The Syracuse Journal, Volume 19, Number 10, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 8 July 1926 — Page 3

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 will do for poor complexions, dandruff, itching and red. rough hands.—Advertisement. Fashion and Elephants The fashionable woman's passion for rings and bracelets made from elephant’s hair set in precious metal is being followed up by a craze for all sorts of “elephant novelties.” It is the desire of every woman to have elephants carved from ivory round about her. either one or a regiment of elephants. Children’s handkerchiefs often look hopeless .when they come to the laundry. Wash with good soap, rinse in water blued with Russ Bleaching Blua —Advertisement Old Gag, New Twist "I have helped you on many occasions. and yet you go about saying that I am a mean man!" “Yes. I want to discourage other people from trying to borrow money from youI" — Fllegenden Blaetter. Munich. *v - ■ - ... -- , AeM «totnaeh heartburn and nanaaa ara Sorr-eted with lb* UM of Wright’* Indian Vagetabl, F. ITS Paarl St.. N. T. Adv. Guessing at anything Is fine exercise for a weak Imagination. A single epigram may outlive a volume of machine-made philosophy.

TOURING Haveyou changed your plugs within the last year? If not, your contentment and satisfaction on your tour will be insured if you install a full set of dependable Champion Spark Plugs before you start. X — rlv I -J. - ...krf'l! i/» Z tathßWßow Each can other than SW 8* Ford,—packed / ’ la the Blue Bom I Ut : Each Champion Dependable far Every Engine Toledo, Ohio It seems as if everything can happen to a lucky man except sudden wealth.

Yeast Foam Begin today to learn the / ‘ \ most useful of J—home arts — / Zq Send for free booklet I Art of Baking Bread” Lj Northwestern Yeast Co. 1 7 30 North Ashland Avu. ' Chicago, HL

Penta W High Place Ifo MMk ie <w» charming to my - ear, fa ejw» ef my friends ami the fMpp»ic»Tfona **f tboee U> want of my - C’ewewr

■piJfl How to Keep ■Hn Bowels Regular DA. W. a. CMIDWEIX AT mt AM or M

To Dr. W. B. Caidwell, of Montleello. BL, a practicing physician for 47 pears, it teemed creel that ao many tonstipated men. women, children, and partlculnriy old folks, had to be kept so&rtantly “stirred up** and half sick *y taking cathartic pills, tablets, salts, ttloffioi and nasty oils. While he knew that constipation was the cause of nearly all headaches, bUloasnes*. IndisrestiM and stomach misery. he did not believe that ts sickening I “purge” or Tphysic* was necessary. In Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin he sflsoovered a laxative which helps tn establish natural bowel “regularity” even for those chronically constipated ». Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin not only -

Sure Relief H°t water Sure Relief Bell-ans FOR INDIGESTION 254 and 75$ Everywhere mFI feel SO *• but what w w v V|\ will make you W P ' ’ feel better, 1 •eta fse. ■ ?._! j. I Box. I Ik ITCHING RASHES I quickly relieved and often cleared away by a few applications of Resinol Don’t Cut Out a Shoe Boil, Capped Hock or Bursitis for R will reduce them and leave no blemishes. Stope lameness promptly. Does not blister remove the hair, and horse can be worked. $2.50 a bottle delivered. Book • A tree. 1. F.Tsng, hu SlO Lyn St SpfefcH, Im. KES One Drop Fq of Bourbon Poultry Remedy Ok c&SSS-SS Cures WrtM Gapes Beerbea RemegfCe.. Baa l». Lexlngten.K,. REPRESENTATIVES—Ont In each locality to handle »ur »alee. plea,;»nt work, not canvassing - Write Varro Product* Com F> '. ?s- iTth St . «: wjtfkrr Wls WA.AT TO HEAR FROM ohxer OF good farm or ranch for. sale. P. Tretnaln, 265 Dillon. Castle Rock. Colo. Kill All Flies? f vxj anywhere. DAISY FLY kILLXX attract, and ki-a ail bee. hutienn. ornamental, caewaiect ard x— -M- ng . jsl» a eh—B Last, all Ma Z'■»-<. •’V- • - * Made of metal. AjVi , can't et»:> I or tiporer. will not «cl or injur, F aa/thuw. Guaranteed J— * / li'irt upon ; /daisy ay killeb trom yo— deelw. HAROLD «()«•»• r roo klva N Y W. N U , FORT WAYNE. NO. 26-1926. A New Nest Egg “For the luva Mike where is my cue ball?" "«»h. I'm so sorry, dear; I lent It tn old Mrs. Jones for a nest egg. Couldn't you use Jimmy's baseball tbit one time?" ’

