The Syracuse Journal, Volume 20, Number 15, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 11 August 1927 — Page 3

SICK WOMAN SOON RECOVERS

By Taking Lydia E. Pinkham** Vegetable Compound “A neighbor advised me to try Lydia H Pinkham's Vegetable Compound,

which she said had helped her so much. So 1 bought a few bottles and tried It out. It sure helped me wonderfully. I felt much better. My work was no logger a dread to me. If I hear of any one who is troubled the way I was. I will gladly recommend the Vegetable

Compound to them and I will answer any letters in regard to the samet"— Mas. Bextha Meacham. 1134 N. Penn. Ave., Lansing. Mich. *1 had been sickly ever since I waa fifteen years old. After taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound I got so I could do all my housework and I am in good health.”— Mbs. Mazie K. Williams. Ketchikan. Alaska. From Michigan to Alaska, from Maine to Oregon and from Connecticut to ' 'alifornla letters are continually being written by grateful women recommending Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. The Compound is made from roots and herbs and for more thg>£fty years has been helping to restore run-down, over-worked women to health. Are you on the Sunlit Road to Better Health? -

K # *l God-sent Est Bussing* |T ✓ is what one I mother writes of Mrs. J Winslow’s Syrup. Thousands I of other mothers have found 1 this safe, pleasant, effective I remedy a boon when baby’s ■ little stomach is upset. For conI stipation. flatulency, colic and I diarrhoea, there is nothing like MRS. WINSLOWS SYRUP It is especially good at teething I time. Complete formula on every label. Guaranteed free from narcotics, I opiates, alcohol and all I harmful ingredients. At all Dnttiiti MKnlfl Write for free booklet ot R *9 letters iron, grateful mother*. jf ?’ AKGLO-AHUUCAN MUG CO. .# W XIJ-IHFJtekSI NwM | Snowy White Clothes WITROUT HUB* I NO N-R-0 Laundry TWwete w**h (totiwa Lw',-', ink. fruit win*. bkMd. ruoi. pcmfwtaw aad *ll »uix* iMianUy. CurtawH Net tala fare the HaaOa er tba Flne«t Fatorfe Atotoxhw raaulta when N-B-4J to ocei in tt» w«»hing w4ji—. wttow etoeteto or band No Mots* r-x;aLn-' For sato nt rw grvorr'n. ISo pre' ■Mkaee. V*in*He with ewr {*<**««. Only soar for Siirtr VoMtwoa. Skrnar *T»t» <M»-« MfOOWCTS CO..CMKACO.NX. Unless you have more dollars than tense do not expect others to consider your troubles Interesting. Only those who enjoy dining .on air Can afford to trust to “BAYER ASPIRIN” PROVED SAFE Take without Fear as Told tn “Bayer” Package /T\ BAYER] thefte aAL/ Unless you see the “Bayer CrossBn package or on tablets you are not getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians over twenty-five years for Colds Headache Neuritis Lumbago Toothache Rheumatism Neuralgia Pain, Pain Each unbroken “Bayer" package contains proven directions. Handy boxes of twelve tablets cost few cents. Druggists also sell bottles of 24 and 100.

*d^*^W** r * Ma Buzz went to the country. Hooray I TJUT spray dears your home of flies and mosJ? quitoes. It also kills bed bags, roaches, ants, and their eggs. Fatal to insects but harmless to mankind. Will not stain. Get Flit today. » FLIT gM t / wXiXwioHi * * * wax# ged Uffgw Kowdußfli

