The Syracuse Journal, Volume 24, Number 28, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 5 November 1931 — Page 3

ODD THINGS AND NEW—By Lame Bode 808 MACECHESTt* HIGH SCHOOZ (VA.J OLLAFII'RBACK SCORED ONZY 2 POINTS IN 3YERRS ~ —'2 '* - AND THEY WERE TOR MS OPPONENTS / «SE ? CAN BE PEPUCEP 10 ■OREES BELOW ZERO \&RWE) WITHOUT fREEZIHG ♦-> w The wings of-, ELRP 2000 TINIES PER SECOND/ S loncrf* 0 * W—r- ' v rl a A N f#?Y. NEBRASKA..— J U .NU Service.l

| The High Notes ? t X By THOMAS ARKLE CLARK •> T Dean of Men, University of *:’ J. Illinois. •:• , A great: artist wits criticizing Jhe .work of his students. A hundred or >. ■' so s< re ; anged in

L front of hltu ,wbl .o. I the work which I each bud been do-, | so w;is spread, out before him on u hug e cl’. «e 1. He I Wl> : 1 gfcin o lit these half-dozen sketches perhaps and then make his crlttcisra. It was strange how ' little tlie r e wa s out of the com-

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cn<>t<;>i;u ••. Here were rm-iibim! wqmea trying to be great, trying to io something that would bring them out of the crowd, and falling far short of It. \ “There Is nothing outstanding In these.’’ he would say. “They have no blaze, no sparkle, no snap. There are no contra*:*. no higher notes, ju-j <>ne dtill, coiinnonj'lace “What you should do.” hy would continue, “is to put 15- into what, you ■re painting, color, big contrasts. As I looked at the. group whose Work the artist was criticizing. It .-' seemed to mo that the things they wete. doing'.«ere Intnost leases,.pret ty' much represent alive of their own charactera. There was a stender, parie youth a: ng the g' '. . " • - '• ' . -wf.-d.jors. The work which he did ,w.<s ptfcty. delicate, rehue ! >n'd full of detail. but it- was w. k. without <!:>.■ ■ y. . In striking .cinirast to f 11; -<t. 11 • •:»t‘• 'y .t h. a < o I.V tlileie who .might have been a pprize tighter. “i‘m curious to see what his pic-

SUCH IS LlKE—Those Funny Hats! K > charles Su S hroe — (R>PsAYsM£ , ; >;<sAjGr\ I -I H la+wrI a+wr Wr Wn\(-»DUSr AM’ . J/ -SAS MAf A SGAFE AJO CR(W= fe; M Zut k ( L, > ™ Sir w t 1

Purdue Quarterback w w w w w w w w * w w w W WWWWMWWW v Wuj .' M 3» ’ saw H ■ t 3OgJ j Purdue, with the same all-star backfield of 1830 and a Une composed largely of veterans, looms as an outstanding contender for the 1931 Bib Ten title. Our picture shows Jack White, Purdue quarterback, who rates as one of the best quarterbacks In the Big Ten.

An Astor Who Works t■ ’ ’ I jBRBBBfcL I' xil.s Astor, daughter Os Lady As-, tor, America-born member of the house of Commons, who has Joined the staff of a real estate agent y in London, Friends aay she la oothualaatic about her Jolt, which was taken not so much to provjide'her with a hobby us front a desire to d<» something useful in these .times <>f unparalleled taxation of the | — rj * ; titres ixdl be like." 1 said to the young woman Who sat beside me, ■■.-.-When they‘Were, arranged upon the easel, they almost sl.mited at us. i\. .-■ \\ .:> a : .t bl:lZ*'' of tolor, pill on « ?:!. the boldest strokes. There whs nothin..' pale or weak- <>r sickly oboiit ‘ s W Tk. its there was nothing of these qualities In hint The trouble with the lives and work of too many of us Is that they are drab, without sparkle or high notes. i.'|, JS-31, W eoern Ntwsvai ; »r'l:'nl‘.>n.»

Air Transport Flying Shows Enviable Record Chicago.—ls a passenger were to fly 10.000 miles annually in planes flown •■u ,r>.'.;ular ’s<■!..doles of air-mail pas senser lines, he. might suffer a crack up in his forty-sixth year and might be killed in the 068th year. If the same men. however, went the same j distance in random flights, such as sight seeing, joy-hopping, etc., he could anticipate an accident every five years, or prepare for death in the thirty-fifth year. This means that there were only five, fatal accidents In more than 20. OtXMMM) miles of scheduled alr-trans port flying during the first six months of 1931. and that the dependability and safety of air transport is being substantially bettered. evidence of the Increased dependability of air transport is that on the longest mail passenger line in the world, with both day and night service between New York and San Francisco—2.766 miles—that company ha<l, a record of completing 99 per cent\of all the mileage scheduled for it last month. This is especially noteworthy because the company flew more jthan a million miles in one mqntti with tri-motored transports. A few yea rar ago such a record was one to be hoped for. Mining on Upgrade Tonopah. Nev.—The report of E. T. Oyde and Fred Allen, assayers for the United States mint at Carson City, Is encouraging as showing that mining of precious metals during the fiscal year is on the upgrade all over the state.

