The Syracuse and Lake Wawasee Journal, Volume 13, Number 3, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 20 May 1920 — Page 7

WOMEN! PONT BUY POOR DYE! Say You Want “Diamond Dyes'—No Other Kind! Don’t Spoil or Streak Your Material

Each package of “Diamond Dyes” contains directions so simple that any woman can diamond-dye a new, rich, fadeless color Into worn, shabby garments, draperies, coverings, whether Fron Seed to Seed in Eight Days. Cress Is one of the quickest growing of plants. Under perfect conditions it has been known to flower and seed within eight days of planting. Why buy many bottles of other Vermifuges, when one bottle of Dr. Peery’s “Dead Shot” will act surely and promptly? —Adr. Its Fitting Kind. "Jim said when he went outdoors this morning, he saw a snake coiled around the garden Bose.” “Os course, it was hardly necessary for him to state it was a garter snake.”

CONRAD Farm Wagons Built to Your Order Exactly the way you want them For more than sixty years CONRAD FARM WAGONS and TRUCKS have been built right here in this town; first by my grandfather, then by my father, and now by me — in my own shop. Every Wagon or Track Is Built to Order You get exactly what you need and want, to fit the work the wagon has to do. You Get the Biggest Dollar-Value for every dollar you spend. EARL W. CONRAD Pioneer Wagon Makers of Indiana WARSAW, INDIANA

ALL OF FAMILY NOT THERE How Many of Spaniard’s Daughters Were Missing Had to Be Left to the Imagination. In Spain, and particularly In the province of Andalusia, families are so large that even Theodore Roosevelt would have been appalled. Hamilton Fyfe, the well-known writer, was touring Andalusia on horseback one winter and rpent the night In a fonda near Los Boliches. At dinner over his hominy soup, Mr. Fyfe was amazed to see the multitude of daughters that the Innkeeper possessed. 3 “You have a fine, a very fine family of daughters there,” he said. “Ah, senor,” said the Innkeeper, “we’ve been very unfortunate with our daughters. During a 1917 terral, the chimney fell in and killed all but eleven of them.” Males Outnumber Females. The latest available compilation shows the United States to be one of the four leading countries In the world where the male population outnumbers the female. The proportion of females to each thousand males is as follows: United States, 934; England, 1,068; Germany, 1,026; France, 1,033. Boxes to Hold 8,000,000,000 Cans. One . hundred million wood boxes were required to pack last year’s output of the canning industries in the United States, estimated at 8,000,000,000 cans. — Skies ForteH Weather. A deep-blue colored sky, even when seen through clouds, Indicates fair weather, while a growing whiteness indicates an approaching rain.

For Every Home A table drink that refreshes, but leaves no after-depression —* Instant Postum Much used nowadays instead of coffee as a breakfast beverage because of its similarity in flavor to coffee, but with entire absence of ill effect, since Postum contains no “caffeine.” Instant Postum is made quickly'in the cup, with economy as well as com* venience. Sold by Grocers Everywhere Mad. by POSTUM CEREAL CO, Inc. BATTLE CUIK, MICHIGAN

