The Syracuse Journal, Volume 20, Number 39, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 24 January 1929 — Page 3
i: Kent RADIO "I know that man—that is exactly the way he talks” SHE was listening to a demonstration of an Atwater Kent. Turmngthe Full-vision Dial from one station to another, suddenly she heard the voice of a friend she had not seen for years. She listened eagerly. , It was "exactly the way he talked.” **l’ll take the set,” she said. "This radio tells the truth.* Anyone can convince himself that Atwater Kent receivers and speakers do give faithful reproduction. Listen to an orchestra and pick out the individual instruments. Each has its own character —its own identity. Turn to a male quartet, a piano solo, a radio drama with all the varying voices and inflections —or to the President when he speaks. Every sound is true to the original. That is the standard of Atw ater | Kent performance. Atwater Kent gives it to you for less money. Less money because Atwater Kent Radio is manufactured in great quantities, making economies of production possible. 4 et this huge output does not affect quality ; in the slightest. For every set, besides being made of the finest materials, has to pass 222 tests ot inspections in the course of manufacture. Turn the Full-vision Dial and listen to "the radio that tells the truth.* ATWATER KENT MANUFACTURING COMPANY 4764 Wissahickon Avenue J. Atwater Kent, Pres, Philadelphia, Pa. Prien ,lightly higher weU air—every Sunday night—of the Rockies, Atwater Kent Radio Hour — listen ini Model 40 (Electric) $77 Battery Sets, $49—868 rol Ersj "Radio’s Truest Voice” Solid mshogany cabins ts. Panels satinFor 110-120 volt, 50-60 cycle alter- Atwater Kent Radio finished in gold. Full-vision Dial. Dating current. Requires six A. C. Speakers: Models E. E-2, Model 48, $49: Mocd 49, extra-pow-tubes and one rectifying tube, $77 E-3, same quality, differ- erful, 868. Prices do not include tubes (without tubes). ent in size. Each, S2O. or batteries.
Old Writings Found Shed Light on Past From Rabat, Morocco, comes a report of the discovery of cuneiform writing dating back to the Sixth century before the Christian era. The MSS. tending to shoft that the Assyrians or the Medes conquered and colonized Morocco, has been found, it is stated, by Captain Odinot. a French explorer, 22 miles north of Fez. the sultan’s capital. The inscriptions, which were discovered in subterranean galleries in the mountains, resemble in many respects the Babylonian writing found at Ur- in Chaldea’. Captain Odinot believes that the inscriptions prove that the Berbers were not the original inhabitants of. Morocco, but that the modern Moors are the descendants of the Assyrians, Medes, and ■ Persians and great warlike nations of Biblical times. Mrs. Bell Tells Her Friends of Her Narrow Escape “Something over a year 'ago T had the llu, which left me with a very bad cough which kept getting worse all the time, until I could not lie down ' at night. If I attempted to lie down I would cough all night and choke up so I wplild have to sit up in bed. This continued until I got so weak I could not walk across the floor, and every night I thought would be my last. I became so thin that my hands would meet around my legs. My doctor said that my lungs were affected and I was in a desperate condition. “Finally I read about Milks Emulsion and started to use it. I have t ow taken it about three months and I am entirely recovered. My cough is gone and I have taken on flesh and strength, and I thank God that I found Milks Emulsion.“I have spread the good news among all my friends and there are five of my immediate neighbors taking it, and they all say it has done them so much good. Yours truly, MRS. K. BELL, 1640 Bergen St., Brooklyn, N. Y.” Sold by all druggists under a guarantee to give satisfaction or money refunded. The Milks Emulsion Co., Terre Haute, Ind. —-Adv. Denote* Concealed Evil “There,is something rotten in Denmark,” is said of a concealed evil. Thousands of persons use* this saying . continually without having the least suspicion as to its source. It is based on a passage in Shakespeare’s “Hamlet." In the fourth scene of the first act of.that play Marcellus, an officer of the watch, says to Hamlet’s friend Horatio: “Something is rotten in the state of Denmark.” The remark was made after Hamlet followed the ghost of his father from the platform before the castle. Fresh, sweet, white, dainty clothes for baby, if you use Red Cross Ball* Blue. Never streaks or injures them. All good grocers sell it.—Adv. ?• ■ The man who rides a hobby is likely to deride the hobbles of others. Affluence is the dream of every one who is in the employ of others.
