The Syracuse Journal, Volume 22, Number 1, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 2 May 1929 — Page 5
R|ji ol Acidity r Tile common cause ot digestive difficulties is excess acid. Soda cannot alter this condition, and it burns the stomach. Something that will neutralize the acidity is the sensible thing to take. That is why physicians tell the public to use Phillips Milk ot Magnesia. One spoonful ot this delightful preparation can neutralize many times its volume, in acid. It acts instantly; relief is quick, and very apparent. All gas is, dispelled; all sourness is soon gone; the whole system is sweetened. Do try this perfect anti-acid, and remember it is just as good for children, too. and pleasant for them to take. Any drug store has the genuine, preScriptional product paiiups r Mak. of Magnessa — GREAT OISSOVERYKILLS RATS ® MICE, BUT OTM ELSE Won’ll KIJS Livestock? Poultry? Dogs? Cats? or even ESaby Chicks K-R-O (Kills Rats Only) is a new exterminator that can be used about the home, barn or poultry yard with safety as it contains no deadly poison. K-R-O is made of Squill, as recommended by U. S. Dept, of Agriculture, under the Connable process which insures maximum strength. Two cans killed 578 rats at Arkansas State Farm. Hundreds of other testimonials. Sold on a Money-Back Guarantee. Insistupon K-R-O(Kills Rats Only).theoriginal Squill exterminator. All druggists 75c, or direct if not yet stocked, f-arge size (four times as much) $2.00. K-R-O Co.. Springfield. O, For Barbed Wire Cuts Try HANFORD’S Balsam of Myrrh AU dealers are authorized to refund your money for the first bottle if not suited. IF AFFLICTED OR THREATENED with that terrible disease of the gums, Pyorrhea, test the new AVIVA Massage Treatment without risking a single penny. Complete heme treatment. Send name today! Address: The AVIVA CO.. 5002 Calhoun St. Fort Wayne, lad. Ireland Reviving the Harp Musicians of Ireland are trying to revive the harp, once a favorite In that country, but waning in'popularity In the last few years. The Royal Dublin society recently gave a recital to show the use of the harp in chamber music. The concerto by Bach was included in the program, and leading Irish musicians roundly welcomed the playing of the instrument that has long been considered essentially Irish. Among the younger generation the harp is considered old-fashioned- At tlft) Feis Ceoli, the great musical event, harp entries are dwindling and advocates of the instrument hope to bring it back to a recognition at least as great as in other parts of the musical world. No ugly, grimy streaks on the clothes when Russ Bleaching Blue is used. Good bluing gets good results. All grocers carry it.—Adv. Ouch “What is the latest news?” “A policeman led a bride away from the altar today.” “What was the matter?” “He had just married her.” —Die Muskete, Vienna. f Human, Anyway “Have you a good cook now?” “Well, she’s not too good to use a swear-word once in awhile.” yb Wk HHariLj A DOZEN different things may cause a headache, but there’s just one thing you need ever do to get relief. Bayer Aspirin is an absolute antidote for such pain. Keep it at the office. Have it handy in the home. Those subject to frequent or sudden headaches should carry Bayer Aspirin in the pockettin. Until you have used it for headaches, colds, neuralgia, etc., you’ve no idea how Bayer Aspirin can help. It means quick, complete relief to millions of men and women who use it every year. And it does not depress the heart. ©kSPIRIN
Spotting Seals Is This Flyer’s Task
