Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

Sun-Journal from Lewiston, Maine • 4

Publication:
Sun-Journali
Location:
Lewiston, Maine
Issue Date:
Page:
4
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

A'- LEWISTUN bvmuiis JUUKNAL FRIDAY MAY 27 927 FONTAINE FOX- taOTf IHIWIH'H w- 1 1 Just On Common Themes I IHIH (STATE CHAT i I1M a On A -The skipper was uad Oswald mis pet-vAjodpeckeb Busv SNATCMIMO THE MATS OP TUOS6 UAVE DESERTED THE CAR PoR BlCVCUES tmiutno 1MT lalml Matin- lti im at tfcs Pan Ofltt at ImiI Act at Harck im Lewiston Fri -May 27 1927 maiEU or associated pmi Tfca AaaadatcS la anlnlnlr SIM ta tfca aaa far pabllcatlaa at al acwa fiatltH ta It ar aai atfcer-wlaa cvadltad la ffcla aaaer aa alaa tfca laaal atm pabltsfcsS therein All rigfcta at sepafclleetlea at apcdal tfcaiala ara alaa reserved Tfca Jaaraal aaaaaiaa aa laai fcaepeaelfclllty fac ttimapklta) aa ta alttrthaaiat fcat will rcprlat that part at aap atmtl scat cat It afcM tppatapfclcal am meemra AdverHeete will plaaaa setter tfca Advertising Mssager praaiptlp at aar ap ncenr Number One They said it was six miles in from Indian Fond (Maine Central R) station to-Dead Stream Pond camps it is just as level' as a said Mr Pottle I went with two men Pottle and Bliss may as 'well tell the truth about it to begin with for probably my enemies will discover it anyway and if ever I'run for office it will be told Mr Pottle went on ahead and left Bliss and me to struggle along ahead of the tote team a buckboard filled with luggage and passengers It was hot and sticky the black flies flew as hawks and large eight-tube musquitoes flew low seeking insects as a storm portended even tbo the day was hot andsunshiny They had long: beaks and they pried Bliss open In many places Now I have related the very worst for I wish that trip had been 10 miles instead of six afoot in the wilderness on a slushy road under a beating sun We did so enjoy the brooks running water and springs Black-flies and mosquitoes slippery roads sudden recurrence of small mountains about twenty feet tall pedestrians passing us saying Ha! in deep scorn rumbling of the buckboard adown the sylvan windings and finally its passing of us with remarks as we lay on bosky declivities in deep shade toying with the eager fly not one of these concerns us now we arrived and we drank deep of every brook laved our feet in the pellucid mountain brook breaking the record for all-stop runs four hours Beven miles Ask Bliss tell you We carried a bottle of that inspiring brook water into the camp Iiearlataa Emlai Jaaraal aa aala la Haa Yark City at aawa ataai 9 Cer Btfc Ara aaA AM street daily arasciupnoN rates PAYABLE IB ADTAKCE BY GABBIER baa pear BTAO Bis aaatfca A Tfcraa laaatfca 171 tfc alS BY MAIL Baa paac BBAO Bis BMBtfcr ABB tfca IM LBB jS Oaa Mentis a pi Bp bmII ta Aap AAAraaa OatalAa A Malaa aa Hear Baapafclra Oaa paac i TAt Tfca Lcwfataa Jaaraal Batardap Iti aAltlaa fcp Hall la Mala aaA Mampaklra BUB par paar Ta aap aA- dense aatalda at Malaa aai Kcw i liBtiklri SBM a pear 1 5 Abara aatca applicable ta tfca Galt- I aA States Its Territories aa lalaaA acrosi the seas or paint pictures of aspiration and longing In dark caves for the glorification of beauty ONE OF T1IE HAZARDS ot the acajlon season is the danger of ty- in Gcn- eral of the United States Tublic Health Service has just isSued a-let-ter sdv-isinFTSeHh officials resort owneys and others that unusual care should he exercised In regard to sanitation conditions and the examination of food-handlers during the coming months Such precautions should aid In checking the spread of germs by carriers" But they might be only partially effective if other and sometimes negleeted source of infection la overlooked When Dr Wilmer Krusen Director of Public Health reported on the typhoid situation In Philadelphia in 19g he stated that motorists frequently contracted the disease by drinking Impure watcMn communities where precautions were nonexistent or Inadequate The roadside spring or well may also be a menace Motorist who guard against infection from such aoureea not only protect their own health but aid city and State health officials In combating the spread of typhoid We may say that Maine Is practl cally immune a 'to typhoid But these rules are good none the less Drink good water THE PHILADELPHIA PUBLIC Ledger calls Lindbergh flying ambassador" That Is tha best thing that has been we wish we had said it first And If that boy only keeps his pace keeps modest Woman and fool will try to turn his head They will patronise and Hobsonise him willingly Keep your own goat Kid WE READ that ths Misaiaalppl floods ar falling' Flows