The Syracuse Journal, Volume 23, Number 12, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 17 July 1930 — Page 7
Youthful Music School Graduate z --' t W | / v CT ! j • : 4 iB • >jH MWmICJw *?Kt Little Margaret Ann Guest, three-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. fl. Guest, of Baldwin City, Kan., with Pean Gaskill of the conservatory of music of Baker university; when she received her diploma in music. She is believed to tie the youngest graduate of a music school in the country.
Lights of New York
I — Working Gobs. Some .50 Ri H. - .<'?. .11 '■ ’ college, a city Institution. have carnet! about .<_'.*• <««i iii less t hah; five. m mt.hs, and one of the -iris gels taking a dog for a daily, walk. Amottier ea rns >*■:>• idcra,bly nn>|n‘ .gh lug bridge l>*.< and most oft the Studell •- W . rtmelit ;Sti‘l ' Properly Stung. . Not’nh’ni s<b ex th.> ow tier of a desirable piece* of real estate get the price id’ is holding , out ipc a 'tkyw. J ' ( ft real estate tint ght° river fort» de lux'e apartment buildUig. It Itled to gi t in 9 hlit|or ’ rip twenty-live fi-et »:•!«. but the <>«!n*r . ■ lit in :■■ on a smrl er ar<*n. ’1 lien, oti the other side of the prolit «ei*er. another firm bought trnoj her parcel of. laind for an-■ other apartment. It. too. fought the I 1 r;-. ,-W s’ ) T’ 0 ' ''* " '' ’ * * - '*, and ' ■ ' lingwas erected *ot st irea. ■ I t strip Is m>w -betW ■ '-H two sixteen Story bull lings and of compa ratjive I y little value It Isn't tdir enough for. another apartment building, arid the little hnti.se ri-»w Standing on it [ls unpleasantly overshadowed by its neighbors. ••. ■ • Odd Contract. A- - s- Os commercial misadventure, has signed a‘’l ■ ' . yer. '■ The has s of file ertrnfiuu is I ”.. . ... ghf'.is hot a -.bad workman. turns blit at* leijfft .one prodmeable show a y. ar. .nd that I- worth sonuthit:-'. S- the contract reais that, the . ■ ■ ■ v-, ■ „ut of . iii .for t • • i ext ' years (p return f-r '- 41 !><r tof : !-• : firing the p ly wrlght tun - out. . ; The Wise Street. Itroadw.iy. the street of the wise ( boys, has proved “a happy hunting ground for a renl.*]old-f;is|hk>ned medicine show for the last six month*. What foolej our gentlemen in the belted po.o coats Is the < that the'show isn't given from the
************************** PENN. STATE HONORED *-m****************** ■? -*- •fcfS?: s Bhe **■■■■** Barney Berlingen ■. alt-roei <i star. whs unanimously elected captain of the University of Pennsylvania- track and field team for the li«l season.
SUCH IS LIFE - Written in Jest & & By Charles Sughroe iisßW PAPER ABOUT USUI'I S&SSVW /''Z- 1 ' 1 IC>EA T - * samp —I n(i I f\ / i I ( I Qffivi ; vas/jt U| r >=4l PAPER TO Z7-<J /jTo®Mj\/l 1 • I 1 $? SO ■ remove Sk*/ \^raMrJJ//fc==: 1 ~? vkZgA I next ■ fs-1 I^OKSF // j®sfiWn - - j£ -—- —
1 bad; of a wagon, but it installed in a It is “Ladies Only.” They sefi a s t,, re health book and an ’zeroising device . . f ( >r sl. soap for 50 cents and “mediI he nuMlie ne men rent their space 1 . ti, o .- .... ... cine” for anything up to }-10. Ihe for ,_.s<o a month. Ihe .nud ;)tn .nd;ince. in the phrase of the niedistarls at 1<» a. m. ami continues to 2 <>jne in , |n js abont o ra cffikeys a p. m. ’ Sometimes they hang .out .a j ( |. (V Sai.all street, Broadway. sign, “For Men Only.” Other times ’ i*3o. Dell Syndicate.>
Making the Readjustment g . 5 —o By THOMAS ARKLE CLARK $ : 0 v O Dean of Men, Univer»ity of 2 O ••• . ® O lllinoi*. 0 ! d 0 ooooc 000000000000000000000Some One l as said that the chief t;m;e < f education is to help one to
meet the unexlevied, to adjust ■himself to a new situation quickly and ■ pleasantly, I Whether or not education does give <>ne this abll- | ity it is not for I me to say. but it I is a cli.inicteris- ■ tic w hjcli should b I t ! vat<_'d j wlrem'xer possi-
Alt /
hie. Life brings Tto many of'us quick changes, su lden i ( alls for an ab-. lately new routine of I daily l.fe. It Is the wise tind happy, I man who .an make these readjusti meiits .without, wrecking bls life or ■ I rtnning L < liappine-s. I, ’ 1 h:i\e notice,! that when, men who ' i lune r< .u lied or passed middle life I (-ome up againsj <!-aster or tire c»in- ■ |H*llf(l by circumstances to (hinge. , their occupations or alter the regular routine which habit has .established, ■ most of them are unhappj ami many of them die quickly. | Cornell, who had b<s>n a banker nil . lii< life and ivho lia<l made some money, retired a dozen years ag(» or , sy. Having 5..; 1h - h'..