The Syracuse Journal, Volume 22, Number 4, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 23 May 1929 — Page 3
1 Give ■ Better A Service ' ’ * Champion’s exclugive sillimanite insulator is practically impervious to carbon and oily deposits. Special analysis electrodes resist pitting and burning to the utmost. That is why Champions excel in service. Champion SPARK PLUGS TOLEDO. OHIO GREAT DISCOVERY KILLS RATS AND MICE, BUT NOTHING ELSE Won’t Kill Livestock, Poultry, Dogs, Cats, or even Baby Chicks K-R-O (Kills Rats Only) is a new exterminator that can be used about the home, bam or poultry yard with safety as it contains no deadly poison. K-R-O is made of Squill, as recommended by U. S. Dept, of Agriculture, under the Connable process which insures maximum strength. Two cans killed 578 rats at Arkansas State Farm. Hundreds of other testimonials. Sold on a Money-Back Guarantee. Insistupon K-R-O(Kills Rats Only), the original Squill exterminator. All druggists 75c, or direct if not yet stocked. Large size (four times as much) $2.00. K-R-O Co., Springfield, O. IF AFFLICTED OR THREATENED with that terrible disease of the gums, Pyorrhea, test the new AVIVA Massage Treatment without risking a single penny. Complete home treatment. Send name today! Address: Tbs AVIVA CO., 5002 Calhoun SL. Fort Wayns. tad. BEDBUGS, ANTS, ROACHES KILLED QUICK, EASY WAY P. D. Q. (Pesky Devils Quietus) Instant death to Bedbugs, Roaches, Ants. A 35c pkge. Dry P. D. Q. makes quart. Also liquid form 50c bottle. At druggists or mailed direct upon receipt of price. P D Q. SPECIALTY CO., Cincinnati, Ohio-
An Improvement The late Gen. Owen J. Sweet, who died at Fort Totten in his eighty-third year, said one day that the World war had improved soldiering and all things pertaining thereto. “Think.” the veteran general went on, with a twinkle in his eye—"think how much neater soldiers’ uniforms have become since the World war. Why, I remember how in the old days you’d hear the quartermaster's sergeants snarling.at every new recruit: “‘Well, speak up there, can't ye? How do you want yer uniform—too big or too small?”’ Buss Bleaching Blue is the finest product of its kind in the world. Every woman who has used, it knows this statement to be true.—Adv. Value of High Training Figures compiled by the chemistry department of the University of Wisconsin show that industry is daily showing a greater appreciation of men who have been educated in the higher branches of science. Since the World war 56 out of 109 persons who received the degree or doctor of philosophy in that department at Wisconsin have gone into industrial work. Previously. since 1899 whep the first degree of the kind was given by the department, only eight persons had entered the ranks of industry. Lewis E. Lewis, warden of Sing Sing prison, recently stated that the average robbery committed in 1927 yielded the robbers only $30.75.
,<.<• xv : \W • damp days, sudden * ’ changes in weather, or exposure to a draft makes joints ache, there is always quick relief in Bayer Aspirin. It makes short work of headaches or any little pain. Just as effective in the more serious suffering from neuralgia, neuritis, rheumatism or lumbago. No ache or pain is ever too deep-seated for Bayer Aspirin to relieve, and it does not affect the heart. All druggists, with proven directions for various uses which many people have found invaluable in the relief of pain. ftASPIRIM Jjroirin is the trade mark of Bayer M»mf ■:*«• » st Monoacctiocidsffter ot S&licyl-.
