The Syracuse Journal, Volume 17, Number 23, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 2 October 1924 — Page 6

Mrjhkkii DYSPEPSIA Everv normal person requires a w *|*‘ kalaneed food diet to maintain bodily weight, nrrvoui and muscular energy and general good health. And thw taino to wind the dyspeptic, who i» particularly unfortunate in that he cannot eat sufficient quantity or variety of food to prop orly nouriah hi« ayatem. Yet even the dyspeptic, if he will follow a simple treatment, can win his way back to health and happiness. This treatment is found in Jaques’ Digestive Capsules, providing in capsule form the digestive elements which the weakened, undernourished, dyspeptic stomach is unable to provide. , . Jaques' Capsules are pleasant to take and bring quick, sure relief. They have a tonic effect which inspires the stomach to do its work unassisted. Nonhabit forming. 60 cents at all druggists, of direct from Jaques Capsule Co., Plattsburg, N. Y. NOW YOU CAN QUICKLY END KIDNEY TROUDLES A six ounce bottle of Dr. Carey’s Marshroot Prescription 777 ( for 75 cents. If you have backache or puffed eyelids, swollen ankles or clammy hands. It’s probably poison settled In your kidneys and the sooner you get rid of It, the further away from the grave you'll be. Roots and herbs are best for this purpose as Dr. Carey, for 40 years a practicing physician, well knew. If your kidneys are making your life miserable the best medicine is none too good. Cut out thia notice, take it to any good druggist and see that you get Dr. Chrey’s Marshroot Prescription 777. It comes In both liquid and tablet form and the price Is only 75 cents. If your local druggist hasn’t It he can get It from the Carey Medical Laboratories nt Elmira, N. Y. TAe Essential Robert was Invited over to the neighbor s for dinner. As the. maid brought in the fried chicken and all that usually appeals to the three-year-old, Robert continued to gaze furtively toward the kitchen- After the dessert course he voiced his Judgment. "You haven’t gut very 'much, have yon?" "Why?" asked the hostess a bit taken aback. "Well. I don’t see any ice cw-m." Brought up on a Farm As a. young man Dr. Pierce prac- . tired medicine in a rural district and . was known far and wide for jr his great success Yja 1 n alleviating I T>V ImA disease. He L early moved to Buffalo and put ./ 'vJwK ® p ready-to-use form, his Golden Medical » fey Discovery. ths well-known ton,or the blood. I which Is an extract of native root* This "Discovery" of Dr. Pierce's clears ayay pimples • and annoying eruption*, tends to keep the complexion fresh and clear. It corrects the disordered conditions In a sick stomach, aids .digestion. acts as a tonic and enriches the blond. Vim is sure to follow Its use. All dealers. Tablets or liquid. Redeliver Moisture Kain trees of the island of Ferro collect the moisture of drifting clouds and allow it to drift to the ground la steady streams. We arouse in others the attitude wo hold toward them. The right way to akin beauty pVERY akin will respond Aj to corrw# treatment. but don’t overlook that word eorMCt —it mean* the difference between suocees and failure. la addition to being unaurpaaaed for general toilet W, keainol Soap, aided by RremrJ Ointment improves poor compluMXM. Blotches, roughnesa, clogged pores. redness. and even the move serious itching, smarting akin disorders gradually disappear when the Resinol traatment is used. Ask vour dnmgfot today for Resin nl Soap and Ointment and use them as directed. Within a week you will begin to notice • diffsrsne s m your skin. Resinol tho I 1S» .re?** t CMMrm pw bmlihr md_t»ve z wap, ■ Km| I pbXnt-atawßaum rHMBi