Genth Art of. Lying Not Unknown in East We are prone to give westerners credit for telling the biggest yarns, but here’s one from China which shows the failing is not confined to any particular location. Two coolies were sunning themselves on the docks of Hongkong waiting for an English or American liner from which they could earn a few yen. “When I was in Singapore.” said one. “1 saw a man so black that you had to hold a lighted candle close to nim to see him even in broad daylight.” Said the othe-. with a yawn. “I lived once in Formosa In the house of a man who was so thin that he had to puss through his doorway twice before his wife would give him credit for being at home.” —Los Angele* Times. A New Way to Make Jellies Without Staining Fing«r»—Without Long Hours of Boiling—Without Depending Upon Berries or Fruit Being in Season. One of the most interesting and yet one of the simplest new products in life fo<>d field is calk'd minute jelly. It is pure fruit or berry juice already boiled down and concentrated. To this concentrated juice, fruit pectin In* the right amount has been added. The pectin Is that part of fruit which makes jelly “jell.” It is as pure and wholesome as the fruit juice. To make the jelly take the little bottle of concentrated Juice, pour in a sauce pan. add water and sugar according to directions on the bottle and boil a few minutes. Then pour into Jelly glasses and when It has become cold you have the most delicious pure fruit jelly you ever tasted. A few bottles kept on hand, selected according to your taste for Jellies, and you can make up a few glasses just as you want it. One small bottle makes two glasses of jelly, if you wish to try two bottles send us twenty-five cents and we will give you your choice of grape, mint, pineapple, orange, raspberry, strawberry or blackberry. Or four bottles —all different —for fifty eents. Address Department Wl’, General Packing Corp., Cranford, New Jersey.—Adv. Woes of a Bank Teller Ranking, a Understood by some women, is a mysterious process, according to one hank teller. The other day a woman handed in tier bank book tilled with scratched pages and Illegible scrawls, “How did lids happen?” be asked. “Why,” she explained sweetly, “the last time my account was balanced it didn't come out right, so I Just changed It In the little ed Btok.” Another' announced Indignantly: “I'm going to take my money out of this bunk et once. They are so disagreeable, they have Just told me my account is overdrawn.” Portraits Given to Post Portraits ot two Elizabethtown men who were kilted In action in France have been presented to Elizabeth Post No. 13b of the American Legion by tlteir mothers. The two men, Joseph P. Barnes and Joseph A. Ryan, were burled by the post in a double military funeral when their bodies were returned from France. WAen It Happened “Why. I didn’t know y«»ut brother-in-law wanted to get married?’* said an acquaintance. “He didn't.” replied Fanner Fumblegate, “unil! the wlddet s<n<m ver w inted him to want to.”—Kansas City Star. The Idea! .“Didn’t that lawyer know vou were u movie star?” “Hadn’t the least suspicion. Why, he offered to get me my divorce without any publicity.” Indirect Distribution Jed—l heard that the lawyers gol most of the estate. Did Marie gel anything? Ted—Oh. yes’ She got one of tlw lawyers. To Insure glistening white table linens, use Russ Bleaching Blue in your laundry. It never disappoints. At all good grocers.—Adv. .. . ", . ■ Business Combines Old * The origin or n>rp**rations has been attributed to the Romans but they are said to bare existed tn Greece in MM B, C„ tn I’Loeniria 9UU B. Q, and in Babylonia 22<lt» B. C. ] . Ginseng grown in Manchuria was once reserved as a rare and potent medicine for the exclusive use of the Imperial household tn China.

Latest Vessel to Skim the Ocean

—- . . < Half Ship, Half Plane, It Will Use Gas Derived From Sea. Paris. —A French naval engineer named Jean-Paul Michel has Invented an ocean liner that is half ship and half airplane. The new ocean vehicle, < which is called The Greyhound of Sea. Is guaranteed to have a speed of 50 miles an hour and to cross the Atlantic In 60 hours. It Is unlike any other boat or airplane that has ever been built, although an Italian company at Genoa is now constructing a “mystery boat” along somewhat the same lines. Driven by Two Air Propellers. The Greyhound of the Sea will be driven by two big air propellers at the bow. just like an airplane or seaplane, and Instead of riding

