The Syracuse Journal, Volume 29, Number 29, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 5 November 1936 — Page 2
ifowehoM ®\ ®Ques//OM\ A stick of wax and a brush of oil will do much to take the curse off furniture scratches. The wax will fill in the scars and the oil will darken the wax. • • • Candied ginger, diced and combined with chilled fruits makes a tasty cocktail. *• • • When making bread and butter pudding, sprinkle each slice of bread with grated coconut instead of currants, and strew some on the top. This will make a change from the ordinary pudding and will be found very tasty. • • • To make chiffonade dressing mix one tablespoon chopped - onion, two tablespoons chopped cooked beets, two tablespoons chopped sweet pickles and one hard-cooked egg, diced, to onehalf cup of French dressing. This dressing is tasty to serve on head lettuce or diced vegetable salads. • • • Black stockings will not lose their color in the wash if they are soaked for several hours in warm soapsuds to which a little turpentine has been added. • • • When you are basting roast beef, a tablespoon of brown or white sugar added to the gravy improves the flavor and color. Salt should never be added to Stews, soups and boiled meats until after they are cooked. If put in at first it toughens the fiber of the meat and takes out the juices. • • • Bits of leftover jelly are good used for stuffing baked fruits, topping baked or steamed pudding or spreading over chops or roasts Just before serving. « B«U Syndicate—WNU Sarrka. To Ease a Headache Fast Get Real Quick-Acting, __ Quick-DiuoMng Bayer Aspirin Sm How CSp Genutoe Boyer Tabietr Work * V/ !a S MMria hr ata* B-R watch. • I BATES tahtet rfls X 4 ■ad to ta wark. Ursa •til H Bayer Awhte tablet ta- 111 te • CtaMß «C water. Sr 111 . £3 th* tfaae k Uta iba bet- 111 f jl teea at the gtaae k to Us <■ •elenr iitaj. What | I * I is FMt Virtually 1/a Tablet Now If you suffer from headaches what you want is quick relief. Genuine Barer Aspirin tablets give quick relief, for one reason, because they dissolve or disintegrate almost instantly they touch moisture. (Note illustration above.) Hence —when you take a real Bayer Aspirin tablet it starts to dissolve almost as quickly as you swallow it. And thus is ready to start working almost instantly ... headaches, neuralgia and neuritis pains start easing almost at once. That's why millions never ask for aspirin by the name aspirin alone when they buy, but always say “BAYER ASPIRIN” and sea that they get it Try it. You’ll say it’s marvelous. •nuHSC ms a NMMivrra ' Mow ran nor nance csmssT* Time to Weigh Words Our deeper thoughts are beat when written; hardly ever as impressive when spoken. A Three Days’ Cough Is Your Danger Signal No matter bow many medicines you have tried for your cough. Chest cold or bronchial trrttotWL you can get relief now with Crt&nulzton. Serious trouble may be brewing and you cannot afford to take a chance with anything tern than Creomulaton. which goes right to the seek of the trouble to aid nature to soothe and heal the inflamed membranes as the germ-laden phlegm is loosened and expelled. Bven u outer remedies nave failed, don’t be discouraged, your druggist is authorised to guarantee Creomulston and to refund yonr money if you are not satisfied with results from the very first bottle. Ost Creotxmlsion right now. UdvJ BACKACHES MOTHERHOOD wmmHmi btforo Wiky f I PWMB MmlmO m Wco4l ' ntomltotoS.lto2btoS.OT?wsjff L Orw s ■atoeemtotoyvasto inters. am Wtt to* lll » ' , , mb mm |KEyfrom surface oorwrtxws J not U t emtoed. jj |i|gy Mite okii cMuhmt mMH 'W, I
. . - . - BRISBANE THIS WEEK Two March Side by Side Once AU Walked in 75 Years, Much Done Another Milton Needed Germany and Italy, meaning Hitler and Mussolini, are said to be working together closel y- They are I to control Austria, and Hitler’s share in the control might not please that in- ~ 4 tensely Catholic I country too well. Germany’s influ- :*' ■ . crease along the Danube. Germany and Italy combining make I that possible, —- With nobody 1HI„ Brtokaa* clined fight about it. In return for recognizing Italian sovereignty in Ethiopia Hitler is to have important Ethiopian concessions. A million years ago, when our ancestors went out seeking some- , thing to eat, preferably some fee- i ble human being easily killed, ev- | erybody walked. Now nearly everybody rides. Across George Washington bridge over the Hudson river, opened five years ago, about 100,000,000 human beings have crossed in 31,000,000 automobiles, while , fewer than 1,000,000 have crossed on ; foot Busses alone carried 11,638,000 over the bridge. How rapidly progress moves oupe it starts! Seventy-five years agb, both sides of our country were com. nected by telegraph for the first time. Now men talk around the world by radio. Seventy-five years ago they only talked across the continent, now they fly the continent and orf&beyond, across the Pacific ocean. ™ Those hostile to new ideas might remember that a little more than seventy-five years ago