The Syracuse Journal, Volume 20, Number 5, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 31 May 1928 — Page 3
Any Woman Gan Look Stylish MAE MARTIN Sil Most stylish looking women you see are simply “good managers.” They don’t open their pocket-books wide for every change in fashion. They know simple ways to make last season’s things conform to this season’s styles. Thousands of them have learned how easily they can transform a dress, or blouse, or coat, by the quick magic of home tinting or dyeing. With true, fadeless Diamond Dyes, anyone can do this successfully. The ‘know-how” is in the dyes. Each package represents the perfection of 50 years of dye-making. They don’t streak or spot like inferior dyes. New, fashionable tints appear like magic, right over the out-of-style or faded colors. Tinting with Diamond Dyes is as easy as bluing, and dyeing takes just a little longer. Oiily Diamond Dyes produce perfect results. Insist on them and save disappointment. My new 64-page book. “Color Craft,” gives hundreds of ways you can make your home and clothes stylish apd attractive, and do it with little money. It’s FREE. Sent? for your copy, NOW. Write Mae Martin, Home Service Dept., Diamond Dyes, Burlington, Vermont. * 4 Colonists Must Be Fit Colonists who take advantage of the offer of a new colonization company in Argentina will be chosen accord ing to their physical fitness and ability to overcome pioneering difficulties. The project is to be tested with the opening of 40 farms of about 25 acres, each. On each farm will be a comfortable house, a well, a pump for drinking Water, shade trees and necessary tools for working the land. Advances will be made bn the purchase of horses, cows/\chickens and feed. Payments for the farms are to be made over a period of 30 years. Oth er similar projects may be opened later. The Truck Driver I believe Champion is the better spark plug because of the way Champions stand up in hard truck service. Champion is the better spark plug because it has an exclusive siili* manite insulator spe* ,_!* cially treated to with- Jyl? stand the much higher f B temperatures of the modern high-compres- kwga sion engine. Also anew patented solid copper gp-—"Gj| gasket-seal that remains absolutely gas-tight under high compres. sion. Special analysis electrodes which asstire |s|=S| a fixed spark-gap under y—all driving conditions. Champion SpariCPlugs Dependable for Every Engine As Usual ’ „ Magistrate—You have already acknowledged that you assaulted the policeman in the manner stated. A or used—Yes. Magistrate—Then what do you want to do now? Accused —Deny it.—Pathfinder Magazine. Could Be Worse Jeffery—So you’re pn the mailing list of an 'oil stock company? Thomas—Yes. and that’s better than being on their waiting list. Hotel Maryland < 900 RUSH ST. CHICAGO QUIET . . . DIGNIFIED HOMELIKE . . REASONABLE Single... .$3.50 to $5.00 Per Day Double. . .$3.50 to $6.00 Per Day Al’ rnotns have private bath. DelightftK Restaurant and Coffee Shop Service. Breakfast -40 c, SOc. 60c. 73c , Luncheon . i 65c and, 75e Dinner - . SI.OO and $1.50 TOb A La Carte Service at sensible prices. H. H. DECKER. Manacer Delaware * I ’ ’ a few . “ S e kOi blocks I swiwHK rom ...— W. N. uJfORT WAYNE, NO. 21--192&
THE NEED OF SCIENTISTS S
AN AMERICAN scientist—a professor in a college, recently refused the sum of $2,000,000 for the formula by which he has produced a new vitamine, which is helpful In the prevention of many maladies due to wrong diet A food manufacturing company made him this offer. Had he accepted it there is no likelihood that any effort would have been made to fix a high price on the product containing the vitamine. But a monopoly would have been conferred, and that is what the discoverer of the vitamine desired to prevent. He wanted the result ot his labor and study to be for everybody. Now there are not many people who Things That Fail ■ ■■■■aiaa By DOUGLAS MALLOCH I THOUGHT that men must build success On old successes. ’Tis not so. For all the champions 1 know Had been defeated more or less. The smoother road that great men tread, I learned, a harder path they came; And he who found the eternal flame Had left a thousand campfires dead. Yes, many another dream must fade „ That men may recognize the true; And men will find the thing to do Because of errors that they made. We winnow life as hands the wheat; Amid the chaff we find the grain. I say that every loss has gain, I say the bitter makes life sweet From rocks that loosen great men make A footing that they know will hold; Defeat will only make them bold Some other height to dare, and take. On rocks that tumble toward the vale upward climb to find the peak; And men shall find the things they seek By making use of things that fait <© by McClure Newspaper Syndicate.!
