{ title: 'The Adirondack news. (St. Regis Falls, N.Y.) 1887-1934, December 12, 1931, Page 4, Image 4', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn87070345/1931-12-12/ed-1/seq-4/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn87070345/1931-12-12/ed-1/seq-4.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn87070345/1931-12-12/ed-1/seq-4/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn87070345/1931-12-12/ed-1/seq-4/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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• • • t • ... • • 1 : 0 • * ... t i i tt INTERESTING FEATURES FOR ! \ »••»•<• HAT WE NOW ARE ;: By THOMAS ARKLE CLARK ! Ssjtrltiit D«*a tflln, lAlvertlty tf IlliaeU. Grov tht In drill s quits discontented with lum which the college has laid out for him. He has In mind certain things which he will be doing ten or twenty years from now, and so far as ho can set a great deal of the work which he Is required to do in college will be of no practical benefit to him at that time. He sees no use in Lat- or Jtn|llth literature or military half dozen other things anpl with whic ' I \We nose of us set out with the Intentlo* < >f being what we now are,* a shrewd observer of human nature has salt), 'and we have all of us had to adapt ourselves to our situation from time to time*** , Possibly his statement \i a little sweeping but In my own case It Is strangely true. I have never done anything that I planned to do, and no position] ihlch I have ever neld did I go at tunlty o\ Hi my position i o with man one sort THffi I f thebfsi his course is cluttered up. It was chance, or oppor- he request or the Insistence >nds that put me Into one another.. I think It Is so people. They plan to do work or another and then settle denn for life in something en¬ tirely different. For these reasons I believe It nakes little difference what one sttidlBs in college, just so be chooses In >se branches of study which give him! n ental discipline and breadth of view. ? Whatever makes a man think thing for him. There ;w is Brown, He had made up his mind [before he was out of the grades tpak engineering was the thing for hlm.i He ate up mathematics and physics and chemistry. He was mis¬ erable until his mother bought him a set of tools, and then he fixed every¬ thing in tbje neighborhood which need¬ ed mendlnk or readjusting. He was on tht aonor roll In college In engi¬ neering, and was elected to Tau Beta PI In his Jinlor year. He Is very like¬ ly a successful engineer now, you say. Jfot so. JHb Is the president of a bank. (A IStlj WwUrn Ntwapap* Union.) jtrleved Owa Game Rnoxvilie, Tenn.—Gordon Powers Ired his shotgun at two birds direct¬ ly ovcrhtajd. One fell Into his open band, thb othtr at bis feet thb D TURK DICTATOR SPARES HERO'S UFE London.—\No traitor shall escape death,** said Mustapha Kemal Pasha, dictator of Turkey, when, In 1928, he signed the death warrants previously executed by the sultan of Turkey, of those who had been traitors to their country during the wan The story has Just reached London^ however, of how the ghasl relented for the first time recently and freed one of Tur¬ key's, traitors, i The memory of his widowed mother, whom he adored, moved him to mercy In one of the most extraor¬ dinary stories coming out of the war. He granted state clemency to Capt Sabry Bey, formerly of the British army,.* who had risked death by re¬ turning to Turkey eight years ago to see his mother before she died. He was arrested only recently. Lieut Sabry Bey of the Ottoman fusiliers of the Imperial guard, was recommended for aeronautics In 1918 after a distinguished active service record In the Balkan war, andAent to England to train. He was attached to the Royal Fly¬ ing corps, then In Its Infancy, and became, very popular In the mess. Through his kinsman, Prince Tewfik, the Turkish ambassador, who had fought with British allies In Crimea, he obtained entree Into the most ex¬ clusive circles of English society. When Britain declared war against Germany