The Syracuse Journal, Volume 22, Number 24, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 10 October 1929 — Page 2
n Air Salesroom for Airplanes
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View, of the open air salesroom for airplanes, which is at one of the busiest corners in Los Angeles. Calif., where nearly a quarter of a million persons pass daily.
AIRPORT DESIGNED LIKE THE BEEHIVE Novel Terminals Proposed by New Yorkers. .'few York.—ln a few years the air traveler may look down and regard a beehive on the earth with the same joyful anticipation that an ocean traveler sights land. . For the beehive, one of the oldest forms of architecture, inspired the newest plan for the nation’s newest need, the airport, and one has been designed by Frances Keally and EI* Goodrich. New York architect and city planner. Goodrich is in China, having been commissioned by the Chinese government as consulting engineer in the development of a modern seaport at Canton and the laying out of a modern capital city at Nanking. His plans call for aviation development and he will use the beehive airport as a basis for this phase. This new aviation ter- dnal strives to become an architectural asset rather than a liability. And it looks ahead to the time when air travel will be much more common than today. Really said. Come and Go System. “It is designed so that one-way traffic becomes an automatic feature,” explained Keally. “Twenty-two airplanes and a dirigible can land while 22 airplanes can take off—all at the same moment. “The average train leaving Grand Central station carries between 600 and 700 passengers; thus the airport can handle about the same amount of traftie. “The design is made so as to focus and clear from one point all the hi ch speed traffic of the city. Thus, vehicular tunnels uid subways can come right into the airport and discharge their passengers, who then hop off in planes. “All planes will start from and arrive at four terminals, which meet in a huge rotunda. Either the eastwest of north-south terminals may be used to the advantage of the wind direction.” The design calls for an airport 6,000 feet in diameter, the landing surface of which is covered with cinders, with enough space left for a runway 350 feet wide for each plane, the length of the runway being 2.500 feet. “The landing surface has a 2% per cent grade so that airplanes arriving will be helped by gravity to stop and airplanes taking off will be helped by a down-hill run,” Keally continued. “A iuge dome will cover the rotunda with storage s|>ace for several thousand airplanes supplied by twostory hangars. Above the dome will be a mooring mast for a dirigible and the top of the mast will be exactly 1,000 feet from the ground, the highest structure in the world. A City Itself. “The outer crust ol the dome—think of it as the inner and outer layers of a thermos bottle —will be fashioned into a hotel containing several hundred rooms. Each fifty story of this hotel will have a terrace so that guests can watch incoming and outgoing planes. “Passengers who arrive by dirigible will descend to hotel 01 to rotunda by elevators. In the rotunda will be ticket offices and an outgoing and incoming waiting room, with public health, immigration and a room in which traffic men of the airport will get their instructions from men in the tower. In other words, the airport will be a city in Itself.” Route* to Foreign Lands The United States now has 9,000 miles of air routes connecting it with J 6 foreign countries, while more than 5,000 miles and at least four other nations will be added to the system in the near future. For Women’s Records Aviation records made by women are to be controlled in each country of the world by a woman representative ;of the Federation Aeronautique Internationale. Air Taxis for England Shilling-a-mile air t >xis for hopping around England, and 40-passenger biplanes for traveling *0 India and South Africa are among the new transport facilities promised Englishmen by next spring. Gasoline From Coal It is reported that successful experiments with gasoline distilled from coal have been, carried out in tw6 British aircraft engines. Although the planes housing the motors were not