Canadian Aviator Scouts Sea to Locate. Prey for Hunters. Toronto.—Colin S. Caldwell, wellknown Ottawa aviator, is now on his way to the icy waters of Newfoundland and Labrador to engage in probably the most unusual commercial Hying in the world. This is his fifth season working with the Newfoundland sealing fleets, flying over the sealing grounds to spot seals and inform the different boats in the fleet of their position. Pilot Caldwell lived in Alabama hut in lIH7 came to Ottawa to join the Royal Flying corps lie trained at Camp Borden but did not get his chance to go overseas. Then he decided on two things, that flying was to be his profession and that Canada was to he his home. .He was one of the first flyers to go on air expeditions into the new mining regions of northern Ontario and Quebec. He has flown to Alaska and visited most' of the wilds of Canada on commercial flying ventures. He is acknowledged to he one of the best of Canadian hirdmen. The “We” of Newfoundland. Caldwell and his small machine are the “We” of Newfoundland and Labrador. He is tlie only pilot in the world who has ever engaged in the trade which fie calls spotting seals, and is the only airman who tias spent any length of time Hying off the coasts rtf Newfoundland and Labrador in the winter months when; vast tields of ice stretch in every direction. He operates from land bases during the entire season. Round the coast ot Newfoundland are dotted little telegraph stations which keep the Indian and Eskimo villages in touch with civilization. At each of these stations the sealing companies during the summer months have deposited supplies of non perish-
* • . * * New Hampshire Man * * Owns Oldest Piano * * Portsmouth. N. H—Charles * W Gray of this city has the dis- * tinction of being rhe owner of * the oldest piano in the United * Stares. * * • aje * Tlie instrument, which- has at- # * much attention, was * built in London in 17G3 hy * * Johann Zampe. inventor of rhe * grand piano. In 1784 it was brought to rhe United States for * John Jacob Astor. During the * J long passage across the ocean * it was with difficulty that rhe * J strings were kept from rusting. * After its arrival in New York. * * the much dryer atmosphere £ * caused the woodwork to crack. * * For nearly forty years the * * piano remained in the Astor * family. Then it went into tlie * possession of rhe father of the * * late G. Alexander Kmery of * Boston. On the death of Mr. * * Emery. Sr., the piano passed to his son, and on his removal S * from Boston to tin’s city he took * rhe highly treasured instrument * with him. Upon the death of * Mr. Emery, more than twenty- * * five years ago. the piano was * * purchased by Mr. Gray. The * piano is still in a good state of * * preservation. S
Buys “Old Brick Capitol” Mum! ? x whets I The final chapter in the proceedings by which the government secured possession of the “Old Brick Capitol” at Washington as a site for the proposed Supreme Court building. Attorney General Mitchell is shown presenting a check for $229,200 to representatives of the National Women’s party, owners of the building.
SUBJECT OF THREE NATIONS BECOMES CITIZEN OF U. S.
—■■■ < Didn't Know Which Flag of the Three European Countries to Renounce. New Orleans. La.—United States District court officials were startled during an alien naturalization session when one of the applicants for American citizenship did not know his nationality. He could qualify for civic rights in three European countries and didn’t know which flag to abandon. “What nation are you renouncing allegiance to?” Judge Wayne Borab questioned in a tone of routine. “I don’t know,” replied Isadore Reisfeld, sometime domiciled within the territorial limits of Austria, Turkey and Italy. Questions resulted in Reisfeld’s being admitted as A citizen of Italy. “The funny thing about the matter Is that I am no more an Italian than any of y<m.” the applicant
THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL. SYRACUSE, INDIANA
* ’ * * Fires Self From One * Job to Hold Another * * • Fort Scott, Kan.—To fire him- * * self from one office in order to * * reinstate himself in another, * * from which he was technically * * removed, was the experience of * D. R. Lang, county attorney. * * The state’s attorney general ad- * vised Lang that by accepting * a temporary commission as un * der sheriff he. unwittingly had * vacated the county attorneyship. * * Lang dismissed himself as un- * * der sheriff and by court per- * mission was reinstated as coun- * * * J ty attorney. * * * ******4HE-S**-X-*-st-*-)HHHHHf-****-*
