The Syracuse Journal, Volume 24, Number 40, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 28 January 1932 — Page 7

( HEUO, JEANFcOMkS jnSn J SEE HOW UWELY I ■F **MWZ AND WH,TE MV / f' <</ WASH Is. I TOOK \ J* J L4-S NOOR ADVICE— 1 J&B nkwa , m using I /VJHL I VUh. R|NSO J So glad she changed to this "no-work” soap! 1 SIMPLY can't getovet it! I didn't scrub at all, Jean—nor boil either—yet look •t this wash. Whitest 1 ever saw! I wish you had told me about Rinso long •go; I never knew that suds could make such a difference.** So easy on clothes! Rinso inks out dirt —saves clothes from being scrubbed threadbare. Its suds are thick, lasting—even in hardest water. Rinso gives twice as much suds, cup for cup, as lightweight, puffed-up soaps* Wonderful suds in washers, too; t~e makers of 40 ‘ famouswashers \ recommend it And how touy Zs * / f 1 A Yf/■». its rich suds //i VM3NWB/ makedahwash* /■MflgHMmw jw ing! Get the Jv»/ BIG package. MILLIONS USE RINSO in tub, washer and dishpan Bees Delayed Firemen Bevs proved more troublesome than Barnes to Volunteer fire fighters of Silver Springs, D. C. Speeding to a fire the volunteers met a bee swarm. The bees stung, the truck stopped and the firemen fought. When they finally reached the fire they found it under control., RESTFUL SLEEP for FRETFUL, FEVERISH CHILO — Wilh Castana's regulation When your child tosses and cries out in his sleep, it means he is not comfortable. Very often the trouble Is that poisonous waste matter is not being carried oft as It should be. Bowels need help—mild, gentle help —but effective. Just the kind Castoria gives. Castorla is a pure vege- ’ table preparation made sjiecially for children's ailments. It contains no harsh, harmful* drugs, no narcotics. Don't let your child's rest —and your own —be Interrupted. A prompt dose of Castorla will urge stubborn little bowels to act Then relaxed comfort and restful sleep! Genuine Castorla always has the name: Wlmmb Ho*. Flash Fie —When Is your birthday? She—When will It be most convenient for you? How to breathe freely all night Use this own—keeps aostrils opeo—Catarrh foes away Now you can breathe freely all day and sleep comfortably with mouth closed all night, no hacking, do choking. no fighting for breath. Just put a —. little ELY'S CREAM BALM up each / nostril and you get instant relief that c/ lasts for 10 hours. Head colds and Catarrhal troubles vanish. This fragrant antiseptic is best because it penetrates and clears out eXery air passage in the head and soothe* the inflamed or swollen mucous membrane. Try it WORKS LIKE A CHARM! AH druggists sell it Qeery ""J **l say that the world owes me • Bring.** “How are collections?” e— -'3 pain while it heals; because it penetrates into the wound. If you have Pain in Back, Cold in Head, Cough, Sore Throat, Earache, Piles or know of a wound on man OC beast that will not heal, • try ZMO-ODL 35< of Dr«r Storaa | B you have ww used ZMO-OIL we wffi (Mfr msß ytra a saw staple botda, Writs M. R. ZAE6EL A CO. •MBMtWkkastb «At*OY««L WB.

Rumanian Army Spy b Degraded I - Z. jftr ' I a-K' ? LS Maj. George Varzaru (left), a Rumanian officer, watching with stolid features as Colonel Pella, commandant of the army barracks at Malmalson. near Bucharest, breaks his sword over his knee. Varzaru and four army comrades were degraded from the army and sentenced to banishment from Rumania for life for espionage. The entire corps of soldiers witnessed the degradation.

BIG ENGINEERING PROJECTS OF 1931

Many Changes in Commercial Geography of World. Washington—lmportant engineering projects of 1931 wrought many changes in the commercial geography of the world, according fib a bulletin from the National Geographic society reviewing the outstanding construction accomplishments of the year. "The year saw" the greatest highway construction program In the history of the United States,” says the bulletin, "bi*cause of a liberal expenditure: policy by federal, state and local goy- • rpments. More federal aid were under construction at a cost of over a third of a billion dollars. “Cuba contributed the most spectacular single highway project of the year when in February she threw open (for use the 700-mile paved motor road extending from end to end of the island. "At Washington, the United States government brought almost to completion a model modern automobile road, built in preparation for the bi-centen-nlal celebration of the birth of George Washington. It Is the Mount Vernon Memorial highwa,. extending from the

ODD THINGS AND NEW—By Lame Bode ■ I x Sign of A b SANTA UhUS/ mMH in iooks -and be CAU Ttr/tro fives lUWilp SAM HELLER- -notthe notth poleHAMSEZZER-' ' — fMUEO IHKKM,tLL OF fRWXfS XIRKE--in Copenhagen- no miles YO A SfAIRCASe OH OUTSIDE - . J - 9 MILES AIMY / (WNV Svrvlcv.)