fn August, 1914, Sabry, like all tht rest of his comrades In the mess, got war fever. # The pro-British tradition Inherited from tht Crimea THINGS AND NEW-By Lame Bode SIR (JfflERSON *iU£NUY/ CAN $t GROWN OH Pi A HOUSE m HIGH MP ONLY Q APRIt fOOL .1»t PASQUt (P HU Soldier Risked Ex< Aid Widowed Moi He en- ifantry in the Neuve became too strong for him. tered the ranks of a British regiment and fought at Mons retreat, at Glvenchy and at Chapellle. Within three monjhs and before Turkey entered the wal Sabry Bey had won Its commission as an officer in the British army li service. In the early days of No 1914, telegrams from the war Constantinople arrived In Loi Sabry recalling him to Turke; active rember, nice at on for which Japanese Swim S Japan's new swimming Tamasakl, sixteen-year-old blg boy, who broke the Japan for the 100-meter swim by through the distance in 09 1-0 during the national champions at Tokyo. He Is assured of on Japan's swimming squad 1962 Olympic games at Los Is Kojl school record lashing onds, p meet place In the ngeles. PART PRET Romance of Oiark Moti Ended by Court* had already made up her mind to join the Germans. Sabry never re¬ plied and the Turkish ambassador was unable to obtain an/ trace of him. In 1916 he received thf Mans Star, the Military medal, an<J was men¬ tioned in dispatches by the Brltlsn commander in chief. In the meantime the Turk* held an Imperial court mar¬ tial and the sultan signed his death warrant at the end of 1018. In 1928 Mustapha renewed it. Eight years ago the friendly com¬ mander of a British torpedo boat de¬ stroyer shipped Sabry at a Bulgarian port and dropped him at the European side of the straits. The Turk swam back to his own country, despite the death warrant, because be had re¬ ceived news that his aged widowed mother, of whom he was the only child, had become a paralytic. For eight years he remained hidden in her home disguised as a servant. Few people entered the house, as It was notorious that she was the mother of a traitor who had been convicted. A short time ago Sabry Bey attended his mother to the grave and In an* swer to the priest's question, \What good Moslem commits this body to the grave?\ Sabry answered, \Her son.\ , His arrest was a matter of hour* When. the dictator was informed of It aud Sabry's history, be sent for him. He was taken before the chief executive under heavy guard. The ghasl ordered the escort to release the prisoner and gave him a complete pardon because he had thrice risked his life: once for Turkey in the Bal¬ kans, again for England on the west¬ ern front, sofa finally to console his mother's last [years. I Mustapha reminded 84bry that he had also loved his own Mother deeply and declared that since he had heard of the latter's case he had been won¬ dering whether, under the same cir¬ cumstances, heV himself would have had the courage to come back. T BRIDE AND BOY Independence, Mo.—The romknce of a pretty little seventeen-year-old wife and a twenty-one-year-old lusband ended In the Circuit court hen when Judge 0. Jasper Bell annulled their marriage In Bentonvllle, Ark. Miss Blolse Shearer, sorority girl and leader on the University lof Mis¬ souri campus last year, Was the young wife and Charles 8ears, sol of a wealthy Kansas City family, was the husband. Both live In Kansad City. Charles did not appear In Jourt to defend himself In the annulment pro-j ctedlngs, but he was. represented by; his attorney, who did not contest any; of the remarks that Blolse made con-j cernlng their marriage and love affair.] Blolse said that they had been mar¬ ried while they were spending ft week end In the Missouri Osarks. Judge Bell Inquired whether they were alont on tht trl*. \No nol M she replied. Th4re was another couple—a married couple— with us. We all had a few cocktails and Charles suggested that we go to Bentonvllle, a sort of Gretna Green, and get married. When we got there I gave my age as over twenty-one years. We were married.