The Syracuse Journal, Volume 22, Number 11, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 11 July 1929 — Page 3
Pacific \ Northwest (This summer the enchanted land. See magnificent Rainier, Olympic Peninsula, islanddotted Puget Sound, bustling Seattle and Tacoma. Cruise to Vancouver, Victoria or on to Alaska. En route Northwest visit Yellowstone through Gallatin Gateway — new, scenic way to America’s wonderland. For information ana booklets ask your local agent or write GEO. B - HAYNES Passenger Traffic Mgr. 949 Union Station Chicago 476-58 % Milwaukee ELECTRIFIED OVER THB PHAB ROCKIES TO THB SEA JXV/ZXM All Is Vanity “Is your husband vain?” asked the caller. “No,” sighed the wife, “but his efforts to make money certainly are." ft APerfect Day Bl TS NOT one that leaves you with ISQ Rl A tired, aching feet. They will spoil IWg Hl any day. but if you shake Allen’s I® [fcl Foot=Ease into your shoes in the IJs| HM morning you will walk all day or I® gjl dance all night in perfect ease. It I® Hgl takes the sting out of corns, bun- Ife Wwl ionsand calluses. Sold everywhere. 11 | ’“Allens IwFoot’Ease \ ffi'KSl For Free trial package and a Foot- I ' ElaJßl Ease Walking Doll,- address , I . Hq \ Allen's Foot—Ease, Ee Roy, N. Y. ’ : Progress “How did your boy Josh get along at college?” “Fine,” answered Farmer Corntos- I sei. “He knows more than the perfessors: only he can’t convince ’em.”, . ' To insure glistening-white table lin- ‘ ens, use Huss Bleaching Blue in your : laundry. It never disappoints. At all good grocers.-—Adv. Hunts Kangaroos in Auto An Australian motorist is sponsor for a new sport. Finding the usual method of hunting kangaroos with dogs a bit slow, he chases the animals cross country with a light six-cylinder car and lassos them from the running board. Mosquito Bites HANFORD’S Balsam of Myrrh Money back for first bottle If not All d<”' l er a . June Brides Governor Green said at a wedding j breakfast in Lansing: “A realistic, yes, even a pessimis- ; tic view of marriage seems to prevail nowadays, and so to be in the movement I would say to our June brides: “Remember, as the years pass and your burdens grow ever heavier —remember that wives were made to suffer and husbands to be suffered.” For the Teeth The best natural dentifrice is an apple. The acid in the Juice kills all germs and preserves the enamel. ! SAME PRESCRIPTION HE WROTE IN 1892 When Dr. Caldwell started to practice medicine, back in 1875, the needs for a laxative were not as great as today. People lived normal lives, ate plain, wholesome food, and got plenty of fresh . air. But even that early there were j drastic physics and purges for the relief of constipation which Dr. Caldwell did not believe were good for human beings. The prescription for constipation that he used early in his practice, and which he put in drug stores in 1892 under the name of Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin, is a liquid vegetable remedy, intended for women, children and elderly people, and they need just such a mild, safe bowel stimulant. This prescription has proven its worth and is now the largest selling liquid laxative. It has won the confidence of people who needed it to get relief from i headaches, biliousness, flatulence, indigestion, loss of appetite and sleep, bad breath, dyspepsia, colds, fevers. At your druggist, or write “Syrup Pepsin,” Dept. 88, Monticello, Illinois, for free trial bottle. • S Health Giving -wrw iinsliinlt AH Winter long Marvelous Climate — Good Hotels —Tourist Camps—Splepdid Roads—Gorgeous Mountain Views. The wonderful desert resort of the West P Write Cree C Chsffey alm Springs CALIFORNIA MLN?U„ FORT WAYNE, NO. 27-1929.
Combination of Face Brick and Siding Makes Attractive Home
A beauty in a combination of face brick and siding. Notice the simplicity and harmony of each part with every other and study the unusual floor plans.
