The Syracuse Journal, Volume 18, Number 10, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 9 July 1925 — Page 3
WAS NOT FIT TO DOJER WORK Dreadful Condition of Mrs. Fullerton’s Health Remedied by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound Clearfield, Pa. - “I cannot begin to tell you how much Lydia E. Pinkham’s Veghelped me in every ■ apdßfoto. way. Before taking it I couldn't stand on my feet without ?»}«■ pains running all V through my whole body from my waist M down, just like threads trailing. J 1 was nt to do any A Jr work. My mother g /f 'Jr got me to try the SLl£_—X-=IJ vegetable Compound and I have found great benefit, and I not only recommend it for such troubles, but to build up the whole sys- . tern. I have used it xor most everything that gets wrong with me. When I begin to feel nervous and irritable I don’t stop long in getting a bottle of the Vegetable Compound if I haven’t got one in the house. It gives a fine appetite and makes a new woman of me. You may use this testimonial in my own town or anywhere else, and I will answer any letters I receive.” — Mrs. Rush Fullerton, 525 S. 2nd Street, Clearfield, Pa. If you are suffering from nervous troubles, irritability, give the Vegetable Compound a fair trial. For sale by druggists everywhere. FOR OVER 200 YEARS haarlem oil has been a world-wide-remedy for kidney, liver and bladder disorders, rheumatism, lumbago and uric acid conditions, correct internal troubles, stimulate vital organs. Three sires. All druggists. Insist on the original genuine Gold Medal. The Purity of Cttticura Makes It Unexcelled <■ For All Toilet Purposes gjEdF’ -m m Sunday School Record James Frankenfield. a member of the Grace Lutheran Sunday school at I Bethlehem. Pa., has a record of attending Sunday school every Sunday for 19 years without an absence. He 1 braved blizzards and diaregnrded illness to be in his seat every Sunday during that period. Rush Schnable of i the same church Is a runner-up for the record with IT years without an ab- , aenre. > • No ugly, grimy streaks on the ckihes when Red Cross Bail Blue is used. Good bluing gets good results. All grocers carry IL—Advertisement. Siberian Lumber Route Effort is being made to establish an all-water route' from western Siberia for lumber, which- now must travel a longer distance overland on the TransSlberian railway to the Baltic sea or Archangel and thence to Great Britain by steamer. !** M harts* Dr. P—ry-« "Dead shotfar Worm* or Tapaworm and th« druaatat will gat it for yon ITS Pearl St., N. T. Adv. Real Secrecy Per— Trn engaged. Don’t tell. Mary—Marvelous. Who sha’n’t X tel) first Widow. Light Is the symbol of truth.— Lowell Sure Relief FOR INDIGESTION Beuans LCSS2PW Hot water • KffzZßl Sure Relief DELL-AN S 256 AND 75* PACKAGES EVERYWHERE NO MORE PILES Kilpile Tablets Relieves Piles No. 1 for women; No. 2 for men. The latest sod moat anuuung discovery tor pile*. make* , spcration needless. Stop using salves, amt- { tnenta, suppositories, etc. AU rod hero to do is to take taro tablet* of j KILPILE before each meal and your pile* will begin to disappear. KILPILE tablets are made la two kinds, i No. 1 tablet* to conform with the female Wganwim. No. 2 to conform with th* male | Mjmnieim. When yoa give your Order for ! KILPILE tablet* stat* what number tablet* you wish. Without any obligation ea your Hrt SEND FOR FREE SAMPLE. THE KILPILE COMPANY ISISFerd Av*mm Detook. MME IWa In Case of Accident Wherever there are children, acct tents are Hkety to happen. Porter’* P»ln King Salve ha* powerful heeling sad entireptlo propertfa*. Recommeuded for and eracked ekt*, bell*. pttee. felon*. itch. v*M ea th* chest, croup, iambs**, vartcore vein* •»« see was. Mad* of hwifac dregs e»o»Mapd with tereare team wrel t*t>. XJi. Greee’i Aogast Flower I fIcRA lAv CMRttesliML
I BIRMINGHAM \ dhmenMer nesf-MFMua Oi WNC Sarvtca.
