin’
car tracks,” he replied. “Can’t you see?" “Why, yes," she said, "but how funny! I should think that they would take up the used ones.” A Natural Error Stranger—l represent a society for the prevention of profanity. I want to take profanity entirely out of your life and— Jones (calling to bls wife) —I say. Mary, here’s a man who wants to buy our ear!
ICThe Kitchen t Cabinet E
(©. 1937. by Western Newspaper Union.) Home folks! Well, that-air nam% to me,. Sounds Jis the same as poetry— That is, if poetry is Jis As sweet as I’va hearn tell it is! SERVING COLD MEATS So often a few slices of some choice roast, stew or steak are allowed to
waste because the family Is tired of it as such. A. little different sauce, will make over a dish. Mutton on Toast.— Slice some thin pieces of mutton —the rarer the better—and place on well buttered squares of toasL Add a drop of Worcestershire sauce on each and
dot with a spoonful of currant jelly. Place In a hot oven and ser\-e as soon as well heated. Cannelon Royal.—-Take a pound of cold roast veal, free it from skin and grind it - - through the meat grinder twice. Add to it a quarter of a pound of ham also ground. Season with salt and pepper, minced parsley, half a teaspoonful of minced onion, a littlegrated lemon rind and a pinch of nutmeg. Mix well, add two well beaten eggs, shape into a roll, cover with buttered paper and bake half an hour. Roulade of Beef.—Take a pound of cold roast beef, free it from skin and gristle and put it through the meat grinder with a third of a potind of ham, lean and fat Season highly with salt, pepper, a teaspoonful of minced olives, a few drops of tabasco sauce, a teaspoonful of minced parsley, a little grated lemon peel and a bit of nutmeg. Mix all together and add one-half cupful of cooked macaroni, cut into one inch lengths and tossed tn butter. Add the well beaten yolks of two eggs afid the whites beaten to a stiff, froth. Mix well and roll, cover with greased paper and bake in a moderate oven one-half hour. Serve with the following saucb: Add salt and pepper to a pint of tomatoes which have been put through a sieve. • Add a teaspoonful of sugar, a tablespoonful of vinegar, a teaspoonful of onion Juice of half a clove of garlic minced. Cook until reduced to a thick sauce. Sardine Salad.—Drain a can of sardines, sprinkle with lemon juice and alternate with bard cooked egg quarters on lettuce. Sprinkle with finely shredded onion. and serve with • French dressing. Some use the oil from the sardine can with lemon juice and it is very good, as well as economical. ' Luncheon Dishes. Myrtle Reed, who did not practice what she preached, said: “Judging by
the various books on the subject of luncheons, people do not eat at noon unless they have company." This is probably true, especially among women in families where the man of the house takes his noon meal downtown. The houseeven if entirely alone, should have a hot
dish and sit down to eat it Myrtle Reed continues: “People who do not take time to eat and sleep, presently are obliged to take time to die. Those who from false notions of economy live upon improper food, are shortly put to the greater expense of a funeral. It is better to; spend money on fruits, vegetables, milk and eggs than upon wreaths and gates ajar. The one who leads the procession, wiih his friends riding behind, might better have postponed this particular entertainment for a few years and in most cases it could be done by taking more time to live while engaged in the business of living.” Tongue.—Tongue makes a most acceptable meat. If lightly corned or fresh it Is equally delicious. Boil it tender, then remove the skin and serve thinly sliced with a tongue sauce or with a rich brown sauce with a half cupful of chopped raisins added. Cooked in The oven covered with chopped carrot and celery until the vegetables are tender, using some of the broth, Is another most delicious method. Serve hot with the vegetables. Rabbit With Vegetables—Cup up the rabbit in joints and brown in any >Weet fat Remove to a kettle and add thtee small onions, a clove of garlic, one-half a bay leaf, a bit of thyme, a teaspoonful of salt onefourth teaspoonful of pepper and two cupfuls of boiling water. Simmer until tender. Add a few cook until they are done. Serve the rabbit on a platter with the vegetables around it as a garnish. Luncheon Dish.—Butter squares bread and lay in a baking dish with a layer of hard cooked eggs cut into eighths, sprinkle with cheese and place another layer. Pour ever a cupful of milk to which has been added one egg; beat the egg lightly and mix with the milk. Bake in a moderate oven until the custard is set. Serve hot Cold cooked macaroni is very nice prepared in this way with hard cooked eggs and a thick white sauce or cqgtard. Velvet Sherbet—Take one quart of rich milk, a pinch of salt, the juice of three lemons and one and threefourths cupfuls of sugar. Stir until the sugar ia dissolved, then freeze. Made Double Catch A former named Brown, living near Kinston. N. CL, set a steel trap in a tree to catch a chicken-stealing hawk, remarks Capper’s Weekly. Next morning he found the hawk In the trap and In Its talons a trout Cenerotu Bank Wife (with her first • checking account)—Oh, John, the bank has sent me back all the checks I drew last month, so I haven’t spent anything.— Boston Transcript