are returning to ths fields As Nlls-flood enriches Egypt's soil so we pray may ths silt from up along partially repay those souther- farmers Replanted fields far up ths Mississippi a re now green with crop Louisiana to still fighting ths waters with the Atchafsyala country at Its worst But they know hoW to fight this waste in Louisiana and all will yet be well IT MAT BE that France will take America more kindly to her heart as a result of ths Lindbergh flight i kindly heart that of France even If emotionally variant and given to mobs and revolutions Maybe it may see In this new episode of neighborhood and brotherhood the very notion that Edmond Rostand poet auggesta In hla fine poem truly majestic in some i specU that wag written at the field of Le Bourget when Captain Lindbergh landed the laat five verses of which go a follows being based on Allen Beegera great verses 1 have a rendezvous with ix Dost know who 1st you hold in check Death distance and ths solitude? Lost know who caused you to airlv With such exactitude? IN NEWS In Dead Stream camps we were welcomed by'Doc Far-quhar and Dave Farr of Lawrence Mass A1 Sweeney the woodpecker expert of Lewiston and Mr Pottle who was fishing already Dead Stream Pond Camps are run by Elias Vaughan and wife of Bingham Me Dead Stream Pond and their neighboring ponds Horseshoe Round and Island ponds may be found on the map in Chase Stream township Somerset County in Kennebec waters taking in from Indian Pond Station on the Kineo Branch of the Maine Central railroad Nobody ever went to Dead Stream Pond except for fishing or hunting or lumbering It is Hollingsworth and Whitney country They drive down the East Branch of the Kennebec It has been cut over considerably But the fish are all there relatively speaking Doc Farquhar of Lawrence Mass a celebrated Rotarian songleader dentist and throat-specialist was mentioned as being there when we arrived He has made this his fishing ground for years along with Pottle and Carr and Bill Carrigan Bill is not there this year hut his talkative memory is green He usually began and ended his loquacity it is said by agreeing with Doc Doc is Scotch He wastes nothing but words TwsTooNERVILLE "TRoLLEV that meets all Sunlit Trails with Maine Folks Alice Frost Lord Journal Wayfarer i Tickets Please 'Don't you wish you was a boy again Able?" "Sure Then I would travel half Smith's Weekly Seme Thing Dick you think Betty al ways ha a touch-me-not air abo her Jack Well It'e always a cane o' fresh paint Wasted Money Is Sandy ao down mouth?" went to the expense of a cors card zt the game and neither side Say It With Rowers told me he was going to propose In an odd way so he sent me a a poppy" cute! And how did you answer him?" a like manner I sent him some Boston Transcript 1987 MihIH Kind' old lady rtn little And how old Is your baby dear? Little girl (modern) 11 old at all He's this year's London Answers A Little Foolish you think he's crazy getting engaged?" "No not Just Dead Stream Pond Camps are on the edge of the water When the pond is high as now the pond comes almost up to the door-steps It is a deep-woods pond about a third as large as Lake Auburn trees bold shores deep shadows silences as large as mountains and echoes like those of the oracles at Delphi Maybe you have dreamed of a deep-woods pond where the forests fairly swept all around where the morning air throbbed with silence where the evening stars sank deep into limpid waters and the waters glowed where moonrise and sunset are from the tops of tall trees where nobody comes and nobody goes and where the fish fairly leap and gambol in excited joy at sight of a fly and a hook If you have dreamed of such flysium it is here If yotr have wondered where you might rest your head heart liver lungs lights and legs it is here for you may almost catch a string of trout out of yeur bedroom window If you have wanted for ah! so long so long a place where the rain makes melodies on log-cabin roofs where spring water is in the room by faucet where they have these little iron box stoves that roar up the chimney when the nights are chilly and the rain is noisy where they have kerosene lamps soft to the eyes where they have those wide open spaces where men are as they please and women wear what they please it is here A I am not saying It is a new Statler or a new or a new -Ritsr it-is-nofa THif ftTi-ftld-f nnhiftnnd camp A CHRONICLE but no matter There lived nai matter A man whose but then need not that declare wall hq had been borji And ao ht waa alive His age I details Was aomethlnsty and live He how mans years I truly can't decide Bilt this one fact Ha until he died I have