The Syracuse Journal, Volume 17, Number 24, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 9 October 1924 — Page 6

Chew it after |CEeb every meal It atlmalakea Bky appetite and ■ w'a> aide digeatlea. ■ 4 I® ■»•■»«• ?•»* Hvri food do yon more ■nanMaaal good. Noto scow It relieves that atafty feeling after hearty eating. teeth. Xg‘W||Njk eweeteae iRkvUtacMFA breath aa<d MMgyWEflreßw a ■ a ■Banansaanao ' ■ ■ Compare Champions A compari-wn with other vpark plugs readily reveals Champion superiority of design and finish. A new Champion m every cylinder means more power and speed and a saving in oil and gaa. Champion X is 00 cents- Blue Box 70 cents. Champion Spark Plug Co. Toledo. Ohl* CHAMPION Built Nest in Railroad Car When a car from the Pennsylvania coal fields reached Waterloo. N. Y„ a rnbin was noticed hovering about it and on the bumpers was found her nest with two eggs in It. It Is a certainty that her home was otablished itnd the eggs laid before coining to Waterloo, but whether the blnl eode In the neat or accompanied the train on lire wing la not known. ’ The prices of cotton and linen hare been doubled by the war. Lengthen their service by using Red Cross Bail Blue in the laundry. All grocers—Advertisement Dnugtder says woman Is more than man’s equal when It comes to being swelled up ais>ut her job. Women, Why Suffer? Quincy, 111.—“ I alas relieved of feminine trouble, which had caused ( m e to suffer fw it h headache and other distressing feelings, b y simply taking a few bottles of Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription.' I have had no return of ths trouble and I am glad to recommend thia tonic to all women who suffer. 1 wish someone had told me about this remedy long before they did.”—Mrs. Rose Davis. 525 S 3rd St Obtain this “Prescription" of your dealer, in tablets or liquid. Write Dr Pierce for free medical ad vine. to Invalids’ Hotel in Buffalo. N Y. The New ForTenderFaees eMfIUJEWT MEOICUttI AKTISCFTIC .. Woman'* Dutmctian* Dr. Amelia Retnnardt, who Is at the heed of Mill* college in California, to said to pomes* more college and university degree* than any ether has the distinction of being the only woman to hold the presidency of a college in any part If the Far Weal. i7en ration or a neipmeet A wife Is a person you rsn teach tc drive a ear without hugging her.—San . Francisco Chronicle. Hall’s Catarrh war will do what we MCuICIIIC data fa* it — rid your sysutn of Catarrh or Deafness caused by Catarrh. Ms *y dtassata Av «wr ** seen P. J. CHENEY A. CO, Toledo, Ohio PAXTINE IS FOR WOMEN WlH> 'Fa tawriwtaa Ute ttafct #ttd lOCMU tUMUtanas—Peaekss at PsxUm AaUssetto strays OMaas avnaa. heels laflaaMMtten. ataratM »*4 Mas* the (Maaharga. Th« y PtßlllMbMl MtottetX Cte WMNBBMawStol PWUM ter y«<rw t» ttoir tdnr ttetaf- A jMTh wWte powtter to to StestowS to water a* tohS Tfiifrifi Kfcltefea • kWI WW uaa ww at atraaa aaUaeptte eahsttoa that givaa sen. ttva ratlstSWll* SOr at drwslata ar pastaeM to auUL THZ COMFORT POWoXK Company. bouton. MAsaaCHUMrrra

How the Marines Would Fight Antietam Today

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CiutrgiDK up a »M>e, thouaamlß of marines from Quauiie«», Va.. dumoreinued how the battle of Antietum might be fought In these days, the re-enactiuent being held on the original battletteld at Antietam. Aid. Nearly lUU.tMM 1 spectators saw the maneuver*. Airplanes were used to lay smoke screens.

