{ title: 'Lackawanna herald. (Lackawanna, N.Y.) 193?-19??, November 30, 1933, 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/sn95071107/1933-11-30/ed-1/seq-4/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn95071107/1933-11-30/ed-1/seq-4.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn95071107/1933-11-30/ed-1/seq-4/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn95071107/1933-11-30/ed-1/seq-4/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
Image provided by: Lackawanna Public Library
yv'.-5-.-.-.~s-.—_;-.-,-.~ .q~g-w-, .. ,.., _,_V,, , _ _ _ . V ‘ ‘ . t. ._« - __ » ,,.n -V..‘.... H, .¢‘..,. ‘mac -,~~-.-u-2 :..w,/ ‘ V \ . . '_',‘I4- . “\-' ~- ~ 4\ -. ~ ,.. .. _ N _ ' “4\'. ~\f\I“:}2':z*;‘, ' — . ~''- ~»-mv ‘« ~‘ 2w.‘ 2- . 2: *.;*/1.2; \.'~ I-\.' 3., ‘U ’.l'\‘, Q Ei my ‘. vi-,'.’?>’.x-. Q The Lackawalma Herald PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY AT WIND AT ALTITUDE; OVER FORTY MILES ;~H}U.M’A=NfS ;y-Aoa_naTLc».s-suéei 125} ELECTRIC AVENUE‘ ILACKAWAN-N|A, Y. '$~1.=‘50:a Yearj Following me vreportsi or =exiJlorerI~ oi’ the upper atmosphere, -eclentistl‘ pulnted a -picture of it as a ;plac‘id’=res- glen undisturbed by winds or current! or any sort. ‘but possessing ‘a uniform -and very -low temperature. But -from-I -Fairbanks, mneku. comes a dispatch‘ suiuxnurizing the ‘United’ ‘States ,n_avy'I': recent studies ‘in polar regions and these’ studies. according to in vnnvaly scientist, tend to disprove some’ ings. Tennyson sings 0! ‘“»the iucent in-‘ -terspaces. where never breathe: a wind, ‘nor moves a cloud. or fall: the least yvhite star or snow.\ and this‘ description has been thought to in the .stratosphere. But the naval ncien-g «tists are sure that winds do“bl,ow at altitudes greater thnn forty miles and that ihoth the -magnetic needle and; ‘auroral dlsplnys respond to those‘, winds. , EFM-, LEYDA, Pu‘}:l'i\.‘1c1-“ Lie :a Month ;by Carrier Editor\ FRED E. LEYDA, Business Manager A—%B=BOT’I‘ 1 -181- TWO PHONES ABBOTP 23577‘ ‘Cl.A3SSIIF-IED ADVE'R';I‘I'SI‘NG FIVE CENTS -A LIN'E—M7INIMU-M‘ 25¢ ‘OFFICIAL PAP-ER '0F‘TH‘E CITY OF LACKAWANNA A CHANGE FOR ‘THE BETTER Text: “Olin «unto ‘God ||||¢|¢Il_Ml'l-\\‘ PICIIIII. I314. In a -recent address, Dr. S, S. Huebner, Dean of the A‘mIar'ican; College of Life Underwriters, spoke of the remarkable broadening} of ‘life inrsurnce services that has ‘taken: place in the past fifteen: years. From a business issuing protection principally against one‘ poten.tia1>ity—d‘ea~th of the waige ear-ner——it has developed into an: ivnst~i-tution covering almost every human ex 1 ‘ RA-'1‘\I'I‘UDE‘torfa'vorsnnd bleak lugs rrecelved is the warrant for ‘blessings and favors yet -to- come. In- our individual and corporate Ilte ‘nothing is more disheartening -or disappointing ‘than «lug:-ntltude. It was ’ ‘this, that made King Lear cry out: \How sharper than n-serpents tooth Apart from llts vabstrnct 'sc’lent1‘nc Interest the practical [Importance of the report -he that it ’lndl'cntes that ‘ltrntosphez!l’c winds area factor in weather coisditions ‘In the elower .at~ mospherc. 'l!he average altitude of the ntrnmsphere. or Isothermal zlayer. ll .-greatest over the equator -and -least over the -poles. wh1ch is doubtless the reason why the government has car- ried on these studies in mud near the Arctic ,zone.~,-1.0: Angeles Tlmea, The most remarkable phase of this is in the change _of em-; phasis fronn the “death” side of a policy to the benefltspvvhich thleu-3 the ‘policyholder himsel-f receives from life insurance. Llztle cover-* age remains the \best of all possible protections for one-’s depen- d'ents—=but -it does a hundred other things which are ‘equally 1m-I‘ poortant. It is an investment—e-and no investment is safer or more genuinely profitable so far as the average man; is concerned. It is a means 0-f seiidi-ng one’s ‘children to school. It is an instrument for creating estates. Perhaps most vital of