The Syracuse Journal, Volume 22, Number 52, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 24 April 1930 — Page 9

Fishing Boats Carry Church’s Blessing » .4* | j j V Ur , ,*W I, ■ Lftt "I . flhfc i kJ>^Wsi L fvß iw *- * I JI al l JLfii X ■jSwi r 3BKB 1 - S®?BS>BB :r: t vmj.qa. Part of the gayly decorated fleet of 2<*> fishing schooners just before they left. St.Malo. France, for a sLx-montils’ fishing voyage off the coast of Newfoundland. Previous to sailing, they were, blessed by Cardinal ( horst in the presence of •_*’'.'"st people.

Report Another “Flying Dutchman

'Alresi—?An»>th»’ : r .Tiivsh ry f- ' ' nimiths, .has 'again.-been sgtitd.' Thirteen months ago fJ <• .ship ' Jxobeitimx ! . Which van 1 I—ht;<’l mx Mvriom-ly in Im-’fiiber <•! ■ ]X‘S. like a by dragg »-! wraith . In The middle of <! <• South . Atlantic 1 Ocean; In .nliiiu toward the poxir-s<as of Ant:ir« tog< a. • . . < TI >1 < Ist) ft.- xx ri rd; m-w s Ir• >: gift her*; j ■ I y Philip- 1. mlsay. a Brit si ■ ssl««n ary. the first rmin tn r< a> It -~. . ition . from the Tilstiin <l,i island group Sim e January of It'g".', ,• 'J The Tris-tun <i.t <’unlm< are In the South Atlantic. just north of the extreme 1 limit, of tloining hv. and abouLj midway between Buenos Aires and t’lijie Town. . . According to Lindsay, the Koken-- , hnxn. like n ■-|»ectre. parsed.the Tris tan da Cunhas on .January 21, J!*2'.’. Her maininast was missing and her ' _ Find “Dry Ice” Wells in Deserts of West jVasliihgfon. T>rx lee? may he pro dined in commercial quantities from carlton monoxide wells on the public j <Jbm ill) m the desert stret< f the W.sx. • j Sm-h wells have been brought In I by pfospettors in Colorado and I'tali. (.inr.-e I>. I'arklns-n of Salt I ake City . I ns informed the J apartment vs the; Interior. The "prospectors are p.roteeted by their original exploration permits ami tbe government will net ept a royalty, of two cents per 1 '"*! cuf’ii.’ feet for the first two years of actual operation. ‘•pry ice." made from carbon tndn- ' oxide, has twice the refrigeration etfittf water Ice and keeps longer. OHIO’S AMBITION . * Jg» 1 \.WZ I The noble and aristocratic sport of rowing seems t<#> be moving wes-t. L. XV. St. John of Ohio State, athletic ’director, His gone oh record sis favoring the adoption of rowing and the matter .b..:s been ditjcU's«-d wiih % g".r . this spring. A ."boat elulr nearby bits I . offered Its facilities to the proptwl , Ohio crew 1 .

■ & C'iittßT WX, GEE/ Y\ I HEftE ) a., v/a E <• *■%s . f % UR H w®. L_ _~gsL ««9mb sSSgcjS? y wB \\JOstva ■I LOOkW into j|B_2_ WULP you UKE 7W£ ©UePeM \w-i A Ltm-E se£ — —’ sho? •y}> x. Gv§\ ResOßrS ' -'Um //EAV/ HW aV . v Or o' SARCASM / *2? wE^ r go I hr u^_—

Ylgg'hg was .'flyfiig Irutse in the wind; T!.i‘ ■ r< i . f<‘p! tire l<fth*■ sh"p V -‘S her !;.k k htill. ar<>itml vyhirli a wi pe' band hafl- been | a i 'e-l. v . ■ ■ eurd I>f the Kobent 'avn ' Sti: ■ 1. from La FLK.i. for CO.OOCOO’COO'X>COOOOOOvv< oc-00. RAIN ? o . ■ ' g. 2 d ? Bv THOMAS ARKLE CLARK ° Dean of Men, University of .X' ' * Illinois'. A , 0 1V i« raining hs 1 write this—a gen tie r tt th ’ sink* Into the gr<m’J_

and •disappears as It falls. Nothing' else is s.« restful as h rain: noth Ing s<> qnl’eting t<> the nerves I shout’d not like to live in it place where it does not rain regularly. V ■ hsive just tieen reading an article In praise of the climate of California;