LOWEST TO [fdli mist Kid gloves will clean nicely by dampening a cloth in milk, rubbing the cloth over a cake of toilet soap, then over the gloves. Use eggshells to wash bottles or vinegar cruets. Crush them fine, put into the cruet with warm, soapy water and shake well. . In removing basting threads, cut them every few inches. Do not pnll a long thread out at one time, as this may leave holes in the goods. When laundering curtains for first time, soak them in four tablespoonfuls of salt to each four cupfuls of water. The curtains will wash easily as the dressing will wash out readily. To reheat leftover mashed potatoes, place them in a double boiler, add a little warm milk or cream, beat well, cover tightly and cook fifteen minutes.

Hunger End Tour of Hitch-Hike Girls

Start Out to See World, but Stomachs Rebel. Atlanta, Ga. — Pangs of hunger brought to an abrupt end here a proposed hitch-hike tour of the world by two pretty Michigan girls, and now they are hack at their homes at Grand Rapids, where they can get three square meals a day, if not romance and excitement. Tlie girls are Thelma Henson, fifteen. and Leone Bristol, seventeen. They got as far as Atlanta in fine shape, although the pangs of hunger first struck them at Chattanooga, a •day’s drive from here. By the time they got here their tongues were fairly hanging out. Having no money and no means of ; satisfying their hunger, they wandered along the streets of Atlanta, looking longingly Into, the windows of the various restaurants and grocery StOFI s. At a grocery department display of a large uptown department store Leone and Thelma became so engrossed that they went inside and New Note for Fall wH U i \ >' y - i . ILI Maggy Kouff gives a new touch to the puffed sleeve idea by gathering a full underseciion to a shaped semi circle. Bands of riff red sequins break the marked contrast between the ma roc brown faille and the white crepe.

♦ i POTPOURRI $ ♦IINMMM M M M M MM MIM IM ■ »« •» * Language Study aic ? Tbe scientific study of lan * ♦ gunge, with a view to tracing ♦ X its historical development and ♦ ! * the possible.history <,f the pe*»> J ♦ pies among whom it- developed. .* is called "philology.” Tills scl- J sk ence Is concerned with laws gov- * ♦ erning nil human speech of all * ♦ times. The term Is a compound * ♦ of two Greek words meaning * ♦ • love” and "word.” it is a fas- * $ cinaling study. * ♦ (-EV ini. Western N«w«—n«r Union.» ♦ ♦ * Expert Sausage Linker Can Do Work of 40 ’ Sandusky, Ohio.—Something ne„w in the way of a sausage linker has been devised by August Merk, who makes the. little pork blimps. Merk’s contrivance links sausage in a series instead of Individually, a mechanical improvement that will enable one flrst-class sausage linker to do the work of forty, the inventor maintains. x ». KffSL’wyJw The best way to eliminate those annoying noises in the rear end of the car is to leave the backseat driver at home.

THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL.

This Will Be Footwear for Chinese -IBS - 11 Southern California has developed a new export industry. This picture . shows part of the huge mountain of worn auto tires gathered in Los Angeles and destined to be sent to China and Europe. In China the tires are cut up to make cheap footwear, while in Europe they are used in hard rubber products. ' . ■

j paced slowly up and down the aisles, looking with longing glances at the food on the counters. Their action aroused the suspicions of store detectives, and before they knew it they were whisked to the office of the manager. There they told their story." They had left their homes intending to go to Florida and ship from there to South America, later going to Spain and the continent. “What were you using for money?" the manager asked. “We thought we could earn our way." said Leone. “We were wrong." The manager agreed at their request to wire their parents. In the

