The Syracuse Journal, Volume 20, Number 45, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 7 March 1929 — Page 3
Young Lady's Elbows No Longer A Hat Rack “I j'ist couldn't resist any longer telling you of your wonderful medicine, Milks Emulsion. I have been constipated as long as I can remember. typhoid fever when I was eight years old and since then my bowels haven't moved freely. Doctors have given me bowel medicine and I have taken pills, salts, castor oil. and everything a person could think of. They didn't do mo any good whatever. “Now, whenever I hear anyone say they are constipated, I immediately tell them of Milks Emulsion. *1 have tak(*n about 12 lar bottles, not all of them regular. l*ow I keep Milks Emulsion in the house and take it regular. I have taken so much medicine that I thought it was all alike. “I had a sallow complexion, no color, and felt miserable all the rime; hut now I have the color of health, and health is something I wouldn't exchange with anyone for a fortune. I wouldn’t take ten times the price I paid for Milks Emulsion for the results I have obtained. “I am 19 years old and weigh 105 pounds. Have gained 5 pounds slhce taking your medicine and am still gaining. My face is round and my arms are getting round. Before, people used to hang their hats on my elbows. thinking they were hatracks. Now I am going to keep on with Milks Emulsion—until I weigh 125 pounds. “I mentioned your Emulsion to two doctors. They both it was good, and no one knows better than I that it is not only good, but wonderful. “You may publish this letter if you wish and anyone that wants to ask me about your medicine may do so. I promise to answer every letter. Tn fact, I could 't do enough for Milks Emulsion to repay them ' for what their medicine has done for me. I remain. very respectfullv yours, BOSEMOND BOWER, Frontenac, Kan.” Sold by all druggists under a guarantee to give satisfaction or money refunded. The Milks Emulsion Co., Terre Haute, Ind.—Adv. ; Impressive Funeral Rite The I’annykhida is the beautiful "Office for the Faithful Departed.’’said to be perhaps the tmtst impressive ot the Russian church services because of the beauty of the language
Quart of Water Cleans Kidneys, c ’ Tcke a Little Salts if Your Eack Hurts, or Bladder is Troubling You No man or woman can make a mistake by flushing the kidneys occasionally, says a well-known authority. Eating too much rich food creates acids, which excite the kidneys. They become overworked from the strain, get sluggish and fail to filter the waste and poisons from the blood. Then we get sick Rheumatism, headaches, liver trouble, nervousness, dizziness, sleeplessness and'* urinary 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 drinking a quart of water each day. also get about four ounces.of Jad Salts from any pharmacy; take a tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast and in a few days your kidneys may 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 flush and stimulate the kidneys; also to help neutralize the acids in the. System, so they no longer cause. irritation, thus often relieving bladder weakness. Jad Salts is inexpensive: makes a delightful effervescent lithia-water drink which everyone should take now and then to help keep the kidneys clean and active and the blood pure, thereby often avoiding serious kidney complications.
RcdlUi Fever Rest DIXIE FEVER AND PAIN TABLETS JDependnbh foe Waits _
Rheumatism For 35 Years TRUSLER’S RHEUMATIC TABLETS ’ HAVE GIVEN RELIEF AU Druggists. Two Sizes, 50c and SI.OO. Trusler Remedy Co. Cincinnati, O. WM YOUB 1)0 YOUR FEET HAVE I ■ VUK that tired, aching ur burning tec-ling U&kBA ■■ from walking or .standing luu much * rC— have you flat-feet, fallen arche.% callouses. weak ankles, poor einula* fc | I,on vr sweaty feet ’ An - V ’ n ** ‘‘boi? ailments can be quickiv relieved by a very simple ap> phance not sold in stores MINT SUFFER ANY LONGER. Let us tell you how you can rua. walk, dance and get thar ‘Pep’* back in your feet Send your nama and address for a FREE copy of “Your Feet — Their Care and Treatment" WRITE TODAY. VENT-OFEDIC CO, lac. 120-H High Sl ’ BOSTON. MASS. -J or bursitis are easily and */ quickly removed withe%,. *'*‘l Jr out knife or firing iron. Absorbine reduces them 7 permanently and leaves no W A blemishes. Will not blister y I or remove the hair. Horse worked during treatment. At druggistsor $2.50 postpaid. Horse book 6-S free. ■ Surprised user writes: “Horse had largest shoe boil I ever saw. Now all gone. I would not have t hought that AHmrhin* could take it away so completely [Nasal Catarrh, Aching MukJm. Sore Fact, I Itching Pile*, Cuts, Burna, etc. 2 Sizes, At all Druggiate. I
Fine Town Hall Is Also a World War Memorial * ■ I I This is the handsetoe tows hall at . „ f ’ & Norwood. Mass., which was completed i. Ilk * * IB ' recently at the cost of more than half Mill - HL Jf! a dollars. It was erected as a niemoria * to town’s dead in the World war. , « r z iK / . Ml I J ■' ; 1 . ? Jt i i 1 ; 'f* KwM ' j pWBIIIiWWI -? B i ■ h * ■ i ’I F " l l' J im » in Ltd itlitii n 1 rap “ > ft 3J iJi
