The Syracuse and Lake Wawasee Journal, Volume 12, Number 48, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 25 March 1920 — Page 9
TAKE ASPIRIN RIGHT Bayer Company, who introduced Aspirin in 1900, give proper directions. To get quick relief follow carefully the safe and proper directions in each unbroken package of “Bayer Tablets of Aspirin.” This package is plainly stamped with the safety “Bayer Cross.” The “Bayer Cross” means the genuine, world-famous Aspirin, prescribed by physicians for over eighteen years. ’‘Bayer Tablets of Aspirin” can be taken safely for Colds, Headache. Toothache, Neuralgia', Lumbago, Rheumatism, Joint Pains, Neuritis, and Pain generally. Handy tin boxes of 12 tablets cost but a few cents. Druggists also sell larger “Bayer” packages. Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacidester of Salicylicacid. —Adv. Comparisons. “T am glad to give this opportunity to learn a good business to a returned soldier. But you will have to begin at the bottom.” “That is a lot better than going over the top.” ANY WOMAN CAN DYE AND KEEP IN STYLE “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! K Direction Book in package tells how to diamond dye over any color. ■ Tc match any material, have dealer show you “Diamond Dye” Color Card.—Adv, In the Cyclone Belt. The difficulty of finding a house is not exclusively an Eastern problem. Out in Kansas, for instance, a native observed a stranger looking around and ventured to say, “Good morning, sir. House hunting?” “Yes.” replied the stranger. “I wonder if it could have blown this far.” — Boston Transcript. Roman Eye Balsam is an antiseptic-oint-ment, applied externally and not a “wash/’ It heals the inflamed surfaces,- providing' prompt relief. —Adv. The Real One. , “Don’t you think a college education pays?” “No; the man who tries to get his son one, does.”
AFTER 6 YEABS-STILL WELL Now Strong and Hearty Though Case Looked Hopeless “Six years ago I was in awfitl condition.” says E. K. Chase. 36 E. Cross St., Ypsilanti, Mich. “My family was told 1 couldn’t live more than two months. I was in constant pain from
the uric abid- and was so bad with rheumatism . m y legs seemed all drawn up. My back never stopped hurting. The kidney secretions were held back until only a few drops came, and 1 bloated until I thought my skin would burst. My legs were twice their normal size. “The water seemed to fill my chest and press
II 'ssr U fJo Mr. Chase \
against the heart. For three' months I never moved out of the chair > and I choked and gasped for breath like a dying man. All the doctoring failed, and my weight went from 185 to 125 pounds. “Doan's Kidney Pills saved my life. Eleven boxes cured ine of every complaint. I have been well six years and able to work as hard as any man.’’ Sworn to before me. "FLOYD E. DAGGETT, Notary Public. ■ Get Doan’s at Any Store, 60c a Box DOAN’S «*»«•’ FOSTER-MILBURN CO.. BUFFALO. N. Y.
SLOW DEATH Aches, pains, nervousness, difficulty in urinating, often mean serious disorders. The world’s standard remedy for kidney, liver, bladder and uric acid troubles— GOLD MEDAL Tiring quick relief and often ward ofl deadly diseases. Known as the national «emedy of Holland for more than 200 years. All druggists, in three sixes. Look for the name Gold Medal on every box and accept no imitation P\ fed so E°°d I b ut what BR K Vli n I will make you W ft? \JP \ 1 feel better. 1 I Gets 1 I Got. I LIBERTY BONDS ALL ISSUES 50-100-500-1000 Bought and Sold on Commission POST BROTHERS & CO. Member! N. Y. Stack Exchange 52 Broadway, New York
DANZIG IS NOW A FREE CITY -rd French commander, General Dupont and General linking. British commander of Danzig, reviewing French troops just before they left Danzig, where they were kept to maintain order. Danzig is now a free city.
MOST WONDERFUL OF ALL WAR PAINTINGS.
— - . . [ . —— “Gassed,” by John R. Sargent, R. A., said by many critics to be the most wonderful of ail war paintings.