wool, silk, linen, cotton or mixed goods. Buy “Diamond Dyes”«—no other kind —then perfect results are guaranteed even if you have never dyed before. Druggist has color card. Pleasure Missed. “01” said Marjorie as the dessert came on, “how I wish you had told me this morning, mamma, that you were going to have strawberries and cream for dlnaer I” “Why, what difference would that have made?” inquired her mother. “O, lots!” with a sigh. “I could have looked forward to it all day then.” Cutlcura for Sore Hand*. Soak hands on retiring in the hot suds of Cutlcura Soap, dry and rub in Cu-, ticura Ointment. Remove surplus Ointment with tissue paper. This is only one of the things Cutlcura will do if Soap, Ointment and Talcum are used for all toilet purposes.—Adv. Kind Invitation. College professors are proverbially absent minded and many stories are told along this line. One is told about the late Professor Cleveland, beloved of ail Bowdoln men of several decades ago. One day the professor had a powerful electric current running over an Insulated wire in the class room. “If ft man should touch this wire,” he said to the class in physics, “he would be killed instantly.” Then, beamingly absent mindedly uppn the nearest student, he said: “Now, Mr. Smith, will you kindly touch that wire?”—Portland Express. Catarrhal Deafness Cannot Be Cured by local applications as they cannot reach the-diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to cure Catarrhal Deafness, and that is by a constitutional remedy. HALL’S CATARRH MEDICINE acts through the Blood on the Mucous Surfaces •f the System. Catarrhal is caused by an Inflamed condition of tne mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube is inflamed you have a rumbling sotind or imperfect hearing, and when it Is entirely closed, Deafness Is the result. Unless the inflammation can be reduced and this tube restored to Its normal condition, hearing may be destroyed forever. Many cases of Deafness are caused by Catarrh, which Is an inflamed condition of the Mucous Surfaces. ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for any case of Catarrhal Deafness that cannot be cured by HALL’S CATARRH MEDICINE. , All Druggists 75c. Circulars free. P. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio. WOULD HAVE TO CALL EARLY Indianapolis Man Learned Something When He Set Out to Buy Second-Hand Auto. Bob Devericks, head of the manuscript department, state board of education, tells a good one about two automobiles and a man of the peoplo. Says Bob: “I thought I’d try to pick up a sec-ond-hand automobile and enjoy some of the delights of the rich, and so begnn scanning the ‘for sale’ columns of the newspapers. I saw an advertisement that told about a Ford sedan only slightly used and for sale at a reasonable price. “I called the telephone number given. A woman answered the call. She said her brother had advertised the machine; that he had bought the Ford to use while he was having his National painted. I told her Fd call the next morning and talk to the brother and received the reply: “Well, I don’t know whether you can get him unless you call very early. He leaves at five o’clock, because he drives a milk wagon.” A Crazy Idea. “Now, in ‘his film you make violent love to your wife. And, if you like, you may have that part played by your wife.” “Are you plumb daffy?” demanded the screen star. —Louisville CourierJournal. The Fly's Entry. A fly’s leg made S4O look like $l4O on the bankbook of a St. Paul concern the other day. We’ve been swatting flies with our bankbook since early June with precisely the reverse effect Some folks are born to luck!—Buffalo 1 News.