Art Crime Cure New York.—Channing Pollock playwright, believes that art and culture are the chief Ingredients of tbs panarea for crime.

J causes • gentle, easy bowel movemeni ’ but. best of ail. It never gripes, rick • ens, or upsets the system. Besides. Il I la absolutely harmless, and sc pleasant • that even a. cross, feveririi. bilious : rick child gladly takes It. Buy a large «Fcem bottle at any ’ store that sella medicine and just ae« j for yourself.

f Dr. Caldwell's SYRUP PEPSIN

EVERY 20 YEARS COMESACCIDENT Statistician Figures Average Driver Can Expect Serious Accident The average automobile driver may -xpect to have a serious accident about once In twenty years. But one or two per cent of the drivers should thank their special guardian anrels if they don’t smash a car or run down a pedestrian every six months or oftener. - This is the way drivers classify under today’s standards and conditions. according to Dr. Wa Iter V. Bingham, of New York, director of the Personal Reseanrh federation. One of the large problems of highway safety, he says, is to recognize Incorrlgibles before they do any damage. and to banish them from the steering wheel. Pick Out Repeater*. Accident ’’repeaters" cannot be picked out by outward physical appearance, psychologists agree. There probably are just as many blonds among them as brunettes. They have no distinctive facial characteristics, or other earmarks. "How, then, can you determine who will be predisjTosed to accidents before the subject begins driving?” The question was put up to Doctor Bingham, who was chairman of the committee on causes of accidents reporting at Secretary Hoover’s recent safety conference, and also to Dr. F, A. Moss, professor of psychology at George Washington university and secretary of the same committee. "There are personal factors which can be revealed by psychology laboratory test of the applicant for a driver’s license." answers Doctor Bingham “You can determine exactly how long it takes to act after an emergency is perceived'. ’The average driver, we have found, requires about one-half a second tn emergency to take his foot off the accelerator and put It oh the brake. This means the car traveling at thirty miles an hour would go about twenty-two feet before the driver acted. “Some types of nervous disorders unfit a person to drive, while others have no such effect. One eminent psychologist says that a person suffering from acute melancholia is one of the safest of all drivers, because he takes extreme precautions against accidents.” Extensive Tests Made. Doctor Moss has made extensive tests into the personal factors which cause accidents. One of his tests was a simple device of “What’s wrong with this picture?" to determine a perception of danger. He has applied the standard Intelligence . test to drivers also. A high grade of general intelligence is not necessary to be a good driver. Ise demonstrated, but a subnormal mentality makes a dangerous driver. He found taxicab chauffeurs with the minds of seven-year-old children, and they were having trouble. “A small number of people become chilled and quite fear when confronted by sudden emergency," says Doctor Moss. "We have located -them in tests on student’s In the university." “It Is possible, also, to Judge one's eye and hand co-ordination by tests. This Is important in passing cars and driving up to curbs. These tests are quick and practical and will locate dangerous traits. “Women are no more dangerous as drivers than men. given equal practice. They have no distinctive psychological tendency to accidents.” The Influence of fatigue bn automobile accidents, according to these authorities, is marked. A tabulation of 28.444 traffic accidents in New York state last year showed that more than twice as many accidents occurred during the evening rush hour as in the morning rush hour.

