The Syracuse Journal, Volume 16, Number 38, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 17 January 1924 — Page 7
FROM PERSONAL EXPERIENCE Mrs. Bradford Recommend* Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound . Phoebus, Virginia.—“ Having this op portunity IjuMcsmiot refrain
mg a word of praise for the Lydia’ EPinkham medicines. ItTaveUsed them as occasion required for twenty years, and my three s isters have alao used them, and always withtbemost gratifying results. During the Change of Life I had the usual distressing symptoms—-hot
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flashes, insomnia, etc., — and I am pleased to testify to the wonderful results I obtained from the Vegetable Compound. I heartily recommend it to any woman and I will be pleased to answer any inquiries that might be sent to j me through the publication of my testimonial.’’—Mrs. H. L. Bradford,lo9 Armstead Street, Phoebus, Virginia. Consider cafefully Mrs. Bradfordß letter. Her experience ought to help you. She mentions the trials of middle age and the wonderful results she obtained from Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. ■ If you are suffering from nervtfcs troubles, irritability, or if other annoying symptoms appear and you are blue at times, you should give the Vegetable Compound a.fair trial. For sale by druggists everywhere. *
THB| they tWMP tiaugh. ffjrß s/w € Kemps BALSAM CMUKBSOUOK MFQ. CO., CONST!. St Sow St. » . , New YoA Vaseline PETROLEUM JELLY
- ' ■" 11 1 Young Man, Beware. Mr.vDe Sines. (on being introduced to her)—Pardon me, madam.'but'nave we not met before? Your face seems strikingly familiar. Adored One's Mother—Yes, 1 am the woman w|>o before you_two whole miles in - "# atreet car the other diy while you aat reading a paper.—' Toronto Telegram. “CASCARETS’FOR UVER ANO BOWtLS—IOc A BOX *Cures RtllonitiesK, Constipation. Sick Headftebe.lndigestlon. Drug store*. Ade. 3 u. Unnecessary Labor. His Wife— Thai clock's twenty mln- • utes sIqVB. Betdt»forard tp twelve. Neveoweat -Leave it. alone. It’ll tiacS around, to twelve If you only give If time. } A Safe and Sure Laxative— Rramlreth Lilis. One or two taken at al time will keep yo<u In good.* condln. Entirely vegetable.—Adv. , '.The average back, yard by any other nhme would inspire no landscape painter. ' Much of the chMjtyjthat begins at < hbme Is foe weak to travel. / < J
Hall’s Catarrh MetSicine rid your tyMem of Catarrh or DcafncM oiuscu ©y viitrru. W*> Awvirti *nr 00 yam F. J. CHENEY &. CO M Toledo, Ohio PlIV> Alright flflwffl ~ ffiß n* wvriwrt, adds KWjH AIW tana and vigor to Efljflg . wBB digMtivo aiimlnativa »y,tem. laptovti tha appa- I ■ . IVVf tita, raliarvoa Bick |rW' l m Haadacha and Bi»- *•’*•*'•••> eor,,# ** . jR* -I *■■■lhed Air over jF •Waa j CK-Tiff-tfcOWßlodk > tUJuawNMi Umana ■ OnMbird the regular dca*. Made of eame ingrwdivn ta, tb<n candy coated. For children and adult*. ■aa»o<Jß mr rotrn nwniwr—■ar —juituns ~| HAIR BALSAM I HINDI. ftCORNB »HMMM on* cm■MBM. HA> MKmM *ll MiA MKHflknMt to t*A RPMNb KNHMI LWMHM WWbNWNMMWW** ■
king Tut-Ankh-Amen Was Pharaoh of Exodus, ” * A and Not Rameses II - . Am— —— ’ By ARTHUR WEIGALL, Famous Egyptologist. h CT» ING TUT-ANKH-AMEN was the Pharaoh of Exodus. He was the ruler of Egypt who hardened his heart against Moses and the children of Israel, for which he was visited by the plagues; ■“ It was King Tut-Ankh-Amen, not Rameses 11, as tradition b6lds, who kept the Israelites in bondage and played the leading part in ’ one-of the 7 greatest and most moving dramas in the world. , I*expect that my statement will be challenged, and even among other Egyptologists, but I am quite prepared to establish and prove, my assertion. I have made intensive investigations and research of this subject, before arriving at my -decision, and now I have historical and Biblical confirmation that King Tut was the Pharaoh of Egypt at the time when Moses sought to deliver his people to the Promised Land. “Actually, the Egyptianjhistorian Manetho, in the Second century: B. C., gives an account~of the great religious disturbances which took I place in the reign of Akhnaton, King Tut’s father-in-law, and states that Moses 1 was living at that time. That date was about 1375 B. C. f I ' The Book of Genesis says that the bondage of the Children, of. Israel in. Egypt was to last about 200 years, and we know from history that the . oppression of these foreign people in Egypt began about 1575 B. €., which is just 200 years before, making the dates’aad