Famed Scout Will Get His Last Wish
“Yellowstone Kelly” to Be Buried in Boot Hill Cemetery at Billings. Billings, Mont —“I also desire that my body shall be buried in Boot Hill cemetery, Billings. Mont.” This codicil to the will ot a famous early day character again calls atten tion to one of the unique cemeteries of the country. It is an institution having a peculiar fascination for pioneers ot the Northwest. The provision above referred to was found in the last testament of ‘‘Yellow Aone” Kelly, whose death. recently occurred in Paradise, t'alif.. at the age of seventy-nine years, and who was one of the most famous Indian scouts known to the history of the ’"West. I Boot Hill cemetery derived its name from the fact that every person originally buried therein died with his boots on. It was established in 1879. before the city of Billings was found ed upon the construction of the Northern Pacific railroad, and the motivat ing cause was the need for burial grounds for characters who suddenly snapped out of an' earthly existence in and near the town of Coulson. | later the western terminus of the line. Later Billings was created as a municipality and Coulson, one mile east, became a ghost city. “Yellowstone” Kelly was well acquainted with the underlying reason ! tor the establishment ot the cemetery, which, it is estimated, has a population of about forty bodies. Because of the historic incidents attaching to the cemetery. 1. D. U Donnell, of Billings, sponsored a movement providing for the fencing of the cemetery as 'well as the erection of a monument. Tombstones were not used in the burials,/- piles of stone serving as markers. The monument is of round boulders and stands about thirty feet high. To Bury Kelly on “Mountain.** In order to perpetuate the name of “Yellowstone” Kelly. Mr. O'Dohneii secured acsmall tract across the high way from the cemetery proper and named it Kelly Mountain. Mr. Kel ly’s body will be buried there in the spring. , An interesting story is told tnvolv ing “Yellowstone” Kelly, and “Liver Eating” Johnson, another famous early day character of eastern Mon tana. Johnson gained the rather f blood-curdling appellation from the fact that he w-as said to have pretended to eat the liver of an Indian victim, following a skirmish, to im- ; press the captive redskins with nis ;■ ferocity. it seems that Kelly and Johnson were caught by a band of marauding Indians, and to save their lives decided to “ride it out.” They mounted their steeds and made a run for it. being outnumbered to such a degree that a tight meant suicide. The in dians began a bombardment with both arrows and bullets, and the Situ- ' ation was critical indeed. Kelly had a better horse than Johnson, but both managed to escape the missiles. The race continued, however, with Kelly gaining ground and Johnson -barely bolding his own. Kelly
RARE ART FOUND IN MURAL PAPER OF KENTUCKY HOUSE
Famous Caperton Mansion Yields French Block Prints ot Na- . poleonic Era. Lexington, Ky.—French block wall paper ot a rare design, which has adorned the walls of a room at Woodlawn, the colonial home of the late Col. James W. Caperton. near Richmond. Ky., 26 miles south ot this city, for more than lUO years, or since 1822. has been sold to J. A. Lloyd Hyde, a dealer of Netv York city, on the recommendation of the Metropolitan Art museum, and the painstaking Work of removing the paper hits been beguto by C. T. Wall, a New York,decorator. This wall paper was printed prior to 1810. during the Napoleonic reign in France, according to Mr. Wall, who stated that none of that design was pitxlm-ed after that date. It Is very -art*, lit* said, though the Metropol! ui> museum is in possession of sev
THE SYRACUSE JOTRXAL, SYRACUSE, INDIANA
looked hack and sought to spur John son to greater activity. “Come on. Johnson I” he yelled. “If you don't speed up they’ll get you.’ Johnson retorted; “You don't think I’m trying to throw the race, do you?” White Men Win Out. The superiority of their mounts finally told, and they rode to safety after one of the closet calls either had ever experienced. The Billings Commercial club has in charge the arrangements for the fu neral of “Yellowstone.” whose name was Luther Sage Kelly. Friend of the late Theodore Roosevelt and Gen. Nelson A. Miles, the old scout lived his last days in California, in memories of a career such as comes to few men. A native of Geneva, N. Y., Kelly gained fame as one of the greatest Indian scouts in history while he was with General Miles, but his exciting experiences were not confined to this period. Two Alaskan expeditions found him a member. He saw service in the Philippine insurrection, and later was provincial treasurer of Suriago and was acting governor