The Syracuse Journal, Volume 20, Number 12, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 21 July 1927 — Page 3
v For . Motor Boating If you own a motor boat —whether it be a handy out-board driven craft ot a large cabin cruiser—you'll find Champion, the better spark plug, more dependable—more , efficient — and more economical. Champion u the better ? -'* zSft&raiS £=} -ttte core —iu two-p«ee comtnectum <md itt »tw " Jfc oal onolyeu tUaroda. Champion X - It r tor Forde 60K CXomfHon—• Can other , Ae—--jßb than Forde -g— tfs 75K Champion Sparkplugs TOLEDO, OHIO I For your protection be sure the Tl Champions you buy are in f the original Champion cartons. JJ A Short Tragedy “Doni speculate." Charles M. Schwab, on a rcent visit to his native Loretto, was ad tressing the Loretto Y. M. IL A. | "The tale 'of the speculator.” be went on, ‘‘is short and tragic." “‘I speculated last week.’ said a man. "•Did you? said another man. “ They did.* ” i Romen Ere Baleetn Is «n antiseptic otnt- I m<>nt Hence the medication heals by pen*Iratiiif thv laflanav4 FUifam. Adv. Will Do for a Start Mistress (to cook who Is leaving)— | Well. Linda. 1 hope the man you're marrying is a worthy one. Cook—He ain’t de best dey is. ma’am, but Ah gwiue ter make him do fob de present * .■ ' — For true blue, use Ru s Bleaching Blue.- Snowy•whiteClotheswill bosure to result. Try it and you will always use it All good grocers have it.—Adv. Getting Along Fine Bill — How Is your new home? Alex—Great! We have both a roof and a mor’gage on it Very often a genial man Is me who enjoys fun and comfort at the expense of others, mu I Instant | r lather in B any kind 7] I of water 0 <4 Health! r Beauty! K e WjyEF 1 E ' * F ' *\i SAVE MONEY House Paint $2.25 a gal. Good Quality at Low Price 1« Color, Black and Whit* Flnor and Trim Varnish $2.25 a ral. Fr»Wht Repaid Term* I'aab with ordar. You taka no rUk. It good, are not Mt ? factory, r.iurn and w* will refund your tnoo<-y. Special Introductory Offer •wins la bettering. Sand M 11 and we will M»d you. l-arcet Foot. oa. pint Orwy Houna Faint and On. Pint Floor and Trim Varniab. Oval-re And Agent, Wanted. GUARANTEE PAINT CO. 43d MaaMcteoaetta Arinnc. Indianapolis, Ind. FOR OVER 200 YEARS haarlem oil has been a worldwide remedy for kidney, liver and bladder disorders, rheumatism, lumbago and uric acid condition*. HAAR LEM OHL * correct internal trouMe*. stimulate vital organs. Three sixes. AU druggists. Insist co the original genuine Gold Medal. KAY-O la sttaraatMd to SIM tartant and 3 benlute PMM to any case of HAT FXVSR ta tbe world, or money refunded. Price S 3. THB HAY-O CO. Sundanoa. Wyoming. n|3ijgy«Maß Btteomo Dandruff-Sww Hn>r FaOw '*" TJ HINDERCORNS Bewew** Oonw. (ML lottMNk fH> j. ttOOO AU ODBUTOI OMBfoft to UM Hwt. attkea waking aaay. He by taatl or at Drag* fitta. HiacMOgttdaalWotts.FaMbacaa.ME Hanford’s Balsam of Myrrh for ItaMpttto BMm, Sttagof Bees ■meg bntt far tert baOte if art mML. AStkataa. |Hf. N. U„ FORT WAYbjE, KO. 20-1527.
Bombing Plane Lifts More Than Its Own Weight 11> .".. II I M . ’Jnj . A general view of the latest bombing airplane designed by Glenn which is the first machine developed capable of lifting more than its own weight, and therefore of special interest to naval officials for bombing operations. The machine was tested before high navy officials at the naval air station at Anacostia, D. G.