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c ’ picture to yourself." It says, "what : a difference ■ls made In your habits, your moods, your Whole adjustment j to hfe. when you know that tor at i least four months of the year—June i to October —no rain will fall.'* I have t-hb picture. I mst in the air, hill'.>l< < brown and sen-iH vegetation everywhere drying up excepting ns one stand* with a hose in his hands ami sprinkles the lawn and the flower l>eds. A hot sun heating down upon <me tn.td no hope of rain ’ for four, months to c<,mi| off the atmosphere; grass, and shrubs, and flowers burned brown and dead excepting where .some. faithful lintel gives them regular attention! A dry wind blow ing the yellow dust Into one’s eyes! It makes no appeal to me. 1 like variety; 1 like the soft mist against my face, 1 like to hear the drdps beating upon the roof or against the Window panes; I thoroughly enjoy rain. and some way, in spite of the absence of rubbers and rain coats and umbrellas,;! seldom seem to get wet. NofbJr g- artificial can ever refresh the vegetable world as a good rain does. The air. smells better. tastes better. ah{! see/na to penetrate more • . h era rain. 1 caii Work with more enthusiasm, with more <x«n cent nit lon and with more energy during a min. When the mln is falling outside it gbes opportunity to tinjsh the uncompleted task; to set tie down to something that bas been waiting for attention for days or . w ce'.s. " I was a hoy the farm a I rainv' lliiy was a periotl to be looked a w..• d t". Before the hartj work «»f • I life .bad fastened itself upon ■ dby ' ■ so play d -v. We I cut all sorts of capers in the hayloft the : p>atter«s! tlpw ;i . .

Elephant Breaks Up Hindu Prayer

Bombay. — Several persons were trampled upon and seriously injured recently when a young male elephant ran amuck for half an hour at Allahabad during-the Kumbli Mela religious festival. Two million pilgrims were t packed along the wayside reciting prayers while a procession including nine elephants was returning from the river bank with all the customary pageantry of gorgeous banners, musical bands, naked attendants, and the gold and silver palamjuins borne on the shoulders of the men. generally associated with religions festivals here, when the young elephant, apparently peeved ait the slow progress Os the procession, made a sudden rush at a female eleplmfit. immediately in front and gored it savagely. The suddenness of the attack resulted in the driver and passenger being flung off the attacked animal, which trumpeted shrilly with rage and pain. The crazed attacker then turned its attention tp tile other beasts, trumpeted, threw out its hind legs, and finally unseated its \ Moving In circles 'vouji ' isn't the way to. get jpgS ! ahead, even though you may move in ——* the verv best circles.

At.-Tana. > ’i I‘e' enil er 14. e'lV' IV r.e \ a ■ sdet < were aboard, t' raiding X. .11 — or .£ 1 >.11111: rit'- tllost ■. • • • Sever; staff of- ■ r' ,e I navy wel i US • tl>- )•■■■( :•’»■>)<-.(!>: )>r we went fish-: ing. It was Tlioijght that- the fish < .■ ■ ravetwitslv .upon a r: ■, dpy. Ir. y have lH*en. hut nliyw i t’At. s ■. re -.]>> ’-t to < • np>>n. rljp . ■ •' .• < reek a ) huddled up and . w;,t> h the corks <>n our fishing lines bolibing up' and down. 1 have ■' Iw ay- . lii.erl re. :•!?•’ ;;s 1 look buik upon the years that have passtsl if seenis to me/ that niitch <>f ti e reading that 1 hale done since the time I was* ten years old has been iloue w iiile the rain was coming down outside am! other tasks for the time being set. aside. ; . No! I like sunshine and I take pleasure In clear weather, but I don't want to live where it doesn't rain! Absetii e of rain would take a-way half the pleasure of life. (g., J 930. Western Newspaper Union.f Funeral Costs Too High, so Town Fixes Prices Mexico City.—The municipal government of Guuymas. Sqriora; has interfered in the town’s undertakers’ business'in order to give its citizens ub economic burial. • 'omplaints were lodged that undertakers" and funeral carriage owners were profiteering. The council then fixed, a svale of prieys with a penalty for violations.

Puts Filial Duty Before Career

lola, Kan.—From a concert pianist w ith excellent prospects Chlqjgo. to operator of a drug store iti a city of less than 10,»»»> population, is a long step, but a step which filial devotion ■ prompted Lloyd N Brown to take. I'iye years ago Brown \vas im in-

DIPPING INTO * ♦ SCIENCE t 4- - J J The Polar Spin X •;* ’lf people resided at. or- on. 4- the .Xi-nth and poles, they ••• '.J would get much less of a Tide"' I•> each twentv four hours than ♦ T those at the equator. . $ A circle at the pole might he <, only " a foot ii> ciri umteretne. ' ♦ wh.e at tie tspiutor the earth <• is miles In girtli.. As the ♦ .* .... - rex -■ y .•» oip-e duii v. <• - t|ie polar reside,nt? gets the ' X . s! c<r'er ride, -T <• | it. 1:T”. W<»EkrtrNc»stap«r fnlon J ♦ i c.-j. <• <• •> •>

THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL.