Keep Step With the Victors By F. A. WALKER
DO YOU give sufficient and proper thought to yourself, to your imperfections, your foot-hold upon solid ground and the direction in which you are traveling? The man or woman who refrains from sober meditation upon all the conditions that have to do with the future, can never hope to make substantial progress. To succeed in any one of the callings of life, it is necessary to think and deliberate. Lloyd George, one of the most distinguished statesmen of this age, learned early in life to think for himself —to bestow intense thought upon the little things that have so much to do with the development of patience, ability and leadership. In his boyhood days he found much to think about in the roughly formed logic of a cobbler, who while pegging away at his last, caught hold now and then of the great truths that have to do with the welfare of mankind. These truths were regularly discussed with the eager little boy who was thinking for himself. It is only by thinking for yourself that you can become a power. You mdy go to the foremost universities, delve in metaphysics, etiology, ethnography, mathematics and philosophy, read the works of the greatest writers, listen to learned 'ectures. but if you do not think and get these sciences in your own head by your own thinking, you will never rise above the common level. The world’s greatest men and women, those who have achieved most for humanity, have been the greatest thinkers. They deliberated, considered and Timely Hints By VIOLA BROTHERS SHORE FOR THE GOOSE—THERE’S times when you have to tell a lie. And times when you don’t have to tell the truth. It’s Just as> dumb to go crazy over things just because they’re popular as It is to hate ’em for the same reason. There’s such a thing as bein’ too far sighted. I know a woman that wouldn’t buy herself a set of false teeth for fear she wouldn’t have enough for a tombstone when she died. FOR THE GANDER— When your enemy wants to make peace it might be on'y fear or self--interest —or just that he’s gettin’ tired of \Var. But it’s always better to have him for a friend than an enemy. Just as long as you don’t trust him none. You gotta be a pretty good talker to get the advantage away from a silent man. (Copyrikht.!
Origin of “Bankrupt” By JEAN NEWTON TODAY the bankrupt Is one who is unable to pay his debts and whose property becomes liable to administration under the law. According to the circumstances of the bankrupt the law decides whether or not he may continue to do business. And it is in the •'ircumstance that such restriction was nposed upon certain bankrupts of a
By JOHN BLAKE would lightly refuse a sum such as that which was offered this scientist Two million dollars means not only freedom from financial cares indefinitely, but the possibility of living in real luxury, and In leaving a fortune to a family afterward. But it is a characteristic of many men of science that they take their pay in satisfaction, and not in money. • ••••••, The colleges are filled with men who could go into the business world and earn large sums because of their intimate knowledge of chemistry and of engineering and of other branches of learning, which have now been applied to manufacturing and finance. Some of them accept the offers made them —and no one can blame them. But in a time when money is regarded as all important, it is cheering to note that there are men who care little for it, and that these men are not only not lunatics, as some people might regard them, but men of very great ability. There is hope for the human race, and hope for progress when such things as this can happen. *•••••• This is no attack on wealth, or on the importance of acquiring an inGIPLIGIGsP - ■ “The hands-across-the-sea idea would be all right.” says Pondering Ponzella. “if they didn’t always extend palms upward.”
contemplated until the subject in band was thoroughly mastered and fully understood. The complex, dull and difficult parts were not skimmed over, but instead, they were taken up separately, examined, analyzed and thought out to the end, until every particle became orderly, clear and easy of comprehension. Learn to think for ypurself and in a surprisingly short time you will be astonished at your newly found strength to grapple with larger problems, and the ease with which you can ascend the hardest hills and keep step with the Jllustrious victors. <© by McClure Newspaper Syndicate.!
