The Syracuse Journal, Volume 20, Number 35, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 29 December 1927 — Page 3

OUR COMIC SECTION Off the Concrete J II y^aiikg-u-ii l l ijR^ T ir HI I ill. [j \ Jr M y£w*/CS a“ 1 1 - .r® w . oi Xx ' TROUBLE- ' > X z "' j"'X--.X» —__J L_ FINNEY OF THE FORCE | A Very Realistic Dream ’ ZTO | I ,p • , r‘« ALU-WE \ AN yJHATS TWC \ 1 RV. 17SAMS To YOU.CHtCF, FmATTUEB \ *£< AW *° \ fWI goUL STUCK HEALY ON I V*/ALteN* YEft TOST lZl ——’ Tui€ 7 Today loike any I \. 7 C-~-_ arJl |^ SPtSHVL ‘DETAIL * i / \ KiMBBWtaS V -<CjL HMK^ ! ’®t n x-MnX / M e 3 = w ;< W :F7z .IiM ft iT. _ - Z ONLY FAITU, AN ALL ) / O»M FATIGUED . | / last NOifiur 01 DQEMOPT / I tNTOIQE-LV ”/ O UA9 CUASIK' A HOLD UP / I rvuN ALucvce> the woftiD/ \ AN TUIS mQNN 9UCE - / tWA \ \ /^\^a3W — Jr THE FEATHERHEADS Storm Clouds in the West /Cm « *’• K I t 5 ** 6 tTSgtF X. OVER,F\ F^TL-’ 4 '*^ —? r~- — —r i ( *<!__ r \ — ( —f /'WMH \n9 I /4\\ -r -»A1 <x< 18. W fl/ ■” --FyiSL mA - <I | ■< - ir !j_ Ju* ' ' FW< bOtLCXMS - V*'lX XST V7 THE WAR **L I !\ *I | >( Wt CAM! lit run up and TUI WMb m ** IF** ( *** h) »*r BttMff PtCK UP WANK CM ZjlA PLAY**<S*« V **>’!/ HOU©«T kH«SWAP HOME ■ A DQEADS sO>/Jl 'W 1 X AU*Y 7 'tMoIU ’/XviAZjS Bui A I ’** /t\ — <4& Newspaper UMo»-> T ■? .

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-Why, offer it at a bargain price.* _____ “Is that play finished yoa were working oaF “It Is." •Has it bee® produced yet?" •Yes. Th??t*s what finished lU* At tAw Boofetor* CastonuT—fßut this book bears a date prior to the taventiun of print Ing. Dealer la Rare Volutnesr-So much

the mere eatalMK sir. lb was only after the invention of printing. you know, that the counterfeiting of old volumes was possible. Her Great Game A young wife, green at the golfing game. said to her husband. "1 had splendid tuck this morning. ! did the nine holes in par.” He looked skeptical. “I did.*’ she insisted. "Os course it was par. Haven't you always told me that par to WOF

THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL

Mflff BIG MONTHS IN EGG PRODUCTION Fall and winter months may be termed the profit months tn poultry culture for the reason that the big difference in production between heavy laying docks and Socks winch are not profitable conies during that season of the yean Almost any healthy hen will lay well toward spring. Lt is an established fact that a fioek must average approximately 100 eggs per hen per year in order te return the owner a profit. The difference between the monthly flock averages of good flwks and poor flocks comes mainly during the fall and winter months. In other words, the owners of profitable flocks have utilized methods which Increase production at a time of year when fresh eggs are scarce and higher In price. Early hatches of early maturing birds could be set down as one of the most important points in getting heavier (all and winter production Fullers that start laying during the latter part of October are from hatches that came before May L. usually before April t. They are birds that have been well fed and are fully developed. Good birds of this character will prwluve greatly over I(X> per year if they are properly fed and .loused. Proper feeding and housing are the second factors that must receive attention in order to get a good yield of fall and winter eggs. Hens will lay in the spring on a straight grain ration. At that time they are answering nature's demands and will lay if conditions are at all suitable. However, after the normal laying season is over, it is correspondingly hard to secure heavy production This can only be done by using a ration that supplies plenty of animal protein, minerals. and succulent feed in addition to grain, which is needed as the basis of all rations. Houses must be warm, well ventilated and comfortable.. In other words, the hen must be fed and managed so that she will feel like keeping right ou with her egg production. Parasites and diseases are the third source of trouble. Nothing will upset a gowl lay«ng flock quicker than a lot of troublesome mites that make the birds want to leave their regular houses and roost in the trees. Preparing for Winter Around Poultry House A thorough cleaning of the poultry house should take place at this time o* year tn preparation for winter. The clean-up should consist of removing nests, roosts, hoppers, drinking stands and all other equipment from the house. Each should get a thorough scrubbing with water and some good distnfectajt The house Itself should be swept ceilings, walls and floor. The Doer stould be well scraped clean of all hard, dried litter and droppings. Dirt floors should have at least six inches of the old dirt taken off and replaced with six inches of clean dirt. The final clean-up step should be a thorough spraying of the inside of the house with some good disinfectant. Whitewash helps to brighten a dark house and a freshly whitewasbe<l house has a tendency to encourage its. owner to keep It looking dean for some time to come. KO-»-0-*-0-*-0"« <XX>* <>-«-C , "*O*’C > {S j Poultry Facts A young guinea Is like a young grouse or quail and will hide when scared. They do not make any noise at ail when they hide from a supposed enemy and are very hard to find. • • • Some poultrymen place a large oox of coal or vocal ashes in each section ei their laying houses The hens tn the ashes and undoubtedly renane many body lice by the process. •• • ■ Feeding w’hoie. dry oats as a targe part of or all whole grain ration ts poor faMtaHaa. Even though ‘the oats are plump and bright, the bulls make them poor feed except lb Limited quantities. The Missouri College of Agriculture ha-' recently completed son>e experiments in which they find that In feeding beam, soybean n»cal may be used In place of meat scrap, thereby reducing the cost of feed. They also found it paid to feed mineral. • • •. While the hen isn’t exactly a gra»lug animal, she dues luck a lot of grass under her belt during a summer day. And when she can't get It. she must have sprouted oats, cablmge. mangels, or such. It she's going to gladden you with eggs. * * • It are expect winter eggs we must produce our pullets' from hens that are bred to lay during the winter. « • • • Thoroughly spraying the poultry house, especially the roosting and laying quarters, with crude oil or coal oil will destroy the red mites. • • • » The period when pullets start laying is a critical one. Pullets which are due to begin to lay at freezing weather usually wait until spring. This means an entire loss for several months. • • • The highest producing pullets Mart laying in November and stay on the job until next fall. These birds will be desirable as breeders next fall. • • e Chickens, like other animals, must be supplied Material with which to make eggs or they cannot produce them. • • • In selecting males for breeding, never give the preference to Rise alone, as rise may be due te fat «nd idleness. it te better to select a male h i - ’ -1 of ttrfd um si a.

a™ KITCHEN® CABINETUJ (©. ISM. W estern Nawspapw Uniou-t •A little thing, a sunny amil*. A loving word at morn. And all day long the day ahona bright. The cares of Ufa were mad* more Mght. And sweetest hopes were born. HOW DO YOU LIKE THESET When one likes oysters there te not dish more pleasing to the taste than •

a good cocktail,’ a stew, or fried, oysters. Bisque of Oyster*.—Put about two dozen oysters Into a saucepan with the liquor, place over

