The Syracuse and Lake Wawasee Journal, Volume 11, Number 49, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 3 April 1919 — Page 3
THE JOURNAL’S PHOTO PAGE STORIES TOLD BY THE CAMERA THAT WORDS CAN NOT EXPRESS
SUPERDREADNAUGHT IDAHO PUT IN COMMISSION "ft & i i i ■ ■ U'JV ' I ! F‘ - " . ; I J ■■ i qH ;; ’W' v * *i > s 's& J JwSElliH MWa :: JiJa . ■ -••_itrifo _ ~ A ITI aggljrfgi iHKffin ~’ S ' " f »>-’ ' ' ; :<' *■' '" v' '■ ' ■ ;■>. ,' Ml The superdreadnauglH Idaho which has just been placed in conihiission at the yards of .the New York Shipbuilding company at Philadelphia, where she was built. The great lighting vessel is GtM) feet long and of 33,000 tons. GENERAL DIAZ POSING FOR AMERICAN SCULPTOR l 4 ■ ■"’? 11F\ W |g - 8 /iILUJ IF • / \-l' '' **%# 8 Up v v W V TW<& k/\ v s4r ! - b z V ; W,„.i tk ,-V , .s , > «A", x - ,v 5 General piaz. commander in chief of the Italian army, having a plater bust ipade by the American sculptor, Jo Davidson, in the latter’s Paris studio. On the left can be seen a bust of Getteral Pershing that has not been completed.
FINE GIFT FOR MADAM BRUN BB ' jMM j
This beautiful sealskin coat was made from the first sealskins from Lobos island, the Uruguayah seal possessions, and dressed and dyed at St. Louis, Mo. The coat, which cost $2,000, will be presented to Madam Baltasar Brun, wife of the president of Uru*uay. Getting Them Mixed. Hazel, age six, dotes on using big , words, but she occasionally gets them mixed. She came home from school one day all aglow with sympathy. There was a little boy in her room too poor to buy any paints. “All right, Hazel,” said her mother, ‘.‘you may have the money to buy the paints, only you had better have the teacher give them to the little boy instead of giving them yourself, for fear he might be embarrassed.” “I gave them to Miss Wright, mother,” said Hazel that evening in telling of what she had done, “and L told her not to tell the little boy who sent them ’cause I was afraid he might be so astonished.”
WIRELESS TELEPHONE TRANSMITTER - Bi r FWI wwisiwy I oßft I This is tlie transmitter of the wireless telephone that has been put in successful operation between the land and planes a great distance away. It is worn by the man- in the plane. JUNIOR MARINES CLEAN WASHINGTON f~~~ . . , ~-.... IK n? Ww ill IB til i» < — 1| ; HB i I •jm rJ §W :> IT .1 Ft_ I?^Limi.ir. IZR JBlf* S- ” is x ft ■*'" 7 0 -' " ' T 7 SCE3EEX3 . ' \ ■-— A hundred American junior marines in Washington have volunteered to keep a part of the streets of Washington clean until congress appropriates some money for “white wings.”