* * * Planes Carry Hunters * to a Far Wilderness * * Duluth, Minn. — Airplanes * * have been called into use in * transporting sportsmen to and * * from a wilderness which is said * * to be a veritable hunters' and * * fishermen’s paradise, but which * * is inaccessible by all other * * means of transportation. * * The wild region lies only * * about 100 miles north of Du- * * luth, but, it is said, scarcely has * * ever heard the sound of a gun * * or the run of a reel. So plenti- * ful is the region said to be in * * game that a company operating * * an air line to lakes of the re- * * gion guarantee iheir patrons * * that at least one member of * * each party will catch fish and * * that all will see either deer, * * lAwse or bear on a flight of an * * hour or more. * Flights to the region are be•k gun at the. air line’s base at * Eveleth. Minn. * * ************************** SUBCOOLED FOG IS GREATEST OF PERILS Solidifies in Layers of Ice on Aircraft Cambridge, Mass.—The peril of ice forming on aircraft may come from three meteorological conditions, according to Dr. Alexander MeAdie, of the Blue Hill Meteorological observatory, Harvard university. These are sleet, glaze and subcooled fog. The last, he says, is the most dangerous. Subcooling means that the tiny vapor particles are actually slightly colder than the freezing point, although still water. This condition occurs when the air virtually is free from dust and other particles, upon which the droplets might solidify. Water expands when it freezes, and the minute particles of fog instead of freezing tend to spread more thinly through the air until they come in contact with some other surface. Immediately upon such contact, as the surfaces of aircraft, they solidify directly into a layer of ice. In this case the (temperature of the droplets is decidedly lower than that, of the surface upon which they freeze. Doctor MeAdie says the best way to escape from subcooled fog is to watch thermometers closely and seek levels, either lower or upper, at which temperatures are higher. When fibers of sweaters and the hairs of fur coats become covered with hoar frost, it is a sure sign of subcooled water. Glaze, which he says formerly erroneously was called sleet, occurs when rain drops near freezing temperatures fall upon a surface which is much colder. Real sleet is due to raindrops falling through a layer of air below freezing, which turns them into frozen raindrops. An airplane moving through such a stratum when raindrops are coming from a warmer area above is in a dangerous zone, for the accumulating frozen drops stick to one another readily and so build up a perilous load. Presumably, if a pilot recognizes accurately the sleet conditions, he can escape by climbing into the warmer level above. Rocket Plane Being Built in Germany Dusseldorf. Germany.—A motorless propellerless rocket airplane, with stream line “arrow” body for greater speed, is under construction here at the Espenlaub airplane factory. It was designed by Max Valier, inventor of the rocket automobile. Lifted into the air by another plajie, the new plane is to take off for /its first flight by merely setting off its rockets and dropping the tow-line. A one-seater monoplane, with a 36foot wing spread, it needs neither motor nor propeller, because of its rocket system of propulsion. About 225 pounds in total weight are thus saved, flown, they were “run up,” and no difference in performance was noticed and no carburation adjustments were necessary. It is expected that ultimately coal will supply much refined gasoline. Finicky Flyer A Stockton (Calif.) man, taking his first ride in an airplane on his seven-ty-eighth birthday anniversary, wrote a letter to the transport company complaining about women smoking in the plane.
************************** | BRINGING DOWN THE HAWK | xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx ((c) bv D- J. Walsh.) LINDY RAND heard a chicken squawk. Almost instantly a hawk whistled triumphantly. She leaped to the door. The children. Jack and Elsie, ran to her. screaming at the top of their voices: “He got it!” Against the blue afternoon sky sailed a great bird with a half-grown yellow chicken clutched in his talons. “We were keeping watch, mother, honest!” Six-year-old Jack said earnestly. “But he just swooped right down!" “It was the chicken with the droopy wing, mother!” said five-year-old Elsie, half crying. “He’ll be back after more,” Lindy sighed. She was almost overwhelmed by this new difficulty. A woman alone with two small children, she had tn fight more than hawks. The hawk had perched on the branch of a tree within plain sight of the house and was coolly making a meal. When he had finished he came hack for more. Round and round above the chicken yard he circled. Lindy watched him anxiously. She was desperate. Every chicken meant money. She needed money as never before. Suddenly she turned and went into the house. Her husband’s shotgun rested upon wooden pegs against the kitchen wall. It had never been touched since the last time he put it there. It was loaded. Lindy knew how to shoot, although