The Syracuse Journal, Volume 16, Number 45, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 6 March 1924 — Page 7

f Keep the Children Well I During these days many children are complaining of headI ache, feverishness, stomach troubles, and irregular bowels. If mothers only knew what I MOTHER CRAY’S I SWEET POWDERS I for CHILDREN 4* I Will do for children no family would ever be B without them. These powders are so B easy and pleasant to take and so es- jgjaK'Sr » I fective in their action that for over B 30 years mothers have used them B and told others about them. Sold by I Druggists everywhere. Be Nel Accept Axy Sobslitxte for MOTHER GRAY’S SWEET POWDERS. H —» 11 ; ~’FnwiM pleasant ways |O to relieve a cough/ Take your choice and suit your ta,te - S ' B —“■ Menthol dk flavor. A sure relief for coughs, cold* ‘“‘d hoarseness. Put one 4QUHz in your mouth at bedtime. traoi Ahrays keep a box on hand. MAMM SMITH BROTHERS SB. COUGH DROPS menthol, ——• Famous since 1847 * utiuiAsy

T.. > devil* never takes a vacation, mother reason why good people A Safe and Sure Laxative— Brandreth Pills. One or two taken at bed time will keep you in good condition. Entirely vegetable—Adv. Frivolous Firemen Granny dearly loved to read the morning newspaper, although It Is very doubtful whether her falling eyesight could always make out the printed words, and It is quite certain that she did not grasp their meaning, as this •fory shows One morning, after breakfast, she took up her position in her favorite armchair, and soon was absorbed In the news. Presently she' looked up over her glasses at her grandson, who was writing a letter. “These firemen must be a frivolous lot.' she remarked.severely. “What makes you think so. GrannyF asked the other, pausing in his writing. "Because," said the old woman, “it •ays heYe that after the fire wast under control at the soap factory the firemen played on the ruins ail night." —Pittsburgh Telegraph. \ Welsh Enthusiasm Three gentlemen froth the heart of Wales walked Into a Manchester place and asked for three glasses of cider. After smacking their lips the first one said: “Look you! That's the finest glass of elder I’ve neffer tasted !* The second remarked: "So did 1 also!” and the third capped with: “Neither did I, too!"—London Morning Post. { Housewife Does Without “Pa." said Clarence, "what's the difference between a housewife and a hakerF “None of your foolishness, now. young man." growled his dad. *WelL* replied Clarence, "a baker and a housewife both make bread out of dough, but the difference Is the baker! makes his dough out of bread*—<’!n I rinnatl Enquirer. I

“TH Take a Chance!" THE thought that goes with the cup of coSee at the evening meal is a disturbing one. u lt may keep me awake tonight!” < The something [caSeine] in coSee that keeps so many folks awake nights, is entirely absent in Postum—the delicious, pure cereal beverage. The difference means a full night’s rest and a bright tomorrow. Postum • for Health "There’s a Reason” / TWffrW CCBMNI in two fccflMß Amuck Pmrm* [in tin*} peer jeevd inaamdy in th* cup by the addition cl bribng wane. I»b3 Fbaum Ctaeai {fa parka***) 4nt dMxnwhosMfef dbofi*tw feruaght am by bailing fuDy K7 I EZzi oludbur .. 11l

A Plunkville Trial "Were these men working In unison F "No. sir, they were working right here in Plunkville.” I To Insure glistening-white table , linens, use Red Cross Ball Blue in your laundry. It never disappoints. At all j good grocers.—Advertisement Origin of Jury Trial In an article in the North Carolina Law Review “on Magna Charta and Trial by Jury,” Chief Justice Clark shows that “broad as are the provisions of Magna Charta and great as has been its effect upon the course of history. It. has no claim to be styled, as it often has been, the origin and | guarantee of trial by jury, with which \lt had nothing whatever to do." The chief justice says trial by jury was utterly unknown in the shape in which we now have It until It appeared in England nearly a century and half after the adoption of Magna Charta. The first authentic instance of trial by Jury was, he states, in England and in the year 1351. where Magna Charts was signed June 19. 1215.—From the Raleigh News and Observer. Homestead Explained Hogan was tired of the city and wanted to move out to the great open spaces where men are men and all that sort of thing. Accordingly, he sought Information from a friend. "Clancy,” he said, “ye've taken a hogjestead, so ye know all about It Wilt ye bi tel)in’ me th' law about goln* about ItF "Well, ye see," said Clancy Judiciously. ‘Tm not after rememberin’ the letter of the law. but here's what it amounts to: The guvyhnent la willin' to bet ye wan htfmlred an’ sixty acres of land agin 814 that Je .can’t live on it five years without starvin' to death." f You will never find cause tor gratiItude If you cause none. Sometimes an officeholder has more of a pull than a dentist.