CHILDREN SUFFER MOST IN VIENNA i 7 "! I'R I ■HRW fJFI 11 .- i •J t f EK - : . ’ Huddled in all the clothes she has in -the room she is fighting to keep for her home, this mother is trying to keep warmth in her baby and herself —The plight of the poverty stricken in Vienna has been terrible and It is such situations as shown here that has compelled thousands of Austrian families to give up their children and allow them to be sent to neighboring countries to save them from starvation. This is but one of the thousands of similar cases. WON RACE TO HELP SUFFRAGE \ &3R.. w I I f ' ’ ' IB IH • Left to right: Mr. Jesse A. Bloch, millionaire senator and tobacco manufacturer of West Virginia, who raced across continent to cast his vote for women’s rights in West Virginia, and Mrs. Elli A. Yost of Morgantown, West Virginia, chairman of the campaign committee of the V\ est V irginia Equal Suffrage association and who has been directing the long fight in West Virginia for ratification. It was Bloch’s vote that decided the fate of equal suffrage in West Virginia.
CONDENSATIONS Women can no longer be employed as elevatof- operators in Dallas. Polo is the oldest outdoor game played today. The Persians played it 600 B. C. The Japanese are far ahead of all other nations in the art of making artificial flowers. In Sweden the doctors seldonji send bills to their patients.. Each patient what he deems just or is able to’
Green frogs are said to have an insatiable appetite for wasps. There are more than 2,000 potato flour factories in Germany. An lowa inventor has won a patent for a safety device which enables a man to shave the back of his own neck. A blacksmith at Rotterdam was so overcome with joy on hearing that he had won $40,000 in a lottery, that in his excitement he lit his pipe with his ticket and was unable to prove his claim.
THE SYRACUSE AND LAKE WAWASEE JOURNAL
GOBS SEE EVERYTHING & 1 - ■ I It |k WIS «■ Sailors of the Atlantic fleet anchored off Colon, Panama, inspecting the ruins of an old cathedral of that city. Gobs go everywhere and see everything. “CRUSADING FOR THE RIGHT” * |L MMmgu 1^- 1 > * | I- ■ #• ... '■ 1 J—,-t •>. 'Fj ~ .s| mS* s'■ M The famous French sculptor, Charles Raphael Peyre, and his remarkable statue “Crusading for the Right,” which he created in memory of the services of the. marines at ChateauThierry. —• ; Prolific Mesquite Tree. A historical mesquite tree, cut down in Honolulu, Hawaii, October 23, 1919, which served as a valuable source ot seed, and had been a landmark attracting the interest erf thousands of tourisms traversing the Pacific ocean, had, during the ninety-two years of its existence, been the progenitor of thou-, sands of trees which now cover throughout the Hawaiian island group approximately 90,000 acres of mostly barren land which formerly was 1 worthies -
PROBLEMS FACING STRICKEN WORLD Shall Chaos or Reconstruction in Europe Follow the Great World War? HOPE FOR PERMANENT PEACE Those Who Fought, and Those Who Suffered at Home, Alike Favor Seme Form of a League of Nations. Article X. ) By FRANK COMERFORD.: Europe was succumbing to exhaustion when the war came to an end. The terrible waste was telling. Endurance had reached the breaking point With peace one thought ran around the world: There must be no more war. The men who did the fighting said it loudest “I’m glad I had a chance to do my part—l wouldn’t have missed the ‘show’ for a million dollars, and I wouldn’t take a million dollars to go through it again/’ is the way they put it. Everywhere in Europe I heard, “It is over, it is finished, thank God.” The first thought of reconstruction was a plan to make peace permanent The laboratory and the machine shop gave to this war a terrible meaning, new agencies had been introduced to kill and maim men, liquid fire, mustard gas. high explosives, bombs from the clouds, torpedoes from the sea depths. The world was horrified. The length of the