** They went on a four-day honeymoon trip to Chicago, Miss Shearer said. Judge Bell restored her maiden name as she had asked In her petition. Mrs. Florence Shearer, the girl's mother, was named as next friend for the girl, for purposes of tpe suit She accompanied her daughter In the courtroom. • When a man Is sure that his friends never toy unkind things about him he can be sure that all fals friends are dead. \A girl but she's al preeont\ way try to eorteeal Her paet. ways willing to display* her Girl Sveji Her Father and Wins $480 in Pay San Frfcnclsco.—A father who was sued by hli daughter was ordered In Municipal 1 court to pay her for work •Me had dole for him. Mrs. GJntys M. Jackson sued her fftther, H pnry Mtiegge, , alleging last !>• tail refused to pay her for working in his grocery store, or to provide her with board f or lodging. 8he asked $060. I . Judge Frank W. Duro} effected a compromise whereby Muegge 'agreed to pay $125 In cash and $26 In Install¬ ments, until $480 has been paid. Cincinnati Has Opened Campaign on Loco W*ed Cincinnati, Ohio.—Cincinnati officials are planning to pass a special ordi¬ nance against \mugglers cigarettes treated with marijuana, which, they said, were gaining widespread use here among circles of young people. Federal law does not prohibit salt of tht weed, whloh brings an Intoxi¬ cated sense of exhilaration. Mari¬ juana has had wide use in Mexico. Lexy Ford, federal narcotic agent here, reported parties of young people sit on the floor in \Marijuana trains,** passing the smokes from mouth to mouth. The \train he said, usually ends in an orgy. El Pato's Plan Offers Babies on Installments El Paso, Texas.—\Four more pay¬ ments and the baby will be ours.\ El Paso parents can say this ^n all seriousness. For babies, like automobiles and radios, can now be bought on the In¬ stallment plan. r Providence and Masonic hospitals and Hotel Dleu have proffered the part payment plan to prospective fathers with gratifying success. ' A small sum Is paid weekly befdro the expectant mother enters the hos- pltnl and the worry removed from the flnunclul problem. A Chic Entemble ensemble of fall brown is worn by] Rocnelle Hudson, RKO-Radlo Pic¬ tures baby star. The jacket is of vel¬ vet with lapels faced with the crepe of which the dress Is made. Empire touches are seen in the puff sleeves anld the stitched design. READERS A piece of orange skin placed on top hei ivy odor of cooking from the kltch- and give out a pleasant fragrance. en of the stove will take away the # • • To remove brown stains from light cobred ranges, dip a doth in turpen¬ tine and apply to stain*. With a lit¬ tle pressure the stains will come off. • * * liabel your jars and bottles with, adqeslve tape and write on the tape red Ink what the jars contain, tape sticks to the Jars and is not to loosen. , with Tb< likely pot i, he hole In the bottom of a flower should never be closed up. Place a few cinders or bits of broken china over It to let the air In to the roots and keep the soil from coming through. open carbet and at Alfter washing and drying woolen blanket* bang them on a line in the air and beat them well with a beater. This raises the fluff the blankets look almost as good tew. Grandmother at 32 Although she Is barely tbirty-two yean old, Mrs. Pearl Downward of Rusftvllle, Ind., holds the distinction of being the youngest grandmother in her state. Ar any rate, she is the young¬ est io claim the honor. Mrs. Dowi ward was married at fifteen and comi a mother a year later. Her daughter, Mrs. Verdi Stevens, now of Dallas, Texas, recently duplicated her mother's record. England Has ail Amphibious War Tank Military men In all successful demonstration blous. It can travel on The tank Is here seen les wert Immensely Interested recently In the England's newest war tank, because it is amphl- md it 45 miles an hour and can swim at 6 knots, rgitjg from a river after a test font* As*ri«e> South America receives the'average rainfall of ai tlnent er con- / Rainfall mmi Vegetation . In tropical countries covered with luxuriant vegetation the rainfall Is sel¬ dom less than 99 to<!