The Syracuse Journal, Volume 20, Number 26, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 27 October 1927 — Page 3

“You Need a Diuretic!” To Be Well There Mutt Be Proper Kidney Function. THE kidney* are the blood filter*. If their action become* *luggi*h they do not thoroughly deanae the blood of poisonous w*Ste*. Such impuntie* make one dull, tired and achy with often nagging backache, drowsy headache* and dizzineM. A common warning of imperfect kidney action i* scanty or burning excretion*. Doon's Ptllt. stimulant diuretic.aid the kidney* in their eliminative work. 50.000 u*era have publicly recommended Doon 'a Atk your ntighbor! DOAN’S p^ s STIMULANT DIURETIC & KIDNEYS foster Milbum Co. Buffalo.NY Coughs and Colds are not only annoying, but dangerous If not attended to at once they may develop into serious ailment Boschee’s Syrup la soothing and healing in auch case* and ha* been used for sixty-one year* 10c and SOc bottles. Buy it at your drug •tore. G. G. Green, Inc., Woodbury, N. J. ' , I . *a-*io J1.M1.1. M’ABK TIME. **H *M*ra*l ine>p>-n.«ive •ncrav.d ChriMmaa ear<ls. K»p unatceaaaiy. S*m*h» *»*»• W» «*rlH.cr and collect <-Tl*»it;::S CAUI> »'<> i ’ N ' ; t V-4 wlta KKKMtitA. iho wonderful bleach emu* Vue one bor and »ee the real »*in JT. 1 —* be fours. Frtc* U.»prepaid HM)hU,TJKKK Arret* wanted. l>r. C. H. Berry U>., ACS Mtctu«*i Ave.. ChteagoHOXSIE'S CROUP REMEDY THE UFB-SAVS* OF CHILDMEN N* eplutn, no nausea >* eent* at drucrista, or KELLS CO„ XEWBVRtrU, N. Y. Bird Has Aluminum Leg A crane with an artificial ;»eg Is an oddity In the zoological ghr'lens of Leipsic One bitterly cold day last winter the crone escaped. When picked up after a long chase. It wa« found that both Its legs were frozen Soon after, when the bird alighted from a flight, one leg snapped clear off. The crane was taken to the birds' hospital and the stump healed quickly. Then some one got the notion to try to fit the patient with an artificial leg. made of aluminum This was done, and the crane uses Its new teg with perfect etfse. The prices of cotton and linen have been,doubted by the war. Lengthen their service by using Huss Bleaching blue in the laundry. All grocers.—Adv. Homeopatha “What cured him of arguing with his wife?" "Arguing with his wife Judge. Hope*a Beacon The brightest rainbow this world •yer saw was that made by the sunlight of love shining through tears.

The BABY

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No mother in this enlightened ag< would give her baby something sh< did not know was perfectly hurtnless especially when a few drops of plain Cast or ia will right a baby's stomach and end almost any little UL Fretful ness and fever, too; It seems no dm* until everything is serene. Thai’s the beauty of Castoria; It* gentle influence seems just what b needed. It does ail that castor ol might accomplish, without shock t< the system. Without the evil taste It’s delicious! Being, purely vegeta able, .you can give It as often as there's a sign of colic; constipation; diarrhea; or need to aid sound, nat ural sleep. ... Just one warning: it is genuine Fletcher’s Custoria that physician? recommend. Other preparations may be Just as free from all doubtful drugs but no child of this writer’s is going to test them! Besides, the book on care and feeding of babies that come? with Fletcher’s Castoria is worth its weight in gold.

Callouses K 8 Quick. safe, sure rvlief from ■ painful callouses on the feet F <s* ttSeho&iT JdL® 2Hno»pa<fs

United States Gunboats Are Built in China

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Chinese workmen speeding construction on the U. S. S. Guam, at Shanghai, for use by the United States navy in the waters of China. The U. S. S. Tutulla Is alongside the Guam.