Pays Visit to; Moorish Chief
Dr. Grosvenor Tells of Interesting Tour in Morocco and Spain. Washington.—Dr. Gilbert Grosvenor, president of the National Geographic society, with Mrs. Grosvenor and daughter. Miss Lilian, have just returned on the Homeric from six weeks abroad, during which they motored 2..5U0 miles in French and Spanish Morocco and I.OQO miles in southern Spain. The French protectorate. Doctor Grosvepor said, has built in Morocco more than 15,000 miles of surfaced road ind many thousand miles of dirt road luring the last eight years. Wide and ttralght avenues radiate in all directions from the capital of the protectorate, jfcnetrallng even into the high Ltias mountains which have peaks as high as the Matterhorn and the loftiest summits of the Alps. The French nave planted trees for almost the entire length of these roads, on both «ides of the roadway, employing hunireds of thousands of eucalyptus, poplar, locust and plane trees. Visits Moorish Chief. Doctor Grosvenor followed one of these roads just completed to Khenif•a, in' the High Atlas, where is the residence' of El Hassan, a Moorish 'hlef who can muster 15,000 horseaien and who owns 5,000 cattle, 8.000 korses and 20.U00 sheep. The chiefs tent of black cloth wovM> from camel and goats* hair, in vhicb Doctor Grosvenor was entertained. measures 00 by 150 feet, the •ntire floor being carpeted with purple •mgs and the walls decorated with handsome draperies woven by the women of the dan. I El Hassan is one of the 14 sons of die late Moorish chief, Mahd Hammon, cho long resisted the French advance. )ne day ail his sons api»eared at the «*rench camp and surrendered, wherejpon the French commander sent Ford to him that as his sons had laid lown their arms it would be wise for lira to follow their example. The old ihief replied that he had ordered his ions to come in and render allegiance to the French, but that he was- too >id to change bis habits. He continled his defiance and was soon afterward sliot and killed by men comua’nded by his own sons. ißy making its sons surrender the old pasbh laved for them his vast property and Insured that one of them became bis tuccessor as chief. "El Hassan can neither read nor write, such accomplishments being regarded by the Berbers as too effeminate for the chieftain of 15,0<)0 horsemen,” Doctor trrosxenor ( said. "He employs secretaries to keep the tally >f his flocks and herds. Shortly before
Paris Judge Uphold* Right to Beat Wife > Paris.—A husband’! right to beat his wife “if she needs it” is upheld by Paris courts. Husbands in France still are legally heads of families, supreme In authority, but in practice they frequently are bad seconds in family rows that get into court. Judge Pontrcnaoli is the magistrate who is trying to restore the old order of things. His decision Justifying a husband charged with striking bis wife set forth that such brutality is not reprehensible when it is excited “by the irritation caused by a wife’s bad conduct."
MUSEUM HUNTERS HAVE THRILLING EXPERIENCES
Narrow Escape From Wild Elephant One of Dangerous Adventures in Central Africa. Chicago.—Bearing tales of thrilling adventures, including a narrow es--ape from a»wild elephant, H. Boarduan Conover and John T, Zimmer, mturalists of the Field museum, have lust returned from some fourteen months in the jungles and hills of Tanganyika territory. Central Africa, where they collected valuable zoologi--»l specimens for the museum. Robert H. Everard of Detroit, third mem>er of the Conover-Everard expedition. jointly financed by Mr. Conover knd Mr. Everard. made a stopover tn Europe for a brief visit The expedition collected approxinately 600 mammals. 1.500 birds and MX) reptiles, it was announced by Director D. C. Davies. Some of the
our visit the French, on completion of the road over the mountains, had presented him with a powerful automobile which he is learning to drive.” At Fez Doctor and Mrs. Grosvenor were entertained by the Governor General and Countess de Chambrun, the latter a sister of Nicholas Long-" worth, speaker of the house; the former is a direct descendant of Lafayette and once was military attache of tlie French embassy in Washington. •‘Fez is probably the most interesting place in Morocco,” Doctor Grosvenor continued. “It is a city of 150.000 people and is probably nearly 2.000 years old. It contains many splendid examples of ancient Moorish art and architecture. It has a water supply system and running water that was installed many centuries before Paris or London had running water. “Property and life are so secure that a murder is a ten years’ sensation. "j Women Are Burden Bearers. “Women probably hold in Morocco a lower place than in any country in the world. You see them bent double carrying on their backs for many miles huge packs of fodder for the horses and cows. Men ride stallions only, for mares do no work and carry no loads because their strength must be saved so that they may foal strong, healthy colts. But no burden is too heavy for women. You will see a man riding comfortably astride his horse or donkey and his wife trudging behind in his dust and carrying his baby and the family belongings. And yet you see no discontented female faces. Crushing labor has been their lot for countless generations and they accept It patiently. After .leaving French Morocco, Doctor and Mrs. Grosvenor motored through Spanish Morocco, visiting Tetuan and Ceuta, and then crossed the Straights of Gibraltar to Algeciras. Contrary to the prevalent belief, they found the motor highways of Spain excellent, with the result that they had a comfortable and most enjoyable ride from Algeciras alorilc the coast to Malaga, thence over the superb mountain passes behind Malaga to Granada, where they visited the Alhambra, in Qb«en Isabella gave her Jewels to Columbus to finance him and sent him on his historic voyage; then they motored through continuous olive orchards for several hundred miles to Seville, where is Columbus’ tomb, to Toledo and Madrid.; Spain is a remarkable country and particularly interesting to Americans f her historic associations with our continent. Her people look happy and are prosperous and the visitor is welcomed heartily. Her cities, cathedrals, landscapes and mountain ranges are indescribably beautiful.
