The Syracuse Journal, Volume 29, Number 36, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 7 January 1937 — Page 10
Ask Me Another £ A Genend Quit e Bell Syndicate.—WNU Service. 1. What assassination brought about the start of the World war? X How many nations were involved in the war? 3. What is nepotism? 4. To what does “histrionic” refer? 8. Did the Bronze age follow or precede the Stone age? 6. In what city does the League of Nations sit? 7. What is aviculture? 8. At the mouth of what river is Shanghai? 9. What does “asymmetrical” mean? 10. Os what people was Hannibal a great military leader? 11. What is argot? 12. What is a nonagon? Answers 1. That of Archduke Francis Ferdinand of Austria and his wife at Serajevo, Bosnia, on June 28, 1914. 2. Twenty-seven. 3. Favoritism to one’s relatives in appointments to offices. 4. To the stage or to actors. 5. Followed. 6. Geneva, Switzerland. 7. The rearing of birds. 8. The Yangtze. 9. Disproportionate. 10. The Carthaginians. 11. Slang or cant language. 12. A plane figure of nine angles. Servitude of Self I will have a care of being a slave to myself,, for it is a perpetual, a shameful, and the heaviest of all servitudes; and this may be done by uncontrolled desires.— Seneca. MUSCLES FEU STIFF ANO SORE Got From Pain •’p&Qt 1 If muscles in your legs, anhs, chest, back or shoulders feel stiff and sore, get a bottle of Hamlins Wizard Oil and get quick relief. Rub it on—tub it in. Warms—soothes—gives wonderful comfort. Will not stain. At all .druggists. Z—s—- — Is Common Sense? Human nature is human nature; but is common sense human nature or a touch from the divine? I TIRED ALL 11 SHE TOLD HIM I THE TIME II WHATTO DO | fEEISUKE NEW! THANKS TO CLEVER WIFE., wasn’t himself. Had too many restless ights. too many tired days. Seemed to lose his ambition- But his clever wife was too smart. to let this go on. She insisted that he try Nature's Remedy (NR Tablets). and he found out what a surprising difference it made to use a laxative of entirely vegetable origin. He didn t mind taking NR* at aU. they were so gentle, and noo-habit forming. They simply made him feel like a new man. Get a 25c box at ft any drugstore today. w j p For We Are Weak Heaven be thanked for the opportunities one doesn’t have to be dishonest. Still Coughing?! No matter how many medicines you have tried for your cough, chest cold or bronchial irritation, you can get relief now with Creomulsion. Serious trouble may be brewing and you cannot afford to take a chance with anything less than Creomulsion, which goes right to the seat of the trouble to aid nature to soothe and heal the inflamed membranes as the germ-laden phlegm Is loosened and expelled. Even if other remedies have failed, don’t be discouraged, your druggist is authorized to guarantee Creomulsion and to refund your money if you are not satisfied with results from the very first bottle. Get Creomulsion right now. (AdvJ
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By ELMO SCOTT WATSON TT TAKES place every four A years. It marks the end of one era the beginning of another in pur history. It is the symbol of a change which may vitally affect the |ives and fortunes of millions of Americans. But, particularly, ft is a colorful, dramatic spectacle which, more nearly than any other event experienced in a democracy, resembles the pomp and i pageantry of ancient customs, i For all these reasons, every Ifour years, the eyes of the United States are centered on Washington, D. C., where a new President is inaugurated or the incumbent in the White House takes the oath of office & second time. • • • Inauguration day this year will be an historic event. The principal reason is this: As the result of the ratification of the twentieth, otherwise known as the Norris or “lame duck,” amendment to the Constitution, Inauguration day is being held on January 20 instead of the traditional March 4. So to Franklin Delano Roosevelt, exponent of the “New Deal,” falls the distinction of being the first President to be inducted into office under a new deal in Inauguration days. Washington weather, traditionally capricious, may be worse on January 20 than it usually has been on March 4. But capital observers are wagering that “Roosevelt luck,” which has included “lucky breaks” when weather conditions might affect his career, will hold and that the skies will smile on his second inauguration even more than they did on his first. Whether they are true prophets in that respect remains to be seen. But it is rather certain that their prophecies in regard to the size of the crowd which will jam the streets of the