events synchronize. . • Then Tut came to the throne. Tut started feverishly to rebuild all the temples to the old gods which had been destroyed during the idealistic rlcign of his father-in-law, who believed in one god. *» Tut himself tells of this in an inscription found recency telling of . using thousands and thousands of slaves and rebuilding these temples. I That expUfins why the Israelites were kept so busy making bricks without : straw. In the -same inscription, which was found at the Temple of; Karnak, Tut also tells how Egypt was visited with the plagues, which Again confirms the Biblical account of them. Moreover, we know that | Tut-Ankh-Amen left no sons to succeed him, which perhaps is the origin of the story of the death of the first born. In 4 Tut’s tomb we found a little casket which had on it a painting Representing him in fiis chariot with all his charioteers behind him giving chase to a lot of flying Semitie people who might well have been the Israelites as they started toward the Red sea. Think/ of the dramatic moment this winter when the big tabernacle trill be opened and the world will be able to gaze at the Pharaoh whose ' heart was hardened against Moses and whose last words were: “I w: H , , hot let thy people go I” s • l ' ll . I Woman Has Never Fallen So Low as When She | Began to Try to Imitate Man By GINA LOMBROSO, Italian Woman Doctor. ■I. ' ' ~ o - No-masculine standards can be suitable to women, for the simple reason that man is created to fulfill an entirely different function in the w< rid. ( rp writers and others have become used to regarding as superior I ■ those women uh"., thwarted, in their own field, have triedvto find an alternative hy taking up a masculine career, or who, unable jo employ : i their feminine superabundance of emotion, - have sought an outlet in: wi nline professions." Because masculine careers and professions are • ntvst admired today, women have begifn to rush into .them, withput i regard to their own inclinations. They strive in every way to copy masculine methods of thinking and working, making the masculine : standard the intellectual standard of both sexes. Woman has never fallen so low as when she began to try to imitate man. The iegi-nd of woman's inferiority came into being precisely at | ’the time thkt she began to consider herself superior. At the present time i the highest type of women are smothered by the clamor of those whose love is crushed by ambition; by those whose passion for fame exceeds the • wish to help others; by those who, in short, have acquired a masculine outlook on thingrknd have lost the feminine viewpoint . , ‘ '.. - .• - z ■ Diversified Farming Is Not a Remedy for the Wheat Farmers’ Plight By DR, H. J. WATERS, Kansas City Editor. The purchasing powej- of the ‘fanner’s dollar is only 87 cents in •jlerms of other industries?tZThfis ineims ty? is paying qjore. ’for what he consumes and receiving less for what he sells than anv other business man. I Because the wheat father has faced an overwhelming fall in his . market prices without giving up does not indicate he can continue to ; stand alone. ° - , <■ Population is on a high tide toward the cities from the country at I the rate of 1,4»W,000 yearly.; White this eventually may benefit the fann- ■ ers, it now works toward making farm, help expennve. Diversified farming cannot, he looked on as a remedy to-the wheat 1 farmers’ plight Climate, soil ahd economics prewent any great substituI’ tion of crops in the Kansas wheat areas. It is the best wheat land in the ; world, but will grow nothing tdse as profitably. ■i The grain rate fight is local. The wheat growers of New England, j ' Pennsylvania or California have no excess to ship out of their country; • I all they can produce can be milled and.aoid locally without paying any i jof the heavy transportation cost of long hauls to market. The Kansas farmers ship 74 per cent of their grain out of t|ie state. . , , 1 . . ■ turn's — j l ~ 1 " " , ... The University Takes Its Place by the Side of the Church and the State By NICHOLAS MURRAY BUTLER, Preindent Columbia University. The university Ukes its place by the side of the chmuh and the state j is one of three fundimental institutions of modern civilization on its I moral and spiritual side. The church represents the organized faith of Christendom and its collective worship. The state represents the purpose of civilized man to live • happily and helpfully together in organized society. The university represents man’s inborn love of