OUR COMIC SECTION Our Pet Peeve - \ \ ” | w, \ \ \ 7 V--(CopyrisM, W.M.U.) 9 Let Her Rave, Felix That's HE u«D i /CT\ A K.CS BTbBEAN OO S~EET . 1 MASB«D / A.NY \ L 10OK.N' A HEART or MINE A HR.TEAThERHEAO - / J 3k /-'"X H,? NAME WA<5 k ihOa J X. ELLA OSyALI* FITT9 — j -“b > , ISMT A IZOMANTiC J jAI fl x* Age w I^AME 1 — ‘W' IPriffir 7 j “J M if- 1 *:. 1 ; i NhLJ ~~~f 6EE— That makeg F-zz-NE */AS 90 BiG Er A 6uY — L 6ooD -larger Than mb. featubrhead - / its V i>on't it HE HAD <k)CM UJONDERFUL BLONDE/ Too E “A. ’ ‘ w/Avcr haie,, Such devilish j Bad nr. «—•—j J>EEP ®lue eyes, X he 'wore ) featherHtS CLOTHES So 'WELL AIN'T f jf B OWmUoi Newspaper Vuioa ' I X || | |y) \ VAN mfM-, — " / — -— : H<w It Happens cvtei urru wwt£ some J . I ertM WBMSAkPEQ VRLL J \ PRIWT AM ITEVA FRDkA A It COUMTCM MEWSCAPER ABOUT &JMG XRiFUMa yS K MATTER, UK£ HEMRV JONE? HAW US BARU / .JFW x SkUMGLED, AMO THEM _gy E7RNOME WlUr G\\)£ O SW^wX 1 ' OEAUIUi ' TW« TWS W U»FF I xKmg >! sncTEEWNE *® s , WEWRM 00MB AMHYM'U GW* tOHDR A CHAUCE UA ÜBUSAbPS • Tfc OXXORTR£S Tb msuxxm 'TU' MEWTOO OFTCUO2 OF EUERHGOOM IM'CNJU |*| 'WkJ OTUERS S MOT X? AS OFTEU AS POSSIBLE, AM‘ THE § THAT 'ftf EDTCbtt REAJOM SObAfi PERSOMS ARt» jf f? . S PUNKA' MOPE - n^auST jSI XM6SE t’EOPVE iaa«e MORE ueusi • Wastera Newsoa*erVMm ) — ■ I”" ■ - ■ . - ■ . - aasag'..<_J WITHOUT AO A-Mks HXfX'Sa'WW* COMPANI- I Ofi I < —- NEW GAME t MENT. I g l ™ T ~ r Stin” Why where’s I like to have a VcX' Johnny 3? ” x & TEMPTATION, quiet smoko Johnny has 2hm - „ *.a out i. why. said V the sewer. / J Garden of Edaa* Duff ’ -J 4MHb lB the sewer! \ — z °° **• Ev ®- I remove the band J Whot for? ’ from my C He's playin’ J} ? bJTom.. - ~rm.ru>. ** Why give a demagogue the lost Next to happtoMß la indifforsaea -As ye sow. so shall y« reap." if Were la a gats? ■ ■ ■ ' . .

THE SYRACUSE JOURNAU

Washington Sidelights

New Spark Camera WASHINGTON.— There may never be another war—as everyone hopes—but in the meantime the War department is photographing bullets in flight tnd during Impact. The department has long been trying to ascertain the position taken in flight by different types of bullets in the interest of acmnicy of fire. Now, however, there is a new camera which photographs the bullet in light and shows some astonishing things. A camera that takes pictures In two-millionths of a second has been perfected at the United States bureau >f standards. This apparatus, known as the spark *amera, photographs waves of sound, moving at 1,100 feet a second, as clear•y and accurately as an ordinary nw-ion-picture camera could record the progress of an incoming tide. It tnkes mapshots of a high-powef rifle bullet «t 2,700 feet a second—so fast that its victim would never hear the sound of .he explosion that sent the fatal pellet on its way to his heart. The spark camera is. of course, exceedingly intricate and dedicate. It has been developed by Philip P. Quayle if the bureau of standards. It is an ilectricul apparatus and operation is

Uncle Sam Growing Chaulmoogra Trees

UNCLE SAM has enlisted In the fight against leprosy from a new angle. At the Department of Agriculture’s station at Sell. Md., the government is engaged n propagating chaulmoogra plants. *roni which oil will be obtained to treat epers. About 670 plants are growing in Maryland and more than 2,000 have already been shipped to Hawaii, the Philippines, the Canal Zone and Porto Rico, to mature in the warmth of a rroplca) sun. There is no place in the United States where the trees will develop fully. This work has been going on since 1920, when Joseph F. Rock, agricultural explorer attached to the office ft foreign seed and plant Introduction, visited the jungles of Burma and Siam searching for chaulmoogra trees. Tracing chaulmoogra history,’ Mr. Rock found that its seeds and oil ‘have been known for centuries to the natives of Burma and southeastern

New Memorials Will Adorn the Capital

PLANS for erecting nearly n dozen new memorials in the nation’s capital, already nmed for its statuary’, are now under way. Congressional sanction has been given for ten to be unveiled in the near future. s The statue of Gen. San Martin (1778-1S5O), termed the “George Washjngton of Argentina,” soon to be ofli‘ially presented by the government of tls country to America, has arrived in Washington. He was also the liberator of Chile and Peru. His statue will >e given a prominent place at the cap,tat. Methodists are making preparations ’or a memorial to Bishop Francis Asbury (1745-1816). joint founder with Thomas Coke of Methodism in the United States. It will be uuveiled in October. The nuns of the battlefields of the ?tvil war will have a monument to heir memory here, thanks to the efforts of the Ladles’ Auxiliary of the Ancient Order of Hihei-nians. •'Heroes that sacrifice*!" their lives, hat women and children might be