AUTOMOBILE GRAVEYARD GOOD INVESTMENT f \ ftjra ii- ■* I . ~ •”* tr.:•' „ I - _ _-i— * •W“ At Vintage, near Lancaster. Pa.. Morris Roseman started an idea to - work eleven years ago. It was to buy all the old automobiles he could get, dismantle ttenk and when anyone wanted parts to a certain machine, which was out of oate. they would have to come to him. The Idea was a success from the start. There are always over 400 oid cars on hand in his “graveyard" as shewn in this photograph at Vintage. His idea made him rich.

AUTOMOBILE HINTS In turning either right or left watch for pedestrians as well as vehicles. '• • • Drive on the right hand side of a parkway unless otherwise directed. • • • Owners of motor airs should drain the carburetor and vacuum tank occasionally to remove water, and dean the strainers, as a dirty strainer may cause the engine to balk in traffic er so a railroad crossing.

THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL

Watch Batteries Closely to Obtain Best Results Every automobile owner knows that unless he oils his motor regularly and keeps his radiator filled for cooling, his engine will ’burn up' and refuse to do its work. He realizes, too, that unless the gears and bearings are lubricated periodically they will be out of commission in short order. It is a peculiar fact, however, that many of these same motorists ignore the storage battery until it dies an unnatural death. They seem to think it will take care of itself. But if it is accorded as careful and regular attention as the car, many battery ills may be prevented. Storage batteries are like human beings In that they must have food' an 1 ’drink’ regularly c" they will weaken and their lives be shortened. By •food* is meant the current which must be put back by the generator. Regular inspection will tell you the condition of your battery. If it Is undercharged the specific gravity of the electrolyte will be 1.250 or less; If it Is overcharged it will be over 1.300, and the battery will show signs of excessive heat and spraying. The most common and ruinous abuse of the battery Is to let it go ’dry.’ The electrolyte solution must always com pletely cover the plates in all cells. Pneumatic-Tired Trucks Hang Spare Under Frame On.many pneumatic-tired trucks the spare tire can best be carried under the frame behind the rear axle, a* shown. The objection to this mounting is the difficulty of keeping the tire from chafing against the parts of the ro " VIRW iplw "M&F* mo*T sn*AM Wooden Blocks on Underslung Tire Carrier Prevent Tire From Chafing. carriage with which it comes in contact. A good method of preventing this trouble Is to bolt two hard wood blocks, cut as indicated in the detail, to the carrier. Two heavy leather straps are wrapped around ihe tire and carried at diagonal points to keep the tire on securely, -end a heavy chain with a padlock is used to prevent theft. —G. C. Douglas, Raleigh, N. C.. in Popular Magazine. Motor Cars on Farms in Middle-Western States Survey of farm-home conditions tr sixteen middle-western states reveals that more than 50 per eent of tht women in the district drive automo biles. On the other hand. more~4haz 67 per cent still draw water from wells or pumps outside the house, anc less than 28 per cent have sinks wilt drains in the kitchen.* Less than If per cent of the homes surveyed hac bathtubs; there were washing ma chines in more than. 40 per cent of the homes, and In nearly 17 per cent tin washers were run from the farm power system. Only a little more that 11 per cent of the farm wives kept any kind of record of their expend! tures.—Popular Mechanics. Other Man Drive# Your Car Better on a Hill It Invariably happens that when yot let some one else drive your car h« makes it perform better on hills thai you can. There is no mystery to this It’s Just a matter of feeding gas prop erly. and the stranger at the wheedoes the right thing without knowir.| why he does it , When you are thoroughly familial with your engine you are likely t< feed It too much gas at the wron| time. The stranger proceeds on th< assumption that the engine will b« equal to the hill and when it begini to slow down he gives It more gas.

