The Syracuse Journal, Volume 17, Number 32, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 4 December 1924 — Page 6
■ % j| [nfiats what ■ I cfwromen ■ I B M*W® powder M I I I ** “‘ir^r’in-1 1 any H the in 1 gredienti u* e< * 1 I onbaKeday. J *»owgpP rt gsi Bales >*/« Timet Those of Any Other Brand Many a man wookf rather have a tooth pulled than pay hi* taxes. Permanent rocuii are a good inveebnent Road — Building Far Behind the Automobile Millions now recognize the automobile as a necessity. It is no longer a luxury for the few. Sixty per cent of its use is fair business. Because of this the mod* ern paved highway has become an economic De* cessity. Y« although the mite*** ci Ccocreto Roads and Sown has bean Maadily inc»»aa»ng. our ‘ highway ijatrtn today lags tar behind Iha automobile The great majority d our highways are as cut d date at the singletrack, narrow gauge radway d fifty years ago. Such a condition not cmlyarrioudy handicapa the pragtses d theaueomoWeaaacouitartabfe. profitable means d transportation, but alao hold* back cw meicisl, industrial and agncub rural advancement m pracucalb . ovary ascncod the country, h is coanag taxpayers mJbonsd dob iMaaannaaiy' tB-t Is -1 U—ragliwvy uuiKSCBg incuiu tw continued and enlarged upon. Your highway auttarutos are SSSdy » carry on tber share d riusgmst public work. But they must have your support. Tell them you are toady so invest in more and wider Conoote Highwayonow. PORTLAND CEMENT ASSOCIATION U1 Waat Washington Serene CHICAGO •< Nstoei OmewtwiM toltapMse sad laaad dw that < CsacaaM OftomtaMCkta • B?Sts Earn Xmas Money Kant. Wtettta mH. ■»****• —faerefs — HAIR BALSAM g?fr7sl|to.i »*.rw»aroa M wlUir Rasters* Color and ■SNSt. *BKB«M*y to Cray aad Faded Hail Me. and stto at Dreetruto 4B|NdEWcORNB awwicto* cm* -’1 t* 4 * owmxie eowtors to tto JRm. is*Jhy iaait ICuticuraSoap I Ib Pure and Sweet iWeal for Children aaMMMUlroir women assays HleilO-tißt a*! Mffß t£» dIMBMUFA TIP
OUR COMIC SECTION [ Our Pet Peeve ||~ \• , * /A Illi U z L * _ —— x f>vr eM -.x / °*' To ? LT V ' l ' * 'CapTrlrM.tr. N. V.> ■ * |_ . ' . ' I ■ ’ . ' . ■ . ‘ Outta Luck Again "" <F I CAN T XA A xxac FOQ MV 17 TeQQ'EQ iS JuST The —-7 Sneak: him into The . —i XtTTUg BOX 7/ Thing — MG’S A -I CaR WITHOUT V, * z/l G® eAT Per anl> Y~j THE CONDUCTOR GETTin' Z_ y rT®x k sooneq or later ( "IhKHe’u yat o FF tour X. / TTH \ .--SfR HAND ' XT / em y Ta?T - I MotX I r \ X -±F- - I / > ’0l ) WAMV To’ W // Buy a nice Dog U=\ / W/ \ // 'NELL SEIL Tou i I V J fc; /// I > A T — 1 Z 7 u, t cf Didn't too TQX , FoffcED V——7* hum -ma - \ ~? . PuTTiN' him UNDER LAUGd / I auiTE A \ X TER COAT or 'to ) ( CQO'WD ON I /fi \ ' CAQ *SUMPTh IN X. The TQaiH 110 \ 7* — A--asas S” r ° w,OHT ' O \ > J I “wf 1 »^ m 't there! 77. \ \ . / \ Conductor n W Sffi'vSo I 1 'Ai/Hrksr/ J- rplzr i L ' ifcrll > \?^7a^ —* — ~ J A Little Error I \VG NO* ovhl < @ ’ j > BoOMOOI \ \ f 1 ouch 1 \ W rM\ J J Eg) . 1 1 " "Ky*"** — / Jy\ U ° FFPI **** L KW> AGOOpJ ' • Wastera NewspaperValaa ~Ca513 ✓X~C7> to M U£T UN 08. VERT DIFFERA DOUBLE SUP- SERVANT EXT - ■■'■ ULI. ( J/7t}9 GIRL. Thirty cents a Slnee Dobbins SAAfXVR A Dad — H 0 w word for thto tot the better of *' T. W man * liroe * did * tufL 1 wouldn't W#>V <ZA Swift there is no /Il I that young man /TVs.' thtnk of iu Mandin* of him. W: ‘ " k»a you last MV) Sir. lam a fitThat’s so. When FT • »ishtt &i3B mouß sathor - he took the eon- 'l I Daughter — I HV) That's just it. cett out ot Swift can ‘ l tell you \ ■ Tou treataous ><L he added It to hie I that, pa. ~V'7> " * ~<l f~~ author. not a r | own apparently. tjL bad —- What! ~~|f / U 1 j pugilist - And the thing <«■ * successful «Q A n>»n wrants to do what he wants ° n ._ I
THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL.
