The Syracuse Journal, Volume 27, Number 49, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 4 April 1935 — Page 2
Reindeer at Last Reach End of Five-Year Trek
'I . i jdßfe nr dKKSKK vC IBM jqjb. /hl, L2c mJ 1 'ArMF: H 1 JKJ Smsl* V „ » *H» - " .. *. ' - ..■
XIT 11 AT can happen In thia great world in a period of ’’ five years? Among the great achievements we can list that of Andrew Bahr of Seattle. Five years ago he took an assignment to drive 3.900 -reindeer across the Great Arctic circle. Bahr, although not a young man, took this great task at the Instance of the king of England, through a commercial trading company, who believed it a good Idea to provide meat for the Mackenzie district of Canada, where there was a scarcity of food. In 1929 a herd of 3,000 reindeer was turned over to this herder and
BEDTIME STORY FOR CHILDREN
AN UNEXPECTED DANGER T\ANNY MEADOW MOUSE, swim ming across the Smiling Pool to escape from Reddy Fox", was worried enough as he thought of how helpless he would be should Billy Mink or Snapper the big Snapping Turtle discover him before he reached the other bank. But Danny would have been still more worried bad he known of a certain Big Pickerel, which you know is a kind of fish, who was making his home In the Smiling Pool. Now zfhe Big Pickerel lived very largely on the minnows and other little fish of the Smiling Pool, but he was always ready for anything else that might be good to eat. He had been some distance away from where Danny dived Into the water, but he had heard the splash Danny made. It was different from the splashes made by the young frogs, and the Big Pickerel knew the difference. He would have been very glad to get one of the young frogs. In fact, he could hare told what had become of a good many young frogs which had disappeared very mysteriously. Bur he had paid no attention to the splashes of the young frogs when they had dived into the Water at the warning of Redwig the Blackbird. You see, he knew all about frogs, and he knew that they bad dived right down to the bottom and hidden in the mud. But this other splash Interested him, and he began to move along In the direction of it Now if he had hurried in the first place, this story might have had a very different ending. But the Big Pickerel had had a good breakfast. and he was only mildly interested. So he swam rather slowly. Danny Meadow Mouse was almost across the
Minute make-ups By V.V.
■ iW -w---(7
One of the newest de luxe fashions Is the wearing of natural flowers. A necklace of orchida—natural—is startling and becoming, especially if you use • powder foundation over your neck so that the delicate color complements your skin. Cvpyrtsht
i r: Traffic Light Regulations During Muddy Season ■ga ». \ ** < J
Dy THORNTON W. BURGESS
Smiling Pool bef‘re the Big Pickerel saw him. When the Big P ekerel did see him he quite forgot tint he had had a good breakfast. It was seldom that he had the chance to dine on a fat
O" 1
Just as Danny Scrambled Out On the Bank. Those Great Jaws Closed With a Wicked Snap. meadow mouse, and he could think of nothing in the world that would taste better. If he had moved slowly before, now
♦ MOTHER'S • COOK BOOK
AU GRATIN DISHES AU GRATIN signifies. In French, a dish baked with a coating of bread crumbs. Such dishes are particularly good to serve for luncheon, as they are easily prepared and quickly served. they may make a chief dish for dinner, or for a part of a company dinner. The main part of the dish, whether fish, meat or vegetable, is usually mixed with a white sauce. To these dishes one* may add cheese, chopped hard-egg, peppers, red or green, mqyhrooms and parsley. When the food is all cooked, the buttered crumbs are used for a topping and the dish is simply heated for ten or fifteen minutes to brown the, crumbs. When the food used that needs longer cooking the crumbs are added ten minutes before removing from the oven. Cabbage au Gratin. Cook cabbage eight minutes In boiling water, drain, chop in small pieces and sprinkle with salt and pepper, cover with a rich white sauce, stirring lightly with a fork to mix well. Turn into a baking dish and cover with buttered crumbs over a light layer of cheese. When the crumbs are brown the dish Is ready to serve. Summer squash, potatoes, carrots, eggplant, in fact, almost any vegetable is most attractive served In that manner. The nice thing about such dishes Is they may be leftovers from
for five years he has plodded 1,200 miles across the Arctic circle and has at last reached his goal. Camping for months waiting for a river to freeze over, weathering Arctic blizzards, camping for the breeding season and a thousand other obstacles have befronted this great herb, but he has delivered, not only his original herd, but an Increase for the five years of over 10 per cent and Incidentally there were two children born on the stormy passage, and are husky Individuals. The Andrew Bahr feat will go down tn history as one of the greatest feats of man.
