The Syracuse Journal, Volume 20, Number 49, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 4 April 1929 — Page 3

Ilf Back Hurts Flush Kidneys Drink Plenty of Water and Take Glass of Salts Before Break* fast Occasionally When your kidneys hurt and your back feels sore, don’t get scared and proceed to load your stomach with a lot of drugs that excite the kidneys and Irritate the entire urinary tract. Keep your kidneys clean like you keep your bowels clean, by flushing them with a mild, harmless salts which helps to remove the body’s urinous waste and stimulate them to their normal activity. The function of the kidneys Is to filter the blood. In 24 hours they strain from it 500 grains of acid and waste, so we can readily understand the vital importance of keeping the kidneys active. Drink lots of good water —you can’t drink too much; also get from any pharmacist about four ounces of Jad Salts. Take a tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast each morning for a few days and your kidneys may then act fine. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with Hthia, and has been used for years to help clean and stimulate clogged kidneys; also to neutralize the acids in the system so they are no longer a source of/, Irritation, thus often relieving bladder weakness. Jad Salts is Inexpensive; cannot Injure; makes a delightful effervescent llthia-water drink which everyone should take now and then to help keep their kidneys clean and active. Try this; also keep up the water drinking, and no doubt you will wonder what became of your kidney trouble and backache.

GREAT DISCOVERY ‘Jj KILLS RATS AND MICE," BUT NOTHING ELSE Won’t Kill Livestock, Poultry, Dogs, Cats, or even Baby Chicks . K-R-O (Kills Rats Only) is a new exterminator that can be used about the home, bam or poultry yard with safety as it contains no deadly poison, K-R-O is made of Squill, as recommended by U. S. Dept, of Agriculture, under the Connab’e process which insures maximum strength. Two cans killed 578 rats at Arkansas State Farm. Hundreds of other testimonials. Sold on a Money-Back Guarantee. Insist upon K-R-O(KilIs Rats Only), the original Squill exterminator. All druggists 75c, or direct if not yet stocked. Large size (four times as much) $2.00. K-R-O Co., Springfield, O. I Nasal Catarrh, Aching Muscles, Sore Feet, I Itching Piles, Cuts, Burna, etc. 2 Sizes, 30c a 35c. a || Druggie I Saves Time, Too Little Gene and his sister were preparing for bed. Eva had said her prayers but Gene refused steadfastly to do so. After gentle persuasion his mother gave it up and said: “All right, Eugene, if you want to be a bad boy and not say your prayers, it’s all right with me. But tonight when you and sister are asleep sister will have a guardian angel to watch over her and you will not.” “I don’t care.” Gene replied. “Sister’s angel can watch over me. too.” “O Happy Day” sang the laundress as she hung the snowy wash on the line. It was a “happy day” because she used Russ Bleaching Blue.—Adv. The Usual Female Reticence “How old are those horses?” “Well, 1 can tell you about one of them, but the other is a mare and I never did know her age.” A moment’s insight is sometimes worth a life’s experience.—Oliver Wendell Holmes. FIRST BOTTLE HELPED HER Keeps On Taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound Philadelphia, Pa.—“l always use Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound before and S after childbirth. I am a mother of three children —two little girls and a baby boy, I would get run-down, nervous, dizzy and weak sometimes so I had to lie in bed. I would take the Vegetable Compound as a tonic i and I always saw an improvement after taking the first bottle. I found it to be a good tonic. I always recommend your medicines to my friends and I cannot speak too highly of them.” —Mas. Anna Loudebback, 1607 S. Front Street, Phils,, Pa. CtHisiipaled Instead of habit-forming physicsft* ,or strong, irritating purgesjg take-NATURE’S REMEDY U Hl— the safe, dependable, all-> Im* vegetable laxative. Mild. # gentle, pleasant— N? — to- f lU'Nluttl night—tomorrow alright. TO-MORROW Get a 25c box. • ALRIGHT For Sale at All Druggists

How Mount Blanc Looks to Up-to-Date Tourists a fl ; > ' fl A' isl r fll li 1\ fl a 1 ' . ' ■ \IH I < 1 : fl 1 wJfi This striking picture of Mt. Blanc was made from a plane piloted by Lieutenant Thoret. the intrepid airman of the Air union, who recently broke all European records by flying eleven passengers over the snow-capped Alpine peak.

