The Syracuse Journal, Volume 20, Number 41, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 9 February 1928 — Page 3
1 L Write for M page fa FREE I book bni ehowinz floors in colors: how ij ’3m' / ■ to modernize your home at fj ‘[ little expense by laying per- fj *9U r manent and beautiful ■ OAK FLOORS — over old worn floors. y-- ■■ AS ‘ Adds resale value. If you YYu .Y build or remodel, don’t SC// X i to wr ' te f° r .^ rec books and suggestions. OAK FLOORING BUREAU 1293 Builders’ Building CHICAGO *Saowy WhSte Clotbes WITHOUT RUBBING N-R-G (Energy! Laundry Tablets wash elothea spotlessly clean in ten minutes without rubbing. Cieah everything like magic; cut scr.p bill in half. Remove ink, fruit stains, blood, rust, perspiration and all stains instantly. Guaranteed Not to Injure the Hands or the Finest Fabric Amazing results when N-R-G is used in the washingmachine, either electric or hand onven. No bluing required. For sale at your grocer’s, 15c per package. Valuable coupon with every package. Only four required for Silver Teaspoon. 25-year guarantee. Over 200 other premiums. THE N-R-G PRODUCTS CO., CHICAGO, ILL. CARBUNCLES Carbon draws out the core and gives quick relief CARBQHL At All Druggists — Money back Guarantee CO. r*AsMw»U.€.Tfcr*M. 3 Absorbine reduces thickened, v& J swollen tissues, curbs, filled tenyfcj dons, soreness from bruises or Tl strains. Stops spavin lameness. 11 Does not blister, remove hair or / 1 lay up horse. $2.50 at druggists, KJ or postpaid. Valuable horse book 1-S free. Write for it today. /f % Read this: “Horse had large swelling just below knee. Now gone; has not redisappeared. Il orse good as ever. Have used A bsor bine for years w ith great success. Garfield Tea Wes Your Grandmother’s Remedy For every stomach wbr rs intestinal ill. PjjXCSb-Jr This good old-sash-loned herb home ’ K. remedy for constlpation, stomach ills and other derangemeats of the system so prevalent these days is in even greater favor as a family medicine than in .your grandmother’s day. QuicA Relief From Coughs and Colds 4 lt Is Exceedingly Dangerous to Let Coughs and Colds Develop. Easy to Check Them. For more than fifty-six years Porter’s Pain King has stood in the front rank of home remedies for the relief of colds, coughs, croup, hoarseness and similar ailments. Porter’s Pain King is made of pure, wholesome ingredients, perfectly harmless and amazingly effective. By merit alone it holds ap honored place in hundreds of thousands of American homes the year ’round. Right now is a good time to read the circular wrapped around every bottle. Many families who have this good oldtime liniment in the house suffer needlessly because they do not all of its many uses. Port er’s, Pam King is more than a remedy for/colds. It Boothes aches and pains' soreness, swollen joints, tired muscles, lame back and rheumatic misery. It heals burns, scalds, cuts, chapped* hands, frost-bitten feet. Why not use it today? Made and guaranteed since 1871 by The Geo. IT. Rundle Co., Piqua, Ohio. Sold by dealers eAef-ywhere. ' « Expensive Love First Person —Nora seems quite gone on the postman. Second Person—Gone? Do you know what that girl does? She posts a letter to herself every night so as to make sure he’ll call the next morning.—Weekly Scotsman. For Colds, Grip or Influenza and as a Preventive, take Laxative BROMO QUININE Tablets. A Safe and Proven Remedy. The box bears the signature of E. W. Grove. 