The Syracuse Journal, Volume 20, Number 14, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 4 August 1927 — Page 3
■ A ■ 'C '* ' "Lt) tn Co. a, CLa^ t 1 When you trade-in your used car for a new car, you arc after all making a pur* chase, not a sale- You are simply applying your present car as a credit toward the purchase price of the new car. 2 Your used car has only one fundamental basis of value; i. e., what the dealer who accepts it in trade can get for it in the used car market 3 Your used car has seemingly different values because competitive dealers are bidding to sell you a new car. 4 The largest allowance is not necessarily the best deal for you. Sometimes it is; sometimes it is not. 5 An excessive allowance may mean that you are paying an excessive price for the new car in comparison with its real value. 6 First judge the merits of the new car in comparison with its price, including all delivery and finance charges. Then weigh any difference in allowance offered on your used car.
GENERAL MOTORS “A car for every purse and purpose” CHEVROLET * PONTIAC • OLDSMOBILE • OAKLAND i BUICK • LaSALLE • CADILLAC GENERAL MOTORS TRUCKS • YELLOW CABS AND COACHES HtlGlDAlßE—Ttu tUdrit rtfrittrat*
Phytical and Mental Requisites for Flying The exploits at Lindbergh auu Ctiuijiberlln have attracted attention anew to the physical and mental factor* concerned in aviation. says Hygvla Magazine, commenting edi torialiy on their flight' Continuous flying for from 40 to st) hours makes a tremendous demand on the constitution, since It involves sleeplessness, relative starvation and constant concentration. In addition io these (acton* is the question of altitude and the ability of the body to meet the demands of the unusual en Undoubtedly, a physical examination of a man who has just completed the terrific stress of a transoceanic flight would show much the same physical changes thut occur In marathon runners or In workers who are compelled to maintain concentration for long periods of time. Fashion a Small Matter Fashion Is among the last Influences under wtdcb a human being who respects himself or who comprehends the great end of life would desire to be placed.—William Ellery Channing Behavior that Is not quite shocking can easily be very annoying to ail people of good taste.
frß £w\ ’ . Little Betty waxes up with stash. PIT spray kills bed bugs, roaches, ants, and their eggs. It also dears your home of flies and mosquitoes. Fatal to insects but harmless to mankind. Will not stain. Get Flit today. JLIT.S WT PESTBOYS VSX /AX FUes Mosquitoes Moths 4/mr* Ants Bed Bugs Roaches OWWMWM*. «d>4
CUTICURA Heipa Business Girls to Look Their Best tnah and See hrww bteoodsbes. th* haft - ' Bw and glossy. and tbs bands roft and 7/x smooth. Cuticura *Mmw« is ftagnmt vSITww I y wm* aG «*»* TOAic* jwWQCk* in— I Z / Bte OtotHrakSßl endßte TnfannKKe. evsev* ■y tenmifc w»»w 1 gfwl / t V* • X L_ 2 . .SU».*A ' 4»... JS. .....SsfiAs.. .xSt .. . 5.,. }
One Advantage “I'm my wife is huilt long and thin, sorter like 8 shoestring, as you uiought say." stated Gap Johnson of Rumpus Ridge. “Why?" inquired an acquaintance. Weil, sne don’t shade the corn while she's a-hoelng of It like a fat woniaa would.”—Kansas City Star. The hensewife smiles with satisfaction as she looks at the basket of clear, white clothes and thanks Russ Bleaching Blue. At all grocers.—Adv. Just So Mrs. Newrk-h—Juhn. I phoned to your office at noon and they said you’d gone to lunch I tried again at 2:30. hut you were still at lunch. Newrich—Yes. I did have a rather distended time at lunch, my dear. if your «y«« ar« sore, gat Roman Eyo Ba team. Apply it at night and you are healed by morning. 373 Pi-arl St , N. Y. Adv. Os the 80.000 Inventlors filed at tbe United States patent office In Washington. about half of the applications are granted. Everything is forgiven except being called a snob; probably because It’s true. Gossip Is a habit like lying. Some are predisposed to II
LAVA BEDS f Os IDAHO
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An Old Fumaroie or Sputter Cone.
