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The Buffalo Times from Buffalo, New York • 19

Publication:
The Buffalo Timesi
Location:
Buffalo, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
19
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

BUFFALO TIME SECOND SECTION SECOND SECTION EVENING Associated Press Dispatches BUFFALO, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 16, 1921 United Press Dispatches I '1 1 I 'lii-t-i 3- 3 1 I Hiiiniiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiii! tin tiMiu 1 1 ivi i uiiiiiui 1 1 tt nt i 'is lit i it it 1 1 i mint i.i,M..i.,.t. A TP tf-t nx i LITTLE BLOND IS FAIRPORTS MAYOR LEADERSHIP SHE ASPIRES TO' SOCIAL wvuuniiMU tUKt" (alv.lM i MAoTEN PARK HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS: I 1 i 4 ''jo' i Some of the clever Btndents attending the "schoolhouse on the hill" gave a very bright performance of "The LaughingCure," yesterday afternoon. Above is a representation of one of the scenes, those appearing in the cast being as follows, left to right Bernard Hammill, Anna Glover, Holland Dutton, Caryl Dutton, Robert Fellows, Ruth Sanford, Gordin Grenolda, Johanna Bueckling, Hudson ur a r-KmrwiT niAmc mapt nri rT ii-iff vni 11 a it. 7 IllV TT 1YL-ULAJ IVliTVl VULiUI UillLilw A V-rw ITfMl, FIND HUES EXPRESS MOODS BETTER THAN MUSIC I BERKELEY, Dec. 16.

Portray- I lngexperime In art' education being undertaken at the Cora WilTIams Inst it trte here. Kecent psychological testa have shown color to have a greater effect II 'vV If t' A i su4 iCi it 1 If it UIspM 'it Jf At ''Ni fip Ji i i -v; '''ml I -1 is --s! ii tfC''J s- I MAYOR AMY KANKONEN, M. D. FAIRPORT, Ohio This town boasts of the only blonde doctor mayor in the world. If there are any others we don't know it.

The doctor-mayor is 23, petite and as "dry as Br er Anderson or "Pussy than nruelc upon the emotions and moods of man, points out Mrs. Wllda Church, Instructor. And so, through the medium of the dance and the tableau, she is training the girl students to "paint' the "emotions that colors express." One pose may Indicate "Joyous pink;" another "azure haze" or sober violet." To some it may sound a bit far fetched. Tet, as Mrs. Church argues the case, thousands study the emotional qualities of music or poetry, so why not color.

A "OhIWrn. like savages, are swayed by color emotions more readily than sophisticated adults," she says. "What foot" Johnson. In fact she was elected mayoron her pledge to oust all bootleggers from this port. She is a graduate of the Women's Medical College of Philadelphia, served in the United States Army medical corps during the great war and has been congratulated on lfer election by Mrs.

Iiarding, wife of the President of the Ji try A 7 .4. Mk flit ip BaiiiVmx United States. '5 sti ft -WK Jb r- V'' -V 11 1 MTDrV WTTDDADV Alir1 ATADW we are doing is to teach our students to associate color with tinman sensa i 5r. id ill AIT rrT? A rVT TTVT TTTUTV iT A TTV 4 tions. OiH.JJLO KJKLLtJ.

HI 11111 AIUITI -r. 4 Pink, for Instance, Is expressed by 1 nrihtiv 1ov: bhie is shown as-ser enity and peace; violet is softness and 7 richness, and so on of colors. "Naure's first lesson to primitive ST man was to respond wfth emotion to color and light," Mrs. Church adds. "Phychologists have revealed many interesting facts about the effect of color on the human being.

It has heen proved that color is far more power-mi than music in Its creative properties and in inducing moods or emotions. "To return to the effect upon primitive man of colors; sunlight meant it- "FEELING BLUE" ISN'T SO BAD, AFTER ALL Happen to bo "feeliiur bine?" Well, here's what your mood looks like when "interpreted by emotions." The warmth and bounty; darkness har so-called prooei of "feeling blue" is, under the code of expressed by serenity and peace not at all like the bored manifold, dangers. Ignorance ordinary conception. The attractive maidens are amonfr the students of the Cora Uiianis institute, Berkeley, where the Interesting color study experiment is being made. and superstition extended this.

Yellow, emblematic of the eun, came to to typify sadness. Green suggests Brown, stand for warmth andlligtit. hope. Poets have helped establish minds. The result is an extensive! these, and similar attributes, In our i symbolism in light and I associated with dying vegetation, came spring, and is interpreted as youth and 4 Chinda Power Paid Her Private Secretary $3,000 Per Month SAN PBDRO.

