The Syracuse and Lake Wawasee Journal, Volume 12, Number 47, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 18 March 1920 — Page 6

IF BACK HURTS USE SALTS FOR KIDNEYS Eat leas meat if Kidneys feel like lead or Bladder bothers. Most folks forget that the kidneys, like the bowels, get sluggish and clogged and need a flushing occasionally, else we have backache and dull misery in the kidney region, severe headaches, rheumatic twinges, torpid liver, acid stomach, sleeplessness and alt sorts of bladder disorders. You simply must keep your kidneys active and clean, and the moment you feel an ache or pain in the kidney region, get about four ounces of Jad Salts from any good drug store here, take a tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys will then het fine. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia. and is harmless to flush clogged kidneys and stimulates them to normal activity. It also neutralizes the acids In the urine so it no longer irritates, thus ending bladder disorders. Jad Salts is harmless; inexpensive; makes a delightful effervescent llthiawater drink which everybody should take now and then to keep the kidneys clean, thus avoiding serious complications. * A well-known local druggist says he sells lots of Jad Salts to folks who believe in overcoming kidney trouble while it is only trouble. —Adv. ' ' .... ~ 5 How Tastes Change! Paynter—Aren’t we losing our taste for the finer things? Greene —I’m afraid so. z\fter a man has eaten margarine for a time regular butter tastes as if there was something the matter with it! —London Answers. Acid Stomach, Heartburti and Nausea quickly disappear with the use of Wright’s Indian Vegetable Pills. Send for trial box to 372 Pearl St., New York.—Adv. Subtlety. The six-year-old boy had told a fib and had been commanded by his mother to go to bed in the dark. lie started reluctantly, and upon taking a long look at the dark stairway. turned to his mother and said: “Mother, don’t, you think you’d better come along and see if I really go to Led?’’ —Pittsburgh Leader. CREAM FOR CATARRH OPENS UP NOSTRILS Tells How to Get Quick Relief From Head-Colds. It’s Splendid! In one minute your clogged nostrils will open, the air passages of your head will clear anti you can breathe freely. No more hawking, snuffling, blowing, headache, dryness. No struggling for breath at night; your cold Or catarrh will be gone. Get a small bottle of Ely’s Cream Balm from your druggist now. Apply a little of this fragrant, antiseptic, healing cream in your nostrils. It penertates thrd’H.gh eter.v air passage of the head, soothes the inflamed or swollen mucous membrane and relief comes instantly. • . •> It’s just fine. Don’t stay stuffed-up with a cold or nasty catarrh —Relief comes so quickly. —Adv. Nuisances All. “What we want to do.” shouted the man who settles every question with ease, -“is to get rid of socialism, bolshevism. anarchism, radicalism and sovietism.” “True.” commented Farmer Corntossei. “And’while you’re about it you might as well throw in rheumatism.” OLD CLOTHES DYED MAKE NEW GARMENTS “Diamond Dyes” Turn Faded, Shabby Apparel Into New. Don’t worry about perfect results. Use “Diamond Dyes,” guaranteed to give a new, rich, fadeless color to any fabric, whether it be wool, silk, linen, cotton or mixed goods—dresses, blouses, stockings, skirts, children’s coats, feathers —everything I Direction Book in package tells how to diamond. dye over any color. To match any material, have dealer show you “Diamond Dye” Color Card. —Adv. Management of Coming Events. “Why is a prophet regarded as without honor in his own country?” “Well,” replied Senator Sorghum, “I suppose politics has been politics ever since the world began; it naturally makes a politician restless to feel that most any day he may find his hand has been tipped off by a prophet." Important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA. that famous. old remedy’ for infants and and see that it Bears the Signature of In Use for Over 30 Years. Children Cry .for Fletcher’s Castoria Jail Had No Terrors for Them. Life in jail at Pfortsuu Prince, Haiti, is .apparently so' that it is harder to keep the natives out than in. A recent roll call showed five more prisoners than had been committed. Officers of the marine corps who investigated the matter found that the five “extras” attracted by three good meals a day and a comfortable cell to sleep in, had sneaked in’.with the returning road gang. Now prisoners who work outside die walls are carefully counted before they are readmitted, —Youth’s Companion. SIOO Reward, SIOO Catarrh is a local disease greatly Influenced by constitutional conditions. It therefore requires constitutional treatment. HALL’S CATARRH MEDICINE is taken internally and acts through the Blood on the Mucous Surfaces of the System. HALL’S CATARRH MEDICINE destroys the foundation of the disease, gives the patient strength by improving the general health and assists nature in doing its work. SIOO.OO for any case of Catarrh that HALL’S CATARRH MEDICINE fails to cure. Druggists 75c. Testimonials free. F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio. Some of the “public movements” are gone into for something to do and others for somebody’ to do.