there when a contingent of insurrectos kept him and a few companions surrounded for more than a year. .Fired with patriotism when he saw his former playmates marching as drummer boys at the head of a Union regiment, Kelly took advantage .of a few days vacation from schodl to seek admission into the army. He was under age .and was rejected. But be continued. ami finally was successful through the efforts of a friendly sergeant. He was a private, ami then a corporal, in tSunpany G. Tenth United States infantry sta tinned near Richmond, to guard prisNEW JOB FOR WOMAN ah „ /a \ JR Kr A wf fy One hundred dollars a week and her own airplane, to say nothing of automobiles. restrooms, etc., is what Ruth Haviland, pretty twenty-year-old aviatrix, gets for being aerial hostess at 'Fairfax airport. Kansas City, Mo. All Ruth need do is meet in<-oming aviators, make them feel “at home,” etc., just as would the hostess of your favorite summer resort.
era! specimens, one an exact duplicate. now displayed in the American wing of the art museum in New York. As much as $15,000 has been paid for enough of the paper to cover a small room, he declared. The Caperton specimen contains a panorama of a hunting scene, from the beginning to the close of the chase, exquisitely portrayed. Mr. Wall explained that great care must be exercised in removing the wall paper. When one block Is taken off it is mounted on canvas. After being mounted it will be shipped in sheets to New York, where any worn places will be retouched by a skillfpl band. The Caperton home, which is one of the historic manor houses of that’ section of Kentucky, is no longer occupied, although still owned by Mrs. Caperton. widow of the former distinguished master, who was for years one of the leading lawyers of the
oners. Be was discharged in 1868 following service at Fort Ripley. Minn.; Fort Ranson and Fort Wadsworth. Braves Rampaging Sioux. The next seven years proved the most adventurous of Kelly s life, and it was in this period that he became known as one of the greatest hunters, trappers and Indian scours. Against the .protestations of Montana miners who ridiculed his plan. Kelly started alone to cross the Missouri on a hunting expedition, facing the dangers ot warring Sioux. After an exciting experience with a war party of Sitting Bull’s Sioux, he arrived at Fort Berthold, in the heart of a hostile Indian country. Here Mandan. Gros Ventre and Ankara tribes bandeij together for protection against the Sioux. The following winter Kelly went to Fort Buford, at the mouth of the Yellowstone. He disposed of his horse and walked, reaching an unexplored section of the river region. He remained in that district several years, gaining a wide knowledge of its topography. In 1870 he attracted the attention of government officials by daring to do that which no other frontiersman would venture —carry dispatches unescorted. Hearing that the last messenger had been killed, Kelly volunteered his services to the fort officials. He mounted a spirited mustang and started on what proved to be a thrilling adventure. He was attacked by two Sioux, one with a shotgun and the other bearing a bow and arrows. He killed one as he slid from his horse, and engaged in a duel with the other, finally shattering the elbow of the bow and arrow antagonist. Indian Allies Elated. The Mandans, Gros Ventres and Arikaras were elated at his victory and acclaimed him “The Little Man With the Big Heart.” Even the Sioux were impressed with the “strong medicine” of this “man who never lays down bis gun.” Kelly engaged as a free trapper in the then mysterious Yellowstone country until he knew it as did nb other man. It was because of his life as a wilderness hermit that he became known as “Lone Wolf’ and “Yellowstone” Kelly. When in 1873. Gen. George A. Forsyth was sent to explore the upper Missouri and Yellowstope, be took Kelly as guide and Forsyth’s report was invaluable when the Sioux war broke out three years later. Kelly’s services for General Miles, for whom he became chief scout during the bitter winter campaign of 1876-77, were invaluable, so General Miles testified. He remained with Miles until 1878 and from 1880 to 1883 was a scout for federal troops in the Ute country in Colorado. Os the campaigns in which Kelly participated there were three that stood out proffiinently. The first was against Sitting Bull, who surrounded a wagon train. The “hostiles” were located by Kelly and his followers and routed by Miles. In a second sfihdlar campaign. Gen eral Miles’ troops defeated the Sioux, who sent several of their number tor a conference with the general during which it was' agreed that the Sioux should deliver three chiefs as hostages to insure that the tribe would leave the region. Tired of Life New York.—Leaving a note saying he' was “tired of being useless,” Clark F. Huhn, twenty-eight years »»id. shot himself in the anteroom of a night club.