averred But cannot prove twaa so But that ho was Interred At any rats I know fancy ha'd a son I hear he had a wife: Perhaps he'd tnore than one I know not on my life! But whether he was rich Or whether he was poor Or or which I cannot cay rm sure I cant recan hla name Or what he used to do: But then well such to serve so and you And that Is why I thus About this unknown man Would lain create a tubs To rescue If I can Rom dark oblivion's blow Soma record of his lot But ah! I -do not know where or what MORAL this brief pedigree A moral we should But what It ought to Has quite escaped my mind Anonymous Out of the 80000 simplified word tha dictionaries recognise 13 spellings Ths thru altho tho thruout thoro thorofars thoroly which wen adopted whan simplified spaUIng first began to he advocated an In tha list Tho other words an tha simpler forms of program catalog decalog pedagogy and prolog Tha ferry between Gnat Worka and Bradley on the Penobscot Inaugurated In 1144 has been abolished by vote of the county commissioners following a long hearing The Bradley selectmen said that while then seemed to be need of a ferry then the town did not can to go to any expense of maintenance The same action was taken by the city ot Old Town of which Great Works to a part It to understood however that a petition for establishing a new ferry wlU be presented Alewivea an arriving and hundreds of bushels an swimming past ths famous town dam at Warren all unmolested becauee the town fathers haven't been able to get a bid from some fish dealen for the catch! A few yean ago tha people of the town voted to do tho harvesting themselves with the proceeds of tho sal going toward ths annual town budget The Industry furnished one of the town's beat sources of Income Roads new schools and other improvements have been pnvlded by the alewivea But this year ths bottom dropped out Fish an still unsold and neta lying idle! Leonard Merrill of Gardiner one of the city's prominent citizens and a veteran of the Civil War served In the Second Maine Cavalry enlisting In 1868 at Augusta Two of hla brothers Enoch and Melville wen In the same company Other broth-en In the war wen Ruel In the Third Maine Florentius In the Fourteenth Maine and James In the First Maine After the war Leonard enlisted in the Ordinance Department and served five years at Augusta at ths Kennebec AneqaL Mpst of hla war service was In ths Mississippi Valley In Florida and -In Alabama While It waa not his lot to partlcl-fti In the Wggsst -historical-engage menta he took part In many sharp and bloody raids and aklrmlshes Ths biggest fight ha was In was at Marianna Fla It was there that Major Cutler who after the war waa In charge of the National Home at Togus for several years received seven bullet-wounds while three horses were shot from under him and that Lieutenant Ayer of Randolph a brother of Red Ayer who noir Uvea In that town waa allot dead The Rebels fired from houses shops and churches says Mr Merrill and concentrated their aim on officers The Maine motorist writes from Virginia that the state 1s building a new wide concrete road from border to border Aa one garage man said to very sick of being called backward and laid It out to show' people up north whether they was backward or He goes on to say: We are driving on this nice new road with the car running fine and everything lovely when we notice this sign on a tree Died for the This being true wa admit It and keep on We come to a nice straight piece of road and find another sign quite pertinent this to Meet Thy Then aa we round a big curve and come to the top of a steep hill we get this one "Death to on Tour bad" thinks I a little frivolous "But what ran do about Then part way down the hill is this "After Death the Judgement" Thto Is getting a little serious -and I keep my foot oh the brake and both eyea wide open About half way down the iTgiiwanja to will you he in Eternity?" This to a poser all right but the sign answers Itself by yet another Wicked Shall be turned Into Hell" Somewhat nervous we keep on because there to nothing else to do then the sign says sure your Sin will find you out" I try to think of nny transgressions whereby I might be liable and by that time we reach the bottom of the hill Here we are asked "Are you saved?" It seems certain now that we are for the time being anyway so we breathe a little easier step on the gas and roll along" But we are not to get off so easy after all for Just as we get nicely under way again we get this one square between the eye Wicked Flee from thq Wrath to Come" Alas! Thto to much too much How come all these signs by a peaceful roadside you ask? I wished