See Harm Done by Barren Land

Experts Say Reforestation Will Help in Flood Control. Washington.—Any plan for flood control which does not include a comprehensive reforestation program as one of Its Important phases cannot be successful, in the opinion of federal and civilian forestry experts. None of the experts assert that reforestation, of itself, will prevent floods, hut all of them agree that forested areas are of Incalculable value In halting run off and loss of millions of dollars annu ally by erosion. The importance of a definite national reforestation policy and the development of closely related state programs was emphasized, according to Charles Lathrop Pack, president of the American Tree association by the recent Mississippi river flood which he describes ns "one nf the most gigantic defeats engineering science has ever suffered.” Three-Part Solution. The flood control, as viewed by Mr. Pack, calls for a three-part rolulLm: 1. Restoration to forest nmditions of all those portions of land suited for practical forest growing that are today destructively and wasteful!.* wishing away through lack of trees. 2. The application of the very best engineering technique available for the building of levees, storage dams, spillways, or. If need be. a combination of all these. 3. Correction and regulation of the destructive grazing which causes millions of acres east of the Utx-ky mountains to erode and flow away. “The Mississippi has brought to us an obligation for action Unit must be squarely and Immediately met." asserted Mr. Pack in a recent brochure on the subject of “Floods, Forests and the Future,” which Included a history of the adoption of reforestation programs as flood prevention measures In France. Italy. Switzerland and other European countries. In his contribution to Mr. Pack's booklet. W B. Greeley, chief of the United States forest service, declared: "Every forest fire in the Mississippi basin tends, sooner or later, to aug ment flood conditions. Every aban dotted or neglected piece of poor hill side farm land hits the same tendency. Destructive lumbering anil overgraxng which leave naked soil behind them, are sure to contribute, at one time or another, to some flood crest. "Behind and supplementing- the levee* or other structures that must be built, we get back to the land And we should not fall to restore a# far as tt may be done the natural storage and protection from erosion that may be derived from common sense and practical wisdom tn our everyday use of land." For forty years or more, according to Mr. Puck, the United State* has put Its faith and money into levee construction as a flood prevention measure, but almost over night be continued, ‘a great river rising in its angry wratb has broken our man-made levee* as,a summer** shower carries away the mud toys of a little child. Levee* Alon* Not Enough. “Probably." he continued, “we shall have to devote many millions more to this form of river development, but it l» folly longer to depend for flood protection on levee* alone. “The problem of the Mississippi la far too huge and too Inextricably bound up with our national welfare to approach from anything less than a

OLD COWBOY SALOON HAS RELICS OF FRONTIER DAYS

> ■ Fifty-two Men Killed at Bar of Fa mows Drink Emporium of the “Roaring '7oa." Thackerville. Okla.—On tbe west bank of Red river at tbe southwest comer of Spanish Fort. Texas, surrounded by pecan orchards, icreat ranches, and prosperous farms, and Inhabited by happy, friendly people, with little about tbe town to suggest that this I* the roaring "Old Bur lington’ of the ’7os. "Cowboy Saloon.’ known from Texas to Ogalatta. Neb., and even into the wilds of Montana tn those early days. still stands <* a corner of tbe public square. Old Burlington was buih about 1840. a typical frontier town, with its log dwellings set along narrow streets and rude Ing business bouses set around a large public square The first business to be operated separate