men were beaten for re-election to congress because, as the voters put it, “they were foolish enough to vote money j to experiment talking over wires.” ’ They were defeated for willing- ; ness to have the government try j out Morse’s electriq telegraph idea. Berlin reports that German booksellers must sell, and Germans must read, only books that the govern- , ment thinks they ought to sell and read. The public will be compelled ; with “loving force” to read what is ' good for them. That takes Germany back to the , Seventeenth century, when the English government decided that Englishmen must read only what the government thought was good for them. All books must be submitted and wait for approval before printing. Along came a man named John Milton with his book the Areopagetica, printed by him without anybody's permission, denouncing an infamous law that would control men's minds and freedom of thought That settled it; the law died. Somebody will kill It in Germany, in time. In the Spanish civil war, hostages have been seized, on both sides, including many women, and are held with this threat: “If you kill hostages taken from my side, I'll kill yours.” , . England and other countries almost tearfully are begging both sides in Spain to exchange hostages instead of murdering them; the British government officially expresses the fear that women “are in danger of wholesale massacre." Nice civilization, is it not?” Dr. Bakst, young teacher of mathematics at Columbia university, thinks he has a sure formula for winning on horse races; “he tried it and won, 1,000 times, not with money, just mentally.” Anybody can win mentally, they do it constantly at Monte Carlo and elsewhere, but nobody can win money, except accidentally — never in the long run. A brave truck driver, name unknown, saw a lady with a difficult name, Mrs. Anastasia Adiusxkie* wics. hanging from the ledge of a second story in Jersey City. Rushing to help, he caught her in his arms as she fell, then left, granting no praise. He makes up for many that do not give their seats to ladies in street cars. An eighteen-year-old girl, alone and in agony, gave birth to a child; and, according to police, immediately killed it, dropping it from a roof. A jury convicted her of manslaughter, and the judge let her go on probation; she must report once a month to prove that At is behaving. Four jurors that helped convict her told the judge they regretted their verdict. Every mother knows that the unfortunate girl, after her horrible experience and solitary agony, was at least as nearly insane, as any sucXwhiocukx soldier* • KM* Fkatwe* BytStolt, Uto> WM U Strvica, Cote Saw ' Cole slaw is a transliteration of kohl salat, a German term that is correctly ' translated as cabbage salad. Cote is pronoumced exactly like kohl; and slaw closely apprexiISIRteH Ths ASOMHbCMO bonw cole slaw is among the Pennsylvania Germans* Baß and Soekat JsteA ; The hip joint is a ban and nckat joint between the bead <rf the femur
GAY FEATHERS DON’T ALWAYS WIN MATE Expert Gives Some Facta on Bird Courtship. New York. — Are male birds, which are the most brilliantly colored and adorned the most successful in obtaining mates? In the mating contest, does the female bird select the male of brightest plunkage? Darwin advanced this idea in his theory of sexual selection, but it has been widely criticized. If it is not the resplendent appearance of the male that decides the female bird in her choice of a mate, what is it! Mr. H. N. Southern, in "Natural History" published by the American museum, makes some interesting observations on this question. “While there is no doubt that sex- ■ ual selection can actually be observed in operation in some cases, there are a number of difficulties I that arise. Many instances are recorded of cock birds with poor I plumage getting mates while more ' brightly colored competitors are j condemned to bachelorhood. The hen in many cases seems quite oblivious of the display that is going on and seems pointedly to look the 1 other way. This is curious if the stimulation is by a visual image. Answer a Compromise. "As with most zoological controversies the correct answer seems to be a compromise, an acceptance of the fact that sexual selection has been seen to occur with the proviso that many other factors may be equally if not more important.” Mr. Southern tells of a visit to the Shetland islands, at the extreme : north of the British Isles, where he : had the good fortune to make some close-up observations of bird courtship. The birds on these barren islands were two species of skua, ''"the great skua being called bonxie by the Shetlanders. “In making a survey of one small island," he says, “we noticed that the bonxies tended to collect upon one particular ridge. We decided j to watch what was going on at this particular ‘club,’ and after a few hours we found that events were so interesting that we put up a ‘hide’ and managed to take some photographs of the proceedings. “The books informed us that the I courtship of