The Syracuse Journal, Volume 20, Number 24, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 13 October 1927 — Page 2

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Ry ELMO SCOTT WATSON HERE’S a touch of autumn coolness in the air and the faint purple haze that hangs over the distant ’ hills tells that Indian summer is at huud. A mammoth structure of concrete and steel, gleaming white in the sunny October afternoon, a vibrant mass of humanity—-40,000— 50,000—60.000. Bands playing—songs

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—the measured cadence of r-a-h, r-a-h, r-a-h, and ■ Sharper explosion of sound as dervishes in white break into a new set of contortions. A shifting, changing kaleidoscope of color and motion and sound which is suddenly stilled tn that breathless moment before the whistle shrills. A thump and a soaring object high in the air—th® 1 pounding of cleated shoes on the turf —the Impact of human bodies- —two lines of husky young American manhood that bend and •way. Then with the eyes of the 00.000 riveted on that little group of 22 down there on the rectangular patch of green, one of the lines •hists and spreads. A crouching figure runs bark from the mats snd the ball shoots over the line into the arms of a player far off to the right As he turns and takes the first step tn his flight down the chalk-marked field, the 60.000 come to their feet in one mighty roar—‘‘Touchdown!" And that's football! Such was the scene that was repeated time after time last year and if the season of 1926 Is any criterion it will be repeated many more times during the season of 1027. When the curtain went down last November, an eastern sports writer declared that^ ‘ Superlatives only may be used in reviewing the football season of 1926. In matters of attendance, stirring competition, thrilling incident and amaxlng form reversals no season in the more than fifty years of gridiron play approached the ten weeks which recently passed into history." if only the matter of attendance alone were considered It would be sufficient to show what a bold football now has on the American public. Time was when Vox Populi knew but little of •rah. rah, rah." He left that to the "collegians" •nd regarded with a tolerant eye the autumnal madness which afflicted them early In September, reached its high fever point late in October and then cooled off with the first snow Hurries in November. But in late years this virus got into the body politic and. before he realised it, Mr. Average American was troubled with the fall restfessaess which had heretofore afflicted only his sons—and daughters—as they began packing their trunks “to go away to college." Perhaps it is not saying too much to assert that there Is one individual principally responsible for this change in the public attitude toward football, and that individual is the erstwhile iceman of Wheaton. 111, young Mr. Harold Grange. The young Mr. Grange began playing football under the tutelage of Coach Bob Zuppke at the University of Illinois in 1923 and immediately gave promise of being an unusual backfield man. Then the season of 1924 opened. Illinois was dedicating its new millloo-dollar stadium with

Lavish Use of Lace in Ruff for Royalty

It to said that 35 yards of lace necessary to tri® one of those huge. Wray affairs which arose above Queen Elisabeth's head in the form of a slant raff. The queen had a yellow neck, and the stylo helped her to conceal K, aeeordta* to rnmor TW Puritans frowned oo lace, as they did ■poo all the amenities of fraceful ttvtag. Yet. when Cromwell's body lay to state. It was draped with the moot