CHAPTER Xl—Continued “They will." said Janet. “By this time I expect they have. He went oft to the police office this morning to obtain his Ausweis. taking the passport ; with him.” “What?” said Casimir. "He has gone to the police office!” S “That's what I’m trying to toll you." said Janet, “and I’m" very much afraid there’ll be trouble." “Trouble! They will imprison him. ' They wllldepart him. They will— But not even Von Stein veldt would dare shoot him. But— Excuse me. I must act at once or all is lost. The princess! My beloved country! But I have friends ahd I hjtve money. The king has friends. Perhaps it is not yet too late." He hurried across the hall toward the door. Janet hurried after him. Tommy was in serious trouble. Casimir was excited and frightened. She could not bear the thought of not being helpful in a crisis as desperate as this. She caught Casimir by the arm Just as he reached the door. “Shall Lring up the embassy?” she said. “The third secretary is a friend of mine. At least. I’ve often talked to him over the telephone. After all. your "friend —I mean mj- nephew—is a British subject. The ambassador must do something. 1 shall insist on his moving in the matter.” Casimir turned on her. He must have felt extremely Irritated, but his politeness did not fail him. “Gracious lady." he said, "I can think of only one thing In the world ‘ which would make this affair worse J than it is. and that is the interference lof the British ambassador.” Janet says that , his face was white, drawn and tragic-when he spoke, and that beads of perspiration had gathered on his forehead. But Janet Is inclined to exaggerate in the Interests of the picturesque. 1 do not suppose that Casimir was in the state she det scribed. He was upret about what i had happened, and foresaw a great deal of trouble. But he had no doubt that he could straighten things out i even if the police had arrested TomI nay. When he left the hotel Casimir went straight to his bank and cashed a i check for ten thousand marks. In Germany it takes a long time to cash a check and it was half an hour before Casimir actually got the money. Then he drove to the police office and walked into the room into which Tommy had gone that morning. There was still a long queue of Poles, Russians, Slavs. Ukrainians and other fori elgners waiting to approach the police officer's desk. But Casimir did not take his place at the end of the line. He handed twenty marks to the policeman who kept watch at the door and was immediately placed at the head of the queue. In return for an-other-twenty marks the policeman ordered all the other waiting people out of the room. They were allowed to rfraw a breath of fresh air In the passage until Casimir. finished his business. This was good for them, but they did not like it. For some months the German mark had been falling rapidly. Official salaries. from those of cabinet minister to those of simple policeman, had in March only about one-tenth of their supposed value and a large class of more or less deserving people found themselves starving. This, though disagreeable for them, was a great advantage to any one who controlled money In a stable currency. Casimir had Procopius Cable’s English rounds to draw on. He felt confident of being able to persuade any official to de what he wanted done. He began his interview with the police officer by laying a thousand marks on the table in front of him. Then be said be wanted an Ausweis, duly signed and in proper form, for an Englishman called N&rheysC The police officer stood up and bowed re- ! gpectfully to Casimir. Then he fixed j his eyes, hopefully at first, sadly aftj erward. on the thousand marks. He . began to apologize. If he had known a little earlier that I the highborn gentleman wished for an Ausweis — The young Englishman had , been there, in that very office— There had been a trifling irregularity in his | passport, very trifling, nothing that mattered. If he had known— Now, unfortunately, he could dp nothing. The young Englishman, had been passed on to his superior officer. The poor man eyed the thousand marks hungrily. He bad a wife and two children at home. They had very little food and no firing. A thousand marks would have made life a much pleasanter affair to him. “Ach, most highborn sir.” be said. “I cannot now lssu<* the Ausweis, though how willingly 1 would do so If I could.” Casimir Is not a man who pays for what he does not get He picked up the thousand marks again. Then he laid down a note for a hundred marks, and asked to see the superior officer who had taken charge of Tommy. This time the young man. standing behind his desk, bowed gratefully. Certainly the highborn gentleman should ace the superior officer at once. Casimir was shown into the inner room. The young man at the desk pocketed the hundred-mark note. Perhaps be spent half of it on a piece of