war, the number of dead and crippled, She raiding and bombing of defenseless cities taught the world that an end must be put to war if civilization was to live. So the people, particularly the working people, took heart when a League of Nations was suggested as a means of enforcing peace. They placed their hopes in it. They had suffered most from the war. The dead were largely their dead. The returning cripples were blood of their blood. As they put it, they were from their class. Os course the sons of the other class fought, shared the hardships, paid the price, but they were few. The group from which they came is small, while the toll of casualties from labor’s ranks was large. All men know that controversies between nations are inevitable. In the absence of some scheme of arbitration there is but one way that these controversies can be settled. It is force —War. It is not uncommon for individuals to have serious differences of opinion. Every lawsuit, and there are thousands of them in every city of every country, represents a difference of opinion. If we did not have courts providing a peaceful determination of these disputes, the" litigants would be compelled to settle their differences by force. Assault and battery would succeed orderly procedure. Nations have been without a peaceful means of adjusting their difficulties, and as a consequence have been compelled to resort to force; Until some scheme of arbitration is created, to talk peace is to waste words, to hope for it is idle dreaming. Peace Conference Fell Short. The peace conference met in Paris. Labor watched it. At an early stage in its proceedings intrigue was discovered at work. Wrangling, bickering, bargaining and tracing for commercial advantage occupied the time and thought that the world expected would be devoted to the building up of a league that would at least decrease the chances of future Ivars. ’ Statesmen in their blind demotion to expediency lost sight of the great reason for the conference. They talked of boundary lines, discussed frontiers, and always from the point of view of financial and military advantage to their respective countries. It was noticed that the territories over which they quarreled were rich in minerals or some other thing of great commercial advantage. They squabbled over spoils. Then, too, these men who were supposed to be concerned in the future peace of the world, in arguing over frontiers urged their respective claims -on the grounds that their respective countries needed these frontiers to make them secure in future wars. What future wars and why the discussion of future wars at a conference. the object of which was future peace? Working men watched, listened and thought. They construed these bickerings and wranglings as evidence of the fact that there is an interest in the world which does not believe in giving up force. I am only reporting the truth when I add they suspect this interest is Capital. If the League of Nations fails this suspicion will be confirmed. The movement toward an internationalism of the workers will be given great impetus. The League of Nations failing, they argue there is only one other means of preventing war. It is for the men who make up the rank and file of the armies in time of war, the millions recruited from shops, factories and fields, to get together and organize an international labor authority to save the working men from war. Such a movement would take away from governments an important and necessary function and give to
ORIGINAL “UNCLE SAM." During the revolutionary war there was a man by the name of Samuel Wilson, who was engaged as an inspector of provisions. He was known by his friends as “Uncle Sam.” In his work he stamped inspected goods “U. 5.,” which initials happened to stand for his nickname as well as his government. . Thus the two became Identical. Uncle Sam as an old man with whiskers was taken from Samuel Wilson.—Exchange.