OUR MAGAZINE section zyt Interesting Features for the Entire Family

Something to Think About By F. A. IDALKER

SERIOUS FACTS XX7HEN we mortals turn from the * ’ beaten track and find that we are at a place where we must pause and meditate upon the serious facts confronting us, we are frequently inclined to become ill-humored and Illogical. A sort of mental strabismus darkens our vision and numbs our bodies, caused in a large measure by our disinclination to touch upon anything of a serious nature. We dislike to go afield among the dark shadows where the ghosts of the past are lurking. The open sunshine Is always preferable for the reason that it dissipates doubt and permits us to see clearly without effort. * Indeed, the great majority of our relatives, and ourselves included, prefer the frivolous to the profound. We incline to touch lightly, to grasping with all our strength. We fall at once Into the state of the school boy when the trees are budding and the air is soft and warm. He tosses a dependable coin to decide whether he shall take his place in the classroom among serious teachers, and still more serious books. He returns home at night with a. string of fish, a new freckle or two. and goes early to bed, brooding over t THE MORE THE I DISHES | ♦ By DOUGLAS MALLOCH ♦ *444444444444444444444444* K/fY MOTHER’S mother when she XVX got A dinner up was glad to do it; She liked to entertain a lot, And plenty came, for plenty knew IL A Sunday meal, a Christmas Day, Were right according to her wishes, And yet she' always used to say, "The more the meal, the more the dishes." She didn't say It to complain But more to stop the rest complaining; -A When they were tired enough to faint, With still the kitchen things remaining, "This ain’t," she nearly always said. “No miracle of loaves and fishes; And, if you want to have a spread, The more the meal, the more the dishes." And I Mhave noticed all along Through life that wealth Is like a dinner; You’ve got to labor good and strong, You've got to work to be a winner; And. after you have got your gold, Man seldom finds the ease he wishes; You've got to work your wealth to hold— The mbre the meal, the more the dishes. (© by McC>ur» Newapapcr Syndicate.)

mot kefs Cook Book

There is no mystery about happiness Whatever. Put In the right ingredients and it must come out. W*. may encourage others by our faith and cheer, but we have no right to dishearten them by doubt and gloom. FOOD FOR THE FAMILY THERE are all sorts of bread pudding* and when well prepared are delirious. Here is: Another Bread Pudding. Take two cupfuls of bread crumb*, a cupful of sugar, a cupful of molasses, a half cupful of raisins, a dash of cinnamon and two cupful* of sweet Has Anyone Laughed At You — Because- ’’‘Wk ♦ You always road th* adver- <. tiaement* hrrtf o People have probably peeJ ‘ tered you and said you were not <» < ► literary but “all business.’* Lack- * * , aday 1 they know little, those «► < > laugher* I Ad* today are really * * o more literary than story-text. ♦ 4 * More time Is taken In their mak- < ’ o Ing. more cennonhlp in their ♦ publication, mure brains (very o often) in their building. Ads o 3; are nearly always faithfully 11- I, < > lustrated where stories have 11- J • ’ J lustrations that may not match | •» thdlr contents.. Stick to your ad J * J ’ reading; you will learn about < > < ► Industry, art, price*, costs, in- ’ * J ‘ ventions. *and far more than * ’ * most stories teU you. ;; And o o so ;; Tour get-away hen is: • 1 That million* of dollar* have J ‘ < * bron spent Ju*t to mak* you do «> ♦ thial So why not! Z r© by MeCtar* New»paj>*r SytMlteat*.) ♦

THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL

the seriousness of his plight. He will remember for life when he is told on the morrow that it is the serious men and women who do things. He will tell you that had Sir Isaac Newton not been the serious-minded man he was, the fall of an apple would not have revealed to him the law of gravitation. What the thoughtless term "good luck,” if you will look into the matter deeply, may be traced to serious thought. You may con your Greek verbs, or play hide and seek with your Latin, but if you are not realty serious in your studies you can never master them. To mare forward day by day in your sphere of endeavor requires the quality of seriousness that made Washington so dearly beloved by his armies, and gave to Lincoln an enduring name. To the serious-minded, earnest persons, the world is indebted for its greatest inventions and loftiest achievements. We want a little more seriousness in our work, and decidedly less dejection, and when we get it, paradoxical though it may seem, we shall be more cheerful and infinitely happier. (© ty MeClure Newspaper Syndicate.) o Sure Proof. If you wish to know whether he coaches the track team or has the chair of history look at his salary check. —Dulntb Herald.