(Pr.rmred by the National Geographic Society, Waahlngton. p. C.) IN THE West the term “Lava Beds of Idaho” has always signified a region to be shunned by even the most venturesome travelers —a land supposedly barren of vegetation, destitute of water, devoid of animal life, and lacking in scenic interest. In reality the region has slight resemblance to Its imagined aspect. Its vegetation is mostly hidden in pockets, but w.hen found consists of pines, cedars, junipers, and sagebrush; its water is hidden deep in tanks or holes at the bottom of large “blow-outs” and is found only by following old Indian or mountain sheep trails or by watching the flight of birds as they drop into places to quench their thirst. The animal life consists principally of migrant birds, rock rabbits, woodchucks, black and grizzly bears; its scenery is impressive in its grandeur. A glance at a map of Idaho shows that the southern part of the state, lying between Arco and Carey and north qf Minidoka, is a vast region labeled desert or rolling plateau. This aegion is about 100 miles southwest of Yellowstone park. Although almost totally unknown at present, this section is destined some day to attract tourists from all America, for its lava flows are as interesting as those of Vesuvius, Mauna Loa or Kilauea. Part of it has recently been made into the craters of the Moon National monument. The district consists of some 63 volcanic craters, lava, and cinder cones, all at present extinct or dormant The largest and most conspicuous is 600 feet high, rising in the midst of a belt of craters two or three miles wide and 30 mile's long. The craters or cones are close together in the north and west; in the south they are miles apart Among the Crater*. Id entering from Minidoka one of I the first major landmarks encountered is Big Dome. A few hundred yards north of it is a crater several hundred yards in diameter and about 200 feet deep. The bottom of this crater was utilized as a camping Site by a recent exploration party. They found themi selves in a gigantic funnel whose sloping sides of red and black formed weird surroundings, in the reflections of the campfire. A peculiar feature of the bottoms of the craters was that they seemed te> act as sounding boards for the notes of the birds migrating northward far overhead. Their faint : calls are gathered and intensified until the birds seem only a few feet away. Half a mile east of Big Dome is an Immense crater ring that looks as if the top of a mountain had collapsed and fallen back into the volcanic throat. From the center, crags of bright-red lava and burned cinders jut uu Ip some places the lava is tjlack, as if smoked in a fire. The crags have magnetic properties, and the compass needle cannot be depended upon when peer them. About a quarter mile to the northwest is a large fissure, which was named Vermilion canyon. The floor, a burred or more feet in width, is composed of cinders; the walls of lava are a bright, almost a vermilion, red in the sunlight. Fifteen feet south of this is a hollow cone, built up 4 or 5 feet. One side has fallen in. exposing the throat, which goes down 25 feet and theri' angles off, an unknown depth. Fifty feet to the north is another cone, about 4 feet high and feet in dltmeter at the base. This has a 6-Inch hole In one side, which opens up as it goes down. Not far away is another crater similar to the one already described but having interesting variations. From Its rim one sees below a hundred or more large lava blisters or bubbles, tn many instances the tops have fallm ta. disclosing rooms from 840 10 feet across and as high as 6 or 7 feet. The shells of these lava bubbles are from 6to 8 inches thick. Their color is a grayish brown. West of the crater beside Bubble Basin are channels winding through the lava flat just as meandering brooks might cross a level meadow. Examination showed these to be lava gutters. Here the plastic lava had flowed down grade, assuming all the shapes of a mountain stream. It was la waves, rolls, twists, and levels.
Plane Mark in Doubt The breaktag of tbe world’s altitude record for light airplanes by Dr. Von Langsdorf. in Germany, March 24, al* ready has been surpassed, but there are seme particulars brought «vt by investigation and diScnsa&m have conveyed by the American eremul in -Stuttgart. Germany. The machine had actually climbed to more awn 20, ffeeL I .j .
