Houston home journal. (Perry, Houston County, Ga.) 1924-1994, May 11, 1939, Image 7
adventurous AMERICANS By Elmo Scott Watson : ‘Old Put’ Most Americans think of Israel Putnam as the New England hero of two thrilling escapes. One was during the French and Indian war when a providential rainstorm put out the fire which the savages had kindled to torture him. The other was during the Revolution when he avoided capture by the British by riding his horse at break neck speed down a long flight of stone steps. But these were only a few of “Old Put’s” adventures. During his busy life he saw ac tion on many fronts—from Montreal in the north to Havana in the south and from Boston in the east to De troit in the west. They began in 1755 when he served under Sir Wil liam Johnson against the French; they continued when he enrolled in Rogers’ Rangers in 1758, was cap tured by the Indians, sent to Canada as a prisoner and freed by exchange the next year. Then he accompanied a British naval expedition against France’s allies, the Spanish, in Cuba, where he was in the thick of the fight when the English stormed Morro Castle. He had hardly returned home when Pontiac’s war broke out in 1763 and he accompanied Colonel Bradstreet on the expedition to raise the Indian siege of Detroit. In 1772 he was a member of the Company of Military Adventurers who visited the Lower Mississippi and West Florida to look over lands promised the Colonials who had served in the French and Indian war. Nothing came of this so Put nam returned home in time to be come one of the heroes of the Battle of Bunker Hill. * • * Navajo Bill THE Navajoes were holding a fire *■ dance. White men were not wel come at this important ceremonial so there were hostile mutterings among the young braves when they saw a “pale-face” looking on. Sud denly a young buck, his face dis torted with a frenzy of hate, dashed out of the circle of dancers and, brandishing a long knife, bounded toward the white man. But before he had time to strike, a lariat shot out from a group of Indians near by, settled over the young brave’s shoulders and jerked him to the ground where he was soon trussed up so tight that he could not move. The lariat had been thrown by the great chief, Manueli to, and he had thus saved the life of his good friend, Dr. W. N. Wallace, otherwise known as “Navajo Bill.” Wallace served in an Indiana reg iment in the Civil war, then went west. He landed in Portland, Ore., where he became a doctor and prac ticed his profession until tubercu losis forced him to go to Arizona. There he became acquainted with the Navajoes. One day a little Indian girl fell into a campfire and was badly burned. The skill of the “white medicine man” saved her from be coming a cripple and from that time on his position among the Navajoes was secure. They adopted him into the tribe, gave him a Navajo name end he became a close friend of the great Manuelito. It was that friend ship which saved his life at the fire dance. * * * The Mad Poet J' WO months before McDonald Clarke died he wrote this auto biography; “Begotten among the or ange groves, on the wild mountains of Jamaica, West Indies. Born in Bath on the Kennebec River, State of Maine, 18th. June, 1798. Ist. Love, Mary H. of New London; last Love, Mary G. of New York; intermediate sweethearts without number. No great compliment to the greatest Poet in America—should like the change tho’; had to pawn my Dia- m ond Ring (the gift of a lady) and go tick at Delmonico’s for Dinner, •so much for the greatest Poet of America.” If that sounds a bit “goofy” to you, it’s no more so than much of tne poetry he wrote. That’s why he was called “The Mad Poet.” At the ogmning of the Nineteenth century ■ e was “constantly seen on Broad way. his blue coat and military earing, enhanced by his marked Prohle, making him a conspicuous ■W rtnking figure. It was his hob ; in line with all the belles . e c ity and to commemorate !I beauties and worth in verse. ■ ever well-meant these effusions 1 e Part of the poet they were °y'ng. His poems helped to sup {• 1 “ ln }< but the number of edi ho and present scarcity show that ,ust have eked out the revenue , , ssa /’y to supply his humble itv f ’ subscriptions or the char- Publishers and friends.” hnru° m to 1841 he issued eight Poems. Then the “Mad s adventure in living came to JL gIC close on Mar ch 5, 1842. A '•man found hj m on the street mpntJ^ estltut . e . and apparently de iai! f uundition and took him to inp u T sa l e heeping. The next morn ter fit Was l°und drowned by w«- open faucetl • Western Newepeoer Union. Hats, Print Silk Frocks Go Definitely Pretty-Pretty By CHERIE NICHOLAS IJEDICATED to pretti- fjjrf ness* to womanly charm, to romance, to the ir poetry of life are the fash ions that hold forth this • V season. It would almost ! - seem as if the new hats ! and gowns had entered in to a conspiracy to see how adorable they can make woman kind look in distractingly lovely frills and furbelows, in fashion whim sies that beguile, in colors radiant and gay together with all the vain glorious little details that bring to full bloom the endearing charms of the wearer. Fashions this spring and for sum mer are of the pretty-pretty sort that men delight in seeing their ladies wear. The provocative col orings, the daintiness of frail ruf fles and