SCHOOL DAIJS

t 1 \\ \ i Yz * /il \ Copyright

milk. Bake huif an hour, stirring often, then add four cupfuls of milk and bake two hours longer. Serve hot. Pineapple Salad. Mix djced pineapple with equal parts of diced celery ami half the quantity of shredded almonds. Serve In nests of head lettuce with mayonnaise dressing. Ginger Bread. Take one cupful of sugar, one cupful of molasses, one-half cupful of melted lard, one teaspoonful of soda in one cupful of boiling water, one egg, three cupfuls of flour. Beat the egg. add the sugar, lard and molasses with a teaspoonful of salt and a tablespoonful of ginger, then add the three cupfuls of flour and when well-mixed add the boiling water and soda. Stir well and pour into a large dripping pan. Bake forty minutes. Spinach With Cream. Wash three pounds of spinach and put to cook tn a large saucepan; cook, stirring occasionally, twelve minutes; then put through a toe sieve, saving all the liquor; add four tablespoonfuls of butter and pepper and salt to taste, cook for fifteen minutes, then add three tablespoonfuls of cream; mix well and pile in the center of a dish with croutons surrounding gie spinach. XjUm <• *V Wwttni Newspaper Union.) O . j “Johnny Applwd.** “Johnny Appleseed" was a queer character who lived about 1830, or perhaps several years earlier. He was a wandering hermit who traveled through the Middle West with a bag of apple seeds which he planted in many places. His real name is said to have been John Chapman, but he got ft* name “Appleseed” from his occupation «

: THE ROMANCE ? t OF WORDS t : : "ENGINE” X 4 YD EADERS of Chaucer who 4 ♦ are none too familiar with J 4 the medieval meaning of the '4 ♦ word “engine” have natural- $ 4 ly been puzzled over, the state- 4 J ment by the English writer that * ♦ "Man hath sapiences thre: ♦ ♦ memorie, engin and intellect" 4 ♦ But it should be remembered ♦ :* that this word, formed from the 4 Greek gignere, “to beget,” and ♦ 4 the Latin ipgenium, was under- 4 ♦ stood as late as the Eighteenth J 4 century to mean talent or wit— ♦ * practically a synonym for “in- J 4 genuity” which is derived from 4 J the same word-root. So, for ex- * ♦ ample, in Puttenham, we come ♦ * across the line “Such made most $ 4 of their works by translation. ♦ $ few of their own engine,” while 4 4 the additional meaning of “tem- ♦ 4 per" is apparent from the quota- ♦ ♦ tion from Fairfax’s Tasso. “His J 4 fell ingine hlsAgrayer age did ♦ J somewhat mitigate.” x 4 About the Sixteenth century 4 J the word began to take on the 4 ♦ sense of the product of one’s in- 4 J genuity. rather than the skill * 4 itself and was widely applied to 4 * any appliance or machine used X 4 in warfare, hunting, the commer- $ :clal arts or torture. Thus a cata- ♦ pult, a cross-bow, a spinning « X wheel and a rack were all ge- ♦ ♦ nerically referred to as “engUies” 4 4> and it was not until the early J £ part of the last century that the 4 ♦ word was used in the currently J £ accepted sense. 4 4 <® by Wheeler Syndicate. Inc.) J

< Young Lady I ( Across the Way | tzJf The young lady across the way say* nicotine is a deadly poison. and if people must smoke they ought always to use cigarette holders. (© by McClure Newspaper Syndicate.) o SYMPATHY. “Do you believe marriage brings Sjrmpatkg?” “Most assuredly. I believe every woman feels sorry for some other