he shot forward like an arrow. Grandfather Frog saw him and tried to warn Danny, but Danny was already swimming as fast as he could, and all the warnings In the world couldn’t have made him swim any faster. The Big Ilckerel’s great jaws, each of which had ever and ever so many sharp teeth, were actually opening to seize Danny, just as Danny’s feet touched bottom. Just as Danny scrambled out on the bank, those great jaws closed with a wicked snap, almost on the end of Danny’s funny, short tail. There was a great splash, for the Big Pickerel had rushed so that he had almost stranded himself in the shallow water. For a minute Grandfather Frog couldn’t see what had happened. Then he saw the Big Pickerel dart back Into deep water, and with a sigh of relief saw Danny Meadow Mouse pop into one of the holes in the bank of the Smiling Pool. ©. T. W. Burgess.—WNV Service. Leave It Up to Enemies •Tain’ no use tryln’ to destroy yoh enemies," said Uncle Eben. Ts day’s as bad as you thinks dey is you kin let ’em alone to fight among demselves." Hand of Groat Apes The hand of the great apes is more highly specialised than a man’s hand, says an anthropological report, but man’s foot is the more highly specialized.
the dinner of the day before. Soak a three-pound haddie in warm water or milk to cover, for an hour. Bake in a moderate oven for thirty minutes to separate the flakes: there should be two cups; cook one tablespoon of chopped onion in one-fourth
~ iHMKMI «— —: jLjlam
THE invalid's piano, a new Invention which enables the bedridden to play the piano, as it was demonstrate)! at the British Industries fair in Olympia.
THROUGH A Wxnans Eyes By JEAN NEWTON “HOME" •« TIT HAT do you suppose my twelve ▼V year-old boy said to me thia evening, as we left?" complained a woman at an evening gathering recently. “Mother! . Are you going out again? Oh gee, you go out every nightl" “He has to go to bed soon after we leave anyway,” she added. “Now what I do you suppose he wanted?" Gropingly, thia woman bad a feel- * Ing of guilt though she knew not why. It developed that what the boy “wanted" was to play ping pong (be la an only child) before going to bed, as he had recently realized his dream of owning a ping-pong cable. But a> that woman spoke I thought, I could sense something else her boy | wanted. It took me back to nay own
Piano for the Bedridden Invalid
SYRACUSE JOURNAI
THE BUTTERFLY By ANNE CAMPBELL
I HAD been in the kitchen half the * day, Cleanings the cupboards, making the room fair. When' hands are busy, hours fly away. And it was noon before I was aware. Weary before the open door I stood. Looking at my own patch of homely green, When 1 was joined in my brief solitude By a brown butterfly, with golden sheen. I was transported on its gauzy wings Far from the sordid tasks of everyday. Intangible but high Imaginings Captured my thoughts and bore me far away. There was my early home, the open door, The locust tree, the garden rich in blooms; The sunlight on the whitely scrubbed pine floor. And heaven lending peace to little rooms. i From toil there is escape. The drab cocoon Os ordinary day cannot hold fast The thoughts that soar like butterflies in June, And find their way to God’s blue lanes at last. Copyright.—WNU Service. Resembles Pre-War Style
V 4
Tying her luxurious scarf of Russian sables, this young lady is almost a replica of pre-war style. Yet her tailored, braid-trimmed suit, and shiny straw sailor, not to mention her furs, are strictly 1935. ’
of a cup of butter five minutes, stirring constantly. Add one teaspoon of salt, one-half teaspoon of paprika, a few grains of cayenne In four tablespoons of flour, stir until well blended, then add, stirring carefully two cups of milk. Bring to the boiling point, add the fish. But Into a greased -baking dish and cover with crumbs. Brown and serve. C, Western Newspaper Union.