THE SYRACUSE AND LAKE WAWASBE JOURNAL

PROBLEMS FACING STRICKEN WORLD ■ ; ■- ■■■■■■■ Shaft Chaos or Reconstruction in Europe Follow the Great * World War? RUSSIA OUT OF BALANCE That Its Industrial Life Has Not Kept Pace With Its Agricultural Has Been Fatal to Country's Prosperity. Article XVIII. By FRANK COM€RFORD. Less than 10 per cent of the people of Russia “permanently” live in cities or towns. I write the word “permanently” to call attention to the fact that a number of peasants and villagers come to the/cities and towns to work for a part of the year in the Industries. They retain their peasant status and their domiciles in the villages. In 1910 there were only forty cities in the Russian empire with a population of from 50,000 to 100,000; only four cities with a population of over 100,000. Poverty forced upon the Russian people the co-operative spirit In a great, long strain people can stand up together better than alone. It Is the Idea of consolation in companionship. It is a principle of mass psychology that a group of men will dare to do a thing, to stand a suffering or a danger that no individual ip the crowd would undertake alone. The Russians have suffered from the dawn of history, and one of the oldest institutions of Russian life is the Artel. The Artel very much resembles the co-operative society of western Europe, with this difference, that the co-operative society in Europe and America is the outgrowth of an economic trend. In Russia it was the unpremeditated result of necessity. It is the difference between one who is hungry because he Is dieting and one who is starving because he is without food. The workers of Russia have suffered the same slavery the peasants have endured. The maximum wage has been a starvation pay. So when the working men from a province come to a dty to work in the textile industries or as carpenters, masons, etc., they at once unite In groups. of from ten to fifty persons, rent a house, keep a Common table, elect an elder of the Artel, to whom each one pays his share of the expense. All over Russia one finds the Artel —In the cities, in the lumber camps, even in the prisons. When a building is to be put up an Artel is organized. When a railroad is being built an Artel is formed. In some instances the Artel resembles a labor union, in that the arrangement ofi. the terms of employment is made by a delegate or committee appointed by the Artel. Live in Squalor and Misery. Village life is primitive. The villagers live out of the world. The villages are very small, particularly in the extreme north. The houses are generally cheap wooden shanties. Owing to the great danger of fire, Ihe villages generally cover a large area of ground. The houses are scattered and straggling. The conveniences found even in the American tenements are unknown. There Is no chance for cleanliness. They live and sleep in crowded, smoky, unfinished houses. Furniture —they haven’t what we call furniture, even what the poorest farm tenant In America would call furnishings. A board for a table, a shake* down for a bed. Russia’s Industrial life has always been out of balance with her agricultural life. Notwithstanding her riches of raw material and her great possibilities for a successful industrial life, Russia has continued to be a nation with 81 per cent fanners, 7 or 8 per cent permanently engaged in Industry, and 3 or 4 per cent of peasants who devoted part of the time to work in the Industries. It has been said repeatedly that the Imperial Russian government from the time of Peter the Great has been unceasing in its efforts for the creation and development of home manufactures. All of the eiMdence I have examined refutes this statement. There never has been any security to the worker in Russia. The only protection he has had has been his interest in the family allotment. He could go back there and be hungry; In the city starvation was the danger. The czars put every obstacle in the way of education and of course this prevented the growth of Industry. In T 902 the principal industries in Russia, representing all of the factories throughout the empire, of which the annual production was valued at more than SI,OOO, were textiles, food products, animal products, wood, pachemical products, ceramics, mining, metal goods, miscellaneous, and all of these employed only 2,259,773 workers. Led Up to Bolshevik Problem. This dwarfed, stunted, paralyzed side of Russia —Its Industrial side — has a direct bearing upon conditions in Russia today and is an important part of the problem of the bolshevik government. • A nation to be economically normal must have balanced agricultural, manufacturing and commercial sides. If these three departments of activity are not proportionately developed the nation is economically a cripple. Russia has been and is in this sense an

Whither We Are Flying The point In space toward which the sun with its planets Is voyaging at the rate of a million miles a day now lies directly overhead early in the evening. The exact location of this point has not been finally determined, but it lies somewhere In the neighborhood of the brilliant star Vega. Do you feel that you are shooting upward, head first, about 25 times as fast as a can* nonball?