In the belief that an elephant can be subdued in even its wildest mood if a camel bites its ear, some, venturesome spirits drove a camel toward the beast, which in consequence dashed off and plunged at great speed into the crowd, scattering them right and left. Panic immediately followed, and men. women and children screamed and fought madly, in their efforts to escape from the path of the infuriated animal. Luckily., the courage and resource of Captain Niblett. a magistrate, and Mr. Cole, a police officer, saved what Would undoubtedly have been a much wt>rSe disaster. Captain Niblett procured two tame elephants and.set out to capture the escaped beast, which was now racing rapidly toward the river, while Cole galloped ahead on horseback, warning tlie crowd. The huge four-footed pachyderm plunged pell-mell through an encampment of pilgrims by river bank and crashed through a number of lowhuts constructed of thatch and bamboo. widen gave way before the monster like match boxes. Inside almost every hut. fires Were left burning, and in consequence the wretthed dwellings quickly became a series of blazing bonfires. Captain Niblei chased the mad eleCoaxing Cows’ Appetite With Hawaiian Molasses Colville.. Wash.—Black strap molasses fropi Hawaiian sugar fields is being ft <1 to dairy cattle here in an experiment to increase milk production. The black-thick sirup is shipped -in barrels and is a' residue from sugar vat'. ■ Thinned with water. It is sprinkled over grain, my or fougliqge. With the added relish cows will devour with avidity food which is generally left in the mangers.

If the Truth Were Always Told 1 iiwueM w®wyi

st.ructor in piano in a (.'hieago music, institute. He httd completed his study there and had been retained as an in structor. In addition to teaching, he filled concert engagements and on several occasions played with the Chicago Symphony orchestra. His prospects were bright and it was predicted he would soon be one <»£ the outstanding figures in the musical xvorld. Just as Brown was making the most forward strides toward fame he reFrench Retain Battle Scars as Memorials Paris. —The ~ citizens of Verdun have sworn an oath. to. oppose any attempt at reconstruction or reforest at ion of the war-torn slop»es of the Meuse valley that were devastated during the fierce lighting that cent» red around that district during the World w.-tr. They feet that this encircling strip of sdteUqunked and unrooted land is the most fitting inetnorial to. the tnatiy ■d ma ini their brave oath, "They shall not pass.”, Sacred Beasts Shocked by Bare-Legged Girls New York.— Bare-legged girls and men wearing plus fours are burred from the presence of sacred elephants in Siam. Advices from Bangkok are that American tourists visiting the elephants’ stables were compelled to return to a liner and put on more dignified garb.

| Girl at Altar Bilks g at Taking of Vows S ° lulwton. Okla. —You. can lead g a the bride to the altar, but you o g can’t make her cet married. g O A couple and several friends S S calleci on Justice of the Peace § o G. W. Horn. The couple wanted o Qs,lo be married, they said. O The part/ and the court clerk g 5 went to the courthouse to pro- $ $ cure a license. Just as the g § license was about to be deliv 6 § ered the would-be bride said she g S was not going to be married. o And she was not. §

phant miles of territory before finally coming to grips. Then followed a struggle between the three elephants which lasted some time before the raving monster was finally subdued and returned to his trembling attendant at Allahabad. CHIC FOR AFTERNOON Z . A Jr■ 3m p*™ / '. x> x '*TI i - ’MM d'lU*'® Tollmann demonstrates . the new line of chic for afternoon in this 1 lack and white printed chiffon with fitted bodice, three-quarter ruffled sleeves and skirt of floating fullness. Black suede gloves and a lacy straw hat complete the ensemble.

deived word from home that his father. Dr. H. A. Brown, veteran physician and druggist here, had suffered a stroke of paralysis and that Lloyd, the only sen, was sorely needed at home. As he saw it. only one read w-as open for hint. Before him was success in the musical world that he loved; not only success; for himself, but for his wife, an accomplished vim linist xvhom lie met and married in Chicago. • /tie closed his piano, resigned his position with the college and forsook his career as a musician to hurry horns to his parents -and to enter the c<.t> parutively strange profession of » .druggist. Blit his heart is not in the drug business, lie intends some day to return to his music.' He has a- staiidin? offer to return to Cidcirgo as an in structor. WOMAN WINS HONOR wl # Miss Marjorie White of the Statl department will be one of the United States representatives at the conferfor the codification of iiterna tional law at The Hague.