Hot mtsr to BIT HOUSEWIFE

To remove machine oil from linen, rub It with a little lard, let It stand until the stain disappears, then wash it in warm water and soap. • • • To preyent the contents' of a casserole baking too quickly, put a plecejrf oiled paper under the cover before putting the casserole Into the oven. • • • A few drops of ammonia put into each quart of water with which house plants are watered will Improve the color of the foliage and increase the growth. • . • • A To warm over a fruit ppdding whichhas already been steamed put it into

SUCH IS LIFE—A Nasty ’ By Charles Sughroe ought to §lns2E truck go f mom! WE’rf jg \ 6 ®JL wiAAte TW aaaxi YW s the n&m „M. 1 <■ >ackshat/1 jffliy r§festi “is <-(a 7 Mh W w<(® sah >23* <> ■ * > ■ ■ ■ ■ ’. :. ... .. .' . .i- , . / .:.. ..... . * .

National Capital to the home of the first President "The Mount Vernon roadway is wide enough for four lanes of traffic, and Is to have on each side parked strips of lawn, flower beds and shrubs. No road however unimportant Is permitted to cross the highway •blind.’ The least important roads have staggered crossings. Others must -cross between safety islands. The hnportant cross roads are carried over the highway on ornamental viaducts. "The most notable engineering event of the year was the completion in October of the* George Washington Memorial bridge across the Hudson river between New Jersey and Manhattan island. This bridge with a span of 3,500 feet Is the longest suspension bridge in the world. 6nlv a few weekjr later, the near-by Kill Van Kull bridge between New Jersey and Staten island was completed, the longes. steel arch bridge in the world. Its length. 1.652 feet, .one inch, exceeds by two feet, one inch the length of the arch in the Sydney Harbor bridge, Australia, also virtually completed in 1931. "In Africa, a new combined highway and railway bridge was put Into operation in Uganda across the Nile near the river's point of issue from Lake

the top part of a double boiler and set it in boiling water for a half-hour. use ■ If you like maple sirup use it instead of sugar to sweeten whipped cream. ?aris Remain* 3rd City; Population 3,783,000 Paris.—Greater Paris, with its suburbs, has a population of 3.783.000, official census figures showed. , The population within the walled fortifications I. 2,891.000. Marseilles la second with a population of 800,881 and Lyons third with 579.763. Paris thus retains her place as third dty in the world, doming after London and New York. In the 1930 census. Chicago showed a population of 3376,438. closely rivalling Paris. the concessions of the weak are the concessions of fear.—Burke.

THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL.

DREAM OF HIDDEN GOLD COMES TRUE

One of Most Dramatic Stories of Lost Riches. Mexico City.—Twenty years ago. a German dreamed of a hoard of hidden gold. Now he has found a tunnel which he believes will lead him to the treasure of a long-dead king. .« The scene of this is In the hinterland of Mexico, and the story is one of the most dramatic in the annals of lost riches. Twenty years ago Ernesto Loeck was a rising business man in the German town of Dusseldorf. He was then just turned forty, ard his diligence and acument were enabling him to put by what promised to be a handsome little competence. | About a year after his wife died he had a vivid and remarkable dream. The scene was the crest of a high mountain, and along a narrow track wound a long line of light-skinned and scantily clad Indians. They marched in single file, and on the shoulders of each was borne a roughly made hide sack —a sack containing gold. The carriers seemed to disappear

Qabby Qertie

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“Even a shoe clerk may marry an heiress if he gives her the right sighs.”

Victoria. As a result of this completion, the first railway train entered one of the leading cities of Uganda. “The outstanding canal completion of the year was that of the New Welland canal in Canada between Port Colborne on Lake Erie and Port Weller on Lake Ontario. At one point the Welland river is siphoned under the canaL “In November the Panama canal was temporarily closed by the first major landslide of the year. The slide was quickly cleared away. "Work was begun on the huge Hoover dam project on the Colorado river near Las Vegas, Nev. Numerous dams were completed, including a waterworks dam near Calgary, Can. ; the Bagnall dam on the Osage in Missouri; the Saluda dam near Columbia, S. C., and the Tijunga dam, near Los Angeles. “Important railway construction probably led all other engineering activities in wide distribution throughout the world. Os great significance was the building of a railway section in Belgian Congo which made it possible for the first time for passengers and freight to move by rail across Africa from Lobito on the Atlantic to Beira on the Indian ocean. The line opened up rich copper mine areas in Katanga. Belgian Congo, and in northern Rhodesia. “One of the most interesting bits of railway building was in the Bermuda islands, where a line .20 miles long was opened to traffic.. It Is the first railway to be built In this old British colony. Legislation heretofore prohibited railways in these islands. “In the Malay peninsula, a railway was opened along the east coast, establishing com nunication between Singapore and the border of Slam's long southern tail. “Os immediate economic Interest was the opening for grain shipments for the first season of the railway