AsPtWN SAY .“BAYER” when you Unless you see the “Bayer Cross” on tablets you are not getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians 23 years for Colds Headache \W )\ Toothache Rheumatism Neuritis Lumbago Neuralgia Pain, Pain Accept only package which contains proven directions.' Handy “Bayer” boxes of 12 tablets —Also bottles bf 24 and 100—Druggists. / Aspirin is the tnds mark of Bayer Uanufactm of Honoacetleacldestcr of Sallcjrllcecld / CONSTIPATION Take a good dose of Carter’s Little Liver Pills iCAOnrOfCI —then take 2or 3 for a few nights after. They vAK IC. KO cleanse your system of all waste matter and WIR Regulate Your Bowels. Mild—as easy to Hpil I C take as sugar. Genutne bear signature—-u&hbhmßß-J Small Pill. Small Dose. Small Price.

Any woman who knows anything about men never, asks one whether her bat is on right. No ugly, grimy streaks on the clothes when Red Cross Ball Blue Is used. Good bluing gets good results. All grocers carry it —Advertisement. Wig and Robes Expensive ’ The wig and robes of an ordinary English judge cost approximately $2,000. The lord chancellor, the attorney general, the lord chief justice, the master of the rolls and lord justices of appeal are even more expensively dressed.

Why You Jbr £eenew>ica/ Tran./ertetim* May Need — Thera are three main groups of''prospective buyers of Chevrolet automobile* and commercial cars. First, are all who know from comparisons or through the experience* of friend* that Chevrolet provide* the utmost . . dollar value in modern, economical transportation of people or merchandise. _ Second, the large group of people with modest income* who have the false impression that so good a car a* s, Chevrolet is beyond their means. They do not realize that due to engineering excellence and full modern equipment, Chevrolet operating and maintenance costs average so low that during the lire of the car, it delivers modern, comfortable, fast transportation at the lowest cost per mile, including the purchase price. Third, the smaller but very important group of car owner* of ample means, only a small percentage of whom as yet realize that Chevrolet a* an extra car virtually costs them nothing, due to the reduction in their transportation expenses effected by it. ! We respectfully suggest consideration, investigation and comparison of Chevrolet with any other car at any price. Chevrolet Motor Company, Detroit, Michigan Division of General Motors Corporation Prices f. o. b. Flint, Mich. - Superior Utility Coupe . 640 Superior Ligjni Delivery . 495 terrier 4-PamasuCoupe 725 Utitay Exp; £ Truck Ch~ri* 550 • i1 ■ II h W i It Ml ul ilto .Hk. AiH ™ 1 9 w 1 vsfr'j V/y

Ignorance Is Costly Owner —What will it cost me to have my car fixed? Garageman—What’s the matter with It? Owner —I don’t know. Garageman—Forty-eight dollars and fifty cents. —Arkansas Utility News. -DANDELION BUTTeT COLOR” A harmless vegetable butter color used by millions for 50 years. Drug stores and general stores sell bottles of “Dandelion’’ for 35 cents.—Adv. Fortunately A—Did your wife miss you? B—Yes. by a hair’s breadth. The nlate just grazed my ear.

piuiv JMMK vxs - - . .. • , w Children Cry for “Castoria” r Z 8 * AHarmta Substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops and Soothing Syrups «-No Narcotics!

Mother! Fletcher’s Castoria has been in use for over 30 years to relieve < babies and children of Constipation, Flatulency. Wind Colic and Diarrhea; allaying Feverishness arising therefrom, and, by regulating the Stomach and Bowels, aids the assimilation of -

Law is for protection, not to influence men's conception of their moral duties. The demand for sincerity is far in excess of the visible supply. A Universal Remedy for Pain. For over 70 years Allcock’s Plaster has been a standard external remedy, sold in all parts of the civilized world. —Adv. Some people get excited even when they are talking about nothing. After hesitating a man often finds that It is too late to act.

Like All the Rett A terrible tragedy is reported from Suburbia. It appears that a lady recently write to an evening paper to say that she, at least, had found the perfect husband. Unfortunately her letter was never published, as the gentleman in question forgot to pest It For bloated feeling and distressed breathin* due to indigestion yon need a medicine as well as a purgative. Wright's India* Vegetable Pills are both. Adv. Poor Jonet "What’s the matter with Jones?* "His wife is spending the raise be didn't get.”—Boston Transcript A man is seldom in undue haste to take up an overdue note.

Food; giving natural sleep without opiates. The genuine bears signature of J