to know that very same thing ao I made inquiries and found that they were erected by an old man (name not by my Informant) who hellniSFs that he has been appointed special messenger byrthe Lord to enlighten the world And so for a hundred and fifty miles he ha painted these signs Lad's Definition Teacher Who can tell me the meaning of the word "appetite?" Small Boy Please sir when you're satin' you're 'appy and when you're finished you're tight Van- ONE OF THE SPEAKERS at the Anti-prlmsry repeal mpertng at the State house Thursday mentioned ths name of Hie editor of the Lewle-j tea Eranlns Journal aa being OPS' posed to the Primary Elections law Not that It makes arty treat dlf-t I fersnee to us what they only It la pitiful that some people an not read straight Unless It happens that he who 5 1 wants the Law Improved Is thereby opposed to the law we ate not op- posed to the primary Elections law i 1 We consider the principle of the Primary Elections law absolutely sound essential and In accordance wltti our Institutions We do not consider it perfect It is half a law Wa have asked that It broadened so that the Convention be given 5 the right to have automatically a 1 oanAidatc on any ballot for any of- flea on the ballot and leave the Primary eleetons law otherwise un- disturbed 2 The convention-law always per- nltted the individual a certain right of place by petition Give the cotf-ventlon equally fair show along i with the present plan What makes ii extremely suspicious Is the great fear expressed by those who luxurl- 1 ate In the present system of egotis-fg tie grabbing when anyone expresses a faith In the convention or the party It makes one wonder If the Boh to extinct THE BOSTON AMERICAN say phi of Mains: At this time of year when "company" to expected at any minute It to next te Impossible to keep the State of Maine off the front page the back page and moat of the pages In between Portland to making plans for what la expected to be the airport In New The Chamber of 5 rgomreehisSbtAmya Kfl-bptHM I on more than 100 acres lying In the town of Scarbero- Ju st beyond the city limits Three-fourth of the $80000 the Maine Publicity Bureau the State "Chamber of Commerce and the New England Council are raising In a i campaign to already In the treasurer's hand Some les and many towns have exceeded i their quotas Announcement Is mads that the Three-Quarter Century Club made up of Maine folk who have reached age of FyeearsTwin 1027 meeting In Portland late In euihfner The tenet-able number several thousands They will strengthen the already strong appeal mads to the visitor by verdant villages fertile farms "lovely lakes and beauteous beaches only a vacation State? Why this the place to Hero to another little paragraph telling of the Mains Beautiful As-J call to the people to make 3 nomee aqfl gardens aa attractive as possible and cover up ugly epots along the highways that aa the stranger motors over Maine roads ha will bo greeted by pleasing views at' every turn1 Before tha firat aummag visitor and last year -ha brought $110 B00 000 with hlne-4heFlnwTree Stole will be THE 1 plant? Or is it ths aummORp -if a falling mantis of dew all -very and soft and quits invisible to ths human ays Perhaps it lias in spsll of our own gardens" whore Lev abides and with finger ciaspsd humbly await the PrimroiA mirt el Certainly those who have never sat in tha rustic arbor under a vsncrabl and knansj old ap pletrss behold tho Primrose open at sunsst-tims hsv yst something for which to live even have those who nava nrvtr tramped ths mountain nsights in the hush ef cold dawn watching for ths unveiling ef ths cloud-cprfsd peaks and the Jenning ef their tinted robes in ths fcri' hues ef morn iriqht eijw7 will it It hrfor the cigar are River fllobe Why Work! Kallir--Now that you've finished Hith 4 ulleg mi- lv hadn't you brt-1 l-r li looking out fr si Jol-? Son Not on your Ilf old thing Iyt the lilighter scramMe for London Benefit sf Relatives do on think of relativity has its value" answer'-d Sena- tor Sorghum "A man ran be a considerable power in politic If lie ran persuade alPhle relatives to vote tho eame teket" Washington Star Consistent Unsuccessful Traveler fnr ynil flng In with me sir I'll take or no man! Sales Yes I notlced'fhat while you were traveling for London Till Hits These Dsys "Mary uu going out to-night?" his dutiful wife replied a bridge game "Well I'm goin' play poker at Hnrry's an' I'll Fet home about 1 nV''irk In tli' Want me sit up for you?" Brockton Enterprise Prsparsdneia "Whnl did I learn to-day Willie trarhr?" Teaehetl hv i Willie: "They'll want to know at home" But What Is It For? Modern