The Syracuse Journal, Volume 25, Number 5, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 26 May 1932 — Page 7
ODD THINGS AND NEW—By Lame Bode fe/ / wwev > SONDHHJM m OR®) ft i CAN STARE fOR ft |W \ HOURS Al THE jft- J(| 1' > /A BURNING sun W MfcU CHIOGNA- W 0 411 TRAVfZfP EREP SityoMiifsl yy Z 6RNST- -• tatHfo PER HOUR 4 L ,) GGCD 3. CM I ,T J CWSX/S/ ¥ NME RU THE V\ \ I U S PRESIDENTS k'-VIJ S). fv.- X s ft 8V LOOKING AT THE/R PORJRfurs * "OUR ENVIRONMiEn! PiHP ’ . \ 1\ ’HC>W WE USE IT' A il\ '-a science bookwas written er GLASS, CARPENTER **9 WOOD Hear readme Valley, Gwdjer laid <Mi\ • 9<q
SECRET OF BRIAND’S LOVE NOW REVEALED
Paris.—The secret of why Aristide Hr hind. eleven times premier of France, a lover of chihirei remained a confirmed bachelor until his death a few day# ago has been solved by the •lory of nn unhappy love affair now -being told for ttiefirst time. The attitude of the great orator and statesman toward marriage .dates to the early days when he was a struggling law student. ■■, In his native Nantes was a Breton maiden who received the homage of all the young men of the best families, but this girl. Jeanne Kermnndec. by name. was ambitious and had declared that she wotAd only listen to lite Wooing of a man with a brilliant future. .she refused to entertain th?. Im pecunlotis Brland of humbl? origin, and cast ■■’ her lot with a young man of nts own age. one of his s pends, a ■ member of a well known family and a brilliant star of local debating socle; ties for whom great future was predieted. Twenty years later the mail of brilliance had emerged from prison after serving a sentence for fraud’, and be
Chic Military Model — oSr * * l ■ ' .'3b jggEpWjp,- Li Thia model la In gray flannel The amusing scarf Is in red and white pinstriped silk. The Jacket haisfa little shaped peplum with silt pockets.
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President** 500 Trout Put Into Wrong River Nashua. N. H-—ls fisherman Herbert Hoover wants to catch the trout raised for bits at the local government hatchery bell have to transfer bis angling operations from the Rapldan to the Rose river. The SOO eightinch brook trout shipped to the President's camp were put off the train pt Orange. Vfc£» by mistake, according to word received here, and dumped into the Rose
and his ambitious-wife were reduced to the direst straits, living in a miser able attic in the |>tost squalid section of Parts., > . At the time ArlstJde Brfttnd. who had up to then devoted himself to the law and journalism. was Just coming into his own as a, politician, and his daj’.zhng eloquence earned for him ttie admiration of women of Wealth, and position who would ghidly have linked their fortunes with rhe com.ng man. hut Brland remained faithful to his first love, nnd cherished the hope that one day they would be reunited. When he became premier, though by no means rich; .M Briand arranged to give h|s former friend a new start for the sake of theWonmn. they had both loved, but his efforts were un availing, and after a brief career as an official in; the colonial -office in France and Africa, the man fell again, dragging his wife down with him. Bottr disappeared, and wtien they were traced again the man was .at the point of death anti the woman was a wreck of her former self. . When the bushand had been in the grave a year Brland offered marriage; (perhaps because) she tmd realized ttie mistake she had made In rejecting him in the first instance.-she stoutly refused his offer, saying that she had no right to burden him with a woman with a past who was an ugly shadow of her former self and was representa the of naught but a wasted life. In any case, site said, her own death could not be far off. amt In fact she died about two years afterwards She was buried In an unmarked grave In the little cemetery of Cocherel. where the remains of Briand now rest Each year, on the anniversary of the woman’s death, M. Brland made a point of Journeying to Cocberel to lay flowers on the unknown grave, and, not even the most Important political engagements could Induce him to omit this tribute to the deed woman he tmd loved with such obstinacy for nearly a half century. Now. through death, they are at rest, not far from each other. >4ll Aound Xf House .|Q, Use a slit spmm to remove cooked vegetables from the boiling liquid. Hard sauce made with brown sugar is excellent with warm cherry cobbier When making booked rugs do not crowd the rows too closely together You should be able to see the burlap between the rvws? aa you work. • A curved grapefruit knife la con