flichigan as the opposing team. A crowd of 67.000 had gathered for the evenfc (The photograph of that crowd is shown above.) Michigan kicked off. The agile young Mr. Grange received <the ball anti ran through the whole Michigan team for a touchdown. Michigan kicked off again and after one play Grange took the ball and again ran the length of the field for a touchdown. In fact, four times during the first quarter the Illinois halfback diinced across the Maize and Blue goal line to and just to complete the afternoon's work he made another touchdown later tn the game. But it was not until the season of 1925 that this red-headed youngster I became a national figure. Illinois was scheduled to play Pennsylvania, one of the strongest teams in the East that year and undefeated up to the time they met .the western invaders on historic Franklin field. The East had heard of Grange, of course, but it was a bit skeptical of the Middle West’s boast that he was a gridiron superman. Sixty-three thousand people saw that game—saw Grange, despite the handicap of a muddy field, carry the ball 32 times, average 11 yards on every play, run through the whole Penn team twice for gains of 50 yards each time and score three touchdowns. But more important than the fact that “Red” Grange was one of the greatest football stars that ever sped across a college gridiron and that his entry into professional football gave it new life is the fact that he was the dominant figure in giving several million Americans a new major sport interest which premises to give baseball serious competition for the title of “the great national game.” For after the seasons of 1924 and 1925 the American public had tasted football and found It good. * So It was prepared to make the season of 19C3) the greatest in every resi-ect that the sport had known up to that time. As early as the third week of the 1926 season, the various stadia Id different parts of the country. seating from 40.600 to more than 60,000, were reporting cajmclty crowds. By the end of the season the larger colleges <rf the East reported that at least 5,000.000 had seen their games. In the Big Ten the game bad drawn a total gallery of more than 1.500,000 and on the Pacific coast seven college teams bad played before 1J250.000 fans. All In all. it has been estimated that the 200 or more colleges which had football teams drew Into their football stands the amazing tout of 15.009,000 persons. Since the tickets were priced all the way from 73 cents for the small colleges, to the top price of >ls for the Army-Navy game, it is estimated that the American public was willing to spen<i a minimum of $30,000,000 for its Saturday afternoon diversion and that figure may ba Increased by several millions when the activities of the speculators are taken Into consideration. It was a season of thrills and upsets, too. Dartmouth. the undisputed champion of the country In 1925 and without a defeat on Its record for nearly three years, failed to win a single major contest all season, losing to Tale, Harvard. Brown and Cornell. Again aud again the little David triumphed over the giant Goliath. Harvard lost the first game of the season to little Geneva college; early in the seascm little St. Mary’s, out on the Pacific coast, humbled the California

splendid Flemish lace, and tn tbe next reign, that of Charles 11. a revival came in. and the court wore lace in greeter profusion than ever. Gallants even filled their wide boot tops with rich ruffles of tt. Estelle EL Ries relates, in World Traveler. At this time tbe custom of dressing the hair in flowing locks effectually killed the wide collar, as only the front could be seen. Therefore, the

beck part was eliminated, and lace was reduced to the form of a cravat, as far as neckwear was concerned. But almost the whole feminine world was now engaged in lacemaking, and the necessary outfit became as much a part of the shepherdess’ poetic equipment as her crook and kerchief Peasant women as well as great ladies found time and opportunity for this occupation. It is curious to note that the words Tace" and “lassoo" are both derived from the sam* Lutin word that means

THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL

■ ■ JftHHM CAPTAIN WILSON. ARMY

Bears; Knute Rockne’s Notre Dame team, famous for its “Four Horsemanship,” seemed to be riding easily to national honors until they came a cropper at Pittsburgh and Carnegie Tech won by a score of 19 to 0. But they took their turn in upsetting exercises when they journeyed out to the Pacific coast to meet Coach Howard Jones’ Southern California eleven. Except for a onepoint defeat at the hands of Stanford, U. S. C. had been clicking off victories at a regular pace. Then Notre Dame came along and handed them a 13 to 12 defeat in the game which rang down the curtain on the 1926 season. Thrills and upsets, upsets and thrills! At Ithaca, Cornell, trailing Dartmouth 7 to 23 in the last period, unleashed a sensational attack which carried Dobie s men to a 24 to 23 victory over the Green. At Annapolis with Colgate leading Navy 7 to 6 in the last minute of play, on the Middies' 3 yard line and headed for a touchdown. a Colgate fumbled and Lloyd, a Navy end. picked up the ball and ran 97 yards to a Navy 13 to 7 victory. At Mlnneai>olis. Micbtgan, outrushed 20 yards to 1 by Minnesota and trailing 0 to 6. scored a sensational victory in the last period when Benny Friedman kicked the goal to make a final score of Michigan 7. Minnesota 6. But the climax of the season tn interest and in attendance came on November 27 when the Army and the Navy met in the Soldier field stadium at Chicago. It was the first time the annual service game had ever been played west of the Alleghenies. It was the first time, too, that a crowd of 110.000 had ever gathered to see a football game. Early in the game the Navy ran roughshod over the Cadets for a lead of 14 to 0. Then the Army rallied, tied the count at 14 to 14 and scored a touchdown to give them a 21 to 14 lead. Then the Navy came back with a volley of passes and Halfback Shapley skirted the end for a touchdown. The score was then 21 to 30. It remained tor Halfback Hamilton of the Navy to decide the issue. He kicked the goal. Score: Army 21. Navy 21. Such was the season of 1926. the “season of superlatives.” What will 1927 be? It also may be a season of superlatives in attendance or In thrills when Harvard meets Yale, when California meets Stanford, when Pennsylvania plays Chicago or vhtn Notre Dame and Southern California meet on Soldier field on November 26. For this week and next week and for the next five or six weeks 15.000.000 Americans or more will be crowding into college stadia all over the United States to await the one big thrill In the game, to come to their feet In the mighty roar es "Touchdown!* For that's football!