World Flyers Welcomed by Throng of Chicagoans

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This |g part <»f -iht» iriiuienwe throng of Chicagcmtis that gathered to greet the woiru flyers when they arnteu inert from Dayton. The picture was made at Checkerboard field, where the aviators landed.

Recruit for U. S. Merchant Marine

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The former German merchant ship Kaiser Wilhelm 11 steaming down the East river at New York under convoy of ten tugs. The ship, now known as the Agememnon. proceeded to Norfolk. Va.. where she will be reconditioned and prepsred for service in the merchant marine.

New Seismograph for Georgetown

The finest seismograph in North America has been Installed at Georgetown iitil.ervity. Washington. l» C. It is shown here with Father Ton dorf. who inaugurated the work at Georgetown in 1910. The machine will Ivftii '*"* 'i permit the wording of many more of ,he world's earthquakes and permit n more accurate interpretation. FC i I I

AROUND THE WORLD

According to a western scientist, •carcity of Insects and not cold weather causes birds to go south when fronts SMUNMidh ’1 When Heater Goodrow and Ray Edie, of New Underwomt lowa. Moped to Council Bluffs, the young woman’* father. Rev. W. W. Goodrow, pnraaed them and caught them tn um* to Forgive tne<u ana omciaie ii

The New York Edison company Is setting up singleunit turbogenerators i of ai.OOO kilowatt capacity. These generators will exceed by 10,000 kilowatt* the largest similar machlneß now in , existence. Among the sights of Peking to the , j autumn months are thousands of cameta. They come from the. Interim of Asia and uke back the caravan tea and other freight.

THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL

AGE DOES NOT WITHER

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Alice .Jewel, Pit. D., president of the Alic 4 Jewel International Society of Applied Psychology, who amazed the city of Boston when she announcer! that site was sixty years of uge. that •old age was a curable disease” and she has come to demonstrate to the world that she will live to be 250 years and other persons can do the same This is a new photograph of Ductor Jewel made In Boston.

GREEN’S RADIO TOWER

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This radio tower on the estate of Col. EHR. Green. w»n of the late Hetty Green, at New Bedford. Mass, is equipped wltit powerful amplifiers so that when Cotamel Green <q>em« hl* grounds to motor parties »n Sunday evenings everyone can hear the symphony concert broadcast from New York through Colonel Green’s station During these concerts more than 2.006 cars are parked on the “Bound Hili’’ lawns. Flapper Fairy Tales Peter—Here’s a box of nice fresh chocolates for you. Panay. Pansy—Thank you ever so much, darting, but I can’t eat them. The dentist said that candy made the fillings come out of my teeth, and I cant afford to have that happen. Unde Eben 1 don’t see who’s gineter run de country.” said Uncle Eben. "A rich man ain’t welcome In polities \nd a pore man ran t afford de time.”