Skater* Training

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Under the able direction of Bill Taylor, veteran coach of speed skaters, the United States Olympic speedsters

into the heart of the mountain, and watching them was a tall man of noble aspect Just as the dream faded there seemed to appear written on his brow in letters of fire the word Calzontzin. The dream was so vivid and made so great an impression on Loeck that he began to wonder whether history had any record of a man named Calzontzin. A long search revealed that it had. There was a Tarascan king of that name who was ruling in a part of Mexico some 400 years ago, and who had vanished with gold worth $30,000,000. Now, after 20 years of search, Loeck has found on the summit of La Bates de Oro a narrow underground passage’ He is confident that that tunnel will lead him to the hid? fien gold.

from Canada's western wheat region to Churchill on Hudson bay. Os geographic interest, with economic results to follow later, was the virtual completion of a railway through northern Ontario to the southern extremity of Hudson Bay at Moose Factory. "Rails were pushed ahead steadily, adding to the world’s railway mileage in such widely scattered regions as Finland. Brazil, Turkey, the Philippines. Nova Scotia. Argentina, Algeria, Colombia, Manchuria, Japan and Ecuador. "In the United States an Important link was built in southwestern Pennsylvania ; a cutoff from the southwest comer of Kansas into New Mexico; in the Texas ‘Panhandle*; in northern California, and in a number of other Western states. A short, but important line was built in southern Nevada, connecting the site of the Hoover dam with existing railways. ( "In the Netherlands, the first ‘polder’ of the vast Zuyder Zee reclamation project was put into use. These 33,000 acres were reclaimed from the seajfter remaining submerged since 12847’

;**;-*;—;—,**.**i—c**t**i-*.-*i- , i*’.*'.-*.**.**."***.**."-"-* POTPOURRI f ■ . *f

Emery Dust r Emery, which has for centuries been used for polishing gems, stones and metals, is found In large boulder-like masses. It Is an impure corundum composed chiefly of aluminum and quartz. It will not melt and acids will not act on it. In crushed form it is put on hands for attachment to polishing machines. (©. 1932. Western Newspaper Union. 3

Latest for Milady w Jr' 5 1 ?rHMl":

The very latest for milady is ' this creation of ribbon-striped black net, posed over tea rose satin, matching the net in bertha. It Is featured with stiffened ruffles at the skirt bottom.

are doing some very serious training on the ice at Speculator, N. Y. Two of them are shown doing a little trick work, Eddie Murphy skating through the legs of Burt Taylor. Old Bible Hold* Civil War Vet** Death Message Pittsburgh, Pa.—A strange message, almost seventy years old, is in the possession of Harry C. Wood. Wood found a small, hand-carved Bible containing the message, packed away in a trunk in the attic. It belonged to William McCutcheon, a cousin, who enlisted in the Civil war. With it were a diary of 1863, a penknife. a picture of the youth, and letters to bis mother. It was a las* message to his mother, in event he never returned. A letter, found with it told of its existence, and told the mother that Nit was not to be opened unless be were killed. / I

Arms Meet Delegate

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Dr. Mary Emma Woolley, president of Mount Holyoke college, who has been appointed by President Hoover to be a member of the United States delegation at the disarmament conference in Geneva.

* * t POVERTY AND J OLD AGE * • * * By THOMAS ARKLE CLARK * * Emeritus Dean of Men, * * University of Illinois. * * • » *

Nancy was just telling me today that Brewster had gone into an old

folks’ home. It gave me a shock. We hgve known Brewster for a great many years. He was a young man when we were children—a prosperous yfiung man, too, it seemed to me then. At least he had a good salary, he dressed well, he lived comfortably, and he spent money freely.

