The Syracuse Journal, Volume 20, Number 20, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 15 September 1927 — Page 8
Legionnaires Begin to Arrive in France \ —■— < z M **ts*>k smI ~ z Ri ▲jme* v . *JKk J7JMh B^ ( I I I KH 1 1 | Here are some of the first members of the American Legion to arrive tn France for the convention, photographed as they slaked their thirst in Cherbourg. where they landed. At the left Is Capt. Helen Purvianee of the Salvation army," the original “doughnut girl.” who already has gone across to distribute doughnuts to the dough boys once more. ' Funeral of Sacco and Vanzetti in Boston I -j . t*’"' •■-■• x%sisj ; vi •■ >2 ‘ r\ ’ I gjgU-4a-! Aisy>r*aV» *r -x*!» *I *■* xt £BSokW>< 71 *<.tfiSa± Some of the many thousands of Sacco-Vanzetti sympathizers and mourners following the two nearses Ib the funeral procession to the Forest Hill crematory, Boeton.
W. K. Vanderbilt and His New Wife II fr I ILJS “ ■ v *** II r~- -ii - j 'y X '\> a jJ| Err — /M- ■ fk *' •* v jn • *isF * s| I |. ,M4 ** :'T ; m X '«/ M? •’,/■£' SK : ;. I William K. Vanderbilt nod Mrs. Rosamond Warburton, who were married in Paris. The groom's application to dispense with the ten days’ notice demanded by the French law was denied by the authorities. At the British War Maneuvers II / I : I • • ,•-•/; i : ' C3t <’ ,■ : kj 3l wSc £j. i *’aAa ' ■"■■ -4wk?\ Ab * ;Vi m Sk If Britain's new war machine, the mechanised force, bad its first intensive field traininc on Salisbury plain recently. Photograph shows gas masked members of the infantry passing through the gas are*.
CONDENSED IN A FEW LINES
Petroleum was first used as medicine by the Greek philosopher Herodotus. about 454 B. C The thatched cottage of Isaak Walton, famous Seventeenth century fisherman. In Staffordshire, has burned down. Automobile stop signs In Ann Ar hot. Mich., now mv marked with fir ores telling the fine for violating the tow. f
The gauthusia. an American fish. Is b«|tag mkl to destroy the larvae of mosquitoes tn lakes and ponds In Spain, Italy, Germany, Russia and Jugoslavia. ?To protect himself against pickpockets while traveling tn Poland, T. C Augustine, of St. Joseph. Mo., sewed fish books in his pockets, and he caught two pickpockets in Warsaw in this manner, be says. •
WITH BROKEN NECK M / c ■■, 11 JEr-yit -■' -a.-y- v ~ ffiL? -I ■ \ W a i One year ago Merrill V. Beugie oi Rosemont, Va., was taking a radio course when he had his neck broken in an automobile mishap. (Its neck was first encased in a plaster east, and now is In a steel and leather body brace, which he has worn while com pitting bis radio course. He has Just been licensed by the government as a first class radio operator. IN NICARAGUA "* Wl i w —""' Brig. Gen. Frank' R. McCoy, appointed