The Syracuse Journal, Volume 16, Number 33, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 13 December 1923 — Page 3
Help That Achy Back! Are you dragging aroond, day after day, with a dull, unceasing backache? Are you lame in the morning; bothered with headachei, dizziness and urinary dieorders? Feel tired, irritable and discouraged? Then there’s surely something wrong, and likely it’s kidney weakness. Don’t neglect it! Get back I I your health while yen can. Use Doan’s Kidney PilU. Doan’s hare helped thousands of ailing folks. They should help you. Ask your neighbor/ An Ohio Cue
Mrs. Cornelia : BurchUl, 20 New ' St, Dayton. Ohio. I ’says; "My back gave out and ached like it would break. I tired easily and I often had to stop and rest. My sight blurred and I was .so dlny I couldn't 'walk across the floor at tlmea My ‘ kidneys acted tog !
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often. 1 used Doan’s Kidney Pills. I The aches and pains left my back and my kidneys were regulated.” Get Dean’s st Any Stars. Wc a Box DOAN’S V.TIV foster milburn co. buffalo, n. y. ’Wanted to See the Boss. A green salesman had been turned I loose on the drug trade. He hadn’t I been out long when he struck an enterprising shop doing business as the Hygela Pharmacy. The salesman had * been drilled in approach methods and j instructed not to lose any time. So when the genial proprietor came forward to inquire his business, he spoke up briskly: “Kindly let me see Mr. Hygela.” GIRLSI AGLEAMYMASS OF BEAUTIFUL HAIR 35-Cent “Danderine" So Improves Lifeless, Neglected Hair.
An abundance of luxuriant hair full of gloss, gleams and life shortly follows n . genuine toning up ’ of neglected scalps with dependable “Danderine.” Falling hair,
Itching scalp and the dandruff Is corrected immediately. Thin. dry. wispy or fading hair Is quickly invigorated, taking on new strength, color and youthful beauty. “Danderlne’* is delightful on the hair; a refreshing, stimulating tonic—not sticky or greasy! Any drug store. —Advertisement. Accommodating, Tailor —I should like to know when you are going to pay that bill. I can't come hen* every day in the week. Jones—What day would suit you vest? ‘Satunhij" “Very well, then, you may call every Sa turday.*'—Lon don A n swcrs. Baby's little dn -«ea will Just simply dazzle If Bed Cross Ball Blue is used in the laundry. Try It and see for yourself. At all good grocers.—Advertisement. Poor Outlook for Jack. Ethel—Jack told me that he will drown himself if I do not consent to be Ids wife What shall 1 do? Mother— Walt, my child, and see whether he does It or not. If he falls to keep his word. you will know that he is not worthy of jour love.—Boston Transcript. One Trial Will Convince You that A!h'.> k’s PkK'er is by far the qui< ke't. safest ami most certain remedy for all local aches and pains.—Adv. Some Driver. Are you a good driver? Motor, golf, charity, pile or slave?— Philadelphia Record. Sure Relief FOR INDIGESTION Bell-ans LP&dFSj Hot water Sure Relief DELL-ANS 254 AND 75* PACKAGES EVERYWHERE EURfSICOLDS - LAGRIPPE — Standard cold remedy world over, Demand box betttwg Mr. Hili'* portrait and s<nature. I mu AtAfftigite-JBCkfiß OenaiM Hand-Fwlatefi Bread Board With teau’ifsl blue bird or fruit dv«i<n, knife to match—a UMtul Ch run ma* rift —postpaid tl.T| Farlow Oallrrir*. Sfesboycsn. Wi* A*«at«—NrU Plant Marvel, the W»rW, Parral, rMUtsst and <ia)cke«t-actln* small packaaa' fsrtutacrr. Sample He Rsfundsd first order Sale* Manutsr. <•» Linwood Ar., Columba*. O AtMKMiA BIG FAEMFORABIO man. This farm is all rivsr flaw, biack loam soil, svsry foot can ba worked by tractor. This land U actually worth 13*0 par aers. All buii<tts<* rood. Lawla eountv; ' S3«.i«e, part cash. Hit aersa: all level section of land; can all be tractor-worked; lbrmu*r county; ISAM. part cash Me acres; boat kind of soil; all buildtnes reod; d« cow*. aU machtnary and tool*. Schobarte county: Srtee »«.«<» I<9 other bargain* Form Sales Maxatinr seat free. NSW ’ WORK STATE FARM BAL.K.I CO. U Mana Bid*.. P O. Bor(lit UTICA. NEW TORR At? Aon Itiwutlwfied. Hick er Broke? My r method Wtn brine results reghrdlew of cause. No medicine, er interference with your rell*lon. M A. Tripp. Ho* IRI. Denver. Colo. I N VEM TMKM«B SAVTK. SO<-ND AND secure. Principal pathway to profits. Poets) ; card tor Information to SELDEN H. KILGORE. IMS CaUfonUa Ave.. Topeka. Ke*. I f * |seldom«see| '7S f ***« ka *“ “*• 5 w * t year I EH 7H keros may have a bunch or bndne I thread g I win cl sen it off without lay■rfl ingap iha horse. N« Mister, Hp Esir gone- Con cent™ tad —only a few required at an [w.r.YOCEG.hs.mUw.sSL.amewfcM.Aaw. W. N. Uw FORTWAYNt. NO,£-tm