Health Giving J* 4/f Winter Long JALaI Marvelous Climate — Good Hotels —1 ouris Campa-Splendid Koads—Gorgeous Mountai, Views- The wonderful desert resort of the PWrif Cr«e A Chaff* Cz* tai- qrAi a Wjanted to Know Traveling Man —Is this a fast train Mr. Conductor? Conductor (with injured air) —Ot course it is. Traveling Man—l thought so. Woulc you mind getting off and see what it’s fast to? —Cappers’ Weekly. Interesting feature of pliiiosophy is that a good deal of it is probably true Party managers won’t complain i: they get one-fourth of the majority they claimed. ~A"MOTHErS-pROBLEM" Is, how to treat her child who is peevish and fretty, yet not seriously sick. Many
Mothers say they always keep a package of Mother Gray’s Sweet Powders on hand for use when needed. They break up colds, relieve feverishness, worms, constipation, headache, teething disorders 1 and stomach troubles, and act as a tonic to the whole system. Equally good for older people. Sold by Drugl gists everywhere.
TRADE MARK DON’T ACCEPT ANY SUBSTITUTE
Trial package sent Free. Address. THE MOTHER GRAY CO.. Le Roy, N. Y. HANFORD’S Balsam of Myrrh Since 1846 has healed Wounds and Sores on Man and Beast, All dealers are authorized to refund year money for tin . first bottle if not suited. Quick Relief! Take Filo’s—relief I* » < immediate. You get a good night’s rest > —and renewed vitality. 35c and 60c. ■■ Standard for64 Yean S Goodhair Soap The Ideal Shampoo. For the Scalp - Dandruff - Falling Hair. Wonderfully effective. Sold for 30 years. 25c a cake. At Druggists or by mail direct. FREE sample on request. THE GOODHAIR COMPACT CinosMtin Ohio
/?< diut Produce Freer Rot DIXIE FEVER AND PAIN TABLETS De pc ndiiblc fan 3 7 ht/M
W. N. U., FORT WAYNE, NO. 3-1929.
Mrs. Franklin Roosevelt’s Furniture Factory ~ rw rwMB I I w * I I & 1 1 a M I ' i I - t I * Oh ■ -ft—X- _ ■■jMft** l ■■ i I ** .< ■ ’ I ft i I » 4 Rfflj mA <is - -fttv : ■ ft ft I ft w H- ■ (3 M J |\ i t ~ ~t j ?.ig j * I? fl MRm I I ft A. LLuwl h mfgw 3 j|f|i| '' "*"WI ■ 91 aft 9ft '**. ■* f *-*M nut •■h s ±^Bk>^ sS^' lat £ -• ; Shk - tWT/W ; 1 , ntMraiw I* View ot the workshop of the furniture factory at Hyde Park. N. 1., which is conducted by Mrs. Franklin ! D. Roosevelt, wife of the new governor of New York. She specializes in early American copies and adaptations. I
Con Men Named in Murder Case
dRing of Crooks at Tulsa Blamed for Long List * of Crimes. I Fort Smith, Ark.—Why was W. C. Clayton, forty-three, formerly of Tulsa and Muskogee, shot to death and his body sunk in the murky waters ot Frog lake bayou, near Ruby. Ark.. recently? The true answer may never be known to the public, but Fort Smith i officers are positive of this one thing they say: The man who is held for safekeep ing in Arkansas state penitentiary pending trial tor the murder of Clay ton was a member of the band of eon tidence men ttjat is maintaining head quarters in Tulsa and has been rperat ing throughout Oklahoma and neigh boring states for the last foui years, fleecing gullible victims of hundreds of thousands of dollars. Other Acts of Violence. The tnurdei is but one of several riolent acts that have been laid at the door of the confidence men. The suicide of a Sapulpa man. an attempted suicide of a Tulsa man who later died a natural death, the kidnapping and Intimidation of a witness against them, “doping” of a victim who was in their dutches, a gun brittle among members of their own crowd, and the flashing of guns and knives in several of their games are blamed on these schemers who have been permitted to run at large tn Tulsa. • The band has been growing rich and powerful the last year or two. It has extended its operations to include many towns and cities of the Southwest. hut It has maintained its head quarters at Tulsa and it is here that it has played its biggest games, seemingly safe from prosecution of the law But now for the first time since the. wave of crime began it looks like the swindlers’ activities may be brought to an end. A Gruesome Catch. It was a gruesome catch that J. 1. Byrd. Fort Smith contractor, made when he went fishing in Frog bayou, beyond Ruby. Ark. He was fly fishing in the bayou. His luck had. been fair. He took a bass off his hook, threw if into his basket and made another cast. The hook caught in a heavy object. | Peel River Indians | Puzzle Ethnologists g & Juneau. Alaska. —Ethnologists X f throughout the world are puz--4 zled over the origin of the Peel X River Indians, a tribe in the up x & per Yukon country. These In 4 x dians are as black as negmes X 4 but possess long, straight hair. 4 X with aquiline features. They are X 4 very proud of their blood ami 4 A permit uo mixed marriages. 