by President Coolidge to supervise the Nicaraguan elections in 1928. has arrived In Managua. Nicaragua, where be was presented to Presidem Diax by Charles C. Eberhardt, the American minister. Founded by Columbae The first European city in the New world, named Isabella. was founded by Christopher Columbus In t>ecember 1493, on the northern shore of Haiti, about 25 miles west of tbe present town of Puerto Plata. How About It? “We are not what we think we are; we are what we think,“ philosophizes an exchange. Why. if we are what wo think, what we think we are we are, are we not—vr are wet
THE STRACrSE JOURNAL
OUR COMIC SECTION I Events in the Lives of Little Men IN THE SHAPE sex KKpHTTHIS WAV I fcS (kb COLD ' 'NADEI LEMONAPE. \T ' I*' A’ 4?R- ■ 7»< ;7i7, w®Jl3S'- l iU--S c U?* ATr- K femLLTT "v-i i I aoßiiJ* V^/1\ •*•*■/'' / fSc '■ ylfMil i ' : w ‘i iW?■ y A ) ® H [(Camirtt. W. N.U > ; FINNEY OF THE FORCE Through With It for Life / K I I /am TmaT \ z' - ''X. /Ot ( SmWGhmiSSY iU J ( DUMB cmanGEO h>S WAVS TAN NV— \ »J \ TobAV, fanny \ tANKk.f 1 HE WAS ON the TinTM FtOOQ \ x 1 J AV TUE NEW.OOG AN'CAT 1 _-*** AN Ot tXPECT HE b HAO A J V*W / k DHi?INK OR TWO—* raWTi W? > / / X z xo; / 1 k) \ / RUM SZT" - I I /AN WAS ? A \ f S HAUCN iSSY has /•, J.— ft Em K,I T " / \ Took HIS LAST / |<p/ Hg .. §L ; Wfe'-Rr* zX i / i \ \ ' sf ■'A <z \ / I ?■ a \ /tvt, ~ffy /tLj) |\ O Western Newspaper Union >x^a ‘ |f AtsxAio»R THE FEATHERHEADS For Mrs. Middleton’s Benefit I’V >||l ll?^„ 0 “ VE . S ' f^? S _fl C 2 1 ' Xi K decoy’s -or >I i I'hllhl I come out for Onneq.— »\ J iueres no use Trying* I\7 chacminG- }‘^ b _ $ . i I I. Mb I H Fn - iXANC>I With BE SO PLEASED! || To KEEP FfteODV’S j UA FATHER-? |l 'f nil FEUX OFTEN SPEAKS OF'T4£LOVELY /■[ Qoom IKI ORDER— / -M Hf ini&Nt qualities in that wonderful/ k he's just a REAL ‘‘ \PCTUQE MOQ SENT US— • / ETS Hl/ lift3/XMO h|)ZWELL WELL-WHO hfli ===== \Z / Whip Ii f HAULED, THATOLb I f / t k r 1 ’ \i// vl/// >p<4l £?y I — l W] r J .'ZWiLZF Vm '© v^teff*N^spai»er\?^i?on^~^^ ~ -U 41 '4 il««Pg>« I
A GOOD SHOT "Do you miss your husband much!”
"No—Fm a good shot." By the Beard! Magistrate (to accused)—lf your conscience is as black as your beard it must be in a very bad way. Accused—Well, if we are going by beards you have no conscience at all. —Berlin Der Brammer. Balm for Hie Wound He—W«e I go, Mary, I must ask you once more to be my wife.
She —I am so sorry, Fred, but I can never be anything more than a sister to you. He (sighing resignedly)—Well, all right, kiss brother good night and I’ll go.—Capper's Weekly. A Big Surprise Tom —How can that litt'e birthday gift for your wife be a surprise if she told you what she wanted? Henry—Fm not going to it to her.