MOBILE HOSPITAL DOES GOOD WORK IN NEAR EAST ME’! ’ r r ■’ i- 1 ‘ ' W***!"". Newspaper Unio n: This Is Dr. George L. Richards’ hospital car on the Bagdad railway, halted at a station to treat the sick. Such hospitals are found necessary by relief workers in the near East. INTERIOR OF CANADA’S NEW PARLIAMENT BUILDING —wgTftssiwwiii muni 11 m —w. > iiMginTi C" '?*’ " x Canada’s new parliament building, replacing the one destroyed by fire several years ago, was opened recently. This is a view of the chamber of the house of commons.

PRIVATE MOSQUE OF THE SULTAN I Ik .A tfl I hh I M&Sfeaaag I IHIIE3 t'2 ffi I r-—. s- ' fir' l[ ; ’ Waaliai ' ' ST ; W” ** " ''? ’ \ 3 x x.. •> <« >- x' ; I? flhte Private mosque of Sultan Mohammed VI of Turkey at Yildlz, where he goes every Friday for prayer. MAIL PLANE BETWEEN PARIS AND COBLENZ Flying from the American headquarters in Paris to that at Coblenz, with mail will be the task of this American plane. An American crew is to guide it.

BRIEF INFORMATION The mother of Herbert Hoover was a preacher, after the casual Quaker fashion. An electric hair drier and vacuum comb for cleaning the hair has been combined by a Pennsylvania inventor. In Norway women employed in the civil service and teaching profession are assured by law of equal pay with men. . . ' *

A preliminary estimate of the* amount of lumber cut in British Columbia last year places the figures at 1,700,000,000 feet Preparations are being made in Natal for the production of sulphate of ammonia and other by-products of coal on a large scale. In order to give employment to the unemployed the British government has decided to build 100 locomotives at Woolwich arsenal.

THE SYRACUSE AND LAKE WAWASEE JOURNAL

BARONESS ROMANO AVEZZANO f feßwill t I ;gi JI& HwiW. j*s <: \\\ ,o BBfsLW > Kfe-wZ Mfli V* 4 1 1|||||| BOw j ®I■ wilt • A new photograph of Baroness Romano Avezzano, wife of the new ambassador from Italy to the United States. She and her daughter recently arrived in Washington with the ambassador. To Honor Discoverer of Ether. Arrangements are being made in Charlton to honor the memory of one of the immortals of Massachusetts and of the world, who was born In that town. Charlton is planning to observe the centenary of the birth of William T. G. Morton, the discoverer of ether. A suitable memorial will be established and appropriate ceremonies arranged to commemorate the event. The discovery of ether or anesthesia is accounted to be the greatest benefaction ever given to man, for in that discovery was the complete mastery of pain, and, in part, mental anguish. Beware of Pets. A series of experiments has convinced one of the professors of Upsala university that the danger to the community through the dissemination of disease germs by animal pets is serious. In one case a whole family was afflicted with tuberculosis through a pet cat. A Professor Petit in France voices the danger by appealing to* owners of pets to take special precautions with animals whose health is not good. Diphtheria is more easily circulated by the feline tribe than uny other disease. In the Wrong Place. “A hundred thousand dollars for a picture!” exclaimed the war profiteer. “Impossible!” > “Nevertheless,” said the art dealer, “that sum was recently paid for this canvas, and I’m willing to let you have it for only SIIO,OOO to get it off my hands.” “Why, I always thought that much money would buy a wagonload of pictures.” “And so it will, sir. But Pm not selling souvenir postcards.”—Birmingham Age-Herald,