river by some mountaineers who were expecting a similar consignment. Airway Lighting Has Become Exact Science Chicago. — Illumination engineers have conquered numerous unique prob lems In the lighting of airways over which the mail-passenger planes now ayO.OOO miles nightly. At present there are four classes of lighting equipment for aviation: Light-
FRIENDS AND REPUTATION By THOMAS ARKLE CLARK Emeritus Dean of Men, University of Illinois. Pratt, who Is a young fellow Just out of college, claims that he has never had a drink
in his life and yet •practically no one believes him. and the reason is that his associates are drunken. lit is constantly talking about tbe bibulous exploits ot his acquaintances. and If you happen to be coming home late at night and stumble upon some one leading a half tipsy companion to
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safety, it is sure to be Pratt. When a group of young fellows take on too much gin. are apprehended by the police. as has been known to happen, and And themselves with Insufficient financial resources to adjust matters amicably. It Is Pratt who is telephoned and who fixes the matter with the authorities, and acts the good Samarium generally. There seems to be no one else In town who has intimate acqiiaintan<-e with so -many people who are on the black list so far as dntaking and gam filing nnd general irregularity are •••>)) cerned. And yet Pratt rather resents it o lien It is intimated that his charnctet Is not .quite am>ve reproach. "1 don’t see why people criticize me.’ he says. ”1 don’t understand why l>eo|>le think I drink and carouse around Just because some of my friends do. | can’t keep the fellow® from coming to me when they are tn trouble." The thing which Pratt has never quite understood Is that bur reputa tions are determined very completely In general by the reputation and the character of the people with whom we associate, and this Is true whether these people are our relatives or just our friends or acquaintances. ‘d don’t have to do the tilings the people do with whom 1 associate." a young gir) said to me not long ago, ‘nnd 1 can’t see why people think 1 do" She had been in an automobile wreck In which a drunken driver had lost control'of the car and turned It over In the ilityh. The account of the affair got Into the newspapers, as such things will, and her own name was being bandied about in no pleasant or complimentary way. She could hot see ttie Justice of it. "neither could she 1 explain to the world in any satisfactory way that she was dot In the same condition as her companions. (ft 193 J Western Union.)
POTPOURRI Coffee Drinkers Medical science now asrrees that ciiffee. unless useti exees sively, floes not injure, but rarher is beneficial ro the human being. The average American drinks about ten and -one-haft (Miunds yearly while in Nether lands the average person con surnes fifteen pounds, in Sweden, twelve and one-half pounds Den mark, twelve pounds. Nbrway. eleven pounds, Belgium, ten (M>i)n<ls. Finland, nine and onehalf pounds, and Cuba nine poitn<ls. <© ItJS. Western Newspaper fnton.V
venient to use In removing soft cooked eggs frotn the slfells, and custards from their cups. A strawlierry huller is a good uren sil to use to pull out tile quills of fowl. The t iyo sections at an omelet ..pan may be tised to heal two different vege tables over <»ne burner. If lumps form In gravies, try beating them out with a flat egg whip. It is better than a spoon. Heating a food chopper in boiling water before using ft to cut raisins, prevents the fruit from sticking.
ing at terminals, lighting at emergency fields, lighting between emergency fields—commonly referred to as beacon lighting, and course markers—usually called "blinkers." The average cost of all these form, of light is 1315 amile. There are about 18,600 miles iof airways lighted in the United State*. Airway improvement, development and lighting Is an activity of the Department of Com merce. The llttla blinker*, which in some
THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL.