truth, his persistent curioeity which* has given rise to all science, and his dominating idealism which is the origin of all literature and of all philosophy. Long experience has shown that the university may and can only fc achieve its end by a three-fold activity, each aspect of which is complementary to the other two. The university must gather and Conserve knowledge; the universify must advance knowledge; the university must diffuse and apply knowledge. These are its three necessary and characteristic functions. - - . - - The university fails of its high purpose and falls short of its lofty ideal if it does noUrealize the fact that it must add to scholarship public service, and that it exists not for itself alone but for the nation and for all mankind. > * Senora Juan Antinio Buero, Uruguay.—Conditions that are fast making divorce a menace to the stability of the family life in America fortunately do hot exist in Uruguay. Divorce is frowned upon in my country «ao that it amount! to social ostracism to those who resort to the courts for divorce. I think this is dA principally to the training young people receive. Boys, and girls ..am brought .up .to consider carefully the importance of permanency in the married state and the serious character of matri- • . Gov. Wallace Farrington.—The eventnal destiny of Hawaii is to enter the family of stetes with full righto of statehood.
THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL
DADDY’S SEI EVENING inmriME||.ga Graham Bonner LITTLE WHITE DOG *Tm only a little white dog. I’m not very large. In fact I’m’ really Ilt-
tie, really smalL , “I’m not particularly beautiful. In fact I don’t believe Fd even be called pretty. * “My hair is shaggy and somewhat curly though it is more apt to look snarly than curly. “Still, my master does the best he can with it. It is difficult hafr with which to do anything. “But it doesn’t matter to me that I am not a big
He Studies Lessons.
creature. It doesn’t matter to me that I am not beautiful. It doesn’t matter to me that my hair isn’t pretty. “Nor does It matter to my master. That is the best of all. “My rfiastej- is a fine boy. Be goes to school. He studies lessons out of many books. Lt is surprising to see how many books *he studies and surely he will be very wise when he grows up. “He always comes home- from school with an armful of books. “I wonder then if he Is going to pay attention to the books and not to mC. “But no, he doesn't bother about his . books until much later on when it is <Jark and when I curt up in his lap or He by his feet and rest while he studies. ' “I’d be glad to help him with his lessons, blit I know I can’t. I am not a student. I Jiover was and I feel sure I never will be. “And so I don;j bother to .try so( I. know I'd only be a nuisance to my. master if I tried to look at the books and see what they were ail about. “When I was only a wee dog. no more than a puppy, I believe I tore up a school book once and chewed some of it. , ■ ’ “Probably I swallowed some knowledge then. But it has never been of any use to me and it has never been of any help to me. “I* don’t. know about anything because of that book. What I know I have learned because of my master and my own good sense which, has been handed down to one dog after another for generation after generation. “Os course, I do not mean that learning has been handed to us in our f paws. I mean that as an expression to l£t you know, if you don’t already, that dogs ‘inherit’ as they say, certain qualities. “We used to have some wolf ancestors years and years ago. they say. and the way we bury bones and find them again copies from the old wolf strain in us which bids us save some food for a rainy dav. “Now I.don’t mean an actual rainy day. . ■ ••That Is just an expression which means a day when things aren’t at their best and wiien It is well to have a little something saved for such a time. “But. oh, the best of all is the way my master loves me and treats me. the summer time he goes to play in a park nearby. In that park there is a little drinking place. My master puts his head down over a spray of water which is always coming up and has a drink. “But he doesn’t forget about me. He bolds me up In .bis arms and be takes the water In his hand and I lap it up from his hand. “Os course, I can’t get a great deal at a time this way and so he holds me in bis arms, under his left arm. to be exact, and I am given all I want. “My tongue is so refreshed. He dampens it for me. And he doesn’t
Doesn’t Bother About Book*.