Richmond bar. Commenting on the sale, she declared that she disliked to dispose of the wall paper, but the facts that she no longer occupied the old nfansion and that this beautiful paper should be preserved to posterity combined to bring her to a decision to disp«»se of it. Woodlawn was the scene of John Fox’s famous novel. “The Kentuckians.” The house, built in 1822. is of a purely colonial type of architecture. It was erected by Col. William Rodes, a noted Kentucky pioneer and large land owner, and his wife. Mrs. Pauline Clay Rodes, daughter of Gen. Green Clay and a sister of the noted abolitionist leader, Gen. Cassius Marcellus Clay, whose historic estate, Whitehall, is only a few miles away. They Would New York.—Sales by two notorious sisters of tear gas in implements resembling fountain pens have caused the aidermen to prohibit the private manufacture or sale of such gas and devices for its use. Criminals were found to be using them.
I COLD SHOULDER THE COLD * s TEN to fifteen million people tn North America are annually vic-. | tints of colds during the fall and ( early winter. When the aggregate in- ; convenience and economic loss of this ; disability is considered, it is easy to realise that a problem of major im- j portanoe confronts us. Add to this \ situation the reduction of body resistance to other infections such as | bronchitis, influenza, pneumonia, and even tuberculosis, and odds assume a gravity usually not appreciated by the average individual. __ “Only a cold” is the general expresislon of indifference attached to this (Condition. And it is exactly this attiitude that has developed the unfortunate power the colds have on the 'American public today. • Colds are no light matter. One i cold per year is bad enough. Many people can boast of three during this period. Assuming that you are go:ing to be among the fifteen million | unfortunates this year, what do you propose to do about it? For. after all, it is a very personal matter and one which cannot he controlled by public health measures. The best medicine for a cold Is bed. It is the last medicine usually administered. The time.to retire to your couch is when you re<j»gnize the cold’s presence. This means that you are ‘ not to wait until you are so ill that you cannot stay out of bed any long- i er. With business to attend to or household duties to perform, it will take will power to close up, shop because of a few sniffles and coughs. But in the long run it will pay you to do so. It may be exceedingly hard for an ' ; active person to get out of the race : for a few days for such a little (?) ; thing as a cold. But many people who have neglected to do so have been disqualified for weeks through more serious il’ness and not a few have ; been finally eliminated. Give this suggestion some thought the next rime you contract “only a cold.” It may ; even save your life! But why get a cold in the first in- ' stance? Here are some rules which if followed will make colds weaker adversaries for ?ou than they now j are: > I—Avoid direct drafts of any kind, | this includes your "leeping room. 2— Keep away as far as possible from others having colds. 3 —ln the “cold season” avoid crowds and crowded places, even to t he p«unt of losing , some fun 4—Keep the feet dry. 5— ; Avoid sudden chilling. 6—Live up to | the general rules of health every day and develop a strong resistance to all disease. Ten or fifteen million people Is a large crowd, but get out of it And stay ouL • • • WANTED! A CONTINUOUS ; PERFORMANCE A GREAT number of people have a very mistaken idea about the annual vacation. Those who use It i ! for rest and the replacement of vital ; forces lost during the year are de- j ! cidedly in tire minority. Rut even j this class, (not to mention the others who return home more tired than ) when they left) are likely to argue that two weeks in the open air, with a healthy minimum of physical exercise and a maximum of life restoring sleep, are all they need until vacation time rolls around once more. It cannot be denied that much good is to be derived from a safe and sane outing. However, it is equally a fact ! that fourteen days in the woods er shore are not to be considered as an effective antidote to three hundred and fifty days of luxurious inactivity. That' is the hasis upon which many work, nevertheless. One must realize that with the conclusion of the fortmrl vacation, the. vacation possibilities still remain. Even if one is back o» the job. there is stilf plenty of fresh air to be had, the breezes are still blowing and the night hours are available for sleep. ! '• Those who come home in fine physical trim will do well to remain that way. A bit of daily discipline which will promptly turn into