national viewpoint It is a problem to whose solution we must bring not only the best engineering skill, but also the best knowledge and scientific attainment in the fields of forestry, range control and soils management We have got to formulate a vast, thoroughly correlated scheme wherein the engineer, the forester, and other experts shall give their best toward devising effective means of taming once for all the turbulent Father of Waters. “A wealth of forest facts exists pointlng to the moderating action of forests on floods and to the deterring effect on elusion. And. after all. it is erosion that furnishes arms and nm munition to flood waters. Not water, hut solid matter, is the destructive stuff that floods are made of. Appalachian* Need Tree*. “A large percentage of the water that flows past New Orleans comes from the combined sources of the Ohio. Tennessee and Cumberland rivers. These three rivers are the chief flood breeders of the .Mississippi. All arise among the steep slopes and heavy soils of the Appalachians. "From this area enormous quantities of silt are torn annually to add to the volume and destructiveness of the lower river in flood stages. Here. If anywhere, is the region where land should be acquired and put under forest management by the federal government and by the states. In this section more than any 'other, forests can make their greatest contribution as ameliorating factors in flood control. Yet the rate at which land for this purpose Is being purchased there Is pitifully Incommensurate with the need. “At the northern headwaters of the Mississippi the topography Is gentle, and the soil more sandy or gravelly. Little silting occurs there and. except for a few localities, little erosion. However, the headwaters of the Mississippi river, with literally Innumerable lakes and forested swamp, are the great natural reservoir of this river, indiscriminate drainage of the swamps and- even of lakes and the destruction of the forests around the lakes tend to destroy this natural reservoir. r Need Range Control. "The northern portions of Minnesota and Wisconsin are but little suitable for agriculture. Here. If the land is protected from tire, nature will keep the source of the Mississippi clothed with forest vegetation. Therefore, tire protection of the forests on the headwaters of the river Is essen’lal. both as a measure of flood control and as an economic necessity. From the western tributaries the lands Just east of the Rockies are undergoing a tremendous process of erosion as the result of unrestricted sheep graxing. For this country th* 'solution ties largely tn a national system of range control until forage plants again c<‘ver tint land and hold the st»il In place. “So It is in the Appalachian*, and to a somewhat les* extent In the Oiaiks. that forestry can best contribute Its share toward the cuutrpl of the Mississippi. Today probably less than 2 per cent of these region* receive* any form of forest management. F*d*ral Ownership. / “Federal ownership and state own ershlp I* the Immediate solution, the first step toward* translating these wasting assets, these potential forces of destruction, into acres of perpetual productivity. “It Is Important too, that we remember the money so silent must not be looked no in the same light a* money spent for levees or spillways—

<►— *— from the general trading post was a log saloon replaced by 1870’ by the frame building, which later became famous as the "Cowboy saloon." High above the saloon porch root was a board front, like that usually found on small-town grocery store fronts. Ob this huge billb«»ard was painted in bright colors a life-size picture of a Texas steer. Beneath the building was constructed a huge cellar to be used as a storage for tbe liquors and as a hiding place for the barkeeper in time of serious trouble. A secret passage behind the bar mart? it more convenient to escape and from tbe underground chambers there was a secret passage that led outside. The old saloon was voted out in 1901 and for a time the building was used for the post office and grocery store. After the death of John Shrock. who had owned the saloon since 1872,

THE SYRACUSE JOT RNAL

Ship-Card Sharpers Often Wear Glasses London. —“Don’t gamble with strangers wearing glasses, if you don't want to' get skinned,” is the warning issued by detectives on transatlantic liners. Professional can! cheats al most invariably wear glasses Magnifying lenses are of great help in enabling crooks to recognize the marks on playing cards. In nearly all cases the trans atl&ntic crooked gamblers go In pairs. One crook can attract the attention of the other play era while his confederate is fix <Tfg up the hands.