Girl (to fiance)-what a charming littlo ornan have sent me But what mnde of gold but It's not a brooch nor a ring nor a bracelet I've never seen anything like ft Whnt Is Hugo "A thimble" London Paasr ing Show Just Fishln' Professor (coming on a youthful angler' sitting on the hank uf a stream) art thou endeavoring to entice the finny tribe to pngulf In their dentrlculated mouths a fcarlied hook upon whose point is affixed a dainty allurement?" Uny "No I'm Pathfinder The Solicitous Agriculturist Farmer (to druggist) "Now fc sure an' write plain on them bolHes which is for the Jersey cow and which Is for my wife I don't want to toppen to that Jersey cow" National Cafeteria Owner 50 Years Ago Today A in the furnace to again required it coats Auburn about $13000 a year to rcpnlr roods Lighting the streets by gasoline costs only about $1000 a year' in Auburn 1 Mr Woo ley has put Into thewfirk a loi't of English sparrows Why doesn't some enterprising fellow pet up an a lnwn mower? There are many families In the who have little lawns which they would like to keep trimmed but hardly think It worth while to buy machine A handy chap with a mower a allkle and a little enterprise might drive a good business Frost to still laboring with marked success In reform work In New York May 88 by Rev George Lindsay Johnson and Mlsa Cora A Chamberlain both of Auburn -Lewiston by Rev Weth-erbee Daniel A Staples and Mian Bins Hodgdon both of Lewtpton Ths Primrose Spring always brings with her ths birds and flowers and -among thorn after ths first Mayflowers have corns and gone perhaps ths gpatsst appeal is ths expectation of that -ni' acts blossom ths Evening Primrose Perhaps it is because it is non toe common Perhaps it is because it grows in another's garden and ws do net it often Perhaps it is because of its own lovely self opening so mysteriously to ths first faint whisperings ef tha dusk who knows why tha Evening Primrose should slumber by day and awake at night? Is it the call of fairy fingers of rosy-tinted Eve whose twilight rays pleas ths fancy ef this glorious defective" Everybody's WVekly Happy School Days From a letter from jminc sriri student: am eur liavinu smiie busy time I am gniiic inibiy school ilinrlng whim! writing school and school" Howard Co mint -Well I-iily What ar ths plants please? They are tobacco plant in full bloom How InterrsMnc! Hoar long Introdtir-1 1 lieu ing widow of policem'-ii and Dromon and even after finding several who were expectant inuthors lie rould get none of them to agree lo thus let her sacred function in life lie the center of the curiosity and guess-work of tabloid readers Perhaps the most extraordinary thing about the whole episode was that the tabloid had been able to convince the postal department that the 'contest was not a pure lottery but a contest involving skill and knowledge and thut Die correct answer to the contest depended upon exact mathematical deductions How the postal authorities thought the contestants were going to get the basic data upon which to base calculations to something I cannot fathom If the widow was to supply these dates thru the tabloid then the ways of the postal authorities are past understanding for they have repeatedly refused to permit certain -books and magazines to he sent thru the malls I I 1 Nli 1UKK May 2i Til-Drifter In ths Nation read an ad-vertleement In a theatrical paper of a firm in Boston that supplies freaks for sideshows and sent fur a catalogue The freak business has grown more spectacular and up-to-date than it was in my boyhood when I used to pay a dime to see a man" in a wooden coffin or to see a half naked Negro with a wig Bitting among mokes In a canvas pit and eatingyzvienerwurats fixed up to look like snakes The catalogue the Drifter received had the following items among others: King Mac-a-dula The two-headed giant 8x10 banner $55 rash Polly-Moo-Zuko and 8x10 banner $45 cash Siamese Twins and 8x10 banner $55 cash Prehistoric Giant Man with one head $55 cash Moa Devil Bird with 8x10 banner $45 cash i There was also Baby Iff the Bottle" described as a getter" and whole show In The to as natural and lifelike aa we could make It Ths hair on head being sewed in giving It a very natural appearance Supposed to he a real child In embalming fluid" With some of the offerings there was also included a for the ballyhoo man outside and inside the tent Part of the for King the Two-headed Iata-gonlan Giant' Is: body was found fourteen years ago and taken to England and placed on exhibition at the Crystal Palace It Is owned by the' historical society In London and no amount of money can buy it Wo simply rent It The atmosphere