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It was not that he was lazy or incompetent. Hard work did not daunt him. Responsibility did not weigh heavily upon him. He was a real force in the firm with which he was connected for forty years or more, and as time went pn fie rose to one of the best positions in the organization. Brewster's weakness was that he gave no thought to the future. Thrift he did not know the meaning of. He spent his money as freely as it came to him. The 'more he made the more easily it seemed to slip out of his fingers. His more thrifty friends used to say to him, “Brewster, what are you going to do when you get old? You won’t be able to earn as much then as you do now, and you won’t like living on a less elegant scale than you now do.” “Oh, I’ve always been lucky,” he said. “Some one will take care of me. Maybe I won’t ever get old. Anyway, I’m going to begin to save one of these days.” No matter how small his income is every one can save a little, and he who Saves regularly and intelligently will not have, as Brewster has, an improvident old age. . (©. Newspaper Union.) Forest Highway Building Provides Work for Idle Harrisburg. Pa. —Forest road building is helping residents tn remote mountain settlements, most of whom depend on state forest work for a livelihood. according -to Lewis E. Staley, secretary of .the state department of forests and waters. In co-opeffiffin with the state highway depafffl'Cnt. the department of forests and waters is pushing new road construction in state forests. Nineteen new road projects are un-j der way now, with 3GO men at work. With completion of these projects, 75 miles of new forest road and two rebuilt 40-foot span bridges will -be available f<f use. McCutcheon carved the Bible and hollowed it out before he went away. The message was placed inside, and the opening sealed. But be returned within a year. Five years later, in 1868, he died. His mother, who was ill at the time, never opened the Bible. She died soon afterward. The Bible was put awgy and forgotten until Wood found it. Now Wood is undecided whether he should open it.

:■ When a young man makes the mistake of marrying too B^-—young. It is one of the mistakes he never repeats. The sunrise has never failed us yet

LOOKJUT! Counterfeit Aspirin! Thousands of boxes of counterfeit aspirin have been put on the market. Watch out. Take no chances and flatly refuse to accept any box not marked “Genuine Bayer Aspirin.” Don’t put any tablet not marked “Bayer” in your stomach. Tell your family and your friends of this. Refuse any preparation offered you as the “same” or “like” Genuine Bayer Aspirin. Demand and accept only this boa, thia “Bayer” marked tablet DORS NOT HARM THE HEART

Traveling Laboratory A traveling entomological laboratory for the department of agriculture in Tanganyika is undor construction at Glasgow. Tiirn motor laboratory will be used specifically for malarial investigation. The Interior measures ten feet by six feet and five windows are fitted—two on 'each side and one on the door, which is at the rear. The windows, louvres and other openings are covered with copper gauze on the inside to render them proof against the dangerous tsetse fly. The van is also fitted with a special electrical plant '

Harold’s Mother Knew Answer

“1 “Yes, sir, lam certainly proud Os my I little boy," says Mrs. | H. M. Smith, 421 Topeka Ave., Topeka, Kansas. “He’s five and weighs fifty-sev- ’ en pounds. He’s the . picture of health as

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you can see, and I feel like he’ll always be that way’ as long as I can get California Fig Syrup. I have used it with him ever sjnce he ; was a year old. I knew w’hat to give him ‘ for his colds and his feverish, upset spells because Mother used California Fig Syrup with all of us as children. I have used it freely with my boy and he loves it. It always fixes him up, quick.” In many, homes, like this, the third and fourth generations are using pure, wholesome California Fig Syrup because it has never failed to do what is expected of it. -Nothing so quickly and thoroughly purges a child’s system of the souring waste which keeps him cross, feffer/sh, headachy, half’sick, with coated tongue, bad breath and no appe- * titeor energy as long as it is allowed” to remain in the little stomach and bowels. Fig Syrup gives tone and strength to these organs so they continue to act as Nature intends them to do, and helps build up and strengthen weak, pale and underweight, children. Over four million bottles used a year shows its popularity. the genuine, 'endorsed by physicians for <SO yedrs, always bears the word’“California.” Optimistic Doll One of the most popular novelties., displayed at the Leipzig fair last fall was a fortune-telling doll which announced hopeful prophecies of Germany’s future. An ingenious device made it possible for the doll to display cards announcing short but * pertinents opinions in a highly iop- • tlmistic spirit. The doll was named Madame Lenorjnand, after the famous fortune-teller.

Drink Away I that heavy, drowsy feeling! When constipation signals. I bring back the flush of health I to your face by flushing the bowels thoroughly. A cup or two | ofGarfieldTeawillcleanseaway 1 I unhealthy, stagnant waste, reI new the feeling ofenergyandpep I alt tht ntamt druggilt L |garfield tea| ■ Parachutes for Airplanes Passengers from falling cabin airplanes will have very little about which to worry in the future, according to Modern Mechanics and Inventions Magazine. A new extra large parachute, attached to the cabin which will be fastened by temporary staysAwill carry the passengers to safety without their having to leave the cabin. Pass enough compliments and you won’t be a bore anywhere. Stiff, Aching,[ O ore - Get quick relief this simple way \ Here’s the way to relieve painful lumbago llklliSk; ’ w ’ t h° ut blistering or burning. Rub on good old St Jacobs Oil. Quickly it draws out inflammation and pain. Wonderful relief Comes - .in a minute I St Jacobs Oil is just the remedy for aches and pains of Rheumatism, Neuritis, Lumbago, Backache, Neuralgia and sore, swollen Joints. Get a small bottle from your druggist W. N. U, CHICAGO, NO. 4-1932 .1 , ' ' : ■ — i » L