immaculate touches that flutter about throat and wrist, the flattery and mystery of whimsical veils that half conceal, half reveal the witchery of her eyes, the glamor of her jewels and amusing costume gadgets, the loveliness of the flowers she wears—beaux and bachelors be ware, there’s danger in them there trends of fashion! If there is one costume more than another that is essential to the “pic ture” this season it is the gown of winsome, ever-flattering silk print to which a hat that rates high in glamor plays dramatic accompani ment. See a trio of just such por trayed in the illustration. They stand for all that is utterly feminine and charm-full in the current fash ion scene. Paris says “horizontals” as shown to the right in the pretty-pretty printed silk sheer featuring bands of realistically colored flowers, full blown roses to be explicit, that con trast a dark ground alternating with narrower bands in light monotone. The full skirt, topped with a two tone grosgrain that ties in a bow, is attuned to slim lines by means of full length side pleats. The horse hair disk that serves as a most fetching and youthful hat is held in Amusing Variety In Lapel Gadgets The new collections of lapel jewelry include amusing themes as well as flower effects that are real ly beautiful. In the former cate gory one cites bees, birds, animals, ! butterflies, grotesque figurettes and gadgets many of which trace their ancestry to characters that appear in Alice in Wonderland stories. ' The new flower sprays done in jewels in porcelain and various com , positions are veritable works of art. 1 These are really conspicuously I beautiful and elaborate, created ai ; they are of colorful sparkling jewels : to represent flowers of every de scription. A jewel flower piece will prove a joy the entire season 1 through as it “dresses up” a cos | tume at a moment’s notice. ! Rick-Rack Is Used i To Trim Organdy 1 If you are working with organdy try trimming it with rick-rack braid. ' You’ll be delighted with results. ' White on white is lovely. Colored f rick-rack on cloque printed organdy 1 is effective also. Dark linen day time frocks are given color-dash via rick-rack that is used in several 1 hues such as for instance a border 1 effect of red, yellow, green, blue and ’ white braid sewed together, trim • ming a navy linen. t With Navy Green 1 With navy green an important fac ’ tor in the spring picture, severa| teresting new color combinations will be possible. jSy ' i^JSßpSis jQL <tmT V3r* place by velvet ribbon, with flowers clustered over the hair, altogether a picture that bespeaks the very es sence of youth and beauty in fashion. Color and charm from a Victorian flower garden are recaptured in the purple and green silk print that fashions the dress centered in the picture. Shirred detail gives a soft ly flattering line to the bodice and sunburst pleating in the skirt. The two-tone grosgrain girdle is accent ed by a nosegay of flowers repeat ing the theme of the silk print. Speaking of millinery that has gone sweetly feminine, take a look at the demure velvet-tied bonnet which the young modern to the left in the group is wearing. You can tell at a glance that this quaint model is inspired by the lines of the bonnets of Civil war days. Which goes to show that old fashions are repeating in new fashions this sea son, which is really a striking char acteristic of trends running through out the entire gamut of present modes. As to the charming dress she wears it is made of a “sani tized” silk print as are also each of the other frocks shown, this being a new process that deodorizes and keeps your materials antiseptic (germ free and germ repellent). The print glorifies a fuchsia color theme. Pleating at the top of the sleeves is released to puff the shoul ders and the skirt is cut with a be coming swing flare. The printed silks fashionable for evening wear are simply gorgeous, the wallpaper-design flower motifs are in some instances almost over whelmingly enormous, achieving an effect of imposing elegance. Another important trend is toward rustling plaid taffeta for formal party frocks. © Western Newspaper Union. Hand Crocheted Just right for the pig-tail crowd— this cunning suspender skirt, hand crocheted in sturdy pearl cotton. Fashion-right in every detail, it has such a grown-up air any little girl will be thrilled with It. It is that practical mother will be more than repaid for the time and effort given to crocheting it. In fact, it will prove a real joy and blessing in your child’s wardrobe—washes out in a jiffy as spic and span as new and no ironing required, is stylish as can be, and with a fresh blouse each day turns little daughter out smart and as immaculate looking as if she had just "stepped out from a band bo*." REMEMBER . . . “It’s All In The Examination ” Ur. L. N Huff. 54 Broad Street Healey Bldg., Atlanta A Spe cialist In Eye Refractions for over 30 years, and a Stale Board Examiner for Optometrist since 1923, lends the South in eye ex aminations. Let Dr. Huff take care of the only pair of eyes you will ever have. I s : J DR. L N. HUFF (Antique U. S. Bathtubs Preserved by Company American bathtubs, from a slip per-shaped model, invented by Ben jamin Franklin, to the ultramodern types are being photographed, and data on them gathered by the Crane company of Chicago