all, it makes possible the prevention of —proverty-stricken old age £01‘ oneself, by pur-i chasing a policy of the annuity type during the years when one’s earning power is at its ‘lieigtht. It is ‘to ‘have n thankless chlldl\ Failure to acknowledge gifts and ‘blessings conferred-not only chills the ‘heart '01’ the benefactor, but works to the hurt or -the bene To [be thankful for favors ‘big or ‘little is a mark of refinement and an evidence of good ‘breeding, We have often noted that those who are the quickest to respond to a fnvor-conferred are those who -have the finest feelings. An ex- pression of cordial and deep \apprecia- tion is like oil that viubrlcntes the ma- chinery of life. Like the gift of mercy, \it blesses him who giveswnnd him who takes.\ To remember daily the ‘gifts that God bestows upon us. serves to minke u more conscious of the real. values of ‘life. The mere expression in prayer of gratitude deepens in ‘us not only our sense of dependence -upon God, but gives us a finer sense of our own place of-usefulnes in the scheme of life. SHORT AN D. SN-AVPPY “Since Wh'cn {Has He Been Workin'?M\ “He Ain't. Just Lugzin' Washin' Home fer Hls Mlssus T'do1l\ Thousands of life insumnee policies are today being written for credit pu~i'por_:es~. They are being written to protect business interests, and to guard against financial reverses. Group insur- ance has become £1 mighty ally in protecting the interests of the worki-xig people. And so -it goes thi'ough along list of which each item is definitely an. achievement for a business that is of out-. standing importance to the public welfare. Gnnoelug can be romantic even on an irrigation canal. Usually ‘people of -the least Judgment \_§iYe the ‘most advice. HAVE FALSE‘ NOSES AND FINGER NAILS \Tali any that your husband doésn't ‘buy you. any clothc-s?” “No. judge. ‘I! my tongue were (-out- vd It would have to the ‘at my own ex- »pense.\ Noluupport Mos: enthusiasm is ‘for something that isn't worth while. Much has been suld for many fiienrs of the New Womnn. Now ‘at Inst we are to have her, -If the heunt_v speclnl lsts nre to he trusted. It will he pus- slhle. promlnes -the -Mxllaulelphla In qulrer. for nny member 0! the sex ‘to be completely made ‘over. There have Iwen. aids to beauty hlth- evto; Hamlet denounced ‘them. But the new designs. ll’ we may call them so. fnr surpass the old. The famlllnr rouge and l‘_nstlck play 1 small part in the program. Dyelng the hnlr ls. of course, no novelty. But more dlstlnct transforma- tlons are in prospect. Mere tlnted nulls wlll go out. In their place we\ are to have detachable ‘nails. whlch can be “lald on.\ like water. They are shaped nnd - lllre the real srtlcle _ln any. deslred color. Perfect half-moons are one Important feature. It Is explained that the typlst can thus avoid the wear and tenr to which her natural nnlls are subjected; and that long ones can be worn to match long gowns. Demountnble eyelashes. lips. and noses are to be among the secrets of tl3e__rhondolr. Bellnds wlll now sally forth wlth more charms than ever were descrlbed In “The Rape of the Lock.\ Gold-plated nose shspers wlll be sold for only I small sum; no pos- slbly dls surglcsl operation In necessary. The removable llps are made of s llexlblo composition whlch can be applied over the real llpl. There sre ear tacks made of an In- vlslble composltlon. What wlll be left of the orlglnsl girl? \When as In slllts my Julia goes,\ her fond swnln wlll hsrdly know her.--Literary Dlzest. ‘Shining In soclets may require too much of a -man's vtlme. Everyone has had some home llfe. nnduhe Judges it all by that. Save the peunles—but thatll not how vnllllluiluitel are made. swelled head and swollen walstllne often appear at the some time. Clvlllzatlon ought to become less ind leu -noisy, but doe: It‘! Not so hard to keep boy! on the farm. Where [else chn they go? If a man lIn't handsome he‘: got to look dlltlngulshed. But how‘! Quiel|ySVi!cII‘ A trump who was quoting Shrike- speare was .t,old: “In this house we sure adln.