Out on tne 1road P-clHc. ailin steadily southward. tmaecomxad man or tast I Larry Pldon. On hte tittle 34-foot yawl, the Islander, which he built, be Is sailing his little craft acrom 3.000 miles of perilous aeaa to the fax -away Marquesas in oearch of adventure. Harry Pldgreon ha been dubbed by Id aalLs a public library navigator." He is not a mariner in the accepted ease of the word.

For. until a few years ago. he had never seen a body of water larger than the Platte River back in Nebraska, from whence he hails. Last year Pldgeon sailed from San Francisco to Honolulu in the Islander, unattended, with only a sextant, an ordinary watch and a general knowledge of the stars to guide him. Kor several- months he cruised among the Hawaiian Islands, then set sail for home, bringing with him an intrepid youngster.

Forty-four days later they arrived here, little the worse for wear, though the Islander had battjed her way through four storms. After a few months in the Marquesas he expects to sail for Tahiti, thence to Samoa, and from there anywhere his spirit directs. Pidgeon expects to arrive in the Marquesas not later t-n January 1st. With fair winds his little craft can do ten knots an hour. He has three months' provisions aboard.

WOMEN QUALIFY FOR BAR LONDON. Foar women have Just passed their final examination for tbe bar, but this does not mean that they become barristers immediately. They haTe to finish their coarse, so that they wilt probably be called to tbe bar dorlm? next year. Miaa Ivy Williams of the loner Temple paased the final examination with first class honors and officials consider this to be remarkable. She will be tbe first woman to.

be called to the bar. Behind Throne WE ARE PAINFULLY SHOCKED SECRETARY, SAYS HER CIGARETTES COST LARGE SUM i Widow of "Tin-PIate King" Is MRS. HAROLD FOWLER McCORMICK CHICAGO, HI. There are repeated rumors of friction among: the Me-Cormioks and Dame Gossip states that Mr. and Mrs.

Harold Fowler McCor-mick may separate. Hubby is president of the Harvester Corporation and for the Chicago Opera Company. Son is engaged to Ann Stillman and -will wed after he finishes at Princeton. Daughter Muriel is in Germany preparing to take up a etage career. "WSfe, formerly Edith Rockefeller ajid daughter of the Standard Oil Croesus, has recently returned from eight years' study in Germany expert exponent of psycho-analysis.

'Tis said that she will found schools of this variety in Chicago and 'New York and the very latest rumor along the Lake Shore Drive is that Mrs. McCormick may remove to New York City and try for the title of social leader there. 1 TW'C i. t-f I C-l i Jtfifftr 1 Vfli-JllS': Defendant in Strange Suit and By JAMES W. DEAN NEW YORK.

Dec. 16 "There are no really beautiful women in the movies or on the stage!" Penrhyn Stanlaws told me that. And he ought to know a beautiful woman. He has drawn and painted hundreds of them. "There are no real beauties on the stage or screen because no actresses are ladies." Wham! I jumped out of my chair.

"What do you mean "That a woman of refinement suppresses her emotions. An actress expresses much of herself. If she were a 'perfect lady she could hot be a great actress. Bernhardt, Rejane, none of the great actresses, were 'perfect ladies'." Stanlaws is now a photoplay director. His last picture was an adaptation of Barrie's "The Little Minister," with Betty Compson, known as a screen beauty, in the leading role.

Former Employe Alleges She Harry Pldgoon and his 34-foot boat Islander on whicli be is for second Broke Her Contract with Him. time crossing the Pacific Ocean. CHICAGO EXPERIMENTS WITH HER CHILDREN IN THE SCHOOLS NEW YORK. Iee. 16.

Mrs. Daniel G. Reid. former wife Of the Tinptate Want a Perfect Baby? Listen to Mrs. House She Has One! smoked -cigarettes that cost $60 every few weeks, Is Is asserted in an affidavit in a suit against her brought bv Philin Rosenberg.

1 Mrs. Reid on ADril 5... 1919. employed him as her confidential secretary to manage and conduct her business, property and af f- fairs -for the term of lone year. She agreed to pay him $3,000 a month.

i Ma Reid obtained her divorce from School Experts Experiment BY HOY GIBBONS. QHICAGO, Dec. 16. Scientists here are dabbling in a form of magic that would put medieval alchemists to shame. They're trying to turn backward, neurasthenic, subnormal even idiotic children into geniuses! Kvery day a long line of children shuffles up the stairs to the board of Daniel G.

Reid last year. She was formerly Miss Margaret M. Carrere. an actress, known on the stage as Mabel Carrier. I Rosenberg is suing Mi's.

Jenie Rosen 4 33JMCHFS INCHES Hunting Wills of Freedom Signers PHILADELPHIA. Copies of the wills of five of the patriots who affixed their vignatures to the parchment which made the 13 original States an independent nation, are beins sought 'bore by the Society of the Descendants of the Signers of the Declaration of Independence. Wills of 38 of the signers are now in the collection of the society, nine signers died inestate and wills of four were either destroyed in fires or sometime during the Civil War, leaving five still minsing. The live men whose wills are soiijrht are: Samuel Chase. Maryland; George Wythe.