Fresh Camphor Arrive* in U. S. From Formosa Seattle, Wash. —Looks like a bad summer for moths. Two carloads of fresh camphor from the Island of Formosa. one of the largest shipments of its kind to be imported into the United States reached here on the Yokohama Maru. Tbe pungent product was obtained from the century-bld camphor trees set out under the direction of a former mikado of the Japanese empire. It was the first reforestation undertaken by Japan. Today these trees yield tbe world's supply of camphor and provide an industry for thousands. Os the many uses found for camphor most of it is utilized In the manufacture of celluloid, drugs coining far down the list.
specimens have already arrived here and others are still in transit. Mr. Everard had the experience with the elephant—the most dangerous adventure of tbe entire trip. Separated from his companions on a special elephant hunt, Mr. Everard suddenly encountered a family of wild pachyderms. One of the huge animals broke from the herd and charged the hunter, but Mr. Everard managed to place a shot in a vital spot and the elephant collapsed. Most notable among the specimens secured by the party were a white rhinoceros, which is rapidly becoming extinct, and a male and female of Abbott’s duiker, a species of pigmy antelope, very rare and most difficult to bag. The Abbott’s duiker is represented tn very few museums. It took more than 100 natives and three days of strenuous effort to bag the duikers. First the natives cut
THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL
Bees Quit Aged Queen for a Younger One Brooklyn, N. Y. —Dr. Cyrus King, head of the biological department of Erasmus Hall high school, has begun an investigation of an apian mystery developed by the desertion of their hive and queen by a swarm of the school’s bees that flew from the apiary on the roof to the branch of a near-by tree. Every bee left the hive. They weighted the branch to the ground and some, not content with vagrancy, stung curious persons who went near them. Doctor King said be suspected the bees of transferring their devotion to a younger and more interesting queen. He said he would try to verify this and if it were true either re-estab-lish the old queen or accept the new one. provided she would remain at home and not lead her subjects on more excursions.
King’s Personal Appeal Ends Park Paper Litter Lpndon.—Respect for their king and his wishes is the reason attributed for the notable decrease in waste papers which the public of London scattered in the city parks here. Some time ago the king appealed to the public spirit in an endeavor to prevent London parks from becoming refuse dumps. To this appeal, even children responded heartily, according to the inspectors employed by the London county council to enforce the park regulations. Many children were seen to drop waste paper while playing on the grass, then, suddenly remembering the king's request, the youthful lawbreakers would stoop, pick up their rubbish and place it in one of the many receptacles provided for the purpose. Nonstop Drummers Get Big Hand in Belgium Brussels, Belgium.—Nonstop drumming contests are setting new records in the provincial districts. Alphonse Robillard, sixty years old, marched from Mons to Ath and back, more than 30 miles, drumming all the way. He Was allowed an hour for lunch at Ath and was 11 hours making the round trip. The previous record was about 25 miles and tbe newest seeker of the title starts soon on a 36-mile hike with continuous drumming. Whole companies of drummers are organizing contests, big crowds gathering for the start and finish, and the country people cheering the drummers along the roads. Bell Hopping Made Fine Art in London London. —London bellboys must be discretion itself to hold their jobs. They are trained to give a subdued cough whenever they approach a lady and gentleman holding a private conversation. Even the art of properly knocking on a door is practiced assiduously under the sharp eye* of their captains. The correct summons is two short knocks, the hand always being gloved. Four pairs of white gloves a day are donned, and two white waistcoats are worn every evening whether the first Is soiled or not. Well-oiled hair has to be parted exactly in the middle, gloves must never be unbuttoned, and to be caught with hands in pockets means dismissal. Fight It Out Trenton, N. J.—Any two convicts tn the state prison who dislike each other are to be put in a ring with gloves and have the fight taken out of themselves in two-mlnute rounds.
paths through tbe dense forest up a mountainside. Five drives were made. Gangs of natives drove through the forest, setting up a clamor by shouting. blowing horns and using other noise-making instruments, while the members of the expedition watched at various points along tbe cleared paths. Finally tbe duikers were routed from their cover and were bagged. It took eight days to secure the rhino, which fell from four bullet wounds, Mr. Zimmer said. When the work of .removing the hide began, the party fetand it necessary to establish a strong guard to ward off many natives who gathered in the hope of feasting on the carcass, as the meat of the rhino is a favorite food. The field museum hunters feared the natives would not stop at the careass. but take the hide and skeleton as welL ", “The acquisition of the white mine will give the museum a particularly complete collection of rhinoceroses all types of which are disappearing.' Dr. Winfred H. Osgood, curator o’ zoology of the museum, declared.
