The Syracuse Journal, Volume 20, Number 14, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 2 August 1928 — Page 3

The modem way to make jelly, us peXel and get this never this JELLY failure is a thing of the past. Pexel is here. It’s a 100% pure-fruit product that always makes jelly jell. Absolutely colorless, tasteless, odorless. Pexel makes any jelly jell by the time it is cold. With it, jelly is ready for the glasses as soon as it comes to full boil. Thus Pexel saves fruit, sugar, flavor, time and fuel. Right here it repays, from one to three times, the 30c it costs. ’ Get Pexel at your grocer’s. A recipe booklet with complete recipes, accurate tables in each package. 30c. The Pexel Company, Chicago, 111. fig I ftlg| ill For example—with Pexel a 4’/i cups strawberry juice and 8 cups sugar make 11 glasses jelly. 4Vi cups raspberry juice and 8 cups sugar make 11 glasses jelly. 6 cups currant juice and 10 cups sugar make 14 glasses of jelly. 4Vi cups grape juice and 7 cups *>igar make 10 glasses jelly. Green Apples, Perhaps Three-year-old Jimmie was suffering with a pain In his midsection. His complaining finally attention and he was asked what was the matter. “I think,” said Jimmie, “I ate something that didn’t concern me.” The Great Need t His Wise —Why don’t you clean the spots off your coat? It looks horrid. Mr. Motorbug—l know it does, but. we could get at least a half mile on the gasoline It would take. Car Owner AGENTS WANTED X Double * I luFYll " ocker Arms Tension Sprins Tell- Score Housing " hVg? - Screw ’ Adjustment FREE shock absorbers for your own car for a little of your time and good will. The Red! Mfg. Co., Inc. ' P.0.80x443 • Canton, Ohio J for real" satisfaction. It does tbs work. 31.25.nd 66c. ■ Irrao, t aco Cream mak.a your skin baautiful, »125. ■ ■ FREE BOOKLET. Ask your dealer/>r writ. UH Or C.M. Barry C..a9TStacM^aAT« n CMMa. W. N. U, FORT WAYNE, NO. 3Q--1928.

Starting Memorial Church at Valley Forge II ■_ __ I 4 • I far 11 4 W 's-JeLt J pw.’• Sw* B, * i I n" •---’Aj L i ■ 3 General view of the cornerstone laying ceremonies for the new National Washington church at Valley Forge, Pa„ on the one hundred fiftieth anniversary of the evacuation of Valley Forge by General Washington and the American army.

Pay $2,500 for False Arrest

London Police Department Uses Own Funds ai Balm for Error. London.—ls ever any American police department awarded damages from its own funds to a man who had been arrested and discharged, it is not commonly known, but that is what happened here. Maj. Graham Bell Murray, C. I. 8., a distinguished officer of the Indian army, who served in Gallipoli and France in the war and was twice mentioned in dispatches for both brains and bravery, has been awarded $2,500 from the funds of the metropolitan police district. He declares that he is entirely dissatisfied and that the loss of dignity and the expense to which he was put should entitle him to at least $25,000. On the face of the returns his claim would appear to be sound, but an American would say that he is a miracle man. Led to Department Probe. Major Murray’s case is one of the causes celebres which brought about the appointment by the home secretary, Sir William Joynson-Hicks, of the street offenses committee to inquire into the numerous complaints that policemen have been recklessly arresting people without sufficient evidence on charges of insulting women, or of engaging in imjpcent conduct. The charges have shaken the police system to its foundation, and have culminated in the famous Hyde Park case, in which Sir Leo Money, foi eleven years a member of parliament, ,k s*****» , *** > *** < ********************** ,m, * ,> *s > *** Schwab’s Caddy Tries | X to Please His Boss X X New York. —“1 made a very I*. X bad attempt at driving on the X golf links the other day," said .*♦ X Charles M. Schwab. “A good X many persons were standing X around, and to direct attention from my own discomfiture, I X turned to my caddy, a tow-head- X ♦|* ed country boy, and said: X X ‘“That was your fault; you X ought to have told me to keep X my head down.’ .*. X “A little later, when 1 was X y about to drive again before the X X gallery, he called out: X “‘Put your head down, you X X big slob.’ X Y “And 1 did.” X

Tanks in the Re-Enacted Battle of Fleville jWk w 11 B B M - bFHk' wßiwflflbF • B' The feature of Governois Island military tournament held recently was a re-enactment of the battle of Fleville. The photograph shows the tanks advancing on buildings put up for the occasion.