—:n< -- there was rm'hI ing regular l for him _t»» do. He could I shs'p late in the morning; he could I loaf in the afternoon he could go to bed as soon .’is dinner was over. Nhe body would be upset, no business enterprise wloiild be interfered with. He was miserable; be could not make the readJusTment. He endured the'.agony for a few- years and then bought out “another business and settfisl happily back into the old routine. Had he not done so I am sure life would liave soon ended for him. Snyder is min h more adjustable. I|e meets a new condition without mental or emotional. dt-turi>;(n.ce. Snyders !m-;nos'is real estate; his avoctftjqn was a young g r! upon whom his affections were centered arid whom he expect* d to marry. The girl for a time■ maintaimsi the -ame Cewpoint. But women’s minds are subject to change, and Snyder . fiancee ran into another man more to her IB.ing and sire gave Snyder the gate, so to speak, and married the otlierXlnan Was tie. perturb.-;? DI he grow i tie ami sink a .(leclirte? 1 Not hi■- The girl as. ■i loss. , opened up a chance for busme-s. Ihe. newly married couple would liave to live somewhere. Snyder had Jus: .the house and the locution which would be perie. t for them, lie hied him at OBCe to his rival and Isold him a cottage quite to the girl s taste in a new addition which he had just <>|«ened up. He had lost the girl, but he had put over u good business deal at air in-
Woman Breaks Through Prison Walls
Auburn, N. Y.—-Cat Eye Annie Lillian McDowell—forty-eight—notorious burglar and one of the most elusive characters of the underworld when outside prison walls, escaped from the Auburn women’s prison, but prison authorities are doing their best to lock her up again, .lust three weeks after declining to try for freedom with two other inmates who were captured, Annie sawed her way out of her cell and escaped. Cat Eye, who got her nickname from a peculiar cast to one eye, sawed through’ the wood around the , lock in her cell door and got over the walls in a njanner which left prison officials puzzled several hours aftterward. Only a few days ago she told Warden .Frank L. Heacox that Sally Joyce Richards, blond bandit of Buffalo, and Amelia Bascom, badger girl of Brooklyn, approached her to get her to join them in their contemplated escape of April 28. Mystified at the , time by this revelation, and puzzled that Cat Eye had turned down the opportunity, prison officials now see her refusal to escape at that time based on a desire to play her old lone wolf part. At first it was believed that she must still be within the walls, but an extended search of every nook and corner failed to reveal her. Immedir ately the hunt was started outside the walls by troopers and police through-
By GRANT DIXON
' profit. There was no cause - to worry. . " I was going to have a quiet evening on Thursday after a tiresome day. I should go nowhere; I should see no .me; 1 should lie in an easy chair i before the wood lire and read a detecI live story; I'slioUld go to bed at nine, i’.ut it didn’t turn out that way. Mrs. ' -Guyer was liavinc a riot with her j lodgers and. wanted to talk it ,over , with me; Green's appendix had gone
-r-r-’.-H-l-l' 111111111 ■l-H-l-l-H-l-H-DIPPING INTO :: SCIENCE v-W-l'd d i I : 4"!-l"H 1 : !'! l-l-H-l-d-T T . T 4. The Raindrop 4. 4- ’ . • rpund instead " j I of flat, or some dther shape, lie--1 < ause it is really a great .mass I .. of tiny little bits of round vapor •• 1 2’ partides, each complete in itself. .. Y one dines to another and thus ~ : 21 a- sort of ' ball" is formed. When .. •• of sufficient, weight the drop. T I 2J 1 • .1- toward the t-tirtli. -• (T ■ Wi.-tcrn News: <('■ r t nlon.l ■i ’l l-i-l-l-l-l'-l-i .j i pg. i-i-i-i-i-i-i-l-.1-.1-l-
Nearly Half Century In Bed
Council Bluffs. lowa. —Mrs. Mary I Wickham of Tipton. lowa, whose will I leaving all her property to the Brooklyn (N. Y.) Watch Tower and Tract society h.'s Just been filed for probate, spent forty years in bed as the result ; _ of a vow. ■ . Tiie property came to Mrs. Wick.haili on the death of. her' husband, and it. was because, Mr. Wickham baflnot willed to her all his property that site took to her b*|d and remained there. Forty five years ago Mrs. WickI ham came from England to marry Mr. Wickham. She asked Idin to make a will leaving her all his property. lie refu-e-d, and his will left her only the legal qne-third of his j estate. I Hie controversy grew warm. One day, at the close of a particularly violent quarrel. Mrs. Wickham said: “I'm going to bed, and I'm going to stay there until you give in.” ’ “Well, you’ll stay there the balance of your life.” answered the husband. Mrs. Wickham went to bed that same day; The; controversy contin- ; tied for twenty five years. Then Wickham died. .Mrs. Wickham did i not attend the funeral. She stayed be<L . I Once -Mrs. Wii-kbam decided to -’get up and acve|»t her dower share of tiie estate. But she discovered