Paris Stays Up All Night Now
No Real Parisian Knocks Off His Evening Pleasure Until 4 A. M. Paris. —Smart Paris Is 1 developing Insomnia. Night life has become early morning life, and no real Parisian would think of knocking oft his night’s pleasure now. before four o’clock in the morning. During the winter, the smart set was hard put to find something new to do. Spring weather has solved that problem by permitting all night revelries. Blase Parisians, tired of Montmartre and its cabarets, fed up with the ordinary plays of the theaters this winter and looking for something new to tease their jaded appetites, have leaped to this opportunity. So to be really smart you have to stay up all night. At the start, it must he pointed out that Paris is in a world of its own. Tourists can never get a visa to that set. and the smart Parisians shun tourists like poison. They stay out of the tourist cabarets and that is why they have been so hard put to find diversion. Montmartre Is Dead. Montmartre is dead to Parisians. True, the lights still burn brightly on the hilltop, the girls dance with the same gay abandon, and negro jazz or Argentine tango bands sit on every doorstep, hut even Montmartre knows that it is doomed. Montparnasse is killing Montmartre, and Americans are to blame. The tourists have gotten off the beaten path of the “Grand Duke’s tour,” which used to climb around the hill-, top of Montmartre, and they are now knocking about the Boulevard Montparnasse between two and four o’clock in the morning. Just a few years ago Montparnasse began and ended at the corner of the Boulevards Raspail and Montparnasse. The wo famous cases, the Dome and the Rotonde, stood on opposite corners and were filled with* artists of various calibers. Commercializing Gayety. Now even the creameries stay open all night and once staid , umbrella shops have given way to dance halls, paint shops to cabarets and Montparnasse is commercializing gayety for the tourists. Bur smart Parisians do not go there. They have found amusement places still farther out. Not far from the fortifications in the Vaugirard quarter are several ballrooms and bars patronized by West Indies and Central African negroes. There the smartest of the smart Parisians trek every morning around three. There they find all the excitement their blase appetites crave. '■ Paris at night, as it is advertised for tourists, is not exactly the Paris discovered by the real noctambules, men who boast they never see the sun, whose day starts at seven in the evening and goes on all night, and whose real pride is to discover something new in the way of pleasures. In the past ages night life consisted of a play, then to Neuilly for the fair, and on to Montmartre in the places where good “diseurs” used to sing French songs, with some witty sidecracks on the celebrities of the day. We still have some theaters of that kind but it is considered quite “bourgeois” to go there. Night Life Changing. Night life in Paris is changing and the cases ot the Bohemian painters are transformed into night places for high society and millionaires. To make a success of a- place it must
American Troops Active on Mexican Border /'t . i ■ ’Wrifrl rr wßr I I Members of Company K, Twenty-fifth infantry, with the truck in which they traveled from Fort Huachicca, Ariz., to reinforce the American troops guarding the Arne rican border against incursions by the fighting Mexicans.
FORTUNE-TELLING CRAFT THRIVES AS NEVER BEFORE
“Gypsy Princess" Reveals Secrets of How She Reads Clothes, Faces and Minds. New York. — Educators, pastors, writers and sociologists wfii tell you that this is the most enlightened generation in history. And yet the ancient craft of the fortune-teller is flourishing as never before, and there are more of us anxious to believe what the “gypsy" finds in the tea cup, or the “mystic” in the crystal globe. This Is true tn New York and throughout the country, according to “Princess Karina,” who admits she was born in an Ohio village of native English parents, but who, none the less, is one of the most prosperous of the “gypsy” fortune-telling clan, with a nation-wide reputation. The “Princess” reveals her story in the North American Review, admitting blandly that the tea leaves,
THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL* SYRACUSE, INDIANA
not be too big; then cubist paintings on the walls, more chairs than tables and many more people than places to move. Frequently charming places with good dancing floors, tasteful decorations, agreeable atmosphere, turn out to be perfect failures. In Paris the smaller the place is. the greater success it has. The newcomers must always nave the impression that they are let in just because they are they. It is Interesting to watch how unknown back shops suddenly metamorphose into notorious night places where cars pour out millionaires from all parts of the globe, because night life in Paris has always had a strange fascination on foreigners. Some Parisians take great pleasure in piloting their friends to an unknown place and after a few dances and drinks suggest .tc the owner a funny name for the place which the crowd adopts without protest from the owner. These anonymous places are adopted by the people who are present and who bring along their friends, they shake hands with the owner, calling him Alfred or Gustave, and every one has a sort of paternal feeling toward the place until the day tourists hear about It, then the prices go up with an unthinkable rapidity. The godfather is treated like a poor cousin, making him hunt for another place. That it how the innumerable new night places which are springing, up at eveiy corner of Montparnasse can be explained. France Plans to Seek Health in Nudity Camp Paris. —The movement in France to “return to nature” by removal of clothes has been given impetus by the arrival here of the German apostle of nudity, Herr, Zimmerman. Zimmerman came to Paris to confer with his colleagues in this country regarding the establishment of a health camp for members of the nudity society in France. “You can have little idea of the moral revolution brought about by nudism.” he said. “I believe that humanity can only be saved from evil by the practice of complete naturalism. I also believe that this regeneration