>® Knrcna cameßE? U& 1917. We«t«rn Newspaper Union.) THE LITTLE POOL. I am too small for winds to mar My surface, but I hold a star." EVERYDAY GOOD THINGS A good breakfast dish which. If th* family likes tomatoes, everyone will
enjoy, is buttered toast or bread heated in the oven and buttered and seasoned hot tomatoes poured over the slices Another Is: Tomato Cream Toast —Melt three tablespoonfuls of butter and blend it with four tablespoonfuls of flour. I‘onr over
it gradually one and onehalf cupfuls of strained tomatoes, add a speck of soda. Season with salt and pepfH-r, then add three-fourths of » cupful of hot cream and pour over well-buttered toast. Serve promptly Fruit Salad. —Slice two oranges after peeling, very thin, add one thinly sliced banana, one-half of a lemon, one cupful of stoned cherries and onehalf cupful of blanched and shredded almonds. Serve with French dressing. Deviled Oyster*.—Clean, 'train anc i chop slightly one pint of oysters. Prepare a sauce of one-fourth cupful each of butter and Hour and when well blended add two-thirds of a cupful ot milk, one egg yolk, one-half teaspoonful of salt, one-half tablespoonful ot minced parsley, a dash of cayenne, a teaspoonful of lentoji juice. Arrange in buttered scallop shells or in ramekins. cover with buttered crumbs and bake for twelve to fifteen minutes. Cheese Savory.—Place a cake ot cream cheese in a small bowl which has been rubbed with a cut clove ot garlic, add a tablespoonful of softened butter, one-half teasi>oonful ot minced parsley, one teasp<xmful ot chopped olives, and one-third of » teaspoonful, each of Worcestershire sauce and anchovy paste. Season with salt, pepper, paprika and pack elose'y in a gtass mold. Turn onto w plate when firm. Serve with toasted crackers. St'rve cold cooked lamb chops ot mutton roast in slices, reheated in the following sauce: Make a brown sauce with three tablespoonfuls each ot butter and flour; when well blended and brown add a cupful of meat stock, then add a teaspoonful of lemon Juice and a few drops of onion juice with a half of a glass of currant jelly. Season with salt and pepper and serve. Peach Time. The lucious peach is a universal favorite and has been called the “children’s fruit.” be-
cause it seldom disagrees with them. Its melting sweetness lends itself to any number oi dainty desserts, although it is at its best, as are most
of the tempting fruits, when it is served “au naturel.* For the winter table there is nothing better liked .than a well-prepared Jar of Brandy Peaches Without Brandy.— This is an old fashioned recipe whtcb has been tried and proven many times Fill mason Jars with carefully selected. perfectly ripe peaches which have been peeled, but not stoned. Fill the spaces with granulated sugar, shaking down well and putting ,in as much as possible. Seal as usual and bury in a hole in the ground dug three feet ileep to below the frost. Line the hole with hay or straw and cover the Jars with it, then the dirt. Leave until si’ring. or the ground Is thawed. ! before digging up. When open< d the fruit will be centered with a delicious I sirup and will be much better flavored than by any other method of preserving them. Re sure to remember where they are buried. Peach Pickles. — Dip a peck c 4 peaches into hot water and rub with a coarse towel to remove tlie ftizz. The skin may be’removed if desired, dipping into boiling watey. Most cooks prefer to keep the skin for flavor. Stick each peach <vith four whole cloves and drop them a few at a time IntQ the following sirup: Boit a pint of vinegar with two pounds of brown sugar and an ounce of cinnamon in the stick. When the peaches are easily pieced, place in the Jar until all are cooked. Cook dewn the sirup for a few minutes, pour over the peaches and cover as usual. Peach Ice Cream.—Cut up and put through a rieer sufficient ripe peaches to make one and oge-half cupfuls of pulp, add the Juice of a lemon and one and one-fourth cupfuls of sugar. Add one pint of thin cream and freeze as usual. Pack in a brick or meloa mold and turn out on a platter, garnish with quartered peaches and sprinkle the cream with chopped pistachio nuts. Peach Cobbler. — Peel and slice enough peaches to fill a deep plate, piling high in the center. Sprinkle thickly with sugar mixed with a tablespoonful of flour. Cover with a crust, leaving an opening for the steam to escape. Bake in a moderate oven until brown. Serve with cream and sugar. It is not necessary that any one meal of the day should be well balanced with the proper food principles; the important thing is that the day’s food should be so balanced. Perfect Meat London dietitians have demonstrated the “perfect meal.” It included cold chicken and egg sauce, new potatoes, salad, cornflour mold, fruit salad with cream, whole wheat bread add butter and lemonade. All three vitamlnes, A, B, and C, are included. Unc/e Eben “De man dat does his best, “ said Unde Eben. “deserves credit. Unless he’s doin' bis best to do somebody elsa. n —Washington Star.