Woman Elopes Day After edding

Flees Undesired Mate With Childhood Suitor. Miami. Fla.—Mrs. Mary- Condon Greenleaf, beautiful twenty year old bride of two weeks, has. gone back to her Pennsylvania bridegroom after a week's visit in Miami. This is not a social notice, as it may seem, but the story of a romance that parents’ wishes and marriage could not break. In the same automobile .that took the young bride back_to her husband was Harry White, twenty six. charged with abducting her from her husband’s home at Whitemarsh, Pa„ the day after her marriage. The driver of the Pennsylvaniabound automobile,, by the way, was Chief of Police Sherman Koons of Whitemarsh, who came here to return the couple after they were arrested By Miami police. The bride, before leaving-the police station here, asserted that her romance.'with White was only “temporarily interrupted’’ by the_ law. Os Her Own Accord. The voting wifK almost child-like in her youthfulness, tearfully protested that she. came to Miami With White of her own accord. * “This will all be straightened out when we get; home.’’ she declared. Then she told how she married Greenleaf because she thought; White, her childhood sweetheart, had forgotten her. “I married the man of father’s choice.’’ she said. . “He had money, but he was much older than 1. I did

Pugnacious Pheasant Chases Abashed Bull Washington. — Swanky, swaggering ring-necked pheasant swains have in many a witnessed clash with domestic roosters and even cats, won the reputation of being the boldest “cock of the walk” among game birds, remarks a bulletin of the American Game association. But as the prize story of this imported bird’s daring it told of a recent report from Norman Wood of Coatesville. Pa. According to Wood, a cock pheasant was seen tc resent intrusion upon his section of a field by a hull and his admiring retinue. The game bird flew against the cattle time after time, until the astonished hull followed his herd in a dignified retreat. A brood of pheasant chicks was believed to have been in the vicinity. Book Collectors Collect Old Bicycles as Hobby Springfield, Mass. —The vocation of Arthur and Roger Johnson, local booksellers, is collecting books; but their avocation is collecting bicycles—ancient vehicles of a type popular in pre-automobile days. Their collection includes a high wheeler dating back almost to Civil war days, and another machine which was popular in 1875. Reminiscent of the gay 90s is a three wheeled sociable built to carry ten riders. Long-Lived Birds ' Among the birds that are believed to live to see 100 years or more are the falcon, golden eagle, parrot and raven.

meantime they were taken to the police station, where they stayed only a few hours before wires came. The girls ate for the first time in two days just before they" boarded a train for Grand Rapids. "Travel may broaden the mind." Leone observed, “but it certainly flattens the stomach." Nove! “Hole-in-One” Westbrook, Maine. —Aaron Pride points with pride to a “hole in one” he made on the Secbngin golf course. His midiron shot landed in a pocket of George Allen’s knickers. Dances 270 Hours Rome. —Fernando, international marathim dancing champion, a record here of 270 hours’ continuous dancing. He lost 11 pounds in weight.

it only to. please father, and because I thought Harry would never come back.” White had left 'Whitemarsh several years before and had not been heard from. Mary went tearfully to her husband’s home the night of the wedding. Then who should appear the next day but Harry White.’whom she had never ceased loving. He had read belatedly in a Pittsburgh paper of her approaching marriage and had arrived too late to stop it. “I thought you Would wait,” he reproached her. She told him of the long fight against the matchmaking of her father, her discouragement when she did not hear from him after he left Whitemarsh. Swears Out Warrant. They decided to throw discretion tG the winds and that night left by automobile for Florida. The next day Greenleaf, infuriated when he learned that the bride he had wooed so long had left him for her childhood sweetheart only a day after her marriage, swore out a warrant for White s arrest as a kidnaper. . Description of the pair and White’s car was broadcast over the country. The girl and her sweetheart came into the hands of the law a week later. when they parked their automobile across the street from, the Miami police station. A, detective, glancing idly from his office window, noted the license tag was the same Whitenrarsh officers had requested a lookout be kept for and placed the young couple in custody.

Qabby (jERTIE r—~ ' ) fff j * '^** m # x* ' “Stalled cars are supposed to cause traffic snarls, but they often come from stalled cops.’* Egg-Eating Dog Foiled in Raids on Hen’s Nest Hahira, Ga.—When Mrs. W. H. Owens found her dog was eating eggg laid by her hen she beat the dog and put the remaining eggs Tn a pan on the shelf. The hen immediately started laying its eggs In (he pan, out of reach of the dog.

60 years of BABIES have been helped to sturdy childhood bn Scott’s Emulsion of Cod Liver Oil. It gives them Vitamin A for growth, and its wealth of Vitamin D and calcium salts are invaluable for correct bone development. Doctors recommend Scott s Emulsion for infants, growing children, expectant mothers and invalids. Fine for adults too. Its pleasant flavor makes it easy to take regularly. Scott & Bownc, Bloomfield, N.J. ; JrAI Sales Representatives, H. F. Ritchie A Co., Inc., New York. i LtSTKH TO Seote» Emulsion-* ••Romastee* of th* Srn" mrv Sunday «4 at d:3op.sn. ov*r tho Columbia Bane Kttworls