30c. —Adv. Would Be Easier She —Aren’t you happy now that the furniture people will let you pay for the furniture by installments? He—l would be if they’d let me pay . the installments by installments. — Dublin jOpinton. If Back Hurts Begin on Salts Flush Your Kidneys Occasionally by Drinking Quarts of Good Water No man or woman can make a mistake by flushing the kidneys occasionally, says a well-known- authority. Too much rich food creates acids which clog the kidney pores so that they sluggishly filter or strdin only part of the waste and poisons from the blood. Then you get sick. Rheumatism, headaches, liver trouble, nervousness, constipation, dizziness, sleeplessness, bladder disorders often come from sluggish kidneys. The moment you feel a dull ache in the kidneys or your back hurts, or If the urine Is cloudy, offensive, full of sediment, irregular of passage, or attended by a sensation of scalding, begin to drink soft water in quantities; also get about four ounces of Jad Salts from any reliable pharmacy and take a tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys may then act fine. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia, and has been used for years to help flush clogged kidneys and stimulate them to activity, also to help neutralize the acids in the system so they no longer cause irritation, thus often relieving bladder disorders. Jad Salts is inexpensive and cannot injure; makes a delightful effervescent Hthia-water drink, which everyone can take now and then to help keep the kidneys clean and the olood pure, thereby often preventing serious kidney complications. W?N. IL. FORT WAYNE, NO. 5-182&
OUR COMIC SECTION | Our Pet Peeve __ jgor hr Kyi \'jH \\lz £■=> I o (Copyright, W. N. U.) J THE FEATHERHEADS Sales Arguments to the Winds i X 7 X s —x MERE.MR GRAFF*- VZZZZ \ / WHAT YOU SAVE \ X \ bottles are umh-huh I fin breakage alone \ / umh-yeh \ ft CTAEAPEQ.LIGUTEQ.MORF ZWk /. /. toOUCD FAS’ THE INTEREST V GOESS 50-1 HANDSOME lUAN GLASS /Z/Y < IOM StXJQ, MACHIMEQV / \ J W T Tmat'? MOU AB,^/ Z/ ' KwuesTmentX. RI6HT ?/ "Y. . . jT\ /sw IMSIST OM WM TEATUEWEAD J: jjftgj nt I C SELLS 'EM J J,. JI © Weotera New»paperVnion I i I >l! ill I lilt IIU | \zSßcaii’sFINNEY OF THE FORCE Kid Finesse ‘‘ I MnVWDBfi-' J (Ttsce9wf.a'u.iff / — > Iva TAKE AHAMOy y \R>L- HEQE" 7 (Polite Fo g J 0 ' 1 ( ME I ' VlfoU GI\JE w ai / r W /A "Ja JU ffm X cMz A,. jtVL —JfL— 4 / \ ii\\j VIHAT COMXI vll| I .y WHMDIDMTVby \ A j ( yslELl HEQE.WJ-) W SAV.MEIVIM 2 /' 1 T/ THE GRAPES. \]|, LJ - v X Yt ■' • I u Uu • ffl nn \ s A l ° X \A HANDFUL ' (HAMCiS SMAUEC __ Jr _J t J-TXiB \ vSoaliK © "Western Newspaper Union
WIND UP ALL RIGHT vs” O- 1 TjCfr If t ■ ... "M Manager—“ That thief was run down and arrested.” Clerk —“Well, he will wind up in the jail.”
Money Makes a Difference “I’m glad to find you as you are,” said the old friend. “Your great wealth hasn’t changed you.” “Well,” replied the wealthy man, “it has changed me in one thing. I’m now ‘eccentric’ where I used to be impolite, and ‘delightfully sarcastic’ where I used to be rude.” Identification “What Is that a picture of?” asked a small tot.
THE SYRACUSE JOrRNAL
“That’s the Goddess of Liberty,” Big Brother replied. “You can always tell her ’cause she’s got an ice cream cone in her hand.”—Leesburg (Fla.) Commercial. Thorough Wife—Bob is so ridiculous, even for a young father. Caller—What now? Wise —Why, when I told him the nurse was going to teach me to give baby a bath, he wanted to send out and hire another baby to practice on.