Sea Disasters Stir Up Interest

Problem of Greater Safety on the Ocean One for Naval Architects. Washington. — The world of merchant shipping is attracting attention again. Congress I.as shown interest in the plans of the United States shipping board to sell the Atlantic fleet to private interests and » number of disasters have focused notice on the shipping business. It seems quite likely that the winter’s toll of ships is not a closed chap ter for the late winter and early spring constitute a period of tempestuous weather in the north Atlantic. Then follows the iceberg season The United states coast guard, in co-oper-ation with other maritime nations, maintains an icebetg patrol, throughout the season d.iring which the great ice islands come floating down on the bosom of the Labrador current to cross the ship lanes and menace navigation. Notices of the whereabouts of such bergs are radioed but fog is an enemy which renders the ship paths far from safe. Solve Safety Problems. Much has been done, perhaps ail that can be done, so far as radio utilization is concerned. Technical experts are more ind more turning their attention to the ships themselves. The Vestris mystery is not a forgotten chapter, by any means. It is true that there was difficulty tn locating that ship because of wrong radio bearings, but also there was something the matter with the vessel to cause her distress in the first place. It is thought that the next important step toward safety at sea must be taken by naval architects and have to do with the construction ot the vessels themselves. The highest skill already has been expended on ship construction, but still something occasionally goes wrong. It is a little difficult for the layman to gain a full comprehension of the stresses which a ship must stand in a Su >way. The forces of wind and wave are beyond ordinary reckoning. ’As ships have become larger in size new problems arise which ancient mariners had no a use to consider. The United States shipping board has a fund from which It makes advances to shipbuilders desiring to increase the American merchant marine. The board, therefore, bas a special interest in the design of these vessels and their safety and seaworthiness. Building at Low Ebb. Ame-icen shipbuilding now is at low ebb, according to the Department of Commerce. Merchant ships under const ru.’tiou in American yards now constitute only 2 per cent of current world shipbuilding. This is the last country on the list of maritime nations in new construction. England, of course, stands first and Germany second. These are our two principal competitors in the foreign trade. Then come Holland, France, Japan. Sweden. Russia. Italy and Denmark in the order uamed. So it is expected that demand will soon bring about a spurt in American shipbuilding. Govern ment officials as well as private owners are anxious that the new ships constructed be safe. The-havoc wrought by wind at sea

I 1 of Every 79 Deaths | in Chicago a Murder X Chicago.—The health departT ment, which is interested in finda ing out why Chicago people die, T has found out that murder sent X 498 to the cemeteries last year V The toll of homicide far outX ranks some of the common disx eases and even surpasses influ 4 enza. statistics show. The killT ing rate is 16.1 per 100,000 pop ulation. This means, that ot x every 79 persons who died In f Chicago one" was killed by viox lence.

Scheme Went Awry Minneapolis, Minn. — Nelson W. Robinson of Little Falls has a good scheme to make money by sending pencils to persons who had died and then trying to collect $4.50 from their relatives. Federal Judge W. A. Cant sentenced Robinson tc 18 months Id prison

THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL, SYRACUSE, INDIANA

is great evea on steam liners. Wind pressure is a tremendous force. Bui the waves which toss a vessel about, twist and strain her plates and exert tremendous pressure upon her basic structure are the arch enemies. A small vessel, while more readily capsized or swamped by heavy seas, is not subject to the same strain as a large liner. The longer the ship, the greater the strain placed upon her. Let us take the Atlantic, which is the busiest of the oceans in which American ships ply. ic such a storm as may be expected at this eason, the crests of the waves are some 300 yards apart. The waves average about forty feet high or as high as a three or four story house. A small gli les up and down these swells with comparative ease if she is well coastructed, not overloaded and properly handled. Her pitch will be such as to cause discomfort to landlubbers because she will climb hills ol water comparable to a 10 per cent grade on land. Now take a larger ship, say one 500 or 600 feet in length. Her nose will be on the crest while her stern is in the trough. Therefore the steepness of the climb is much less, only about 5 per cent on an average. Proceeding to the big liner, she is long enough to bridge tLt trough, her bow on one crest and her stern on the other. Hogging and Sagging. It is the great liner which feels the most intense strain. It will be seen that a ship becomes a bridge from crest to crest. Bow and stern have plenty of water around them acting as supports, but there is very little water beneath the middle of the ship, not enough to float her; So. then, there is a terrific downward pressure amidships. The ship must be constructed, .or this reason, as strongly NEW SENATOR 11 i I * J I R ■ fl Jfll r - 4fl ■k ) X O. A. l.arrozolo, elected to the United States senate from New Mexico to complete the term of the late Senator A. A. Jones.

HONEY BEE IS HIJACKER, OR MAYBE ONLY CANNIBAL

Court Buzzes With Excitement as Experts Testify in Suit Against Railroad. Chicago.—Dead honey bees, a Su perior court jury decided, are worth about .000315 of a cent each. For a week the court of Judge John Briebs had buzzed with this bee business. J. W. Cunnea and Ezra Ross of Morris, HI., sued the Rock Island railroad for $50,000, claiming 175 hives ot bees—some 20.000.000 of them—had died on their first railroad trip, a ride from Pike Road, Ala., to Morris. The railroad did not dispute the demise, but there was much disagreement as to the cause. The complain ants said holes in the car roof allowed the rain to come in and the bees were drowned outright or died slow deaths from exposure. The railroad produced a bevy of bee arperts who told of the strange goings-

* Women Hire Children t * for Effect on Court ❖ •5* •> Manchester, England.—-Wid- <s» ows’ “mites” may stir the heart, 4> but •they do not always ring ❖ * true. * * A Manchester detective re4, veals that children who cling to * women’s skirts at the police court are usually hired for the 4, * occasion in order to arouse the * 4. sympathy of the court. 4, “Hiring” and borrowing babies * for police court appearances is ❖ becoming a lucrative trade in * certain sections of England. For ❖ * a small fee. he said, it is pos- * * sible for anyone to hire from ❖ 4’ one to five babiOs at a time. * 4»

as a bridge over a stream to counteract this sagging. Again, as the liner proceeds her middle is upborne by one us rhe huge crests, while bow and stern are unsupported, in some cases being entirely out of water. Then the pressure ’s upward in the middle, with downward pressure at. her end. This is called hogging. Either pressure will break a ship’s back. Therefore, such a ship must be built like a land bridge across a stream designed to carry a heavy load, but also must be built like a bridge upside down to resist a heavy upward pressure. Many Ships Vanish. There are many records of complete disappearances of ships at sea. The most uotable case affecting Americans has to do with rhe utter disappearance 1 the Cyclops, the great naval collier, which was in touch with the world by radio one hour and utterly gone without a trace the next. No wreckage was ever found. She had not been blown up by, a German torpedo. Most naval architects believe that her back was broken by one of these stresses and she sank to the bottom instantly. Several tankers, ships ot a type especially susceptible to sagging and hogging strains, have disappea rec in the same manner. Disposition of cargo is another matter which is receiving special attention. Badly disposed cargo will increase these dangerous strains and government inspectors, as well as the marine insurance companies are becoming more insistent concerning this branch of shipping. Depth ot seas makes a great difference in the length of waves. A very deep sea permits tremendous swells to form. Unless they break into combers they are not so dangerous. A shipi merely has to climb one long hill and descend another. In the deep Pacific the crest of waves are half a mile high. No ship ever constructed can bridge these swells. A ship which would be seaworthy in one partjflf the world might not fare so well in another ocean. 3,000 Pupils Rise With Sun to Save Daylight Denton. Texas.—An experiment in “daylight saving” education will be tried this summer at North Texas State Teachers' college. More than 3,<KX> students will get up with the sun five mornings a week to attend classes beginning at six o’clock. Afternoons will be devoted to study and evenings to recreation. Floodlights will light up the athletic field for night sports. Movies will be shown in an open-air theater. The “daylight-saving” program was devised to accommodate what is expected to be the school’s largest enrollment.

