The Syracuse Journal, Volume 23, Number 23, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 2 October 1930 — Page 7

J After 40 Bowel trouble is Most Dangerous Constipation may easily become chronic after forty. Continued constipation at that time of life may bring attacks of piles—and a host of other disorders. Watch ybur bowels at any age. Cuard tlbem with partienlar care after forty. When they n|<-ed help, remember' a doctor should know •what iSj best for them. *Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin" it a doctor's prescription for ths bowels. Tested by 47 years’ practice, it has been found thoroughly effective in relieving constipation and its ills for men, women and •children of all ages. It has proveh perfectly safe even for babies. Made from fresh, laxative herbs, pure pepsin and other harmless ingredients, It cannot gripe; will not sicken you or weaken you; can be used without harm as often as your breath is bad, your tongue is coated; whenever a headachy, bilious, gassy condition warns of constipation. Next time Just take a spoonful of this family doctor’s laxative. See how good it tastes; how gently and thoroughly it acts. Then you will know why it has become the world's most popular laxative. Big bottles—-all drugstores. Da. W. B. Caloweu’s SYRUP PEPSIN A Doctor's Family Laxative FACE BLEACH Positively eradicates from the skin all tan. moth patches.sallow complexion, pimple-, eczema.etc. Al drug and dept, stores or by mail. Pnce $125. BEAUTY BOOKLET FREE DM.C. H. IIIKT CO. SOTS Mtoblgsn Av*. CMes»s, !1L Billions in Forests In the latest official estimate of Canada's national wealth n value of over SI.M>»,OHO.OUO Is placed, upon the forests of the dominion, including the accessible raw materials, pulpwood and capital invested In woods operations. Large as the sun* Is, it covers only a part—possibly no more than half—of the total economic stake which the Gamidlan people have tied up In one way or another in forest resources, industry •nd trade. ■ KILLS RATS NOTHING ELSE • K-R-0 (Kills Kats Only) killed 238 rats in 12 hours on a Kansas farm. It is the original product made by a special proem of squill, an ingredient recommended by U. S. Government as sure death to rata and mice, but harmless to dogs, cats, poultry or even baby chicks. You can depend on thia. K-R-O in a few years has become America’s leading rat and mouse killer. Sold by al! druggists on a money back guarantee. Surgeon’s Pencil The pencil salesman took out n pencil and wrote his name in bold black letters on the skin of the back of bls hand. •This is a surgeon’s pencil," he •ahi. “Surgeons, when about to operate, use It to mark out certain sections on a patient's skin. Os course, it's a special pencil. “1 can show you pencils for pricemarking polished metal, porcelain. ®yes, and even patent' leather." — Springfield J’nlon.' The man who Is crooked wants a broader path than the straight and narrow one. A man can wear a S2O hat without anybody noticing It.

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Daughter Is Healthy Now

**My thirteen-year-olddaugh-ter Maxine was troubled with backache and pain when she came into womanhood. 1 knew Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound would help her because 1 used to take it myself at her age. Now she does not have to stay home from school and her color is good, she eats well and does not complain of being tired. We are recommending the Vegetable Compound to other school girls who need in You may publish this letter.” —Mrs. Floyd Buscher, R. Gridley, Kansas.

Lydia E, Pinkham's Vegetable Compound _

New Way of Traveling on Water . r - " . h . ■ * A i *' V Bill Wright of the Hampton Roads (Va.) naval base is here seen taking • “walk” on the water at Ocean View with his Austrian water skis and a gall. It Is lots of fun when the water is calm.

Long Silence Between Business Partners

Findlay. law and partners in business In this town have worked side by side without speak tng fAT twenty years. They are E. A. Moser an<! E. Meyer, pharmacists, and makers of a secret formula chocolate •oda. WINSOME TAILLEUR Jr ff Taiileurs go on. forever. Shown here Is a popular screen actress wearing a Jacket and skirt of brown and blege mixture. The lapel ornament of deep red carnation Is one of the new fashion fancies from Hollywood.

i GOOD TEACHING $ * AND EDUCATION * * J * " ♦ * By THOMAS ARKLE CLARK ♦ * Dean of Men, Univarsity of # * ■ lllmi is. w. W M. w saAF'-w w M M M 7 ft- Jt ♦irity x n > tirw ww far x-wwww xww w . Nq one belleyMuJuore than I do Id the deslrabßlty of having good ttach-

lug In our schools I and colleges and I no one more than I deplores the fact that so many of I those engaged In | teaching are not adequately prepared and not es- | peclally Interested i in those they teach. And yet J am conduced that the Intellectual progress of a child or a youth depends far

more upon his own Interest and persistence and determination to Improve his mind than It d"A upon the scrt of teachers he has. A poor teacher may even be a B.imtilus to greater offort upon the part of a student then otherwise and may tesult in his creator self-reliance and independence of. thought.. * Before 1 attempted to gain entrance Into college I had bi t one teacher who had ever progressed farther than the grammar school before beginning to teach, and while in college 1 was under the instrocJon of but one man who had ever earned In course a higher titan the bachelor’s degree, and yet 1 cannot feel that.,l was particularly bandic'pped. I tfiight be much wiser today than 1 now am if I had bad better teachers, but perhaps I should have veaker powers of independent thought.