Casimir dealt with the superior officer in much the same way, except that this time he laid down two thousand marks. He was received with almost groveling civility. This officer looked at money not so much hungrily as greedily. He had neither wife nor children and was not actually hungry. But he was a man who liked enjoying himself, and in the good old days before the mark fell he was accustomed to spend his evening in pleasure resorts less sumptuous and much less respectable than the Mascotte. From these delights he had been cut off for some months. With two thousand marks a man can buy a great deal of pleasure in Berlin. For •two thousand marks most government officials would have done a great deal. Casimir said what he wanted, an Ausweis for Tommy. The officer, his eyes fixed on the money, cursed himself, his bad luck, his government, the’ late war, the French nation, the English nation, the Reparations commission and the International Military control. He cmrsed fluently, blasphemously and OT>scenely. At last he told Casimir that Tommy had been sent on to the Prince von Steinveldt. He himself could do nothing in the matter of the Ausweis. The Information was worth something and Casimir paid for it. Then he went back to his bank and drew out, not marks this time, but five hundred pounds sterling. Even with that sum in his pocket he did not feel quite sure of being able to deal, with Prince Von Steinveldt. He drove to the flat which King Wladisiaws occupied and took counsel with him. The king listened to the story. “The difiiculty -Is," said the king, “thilt Von Steinveldt wauls to step into my shoes himself. He can’t, of r/ft' Von Steinveldt Picked the Adder Out of Its Box, Held It Suspended by the Pink Ribbon Attached to IL course. The Entente powers would never allow a German to sit on the throne of Lystria. And. besides, Calypso wouldn’t marry him. But that’s not the point. He tblnks he’ll be able to manage it and of course he’ll want to get Norbeys out of the way.” "Fortunately,” said Casimir, “and thanks to the excellent Cable, we have plenty of money.’! “There’s no use offering Steinveldt marks,” said the jking. “He understands all about marks and knows exactly what’s going to happen to them.” “Naturally," said Casimir. “I should not offer him marks. 1 have in my : pocket five hundred pounds sterling.”; “That ought to be enough." said the king. “He wouldn’t make that much clear profit, after paying all expenses, f out of Lystria in two years unless be | is a great deal cleverer than I am. But , you'll have to be careful, Casimir, j He’ll take the money all right. But he’s a prince. You must allow him to keep up his self-respect." “1 had thought.” said Casimir, “of laying the money on his desk without saying anything about ft." "1 should be rather inclined.” said the king, "to hand it over to him openly saying that 1 sent it as a donation to whale ver charity in Berlin he thinks most worthy of support. Tell him at the same lime that I want to remain anonymous and desire no receipt for the money ” The king, who had been lounging in a chair, got up. went over to his writing table and unlocked a drawer. He
Water Is Literidly Their Staff of Life
The most amaxlng nice of human be- constructed with palm branches. Ftab Ings is undoubtedly the El Molo. ■ is almost their only diet and they have tribe of “Ashmen," who inhabit the no opportunity of varying their menu, desert wastes bordering Lake Rndolt, unless they are fortunate enough to tn Kenya colony, Africa. This tribe spear a hippopotamus. The water of represents the only known specimens Lake Rudolf is undrinkable to anyone of semiamphibious people and it is a but the El Moro, for it contains a curious fact that any tribesman dies large quantity of soda and has an obis he Ur kept without water for about Jectlonable taste The proportion of three hours. As a rule they drink every soda tn that lake Increases yearly, and hour during the day. for even an boor it is believed to be this fact that has and a half without water causes crack- caused the “fishermen" to become a Ing and bleeding of the lips, the Bos- deformed race. ton Transcript says. The El Moro tribesmen spend their It has been discovered that long days swimming in the waters of Lake continued working with radium tends Bndolf and fishing from frad rafts to cause a form of anemia.
THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL
took from it a small case made u» reu< morocco leather. "You may as well offer him this at the same time," said the king. He opened the box and displayed a small golden snake. It was curled up so that its tail was in its mouth. Its eyes, which had a fierce expression, were garnets. Casimir looked at it ; with reverence. It was the sign of ’"The Moat Noble Order of the Golden Adder of Lystria.” an order granted to very few people and worn by no Lystrian except the king himself. “He may like to have it,” said the I king, “though I don’t know why he should. It’s only nine carat gold, aad the creature's eyes aren't rubies. Still, he may like it. Try him, and you might say If at any time he wantin’ good table at the Mascotte. he has] nothing to do but ring me up and I’ll arrange It. What’a more. I’ll take sis- ■ ty per cent off his bill, and he won’t be expected to tip the wallers. Tell him all that, will yon?” Casimir went off to Von Steinveldt’s | office in good spirits and full of confidence. He did not expect that his interview would be pleasant, but he had no doubt that he would be successful In obtaining Tommy’s release. Von Steinveldt would probably try to bully him. He usually did try to bully any one he met He would certainly and the haggling might be prolonged. Casimir, expected bullying and bargaining; but he felt that no living German would resist the offer : of five hundred pounds in English bank notes, a decoration to pin on his coat and the chance of supper at the ' Mascotte whenever he liked at half the usual price. Never was any diplomatist, engaged in a demarche of an important kind, more surprised than Casimir was. Von Steinveldt made no attempt to bully him. He received him with extreme politeness and showed every i kind of courtesy and consideration This made Casimir suspicious. He knew Von Steinveldt fairly well and had never seen him behave like a gentleman before. “His majesty the king of Lystria—" Casimir began. “Ah, poor King Wladislaws,” said Von Steinveldt. “My heart bleeds for him. Such a position for one who has been a king. Tell me, how is he getting on?” Casimir did not believe that Von Steinveldt’s heart ever bled for anyone. He felt sure that he did not care whether King Wladislaws starved or not. His suspicions, already awakened by Von Steinveldt’s politeness, became acute. “His majesty,” he said, “sent me to place a small sum of money in your excellency’s hands. He knows little of the needs of the poor in Berlin and he hopes that your excellency will be kind enough to spend this money in the way that you think wisest." He drew from his pocket his packet of English bank notes and laid it on the table. Von Steinveldt picked it up. There were fifty Bank of England notes for ten pounds each. Von Steinveldt hated and despised almost everything English. But he had a deep respect and a genuine liking for English bank notes. He became almost genial.' certainly facetious, while counting the notes. The feel of the paper between his finger and thumb gave him a sense of physical pleasure. “King Wladsilaws," he said, “seems ; to have been doing pretty well at the ‘ Mascotte.” “His majesty,” said Casimir stiffly, “wishes his gift to be anonymous, and hopes that you will make no acknowledgment of the receipt of th< money." Von Steinveldt pocketed the notes. "Among the German aristocracy," ' he said “there are many who have suffered severely by the fall of the mark. Their pride forbids them to make any public complaint of their poverty. I think, if your king approves. that this money would be well spent, perhaps best spent, in relieving their distress." Casimir had little doubt that the German aristocracy—at all events one i member of it—would benefit by the five hundred pounis. “It la" said Von Steinveldt. “a most generous gift I beg of you to convey to your king my warmest thanks.” .Casimir took out of his pocket the crimson case which contained the Golden Adder of Lystria. “His majesty,” he aald, “Is deeply conscious of your kindness in acting | as his almoner, and is not unmindful i of the many services which you have I rendered in the past to the unfortu- 1 , nate kingdom of Lystria. He begs ' your acceptance of the Order of the Golden Adder of Lystria.” Von Steinveldt picked the adder out • of its box and held it suspended .by | ! the pink ribbon attached to it. Then. standing up and bowing deeply to Cas- i imir, be pinned the decoration to the j I breast of his tunic. It hung there, the last in the second sow of decorations $ which Von Steinveidt wore. There were twenty-nine of them and the Golden Adder made the thirtieth. ITO BE CONTINUED.! Might in the Jungle The lion, noted as being the noblest of the jungle's beasts, is, of course, a mighty hunter. His ferocity is pro verblaL AU animals ar well as man become its victims. The African buffalo, however, is often its master, and elephants sometimes are able to over power both lions and all members of the tiger family.