ROBIN, CAT AND DUCK LIVE TOGETHER IN PERFECT PEACE

Diversified Family In Massachusetts Home Eat From Same Dish and Do Stunts. Greenfield, Mass. —A robin, a cat and a duck play together here tn happy harmony. The diversified family lives at the home of Louis A. La Shier. All the members would have been lonesome strays had they not been adopted by La Shier. The robin fell from Its nest last summer and La Shier fed it. Instead of flying away, now that it is grown, it seeks its cage when tired or sleepy. Kitty showed up on the La Shier doorstep last January. The cat and the robin became pals almost immediately. The robin frequently flies to the cat’s back and enjoys a ride around the house or a quiet perch while Tabby sleeps. The duck is a comparative new

and a Miss Savidge were arrested for alleged improprieties by two policemen in Hyde Park, only to be dis--ehfirged. The case of Sir Leo and Miss Savidge has become a grave question in parliament, has become a political problem, the Socialists going solidly against the police, and several suits being filed by Inspector Collins and the arresting officer against two weekly papers. Major Murray was arrested last August 24 on the charge of being drunk and of peering, or leering into the faces of two w’omen. J. Thurston, arresting officer, asserted that the women appeared to be very much annoyed at the time but they did not appear against the major when he was brought before Magistrate Mead at Marlborough street police court the next morning. ' Thurston testified that the major was drunk and peering. No other evidence of the peering was brought forth, but Inspector John Clarke, at the Vine street station, and Dr. lan MacPherson, a police surgeon, testified that the major was drunk. That made it an ordinary case of the police against a prisoner on the muchmooted question: When Is a man legally drunk? But matters werte complicated by the charge that the gallant major had insulted women and the women were not forthcoming. Charges Rights Denied. Furthermore, Major Murray charged that he was thrown into a cell and was not informed of his right to telephone to fellow members at the Junior Army and Navy club, which he had left a few minutes before he was arrested, nor was he allowed to call a private physician to examine into the question of whether he was drunk. As the case involved the Integrity of the police, Magistrate Mead postponed the case, but later he fined Major Murray 40 shillings, or about $lO, with five guineas costs, or a little more than $25. Major Murray appealed to the London Quarter Sessions against the police court decision. Sir Robert Wallace heard the appeal. Police Constable Thurston stuck to his story that the major was drunk and peering. Major Murray produced friends from the club who swore he was perfectly sober among them a few minutes prior, to the arrest. Before the defense had finished calling witnesses Sir Robert announced be had beard enough. He reversed the police court decision and completely exonerated the major. The case was carried to the street offenses committee and a subcommit-

comer, but in a little more than a month it has learned to enjoy the companionship of the others; All three eat from the same dish, but generally the dif?k has separate accommodations on account of its large appetite. The cat seems proud to draw the robin around the house on a little cart built for the purpose. When the cart is moved the cat runs to it to be harnessed. The robin shows no fear of human beings, and a whistle from its master calls it to him. The bird is delighted with music, showing especial preference for the xylophone, although it will perch on a violin bow whe' that instrument Is being played. The duck will ring a dinner bell to call Its mates to lunch or raise a little flag to the top of a tiny staff. La Shier has a knowledge of animal training acquired as a youngster, when bis father was employed by a circus.

THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL

| This Dispute Has £ Lasted 398 Years £ X Tegucigalpa, Honduras. —The X X second note of Frank B. Kel- \ X logg, United States secretary X x of state, regarding adjustment X of the Honduran-Guatemalan y X boundary dispute, has- been an- X £ swered by the government in a x X note declaring that Honduras X X desired the President of the •** United States to arbitrage the X long-standing controversy. A X X recent attempt to reach an X agreement by a mixed commis- *t* sion neutral chairman- X X ship failed. X X The dispute is 398 years old X and Involves former Spanish X royal concessions in the Rincon X de Jorge region on both banks Y of the Motagua river. tee heard it all over again, with the result that Major Murray was exonerated once more and the award of $2,500 from the metropolitan police district fund was added as further balm. Vanishing Island Once More Rises From Sea Apia.—Falcon isle has reappeared in the South seas. The island has emerged, disappeared and reappeared several times since it was first charted in 1845 by a British warship. Its present area is reported to be larger than ever before and increasing daily. The island is 40 miles west of Nukualfo. capital of the Island Kingdom of Tonga. It was claimed as a part of the British Tonga group when, early in June, the premier of Tonga swam ashore from a visiting vessel and planted on the volcanic he_y.p the flag of Tonga. Ten years after its first discovery Falcon isle disappeared. It rose above the sea again in October, 1885, then sank. Now it has come up again. An interesting feature of the situation is that whenever the island reappears it is rated as new land that may be clafmed by some country. Japanese Will Tow Logs Across Pacific Hoquiam, Wash.—Towing log booms or rafts across the Pacific ocean, from here to Oriental ports, is the latest i idea of Japanese lumbermen in getting extra long lengths of logs into i their country. Many of the steamships do not possess facilities for loading and stowing longer timber. It is proposed they be bound or chained together by the “Davis raft” system and towed during the summer months, following the Alaskan and Aleutian scores.