SUCH IS LIFE—A Fair Question & Bv charles VjvX ) Ljw f 4/ FCOMBREAKIM’ IMr 7 - W \ m five -■ \ —) NIGHTS <1 J f II / ’J— a/

The drug store, located at the junction ot the Dixie and'Benjamin Franklin highways, has been visited night after night by the people of Findlay and the adjoining towns for Che last 20 years, and in all that time the townspeople assert they have never beard Mr. M< ser directly address his brojrher-in law. The toory ot their strange conduct causes many patrons to park their cars along the old time hitching rail log in the hope of seeing the two men and Mrs. Moser, who acts as a gobetween. Customers enter the store and carry out their trays to the waiting automobiles. Usually Mr. .Meyer takes care of the soda business with the assistance ot his sister. Mrs. Moser, while Mr. Moser is seen in the drug department. if any. are along business lines, and Mrs. Moser, a Intle old woman with snowwhite hair, carries the answers back and forth. it is said that an altercation twenty odd years ago over certain transactions caused a rift but did not break up the partnership nor the household arrangements. Mr. Meyer, a bachelor, has lived with his sister and brother-in-law for many years. Friends state that dur-, ing <‘i| those years they have left the store singly at closing time. Mrs. Moser starts first, and’ when she has rearched the Gorrell hotel her husband is seen coming out of the drug store. Shortly afterward his brother in-law loekg~tip the store. When confronted with this story In the drug store, where' 1 the two men have kept shop twenty three years out of their thirty four together. Mr. Meyer. who ; s red-haired and much younger than either ids sister or brother-in-law. said in a shy and embarrassed manner that he, too, had heard such talk. He admitted that maybe at one

Brown was in tosee me a few weeks ago concerning the scholastic progress of hiS son. The boy isn't getting on well and the father thinks that the cause of his son's m'tllocie accomplishment i.~ the fact that he Is being badly taught. The intellectual road is hard for him, and no one is making It as smooth and easy as he would like, and as he thinks should be done. The boy wants to be shown; he wants to be taken by the hand and led sympathetically through the confused mazes of education. He has no inclination to blaze his own frail, to find als own way. to climb unassisted CHAMPION SWIMMER r Marguerite Racier of Philadelphia outlasted a famous held of women endurance swimmers to win the 3’0.000 Canadian national marathon swim Toronto.

THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL.

Lights of New York

George, famous headwaiter at the Algonquin, came to New York from one of the happy isles of Greece, by way of Constantinople. George is acquainted with practically everyone Vvho enters his dining room, so when Frank Case, owner of the hotel, saw a man eating there one day whom be never had seen before, he asked George the customer’s name. George replied that he was Mr. Soandso. “What does be do?” demanded Mr. Case. “He writes books,” replied George. “What kind of books?” said Mr. Case. This stumped George, but only for a moment. “Just books.” he said, with a finality which closed the subject. • • • Frank Case was motoring in Hollywood. a while ago, and stopped to ask his way. “Just go up that road until you come to a house that hx»ks as if Eddie Foy lived in it and then lake the first left turn.” said the citizen who was directing him. “Did Eddie Foy ever live there?” asked Mr. Case.

time there were differences between the two. Hr became much more loquacious when asked about his discovery of the soda formula. On Mondays, when he -does hts mixing, ti e . back door is barricaded and the front dooi- watched- No one is permitted to see even so much as a stirring. “No one knows the formula except my sister.” he said, standing between glass cases and ceiling-high mahog any open shelves that date back to the early history of drug stores. “1 experimented and experimented twci. ty years ago and I perfected it. Twelve yean ago I became very 111. and during that time the store co.uM serve no chocolate sodas, because no one kaew the formula I was too sick to talk, but I wrote down the direc tions. so that my sister could carry on the work.” ' |