rtble food and gasoline. Caldwell works from them all. going from one to the other as the season progresses. From the station he flies out over the frozen ocean for a hundred or two hundred miles spotting patches of seals lying on the bergs and then returning to the land base. By reckoning the distance from the base to where he sighted the seals considering the direction in which he has tlown he knows exactly where the seals are located, and he marks their position on a chart divided into numbered and lettered sections. On returning to the telegraph station he wires the locations to headquarters at St. .John’s. Newfoundland From headquarters the directions are wirelessed re every ship ot the sealing fleet, Each captain has a chart siin ilat td Caldwell’s and they can place the location of the seals almost exactly Also Gives Ice Conditions. Then there is a wild rush, and competition is keen. Each ship gets the news at the same time. Steam is got up and there is a mad race to the position of the seals. It is through Caldwell’s directions that expense to the companies is saved, for in rhe old days the ships had to leave two or three weeks earlier than at present, in order to seek our rhe seals for themselves. Risk is likewise lessened because the flyer can also give ice conditions. For Six or seven weeks the (Iyer leads a lonely life. He makes headquarters for four or five days at each telegraph station. These are subArctic posts, bleak and desolate. Every day, unless the weather is too bad. he makes a flight and perhaps two or three. Until last season Caldwell used a historic plane. It was the “Antarctic Baby.” a small Avron. which was built for Shackleton for his South pole expedition, but never used. The machine used by the flyer now is a small Avron-Avion with an open cockpit. a cruising radius of 590 miles and cruising speed of about ninety miles an hour. The old Shackleton plane is now lying at St. Johns. Four-Horse Team Nets Fierce 1,350-lb. Turtle Port Arthur. Texas.—A. VViltze, a fisherman, hitched four horses to a seine recently, and dragged a 1.3">0pound turtle from the Gulf of Mexico. The turtle, whose protective shell had been cut. perhaps by a ship’s pro peller. put up a hard fight before the horses finally won. It was estimated to be more than three hundred years old.
® attaches after receiving his papers. “1 was born of Austrian parents and proved allegiance to that country when the World war broke out.” Reisfeld said. “The place of my birth, however, was Constantinople. Turkey, so I was also a subject of the Ottoman empire. That would not have been so complicated only tbe contortions and changes of the maps in territorial readjustments following the war brought my Austrian home under Italian domination, so I may be termed an Italian as well.” Severing his connections with Austria in 1923, Reisfeld came to Americe on a Turkish passport. The ship on which he crossed the Atlantic arrived in New York one day too late to get her passengers within the immigration quota for that country, so the man of several flags was allowed to enter as an Italian. Reisfeld is a graduate of tbe Uni-
HEAVYWEIGH . i hJr 9 * :< IR~~ 1 FS I \ I "f ■ ' 4 Nurse Horlick of a New York hospital is shown holding the biggest baby of 1929. The infant tipped the scales at 16 pounds. Co-Eds Adopt Rules to Woo Popularity Seattle, Wash.—Necking is frowned on by co-eds of the University of Washington, but they see “no harm in kissing a boy friend of whom they are particularly fond.” V Tiiis interesting attitude was disclosed in the “ten commandments of popularity” adopted by a group of co-eds. Sex appeal comes first, they agreed, but after that, what makes a girl popular? So they listed their ten commandments : 1. Always be a “lady.” 2: Use good taste in selecting yonr clothes and do not let actions belie that taste. 