The Syracuse Journal, Volume 23, Number 3, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 15 May 1930 — Page 3

SUCH IS LIFE — Thrifty Idea! © '' © By Charles Sughroe SRI <1 fIP S lwi( ■ a3L W Im

Lights of New York =

Live Exhibit. The American Museum of. Natural History, a vast and Impressive hall of (lead things, has one live exhibit — snakes. . Everything else is-as extinct as the dinosaur exhibit. A few live snakes are no great trouble to a 'well f organized museum, but the Natural History museum has been greatly tip-' set. A garter snake decided to have a family, and brought 21 troubiesbme children Into being. The Infants were something like moths; they. g»t into everything. They seep. J but of their own enclosures, and some of the best minds Os the .'museum have been sbrely taxed in hunting the babibs down. ■ Th< captured jet. Nobody is greUtly worFASHION’S LATEST J?e Jhv r & y-i\ ■ >«—. ar ■ < H ■ 4 Mr ' Ik ..-? A butterfly printed -chiffon afterno.>n frock by P.-aptiri.. Note the Interesting detail In the ■capeilke | sleeves, Thd normal waistline is : marked by a brown’ gro-grain ribbon i harmonizing with the beige and egg- I shell tones of the frock.

Wealth Awaits Lortg Missing Girl

Seattle.—Then - ’* a fairy godmother ■ In Seattle waiting to lavish her love and the good things' of this life on Hope Joh-nston, an orphan, if the right H e Johnston can be found. The lucky girl, who should now tye about twenty, may learn al! about her ■ good fortune by communicating with !

oooooooooooooooooooooocooo o' ° g Royal Elephant Runs o Away to Go Swimming g ■ Delhi.—An elephant from the o | O royal stable took French leave g j g to go swimming In the river o 1 g Six elephants and/twb camels g o were scut after him. The‘two O g camels, holding tin; elephant- g O ears In their jaws and the six g g truant officers whipping him q, O with their trunks flwittMiehlnd. g g returned the wayward animal a O home. He Ims gone on a hun- g O ger strike and refused food for o g 10 days. g ? jaooctyootioooooccc sooocooo ‘

— — — - ; Museum Gets Perfect Crystal Sphere aT a wP®\ i z U BU ' I j f **”" ""*' '''•/ ; yT r —"~” — 1 v b i I -- -. ttimffl The world’s largest flawless crystal sphere, measuring 12’4 inches in diameter and weighing 106% pounds, has been presented to the United States Rational museum at Washington. This picture shows the striking result of the photographer’s attempt to secure a picture of the giant sphere. A vigilant museum guard who was watching the proceeding has been picked up by the arystal and is apparently imprisoned upside down in the midst of it.

ried, though, for garter snakes are quite harmless. ’ •• • ' Roof Scene. As I sit in my office, I can see.'on the rooftop across the street, a man > practicing a speech. He Is ineflectually trying to hide himself behind, a chimney. He is holding a copy of the speech in one hand, and wildly gvsii<‘ul;.!ting, with the other. Others In my building have'noticed him. and one of the onlookers yells applause. a; *. The ■' grins.' 'I ve got to 'make it tomorrow night,’; he y IJs. -Want to hear toe?." •• • ' ’ Bet's Dream. Kobert B< a hly r»d tes that he.had a dream the other night. ‘I dream.d.” he told hie. ‘’that I was acting ii,s a Judge in a dispute be-/ twe.-n two Indians over a blanket. The. affair had just got to the {mint Where; ol.e Ihikn .!.<•! tie ot! era thief, when 1 yvuJa- up. I looked at tire clock. It was eafly*—only 8 o'clock.' So I decided I had t rue to go.back to sleep and lie.ir the rest of't he Case.’’ • • • ■■ New Vogue . It Is not .surprising tliese days to nutice among the snooty litimtislne* that race up and down Park avenue a ridiculous old-gasoline buggy of the vintage of l‘.s>’> or pi"- The occupant . . p, ... bhe might suspect, but one Os Hie upper. the. mmveau riche. have ad I".ihe fad* of buying ami'operating museum piece motor cars. •• - • Slight Error. A young New York College professor recently received a mass of flowers and telegrariis that he didn't appreciate, all due to the carelessness of a rewrite man on a financial news pap-r. This rewrite man is employed In boiling down the news of the day as it . c<mcs over the tickers. One item real that Soatid-o. assistant dean i at a certain college, had" been . mad" dean. The . rewrite man- thought the Inform iH'-n to be that . Seamiso is. . dead—and tie wrote it thus. . Idea of Fun. Jos. ph Horowitz, .ni interpreter for ; the Magistrate’:* court. recently inherI ited from bis brother, tin* hate four f Huber, flashlight tninii factun r. with ail that money in Ids