Being a u’oo-1 jud.-e I of character is worth something. One gets* ■ « better wife or husU ' biintl by it.
THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL.
out the vicinity. Cities throughout the state were asked to be on the lookout for her. , ® On a previous escape, after 26 hours of freedom, she was found rain-soaked and exhausted, hidden under a pile of straw a mile and a half east of Weeds" port, eight miles north of Auburn. A clew to her whereabouts was provided on that occasion by word of residents in that vicinity who said they had seen a woman near there acting strangely. She had gone without food for a period of 24 hours. CAPELET FROCK Mn j wl ji Capelet frocks solve the summer wardrobe problem. The one shown here is a red and white print crepe that displays a chic shoulder cape.
t on a rampage and he wanted me to see it out. one thing after another • happened and I got no re-t.. It was midnight when 1 got to bed. Well, fortunately, I liave learned happily to make the quick readjustment, and ' still be I appy. . (©. 1930. Western Newspaper Union.) Nose May Know but Not at Ten-Foot Distance Boston. — Your nose may kiiow, but . not at a distance of ten feet, according to a federal court ruling here. • Testifying against Airs. Catherine ; Murjihy, alleged bootleguer. itry Agent • Charles Donnell said that although six ■ suspected bottles were t. u feet-away, lie knew- they contained liquor because ’ he could smell it. • Court doubted the witness’ ability to smell liquor at that distance and let the defendant off with a tine. Cow Bites 40 Persons 1 Belgrade. Jugoslavia.—A cow bitten • , by a mad tlog ran amuck near the vil<>f E-sogg, biting every’me within • reach. Forty victims were taken to a hospital, some witli hydrophobia.
that during the years she had spent I tn bed her limbs had withered. She ; was unable to walk. She got back into ; tied and stayed there. ’ I. During the first twenty years i Mrs, Wickham was cared for t.y neigh- ! 1 burs, who used to come in every day. 1 1 Then she tinned against these friends | j and refused to have anything to do
If the Truth Was Told "no lady, I AINT had A hard life. I’M 7AX JUST A LAZY BUH. I’M ABLE TO WORK K BUT VJHY WORK WHEN I CAN GET A HANDI\ OUT?I’MNOT GRATEFUL FOR THIS FOOD J ’CAUSE I'VE HAD BETTER'* „ -is jz. ■ ■ ■
Due to exposure sne contracted pneumonia and nearly died. Afjer her recovery she was taken to Matteawan state hospital in the belief that she was becoming insane. Subsequently she was returned here. The description to the police said she probably wore a blue striped skirt, a blue sweater, black shoes and stockings, and a light top coat and brown fedora. She was described as 5 feet 4 inches tall, weighing 120'pounds, with medium chestnut hair and light complexion. Working in the dead of night on her previous escape here, with no tools but a short iron window prop and a spoon. Cat Eye Annie, virtually under the eyes of guards and prison matrons, dug a hole through the brick wall of the cell and, with the aid of a plank taken from the greenhouse, scaled a low wall and slid down an improvised blanket rope to freedom. Packages of mortar and bits of broken brick were found stuffed in a mattress upon which she had pretended to sleep at night. e Iler escape was made in the early morning on that occasion. Alcohol Is Easy Winner in Unique Chess Match Budapest.—Alcohol emerged as winner recently in one of the most unusual games of chess ever played in Hungary. Bottles of wine were used as the pieces, the cork being drawn and the contents of the “piece” consumed as it fell before the onslaught “of its opponent. Although spectators were .allowed to enjoy the spoils together with the two players, the game had to be called off even before either of the bishops—represented by bottles of famous Hungarian tokay wine—had been ( captured. ‘ . Drown* in Rain Barrel Hammorfton, N. J. —railing into n rain barrel while playing - near his home here, two-year-old Joseph Delaratowas (trow nett LEADS WEST POINT 19mm] aMf h Cadet Capt. Pauh F. Yount, of Alliance. Ohio, rated first of the list of 241 in the West Point graduating class of l!>3o' Besides being cadet captain. Yount serves] as managing editor of “The Pointer.” the West Point paper.