capital on this day of days in our national history will be accurate, possibly erring only on the side of an underestimate. Last November Roosevelt was re-elected by the greatest vote of confidence any American had received since the time of George Washington. A few days later he returned to the capital and was acclaimed by a crowd of 200,000, an unprecedented tribute in blase and ordinarily unemotional Washington. So there is every reason to believe that January 20 will see a hegira of Americans to Washington which will break all previous records and a celebration of the event in keeping with its historic importance. Os course, President Roosevelt has expressed a desire for a “simple inauguration.” He did that when the question of plans for the event were first broached. But that doesn’t mean that ha will have it. Other Presidents have ipade the same request invariably it has not been granted. For the American people, and more particularly those of Washington, want their “big show” every four years and they usually get it. “Jeffersonian Simplicity?” The President not only aske<) for a “simple inauguration” but he is also reported to have said that he favored “Jeffersonian simplicity.” The only difficulty with that phrase is that the two
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words are contradictory—w he n applied to an inauguration. For, despite the belief of most Americans in the familiar tradition about the inauguration of Thomas Jefferson, who was the first President to take the oath of office in the city of Washington, the fact is that it was not so simple and unostentatious. That tradition is based upon a single paragraph in a: book written by John Davis, afi English traveler, who was in Washington when the Sage of Monticello became President.' That paragraph said: “His (Jefferson’s) dress was of plain cloth, and he rode on horseback to the Capitol without a single guard, or even a servant in his train, dismounted without assistance and hitched the bridle of his horse to the palisades.” Davis evidently wrote that account from hearsay, rather than * from eye-witness evidence. * For ? A? THOMAS JEFFERSON •. I ~ historians have dug into contemporary newspaper accounts and have learned that instead of riding horseback to the Capitol, he merely walked a few blocks from Conrad and McMunn’s hotel, where he was staying, to the scene of his inauguration. The reason why he did not go from the White House to the Capitol, as became the custom in later years, was due to the fact that John Adams, angered by his defeat for re-election and still harboring resentment over the bitter things said about him during the campaign by Jefferson’s followers in the Republican party, had already left the city for his home in Massachusetts. In doing this he broke the precedent which Washington had established —of the outgoing President being present when the incoming Chief Executive took the oath of office. Adams was not the only one, however, who thus ignored that official courtesy. The English traveler’s description of the simplicity of Jefferson’s costume was accurate enough, but that was about the only fact in his account of the 'inauguration that was. For instead of being a quiet affair it was the occasion for considerable jubilation and ostentation, not at all in keeping with the idea of “Jeffersonian simplicity.” According to one of the Washington newspapers, the National Intelligencer: , The Cannons Boom. The City of Washington presented a spectacle of uncommon animation, occasioned by the addition to its usual population of a large body of citizens from adjacent districts. Shortly after dawn, there was a discharged artillery andabout 10 o’clock, the Alexandria company of rifimen, with the com-
SYRACUSE JOURNAL'
pany paraded in front of the President’s lodgings. At 12 o’clock, Thomas Jefferson, accompanied by a number of his fellow citizens, among whom were many members of congress, repaired to the Capitol. His dress was, as usual, that of a plain citizen. He entered the Capitol under a discharge from the artillery.” This news story then tells how Chief Justice John Marshall administered the oath of office, how Jefferson delivered his inaugural address and then started again for his hotel, followed by a great throng of people. It then continues: As soon as he withdrew a discharge of artillery was made. The remainder of the day was devoted to the purposes of festivity, and at night there was t a general illumination.” From all of this it would appear that even if President Roosevelt’s request for an inauguration of “Jeffersonian simplicity” were honored, his