h..\\TIOS\L-r <\i>l r \L ATTAIDS
To Reduce the Automobile Death List
WASHINGTON. — Confronted with a mounting mortality list from operation of the 15,000,000 motor vehicles In use In the United States, the American public during 1925 will be parties to and students In the greatest educational plan ever adopted In the United States, with the single purpose of reducing the staggering total of Ilves lost through Ignorance and lack of observance of the rule that constant vigilance on the highways of the nation is the price of safety. Eight committees of the national conference on street and highway accidents. which will meet at the call of Secretary of Commerce Hoover In Washington, December 15, 16 and 17. are working to co-ordinate a definite educational plan whose beaching will extend into every home In the United States and whose program contemplates education of every person having anything to do with the movement of human beings and merchandise by automobile. This program will
No Rain Checks at World Series Games
EXTENSIVE experiments In the destruction of fogs and clouds by the use of electrified sand are being carried out. under government supervision, at Bolling field. Army a Indanes equipped with the device patented by Dr. L. Francis Warren of Harvard university are detailed and dally flights are made to determine both the peace and war value in connection with aviation. The two aviators who conducted the attack In the early trials obtained a fair “bag” despite the extreme height of the clouds over the field. A group of officers and civilians from the ground could follow without difficulty the cutting off of a cape or peninsula jf cloud and Its subsequent disintegration. Larger masses were crisscrossed with lanes' through iyhlch the sun’s rays shone to accelerate evaporation. Doctor Warren described the work at Bolling field as a “mere continuation of the Invariably successful experiments of the last three years.” “We have had nothing ha’ppbn,’’ he asserted, “to make us change our claims or our minds. We base our work on the assumption that visible forms of moisture in the air, like mists, fogs, clouds, eic.. were a form of colloidal suspension in gases and
Persia to Send “Extraordinary Envoy”
AN EFFORT to explain to the satisfaction of the United States its position with respect to the punishment of the chief Instigators of the murder of Vice Consul Robert W. Imbrie at Teheran will be made by the Persian government through an “extraordinary envoy.” Announcing the decision to commission the “extraordinary envoy" in an attempt to relieve any tension resulting from the apparent failure of Persian authorities to execute death sentences in the case. Bagher M. Kazemi, charge d’affaires in Washington, emphasized that friendship with the United States was one of the “essential policies" of fils government. In's statement issued after he bad notified Acting Secretary of ' Joseph C. Grew of the course planned, Crage Kazemi asserted that his government had “not spared a moment of their time, effort and power from seeing to it that the guilty persons are brought to justice and punished a* cordingly," and “to bring about the sat-
U. S. Market News Bureau Operations
CHARLES V. WHALIN of the United States Department of Agriculture has been making a tour of the West looking into the operation of thf market news bureau service. Mr. Whalin is chief of the live stock, meat and wool division. , “The live stock men of ’the West now have access each day to valuable information that is furnished the live stock growers of the corn belt, and which they have been using, and greatly to their profit, for several years," said Mr. Whalin. “The Denurtment of Agriculture has opened offices at all principal stockyards of the country and at the trading centers of many European countries for the sole purpose of aiding live stock growers in marketing their stock by keeping them in daily touch with prices and trade conditions. "The government live stock news offices from Boston .to San Francisco are connected by a special wire for the Interchange of daily market information. which is distributed without
Dr. M. C. Hall and His Hookworm Remedy-
SOME of the government scientists have splendid nerve and devotion to research—Dr. Maurice C. Hall of the bureau of uplmal industry of the Agricultural department, for example. ‘He’s the man who has conquered the hookworm and he did not hesitate to take a dose of his own medicine —to see if the human system could stand It. Curiously enough, his discovery was almost accidental. For he was concerned at first with discovering remedies for parasites of animal< rather than for those of man, and dogs were the animals he chose to experiment with. He tried out all kinds of on dogs afflicted with all kinds of worms. He fo--’ that chloroform was reasonably s-G-essful tn ridding dogs of bookworm. and decided, on a sudden “hontt," to try carbon tefrachlorid, a substitaee chemicsily similar to chloro- * R afwl
be laid before the conference, taking the place of the usual report of a resolutions committee, will be adopted and put into immediate use by every agency dealing with traffic on the streets and highways of the nation. ' Taking as its foundation the thesis that “ignorance of the public” is ai the base of the great majority of traL sic accidents the conference will consider every phase of education of the static element from whose ranks 22,600 persons met their-deaths in traffic accidents last year. ; i Figures now being developed by the general rommittee show that while accidents occur in Washington each year, the ratio of non-fatal accidents to fatal accidents is small compared with other cities. One out of every 88 automobile accidents In Washington results fatally, while the ralto in New York is one in 19 and in Cleveland one in 20. The fatality rate here in 1923, due to traffic accidents, was 18 per 100,000 popula1 tlon.