she bad a horror of firearms. She took the gun down and went out of doors again. “Mother; mother! The hawk! Look, the hawk!” shrieked Jack and Elsie. Lindy had a glimpse of gleaming wings, low to the ground. As the bird lifted into the air with another chicken in his talons she raised the gun to her shoulder and fired. The weapon kicked so violently that she was almost thrown over backward. “Mother! You got him!” shouted Jack. Breathless, shocked, Lindy saw the bird floundering before her. The shot had broken his wing. She laid down the gun. grabbed an empty chicken coop and put it over the bird. Down the dusty road from town came a powerful car driven by the one person in the world whom Lindy feared and distrusted. This was Abe Akroyd, the man who had sold the place to her husband. Payment and interest were due that day, and she knew that Abe had come to see about it. The car stopped under the great spruce tree that shaded the shabby house and Abe stepped out. He was a heavily built man with a gray-bris-tled jaw and small hard eyes. He had a gold tooth that gleamed hugely when he spoke. Somehow in that moment he made Lindy think of the hawk, potent, relentless, predatory. But she had worsted the hawk. That knowledge gave her courage to face the man. “Well, Lindy, how are you coming?” he began. “You know what day this is, I suppose?” He took a small black book from his pocket and consulted it. “Payment and interest—ss3o.” “I can pay only the interest.” Lindv looked pleadingly into the coarse face. “My chickens came on slow. In the fall—” “Now, now! I expected better than that of you. Lindy. You’ve had a whole year in which to get righted since John died.” “A whole year!” Lindy’s lips quivered. Abe consulted the book again and shook his head. “Business is business. You know that. Lindy. I’d like to accommodate everybody. But if 1 begin with the rest of ’em will be on my back. I’ve got a good bit of property trusted out around the country. And I live by what folks owe me. I got to treat all alike; it don’t pay to get too softhearted.” "I don’t expect anything but fair treatment. Mr. Akroyd. I am doing the best I can. A year isn’t very long for a woman that’s working alone with two small children to earn SSOO or S6OO outside her living expenses. All I ask is an extension of time. Mr. Akroyd.” Abe squinted upward at the roof of the small house. A comer of the loosely shingled roof had blown off in a recent high wind. When Abe sold a piece of property he always demanded that the buildings be kept in good condition. “That looks bad,” he commented. Lindy knew it She bit her lips. “Lindy,” said Abe, putting the black book back into his pocket, “I’ll tell you what you better do. You better give up this place and move into town. You’ll find work there. You’re never going to get this place paid for, that’s fair and square. Lindy.”
Odd House is Constructed at Behest of “Spirits”
The Palo Alto Chamber of Commerce says: “The Winchester house, in this city, was built by Mrs. Winchester, the widow of the famous firearms man, who was a spiritualist. She claimed the spirits told her she would not die as long as the sound of hammers was heard in her house, and as a result she kept building and building and changing and. when the spirits told her, left off one section half finished and started another. It is estimated that at least $1,000,000 was spent on the structure, and parts of It have not been explored. The house Is some three stories high—that Is. It looks to be that—but there may be five In some parts where it Is built in miniature sections. There are several wings, and the architectural style Is largely that In fashion many years ago—very ornate and ugly. Only the best of material was used In the wood parts, and the furnishings, which have now been removed, were truly magnificent. One room, the one in which she communed with her spirit guide,
THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL
Lindy went white. She ciutiheu « her_thro£>biijg''*throat. The place wahome to her and the children; it had been John’s home while he lived. H< had brought her there a bride. They had planned to pay for it and im prove it and continue there in theii old age. She cnuldn I give it up From her pocket she took a purse, opened It and with trembling fingers counted out S3O in worn bills. The interest She held out the money to Abe, but he refused It with a gesture. “All or nothing, Lindy. I hate to do it but I got to be firm. I’ll pay you back cash tor every cent due you. The money will give you a start some where else. I’m offered more for the place this minute than 1 asked when I sold it to John Rand. Ed Holmes wants it. Lindy, 1 can’t turn down a good cash offer for it. you know.” “Ed Holmes!”