To Try to Run Civilization Upon the Moiais of the Past Is Fatuous By ALBERT E. WIGGINS, in New York World. WE MUST perceive the Golden Rule in the light of modern science if we hope to practice it in away that will really help. We must not only be kind, but we must be intelligently kind. It is one thing to guard a child from tuberculosis or to bolster Up a child’s weak mind by a specially adapted course in school, so that he may become a useful unit in society and feel through life that he has come into a friendly world. We ought to do this; it is the very evidence that we are civilized, but our immorality in this direction consists in the fact that we stop there. It is another thing to set him up as the head of the family, charging him with its responsibility of increasing our supply of weaklings, who, in turn, may not only breed their kind, but pollute good stock that might otherwise produce strong offspring. The point is that our modern society has not dared to establish morality in marriage. We regard marriage and the production of children as a natural right for everybody. On the contrary, marriage is a privilege which society should give or withhold in the interest of the race. . . .. What we need is an intelligent management of life under civilization and moral courage enough to act upon the discoveries which we make. To trv to run civilization upon the morals of the past is fatuous. The main biological fact of civilization, as I see it, is that both the fit and tlie unfit more easily survive. At is not necessary under civilization that one have intelligence, for he can acquire an education instead and do very well with that. It is not necessary that he be physically strong, for he can co-operate with others and make his environment safe. It is not necessary, even, that he be moral; for he can obey the law and thus keep out of trouble. But while all this is true of individuals in civilization, it is not true of organism which we know as Man. In order that Man shall go on, it is necessary that lie be intelligent, strong and moral; and if civilization doesn’t breed these characteristics, civilization has got to go. Extension of Education Among All Classes and Also Into Adult Life By MILTON J. DAVIES, Columbia University. One of the most striking phases of our life today is the extension of education among all classes of people and also into adult life. • This tendency in education seems to have been accelerated rather than retarded by the great war. While the war left in its wake frightful upheavals and paralysis in the economic and pclitical world, it also called attention in a terrible way to the need of education of every kind, and this is finding expression by the unprecedented enrollment in the colleges and universities, and by the unprecedented interest on the part of adults in social and economic questions of national and international imi>orrance. In brief, the war sent the whole world, young and old, to school again. One of the best signs of the times is the hungering and thirsting after knowledge and culture and self-improvement on the part of that large class of adults who have no inclination or need for academic education or instruction, but who desire to keep abreast of the times and in uuch with the best modern thought. To Be Sure, His Royal Highness Has Fallen a Few Times, Perhaps Twelve — By MAJ. DUDLEY METCALF, Equerry to Prince of Wales. I always ride with his royal highness. He is a good, fearless-horse-man. In the hunt he is always in the lead. Let us say that he is riding with Mr. Strawbridge and Mr. Clark, as often happens when these gentlemen are in England. He equals and even surpasses them in horsemanship. I use those two names because they are known in this country. ’I he same thing would be true of any I might pick among English riders. To be sure, his royal highness has fallen a few times, perhaps twelve times all told. But what is that in the course of four years? If he rode once a month it would make the average a high one, but since he is in the saddle every day, it brings the percentage ven- low: in fact, much lower than that of most good horsemen. I myself have fallen countless time* and have broken must of the bones in my body. Not only is his royal highness a fine horseman. He stands equally high as a player of squash. He considers it his duty to stay fit so that he may be in good condition to fulfill his job. His body is that of an athlete, and he keeps it so. Aristocracy Not One of Many Excellent Qualities of Pilgrim Fathers By MRS. JOHN KING VAN RENSSELAER, in “The Social Ladder.” The society of New England, more particularly that of Boston, has been largely of native growth. Its background is almost entirely American. Excellent as were many of the qualities of the Mayflower’s passengers, aristocracy wa« not among them. Apparently it is easy enough for a great many people to trace their lineage back to the folk who arrived at Plymouth in that little craft. It is much more difficult to find any record of its passengers or their ancestors in the Old World. To the Dutch gentlemen of New Netherlands and to the French and British nobility of the Maryland, New Jersey. Virginia and South Carolina colonies, relationship with the settlers of Plymouth would have seemed a ludicrous ground on which* to base a claim to aristocracy. . /. New York and Charleston, S. C-, were chiefly responsible fostering in the Ney* World the gentility and breeding of the old. Flapper’s Successor May Hate Noise as Much as the Rest of Us Do By ALEXANDER BLACK, in Harper’s Magazine. We have been promised a period of romanticism. Who knows that the notion may not appeal to the flapper’s successor and that she mayusher it in? Certainly, it cannot happen without her connivance. She mav attain great concessions. Who knows that some one may not contrive, for example, to make gentle speech fashionable and that she may not, after hearing the shrillest voices in the world, herself become low-voiced ? It would be fearful radicalism, but at this juncture romanticism would be radial, and, after all. the flapper’s successor may hate the noise as much as unrest.of us do. Who will venture to predict that, though she •nay refuse to be a hypocrite and will know too much to be enslaved by any awe, she may not, indeed, find high satisfactions in the sheer art of being a young girl—in rehabilitating an art by whose vicissitudes all other arts are being delayed in coming back ? < U. S. Secretary of War John W. Weeks.—From a defense point, the present physical weakness in our citizenship as a whole is serious. It may be too late for any constructive action on a nation-wide scale to eradicate the physical weakness of the present generation, but it is certainly not too late to prevent the oncoming generation from developing similar defects. Sir David Bruce—The untutored savage liring on the natural fruits of the earth and the chase knows no deficiency disease. It is only when, men begins by artificial means to polish his rice, whiten his flour and tin .. . ■ i