that they should be governed by the same general laws that prevail in colloidal action in liquids and solids. “We fill the sand tanks on the planes with 120 mesh silica sand, the planes being equipped for charging the sand either positively or negatively by the turn of a lever; the sand im-, pinging upon charging plates or falling through charging nozzles and being scattered by the air, driven back by the plane propeller. “Commercial rainmaking now lies within the grasp of man, and he can employ to this end one of nature’s\ cheapest commodities—namely: common or garden silica, at a cost of about $3 per ton, which, outside of maintaining the equipment and operating the planes, will be the only charge. “Two of the larger planes would be quite sufficient to entirely squelch a dense fog covering 117 square miles or more (an area equal to that of the city of London), or a fog covering the city and harbor of New York. The London chamber of commerce has estimated the cost to the city of each 24-hour dense fog at about $5,000,000.” Evidently in the future we shall be able to have rainless Easter Sundays. And why should any big baseball game be postponed for rain, when airplanes can drive away the clouds?
isfactlon of the State department tf® well as that of the widow.” ' Comment on the matter was withheld by the State department, but in informed quarters it was doubted that a special envoy would be able to satisfy the American government with respect tekwhat, in the opinion of some observers, to be procrastination in executing the two men found guilty of the crime by Persian military and other courts. Insistence upon firm application of the Persian laws in the case is expected to be the American course, in view of the opinion here that the safety other diplomatic representatives and Christians in Near Eastern countries depends largely on the outcome. The statement by Mr. Kazemi said in part: “The present government of Persia considers the friendly relations of our respective nations as one of their es sential policies, and due respect to the official representatives of this country and protection to the citizens of the United States will always be rendered.” . ' ’
cost to all interested by daily bulletins and disseminated by radio from our branch offices. “In vhis way the cattlemen of Colorado, for example, can know before noon of any day what live stock of the class he wishes to market is selling for at his nearest or“at a remote market. “In connection with our market news service we are striving for the standardization of market grades and classes of live stock so that univenqi) terms will ' prevail at all markers. “We have broadened the scope of our work untiiHJncludes many other market activities, fruit and vegetable markets, the dissemination of news concerning range conditions and. the condition -and extent of hive stock feeding on farms and range®. One of the extraneous advantages resulting from this service is shown by railway reports that upon our live stock information concerning probable shipments, conditions in the industry, etc., the carriers depend.* tn determining their car and equipment orders.” ■
about a spoonful—of this liquid woutu clear out the most obstinate case "of canine bookworm. He tried it on rabbits next, but it killed the rabbits when given to them la doses which had never proven to be markedly poisonous to dogs. Dogs, usually tolerate even seventy to eighty times the curative dose without lasting harm. Finally, with some trepidation, he swallowed three cubic centimeters himself. No ill effects followed. A few other hardy volunteers tried IL It seemed to be no more poisonous to man that it was to dogs. So it was suggested as a possibility in the treatment of bookworm disease In human being® From the start, frong the very earliest experiments in Adely scattered tropical countries, tb* success of the Mew treatment was Mnsational. ' Missionaries and physicians tn tropical countries reported tbkt tn the great majority of cases one* <fose was completely effective. killio| every worm at
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