The Syracuse Journal, Volume 17, Number 5, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 29 May 1924 — Page 7

PROFESSIONAL NURSE SAYS TANLAC HAS NO EQUAL

Mrs. J, Clark Says Tanlac Was More Than Match for Her Troubles. By reason of th* fact that she I ■peaks from her long experience as ■ professional nurse, the statement of Mrs. J. Clark, of 415 Walsworth Ave.. Oakland, Calif., will be of interest to all who are in need of an upbuilding tonic. , “In all my fifteen years’ experience as a trained nurse," says Mrs. Clark’s statement, “I never found the equal i; of Tanlac as a stomach medicine and tonic. Two years ago an attack of influenza left me without appetite and my stomach in such a bad fix that the little I did eat seemed to do me harm instead of good.

FOR OVER 200 YEARS Haarlem oil has been a worldwide remedy for kidney, liver and bladder disorders, rheumatism, lumbago and uric acid conditions. HAARLEM OIL r-irannrare correct internal troubles, stimulate vital organs. Three sixes. All druggists. Insist oa the original genuine Gold Msoal. The rsoion B, 6ow ZcMiite used simply *• • mouth- | wash or gargle does three things. (1) It destroys the breath odors arising from conditions in the mouth. (2) It kills the germs responsible for pyorrhea and other gum diseases. (J) It kills the germs that cause colds, sore-throat and more serious respuatory diseases. Zonite is absolutely Boapouonou>. In bottles at your druggist's. n 50c KILLS ] Drop Bourbon Poultry Remedy ■k Cures >■ Gapes S«r»M C*.. *»« IS. LaxlMWa-Kw ( •M • l»<»il> t Mede—M seller. ’ (treat JI ,:y--men Wumee. experience oaMeeaMtry. »3c prrfit every |1 Write quick.. Particular* free Millet Sales Agency. Suite 33* Fitth St Ufllce Bids . Ln* An*<le«, Cat MPS USE— UH (AX -lit SAI.-VET- i We have hundred, at dealer* tn every stat* I Over » million farmer* urine it Write ue >« lAI-VIT COMPANY. CLKVBLAXD. OHIO - LOOK! OAK IHII IAK BKIM.n YOC S handsome 111 knitted ttaa, Broadway’s latest style*. Money back It not satisfied Novelknit T,. Liberty Ar- Hr klyn X V latdlr,, !». >» Money— Make yrvr toilet |uodx . ■ - *'.s<.--a- i- , > t-. .1- . ..ft. t-RVi..r tine E-ch formula SSn. all tor I! A Nelen*. H >ndn. Tex It You Hase t aturrb. Frequent Colds. Send lu* your name I wilt tell you an economical shy Io obtain Inirn benefit without drocslntt J W Knot. ISi* <?o!t**e. Indianapolis. Ind BWill reduce Stralaed, Swellea Totdons, Llfsacnts, or Muscles. Stops the laaeaeas and ■*!■ from a Splint, bide Bone or Bone Spavin. No blister, no hair gone and horn* can be Med. $2 50 bottle at druggist* or delivered. Describe your caas for speciel instructions and interesting bore* Seek 2 A tre*. C.iw, SWLnasaSL.SyrMfiaU.ltaM. W. N. U.. FORT WAYNE. NO. 20--It*4. The good man who goes wr ng la in reality a bad tuan who has just been c found out I

Children Cry for “Castoria” I I A Harmless Substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops and Soothing Syrups — No Narcotics!