OPHumoa Advised Friend Said “Don’t Do Iti” Try Lydia E. Pinkham’s etable Compound First. Proved Good Advice aucago>lUinoiß.-“Just a few lines to let yon know what Lydia E. PinkB 1 ibam’a Vegetable Compound did for me. I was married going on for three years, and went to.« doctor and was takingtreatments twice a week for pains every month. I used to lie in bed three or four days with them and the doctor would call and inject some- —— thing into my arm to put me asleep so I would not feel the pains. At last she said I would have to be operated on if I wanted any children. Well, I just happened to go to eee a friend with her first baby and I told her I was going to the hospital, and ahesaid, ’Don’t do it! You go and get a bottle of Lydia £. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound and you won’t need any operation. ’ So my husband got me a bottle right away. Now I have two lovely children. Believe me, I recommend the Vegetable Compound to any woman I know has any kind of female trouble. It has helped me and a lot of my friends.”—“Mrs. A. McAndless, ITO 9S. Morgan St, Chicago, Ilk For tale by druggists everywhere. ( NRMR TamgrrawAtrisht KEEPING WELL An N? Tablet (a vegetable aperient) taken at Bight will help keep you well, by toning and strengthening your digestion and elimination. Iked for over Ls*Bcoc Chips off +he Old Block N? JUNIORS-Llttl. N?« One-third the regular dose. Made of the same ingredients, then candy coated. For children and adults. mb SOLD BY YOUR DRUGGIST™. Odd Baseball Happening In a baseball game at Climax. Pa., the baiter chopped a ball directly in front of the plate and headed for first base. The catcher, scrambling for the ball, threw quickly, only to have the ball “disappear from sight. Not until the runner reached first and tossed the hall to the pitcher was it discovered that the backstop's throw had landed the ball in the batter’s hip pocket. Watch Cuticura Improve Your Skin. On rising and retiring gently smear the face with Cuticura Ointment. Wash off Ointment in five minutes with Cuticura Soap and hot water. It is wonderful what Cuticura wtll do for poor complexions, dandruff, itching and red, rough hands. —Advertisement. Too Much for the Price Customer —Say! That hot dog you’re putting in my Sandwich has been on the floor. Sandwich Man—Well, wbatcha expect with a 10-ceut hot dog. collar an’ chain? Aspirin Say “Bayer Aspirin’" INSIST! Unless you see the “Bayer Cross” on tablets you are not getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for 24 years. £-> Ac “P ( 2IIX i Bayer package which contains proven directions Handy “Bayer” boxea of 12 tablets Also bottles of 24 and 100—Druggists A*ptrti 1» the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of MonoocaUcacldcstet of Sallcylleacid To Restore Looted Crown As a friendly return for the recent visit to England of the prince regent of Abyssinia, the British government has decided to present to the Empress Judith of Abyssinia the crown of the Emperor Theodore, which was captured by Lord Napier at Magdala in 1868. For many historic relic has been among the exhibits in the Victoria and Albert museum. No civilization that didn’t wear trousers ever lasted. "Tis why Sparta disappeared and Rome felt The problem of life cannot be solved ■»y touching the button. Sure Relief FOR INDIGESTION rSiteinSj Wot water • Sute Refief DEU.-ANS 254 AND 75< MCKftSES EVERYWHERE