British Royalty Are Ardent Cinema Fans London.—There is just as X much thrill for royalty in a good •|« film as there is for the humX blest “fan” judging by this pop--4 ularity of rhe “pictures’- with X the royal family. The prince of ♦j* Wales, the duke and duchess of X York, Prince George, Princess Helena Victoria, and Princess X Marie Louise all enjoy an odd Y hour or two at the movies, while I*, the Princess Royal is such a T constant picture goer that she is well known at almost every X West end theater. Other noted fans are Lord X Birkenhead and his daughter. Lady Eleanor Smith; Sir Austen X Chamberlain, Sir Thomas Lipi ton. the duke of Wellington, and X Gordon Selfridge, the millionaire department store owner. X Lloyd George has a well--4 equipped picture room at his X residence at Churt, and Sir ♦f Eric Geddes also has his own X screen and projection machine. «*< m^««*«*^*^«^4*44^«^«4*«4*4^«^«4X,^M ***«**Z < **********« 4 *Z*** <M
which she» “reads” for as many as 100 customers a day in a fashionable tea shop, mean nothing to her, or to anyone else. “The leaves? They are really hot much more than the stage properties for a private demonstration of practical psychology.” she says. “They would badly cramp my style if I took them seriously. 1 now really read nothing but faces and hands, manners and mannerisms, and the many small details of dress and personality. “My story is always one of encouragement, of hope, of a future worth living for. They want z to believe it, even though they affect to be amused by it Moreover, 1 give them good advice, or I think I do.” Women's clothes, she asserts, give the fortune-teller her best lead. “I know what is quietly expensive and what is dressy but cheap. I can see at a glance the signs of careful econ
WHITE HOUSE SENTRY hBMH S B “King Tut,” President Hoover’s big German police dog, makes the rounds of the police sentry boxes in the White House grounds through the night. • He is shown with W. S. Newton of the White House police.
must be international in character. This is the reason 1 have come here to see M. de Mongeot and his friends who are soon to open a camp.” Zimmerman founded a health camp at Klingberg near Luebeck, 25 years ago for persons who preferred to stroll about without clothing. Since the war the movement has grown rapidly and it is now claimed that it has 10,000 members in Germany. Airplane Drops Motor and Glides to Safety Oakland, Calif.—-An airplane that drops its motor to become a glider is the invention of Joaquin S. Abreau, au inventor of this city and former World war flyer with the American forces. The monoplane is constructed so that by pulling an emergency lever in case of motor failure or fire the motor and gasoline tanks, which are carried in an undersection, drop away. The fuselage carries the pilot and passengers to earth as a motorless glider, according to the claims of the inventor. Spring skids attached to the fuselage force the lower part of the plane away when the emergency lever is manipulated and also act as shock absorbers in making a landing. It has been estimated that the winged fuselage will have a gliding radius of 80 miles after the weight of the motor and gasoline tanks has been discarded. Find Pictures Carved Into Rocks by Indians Ottawa, Ont.—Pictures that were carved into the rocks long ago by Indians have been discovered in British Columbia. Harlan 1. Smith, Canadian government archeologist, has reported Mr. Smith came upon the rock pictures 20 miles west of Victoria at a point overlooking the Pacific ocean. It is considered remarkable that these carvings have escaped the notice ot archeologists who worked in the region for many years. Mr. Smith has spent the field season collecting Indian specimens in western Canada, making motion-pic-ture records in the Indian areas and photographing the crude old paintings and carvings placed on the rocks by Indian artists.
omy. The stenographer’s costume identifies her as distinctly as though she wore _a uniform and so does that of the home-body out on a shopping spree. The careful observer can immediately. identify the school teacher, the office girl, the housewife, the woman of leisure without asking questions. All are subtly stamped with signs of their calling.” In the same way faces are easily read for evidence of contentment, unhappiness, suspicion, ambition and" other points of character, her North American Review article shows. Putting these deductions together with the facts revealed by her client’s dress, by her conversation and that of her frequent companions. It Is relatively easy for the fortune-teller to place her, determine her state of mind and tell her the optimistic things which every one wishes to believe—and which, “Princess Karina” argues, always do more good than harm. However, reform is not what It was in ancient ages. If you refuse to reform, you are not decapitated.