induction into office wouldn’t be such a quiet affair. Nor would it be that if he followed some of the precedents established by that other great Democrat, Andrew Jackson. Incidentally, it is reported that the President has also suggested that the reviewing stand, from which he will view the inaugural parade should be patterned after the Hermitage, Jackson’s old home near Nashville, Tenn., and if this is done it will give a touch of * Jacksonian atmosphere to this year’s inauguration. The People’s Triumph. But it is doubtful if the spirit of the day will remotely resemble that of the time when “Old Hickory” took office. Certainly, the scenes of that inauguration more than a century ago are not likely to be repeated. Jackson also asked for a “simple inauguration.” But how different was the one he got I His election over John Quincy Adams had been a triumph for the “common peepul” and they were determined to make the most of that fact. So they swarmed into Washington by the thousands. Jackson’s arrival in the city was greeted by booming cannons, rolling drums and a storm of shouting. A cavalry company met him in the environs of the capital and escorted him to the National hotel to the accompaniment of booming cannon, rolling ANDREW JACKSON drums and wildly-cheering citi- ♦ zenry. The general had declared that he wanted no escort as he walked down Pennsylvania avenue to the Capitol. But he got one anyway. Fifteen veterans of the Revolution, all of them more than eighty years of age, had met that morning and sent a letter to Jackson, asking for the
honor of serving as his bodyguard. He couldn’t very well refuse such a request from these venerable patriots so he accepted their invitation and they surrounded him as he made his way to the place where Chief Justice Marshall was waiting!to swear him into office. Again history repeated itself. For a Federalist Adams, —John Quincy, this time—enraged over defeat and smarting from the lash of campaign canards, again refused to be present when his Democratic successor took the oath. But his absence probably wasn’t noticed by the people who were there to shout themselves . hoarse for their idol, “Old Hickory” Jackson. After the ceremony he started to leave the Capitol and found himself jammed tight in a mob. When a path was finally cleared for him he mounted a horse and started up the avenue for the White House. Behind him streamed the mob — some on horses, others in carts or carriages but most of them on foot. Jacksonian Riot. Arriving at the White House, this throng staged one of the most remarkable scenes in the history of this country. Here is what a woman observer of that day wrote about it: The majesty of the people had disappeared and a rabble, a mob of boys, negroes, women and children scrambling, fighting, romping, took its place. No arrangements had been made, no police officers placed on duty, and the whole house had been inundated by the mob. Cut glass and china to the amount of several thousand dollars had been broken in the struggle to get refreshments; punch and other articles had been carried out in tubs and buckets, but had it been in hogsheads it would have been insufficient. Ladies fainted, men were seen with bloody noses. The windows were thrown open and tubs of liquor, alias punch, placed outside, and thus the house was cleared of the mob. It was estimated that 20,000 persons composed it.” If the Jackson inauguration in 1829 was a triumph for the people, the inauguration of a new President in 1841 was another and was accordingly, although not so riotously, celebrated. Under Van Buren, Jackson’s successor, the Democrats had “gone high hat” and the Whigs, staging their dizzy “hard cider and log cabin” campaign, had elected their frontiersman candidate, Gen. William Henry Harrison. During that campaign many marching . clubs had been formed and it had been one of almost continuous processions. So when it came time to induct Harrison into office the marching clubs were on hand and there were so many of them and so great was the enthusiasm that they generated that after they had finished escorting the new President to the White House, to which he rode on a white horse, they tramped up and down Pennsylvania avenue for hours afterwards. This was the beginning of the inaugural parade idea, which steadily increased in favor, especially after the Civil war, and which has given the pomp and pageantry flavor to Inauguration day. It will, no doubt, be much in evidence again when Franklin D. Roosevelt takes the oath of office <m January 20, a new date in the history of the American Presidency. C WMtem Kewsaapcr Union.