-rents of Bacon.\ when n nntion is cnlled..os we are, to recognize a day oi‘ -thanksgiving, it serves to emphasize our solidarity and the richness of our common heritage. and at the came time brings vividly before us our common dependenceupon him who is the giver of every good and perfect gift. It was the Roman Emperor Constantine who sold to the sculptor who was carving his “I wish you to curve the figure kneel- ing, in the attitude of prayer, for it was iron; that posture I rose to grant- neos.\ As individuals or as a people times more than he ever gave the red man, but the white American has but one Tiianksglving a year. If the red man with his limitations was able to produce his great civilization with but nature's ‘book and the sky as his guide, what can the white man not do with his inheritance .and the wis- dom ot ages through the printed page: of his ideals and experiences? “Faith will move mountains in America today as in days gone ‘by, it we place our feet on the sacred soil Cillgankagiuing “Me, too. mum. if you'll fry I little.\ E Treatment \He\: un old lhuue of mine.\ “Yeah, he ought to be extinguished.\ - Kansas City Star. By Katherine Edelman ETH ER of all, Thy name we Mus. For all good things That we possess. For dreams and Inopu That Illa soul, For struggling toward Some shining goal; F or every linls Joy that clings Around lilo’: simple Ilamcy things. Many a beautifu! library In only looked at and pointed It by ‘the owner. You may share a shlpwreck wlth a man and still not like him very well. Living in I Bun! Herr Leopold Curl l.uu7.._ and Frau, . Florhm Lnuz have Ilved In n. burrel -for-seven years. -have taken ll through .3 '22 countries. and have ncqulred I - «laughter. The Luuzc-I devldgd to trnv- ; el In 1925. They bought a large’ wlne lmrn-l. fastened hunks lnslde. ‘bought _:j a donkey. and started. The donkeyrg pulled the barrel. The Lnuzes walked. They say that they have trumped: through most of Europe. Turkey. 5 Syrla. Palestine and Egyjpt. some get ahead through caution. and some do It by exactly the op- poslte. Llve In the country where people Ire scarce and they are glad to talk to you. our thoughts are bad company sometimes-not at for us to 18800!- lte with. Father of all, Our praiu we and, To Thee, our but And mm: Friend. We blen Thee [or The kindly yield 0! urgtching plain, 0/ wood and And be our portion Great or small, We love and ghoul: you For it all. A man might be Able) _t9_' lmltgte 1 dog‘: bark so well. that ho.-could ucnre away, burglar: wllln It. ' A woman will laugh to he ‘pollte. It In well to keep that In mlnd In tell- ing I “funny anecdote.” The good old days. uh. they were when we were young; and they were the good old (young) dayu. ‘I'll: More Important Quul \You sometime: a pearl |n'In oyster stew.\ remarked the wnlter g blensantly. = “Hnh.\ granted the customer. “I'll =2 looking for oysters.\ Pnrent—l am giving my daughter I 5250.000 dowry. What can you 311: In enhance? Sul!or—A receipt. (C). 1931, Vanni Nuunpoc Ulla: Thu white American Han But On Thanksgiving I Ynr. Latent may mean the some to the laymen as any other gerprlnts, but they have been a source of worry to criminal investigators be- cause they are the prints left by the oily matter and perspiration from the and are usually indistinct. Opinions diifer as to the length of time that a latent print will, remain on the surface or the object touched. as at- mospheric conditions aifect it to —a cer- tain extent. New methods have helped the Department of Justice solve sev- eral major crimes through latent tin- gerprints. They lnciude -the use of ultra-violet rays and dragon's blood .poWdei' (iineiy ground .resin.ot the. rate tun palm). For the ordinary print, powders oi! lampblaclt. charcoal. alumi- num or bronze may be used with suc- cess. The Flynn Knullng, In tho Mmudo ot Prayor. me . ~(<?e\g‘§S0 \\“ of the red man and, unafraid, cele- brnte the true American spirit of Tlmnkqgiving. To be a tolerant, nema- borly American, live the Thanksgiving spirit or the red American In daily thinking and living.