the bonxie consisted of mutual wing-raising by both sexes, i displaying the white webs of the proximal part of the primaries and flashing them as a sort of surprise, like as do many birds with hidden patches of color in their plumage. What puzzled us was that this could be seen going on all over the nesting colony, and did not appear to j have any special courtship signifl- ; cance. It was used for greeting, . for remonstrance when one bird in- ' truded into the territory of another, and as a general expression of excitement or self-assertion.” Changes Taeties. Returning to the ridge, Mr. Southern found several of the bonxies sitting in obviouS pairs. “One of these especially," he says, “was very active* the female brooding an imaginary nest with great solicitude, while the male stood by her and raised his wings at the slightest provocation. Soon she stood up and the two birds stood breast to breast calling and wing-raising. This happened several times and fizzled out, but finally the male started to adopt entirely different tactics; he puffed out his neck feathers until they looked twice the normal thickness, and strutted with head in the air in front of the female. Up and down he went in a kind of sentry-go, until the hen who was standing up and calling reciprocally at first finally sat down and mating was accomplished. On several occasions we saw this procedure end with the refusal of the fem ale to take part and the male was driven off.” Chicago Zoo Sets Mark in Acquiring of Animals Chicago.—The Chicago Zoological park at Brookfield set a new pace in acquiring animals during the period beginning June 1, according to Robert Bean, assistant director and curator of animals at the zoo. Figures compiled for the board of directors by Mr. Bean showed that 343 mammals, 103 reptiles, and ST birds were received at the zoo in that period. “Electric Chair” Devised for Fowl San Francisco.—An “electric chair" for chickens, turkeys, geese and squabs has been invented by two San Francisco technicians and is being subjected to tests here. The inventors are confident that it will revolutionize the preparation of birds for market. With the new machines, which have a voltage of from 1,000 to 1,500 volts, according to the size of the chicken or turkey, the legs of each bird are clamped on a moving belt Then a damp reaches out, seizes the fowl’s I head and presses it against an electrode with a minimum Qg 1,000 volts. A more humane and wvmitqry system of preparing poultry for the-market is the goal of the mventors. Burying Our Sorrows > ‘YVe seek to hide our sorrovrs, . said Hi Ho, the sage of Chinatown, "yet when they are buried they rems tip like seeds bear Moescoas of beautiful memories among ; the weeds of vain regret” The Jebs Mair Traß The John Muir Trail is in the High Sierras in California. This trail was ■ and explorer, bora fat Scotland in
SYRACUSE JOURNAL
IMPROVED’ 558 ’ 53 ' 3 * UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL SUNDAY I chool. Lesson • Western Kswaixpsr Union. Lesson for November 8 THE CHRISTIAN WARFARE LESSON TEXT - Acta »:S-U. IM»*. Ephesians 8:13.so GOLDEN TEXT—Be strong tn the Lord, and ta the power of his might Eph. 4:10. PRIMARY TOPIC-When Paul Preached ta a Schoolhouse. JUNIOR TOPIC—In a Schoolhouse ta Kphg»g>jie INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR TOPIC —Weapons of the Christian Soldier. YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADULT TOPIC —The Gospel Facing the Forces of Evil. War, war! The whole world is war-conscious in our day. Nations are watching one another with suspicion, and in the meantime arming themselves for conflict. Hatred and suspicion are rife, and as long as sin rules the hearts of men we long in vain for peace, which cannot come until that day when the Prince of Peace himself shall reign. Yet every Christian hopes and works for the peaceful solution of the nations’ problems. Right thinking men do not want war between the peoples of the earth. But there is one warfare that we do seek to foster and promote. We encourage it, and as Christians make a holy resolve to battle to the end. That is the warfare against Satan and his hosts. As long as he rules in the hearts of men, and sin and wickedness are here, we say, “Fight on, my soul.” t Christian life and service are presented in Scripture as a fight, and we do well to learn the methods and the weapons of this great spiritual conflict, not stressing a belligerent note of strife against one another, and particularly not between the divisions of God’sP army in the earth, but standing shoulder to shoulder in the battle against the Evil One. Our lesson presents a picture of L The Lard’s Warrior (Acts 19:-8-12). Paul, who is now on his third missionary journey, comes again to Ephesus, the leading city of Asia Minor, and the center of the worship of the heathen goddess, Diana. He tarries there for about three years. Like a good tactician he began ids campaign at a strategic point, the synagogue. He brought forward his God-given