Skipper Sails 157,000 Miles Close to Home Washington, N. C. —Capt. Isaac O’Neal has piloted his little ship, a “bug-eye” schooner, 157,000 miles tn the last 21 years, but the vessel has never been off the 75-mile run between this town and Ocracoke, across Pamlico sound, where the skipper lives. Captain O’Neal has traveled a distance equivalent to more than six times the circumference of the earth in the bug-eye. Sometimes the sound is as rough as the Atlantic, with which several inlets connect it. and it is even more dangerous to navigate, because it is shoaly and the water in rough weather is “choppy.” But never has a person been lost from the one deck of the little ship, though thousands of passengers have made the crossing in it. The schooner is a freighter, but the master has never refused to accommo date a person applying for passage. The Gauls taught the ancient K* mans how to make

crz masvkjet . I 2,000,000 CARS ARID GOING STRONG ! J 1\ • —- ' ■ - - Sgt 1? . with quality,beauty and style dominating In definite dollar-for-dollar value there are no 4-door “ra enclosed cars on the market comparable to the A Four and Whippet Six Sedans. <•’ The perfected Whippet Four offers such desirable £ features as full force-feed lubrication, silent tim* jp <1 f OUR a jjjg c hain. extra leg room and powerful 4-wheel F brakes. The new Whippet Six, in addition to Jr these, provides a 7-bearing crankshaft, Invar- £: . S& strut pistons and many other advantages. £• la Such notable values as these Sedans are possible only because of the skill and ex- S perience gained in the production of T % more than 2,000,000 motor cars. f FOURS Whippet I— Four-cvlinder Touring $455; Roadster (2-pass.) $485; Roadster (with rumble seat) $525; Coach $535; Coupe $535; Cabriolet Coupe (with collapsible top) $595. Whippet Six Touring $615; Roadster $685; Coupe $695, Coach $695. All prices f. o. b. Toledo, Ohio, and specifications subject to change without notice. Willys-Overland, Inc., Toledo, Ohio. WILLYS-OVERLAND, Inc. TOLEDO. OHIO

Snapshots in Colors Through New Process A new process whereby amateurs take snapshots'that can be printed in color was recently shown in London. An ordinary camera is used and from three black-and-white negatives positive prints are made in the primary colors, produced by the direct action of light on specially sensitized nrnteriaL By superimposing these prints, the original colors of the object taken are obtained. Various tones can be produced by a slight variation and blending of the primary colors involved. . The process will not only enable reproduction in color of old masters, but, as has been may be used for making half-tone blocks suitable for magazine covers. Some of the pictures thus made have been exhibited. The use of soft coal will make laundry work heavier this winter. Red Cross Ball Blue will help to remove that grimy look. At all grocers.—Adv. Title Writers Discovered Mark Twain would have been a great title writer for the movies, Photoplay Magazine observes. “Everybody,” said Twain, “is always complaining about the weather, but nobody does anything about it.” (Change weather to picture and it is still good.) “Parts were good,” wrote Mathew Arnold, another title expert. “Parts were original. But that which was good was not original, and that which was original was not good.” Making Sure “You dismissed your maid” “Yes, she lacked gumption.” “Really. I must see if mine has one.”