STOM SWINE SANITATION BRINGS RESULTS (Prepared by the Untted States Department of Agriculture.) Practical tests in the South of the system of swine sanitation, developed by federal zoologists in McLean county, Illinois, have yielded encouraging results. The purpose of the system is to control swine parasites by a series of preventative measures based on current knowledge of the life history of swine parasites. Records obtained in southern Georgia by Dr. E. M. Nigbbert, of the zoological division of the bureau of animal industry of the United States Department of Agriculture, have shown some striking results from the use of the system. In one contrast between two pigs, the animal raised under sanitary conditions was marketed at four months and twenty-three days of age. weighing 173 pounds and topping the market. The other pig was not sold until ten months of age. and even though more than twice as old as the “sanitary” pig, It weighed only 165 pounds. Doctor Nighbert reports that a number of farmers are using the sanitation system and are making their herds and farms available for experiment and demonstration. One farmer, in commenting on the results, stated: “It is easy to pick out from my herds the pigs that were raised under parasite control. They all look thrifty and smoother and are much larger for their age and period of feeding than the others. Os course, that means much better profits from those so handled.” Ear Diseases of Swine Said to Be Incurable Pigs and sometimes hogs become infected and inflamed in the middle ear just as children and grown people have infection and pus in the middle ear where the little bonejt connect the outer drum with the inner drum of the ear. The middle ear of the pig is connected with the pharynx by a tube—the air tube. Pus forms and may press oh each ear drum and sometimes ruptures the other drum. At other times it may pass through the inner drum and infect the middle ear. When a pig holds its head tilted to one side and the ear is sensitive and hurts when you catch it by the ear-r-just as a dog does when it has canker of the ear—it may be due to inflammation of the middle and Internal ears. When the outer drum bursts open and lets out the pus temporary relief from pain may come. A graduate veterinarian may open the drum and give temporary relief. No permanent curative operation has been found for the pig. It is best to fatten an affected pig or hog and make pork out of it. Little pigs so affected from an economic point can be destroyed. Deficiency in Feeding Is Cause of Paralysis The causes of paralysis of swine are said to be: (1) Fractures of the loin or back vertebrae; (2) deficiency feed that causes rickets or lack of development of bones in pigs; (3) osteomalacia or removal of bone in grown sows; (♦) kidney-worm or kidney fat worms; (5) kidney diseases; (6) injuries to the nerve centers; (7) injuries to the loin and back muscles. The most common cause is deficiency feeding. Feeding brood sows on corn alone, peanuts alone, velvet beans alone, soy beans alone. This means that vitamine is lacking that makes the lime and phosphorus soluble or digestible or assimilable and deposits them in the formation of bone. This vitamine is found in milk. In cod-liver oil. and not in white corn, peanuts, in velvet beans or cottonseed oil. Sw r ine Sanitation Plan Interesting to Greece The success of raising pigs in the United States by a method developed by the United States Department of Agriculture for keeping pigs free from intestinal parasites has resulted in requests from foreign sources for a description of the method. One of the most recent letters of Inquiry received by the department came from Saionica. Greece. This demand is one result of the cordial relations which scientists of the zoological division, bureau of animal industry, have with foreign parasitologists. The constant exchange of Information and preserved specimens has enabled the United States scientists to build up an Index catalogue of animal parasites believed to be the largest tn the world.
Hogging Off Peas The Canadian field pea is a very suitable variety of peas to grow for hog feeding. In a good many localities they are grown and pastured off by hogs dnring the month of August after they have ripened pretty well. They will provide from four to six weeks of pasture during this part of the year, and if a little corn, barley or mill feed Is fed to the pigs while they are pasturing peas. 4 they will do very well and one will get a pretty fair return. Avojd Shipping Loss With July and August here, the hog shipper will do well to remember that much los§_ 0811 he avoided if hogs are not crowded into cars. Crowding is one of the chief causes for dead hogs at the market Sand is the best floor covering for hot weather. Proper spraying of the cars during shipment In hot weather is very Important If a train of hogs is to stand for some time in the heat those in charge of shipment should insist that it be placed on an open track.