on in a bee hive. Bees, said the experts. were not the industrious, peaceloving creatures generally supposed, but often were like gangsters or - hijackers. One said bees were cannibals and consumed their young. Another testified they were too temperamental to travel on trains. Railroad attorneys advanced the theory that the bees had been hijacked and killed by a swarm of wild bees or had developed cannibal tendencies and eaten one another, or had buzzed about with excitement until they dropped dead. The jury brought in a verdict of $6,300 for the complainants. St. Paul, Minn.—Rule No. 1 for robberies is: Phone the police. It couldn’t be done at the J. L. Abachten drug store here even after the robbery was. discovered. The stolen object was the pay phone. ■

’ MY G7 FAVORITE "T STORIES “« I Working While Others Slept A WELL-KNOWN public lecturer occasionally tells this story on the platform as illustrative of the enterprise and instinctive commercial sagacity of the young American. He vouches for it as an actual experience. His version of it runs somewhat as follows: “Two summers ago I was motoring up in New England. Taking a short cut over a dirt road late one afternoon I ran into a miry place and the car bogged down and stuck fast. Providentially, as it would seem, a farmer boy Immediately hove into sight, leading a team of big horses. I entered into negotiations with him and the upshot was that for a dollar be agreed tu undertake the job of rescuing me from my predicament. The price seemed reasonable and we closed the bargain. “Be booked his horses to the axle of the stalled automobile and soon bad my car upon high ground. 1 was struck by the brightness ot the lad and the skill be bad shown in extricating the heavy machine from the mire. After 1 bad paid him I led him into conversation, taking occasion immediately to compliment him upon his smartness. “ ‘Well.’ he said, ‘l’ve had considerable practice. Mister. Your’n makes the sixth car i’ve pulled out of this here same mudbole today,’ “ ‘Did each one of the owners pay you a dollar?’ 1 asked. “ ‘Yep,’ he said. ‘That’s my regular price for this job.' “ ‘Then you’ve earned six dollars today?’ “‘Yep, that’s right,' he said. “ ‘Pretty fair wages for a boy your age, I should say,' I commented. “Before answering me, the youngster withdrew from my Immediate vicinity and mounted one of his horses. “ ‘Well, be said, ‘this has been a specially good day. 1 don’t always take in this much; and anyhow, tain’t as easy as you might think for me to earn this money. All day I’ve got to be hangin' round waitin’ for one of you city fellers to get bogged down and start callin for help. That ain’t the worst of it, neither. Except when It rains. I have to be around here a good part of every night.’ “ ‘What do you do here at nights?’ I asked. “He drew his team off the road and started away through the woods. Then, over his shoulder, as he vanished, he replied: “ ‘Oh. night-times 1 have to draw water and till up this here mudbole go’s It’ll be all ready for business the next day.’” • • • Based on the Currency •Systems THE late Charles E. Van Loan, a splendid story teller in his own right and equally adept as a story writer, used to love to tell this one: An ambitious promoter undertook to stage a prize fight between two heavyweighs at a little Mexican town just >ver the national boundary from California. The tight was advertised to go for 20 rounds, From both sides ot the line a great :rowd gathered, the majority of those present being Mexicans. A somewhat inexperienced but juick-witted Texan acted as referee. It subsequently developed that, contrary to the ethics, the referee had a private bet on one of the scrappers. Midway of the tight it appeared highly probable that nis favorite shortly would be knocked out and so. to save nis money, the referee declared the pout a draw and ended if right there. Enraged and disappointed, the auiience rose up, shouting threats. The jative contingent was especially vocif»rous. A first-class riot was threatened. But the imperiled referee bad a imart notion in reserve. By waving lis arms and shouting that be bad a statement to make, he secured comparative silence. Then he made his announcement and it proved eminenty satisfactory. The Americans pres»nt saw the point of the joke; the Mexicans were appeased because the jxplanation seemed to them perfectly sound. “Gentlemen," the referee said, “this was advertised as a 20-round fight and that’s exactly what it’s been—2o •ounds Mex or 10 rounds American. (©. bv the McNaught Syndicate. Incut Cow’s Batcher Weights The amount ot bone in a cow varies with the cow. The maximum per cent of bones is 22.48. The hide •s usually 6 to 6U per cent of the ive weight of the carcass; the heart from 3 to 4 pounds, the liver from 8 to 9 pounds, and the tongue :o 3% pounds. The shrinkage of cattle in butchering and dressing ranges from 33 to 52 per cent Protecting Paint By adding a naif pint ot ol) of cedat to each gallon of paint one may com>at the very annoying curiosity of lies and gnats to find out for themselves if rhe wet paint is really wet. Some painters prefer to use oil of litronelia in smaller quantities. The iffect is the same, the insects will ivoid the' fresh paint because of the xior. Make Money From Frogs Such big catches have been made >y bullfrog hunters tn the marshes >f Louisiana that there are more frogs now than there are people who rnjoy the delicacy of their fried lindquarters. Louisiana supplies the ■est of the world with some two milion frogs a year. What Every Office Needs They say a new treatment immunzes dogs against distemper. What a >oon to suffering humanity on Monlay morning.—South Bend Tribune.