Coats and Wraps Pretty and Warm
An arctic winter Is headed this way. The news Is in the very air—not because the weather man has confided . the prophecy, but because a glorious season of fashions in furs has opened. Dress authorities say there has never been a time in all their experience when furs alone had such a vogue and literally dominated the entire category of styles. Always, says a fashion writer in the New York Times, a woman who went In for good clothes has had a fur coat ®EL. ■ill 1h f ill i v .H H P 1 Ml/1 v ip Hr/J h) ly* L IIW lilM' \\ tor Debutante Is Made of Scotch Mole Trimmed With Ermine. in her winter layout. It was the one note of Indulgence in her wardrobe; her pride, and the, envy of her less fortunate friends. If her estate e!i.m< ed to be one of affluence, the coat was sable—the last word in luxury’— for sable, like rubles, has ever had high value. The possessor of a sealskin coat was once regarded as a person of rank in the world of fashion. One fur wrap was thought. In days past, to be a sufficient blessing for any one person, and not so long ago the shopkeeper who offered fur garments t« his rich customers had often to employ all of his salesmanship to persuade them to buy fur instead of doth for outer whips. The automobile changed all that, for fur : < t->r < oats became a necessity. Driving in the open, it was impossible to keep warm in anything but furs, and the motor salesman tw#me. quite unconsciously, an ally of the dealer In furg. Enveloping wraps and anklelength emit* wf the heavier furs were built In modish models and the vogue was established. All of the coarser varieties of fur were used for those first utility wraps—raccoon, opossum, coney, ringtail, civet cat—with the Inevitable result that these came Into prominence and their prices soared. Craze for Furs. Now that there is a craze for furs, n woman who goes to buy her winter outfit selects as many fur wraps us
Self-Fur Collar and Cuffs
Seal«kln Is so smooth untl uniform that It works out with unusual success In the deep ttouuce model, one having | a slightly flaring skirt that ripples alt around, with self-fur collar and cuffs. | Some especially handsome wraps ia seal are trlmmed»wlth skunk and other furs, one model having a band of skunk around the bottom «ts the straight coat, extending In a narrowing strip up the front, ending tew at the waist. Another sealskin has a cape of its own fur. a band of fox outlining the edge and forming the collar and cuffs; but this has an ewrrimmed appearance and is leas smart than the garments of all-senl. A new favorite has been elected, and chinchilla is now tin* choice of alt the furs for evening. It Is not Inexpensive, | as everyone knows, and it Is adaptable i to the needs of any age. Chinchilla 1 becomes a dowager ns well as It does a debutante. though it mnst be said that Its soft grays harmonize most happily with a rose-leaf* complexion. Chinchilla Is compensating io the modiste, for It combines well with
i ■■ ■ — —• ) Mothers Can Make Hats for Little Daughters , — * i
Any woman who likes to make her children’s hats can make a very modish and alluring one. ■ Two lengths of black velvet ribbon, four inches wide (more or less, according to whether the child's face Is round or slender), is used. These lengths are gathered along one edge to form the brim of the hat. Between I the two ribbons at the outer edge a I wire is tacked. The crown of the hat is made by i making 12 piece* of two-inch faille ribbon, each 18 inches long, and laying them on a circle of silk one foot In diameter, each piece crossing in the center, where they are tacked together with a fiat ornament of ribbon. Where the ribbons meet In the center of the crown there will be an unusual amount of thickness, which can be eliminated by cutting some of the under section of ribbon out, or can be left and raised still further by a little embroidery, which will give a unique effect. A wire Is fitted around the child’s ■