of this country being damp It begins to soften In places and we have to use artificial means to keep it preserved touching It up uiTiislunally with arsenic pitch corrosive sublimate etc and In this way It will last for years Truly a wonderful curiosity worth many times the i Mlrnr pk-turr price you have paid to see it and 1ut aflr three months of lnter- tiial Lindbergh sad and the things that have been attributed to lilm dnd agreed that many of the things were not in charai-ter and were proh- ably invented by imaginative re- porters It was like him we agreed to tAke letters of tion to Paris no one knows me hilt it is not probable that he said was taking only fve sandwiches because "if 1 get there I won't need any more and if I don't get there I won't need any either" or that he said this Is or that he said thit entering the coekplt was entering the death chamber I do not believe that Tindlierglr feels romantic much les talking that way The man with the true spirit of adventuroi never-cMeh: The tabloids sf New York vie with each other in thinking up rnntesls to stimulate -circulation Tribute must be paid to the editor and publisher of the Dally News for thinking up the most astoundlngly original of all contests Iq fact It was so original that tha contest had to be abandoned It was the editor's Idea for one of his reporters to seek out the widow of a policeman or fireman who had lost his life In the line of duty The widow was to be one who was to be an expectant mother knd to have been ai expectant mother at the time of her husband's death A prize of $5000 wia to bo offered by the tabloid to the pno who guessed to the hour the date ot the birth of the expectant child and an additional $5000 was to b- paid to the mother for thus letting herself lie- exploited In the tabloid One of the star reporter of the paper wa put on the Job He said 1 was Die hardest one he had ever tackled He thought it would be easy to pot names from ar benevolent iiswiclatlon ami that It would be easy to find a widow who was also an expeetant mother to accept the $5000 and poao for do your own paddling and have no guides to grouch about staying out in the twilight after the supper bell has rung It is a place where you have no charge for guides boats or bait It is a place where you can walk In six miles some say it is seven or you can ride on the buckboard over a very good road for a buckboard I have seen worse I rode out Here are four ponds as I have remarked Dead Stream Horseshoe Island and Round I suppose there is also a Long Pond there always is Perhaps there is a Lost pond we lost a couple of ponds Later I shall tell you about going over to Horseshoe and Round Pond but that will come in a subsequent number They are piore remote than Dead Stream and include couple of non-stop flights one of them in a leaky boat steered by the worst paddler who ever presumed to lift a blade in a boat his name is Bliss It is also my purpose to relate briefly how one spends a rainy day at Dead Stream Pond Camps But as we slept most of the day the account wilf not be thrilling I only know that the day we arrived after our four hour tramp covering six miles and thirteen bubbling springs we found our luggage on the bed our stove roaring a welcome as the evening was chill up in that 1000 feet altitude and the supper bell was being rung by Ruth Ruth is a bijou beauty from Madison Maine who ought to be in the pictures She waits on the table and Bays Also says being also trouts All in white excepting her red white and blue garters Ruth is as sweetly pretty a Maine girl as you would find and as modest as an ivory idol Smart efforts to delude Ruth into talking or doing a single thing but wait on the table are bound to fail She has raven hair bobbed with a very long spit or promontory on thoTight Her-modestAnd efficient man ner added greatly to our appreciation of the table Mrs Vaughan is the Cook There may be a better cook in Bingham but we can not ask a town to provide it The night came down with signs of storm The trees along the shore Bank into velvet ebon softness Trout leaped into the fading crepuscule of a low red tinge in the west and gleamed like shafts of fire as they flipped over into the circles that they made in the mirrored surface The loon did not cry because there was no loon he alone was missing and I can not lie about it The night was cold Bliss froze his foot It seems that by some accident I had the extra army blanket on my bed and I slept as warm as a little red jacket Ice made In the water-pitcher Day dawned to the patter of the rain This concludes the first number of these casual reflections on a I shall have a second