one class in the world a power so great that political governments would be puppets in their hands, and yet in the light of tbte happenings of the last five years labor could not be blamed. The world is entitled to protection against such slaughter as we have just gone through, and if the political governments fail to take the necessary steps the plain people will. World Now Closely Knit. Internationalism is coming—in fact it is already here. Inventions have brought the people of rhe world close together. The wireless and the cable give us the happenings of remote parts of the world in a few hours. Distance has been destroyed. We are becoming neighbors in knowledge of each other, whether we live on the same continent or not. Modern transportation is shortening the time between places. An air service is in prospect which promises to make London as near New York tomorrow as Chicago is today. We already have a successful Internationalism in finance and credits. Big business long ago obliterated national lines. The commerce of the world is already organized Internationally. The Important question at this time is what form will the new internationalism take? Will it be an internationalism of organized dollars? If so, the world is in serious danger of a financial autocracy. Will it be an internationalism of- organized labor? If this happens it means the dictatorship of the proletariat. Both are equally undesirable. No part of the people should be permitted to enforce their will npon the rest. One kind of slavery is as bad as another. The great majority of the human race wants freedom, not advantage. It is not ambitious to dictate —it will not be dictated to. A League of Nations is the solution, ft is a union of the nations of the world, and as the nations of the world represent all the people of the various states such a combination is democrtftic. That it is necessary is plain. Rivalry for markets, competition for trade, are bound to lead to war unless we have an agreement that these and other problems will be submitted to arbitration. It is not necessary to submit questions involving national honor. Few of such questions ever directly provoke war. It is when nations fighting each other for markets reach a point of positive disagreement that they begin calling each other names. These insults wound honor, war results. Peace Table Proves Worth. A League of Nations is a continuance of the peace table, and notwithstanding the wranglings of the present peace table there would have been war in Europe before this if it was not sitting in Paris. Two cases serve to illustrate. The coal fields of upper Galicia, to be determined by a plebiscite between Poland and Germany would have been a cause of war if the peace table was not in existence. Poland had troops on the border. Germany had her soldiers at the frontier. One thing, and one thing alone, prevented war —it was the fear of* the peace table. The same facts described the controversy between Poland and Czecho-Slovakta; war has been avoided by the peace table submitting the Teschen question to a vote of the people of the territory. No League of Nations will have much effect upon the future peace of Europe which does not include the United States. The nations of Europe do not trust , each other. Every one respects the fact that the United States does not seek territory in Europe. This gives our country the commanding place as. the one disinterested power in the world. With this moral force we can do much to maintain the peace of the world. The propaganda- of revolution coming out of bolshevik Russia, urging the workers to organize an international dictatorship of the proletariat and seize the world, is not neatly as dangerous to the peace of the world as the political heckling against the League of Nations. (Copyright. 1920, Western Newspaper Union) TAXES IN GERMANY HEAVY individuals Are Beginning to Feel That Country Really Suffered Defeat in the War. The individual German has not begun to feel the peace terms, financially. During the war the Germans have been loaning their money to the government. This year they have begun to give it. ' There is an estate tax graduated as to size and as to relationship. It imposes the heaviest tax on the largest Inheritance from the most distant relative. A peculiar feature of this law, illustrating its severity, is a provision that in no case may the tax exceed the amount of the inheritance taxed. No mean cousin can leave “spite money which would compel the recipient to pay more than he got, anyhow. An income tax ranges to about 70 per cent as the income grows. There is a profits tax and a heavy tax on wealth increases during the war —to get the profiteers —the usual taxes for revenue, heavier than ever, and a capital levy is being considered. With food, coal and clothing short, they are bound to add to the discontent. Agitators will make the most of the crisis. But Germany has weathered two crises as serious: In the .most difficult months just after the surrender a year ago; and the peace conference period, when she woke up, as loser, to the terms. *
ELMS. No natural Gothic arch compares with that formed by two American elms, where their lofty jets of foliage shoot across each other’s ascending curves, to intermingle their showery flakes of green. When one looks through a long double row of these, he beholds a temple not built with hands, fairer than any minster, with all its clustered stems and fluttering capitals, that ever grew iff stone.— Holmes.
ESCAPED AN OPERATION By Talcing Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. Many Such Cases. x Cairo, III.—“ Sometime ago I got so bad with female trouble that I thought
I would have to be operated on. I had a bad displacement. My right side would pain me and I was so nervous I could not hold a glass of water. Many times I would have to stop my work and sit down or I would fall on the floor in a faint. 4 consulted several doctors and
I hi nnmn I c 1 -.Wre i s 1 1 § S c r-WWa c ■AiW] i
every one told me the same but I kept fighting to keep from having the opegation. I had read so many times of Lyeia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound and it helped my sister so I began taking it. I have never felt better than I havw since then and I keep house and am able to do all my work. The Vegetable Compound is certainly one graind medicine.” —Mrs. J. R. Matthews, 3311 Sycamore Street, Cairo, 111. \ 1 - Os course there afe many serious cases that only a surgical operation will relieve. We freely acknowledge this, bux the above letter, and many others like it, amply prove that many operations are recommended when medicine in many cases is all that is needed. If you want special advice write to Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co. (confidential) Lynn, Mass.