the fire; when plump drain and chop fine. Add to the saucepan one table* spoonful each of minced onion and butter; let fry until brown, sprinkle with a pinch of curry, salt, and a dash of cayenne. Add the oyster liquor thickened with one tablespoonful of flour and cooked flve minutes;' .add a quart of hot rich milk and the oysters. Serve hot Oyster Sauce on Toast—Put a quart of oysters into the boiling hot liquor ; of the oysters and cook until plump. Drain and chop the oysters fine. Melt? two tablespoonfuls of butter, turn in the oysters and saute until well cooked but not tough. Add a half teaspoonful of curry, a tablcspoonful of onion grated, one cupful of cream which has been cooked with a tablespoonful of flour; season well and pour over nanrow strips of buttered toast. Garnish with a fried oyster. Pot Roast With Vegetables.—Put a pot roast into a deep iron kettle and brown well all over in a little suet. When well browned add a teaspoonful of sugar, such seasonings as one likes, and no more than a tablespoonful of water. Cover tightly and cook until the meat is tender. Add water in the same amounts when needed Cook a few carrots, potatoes and spinach in separate dishes, until tender. Mash and season and press into a small goblet or mold to shape. Turn out around the roast on a hot platter, alternating the colors. Reheat In the oven so all will be served hot. ■ Brown Mushroom Sauee.—Dry mushrooms or the canned variety may be used for this dish. Soaking the dry ones for several hours will make them tender. Save the water to use in the sauce. Prepare with butter and flour, add the liquor with cream and cook. Cheese Puff*.—Melt two tablespoonfuls of butter and mix with two tablespoonfuls of flour; stir until smooth and creamy. Add one and one-half cupfuls of grated cheese. When the cheese 1s melted add one cupful of cooked rice, add three well-beaten egg yolks and mix well but lightly. Fold In the stiffly beaten egg whites and pour into a buttered baking (Msh, surrounded with water, and bake onehalf hour in a moderate oven. Hint* and Thing*. if your dinner seems too heavy for a rich dessert, serve an ice of some

kind. Pineapple, apricot or various other fruit 'ices, any one will be acceptable. Serve with sponge cake or a drop cooky. A pumpkin sfUe may be made most festive by serving with chipped cream, topped with grated cheese.

The best kind of a pumpkin pie is made from the sweet pumpkin; cook down until It is a rich brown color. The aimed pumpkin may be bought, it is good; but that. too. needs cooking down to bring out the flavor and richness. However, there is nothing to take the place of the old-fashioned pumpkin cooked and stirred for hours over a good fire. To make the pie: Pumpkin Pie.—Take one and onehalf cupfuls of the browned pumpkin. two-thirds of a cupful of brown sugar, one-half teaspoonfui of salt, one and one-half cupfuls of mi.'k. one teaspoonfui of cinnamon, one and «M> half teaspoonfute of, ginger, two wellbeaten eggs and one-half cupful of cream. Pour into the paMry-lined plate and bake quickly at first to bake the crust, then slowly to cook the custard. Steamed Squash.—Steam a small hubbard squash until tender. Let dry out. then mash and put through a colander. Reheat and add four tabtespoonfuls of butter to a pint of squash, season with salt and add enough cream to v'ake it like well-mashed potatoes. Beat thoroughly and serve piled lightly tato a hot dish. Dot with cubes of butter. Chicken a I* King.—Heat two tablespoonfuls of butter until it bubbles, add one chopj»ed green pepper, the seeds having been removed. I-et cook slowly for three minutes, then add a tabieapoonful of flour, salt and paprika to taste and enough rich milk to make a thick, smooth sauce. When the sauce te done add two cupfuls of cooked chicken and let tt heat through. Serve on toast or in pastry shells or timbal eases. If the winter is the time one te entertaining. canned corn, peas and beans which have been put up during the season of fresh vegetables will please the palate much better than the kind we may purchase in town. Drawn butter or t<*mato sauce te also good with chestnuts. Trifrut** to Desedrop lAßgfrUow knew the glory of the. dewdrop because he said “every dewdrop has a whole heaven within lt“ Milton culled them “stars of morning which th* sun Impearls on every leaf and every flower." ■ — . When Klephants Charge Ab African elephant when about to' ebarge gives vent to • *hrill. loud trumpet, white th* Indian elephant curt* on io. trunk and charges th Mt

