The Syracuse Journal, Volume 20, Number 25, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 18 October 1928 — Page 3
OLD FOLKS SAY DR. CALDWELL WAS RIGHT i The basis of treating sickness has not changed since Dr. Caldwell left Medical College in 1875, nor since he placed on the market the laxative prescription he had used in his practice. He treated constipation, biliousness, headaches, mental depression, indigestion, sour stomach and other indispositions entirely by means of simple vegetable laxatives, herbs and roots. These are still the basis of Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin, a combination of senna and other mild herbs, with pepsin. The simpler the remedy for constipation, the safer for the child and for you. And as you can get results in a mild and safe way by using Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin, why take chances with Strong drugs? A battle will last several months, and all can use it. It is pleasant to the taste, gentle in action, and free from narcotics. Elderly people find it ideal. All drug stores have the generous bottles, or write “Syrup Pepsin,” Dept. 88, Monticello, Illinois, for free trial bottle. Qualifying “Can I rent a flat? I have three fretful children;’* “That part will be all right. How loud is your loud speaker?” What Will do . Pnt t ■ w i Z . j / >4 > I When Children Ciy for it There is hardly a household that hasn't heard of Castoria I At least five million homes are never without it. It there are children in your family, , there’s almost daily need of its comfort- And any night may find you very thankful there’s a bottle in the house. Just a few; drops, and that colie or constipation is relieved; or diarrhea cheeked. A vegetable product; a baby remedy meant for young folks. Castoria is about the only thing you have ever heard doctors advise giving to infants. Stronger medicines are dangerous to a tiny baby, however harmless they may oe to grown-ups. Good old Castoria I Remember the name, and remember to buy it. It may spare you a sleep.ess, anxious night. It is always ready, always safe to use; in emergencies, or for everyday ailment#. Any hour of the day or night that Baby becomes fretful, or restless. Castoria was never more popular with mothers than it is today. Every druggist has it. Wool Production Arranged in their order oi importance the chief sources of the world’s wool supply are: Australia. South America, United States, New Zealand, Great Britain. South Africa. Children’s handkerchiefs often look hopeless when they come to the laundry. Wash with good soap, rinse in water blued with Red Cross Ball Blue. —Adv. Naturally “How does the equilibrist keep his balance?” / “Why, on a steady /iet of course.” CAN NOW DO ANY WORK Thanks to Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound Denison, Texas.—“l think there is no tonic equal to Lydia E. Pinknam’s —» H ■——— Vegetable Com--4 ' pound for nervousn -- and I have used Lydia E. Pinkham’s liß xi® jOW Sanative Wash and the Pills for Constipation. I . can certainly $ praise your medicines for what they have dyne for me and I wish you success in the future. I can do any kind of work now and when women ask me what has helped me I recommend vour medicines. I will answer any letters I receive asking about them.” —Mrs. Emma Gregg, Route 3, Box 63, Denison, Texas. ■ ntirtrttion. It does the work SIZSaodSSc K ■ Krwnola !•'.« Cream mrte. ,onr rtio b««titul »1 » I ■ FRES BOOKLET. Art your dealer or write ’ *Ji Dr.C.H.e«rTy Co.. 207S»Kch«an Aw.. Ciec»a» W. N. V.rJo«T WAYNE, HO. 41-1928.