3. Always be’ a good sport. Do what the majority wants, but not to the detriment of your own convictions and ideais. < I. Play bridge, tennis, golf. swim, and dance. If not ail. then do these two certainly—play bridge and dance. 5. Read the papers. Know your current events, politics, and athletics. It is well to converse on serious top ics as well as light ones. • 6. Handing a “line” is helpful Even if you are not rhe type, this “you-great-big wonderful - boy” stuff does get over, when used in modern tion. of course. 7. Do not neck. If a girl is charming and peppy enough to interest a boy she need not worry about being the gold digger type. S. Do not kiss promiscuously. There is no harm in kissing a boy friend of whom you are particularly fond. 9. Dress attractively, but not necessarily expensively. A boy notices the general effect you produce, so be as pretty as you can. 10. First last, and always—Be FEMININE. Giant Airships Will Carry 50 Passengers Dallas. Texas.—Giant airships with cabin accommodations for fifty or more passengers will be an accom plished fact within the next five years, H. J. McNally, general traffic manager for the Universal Aviation Corporation of Chicago, said while in Dallas to establish a southwestern traffic department for his company. According to McNally, the giant airplanes of the future will have a wing spread of 300 to 400 feet The present cabin plane and fuselage, which offers surface resistance to flight, will be eliminated, he predicts. “A normal cruising speed ot 3(H) or more miles per hour is probable. The airplane manufacturing plants are turning out larger and larger engines. The size of the future plane will only be limited by the power provided by the motors. We are now carrying hundreds of gallons of gasoline and hundreds of pounds of baggage in the wings and the possibility of also carrying passengers there, thus eliminating the cabin, is a mathematical one.” Find Egypt’s Wise Men Used Magnifying Glass London.—When the eyesight of Egypt’s wise men grew feeble fronj study they used magnifying glasses to make the stone tablets and papyrus rolls easier to read. This is indicated by pieces of round glass from Egypt, one of which, now in the Ashmojean collection, may date back to the first dynasty of Egypt, or about 3500 B. C. That magnifying glasses were known in the famous civilization of Crete about 1200 B. C. had been shown by two crystal lenses discovered in the Cretan ruins. Holds Barber Record Budapest.—A perfect shave in 45 seconds is the world's record established by Ladislaus Secko in an international barber’s competition. Secko came out an easy winner by shaving his client in the above time without inflicting any cuts. versity of Viefina, speaks French. German, Turkish, Spanish, Greek, Russian and Italian, and since coming to America has been in every state except that of matrimony. Grasshopper Is Found in Stone Age Carving Paris. —One of the oldest representations of an insect in art iias come to light in the archeologically famous cave of the Three Brothers in the commune of Montesquieu-Avantes. It is a grasshopper crudely carved out of a bit of ancient bison bone now in the possession of Comte Begouen, father of the three youths who first discovered the cave of prehistoric wonders and for whom it is named. It is the first time that an insect of this type has been found in the art of the old Stone age according to Comte Begouen, and presents a considerable puzzle to archeologists to explain, since such insects were rare in the cold climate that prevailed in France in the Magdnlenian epnrl when the carving was probably mad<‘