PROBLEMS FACING STRICKENWORLD Shall Chaos or Reconstruction in Europe Follow the Great World War? MEN CHANGED BY BATTLE Soldiers Have Learned What Can Be Accomplished by the Use of Force, Sternly and Efficiently Applied. Article IX By FRANK COMERFORD. Making a soldier out of a civilian does more than change the clothes he wears'. It changes the niah. Men who had never owned a revolver or rifle, who had never even shot one off, who had never killed anything in their lives, were given firearms. They were drilled, taught to shoot, taught to kill. The education was thorough and scientific. They learned to look down the sight of a rifle, pick out a human heart for a target, fire and eagerly watch for the man to fall. They were trained to rush madly at a wall of human beings and drive bayonets Into men’s heads and bowels. Many of these men a few years before would have fainted in a stockyards where cattle were being killed. For four yeara they have been in a human slaughterhouse, not only as spectators, but as part of the place. It steeled these men. Many of them contracted the undertaker’s pbint of view towards life, a fatalism without fear. Experience in battle taught them the meaning of the word “force.” They discovered that the individual was only and efficient when he acted in concert with a great group. Everything depended upon team work. Men learned that a group of men working in harmony, with nerve and rifles with fixed bayonets, could do wonderful things. They could take an objective. In other words, take the thing they wanted and needed. When these men came back into civil life and took off khaki and put on overalls, the taking off of the khaki and the putting on of mufti did not erase from their minds this lesson the war had taught them. This lesson has borne fruit The men look at the employer as an enemy. The employer thinks of them as a commodity. Hatred is cordial. The men want something. They den’and it. The employer refuses. Their objective is to get the thing they want and need. The war taught them there is away, a weapon—Force. Today in Europe men reason, “if we can’t get what we want, and need, we must take it. We have the force.” Having grown habited to suffering, accustomed to blood and death, they look with indifference on the question of danger, of price. They saw that when nations could not agree they resorted to force. They discovered that victory generally went to the nation possessing the greatest force. Threat of “Direct Action." In the labor movement of Europe we have this idea In what is called “direct action.” “Direct action” is nothing more or less than applying war methods to peace conditions. It is an effort on the part of great groups of working men to compel recognition of their demands. They seek to secure their objective by force. No allowance is made for the fact that methods justifiable in war are not right in peace. Few people will deny that war is the supreme expression of force. Many men got their first taste of fresh air and decent food while in the army. Very properly the allied governments gave the best of everything to the men in the armies. ’ It isn’t difficult to get accustomed to good food and fresh air; it is hard to go back to poor food and the tenements. Back home, many of the demobilized soldiers are not eating as well or as much as they ate during their service. Notwithstanding the rigid discipline of army life, men are treated as men. The humblest man 1/ the ranks has rights that must be respected. This is not always the case In civil life. Then, too, while in uniform the private was made much of. Class distinction was obliterated. | He was looked upon as one of his country’s defenders. Since he has been demobilized he has been forgotten and neglected. This has soured him. He resents It Social distinctions have come back. He is only a working man now. Another cause of unrest among t}je working man of Europe grows out of the war. Mobilization took millions of men from their jobs. A great shortage of labor resulted. Employers were forced to compete to get men. The usual competition was among men to get jobs. The law of supply and demand affected the labor market, wages went up. The soldier went off to war. While he was in the trenches the wages back home were high. Elis pay was small. Our fighting men were not interested in pay. They went to fight for a principle. With the coming of peace a large quantity of labor was dumped upon the market. The demobilized men rushed for employment. Comrades competed for jobs. The same old law of supply and demand sent wages tobogganing. The number of men who