' i.xo.X.X-X.X.X.XOS<.X.X.)®®<3<3fti | ONLY WAY 1 I TO HOLD A | | HUSBAND j <© b!T D J. Walsh.k IF THERE ever were two people mismated by environment, it was Blanch and Peter. Blanch is my niece and hers had been a choco fate eclair upbringing. Peter came from pioneer stock —hardy folks who recalled living, during the grasshopper invasion, on corn bread and “nig ger heel.” He ffid been raided on pan dowdy, noodles, boiled dinners and pie. So when Blanch gave him heaven ly hash, and pond-lily salads, poor Peter almost starved, and Blanch scraped most of her expensive viands into the garbage pail. She threw out enough every meal to keep Henry and me for a week. Still, 1 didn’t feel to horn in till one morning when Blanch came over looking like a gravestone. “I’m leaving Peter,” she said. “Who's the Janie?” 1 asked calmly. “Hfi. it isn’t that. Aunt Jen. Last night was Peter’s birthday and 1 had a lovely dinner. He didn't come home even. Phoned he had to stay down on business. And my dinner gone to wa-a-a-ste —” “What did you have?” 1 demanded. “Oh. caviare and a tulip salad —” “Any gravy?” “Gravy? Why, no. Eclairs and gin gerbread. “Angel food,” she said stiffly, “and strawberries.” “At i dollar a box,” 1 snorted. “That ish t all.” she went on tragically. “This morning 1 happened to pass a restaurant—a common, greasy place. And there sat Peter with his legs wrapped around a stool, eating pie J” “Many a man.” 1 said tartly, “has eaten pie and lived to tell the tale.” “Common pie.” ignored Blanch—“doesn't lik. my cooking—” “What did you have for breakfast?’ “Oh. what’s the difference? 1 guess we had corn flakes with fruit. And — oh. yes, I forgot to order coffee.” “1 see. Expect a man to work all morning on a dish of fodder. Why don’t you go home and cook him a real meal once? Apple dumplings, pork chops, turnips— * “I'm not in the habit of living on prison fate.” she wailed. “No man ct n live on whipped cream and sawdust.” 1 said firmly. “Peter is one man in a thousand. He has to eat dowr «-wn to keep body and soul together. It’s a wonder you keep up on Peter's salary—” “We can't.” she interrupted. “We had a scene this morning. Peter says we’re living beyond our means. That we’re not saving a cent. But 1 can t keep the bills down. Aunt Jen. 1 believe they cheat me. 1 order over the phone. My grocery bill is about twenty a week.” “Henry would sue me for divorce,” I ejaculated “Peter sayu I’ve got to run the house on a hundred, tie. told me 1 could have what 1 saved out of it for a nestegg. But 1 can t save a cent. And if Peter's going to crab about money I'm going home, so there I” She burst into fresh weeping. Blanch adored the ground he walked on. “Blanch.” said 1, caking the bull, by the horns, firmly. “Helen of Troy couldn’t have held a husband with chocolate eclairs. It’s as true as the fact that all men are at heart Mor moiis; that the way to their heart is through their stomachs. ».ow I'll wager that Peter isn t stay'ng down town tonight on business. He’s just getting a square meal somewhere, maybe with some vamp. Blanch looked at me coldly. “Peter isn't the kind to take his stenographer out to meals.” she said drawing herself up. “He hasn't gone that far —” “If he hasn’t he will,” 1 told het grimly. ' “Men are all alike. Suppose we play detective and find out. Not that Peter wants to oe unfaithful but —well—you ve got to feed a man That’s a biological fact. And when you don t. why. they just naturally gravitate toward the forbidden cooky jar.” “I wonder if you’re right,” murmured Blanch waveriugly. Suddenly, she ran to the closet and flung on a hat. “Come on,” she said to me tensely. “He’s always talking about ”attie King’s restaurant. It you’re sure abom your theory we’ll just go down ami see if he s there.” “Put on an old raincoat," 1 directed “and an old hat We don’t want him to recognize us. We’ll just drift in and ask for a sandwich and coffee and then we ll see what we can see.” So we set out. 1 will admit that Hattie King’s restaurant lo«>keO in citing on that cold, drizzling after noon. It was homey and Cheerful look ing, and the windows had watermelon pink check gingham curtains. There was a delicious smed of hot gingerbread in the air that reminded me ot mother’s kitchen when I was a little
Map Enables Blind to Travel in Safety
It is reported from the British cap ital that the most remarkable map ot London yet conceived is now contem : plated for the use ot the blind, it »s a map that will convey to the blind, through the sensitive tips o< their fingers, a true mental impression oi the position of the main thoroughfares, the principal places of interest along those thoroughfares, and the means-oi access to them. This map wifi be ■drawn” in relief and will consist oi i combination of dots and dashes, a nedium that has already provided for ;he sightless what bad before been lenled to them. Already the blind ot London are in possession of the complete series oi plans of London’s underground rail wivs that are available for public use They are aftle. by the aid of 11 embossed charts, to study in detail the rentes of each tube system, the Met ropolitan and the district railways ind can follow without any possibility t>f error the complete inner circle or he whole network of umlerground ervices. There are even diagrams