childhood, and I saw myself coming home every afternoon from school. It brought back the feeling of terrible emptiness of those rare times when, returning in the afternoon. I found my mother out. They were unusual occasions those, bur I remember how strangely devastating. At such times, home didn't seem home at all. Something, in fact very much, was wrong—and stayed wrong, in some indescribable way, until the house became alive again with my mother’s presence. Os course the habits and traditions of the boy in question were different from those of my own childhood. He was not accustomed to a constant awareness of his mother's presence at home, and therefore did not miss It—consciously, specifically. But I believe that fundamentally the yearning was the same —a . yearning for the background of the living presence that made the house really “home.” ©. B»H Syndicate—WXf Sarrica. Tongue Is Strong The tongue has no bone yet it crushes.
------IMPROVED UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL SUNDAY I chool Lesson (By RZTV. P. B. FITZWATER. D. D, Member of Faculty. Moody Bible Institute of Chicago.) Ci Western Newspaper Union.
Lesson for April 7 THE HEAVENLY FATHER LESSON TEXT—John 14:8-34. GOLDEN TEXT—Like as a father pitieth his children, so the Lord pltleth them that fear him. PsaJm 103:13. PRIMARY TOPIC—The Heavenly Father. Jt’NTOR TOPIC—The Heavenly Father. INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR TOPIC— Why We Call God Father. YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADULT TOPIC —The Fatherhood of God. The alm in the lessons of this quarter is to place before the pupils of the Sunday school some of the great doctrines of the Christian faith, as set forth in God’s Word, with their practical application to the common relations of life. I. Who Is the Heavenly Father (Gen. 1:1). He is the almighty God who created the universe (Ps. 90:2). He was before all things. God is the infinite and perfect Spirit in whom we live and move and have our being. He is omnipotent, omniscient, and omnipresent He was not only before all things, but the cause of all things. 11. What the Heavenly Father Ddes. 1. He created the universe (Gen. 1:1; cf. vv. 26, 27). The universe came into being by the will and act of the personal Being called God. Man himself is a creation of God. 2. He has provided salvation for lost men (I John 4:9). He gave his only Son, that whosoever believeth in him might live through him (John 1:16). 3. He preserves us (Ps. 103:1-14). The preserving mercy of God embraces the following gracious beneficent acts: a. He forgives all our Iniquities (v. 5). This he Is able to do because of the righteous provision he made for sin in the atonement wrought out by Jesus Christ. b. He heals all our diseases (v. 3). This healing refers to the body and the soul. He firs’t renovates mans moral nature and then his physical nature. c. He redeems the life from destruction (v. 4). Redemption implies the payment, of all demands against the debtor. d. He satisfies the mouth (v. 5). God satisfies all legitimate desires, so that youth is renewed like the eagle’s. In redemption man’s original capacities are restored to their native vigor. e. He executes righteousness and judgment (vv. 6-12). The wrongs of life are righted and man is thus relieved of the burdens which they entail. f. He pities his children (vv. 13, 14). The pity of an earthly father is but a faint suggestion of the sympathetic compassion of the heavenly Father. 4. He chastens bls children (Heb. 12:5-11). a. The fact (vv. 5,6). Every one who is God’s spiritual child experiences chastening, an unmistakable evidence of sonship. b. How it should be received (vv. 6-8). It is the token of his love (v. 6). c. The purpose of (vv. 9-11). It is to bring the child into subjection to Induce reverence (v. 9). It is toSproduee holiness (v. 10). It is to develop fruits of righteousness (v. 11).. 