That It’s an old car Is no reason why it wouldn’t enjoy a bath now and then. • • • Automobiles traveled 1.200,000 miles in the state of Washington during December, 1925, according to a check of gasoline sales. •• * • According to members of the American Automobile association, motorists will fight to the limit all proposals denying them the right of trial by Jury in automobile cases, 1 "

I — I HoweAbout- ; Sr ED HOWE r--- *1 iCopyrixbt by The Bell Syndicate. Inc.) When behaving myself I am rarely reprimanded by policemen, neighbors or newspapers. . . When I am punished I am usually guilty. In one of the magazines I find an essay by W. J. Henderson on music. Although 1 am fond of music and have heard a good, deal of it. I had not the remotest notion what Mr. Henderson was writing ab< nt on completing his essay. ... I have read books equally dense, notably Thorsteln Veblen's “Theory of the Leisure Class.” This author labors and groans and uses all sorts of big phrases lamely constructed, and finally does not tell what he believes the theory of the leisure class to be. . . . Which may be fortunate. If his intent is mischievous he has not been able to get his mischief before the public. >— In a certain small town there is a memorial hall. It should never have been built, but after the sentimentalists had their way nearly every one insisted that it be so big it is now useless for any purpose. The people wanted it to look like the Grand opera house in Paris, with the result that it is too large for any use in a small town. It will hold several thousand; the average audience in it probably does not exceed two hundred, and no one can hear. The stage is too large; It cannot be heated. It is merely another monument to foolish American big talk and big feeling. The most worthless human oeing I have ever known was a nineteen-year-old girl. She was what they call “respectable*’ ; the gossip about het was that she was idle and a burden to her parents. Her folks were pmir, and she hated them for it. She could dance, and sing a little, and play the piano a little ; but many a time I have known her to sleep until noon the morning her mother did the washing. She also had ambition, ambition to marry a rich man. but married a young fellow as worthless as herself. I don't know what became of her. but I am certain she is still what is called “respectable"; she had sense enough to take care of herself in that way, but lacked sense in .every other. — « Os the famous outrages we all hear of hourly, I often remark I iiave never personally known anything like, them, I have no sort of patience with the man who Is satisfied with himself, and doesn’t try to do better. Women, discount the gallant talk of men, but do not discount it enough. In literature we often hear of “style.” That's all there is to literature. As a man has it. or lacks it, he is genius or dullard, but neither of them have new ideas. Plenty of capable leaders have appeared; the masses will not follow them. It is the herd that is running away, not the best individuals. The middle-class people have done very well and have honored the world somewhat. but the proletarians have disgraced it. . . . Writers are clamoring for reform for those who have reformed themselves and complimenting those in need of reform. A mam who says tie is elderly, writes: "You once asked the que<:s n. "Are husbands and wives naturally antagonistic, as are foxes and hounds? . . I at first considered it a rude question, and began convincing myself ?f it with a view of writing a protest. But the more I thought of it the more I became convinced of pursuit, capture and conflict in marriage." Marriage isn’t a solace; it’s another problem to work out. In a town near where I live a man was shot and killed by an assassin unknown. The newspapers were full of it at the time. I visited the town not long after the tragedy and beard the men talk about it. They said the murdered man was a decent fellow, and as certainly a martyr to his family as a gootl many women were before suffrage. They said he was a hard worker and well behaved in all respects. but that he had a worthless wife and children. The men of the town do not doubt that some of his family killed him and are still Ioota» Ing around in the hope of finding the culprit" A pastor Is an attorney for his church and makes out as good a case is is possible, as attorneys do for cll•nts. His criticism of antagonists Is teldom fair. I ' The main Idea, of course. Is to be a good and capable man; not to claim such distinction while acting like the devil. 4. I lately met an old fellow on a railroad train, and heard him talking to some of the other men in the smoking room. "I have nothing to do but read." he said, “but am not enjoying myself much. When I was active, and out tn the world, I heard the men say better things'* than I meet with in books. Incidents actually happening In my daily life were more interesting than the plots I see worked out in books or the movies." ». I have noticed that every man who really amounts to, a good deal is prompt: he makes few appointments, and keeps them. And when he works, he works. But look out for the man who loafs half the time during his business hours, and is never on time, - - I ’ frequently hear men tell jokes, and there is that merry twinkle In their eyes which the newspapers say, denotes a good one. Still, the joke Is dull as ditch water; If I haven't heard It, rm sorry I did.