Bright Children hot Necessarily Delicate The old idea that bright children are inclined to be sickly, “queer” and different from their less gifted playmates, has received a blow from the f work of Dr. Lewis M. Terman. head i of the department of psychology of i Stanford university. Since 1910, Doctor Terman, with the aid of 14 associates, has examined | 250,000 school children. Os these, the i best 1 per cent are being studied tn ' greater detail, and\their development followed as closely aSsDossible to obtain -definite knowledge of character- ( istlcs thqt distinguish young genius ■ and to determine bow they fulfill their j ; early promise. These superior children have been found to be as a class a little heavier, ■ larger, better nourished and healthier than the average of undetected children of their age. Their ancestry is l also somewhat longer lived than the average. Better proportioned phys- ; ically and more stable nervously, these precocious children when actually examined have upset the old ideas. In school work they surpass in all directions as a group and display a wider range of information. They are j not freakish or irregular in their abil- | • itles. There is nothing strange or [ ; in their interests outside their studies. They enjoy and play i games, though they like games with thinking in them. They differ from the j general run in degree rather than in | any way that sets them off as fundamentally different. Their superiority manifests itself at an early age. though it is not always discovered by teachers and given sufficient opportunity for full play in school work. Some of the children who were subjects of early studies ; fourteen or fifteen years ago are now j demonstrating that indications of early superiority have been justified by adult ability.—Science Service. A Tragedy “There’s a sad case. ’ said the welldressed man to his companion, as a shabby-looking individual in a timej worn overcoat passed by. “That chap used to have pots of money, and now—" “Drink?” queried his companion. "Oh, no, certainly not, he—” “Gambling, I suppose, on the stock exchange," Interrupted the friend. “It was nothing of that sort, he made—" “Lost, you mean; betting and horseracing, ruin a man sooner than anything.” “You are mistaken; it was not his fault ‘He was the victim of a passing fancy, a craze, anything you ilka to call it" “A woman!" The other dropped his voice to a shocked whisper. “Not just one woman—all of ’em. He was a hairpin manufacturer." Only Wings Necessary A hundred and twenty years ago people were evidently inclined to make greater demands upon their “help” than they are today. The following advertisement teas clipped from Farmer’s Museum, published in 1796: “Wanted, for a sober family, a man of light weight who fears the Lord and can drive a pair of horse. He must occasionally wait at table, join s In household prayer, look after horses I and read a chapter in the Bible. Be must God willing, rise at seven In the morning, and obey his master and mistress ip all lawful commands; if he can dress hair, sing psalms and I play at cribbage, the more agreeable. IN. B.—He must not be familiar with the maid servants, lest the flesh should rebel against the spirit and he should | be induced to walk in the thorny paths of the wicked. Wages 15 guineas a year (about S7 monthly)." Historical Coach Until a few years ago, Phoenix, Artz., possessed a stage coach that had been held up and robbed more often than any other in existence. It began running in the seventies, between Prescott and Tombstone, and was actually robbed 83 times. Eight drivers and as many express messengers were killed on It It was originally a handsome Concord coach pulled by eight mules and cost SI,BOO to Tucson, but its sides were latet split by rifle and pistol bullets and In more than one place the leather lining was cut with the stroke of. a bowl* , knife. Its Advantage They were discussing the advantages of the various college courses “So you’ve decided on an art course instead of a scientific course?" inquired the girl. “Oh. yes,” answered ' the youth, “it seemed the better course . for me." Her next question was, | -Wbyr and his reply to that was. "Well, everybody says It’s easier to forget. Thafs the Question -I aay. doctor, did you ever doctor another doctorr “Oh. yes." “Weil, does a doctor doctor a doctor the way the doctored doctor wants to be doctored. or does the doctor doing the doctoring doctor the other doctor in hie own way?"—Providence Journal. Sore of One Thing The sun was going down, clouds were hanking up. and they had driven for , miles to silence. Finally, the wist i asked. “Do you know where you are. I darling?" Friend busband stepped os the accelerator and replied a bit shortly: “No. If I did we wouldn’t be here.” /namf Oof -Anyone knows enough to go into the hardware buatoess." said a farmhand in the faft of 1928. “But not every one knows enough to stay to the hardware businaas," the same forwthand to the sheriff tn the fall at 1924.—Editorial to Good Hardware. T4ttl* Out man greased to woman’s clothe®? Mother—That's not a man. What