THE SYTt A CURE JOTRN AT,
Ten miles to the northwest, beyond buttes and lava beds, lies Echo Cra--1 ter, one of the most beautiful in the 1 region. It is 700 feet deep and is one ' of the few craters having a growth of 1 timber on its sides and bottom. The ' dark green of the pines and cedars 1 emphasizes the vivid coloring common to these craters. Beautiful Ice Cava. i About a quarter of a mile east of Echo Crater is Ice cave. There is a J rush of cold air from the entrance, j The cause is immediately apparent. The floor is a conglomerate mass of huge lava blocks. These and the walls are Incrusted in water, with about 2 , Inches of ice as clear as glass, through which the structure of the rock can easily be seen. Hanging from the celling are many Ice stalactites, some 4 to 8 inches in j diameter at the base and from 3to 8 feet long. In places, especially where ( there is a ridge in the ceiling* they are in closely packed dusters. East of Echo Crater a lava flow some 20 miles wide extends to the , east. Most of the flow has a pahoehoe « surface (a word borrowed from the Hawalians and used to distinguish a smooth, ropy flow from the rough, brok J en-up, ice-jam formation which the is landers dub the “AA” flow). In placet there are ridfce after ridge and folc upon fold, with crevasses and cracks , again, there are huge folds and waves , as if some one had crqmpled a heavj blanket - , About four miles from Echo Crate) In this formation is a lava stalactite j cave Each stalactite, from 2 to 1 i inches long, is covered with green moss. Farther east is a natural bridge ol lava arching a point where two cliffs of lava narrowed down. It has a 50foot span, and from the floor to the roof of the arch is 15 or 18 feet Its width Is 75 feet There is a pine tree , growing under the east entrance. East of the bridge is a cavern that has been named Amphitheater Cave. It is s room some 40 feet wide and 60 feet long, with a domed ceiling 20 feet ' high. One of the best vantage points in the craters of the Moon country is ' Big Cinder Butte, about 22 miles south ' of the town of Arco, and within five miles of the highway from Carey to Yellowstone park. From the summit one looks over numerous craters and flows and the other features that make up the weird region. To the north are many sputter cones and the shadowy outlines of huge caters. Two miles northwest Is a row of seven lava sputter cones caused by molten lava which had been thrown out of a vent, piling up to a height of 6C feet cobalt Blue Lava Flow. Stretching to the southwest for • distance of about 11 miles Is one ol the most remarkable lava flows in the world. Its color is a deep cobalt blue with generally a high gloss, as If the flow had been given a coat of blue varnish. The surface is netted and veined with small cracks, having the appearance of the scales of some pre historic reptile. It has been named the Blue Dragon Flow. |t merits the name, as in many place* it has burst through the crevasse of an oldre flow and the ropy twists of blue lava spreading out in branches, together with its scaled surface. Deed but a lit- - tie stretch of imagination to suggest the daws and legs of a dragon. It 1* the play of light at sunset across this lava that charms the spec tator. It becomes a twisted. wap sea. In the moonlight Its glazed sur face has a silvery sheen. With chang Ing conditions of light and air, it va ties also, even while one stands and watches. It Is a place of color and silence, broken only by the wail of the coyote and chirp of the rock cony. Beyond the north end of Blue Dra gon Flow is an immense cinder cone i the west side of which has breached ' away, leaving tte» floor of the crater exactly as it must have appeared when the eruption of lava ceased Here are bubbles, rolls, folds and twists, as if a giant’s frying pan ol thick gravy furiously boiling had been frosen instantaneously. This flow had broken out and traveled northwest for several hundred yards, and then, having been dammed up. had broken through a low place in the cinder ridge and gone east.
height could not be determined owing to the fact that the barograph was ruled to record a height of only 6.006 j meters. The recording pen passed] tbe 6,000 meter line, crossed the remaining space to tbe edge ot the ■ sheet at paper and continued <m tbe dram of tbe instrument Read the Sign Another sign over the door of a Iraatoew boose: “We are open tor ’ business and mean business.”—Tbe I. Outlook. i
Hodiqullural SIZING MACHINES NEED GRADE Although a mechanical grading machine is not an essential in packing apples, yet for a large crop of gooc quality, such a machine may be ai economy, especially if it has a grading belt attachment, according to Prof Joseph Oskamp at the New York Statr College of Agriculture at Ithaca. N. Y The term “grading machine** is a mis oomer, according to Professor Oskamp for they ar* really sizing machines and for this reason merely relieve th* operator of any concern about tin size of the fruit being graded. Th* grading belt attachment is thus on* of the most Important factors of run ning these machines, because t speeds up the sorting out of the de fective fruit in the process of peck ing and makes it more accurate. High quality fruit not only bring) more money but is more quickly anc cheaply packed. Therefore, if