girl. We sat down at a back table close to a curtain that shut off the rear. And would you believe it, when this Hattie King parted the curtain to takq our order, who should be sitting before a little round table set for two, but Peter! Blanch saw him and half started up but I stepped on her foot under the taole. Hattie King brought us our coffee and gingerbread, and then she went back, and we heard them talking. e Peter’s voice was low. but Hattie Kings was loud enough for us to bear, if we listened. It was a comfortable nice. deep and rich and motherly. “Take another hunk of gingerbread —do.” she urged. “There’s plenty more where that came from. And now what’s this about you and your wife quarreling and she leaving you?” She gave a low bubbling laugh. “Huh, didn’t 1 sense that you wasn't bittin' it off the minute you come into my place? Can’t fool Hattie King.” “Why, the great big vamp.” ejaculated Blanch. “She's leading him on!” But ’ strained my ears while Peter utte.ed something away down in his throat. “Well, you come to the right place. Boy, you sure did.” Again that throaty chuckle. “She means ‘all right but she's young and she don’t know men. Os course, you- crazy about her, but you don't gibe. .»nd she can’t cook—” “I’m starving -« death,” groaned Peter. He rose trom the table and took out an old pipe. “Mini if 1 smoke? Os course, you don't 1 ought to go back but, by doggies, this is homelike. I’m a cad to tell you but I couldn't help it. You're so-so sort of understanding.” Blanch stood up. 1 could see at a glance that she had seen Peter teach and take Hattie King’s big pudgy hahd in his. But I whispered “wait,” and she sat down. “Now listen, boy,” came in the big comfortable voice, “you're just a hungry kid, that’s all that ails you. Have you told your wife what you told me? Well, you go straight home and read her the riot act. Tell her the truth; how you've been coming to my place not because you’re a trifler, but because you're just plain hungry. Tell her if she wants that 1 should, I’ll teach her how to cook real, satisfyin' dishes. And tell her from Hattie King that that’s the only way to hold a husband.” 1 couldn’t stop Blanch now. She was shooting right for the front door. 1 left the money on ie cheek and followed her, looking oaqk to see Hattie King removing our dishes. 1 couldn't keep up with Blanch at all. And she didu t say one word. But 1 saw when we passed the street lights that she was crying. That was a year ago. 1 was over just last evening. Peter was purring like a tomcat, stretched out on the mohair davenport, with his feet on the cushions. 1 smelled cabbage. There was the remains of a pot roast on the table, and 1 caught a glimpse of a pan in the oven partly tilled with gingerbread. “Hello. Aunt Jen,” said Peter, swelling up like a poisoned toad. “Help yourself to a piece of my wife’s gingerbread. If you don't find it the lamb’s lettuce —” “Peter.” demurred Blanch, with a little blush. And talk about affinities! You should have seen the look that passed between them. It all goes to show my contention that any wife has it all over a vamp if she’s sensible enough to show her hand. To Evacuate Old City Sybaris. ancient Greek town of south Italy, whoich has provided all European languages with a word expressive of licentious luxury, is to be brought to light after 25 centuries during which its very location was forgotten. The extensive marshland along that part of the gulf of Taranto is to be reclaimed by the Italian government at a cost of SI6.(M(O.tW Experts have been detailed to watch for the buried city and a portion of the allotted money will be granted for rhe excavation. Sybaris was destroyed in the Sixth century B. C. by its neighbor and rival. Uroton. which altered the course of a river in order to bury it forever. Some archeologists believe the excavations will supply valuable (and perhaps scandalous) information concerning daily life six centuries anterior to Pompeii. Observer Has Moon Model Among the instruments an amateur astronomer in Los Angeles has used In making a relief model ot the moon is a dentist’s drill. It is helpful in carving out the small craters and other irregularities on the surface of the model, which is fashioned of plaster of paris. Photographs supplied by Mount Wilson observatory and data obtained through two high-powered telescopes of his own have been used by the astronomer in preparing the model.—Popular Mechanics Magazine. Everybody On Did you ever notice how many ot your acquaintances happen along when you are being towed in?—Helena Rec-ord-Herald.
demonstrating the construction of the tubes, and rhe fact, not always real ized by normally sighted passengers, that a tube station is itself a rube, only of much greater diameter than that provided for the passage of the ears between the stations. Ball Before Wheel? •What in the world would present day sport do without the ball? Think of the games that in one way or an other depend on knocking about some kind of ball. Truly, it is said that the wheel is man’s greatest invention but perhaps the ball came first 1 The wheel cdfinotes tabor, and as primitive man prabably hadn’t thought of the motto or later days, “Business before pleasure,” maybe the bail was first and the wheel evolved from it. Japan f s Government Japan’s constitutional government was promulgated in 1889. and the first parliament was convened tn accord ance with the constitution in 1890.
THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL
LEADING RADIO i I MM | (Time given is Eastern Standard; subtract one hour for Central and two hours for Mountain time.) N. B. C. RED NETWORK Sunday, October 14. 1:30 p. m. United Radio Corp. 6:00 p. m. Stetson Parade. 7:00 p. m. Lehigh Coal & Nav. Co. 7:30 p. m. Maj. Bowes’ Family Party. 9:00 p. m. David Lawrence. 9:15 p. m. Atwater Kent. N. B. C. BLUE NETWORK 2:00 p. m. Roxy Stroll. 6:30 p. m. Anglo Persians. 8:15 p. m. Collier’s Radio Hour. N. B. C. RED NETWORK Monday, October 15. • 7:00 a. m. Tower Health Exercises. 11:15 a. m. Radio Household Institute. 7:00 p. m. Mutual Savings Hour. 9:30 p. m. General Motors Party. 10:00 p. m. The Cabin Door. N. B. C. BLUE NETWORK 11:00 a. m. Copeland Hour. 7:30 p. in. Roxy and His Gang. 9:00 p. ra. Riverside Hour. 9:30 p. m. Real Folks. 11:00 p. m. Slumber Music. N. B. C. RED NETWORK Tuesday, October 16. 7:00 a. m. Tower Health Exercises. 11:15 a. m. Radio Household Instituted 7:30 p. m. Soconyland Sketches. 8:00 p. tn. National Radio Institute. 8:30 p. m. Seiberling Singers. 9:00 p. m. Eveready Hour. 10:00 p. m. Clicquot Club Eskimos. N. B. C. BLUE NETWORK 10:00 a. m. Copeland Hour. 6:30 p. m. Burns Bros. 9:30 p. m. Dutch Master Minstrels. 11:00 p. in. Slumber Music. — N. B. C. RED NETWORK Wednesday, October 17. 7:00 a. m. Tower Health Exercises. 11:15 a. m. Radio Household Institute. 5:00 p. m. Vogue and The Mode. 7:30 p. m. The Three Cheers. 8:00 p. m. Am. Mag. & Woman’s Home Companion. : 9:00 p. m. Ipana Troubadours. 9:30 p. m. Palmolive. Hour. N. B. C. BLUE NETWORK 10:00 a. m. Copeland Hour. 7:00 p. m. Jeddo Highlanders. 8:30 p. m. Sylvania Foresters. 11:00 p. m. Slumber Music. N. B. C. RED NETWORK Thursday, October 18. 7:00 a. m. Tower Health Exercises. 11:15 a. m. R alio Household Institute. 7:30 p. m. Coward Comfort Hour. 10:00 p. m. Halsey Stuart. N. B. C. BLUE NETWORK 10:00 a. m. Copeland Hour. 8:00 p. m. Champion Sparkers. 9:30 p. m. Maxwell House Hour. 10:00 n. m. Michelin Hour. II ;00 p. m. Slumber Music. N. B. C. RED NETWORK Friday, October 19. 7:00 a. m. Tower Health Exercises. 11:15 a. m. Radio Household Institute. 7:00 p. m. Wonder Hour. 7:30 p. m. Happiness Candy Stores. 8:00 p. m. Cities Service. N. B. C. BLUE NETWORK I 11:00 a. m. Damrosch Concerts. 7:00 p. m. Interwoven Stocking Co. j 7:30 p. m. Dixies Circus. i 8:30 p. m. Armstrong Quakers. 9:00 p. m. Wrigley Review. 11:00 p. m. Slumber Music. N. B. C. RED NETWORK Saturday. October 20. 7:00 a. m. Tower Health Exercises. 11:15 a. m. Radio Household Institute. 2:15 p. m. Harvard-Army Football Game. N. B. C. BLUE NETWORK 2:45 p. m. Notre Dame-Ga. Game. 8:30 p. m, Godfrey Ludlow. 9:00 p. in. Philco Hour. The following is a list of stations carrying the above programs: National Broadcasting company Red Network; WEAF. New York; WEEI. Boston; WTIC, Hartford, WJAR. Providence: WTAG. Worcester; WCSH. Portland, Maine; WLIT and WFI, Philadelphia; WRC, Washington; WGY, Schenectady; WGR. Buffalo; WCAE, Pittsburgh; WTAM and WEAR, Cleveland: WWJ. Detroit; WSAI, Cincinnati; WGN and WLIB, Chicago; KSD, St. Louis; WOC. Davenport; WHO, Des Moines; WOW. Omaha; WDAF, Kansas City; W('<*OWRHM, Minneapolis-St. Paul; WTMJ, Milwaukee; KOA. Denver; WHAS Louisville; WSM. Nashville; WMC, Memphis; WSB, Atlanta;,WßT, CharI lotte; KVOO. Tulsa; WFAA, Dallas; KPRC, Houston; WOAI. San Antonio; WBAP, Ft. Worth; W'JAX. Jackson vine. National Broadcasting company Blue Network; WJZ, New York; WRZA, Boston; WBZ. Springfield: WBIL, Baltimore; WHAM, Rochester; KDKA, Pittsburgh; WJR, Detroit; WLW. Cincinnati; KYW and i WEBH, Chicago; KWK. St. Louis; WREN. Kansas City; WCCO-WRHM, I Minneapolis-St. Paul; WTMJ. Mil waukee; KOA, Denver; WHAS, Louisville; WSM. Nashville; WMC. Memphis; WSB. Atlanta ; WTB. Charlotte; KVOO. Tulsa; WFAA, Dallas; KPRC. Houston; WOAI, San Antonio; WBAP. Ft. Worth: WRVA. Richmond; WJAX, Jacksonville. Network Broadcasting Network broadcasting covers the continent. The programs of the National Broadcasting company now have four points of origin—New York, Washington. Chicago and San Francisco—giving coverage of the entire United States and parts of Canada and Mexico. Fifty-five radio stations may be fed from these broadcasting nuclei. Also, there are smaller radio chains In this country and an extensive Canadian, chain, resulting in an almost complete network coverage of North America.
OUI7E ! STOCKS! WAY TO PREVENT STOMACH WORMS Various salt-and-drug mixtures have been used by sheep raisers who at times give glowing accounts as to their effectiveness as stomach worm preventives. The mixture of salt and copperas is qne of those frequently suggested. While this mixture has not been put to test by any state experiment station, other mixtures have been tried. The results secured in these tests may permit of some general deductions as to jthe effectiveness of this method of preventing stomach worms. One often hears of the high efficiency of tobacco, given either in the salt or in the feed, as a stomach worm preventive. Two tests conducted by the bureau of animal industry of the United States Department of Agriculture, and one test by the Ohio Experiment station, showed tobacco to be of no value in preventing stomach worms. At the Ohio Experiment station a group of lambs were allowed salt which had incorporated in it 1 c. c. of 40 per cent nicotine sulphate for each ounce of salt. This salt and nicotine mixture was so strong that it caused the death of one lamb and the illness of another lamb, and yet it had no worth as a stomach worm preventive. It is hard to conceive, therefore, of any mixture which will be : effective against stomach worms and yet not harmful to the sheep, especially when a drug such as uicotine sulphate, which is effective when used as a drench, fails so completely when used in a salt mixture, and this even though allowed in a concentration sufficient to jeopardize the health of the sheep. Corn Alone for Pigs Is Not Satisfactory Generally, corn alone will not prove a satisfactory feed for full-feeding pigs even when they are on a legume or rape pasture, according to Ohio State university. Corn and tankage or corn and a mixture of two parts tankage and one part oil meal will produce more rapid gains and less feed will be required to produt. o 100 pounds of gain than when corn alone or corn and middlings are used. If the pigs are on bluegrass pasture or have no forage at all, it recommends corn supplemented by a mixture of 50 pounds of tankage, 25 pounds of oil meal, and 25 pounds of alfalfa meal or ground alfalfa. If skim milk is available irt sufficient quantities it may be substituted for all dr part of the recommended protein Supplement. In general, corn. Itourtny- r*r cjorn and barley fed. at the rate of 29 pounds to one pound of protein supplements, will prove to be the most practical combination for full-feeding pigs on pasture when both rate and economy of gain are considered. Information on Goats by lowa State College A new circular concerning the breeds and methods of feeding and handling milk goats has been issued by lowa State college. Ames, lowa. The circular, written by C. A. Matthews and Earl Weaver, blasts the popular notion that goats will thrive on almost any kind of feed from tin cans to newspapers. Milk can be produced on a commercial scale more cheaply from dairy cows than from goats, according to the circular, so it is not expected that goats will replace dairy cows in the United States to any great extent. The economical advantage for goats must be found under conditions where they