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through the water like a ship It will glide over the top of the waves. There will be an air rudder and also a water rudder, but there are uo under-water propellers. The ship has large skids underneath to. help it slide the waves. *1 know exactly how it will perform when It Is finished/’-Mjlchel, who is a graduate of the leading French technical school, explained the other day. “I have been testing out different models for almost fifteen years, and I finally found one that fulfilled Mil my expectations. “The fir<t big experimental ship, which Is about 151) feet long and has accommodations for thirty persons. Is now being! built in my shipyard near Toulon. It Is more than half finished, and the first thing I am going to do when it is all ready is to take a trip to New York. I am going to make it in two days and three nights. “I think my invention will npset all existing ideas about navigation, and particularly the propulsion of warships." But the strangest thing about The Greyhound of the Sea is that it will carry practically no fuel aside from a little oil for an emergency motor. Michel also has Invented, a process of exacting sodium from the sea. transforming it on lusird ship into a gas and using this gas to thin a special motor he has adapted to it, but. Kiss in the Dark Gets Freedom for Prisoner Paris.—A kiss in the dark got a Frenchman out of prison the other day. I The prisoner, Frit* Gabril, had been behind the bars for two year* and had ■neral mure to serve. His (wife came . to set* him. At the leavetaking in the dark corridor Gabril and his) wife em braced with especial warmth, the parting kiss being so movie-like in length that the guards noticed it and were moved. s ! Gabril had a slip/fr paper in his s during the embrace. On the paper was written: “Tomorrow. during the recreation hour, 1 will Jump over the wall. Have a vehicle waiting fur me on the other side of the moat.” Mrs. Gabril had the vehicle. Her husband got away and hasn't been heard of since. Jazz Pay* New York.—The king of Ja»a com mands money befitting royalty. Paul Whitemair. and his orchestra have signed a contract to play in a chain of theaters for forty weeks at JI2.IXM) a I week. Patil will get halt Exacting New York.—May Cristle. who has written seventeen serial novels, ex- | peels her husband. John iStamatiadis, broker, to support her. •

GET POWER FROM CURRENTS I OF STRAITS OF GIBRALTAR

Spanish Economist Sees Vast Possibilities in Hemessing Power* ful Stream. Madrid —-The currents passing from rhe Atlantic ocean into the Mediterranean sea. and vice versa, produce an enormous power • that could be used and transformed into electricity, according to Don Emilio Zurano Munro, prominent Spanish economist, who has completed a preliminary study of the Question, and submitted It to King Alphonso XIIL Zurano calculated that one current going through the Strait of Gibraltar, coming from the Atlantic ocean and carrying a yearly volume ofpG.OW cubic of water, at an average speed of ten kilometers per hour, and the other current crossing underneath from the Mediterranean into the o —-r with a yearly volume of

THE SYRACUSE JOU RNAL

A—the details of the invention are carefully guarded. The most important room on board his new ship will be a big laboratory near the stern, where a chemist will be constantly on duty to supervise this chemical process. He claims there is such an abundance of this fuel in the ocean that he could it as long as his ship held together, but just as a precaution be is going to install a little Diesel motor and take on a little fuel oil. this precaution being omitted after the new system has been fully tried OUL In appearance The Greyhound of the Sea will look something like a submarine, with horizontal fins at the sides, riding the surface of the water. Top Will Be Entirely Enclosed. The top will be entirely enclosed except for a promenade deck near the stem. The ship will be smokeless, of

Diagram of Frenchman’s Invention

Ths Greyhound of the Sea. course. It will not be able to fly. "although at high speed it should simply skim across the whitecaps. It Is being built of very thin steel, in order to be as light as possible, and It Is difficult to foresee how it will behave in a heavy sea. The high speed will be attained by reducing friction with the sea. rather than powerful motors. The key to diagram printed herewith is: 1, captain’s post; 2, captain’s kitchen; 3, officers’ lounge; 4. radio room; 5. aerials; 6. dining room; 7, bar; 8. passenger cabins; 9. promenade; 10, anchor room; 11, crew’s quarters; 12, pantry and bakeshop; 13, kitchens; 14. baths; 15. laboratory; 16. lifeboats; 17. rudders; 18, propellers ; 19, propeller shaft; 20, motors; 21. sodium transformer; 22, food supplies; 23, refrigerator; 24, fresh water; 25, fuel; 26, skids. Caters to Motorists; Pastor Fills Church London.—“ Sunday motorists who wish to call In at my church can park their cars in the drive and use my garden.” annoU»ve<‘ Rev. W. 11. Raig- | way, vicar of Tarvin, recently: As a result of the invitation, which Includes the right for motorists who accept to have their lunch in the vicar’s garden after attending services at the church, every Sunday there is a long row of motor ears in the rectory j drive; and the vicar preaches to a [ crowded church. Vicar Ridgway’s idea also encourages motorists from the city to visit the ancient churches in the neighborhood through which they pass and, with this object in view, the vicar Is planning to form a sort of motoring guild of which regular members will be a nucleus of sporting churchgoers.