Water’s Change in Color Explained by Biologists The famous lake of Morat, Switzerland, Is again displaying its occasional habit of turning to blood — a phenomenon which never fails to arouse superstitious awe in the neighborhood, frighten the sinful into some sort oft’ectitude and effect miraculous cures. Nonmystical biologists explain that the color is caused by exceptional growth under certain favorable conditions of a tiny red plant of the algae family which is always in the water of the lake, but is rarely notideable. This plant, first cousin to the green scum seen on stagnant water, often grows on Arctic snow and on. stale bread.—World’s Work. Now Has Rosy Cheeks, Red Lips, Clear Eyes, Smooth Complexion

Hillsdale, 111. —“I was rundown, pale and ■ couldn't sleep or eat. My. nerves were threadbare. Any little thing annoyed me greatly. I spent much time and money with doctors in search [of health. Formerly mother had taken Dr, Pierce’s Favorite Prescription and she

Miss Howland

recommended it to me and Ijwas sur * prised at the result. Now I nave rosy cheeks, red lips, clear eyes, smooth complexion, and lots of ‘pep.’ I ,sleep soundly and have an astounding appetite. Hard work never makes me tired like it used to.”—Miss C. L. Howland, Route 2, Box 54. All dealers. Fluid or tablets. Send 10c to Dr. Pierce’s Clinic in Buffalo, N. Y., for a trial pkg. Relaxations “Do you think a man of great public responsibility ought to permit himself the diversions o£ ordinary humanity:’’ “Certainly.” replied Senator Sorghum. “There is nothing -more sensible than a little nonsense at the right time and place.” How One Woman Lost 20 Pounds of Fat Lost Her Double Chin Lost Her Prominent Hips Lost Her Sluggishness Gained Physical Vigor Gained in .Vivaciousness Gained a Shapely Figure If you're fat—first remove the cause! « KRUSCHEN SALTS contains the 6 mineral salts your body -organs, glands and nerves must have to function properly. . When your vital organs fail to perform their work correctly—your bowels and kidneys can't throw off that waste material—before you realize it—you're growing hideously fat! Trv one half ' teaspoonful of KRT’SCHEN’ SALTS in a glass of hot water. Cv?ry morning—in 3 weeks get on the scales and note how many, pounds of fat have vanished Notice also that you have gained In energy—your skin is clearer—your eyes sparkle with glorious health—you fee! yountrer in body—keener in inind. KRUSCHEN will give any fat person a joyous surprise. Get an 85. c bottle of KRUSCHEN SALTS from any leading druggist, anywhere in America, i lasts 4 weeks),. If this first bottle doesn’t convince you .this js the easiest, safest and, surest ■way to lose fat—if you don't feel a superb improvement in health—so gloriously energetic—vigorously alive —your money gladly returned. \Haying Note Mrs/Ji'ifics —I saw your husband at the masquerade ball chasing after a, hula-hula dancer in a grass skirt. Mrs. Brown —Why, the old rake!— .Boston Transcript.

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Send Tor) ' tA rr -' i itAKE CARE yxtr riEi I SIR. WALTER RALEIGH had a hunch that pipe-lovers would welcom* some practical hints on how to tak« care of a pipe. It was a good hunch. Thousands of ptpe- smokers have sen 3 for this free booklet. It tells you how to break in a pipe-—how to make a good pipe smoke smoother and sweeter —the proper way to clean a pipe—and many worth-while hints on pipe hygiene. If you haven’t sent for this booklet, write for a copy today arid find ou« what pij?e makers and pipe-lovers suggest doing to keep your pipe sweet and mellow. Just drop a line to the Brown 6C Williamson Tobacco Corporation, Louisville, Kentucky, Dept. 99j Tune tn on ‘*The Raletgh Revue" eviry Frtdav, 10.00 to 11:00 P, M. (New York Tune over the WE<4 P coati -to - coast ntiwerk of Fi. Sir Walt er Raleigh Il'l rye end It’r milder Add to Your Income Let us ,iart you in .the Rabbit Businees. We teach you bow to raise them —furnish the equipment if desired and help market what you nrhdu'ce. Our plan is simple and we want to tell you more about it—tell you bow to breed rabbits and care for them Write us for complete details or visit our Producing Plant at Braidwood! Ill.— 20 miles south of Joliet "on Route 4. PRIMA DONNA RABBIT & FUR CO. Breeders and Importers 608 So. Dearborn St.. Chicago, Illinois W. N. U., CHICAGO, NO. 16-19301,. AVe want to know the whole truth; especially if it’s scandalous. '