American Dye Industry Is Flourishing

ENORMOUS strides made by the American dye industry are shown in the census of dyes and coal tar chemicals for the caleniar year 15123. which is about to be issued by the tariff commission. The report shows a record output, with conspicuous progress in production for the first time in this country of many important dyre and other synthetic organic chemicals as well as a further reduction in selling prices. Various factors, some of which were ttot anticipated, have enabled the domestic industry, a wartime development. to achieve success in its fight to •stablish itself permanently in face of German competition. The more Important factors responsible for the large output In 1923 are enumerated by the commission as follows: Activity of the domestic textile and lye consuming Industries; occupation of the Ruhr, which caused a reduction In the output of the German dye factories ; and relatively high foreign price levels of dyes compared with those of the pre-war period.

Foot-and-Mouth Disease Cost $5,500,000

DR. JOHN R. MOHLER, chief of the bureau of animal industry of the Department of Agriculture. has returned from a trip of inspection through the regions of California scourged by the foot-and-mouth disease epidemic. He reports satisfactory conditions. “Os the 16 counties involved." he said. “14 are now considered entirely free from infection, another is probably free, and the last one. Tuolumne, still contains a small but baffling center of suspected infection. "None of the 14 counties from which the disease is considered eradicated have experienced any recurrence of the infection ? in more than two months. Los Angeles county has experienced no August 3. ‘Tuolumne county lias presented anusual difficulties In eradication work, due to the broken and rugged character of the land, but even there all known diseased herds have been Slaughtered and buried, and the range cattle in the leas accessible regions. ■ ■ .

Photographs Bullets entirely automatic. When the operator is prepared to take a picture he starts the electric motor. When a sufficiently high charge has been built up a red electric lamp is lighted, signifying that the apparatus is ready for work. The bullet is then fired. From the time the projectile leaves the gun until the picture is completed is scarcely six-thousandths of a second. The but* let passes across the plate, which is eight inches wide, in about ten-thou-sandths of a second. The image is impressed on the plate in two-millionths of a second. So accurately can the spark be timed that successive pictures of bullets leaving a gun show every stage of the firing from the moment the first air is forced from the barrel to the time when the projectile has leaped well beyond reach of the gas blast. Special care is taken to make the spark as nearly instantaneous as possible. An ordinary electric spark, such as Is used for automobile ignition, is not fast enough. It is also possible to obtain a clear photograph of a bullet while piercing an obstacle and observe its behavior, from which valuable information may be obtained for the construction of ar-mor-piercing bullets.

Asia In genera) as palliatives in leprosy and other skin diseases, and were employed by them both externally and internally." There are about 500 lepers in the United States, as nearly as can be ascertained, says the United States public health service. About 225 are in one colony at Carviile, I.q, A small colony which was located at Buzzards Bay in Massachusetts was merged with the Louisiana colony in 1921. There are about 300 registered lepers and it is estimated that around 150 have not been identified. The institution at Carviile has been full from the start, with a large waiting list. Congress last year appropriated $650,000 additional for the home, which Is being expended to care for 500 patients. Those afflicted in Hawaii are cared for at the famous leper colony on the Island of Molokai, where many cures have been effected.

saved, in the tragic catastrophe of the sinking of the steamship Titanic" will be honored in a memorial which will overlook the Potomac river. Mrs. Harry Payne Whitney, recently executed the Buffalo Bill monument, will design this monument. • The First Division memorial, commemorating men of the American Expeditionary force of that fighting organization, has already been erected south of the State and War department building and will be nnveiled in October. A memorial to President Buchanan is to be erected in Meridian Hill park. A memorial to John Ericsson, inventor and constructor of the Monitor of Civil war fame, is to be raised south of the Lincoln memorial. The state of Pennsylvania is pushing plans to erect a memorial to .the memory of Maj. Gen. George Gordon Meade, commander of the Army of the Potomac in the Civil war. Prominent among proposals for monuments {tending in congress is one for commemorating the late President •Theodore Roosevelt

