The Syracuse Journal, Volume 18, Number 20, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 17 September 1925 — Page 9
' —■ Watch Your Kidneys! Your health depend* upon your kidney*. When your kidney* are inactive, blood and nerve* are poisoned and many mysterious ill* result. You feel dull and drowsy; get up often at night and suffer annoying kidney irregularities. Your back acne*; you have headaches and dizzy spells; your nerves are constantly on edge and you are always tired. If your kidney* are sluggish, help them with Doan's Pills. Doan's act on the kidney* only. Are recommended the world over. Ask your neighbor I An Ohio Caw M Barney Wledetan, retired farmr, 649 S. Water t., Kent. Ohio, aye: "My back ched and was im». If I stooped, : was almost mposslble to tralghten. I also ad sharp pains tirough my kideys and ft was ianey seoretiona After using three boxes of Doan's Fill* I was rid of the trouble. STIMULANT DIURETIC TO THE KIDNEYS ffsrtir Mi n i~ Ca. Mb- Chesa. Beifab. N. Y. ——— —— 1 —— Had Overlooked Something . Mrs. Newlywed was a good cook and housekeeper and very proud of her home One day her husband went hunting and brought home a wild duck. She determined to excel all previous cooking and consulted a cookbook. She read: “Cook duck 20 minutes." So she prepared it and baked it in the oven for 30 minutes, placed It on the table with the rest of her dinner and called hubby to the fea*t. The bird was raw. She looked again In the book and read: "Cook duck 20 minutes tor each pound.” Sure Relief FOR INDIGESTION LjEZJEJJ* Hot water Sure Relief Bell-ans 254 AND 754 WCKAGES EVERYWHERE Cows Fond of Garlic American dairy Interest* recently appealed to the Department of Agriculture for a solution of the problem of preventing the garlicky taste in milk from cow* that have eaten garlic, says Popular Science Monthly. Experts of the department determined that the only way is to keep the cows from the weed. In which they revel. Vemuae AspiriN Say “Bayer” - Insistl For Colds Headache Pain Lumbago Neuralgia Rheumatism yfex* *££££? 221 Z f Ba y er package whichcontains proven directions Handy "Bayer" boxes of 12 tablet* Abo bottles of 24 and 100—Druggists A*vtrtn t» tb* tnwt» mark of B«y»r MianffrWMPm of ot B<UcjUcacAd i feelßo ®ood I * but what K will make you W 1 • feel better. 1 I I I Bag. /F I i ML w After A Bath W* Widl M | Cuticura Soap Du*t With V ill - / DsHmmlv *<ii*l**ril Illg—yy 7 Qf fCSS* frwmm Alligators Rout Bathen Two circus alligators were thrown Into Elk river in Kansas several year* ago when the show disbanded and these amphibians poked their heads into a group of bathers near Howard. Kan., recently. The bather* were forced to scurry from the water. The alligators bad not been seen heretofore and created a great sensation until their presence was explained.— Chicago Post. GASTRITIS IS DANGEROUS STOP IT QUICK J - Wlmni yoter H&MXMbCh to titoalaii wbm St I* ao dtateadsd with gaa that pi —sari a* th* mart al—* swffnmt— y** What ars yoa gatag to do? Taka a ehaac* or gat rid «f tba gas quick 7 Th* ©a* hi* **»*« stomach sssdMka* today is Dara** Meath* Pvwrta and tta mighty power to rettovo torrflM* gastrin* ***** or ctewtoc to a Msartag to tom* *< peoMajstos . 1* Dara's Wasta* Fvptoa.