then is a large percentage of culls it b often wise to sell the crop orchard rut ! without grading IL Where the cro| ! runs 85 per cent A grade, It can b< packed for about one-third less that where there are 70 per cent or less o: A grade fruit, he says. Proper can in orchard management and propei spraying should produce a crop whic) will run 80 per cent or more A grade ! It Is very important that the frui . In the barrel should be packed tightly and to accomplish this the barre should be shaken several times tt settle the apples. Overfilling will no* I take the place of racking, and, at th< same time, it results in needless bruis tag of the fruit In,a properly racket . and packed barrel the fruit need pro ject but slightly above the chime. -mm >»- DiseaseiiCausing Pear Tree Branches to Die There are many diseases which t might cause branches to die on a : pear tree. The disease which is most ! often the cause is bacterial blight 1 This disease starts by causing the tip | ends of the branches to die. Gradually tl«e disease works its way down the limbs and finally it may kill entire limbs and even the tree itself. The best way to treat trees infected | in this manner is to prune off all of , the branches and twigs which are' badly infected. In all probability on* will find a considerable number oi ' cankers on the trunk and branches, i if is In these places that the bacteria, or spores of the disease multiply, and. spreading from such places, they are continuously Infecting new and healthy wood. Such cankers should be carefully trimmed out until appar . ently healthy tissue is reached. Such wounds should then be painted with ' a good antiseptic solution. A good solution is made by dissolving one tablet of bichloride of mercury In a pint of water and a tablet of cyanide of mercury in another pint of water. The two solutions should then be poured together and stored In a glass jar. Apply the material with a swab or brush. Such trees will usually be weak. In addition to giving the above treatment. It is a good thing to cultivate the ground and apply a good coating of manure or nitrate of soda in the spring. Furthermore, a good spraying schedule should be practiced so that insects and diseases will be reduced to a minimum. £ Horticulture Squibs I Use only the spray materials recomI mended in the spray calendar. • • • I The peach appears to be directly benefited by applications of limestone • • • The beet materials to use tn spray- ' tag fruits is arsenate of lead and Ume-sulpbur. • • • Crown gall may be easily recognized \ by very rough black enlargements on the crown, roots or main stem of the ! tree. It is alt right to set raspberries be- ; tween the trees providing they are not allowed to Interfere with the growth of the trees for a few years. • • • Do not spray when it happens to be convenient, but spray at the times tht spray calendar saya The time of spraying Is of vast importance and the times given in the spray calendar are based on years of study. * * * In the North, where seasons are not so long, there are not so many broods of insects, so a less number of times spraying answers the same purpose as a greater number does farther South. • • • While the same mixtures of sprays may be used on both plums and apples/yet it is not always practical to spray both at the same time, on account that many sorts of plums blossom earlier than apples do. Be sure the spray reaches right through the trees. To insure this, go in. if necessary, underneath the tree and spray the part beyond the trunk first, then step back to the outside and spray the remaining part. Do this from both sides. • • • If you can't spare a little piece of land exclusively for raspberries, don’t start. One hundred plants give a good start, fifty will do if yon are willing to wait a year for the remainder to grow in your own patch. • • • In preparing for spraying It Is best to buy some good type of sprayer. The five-gallon size of knapsack sprayer will answer the purpose in the first years, while trees are small; and tt is often convenient to have this size m hand for small jqbs, even if one baa a larger slae. . * .... -k .v
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* “A/fY sisters, my sister-in-law and myself all have IVJL families, and for years we have all given our children Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin. We have recommended it hundreds of times and think it just wonderful, not only to bring up children but for ourselves. At the slightest sign of stomach trouble, colds, constipation and when out of sorts, a dose or two is all they need. Truly, it is a family medicine and the Stitch in time that saves nine.” (Name and address sent on request) Constipation, CoZcZs, CoagAs, Feotrg and Other Perih of Childhood One dose and mother’s anxiety is lifted. The sickest stomach craves the taste of Syrup Pepsin. From infancy to old age the result is certain. Droopy, listless, feverish children respond as if to magic. Headache, stomachache, biliousness, coated tongue, con- [ °*| stipation—these are the daily perils for which a host ' ( of mothers say Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin is the safeguard. Sold and recommended by all druggists. SYmUP Forafire€trialbottha«»dinß»»aMiaddnsfto VFDdN ftprin Sgrvp Company, Monticello, lllinoia.