at the request of Oglethorpe university, Georgia, which will preserve the material in a campus crypt not to be opened un til 8113 A. D. The company, which hgs been In terested In old tubs as a record of Its own business, has most of the models it is Immortalizing. Others are in various museums, and are being collected by Frank Hicks of the Crane company, j Franklin’s "slipper” tub is a large copper contrivance. The bather sat on a ledge with his feet toward the "toe” of the "slipper,” and the wa ter was heated from a fireplace un der the ledge. High sides prevent ed drafts from reaching him. He even had a rack to hold his read ing matter before him. | Another early American tub ex tant is that of the Revolutionary war general, Henry Knox. It looks as though it were half of a horse trough protruding horizontally from the top of a two-foot block of wood. iThe "trough,” also made of wood, Is supported at its end by a single wooden leg. The top of the block was used as a seat, and the bather extended his legs into the “trough.” This tub is in the Knox memorial at Thomaston, Maine. I Another tub in the company’s col lection is one used by the Drinker family of Philadelphia in the early years of the Nineteenth centuryj Elizabeth Drinker wrote in her di ary of it: "My husband went into ye tipid bath. Before dinner, he’d handsel’d (tried out) a new bath ing tub, which WD (her son, Wil liam Drinker) bought yesterday for 17 dollars—made of wood, lined with tin and painted—with casters under ye bottom and a brass lock to let out the water.” i A tub made at a slightly later date was originally used by Sen. Harry Stubbs of Martin county, North Carolina. The weekly ablu tion Stubbs took in this tub was the subject of conversation throughout the county. He is said to have used a whole cake of soap and six towels for every bath. A slave kept draw ing water and filling the tub, V round, metal appliance. -/ White Waves on Sand of Jet v You have not seen the sands of Europe’s most famous seashores if they are always golden. Near Torre del Greco in the Bay of Naples, the white waves roll in on sands as black as jet: pulverized lava from Vesuvius. j Short-Sight Aids Aiming i Short-sighted riflemen usually are more successful shots than those who are far-sighted, observes the Better Vision Institute. This is be cause of the difficulty of the far sighted person to focus correctly on the front sight, leading to inaccura cy in aiming. While they can see their target clearly, far-sighted marksmen sometimes make error* in sighting of at least a tenth of an inch, because of the Inability of their eyes to focus exactly on the front and rear sights. At 100 yard* away, this would mean an error of 10 inches; at 200 yards, one of 20 inches. On the other hand, the short-sighted person can line up hi* sights accurately and can, through practice, train them on the exact center of his target, although the outlines themselves are not sharply defined. Java Important Possession Java is the most important of the Dutch possessions in the Far East. It is 688 miles long and from 33 to 125 miles wide. Greyhound Long in Existence From ancient Egyptian monu ments the greyhound is known to have existed several thousand years before Christ Capital of Louisiana New Orleans was the capita', of Louisiana at th* time the state was admitted to the Union, 1812. uu ' UWW¥ IMPR OV ED j UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL SUNDAY I chool Lesson By HAROLD L. LUNDQUIST, D. D. Dean ol The Moody Bible Institute of Chicago. O Western newspaper Union. Lesson for May 14 Lesson subjects and Scripture texts se lected and copy-ighted by International Council of Religious Education; used by permission. PAUL EVANGELIZES A PROVINCE LESSON TEXT—Acts 19:1, 8-10; 20:17-21; Ephesians 2:19-22. GOLDEN TEXT—But now in Christ Jesus ye who sometimes were far off are made nigh by the blood of Christ. —Ephesians 2:13, The Christian Church (that great organization which outwardly rep resents in the world the mystical organism which is the true Church) seems to be “stalled,” if we may borrow a word from the automo bilist. Just like a well-designed and carefully built machine which has “died” on the road. Perhaps the lesson for today may serve to stir up some of us to the responsibility of the Church, and particularly of its individual mem bers, for an aggressive testimony for Christ. Certainly Paul knew nothing of the defeatism which seems to have laid its paralyzing hand on present-day Christianity. Our lesson finds him again making the rounds of the churches he had earlier been used to establish. He knew of their dangers, the tend encies to backslide, the need of new life in the daily conversion of oth ers, and he went about that business with the flaming zeal of an evan gelist, with the tender compassion of a pastor, and always with the vision of the heavenly goal before him. Let us learn of Paul. I. The Evangelist—Fearless and Tireless (Acts 13.1, 8-10). At Ephesus Paul did the work of an evangelist with such a passion for souls and such power from God that even his enemy, Demetrius, testified (Acts 19:26) that "not alone at Ephesus but almost throughout all Asia this Paul hath persuaded and turned away much people” from their heathen worship. He met great opposition both in the syna gogue (v. 9) and from the worship ers of Diana (Acts 19:23-41. But he also found that God had opened for him “a great door and effectual” (I. Cor. 16:9), and we read that many believed and showed their faith by destroying the books of heathendom which were in their homes (Acts 19:19). Are the days of such evangelism gone? Since only the power of God can explain what was accomplished by Paul, the answer would depend on the reply to the question, Has the power and purpose of God changed? Obviously the answer is "No.” God is the same, and when we are ready to meet His spiritual requirements He will move again in mighty power. Am I ready? Are you ready? 