■•••••••••• • • • ■ • • • • • • • | Doctor Dresses Own Injuries, Saves Baby • S New York.—Diphtheria, of the ® S larynx threatened to choke the X ® life out of Jane, the baby daugh- ® • ter of Policeman Hugo G. Geis- j| @ sele, Maplewood, N. J. I An immediate operation. £ .i. known as “intubation," was all $ that could save her; Dr. D. J. I • Poia, ten miles away, started $ to Jane’s bedside in an ambu X lance, with Miss Marion Raitzel. I 1 a nurse, and Gustave Schmidt. driver. Another vehicle cut X • across Schmidt's course. The | j, ambulance swerved and crashed ’ i Into a steel trolley pole, a com .• I pletv wreck. Its occupants | • were severely cut and battered. i ; The young physician, never ’ ! f the less, applied emergency dress- j lug to his companions’ injuries I - • and his own. then comman • ; deered ah automobile, which J g- rushed him and the nurse to the f • Geisseie home. He and Doctor • Demarest successful iy operated j ! on the baby. ;

4 3,000 cubic kilometers saturated with salt, can be turned into a formidable continual electric power of over 30 milliards of horse power. In the document addressed to the king, Zurano said the maximum pow er lies in the bay west of Algericas. but that power is also available in other points on both sides of the strait Explaining the course of energy there. Zurano pointed out that to get an appropriate idea of the water flowing every year into the Mediterranean sea. one must imagine a huge cube of water three times and one-third higher than Mount Everest running at 800.000 cubic meters of water per second. Adding the subcurrent which furnishes 85.000 cubic meters of stater per second, the constant electrical power obtainable reaches 3&®X),000. 000 horse power. A

5 Honeymoons by Air Popular in England S § London.—Many more women $ g use the airplane service be- § S tween England and the conti- 2 § nent than men. There has been g S a large increase in the number o x of young honeymooners who £ travel by air rather than put c § up with the discomforts of g n cross-channel steamer travel, c 3 Close observers say that the c « women seem much more at § $ home several thousand feet in c g the air than the male passen- g o ger. Increased facilities for o g flying now make it possible for 5 a tlie wealthy woman to leave £ § Croydon in the morning, fly to £ o Paris for shopping, and be back £ H in England tn time for dinner. £ <* Several well-known society £ § women have made several such § C trips this season.

Northwest to Celebrate Fruit Industry Jubilee Yakima. Wash.—The Pacific North west fruit Industry this autumn will celebrate its diamond anniversary. It

was tn 1852 the first apple, plum and pear trees were planted In the Pacific states and they came from a nursery In lowa. In that year a traveling nursery brought from Henry county, lowa, grafted trees which were set out near Milwaukee. Ore. From these the present orchards were gradually developed. The fruit trees and shrub train con sisted of two wagonloads of lowa dirt in charge of Henderson Luelline Many of the original orchard trees set out in Oregon 75 years ago are growing and bearing fruit. Wild Pigeons Boon, Not Pest, on Western Farms Chehalis, Wash. —Wild pigeons have been exonerated. Fanners near here who complained that unparalleled Hights of these birds had caused heavydamage In their grain fields now find that they were saved a worse scourge, that of grasshoppers. The wild flock alighted in the fleshly harrowed fields where oats and wheat were sprouting to devour emj twyo grasshoppers emerging from the ; ground. In a newly plowed tract the . larva was uncovered and immediately ' wild pigeons arrived to clean up the pest Since the grasshopper danger was averted the pigeons have migrated to Canada to nest. Cattle Become Wild on Alaskan Island Kodiak. Alaska. —Three hundred and fifty shorthorn cattle browse over the mountainous surface of tiny Chilikof island, 200 miles out in the northern Pacific ocean from Kodiak. More than 40 years ago the Alaska Commercial company, a development concern long since extinct stocked the island with a few head of tame cattle for experimental purposes. oi the little isle with a surface of only 20 square miles, the cattle have degenerated from inbreeding and have become thoroughly wild, but the herd continues to thrive. Alaskans say the experiment at least has that cattle can be grown in the region. U. S. Sailor Weds Belfast Girl After Mail Courtship Belfast.—An interesting romance reached a climax recently when William McKnight of .the United States destroyer Borie married Sophie Phillips, an attractive Belfast girl. The pair corresponded since they first met two years ago. when the U. S. S. Pitts * burgh was at Belfast and one of McKnights companions married a Bel i fast girl. Curfew for Cats Perry. N. Y. —A curfew for cats Is ! desired by the Garhead Kennel club. I It has petitioned the town’s superI visors, pointing out. that dogs must be confined at night, while cats wan- ! der all day, killing birds, then bowl at ‘ night.