OUR MAGAZINE D * SECTION ? M Interesting Features for the Entire Family - ■ -
OMETHING TO THINK 1 ABOUT F. A. WALKER ■-! ■"????■■!======== 1 | l | l | i'i | j ■ ■■■ —flgl
him ■ hi ■! WE NEED MORE THINKERS THROWN with others, the young man or young woman very soon finds that he or she Is affected In various ways by their actions. Tt is in this association, this dally encounter with various minds, wits and ideas that we gain experience of the effect of good and bad actions ' which go toward the development of good or bad character. “Right” and *wrong” acquire a somewhat different •igniflcance In each Individual mind, out fundamentally the underlying principle Is the same. In a little while, through this asI »oc!atlon there is developed an intelI dgent being who begins to think and reason for himself or herself, who rteps boldly out from the masses and tpproves or condemns in his or her >wn way. In this manner every human In the world began the formation of charicter, building it up piece by piece pretty mucH as a mason erects a brick walL until ft becomes a formidable itructure against which the storms »f the years beat until the last grain *f life drops down Into the unfathom»ble sea of the beyond. In this way the feeling of attach|l| IDHO SAID “A falling drop at last will carve a stone." '■ l * — I IA7HEN Titus Lucretius Carls ut- , ’ ’ tered these wools, he expressed i k wealth of philosophy and displayed ' a discernment of vision (hat today , makes his name remembered Though ’ | his death occurred before the birth of : ‘ Christ, a time when superstition and i Ignorance were on all side* apparent, I this man seems to have had the vision ' ‘.o see that ultimately the tiny germs i*f truth and science would triumph and, like the falling drop at last carves the stone, so the truth would carve Its ‘Lining pathway through the blackness of Ignorance. Lucretius is the name by which this tomous Latin philosopher and writer «a known. His birth is supposed te have occurred about 98 B. C.. and he filed tn the year 55 B. C. Little is retarded of hl* life, but a fairly authentic rumor has it that he died a sui?ide to escape the persecution of the I tuthoritlea. The works of Lucretius are best | known for their descriptive beauty j and elevated sentiment. He was one '*f those ' old Roman philosophers : whose teachings much resemble in their gentleness and goodness, the religion that Jesus Christ taught. Lucretius to well known as a bellevar general application of the reach Imps of the renowned Greek sage. | Epicure. This ancient teacher followed a personal philosophy that one should be temperate in all things and should roll from the diversions and pleasure* I st out him only those which were of the best and highest. Epicure died ifter a long and painful Illness which be bore with the greatest fortitude. Lucretius taught a cosmic Or universal application of these principles, whereas Epicure was concerned 6nly with their personal application.—Wayne D. I McMurray. <fi *» G*org* MattMw Adam*.) lIQIOUR II jLj Last Name IS IT JEWELL? r’ 18 usually agreed that tills name, Jewell, has no connection whatever with jewel, but it Is derived from the first name Jules or Julius —a Roman name of great antiquity that was used more frequently aa a baptismal ; name a few centuries ago than it to today ,The first of the name in this country was Thomas Jewell, who was born in England, about 1600. He was granted land In Wollaston, Mass., end had settled at Mount Miller. Boston, by 1439. The Jewells took their share of responsibilities in the eariy colony, and most of them followed the trade of tanner. A direct descendant of this Thomas Jewell was Marshall Jewell of Hartford. Conn., born in 1825. who was governor of Connecticut, postmaster general of the Vnited States and United States minister to Russia. In the American Jewell family the names Pliny, Asahel and Archibald occur frequently. This name to sometime* spelled Jewel and in England there was a John Jewel, born In 1522. who was bishop of Salisbury and a leader of English Protestant*. Burgees—ln old England a burgess was a freeman of a corporate town •r borough. A man holding this office took hto official title for hto surname. taman—This means teaman er tenkeeper. Some authorities say that the mnmaa waa really the caretaker for the te* w town house of a nobleman, rather than the proprietor of a tavern. : I BeoitasUMb"* aw* naisw comes rrom j BtmißgKm, a Sfr** » » nimtnirtmi ? woo w ■teiwtoww w (• to RtoOto* TWirwiSi > _
ment to a duty, or the disregard of obligation becomes stronger and more tenacious with the passing years. in each of us the finer moral distinctions are recognised, the real nature of right and wrong is intelligently comprehended, yet it often happens that we move on doubtfully and shape our course until the end, not so much in accordance with our acquired knowledge as In harmony with the impressions received ih early life. We become so deeply engrossed in our routine task of “making a living* and getting on in the world,” that in (he vitally Important affairs which have to do with our future, we fall to think for ourselves, and fall into the bablt of following blind leaders. This brings us to the thought that the world needs more thinkers who will ask the “reason why" and make an effort to find it out for themselves, the inspiring to greater endeavor for good the straggling, disgruntled armlls of mankind still groping In the dark, complaining of their inability to find the way, or approaching anywhere near the realization of their youthful dreams. OB to MeClor* New»p«p*r Sjmdleata.)
