The Syracuse Journal, Volume 22, Number 22, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 26 September 1929 — Page 3

Swedes Return to Homeland From Russia ■ ii . TWSHr W?- I - x- - ■MBK What is believed to be the largest wholesale return of "prodigal sons” ever recorded took place recently In Europe. About two hundred years ago a group of dissatisfied Swedes left their homeland and trekked to South Russia to make their future homes. Here the colony thrived and flourished to more than a thousand. However, since Russia turned Red the colonists, who had kept their identity without mixing a drop of Russian blood In their veins, began to get disgusted with the way things were going In their adopted land, so recently they decider* in one huge train, whose arrival in Sweden is here shown to return to the land of their fathers and they went back with Red Cross nurses meeting It.

Speech Defects Are Neglected — —. ■ . —

Survey Shows 500,000 Children Are Afflicted With Stammering. ■ Washington.—Disorders in speech have been grossly • neglected, according to the United StatesT’Ublic health service. This is especially true in the case of school children, it was pointed out in a statement issued here. Os 1.000.000 persons suffering from some defect in speech in this conn try today approximately 500.000 are children who stammer Or stutter. Un corrected imperfections in speech oh served in childhood the "public health service said, become a serious economic and social handicap in later life because of their bearing on edu rational achievement and ability to secure preferential employment. Defects Are Functional. -The majority of speech defects, fortunately, are functional in character. not dependent on definite organic lesions and can. therefore, he corrected. Most speech defects, it was said, develop in children between three and eight years old. The public health service listed retarded speech, imperfect speech as sociated with partial deafness, im perfections caused by malformations of the organs of speech, arid the nervous speech disorders namely stammering, stuttering and nervous hesitation as the most common defects in speech. “The popular belief that children who do not learn to talk at the normal age are mentally defective is responsible for much unwarranted anxiety.” the public health service de elared. “While it is true that disordered speech may be an early symp tom of mental defect, speech develop *&ent may he delayed as late as nine years of age* in children otherwise normal. Partial deafness may also ne the cause of speech defect, it continued Most deaf mutes have perfectly nor mal speech organs, but do not ex ercise them because of their inability to hear spoken words. With them the underlying cause of their inability to talk is deafness. Since imitation is su/tT a pronounced factor in the development of speech in children care ful tests should be made of all speech defectives for the discovery of par-’ rial deafness which ms, easily account for the imperfect sp»-»-ch Such children should always be referred to an ear specialist for treatment; and if treatment is ineffective lip readtag should be taught. Look for Malformations. “Imperfect speech also may be caused by malformation of speechproducing organs, such as harelip, very short upper lip. narrow palate, cleft palate, nasal obstruction, tonguetie. and very irregular teeth Careful search should be made for the presence of malformations in order that prompt corrective treatment may be administrated. The underlying cause of stammering is purely mental. It is essentially due to emotional disturb am-e. and implies lessened ability to meet a difficult situation. It is most frequently observed in the so-called nervous, highly strung children. As these children grow older they subconsciously fear that their speech organs will refuse to work and have the horror of being the object of rid

EX-BOY EMPEROR IS BROKE; COTTAGE HIS CASTLE NOW

11° I- —«■« Lives on Charity of His Friends; Last $250,000 Lost in Bank ' Crash. Peiping, China.—The "boy emperor,” once rhe ruler of all China, has movedMnto a small house in Tientsin with his wife, because he can no longer afford to live in a large house. With his fortune almost gone, the former emperor now Is dependent Tor support on the kindness of his old (Manchu retainers But they., too, are suffering from falling incomes, and are not able to spare him enough to keep up anything resembling an imperial menage. The boy em[>eror. now approaching the age of thirty, is not prepared to do anything to earn his living. He is not ambitions, and his friends say he has n<> hope whatever ot recovering his or. He Is content to live

.icule A sense of inferiority develops establishing a vicious circle—the greater the dread, the more imperfect their speech. “Parents should not be deluded by any expectation that the child will outgrow the defect. Only the very mild eases developed through imitation may be said to be outgrown when the increasing mental develop ment of the child enables him to recognize and correct his mistake. The, wise parents will give close at tention to the speech disorders of their children in order to remove the handicap in life which these disorders impose.” Hen Aids Mother Cat Bring Up Three Kittens Ardmore. Okla.—Susie was just an old setting hen with no eggs to sit upon. Now Susie is a setting hen with three tiny, squirmy kittens to take care of. Mehitabel, the rightful mother of the new-born felines, comes around at feeding rime after which she purrs contentedly and leaves the “bringin’ up” of her offspring to Susie. 0 Boys Diving for Coins Endanger a Bridge London. —Three small boys diving toi coins drew such a crowd to the bridge near the Zoological Gardens that to save the bridge from collapse police had to disperse the crowd. Several ar rests were made before the police could effect dispersal.