economic cripple. Her-body is great and powerful; the physical constitn tion is strong. One arm, agriculture is overdeveloped, and its overdevelop ment has been at the sacrifice of the other arm. Russia, economically, in one physical respect, reminds me of Wilhelm Hohenzollern, late of Prussia, now living in Holland. I refer to his withered, undeveloped baby arm. Russia's undeveloped industrial arm is Just such a crippled, useless arm. Reference to the ex-emperor, who Is now sawing wood in Holland, suggests to toy mind the words of a great German economist. List: “A nation cannot promote and further its civilization, its prosperity and its social progress equally as well by exchanging agricultural products for manufactured goods as by establishing ft manufacturing power of its own. A merely agricultural nation can never develop to any extent a home or a foreign commerce, with inland means of transport and foreign navigation. Increase its population In due proportion to their wellbeing, or make notable progress in its moral. Intellectual, social and political development;. It will never acquire Important political power or be placed In a position to influence the cultivation and progress of less advanced nations and to form colonies of its own. A mere agricultural state Is infinitely less powerful than an agricultural-manufacturing state. The former Is always economically and politically dependent on those foreign nations which take from it agriculture in exchange for manufactured goods. It cannot determine how much it will produce, it must wait and see how much others will buy from it. The agricultural-manufacturing states on the contrary produce for themselves large quantities of raw materials and provisions and supply Merely the deficiency from importation. The purely agricultural nations are thus dependent for the power of effecting sales on the chances of a more or less bountiful harvest in the agricultural-manufacturing nations. They have, moreover, to compete in their sales with other purely agricultural nations, whereby the power of sale in itself is uncertain; they are exposed to the danger of ruin In their trading with agricultural-manufactur-ing nations by war or new tariffs, whereby they suffer the double dlsad-* vantage of finding no buyers for their surplus agricultural products and of failing to obtain supplies of the manufactured goods they require. An agricultural nation Is a man with one arm who makes use of an arm belonging to another person but cannot, of course, be sure of having it always available. An agricultural-manufac-turing nation is a man who has two good arms of his own at his disposal. Poland Cited as an Example. List further points out that the relative cultivation of the agricultural and manufacturing arms of a country possessed of an ample and fertile territory will give that country a population twice to three times as large as It could secure by the development of the agricultural arm alone, and maintain this vastly Increased population in a much higher degree of comfort. Surplus agricultural produce is not necessarily capital In an agricultural country. Countries which produce such a surplus and remain dependent upon manufacturing countries are often obliged to purchase these manufactured goods at an enhanced price. He points to Poland as an example. She exported* the fruits of her soil to obtain the goods which she could have manufactured from it. As a consequence she fell like a house of cards when organized nations attacked her. List considers that had Poland developed her manufacturing arm, besides retaining her national independence she would have exceeded any other European country In prosperity. To use List’s words; “Go to fallen Poland and ash its hapless people now whether It Is advisable for a nation to buy the fabrics of a foreign country so long as its native manufacturers are not sufficiently strengthened to be able to compete in price and quality with the foreigners.” Bolshevism has set oat to socialize political, agricultural and industrial Russia, and as I expect to examine the effects of communism in each of these departments of Russian life I have set down some historical and economical truths which must be kept In mind when examining the Lenine panacea. (Copyright. 1920. Western Newspaper Union) France Needs Raw Materials. Economic disturbances in France during the period of readjustment of wages to high prices were predicted by Leon Jouhaux, chief labor representative on the French delegation to the international labor conference at Washington. “The lack of raw materials Is the only thing that prevents the French workingman from going back to his job,” said M. Jouhaux. “We must have cotton and coal from the United States, for it will be from three to five years before the French coal mines can be operated. Os course, wages must go up in France on account of the Increased cost of living, and it is probable that before the workman gets this Increase there will be more or less economic disturbance.” Japanese Miners Strike. Miners of Japan are beginning to demand higher wages and fewer hours of employment. Seven thousand copper miners at Ashio, near Nlkko, went on strike recently and in view of the gravity of the situation a detachment of infantry and a strong contingent of police were hurried to the district from Utsunomlya. The miners formed a funeral procession, some of them carrying large funeral streamers and white lanterns. Another strike has broken out at an I iron mine near Sendai.

Measuring Rainfall The quantity of rain which falls is measured by rain-gauges or pluviometers, which are variously constructed. One of the best is that known as Symon’s rain-gauge, consisting of a funnel-shaped receiving vessel to catch the rain, and a glass measure of much smaller diameter to measure It. To simplify calculation, the internal area of the measure is usually one teeth that of the mouth of the funnel.