formerly she bought coats of cloth and velvet and brocades. She finds need for a long coat for street and carriage wear—the carriage now being a limousine. This coat may be of sealskin, caracul, broadtail, squirrel or any one of several novelty furs and fur fabrics combined with real fur. Mink is, of course, more costly, but is popular for fair weather service and dressy daytime occasions. . This fur belongs to a woman of position In the social world. Her | grandmother was proud to own n mink • cape or a half-length dolman. The i | woman of today wears a mink coat, ; Instep length, or a soft wrap that completely covers her. The cost of It j would have dressed the lady of thel dolman for a year. The affluent one ‘ wears Russian sable, not for the day ; only, but for all kinds of formal dress , as well. Ennlne belongs traditionally tc the trappings of royalty, and is ever a j thing of beauty and refinement. As an entire garment it was not so popular formerly as now, made into gorgeous wraps and coats, long and short. The most exclusive models In ermine ; of Parisian origin are cut full, with wanton use of the fur. Some are the wide wrap-around Some have a flaring flounce, are paneled or scalloped. ’•» a particularly gorgeous wrap of ermine a circular cape of the fur falls I from the neck to a low waistline, richness upon richness. In another style of uncommon grace the upper part of the wrap Is draped about Hie shoulders at one side, where the fur drops in a point and is finished with a long, heavy tassel of silk. In many of the new styles fur Is draped as freely as If It were silk or any lighter material, i For the ball and dinner gown made of the lovely new fabrics in delicate shades, a wrap of ermine is the most f suitable of all furs. But human fickleness that so easily transfers patronage has lost some of its passion for ermine as a dressy wrap, since the fur has been so generally used sot more common wear in street coats, and' so widely and cleverly imitated. Ermine is essentially a fur for youth | and the most engaging garments made of it are shown in the misses’ and junior models. Some are long, to wear over the dainty dance frocks. Others, in the short jacquette style, have a decided cachet. One among the many Channing samples of these little coats is made of black velvet and lined with ermine, a narrow hand of the fur show- | Ing all around the edge, about the collar and the cuffs. The novel feature of this model is that it may be Wbrn Inside out. which the flapper finds amusing. Sealskin has come back into Its own and Is more popular this season than It has been for many years. Not the : same old coat In stereotyped model that ' endured so long, but new styles that ’ have decided elegance. The very latest sealskin coat is made with no other I fur and no trimmings. Its skins are ' selected and the lines of the garment ; are quite new. Designers have shown the keenest Interest In handling this ■ fur and have presented several models . of distinction. One Is a coat cut in straight lines i from the throat to the instep, the general build of the garment being boxy, j the sleeves straight and rather wide. ' Agfcluminous collar that crushes above chin, and wide, slightly flaring cuffs are added. A dressier model In seal is cut after the plan of a cloth coat, the skirt. In three tiers., being attached to the waist. One other is a loose wrap-around with wide sleeve* and deep, soft collar. On this an orna- i ment of bronze beads with two heavy 1 tassels forms the clasp over one hip.
other furs. It makes tlie most stylish collars and cuffs, for example, on a coat of broadtail or caracul. As ail-! over garments most of the models in chinchilla are rather simple in line,' because the fur itself Is deep and the ' , shadings In Its color are very beautiful. ; The fur neckpiece is no longer the j f piece de resistance in a fashionable toilet. As a protection, worn with a | suit or a one-piece dress. It is almosi indispensable, but as n fad it has »M»SMed and is now merely an articlt of utility. The little sable choker Is ’ j always smart and is the l»est style of j laH when Just a touch of fur is re-1 ' quired. The foxes are beautiful this I season, particularly the orange, red , and russet, which are labeled wilt ; fancy names. j Easy to Sew. If a teep has to be sewn nn a hen* and the stitching is not required to g» through both thicknesses, slip a plec< at card or a paper knife between rht folds of the hem. It will then be muct easier to sew the loop. i I
head to get the sixe of the crown. The brim Is now sewed to this wire, and It is pulled down on the head to form a j becoming frame for the face. The ribbon wheel Is then laid on top of the head, and each gibbon is caught to the Inside circle on the brim Jus: closely enough to allow a becoming fullness to the crown. The remainder of each ribbon length Is carried over the brim, swing ing Just over the outer edge. Those ends are cut in points and form a petal-like frame for the face. It is a conservative style and becoming to almost any childish face. The only regulation required is the width of the brim and the length of the ribbonr which trim the crown. Clean* Coral Bead*. P To clean coral beads dissolve a teaspoonful of borax in a pint of warm water. Dip the coral and when clea i pass through tepid water. Dry by rolling in a soft towel.
THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL
0 the >!H (©, 1»»A WMt«fn Newspaper Un ton.) How many people think the world Is drab-colored and life a failure, and so have done or said something they regret all their Ilves, when a vegetable pill or a brisk walk would have changed their vision completely. A COLLECTION OF GOOD CAKES A good cake Is appreciated and enjoyed at any season, but at Christmas
time with the family gatherings and homecomings cake Is one of the reliable and always popular foods. In most homes a tasty cake which is good without being too costly is the one we look for. A sour cream gake will be one we will like. Sour Cream Cake.—
ESt x-_ • ■
‘ Cream one-half cupful Os shortening ; with one cupful of sugar, add onb-half cupful of molasses, two eggs, one tea i spoonful each of cinnamon and nutmeg, one-fourth teaspoonful of salt, one and one-half teaspoonfuls of soda, two cupfuls of pastry flour, one cupful of sour cream, three-fourths of a cupful of raisins; add the dry Ingredients well mixed, alternately with the sour cream. Add the raisins and the same amount of chopped nuts at the last. Beat well, pour into a large loaf pan and bake about three-quarters, of an hour. Texas Pecan Cake.—Cream three- ! fourths of a cupful of shortening, add one and one-half cupfuls of sugar, mixing well. Sift together three cupfuls of pastry flour, three tablespoonfuls of baking powder, one-half teaspoonful of salt; add alternately with one cupful of milk and a teaspoonful of vanilla. Fold in the stiffly beaten whites at the last. Bake in three layers and put together with boiled frosting. using two cupfuls of sugar and two egg whites. Add a cupful of chopped pecan meats just before spreading onto the cake. Fewer nutmeats may be used where they are a dollar a pound. Sunshine Cake (Two Eggs).—Take I one-fourth of a cupful of shortening. I one cupful of sugar, two eggs, onehalf cupful of sifted squash, one and one-half cupfuls of pastry flour, onehalf‘teaspoonful of. salt, two teaspoonfuls of baking powder, one-half cupful of hot milk and a teaspoonful of lemon extract. Mix as usual, adding the hot milk at the last with the ex- ! tract. Bake as a loaf ot in layers. Red springs the rye. As autumn day= decline, And from the -brilliant sky Less florid splendors shine. .Its airy, lustrous line The gossamer displays. And faintly breathes the pine. In ißtsrnn days. CANDY FOR EVERYBODY Who doesn't enjoy a nice piece of i homemade candy?
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cupiui 01 chopped nuts and one-imit teaspoonful of vanilla. Cook until the j mixture makes a hard ball tn water or hairs from a form, add one-half <npfuf of nuts and the vanilla and pout •ver the stiffly beaten whites of nvo eggs. Beat until nearly firm then drop | by spoonfuls on a buttered baking j sheet. Molasses Candy.—Take three cupfuls <rf sugar, two cupfuls of molasses, «ie cupful of butter and flavor to ! taste. 801 l al! the ingredients except the flavoring until it makes a hard hall in water. Pour into a greased phi it er and when cool enough pull. Tl»e flavoring is added just as It Is poured out. Some like a peppermint flavored candy; any kind may be used to suit the taste. Peanut Butter Fudge.—Place two ! cupfuhs of sugar, two-thirds of a cup- ■ ful of mRk in a saucepan and stir until the sugar Is dissolved. Let it l«oil vigorously, stirring a little until the mixture forms a soft ball in cold water. Reowne from the flre and add four tablespoonfuls of peanut butter. I Stir until the butter is melted then i beat until creamy. Add one teaspoon- ! ftil of vanilla and one-thin! of a cupful of sultana raisins. Turt into greased pans and cut into squares < when cool. After-Dinner Mints.—Take three i cupfuls of granulated sugar, onefourth of a teasqwmful of creuM of tartar, one-half cupful of boiling wa ter. one-half tablesponnfuls of vinegar. 801 l until it becomes brittle In water. Pour out oa a buttered phttter. Pull, adding two drops of the t oil of jseppermint. Put into a sigh* glass jar after pulling and cutting i|ll small pieces. Let stand ten days and it will be crenmy and dellqL<*usChocolate Fudge.—-Take two njpfula <rf sugar, one of brown and me of white, add one-half cupful of milk, two tablespoonfuls of butter two nqaares of melted chocolate and «»ne- { third of a cupful of corn sirup. C«ok to the soft ball stage and cool before beating; beat until nearly stiff, then pour into a buttered pan and mark oft into squares before it gets too hard. 'XtLU*. Eliminate Extra Steps. By carefully arranging utensils and supplies to eliminate extra steps and notions, experimenters at University as Washington have demonstrated that a housewife can cut nearly eleven minutes from the time ordinarily taken to make a lemon pie. Ridiculous. The most ridiculous thing we know rs is the bow-legged dancing master tying to make a knock -kneed flapper a*ke the step just as he ooes IL—Richoond Times-Dispatch.