■-LEADING-— ——— I RADIO PROGRAMS (Time Riven is Eastern Stand-vd. subtract one hour for Central and two hours for Mountain time.) H. B. C. RED NETWORK—May 5. 2:00 p. m. Dr. Stephen S. Wise. 3:00 p. m. Dr. S. Parks Cadman. 5:30 p. m. Dictograph Hour. 6:00 p. m. Chicago Symphony Orch. 6:30 p. m. Major Bowes’ Family Party. 8:00 p. m. David Lawrence. 8:15 p. tn. Atwater Kent. 9:15 p. m. Studebaker Champions. N. B. C. BLUE NETWORK 1:00 p. m. Roxy Stroll. 2:00 p. m. Young Peoples’ Conference. 3:30 p. m. McKinney Musicians. 4:30 p. m. Dr. Harry Emerson Fosdick. , 5:30 p. tn. Whittai Anglo Persians. 7:00 p. rti. Enna Jettick Melodies. 7‘15 p. m. Collier’s Radio Hour. 8:15 p. m. Raythean Mt’g. Company. COLUMBIA SYSTEM 3:00 p. m. Symphonic Hour. 3:30 p. m. Richard Hudnut program. 4:00 p. m. Cathedral Hour. 5:30 p. m. Services—Tenth Presbyterian Church, Philadelphia, Rev. D. G. Barnhouse. 8:00 p. m. La Palina Concert. B’3o p. m. Sonatron Program. 9:10 p. m. .Majestic Theater of the Air. 10:00 p. m. De Forest Audions. 10:30 p m. Around the Samovar. N. B. C. RED NETWORK—May 6. 5:45 a. m. Tower Health Exercise. 10:15 a. m. Radio Household Institute. 7:00 p. m. Voice of Firestone. 7:30 p. rn. A. & P. Gypsies. 8 30 p.m. General Motors’ Family Party. 9:30 p. m. Empire Builders. N. B. C. BLUE NETWORK 9:00 a. m. Copeland Hour. 1:00 p. m. Montgomery Ward Hour. 1:15 p. m. U. S. Dept, of Agriculture. 1:30 p. m. Montgomery Ward Hour. - 6:30 p. m. Roxy and His Gang. * COLUMBIA SYSTEM 8:00 p. m. Kansas School Daze. 8:30 p m. Ceco Couriers. 9:00 p m. Physical Culture .Magazine. 9:30 p. m. Warner Bros. Vita’phone 10.00 p. m. Robt. Burns Panatelas. 10:30 p. m. United Choral Singers. N. B. C. RED NETWORK—May 7. 9:45 a. rn. Fleischman’s Yeast. 10:15 a. m. Radio Household Institute. 6:00 p m. Voters’ Service. 6:30 p. m. Soconyland Sketches. 7:30 p. m. Prophylactic. 8:00 p. m. Eveready Hour. 9:00 p. m. Clicquot Club Eskimos. 10 00 p th; Radio Keith Orpheum Hour. N. B. C. BLUE NETWORK 9:00 a. m. Copeland Hour. 1:00 p. m. Montgomery Ward Hour. 1:15 p. m. U. S. Dept, of Agriculture. 1:30 p. m. Montgomery Ward Hour. 7:30 p m. Michelin Tiremen. 8:30 p. m. Dutch Master Minstrels. 9:00 p. m. Williams Syncomatics. 9 30 p. m. Charles Freshman. COLUMBIA SYSTEM 10:00 a m. Ida Bailey Allen, National Home-Makers’ Club. 10:30 a. m. Jewel Hour. 7:”0 p. m. Mobo Entertainers. 8:00 p. m. Political Situation in Washington. Speaker. F. W. Wile. 9:00 p. m. Old Gold. Patfl Whiteman Hour. 10:00 n. m. Curtis Institute of Music program. 11:00 p. m. Wrigley Program with Guy Lombardo Royal Canadians. N. 3. C. RED NETWORK—May 8. 9:00 a. m National Home Hour. 10:15 a. m. Radio Household Institute. 6:30 p. m. La Touraine Tableaux. 7:30 p. m. Happy Wonder Bakers. 8:03 p. m. Ipana Troubadours. B’3o p. m. Palm Olive Hour. 9-30 p m. Gold Strand Orchestra. N. B. C. BLUE NETWORK 9:00 a. m. Copeland Hour. 1:00 p m. Montgomery Ward Hour. 1:15 p. m. U. S. Dept, of Agriculture. 1:30 p. m. Montgomery Ward Hour 6:45 p. m. Political Situation in Washington. 7:30 p. m, Sylvania Foresters 10:00 p m. Chancellor Dance Orchestra. COLUMBIA SYSTEM 10:00 a. m. Ida Bailey Allen. National Home-Makers Club. 8:00 p. m. Hank Simmons’ Show Boat. 9:00 p. m. Van Heusen program. 9:30 p. m. La Palina Smoker. 10:00 p. m. Kolster Radio Hour. 10:30 p. m. Daguerreotypes. f « N. B. C. RED NETWORK—May 9. 10:15 a. m. Radio Household Institute 4:00 p. m. Grennan Cake Club. 5:30 p. m. Yeast Foamers. 6:30 p. m. Coward Comfort Hour. 7:30 p. m. Hoover Sentinels. i 8:00 p. rr. Seiberling Singers. 9:00 p. m. Halsey Stuart Hour. 9:30 p. m. Iso-Vis Entertainers. N. B. C. BLUE NETWORK 9:00 a. m. Copeland Hour. 1:00 p. m. Montgomery Ward Hour 1:15 p m. U. S. Dept, of Agriculture. 1:30 p. m. Montgomery Ward Hour. i 7:00 p. m. Lehn and Fink Serenade. B’3o p. m. Maxwell House Hour. COLUMBIA SYSTEM 10:00 a. m. Ida Bailey Allen. National Hdme-Makers’ club. 10:30 a. m. Rit Fashion Review. 8:00 p. m. Sweethearts. 8:30 p. m. Then and Now. 9:30 p. m. Sonora Hour. 10:00 n. m. The Columbians. 10:30 D. m. Musical Episode. N. B. C. RED NETWORK—May 10. 9:00 a. m. National Home Hour. 10:15 a. m. Radio Household Institute. 4:00 p. m. Florida Citrus Growers. 7:00 p. m. Cities Service Hour. 8:00 p. m. An Evening in Paris. B’3o P m. Schraedertown Brass Band. N. B. C. BLUE NETWORK 10:00 a. m. RCA Educational Hour 1:00 p. m. Montgomery Ward Hour. 1:15 p. m. U. S. Dept, of Agriculture. 