Letter From Germany Breaks Record - ’’Wk O' I W? ? Bib wll Ml WlsfeS a. 1- W® ■ WMBBI _ S ''-Bvfr ' mH Lu.. From Berlin to Washington, in less than seven days, was the time made by a letter received by W. Irving Glover, second assistant postmaster general, The letter was carried from Berlin to Cherbourg by planed crossed the ocean on the Bremen, •shot off by plane when 500 miles at sea, and* rushed from New York to Washington again by air.

quietly with his two women and a few Manchus who hav s e remained with him since his abdication. When 4he emperor abdicated an agreement was made to leave him possessor of his landed property and a large part of his jewels and curios But succeeding so-called Republican governments have ruled against this agreement, and the ex-emp«ror’s prop erty gradually has been confiscated and sold. It is said that all of his income from property hgs been cut off. The young ex-emperor also made an unfortunate investment. He put $250,000. almost all «of his ready money, into the Exchange Bank of China, a joint Japanese-Chinese institution. A few months ago this bank failed because of the deterioration in value of its government bonds. The young emperor’s money was lost together with

❖. _ - ❖ Everybody Is Jones * •> in Boots Lawsuit ❖ Lla nfi h angel Gcneurglyn. .j. Wales.—What is believed to be 4* a unique court’ case occurred ❖ ❖ here. * ❖ Jones was the name ot seven <♦ 4. out of eight people implicated ,i. in the case. * a .j, A married woman named 4. ❖ Jones was alleged to have stol * *♦ V .j. en a pair of boots belonging to ❖ a Mr. Jones. A servant named ♦♦♦ ♦j. Jones gave evidence; a police <• ❖ sergeant Jones was mentioned; * the two magistrates were named <♦ Jones, and so was the court * ❖ clerk. <- The accused Mrs. Jones said ❖ that she and her husband. Mr. ❖ Jones, had just secured work £ ❖ for another Mr. Jones. <• t A »*««£»**« «J» *j» ♦** *j» *J» »*♦ «£♦ «£♦ *J**J**i* *•*♦£* *J**J**l* Man Fined for Taking Orphan Polecats Home Charlerori, Pa.—Arthur Bickerton, constable, was arraigned before Justice of the Peace ('arson, charged with violating the state game laws. Bickerton told ('arson that when a mother skunk was killed he took the six kittens home. They became tame and frolicked about the Bick erton home. B. B. Earner, county game warden, neard about the kittens and had Bickerton arrested. Testimony indicated that had it not reen for Bickerton s interest In the animal they probably would have died. He was given the minimum penalty of $lO fine for keeping fur bearing animals in violation of the state code. Few Wild Buffaloes Left There are no wild buffaloes to be found except in the big game refuges such as Yellowstone National park

8 that,of thousands of other unfortunate Chinese depositors. The ex-emperor has been living tor the last .two years in the Changyuan garden in Tientsin, located in the Japanese concession. Although the rent was given him free by the di visional commander in charge of Tien tsin, the place was so large that he bad to keep more than 100 servants. Seeing the young man’s plight, an old Chinese. Lu Chungyu. offered him the use of one of his houses, also in the Japanese concession, and the ex emperor decided at once to move with his household. Burglar’s Odd Invention Kingston, Ont.—Red Ryan, a notorious bandit before his incarceration in Kingston prison, has developed unex pected talents. While a prisoner h€ has turned his mental powers toward mechanical invention and, ironically has perfected a burglar proof lock fo> mail bags. He also has become Ir terested in the art of nursing and I an invaluable aid to the prison hosp tai staff. * x

THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL

Fresh Vegetables Saved for Winter Are Far More Desirable for Table Use Than Canned -products. Assurance of a fresh and healthful supply of garden vegetables for the winter months may be obtained economically by winter storage, it is pointed out by A. W. Binkley, of the department of horticulture at the Colorado Agricultural college. Such root crops as potatoes, beets, carrots, parsnips, winter radishes, turnips and rutabagas may be stored easily, and in their fresh state they are more desirable than canned products. Storing Root Crops. Medium-sized, matured and perfectly dry roots, with the tops not cut too closely, are ' best for storing, it is stated. Only first grade vegetables should be stored. One of the most satisfactory methods of storage for the small family is outlined by Mr. Binkley, as follows: Provide boxes of sufficient size to hold the quantity of vegetablestdesired. In the bottom of the box place a layer of fine moist sand (not wet), two inches deep. Place a layer of vegetables, then another layer of sand one inch deep. Continue until the box is fifled. and place the box in a coo) cellar, j When the top layer of sand begins to I dry out, sprinkle it with water to keep it moist. Storing in Piles. Vegetables may be stored In piles and covered with moist sand if there is enough room in the cellar, or they mtfy be stored loose in bins in the cellar when larger quantities are to be > stored. Cellar air must be kept moist j by sprinkling the floor or by evapora- 1 tion of water from vessels of water. | Other methods and details concerning > storage of onions, squash and pump- j kins may be obtained by writing the j Horticulture department at Colorado Agricultural college. Practical Way to Keep Up Small Farm Orchard This is the season when many ot us wonder whether to cut down the old apple trees in the back yard or farm orchard or whether to really take them in hand and help them to produce decent fruit. We really should do one or the other, says a writer in the Illinois Farmer. Unsprayed, unpruned neglected fruit trees are a disappointment and an irritation to the owner and a source of disease and insect infestation to the orchards of neighbors who do care for their trees. Little fault can be found with the busy man on the average farm beset with surplus of work and shortage of help if he fails to take time to spray a few trees at the periods required for effectiveness. The farm spray ring is the only practical way we know to maintain the small farm orchard. Many communities jiave such organizations and those communities always seem to have a local supply of good apples. Most of these spray rings are operated by farm bureau organizations. It is no heavy financial burden for a dozen or twenty farmers to provide equipment and materials for proper spraying and employ a man to do the job at the time it should be done, while it is usually out of the question for one farmer with 10 to 50 trees to do the same thing individually. Reasons for Mulching Crop of Strawberries There are several reasons for mulching strawberries. Perhaps the most important is that it makes clean -berries by keeping grit and dirt off of them. It neips to prevent growth of grass and w eeds; and also tends to ; conserve moisture. In the colder cliI mates it hinders heaving and breaking I of roots by alternate freezing and I thawing. Any clean material free from | seed of noxious weeds may be used 1 for mulching provided it will not pack down and smother the plants nor blow away due to coarseness and being light Agricultural Hints Calves will do well on pasture when it is available. • • • In 192", 25.000 miles of new highways were laid in America. • « « A campaign against the weedy vacant lot will benefit the community as a whole. cA • • • Crops on marshes are more subject to injury from frost than those on upland soils. • « • Among the field roots commonly grown, carrots are the most firmly anchored in the soil. The danger of overproduction of 1 dairy products does not lie in increasing the average production per cow. If there is any danger it lies in unduly Increasing the number of cows. ♦ * » A calf should be taught to drink from a pail three days after birth, unless it is very weak and puny. Two quarts of its mother's milk is enough at a feeding until after the first week. I In 191 G the milk produced by the average cow in the United States was 3,700 pounds; and 10 years later, 192 G. this amount was increased to 4,700 i pounds, according to the United States Department of Agriculture. « • • Roots, especially mangels, furnish valuable succulent feed for dairy animals. They have a certain medicinal or tonic effect upon the animal that Is not indicated in their analysis. * • • Soil acidity keeps alfalfa off many farms where.lt should be grown, even though the value of limestone to the soil has been an establishe-’ fact for many vc.-rs, - - - I