Mother! Fletcher’s Castoria has been in use for over 30 years to relieve < babies and children of Constipation. Flatulency. Wind Colic and Diarrhea: allaying Feverishness arising therefrom. and. by regulating the Stomach and Bowels, aids the assimilation of

CONSTIPATION Take a good dose of Carter*! Little Urer PUb “then take 2 or 3 for a few nights after. They jWllt l EJCpI cleanse your system of all waste matter and >4 Regulate Yoor Bowels. Mild—as easy to J nA || | take as sugar. (JKmmBlJ Small Pill. Small Dose. Small Price. I ■ H "—"yi

"Stomach pains would make me so weak I would feel right faint The least exertion would completely exhaust me and six months before taking Tanlac 1 was so weak I had to hire my housework done. I was in bed most of the time for two months and was getting desperate. “Tanlac was more than a match for my troubles and eight bottles left me feeling fine. I eat and (sleep like a child and have energy and strength that makes life a pleasure. Tanlac Is simply grand." Tanlac is for stale by all good druggists. Accept no substitute. Over 40 | million bottles sold. Tanlac Vegetable Pills for constipation made and recommended by the manufacturers of TANLAC.

It may be often that one doesn't praise because so few listen to praise. If You Need a Medicine I You Should Hate the Best- | Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root Have you ever stopped to reason why it is that so many products that are extensively advertised all at once drop out ; of sight and are soon forgotten? The reason is plain—the article did Tiot fulfil, the promises of the manufacturer. This applies more particularly to a medicine. I A medicinal preparation that has real curative Value almost sells itAlf, as like an endless chain system the remedy is I recommended by those who have been benefited to those who are in need of it. < A prominent druggist says. ' Take for ; example Dr. Kilmers Swamp-Root, a preparation I have sold for many years . and never hesitate to recommend, for in almost every case ft shows excellent re- j suit*, a* many of my customers testify. No other kidney, remedy has so large a ■ sale.” According to sworn statements and j verified testimony of thousands who have used the preparation, the success of Dr. ; Kilmer’s Swamp Root is due to the fact, ►o many people claim, that it fulfills almost ; every wish in overcoming kidney, liver I and bladder ailments, corrects urinary troubles and neutralizes the uric acid which causes, rheumatism. You may receive a sample bottle of Swamp-Root by parcel post. Address Dr. I Kilmer & Co.. Binghamton. N. Y., and enclose ten cents; also mention this paper. and medium size bottles for sale at all drug stores.—Advertisement. ? . —— — a'Tl'lo while lie Is always sidetrai’ked by a Mg black one, WOMEN CAN DYE ANY GARMENT, DRAPERY Dy* or Tint Worn, Faded Things New for 15 Cent*. Don’t wonder whether yog can dyt or tint successfully. because perfect home dyeing is guaranteed with “Diamond Dyes" even if you have nevet dyed before. Druggists have all colors. Directions to each package.—-Adver-tl.-enient. Men who mean no harm are not necessarily harmless. Children's handkerchiefs often look hu|»eless when they come to the laundry. Wash with good soap, rinse to water blued with Red Cross Ball Blue. —Advertisement Nothing grant was ever accomplished without enthusiasm.—Emerson. I 7 AsPIRiN Say “Bayer”- Insist! For Pain Headache Neuralgia Rheumatism Lumbago Colds O Ax* Accept only - Bayer package t which contains proven directions Handy “Payer" bow* of 12 tablet* Aho botttefi of 24 and 100—Druggist* Acptrta t* tte tt*Ar murt of R«y»r Marne tkctsrr of Mo*cac*tk*ei4««ter •< SaUeylteseM Calico money is the medium of exchange with Bantu tribesmen Id the Belginn Congo.

Food; giving natural sleep without opiates. The genuine bears signature of

Four feature i S E CT IOM I Department Devoted to Attractive Magazine Material j

' fSI « TO- - - 1 - ' . 1 ■ 5 IJJJ 1 ■ ’ T II I — Il 2 “ Something to Think About ] By F. A WALKER I . \ ( 1 1