I Path of Disaster Left by Runaway Glacier Bellingham. Wash.—A grinding iceberg. 300 feet wide and 2.000 feet iong, ended a seven-utile trip in whicb it destroyed everything in its path when it was broken up in the Nook- I sack river. 35 miles from here. The great mass of ice was broken from Deming glacier on Mount Baker : a few days ago. Trees, railroads and bridges were either swept aside or ground to bits. The ground over which the glacier I passed is bare of even remnants of i anything which stood there before, according to A. S. Athern, state forest ranger. The beds of Glacier creek and the j middle fork of Nooksack river were torn wide for a depth of more than I 30 feet and a width of 100 feet. Damage to tracks and bridges of the Tacoma and St. Paul Logging company was estimated at $50,000. pieces of the great iceberg as large as houses still were melting along tl> pathway where they were broken o' I

Historic Tavern Passes One 'of the oldest taverns In the county, the Golden Cross, was refused a renewal of license when the proprietor applied to the West Lothian licensing court. The clerk stated that at the half-yearly court the chief constable reported that the applicant was bankrupt and that very little business was being done In the prem ises. It was at the Golden Cross that Robert Burns was affiliated to the local lodge of Free Masons, when on his Highland tour in 17S7.—London Mail. Cabbage Traveled Far When Buddy Honea ot Santa Rosa. Texas, slipped a note in a Texas valley cabbage, asking that the consumer write him. he hardly expected to receive his reply from as distant a place as Newfoundland. Honea received a letter from a young man who bought the vegetable there. Small Graduating Class M. L. CotnbSt supervisor of the research division of the Virginia state hoard of education, traveled 176 miles to address a graduating class of one person. ‘ The exercises were held at Miltboro, Va., where Miss Ruth Hickman. the lone graduate, received her diploma.

BABIES CRY FOR “CASTORIA” Prepared Especially for Infants and Children of All Ages Mother I Fletcher’s Castoria has been in use for over 30 years as a pleasant, harmless substitute for Castor Oil. Paregoric, Teething Drops and Soothing Syrups. Contains no narcotics. Proven directions are on each package. Physicians everywhere recommend it. The genuine bears signature of Out to Win Freak Wager A man walking on his hands from Dublin to Belfast. IUO mites, on a wager caused such a sensation that police were called out to regulate traffic. The man saves wear and tear on his hands by the use of special sandals. He is accompanied by a goal harnessed to a little cart, which car ties a camping outfit Sliding Scale From a foreign paper comes the story that an American publisher cabled to Dean Inge: “Will you write your life? Offer two thousand poundsC The dean cabled back, declining the offer. The publisher then cabled: “Will you write life of Christ? Lower terms, of course.”—Boston Transcript. A Sound Sleeper “Dey had to Crow water on Sam Johnson's face at his wife’s funeral,” volunteered a recent mourner. “Dasso? He done fainted?” asked a friend. “No, indeedy. He’s jes' an uncommonly soun' sleeper.”—American Legion Monthly. Nature Faker Popular Science Monthly—“ Acer tain South American Insect has a white light at Its head and a red light at Its tad.” Weil! Well! The little thing must imagine itself an automobile.— Boston Transcript. No ugly, grimy streaks on the clothes when Russ Bleaching Blue is used. Good bluing gets good results. All grocers carry it. —Adv. Too Thrilled for Words Contributor—Yes, I wrote this poem myself. Editor —Wonderful! And to think that I—a1 —a poor, struggling editor —am shaking the h; nd of Edgar Allan Poe! What an honor. Reverse Process Hattie—Did you say that your friend married a man to refo.vn him? Helen —Nothing so old-fashioned. I said she married a reformer to make a man o* him.