A Trio for the Younger Set 1 mi) U 12 , 02 i/H t 1 ’’ 36 ri\
THREE more intriguing numbers than these would be hard to imagine—even in this day of rampant fashion and scintillating style! It’s a trio that the younger set in The Sewing Circle will be enthusiastic about too, for first consideration is given them in— Pattern 1998—This excellently styled jumper dress is one the tot of six and the lass of fourteen will sing long and loud over. It is a guaranteed delight for both mother and daughter because it’s the simplest thing to sew and the most intriguing frock a child ever had. The puff of the sleeves and the flare of the skirt place a pretty accent on youth. Available for sizes: 6,8, 10, 12 and 14 years. Size 8 requires 1% yards of 35 inch material for the jumper and 1% yards for the blouse. Pattern 1202—There’s subtle loveliness about this new dress for all occasions. It makes a grand thing of simplicity—a brilliant success of the new silhouette. Buttons, bold shiny ones, add classic chic to the back. And in the matter of sleeves there’s an opportunity to choose for oneself. Sheer wool, challis, taffeta or silk crepe will be a likely material for this dress. Designed for sizes: 12, 14, 16, 18 and 20. (30 to 38 bust). Size 14 requires 2% yards of 54 inch fabric.. With long sleeves 2% yards. Pattern 1936—This is the season for smocks, although not the ‘hunting season,’ thanks to today’s new model, pictured here. This ideal smock obviates any further search, for indeed, in simple words it is the McCoy! Imagine
The pleasant and quick way to make coughs feat is a Smith I Brothers Cough Drop. (Two kinds—Black or Menthol— Snitii Bros. Cmbli Drogs are the only imps CMtiiaiai VITAMIN A This is the vitamin that raises the resistance of the mucous membranes of the nose and throat to cold and cough infections.
Age Is No Assurance Age of discretion is no assurance that one has enough.
V w if|, ftii s famous southern in the bright red Jewel carton • Cakes are more delicate, pastry and biscuits flakier and more delicious when you use this finer shortening! For Jewel is a of vegetable fat with other bland cooking fats. Actual tests prove that it atoms faster and makes mart tender baked foods.
| PREFERRED TO THE COSTLIEST
I L_ | ADVERTISED BARGAINS | I/’VJR readers should always remember that our community merchants cannot afford to advertise a bargain unless it is a real bargain. They do advertise bargains and such advertising means money saving to the people of the community.
Thursday, January 7, 1937
the fun of having a smock, that reflects one’s own taste in its every detail —yes, even to the size and color of the scarf and buttons. Designed in sizes: 32, 34. 36, 38, 40, 42 and 44. Size 34 requires 4% yards of 39 inch material. The bow requires 114 yards of ribbon. A detailed sewing chart accompanies each pattern to guide you every step of the waj. Send for the Barbara Bell Fall and Winter Pattern Book containing 100 well-planned, easy-to-make patterns. Exclusive fashions for children, young women, and matrons. Send fifteen cents in coins for your copy. Send your order to The Sewing Circle Pattern DepJ., Room 1020, 211 W. Wacker Dr., Chicago, 111. Price of patterns, 15 cents (in coins) each. © Bell Syndicate.—WNU Service, Secret of Living The whole secret of living is to make adaptations as they are necessary. Let none of us try to insist that nothing should ever be changed.—Jane Addams. DON’T RUB YOUR EYES Rubbing your eyes grinds Invisible particles of dust and dirt right into the delicate tissues, making the irritation just that much worse. A much better way, as thousands have discovered, is to use a little Murine in each eye—night and morning. Murine may be depended on to relieve eye irritation because it is a reliable eye preparation containing 7 active ingredients of known value in caring for the eyes. In use for *0 years. Ask for Murine at your drug store.
. Deplorable Fact Shame still has its work to perform in the world.