LIES. Many tell lies in order to deceive us, and many because they themselves are deceived. Some seek to win our favor by false accusations and invent wrongs in order that they may appear angry at our having suffered them. One man lies out of spite that he may set trusting friends at variance; some because they are suspicious and wish to see sport and watch from a safe distance. those whom they have set by the ears.—Lucius Annaeus

wanted jobs was much greater, that the number of places available. The returning soldier seeking a Job was offered a much smaller wage than he knew was paid for the work while he bad been fighting. It incensed him. He figured that he had given four years out of his life, had come home tired and broke. He looked upon the decline in wages as a positive discrimination against him. Comparison Breeds Discontent. Everywhere I have heard these men say f “We are out of luck. The bands played and we were applauded when we left to fight. While we were gone the wages went up. We don’t begrudge the men who stayed at home the wages they got, but it’s damn funny that when we come back down go wages. The cost of living don’t go down. I guess we’re out of luck.” I found two phrases inseparable In the speech of the discontented, “the high cost of living;" “the profiteer." Workingmen with whom I talked, freely admitted that some of the high cost of living was the legitimate result of the great demand for everything and the natural shortage, but in the same breath they insisted that much of it was due to the mercenary, ghoulish profiteer. The profiteer took blood money during the world’s greatest tragedy. He exacted usury from the toiler at home and the fighting man at the front He drew dividends out of the tears and wails of broken-hearted women artD fright-stricken children. He minted his gold out of agony, starvation, heartaches. He stands today the Judas of the war, the most despised man of earth. The profiteer is not ap Englishman, a Frenchman, Italian or American. He is found in every country of the world, a man without nationality, without conscience, without htimanity. He is the pimp of civilization. He is still on the job. The profiteer hhs given the United States a terrible black eye. A common comment of Europe is, “The United States made inoney out of the war.” These people do not refer to the money iwe made legitimately. They point to the fact, a fact that has been given great publicity in Europe, that in August, 1914, there were about 7,000 millionaires in the United States, while at the time of the signing of the armistice it was estimated the millionaire colony had increased by 23,000, making a total of 30.000 millionaires in the United States. The profiteer is still on the job. He is holding up the world, a starving, cold world. Profiteering Case in Point. Under date of November 17, 1919. J. S. Bache & Co., members of the New York stock exchange, in their financial, letter say: “In mercantile circles there is proceeding at the present time a vast amount of speculation on a very large scale in commodities. An incident is cited to us of one concern that is carrying §15,000.000 worth of vegetable oils, which are in great demand, and the concern is holding them for higher prices. This is a distinct damage to the consumers, and keeps living prices in these things, used daily, at top and increasing levels. Speculation of this kind is a real detriment to the community.” The pair of shoes the workingman once bought for §3.50 are now §8 and §lO. It is true that the cost of labor and material have gone up. but not enough to warrant any such exorbitant prices!. Business men have taken advantage of the situation, and justify their larcbnies ground of the law of supply and demand. A shoe man with a prominent Chicago firm, a man long in the business, told me that the present unwarranted and outrageous price of shoes was due to the fact that American shoe manufacturers could get almost any price for shoes from the barefooted people of Europe. , z Governments are blamed for not dealing with this species of holdup. The discontented a.4k “Why isn’t profiteering treason —why shouldn’t these Fagans be sent to the wall with a firing squad as an escort?” (Copyright. 1920, Western Newspaper Union) Greatest bf Hun Crimes. Evidence that destruction wrought In France and Bjelgium by German armies was deliberate and unjustified by military necessity has accumulated since the signing of the armistice, according to a statement given out by the national committee of the United States for the restoration of the library at Louvain. Col. William Barclay Parsons, subway builder, who commanded the eleventh engineers, the regiment that went to Haig’s aid with picks and shovels when the Huns were driving at the channel ports, in a letter to the executive committee, of which Nicholas Murray Butler, president of Columbia university, is chairman, called the destruction of the Louvain library, with its precious treasures, the greatest of Teuton crimes in Belgium. Noted Europeans were quoted as sharing similar views. Germans to Be Prosecuted. Prosecution will be carried out, according to announcement made in Berlin, of German subjects charged with offenses and crijnes committed in Germany against the person or property of hostile aliens during the war and up to June 29 of this year. The attorney general will be obliged to prosecute crimes perpetrated by Germans abroad during this period if the crimes are also punishable under the law of the country where committed. The law covering general procedure in these cases has been submitted to the national assembly. It permits relatives or heirs of the injured party to appear as complainants.

DANGERS OF EDUCATION. . Father—Run along, my boy, and help Cyril play with his toys. Highbrow—No, father; by treating this further piling up of armaments In a spirit of levity following the cessation of an international cataclysm, one unconsciously places one’s self In opposition to the Ideals for which mankind strives, added to which It cannot but have a perniciously derogatory effect on juvenile mentality.—London Opinion.