Dyes produced in the United States supplied about 96 per cent of the apparent consumption in 1923 and. in ad dition, American manufacturers en joyed an extensive export trade. The domestic production of dyes in 1923 by 88 firms was 93.tk57.524 pounds In 1922 the output by 87 firms was 64.632.187 pounds. The total sales for were 87,567.446 pounds, with a value of $47,223,161. Pre-war produc tion in the year 1914 by seven firms was 6,619,729 pounds, valued at $2,470.096. The average sales price of all dyes for 1923 was 54 rents per pound, compared with 60 rents in 1917. 83 rents in 1921, and $1.26 in 1917. the first year for which a census of dyes and coal tar chemicals was compiled. During 1923 nearly 100 dyes were produced for jrhich no production in the United States had been shown in 1922. in addition, other dyes, which had been reported previously in small quantities, wen* manufactured on a substantial commercial scale.

comprising part of Stanislaus National forest, are under a state of siege. “The men, working under direction of the supervising federal Inspector, are under orders to make inspections when possible, but, when stray animals on an infested range cannot be approached closely, to shoot them These animals are buried deeply, a record of the brands being kept so; indemnity purposes. Next year the infected areas will be entirely closed to stock as a precautionary measure/' The outbreak has been expensive—about $5,500,000 to the state and federal governments jointly. The total indemnity Involved exceeded S4.2tXL 000. and the cost of eradicating the scourge was approximately $1,250,000 About 107,000 animals bad to be sacri fired, of which 58,000 were cattie, 49, 000 sheep and the rest hogs. In addition, for a time the tourist traffic into the state wm almost com pletely stopped, which meant n large | toss to imuky toeaßOs*. .

WRIGLEYS ~After every meal / A pleasant /A and agreeable wc<_ i sweet and a I Wjfci fi l-a-s-t-l-n-0 Ira ml s benefit aa M 111 well. Good for teetb, breatb ■ and digestion. Makes tbelßLflßlin next clgarfl taste better. ■j x. Born Salesman A small boy was complaining to a sympathetic neighbor of his father’s suddenly acquired penuriousness. He wasn't giving his offspring money for ice cream and soda water as l»efcre and the latter was greatly stirred over the change in his parent’s nature. "Papa's saving his money, but 1 tell him it's foolish,” he observed. "Saving, eh?” commented the neighbor. "Yes. Papa said he's saving to buya baby, but I think I’ll be able to talk him out of it.”—New York Sun and Globe. No ugly, grimy streaks on the clothes when Red Cross Ball Blue is used. Good bluing gets good results. All grocers carry it —Advertisement. Nevada School Favored Endowments approximating $4T41.000 for the school of mines of the Uni versity of Nevada and the erection «>f a new science building with most modern equipment are recent gifts from Clarence Mackay. Greater Greater speed and faster pick-up are immediately noticeable if a new set of Champion spark plugs are installed. You will know genuine Champions by the doubleribbed sillimanite core. * Champion Xis 60 cents. Blue Box 75 cents.* Champion Spark Plug Co. Toledo, Ohio CHAM PION DOi.OH, i», ■•<•yf.fi.. Farm Children The farm population of the nation although, less than 30 per cent of tho total, is carrying more than 35. per cent of the child population, says a United States bulletin. The farm is charged with the duty of educating this excess of youth and turning it over to the cities at the producing age. If one isn’t sure what life Is for. one Is likely to be confused in working toward the ideal. w — Let him be wretched who thinks himself so. - - Back Gven Out? It’» hard to do one’s work when every day brings morning lameness, throbbing backache and a dull, tired feeling. If you suffer thus, why not find out the cause? Likely it's your kidneys. Headaches, dizziness and bladder irregularities may give further proof that your kidneys need help Don't risk neglect! Use Doan’t PiUs, a stimulant diuretic to the kxinqys. Thousands have been helped by Doan’S. They should help you. Ask your neighbor I An Ohio Case —.— . William D. Brown, 715 Rlverside Ave., Defiance, Ohio, says: , |t uSkAEBwTk* "My kidneys trouWwaf jw bled me a lot and Bt times I had dull backaches 1 .*< an<i * soreness u over m y kidneys. 9 . When I stooped the muscles of my ‘ r \nt' back were so sore VUfW luu I could hardly straighten. My kidneys were disordered. I used Doan's Pills and they relieved the kidney trouble." DOAN’S STIMULANT DIURETIC TO THE KIDNEYS Fasa>Miff>wC»~Mfg.Che t m.Bvfcta.N.Y. FOR OVER 200 YEARS hoar!rm oil has been a worldwide remedy for kidney, liver and. ladder disorders, rheumatism, organs. Three sizes. All druggists. Insist, on the original genuine Gold Mkdal.