5. He cares for his children (Matt 6:11, 25). The child of God who has come to know his heavenly Father as the almighty Creator and Preserver, whose very essential being Is love, will trust the Father for dally bread, without anxiety or fear. 111. The Heavenly Father Revealed In Jesus Christ (John 14:8, 9). The supreme purpose of the coming of the Son of God was to reveal God (John L:8). Only a being of God’s essential nature could reveal him. Jesus Christ became man In order that he might reveal God to man. Only the one who knows Jesus Christ knows God. IV. How Men Come to Know God as the Father (John 3:3-6). It is through regeneration. The new 6lrth is absolutely essential to a knowledge of God as the Father. We are children of God by faith in Jesus Christ (Gat 3:26). V. Our Responsibility to the Heavenly Father (Mate 6:24-34). The true child who has come to know his Father 1. Will give him undivided affection (v. 24). The child of God makes the unequivocal choice between the heavenly Father and the world. The one who knows God as Father will not be under the sway of either the world’s gain or pleasure. 2. He will not be anxious about food and clothing, as stated above. A He will diligently seek the kingdom of God and his righteousness (vv. S 3, 34). He will subordinate temporal things to the things of the SplrlL This Is not a warning against legitimate forethought but against anxious worry. Valley* Rui« Moantaina I noticed in the vale of Chamounf that the mountains ruled the valley, not the valley the mountains. The valley could only wind and go as the mountains let IL The valley could not tlrust away the mountains; it must submit to them. So does the effulgent fact of the resurrection of Jesus rule history.—Dr. Wayland Hoyt Pretense of Long Prayer* He said unto them. Beware of the scribes, which love to go in long clothing, and love salutations in the market places, and the chief seats in the synagogues, and the uppermost room at feasts: which devour widows’ houses, and for pretense make long prayers: these shall receive greater damnation.—Mark 10:38-40. Look Abroad Not in wrapping our finest powers in the ceremonies of the ghostly past, but in the broadest possible outlook upon all spiritual truths, does religion hare its tras relation to life.
Look to Your Accessories for Chic
I £ \ \ w Vfl 'I i Jfl 1 K \ ! Ji A Mr wk J H
WHAT’S smarter. If you please, for this spring, than a good looking black, navy or tweed suit or frock “set off” with fetching accessories to a nicety down to the slightest detail? We confess we do not know the answer, bnless it would be “more accessories.” However, this we do know, that fhshion has gone so unmistakably accessory-conscious, this season, the very fate of your costume depends on the chic and the charm and the correctness of the accessory items worn with it Which leads us to predict that you will be tempted to spend as you have never spent before on the dainty lovely neck fixings which are simply lavished on the new spring frocks and suits. Neither will you be able to resist the appeal of the intriguing costume jewelry together with ingenious little gadgets of every description. Speaking of accessory ensembles, a veritable chamois spring fever has broken out both among fashion-alert Americans and chic Parisiennes. To demonstrate how utterly swank from headrop to fingertip yellow chamois accessories on navy are proving to be, we are Illustrating a stunning ensemble to the right in the group. The pert V-back beret and classic pullover gloves are of this soft butter colored chamois leather. The tailored scarf with hand-stitched chamois is real news. The four-inch belt with circle buckle and the new flat bag with braided handle are also of the chamois. Yes, we agree with you that these new chamois sets are outstanding and greatly to be coveted .by those who appreciate the air of distinction they Impart. The costume worn by the girl seated has about it that note of sophisticated simplicity which is high-style convine-
CHIC SPRING FURS By CHERIE NICHOLAS
8
Dainty fun and fur trimmings tuned to spring are conspicuously in the limelight at present For sportswear or for early springtime this cunning snow-flecked weasel jacket is an excellent choice for a young woman of fashion. Shading from a yellowish beige to • sort brown it harmonizes with browns or the new pastels which are so popular this spring. Turqnoi»e Jewelry Turquoise jewelry is enjoying quite a vogue at present Long strands of small beads are worn, twisted several times around the neck or the arm, with one detachable clip to match holding the different strings in place.