The Gamblers’ Superstitions ■ooooooooo By H. IRVING KING
IN SOME respects, no class of people are quite so superstitious as gamblers. Others may have more superstitions in which they half believe, and one or two pet superstitions in which they rather more than half believe, but no class has such an abiding faith in their superstitions and is so governed by them in their actions—no not even sailors. 3ut the qualification to this statement is this—that the gamblers’ is quite likely to be confined to gambling. With regard to the ordinary affairs of life he may be remarkably free of superstition, but when it comes to games of chance, bets or other hazards he is a convinced slave of superstition. To one who has watched the antics of the “pesky” marble in the roulette wheel and the manner in which the cards and the ponies will sometimes run in seeming defiance of the doctrine of chances, the law of
Indians Inspect Tamiami Trail Bus I . MI - ,gz Tamiami trail, the great niguway through the everglades- of 1 Florida from Tampa to Miami, Is so far completed that the first autobus traversed it the other day. The vehicle aroused the intense interest of the Seminole Indians, some of whom are seen above inspecting it on the trail.
time long past that we find the very colorfu? origin of the word., “Bankrupt” comes from the Latin “banca” and “rupta” and means literally a broken bank. During the Middle ages a “bank” was simply a bench or table on which the so-called banker of the day, the man who took money for safe keeping or exchanged foreign money, transacted his business. In Italy if such a banker became insolvent and was unable to meet his obligations, the law decreed that his money “bench” (from which we have
THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL
dependence, which is the duty of every man with a family. But there are some things which are more to be desired than great riches, and chief among them is a man’s knowledge that he is doing great good for his fellow men, and asking no return in money for it We never think much about this when it is done by a soldier, who risks and often loses his life in the service of his fellow countrymen. It seems strange only when it happens in time of peace, and when the figure in it is a man belonging to a profession poorly paid, and with relatively few opportunities for fame. Some day governments will be wise enough to place able scientists beyond any possibility of want so that they can fight disease and work for better human conditions with no fear. But that will not be for a long while. In the meantime hundreds of earnest able men forego luxury and even comfort that they may do the world’s most important work, and ask no pay whatever. 8 ' 5 (Copyright.! Great Britain's Forests There are now sixty-two forests tn England and Wales and fifty in Scotland, althougn the trees in many ot them may yet be small. Something like fiften new ones are established by the forestry commission every year.
:: About Butterflies and Moths ::
(( T T ELLO, Cecropia,” said the Cab U bage Butterfly to the big Moth. “I’ve got some to tell you.” “Do tell me the news,” said the big moth, whose name, as the Cabbage Butterfly had said, was Cecropia. “How do you happen to be awake at this time of day?” asked the Cabbage butterfly. “1 thought you moths liked to rest and nap in the daytime and fly about by night.” “We do,” said the Cecropia, “but the day seemed a lovely one and 1 like this seaside place where 1 am. The air was warm and sunny and 1 thought I might spend the day in dozin and taking little snoozes rather than in actually sleeping.” “I see, 1 see,” said the Cabbage Butterfly. “Well, at any rate I’m glad to have found you awake. I will feel sleepy when night time comes, especially after my adventures.” “Adventures?” said Cecropia. “So’ you’ve had adventures?” “I’ve been to the city,” said the Cabbage Butterfly, “and this is morning, too.” “Dear me,” said Cecropia, “you’re like a business man. I hear them talking on the porches at night and they speak of catching a boat or a train so they can go to the city in the morning and work at their business.” . X “Well,” said the Cabbage Butterfly, “I’m like a business man perhaps as far as going to the city this morning is concerned. But not in any other way.
probabilities and the most carefully prepared “dope” this is not strange. One gambler’s superstition is that it is bad luck to play against—that is at right angles to—the grain of the table. In other words to be lucky at cards sit so that when you throw out your cards ou can throw them down in the same direction as thp grain runs in the wood of the table. Here we have our old friend sympathetic magic, plus a tinge of tree worship. The cards and the grain of the woed flow in the same direction—result harmony, sympathy, luck! If you throw your cards across the grain of the wood you play out of sympathy with the course of the grain—at cross-pur-poses as it were. Result —bad luck! The fhet that the material upon which you throw your cards is the dead body of a tree-god renders it all the more necessary that your play should be in the direction of its grain. <© by McClure Newspaper Syndicate.!