I.ot’is 1 j\’'cls. Insurance broker in the ments ■, For the “fairy godrodthe.r” is none , other than Abels' wife. Margaret. For years Mrs. Abels has been searching : for Hoj>e. whose father, Mrs. Abels brother. was killed in a mine expies j I ion nt Tell in Ipll. and whose mo 1 ' l • er died of a broken fieilrt. shortly after j was brou_ht to light when Abels ; Visited Justice J. 11. Wright for in . ‘ formation regarding the Hope ’h im I j ston vim l'a I beea given.a suspended i I sentence, of thirty days In Ids court | | for purloh ng a girl friend’s party I dress. ■ ... • ■ ■■ . Thinking the girl might, be the one 1 he and his wife had vainly, searched for through the years. Alu-ls obtained | detailed information about her. which led only to another disappointment, he admitted. ‘ “I am certain she Is not the same Hope Johnston,’’''■be said “exen though the police have not- been able to find her again So that we could see her. The information we have now con-

pocket, he has modestly asked for a month’s vacation, so that he may accompany a German opera company on a tour of the Mid-West and Far Wes’; He says he likes German operti. After the tour he. will return to work. I*3o. Bell Syndicate )

4 DIPPING INTO ± 4 SCIENCE i 4* 1 •*. Ti-4-t-F>r--i-:-:-d-d-bi"i-i--i 'i -i"i- !"i i-i -i-f T Earth Loses Sun’s Heat T X t T• . Usually-we think the earth Is T 4- kept warm by the sun. Hut most 4I of the heat given us by the sun T . •f dissipates it-M during the 1 X nighfr~and as half the earth is X T dark whllie the sun shines on + Xti e other half, tl <re <an be nd T T permanent accumulation from + I the sun. The earth is really X X kept warm by heat from within + I iL x f • IW. stvrn Newspaper Enlon ) 4

Dance and Defy Age, Says Octogenarian I. r ; .i.rii.,.!.,.-,’ .'.ii.” if .u? .J. . y j~ i.. .j .yn»iiiiiHiii . ._■ '. y 111111 . .<*■

>llll. Valley, Calif.—For more than three quarters of a.century Mme. Har- / .ni Kiurlek has danced—danceiikthe years away,, danced old age away. For more than half a century she has been teaching others .to da'nee—to dance ami stay young. ’ Today,' at eiglity, Mme. Enirick is still dancing every day. teaching, others to dajnee, including tier two great-grandchildfen. She is still youthful, graceful as a wisp of rising i smoke —ami happy 1 For the soldiers of America in three wars, the t’ikil. Spanish and World

m v io al'v ,ways say what they '"CrJH t' i’ k might take h few >'• ft"'” I,ie people who think • wl.at they say.

vinces me we were on the wrong track. - ' Despite the fact that the girl in question hud violated the law. Abels said he arid his wife stood realty to give her a good home, had ■ she proved to be “the" Hope Johnston, I -and “if 'she were not beyond redenipI tion.”

*B*<•*!•<• v<*<**>*X’ , <»<*"J»*b<**!*<**Z’< , <* ■ t VISITING THE t ♦ SICK <• ❖ •5» *F ❖ By THOMAS ARKLE CLARK * •F Dean of Men, Univerxity of ❖ |4> ’ Illinois. .>

f <•❖+ 4'■X' -f -f It Is a very commendable habit, this visiting the sick, and one which, with

all <>ur modern equipment and trained nurses to care for those who are not well, is not so generally found as It was fifty years ago or so. It is not only commendable;; It is in reality one of the human virtues for which I heaven is the j

Or/-

promised reward. ; ••! was sick, arid ye ministered unto me.” was an act for which one is to be rewarded with a heavenly inheritance. And yet. Some one could do the w/irld a service and possibly make a fortune for himself if he could es- , tablish a, school for the purpose of teaching the ignorant what is best to do and to say, when visiting the sick not to speak cf what were well not to say or do. Two young women were calling on Jacobs when 1 dropped in on him at the hospital not long ago. Jacobs had only recently come from under the knife and must still have had a good many tender spots on his anatomy. The young women were all but sitting on him as lie lay in a helpless condition, each one perched unconventionally on the bed, smoking and hovering over him as if he were a curiosity of which they were trying to secure a closer view. Perhaps women must smoke when the urge .is on, even if by so doing they bring discomfort to a helpless convalescent, but even the’ most intimate relationships do not warrant sitting on a friend who in just recovering from a serious operation. Mrs. Felton has just been calling upon Mr* I'ord. who, poor woman.

THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL.