loop. This Is a good example of the effect of a popular fad. Sophistication Bernice had some of her ttttl® friends In for luncheon the other day, and among other things, she had olives. She offered them to Effie, who said she did not like them, whereupon Bernice replied la a superior fashion: “Oh. I didn’t Uke ’em myself at first, but you must aocumulate a taste for them."

Os USE WHITEWASH THAT WILL STICK Whitewash has many valuable uses around the dairy barn. It not only helps appearances, but Is a great aid from a sanitary standpoint. One of the most serious problems has been to secure a mixture that will stick for some time. The following mixture has been recommended by the National Lime association as one which will meet this requirement: Soak five pounds of casein in about two gallons of warm or hot water until thoroughly softened (about two hours). Dissolve three pounds of trisodium phosphate in one gallon of water and add to the casein solution. Allow the mixture to dissolve. Prepare a thick cream by mixing fifty pounds of hydrated lime in seven gallons of water, stirring vigorously. Dissolve three pints of formaldehyde In three gallons of water. When the lime paste and the casein solution are both thorougly cool, slowly add the casein solution to the lime, stirring constantly and vigorously. Care must be taken not to add the formaldehyde too rapidly. as carelessness may cause the casein to “jell out” and spoil the batch. A cold lime paste may be used In place of the hydrated lime. This can be made by slaking 38 pounds of burned lime. This mixture may be applied either as a spray or with a brush. , A simpler mixture but not so durable Is made by slaking twenty pounds of burned lime by adding six gallons of water in small portions. Dissolve one pound of zinc sulphate tn on® gallon of water. When dissolved, add the sulphate solution tc the lime. Then add one gallon of skim milk. Make up only enough for one day's application and keep well stirred while applying. This should be applied with a brush.

Fall Feeding of Dairy Cows Quite Important The wise dairyman will feed liberally during the fait months. Cows which are not well fed at this time will go into the winter Miin in flesh and with reduced milk flow. It will f be expensive and largely in vain to attempt to bring them back to normal dow after they go on winter rations. It will pay to begin feeding silage and hey early. ‘ The extra feed given at this time will not oa'y bring good. Immediate returns, but affect the milk flow for the whole year 9y putting the i cow in good condition to go through the winter months. Cows which go Into the winter in good, vitality, and with undiminished milk flow, are the >nes which will make most economical use of the high-priced feeds given ■ during that period. Keep up the milk flow during the fall months by proper feeding. It will pay. Cold, uncomfortable cows will not make economical use of feed. Their highly developed nervous systems are ■ very susceptible to sudden changes in temperature. This should be borne in mind in the fall; when the first cold rains and cold winds come. Protection from these will prevent the rej duction in milk flow which they al- : ways cause. Do not waste feed by letting cows stand out in cold winds and rain. Grain Fed to Dairy Calf Proves Good Investment A little grain fed to the dairy calves on grass generally proves to be a good Investment. A mixture of corn and >ats, equal parts, is satisfactory for this purpose, although 10 per cent of linseed meal added to the mixture will produce a larger growth. When the pasture Is good the addition of lin- , seed meal is seldom necessary. Young waives which are allowed to secure all of their ration from pasture will often become stunted. Yearlings should hot need additional feed If the pasture is satisfactory, but the small calves should have access to one or two pounds pf grain daily, depending upon their size. If it is impossible to give the young calves a separate pasture, it Is often possible to build a calf creep'where the small calves can get id to eat their daily ration of grain. Rye Flavors Milk The use of rye for fall and winter pasture as practiced on many dairy farms, according to A. C. Ragsdale, bead of the dairy department, Missouri College of Agriculture, is objectionable because of a flavor it often gives to milk and sweet cream. As a succulent, milk-producing' pasture, it is excellent, but because of the flavor and frequently the odor it gives to the milk, rye is giving way to wheat. Sweet Clover Pasture Sweet clover is a great help In solving the pasture difficulty. The most successful ones find that pasturing the second year’s growth until after Harvest is best. The sweet clover is •own to the small grain, and after the shocks are removed from the grain fields the pasture is abundant and lasting to normal seasons. Care must be taken not to overstock iL Sweet clover will stand a reasonable amount of fall pasturing, even better than other Hovers. Many Unprofitable Cows Surely every man who keeps and milks a cow is ambitious to make bis work pleasant and profitable. Still, it la rather embarrassing, and certainly not a compliment to our wisdom to know that 33 per cant of all the eowa we keep to this country are unprofitable. One cow out of three Is a parasite and a boarder. We must not, however, blame the cows too much, for we really are most to blame as many of our cows would give a profit If they had a chance.

