The Syracuse Journal, Volume 17, Number 28, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 6 November 1924 — Page 6
JL: Tile Won&n Who K«owt New Albany, lad.—“l had • trouble for about a year that waa fvery weakenin*. I doctored for Tt but It didn't •cent to do much good, ao I thought 1 would tty Dr. Pierce'* medicine* which I had heard to much about ! took five bottle* of the ‘Favorite Prescription' and two of tht ‘Medical Discovery,’ and I feet like a different woman. I recommend Dr. Pierce’s medicines to all suffering women." —Mrs. George E. Mott weiler, 1747 Shelby St. You can always get Dr. Pierce’s family medicines at your neighborhood store, in tablets or liquid. 'SBBErePWSjr |-^SC«A^I!UMr-i Standard cold remedy world over. Demand hna bearing Mr. HilTa portrait and denature AtAUPrvggif—SQC—t* h" ■ st Irßjfen^rrow ADA vacate til a |M|l MM IW apariontj add* EMU > ||l th« # d£«tiv£ o, «nd JK— •limin»ti»a aratern, * Hi U| Improrea tha appo|g| HW tita, rcilavM Sick PfW HB Hradaeba and BitI, r Chips off -Hw Otd Block MV JUNlOß*—Uttla Ms On*-third tha regular does, Mad* of aam* ingredients, than candy Ooutad. Par children and adults. mmm SOLO BY YOUR DRUGGIST—■■ THIS PRESCRIPTION FOB KIDNEYS Nt Dmgs—ittst Roots and Herbs 6 Ounce Bottle, 75 cents Years ago Dr. Carey aald, "When backache comes get after your kidneys —and don’t waste any time." "Right at the start, go to your druggist and oak for Dr. Carey's Marsh root Prescription No. 777; take It as directed until backache ceases and your eyea are clear and bright." For more than 40 yean Dr. Carey specialized In dtseases of the kidney and bladder, and when In the height of 1,1 * r *“<narkab!y busy life he declded to dispense his most effective kid- - ney and bladder prescription ■f jL . through the better S/S&laßErMr f * rugglsfs, he helped *■ ‘’'v'fArr i thousands who could not afford to 1° to blm for treatfoiiik Cany. ■- S Thousands of unobservant people have kidney ailments and never know It until too late. High colored urine, sotting up in the night, and puffy eyes tell the story. If you eTeu suspect—start today with Dr. Carey’s Marsh root Prescription No. 777. It will drive the poison from your kidneys and your druggist knows all about ft: Druggists dispense lots of It. It comes both Inuhuld and tablet form. It will help you it ha* a host of others. If It should aW, If you aren't glad In one week's time* that you bought it, money „ gladly returned—end only 75c.. If your local druggist hasn’t it he can get It fn>tn*the Carey Medical Laboratories at Elmira, N. Y. Cuticura /AfiKSx Soap and YfpJt] Cbm \CLmmb amt HwitltiT \s>i Q- tgrn. Expect to Harness Tides The fore* of the ebb and flow of the Atlantic’s tide, may soon be harnessed to produce electricity, Dexter P. Cooper, brother of Hugh L. Cooper, the hydraulic engineer who designed the hydroelectric plants at Muscle Shoals, Keokuk, and Niagara Falla, Canada, la at present muling preliminary aur eyt along the Maine seaeouet with a view to finding generating station sites near KsiMport. Th.» average difference between high and low tide at East port la 18 Vfeet 2 inches. Fixing the Hoar Tim Man—" When do yon expect yoor wife homer* Second Man ~« "Whea I learn expect her." QVWM JBASft OF WCCC BN
t * s ,r J. ' ■''* v Our New Zeppelin, ZR-3, Comes From Germany
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Chekiang Troops Back of the Fighting Line
Chekiang soldiers five miles back of the front lines after a tour of ten days during which time it rained incessantly. These soldiers are thoroughly demoralized, have very little lighting equipment and, It Is said, wouldn’t know what to do with it if they had. Quantities of food are rotting. The wounded are not cured tor but left lying w here they tall.