f-LEADING- —————— [RADIO PROAMS (Time xi ven te Eastern Standard subtract one hour tor Centra) and two hours for Mountain time.) N. B. C. RED NETWORK—May 262:00 p. m. Dr. Stephen S. Wise. 3:00 p. m. Dr. S. Parks Cadman. 6’oo p. m. Old Company's Program. 6'30 p. m. Major Bowes’ Family Party. 8:00 p. m. David Lawrence. 8:15 p. m. Atwater Kent. 9:15 p m. Studebaker Champions. N. B. C. BLUE NETWORK 1:00 p. m. Roxy Stroll. 2:00 p. m. Young People’s Conference. 3:30 p. m. McKinney Musicians. 4’30 p. tn. Dr. Harry Emerson Fosdick. 5:30 p. m. Whittail Anglo Persians. 7:00 p. m. Epna Jettick Melodies. 7:15 p. m. Collier’s Hour. 8 15 p. m. Raytheon Mfg. Company. COLUMBIA SYSTEM 3:00 p. tn. Symphonic Hour. 3:30 p. m. Richard Hudnut program. 4:00 p. m. Cathedral Hour. 5:30 j>. m. Services—Tenth Presbyterian Church. Philadelphia, Rev. D. G. Barnhouse. 8:00 p. m. La Palina Concert. 8:30 p. m. Sonatron Program. 9:10 p. m. Majestic Theater of the Air. 10:00 p. m. De 'Forest Audeans. 10:30 p. m. Around the Samovar. N. B. C. RED NETWORK—May 27. 10:15 a. m. Radio Household Institute. 7:00 p. m. Voice of Firestone. 7:30 p. m. A. & P. Gypsies. 8:30 p. m General Motors’ Family Party. 8:30 p. m Empire Builders. N. B. C. BLUE NETWORK 9:00 a. m. Copeland Hour. 1:00 p. m. Montgomery Ward Hour. 1:15 p. m. U. S. Dept, of Agriculture. 1:30 p. m. Montgomery Ward Hour. 6:30 p. m. Roxey and His Gang. 8:00 p. m. Edison Recorders. COLUMBIA SYSTEM 8:00 p. m. Kansas School Daze. 8:30 p. m. Ceco Couriers. 9:00 p. m. Physical Culture Magazine. 9:30 p. m. Warner Bros. Vitaphone Jubilee. 10:00 p. m. Robt. Burns Panatelas. 10:30 p. m. United Choral Singers.
N. B. C. RED NETWORK—May 28. 10:15 a. m. Radio Household Institute. 6:00 p. m. Voters’ Service. 6:30 p. m. Soconyland Sketches. 7:30 p. m. Prophylactics. 8:00 p. m. Eveready Hour. 9:00 p. m. Clicquot Club Eskimos. 10:00 p. m. Radio Keith Orpheum Hour. N. B. C. BLUE NETWORK 9:00 p. m. Copeland Hour. 1:00 p. m. Montgomery Ward Hour. 1:15 p. m. U. S. Dept, of Agriculture. 1:30 p. m. Montgomery Wal’d Hour. 7:30 p. m. Michelin Tiremen. 8:30 p. m. Dutch Masters Minstrels. 9:30 p. m. Charles Freshman. COLUMBIA SYSTEM 10:00 a. m. Ida Bailey Allen, National Home-Makers’ Club. 10:30 a. m. Jewel Hour. 7:30 p. m. Mobo Entertainers. 8:00 p. m. Political Situation in Washington Tonight. Speaker, F. W. Wile. 9:00 p. m. Old Gold, Paul Whiteman Hour. 10:00 p. m. Voice of Columbia. 11:00 p. m. Wrigley Program with Guy Lombardo and His Royal Canadians. N. B. C. RED NETWORK—May 29. 10:15 a. m. Radio Household Institute. 6:30 p. in. La Touraine Tableaux. 7:30 p. m. Happy Wonder Bakers. 8:00 p. m. Ipana Troubadours. 8:30 p. m. Palm Olive Hour. 9:30 p. m. Gold Strand Orchestra. N. B. C. BLUE NETWORK I 9:00 a. m. Copeland Hour. I 1:00 p. m. Montgomery Ward Hour. 1:15 p. m. U. S. Dept, of Agriculture. 