a pleasant J habit, is all that is required. Really, | the whole plan is so absurdly simple ■ that many will disregard it for that | reason. Use the fresh ait by walking | in it daily at least two miles. Hermit (the breezes to fan your cheeks by regularly intimate with the .outdoors. Do not over or under eat: • and lastly, give your bed a fair and healthy chance at you. Even for that great group who re- j turn home with nothing to show for it but black circles under their eyes and flat pocketbooks, ''‘there is much hope”—as the quack medical advertisements sav And the medicine is | exactly the same for the foolish ex- i . cursionists ns for the wise ones. (©.1929 Western Newspaper Onion.) t British Taxation The Income tax, which was introduced into the* United Kingdom as a war levy by William Hitt in 1798-1799 ‘ —a duty of 10 per cent on all incomes from whatever source derived, except incomes under £6O a year—was lifted in 1815 and not revived until 1842. A graduated tax on income from certain fixed sources had., however, been levied as early as 1435, and again in 1450. Now You Know A horse and buggy is an oil can, and an oil can is a foul bail, and a foul ball is a false alarm, and a false alarm is a boy friend who thinks he has no right to kiss her unless she is undef the mistletoe—Cincinnati Enquirer. Sound* Reasonable English paper—” . . . but it is a fact that diseases which prevailed then are now rare, and others which are now rare were common in the past*
I II frll IM—WMMWWi mWw w ■W...A w ■< ? — ■ « TF you ever have rheumatism, lumbago or other pains, that ” penetrate to the very bones and x joints, Bayer Asprin offers \ quick relief, and such complete wOMMb com tort that it's folly to suffer, j Keep these tablets handy in y?' I the house; and carry them in . your pocket. Then you need never suffer long from any ? attack of neuralgia, rieuritis, rheumatism, or even from a 8 headache. Bayer Aspirin ■PW* I is a marvelous antidote for all P ain an< ’ as no e^ect on ie I I heart. Proven directions for 1 many valuable uses in every p box of genuine Bayer Atpirin. I • All druggists. feW>IRI N Aspirin Is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaccticacidester of SaUcyiicaeia
Too Low a Bid “A penny for your thoughts, my child.” “Thoughts have gone up, like everything else, ma.”
a You can get results—after a fashion—with any old dye; but to do work you are proud of takes real anilines. That’s why we put them in Diamond Dyes. They contain from three to five times more than other dyes on the market! Cost more to make? Surely. But you get them for the same price as other dyes. Next time you want to dye, try them. See how easy it is to use them. Then compare the results. Note the absence of 4nat re-dyed look; of streaking or spotting. See that they take none of the life out of the cloth. Observe how , • the colors keep their brilliance through, wear and washing. Your dealer will refund your money if you don’t agree Diamond Dyes are better dyes. , The ujiite package of Diamond Dyes is the original “allpurpose” dye for any and every kind of material. It will dye or tint silk, wool, cotton, linen, rayon or any mixture of materials. The blue package is a special dye, for silk " or wool only. With it you can dye your valuable articles of silk or wool with results equal to the finest professional 1 work. When you buy—remember this. The i blue package dyes silk or wool only. The white package will dye ever y hind of goods, including silk and wool. Your dealer ‘ Au.bfe.fFJV«{ has both packages. Diamond Dues Zavp to use Perfect, results AT ALL DRU(J STOfc.ES
, And the Taxi Driver* Lady—lsn't it wonderful how a single policeman can dam the flow of traffic? Boy—Yes, grannie; but you sHould hear the bus drivers. Many a man isn’t worth the market valueof the phosphorus in hig bones. It’s open to suspicion—the stolen umbrella
known everywhere for its fine quality \Jor alternating current, J less Radiotronsj Most popular Radiola ever designed. Faithful reproduction over a wide range. Inexpensive operation from house current. *< . < Ask the nearest RCA Radiola Dealer to demonstrate the " 18” for you and tell you about the RCA Time Payment Plan. RCA RADIOIA MADE •» VH« MAKtm or TH« kaoiotroO
Io Get Rid of Mice To banish mice put camphor into rhe places they frequent. Holes should be stopped with putty-in which mustard has been mixed.
Happiness may resemble eitiier a mountain or a molehill. It depends on the distance you age from it. Children’s handkerchiefs often look hopeless when they come to the laundry. Wash with good soap, rinse in water dried with Russ Bleaching Blue. —Adv. A man doesn’t necessarily appreciate a cyclone because he is carried away with it. »'