Careful Cutting Helps Woodlot New York Farmer Cut SIOO Worth of Fuel From Each Acre, Aiding Stand. In a woodlot on the farm of Henry Kellogg of Barnes Corners in Lewis county, SIOO worth of fuel wood was recently removed from each acre dnd the woodlot was left in better condition than before cutting, according to J. A. Cope, forester at Cornell uni versity, who had charge of selecting and cutting the trees. » Woodlot Improvement. This was part of a woodlot improvement campaign conducted by the Lewis county farm -bureau in which Mr. Kellogg agreed to use his woodlands to show what could be done. An area was laid out in a 20-aere woddlot, and the trees marked to be cut were only those that were defective, crooked or were what are commonly called “weed” species. At a woods meeting, attended br farmers of the community, the marked trees which had been carefully cut and ranked were measured. It was found that SO 15-inch cords of wopd had been cut from each acre. This fuel wood had a roadside value of S2OO. Mr. Kellogg kept a record of time required to cut, haul and rank this wood, and found the SO cords could be delivered to the roadside for SIOO. including sawing it into 15-inch lengths, thereby netting him a clear stumpage value of SIOO an acre. Saved Crop Trees. The group next visited the lot where the cutting was done to see that the main crop trees of thrifty ash, basswood and hard maple had not been touched. The cutting had improved the condition of the stand so that the crowns of the remaining trees will be able to expand and thus diameter-growth will be greatly increased. Mr. Kellogg’s experience indicated that, as far as Lewis county woodlots go, “you can eat your cake and have it, too," Mr. Cope says. Stinking Smut Is Most Widely Spread Disease Stinking smut the most widely spread disease of wheat and next to black stem rust is the most destructive. It has been estimated to cause an annual loss in the United States of 25,000,000 bushels. Stinking smut grows within the wheat plant and eventually forms smut balls in the place of the kernels. It causes a general shrinkage in the outline of the head but does not otherwise greatly change the mitward appearance of the head andean be detected in the field only by close examination .or by scenting its odqr which is similar to that of decaying fish. When the smutted wheat is threshed many of the • smut balls are broken and some of tlie smut dust or spores is lodged on the surfaces of sound grains. If the smutted grain is sown, the smut spores germinate with the seed wheat and again develop within the plant. In this way the disease is carried -from one crop to the next State Game Laws Govern Hunting in the Forests Can anyone hunt and kill game in the national forests? This question is frequently asked Department® of Agriculture officials. Hunting and fishing in* all national forests, says the forest service, are governed by the game laws of the state in which the national forest is located. Most forest officers are deputy state game wardens and it is their duty to enforce tlie state game laws .at all times. In some of the national forests, however, national game refuges have been set aside for the preservation of wild life. In these refuges hunting and fishing are not allowed, except under special circumstances and with the approval of the authorities in charge. Agricultural Squibs ’ A farm implement in the shelter is worth two in the storm?. * • • Poultry usually do not need such things as yeast, mineral or tonics if they receive adequate rations. • • • A grooved surface on a concrete approach to a raised driveway will assure a firm foothold. • ♦ • Cement-asbestos shingles may be placed directly over an old wooden shingle roof. • • • Concrete gate posts, covered with stucco, make attractive entrances to farms. • • • Probably the most important of all the more recent tendencies in fruit growing is the use of sweet clover in the apple orchard. ♦ • • Farming with just the hands and the feet goes hand in hand with delinquent taxes. • « • Running water in the home and barn is not only convenient but it pays for itself many times by saving time. • • • “Price chasing” of farmers in order to catch the high price crops or live stock has on many occasions resulted in disappointment • * • It costs more for each bushel or for each unit to market a large crop of an agricultural product than it costs to market a small crop. • • • Farmers who take an annual inventory should not forget to include the dog. He may be an asset or a liability for he has to be fed and an annual tax has to be paid for him. * * * In peach orchards and in apple orchards where clean cultivation Is practiced, manure is an, invaluable aid In maintaining soil fertility and physl'*”’ at such a point tb thrive.