TH®, STKACUS® AND LAKE WAWASEE JOURNAL
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Put to Better Use. •‘Some -men think more of their antomobiies than they do of themselves.” "That's right,” replied Unele Bill Bottletop. "I've seen many a man go thirsty hisself so's he could afford alcohol to put in the radiator.” And Yet They Seem Voluminous. “Don't you think some of your remarks might have been omitted?” "Might have been.” exclaimed Sentter Sorghum. "Most of them have been'” The Way of It. "The indifferent young doctors and 'lawyers return us good for evil when we turn them out.” “How so?” “They take us in.” Childhood’s Lesson. Now—He is the meek, subdued husband of a rampant suffragist. Then —As a child they always said 3f him: "He's so good about taking his medicine.” —Life. Resting Her’Face. He—You don't seem glad to see me. Miss Fadds—Oh, yes, I am, only this is my hour for resting my features all expression. Explained. “Bridget, there is not enough caloric n the soup. ’ "Sure, ma'am, and I put in all there ,vas of it in the house.” THE WORST PART
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y az.».* -s^«:<.-«—> 2~ f Higby—l married a college woman. Rigby—Gee! It must be tough to be tied to n woman who knows sc much you don't know. Higby—No; the toughest part is that she knows how much I don’t know. Willing to Show It. Mary has a little dimple Lurking near her chin, Therefore Mary never misses Any chance to grin. The Way of It. “I was held up by a woman once.” “Did she hold you up as a victim of robbery?” “No; she held me up as an example.” Fastidious. “I would lay the world at your feet,” said the romantic youth. “Indeed!” exclaimed the supercilious young lady. “I can’t see why you should attempt anything like that with the world in its present mussed-up condition.” The Evidence in the Case. “Do you charge that my clerk was trying to escape giving you full measure?” “Well, sir. I caught him trying to steal a weigh.” Question. “That red-headed constituent of yours says the next time you come to his town he’s going to be at the meeting with a basket of eggs.” “Hum,” rejoined Senator Sorghum, reflectively. “Ammunition or a bribe?” The Difficulty. “Now, sir, in teaching your wife elocution, I want her to make an impressive pause when she comes to a full stop.” “But she never- does come to one, professor.” Sure, They’re All Like That. Mrs. Askalot —Ah, Mrs. Tellafew, so glad to see you, dear. By the way, what does your husband do? Mrs. Tellafew —He’s a furniture finisher. * Mrs. Askalot—Oh, I don’t mean around home. What does he do for a living? Rather Suspicious. She —What did pa say when you told him you wanted to marry me? He —He asked me if there was any insanity in my family.
NEW YORK’S WELCOME TO ITS FIGHTING MEN ■T“ "" ' ■ " ■. ■■' * — ■ -' * L ' Hw ; U. <'' F JI I ilßHß|S|||i : ;' I ! jn*L' 'r <5 S : ;■ '■ .■•• . . ■' ■HHi .. Scene in New York as the Twenty-seventh division was passing under the beautiful Victory arch duriiwz the parade of that famous fighting unit. FIRST PHOTOGRAPH OF THE “LOST BATTALION” 1 L :'‘l ■■’ i J i '•! ■'• I • ■•'WWfU i.f.F 'b ■ I zass t - : 'sT?iL ,y: '■ . v, - i I MajjaahMb?' 1 '.M . : ' ' - •. .;x./.<7% . .. .:•. .' ~-,<u.> Photograph just released by the war department of Lieutenant Colonel Whittlesey’s “lost battalion” at Apremont, Argonne forest, France. This group of boys is all that remain of the battalion that fought so bravely while it was . surrounded by the Hun. Many of these men have returned to this country since the photograph was taken.
MR. WILSON’S RESIDENCE IN PARIS □n — ~“ t —~— i i ■• .. ™ 1 B ‘ V./; ' ' ' >'<"< /■' <■ X (FTO? ' - • mdrntegm This is T1 Place des Etats Unis, Paris, the house occupied by President and Mrs. Wilson during their second stay in the French capital. ITALIAN DEMONSTRATION IN FIUME .r= !^s*’X E: ' s ' ,T «si I BSgMftfer - I - iiE I] k A; 2 lIMMtt 717141' Demonstration of Italians in Fiume, the city on the Adriatic coast whose possession is in dispute between Italy and Jugo-Slavia.
' BOHEMIAN DOG HAS HISTORY KM P-ISIIIjM fV 7
“Czecho-Slovak,” little Bohemian dog presented to General Cardona, who then commanded the Italian army, by an Austrian deserter. General Cardona gave him to H. L. Booth of St. Paul, Minn., a “Y” worker, who |ias been in Italy over a year. He and the dog arrived in America recently. American Triumph. Before the war, exports in dyestuffs from the United States were $500,000 a year. In 1918 the figures ran to sl7-.-000.000. American textile manufacturers, when the war broke out, were panic-stricken, because they believed I that Germany was the only country that could produce tine dyes. American chemists, however, came to the rescue and are now producing dyes better than the German. No, but They Think It Is. “I fear these two citizens are having a warm argument about the war.” “You are mistaken. Each is trying to convince the other he has the better furnace.” “Is that anything to quarrel about?” “It would be -if they had the same make, but they haven’t, and since * each one regards (himself as an authority on. heat units, hostilities are liable to begin at any moment.” —Birmingham Age-Herald