ya ■■ h AyA y ■ft f ft gg| • Y You can get results—after a fashion—with any old dye; but to do work you are proud of takes real anilines. That’s s. why we put them in Diamond Dyes. They contain from three to five times more than other dyes on the market! Cost more to make? Surely. But you get them for the same price as other dyes. ■7* '/ Next time you want to dye, try them. See how easy it is •7 use them. Then compare the resuhs. Note the absence / of that re-dyed look; of streaking or spotting. See that 1 W/ iu take none of the life out of the cloth. Observe how A Y/ 111 the colors keep their brilliance through wear and washing. J/ nil Your dealer will refund your money if you don’t agree / nil Diamond Dyes are better dyes. II The wh » e of Diamond Dyes is the original “allr // U PU’T’ose” dye for any and every kind of material. It will 7lff I B dye or tint silk, wool, cotton, lined, rayon or any mixture materials. The blue package is a special dye, for silk I 1 °r 'Y°°’ only. With it you can dye your valuable articles ■ 1 °f silk or wool with results equal to the finest professional 1 : , 1 work. When you buy—remember this. The blue package dyes silk or wool only. The white package will dye ever - v hind of goods, including silk and wool. Your dealer has both packages. Diamond Dyes /o nwc f Perfect results AT ALL DRUG STORES

Cloth for Africans Lancashire fabric manufacturers are. many of them, devoting the greater part of their time to the production of cloths for natives in Africa and ether countries overseas. One Bolton weaver. I am told, is visited personally by native chiefs from time to time, who bring over the latest colorstripe patterns from the native looms for the manufacturer to imitate. The small native loom produces a “join” in about every five inches of the fabric, and this the Lancashire weaver has to" imitate artificially, or his §tuff will not be acceptable!—Exchange. — Something Reminded Her of Her Duty “Today I am reminded of a duty i that I have neglected, and that is to let you know how wonderful have been the results I obtained from the use of Milks Emulsion. Nothing could have been more beneficial to me than 1 your Emulsion. “In the winter of 1917 and 1918 1 had a severe case of pneumonia, and in the spring of 1919 I took a cough. I was doing some summer work to prepare myself for a college, but by the time school opened I was too ill to attend. I finally went to bed for the rest cure. I gained a little in strength and got up by Christmas, but my Wnigh never left me, and I caught cold very easily and it would | take a month to get over it. “Finally, in September. 1920. I got a bottle of Milks Emulsion and wrote you for instructions, to which you replied promptly and for which I thank you. I followed the instructions carefully and soon my cough began to disappear. I was able to sleep better than ever before and my appetite was fierce. I could not eat enough. I gained in weight slowly but surely, but continued the use of Milks Emul- ' sion, until I am a well girl today. “I went through the entire season j without a cold or a cough, and I came ! back into the society circle and played 1 all the big affairs without any ill e,f- --! sects. About a month ago I neglected myself and took a dreadful summer 1 cold and, being at a house ■ party, I ' could not care for myself properly. But as soon as I reached home I flew I in on my old standby, Milks Emulsion, and within a week I was well. “I have recommended it to many s and if at any time I can be of any help to your company by telling, what !it did for me, let me know. Sincerely. MISS KATY WALLER, 401 . Argyle Ave.. San Antonio. Tex.” Sold hy all druggists under a guarantee to give satisfaction or money refunded. The Milks Emulsion Co., | Terre Haute, Ind.—Adv. Gun Warned of Fire Returning from a hunt. Charles | Maull. Milford, Del., hung up his gun on the kitchen wall thinking it wasn't loaded, but in this case it was fortunate he Was mistaken. That night the family was aroused when they 1 heard the gun go off. A fire had broken out in the kitchen and reaching the gun, discharged Lt The fire was put out before it spread further.