\ Doctor Bates says. we never have a truer consciousness of our corporate life and our intimate interrelationships than when we kneel to acknowledge the gifts and blessings that we commonly receive. Thus, Thanksgiving day, rightly interpreted, places fresh emphasis not only upon the source of all our blessings, but compels us to recognize the closeness of the tie that binds us together in a great fellowship. It is the family day of the nation. It reminds us that we are bound together \for better or worse, for richer or poorer,\ and that what aifects one section for good or ill affects all. It is a demonstrable fact that noth- ing brings us closer together in a great fellowship than a spirit of thankful- ness. When we are over-self-con and self-assured; when, in the lan- guage of the ancient Word, we declare, \My power and the might of mine hand hath gotten me this wealth.\ we lose our sense of interdependence one with another and the deeper conscious- ness of our common dependence upon God. How frequently In households where the patrimony is dispensed to the children do we and that it creates cleavages and the loss of mutual re- spect and affection. Again, how fre- quently in households where adversity and misfortune have come do we dis- cover the knitting of the ties of kin- ship and the evidence of deepened af- fection. America on this 'l‘iIanksgiv- ting’ day must acknowledge with grati- tude snother year of unprecedented blessings. Widely scattered as our peoples are. diverse as are their in- terests, they are the shnrers of a com- mon bounty. Sureiy at such a time and under such conditions it is lit- ting that we should unite to \offer ‘unto God thanksgiving.” ‘The very act of corporate ‘thankfulness tends to break down that which all too, fre- quently‘ divides as into groups and clssses: it effaces distinctions and makes of the nation itself one great family. Thus the spirit of thankful- ness becomes indispensable to our security, our peace and prosperity. We may' worship at different altars, we may express our devotions in ways familiar to us, we may have fellow- ships that have grown dear and help- ful to us, but on our national Thanks- giving day we bow‘ as one people be fore the \Giver of every good and per- fect gift\ snd with ‘humility recognize‘ his bounty and our common dependence upon his goodness. EHIIEIEE Marriage may be a lottery. but lo In life. A watch dog over-estlmntes hls re- upoullhlllty. , One wants to llve long to see what’) going to happen. If one ls too optlmlstlc, the world grown tired of mm. A man doesn't mind belng banged by his wife-—lf he Isn't. A man who was afraid to make on enemy never got anywhere, I-‘lowers wlll grow as well‘ If your rock garden la mode of brlck. Ignorant people may live longer than others because they worry less. Get ell the “aophlgtlcatlon\ possible and you won't enjoy nnythlnz. A mousetrap can be perfected but II there ever I perfect rat trap? Very old people are asked to spend ‘too much tlme explnlnlng It. Resentment of being told what you uhan't do will alwny: wreck aumptum-y lnwl. ‘K ‘ I!‘ .\IC~l-}l\l‘ the Fourth of July E 'i.‘ln1nl:sgivlng is the most dis- tinctively American oil all our natlunui liolldays. it has not always heen held so late in the year, nor has it always been held everywhere at the same time. Originating in New Eng- land. it was not observed throughout the country until after the Civil war, when the i’resideuts, as well as the governors of states, began to Issue 'l‘imnksgi\'iug proclamations. Thus it has become a symbol of national unity. 