THE HUMAN SPIDER ALONG the devious highways where the lights are blazing, to the byI ways where mystic shadows are, and tiie witchery of semi-darkness exerts iis seductive spell, in the salons of [ precious woods and gildings, in the dingy-hovels, the human spider Is ]’ ♦■ver watching and waiting for vic- , tims. His sole purpose in life is to gorge himself and fatten upon the unsuspecting or adventurous who by their own folly become entangled In his web, an exquisite, .airy abode of silvered threads wheA viewed from the outside, but a carnal bouse filled with { horrors to those imprisoned within. Before the dupe has penetrated very deeply into the web, a nauseous sense ■ of fear oppresses blm, but he laughs (t away and ventures forth gay-heart-i ed. confident of his craftiness to break the bonds and go free whenever he may be s Inclined. But his quest of riches and pleasures must be continued. The spider has assured himself that his fondest desires shall be realized. Even now the sticky web is clinging to the victim's feet, shutting out the light from ’ his eyes and smothering his breath. When at last he comprehends he is Imprisoned. It is not without that he finds himself in a hopeless ■ condition, terrified to the core of his •si MEN YOU MAY MARRY | By E. R. PEYSER X — t ••• Has a man like this proposed to you? X Symptoms: Short, trig, full of X good dresser. Sensitive, Y •? charming, never wants to sit • *:* home, always wants to “go some- X Y where" else. Leaves a play if v X he doesn’t like first act. leaves X y a restaurant if he doesn’t like ❖ 'X his waiter, raises a row any- X Y where—always has some fuss X wherever he goes. You sit in X fear and trembling lest the steak v X is too rare or the egg is too soft, a i ' N FACT X a He, being short, has a horror A y of being thought soft. J *•* 71 Prescription for the brideJ to-be: X Wear, low heels —low hats, y X ABSORB THIS: X •> Give him an inch and he’ll take y X it well. , A <C by McClure Newspaper Syndicate.)

•••*%*V%*V*ZV%*V T !■■■ — I—flßot icr’s Coo c Uoo c

Books! Tw a dull and endless strife, j Come, hear the woodland linnet. How sweet his music! on my life. I There s more of wisdom In it. I And hark! How blithe the throstle sings! j He. too. is no mean preacher. I Come forth Into the light of things. Let nature be your teacher. One impulse from a vernal wood * May leach you more of man. i Os moral evil and of good. Than all the sages can." —Wordsworth. HERE ARE SOME SOUPS CUT up six white onions and fry in . a lahlespoonful of butter until ; light brown. Add a quart of water j and a pint of milk, season with j one teasiKMinful of salt and a dash I of pepper, a teaspoonful of sugar I and u piiteb of mace. Cook slowly for an hour and strain; beat four eggs i until light, add a cupful of cream and J a tablespoonful of cornstarch mixed j 5 with a little cold water; cook until the j starch is well done before adding the eggs and creatn. Just heat but do not holl or the eggs will be curdled. I THE THINGS OF | EVERY DAY | By DOUGLAS MALLOCH A : *T'HE little things of every day Make up the sum of living; i Tiie father’s toll, the children’s play. The loving and the giving. I We plan so many rnignty things. I [ But plans go wrung and wealth takes! wings; Yet time can never take away , The little things of every day. i The little things of every dsy Are what we most remember; I The April grass, the rose of May. We cherish- in December. Some word, the first the baby said. Some lullaby, some path we tread. The only things chat ever stay Are little things of every day. The little things of every day Make life a joy or sorrow, The things we do, the things we say, Are memories of tomorrow. Whatever pinnacle we choose. ’ What wealth we win, what wealth we lose. The things that never pass away Are little things of every day. by McClme Newspaper Syndicate.)

THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL

fluttering heart as he tugs and pulls g with desperation to break the silken | threads being spun around him and ’ | slowly strangling him to death. ; g At the spider’s behest the fool has | played fast and loose in the sunniest s days of his existence. Having been so g bound up with the one master-thought | that he could falsify and pilfer with- g out being suspected, gamble with | money that was not his own, delude | his trustful wife and his employer, he . | awakens with a start to find himself f in a house of many winding stairways {| from which he cannot possibly escape. I f The changelings who would have ■ | you believe they are men of rare cun- | ning, fall with frequency under the f spell of the spider, though even the g wise now and then are fooled and i humbled. Nothing but evil is to be had from | the scheming spider who invites you | to “walk in" in Simple Simon fashion | and “make yourself at home.” Every | day the spider is planning mischief. | (© by McClure Newspaper Syndicate.)