ANOTHER NURSE PRAISES TANLAC Mrs. Leona Culpepper, 17 Lucile Avenue, who was a trained nurse for fifteen years, is another highly esteemed Atlanta woman whose gratitude and desire to help others prompts her to tell of the wonderful results she derived from the Tanlac treatment. *1 had suffered from nervous Indigestion and loss of appetite for four or five years,” said Mrs. Culpepper, “and was nearly always nauseated. I had heartburn so bad I could hardly stand it, and became so weak and nervous I could hardly do my housework. s “Reading what done for others, I decided to try it. and hy the time I finished the first bottle I was feeling so much better that I bought two more. When I had finished the third bottle I was feeling fine and had actually gained sixteen pounds. Tanlac Is all that Is claimed for it.” Tanlac Is for sale by all good druggists. Take no substitute. —Advertisement. Toad Spurts Blood. The so-called “horn-toad’’ of our Southwest, which is really a small lizard, has a habit of “spitting blood.” as the hoys of that region will tell one. But Prof. Vernon Bally, chief field naturalist of the United. States Department of Agriculture’s biological survey, says the blood comes from its eyes. The Mexicans call them “sacred toads.” because they weep tears of blood. The weeping, however, is ! more like shooting, or squirting, a fine • stream or spray, sometimes io a dis- ' tance of several feet. WOMEN! DYE FADED THINGS NEW AGAIN Dye or Tint Any Worn, Shabby Garment or Drapery. Each 15-cent package of “Diamond Dyes’’ contains directions so simple that any woman can dye or tint any old, worn, faded thing new, even if she has never dyed before. Choose any color at drug store.—Advertise-' ment. Magnificent, for the Dentist. A friend of ours went to a dentist and asked him to take a look at his ' teeth. The dentist did so and seemed full of admiration. “What do yoq think of them?” asked the patient. “Magnificent! Magnificent!” was all the dentist said. "Then you don’t find anything to do to tliem?” “To do to them? Why, there are four to be pulled, six to he filled and a bridge to make,” said the dentist. ! There Is nothing more satisfactory after a day of hard work than a line 1 . full of snowy-white clothes. For sucli . results use Red Cross Ball Blue.—Advertisement. The Brute. Wife (with empty pocketbook)— ' I’d like a little —a little change, dear. Heartless Husband —So would I. But the law requires we be divorced first. : ; —New York Sun and Globe. • Wrixht’s Indian Vegetable Fills contain ‘ <n!y Tcretablr Inirrodtanta which net as a i :«ntle punratlva ST2 T*»arl St.. N. Y. - Adv. * A man at forty knows almost half , m> much as be thought be knew at. ’ : twenty. ; -Algebra is said to train the intel- ’ vet. hut some wonderful r j sever had It. i I■■ ' i—-
Sea Fo a m.— Take two cupfuls of sugar, threefourths of a cii|»ful of com sirup, one-fourth of a cupful of boiling water, two egg whites, one-halt
J — Health and good looks —f/ie reward of internal cleanliness
HEALTH and good looks go hand in hand. If you do not keep clean internally, your looks and health are undermined toI gether. A clogged intestine breeds poisons that reach every I Hl P art °f These poisons ruin the complexion and undermine ■ I'L s health. Constipation W brings on such ailments I headaches, bilious attacks, and insomnia—each or which sapsyour health and vitality. Soon much more serious conditions follow. In constipation, say intestinal specialists, lies the primary cause of more than three-quarters of all illness including the gravest diseases of life. Laxatives Aggravate Constipation Laxatives, and cathartics do not overcome constipation, say sa noted authbhty,butbytheir continued use a tend only to aggravate the condition and often lead to permanent injury.