>ts a year, f - • nut !! baking A L 111111111 n i in i y\ i ii 111 POTPOURRI in minium nn inn , Platter/df Paris Plaster of /Paris Is made by thus driving off the water/fad leaving a fine dry powder. /One part of this pow-, der added to two parts of water creates a thin paste, which bard- ens Quickly on exposure to the By adding a small quantity lime to the paste a very hard arble-llke substance called cal¬ cine plaster Is produced. MB, 1111. WMttrn Ntwapapvr Union.) • • O: 11111111111111111 Ml 1111 Worn Out Land to Be Used for Reforestation Battle Creek, Mich.—Farm land, abandoned as worn out, will be used In a reforestation experiment by Mich¬ igan State college experts. W. K. Kellogg has given the collect 800 acres of land in Kalamasoo coun¬ ty, which is considered \worked out\ so t*t as grain crops are concerned. Paul A. Herbert, professor of forestry, will tvy evergreens on the land, de¬ voting eight or nine years to the ex¬ periment . Stocks Iko, Nev.—Ike Woodhouse likes to fish. He proved It On top of Ruby's mountains Is Robinson lake, Ike's favo¬ rite fishing ground. Last summer the catching was poor, so Ike ts hauling flngertlngs up the mountain and plant- Ing the lake. 088 MERV1J4 paiiMld a mo¬ ment before he went unj the rickety stairs that led to the room where dumb \Soupy\ Sam, would rent him a bed for the eight for the sum of ten centk , He caught sight of ft slight, girlish figure! stagger¬ ing along the street toward bfm. 8he •topped suddenly with groping bands. The light from the \Chink*\laundry fell on her face, and the horror on .it sent him with^wlft steps toward her. \Something wrong?* htj asked gently.. n Her small, thin face wore the look of a child frightened beyond ipeech. 1 guess—I'm blind 1 My eyea— M were the whispered words hi caught. Her wide eyes did seem slgbtlest to him. He took her arm quickly under his. \Perhaps tt Is Just for;the mo¬ ment I'll be glad to take yod home if yon tell me where to go.\ j \I have a room on East street- number 80. If you will |elp me please,** she said In a strange little voice. . , She was a slight thing, and pretty «nder other circumstanced. Rose thought He learned In that >rief bat eventful walk that *he had befn study Ing art In the dry, but success had not come her way. The Christ mat will rush In the stores had given tm aa opportunity to earn monejr. The lights bad bothered her after the strain her eyes bad been under In her studying and that night on her way home darkness deeper than the night had come over them. He suggested getting In touch with the police, but she begged him not to. \I have my rent paid until Sunday night and If I rest tomorrow my eyes may be all right After that— after that—\ He put his hand encouragingly over her small one. \Don't worry about that I am going to keep an. eye on you myself. Here you are. 1 * A rigid faced landlady door. In a moment Ross gll situation. The woman planatlon with a scowl; a dded to wait until he had helpless girl to her room, said quietly: I \Look after her well, tnjl I see that you are paid.** ! \She has her room paid until Sun¬ day night After that the city will take care of her—unless shej has the cash 8unday night You look like • bum to me, but If you get the mon all right** the woman said shortly. Ross smiled. \You have (n her; but I'll have the money. to her. She's a mere kid aJid op against It\ < \So am I,\ she replied sharply* •«Good-by. H The next morning early he was at an agency. He stepoe<l to Ihe desk Just In time to hear a/man saj[ t \That's no job for me!** and go on. , , \I'll take It** Ross agreed.! The clerk smHed. \This job ts drlv- Ing a truck for the construction com¬ pany at MlUburg. The track carries explosives for their dynamiting. For two/days Ross drove rpe track. Saturday 7 night he received days* phj and hurried to street^ paid the grim landlady his two SO Bast rent for r week, and talked for one long hour with the girl he bad vowed aid. Her eyes had Improved a little, and under his quiet determination she agreed to rest during the coming week. \I—I dont see why you are so good to me,** she said hesitatingly at parting. ' Her hand sought his. \But—your voice out of the darkness—|I % know t O, I know!