The Syracuse Journal, Volume 16, Number 31, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 29 November 1923 — Page 7
Sure Relief FOR INDIGESTION rcESSt) Hot'water Sure Relief Bell-ans ?StAHD 754 MCKA6ES EVERYWHERE I Ins or running imm I noeel If to, give them “J iPOHN'S.” I I I A valuable remedy for Coughs, I Cold*, Distemper, Influent*. Pink I Eye and Worms among horses and I mules. An occasional dose “tones" I them up. Sold at all drug stores. One Way to Sava It, “You're lookin’ bad, Wullle." “Aye, I’ve been In the hospital an' tire doctors have tooken ,»wa’ ma appendix." ’ “These doctors tak* onythlng. It*a a peety ye dldna have It In your wife's name." Aspirin Say "Bayer” and Insist! Unless you see the name “Bayer" on package or on tablets you are not get* ting the genuine Bayer product prescribed by physicians over twenty-two years and proved safe by millions for Colds Headache Toothache lumbago Earache Rheumatism Neuralgia Pain, Pain Accept "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin’ 1 only. Each unbroken package contains proper -directions. Handy * boxes -of twelve tablets coat few cents. Druggists also sell bottles of 24 and 100. Aspirin la the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoacotlcacidester of ISallcyllcacid.—Advertisement, No Chanct to Bo Polite. Said a straphanger to another who had Just given bla seat to a lady: •Good luck, air. I've been traveling on this Une for three years, and I’ve never offered my seat to a lady." “Then you've never had any manners, sir," was the reply. “No. It Isn’t that; I’ve never had n seat.'’—Judge. MOTHER! GIVE SICK CHILD “CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP** Harmless Laxative for a Constipated Baby or Child. Constipated, bitlona, feverish, or nick, colic Babies Jr' nnd Children love ¥(, to take genuine ([lll \ “California rig Syrup." No other J) m laxative regulate* ** the tender little a! A * _ bowels so nicely. / It sweetens the stomach and •tarts the Uver and bowel* acting without griping. Contains no narcotics or soothing drugs. Say “California" to your druggist and avoid counterfeits 1 Insist upon genuine “California Fig Syrup" which contains directions. — Advertisement. Odd Fellow! Gay—Waters has an odd case of absent-mindedness. Girl—Oh! Guy—Yea, he’s just back from a motorboat cruise, and the other night he eat down in the bath and balled It out 'until the whole Boor was flooded. „ Sere end Inflamed area, attaa end traaalatlona healed promptly by ntjhtlr of Roman Bye Baium. It ceota. Adv. Worth it. Doctor —I will examine you for ten dollars. Patient —Go to It; If you find It 1 will give you half. ”A COMMON COLD DESERVES™ TOUR PROMPT ATTENTION” TAD FATHER JOHN’S MEDICINE "A common cold deserves your Immediate and serious attention"—So writes a well-known physician, in pointing out the danger of neglecting a cold. “Early treat- > went of a cold will spare you days of suffer- JflA Ing nml dan. ; ger," he V Doctors wlUtellßpf Ks. you that colds■fepßWV '<■ t are very likely ' ;1 to develop Into serious and great fatal dls- w^. mm If they are neglected. Many doctor* prescribe Father John’s Medicine because they know It has had over <SB years of success for colds and coughs. It builds new strength to throw off the cold and prevents Its development into more serious trouble. No drugs—all pore food. * as bxciu-tionai. oraMso son vbosjb SsulrliMT piaUßhome Hwtai No caavaaaia*. City: coup try. curipslcr s—hTW appear* •a iowl st pip* after f*» boar* of emokla*. Somethin* wonderful. Postpaid TSe. Acosta waM**.' St Hs»a*t. irn W. »«M t-t. Chteaga
OUR COMIC SECTION