with them. After the death of Wickham she hired • a . companion. There are no near relatives, and it is unlikely that the will giving tier share of the estate to the Watch Tow; er and Tract society will be contested. Gas given off by sauerkraut most I'M per cent, carbon dioxide. * «
FfIUITRY REMOVE ROOSTERS FROM HEN FLOCK — Poor Eggsßesult From Laziness and Neglect. With the coming of warmer weather, there will be the usual rapid increase in the flow of poor quality eggs on the markets unless flock owners adopt control measures. “As first produced, eggs are about as nearly a perfect food product as one can find,” says C. F. Parrish, extension poultry specialist at the North Carolina State college. “If the hen Is properly fed, the nest clean and the eggs gathered twice each day in hot weather and stored in a cool, clean place until delivery to the consumer, the market will pay the top price gladly. But. on the other hand. If ! roosters are allowed to run with the | flock after the l atching season is over, i if the hqns ar? not well fed, if the ‘ nests are dirty and the eggs gathered ■ occasionally aqd,kept in a poorly ven- f j tilated. warm room, the consumer j feels' like ordering a gas mask along i I with his eggs.” Mr. Parrish insists that bad eggs , are not aceiderits—they result from j laziness, neglect, and poor manage- i meht. It is just as easy, he says, to ' produce high quality, infertile eggs as ' it is to offend the customers with stale, fertile, low quality eggs. Farm- ; ei-s of the state fivse about : each season because of bad methods j in producing and handling this product. At least one-third Os this is due , to the partial hatching of fertile eggs f which have become warm enough to incubate. - Het days have the same of-1 feet on fertile eggs as the hen or in- . I cubator and the .first step is to re- ’ move tho male bird from the flock as j I soon as hatching is. over. He has j I nothing to do with egg production. . Five good rules to observe are given ■ by Mr. Parrish;'as follows: Keep nest j clean and provide one nest for every 1 I four hens: gather eggs- twice each t day: market the eggs twice’ each week: store them in a cool, dry place, ] such as the cellar: and pen or dispose of all roosters after the breeding seai son. 'l'i> follow these five suggestions |is to improve the quality-of the prod- | j net. Feed Baby Chicks Sour Milk in Liberal Doses Stour or clabbered milk as a feed . for chicks is one of the surest pre- ~ ventatives of white (liarrhea avail- j able. So says H. A. Bittenbender, head of the poultry husbandry de- ■ partmenf at lowa State college. ■ Where plenty, of milk . is a vocable it Is a profitable practice to stive no water to the .chicks during the first I six weeks, sour, milk to constitute the ’ only drink.' ■ ■ (’are should Ke practiced in feeding soiir milk, for Sharp changes in the ; acid ccintent from'dav ,to 'lay.almost | , always cause bowel trouble. A safe rule to follow is t<> feed today s milk tomorrow'. Then the acid content will ‘ , remain very nearly the same. . , ‘’lt is best to feed'the milk in enrth-J on or enameled vessels, for they are ; much enCor.to clean than-other types . of containers, and cleanliness is a big , taettir in the success of, chick , feeding. Chicken Culling Most Important in Summer | ' Chicken culling is not something I that should be done only in the late summer or early fall when the' hers ; are molting. Culling should start at . the time the chicks are hatched, and I ■ should bo continued throughout the ■ ■ growing season. All chicks that are | weak or crippled wJien the hatch is j , taken off should be killed. Chicks > lacking in vitality are a constant , menace to the flock because they are more susceptible to disease than are , the stronger ones. Furthermore, the , extra care and attention which must be given the weak chicks increases I the cost of rearing the flock. Also i those chicks that are weak at hatch- ■ Ing time will be slower in starting to grow and will mature more slowly ' 'han the strong vigorous birds. Succeed With Turkeys The kind of feed and the manner of feeding poults make .a vast difference in results. The difficulty in handling turkeys in domestic fashion has been rea.!iz< d for years, more so as faftns became closer together and wide, open ranges became harder to provide for flocks of turkeys. Unwholesome feeds and bad ways of feeding have worked much harm to this Industry. Growing poults- will not require so much attention as to feed when the range is am- • Mistaken for Cold ; Chickenpox is often mistaken for i a cold, but it is a specific disease. 