** The next week, the fates s Mined to take a hand In remolding his one event followed another life, and speedily. Hs looked op from his engine to his father's fur-coated figure and hear him say: \Lad one of my engineer friends here spotted you and told mi. It's si- most Christmas. I feel thsjt I have been unjust to yon—but won't you come homer , Ross* mind lingered on the word \Christmas and he said simply, \I will—If I can bring some one with be. No, not my wife, but a girl I hope to make my wife.\ So It came about that one] eventful evening Ross bent over s pale, flower like face and looked Into daijk eyes to which s treat dty physician had brought the blessing of sight; and shr said: , j . - •Dear, what a dream It see^nsl This beautiful home—and you with me! And just a few weeks ago, you and I down—** (> . ' | \In the depths, sweetheart! I began to climb out the moment f saw you that night.** \And you took me with yon—\ the chime of far-away bells broke Into her words with distant music— *1what are those oells?\ she a*ked wondningly. He touched her lips flfb his \Christmas bells, little girl ringing out the old for us—forever if ia till Hat-and-Muff Sets Fashion's Latest By CHERIE NICHOLAS PJBSIGNKRS art as busy as beta •^ creating the most fascinating hat- and-muif ensembles one may ever tope to see. These lltdt sets which tavari- ably Include a muff—for not la dec ades havt wt been privileged to carry sach Intriguing raaffs as the style gram now offers—art mostly made tf velvet winch Is shirred, smocked, ruf¬ fled, puffed and otherwist manipulated to the queen's taste. Ton will bt finding oot of these flat¬ tering sets Just the thing to wear with your winter fur coat Note tht win¬ some velvet hat and muff which tht smartly cloaked young woman to tbt left In the picture Is wearing. Black velvet ribbon shirred la s roll ruch* effect makes the muff, a band of tbt same encircling tbt cajrilke turfcaa which dips down over the right eye exactly as It should to be fashionable. Tbt very charming velvet aat-aad muff set which adds such a conspkv oosly outstanding nott to tht coat tf black broadcloth which tht seated fig ore, below to tht right In tht picture, id wearing, stresses tbt ever chic black-and-white note, tor they say la Paris that tht feeling for Mack aad white Is waning not a whit, which Is tome record whtn one considers the/ begullmtnt of tht delectable com shown oo tht fall and winter color car0. Tht muff In this Instance Js es¬ pecially Interesting In that of thost tricky llttlt affairs jwhteh la supposed to slide op tht arm like t huge cuff when not In actual Sets which feature velvet la rrast, as dots this ona/art also being shown In brown or tn/dark green with beige bandings. Tht Idea Is that taty bt a perfect coloj/match to tht cloth of tht coat or suit which they comple¬ ment. There's siniply no way of telling all tht dcsignful things that art bting dont wit* velvet In the creatioo tf these sets which fashion decrees shall bt worn with tht afternoon salt or tht street coat One sets, ptr example, tht hat with a brim crowned with vel¬ vet all puffed and shirred, tbt treat- t repeated tor tht mutt. Ukt as /• att tht tnstmble will develop mtt a tovrsomti la £hat a shlrrtd aad pufft* velvet atckplect likewise a handbag will baaddtd. / Not Infrequently vtlv* shares tht glory with fur la that tht two form an alllaact In tat suiting of these dec¬ orative tnstmbltft/The black ttlvti hat and stuff wttcb is trimmed. la white tmlat ls> favorite ttwait with, designer*. Ont-«olor schemes ar« worked to nirftctito sach as. for la stance, brown velvet with aUnk trim¬ mings ft/both maff aad btrtt Tht flat ptMS such as caraeai falyak and astrakftaa art especially favored alact .permit of a fabridlkt aaaoJIns at/they