soon tomorrow probably relating the way we fished the places where we fished a dinner on Round Pond an evening after a perfect some camp conversation and our return home It may require three or four numbers A 'Twsi not the pride of thie great feat Nor the trembling praise of old Europe Jfor the whit light at Le Bourget turning Nor yet your periscope XL Nor was it yet two continents Whleh mu ths same air Nor that you sailed at the moment when Tou embraced your mother XXL 'Twaa those young men with hearts so brave Who full of fervor and goodwill Came from your home too soon forgot To die for Francs XIIL That which had brought pre-destlned one Through all these risks wlicrs others fell It was the rendezvous which gave you --At their fresh graves Perhaps that line 'Twaa thoae young men with hearts ao brhve who full of fervor and goodwill came from your hi -me too soon to forgot to die for France" perhaps that line or two may Unger in thfr mind of France and tiu: them more kind and appreciative to the ly heart of America Remember the good old daya when the favorite alibi- for a killing was didn't know It waa As a result of the meeting of 44 state legislatures this year there are 1 0000 new laws More work for the violators Reports ny that the Berlin public Jeered the march of the steel hel-meted monarchists ths other Sunday Again proving that times do change Current Comment We're not looking for the American marines in China to bring back many war brides Toledo Blade The levee system of flood control sems to be satisfactory except In cases of too much water Kahsaa City Star The American aviators who remained in the air 51 hours break the records of sometof the politicians Indianapolis News We have our momenta of depression when we don't believe tha corn bbrer Is much afraid of ederal inspectors Ohio State Journal A southern state has ruled that bootleggers must pay an -Income tax That will mean we cap raise enough Money to fight another war Urbans DeieocisL The C'i ntn are mistaken If the-1 think that a Celestial revolution will lead a world Philadelphia Record Many -persons who were glad to welcome the open door In China would like to sec inure exit just at present Detroit Free Press looking her best I beat to any better No other State's I- a ru "-v v-V -A-' r-vt i 'HENRT FORD mads hla fifteen millionth Ford car Thursday On aame -day Harvard University was delighted to hear from Its arch- asoloplcal research crew in Arabia that valuable Inscriptions supposed to be 8000 years old bad been unit earthed near whera Moses gave down the decalogue or the Ten Commandments from Sinai At the lime time archeologists are hunting cavea In France and Spain where men and women lived and painted pictures 80000 years ego Man Hems to have a capacity of progress A Spark of Genius Inhabits him glows within him feeding Area From Cro-Magnana In £tovea te Henry Ford making 10000-00 automqblle and to Lindbergh beating the birds in 8000 mile eitlght thru the air means mors than rsieeldental development either by tnure evolution of types or pure ad-nlure Those who hold back -af lri because ef personal opinion Ancient ballots are net of the Diet make Ten Commandments: Jpeerlptione on otonet make fifteen mlQlea automobiles fly A I ask you as- a favor to the management to please tell your friends about IL Thanking you for your kind attention I will ask you to look lr over carefully and stay as long as you Thyra Sam ter Winslow the author of Round the gnvc a big party on the day after Lindbergh landed in Paris and the talk st the party was of nothing hut Lindbergh's achievement I talked with Fanny Heaalip Lea who said that alio had read for six hours steadily every word printed in every paper she could get hold of about Lindbergh- "He Is ths spirit of she sold "and- nothing so romantic as this young Lochlnvar out of the west has stirred the Imaginations of the people for fifty years He Is the only person or event within my memory who has been accorded four solid pages in the New York Times" We fell to discussing tho things 1 (This is the first of three or four articles on going a The second will soon appear Ed) That discovery of a new serum that Is effective against the bites of rattle-snakes moccasins and copper-hiiril may lie another victory for Indianapolis News Tha President was asked to call an extra session of Congress on account of the Mississippi -flood Why Isn't Hie flood enough troub for oe Cleveland Plain Deal- 1 A.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the Sun-Journal
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About Sun-Journal Archive

Pages Available:
1,419,865
Years Available:
1861-2024