Vir-einia; WHliam North Carolina; William South Carolina, and George Walton, Georgia. 1 accuno'cwFrT ORCUrtoTABOCrieH 18 INCHES berg. Samuel S. Winter, or No. 261 Broadway, appeared for the plaintiff yesterday when the case was argued in Supreme Court, Special Term, Part 1.

A bill of particulars preparatory to the trial on December 22d was drawn up in which the cigarettes were itemized among various other expenses paid out by Mrs. Rosenburg for Mrs. Reid. Rosenberg alleges Mrs. Reid broke their contract, which was an education research laboratory.

Many are dull in appearance, many deformed, most of them ill-clad, all of them mentally defective. A white-coated, physician gives them a preparation made of sheep glands. Then they shuffle back to the classroom. Scientists Are Watching Hesults. v- The eyes of the scientific world are fixed on that daily experiment.

Felts originators say it will teach medicine how i oral without notice or right on May 11. 1919. and'when she euii owed TOKIO Crown Prince Hlrohito, re gent of Japan. NOW AN ORPHAN SHORTAGE him $3,383. Cheapen Flats to Viscount Suteml Chinda, the poweit behind the throne! Count Chinda's position as adviser to Enlarge Families PARIS.

The Chamber of Deputies A Jjm.L DR. FRANK. G. BRUNER. WHO'S TRYING TO MAKE IDOTIC CHIii-DREN OF CHICAGO INTO GEN.

IUSE3. is considering a bill designed to relieve' the severe housing srhortaKe, with the unique provision of "the bigger the familv the cheaper the rent." NEW YORK There 's an acute shortage in children and Orphans Preferred are climbing to new high levels on the local exchange. The Children's Aid Society, largest adoption society in the world, says so. It can't find enough children to fill adoption demands. "Most requests come from Middle "Western States," said an official.

"Folks out there don't figure so closely on expense of food and some families adopt two or three at a time." To restore mental health to the subnormal To give every one a perfect mental machine And even to cure Insanity! "We're just in the first stages of the limitless possibilities of this field." says Dr. Frank. G. Bruner, board of education physician. "What is a mentally subnormal Individual? I believe he's only a neurasthenic whose nervous system has become pitched so 'high that It has passed the point of control- "Now all geniuses are neurasthenics.

The boundary line between the genius and the lunatic is vague. vj Buried Genius i May Assert Self. 1 "It by gland treatment in which have faith we can cut down the nerv- VIRCIXIA LKK HOCSl Ml Vho-u oct Me the regent will equal in importance and influence that of the premier. Count Chinda is 65, well versed in foreign affairs and an experienced, diplomat. He was graduated from an! American university when he was 25 entered the Japanese foreign office alid made quick progress in foreign diplo macy.

He became minister to Brazil and then to Russia. In recognition 'of his special services he was raised to the peerage. In the last 13 he aeted as ambassador to Germany, to the United States and to Great Britain. -i The new regent is 20. At the time of his tour of Europe recently rumor had it that he was being prepared for the step whicli has just toeen made.

The bill provides for the construction of 500.000 cheap flats by the government to-be completed within ten years. The' funds of seven billion francs neceswary for the construction wouid be raided by a loan. In leasing the flats, preference would given to working men with, large tmviiics and the rent would -bo reduc-sl in proportion to the number of 'hildren. According to the tentative Man. a family with three children vouid nav ah.Vut half the rent exact ous pitch of the insane and the feebleminded, who can say that the buried genius that gave rise to their eccentricities will not assert itself?" Dr.

Bruner believes every montai disorder arises from an oversupply or undersupply In the glands of the neck and head. So, to restore reasoning power, he's giving children the pituitary glands of sheep. An to cure sluggish mentality, thyroid extract. And, to stimulate growth of a dwarfed mentality, pineal tablets. PERFECT B-BY.

Lee House. 25 months old. whom 300 experts have adjudged a perfect baby. Virginia and her mother and father live on a farm at Leonidas. near hen-.

When a baby show was announced Mr. and Mrs. House cranked up th flivver and brought Virginia to town And right there the city babies KALAMAZOO, Mich. If you want your baby to be perfect Bring it up on the farm. Let it romp outdoors as much as it pleaaea Give it animal playmates.

Give it plenty of fresh air and fresh mill- rhi.lia IT chances at winning the prizu dropped out of sisbU i ed from family with only on chiid. That 3 tbe aavic-e ot liouie. She's the mother of Irginx.

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About The Buffalo Times Archive

Pages Available:
311,707
Years Available:
1883-1939