1:30 p. m. Montgomery Ward Hour. 6:15 P- m. Squibbs Health Talk. 6:30 p. rn. Dixies Circus. 7:30 p. m. Armstrong Quakers. 8:00 p m. W'rigley Review. 8:30 p. m. Philco Hour. 9:00 p. m. Hudson-Essex Challengers. 10:00 p. m. SKellodians. COLUMBIA SYSTEM 10:00 a. m. Ida Bailey Allen, National Home-Makers’ Club. 12:00 m. Radio Home Bazaar. 6:45 P m- Enna Jettick Melodies. 8:00 p. m. Temple. 8:30 p. nt. Veedol Vodevil. , 9:00 p. m. True Story Hour. 10:00 p. m. Kodak Hour. 10:30 p. m. Night Club Romahces. N. B. C. RED NETWORK—May 11. 8:45 a. m. Tower Health Exercise. 10:15 a- m. Radio Household Institute. 5:30 p. m. White House P‘, jr Music. 8:00 p. m. Nat. Orch wu.. >amrosch. 9 00 p. m. Lucky Strike Dance Orch. N. B. C. BLUE NETWORK 2:30 p. m- RCA Demonstration Hour. 5:30 p. m. Gold Spot Orchestra. 7:00 p. m. Pure Oil Band. 8-00 p- tn. Packard Electric. COLUMBIA SYSTEM 10:00 p. m- National Forum from Washington. ' Recognition at Last The photo-voltaic cell discovered about 100 years ago has been well known to scientists, but it has been repeatedly declared of no practical use. Television has, however, given it a place and it i$ now on general sale for this purpose. Susceptible to Dampness Audio transformers are often susceptible to the effects of dampness, especially when of the exposed or uncased’ type.
Will Hail Braille as - Benefactor of Blind Every blind person has reason to be thankful that, 117 years ago, a little boy of three became blind. For this year, says an article in London Answers* Is the centenary of the invention, by this same boy, of the Braille system, which enables the blind to read and write. Lewis Brail’e was only twenty when he invented his famous system by which combinations of six dots form letters, numerals, punctuation marks, and musical signs. It is now in general use among the blind, and books on Braille can be obtained on all sorts of subjects. But that does not exhaust the marvels of Braille. A blind shorthand writer, using the Braille system of shorthand, can. “take down” at ISO words a minute. And the most complicated mathematical problems can be worked out by means of numerals. Yet it was not until 40 years after its invention that Braille was gen-, erally adopted among the blind in this country. Now, however, its value is fully recognized, and the National Institute for the Blind is planning to celebrate the centenary of Lewis Braille’s great system. Exposition Will Show Home Life of Sweden Swedish home life, long the object of admiration by the people of other countries, will be glorified by a large exposition to be held at Stockholm in 1930. E. G. Asplund, a leading Swedish architect of the ultra-modern school, is now’ designing the building which will be located on the famous island of Djurgaarden, ancient roYal deer park lying to the east of the city proper. The exposition, according to the prospectus, will include a large collection of modern Swedish homes ranging from modest summer cottages to the most imposing villas, together with model gardens, streets, shops and public rooms. Special efforts will be made to display the best and latest products of Swedish industry, textiles. glassware, forged and hammered iron, silver, pewter and jewelry, all of which have won wide attention at foreign expositions during recent years. Acorn A teacher in the Fresbytctian Sunday school at Franklin was telling the beginners’ class a story about an acorn and said: “N(\w. have any of vou ever seen an acorn?” w’hen Dickie* the<four-year-old offspring of a Franklin attorney, said: “Yeh, on my mudder’s toe.” —Indianapolis News. To insure glistening-white table linens, use Russ Bleaching Blue in your laundry. It never disappoints. At all good grocers.—Adv. The Test to Come Cora —Does that rich young man of ; yours write convincing letters? Dora—l can’t say. The case hasn’t gone to the jury yet. Did He Get Away With It? Editor (at home, to wife) —That will do, Marie. Tlie editor’s decision is final.