Ancestral Pride V * * ■ V A <<<«

wars, Mme. Emrick lias danced gratis. It is her one ambition, now to dance once again, for the last time in public, before what remains of the Civil war veterans, for the Spanish-Ameri-can veterans ami for the American Legion, ail together. • She is a sweet and gracious old lady, this octogenarian, who still ti aches the dance to young and old i in her Mill Valley studio. She lias < lasses every day and is assisted, by I ■ ' JOCKEY’S GOOD DAY WB * 1 'A'-'F /jBL -SIMWh; ‘WT« Jockey A. Robertson- diminutive rider for the famous 11. P. Whitney stables, after he had pushed in four winners out of the six mounts which he rode to the post the othet day at Bowie.

I has been on her back for months and is pretty near the end of her journey. ; The- two women are about the same I age, the former husky, vigorous, and' ! proud of the fact that she has never I had a sick day. in her life. She proim.gs her < all for an: hour or 50, when'twenty minutes would have been more than adequate, and spends, the time in telling how amazingly well she . is. how many herculean physical task's she has recently performed, and Low, if nothing unfores-Hm happens, she st'ems likely to live to be a hundred. Someway she does not sense the fal-t that this Haunting of her exuberant health 'in the face of a woman ' who at best has only a few weeks of life before her, has not helped the Invalid the easier to bear her own. pains arid <li<appointmetit.s. Mrs. Higgins knows What to do: when she comes into a sickroom. “What a lovely room you have.’ - she says to Mr~. Ford, as she enters' rhe sick chamber. “If you must be j Sick—and really you look better than you did when I was here t»efore —you certainly have a beautiful place to stay in. Everybody’s asking about you. Sometimes I think I’d be willing to be sick myself just to find out how many friends I had. and especially if I had as many as you have.” She stays hardly ten minutes but she leaves the sick woman cheered, hopeful, happy' in the thought that she may. after all. get vyell.- and if j she doesn’t she is not going to be forgotten, for she will be leaving behind those who love her. (©, 1950. Western Newspaper Union.) U. S. Women Swindled of $700,000,000 in 1929 Chicago.—Activities of women financiers were outlined today at the Executive club by Howard EL Reed, a Pittsburgh financier. He stated: “Eighty-five per cent of all salaries in the country are spent by women. Last year feminine financiers invested STOO.OOO.tXM) in fraudulent securities. It is the fault of their husbands, brothers, sons and fathers, who do not take time to teach them sound finances. “They further purchased on the installment plan depreciated luxuries of little value to them and cut down their savings by 5130,QU0,00U.” / •

I her daughter, who was known to the | stage as ’‘Clarissa, the Dancer,” and ■ by her granddaughter, known as > “Georgine.” Her two greatgrandchildren, Harvey ami Helen jean, are her regular pupils. And lest it be. thought that Mme. Emrick teaches only the graceful, stately’ movements of bygone generations, let it be emphasized that she can tap dance with the best pf them and t-oildle a wicked jazz number with any of the sheiks or shebas. “The dance is a part of the religion of the body,” declares Mme. Emrick. “I call myself the priestess of that religion which F originated.” Mme. Emrick has trained scores who have made a mark upon the stage and ballet. She was born in Fort Madison. lowa, in ISSO. She first began to teach the dance more than fifty years ago In'Portland, Ore. Sam. Overcome in Balh, Saved by Census Taker New York.—The flame under the water heater in Sam Bianco’s room went t'tit while Sam was taking a bath. The room rapidly filled with gas and in a short time Sain lost his senses. He was awakened whpn somebody shook loin. vigorously. “What's your, name?” asked the man who had saved Sam’s life. “Sam Bianco," was the reply. “Have you a radio?" the rescuer dehianded. The man who had walked into Sam's room just in time Jo turn off the gas and open the windows was Morton : Kotzen, census enumerator. Vclcano-Made Charcoal Warms Alaska People Kodiak. Alaska —<’harcoal forests left in the wake of the ash storm from the eruption of Mt. Katmal In 1012 yiehlixt an excellent for island' residents this winter. Whole forests were burled tn red hot sand and ashes and the wood turned into charcoal. Trees one foot in. diameter are completely charred through. Uncovered and broken intc small pieces, it is found to be accepi table fuel. • : Practical Joker Worries Terre Haute Citizen* Terre Haute. Ind.—Residents of this town ha\e appealed to police to protect them from the pranks of ri joker who has quantities of merchandise sent to their homes, and orders taxicabs for a'ldresses in the vicinity wL< n none are needed. DECORATED DIPLOMAT 13 Sir Ronald Lindsay, the new an» bassador from Great Britain, photographed in his uniform and wearing all his glittering decorations. He recently presented his letter® of ere dence to President Hoover.