weapons, “reasoning and persuading." Some he won, others disbelieved — the sad fact which even this greatest of all preachers had to meet. God attested his work by miracles. The soldier of the Lord does not go into battle alone. Nor does he fight in his own power. God gave him IL A Mighty Conquest (w. 1820). When a man’s profession of faith in Christ carries with it an open forsaking of his confessed misdeeds —a true change of life as well as a declaration of belief—there has been real dealing with God. Notice, that they burned the bad books found in their homes, even though they were valued at thousands of dollars. Christian, how many books or magazines are there in your home now that minister only to the lowest in your nature? Oh, yes, they may be “literature,” they may be in beautiful bindings; you may even read them “in the original,” and regard the reading as cultural. But if they are bad books, are you ready to follow the Ephesians in destroying them? Finally we have from Paul's letter to the Ephesians the glorious presentation of the Christian’s HI. God-Given Weapons (Eph. 6:13-X)). This is a familiar, but noneWhe less rich and instructive, passage. We have space to note only that there are (1) five weapons of defense; namely, the girdle of truth, the breastplate of righteousness, the shoes of peace, the shield of faith, and the helmet of salvation, and (2) one mighty weapon of offense, the sword of the Spirit—the Word of God. A glorious and impenetrable armor and equipment for battle! But it will do us not the slightest good unless we obey Paul’s admonition and put it on. Christian, are you wearing and using "the whole armor at God”? Fight the Good fight "But out yonder in the wide forest, who knows what storms are raving tonight in the hearts of men, though all the woods are still? Who knows what haunts of wrath and cruelty and fear are closed tonight against the advent of the Prince of Peace? And shall I tell you what religion means to those who are called and chosen to dare and to fight, and do conquer the world for Christ? It means to launch out into the deep. It means to go against the strongholds of the adversary. It means to struggle to win an entrance for their Master everywhere. A Golden Link” A mother’s love is indeed the golden link that binds youth to age. and be is stffl but a jchfld, however time may have furrowed his cheek, or silvered his brow, who can yet recall with a softened heart, the fond devotion, or the gentte chidings, erf the best friend that God •ver gives us. Acts That Bring BesMfe No act falls fruitless; none can teU how vast ita power may be; nor what rosulta, enfrdded. dwell within it silently.—Bulwer. Keep 4ose*t!rL Beet Friend, and He will refresh and cheer thee. —Spurjecn.
Wives, Know Yourselves!-— ’Accurate Analysis Will Do Much to Overcome Difficulty in Wedded Life
SPEAKING on the question of trial marriages, a well known vTiter said, “There should be no need for trial when two people know their own abilities and have measured themselves accurately. Two people who understand themselves will never, I believe, have any difficulty living happily together after marriage.” That is a new slant on the question of success in marriage, supplements a woman writer of national fame. Not “Know thy husband" —or “wife," but “know thyself!” And, come to think of it, isn’t most of the discontent and dissatisfaction in marriage traceable to ideas of ourselves—that may be misconceptions, no less than our illusions about the other person? How many women’s dissatisfaction with their hiisband has as its source the thought of all they gave up to marry him, all they “might have had” if they had married a certain other man? How many women’s discontent with the role of wife and mother springs from the thought of how much more fascinating pastimes they might have had if they had followed that career? How many girl’s impossible expectations of a fulltime lover and Prince Charming originates in an exaggerated notion of their own devastating beauty and charm? If all discontented wives would look deeply unto themselves, measure themselves, stop fooling themselves, many might discover that the other man they might have married is a self-nurtured illusion; that the career of their dreams is not a soft snap and a joy forever; but a grueling, exhausting job which might have worn them out if they had qualified for it, which they probably would have been unable to do; that they themselves are neither devastating beauties nor always charming, but women who are The Greatest Man THE greatest man is he who chooses the right with the most invincible resolution; who resists the sorest temptation from within and without; who bears the heaviest burdens cheerfully; who is calmest in storms, and most fearless under menaces and frowns, whose reliance on truth, and virtue, and God, is most unfaltering. —William Ellery Channing. A man may be wrecked as is a ship. Conscience is an anchor. Terrible it is, but true, that like the anchor conscience may be carried away.