combine with tht velvet i Tbt Uttlt sliotjldtr capt mam/ tf Velvet banded mw-mid-raw wUa far la tx<c«fln*ljr t smalt <M <*uarst, la ©r- d»r to tftiMtft Htlc saprtmt It most bt accompanied with a muff similarly worked with far and velvet It Is quits tht thing, too, tf oofs ma* bt all tf far to adorn It with a tog* vtivtt bow to match tht velvet of ont'* hat and oat's aockpitct. *aot Is Ifctrt la a tboatand aad oot ways to whic* velvet Is ptrtDtrshipfrtng with far In tht making of tht ntw hats, scarfs and muffs, and tht sjamt Is to choose tat sot you like best and be the tovy of your neighbors aad roar sister Hob ai embers as they aott tat chic aad ebarm of your apptaraact. Tht bag showa) la tat panel abort, la smart for formal sitemooa tr eve¬ ning. 11 Is tht now Ions; snaps which flu tht hand. It m doted andtr tbt flap with a takm fasttotr. Tbt bow- ksjot and bracelet art of p+arls, for a revived flair for starts Is aottd to tbt realm of JawoJiy. LAVISH WITH FUR Handsome evening wrap of transpar¬ ent velvet trimmed with psach-btlft fox. Tht unique diagonal treatment of tht for bordering Is typical of tht ntw trend. This cost Is thret-quar- ttr length and Is worn over a gown of dull white velvet Grow Wider al Top in Latest F Whether yon havt worrltd narrow abojaMtrs and exhibited by your own let them go unnoticed, la tht ntw fashion dresses wider at th patterning dots so shapes that It Is Im that It ever went II glory king Ut This for feminine bit to believe styto. WALKING DRESSES REVIVE PROMENADE Walking drams art woil to too mining this ssasoa Tht apparently lost pastlmt of tbt promoaadt to bt¬ ing revived and whether tat tevtly street frocks art a canst tr a tymp- / torn It Is not for as to discover. . Wool, of coarse. Is about tht most popalar fabric and Is astd to Ms van- on* wtavoa, with tht corduroy vtav* bting a trtmoadoas favorite. Despite tht appartat simplicity tf these frocks, there Is a vast amovjnt of flat workmanship and detail aboat them and flnt furs art smartly astd to complete tbt schtmt, although tht model mutt never bt ovtrburdtntd with far trimming. Barm/my aad ro> atralnt most of necessity bt tfet key¬ note of tht really flat frock mtaat mostly for outdoor town wear. Modem Clothe* fir Touch of Old Style* , Bran if wt somttlmts cannot/txact* iy date any particular coat tr frock, tatro Is no galaaayiag tht caarai aad gracious tints of tht new aatasssy clothes. And why sHosjlt) It bt aoea*» tary to tag a hlstoricaJ epoch onto a garment that Is tjvalot and ptctsutaojaei with a tooch or fta^rt that It neat- siscont of othtr daftt tt any partlciiar garmtot was defi¬ nitely of tht Stesod amptrej or of ssltV Victorian days It would look 4rtadfally fttt of plact la a sssdara balleHaf. No, tat aow douita art splendidly cp-to- dato. / , / Ptalgnjtrs art far too wise tt go la tor sartorial anachronisms. Thty att Just enough of tht bygone stylos to glvt/a different look and ftti to ultra- dotbss, [umble Corduror Taket Its Place in Fathioiu Among tht rtifotog mtmbtrs of tat velvet family, tht bomblt cordaroy takes Its plact la Parts fashhms, thUi season. This now corduroy Is mort lastroas than tht kind wt art familiar with and la madt of wool tasctad of cotton. Paris likes this material tor skirts to wear with far jackets, tor topcoats trimmed with far, and short all, lor smart afternoon suits and to- ttmblts, Interesting News From World of Fashion gowns art al- ntw drams Baglan aim kimono sleeves havt re¬ turned to/vogue. Black/net evening ways,In demand. hrt details on tht 'most charming. luster Brown collars*art a ntw note fail frocks. To brighten a dark costume thtrt art necklaces constating of several rows of tiny gold or silver beads. Soot of tht BOW far coast art trimmed and Uaod with tweed, aad art rtvtrslblt. Back tht Enfoalt hats or aot, oat cannot btlp oot admit that taty art vastly becoming it eartala tjata of Sweaters will bt very good, tot taaf will bt short—oot too far dowa over the hips. Tht prtttiost havt parltefl at the waistllaa, f