14,400,000 Cans jl V ES , more than fourteen million JL cans this season! Will be produced by Sthis modern Monarch plant at Rochester, Minn.— the largest in the world for canning peas and corn. A model plant in everv particular. No kitchen in a private home anywhere is cleaner or more sanitary. Floors are tiled, round cornered —everything spotless! ’ . Farmers in the land of long hours of sunshine have planted more than 7,000 acres under contract with Reid, Murdoch & Co. Planted this . . enormous acreage with pedigreed Monarch seeds. Every operation is supervised by Monarch men, from planting to canning. That is why you have peas with Nature's own fresh flavor under the Monarch label—-sweet and tender peas that almost melt in your mouth; many say, “These must be fresh picked peas right out of the garden.” More than 250 Monarch Quality Foods, including: Monarch Canned Fruits Monarch Canned VeSetablea (all varieties) ... . ■ „ (all varieties) 3 Tea Coffee Cocoa Spices Bakina Powder Sweet Plcklea Sour Pickles Miied Pickles Catsup Chill Sauce Preserve* •' Jellies . Peanut Rutter Orange Marmalade Toffies Evaporated Fruits Canned Fish Canned Meats Cereals Soups Grape Juice Spaghetti, etc. . ’ Sold Only thru Independent P Merchants wJi Jg J REID, MURDOCH & CO. (Established .1853) Chicaco New York Boston . ’Wilkes-Barre Tampa Jacksonville St. Louis Los Angeles San Francisco

Golden Symphony Fred Stone and his wife were stopping overnight in Detroit at one of those gilded palaces they call hotels. Everywhere gold flashes upon - the eye; the dining room ceiling, the chairs and the stairways shrieked in a golden symphony. When they had retired for the night, Mrs. Stone remarked to her famous husband that he hadn’t put his shoes outside the door. “Put them out, dear," she said; "and.they'll shine them for you." “Shine ’em, shucks'" exclaimed Fred. ‘TH bet a dime they'd gild 'em.*—Boston Transcript. "Ob zMe” — At some time in her life J X Cupid pleads / »» \ to ever y at " I ... I tractive womI I aj b-“ ma ‘ _ 1\ I / ter w kat her v J M / features, are, a ' woman who is s ' cannot b e attractive. Sallow skin, ■> pimples, sunk- ' en eyes, lifeless lips — these are repellent. DR. PIERCE'S GOLDEN MEDIC.AL DISCOVERY is just the tonic a rundown person needs. It enriches the blood, soothes the nerves and imparts tone and vivacity to the entire system. In liquid or tablets, at drug store. Send 10c for trial package of tablets to Dr. Pierce's Clinic, in Buffalo, N, Y, and write ior free advice. Not So Agreeable “Your wife does co remind me of my eldest sister.” “She reminds me a great deal of her first husband.” —Stray Stories. ,

Conlren tS H««J Pradß An Ailing tjgglgM CHIIJ) W Are you prepared to render tj B first aid and quick comfort the ■ moment - your youngster has an j-V upset of any sort? Could you do i'li’ji the right thing—immediately—• < though yte emergency came without warning—perhaps tonight? . -. ■ Castoria is a mother’s standby at harmless as the. recipe on the such times. There is nothing like wrapper reads. If you see Chas, it in emergencies, and nothing H. Fletcher’s signature, it is better for everyday use. For a genuine Castoria. It is harmless » sudden attack of 'colic, or the Ao the smallest infant; doctors gentle relief of constipation ; to will tell you so. allay a feverish condition, or to You can tell from the recipe on soothe a fretful baby that can’t the wrapper how mild it is, and sleep. This pure vegetable prepa- how good for little systems. But ration is always ready to ease an continue with Castoria until a ailing youngster. It is just as child is grown. Family doctor’s laxative instead of harsh purges; I drm gaKihl M trial bottle Free | i ■i i * v Old Dr. Caldwell’s prescription cannot form the j 7 cathartic habit It can be given to the child whose I tongue is coated, or whose breath is fetid, or has a 'TYDIID Pcdcim little fever. Or to older people whose bowels are MKUrrmiß * clogged. Its ingredients stimulate muscular action , ‘ and thus aid the bowels to more normal functioning. s ßtuOMrotn| . The pure senna and laxative herbs in Dr. Caldwell’s i Syrup Pepsin are good for the system. So do not ' constipation I hesitate to use it when there’s biliousness, headaches, -ictwcw, I or any sign of constipation. Your druggist has this PE^'^ R w-a) g world-famous prescription in big bottles. Or, ‘write | Dr. CaldweWs Syrup Pepsin, Monticello, 111., and a igg | mnri.m H || By Zr« trial bottle will be sent to yott, postpaid, * —Jr

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