What Women Want to Know About Fashions
Paquin favors gray and grege, especially in woolen suits. Vionnet colors favor vivid greens and vloline tones and reds. In the more rarefied strata of fashion. gored skirts are on the >cene again. Cork purses for wet weather are proving more popular than their predecessors, the oilcloth and patent leather ones. 1
By CHERIE NICHOLAS t
Ing. Her navy novelty silk frock bespeaks discriminating taste. The wide patent leather belt is ti ecording to latest dictate of the mode. The Jaunty hat is a smooth ballibunt! for which Paris fashionables are expressing a decided preference this spring. The real sensation about this costume is the novel gold jewelry w »rh with it —looks as if it were as rilled collar and cuff, set. It is, however, of ,'old metal which is light as a feather. It would be difficult to find anything in the way of a neckline and wrist adornment that will impart a finer finesse to a simple navy or black afternoon dress, than these very unusual jewelry sets, * Frilly, fluttery neckwear moans * everything to the new costumes. If your yearning leans to animated little lingerie pleatings and ruffllngs and frilled jabots and lace collars and cuffs which carry alluring feminine appeal . now is the moment to see your fondest hopes realised, for fashion makes fanciful peckwear the center of attraction this season. The sheer white finely pleated jabot at the top to the left in the picture is typical of the new trend. The hat worn by this vitagraph star Is excellent style since it is of quilted taffeta banded with shiny rough black straw. Milliners are making a feature of quilted fabrics for spring. Her little galyak shoulder 1 cape is also up-to-the-moment, for dainty fur separate pieces are very important in the cum nt mode. > The lingerie blouse with a very frill has come Into irs own this season. Note the attractive organdie and lace model to the left below in. the - picture. Ir has wee crochet buttons—two dozen or more down the front. The nifty little pill-box turban is hand made of the new glass ribbon straw. ©. Western Newspaper Union.
FEMININE CURVES COME INTO FAVOR
The perennial question of the great American figure is before us again, and this time the consensus is decided —we are to have feminine curves this year. Not the Mae Westian curves of yesterday, nor yet the wasp waist of the Gibson girl, but a happy compromise ■ —a return to natural contours. Rosina McDowell Lynn, of the McDowell school of costume design says the new trend toward natural curves is all due to Mussolini and Hitler, and their policy of encouraging women to concentrate on the nursery. She says the American figure follows the trend of the times, toward a more normal state of mind, and predicts that the spinach-and-grapefruit diets of the last few years are on the way out. Flecked White Linens Are Popular for Spring Frocks Heavy white linens splashed with multicolored flecks (achieved by sprinkling in small bright bits pt doth while the material is being woven )and cream linens embroidered in red and black figures are used for frocks. A new “blotting paper pink," flame and pastel tint* are favorite colors for linen frocks this year; green, brown and gray are smart for suitings. Linen corsets, lingerie, gloves, bags, hats and shoes are among the novelties launched this spring. Golf suits and tea gowns, evening frocks and flying suits, summer dresses and tennis shorts are also being fashioned In the new flax weaves. Velvet Ensemble Favored Velvet ensembles or velvet dresses with long narrow fitting capes of graceful line are being worn, with matching gloves and hats In London.
A wooden watch for sportswear is the latest novelty. • .. Lanvin, besides navy and white, has a fancy for scarlet. A throat that is swathed in frills of white mousseline is a fashionable one this season. Paris millinery in which line Is chiefly important, exemplified by new small and medium size berets which fit like toques,