'l‘he custom of celebrating a Thanks- giving day did not originate with the I’|l;,'l‘llIlS, though they introduced it into this country. For seven (lays when the harvest was over the He- brews of the Old Testatnent held their Feast of 'i‘nheraaeles. It sort of camp- Im: out time in memory of their period oi‘ wandering in the wilderness. In (‘it-toher the Greeks celebrated at Athens their “'1‘hesmophorln,\ in hon- or at‘ I):-meter, the goddess of agricul- ture. It was a festival that began with religious rites performed by married wuuu-n only. and that ended with 9. general banquet and dancing. On Oc- tober 4 the Romans kept a similar fel- tival that they called \Cerealla\ in honor of Ceres, their goddess of the hm-vest. indeed there is in almost every -European nation a tradition of a feast to mark the end of the garner- ing or the crops’. in Old England’ it was \'l”€(l “Harvest Home\ and came do“! from the Snxoniperiod; In Scot- lnn-t it was “Kern\—a word that men ~: the last ‘sheaf. The Dutch of Le_\:- l. where the Pilgrims spent ten yea -- before they came to New Eng- land .-vlehrated on Octolier 3 every ye.-n .. festival to give thanks for their «leiiu,-r,v from the Spaniards in 1574- a day that corresponds to our Armis- Lire «lay. in the Hesunliuavian churches a special Sunday is de.<:i;:nated every an as ’i‘lmni::;,i\-lag day.--Yuuth's ('ompaniun. Since it is the chrysanthemum len- son—thls hardy defying the trost—the chrysunthemuzn II the Thanksgiving That in quite as lt should be. Thanksgiving‘ ll I hardy holiday as well’ asa hearty one. It spans the whole distance between the American of the Seventeenth cen- tury who held (in New England) all sport on ungodly pastime. and the American of the Twentieth century who makes a god of sport. That shows how truly and abidingly Amer- ican a holiday is this one, which is so rarely |)riy'ileé'ed that the President of the Iicpublic has to pay it the trib- ute ot an annual olllclal proclamation. Thanksgiving Chrysanthemum “Aren't you the boy who applied for the position I week ago?\ \Yes slr.\ “And didn't I say that I wanted an older boy?\ \Yes air; that’: Why I'm here now.\ —'1‘oronto Globe. Father-There II always room It the top. Man II the only nnlmul able to hush; and he ought to make tho molt of It. Arthur-—l'es, but when you get there you are liable to get thumped by an ulrshIp.—-Brooklyn Eagle. somebody Inn you can't ovex-tn the patience of the taxpayer. You're téllln; Ill. 2 Two-pant sum have their wine, but two-vent mm could heip divide the [run Ipotl. Flu-at Observer-.-Wren’: head II II good as new. ' Second Ditto—-Ought to bc—ho'a never used It.—-Kansas City Star. You can admire a plain, honest gen- tlemanly mun very much, even though he doesn't look Iwell. Soon as people and a man In con- ceited, they begin to ‘ him. He seldom hears the truth. “Pocket edition: or -books are very handy.\ remarked the book’ worm. “But not as handy an the -ordinary pocketbook,-\ -retorted ihe family man. Obviously, the ldtelt and when thing a nation can do in never to let any other nation own It. Pleasures of intellect are the great- er: but they can’: he acquired. Yon dther enlov 9l'_!oj1 dun‘! mm Mosquito-—why m yon nuk- lng Inch 3 fun? second Mosquito — Whoopee. I pmed the screen test! The nebnllum theory arose year: ago when light from distant nebuias was found to contain certain lines of color not produced by any chemical element known on earth, These mys- .t_e:-ions lines were supposed to indicate the existence in distant stars of an nn- known r.-hemicni called “nebuilum.\ This nebuiium rims now, vsnlshed from the star in which the lines were 1or- meriy observed, thus con ! the theory of some astronomer: and chem- iota that the nebnlinm never reel!) ex-,« lllllllio. _ No HI! 1’eache,r--Where are elephant uln- Illy found? Bov—Pleue, air, they're so bl; they aren't usually lost Burner’-1: the ddctor treating your sister for nervoumeu?’ 0quld—-Oh, an. no. Ihcfg run than tohn plyclo-sounds __ , __ 7 ...._. , - ',’,;‘f3 .‘ ,'$‘ ,7.