11. The Pastor—Lover of Souls (Acts 20:17-21). Having completed his journey through Macedonia and Achaia, Paul is hurrying back to Jerusalem, and not having time to stop at Ephe sus he sends for the elders to meet him at Miletus, the nearest seaport. He recalls to them the experiences which he has passed through, tells them of the bonds and afflictions which await him, but above all he wants to admonish and encourage them to go on for Christ. As a pastor who has been true to God and faithful in his ministry, he is able to point to his own walk and work among them as an example, doing this in all humility. Pastor, shall we ask ourselves if we could do the same, or would we need to blush in shame over our failures? Especially noteworthy is Paul’s reference to having gone from house to house as well as teaching publicly. The work of the pulpit or from the teacher’s desk loses much of its savor and usefulness if not backed up by personal contact. Some men who preach well, excuse themselves from pastoral work on the ground that they are really preachers, not pastors. Others love to do pastoral work but do not apply themselves to the weak of the study, and so they say their calling is that of a pastor rather than a preacher. Brethren, let us face that matter honestly and perhaps we shall find that we are simply taking the line of least resistance. Paul had none of that spirit. He preached with all zeal and power, but he also went from house to house, "serving the Lord with all humility ol mind and with many tears.” 111. Fellow Citizen in God’s House hold (Eph. 2:19-22). The evangelist and pastor here re minds his Ephesian converts that they have entered a goodly fellow ship—"the household of God”—and have become “fellow citizens with the saints.” Some folk are called "joiners” be cause they like to join every pos sible society, organization, lodge, or what rot. Well, here is the supreme fellowship of all, which knows no barrier of race, creed, social posi tion, sge, sex, qr nationality, and which brings us into fellowship with the eternal God Himself. You may “join" if by faith you will take the Lord Jesus Christ as your personal Saviour and thus enter into eternal life. Will you join God’s people now? Make These Frocks; Wear 'Em Proudly pattern 1743 you can so ** easily and quickly make a graduation dress that’s as fresh and new as spring—the simple, charming kind in which your daughter looks best! The bodice is softly gathered above the tiny waist, and a sash bow adds to its youthful prettiness. It will ba sweet in taffeta, organdy, dimity and silk prints. Cl Flattering to Tour Figure. M Here in No. 1737 is a beautifully ’ designed smart dress that you ; can simply live in, for afternoons and runabout. Gathers are adroit ly used to give bosom fullness to slender figures. The skirt, cut high in the front, flares into circular fullness at the hem. So many ma terials are appropriate for a dress like this—flat crepe, silk print, chiffon or georgette, for example. Each of these patterns includes a step-by-step sew chart. No. 1743 is designed for sizes 11, 13, 15, 17 and 19. Size 13 requires 4% yards of 39-inch material. No. 1737 is designed for sizes 32, 34, 36, 38, 40, 42 and 44. Size 34 requires 4Vfc yards of 39-inch ma terial without nap. Spring and Summer Pattern Book. Send 15 cents for the Barbara Bell Spring and Summer Pattern Book, which is now ready. Make yourself attractive, practical and becoming clothes, selecting de signs from the Barbara Bell well planned, easy-to-make patterns. Send your order to The Sewing Circle Pattern Dept., Room 1324, 211 W, Wacker Dr., Chicago, IIL Price of patterns, 15 cents (in coins) each. e Bell Syndicate.—WNU Service. NERVOUS? Do you feel ao nervous you want to scroamT Are you crow and Irritable? Do you scold those dearest to you? If your nerves are on edge and you feel you need a good general system tonie, try Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, made eepeeially for women. For over 60 years one woman has told an other how to go "smiling thru" with reliable Pinkham’s Compound. It helps nature build up more physical resistance and thus helps calm quivering nerves and lessen discomforts from annoying symptoms which often ac company female functional disorders. Why not give it a chance to help YOU? Over one million women have written in reporting wonderful benefits from Pinkham'a Compound. 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Steps shih and Isos». deeas Weed si sttltris. fsmews SHOPPING ping tour Is m * M £ W yarn favorite easy- X\J I chair, with an open newspaper. Make a habit o< reading the advertise ments In this paper every week. They can save yon time, energy and money; i