. Lindy’s face was scarlet now. “I’ve seen him snooping ’round on my hill yonder. I don’t know what he’s looking for. But he’s going to keep off the premises as long as I occupy them or—or I’ll drive him off with a shotgun!” “What’s this?” Abe looked in astonment at the palpitating little figure of the young woman. Lindy pointed toward the chicken coop within which the hawk was glowering. “Ijust shot him.” she said. “Yes, mother did. too!” cried loyal Jack. Abe looked at the hawk, which he hadn’t noticed before. ‘Guess I’ll have to warn Ed to stay away,” he said. Then as Lindy again held out the money to him pleadingly he turned from her and went to his car. Stepping in. he drove swiftly away. Weak and faint Lindy sat down on the doorstep. Abe had refused the interest. That meant he was determined to get rid of her. He warned to let Ed Holmes have the place. What did Ed want to for? What was he doing up there in that stone patch? “Jack and Elsie.” she called. “You stay here and watch the chickens . I’m going up on the hill for a little while.” She hadn’t been on the hill since John died. It was nothing but an old rock pile anyway; no good land. John had paid much more than the place was worth and now Abe Akroyd was squeezing her for the payments. She climbed up to where she had seen Ed Holmes a few days before. Just inside~the woods she stopped aghast Before her some freshly dug earth and chippings of rock. Ed Hoftpes had been digging into her land, jWhat for? What did he hope to find in a barren place like this? Lindy ran all the way back to the house. Ten minutes later she was racing toward town, the two children bobbing on the back seat of the old flivver. Down Main street she drove, past all the lawyers’ offices until she came to a shabby house, where on the porch, sat an old man reading a- big book. “Mr. White!” Lindy said, going up to him. “You’ve read just about everything. John always said you were the best informed man in these parts. I’ve got a mystery to solve. You know what my land is. Y<m know what that hill back of the house is. What would a man like 'Ed Holmes find there to interest him?” “Been snooping round there, has he?” inquired the old man. “Digging dirt, chipping off pieces of rock.” “Ed Holmes, you know. Lindy, has made a great study of the rocks hereabouts. He prides himself on being a genuine geologist. Yes. yes. Guess I’ll go home with you. Lindy, and see what I make out.” Back toward home raced Lindy with the one person she felt she could absolutely trust. She helped the old man up the hill; she boosted him up. He knelt down. He picked up a bit of rock. He held the specimen close to his eyes. The light and life of youth streamed into his old face. “Blue granite!” he said. “Yes. yes. Lindy, don’t you breathe a word of this to anyone. There’s a plot on foot to rob you. But you’ll fool ’em. Lindy, if you just keep your mouth shut.” For the second time that day Lindy raced to town. It was near sunset when she located Abe Akroyd. Mt*. White had lent her the money to make the last payment, and Abe reluctantly received IL Ed Holmes had not let Abe know why he wanted the Rand place. When he_found out that he couldn’t have it he was furious, but not half so furious as Abe himself. As for Lindy, who had outwitted them both and who found herself about to become a rich woman, she went home and commiserated with the captive hawk. “Keep up your courage, old boy,” she said. “Your wing is going to mend nicely. And then you’ll be able to fly again. I owe you something and 1 always pay my debts.” Love’s Demands We can sometimes love what we do not understand, but it Is impossible completely to understand what we do not love. —Mrs. Jameson.
was furnished and hung entirely in black velvet Others were masterpieces in satin, and there were closets full of the best linens, silks, etc., for the entertainment of her spirit guests. She lived alone with her niece and a nurse and never had visitors. In the house itself there are staircases that lead to nowhere, ending in a blank wall. There are others that break off and end some 6 feet deeper. There are rooms 1 foot wide, and there is a tiny balcony with doors about 4 feet high leading to it. There are other staircases with 2-lnch risers. Surrounding this curious house of a dingy color are tall cedar hedges and a nondescript garden.” Call for One’s Best Play your hand, and play It to the finish, for, as Josh Billings said: “As in the game of cards, so in the game of life; we must play what is dealt us, and the glory consists not so mnch in winning as in playing a poor band well.”—Grit.