COUGHING, WEAK AND RUN-DOWNAFTER FLU Regained flesh and strength quickly, and tells how. "I nearly died from ’flu' last October, and It left me with a terrible cough. The doctor gave me one bottle of medicine after another, but it did me no good. Went to Charlotte, N. C. p and took treatment of a specialist without any permanent benefit. "I saw Milks Emulsion advertised and started using It. It helped me right from the start. I had no appetite and my stomach was In bad shape. But 13 bottles have straightened me out entirely. I eat anything without distress, my cough is gene, and I have gained back my strength and flesh."—Emma Withers, Box 60, Belmont, N. C. Dont' trifle with a weak, run-down condition. It leaves you open to serious diseases. Get your strength back. Milks Emulsion costs nothing to try. Milks Emulsien Is a pleasant, nutritive food and a corrective medicine. It restores healthy, natural bowel action, doing away with all need of pills and physics. It promotes appetite and quickly puts the digestive organs in shape to assimilate food. As a builder of flesh and strength Milks Emulsion is strongly recommended to those whom sickness has weakened, and Is a powerful aid In resisting and repairing the effects of wasting diseases. Chronic stomach trouble and = constipation are promptly relieved—usually in one day. » This Is the only solid emulsion made, and so palatable that It is eaten with a spoon like Ice cream. No matter how severe your case, you are urged to try Milks Emulsion under this guarantee—Take six bottles home with you, use It according to directions, and If not satisfied with the results your money will be promptly refunded. Price 80c and $1.20 per bottle. The Milks Emulsion Co., Terre Haute, Ind. Sold by druggists everywhere.—Adv. Answered. Patient—“Do encumbers really affect all people?” Doctor —“No; only those who eat them.” SWAMP-ROOT FOR KIDNEY AILMENTS There is only one medicine that really stands out pre-eminent as a medicine for curable ailments of the kidneys, liver and bladder. Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root stands the highest for the reason that it has proven to be just the remedy needed in thousands upon thousands of distressing cases. Swamp-Root makes friends quickly because its mild and immediate effect is soon realized in most cases. It is a gentle, healing vegetable compound. Start treatment at once. Sold at all drug stores in bottles of two sizes, medium and large. However, if you wish first to test this great preparation send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., for a sample bottle. When writing be sure and mention this paper.—Adv. The Birds. “Those birds fly over here to feed. Their sleeping place Is many miles away, but they return every night” “I see. They commute.” —Louisville Courier-Journal. IK BUYING ASPIRIN ALWAYS SAY “BAYER* Look for the name “Bayer” on tablets, then you need never worry. “Bayer Tablets of Aspirin,” can be taken gafely for Colds, Headache, Toothache, Earache, Neuralgia, Lumbago, Rheumatism, Joint Pains, Neuritis, and Pain generally. To get quick relief follow carefully the safe and proper directions in each nnbroken 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. 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. Club Amenities. “When our club met at Mrs. Waggs’ she wanted to do all the talking, I got up to say a few words, but she insisted that she had possession of the floor.” “What did you say?” “I told her anybody would know that from the shop-worn carpet she had on it.”

fyetl Contents 15TIuidDraclra IH Cheerfulness and RestCofita® UniwiM neither Opium, Morphine not lllipi I Mineral. Not Narcotic . i |

Enact Copy of Wrapper.

are helping their husbands to prosper—are BlpOM |US ' \ they encouraged them to go where they could make a home of their BM Biff lit \ own—save paying rent and reduce coat of living—where they ■MU •_ t could reach prosperity and independence by buying on easy terms. Vrfl l\ \ Fertile Land at sls to S3O an Acre mil I ( M —land similar to that which through many years has yielded from 20 17 I N l 1 to *« bushels of wheat to the sere. Hundreds of farmers in Western ■ / I J\.l Canada have raised crops in a single season worth more than the whols ■ k co€t of their land. With such crops come prosperity, independence, good ■ f home*, and all the comforts and make for happy living. If. I Farm Cardens—Poultry—Dairying I} l . are sources of income second only to grain growing and stock raising.

’ Good climate, good neighbors, churches. ; I •J’ schools, rural telephone, etc., give you the ■ ( Mt A opportunities of a new land with the con- ‘ M j A./ J veniences of old settled districts. IL/ r > X\ J For iltastratad Hurator*, map*, description of [VI W J V\ farm opportunities in Manitoba, Saskatchewan. I A \ * /! M and Albert*, reduced railway rates, etc., writ* I L \ I (V \ Department of Immigration, Ottawa. Cu.. or I ■L Fl- 4 *• L NETHEIT, Reus 12, Istmtai Sttflei I \ •«*. Cohmkut, Okie; i.l. MeeUCHUR, 211 I \ l ractto *'T ,n,l>l * J ßulMiu-ladlaaasolte.ladlaoa I I'K .VrC*AM. Canadian Government Agents.