The Last Survivor Flyosan has killed all his millions of friends and relatives

WTO wondek he's Hue. He knows "Swatting” only scatters these 1X he’ s next. germs into the air which you and your family breathe. * lyoran has killed every single fly and mosquito in thousands of Here is the right inaecticid* home* this summer. Flyoasn ia the /or ea<-h f/meet: • modern best way of fighting flying flyosan, Sfny — xm» Slm pests. It kills them by the whole-sale-nnt one at a rime- petemmajts a.xt food— Flyosan is the original liquid insect spray (non-poiaonous). Lje food-™i-w. Flyosan itself, not one of its uni- u»« tattoos. Flyoean not only kills all . Petermavs MOTH food — the lies and mosquitoes in your heme but also rids it of the mil- insectilions of deadly disease bra- > -i|t Y<m mut ® *P*5“‘ C which each one carries. ci<^e for eaeft insect. No single ingenus which each one weticide will exterminate them all. Tehee had nearly SO years’ experience. We know that in true. JtWWUWI&

Visit the West this Summer Spend your vacation this year seeing America’s wonders in the glorious West—Puget Sound,Rainier National Park, Yellowstone Park through die famous Gallatin Gateway, the Pacific Northwest, California. To see the most, go at least one way on the “Olympian”— the famous transcontinental train between Chicago and Seattle-Tacoma over the electrified Chicago, Milwaukee &. St.PauL Low round-trip fares are now in effect. Return limit October 31. Stop-over privileges and free side trips. Write, pJionr or call on ovr nearest Travel Bureax for full detaib and in ftlanninz tout triD C. M. A St. P. Ry. r SOS Transportat n Bldg. Detroit S3T Union Trust Bldg. tl!l\ Z{ Cleveland tIT Merch. Bank Bldg. "J*®!--' W Indianapolis ” Milwaukee Road CORNS Ends pain at once! In one minute pain from corns is ended. Dr. Scholl’s Zino-pads do this- safety by removing the cause—pressing and rubbing of shoes. They are thin, medicated, antiseptic, healing. At all drag •nd shoe stores. Cost but a trifle. DZScholl’s 'lino-pads Put one on—the* pain is gone! Bilious ? Take Nl— Naturz's Rzmzdt— toBight. You'll be “fit and fine” by morning — tongue clear, headache gone, appetite back, bowels acting pleasantly, bilious attack forgotten. For constipation, too. Better than any mere laxative. Safe, mild, purely vegetable— Hanford's Balsam of Myrrh Stace 1846 Has Healed Wounds and Sores on Maa and Beast Mocey back for Snt bottia u not suited AL aealers IS to 13% Earned oa Syndicate iave-dmenu. Mortgage Loans. Apartment Bldgs,, Hoteia. Chain Stbres. etc. S«.id on monthly payments. Brokers wtd. P O. Box 435. New Orleans. La. CIGARS DIRECT—One hundred Fresh Hatana Cigars 12. prepaid. Smoke 19. It not satisfied money refunded. You take no risk. Order today BETHESDA PRODUCTS CO.. Bethesda. Ohio. can be removed. For real sat isfact on use Dr. C. H. Berry’Co’s Freckle Ointment. It does the work. Ask your dealer or bymail prepaid. $1.25 and 65e. BEAUTY BOOKLET FREE PR. C. H. BERRY CO. 2975 Michigan Ave. CHICAGO Wfever ALLEVIATE YOUR ATTACK Juot t*ie two otnall RAZ-MAH capsuloo and experience the immediate rolirf that you haroalrtayahopodfor. RAZ-MAH trill not harm the hoart or other ortana. and containa no habit forming drug*. Many hundeeda of people now uaoand andorao RAZ-MAH. Proro it in your own caao. For The Generous Free Trial mita Raa -Mah Co.. 320 W. Condraaa St., Detroit. Mich, or aah your druiint for tha Si box. Ralief Suarantaad or your money refunded. -<4Z MAH ilia a Red Boz with m Owtge Sou’W.;N. U., FORT WAYNE. NO. 32 -1927 Blissful Ignorance “What makes them such good friends?” “What they don’t know 1 about each other.”

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