- T (UOR IN M p fCwnUM. Kill — Jabe Done Harold Wrong! Wf""* 11 -■-« s _ _ - uicn CfvraohN jabe coaae ivtto -tu ofpice •• WWKW. VOIXSt M-k«o« oa scat. OWlt van, J*B*S »BU «**iXO «^S _ ~'~ l r£r£r mmmwm9m HERE UhS EVkU. WEAfIO MINA PEOFOBJA , uor Q tu Ki w mmm—^ Gcrx a o*o*o vFib iw L.CGIOU CUJORDOA 'vi OLE JABE Won. CM MAMO ** PAiW OUT LAN SOOO WOVIEH t£K*V. ? lAAAca UCW NOR.* AUUOOUCEO, UE.XX WOVh- Aal‘ HE GrAUOPCO *<D fH' OEPOt 'U W\REO 'TO OM “ WOLVU SF,w«HWKXO-WCOMeW^'UMELrwOSKeoaH. oco tOiAPtkiuS " OLE JABE LEAWEO BaCAC.PWOOO M'SEE, JABE KICJEB. HEARD A RADIO 'M AS ASVUEFEO -tORVCe* ”WC BOCO etARtEOPa* He *tHAT EVATVC VA)E ’tHEM tVtf RAOO BVAKtIEO WHVVSW4’ AU’ SQD6AUU VAAROEO l What’i Mvtig Here? Rficwin X v'NJE. VJARWIED NOU OCCASIOWALDf / 'V u ?. K | ., t l |-t» 06 CA«FU>- '« JOtAWVia AV C»»-J 1 * '* eLv»ous.w®» x«mu6t cops ‘-i I FOR. -IME RfkPS*., OOT "tWERE 6 SUCH . Uff\ S— 1 A-iH>ua AS 061 HS ■«» L ■' HEB-Et ASTogHj " ~ f*-tv*E eoirt ov cuv em \ a ” ~ s —>. Uiaau-errs AMO ACq>\ a" 1 asack, XAIAS m \\r n rt /ruVF= • |P rcy.l EtV€R TbOAS 'tWE POLICE OOhUl V OJI t-** Br S OEUBKa Vt WAS A SVAC\OE»BVJY _ MAR/ ° / *| ! ***
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Fashion Plates of Tanagra
Tlie Beotian town of Ta Basra was a >laee of some Importance In ancient times, bat It bad km* since vanished Dpoib the map, when In the earl* "70s >f the last century the world began to Hear of -Tanagra Figurines." The Bgorines are hollow, usually open at Uw» base, and were cast In several piece* from molds. More than ninetenth* of these figurines represent lam on net la the eoaveational man-
Our Pet Peeve
ner of the Egyptian monuments, but In a photographic likeness. They show us everyday Greek womanhood of the Third and Fourth centuries before Christ, says a writer In Mentor. They reveal much about the intimate Uvea of Greek women, their tasks and amusements and especially the details of their dress. Author of Munchausen Tales. The author of -Baron Munchausen’s Narratives"—those fantastic tales of adventure —Rudolph Erich Baspe, was
THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL
a refugee in England from Germai justice when he wrote his mastei piece that made him a charter mem ber of the Ananias dub. says the De troit News. Baspe, a native of Bano ver. Germany, was curator of the mo seum of Cassel, and was accused o stealing medals from a collection li his charge. He fled to England U escape prosecution. He obtained em ployment at the Dolcoatn mines U Cornwall, and while there engaget created Baron Munchausen, Hasp* died in Ireland in 1794. ■ ■ i
Relations Between Established Settlements and Outlying Frontiers By I. T. ADAMS, in "Revolutionary New England." THE relations between established settlements and their outlying frontiers seem everywhere and in all periods to follow certain simple and well-defined lines. In the first place, the older settlement has accumulated capital seeking investment, whereas the frontier, in spite of Its natural resources, needs for their exploitation capital in the form of money or credit The frontier, therefore, is always and everywhere in debt to the old settlement, and this relation breeds all those feelings a debtor seems by nature to entertain toward his creditor. As contrasted with one another, the older settlement is always conservative, the frontier always radical. This involves distrust on the part of the former and irritation of various sorts upon that of the latter. The East has therefore always feared and sought to check the political growth of the West (as the terms may be used in this country), whether, depending on the period, the West lay a few miles or a thousand miles from the coast. It has trembled for its investments in the too rapid expansion that the frontier always breeds. It has distrusted radical thought and has feared above all else that economic expansion might increase political power and transfer control to a section whose philosophy and outlook have seemed revolutionary. The main feeling of the frontier for the settlement may thus be denominated as resentment, whereas that of the settlement for the frontier is fear, the two human emotions that perhaps most militate against cool reasoning and mutual understanding. There is a third element in this relationship. In the older settlements economic inequality results in dividing society into upper and lower classes. The lower class has more in common in many ways with the frontiersman than it has with the upper class of the settlement. Its lack of capital and culture, a certain recklessness derived from its hard struggle for an uncertain living, its resentment against the class above it upon which it is dependent for wages as the