1 n- .' less care is taken colds may appear with the nox and many chickens will die. The month form of chickenpox lis not ordinarily serious if the ! occurrence of colds can be prevented. . j The temperature of the pens should be ; raised, the birds given special care ■ and the litter changed often to keep > moisture at a low level. The removal I of diseased birds in the early stages 1 will help. Chicks Grow Fast Baby chicks do a lot of growing in the first four weeks of their lives. H. L. Shrader, extension poultryman in the United States Department of Agriculture. says they double in size in the first two weeks. Not satisfied with such a record, they double in size again in the next two weeks, if they get the right kind of attention. Two essentials for success in rearing baby chicks. Mr. Shrader explains, are plenty of heat and the right kind of feed.
IMhen/bcfd Sours Lots of folks who think t iey have “indigestion” have only an acid condition which could be corrected in five or ten minutes. An effective anti-acid like Phillips Milk of Magnesia soon restores digestion to normal. Phillips does away with all that sourness and gas right as er meals. It prevents the distress so apt to occur two hours after eating. What a pleasant preparation to ake! And how good it is for the system! Unlike a burning dose of sola—which is but temporary relief at best — Phillips Milk of Magnesia neutralizes many times its volume in acid. Next time a hearty meal, or too. rich a diet has brought on' the least discomfort, try— PHILLIPS r Mak . of Magnissia 1111.111 flakes your skin iema. Price $1.25. 'es f reck les. Use 4 ’ and t>sc. Beauty ur dealer or write
Solarium for Miners • The deficiency of st nshine which is experiei'eed by- mi iers is being atoned for in the case of an Idaho mining plant.' by ' subjecting these workmen to. a treatnie it of artificial sunshine. The healtb-c: v ing ultra violet rays • which are absent in the' lower regions are being supplied by electrical means as the men leave the mines. This is achieved through the~ agency Os a moving .platform, which will carry tlr 1 meh slowly through a narrow cabinet equipped with six piTwerful inereury-qtmrtz. lamps—the arra'tiget.nent being such that the ilrtiiivial sunlight will strike every part'of the body. The solarium wiii be available to the miners’ families.
inside? a P Feen-a-mint is the answer. Cleansing action of . smaller doses effective because you chew it. At your druggists—the safe and scientific laxative.
Feenqmint
FOR CONSTIPATION Airplane's Int-igue Kanakas The'promise of an airplane ride has instilled great energy In the usually lethargic native Kanakas of New Guinea. The natives slave hard to save up $lO to take a good ride, with » loop-the-lo >p thrown in. The first plane that- passed over their district between die gold fields and the coast.sent th? natives wild with fear, but they have become accustomed to planes. Smallest Republic San Marino, with an area of 32 square miles, is the smallest, republic in the world. /
COULD HARDLY DO B WORK Strengthened by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compaund Mission, Tex.—"l have used a good deal of voiir medicine and always find
it gives wonderful help. I was feeling so weak and miserable that I had to lie down very often and I couldhardlydomy housework. I read in the paper how Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound had helped other women who were
] U< : ''
in the same condition so 1 said I will try it for myself. I am very much better now arid I recommend this'medicine, and will answer letters from women asking about it.”— Mbs. J. W. Albertson, 1015 Miller Avmue, Mission, Texas. DAISY ITY KILLER placed tnywhrre, QJdSY FLY KILLER attracts and killt all flies. Neat, clean, ornamental, convenient and - 1> cheap. Lasts all reaMade of metal, r tip over; * iD ®ot aoil or injnra anything. Guaranteed. 3Mf *P°n DAISYFLY iWr¥ y KILLER from your deal *!- HAROLD SOMERS, BROOKLYN,M. *•