funds purely and simply .spent In flood control and bringing no other return than protection. Even so. it would be worth every, cent. “But these forests, federal and ■ state, are themselves capable of important monetary returns. As the ‘ years pass they should pay back every penny expended. They will furnish perpetually renewable sources of wealth to coming generations. And all this they can do while they are fulfilling their great primary purpose of holding the soil in place, reducing erosion and mitigating the destructive effects of floods.” Broom Seller to Live Like Prince in Palace New York.—ls. a few weeks ago, anybody had told Mark T. Ashley he would live the rest of his days like a ; millionaire, with servants at his beck ■ and call in a palace a king might ; env; with m estate of 50 acres in j which to roam, a limousine at the door and never a thought of money, i he would have told the Informer be was crazy. For Mark had passed his seventy- 1 ninth birthday, he had had his ups j and downs and he was struggling des- ' perately to make a living selling mops j and brushes. But Mark today Ilves In finer state than many millionaires. The whim of a strange, austere, lonely old man ( has brought about the remarkable change in his life and will make It possible for 79 other men like h’lm to enjoy all the luxuries in their de- ! cliuing years. Seven years ago Marcus L. Ward, bachelor of nearly eighty, son of the Civil war governor of New Jersey, died In the Essex club, Newark, where he had lived alone many rears He left nearly all his estate, estimated then at from $2,000,000 to $3,000,000. to establish ’The Marcus L Wani* Home for Aged and Respectable Bach } elors and Widowers.” Today the estate Is worth about $5.- > 000.000. the home has been built, and i Mark T. Ashley has been admitted as the first “guest.” The home is In Maplewood. t». J. Land Worth $4 an Acre Spouts Riches in Oil Big Lake Texas.—Land which far ranch purposes is worth about S 4 an acre Is spouting wealth In oil tn Fecos county, site of the Yates oil pool. In the drams of life across the Pecos, where drought has followed drought and where time after time people have left Its alkali acres high value is being placed on the mineral , lands. fra Yates, owner tn fee of about 26.000 acres of ranch land on which > the pool Is located, probably will become one of the wealthiest men to Texas as a result of the oil find. The oil Is In pools at « depth ot about I.ODO feet. Water well rig* are used to reach production depth and * well can be drilled tn eight day*. ■

t»ls son. Drew Shrock. moved the grocery stock out built a partition about midway of the building and used the rear end for a storage room for all the relies of the old saloon, cowboy. Indian, and pioneer days, that had been gathered by his father during his career on the frontier as saloonkeeper and Texas ranger. The front end of the building still is used for the post office. During the 21 years tbe Cowboy saloon was running 52 men met death in and about the building in duels and drunken fights. Today the building stands tn ruins There is not a visible nail bead In the ceiling which has not been shot at Though there always were one or two other saloons tn Burlington during tbe life of tbe Cowboy saloon, it bad few rivals along Red river. Nazimova May Vote New York—Alla Nazimova: Rus-sian-lorn stage and screen aciress, may vote now Sbe has been naturalized. even though sbe had to reveal ; her age as forty-eight. 1

7~i7 7 v „,»* COVER BRAMBLES BEFORE WINTER Small fruit growers should cover all their brambles. Including the red, black and purple raspberries, blackberries, dewberries and loganberries, as soon as possible, in order to avoid early hard freezes. Brambles growing in especially protected places may not need covering, but this is not often the case. Before covering, it is advisable t« remove all old canes that bore fruit this year, where they were not removed at the end of the bearing season. Remove all Inferior and weakened canes, leaving eight to fifteen canes per hill, and cut them back to three or four feet long. Cutting back may be delayed until after the cane* are uncovered tn the spring. Cover the canes on days when there Is no freezing temperature as they break easily If partially frozen. Bend the canes over and weight the tops down with some soil and then shovel enough dirt over them to completely cover them to a depth of three or four Inches. They must be covered completely. If the canes tend to break on bending, remove a shovelful of dirt from the side of the canes toward which they are bent. Covering Is facilitated by plowing two furrows on each side of the row before shoveling the earth onto the canes. This allows the formation of a well-round-ed ridge with wide bases to prevent the earth falling off the ridge. Strawy manure can be used when it can be secured In sufficient quantities for complete covering. One should be careful In bending blackberry canes, since they tend to break easily. Bend them at an angle of 43 degrees with the rows to facilitate covering, to give the canes more room, and to avoid the tendency for the rows to become ridged. Small fruits must be covered completely and covered before freezing weather If winter injury and consequent crop reduction are to be avoided. —Richard V. Lott. Instructor in Horticulture. Colorado Agricultural College Measuring P. D. B. Made Easy for Peach Grower The inconvenience of weighing out exact quantities of paradichlorobenzene for peach tree borer treatment has created a considerable demand for a quick measuring gauge. Therefore, peach growers will be interested in the directions for such a gauge given by Frank H. Beaclh extension horticulturist in Ohio. Cut a piece of smooth paper 4 1-16 Inches long and 2% inches wide. Draw a line exactly through the middle and the long way. Mark it one-half ounce Now draw a second line dividing one of these halves equally ; name this line threefourths ounce. Roll the paper into a cylinder, lines marking the ounces inside. and paste It into place. In doing this, overlap the end exactly seveneighths of an inch. The cylinder will hold an ounce of P. D. B. Place the cylinder on any hard surface and till with P D. B. to the line Indicating the quantity yon need. Pour the fine crystals of the chemical Into a small wide-mouthed bottle and gauge the various amounts on IL A file may be used to cut a mark. If you have a small bottle that wili be convenient in measuring, you could have your local druggist mark the bottle instead of going to the trouble of making the little paper cylinder. In using the chemical remember that a half ounce to three-fourths ounce is the quantity to use on trees three to five years of age. None on younger trees. Mature trees six years old and over may be treated with an ounce.