think that" just because there isn't a regular place for dogs to drink that I must . wait until we get home. “And everyone loves to see my master’s devotion to me. I can see that they think it Is very sweet. 1 “No one minds If I have a'drink from my master’s hand at this -little fountain for the water keeps bubbling up
time. “But, oh, it fa such a wonderful thing to be loved ’ ft is. such a wonderful thing to be looked after and cared for and petted and treated so well and so affectionately. “It is so wonderful never to be forgotten! “What does it matter If one is only a little white dog, not very large and not beautiful and not even pretty and whose hair is not the nicest in the world so long as one la the pet of a perfect young master? “It doesn't matter in the least! That's what this little white dog says.” Canoe of Fever. Little Edna—My uncle has malaria fever. I wonder what causes people to have that kind of fever? Tdttle Emma—Don't you know? Little Edna—No. Do you? Little Emma—Tea. Marliaria, of course. Harmony. Music Teacher—What Is your impression of harmony? Smart Student—A freckled-face girl In a polka dot dress leading a coach
Winter Find You* Tired and Achy ? Do You Suffer Constant Backache — Fee! Old and Worn . Out? Then Follow the Advice of These Good Folks!
DO YOU get up these winter mornings feeling tired, weak — achy all over ? Are ydu so lame, stiff and miserable it seems you can never get back in trim? Does your back ache with a dull, constant throb? Sharp, rheumatic pains torture you at every step? Then you should be giving some attention to your kidneys! Winter, you know, is danger time for the kidneys. That’s because exposure to colds and chills wears down body resistance and throws an unusally heavy strain on the hard-working kidneys. The kidneys are apt
' Use Doans,” Say These Good Folks: «
W. W. GEBBY, prop, of barber shop, Main St., residence White St., West Liberty, Ohio, says: “First thing m the morning, if I stooped to lace my shoes, sharp catches took me in the small of my back. My back was sore and stiff and the muscles across my kidneys felt drawn. If I tried to get up quick, black spots danced before my eyes and made me dizzy. My kidneys acted irregularly. Doan’s Pills rid me of -the backache and flushed and regulated my kidneys.”
DOAN'S PILLS Stimulant the Kidneys ** At all dealers, 60c a box. Foster-Milbunt Co., Mfg. Chemists, Buffalo, N.Y.
An Inconsiderate Man. “We’ve, simply got to call a htilt,” he said. “We can’t go on living beyond aur income forever.” “I knew you’d do something to spoil the day for me,” she replied. “This is the first morning for a week that I haven’t had a headache.”—Seattle Post-Intelligencer. Don't Forget Cuticura Talcum When adding to your toilet requisites. An exquisite face, skin, baby and dusting .powder and perfume, rendering other perfumes superfluous. You may rely on it because one of the Cuticura Trio (Soap. Ointment and Talcum), 25c each everywhere. —Advertisement. Bees Not So Busy. A honeybee’s work consumes about half the hours of daylight, the remaining hours of the twenty-four being spent in rest, according to tests, made >y the United States Department of Agriculture. Always, Keep Ailcock’s Plasters in your home. Invaluable for all local aches and pains. Inexpensive, absolutely pure, safe and effective. —Adv. Indigestible. Artist —You appear to have done your prescribed reading, but you seem not to have digested it thoroughly. Mr. Poise—Me digest that stuff? It’s impossible. I’m no goat.