Ovation Accorded to “Babe Rath’s Brother” The biggest tiger in the world, so I believe, resides in the Calcutta zoo. I saw him there. And they also point out to you the granite shaft which marks the site of the infamous “Black Hole" in which 123 out of 146 British soldiers were smothered one summer night But stranger than these things was the report of a baseball game played to Calcutta to July by sailors from Uncle Sam’s warship lying in the harbor. says Girard to the Philadelphia I Inquirer. lam indebted to our fellowj townsman, William Lancaster Jenkins, i consul general at Calcutta, for this report which appeared in the Calcutta Statesman: “In America there is a great man named Babe Ruth—a veritable Jack Hobbs, in sact —who apparently has several brothers. At all events, several batsmen representing the navy took the pitch with a concerted yell, •Here’s Babe Ruth’s brother!”' T*r bloated feelinc and distressed breathins due to Indirestlon you need a medicine a» well as a purgative. Wricht'a Indian Vegetable Pill* are both. Adv. Most Crowded State The greatest density of population ' tn the United States is not found to New York, but in Rhode Island, which has 566 people to the square mile. | Massachusetts comes next with 479 per square mile. New Jersey is third with 420. Connecticut fourth with 256 and New York fifth with 217 per square mile. The District of Columbia with 7.292 to the square mile stands in a class apart. The most thinly populated state is Nevada, with only seven-tenths of a citizen for each square mile.—New York Times. Watch Cuticura Improvs Your Skin. On rising and retiring gently smear the face with Cuticura Ointment Wash off Ointment to five minutes with Cuticura Soap and hot water. It is wonderful what Cuticura will do for poor complexions, dandruff. Itching and red, rough hands.—Advertisement c To Harness Desert Heat Scientists who have been delving into the future of the development of natural utilities have suggested that it is feasible to harness the heal of the great Sahara desert sands. While the suggestion is a vapory one just now, scientists who look upon the idea seriously say It is hardly more impracticable than the harnessing of waterfalls seemed to be some years ago. Wyoming Leads in Elk In the state of Wyoming there are more Elk than in all %ther states and territories of the Union. The 1923 census shows that state alone has 22,572 head. About 11,000 of these inhabit the Jackson Hole region. In the last few years elk have Increased to number. To Insure gllstenlng-whlte table linens, use Red Cross Ball Blue in your laundry. It never‘’disappoints. At all good grocers.—Advertisement. Trimming the Sails -Now, a sailor must trim his sails.” "Hl like that part,” said the girl, who learns to steer. “What sort of trimming is stylish In sea circles F’— Louisville Courier-Journal. Lost and Found More than 10.000 pieces of property were turned into the lost and found department of one eastern railroad last year. Same man who will flatter a woman’s vanity won’t say one word to please a man’a FIRST AID TO BEAUTY tAND CHARM Nothing so mars an otherwise beautiful face as the inevitable lines of fatigue and suffering caused by tired, aching feet. ALUM'S rooT-EAM the Antiseptic, Healing Powder, Insures Ck foot comfort. It 1* a ToL < IrtNeeaaiqr. Shakait <\ fa year ahoea fa th* \\ rooming. Shop all Jay— Dane* all *vening—- / then let yo*r minor Mil ( th* eton. Trial pack1 age and a Foot-Ease Walking DoU eent Area. Addreee Alta sF*W-EmL to ley. N. Y SaM oi Dros DOortruiu Startt. K inskmY r * 1 OS A drujgist FLORIDA LAND—F*rme fa Beet DletHcte—acreage and investment properties —information on ail Florida. Mackintoab A Da**, Real Estate Broker* Tallahassee,* Florida.
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