What’s the f Answer -.♦ Quettiont No. 17 1 — Who was the Venerable Bede? 2— Wha» city is regarded as the greatest commercial center of Asia? 3— What Is the meet notable characteristic of the movie comedian. Buster Keaton? 4— Who was the leading pitcher in the American league in 1926? 5— What famous British spy was banged by the Continental forces during the Revolution? 6— Who was the American commander of the U. S. S. Constitution In the battle with the British ship Guerrlere? 7— Who invented the airbrake? 8 — How many chambers are there in the human heart? &—ls It correct to call the Olympic games an Olympiad? 10_What is God? 11—Why did Oliver Wendell Holmes write the poem “Old Ironsides’’? ,12 —What South American country was the ancient kingdom of Quito? 13— What Island Is noted for its many colossal images and architectural ruins? 14— What great pianist of the day is also a statesman and has served as premier of his country? ' 15— What great caricaturist, working in colors, is remembered largely for his illustrations for the novels and sketches of Charles Dickens? 16— What horse won the Kentucky Derby in 1914 and what was bis time? 17— What famous American warship was called “Old Ironsides”? 18— What President had been known as “Old Rough and Ready” In what war? 19 — Who invented antiseptic surgery? 20— What does the sense of smell do to help many animals?

Answers No. 16 1— Mount Logan, in the Yukon 2— Willie Munden with 171 firsts. B—Gen.8 —Gen. George Meade. 4 — Daniel Boone; 5— In Arkansas. 6— Josepn Mallord William Turner. 7 — Algernon Blackwood. 8— This land crab is often over a foot long and frequents coral island* in the Indian and Pacific oceans. 9— That it is not significantly related to the matter in hand. 10— For Thine is the kingdom, and the power, and the glory, forever. 11— “Pilgrim’s Progress" by John Bunyan. 12— Mount Whitney. In California 13 — Scapa Flow. 14— Gen. John C. Fremont. 15— Battle of Trenton. 16 — In the feet. 17— Leopold Auer. 18— On the Islands in the Caribbean sea. 19— Instead of “whom" it should be “who,” nominative ease as subject of the verb “was,” 20— In the year 1866. Famous Painter Put Heart Into His Work Tn many respects the career of Titian, the Venetian artist, is without parallel in the history of art. The span of his productive life Is unprecedented. He lived to be ninety-nine years old and painted steadily for nearly seventy-fiye years. This noted painter apparently believed that no amount of inspiration or intuitive genius is a substitute for painstaking labor. A contemporary wrote of him: “He laid in his pictures with a mass of colors which served him as a ground-work for what he wanted to express. I myself have seen such powerful strokes swept In by him with solid pigment, sometimes with pure *terra rossa' (red ocher) —and this served him for the half-tones — sometimes with a brush full of whit® lead: and with the same brush dipped in red, black or yellow he picked out the lights. In four strokes he had sketched In a remarkably beautiful figure. Then he laid the picture against the wall, and left It there, often for several months, without looking at it again, and when he wanted to work at it he examined ft very critically as If It were his mortal enemy, in order to discover any possible faults. Then he took away a prominence here, set an arm straight there, and got a foot into th® right position. So by degrees he brought his figures to the most perfect symmetry, and then he proceeded to do the same with the next picture" —Kansas City Star. Novel Use for Ho»e Sir James Crichton-Browne relate* this anecdote of a colleague’s absentmindedness: He was standing by th® bedside of a lady patient giving her copious and emphatic Instructions as to what she ought to do, when to her dismay she saw him take her black silk stockings, which were lying on a chair beside the bed, and draw them on his hands and arms as glove®. H® did not discover his mistake but walked off with the stockings.—Exchange. Tides Travel Far The ocean tide may be felt In the Mississippi river as far up as Red River landing. 307 miles above the mouth; in the Delaware river as far up as Trenton. N. J-. 131.5 miles above the mouth, and in the Hudson as far up as Troy dam, 153 miles above the mouth. Sirus Was Guide Dog star. Sirus, was a guide for the ancient Egyptians as to the rising •f tbe River Nile. j •