can be kept cheaper than dairy cows or where there is a sufficient price advantage for goat’s milk, according to the circular. Dock and castrate the lambs. • « • A horse hide furnishes about 18 pounds of leather. * • • Rainy weather is a good time to trim the hoofs of your calf or calves. * « « Most horses which die in pain expire in silence, or utter merely a moan or whine. * * * Ew’es which are to be bred should be gaining in weight at the time of the breeding season. « * • To bring the top price a lamb must be fat but. as a rule, it must not weigh over 85 pounds when marketed. It is an impossibility to breed good cattle from an inferior sire. The cost of the sire should be a secondary consideration. * • • It was thought, a few years ago, that silage-fed cattle shrank more in shipment than those finished on dry roughage. It has now been abundantly demonstrated, however, that if silage is withheld for the last day or two before shipment and dry rough- " age fed instead, cattle fattened on silage will not shrink any more than those which have received no silage. * • • If hog cholera is in the neighborhood, it may be advisable to confine the hogs to a relatively small area on a remote part of the farm; where the possibilities for carrying the disease to them by visitors or stray animals will be minimized. • • • The hog louse is common on practically every herd in the country, investigations show, and it often causes a loss from 2 to 6 per cent of the market value of the hog, besides weakening him by loss of blood so that he is more susceptible to disease, i
| NEW YCUROCniES
\ y rvs/ z i AS
Don’t envy some other woman her ability to look attractive and stylish on less than you have. Learn her secret! Give new beauty and vari e t y to your dresses by the quick magic of home dyeing and tinting. Perfect results are possible only with true, fadeless Diamond Dye s, the standard for over 50 years. Insist on them and s a v e disappointment. They are
real dyes, the kind used when the cloth was made. They are so easy to use. New colors appear like magic right over the old, failed ones. Twenty million packages used a year shows their popularity. My new 64-page illustrated book. ‘Color .Craft,” gives hundreds of money-saving hints for renewing clothes and draperies. It’s Free. Write for it now. to Mae Martin, Dept. F-143, Diamond Dyes, Burlington Vermont. Uncle Eben “You can’t alius tell by appearances.” said Uncle Eben. “Sometimes, a man looks specially well dressed* ’cause he’s broke an* ain’t got nutfin to wear but his Sunday clothes.”—Wash ington Star. Says He Had Taken a Wagon-Load • of Physics “In November, 1920, I wrote you for advice as to the use of Milks Emulsion. I had been bothered with my bowels for a long time. They would not move unless I took something all the time. If I neglected that, 1 would get bedfast, dizzy and take with fever. “This is a malaria country, and 1 have taken a wagon-load of purgatives, salts, etc. This finally gave me stomach trouble in very bad form, and I commenced to lose weight, and had no appetite. My tongue became so coated that it cracked open. “Since writing you. I have taken your Emulsion regularly ami have found it a great does all you claim for it and more, too. It is a fine meilicine, and I will gladly recommend it to anyone. “We are now handling it in our store and I am selling it right' along and recommend it to all of my customers. I thank you for the instructions you gave and the results that I received from same.” ' Yours truly. W. A. CLUCK, Mgr., Globe Mercantile Co., Greenway, Ark. Sold by all druggists under a guarantee to give satisfaction or money refunded. 1 The Milks Emulsion Co., i Terre Haute, Ind.—Adv. Most of the outrageous sins are due to selfishness. Honesty is truth’s moral phase.