Children Cry FOR | f p ’’** i A I ; B 11 MOTHER:- Fletcher’s OC / Castoria is especially pre- y / pared to relieve Infants in ~ / arms and Children all ages of Constipation, Flatulency, I p Wind Colic and Diarrhea; allaying Feverishness arising there- t from, and, by regulating the Stomach and Bowels, aids the assimilation of Food; giving healthy and natural sleep. To avoid imitations, always look for the signature of . Absolutely Harmless -No Opiates. Physicians everywhere recommend iL Travelers Should Carry Cuticura Daily use of the Soap and Ointment removes the dust and grime of travel, allays \ irritation, redness and roughness of the \ \ face and hands, and keeps the skin soft \ ' and clear under all conditions of exposure. Cuticura Talcum is fragrant, cooling and LnkJoHS refreshing, an ideal toilet powder. / Soap 2Se. Ointment 25 and 50e. Talenm 25e. Sold every- Z \ where. Sample each free. Address: “Cattcora Laboratoriaa. Dept. B S. Maidan. Maae” U=£i Cuticura Sharing Stick 25c. USH*
Their Long Suit Maria Gallo of Turin, an Italian girl who is to chmpete in an international beauty contest, said in excellent English at a dinner of welcome in Galveston: “I’m glad the short skirt is back again. The reformers persuaded us to lengthen it. They said if we lengthened it men would like us better and we’d make better marriages. But the reverse happened.” Signorina Gallo glanced down complacently at her own short skirt “So now tlie short skirt has come back to stay.” she ended, “for we girls have found out that our long suit wasn’t our long suit after all.”— Pittsburgh Chronicle-Telegraph. Just say to your grocer Russ Bleaching Blue when buying bluing. You will be more than repaid by the results. Once tried always used. —Adv. They’ll Sleep Well lecturer (to his press agent)— Didn’t you reserve rooms for us at this hotel? Press Agent—All gone. But cheerio, we have our own bunk. Preparedness "Huccome you-all builds dis heah street so narrer?” “So’s traffic won’t have room ’nuff to jam. I reckon.”—Washington Star.
Childhood W TT must be all of twenty years ago that mother first I gave me Syrup Pepsin ’ i For those Fevers, Colds and Bowel Troubles of Childhood How time flies. My good mother has gone to her rest, but 1 have faithfully relied upon her judgment and have given Synjp Pepsin to my two children since they were born. It is certainly a noble medicine and neve- fails of its purpose. I like to recommend it” (Name and address will be sent upon request) And in the Evening of Life When age comes creeping on, with bowels relaxed, muscles weak, digestion poor and blood thinned, then idl is when constipation does its evil work in a night jrl j-tm Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin is so palatable, sets so wBAj well in the stomach, works so easily, so gently, so with old folks as to accomplish its purpose i 1 without gripe, pain or other distress. For biliousness, sour | <t xw | stomach, coated tongue, headache, fevers, colds and constipation from infancy to old age Syrup Pepsin, is recommended everywhere and sold by all druggists. SYRUP For a free trial bottle send name and address to DIHaKCTN Peptm Syrup Company, bfonticello, Illinois. ITil'Sßlw
Companion Volumes Hubby—You never tell me anything. Your whole life is a closed book to me. Wifey—Well, John, dear, you’re no loose-leaf ledger yourself.—Los Angeles Times. Money talks, but few of us are tn a position to be bored by IL
1 Baby Buzz sounds a “mess"call FIT spray clears your home of flies and mosquitoes. It also kills bed bugs, roaches, ants, and their eggs. Fatal to insects but harmless to mankind. Will not stain. Get Flit today. DESTROYS /ZSS Flies Mosquitoes Moths u Ants Bed Bugs Roaches wr «M «a. sex) i
Headache! Instead of dangerous heart depressants take safe, mild and purely vegetable Nature's Remedy and get rid of the bowel poisons that cause the trouble. Nothinglike . hR for biliousness, sick headaches, and constipation. Acts pleasantly. Never gripea. Make the test tonight— Maybe So “This marriage will unjite two fortunes.” “Um.” “Heh?” > “Hadn’t we better hate the minister assisted by a banker?” When you decide to get rid of Worms or Tapeworm, get the medicine (hat will expel them with one dose—Dr. Peery’s "Dead Shot." 373 Pearl St.. N. Y. Adv. Difference Kind Old Lady—Officek this little boy diesn’t know where he Ilves. Boy—Yes, I do, but I ddn’t know the way. We -may not always recognize it, but only that comes to us that we have sent out
It Pays to Be Polite “My goodness! you were polite to Jones just now. Has he fallen heir to a million?” “No, he* just got a job collecting installments." Be reserved and circumspect In your promises.—Nabi Effendi.