THIS WOMAN FOUND RELIEF After Lpcs Suffering by Taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege> table Compound In a little town of the middle West, was a discouraged woman. For four ———————l mon thsshehad been X in such poor health tbat she not • stoop to put on her Smr own shoes. Unable WF MW to do her work, txk i.J»ls unable to go out of doors or enjoy a "AX friendly chat with her neighbors, life IpL seemed dark indeed gaik to Mrs. Daugherty. Then one day, a booklet was left at her front door. Idly she turned the ” ! pages. Soon she was reading with quickened interest The little booklet was filled with letters from women in conditions similar to hers who had found better health by taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. “I began taking the Vegetable Compound.” Mrs. Daugherty writes, “and after I took the third bottle, I found relief. I am on my eleventh bottle and I don’t have that trouble any more, and feel like a different woman. I wecommend the Vegetable Compound to everyone I see who has trouble like mine, and you can use these facts as a testimonial. lam willing to answer any letters from women asking about the Vegetable Compound.”—Mbs. Ed. Daughekty, 1308 Orchard Ave., Muscatine, lowa. Are you on the Sunlit Road to Better Health? Boschee’s Syrup has been relieving coughs due to colds for sixty-one years. Soothes the Throat loosens the phlegm, promotes expectoration, gives a good night’s rest free from coughing. 30c and 90c bottles. Buy it at your drug store. Q. G. Green, Inc., Woodbury, N. J. »»r«ly wcctskk. Mm CkUrn’i k«riktcr. fon»«l» «■ UUL I CaaLTutMd Ma-atrcetk, aea-aktUlic. M MRIWIHSOW3 SVRVP I Ik iaiuto’ uU OlUhb’* RtoUtar Children grow healthy and free ■ from colic, diarrhoea, flatulency. B constipation and other trouble if Huy ■ given it at teething time. ; J M Safe, pleasant—alwaya brings re- o**l ■ markable and gratifying results. At AU ' AO Drassi*t*f 7 0 rj?SB ■F b ' A For Pipe Sores, Fistula Poll Evil Try HANFORD’S Balsam of Myrrh AB dealers are aathoriaed to rtfwad year aeaey far tke fint bettie if Bet saitod. Oh, I Understand “Hello! Where are you walking in such a hurry?” “Fellow just stole my car.” “But you can’t overtake him on foot.” “Oh yes. He forgot the repair kit" —Washington Star. | Instant |J lather in I any kind lof water X J ■ Health! r Beauty! SAFELY Tm on now stop k>®« caused by rato and mice without risk to your stock or poultry. K-R-O is tte new safe way—made from squill bulbs as rcci?m mendea ‘ rG< Severe teeto have provedth<t K-R-O to harmless in any quantity to taman betotok, bvemodt. peta cr poultry but kUto rats and nice every tane. Does not contain arsenic, pboeptawfa banum carbonate or any other deadly .At y<« sue (4 tunes as much; $2 00. Or sent direct from us postfaid if be cannot supplr’Su> co, K-R-O KILLS-RATS-ONLY