A [ SCHOOL DAIJS j| | THL

Quick Soup. Take a can of pea soup and a can of 1 condensed milk—that which is less sweet is more desirable. Mix well, i heat hot and serve with crackers. Cream of Barley Soup. Melt two tablespoonfnls of butter in a saucepan, add two tablespoonfuls of flour, nnd cook three minutes, stirring steadily. Then add one cupful of pearl barley nnd cook two minutes. Add slowly one pint of boiling water and one of milk, stirring until well-blendwi ; and simmer gently for one hour. Rub | through a sieve, return to the heat and j add three pints of vhicki-n stock, one tablefqHxmful of cornstarci mixed with a little cold water. 801 l until the starch is well cooked and serve hot. Condensed milk added to a canned pea soup, heated hot nnd served with fingers of toast makes fine cup of soup for a chilly night. A cupful of mashed potatoes blended well with 11 little cream, added to a quart of hut milk, seasoned with butter. pepper and salt is another quick, nourishing and tasty soup to sene as a supper dish. 'HILUc (©. l»»4. Y«<«n Newspaper Uak>*.)

‘> < > ii Reflections of a Bachelor Girl ji Bq HELEN ROWLAND

JUDGING from the infant mortality amongst them, the rojeann«t love these early-blooming romances. There appear to be two kinds of preachers: those who teach you how live go that you will not fear death —and those who want you to live so that you will cheerfully welcome death. Oh, miraculous youth! To be able to live on the memory of a kiss for 24 hours —and to warm the memory over again the next day! The first kiss always brings a lump In a man’s throat—but it’s the last kiss that leaves a lump in a woman’s throat. No matter for what unconscious or unconscionable reason a woman may

it I The Romance of Words | I ™- ? [ of the most Interesting g i and best-phrased explana- g lions of this title occurs In a I | book written, strange as it may | i seetn, tn I(ss3—Vorstegan's “Res- = = titution of Decaved Intelligence." | “This honorable name of of- | I fice," says the author, “in the E ! chief and most famous city in g our realm is written in divers’ § I wales. Some writ it ‘major,’ g i some ‘mayor’ and some 'Maire." g I And because major in Latin sig- g 1 nifieth greater or bigger, some. | I not looking any further, will g I needs from thence make it ma- g i jor. But, seeing the names of | | sheriff and aiderman cannot be g I drawn from the Latin, why g | should it be thought that mayor g i coineth from major? Certain it g | is that as the other nemes of of- | fice are not derived, from the f Latin, no more is this. For the g | etymology thereof we are to f | note that in our own English to 8 | ‘may’ is as much as to say a g I ‘haver’ or possessor of might— g ! one that hath and may use au- | I thority.” | (ig) by Wheeler Syndicate, Inc.)

, j-.--- ------- - - I Young Lady] 1 Across the Way f ■ ■»' I' I— J—l-J-l-l 1 i i IO V __WA' i » !| I s, 11 ji H ' feiOy I The young lady across the way say> moving pictures of the Old Testament stories now are being shown, but shr supiMFses they’re rather crude, having been taken so long ago. <£. by McClure Newspaper Syndicate )

glance at a man, he always interprets her look as a glance of admiration. Somehow, the smaller a man's heart, the more trivial and foolish little love affairs be seems to be able to pack into it There are three kinds of men in the world: the kind a girl dreams of marrying; the kind her mother expects her to marry; and the kind that she finally succeeds in marrying. A man’s idea of ‘•diplomacy” Is to do as he pleases, and then stay away, until, in her anxiety to know whether he is dead or alive, a woman has completely forgotten her indignation. The hardest words for a man to utter and the easiest for a woman to believe are—“l love you!” (Copyright by Helen Rowland.)