the word “bank”) be broken! And It is from the broken benches of old Florentine and Venetian bankers that we have the word “bankrupt” today. (Copyright.! Warless World By LEONARD A. BARRETT ONE of the most important questions being asked today is: “Is a wartess world possible?” The solution of a problem should be
New City Hall Dedicated . This I s the °* L°S •f' T- * ' 'vOScI Angeles which has just been com- ' ts vWwB P lete d and dedicated. On the top of the tow * r tbe Lindbergh beacon, a Fpowerful light to guid. aviators, which $ *lhftwl! was li S hted when President Coolidge wllll'-K Ud l O| pushed a button in Washington at the * j||| time of the dedication. The building to be the most beautiful city - y *>< *1 hall “i America. lIH . .... r |itit : ft t ? h v i : fit t :• . > . J riit h, n h . tills:-; ' till ■: : iir i 1111 ; irp i i • .■ h i Hid : '■ 8 Uli ' j ’ ' ' Jim n ii u «b uii s R-. ... . ' WMIUSIUII I | | | | | Ii IS II 13 11 11 • t.--3T— X > IIMWU ||H 1
“For 1 didn’t catch a boat or a train and I didn’t do Work and I’m back before it is night time. “So you see it is quite different” “Yes, 1 see.” said Cecropia. “But I went to the city, and how strange it was. I flew up and it seemed to me that the sky was hidden. I wondered for a time if they had a sky in the city! “There were such high buildings. Dear me, Cecropia, they were high! “They were much higher than trees “Do Tell Me the News,” Said the Big - Moth. s and as for bushes —well, bushes would get lost in the city, completely lost, Cecropia.” “Dear me,” said Cecropia, “how very strange.” “Very strange indeed.” said the Cabbage Butterfly. “You are right. It is very strange in the city. “But 1 found at last there Was a sky in the .city. Yes, it was over the city just as it is over the country. “It was quite exciting and interesting, but no sort of a place for a butterfly to live in.
Cheese and Other Nice Dishes By NELLIE MAXWELL
CHEESE is such a concentrated and wholesome food that for a warm weather dish it is ideal. Though fairly high in price there is no waste as there is in meat, for which it is a good substitute. Dinner Cheese. Put through the meat chopper onehalf cupful of stuffed olives, add to one cream cheese and when well blended add two cupfuls of grated American cheese. Season well with
assigned to a definite category of values. Peace is not a scientific problem. We do not look for its solution In the laboratory of the physicist. It is not a philosophical problem.. Philosophy deals with the abstract, while peace is a concrete proposition related to human values. It is not an economical problem. War is costly, so is the maintenance of peace—if It is enforced by legislation. Peace is a moral issue. It can only be maintained upon an authorized basis of moral values. History testi
“1 heard on my way home that there were nice parks where butterflies would find bushes, but I didn’t happen to see any. “And then, too, I wouldn’t leave the country for anything. Some might, but not 1. “Still it was fun to see so many different sights and to have adventured into the big city with its buildings and its people. “Dear me, Cecropia, there are lots of people in the city.” “As many as a hundred or so?” asked Cecropia. “But 1 believe there are more than a hundred people in the city.” “1 fancy you must be right,” said Cecropia. “Well,” said the Cabbage Butterfly, “I must rest now, for I’m beginning to feel quite tired.” “I should think you would feel tired,” said Cecropia, “but I’m glad you went, for it has been interesting to hear of such a visit.” “Yes, it’s all right to visit the city, but I like the country for my home,” ended the Cabbage Butterfly. (Cony right.! (© by McClure Newspaper Syndicate.!
salt, roll in a long roll and decorate with slices of stuffed olives. Pass with a cheese knife and let each guest serve himself. When preparing a salad or cocktail of fruit, using grapefruit, save the juice and thicken with a bit of gelatin and serve the next day cut into cubes with cream cheese as a salad. Cream Cheese Sandwiches. Mash a cream cheese and moisten with French dressing. Spread thin slices of graham bread with the mixture and sprinkle lightly with salt and pepper (red), cover with bread, spread with butter, trim off crusts, cut into finger strips and toast lightly on both sides. Serve hot with salad. Cheese and Chicken Dish. Rub the yolk of a hard-cooked egg to a paste with a tablespoonful of olive oil or soft butter. Add one teaspoonful of salt, one teaspoonful of made mustard, one of sugar, and a few dashes of cayenne pepper. Mix with two cupfuls of grated cheese and one cupful of chopped chicken. into scallop shells or ramekins and bake just long enough to melt the cheese. If too hot the cheese will be tough and stringy. Onions fried with apples make a most tasty dish to serve with pork roast or chops. Cook the onions for a few minutes before adding the apples. Add seasoning of salt, pepper and a little sugar. Chopped onion placed as a poultice on tjie chest is beneficial in all colds or Xu. Mix with a bit of rye flour and moisten with vinegar, place on a thin cloth and change the poultice as soon as it is dry. (ffi. 1928. Western Newspaper Union.!