Colorado Peak Named for Lindbergh J 1 A.- ' J This towering mountain in the hell hole region, near Boulder, Colo., has been oili«-btily named “Lindbergh Peak” as a memorial to Col. Charles A. Lindberg!). vim rica s great flyer. It Is 12.GU0 feet high and is located in one of the most beautiful sections of Colorado.
MEDIC SOLVES MELANCHOLY STATE
Berlin. Germany.—Melancholy, that metitiil state wtiich so far has baffled psychiatrists. Is due simply to lack ot bromine in ttie blood, according to an astounding statement which the noted speehflist for internal diseases. Prof. Hermann Zondek, recently made before the medical society here.! Professoi Zondek, who was Stresemann’s physician, lately has studied the chemical composition of the blood of mentally diseased patients. in every ?case. he found that whenever the bromine percentage in th? hlbod fell below average; symptoms of melan choly were detected. On the strength of this discovery. Ping-Pong Champion • / Or it f F'a ' 1 F 7 K ' II F '"-v. j L - Il ’'W, w? EteWW* >4 ft RrW Inf‘‘ik?l tMwi' BA Coletnan Clark, a broker of Chicago, was returned ttie winner of the twoday ping-pong championship tourney at the Waldorf-Astoria- hotel. New York. Mr. Clark battled his way through a field of over 2-" m) entries to gain the national championship. He is here shown with his trophy. New Hampshire Women Win Many Town Offices Concord. N. H.—Women nave captured many of the more Important town offices in several New Hampshire communities as result of. the recent town meetings At Middleton Mrs. Ruth Kelley was elected town clerk; Mrs. Margaret Kimball, town treasurer, and Gladys Whitehouse, town auditor. Bessie Hayes was elected town treasurer.of New Durham; Sirs. Ethel W. Morell, town, clerk of Alton; Stella F. Ayer, town treasurer of Alton; Tressa Nelson, town clerk of Strafford; i.inna B. l-ocke. town clerk of Barrington, and Mrs. Fannie Whitehouse. town clerk .of Farmington.
places mark the course at three-mile Intervals, cost S“SO each, while the 24inch revolving beacons between emergency landing fields represent an outlay of each. The expense of lighting the emergency fields themselves averages about SS.OUU each.
Electric “Eyes” to Guard Lift Riders Pittsburgh. I**.—Electric "eyes” will guard users of elevators in Rockefeller Center. New York. Light beams are to be projected across elevator entrances In such a wuy any person Intercepting them will cast a shadow on a photo-electric cell. The cell controls operation of the doors and the falling shadow will keep them open or shoot them back if they have started to close when a passenger Is stepping In or out of the car.
Dash of White With Red and Black Most Pleasing Red ants black with a small amount of" white Is the most important as well as the most dramatic color comblna tion devised. Perhaps recalling some of Urban’s combination of these colors for tbe gorgeous stage settings of the Follies will cause many to agree that this color trio is far from ordinary. Tricky Collar White batiste and wool combine to make a brief collar that ties like a scarf on the new high neckline of a black canton crepe dress.
Professor Zondek undertook to I cure patients afflicted with melancholy by injecting small quantities of bromine into their blood. This cure, h? announced. proved very efficient. Melancholy a frequent mental affliction, is also termed “circulaf insanity" because the patient’s sjytnp toms form a cycle. In which periods of apathy and despair alternate with a normal and even abnormally JOyous mood. Melancholia Is known as a more benign form of mental disease [than dementia and paranoia, which [ con stltute other important groups of mental ailments. While .aese latter forms of insanity are usually incurable and require continual treatment in institutions, melancholia usually improved under treatment so much that even return to mental normalcy Is often attainable, although the possibility of a relapse remains even in successful cases. The discovery of Zondek has led psychiatrists to hope that from now on a more effective and radical treatment than that hitherto applied , will be available. If there is toj .be a brotherhood of man 1U everybody is to be treated fairc j*. ]y. some r. list be forbidden to meddle with the works. Qabby Qertie .• 1 • <r ~ “Some girls don’t enjoy swimming everywhere because it makes them crawl all over.” It is the bomliest breed of dogs that becomes the most fashionable.