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And this Cor comfort you must know Times that are ill won’t still be so: Clouds will not ever pour down rain A sullen day will clear a*ain. SOMETHING TO EAT SOMETHING new Is hard to And; something different win depend largely upon the ingenuity of the cook. When we are thinking about foods new combinations will suggest themselves. Pineapple Salad. Arrange slices of pineapple tn nests of head lettuce, sprinkle with cream cheese which has been put through a rlcer, fill the centers of she pineapple slices with large yellow cherries and serve wiih: Golden Dressing. Take one-fourth of a cupful each of pineapple Juice, orange or cherry Juice, heat in a double boiler, beat two , eggs lightly, add one-half cupful of • sugar, pour over the hot Juice and ! cook until smooth; remove to a dish to cool. Delicious Sweet Potatoes. Peel and cook sweet potatoes, mash, using three cupfuls: add a half cupful of sugar, a fourth of a cupful each of butter, raisins, and pecans, a third of a teespoonfui of salt and a few grains of cinnamon or nutmeg. Pile after beating into a baking dish, dot with quartered marshmallows and brown in the oven. Cymllngs or Summer Squash. Cook, mash and season them generously with butter, salt and pepper. Place tn a baking dish, cover with buttered crumbs and slices of bacon. Bake until the crumbs and racon are brown. Serve from the baking dish. Rolled Beefsteak. Beat a round steak well and spread with a good seasoned stuffing. Roll up neatly and tie In shape. Put into a dripping pan with a teaspoonful of vinegar, basting frequently, with the addition at a little water. When ready to serve spread the roll with butter and make a thickened gravy with the sauce tn the pan. Cut like a Jelly roU whan serving. Virginia Baked Ham. Beak atv ar Mght pounds of smoked ham over night, drain and bring to the touting point. Remove the akin.
THIS BYBACUBE JOURNAL
THE FAITH AT HOME By DOUGLAS MALLOCH T WANT the folks at home to know. Whatever others say about me. That, what I do or where I go. The home-folks have no cans* to doubt me. I want the folks at home to feel Tonight, when down to pray they kneel. Though father may be far away There is no stain upon this day. I want the folks at home to trust; I want It not for my sake only; For some stay home, for some folks must. And children want, and wives are lonely. I want the folks at home to keep One joy when they lie down to sleep. The peace of knowing that the name They bear has not a mark of shame. I want the folks at home to say. Whatever others say about me. That here or there or far There Is no need for them to doubt me. However separations grieve. Or slander hurt, if they believe, A fellow still can do his best And not care much about the rest, ff® to McClure Newspaper Syndicate.)
i In a dozen cloves. Pl«ce the fat sld« ‘ up in a roasting pan. Put a little pea nut butter with some celery or celery seed in the pan with four bay leaves, j add a little water, baste occasionally, ‘ and roast three hours. Use half a pound of peanut butter; this gives th* flavor so well liked in peanut-fe< , hogs. Frozen Custard. Take one pint of milk, one cupful bl sugar, one and one-half teaspoonfull of cornstarch, mixed with a little cold milk. Scald the milk, add the sugar ' and cornstarch •• I the starch Is well cooked. Add salt and flavoring. Strain ano in ...i when half frozen one cupful of create and a eupful of mashed fruit. U&. 1»»». Waatara Newspaper Union.) The young lady 11 ACROSS THE WAY J B JI IfllW/nl Ell The young lady across tbs way says she guesses Japan realises by this time that she isn't tbs only natbm ea • (• tar MeCtera Newsamwr gyadtaalaj
Ic—riLjl Buildxnq Resident of Small Town Needs No Pity The little town, says the New York Evening Post, does not invite the condescension of outsiders. It has it* own public opinion and civic pride. The manager of a chain of rural stores comments on the revolution wrought in country life by the easy access to the city. Radio, autos, and national magazine* have been part of the interweaving forces of a shuttle constantly at work between the larger and the smaller communities. He might have mentioned the power of women’s clubs to raise the cultural level by lectures on current events, by the encouragelient of gardening, by the provision •nd furtherance of music. The little town does not live by the mere sufferance of the city. Nor does it run to the city for every good thing to eat, to hear, to wear. It to aware of books and abreast of fashions. It has churches served by ministers who are compensated by the devotion of a flock for their relatively . modest income. Moreover, that income ik not always small when weighed in the balance with the cost of city life.' One of the peculiar satisfactions to the small town dweller is the neighborhood consciousness—the knowledge that nextdoor neighbors and those beyond next door ad infinitum will eagerly