Radiola 33 - latest product J ’ —IJ —I I A high quality "all-electric” , receiving set for inexpensive A. C. operation. An amazingly fine in- » strument at this remarkable price. e e (less Radiotrons) Ask the nearest RCA Radiola Dealer to demonstrate the "33” for you and tell you about the RCA Time Payment Plan. RCA RAUIOIA MADE BY THE MAKERS OF THE RADIOTRON WhoWantstobeßald?! Not many, and when you are | -Wwi getting that way and loosing I Wlr a ’ r ’ ends in baldness, > you want a good remedy that sh w stop falling hair, dandruff I and grow hair on the bald head HoOHi BARE-TO-HAIR is what you ‘ For Sale at AD Dealers in ToOet Article. W. H. Foret, M£gr. Scottdale, ■■■■■- 1 I
CRUISE June 2» M. “LANCAS-raiA’* CUNARD LINE. 52 days. SSOO to SI3OO Spain, Tangier, Algiers. Italy. Riviera. Sweden, Norway, Edinburgh, Trossachs, Berlin (Paris. London, Rhine, etc.). Hotels, drives, fees. etc. included. Mediterranean Cruise, Jan. 29. S6OO np Frank C. Clark, Tinies BMg*« Y. and 50% of earnings. V Write for circular. yO We have no salesmen. Bank references. THE PEXEL CO. Food. Products 119 N. 4th Sb, Camden, N. J. Health Giving All Winter Long Marvelous Climate — Good Hotels — Tourist Clamps—Splendid Roads—Gorgeous Mountain Views. The wonderfu I desert resort of the West P Write Cree A Cftaffay alm CALIFORNIA Bilious/ Bilious, constipated? Take hR— B—NATURE’S REMEDY—tonight S —the mild. safe, all-vegetable K laxative. You'll feel fine in K the morning. Promptly and / n pleasantly rids the system / (O'NIGHT of the bowel poisons that TO MORROW cause headaches—2sc. ALRIGHT For Sale at All Druggists Holstein &’ Guernsey, practically pure -bred heifers, calves, tuberculin tested: bred tor production. Oakwood Farnis. Elm Grove. Wis.
ASK FOR ALLENS | FOOT-EASE ] |- for PAINFUL FEET M
FOR 7 YEARS 3 Di*. cJOHNSONS r ALIMENTARY AILMENTS WHY HAVE COCCIDIOSIS? When it is unnecessary, if yon will use CHIKV.’EL as per'our directions. There are thousands of birds die each year that should be saved/ Write forour folderof suggestions and testimonials: or, why not order a bottle of CHIKWELnow, since I guarantee satisfaction or money refunded. Price. 11.50 bottio which makes M gallons of treatment. W.C. JOHNSON, D.V.M. SUMMITVILLE. INDIANA > wTSTu., FORT WAYNE, NO. 17 -1929. Two Evils George Bernard Shaw, ever audacious, has plunged with characteristic .heat into the discussion of women's clothes. He had a number of interesting things to say, one of which caused something of a sensation: “The highest medical demonstration would not prevent me from wearing corsets,” declares Mr. Shaw, “if I had to wear skirts.” But That’s Been Developed Waiter—Has your order been taken? Diner —Yes. and so was my photograph when I was a child.—Boston Transcript. .. .» I No person is so punctual when it comes to keeping appointments as the bill collector.