Modernize Z|a \ 1 Do your decorating with ■ the nationally accepted \BgJr wall tint in beautiful r nature colon —artistic, paefios* Aaa sanitary, economical, LgS- BP and durable. i n r*<L M®- itf® Instead of Kalsomine or WiH Paper

There tire only two classes pf men. those who ride In automobiles and those who dodge them. The charm of a bathroom is its spotlessness. By the use of Red Cross Ball Blue all cloths and towels retain their whiteness until worn out. —Advertisement. To hate whom we have injured Is a propensity of the human mind. Dr. Peery’s “Dead Shot’’ I* not .1 lozenge 1 or syrup, but a real, old-fashioned medicine which cleans out Worms or Tapeworm with a single dose. 371 Pearl St., N. Y. Adv. He who would climb the ladder must begin at the bottom.

*B.°° shoes find WOMEN s wW' y- Vl™ yilany at {J.oo and "Boys at d *J.oo | I* 'I 'jSl 1“ D° u ßl as Shoes are sold in 120 of our i" ; own stores in the principal cities and ? by over 5,000 shoe dealers, 1 ’ WHEREVER you live, demand W. L. 1 •yTaffia Douglas shoes. They are high-class and J ? Xh- I made in all the popular styles that appeal to men and women who « stylish and serviceable shoes at reasonable Corflcxl’ LDOM have vou had the opportunity to buy f ° r ' X .°T* such wonderful shoe values as you will find in W. I— DougltlSo 5/.00 and Cornet effect gives SS.OO shoes in bur retail stores and and Supports Arch. 97.50 , ‘ n shoe stores everywhere. Only by —_—__— examining them can you appreciate j | UL-j ( their superior qualities. =f 1 < 5 FOR ECONOMY and dependable ? value, wear shoes that have WL. r>Sb<l I name and the retail i Pjice stamped on the soles. L i. any 11 not for sale m your vicinity, ' ’■ . write for illustrated Catalog h ? I m e?eiSVßSh showinghoutoordershoesbymaZgSß THE RETAIL ■ lue. >7.00 T.L Docglu Shoe Co., 10 Sport St., Brod ton. Mau. price AT THE FACTORY | DUTCH MASTERS / cigar i ' ' • 7 The cigar he smokes is a part of a man’s W|ll|l individuality. That’s why millions smoke Dutch Masters cigars. I Special Also 2 for 25c 15c 3 for 50c 1 Dutch CijM is made by IVL. ( Consolidated Cigar Corporation. N*w York THE NEW SPRYWhEEL GARDEfj TRACTOR With Starter, Clutch and Other Improvements Simple _ A Efficient •150.00 Complete Thousands of the clutchless machines have been sold and are used with success. The New Machine has many improvements. It will do more work. want agents in every /ow'n, whole or part time, to make money selling this machine. rite today for circulars. POWER LAWN MOWERS and MOWING ATTACHMENTS H. C. DODGE, Inc, Sprywheel Division, 33-45 Alser Street Borton. Ste**. THEY LOOK AT YOUR SHOES! ShinouA AMERICA’S HOME SHOE POLISH JI W Keens AH Kinds of Shoes Neat and New Looking farßlack, Tan, Wltite, Ox-Blood and Brotn Shoa SHINOLA HOME SET For Cleaning and Polishing Shoes Genuine Bristle Dauber dean* around the *olw mewl annlies Doliahn Umb’TWool Polriher bring, th. brilliant Shinola »hin. with a few .trokea. ,

f PLANTS SEEDS RIGHT [ 951 oj\ — ® 1 /The HARRISON GARMT ) k/ DEN PLANTER plant. Qg) Qijf *ll garden Beedr —radMfll ishertobeanß.inatraitht Knot at N. fMH rowi at ritht depth and Dealer'. evenly .paced. Assures sturdy growth, thinning Dina W seldom necessary. Dan HARRISON MFG CO. Versaill**, Indiana Let arms yield to the civic gown, let the laurel give place to eloquence.