Joffre Monument to Be Comrades' Gift

Paris, France.— Marshal Jacques Cesare JofTre, victor over the onrushing Germans at the Marne river, refuses to have another statue erected in his honor unless it is financed by the soldiers he formerly comtnanded. A limit of one franc apiece, approxiover the obstacles which, lie in his in tellOctual path. Neither |trown nor •iis son assume an unusual point of view They have the general attitude that education should be made as simple and easy as possible. But that is not she way that either the mind or the body is trained. - The greatest scientist and the greatest teacher I lave ever known —one of the greatest in' this country and one whose name is familiarly known over the eiviliZed world, died a few months ago. He was a specialist in a half dozen fields when most men are quite contented to star in one. He could read and speak a half dozen languages, and though he was par excellence a scientist, he was versed in history and, philosophy and literature. “In no one of the various subjects which 1 have taught,” he said once.' "have 1 ever had one hour of formal teaching. 1 have worked things out for myself.” No one had ever made the road easy for him. lie was eager for knowledge. and he blazed his own trail. As I said, no one stands for good teaching more than I do. It is helpful. bat it isn’t essential if one Is really eager for an education. t®. U 39. Western Newsnaper Union.) 00000000000000000000000000 I Manitoba Bees Take House From a Family x Winnipeg.—Driven from up- Y stairs to downstairs and finally o struggling to maintain their x household.in. the kitchen, 11. Ban- o dy and family, who live on a § farm near Birtle, Man., are re- 0 covering from a week’s battle 6 with a swarm of bees. The bees flew in. makitg their a first stop on the roof. Soon they $ invaded the bedrooms, usurping o ■beds and dressers. $ The family were forced to 6 make their last stand in the 2 kitchen, when the bbes followed 0 them to the lower floor. X Realizing the bees’ propensl- Q ties for pursuit, the family then 2 retired into the open. Talling 0 Into the trap, the bees followed, $ and now the Bandy home is free 0 of bees. 6 CXMXJOtXXXXXXXHWXXXXXXXKKK) Ancient Chinese documents were sometimes signed by fingerprints impressed Into clay seals.

“No,” said the man, “it just looks as if he did.” Mr. Case followed directions and found* his way without difficulty. • • • James Montgomery Flagg was driving down Long Island to visit friends at East Hampton. He also lost bis way, but finally arrived, in a state of some indignation. ■ . . “They shoyld find some other name for these Long Island towns,” he said. "Hampton gets a little wearing. I’ve been in South Hampton, West Hampton, and Hampton Bays. Now I’m here in East Hampton. The fact is that I have visited all the Hamptons, except Ben Hampton and Walter Hampton.” • • • Most visitors to New York. Including the prince of Wales, manage at one time ot another to get to Long Island, which is a body of land entirely surrounded by history. That this history gnes further back than the formation of the United States is attested by the fact that the north end of the island was built by deposits along the front of rhe continental glacier Birds from the arctic and the tropics visit its shores. Indian tribes gave their names to the Islands towns. There is, for example. Montauk, Shinnecdck, Manhasset, Patchogue, Ca narsie—they sound iHe Scotch Indians —Setauket. which took its name from the Sealocot trihe. and towns derived from the Nessaquagues. There also are Dutch towns, such as Flathush, which originally was ano Brooklyn,, which once was Breucklen. Bushwifk. first settled by Swedes and Norwegians, once was Boswijck. Hempstead; the Hamptons; Hastings, Brookhaven and Oyster Bay. of course, were English. Other towns, such as Rockaway and Blue Pbint, gave their names to oysters. • • • Long Island always has been a great place for artists and writers. Take, for instance, the town of Bellport, named for that old sea Captain and ship builder, Thomas Bell. There, at various times have lived Mary Roberts Rinehart. Walter and Louise (’Josser Hale, James and May Wilson Prestop. P. G. Wodehouse. Heywood Broun. Ernest Lawson. William J. Glackens and Everett Shinn. Such

mutely four cents, is the maximum which any ex-service man can contribute. For some time there has been agitation fur construction of a monument to the savior ,of the Mat’ne at Rivesaltes. in the department of the ori-, enta.l Pyrenees, where the marshal was born seventy-eight years ago. M. Rene Mannaut, under secretary ot the interior, was charged to ask Marshal Joffre’s permission for erection of the statue in his home town. The old marshal smiled grimly ami told the' government agent be would consent only on . the condition that every rent of the money be collected by, voluntary subscription from the soldiers he commanded. He set the limit of each corftri but ion at one franc. His terms were accepted and already contributions of one franc are pouring ’.n from every province in France and from many corners of the world, because the marshal Included