Z/ A Good Old Bread Recipe and Gold Medal 'Kitchen-tested' Flour" —l^o^ — Win First Prize— MRS. R. H. WILKINSON (Blue Ribbon Winner Home-Baked •' Tr Bread, Edinburg, 111., County Fair) “At our county fair in Edinburg, 111., last August I won Ist Prize for home-baked Mrs. Jt. H. wnunson. Edinburg, in. bread in the class open to everybody. I didn’t use a celebrated cooking school recipe, but one taught me by my mother. My daughter also won Ist Prize for home baked bread in her class at the same fair—using the same recipe and no other than my favorite Gold Medal Flour! Proof, f say, that to get prize winners every time, use Gold Medal ‘Kitchen-tested’ Flour.” TODAY thousands of women have m” 11 pastries—in an oven just like yours. Only learned how to get perfect results with flour which acts the same perfect way all their baking— “Blue Ribbon” cakes and r ; every time is allowed to go out to you. pastries, bread and biscuits, every time! x ”*Thus you know in advance exactly what y° Mrrest d^ sw^^^e - in Baking Bi H Special “Kitchen-tested” They use a new-type flour for all baking Mt V^ y x ■ (Changed every 3 month,) Flour—that simplifies baking remark- Kg ;SO»rt|n £- 18 Please accept (free of charge) simplified ably and banishes the cause of most MM I* |b| recipes for the world’s 12 most famous baking failures. H baking creations. RecipesforthedaintiFailures, experts found, were mostly due Bal \ Hi est cakes, the finest cookies, the most to the fact that two sacks of the same flour MMM HI popular pastries known. Each one is often acted differently, even with the H| “simplifi^”untilitisremarkablyeasy, too. same recipe ... it was not uniform in Ks Ttrtrihfin-testrf All 12 of these simplified “Kitchen-tested’* oven action. O| recipes are inside every sack of Gold So nowall Gold Medal is“A7.'cAe>z-tor«r’ Medal “Kitchen-tested” Flour. You can before it comes to you. As each botch gs W get a full set today—simplyask your grocer comes through the mill it is tested by for Gold Medal “Kitchen-tested” Flour, actual baking—bread, cakes, biscuits, Washburn Crosby Company GOLD MEDAL FLOUR ie Kitchen-tested” Always sold in trade-marked sack—never in bulk nc

Ov<*rclothed for Tropics When it >s hot iu Singapore it’s hot without any maybe, and when a Chinaman appears on the streets all bundled up in torrid weather there must bV a reason. So thought the police when they investigated and found that the Chinaman was wearing nine suits of clothes while the thermometer continued to climb. Displaying the best Chinese brand of stoicism the man was arrested and charged with "fraudulent possession of clothing.” f FAMILY IDOCTOR 1 :: MADE MILLIONS OF FRIENDS j Fifteen years after his graduation* Dr. Caldwell became famous for a single prescription, which now, after forty years, is still making friends. Today Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin is the world’s most popular laxative. Millions of people never think of using anything else when they’re constipated, headachy, bilious, feverish or weak; when breath is bad, tongue coated, or they’re suffering from nausea, gas, or lack of appetite or energy’. Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin is made today according to the original formula, from herbs and other pure ingredients. It is pleasant-tasting; thorough in the most obstinate cases; gently effective for women and children. Above all, it represents a doctor’s choice of what is safe for the bowels. Community Clubs A “20-30” club is a club of young men between the ages of twenty and thirty. The first club was started ’in Sacramento, Calif., iff 1922. Since then 37 clubs have been admitted to membership. The total enrollment is about These clubs resemble Rotary, Kiwanis, etc., in their desire to be of service to their communities. Immigration Restriction Until 1819 no law was passed in congress which affected the immigrant. An act then adopted, though applying to all passengers, was iu reality a law regulatjng immigration because then nearly all passengers were immigrants Razor 10,000 Years Old A razor 10,000 years old has been found by a French archeologist in a sand quarry at Moutieres-les-Atniens. It was discovered in a Neolithic bed among a number of other implements. Contagious? Seymour—l found out that Patricia has a fever blister. Oswalt —How did you find it out? Seymour—l got it from her own lips. Some people refuse to take, physical exercise for their health because it doesn’t come in bottles.

Find New Composition Helps in Tree Surgery A composition somewhat like putty in its consistency has been recently found of value in filling broken or splintered woodwork, it has several advantages over putty and other materials designed for this purpose in that the woody composition may be cut, carved and treated as wood, whereas this cannot be done with putty. By some modification the same idea has been successfully applied to tree surgery. Concrete has been used for the purpose of filling cavities iu trees caused by rot. bur because of the constant motion of the tree trunk this has a tendency ’to break away from the sides of the cavity and in order to hold it in place it is necessary to insert metal strips. The wood composition does not do this and really acts to a great degree like the wood of the tree trunk, contracting and expanding in the same manner, so that It is quite durable. The material was that used by a Philadelphia tree surgeon who gave the new filler a long and severe test before making any announcement of the discoveCy. The use of soft coal will make laundry work heavier this winter. Russ Bleaching Blue will help to remove that grimy look. At all grocers.—Adv. Not Located as Yet Esther —One of my girl friends is here at the beach looking for her husband. Richard—What’s his name? Esther —Oh, she doesn’t know yet. In the paper, a man wants his new house valued at SIO,OOO, but not in the assessor’s office.