SCIATICA r— ’——— V7"OU have undoubtedly | ‘ X used Bayer Aspirin for I headaches and know how I \wLk4 * promptly and completely | these tablets relieve the pain. jfl /?' They are even more wonder- ||| ful in the relief of such -|KJflraflk 1 serious suffering as sciatica; ~|| a lumbago; rheumatism and \ SI . those aches and pains that V | are bone deep. They don’t ' affect the heart, and they do dispel the pain. There is nothing quite like genuine fl’, ? Bayer Aspirin, but see that you get the genuine. It has X' Bayet on the box and inside are proven directions for ; I many important uses it is I - J I well to know. L srH •. the trrfle mark of Barer Maauf*cture ot MoooaceUcactdester of SalicyllcMM

/-• the twfle mark of Bayer Manefactnre of

CRUISE Jum 29 Es V JC« »». “lANCAST«tA'> CUNARD LINE, 52 days, SBOO to SI3OO Spain, Tangier, Algiers, Italy, Riviera, Sweden, Norway, Edinburgh, Trossachs, Berlin (Paris. London, Rhine, etc.). Hotels, drives, fees, etc. included. Mediterranean Cruise, Jan. 29, S6OO up Frank C. Clark, Times Bldg., N. T. S Health Giving -pg| M AH Winter long Marvelous Climate — 1 Good Hotels —Tourist Camps—Splendid Roads—Gorgeous Mountain Views The wonder/u I desert resort of the W est PWrlta Craa a CMa/rey alm Absorbine <wil] reduce in- \ flamed,swollenjoints.spraina, bruises, soft bunches. Quickly 4* heals boils, poll evil, quitter,/VW A fistula and infected sores. Willi•s fl ij notblisterorremovehair.YouW, can work horse while using, ww F ?2.50at druggists, or postpaid. V nW? Send for book 7-S free. w 11 From oar files: “Fistula ready to 111 burst. Never saw anything yield to treatment so quickly. Will not v Jr be without Absorbine.** Inc, llOtSnaniStCSpringfield. WasT| RHEUMATISM TRUSLER’S RHEUMATIC TABLETS HAVE GIVEN RELIEF All Druggists. Two Sites, 50c and SI.OO. Trusler Remedy Co. Cincinnati, O. HOXSIE’S CROUP REMEDY THE IJFE-SAVER OF CHILDREN No opium, no nausea. 50 cents at druggistß ot KELLS CO., NEWBLKGH. N. Y. For Poisoned Wounds As Rusty Nail Wounds Ivy Poisoning, etc. Try Hanford’s Balsam of Myrrh All dealers an aathorised to refold year money ier the lint bottle if Bet suited. W. N. U., FORT WAYNE, NO. 13-1929. Hunting Pirate Treasure While taking submarine pictures for the American Museum of Natural History near the Bahama islands, a few years ago. Vancampen Heilner, Spring Lake, N. J., discovered some old cannon on the seabottom. Efforts to raise them failed because the guns were cemented to the reefs by barnacles. Heilner now has returned to the Bahamas with equipment that will lift the cannon and any other salvage what is believed is a sunken treasure ship of the pirate, Benjamin Hornigold, which went down near this spot. —Capper’s Weekly. M It is foolish to bet that the dog with the handsomest collar will win the fight.