BELCHING Caused by Acid-Stomach Let EATONIC, the wonderful modern stomach remedy, give you quick relief from disgusting belching, food-repeating, . Indigestion, bloated, gassy stomach, dyspepsia. heartburn and other stomach miseries. They are all c-used by Acid-Stomach from which about nine people out of rep suffer in one way or another. One writes as follows: ‘‘Before I used EATONIC, I could not eat a bite without belching it right up, sour and bitter. I have not had a bit of trouble since the first tablet.” Millions are victims of Acid-Stomach without knowing it. They are weak and ailing, have poor digestion, bodies improperly nourished although they may eat heartily. Grave disorders are likely to follow if an acid-stomach Is neglected. Cirrhosis, of the liver, intestinal congestion, gastritis, catarrh of the stomach—these are only a few of the many ailments often caused by Acid-Stomach. A sufferer from Catarrh of the Stomach of 11 years’ standing writes: "I had catarrh of the stomach for 11 long years and I never found anything to do me any good—just temporary relief—until I used EATONIC. It is a wonderful remedy and I do not want to be without it.” If you are not feeling quite right—lack energy and enthusiasm and don’t know jost where to locate the trouble —4ry EATONIC and see how much better you will feel in every .way. At all drug stores —a big box for 50c ana your money back If you are not satisfied. , PATON IC U 9 CFOR Y6UK ACID-STOMACH) BRINGS THE ROSES TO CHILDREN’S CHEEKS Mother: Brew Dr. Carter’s K. & B. Tea at Home—Good Health to All the Family. Keeps liver anti bowels in proper condition and ends bilious attacks and sick headache. Give to the children when peevish. They like it, and it acts very gently on their little bowels. Be sure you get Dr. Carter's K. & B. Tea. Clear Baby’s Skin With Cuticura Soap and Tai cbm , Soap 25c, Ointment 25 and 50c, Talcum 25c. SINCE | 1870 SHILOH HILL’S GOODCHEEB NEI BOTONIC CAPSULES. A Wonderful New Remedy tor Weak. Nervous. Run Down Men and Women. You get IMMEDIATE results. It makes you work well, sleep well, and enjoy all ths good things of life. A boon to alcoholics. SI.OO per package; trial package 25 cents, prepaid. Monev back if not benefited. AGENTS WANTED. Leon HUI. Pharmacist. 12 Chapman, Binghamton, New York. “Can’t Cut Off My Leg” Says Railroad Engineer “I am a railroad engineer; about 20 years ago my leg was seriously injured in an accident out West. Upon my refusing to allow the doctor to amputate it I was told it-would be impossible to heal the wound. I have tried all kinds of salves and had many doctors in the past r-20 years, but to no avail. Finally I resolved, to use PETERSON’S OINTMENT on my leg. You cannot imagine my astonish-: ment when I found it was doing what; over. 100 things had failed to do. My leg is now completely cured.”—Gus Hauft, 799 Myrtle avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y. Great for piles, eczema, old sores and all skin diseases. 35 cents. Mail orders filled. Peterson (Ointment Co. Inc., Buffalo, N. Y. Bronchitis Chest_Colds When that tightness appears in your chest and the sharp pains signify inflammation and congestion you need a« hot application right away. x Heat eases pain, and when yoji use/ Begy’s Mustarine you get just the right kind of heat—penetrating heat-*-that quickly reduces all soreness and congestion. , f Apply it to-night and cover with a cloth. You’ll lots better in the morning. It’s a‘grand, sensible remedy that all who use it praise. 30 cents. S. C. Wells & Co., Leßoy, N ~ SOUTHERN N. Y. FARMS—Large farm»; small farms; equipped farms; country tates. List free. F. B. Wells, Sidney, N. T. Coughing h annoying and harmful. Relieve throat irritation, tickling and get lid of cougha. eolda and hoaaaeneM at once by taking PI SO'S