IgKjLr j|| “When I was a young single girl I took Lydia .E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound because my mother did and she gave it to me. After I married I took it before my children were bom and afterwards, and I have eight living children. I am now a grandmother and still take it and still recommend it when any one is tired and run-down.” — Mrs. Alfred Iverson, St. Edwards, Nebraska.

If Possible According to King Solomon “a good name is rather to be chosen than great riches.” and we are not taking issue with him, but wouldn’t the ideal condition be to combine the two? —Hillsboro

ROOFING Direct from Factory SPECIAL SMOOTH SURFACE ROOFING. with the New Sta-Rite Wearing Surface. The ideal Roofing for Factory qr Farm buildings. Roils averaging 50 pounds, $1.75; 55 pounds, $1.90; 60 pounds, $2.10; 65 pounds, $2.30; 70 pounds, $2.50. All rolls contain 108 square feet. Lap cement and galvanized nails are packed in core of each roH. Send for sample. Standard SMOOTH SURFACE ROOFING at reduced prices. RED and GREEN SLATE SURFACED ROOFING, made with heavy felt base, 85 to 90 pounds per roll, $2.00. Asphalt ROOF COATING, black only, in 5 gal. cans, 50c per gallon. In 60 gaL Drums, 40c per gallon. STA-RITE MANUFACTURING CO. LOWELL, INDIANA S Health Giving All Winter* Long Marvelous Climate — Good Hotels — Tourist Camps—Splendid Koads—Gorgeous Mountain Views. The iconderful desert resort of the West P Write Cree A Chaffey dim CALIFORNIA Learn Beauty Culture We teach yqu to become a real beauty /5X operator in ninety days. You do not have to pay high powered salesmen n J to enroll. Established 9 years. Write J | for terms and catalog No. 5. Us Betty Jean School of Beauty Culture* jft, Fort Wayne - - - - Indiana. Every Church Should Use the For only $lO we will send polished Aluminum Tray and 38 glasses. Bread Plate, and Collection Plate, postage paid. Satisfaction guar. Folder free. 60,000 churches use. Thomas Communion Service Co. tz ßbx W-N, Lima, Ohio The SECRET of YOUTH for ufl The secret of Hair RegrowWk ■ > n ? an d Preserving worth y ■ millions of dollars you can £ JB. have individually for SI.OO. • • Delivery after TOGO orders, or money refunded in three months. s’ Win kTngsTng" 128 Gates Ave. - Brooklyn, New Yorttl Enclosed sl. Please send me the Secret of How to Preserve or Regrow Hair. Name Street City State’.... 100 Choice Farms Carroll Co., Georgia, one leading agricultural counties, population 80% white; terms. Carroll Land Co.,Carrollton,Ga. Z MELLOWS, FLAVORS, PAI ADC Purities punch LULUItO and other llqifiSil'OTWclnrJWA uids over night. Removes KriKHiiAWHMI harmful ingredients and bad odors. Improves taste. Old HVMiMMa Dixie method. Rasy to use. KatlJKlyiM No st raining. Bag t reats galWpmfjWSKPIW ion; 60c postpaid. Two bags 11.00. Guaranteed. KjK9MNnH I.ITTI.K Nitons JFG co. 811 Cherry St. - Toledo, OUe PARKER’S HAIR BALSAM BemovesDandruff-StopsHairFalling Restores Color and Beauty to Gray and Faded Hair 60c. and SI.OO at Druggists, Hiseox Cbem. Wks. Patchogue. N. Y. FLORESTON SHAMPOOt-Ideal for use in connection with Parker’s Hair Balsam. Makes the hair soft and fluffy. 60 cents by mailor at drug, gist*. Hiseox Chemical Works, Patchogue, N. X. W. N. U., FORT WAYNE, NO. 38 -1929.