UFT OFF CORNS! Apply few drops then lift sore, touchy corns off with fingers Doesn’t hurt a bit! Drop a little Freezone on an aching corn, instantly that corn stops hurting, then you lift it right out. Yes, magic! A tiny bottle, of Freezone costs but a few cents at any drug store, but Is sufficient tp remove every hard corn, soft corn, 'or corn between the toes, and the calluses, without soreness or Irritation. Freezone Is the sensational discovery of a Cincinnati genius. It is wonderful.—Adv. Doughnuts Gone to the Dog. My most embarrassing moment came when I looked back at a bride and groom, fell over a dog and spilled a ■dozen doughnuts all over the sidewalk. I know how Lot’s wife must have felt. —Chicago Tribune. The Cuticura Toilet Trio Having cleared your skin keep it clear by making Cuticura your every-day toilet preparations. The soap to cleanse and purify, the Ointment to soothe and .heal, the Talcum to powder and perfume. No toilet table, is complete without them. 25c everywhere.—Adv. Usually the hand that rocks the cradle can’t hit the side of a barn with a brick. \ Garfield Tea stimulates the liver, corrects constipation, cleanses the system and rids the blood of impurities. All druggists. —Adv. Don’t wait for your ship to come jn, boy; charter a tug and go out to meet it. WHY DRUGGISTS RECOMMEND SWAMP-ROOT For many years druggists have watched with much interest the remarkable record maintained by Dr. Kilmer’a Swamp-Root, the great kidney, liver and bladder medicine. It is a physician’s prescription. Swamp-Root is a strengthening medicine. It helps the kidneys, liver and bladder do the work nature intended they should do. Swamp-Root has stood the test of years. It is sold by all druggists on its merit and it should help you. No other kidney medicine has so many friends. ’ ' Be sure to get Swamp-Root and start treatment at once. However, if you wish first to test this great preparation send ten cents tc Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., for a sample bottle. When writing be sure and mention this paper.—Adv. Plain Proposition. “And you used to say you were willing to die for me?” “So I am.” “Ahd yet yoii refuse me a new dress?” s “But look at the cost of It!” “It’s cheaper than a funeral.” OUCH! LUMBAGO PAIN! RUB BACKACHE AWAY Instant Relief With a Small Trill Bottle of Old “St. , Jacobs Oil.” Kidneys cause Backache? No! They have no nerves, therefore can not cause pain. Listen! Your backache is caused by lumbago, sciatica or a strain, and the quickest relief is soothing, penetrating “St. Jacobs Oil.” Rub it right on your painful back, and instantly the soreness, stiffness and lameness disappears. Don’t stay crippled! Get a small trial bottle of “St. Jacobs Oil" from your druggist and limber up. A moment after it is applied you’ll wonder what became of the backache or lumbago pain. / Rub old, honest “St. Jacobs Oil” whenever you have sciatica, neuralgia, rheumatism or sprains, as it is absolutely harmless and doesn’t burn the skin. —Adv. Appropriate Advice. “Sam is always talking about his op eration for appendicitis.” “Why don’t you tell him to cut it out?”

Sure Relief CYT M indigestW L- I IpMUW/ 25 CSHTS Jr 11—Hot water Ksr Sure Relief rell-ans IB FOR INDIGESTION B PARKER’S JAIR BALSAM vesDandrnfl-Stopsßair Falling Res tore a Color and ty to Gray and Faded Hair Jo. and SI.OO at drusxlsta, K Chem. W ks. Patchotme. N.T. HINDERCORNS Removes Corns, Cal-1 louses, etc stops ail pain, ensures comfort to the feet, makes vatkintr easy. 15c. by mail or at Drn*. gists. Hiscoa Chemical Works. Patchogue. M.T. 4 \ Money back without' question K \1 if HUNT’S BAUVK fails in the 11 treatment of ITCH, ECZEMA, k)J RING WORM.TETTER or other f■ f r/ itching skin diseases. Price I ’Vl 1 J A 75c at druggists, or direct from X. - I'J Ll.llchirii ■HIcIMCKIMtnmJu.