feXel is the last word in jelly making /7> PEXEL always makes jelly jell. Absolutely colorless, tasteless, odorless. Unlike other products, Pexel is a purefruit product—loo%. Doesn’t change taste or color of most delicately Ha- I|hM vored fruit. I gfeK— Pexel saves time and fuel. More than repays 30c it costs. More jelly— , «<- fruit, sugar and flavor aren’t boiled IHSUTeS tlllS off because, with Pexel, the jelly is ready for glasses as soon as it comes to full boil. It jells by the time it is cool. Get Pexel at your grocer’s. Rec- (xCC/z ipe booklet in each package. 30c. Thg Pexel Company, Chicago, 111. peXel prevents this The tatting women do nowadays A sheriff would hate to be known mostly has an “L” in it. by the company he keeps. The emptier the head the easier it As girls grow older they think less Is to fill it with foolish ideas. of love and more of money. Aspmm SAY “BAYER ASPIRIN” and INSIST 1 Proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for Colds Headache Neuritis Lumbago Pain Neuralgia Toothache Rheumatism > | DOES NOT AFFECT THE HEART ] t ZVrt Accept only "Bayer” package Ttrs which contains proven directions. C Handy “Bayer” boxes tablets KmX 9 Also bottles of 24 and lOD-DruggLsts. Asoirin is the trade mark ot Bane Marataetora ot MonoaceUcacideewr ot SallcyU
flit Kill Rats Without Danger A New Bxtermlaator that Is Wonderfully KUaative yat Safa to Vaat K-R-O is relatively harmless to human beings, livestock, dogs, cats, poultry. , yet is guaranteed to kill rats and mica every time. Avoid Dangsvous Poisons K-R-O does not contain arsenic. pho»Sborus. barium carbonate or any other eadly poison. Its active ingredient is squill as recommended by the U. S. Dept, of Agriculture in their latest bulletin on Control.” Many letters testify to the great merit of K-R-O. ••A customer bought one can of K-R-O on Saturday;heputitoutthatniglit and on Okla." . SOLDONM9NKT-BACK GUAR. AHTRK. 75c act your druggist or direct from us at SI.OO delivered. Large size i (four times as much) $2.00. The K-R-O Company, Springfield, Ohio. ■ K-8.-O KILLS-RATS-ONLY Gcodhair Soap 1/ The Ideal Shampoo. For the Li ’l® Scalp - Dandruff - Falling Hair . ■ lEnfWli Wonderfully effective. Sold for VT. 7 30 years. 25c a cake. Al I A. Druggist* or by mail direct, ihb FRDI£ sample on request. TH£ goodhair compamt BX/rt frtViTryair-l Cincumati, Oaia For Old Sores Hanford’s Balsam of Myrrh Money back for first bottle it not salted All dealers. 1 Absorbing reduces thickened, 1 swollen tissues, curbs, filled tendons, soreness from bruises or ff strains. Stops spavin lameness. 11 Does not blister, remove hair or g I lay up horse. $2.50 at druggists, or postpaid. Valuable horse book W 1-S free. Write for it todays A3. Read this: “Horse had large swelling 'R, i ust below knee. Now gone; has not re(jjj 1 appeared. H orse good as ever. Have used Ateorbineforvearswithgreat success.” AFAKTMENT HOVSE. One of best In Sacramento. 7 year tease. 45 elegantly furnished rooms. Substantial income. $18,750. Western Brokerage, 1812 W. Pico. Los Angeles. Calif. S6O Week Distributing Circulars. Household necessity. Steady employment. Particulars for stamp. P. N. Thomas, Fordyce, Atk. MEDITERRANEAN gg; ss “Transylvania” sailing Jan. 30 Clark’s 25thcruise. 66 days, including Madeira. Canary Islands, Casablanca. Rabat, Capita! of Morocco, Spain. Algiers. Malta. Athens, Constantinople. 15 days Palestine and Egypt. Italy. Riviera. Cherbourg. (Paris). Includes hotels, guides, motors, etc. Kurway-Medlterranoan. June 29,1929; S6OO up FHANK C. CLARK, Times Bldg.,N T Rabbit The old trick ot lighting fires under stubborn mules and affixing sugar loaf to a pole just ahead of the horse's nose find a modern counterpart in the increasingly popular sport of dog racing where decoy rabbits speeded ahead by electric trolleys lure greyhounds to lightning speed. Portugal, one of the few countries with leftwise traffic, lias changed to the- righthand rule as convenience to tourists.