1:30 p m. Montgomery Ward Hour. 6:45 p. m. Political Situation in Washington. 7:30 p. in. Sylvania Foresters. 10:00 p. m. Chancellor Dance Orch. COLUMBIA SYSTEM 10:00 a. m. Ida Bailey Allen. National Home-Makers’ Club. 8:00 p. m. Hank Simmons’ Show Boat. 9:00 p. m. Van Heusen program. 9:30 p. m. La Palina Smoker. 10:00 p. m. Kolster Radio Hour. 10:30 p. m. Daguerreotypes. N. B. C. RED NETWORK—May 3Q. 10:15 a. m. Radio Household Institute. 4:00 p. m. Grennan Cake Club. 5:30 n. m. Yeast Foamers. 6:30 P. m. Coward Comfort Hour. 7:30 p. m. Hoover Sentinels. 8:00 p. m. Sfeiberling Singers. 9:00 p. m. Halsey Stuart Hour. N. B. C. BLUE NETWORK 9:00 a. m. Copeland Hour. 1:00 p. m. Montgomery Ward Hour. 1:15 p. m. U. S. Dept, of Agriculture. 1:30 p. m. Montgomery Ward Hour. 7:00 p. m. Lehn and Fink Serenade. 8:30 p. m. Maxwell House Hour. COLUMBIA SYSTEM 10:00 a. m. Ida Bailey Allen, National Home-Makers’ Club. 10:30 a. m. Rit Fashion Review. 8 00 p. m. Sweethearts. 8:30 p. m. Then and Now. 9:30 p. m. Sonora Hojir. 10:00 p. m. The Columbians. 10:30 p. m. Musical Episode. N. B. C. RED NETWORK—May 31. 10:15 a. m. Radio Household Institute. 7:00 p. m. Cities Service Hour. 8:00 p m. An Evening in Paris. B’3o p m. Schraedertown Brass Band N. B. C. BLUE NETWORK 10:00 a. m. RCA Educational Hour. 1:00 p. m. Montgomery Ward Hour. 115 p. m. U. S. Dept, of Agriculture. 1:30 p. m. Montgomery Ward Hour. 6:15 p. m. Squibbs Health Talk. 6:3V p. m. Dixies Circus. 7:30 p m. Armstrong Quakers. 8:00 p. m. Wrigley Review. 8:30 p. m. Philco Hour. 9:00 p. m. Hudson-Essex Challengers. lu:00 p. m. Skellodians. N. B. C. RED NETWORK—June 1. 10:15 a. m. Radio Household Institute. 5:30 p. m. White House Dinner Music. 8:00 p. m. Nat. Orch. with Damrosch. 9:00 p m. Lucky Strike Dance Orch. N. B. C. BLUE NETWORK 2:30 p. m. RCA Demonstration Hour. 5:30 p. m. Gold Spot Orchestra. 7:00 p. m. Pure Oil Band. Inside Interference Much heterodyne interference complained of originates right in the receiver, either because it oscillates uncontrollably or because it is an improperly designed superheterodyne. Some receivers of this type squeal and growl as soon as there are two or more stations on the air. The squealing is due to the fact that in every superheterodyne any station comes in at two-dial settings, the so-called “onespot” not excepted. Sets Receive One Watt Os the 50,000 watts generated at the transmitter of the most powerful stations, it is estimated that the total power picked up is less than one watt. This corresponds to an over-all efficiency of 1-500 of 1 per cent. Improves Quality Harsh tonai quality of a cone loud speaker can be improved by connecting a small fixed condenser across the terminals of the speaker. Try a condenser of .005 mid. capacity.