Demand -x W j I ' IF \ ' \ / "■Bat ASPIRTN The whole world knows Aspirin as an effective antidote for pain. But ifs just as important to know that there is only one genuine Bayer Aspirin. The name Bayer is on every tablet, and on the box. If it says Bayer, it’s genuine; and if it doesn't, it is not! Headaches are dispelled by Bayer Aspirin. So are colds, and the pain that goes with them; even neuralgia, neuritis, and rheumatism promptly relieved. Get Bayer—at any drugstore—with proven directions. Physicians prescribe Bayer Aspirin; it does NOT affect the heart Aspirin Is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoacetieacldester of SallcyUcacldL.
Another Attempt Only Fair to Shakespeare The late John Drew hated bad acting He would often express this hate in a witty and cruel manner. An English-actor played Hamlet onenight in New York and was afterwards the guest of honor at the Players’ club. He sought out Drew there and said: “Well, how did you like my Ham“Do you want the truth?” said Drew. “Yes.” “It was awful.” “I’m afraid you’re right,” said the Englishman. “1 felt that way while I was playing. I’ll never attempt Hamlet again.” ”Oh, but you must,” Drew said earnestly. “Your performance tonight, you see, has made Shafeespeare turn in his grave. Well, you can’t leave him like that, lyjpg face downward, can you? You must play Hamlet just once more; then he’ll turn over and be comfortable again.” Hoxsie’s Croup Remedy, the life saver of children. No opium. No nausea. 60 cts. AU druggists. Kells Co., Newburgh. N. Y., Mfrs.—Adv. Brodie*s Jump Not the Only Chance He Took “Give ear!" said the Park Row philosopher, oft again. “Are people any honester today than of yore? I say no! 1 could give you a dozen proofs, but one will do. Reinembei Steve Brodie—the Steve Brodie who took a chance and jumped off the, Brooklyn bridge? Well, he got away with it and started a salfion in the Bowery. And he filled that old gin mill with umbrellas—scores and hun dreds of perfectly good umbrellas. What for? You’d never guess. For working girls to use on rainy days. “He put out a sign: ‘Any honest girl is welcome to the use of one of these umbrellas. Just return when done with. For years he kept that up. Thousands of girls used th< um brellas. and they say Brodie never lost one.” —New York Sun. “It affords me great pleasure” is the way an after-dinner talk used to begin.
wjM Yes, LESS than one cent per baking for 1 the finest, purest, I surest baking pow5 I der that can be I produced at any DOUBLE I price. The greatest ACTING money saver that makes ever entered a ,Q kitchen. Prevents failures that waste many dollars'worth of other baking materials. I J Try it. Profit by the perfect, never-failing acti ° n c a^umeL
Man Accorded Title of Football “Daddy” The 1927 football season is history, and all lovers of the great American sport are turning attention to other games. But with the defeats and victories of the past season still fresh in the mind and al) the talk of two varsity squads /or 1928 football is by no means forgotten. Football, as most fans know, was Introduced Into Britain by the Romans. From Britain it was brought to Canada and thence to America. Some authorities that the modern game of football was introduced by Harvard in 1876. But the “daddy of American football” is Gerrit Smith Miller, eighty-two years old, of Petersboro, N. Y. He is credited with organizing the ’first football team in America —the Oneida football clnb. That was 64years ago—in 1863—and the organizer won his letters as a star player.—Pathfinder Magazine. Ask for SUNSHINE RAJSINS. a full pound wonderful seedless raisins, at your grocer’s.—Adv. Was From Missouri The inside story of the million-dol-lar check which was flashed to a foreign country by radio recently is as follows: A big deal was on. but, in the language of one of the participants, the man in question was “a little coy.” Some one got the bright idea of broadcasting the tnillion-dollar check to him, which, by the way, he received clear across the Atlantic before the ink was hardly dry on it in New York. Once the check was placed in the man’s hand, where he could see and finger it, he lost no time in seeing if he really could cash it. He could, and the deal was closed. Famous Garden Restored At Upsala the old garden of the famous botanist, Linnaeus, has been restored. according to the original plan left by the master, in this old university town the Swedish •’king of flowers” taught students from all over the world his system of classifying plants.—Pathfinder Magazine