Jg Nujol fIK RBO - us> PAT * OFr * Il qlrld. For Internal Cleanliness
a in 1 Aspirm SAY “BAYER” when you Proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians sot ■ ‘j Colds Headache Neuralgia Lumbago Pain Toothache Neuritis Rheumatism /O / ///MO Accept only “Bayer” package which contains proven directions. Handy “Bayer” boxes of 12 tablets Also bottles of 24 and 100—Druggists. Asplrla la tba trad* mark at Barer Manafaietute at Moooacetlcacldester ot SallcjrlleacM HYPO-COD MADE THIS SAGINAW MAN WELL
He Had Such A Pain In His Back That He Could Not Work Until He Took Earle’s Hypo-Cod Mr. W. E. Johnson, of 335 N. Third Ave., Saginaw, Mich, writes that “I suffered from a severe backache which the doctors called Lumbago. I would have cold chills and pains in my back and side until I could hardly move, and I had tried everything, but nothing seemed to help me until I started to take Hypo-Cod. The second day after starting to take this wonderful medicine I began to move around a little, and noticed that I did not have near as severe pains. After taking one bottle I was able to go back to work, and after the second bottle my Lumbago, as they called it, was
tQwo pleasant ways • to relieve a cough > B Take your choice and suit •sLA'x' X your taste. S-B—or Menthol flavor. A sure relief for coughp, colds and hoarseness. Put one in your mouth at bedtime. TRA.ce Always keep a box on hand. MAFJ ' I SMITH BROTHERS SS COUGH-DROPS HgfflK, IraMiiiiu iii im ■BBa*wasa»as=M=i CONSTIPATION Take a good dose of Carter’s Little Liver Pills —then take 2 or 3 for a few nights after. They I UAH 11K w dean»your system of all waste matter and yi’&ixzEß Regulate Your Bowels. Mild—as easy to H If I take as sugar. Genuine bear signature— Small Pill. Small Dose. Small Price.
I *, —; , — 4 True Enough. Perhaps we exj»ect too much of our courtesies. If you give a lady your sent in a car, sbe is not likely to leave you s2s,<*W A dazzling smile is quite <mough trnymemt. —Louisville CourierJournnL First or. Record. “Who was Delilah?” “The original lady barber.” —Exchange.
Medical science, through knowledge of the intestinal tract gained by X-ray observation, has found at last in lubrication a means of overcoming constipation. Physicians Favor Lubrication The lubricant,Nujol,penetratesand softens the hard food waste and thus hastens its passage through and out of the body. Thus Nujol brings internal cleanliness. Not a Medicine Nujol is not a laxative and cannot [ i>ihM6%S| gripe. Nujol is trcJ used in leading vEgt/ wI|SB b[| hospitals and is ' prescribed by YC-ti- j physicians throughout the world. CitanlintM DtmanJt Mon Ttfn Don’t give disease a start Adopt this habit of internal cleanliness. Nujol is not a medicine. Like pure water, it is harmless. Take Nujol as regularly as you brush your teeth or wash your face. For sale by all druggists.
a thing of the past I have gained in weight strength and all around health, and I believe that I am better in every way since taking Hypo-Cod.” Too many people suffer like Mr. Johnson when there is no reason why they Hypo-Cod is bringing health and happiness to many Michigan homes, and there Is no reason if you are in ill health why you should not benefit by taking this great health builder. It is pleasant and easy to take with none of the oily, fishy taste of the Cod Liver Oil, in fact it has a pleasant' wlne-like flavor. Get a bottle from your druggist today, or send SI.OO to the Earle Chemical Co., of Wheeling. W. Va., for a full size bottle to be sent you prepaid.—Advertisement.
Cottonseed in Egypt. The production of cottonseed oil and cake is a flourishing Egyptian industry. There are seven large crushing mills owned by European companies in Alexandria. Cairo, Kafr el Zayat and Mit Ghamr. In 1922 4,506,000 kilos of cottonseed oil were exported from Egypt to the value of £183,000; 13,000 metric tons of cottonseed cake valued at £84,000 Avere also exported in 1922.