| 808 JOIN? THE RANGER?/
Bvoull JUSTS A&OOD NI6HTS 1 Pfri&iTyrs HEAD woulp 2 'Pfr I | |||gfKsjy%. aMTO I T' rml|>'W|Hl I vwx»rr?>fe* “" I Jo i F '|U- '***' E-a mi 1 • O* CUUMB* children ahradd never drink cofifen. IjoPAYS lAtck ’ If I'M CrrtfiNG VOU U F 1 » 6 ®® <* c “ rt sUep ««mdly.-try Pwtum. WOtfFW TWEZfI« fIfEKL B * «> Jt 11 whole wheat and ■ RANtf* CVTTWE Jss (Jp-K, I bran, roasted .nd slightly sweetened. ■ AWTHtN& gS You may miss coffee at first, but after 30 days B Junior? Bl you’ll love Postum for its own rich, satisfying flavoa. -'fihf sSciririA jNS Postum comes in two frwnw—Pnetum Cereal, the HBk JPSSBBffiufLA •** IV/* Ulf I <tJHB J T-^.- Tt- -Ar-.r- swaAa In./'nn*!-.. ftKjO, \ JKXXaCM » O*iA OC* Ila mXaCI **<yr*iTiK a OSVUXXI* XUctvlC' * TIT * y in the cup. Either way it is easy to make, delicious, ecxsoomical, axxl may prov© a real help. A product of i *4£EMIb sl. jsßWk .. ** « ■ ih<esfeeraa • ooCmr» I J|| L®OS rR E E— tat m send yea yovf Ont week’s snpply of . Saad zna, wititoet cbHeetica, a west’s supply of Oksetant I FostumOPostuni Cereal (check kind you prete). B?"*** I Warne —....— — lj | ' fowl** — — "y* I Orst. espirae July 1,1937*5 i i i » _ - . i - "-
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1936.
frequently disappointing and difficult to live with. They might discover and admit to themselves that they are greatly in debt to their husbands for many things that make life easier and better and more worthwhile—that they would not get along so well without them. Then they might think more of doing their part of trying to make those husbands happy. /_nd that effort on the part of one must inevitably go a long way toward a mutually happy and successful marriage. • Bell Syndicate.—WNU Service. Foreign Words and Phrases Amor patriae. (L.) Love of country. Contra bonos mores. (L.) Contrary to the moral law. Dirigo, (L.) I direct or guide. (The motto of Maine.) En fin. (F.) At the end; finally. Functus officio (L.) Having fulfilled his office; out of office. Genius loci. (L.) The genius of the place; the guardian spirit. Malum in se. (L.) A thing evil in itself, inherently wrong. ! Obiter dictum. (L.) A remark in i passing; such part of a judge's opinion as is aside from or beI yond the point at issue, and there- , fore not binding as a precedent. : Bienvenu. (F.) Welcome. Savoir vivre. (F.) The knowing : how to live; good breeding. 1 Tu quoque. (L. )You too; you’re another. 1 Ultima Thule. (L. Farthest ’ Thule or land; utmost bound.
k I l* ALkteß — I Vitamin Btn Quaker Osb Promotes Good Appetite, Healthy Nerves and System BKwlwßfiß • Doctors warn against a shortage of Vitamin Bio diets ■ I of richer youngsters or adults. So give the whole family a Quaker Oats breakfest every day. It supplies plenty of the wonderful J-purpose Vitamin M WniWtffliM to combat nervousness, constipation, and poor appetite due to lack of Vitamin B. K K- Order a package of Quaker Oao by name from yvur Sa. fa iSSMI grocer today. ■
What Luck the Lady Did Not Have Quinsy It was the evening of an interesting family event, and the master of the house, who hoped it would be a son, had been pacing the floor, anxiously awaiting the doctor. When the physician entered the room the father seized him by the arm and demanded: “Is it a boy or a girl?” “Tr-tr-tr ” gasped the doctot, who stuttered rather badly. “Triplets!” “Qu-qu-qu •*’ stammered the doctor. “Quadruplets! Man alive! What is it you say!” “No-n-no. Tr-tr-try to take it qu-qu-quietly. It’s a girl.” But the father was beyond hearing the truth. He had swooned. ATONE STATE/ rjwrt 3 Bisy brands bit whs bow asas CLABBER 6IRL, wdisltef. OHLY 10* "IT sSw
■ CLABBER GIRL BAKING POWDER