Britain Urges World to Make War on Rats The government of Great Britain has started a world war on the rats. It is a world war because it is endeavoring to have the other nations of the world to follow her example, and the threat is made that if something In this direction is not done the result will be disastrous. If the rat population of the world is allowed to increase as it has done in the past few years, the world will be overrun with rats and civilization will topple. Man will be wiped from the face of the globe. All the great plagues of history are said to have been spread by rats. One of the remedies is absolute cleanliness. There is a close analogy between the number of rats to be found in a city and the sanitary condition of that city, one official declared. The more careful cities are about the disposal of garbage, the fewer rats they have, because lack of food will control the normal increase of the pests. Pigeon Effective in Role of Home Wrecker Returning home to Philadelphia from his vacatibn. Robert Ransford opened his front door and pushed on the light. Such a scene of destruction met his eyes, that he hurried to the nearest drug store to call the police. Two answered the call and, with i drawn revolvers and cautious steps, searched the lower part of the house for vandals. They found nothing but confused wreckage. Upstairs they found lamps overturned, bureau scarfs pulled off, and in the bathroom, bottles broken on the tiled tloor. In the back room they discovered the culprit —a very tired and very hungry pigeon asleep on the bedpost. When it was assured that no valuables were missing, it was concluded that the bird had sought shelter in the fireplace chimney and had been unable to find its way out again. Good Action Lady Paul Dykes, formerly Mrs. Ogden Mills, said at a dinner in New York: “Whether beauty is an advantage or a hindrance to the working woman, I can’t say. Certainly it draws a lot of attention to her if she has it. “A doctor once telephoned for a nurse to look after a very sick man. The nurse arrived. She was a beautiful girl, and she seemed to understand her duties. “The next morning the doctor said: “ ‘Well, nurse, how is our patient’s heart action today?’ “ ‘Doctor,’ she answered, ‘it’s just wonderful. He’s proposed to me four times already.’ ” Every department of housekeeping needs Russ Bleaching Blue. Equally good for kitchen towels, table linen, sheets and pillowcases, etc. —Adv. Modern Oratory “Your recent speech sounded as if you were a little tired.” “I was,” answered Senator Sorghum. “I miss the direct human applause, and I may as well admit that there’s no inspiration whatever in the facial expression of a microphone.” Hoys, We Shall Starve Doctor Durant sees the day when men will only do mental work. That means we are bound to have a lot of unemployment. —Indianapolis Star. Modernism “Gosh, what makes it so cold in here*’ “The electric refrigerator just got struck by lightning.”
400,000 Women Report Benefit '. ‘by actual record “Have you received benefit from taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound?” A questionnaire enclosed with every bottle of medicine has brought, to date, over 400,000 replies. The overwhelming majority—in fact, ninety-eight out iSt/ of a hundred —says, “Yes.” If .... this dependable medicine has ’ helped so many women, isn’t it reasonable to suppose that it will help you too? Get a bottle from your druggist today. Lt|dia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound LYDIA E. PINKHAM MEDICINE CO., LYNN, MASS. Shampoo yourself with Uuticurti Soap \ FIRST rub your scalp lightly with \ Cuticura Ointment .... Then ✓ J \ shampoo with a liquid soap / c I/ \ \ ma de by dissolving shavings / ■ \ \ Cuticura Soap in a little X \ hot water. Rinse thoroughly / — \ ! n te P‘d water. A dean scalp I / X \ } is essential to good hair. \ I Soap 25c. Ointment 25c. and 50c. | I Talcum 25c. Sample each free. I I Address: “Cuticura,” Dept. 86, Malden, Mas*. I ll Cuticura Shaving Stick Use. WhoWantsto beßald? I Not many, and when you are I// jltll getting that way and loosing I. .aWaL ' hair, which ends in baldness, r J'' you want a good remedy that will stop falling hair, dandruff f and grow hair on the bald head < W; jTwwi BARE-TO-HAIR is what you vMI *= wan t. — For Sale at AU Dealers in Toilet Articles W. H. Foret, Msgr. Scottdale. Penna 4
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W. N. U., FORT WAYNE, NO. 20-1929. Knees Are Trump* “Frankness is the modern girl’s long suit,” says an exchange. Apparently it’s the only long suit she has. The Leading Citizen Blinks—l hear lie is quite prominent in his home town. Jinks —Yes, he’s as prominent as a darn on a flapper’s silk stocking.