Coal for the Winter in One Lump r .r *TIUa wild lum|i t>f ,-dd>lßt HUIW pound. ... tnkva from on lllinot, ronl mlno and contain, aalßcleiil sud to kaap an ordinnr, fnraneo going fur o whole turps ... * *
Co-eds Paddling Their Own Canoe
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Three daughters of lew* pioneer* are these, and they followed the mode of travel that their grandfathers used when they paddled some 200 miles to attend the University of lowa tlds fall. They made It In three days and a half. Left to right, are—Gladys Breaker of Omaha, Neb, Josephine Buis sad Cecelia Kloek of Boone, lowa. ?
AROUND THE WORLD
A silver bowl made by Paul Devere brought $4,200 in a New York auction recently. * , ' , Os all beasts of burden ta the would ft)* water buffalo In Java la known a* the slowest animal. The chief causes of crime are said 18 tl* influences of evil associates, lali Wli-frt ntt At ntm *■* —nn ra Irtmtv. Hviueu oisposuiOH, uriuK* Mnmg leuip* tattoo plus favorable opportunity and ■■■ ■ > V . - to *Nsd
Pines are among the few trees that can grow at a high altitude. Fay Yu Hsian*. Chinese general, bad his army of several thousand soldiers baptised In a group. The United States Department of Agriculture reports that the western magpie has bem attacking live mock, tearing out flesh where wound* or fresh brands giro them a chance to
.-••«■ r' *t j i> « -aisj*y- n THE SYRACUSE .TOURNA
WORSTED IN A DUEL JsSHi app .-HHI Dr. Thomas Le Breton, former Argentine ambassador to Washington, was slightly wounded In an affair of honor in Bueno* Aires, the duel being fought with sabers. Deputy Molinarl was challenged by Dr. Le Breton ou ac< ouni of the publication of a newspaper article which the latter considered offensive. Doctor I> Breton resigned his post as minister of agrtcul I Hire to order that he might fight tht duel. UNCLE SAM NEEDS HIM John Washington of Washington. D. O. works, tor government mul. a* he has Just turned seventy, is entitled to retire from his labor* with a |>eahe holds the seviamp caccolers used by the Unit- : >*(J States govern- ' nent. Uncle Sam r.n t get along vlf hoot h'm A America Oldest Continent America, although, the last to be die covered. Is probably, from a geological standpoint, the oldest of all the coat I neetk Hence Tennyson in his poem, “Locksley Bsll,” calls It the “new world wb*ch Is old." Lest City es Noram bega Korumbega was an Attieruwn city mentioned by English and French explorers of the Seventeenth century. It Is said to bare been either in Maine or In w*t«t Mftssachaaena.*
To cultivate a Sense of National Responsibility Toward the Fisheries By HERBERT HOOVER, U. S. Secretary of Commerce. WE HAVE not alone the problem of food fisheries, but we hsve a problem that, while perhaps not so vital to food, is yet vital to the development of American life; that is the problem of game fish. The development of the automobile and good roads has enabled a far larger portion of our people to take to the great outdoors for regeneration both of body and souk I do not consider it an exaggeration to say that this summer will have seen two million anglers upon our streams and coast In one state alone 200,000 individual licenses have been issued this year. Every fisherman will confirm that our game fish are decreasing steadily under this pressure and with them one of the great lures to the outdoors os being destroyed. We cannot maintain our fisheries unless we allow enough of each species to escape to reproduce the school* and unless we increase and improve our methods in propagation. We cannot get them to reproduce if we pollute and poison the waters in which they must spawn. The steps before us are: To cultivate a sense of national responsibility toward the fisheries and their maintenance; to make conservation of those priceless resources s part of the national instinct; to let the whole country understand that we can no more overfish'and expect to have sea food than we can outeut the growth of our forests and expect to have timber. To make a vigorous attempt to restore tile sturgeon, salmon, shad, lobster, crab, oyster and clam and other littoral fisheries on the Atlantic coast To secure the prevention of pollution frtgn sources other than shins both in coastal and inland waters. To undertake the reinforcement of stocks of game fish throughout the United States. , - 5 New 2 Per Cent Quota Law Has Given a Jolt to Aliens in America By R. C. DEMING, Yale Summw School. ct The new 2 per cent quota law for the regulation of immigration has given a jolt to the foreigners who don’t seem eager to become permanent members with us although they do so much of our work. It interferes* with their plars to bring relatives over and to return to their native land for brief visits. They realize, from reading the