FIRST to develop and use the self-starter ■ • - The first practical self-starting and lighting system, the Delco, was invented in Dayton, Ohio, in 1910. It opened a new era in the history of the automobile, extending its service to women, making night driving safe and all driving vasdy more comfoijable and secure. Delco was first used by Cadillac, a % General Motors car. The inventor of Delco is today head of the Research Section of General Motors, whose personnel includes scientific leaders in every phase of automotive development. General Motors operates the largest automotive research laboratories and proving ground in the world. They are added assurance that whatever is best and soundest in scientific progress will be found in General Motors products. GENERAL MOTORS CHEVROLET « PONTIAC * pLDSMOBILE OAKLAND - BUICK * CADILLAC GMC TRUCKS YELLOW CABS, BUSES AND TRUCKS z “A car for every purse aiui purpose’*

Two Billion to Farms The federal farm loan board has net credit requirements of agricui’ure to the amount of more than F 2.000.000.000 since its establishment, tccording to its annual report. Trinidad has been sending nearly £OOO bunches of bananas to this country each month this year.

■aTT “ fly-Flit-Flop! FLIES breed in filth, feed on filth and bring filth into your home. Flit spray elears your home in a few minutes of disease-bearing flies and mosquitoes. It is clean, safe and easy to use. Kills AH Household Insects Flit spray also destroys bed bugs, roaches and anta. It searches out the cracks and crevices where they hide and breed, and destroys insects and their eggs. Spray Fht on your garments. Flit kills moths and their larvae which eat boles. Extensive tests showed that Flit spray did not stain the most delicate fabrics. Flit m the result of exhaustive research by expert entomologists and chemists. It is harmless to mankind. Flit has replaced the old methods because it kills all the insects —and does it quickly. f Get a Flit can and sprayer today. For sale everywhere. STANDARD OIL CO. (NEW JERSEY) aS ■ IBBLBS ■R& DESTROYS —J \ FHes Mosgaitoes Moths ’ /AX Ants Bed Bugs Roaches **

Familiars •‘Here you heard ‘Tristram and j»olde’?” "No. Where’s Tris playing now?”

Shahe it far® Your Shoot _ SrrinMe it htto the Foot-bath ALLEN’S FOOT EASE THE ANTISEPTIC, BFALINfi \ POWBEH FOB THE FEET Takes tbe friction from the shoe. relieves the pain of corns, banions, callu’es and sore BF 9 P° Ca - freshens the feet and jives new vigor. <_ Tf 7 w er Si,<es F<d F “ y MF \vWjaS|KaiHW At night, when your feet are tired, sore and W swollen from excessive dancing or walking, I fIMM ' “kSIBBF sprinkle Allen’s Foot-Ease la tbe foot-bath \ > ' OO4 e ’V°* th '‘ bl * J s of f**i without an ache. (hn °** MGtloc Ave hundred theoMiid pounds of powcer for the feet were u«ed by oar Army and Navy ' suers foot-ease. uiw.ii. - "

,To the man who works hard, th* greatest holiday is simply not tc work. $ 0 Eye Inflection and Inflammation are healed overnight by using Roman Eye Balaam. Ask your druggist tor 35-cent jar or aend to 3T2 Pearl St.. N. T. Adv. Butterscotch was not of Scotch orb gin. as the word is a colloquialisrt meaning “to scorch."

Proper Place "Let’s find a good place to have long talk.” “Sure, I’ll go to the librar with you.”