Teach your child internal cleanliness f THE mother who permits constipation in her baby or older child is risking the health, even the life of her little one. It must be remembered that an infant is helpless, unable to tell that constipation is making it* life miserable. Consequently the mother must be able to recognize signs of constipatiop xn her baby. Convulsions, night terrors, grinding the teeth to B leep u tlmlimLJl feverishness, fretfulness and such symptoms—any of these indicate that poisons from baby’s.stagnant intestine are flood- * ing the little body.In older children biliousness, coated tongue, loss of appebte - warn the mother that constipation is nur n. su» unchecked in youth; may lead to serious * constipation, according to intestinal specialists, lied the pnmtrfy cause of more than three-quarters of all illness* including the gravest diseases of life. I; ’’’ O* Laxatives Only Aggravate Constipation *fte mother should not resort to laxatives A noted authority says that tevstives and cathartics do not overcome constipation'' t - But by their continued use tend <toly to aggravate the condition > and often lead to permanent injury. ? Why Physicians Favor Lubrication ;1 •; Medical science, through knowledge: of the, intestinal bract gained by X ray observation, has found m lubrication a means of JSL&njlr overcoming constipation. The gentle lubricant, Ndj ol.penettates - and softens the hard food waste and hastens its passage ttoough . and out of the body. Thus Nujol brings internal A’of a Medicine Nujol is used in children sand general hospitalsand is prescribed by physicians throughout the world. Nujol is not a medicine or laxative and cinhot gripe. Like pure water-it’is harmless. ' Let your infant or child have Nujol regularly and see rosy , clear eyes and happiness return once more. . Get rid of constipation and avoid disease by adopting the habit , of internal cleanliness. Take Nujol yourself as.regularly as you brush your teeth or wash your face. For sale by all druggists. v * 4 - - “TR? 4 Nui ol dfir RSO. US. FAT. OFF. BPI For Internal Cleanliness
to fall behind in keeping the blood-stream pure, and poisons accumulate that well kidneys would have filtered off. , t . Racking backaches come with stabbing - ; pains; muscles and joints ache constantly; > there are headaches, too, with dizziness and distressing kidney irregularites. Nerves are “jumpy”; one feels old —all worn out. - Give your weakened Jkidneys thq help they need. Use Doan’z Pill* — a stimulant diuretic to the kidneyft. Daan ’s have helped . thousands. They are recommended by grateful users everywhere. Ask your neighbor!
MRS. JOE BUDDE, 403 S. Perry St, Wapakoneta, Ohio, says: “Sharp stinging pains inmy back made it hard to do anythmg. Whenever. I did much sweeping, or dusting a dizjy serotetion often made me stagger and many times I. almost fell- down. My eyes became affected and flashes, of light caused great incopyenijnpgei, My kidneys were disordered. Doan’s Pills quick relief. My back-was sobn strong',’ the dizziness left and my kidneys acted normally./*' A.’i
l “Scalped the Mpn.” . . A Scottish footballer was as bald as a billiard bail, but managed to keep it concealed by means of a cap and wig. In one match, however, as one of bis opponents took a redhot shot at' the goal. “Wiggly” got his head in the way of the ball and the wig and sap were knocked off. When the first player saw the result of his shot he seemed thunderstruck for a moment,, .and then exclaimed: “Guid heavens! I’ve scalped the mon!” Some men never do a charitable act unless there is some one around to applaud.
a Two pleasant ways u to relieve a cough, '.'Mft i Take your choice and suit A * your taste. S-B—or Menthol 4 flavor. A sure relief for coughs, SQpftfypzP , colds and hoarseness. Put one -■* ft in your mouth at bedtime. ; t* V«*o» Always keep a box on hand. MAMI * SMITH BROTHERS sa COUCH DROPS MMSHs Famous since 1847 fonuycwarmaw -..--a—- ~ ■- .---r - t —- ■. < ■' -ST"I —~ ' *
, Colorado Had Tsetse Fliea. ~. . Several species of tsOtse which today carrjr the gerihs African sleeping • sickness,-' existed tar what is now Cdloradoiborb*tl»an a mH** lion years ago. ' *.».'• ■-A. LiU ♦ ’ Red Cross Ball Blue Is the finest product of its kind Jn the tcorld.' ?®very woman who has. u«td it this statement to be true.—Advefti^i £ ment. - Aye, Professor —What Is the commonest roriji of eye trouble? , ' ’ i Stude— Egotikm, siri *• •. *•*