[SU3 J • I :i ROSA : Mimi | *AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA» Movies and Morons THIS morning 1 talked with a man who said that the success of the I movies was due to the way the film producers played Into the hands, or 1 eyes, of the morons. 1 to.d him I thought that was not nice at all. It’s not that I’m a hound for the i eye punishment which one gets from the shooting and kissing and piethrowing which greet our wistful orbs when we want a filmed play. But 1 I do go as a matter of amusement, education and habit. I 1 believe that the movie began as a ! Nickelodeon for it was run on a fivecent basis, but now it’s a great industry like Standard Oil or U. S. Steel. It has stock because people take stock I in it. But there are limits to the ■ screen and you mustn’t expect it to educate you the way day school and 1 Bight school do. There’s a moral censorship of the screen, so I have heard, but it seems i to me that there should be a mental i one. too. We don’t want to have the conscience shocked by a low-toned performance, and we don’t want our brains to be stung by a low-browed show either. There have been and still are great minds which have devoted themselves to the'stage—Bernhardt. Duse. John ■ Drew. Mantell, Southern and Marlowe. ■ You can’t compare Hollywood names with these, can you? You and I want to see a show with some sense to it. We’ll stand for all the horse play and monkey-business, the kisses and the pies, if only the film-maker will make the film seem i natural. We hate to be kidded by screened fairy tales which are | supposed to give us real life. In the other arts the best minds set the standard of taste. The archl.- : tect of the Taj Mahal or the Parthenon didn’t try to figure out what the gang in India and Greece would like. ; He gave them rhe ideal in stone. The great painters haven’t ever acted like the boys who make up the comic strips for the edification of thoughtless people. No. the fellows like Raphael and Corregjo. who flung the fancy brushes, gave people the s best and let ’em take it or leave it. The same with Shakespeare, whose old plays are still running, and Ihsen and Clyde Fitch. Even old Barnum gave something like an ideal circus. But the movie has played down to low taste and when it becomes a movie-talkie, it may be shown up so that it will have to brace up to meet the demands of good sense and good taste. Every Kitten Has Its Day YES. she has and this is the day It’s Mother’s day’ once a year, but the flapper may claim the other 364 as her very own. Then there are dog days in the good old summer time, but the kitten has a whole calendar full of these purring days of the present. The way that the styles are figured out in Paris, if that’s where they do come from, every girl has a chance to display her charms. Even the plain girl can make a good Impression with these modern frocks to say nothing of hosiery. You see. It’s like this: In the old days with the old patterns, about all you could see of a girl was her face, which was all right if she happened to be pretty and nothing else. The plainer girl who could shine in a bathing suit, where form counted, didn’t have much of a chance, for one couldn’t go bathing all the time. But the modern frock suits the plain girl to a T. Her face may not be dimpled, but she may be able to makeup for that with tricky ankles. Her countenance may not be resplendent, but where form counts in the beauty game she’s bound to score. Mother Nature is certainly eccentric when it comes to putting human beings together in separate bundles She will stock a large head with its full face on a slender body, and try to pait off arms and legs when they are not at all proportionate. The contrast between face and form is very noticeable in most women although now and then Nature will adapt the pretty face to the graceful body, but how often the beauty ot the village or town was not so proud of her shape, and how just as often the girl whose face was not of the same candle power had a figure that would make the Venus of Milo want to reduce. The girl who has form with grace doesn’t need to take any dust from the girl who has just a pretty face but nothing about her that would suggest the dancer or swimmer. There is charm about every woman no matter Jjow little she may think of the impression she makes upon her mirror. And these are the days when a | woman’s charm has its chance. ! Much of this supposed beauty business is not a matter of creams or powders, but Just plain health. Thank goodness, girls, that you and 1 can move about in a free and easy costume where handsome is that handsome does its daily exercises and practices proper diet to say nothing of proper hours. It’s our Big Day, all right, if we will only realize it and make the most of it <© bv the Bell Syndicate. Ine.) Early Printers’ Prices There is record of two printers in 1478 agreeing to publish 930 copies of the Bible. Just how long these Bibles were in preparation Is debatable, but the first record of sales in that locality, Venice, .tear 1492, and by the same printers gives the selling price at 6 to 12 ducats, or S3O to S6O. Trappers Signal Flyers Aviatoi forest rangers of Alaska look out for the lonely trappers on their trail. Smoke signals convey the State of affairs on the ground.