fies that at present the only authoritative basis of moral values is the Christian doctrine which argues that the morally right will ultimately irin. The demand of public sentiment determines legislative enactment. Not until peace becomes a passion sufficiently aflame with enthusiasm and sacrifice to demand its universal acceptance upon a moral basis will q warless world be possible. It is ae ideal worthy of all the sacrifice nec essary to its attainment. (©, 1928. Western Jk/vspaper Union.!
[Qrteinaßauyl- - at Three |-and it's Dangerous- ; fyr JlutA Brittain 'A > .Wk v aJbi Thumb sucking does look sweet in a . baby, but it is disgusting in the three-year-old and sometimes ft hangs on until fifteen or sixteen I The habit may cause an ill-formed Ipouth or induce adenoids; and it always interferes with digestion. Pinning the sleeve over the hands attaching mittens, or putting on cardboard cuffs, which prevent bending the arms at the elbows, are some of the ways to stop the habit. Another bad habit—irregularity in oowel action—is Responsible for weak bowels and constipation in babies. Give the tiny bowels an opportunity to act at regular periods each day. If they don’t act at first, a little Fletcher's Castoria will soon regulate them. Every mother should keep a bottle of it handy to use in case of colic, cholera, diarrhea, gas on stomach and*' bowels, constipation, loss of sleep, or when baby is cross and feverish. Its gentle influence oyer baby’s system enables him to get full nourishment from his food, helps him gain, strengthens his bowels. Castoria is purely vegetable and harmless —the recipe is on the wrap per. Physicians have prescribed it for oyer 30 years. With each package, you get a valuable book on Motherhood. Look for Chas. H. Fletcher’s signature on the wrapper so you’ll get the genuine. Sea Monsters Taken With Hook and Line Sportsmen at Keala, Hawaii, are enjoying themselves catching sharks with hook and line. They are big brutes —gray-blue in color —14, 13 and 12 feet in length. One escaped with a steel hook and 3 feet of log chain which was being used as a leader. Others escaped by straightening out steel hooks % of an inch in diameter. One female shark was caught whose body contained 85 unborn young about 8 inches in length. All the sharks caught were hooked from the beach,, surf fishing. A coral reef lies a short distance offshore at Waipouli. There is a hanging-out place for sharks near the reqf. Fishermen strew spoiled salmon on the surface and bait their hooks with horseflesh. The 14-foot shark was caught and held by seven men from shore. They were losing ! ground when seven men came to help them. They pulled the shark into shallow water where another man shot it in the head. As the blood spurted four feet away from the wound other sharks crowded into the fray. But the dead shark was drawn out before they could eat or tear into the body. Ask for SUNSHINE RAISINS; contain Iron, Vitamines, Real Energy, at your grocer’s.—Adv. A Difficult Game “Some leave politics poorer men than when they entered.” “In some parts of the world,” said Senator Sorghum, “men who insisted on remaining poor hadn’t a chance in politics in the first place.” Better to risk mistakes than die of dry roL ' Youth throws away a dollar that old age will need. MOST people know this absolute antidote for pain, but are you careful to say Bayer when you buy it? And do you always give a glance to see Bayer on the box—and the word genuine printed in red? It isn’t the genuine Bayer Aspirin without it! A drugstore adways has Bayer, with the proven directions tucked in every box: ’ Aspirin la the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture . u of Monoaeetlcaeldester of SallcylicacM haPtoeh.l’w ALLEN’S FOOT-EASE For Tired Feet It Can’t Ba Beat _ At night when your feet /flKsißk are tired, sore and swollen KSmOkfrom much walking or - liSSBg y dancing, sprinkle two MLEN'SFOOT-EASE powders - y in the foot-bath, gently uC rul>thesoreandin ' /vx / AN’irx flamed parts and X 'UnVW 1 relief is, like magic. X/ H Shake Allen’s Foot-Ease us I\ t into your shoes in "I / the morning and \AKIfeP walk all day in comW fort. It takes the friction from the shoe. For frse Sample sddress, AULVS FOOT-EASE. Ac Bay. N. X.