? Horticulture Facts | Winter apples are not ready to pick until the seeds have started to turn a brown color. • • • A strawberry patch will not usually Sire more than two or three good harvests as a rule • • • If the old berry canes have not been removed after fruiting, they should be removed now. and the berries given a good mulch of stable manure. • • • Concord Is the best known of all grapes and Is still the mainstay of most commercial plantings. It has many good qualities which commend it Sheridan, a cross between Warden and Herbert Is recommended as a variety to follow Concord. A great many growers feel It Is inadvisable to grow strawberries between peaeb or apple trees. • • • The safest way to protect trees against gnawing by rabbits Is to use wire screen or some other wrapper on the trees. * •. • To test the firmness of apples as a guide to the proper picking of the fruit for storage and for shipment, a mechanical tester has been devised which measures the degree of softness in the ripening fruit Ration for Calves The following grain mixture for calves which are on pasture has many things in its favor. It consists of three parts ground corn, three parts ground oats, three parts bran, and one part linseed oil meal. Clover or alfalfa hay can be added and is especially important if the calf is not on pasture. If silage is fed it should be of good quality and fed only In moderate amounts not to exceed ten pounds per day for calves twelve months old *

Doctor Found Women and Children Sick More Often than Men

As a fttmlly doctor at Monticello. Illinois, the whole human body, not any simall part of it, was Dr. practice. More than half his “calls” were on women, children and babies. They are the ones most often sick. But their illnesses were usually of a minor nature —colds, fevers, headaches, biliousness—and all of them required first a thorough evacuation. They were constipated. In the course of Dr. Caldwell’s 47 years’ practice (he was graduated from Rush Medical College back in 1875), he found a good deal of success in such cases with a prescription of his own containing simple laxative herbs with pepsin. In 1892 he decided to use tihis formula in the manufacture of a medicine to be known as Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup- Pepsin, and in that year his prescription was first placed on the iharket. The preparation immediately had as great a success in the drug stores as it previously had in Dr. Caldwell’s private practice. Now, the third generation fe using it. Mothers are giving it to their children who were given it by their mothers. Every second of the working day someone somewhere is going into a drug store to buy it. Millions of bottles of Dr. Caldwell’s Syrui> Pepsin are being used a year. Its I great success is based on merit, on. repeated buying, on one satisfied user tilling another. There are thousands of homes in this country that are njever without a bottle of Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin, and we have gotten many hundreds of letters from grateful people telling us that it helped them when everything else failed. Among Highest Virtues ' industry and honesty should go hand tn hand that the laborer be worthjy of his hire. Both are virtues and properly cultivated give strength to mind and body and peace to the soul, creating a nobility of manhood compared to which all else is dross.—Grit. Improve Your Complexion Peoria, DI.—“I found Dr. Pierce** Golden Medical Discovery to be a better

medicine even than they say it is. The four bottles which I , took as a tonic seemed I to act like magic on my entire system. It even regulated my bowels and cleared up rnv complexion so 1 that -1 look and feel like a different person. I do not expect to ever find a better

tonic and alterative than Dr Pierce’s Golqen Medical Discovery.”— Mrs. D. T. Sivley, 207 Wayne St. Golden Medical Discovery is a personal blessing to every man and woman. It increases the appetite, stimulates the digestion, enriches the blood and clears the skin of eruptions and blemishes In liquid or tablets, at your Drug Store. No Way to Find Out “So you and John don't speak now?” "No; we had a dreadful quarrel aboutj who loved the other most.” Th* use of soft coal will make laundry i-ork heavier this winter. Russ Bleaching Blue will help to remove that grimy look. At all grocers.—Adv. Don’t mistake habit for character. Men with the most character have the fewest habits.