y. Pain ▼ ®° me £S tak® Pai* l f° r granted. W They let a cold “run its course.” f They wait for their headaches to “wear off.“ C suffering from neuralgia or from neuritis, they rely on feeling better in the morning. Meantime, they suffer unnecessary pain. 5 Unnecessary, because there is an antidote. W W Bayer Aspirin always offers immediate relief W from various aches and pains we once had to endure. If pain persists, consult your doctor as to its cause. <1 Save yourself a lot of pain and discomfort through the many uses of Bayer Aspirin. Protect yourself by buying the genuine. Bayer Is safe. Always the same. AU drugstores. BAYER ASPIRIIV ABDirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaeetieaddester of Salicyljcadd
A»tec Idols Dug From Old Ruins of Tenayuca Tenayuca, the Aztec ruin which has already yielded so many Interesting objects of a past civilization that it is undoubtedly the most important Aztec site in Mexico today, recently gave up three more idols of stone. No are sitting on their haunches and have their hands on their knees while their heads bear ornate headdresses. A third idol is just a face broken off a body that has not yet been found. AH three represent priests or gods, who may be identified later when their adornments are studied. The style of carving is Aztec. The site of Tenayuca has yielded tin enormous quantity of pottery. whole and in fragments, which has been classified and is being studied by Eduardo Noguera, of the direction of archeology of the Mexican mirf istry of education. Some stratigraphic explorations have been made to deter, mine the succession of cultures that have existed in that region. Pottery fragments belonging to the archaic Toltec and Aztec periods have been found, and objects from the oldest of these periods, the so-called archaic, nave been found to an unusual depth Simian Good Corn Husker Called to the home of Bob Wilbur. Roy Pierce and Hugh Warden, policemen at Kirksville, Mo., found a neighbor’s pet monkey in the Wilbur corn patch. Astonished, they saw the mon key seize cornstalks, break them with ease, husk the shuck with speed that would put a champion cornhusker to shame. —Indianapolis News. True Enough “Bear in mind that the big potatoes are always to be found at the top of the heap,” said the successful man. “But if it wasn’t for the rest of us there wouldn’t be any heap,” suggested the failure. — Philadelphia Record. This Aging World! This is indeed a blase age. Little children ride along tn motor cars, calmly reading or looking at picture books. They didn’t do that In the days of the horse and wagon. A ride was exciting then. It Wasn’t Her Fault He—Don’t go. You are leaving me entirely without reason. She —I always leave things as I And them. Those who don’t notice that clouds are of different kinds can never foretell the weather.-
Life looks rosy for him
Health worth more than fortune THE baby to b? envied is the one who is born with an inheritance ©f perfect health, to begin with. Ana who’s lucky enough to have a mother who knows how to build up this fortune. ’’Perhaps I'm old-fashioned,” she’ll say to the doctor who pronounces her child physically 100% at a baby show, “but this health certificate means more to me than all the stock certificates in the world. If my baby grows up strong and well, I’m willing to leave it to him to make a career and fortune for himself. “Already I’m teaching him the value of regular habits. Regular sleep, regular meals, regular functions. He’s never once been off schedule, not even when he was cutting teeth or traveling to the country. I make sure of that by giving him Nujol regularly.” Nujol works so easily and naturally that it won’t upset a baby under any conditions. It keeps everything functioning properly. It not only prevents any excess of body poisons (we all have them) from forming but aids in their removal. It is safe and sure. Nujol was perfected by the Nujol Laboratories, 2 Park Avenue, New York.
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Heir to millions : Sn «L J| H®® ■&> ' /JmeH Wflbk l!lil«&. wl Just try Nujol for your baby. Give it to him regularly for the next three months. See if it doesn’t make things much easier for both of you. Cer- 1 tainly it could do no harm —for I , Nujol contains no drugs or medicine. Your druggist carries it. Be sure you get the genuine. Sold only in scaled packages.