Sometimes It Is easier to allow your-. self to bluffed than to raise a

Bi X

actors as Harry Warner and Ernest Lawford have resided there. Elmer Sperry, of gyroscopic fame, lived there. Bernard Baruch spent some time there. So did Arthur M. Hopkins. This well-known producer now has a summer home at Great Neck, where he can cast any play merely by calling the names of actors from the pofch of the golf club. Out toward the further end of the Island, at Easthamptori, you will find homes belonging to Irvin S,- Cobb, Ring Lardner, Percy Hammond, and Grantland Rice. Arthur William Brown has a place there this summer, and here at Easthampton was the house where John Drew lived for so many years. I used to sit on his porch with him while be told me stories of how, when he was young, he used to school horses to jump in the adjoining lot. <<6k 1930. Bell Syndlcate.* IMPORTANT OFFICIAL W r ' j Cggl-wnz JDr. Katherine S. Hoffman, as chief physician to the United States Treasury department, looks after the emergency medical needs of thousands of employees of the department Treasury officials say the sick leaves have decreased materially since she took over the work in April. Doctor Hoffman is a daughter of Brig. Gen. C. J. Symonds, commandant at Fort Bliss, Texas.

the allied soldiers in his stipulations. The monument is now being executed by the famous French artist. Maillard, and it is expected it will be dedicated before the end of the year. Big Family Proves Break for Bootlegger Lawrence, Mass. — Napoleon Gingrass had ’been fined SIOO for bootlegging. “Have you any children?” casually inquired the court. “Twentyone;’' smiled the defendant. “Make that fine $25.” ordered the Judge.

************************** * POTPOURRI ************************* * * A 16,000-Mile Migration | * Most birds, although not all. * * migrate from climate to climate * yearly. The record is said to be * * held by the golden plover, whose * breeding ground is the shores of * * the Arctic ocean. Each year it * * migrates 8,000 miles southward * * to the north coast of South * America, or an annual round trip * * journey of 16.000 miles. $ * <"£>. 1930. Western Newspaper Union.* *

Memories!

By WALTER TRUMBULL

WHY DON’T YOU TRY R,N so. mr& hiul? my CUSTOMERS SAY (T , S WONDERFU| _ f k Mrs. Hill took her grocer’s hint and gets whiter washes easily Trf so grateful to my grocer for getting me to try Rinso,” says Mrs. Hill. “How easy washday is now... why all I fio is soak and rinse! That saves mending, let me tell you! My clothes last much longer now. Rinso is just grand in our hard water; it gives such thick, soapy, lastingsuds.’* For dishwashing, too Rinso is the only soap you need —for the wash, for the dishes, for all cleaning. So economical; cup for cup it gives twice as much suds as light, puffed-up soaps. And no softener needed, even in hardest vaster. Wonderful in washers; the makers of 38 leading . , washers endorse Rinso. Ff jt sTFtI Safe for fin- I est linens. Get the BIG package. MILLIONS USE RINSO in tub, washer and dishpan Rich Bequest Refused A bequest said to consist of”1.0(M> acres in Mississippi and $9,000 >a cash as a reward for an act of kindness 24 years ago was refused by Mrs. Addie Kingston of Beaumont, Texas. She kept on working at her usual job in a mattress factory. “I am not entitled to it, and I will not accept it.” she told friends. .Mrs. Kingston befriended Mr. and Mrs. Henry Hendrix of Richburg. Miss., while visiting in that state in 1906 by doing chores around the house for them.

tired every; ' morning/ Get poisons qut of the system with Feen-a-mint, the Chewing Gum Laxative. Smaller doses effective when taken in this form. A modern, scientific, family laxative. Safe and mild. \ON THE GENUINE FOR CONSTIPATION Damage by Plant Disease , One and a half billion dollars annually is the average amount of the Injury plant diseases do in the United Seates each year, says Dr. R. J. Haskell, plant pathologist, of the Department of- Agriculture. In Canada the estimated annual losses average about 15,000,000 English pounds. „ - Chinese Wear Wool Many Chinese have abandoned silk clothes for wool, despite a campaign in China urging them to btiy more silk. * Young man, never will all the Interesting things Happen to you in this life that you sire expecting. BAYER ASPIRIN is always SAFE BEWARE OF IMITATIONS - —TUnless you see the name Bayer and the word genuine on the package as pictured above you can never be sure that you are taking the genuine Bayer Aspirin that thousands of physicians prescribe in their daily practice. The name Bayer means genuine Aspirin. It is your guarantee of purity—your protection against imitations. Millions of users have proved that it is safe. Genuine Bayer Aspirin promptly relieves: Headaches Neuritis Colds Neuralgia Sore Throat • Lumbago Rheumatism Toothache No harmful after-effects follow its u I use. It does not depress the heart. Aspirin is the trade-mark, of Bayer manufacture of monoaceticacidesttf of salicylkadd.