4 They (nay or may not be an j A offshoot of the Hindu race or 4 4 descendants of peoples coming 4 <S u'j the Mackenzie river from the A 4 Arctic. Today the tribe num 4 4 bers several hundred and is 4 x prosperous and well established. X 4 Like the Seminoles, however. 4 a they are vanishing because of x 4 their antipathy to intermarriage 4 with other Indians Several ex X 4 peditions to study the race are * „4 planned to leave Seattle next X T spring for the Feel River coun- 4 4 try. ’ 4
GLAM DIGGER KILLS FRIEND TO SAVE LIFE OF MONGREL
<9 Twain Drinking on Slayer’s Houseboat When Crowbar and Ax Settle Argument. Beach Haven, N. J.—Samuel Conk lin, a clam digger, and John Carlson, a fisherman, sat down in the cabin of Conklin’s houseboat in Mermaid bay, near her, for an hour of quiet drinking. Within the hour Conklin .had beaten his friend to death with an ax because, he said. Carlson bad tried to kill his dog. Conklin has signed a confession of the killing and is tn the jail here awaiting arraignment on a charge of murder. The dog is a ragged brown mon grel, about two years old. Despite its homely appearance. Conklin, who lived alone in the houseboat off Bay avenue. Beach Haven terrgee, loved the dug next to his friend Carlson One morning as Conklin was - on. • • • • •• * w-‘ •* .* ** ■ • ’
THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL
> ■ "" 11 I I ■ 11. ■ ■ — He couldn’t pull it from the water. Frank Miller of Fort Smith, who had gone fishing with him. and two other men came to his assistance. They brought the object from the water to find it was the body of a man. clothed only in a shirt, tie. and underwear. The arms and legs were bound tightly with rope and the body was weighted down with heavy rocks. The man’s face was powder burned. There was a bullet hole through the temple. The body was identified as that of •\V. G Clayton, and the next day charges of murder were filed against Birdie Cooper Adams Clayton, the widow, and her brothers. Russell and Hugh Cooper. Mrs. Clayton was arrested three hours after positive identification of the body. She had been married to Clayton two days before his death. Russell Cooper, who with his broth er and sister was indicted for the murder of Clayton, was not found un til September 28. when he was arrested in Tulsa. He was taken to the Arkansas penitentiary, where he is be ing held pending trial. Recently he was granted a change of venue, while at the same time a nolle prosse was entered in the state in the case of Hugh Cooper and hearing of the case against Mrs. Clayton was continued until the March term of court by agreement Three Theories. Officers who have been working on the Clayton murder mystery have three theories: The Cooper brothers, learning that Clayton had married their sister without divorcing an estranged wife who resided in Tulsa, may have planned and carried out the killing on that account. Clayton may have been an intended victim of rhe swindling ring who resisted and was killed for his trouble. Or—and Fort Smith officers say this theory is as tenable as the others —
— r v Making the Medal for Lindbergh JIT z glwl ‘ 'JF Mrs Laura Gardin Fraser of New York, who in national competition was awarded bv a jury composed of Secretary of the Treasury Mellon and the National Commission of Fine Arts, the assignment to make rhe special congressional medal which has been awarded to Col,. Chas. A. Lindbergh, in commemoration of his epochal flight. *
b —— the beach digging for clams his frjend approached and asked: “Sam. bow’d yon like to have a drink of whiskyT Conklin replied that he would be pleased and made arrangements to meet his friend at the houseboat tater in the afternoon. At 5 o’clock Carlson came aboard carrying two pint bottles of whisky They went into Conklin’s cabin lighted poorly by a kerosene lamp. On the floor the dog lay whimpering. They drank a while, and then Carlson said: “I’m going to kill that hound. He’s sick and I don’t tike him.” With this he grabbed a crowbar from behind the door and started toward the dog. Conklin rushed at him and sought to wrest the bar from Kim. In the struggle Carlson was hit on the head. ‘TH ...kjll; you, too,"- the latter pant ed a» they fbiighC Whereupon Conk fn>s» umter the