mobilize to help in time of need. The little town offers its own abundant compensations, best known to its own citizens. Community Built Up by Organized Effort A fine example of community effort that gets results is found in the work of improving the streets that is being carried on in Columbiana. It is also a demonstration of the manner in which such an organization as the Exchange club can render its best service. Some weeks ago at a meeting of the club a fund for street Improvement was started. In this, however, they were preceded by a group of citizens who, cooperating with Mayor Leonard, were at work cherting the street leading to the Southern depot. Other citizens joined the Exchange club with their contributions and now the depot street has been completed and good progress is being made on College street. There is enough money pledged. It Is said, to chert every street in town. There are other things to be done In Columbiana and there are similar things to be done In every other community in the county. Let our people organize themselves and take hold for still greater effort at community building.—Shelby County (Ga.) Reporter. Movement to Suburbs The tremendous growth of American cities and the resultant growth of the suburban zones around them have reached such proportions that the ! whole conception of cities and their ; regulation requires revision. The | standards by which everything regard--1 Ing cities was judged a generation ago i are no longer adequate, and some radical changes In the physical aspect of cities and their administration may be ■ expected. Decentralization of cities : Is already under way. and the results i are apparent in the real estate market ' in an unprecedented demand for acreage around the fringes of the cities. In the Chicago area this activity is apparent for 30 miles or more In *ll directions. Plan for Beauty The city that is planning ways to make Itself more beautiful is going to grow more rapidly than the city which does not care, a speaker at a rAd estate convention at Detroit asserted. I would like to think that the real estate | men of this country are becoming more and more an influence for right living and right thinking. If we do so, dividends will be returned to us one hundred fold. Let us have cities that are dean—clean morally and clean physically. Let us do away with the ' things that mar and disfigure their beauty, that stop growth and retard I wise city development. City Managership There are now 14 states in which any town or city may adopt the city manager plan by a referendum of its people. They are Massachusetts, New Yori, Virginia, Ohio, Oklahoma, KanI sas. Idaho, Montana, North Dakota, I North Carolina. Wisconsin, Louisiana, Indiana and New Jersey. The plan has made greatest prog ress in Michigan, where 34 cities and towns have adopted it Texas, with 23; California, with 18, and Virginia, where every city over 25.000, with the single exception of Richmond, te under city management j GUberPs Witty Sally Sir W. 8. Gilbert was a member of the “Liver Brigade,” a group of London men who rode daily for their health in Hyde Park. His sallies always kept the equestrians In good humor. On one occasion he rode up to a man tluit for years had been in the habit of walking his horse in the park, and said: “Frank, Frank, you will be arrested —the police have their eye on you.” “L old ifllow? Good gracious, what for?" “For furious loitering.’’ Wisdom in This Comment If a town is worthy of your citizenship it to worthy of your recommendastlon and good will. There ia only one 'place whose residents are excusable for condemning it and warning other* not to come. Dives went to llye in that place, and he had enough goodness in him to wish his brother* would have sense enough to stay out- at it— Parasols with vanity eases te th* I bead are being carried in Paris.
a Standby »—the same dependable remedy that over a period of more than fifty years has been found so reliable in the treatment of catarrh and diseases of catarrhal nature. The outside of the package only has been altered. To facilitate packing and reduce breakage in shipping, the paper wrapper Which has identified the Pe-ru-na bottle for many years has been displaced by a substantial pasteboard carton. Pe-ru-na cannot be made any better. Three generations of users testify that Pe-ru-na is the best remedy in the world for catarrh and diseases of catarrhal origin. The remedy our fathers and grandfathers used with so much satisfaction is still the standby '—for the ills of everyday in - thousands of American homes. PE-RU-NA I Tlw Orlgtaal aad RellaMe *MM<y u fOF CotßWll Th* New Package Kv*rywfc*r* • VaMata •» Uq*M Bate 4 C*t* t*r >**>tl*t M **t*rrti to tk* P*<«w*aa CMBpaay* r*l***a**, OM*