frontiersman is for capital, all tend to unite it with the frontier and to align the two against the conservatives of the settlement capitalist class. The Three Faults Most Commonly Charged Against Our National Character 1 By DR. A. T. HADLEY, in Current History Magazine. The three faults most commonly charged against our national character today are materialism, lawlessness and unwarranted self-assertion. These three sets of charges are made with about equal frequency. When we come to examine the evidence by which they are supported we shall find that they stand upon very different bases. Those who accuse us of materialism charge us with a fault that i 9 common to the human race. They fail to prove that it is distinctively American or that we are worse than our neighbors in this respect. Those who accuse us of lawlessness can show that many of the things of which they complain are distinctively American and that our record is not so good as we and our neighbors have a right to demand. I think we shall find that thcso facts point to defects in our machinery of government rather than our national character. But those who make the charge of unwarranted self-assertion seem to me to be able to prove their allegation and to be rendering our nation a real service in calling timely attention to a distinctive fault in American character which, if allowed to develop unchecked, may prove as disastrous to us as a somewhat different manifestation of the same fault Kaa already proved to Germany. Scheme Which Regards War of Aggression as an International Crime By PROF. J. W. GAkXER, in Chicago Daily News. I have read with much interest the proposed treaty which has been agreed upon by the disarmament commission of the League of Nations for the organization of a system of mutual assistance among states as a means of facilitating a reduction of armaments. The scheme which the commission proposes differs fundamentally from all others of the past in that it is based on the sound principle that any substantial reduction of armaments must be preceded by the establishment of securities and safeguards that will render such reduction safe and practicable. That is to say, it proceeds on the logical assumption that reduction of armaments should be the ultimate stage rather than the initial process in the movement for safeguarding the general peace. It mav be remarked that the proposed treaty introduces a new principle into the law of nations by laying down the proposition that a war of aggression shall be regarded by the contracting parties as an “international crime,” the commission of which none of them will ever be guilty. This is a new principle, because as the law of nations now stands, no war, not even a war aggression, is a crime or even a violation of international law. All Great Problems of Our Day Becoming More and More Psychological By G. STANLEY HALL, In "Life of a Psychologist.** ATI the great problems of our age are becoming more and more psychological the better we understand them ... and we have been caught unprepared. ... * * Nearly all the disorders of our day are of psychic origin and are due to the fact that we have not realized that institutions were made for man and not man tor them. Consciousness as we know it is only a port of entry and departure for a vast and yet only partially explored hinterland, although we already know far more here than has yet been put to use. Practical psychology, which has done so much and will do far more in grading intelligence and in fitting men to their jobs, will transcend the fields of business and school, and address itself to a more comprehensive program. It will refit present institutions, 6odal, civic, political, industrial, religious, etc., to Hie nature of man, which is at least one, and may be several, hundred thousand years old, and thus relatively, not only to, the present industrial system, but to all other even far older institutions, must be regarded more like the unchangeable laws and forces of the I physical universe. Louis Wiley, New York Times. —The publications which lead, those which exert the greatest influence, those moet widely read, the most prosperous are, as a rule, the newspapers which HVe up to the highest standards of sthics. Their ambition is to comment upon the news with fairness and honesty, not to subordinate principle to expediency, render public service and to place before their readers that which will not debase, corrupt, deceive, offend or exercise malign influence on the community. Postmaster General New.—-The air forces of the army and navy must be placed upon a sound and effective basis, both as to existing equipment and personnel