Children of Leper? Saved From Disease In 1925 a plan for saving the uninfected children of the Culion leper colony in the Philippines was instituted by the office of the public welfare commissioner at Manila. In order to prevent these children contracting leprosy from their parents they are removed from the colony and placed in institutions or private homes. By January. 1926, 255 children under fifteen years of age had been removed. The youngest children are cared for tn a public nursery near Culion. and if it is not possible to place the older ones with relatives or friends they are put in institutions where their care can be supervised by the office of the commissioner. Periodical health examinations are given to detect any early signs of leprosy which may appear. School training is provided, and as far as possible the children are being prepared for happy, useful Ilves. They are encouraged to correspond with their parents, who are advised by monthly reports from the institutionsof their children's progress. » The discovery of a cure for leprosy makes possible the hope that the children may eventually be restored to tbeir parents. Old Colonial Houses Built for Permanence Back in the early days ot America, when the family’s interests of neces sity were almost entirely centered about the home, the permanence of the materials' in its construction was the Paramount consideration, and. out of this honest use of good materials came the early Colonial architectural designs which are today the subject of deep study by architects because of their fidelity to classic grace, combined with a certain freedom of interpretation. • One splendid example of this digni tied spirit of home building is that of Upsala house. Germantown. Pa. The home, erected tn 1798. has been in the continuous possession of the family since its building and stands today in as sound condition as when It was first constructed. The builders of Upsala house spared no pains to make It.of permanent construction. Its stone walls are protected by copper gutters and rainpipes. When You Feel a Cold Coming On. Take Laxative BROMO QUININE Tablets to work off the Cold and to fortify the system against an attack of Grip or Influenza. 30c.—Adv. Sugar From Dahlia At last botany has found an esthetic source of sweetness. Sugar-cane is unconvincing in appearance, the sugar-beat unbelievably oafish tn Its coarse white dress, but now the dahlia, so long grown In our gardens for its handsome flowers, comes as a rival to these sordid sources of saccharine. The tubers, which are found to yield a sugar one and a half times as sweet as beetroot sugar, are more easily frown than beet. The cost ot production is about the same, but the great advantage of dahlia sugar is that, unlike beet, it can be taken by people suffering from diabetes. Molly Pitcher Honored To Molly Pitcher goes the honor of being the first woman to have an American highway named for tier, in Pennsylvania, the highway which extends through Carlisle. Shippensburg and Greencastle will be known as the Molly ifitcher highway. Nolly Pitcher, so the story goes, took her tiustvand’s place when he was killed in the act of tiring a cannon in the battle of Monmouth in 1778. She vowed revenge for his death and proved a fearless soldier. Later she was made a ser geant and enmmemied by George Washington. HOX-.U-. Cronp Remedy atrtke* atJb» rent and pr«-vents-Aerfotts luns troubles. No family aate without It. No opium. SO eta.—Adv. Gather to Fight Robbers A silent burglar alarm has been Revised for Illinois banks, instead of restetlng bandits, bank employees set off the alarm which summons vigtlantes from half a hundred business houses. When the holdup men emerge, the armed town guards meei them. With the Roller Man (aged seventyi—l hear you want a man to carry the red flag in front of the steam roller. Boss—-Yes. 1 do. Man—ls there any chance ft»r advancement? Ask for SUNSHINE RAISINS. Seedless. Rich in Iron and Vitamines. Create energy. Good for children. Full pound. All grocers.—Adv. An OW Question This probably originated between a couple of ancient Greek matrons. “I wonder If Atalanta will jnarry that chap she is running with.” The Limit Would-be Hunter—What 1s the game limit in this locality? Native—Two deer and one guide. The greater the difficulty the more glory there is In surmounting It

Druggist J . Gave Her Advice Miss Ruth Horowtte, Bronx. N. T„ writes: “Having been troubled with indigestion caused by constipation for severed “J®®* druggist advised me to try CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS. He said they are good for a hundred different ailments. ss w Uv rsi - SS w-iWsres tired-out and achey feeling, when due to constipation, .will nna Z/// ihgam tfunirht Tomorrow refwshod - All druggists.