PRINCESS IN CAPITAL L ,x. l t : One of the popular members of the . younger set m Washington is Princess | Antoinette de Ligne, daughter of the ambassador from Belgium tb the United States, I Clayton was a member ot the swindling ring and quarreled with Cooper over a division ot the spoils. D. L. Ford, assistant prosecuting attorney of Fort Smith, said that Clayton had a wide acquaintance in northeastern Oklahoma and it was their theory that he had been used as a “come-on” man i in that section of the state. . j Take to Bicycles Northampton. Mass. — It is quite the thing now for Smith college girls to ; ride bicycles, but they must stay off the sidewalks. Miss Constance S. ' Peterson of St Louis has been fined $5 for riding. Ancient Razor Is Found Amiens. France. —The granddaddy ' of all razors seems to have been dis covered. One found by archeologists ! is estimated to be ten thousand years old. Apparently it was used by Stone age dandies. — * i
bunk and struck Carlson three times twice with rhe butt and the third time with the blade. The fisherman fell to the floor and did not get up. Conklin went to bed. About 3 o’clock tn the morning he awoke and saw the body lying on the floor. He dragged it off the houseboat, across the beach and over tbe Pennsylvania railroad tracks, 200 feet away, and dropped it in the middle of Bay avenue. Then he returned to the boat, washed the floor and the ax. which he placed under the bunk and retired. K. C. Burlingame, a milkman, was making his first delivery when he came upon the body. He hurried back to Beach Haven and informed Patrolman Albert Murphy and State 1 Trooper Atkinson. They accompanied him to the place where the body lay and found a trail of blood leading to the water’s edge at a point near where the houseboat was moored They boarded the boar and aroused ■ Cbnklin. arrested him and took him . to jail. “I did it because I thought j he would kill me.” the clam digger i said.
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Pay Roll Simple in Italian Rice Fields A customary preliminary to harvest time, which begins in early September in Italy’s rice-growing center surrounding the city of Alessandria, in the Piedmpnt, is that the farmers and peasants arrange for wages and other labor matters. Last year the respective syndicates of workers and growers reached an agreement based on “compensation by nature” or emolument in kind. No money to the worker: he shall be paid with rice.' Thus peasant lads from fourteen -to fifteen years of age receive 17% | pounds of rice a day. those from fif- ' teen to sixteen earn -3 pounds a day. and boys from sixteen to seventeen years get 35 pounds. Girls from fifteen to sixteen earn 20 pounds of rice I for the eight-hour day. while the : women’s stipend is 26% pounds. Should a laborer insist on cold i cash, the grower will he troubled with J the necessity of utilizing his arith- | metic. For he must take the number of pounds the worker is entitled to J and multiply it by the current market price, which is about 3 cents a pound. ' ■) ■ ■ “O Happy Day” sang the laundress i as she hung the snowy wash on the, line. It was a “happy day” because she used Cross Ball Blue, —Adv. The Bait Between the halves of the U. S. C.Wildeat game, two fair coeds were discussing one of the Trojan players. “Why don’t you set your cap for nim, if you like him so well?” asked one. “Both my knee caps have been set for him for a long time,” gurgled the other, pointing demurely at her dim pled tempters.—Los Angeles Times. Fails to Make Good “Trina, 1 1 could die for your sake.” “You are always saying that but you never do it.” Two Tests “Most men are known for their deeds.” “Others by their mortgages.”
For Colds How many people you know end their colds with Bayer Aspirin! And how often you’ve heard of its prompt relief of sore throat or tonsilitis. No wonder millions take it. for colds, neuralgia, rheumatism; and the aches and pains that go with them. The wonder is that anyone still worries through a winter without these tablets! They relieve quickly, yet have no effect whatever on the heart. Friends have tdld you Bayer Aspirin is marvelous; doctors have declared it harmless. Every druggist has it, with proven directions. Why not put it to the test? Aspirin Is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture Monoaceticacidester of Salicyllcacid I ©kSPIRIN
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