Aspirin SAY “BAYER ASPIRIN” and INSIST! Unless you see the “Bayer Cross” on tablets you are not getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for 25 years. DOES NOT AFFECT THE HEART Accept only “Bayer” package which contains proven directions. > Handy “Bayer** boxes of 12 tablets 9 Also bottles of 24 and 100—Druggists. Aspirin la the trade nark «C Barer Menatactnra ot UonoeceUcecidester ot SeUcjncadd yy How often does that friendly question find you full of ■4 11 pains and aches caused by kidney, liver and bladder •• w w troubles ? Keep your health while you can. Begin taking Gold Medal Haarlem Oil Capsules at once. JK W* IJt Hardy Hollanders have used this remedy for V* over 200 years. In sealed boxes, at all druggists. * 3 sixes. Look for the name on every box. aouiMEiu. vou LEM * VUAI •

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AT AGE 83

While women, children and elderly people are especially benefited by Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin, it is promptly effective on the most robust constitution and in the most obstinate cases. It is mild and gentle in its action and does not cause griping and strait). Con : taining neither opiates nor narcotics, it is safe for the tiniest babyj Children like it and take it willingly. Every drug store sells Dr. Caidwell’* Syrup Pepsin. Keep a bottle in your home, —where many live someone is sure to need it quickly. ' We would be glad to have you prove at our expense how much Dis. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin can mean to you and yours. Just write “Syrup pepsin,” Monticello,lllinois.and we will send you prepaid a FREE SAMPLE BOTTLE,

DIURETIC STIMULANT TO THE KIDNEYS Standard for Generations. Mrs. Sarah E. Walker, Kregar, Pa., ■write? as follows: “Two years ago I had the f|lu. Then my heart got bad. rheumatisrh set in and I could scarcely get upsiairs. I had not much use of my limbs I took fifteen boxes of Dodd’s Pills and three boxes of Diamond I>inner Pills. They saved my life with the good Lords help. I can now whlk good and; do my housework. I can go to bed now and'\ rest good. I ,atn now 82 yehrs old. Dodd’s Pills relieved me wheA Ing with Diabetes over 20 years ago. and I believe they will help any kind of kidney trouble." At al) druggists, <SQc per hoxl or TheDodds Medicine Co., Inc., 700 Main St., Buffalo, N. T. I

All Hands I 3 Factory ajrents or territory ■ Pp 5 *** B !ye» M salesmen wanted Writet-day. ■

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FLORESTON SHAMPOO—IdeaI f<r « h connection with rark-rs Hairßasam. Makes the hair soft and fluffy. M> cents by mail orl at drug, eista. Hiscox Chemical Works, Patchogue,«. X. People who borrow trouble are always anxious to turh it over to others. When a man is in love he gives. When a women is in love she forgives.

Cuticura Promotes > Permanent Hair Health Shampoos with Cuticura Soap, with light applications of Guticura Ointment when necessary, tend to free the scalp of dandruff and minor blemishes, and to establish a permanent condition of hair hrwlth BSe. OtotaMUt S >nd SOe. Taleam Se. SaM «wrwb«re. >« ejehfre.. Addna: “CaMMKa lifrOnrHq ai»X.B3. £W* CUtwa Shariat Stick 25c. 'N ’ ,

I PARKERS HAIR BALSAM I RemoveslUuidrutr-StopsHaurFalling Restores Color end | Beauty to Gray and Faded Hair I We. and f I.W a» Orug fists. jHlwox Chem. Wks. PatchCKne. N »■