He Owes His 40 Years of Constant Good Health to Beecham’s Pills v “I am 57 years old and commenced to be troubled with constipation when I was sixteen. *Tn 1884 I started taking Beecham's Pills other remedies having failed. 1 have not had a sick day in all the 40 years.” F. LOUIS LOEFFLER Rochester, N. Y. For FREE SAMPLE—write B. F. Allen Co., 417 Canal Street. New York Buy from your druggist in as and J*e boxes For constipation, biliousness, sick head- ■ aches and other digestive ailments take Beecham's .Pills Quick T - 1 Safe F?// J Relief Cohns In one minute—at less—the pain ends. Dr Scholl's Zino-pad ia the safe, sure, healing treatment for corns At drug and shoe stores DTScholl's Zino'pads Put on* on - the j>«un i* gon* EX-ZEMA-FO For the treatment of Ecsema and other skin diseases. Easy to us*. A liquid. No srrea -e NO soiling of clothes. Apply to the skin and Ec-Zema-Fo does the rest. As a trial a 50. cent bottle will be sent free for 10 cents. NEKVOID COMPANY, 173 Seventh Ave. Broukljn, N. ¥. n FARM FOR SALE S3O acres, Marshall County, Kansas, about C miles from Axtel and 4 miles from Vermillion. Under cultivation about 250 acres, of which 150 bottom; balance 70 acres In hay. alfalfa and pasture, with running stream supplied by spring and with heavy scattering timber. House, two barns, corncrib, large chickenhouse, two wells, one windmill. sllO per acre. For further particulars write G. W. FROHLICH •912 Washington Blvd. Chicage, Illinois Truckers Wayne County with it* wonderful soil and climate, long seasons, mild winters, cheap lands, splendid churches and schools, and excellent transportation facilities, invites you to locate here. A great boom ia headed our way. Act at once. Write BOAH1) OF TRADE. JESUP. GA. FLORIDA is the state of unrivaled opportunity. If Interested in Florida real estate, •et us serve you. Correspondence cheerfully answered. SCOTT REALTY CO- Delray. Fla. Farm Ditch Dig** r —Build Your Own. For particulars write C. G. Alden. 225 East Tenth Street Erie. Pa. Representative* wanted. Florida-Reliable information about solls.ellmata. jgrtcuiture.advaDtages.opportunltfes. Anunsed to | *w*ta***s to* vf*i»s.Ti*n *l* .*»>ajla wTNruTFORFwAYNE, NO. 36--'925. Really Funny To our notion the funniest thing In the world is not tbe> man with the hives and a curry comb, but a man weighing 275 pounds with a shape like • a Mexican jumping bean, trying to coax a golf ball out of a bunker.—Buffalo Evening Times. School to Teach Baking Baking now has taken its place among the arts. A salon of baking, which opened its doors in Paris, has proved a great success. The man who is domiciled In a rilage boarding house has no use for a local paper.
Foam * <- —7 ~7~ \ 1 / f ffe |A yT ' yr Z 71 Yw 4, Mothers! ?KS bread, try home-made bread and note the sudden increase in the youngsters’ bread consumption. _DR. PHILIP B. HAWK. Send for free booklet **The Artdf Baking Bread" North AAlanU Ave. Chicago, HI. a'”' n? ML' .'. k’Se
TERSE TRIFLES Don't annoy a silent man; he may be a reformed prize fighter. A great many men owe their suo cess to the failure of others. To get rich a man has to think) and he has to think in time. Don’t blame a man for taking prid« in his birth; it brought him here. No one really scoffs at public opin ion; it is always relentless. if there is nothing in a man oppor t unity never troubles him. The epitaph perpetuates the unmad* reputation. If a benefactor has plenty of money he is satisfied with a vote of thank’s. There are some who use humanity to serve their pride.—Dunham. Violets and dandelions make i charming combination; hut the florist! don’t yet undertake it. Why have so many people the ulty of finding out things that an none of .their business? Perfecting the science of meteor ology will remove interesting uncertainty. Few men are modest enough to be lieve themselves overestimated by others. Any one, after he has become rich Is willing to tell how poor he ha> been. When a man has become a hero th* people add heroic anecdotes to bb glory. Freshen a Heavy Skin With the antiseptic, fascinating €?uticura Talcum Powder, an exquisitely scented, economical face, skin, baby and dusting powder and perfume Renders other perfumes superfluous. One of the Cuticura Toilet Trio (Soap Ointment, Talcum).—Advertisement. \ Jap Girls in Business In Japan today there are about 1,500,000 girls and women engaged in clerical and stenographic work, having turned to tbe» business ‘office as • means of livelihood. 1 Enrollment in business courses Increases about 30.000 annually and taxes the public and private schools giving these courses foi girls. Limburger Statistics About 922,000 pounds of limbnrgei cheese were confined in storage in the United States on the first of July, oi nearly 200.000 pounds more than las; year. More or Less He—Did you marry him for bettei or worse? She—Well, more or less. No ugly, grimy streaks on th* clothes when Red Cross Ball Blue is used. Good bluing gets good results. All grocers carry 1L —Advertisement. G<nng f Going—— Hs your watch going?” “No. It’s gone; somebody took IL’ Being respectable is also being safe* which accounts for some of It.