foreign-language press and from bitter experience, that it is a lot easier to get out of this country than to enter it. Aliens know also that this new law is not the end. They know that an alien registration law is being advocated by the secretary of labor and others who have studied the problem and understand its importance, and they don’t, want to be. aliens when that law comes. Registration with the police and similar interference in their personal affairs is what they cams to America to escape. , This all means one thing! Formerly we sought and were unable to compel the alieu to go to night school and learn English and study citizenship. Now he is going of his own accord. Our problem is simpler, but it is big enough. We must provide the teachers and the schools. j> Ferguson’s Religion More Private and Persona) Than His Father’s By "90,” in Atlantic Magazine. Ferguson’s religion is a much more private and personal thing than his father’s. For that reason it is harder to get at and more difficult to dqscribe. It governs his life much more than he suspects and prjyides him with just what he needs during a very brief and bewildering period. The men who are active in religious work he regards as no better and no worse than any one efee. Their activity alone wins them no special consideration, but, on the other hand, it does not place them in a class alone. Ferguson’s father used to call them “gospel sharks” and they were , held in more or less contempt by youths who joined their associations and dabbled in their undertakings while they sneered tftem behind their backs. Ferguson may or may not share their labors, but he no longer sneer* at them, and if they "make good” they are elected to his clubs aud reee i col lege -honors. This change is well to ponder on. It is more significant than it seems. Ferguson will never be as "Higious” as his father in the class of ninety, but he is quite as likely to inherit the Kingdom of Heaven. “Instead of Abolishing Pistols I Would Encourage Their General Use” By VAL A. FLYNN, in St. Louis Post-Dispatch. Instead of trying to abolish the pistol, I would encourage its general use. The more citizens are familiar with the pistol and expert in its use, the better for the individuals concerned and for the country at large, particularly in case of a nationaremergoney. Also the less inducement for • thug to take a chance on a holdup or on entering a home. If all policemail clerks, pay roll clerks and others in similar responsible positions were fine shots, willing to use their weapons, the number of holdups and murders would dwindle, remarkably. Still the police alone cannot put an end to the admittedly scandalous situation. It must have the promptkapport of the courts. The trial of a suspect should be over within a few months of apprehension. By that time he should be f acquitted or condemned. If the latter, he shonld be on his way to the prisoner the gaiiows and the court’s sentence should not be open to modification except by the President of the United States. Development of Your Inner Faculties Constitutes True Success in Life • By EUHU ROOT, in Address to Hamilton Undergraduates. The development of your inner faculties constitutes true success in life. There are grave differences in the standard of success. Power, wealth and fame, each have been objective*, but each in itself is nothing. Money enough to be independent is a fine thing, yet a truly successful man ia one who ha* acquired the capacity for the enjoyment of life. Success comes of what you have made o f your inner nature. Cultivate vour taste to receive joy from a thing of beauty; cultivate your power* for the joy you may obtain from their employment; cultivate friendship and-those other simple Virtues which are so commonly admired. No man is truly happy who must depend on outside things for his happiness. Success that is blazoned in the press and praised by dll docs not come from direct approach. You do not win wealth, power or station by direct assaults. They come only from aqp by the development of stalwart manhood. Jacob Franks—My wife had never wanted, had never felt, that Nathan, Jr., and Richard should be hanged- She is satisfied with Judge Caveri/s verdict lam satisfied with it, also, bat partly because it agrees with my wife’s attitude. Would it not be for her, I might look at it a different way. I must reiterate, however, that life imprisonment is satisfactory if it ia life imprisonment and no favoritism is shown. • • 1 'V t — Knute K. Rockne, Football Conch, University of Notre Dame—ls the youth of America attunes it* mind to such character-building games as football, baseball and basketball, the danger of such nauseating crimes «g the Franks murder will be materially lessened.
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