I Scott’s Emulsion I or \()R\VF.C.II\ COD LICER OIL

In Character Many a man looks insignificant Photographer—How do you want when his wife is with him. this picture of yourself as a northwest policeman? The wages o( sin is always in» Tourist —Mounted. 1 adequate. A Cold Colds are common because people are careless. Prompt use of aspirin will'always check a cold. Or relieve your cold at any stage. And genuine aspirin can’t hurt you. Take two tablets of Bayer Aspirin at the first indication of a cold, and that’s usually the end of it. If every symptom hasn’t disappeared in a few hours, repeat. Bayer Aspirin does not depress the heart. Take enough to give complete relief. And if your throat is sore, dissolve three tablets in water and gargle away all soreness. In every package of genuine Bayer Aspirin are proven directions for colds, headaches, sore throat, neuralgia, neuritis, pillions who used to suffer Qbm these things have found winter comfort in aspirin* BAYER®ASPIRIN

New Style Blacksmithing The village smithy has taken to the - highways and business is excel- ! lent. Louis Wanasek. a Wisconsin blacksmith, reports. He admits that the motorized era shoved horseshoeing from the door of his smithy and might have Toned him into bankruptcy had he failed to fight the au- . tomobile with the automobile. “There are still plenty of horses,” he said, “but farmers refuse to drive, the poky things to a blacksmith shop.” SO Wanasek receives orders by telephone. loads tools into his car, and drives to the farms where there is. . horseshoeing to be done. A Far Better External Remedy No matter how up to date your doctor is, there is one old-fashioned ' remedy he often finds most helpful—j he mustard plaster. For generations it has been recognized as useful in I treating bad colds, particularly where pneumonia is feared. But today ' many physicians realize that there is something far better in the way of . external treatment, giving results never before obtained. It is B. & M., I The Penetrating Germicide. For | quickly checking coughs and colds it is always dependable. Should always be used where pneumonia threatens or has set in. B. & M. is the only germicide that penetrates when externally applied. There is nothing else like it, no substitute for It. Your druggist should have it in stock. Or we will mail a full-size bottle oh receipt of §1.25 and his name. Useful booklet free. F. E. Hollins Go.. 53 Beverly St., Boston, Mass. (Adv.) A New Wrinkle “So you didn’t sell that man a car?” inquired the boss peevishly. .“How could I?” argued tbc star salesman. “He wanted a <*a'r with a door that slammed shut without making a lot of noise!” They All Are Visitor—What an unusual child! Proud Papa—Yes. he’s just like other babies, thank goodness. Because there are ugly things In this world, is no reason why we want to hear about them in every chapter. Novelists, take notice.

And Skin Health Are Linked Together, Daily use of Cntieora Soap thoroughly cleanses the pores and does much to keep the skin healthy. If there are pifnples or rashes anoint with Cuticura Ointment. Cuticuwi Talcum a fragrant touch to the toilet. Soap2sc. Ointment 25c. and 50c. Talcum 25c. Proprietors; Potter Drug AChemict J Corn, Malden, Ma—. ■V* Try the new Cuticura Shaving Cream. ■ «

Such a Dummy! “How are you getting on with George?” , “Oh, he’s a most disappointing lover. I purposely blew out the electric light fuse before he came over last night, and he spent the whole evening mending it.” —Tit-Bits.

//Z / / ' r /--11 l For Troubles due to Avid ' ?ii i / mo’GrsrtO .. // z AOO STOMACH - I /y // heartburn ... f/ I I HEAn* CH !L,« Too Much ACID MANY people, two flours afte» eating, suffer indigestion as they call it. It is usually excess acid. Correct it with an alkali. The best way. the quick, harmless and efficient way. is Phillips’ Milk of Magdesia. It has remained for 50 years tho standard with physicians. One spoon--1 ful in water neutralizes many times ’ its volume in stomach acids, and at once. The symptoms disappear in five minutes. - ’ You will never use crude methods L when you know this better method. And you will never suffer from excess acid when you prove out this easy relief. Be sure to get the genuine Phillips’! Milk of Magnesia prescribed by physicians for 50 years in correcting excess acids. 25c and.soc a bottle —• any drug store. The ideal dentifrice for clean teeth and healthy gums is Phillips’ Dental Magnesia tooth-paste. PARKER’S HAIR BALSAMi Bemovea Dandraff Stope Hair Filling Impart* Color and Beauty to Gray and Faded 1-iair 60c and 11.00 at Droggiata. Hiacor Chem. Wira.. Patehogne.N.Y. I FLORESTON SHAMPOO — Meal for une in connection withParker’aHairßalaani.Makes th® I hair soft and fluffy. 60 cents by mail orat <i rug- * cista. Hiacox Chemical Works, Patphogue. N.Y.