“—And Not Until Then ’/l&K Did He Propose to Me” vWeLh I first saw Bob Richards at Mav Evans’ er’s Herbex Hair Treatments. Os course, I £rdancp She hart fnvit-o/1 him ha/'m.ca ha couldn’t go to New York and pay the price of ; j aance. &fle had United mm beiause he the treatments in his exclusive Salon there— 3 / was the most popular man m town. 1 had but I discovered that for only $2.00 I could ft / been waiting all winter for a chance*to Rive myself the treatments at home. With moot him And here it TTora w»« mv little faith but never-dying hope. I ordered J? meet mm. Ana here It was! Here was mj a botHe of his Herbex Hair Tonic and a jar Wgm// chance I But alas, for all my efforts, for all my of his Herbex Hair Cream. I followed direcbest chiffon evening dress, he never noticed tions carefully and in less than two weeks /JW ma «n ovanin« my scalp began to tingle with vitality, dand- /jHgsfSi me all evening. Aot once did he ask me to ru ff was checked, my hair stopped falling (|gs|?A * dance. I wondered why, in the long weeks out but instead took on new life, new luster, that followed that heart-breaking occasion. new ‘‘manageability." I had it shingled and ® dressed it a new way (with the aid of the f Tl—AJkaL-—.-. C—. cream), and by Christmas, when May Evans Z"" * nCTC 3 IVOuling DO LnßtQßl€rul IO gave another dance, I was more eager than ever to go. a Man as Untidy, 111-Kept Hair I Owe My Engagement to Frank Parker I took stock of myself. I knew I was pretty Bob Richards was there, of course. Mae said he asked to —lots of people had told me so. My clothes be introduced to me, not remembering that he had ever seen .Z 5 were all right. My manners were good. I was me before! And not only did he dance with me most of /znO’ as lively as any of the girls. Yet—Bob Rich- the evening, and say the most flattering things to me, Z ards never even noticed me'at the dance. One • but he took me home, and that very night we became tA day I asked Mae Evans if she knew why. Be- engaged. We’re going to be mdrried in the Spring. ZtW -Z ing a good friend of mine, she said, “I think and I’m the happiest girl alive. And, as I tell .Z .s I do. Y’ou know your hair is so unattractive Bob, I owe it all to Mr. Parker. zftV' —stringy and lifeless and always hanging To other girls who have trouble of any -Z a P about your face—.’’ kind with their hair, I can only say and >Z Parker — . 1 sa Y with all my heart, Herbex Hair Hpmien Onlv Knows What Tonic and Herbex Hair Cream will ZIF/ neaven ?miy MOWS do wonders. There’s nothing else ' 6 / poration,3o« E. They Said Behind My Back at an like them and i know / f * * tor IVe tried them, pretty » Jr r-— enclose $2.00 Y was eternally grateful to May for her nearly all! .ZLZfcash. "'money order, frankness, which was really kindness. 1 know rtf' stamps, sheck), for whten what gossips women are. I shudder to think Treat Your Hair Z^Z Zkjrge bottle of Herbex Hair Tonic what they said about me behind my back. Right—Send in oo>, and 1 generous jar of HerbBut I went to work at once to remedy my ® aena 1 Halt Cream ($1.09), $2.00 in ail. offending hair. I tried hair tonics, hair creams. This Coupon Vv' and hair treatments galore—but, though I was taitavi >Z Ift* ZZ week. lam not fully satlsiJed, I may repatient, I could see but little improvement. lUUAI * ..qt >r turn the remaining tonic sad eream and .Z you will refund my money in na-L / Was Utterly Discouraged I didn’t know what to do. And I was grow- <**•* >Z Address . ing positively melancholy over the situation. Z\ •<» when some one told me about Frank Park- -Z >Z J.

Prominence “You have succeeded in attracting some attention in the country.” “Yes,” the professor. “1 have sought fame. And I may at least claim that there is not a financial ‘sucker list’ in the country that does not include my name.” Burden “Life must be strenuous In like Noo Yawk.” “Yeh, two teams to worry about.” Even the first prize beauty may be a regular booby.

CUJICURA Regular use of the Soap, as- / sisted by the Ointment when 11 I t// '—‘ £'7 required, not only cleanses and \\ (7 purifies the skin of children and r? adults, but tends to prevent clogging of the pores, the common y cause of pimples and other unfl. sightly conditions. • Il IT\ SES \ I \ Soap 26c. Ointment 36 and 50e. Talcum 25c. Sold // 111 everywhere. Sample each free. Address: Outiew* Jj 111 X, X | Uhoratortm, Dept M, MaMen. Maas" BMP* Cuticura Shaving Stick 25c.

Sea Monster Puzzles To determine the species of sea monster stranded at Gretna recently, parts have been sent for identification to the’’ Royal Scottish museum at Dumfries. These indicate that the animal was not a whale, as at first supposed, but a large species of the basking shark. The Gretna visitor is 19 feet long, with head about 5 feet in length. Its weight was estimated at nearly two tons. When a man fails he tries to make’ a virtue of necessity.

WHY SUFFER? Try Chases Gastrico Powder for the stomach. For dyspepsia, indigestion, heartburn, sour stomach, nausea, billiousuess, dizziness, constipation, bloating. It has relieved thousands. It will help you. Guarantee results or money refunded. Write for literature and testimonials. SAMUEL CHASE PHARMACISTS 5855 Vancouver St. • - Detroit, Mich. PARKER’S HAIR BALSAM Removes Dandruff st< >psflairF&llins Restores Color and Beauty to Gray and Faded Hair «oc. and SI.OO at Dnunrists. Hi-coy Chem. W ks. Patchogue. N. Y. FLORESTON SHAMPOO— IdeaI for use in connection wth Parker's Hair Balsam. Makes the hair soft and fluffy. 50 cents by mail or at druggists. Hiscox Chemical Works, Patchogue, N. x.

Get Orang-utans In a shipment of 60 orang-outans recently received at the zoo at Can-* nes, France, were several mothers with their young and some of the largest specimens of their kind ever seen in Europe, 15 having arms with a span of more than nine feet —Philadelphia Inquirer. Elephants Good at Plow A pair of elephants, trained In the Belgian Congo government school at Api, can do two and one-half acres of hard plowing tn a morning.