Many a man will give another man a letter of recommendation, though he woudn’t lend him a dollar. •' Lift off Corns! Doesn’t hurt a bit and Freexono costs only a few cents. With your fingers! You can lift off any®hard corn, soft corn, or corn between the toes, and the hard skin calluses Jfrom bottom of feet. A tiny bottle of “Freezone” costs little at any drug store; apply a few drops upon the corn or callous. Instantly it stops hurting, then shortly you lift that bothersome corn or callous right off, root and all, without one bit of pain or sorenqsSs • Truly l No humbug l—Adv. The Building Crisis. Knicker —The house divided against itself will fall. Bockcr —Nowadays It won’t get built. FRECKLES • Now la the Time to Get Rid of These Ugly Spots. There’s no longer the slightest need ol feeling ashamed of your freckles, as Othlns —double strength—ls guaranteed to remove these homely spots. Simply get an ounce of Othine—double strength—from your druggist, and apply a little of It night and morning and you should soon Bee that even the worst freckles have begun to disappear, while the lighter ones have vanished entirely. It Is seldom that more than one ounce is needed to completely clear the skin and gain a beautiful clear complexion. Be sure to ask for the double strength Othine, as this la sold under guarantee of money back If It falls to remove freckles. Handicapped. “I tried to tell that lady about my new Paris gown, but she wanted to talk about the new books.” “Embarrassed you, eh?” “Yes; I don’t know a thing about the latest style In books.” —Louisville Courier-Journal. Snowy linens are the pride of every housewife. Keep them In that condition by using Red Cross Ball Blue in your laundry. 5 cents at grocers. Changing the View. A cylindrical tool, described In the Popular Mechanics’ Magazine is meant to aid the portrait photographer in posing his subjects. From a switch mounted on the rear of the camera, wires lead to an electric motor concealed In the base of the stool. With his hand on the switch, the photographer is constantly able to turn his subject until the desired view, profile, full face, etc.. Is seen.

c 0 r

CASTOR IA

Special Care of Baby. That Baby should have a bed of its own all are agreed. Tet it is more reasonable for an infant to sleep with grown-ups than to use a man’s medicine in an attempt to regulate the delicate organism of that same infant. Either practice is to be shunned. Neither would be tolerated by specialists in children’s diseases. • * Your Physician will tell you that Baby’s medicine must be prepared with even greater care than Baby’s food. A Baby’s stomach when in good health is too often disarranged by improper food. k Could you for a moment, then, think of giving to your ailing child anything but a medicine especially prepared for Infants and Children ? Don’t be deceived. Make a mental note of this:—lt is important, Mothers, that yon should remember that to function well, the digestive organs of your Baby must receive special care. No Baby is so abnormal that the desired results may be had from the use of medicines primarily prepared for grown-ups. MOTHERS SHOULD READ THE BOOKLET THAT IS AROUND EVERY BOTTLE OF FLETCHER'S CASTORIA genuine CASTOR I Always Bears the Signature nf _ THE CINTAUW COMPANY. NSW YORK CITY.

illiliii

I tell you, Munn, this Golden Sun My wife’s been buying lately Is the best bet (That I’ve struck yet. I likf it’s flavor greatly. PURE Coffee; carefully selected and Skillfully blended, free from draff and dust, and therefore giving full vahie,-fhafs Golden Sun, the coffee your grocer sells and peddlers, do not. Peddlers; make bigger profit on cheap brands., The Wools oxi Spice Ox; Tbtedo. Ohio

I Buy Coffee of Your Grocer Only fl esssssssesssssss!

Eczema

m MONEY BACK ' Without question li Hunt’s SaITW fails in the treatment of Bciema, Tetter, Ringworm, Itch, etc. Don t become discouraged because other treatments failed. Hunt s Snivel bas relieved hundreds of such cases. Yon can’t lose on our Moneyft #■ j Back Guarantee. Try it at our risk fßf TODAY. Price 76c, at drug stores. ■ | A.B. Richards Co., Sherman, Texar nanni.n riimers, UO Do Kalb Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Pittsburgh Bible Institute Prepares for the Gospel ministry and for all forms of Christian work. TUITION IS FREE. The student of little means, and even of no means, is given an opportunity for training. Send for Its Prospectus and free literature. REV. C. H. PRIDGEOX 12 Congress St. Plttsbnrrh. Fs,