V* or “Antt l n Bernard Shaw is quoted as out to put an end to the “damnable affectation” of present-day English writers who see an evidence of culture in using “aren’t I” instead of “am I not.” “Aren’t," says the writer i quoted, is plural and “I” is singular. You would not say “Are I not right,” would you? Then why use the plural form in the contraction. The homely form “ain’t” is much more nearly correct being derived directly from “amn’t” the contraction of “am not” A New Way to Make Jellies Without Staining Fingers—Without Long Hour* of Boiling—Without Depending Upon Berries or Fruit Being in Season. One of the most interesting and yet one of the simplest new products in the food field is called minute jelly. It is pure fruit or berry juice already boiled down and concentrated. To this concentrated juice, fruit pectin in the right amount has been added. The pectin is that part of fruit which makes jelly “jell.” It Is as pure and I wholesome as the fruit juice. To make the jelly takb the little bottle of concentrated juice, pou? ta > a sauce pan, add water and sugar ac- ■ cording to directions on the bottle and ■ boil a few minutes. Then pour into - Jelly glasses and when it has become ! cold you have the most delicious pure j fruit jelly you ever tasted. A few bottles kept on hand, selected according to your taste for jellies, and you can make up a few glasses just as you want it. One small bottle makes two glasses of jelly. If you wish to try two ibottles send us twenty-five cents and we will give you your choice ;of grape, mint, pineapple, orange, I raspberry, strawberry or blackberry. !Or four bottles—all different —for fifty i cents. Addresp Department WU, GenI oral Packing Corp., Cranford, New Jersey.—Adv. Fes, He Wae Mortified A holdup stopped A. M. Utt, Springfield. 111, late a recent night, and ordered him to “stick ’em up.” Utt has only one arm hut put that up and chided the bandit 0 “Ain’t you shamed to rob a one-armed man.” Utt. “I never was so mortified in my life,” . the thug answered, “but business is j business."—Capper’s Weekly. Snowy linens are the pride of every housewife. Keep them in that condl- | tion by using Huss Bleaching Blue ta your laundry. At all grocers.—Adv. Could See It Better Landlady—How did you find your food today, sir? - Boarder —Oh. I took my plate to the window.—London Answers. For economy** sake, why not buy a vermlfuge which expels Worms or Tapeworm with a single dose? Dr. Peery’s "Dead Shot” does it. »I» Pearl St.. N. T. Adv. “Read the classics for fifteen minutes each day." Maybe that’s all you can stand.
Bugville’s Richest Citizen— But Flyosan will get him too!
XTE’SBEEN burying flies Here is the right insecticide t JjL and mosquitoes by the f or each insect: milllOnS ' ’ FLYOSAN, Liquid Spray— kills . Flyosan floats through your rooms, flies and mosquitoes. CV ?_ PtrTERMA.VS ANT FOOD-e.. n terminate ants. . ■ PETERMAN’S DISCOVERY, Bat use Flyossn itself—the first j^uid—exterminates bedbugs, PETERMAN'S exlernuo.tt. that coeboul house, but also kills the milßtms army. of deadly, diroase bearing germs PETERMAN’S MOTH FOOD—on the body of each. protects against moths. And w swatting*onlya«ittersthese Y o« mart haro a specific inseetb germs into the air yoa and your fa,. «„* insect. No single fafamily breathe. v secticide will exterminate them p-toma-’. gaa ■ have had neatly 50 years’ rhe right Z'A experience. We Amsc that is true, ride for each t J 200 Fifth "J ■ r
| Bringing up Children
w powder ts and ndee ithing else without dancer to your L pets or poultry, is means to you I used freely in the home, ouse with absolutesafety. * proved thatit kills rats me but other animals and jured by the largest doses. ’ A POISON t contain arsenic, icarbonate. Madeof squill safe way urged by govl At your druggist 75c. esas much) $2.00. Or sent stpaid if he cannot supply feel Dizzy? FiwiWhy, MHoua. ecMtinated? Take Nt—Natukk’B Reukoy— tonight. Thig mild, safe, vegetable remedy will have yoa feeUng fine by morning. You'D enjoy frea, thorough bowel action without a sign of griping or Jlwjnmfhrt. Malte the tut tonight—«dy 25c I RHEUMATISM For J$ Year. TRUSLER’S RHEUMATIC TABLETS HAVE GIVEN RELIEF AU Dragguta Two Sijr». 50c and JI.(XL Tru.ler Remedy Co. Cinclnn.ti. O. ROILS MW Theres quick, positive, relief it) CARBOIL GCNIROUS SOt BOX. PARKER’S HAIR BALSAM BanovM Dandruff-Stop. Hair Falling Restores Color and Beauty to Gray and Faded Hair 60c and SI.OO at Druggist.. Hbcox Chem. Wk».,Patehogo«,N.Y. HINDERCORNS Removes Corns Callouses, etc., stops all pain, ensures comfort to the feet, makes walking easy. 16c by mail or at Drug. gists. Wscox Chemical Works, Patchogue. N. X, HAY-O is guaranteed to give Instant and absolute relief to any case of HAY FEVEB tn the world, or money refunded. Price tl. THE HAY-O CO., Sundance, Wyoming. Reports. Personal and Financial on anyone anywhere. Consult our Legal Dept, for Tracing, Collecting, etc. United Attorney Repbrt. ing Agency, 25 W. 43rd St.. Room 901, N.Y.C.( Early Abolitionists j The first protest agsinst slavery ta the United States was made in 1688 by the Society of Friends in Germantown, Pa., according to an answered question in Liberty. _ If one’s relatives live 800 miles away he can brag more about them.
L I | Byosap f I VICTIMS BURIED AT * 41j| CREATIT REDUCED RATES AHOS FLYE UW£RTA«k