Ten-Day Governor > -I *** * os W ' I . nJ Miss Alice Lee Grosjean. pretty ani twenty-five years old. was governor of Louisiana for ten days while Gov. Alvin O. King was attending tbe goverrnors' conference in Richmond. Va. Miss Grosjean became the chief executive temporarily because she is secretary of state, a position she has held since 1930. Gold Cargo Sought Seattle. —Five million gold that went down with the Ward liner Merida in 1911 about 65 miles northeast of Cape Charles will be sought by the Romano Marine Satvageing company of Seattle. An attempt is , being made to raise the derelict.
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“Ad” Got Results A Newport (England) mirier found life dreary after he had been legally separated from his wife. He inserted this, advertisement in a paper: “Young man wishes to meet widow, no objections to a child.” He got only one reply. He wrote several letters to his mysterious correspond-
, Nurses say that many people would never ; ,' W see the inside of a hospital, if they took /JwS' . care of their “nerves." / When they feel vitality lacking, nurses t take Fellows’ Syrup because they have «j® W*"" z® seen doctors all over the world prescribe ■ jB ; . 'this wonderful tonic for “rundown" patierits. They have seen the definite results in increased pep, improved vitality and j “interest in life.” Try it yourself. Ask your druggist for i wgenuine Fellows’ Syrup today. FELLOWS SYRUP
PAPERS KNOWN AS X Y Z DISPATCHES In 1797 strained relations existed between the United States and the young French republic. The United States, desiring to repair the friendship between the two countries which had been of such importance during the American Revolution, sent three commissioners to France t< effect an understanding. The government of France —the Directory—was pressed for funds, and the commissioners were given to understand that the United States could have the friendship of France only upon terms which amounted to an international bribe; thiit otherwise war might be expected as the result of affronts the French felt they had received at the hands of the United States. The American commissioners sent back to their government a series of dispatches describing their reception and the French proposals. President Adams, after seeing these dispatches, sent word to congress that no agreement with France was In sight, and that no terms “compatible with the safety, the honor, or the essential interests of the nation” could be obtained. Copies of the dispatches were forwarded to congress at its request. In the copies, the tetters X. Y and Z were diplomatically substituted for the names of three French agents who had presented the offensive proposals. Hence the papers were called the X Y Z correspondence. The revelations contained in the dispatches caused a great sensation, and preparations were begnn for war with France Some conflict, indeed, did
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hnt, finally arranging’ to meet her. When he arrived, the wife from whom he was separated was awaiting him. with an order to appear In court to answer maintenance charges. •»* ■ 1 -i ■ i 4 One has to get Up a lot of steam l to be as indignant at the aige of sixty as at thirty.
Pa Listen* “Pa," said Johnnie, “what’s a monologue?” “It’s a conversation being carried on by a man and |iis wife, .jqpn,” growled his dad. Japanese File for relief A Soft, Clear gives beauty and freshness to your complexion. Use this skin-purifying, toilet, bath and shampoo soap daily ■ Glenns ■ Sulphur Soap Contain* per Hill'a Pure Sulphur Hair Dye, and Brow*. 50c EPILEPTICS. Gladly tell how my daughter: was quickly relieved at home by new discovery without the! use fit harmful drugs. Nothing to sell. Write MRS. BURKE, drawer's, Arlington, texar CARES WVIILW Or. —wlWl— u. WWa. break out upon the sea. Laterl however, a .satisfactory relationship was established between j the two countries. ■ | Maybe MUlaid Junior came in with an egg from the yard with the old hen following him and cackling lustily. Mother asked: “What’s the matter with that chicken. Junior?” “She wants tills egg back," he replied.