V*MB zSW jfaor* «t madaraa or|yj». Om room at » Sow, guranf tpaf a ngjf *‘\ f Modernize your home with OAK Floors Redtice housework. Makeyourhome mor* beautiful, more valuable for rental or sale. Write for free literature. OAK FLOORING BUREAU 1293 BuUJero' Bulldia* CHICAGO Gars ieid Tea Was Your Grandmother’s Remedy

For every stomach and intestinal HL This good old-fash-ioned herb home remedy for constipation. stomach ills and other derangements of the sys-

tem so prevalent these days is in even greater favor as a family medicine than in your grandmother’s day. To Cool a Burn Use Hanford’s Balsam of Myrrh Mom? bock fee Ont bo«U if uotMiitod. All deak-n. Stop Coughing The jinore you cough the worse you feeL and the more Inflamed your throat ana Jungs become. Give them a chance to ’ heal Boschee’s Syrup has been giving relief for sixty-on* years. Try it. 30c and 90c bottles. Buy it at your drug store. G. G. Green. Inc., Woodbury, N. J.

j 1 — Weaving Pioneer Honored li|i honor ot Alexander Morton, first to Recognize that hand-loom weaving must give way to the power loom, and tnvpntor of chenille fabric and the madras material, a memorial is being erepted on the Kilmarnock main road between Deavel and Newmiln, Scotland Morton died in 1923. and in the vaikey near the memorial are 20 factories. most of which are supervised by men who were once his foremen. The memorial contains a bronze portrait bust of Morton, and two stone figures, which will occupy pedestals at the extreme ends. These figures, a ”boy with a sickle” and a “girl with a shuttle.” symbolize agriculture and weaving. Panels in the wall depict the old and new weaving machines. Grocers sell SUNSHINE RAISIN’S. A delicious food confection, rich in Ir<|>n and Vitamines. Fine for growing children. AU grocers.—Adv. Priceless Old Coins Three two thousand-year-o:«t Roman colins. worth nothing at face value but priceless as relics, have been presented to the Toledo Museum of Art by Thomas Wiuezop. The . coins were found by Winezop. hidden in a crucifix brought to this country from his mother’s hoihe tn Switzerland seven years ago. Winezop said the crucifix tn which the relies were found had been in his mother's possession about 60 years. He did not know the history of the image before those years. Plea for Historic Building An appeal has been made to Yale aflumni for aid tn obtaining a tenant fbr Plasyn-Yate. or Yale tiati. tn Yale valley, near Wrexhant. Wales. Yale ball belonged to the family ot Elihu Vale, founder of Yale university. The present tenant, a disabled war veteran, suggests that Yale men might use the estate* as a vacation camp

PORTER’S Pain King SALVE 5 An eßeient and quick-acting otntBient, madeof wool fat (Uhol t>«) combined with antiseptic, healing. paraivlieyiag medicine. Kecvauueiided for burns, cuts, sores, wound*. bruise*, chapped and cracked •km. boils. ptleeand le.oiis. Used as a local application U> retieva colds on the chest, croup, lumbago, yancvae so.ns and eeaema. TkstkM. IL tad.<K.r*».A J un ■ ,W— S GoodhairSoap A ScienttSc Remedy for the cute of all Hair. Scalp and Skin Piseoxe. Sow on a guarantee, pne trial will surprise you. A» your druggist or bf mail on receipt of 25 cents. HI MIIIMI tHMIt CittiaaaU. Btia I RHEUMATISM For AS Yeats TBUSLER’S BBEUMATIE TABLETS HAVS CIVBN ABLIET AiiDntgguas. TteeSttts. 50ca»J>l.<Mk Trusler Remedy Co. Cincinnati. OW. N. U„ FORT WAYNE. NO. 52-1927.