Mrs, A. Hapner Do You Have Pains or Backache ? Read What This Woman Says About It: Bouth Bendj Ind.—“ Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription is the only medicine I ever found that gave me any relief. I was suffering few some time with inward weakness. Through this I became a nervous wreck and was so weak and ‘all in' I could not do my work. I had backaches and pains in my sides- Neither the doctors medicine nor any other seemed to touch my case or gve me any relief. lat last decided to ike Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription and from the first it seemed to give me new hie. It completely relieved me of my weakness and improved my general health in every way.”—Mrs. A. Hapner, 627 E. Monroe St. Your health is the most valuable asset Ku have. You should write Dr. Pierce, es. Invalids’ Hotel in Buffalo, N. Y* and receive free medical advice. ~t will reduce inflamed, swollen jy, El jflJoiats, Sprains, Braises, Kl If Soft Bunches; Heals in M. Bolls,Poll EvtMlulttor. B(ri,Mv- i \>|g v vW Fistula and Infected n SHv VB Sores quickly as It Is a H1 germicide. Pleasent to 9 uae: does not blister or H remove the hair,, and 9 JS rnt/J&n y°« can work the horse. S per bottle delivered. j T. F. YOUNG, he, 510 lynss St, SprintfoM, its. An effective remedy. many other stomach The Stomach ,Sidney Watson, Cleveland, Ohio;' Writes, ‘‘My wife suffered awfully Cram stomach trouble. Bo doctors could do her much good. Tried Jaqaea’ Capsules and within a week she was s well woman." Jaques* Capsules quickly relieve indigestion; heartburn, acid stomach, constipation, gas. Takes regularly, they relieve cases of long standing. At ail druggists or 60 cents by mail postpaid from Jaques Capsule Co., Plattsburg, N. Y. GrveQufdkfefief |S*' kfloughs r and (olds FOLEY’S HONEY-TAR ESTABLISHED 1875 iMtBTSiUIMCoWaMEOKINEIIIKWMII REFUSE SUBSTITUTES The Pubiic Demand. “Aren’t you going to make a speech?" “Not if I can avoid it.” answered Senator Sorghum. “Why should I rl§k saying something that might make me unpopular? All the public appears to ask at present Is that I keep quiet and be photographed." Cuticura for Sore Hands. Soak hands on retiring in the hot suds of Cuticura Soap, dry and rub In Cuticura Ointment. Remove surplus Ointment with tissue paper. Tills Is only one of the things Cuticura will do if Soap. Ointment and Talcum are used for all toilet purposes.—Advertisement. Good Advice. “Build on solid ground, son," counseled the old merchant. “Yes, dad.” “Beware of get-rich-quicksands." ■? If Worm* or T»p*worm persist In your system, us# the res! vermlfu*#. Dr. Peery*s “Deed Shot." Only SO cents at your drugKtet or BTI Pearl St.. N. T. Adv. No one pursues brains as he does the acquisition of wealth, because It Is futile.
Is Your Work Hard? Is your work wearing you out? Are you tortured with throbbing backachefeel tired, weak and discouraged? Then look to your kidneys! Many occupations tend to weaken the kidneys. Constant backache, headaches, dizziness and rheumatic pains are the natural result. You suner annoying bladder iWegularities; feel nervous, irritable and worn out. Don’t wait! Use Doan's Kidney Pills. Workers everywhere recommend Doan’s. They should help you, too. Ask your neighborl An Ohio Case S. a Hayes. 508 a Market Street, Waverly, 0., says: “I suffered with pains in my back which made hard for me stoop. The cles of my back were sore. action of my neys was irregu-BRaAN?U**iM lar most of time, being too frequents I used Doan's Kidney Pills and in a short time I was free from the backaches and kidney complaint." Gat Unsafe at Any Stan, 60c a Boa DOAN S I FOSTER-MILBURM CO, BUFFALO, H. T,