By W. A. RADFORD Mr. William A. Radford will answer questions and give advice FREE OF I COST on all subjects pertaining to , practical home building, for the readers of this paper. On account of his wide experience as editor, author and manufacturer, he is, without doubt, the highest authority on all these subjects. Address all inquiries William A. Radford. No. 1827 Prairie avenue. Chicago, 111., and only inclose two-cent stamp for reply. There are a great many different building materials which used alone i make an attractive home. However, some people desire a combination of two materials, thereby securing an ' out-of-the-ordinary home. In the home building design shown in the accompanying illustration a combination of face brick and wood is used ’ to good advantage. While the house ‘ — 300" -v , \ KITQHN C. t.'jj irO‘X£>'O“ ■ | 10. <n *.e.e-o - -4— 8 .0 MU tt U [: JDININOTM ’ ■ A« o A»a-G>' II j ■ TORCH EL_ « First Floor Plan. is not large the brick walls up to the second floor still give it an air of solidity, likewise the contrast of the wood above helps to take this house out of the commonplace. The home is 30 feet long and 24 feet deep and contains six rooms, living room, dining room, kitchen downstairs and House Wiring Needs Services of Expert When you pii§h a button or turn a switch in your home and your lamps light, your flatiron or curling iron gets hot, your washing or sewing machine begins to move or your refrigerator begins to chill, you know what happens, but do you know why it happens? Do you know how the electric current, one of the most frequently used home-making agencies brings heat and cold, light and motion all at the same time? Maybe if you understood it better you could use it better. In this day when practically everything is being done electrically the tendency is to put heavier fuses in the circuit and attach on every kind of an appliance possible. This is in line with modern progress and very commendable, but a few precautions should be given before loading up a ; circuit too heavily. When electric current passes through a conductor of any sort it i heats it up. This is commonly noI ticed in the various heating appli- ' ances and the lights that are used in a home. A flatiron will become very hot while the cord to it will become but moderately warm, due to the difference in resistance used. The more current that is passed through a wire the hotter it becomes. Large wires will carry more current than small wires without heating up as much. The ordinary home, if wired a number of years ago, has rather small wiring, designed only to carry a light load of lights. If this system is taxed with a number of current-consuming devices such as flatirons, heaters and motors, the amount of current that ; these wires must carry is increased. A few extra floor lamps or a small motor for a washing machine, etc., will not appreciably increase the lighting load, but the addition of a number of heating appliances, stoves and other things consuming large amounts of j current should have the approval of All Form Lumber Needs Surfacing on One Side All form lumber, regardless of where it is to be used, should be surfaced on one side and one edge. In so doing the lumber will work much easier and will also provide a much more satisfactory appearance. Lumber that is surfaced will make a much tighter form and will hold ail tlie cement and sand, ’avoiding the possibilities of rock pockets and rough surfaces in the concrete. Ship lap or tongue and grooved lumber is most satisfactory. Waterproofing Cellar Walls Good Investment Waterproofing the cellar walls of your new home will cost little more than 1 per cent of the entire expense of your house. Since nothing can make a home deteriorate faster than a leaking cellar, sending up dampness, making beams swell and warp, causing plaster to crack and discolor, your money spent on waterproof cellar walls is well spent.
THE SYRACUSE JOURNAI
three bedrooms and a bath upstairs. As will be seen by the floor plans which accompanies the exterior view, all of these rooms are of unusual good size. The entrance door leads directly into the living room, which is 16 feet 6 and 22 feet long. At the right IT"" \»® I I -X— I CJ~C‘ £?£?£¥• I I jbeeurm »ox.-»o . 1 Second Floor Plan. through a double-cased opening is the dining room which is a front corner room with five windows, making it a light and airy place for the family meals. Back of the dining room is the kitchen. 9 feet by 11 feet. An open stairway leads out of one side of the living room to a central hall on the second floor. Off this hall opens three bedrooms, two kt the front being large, one 11 feet by 14 feet, and the other 10 feet by 16 feet 6 inches. There is a small back bedroom which is 9 feet 6 inches square. The bathroom opens off the upstairs hall at the head of the stairs. One attractive feature of this home is the roof projection at the front over both the living and dining-room windows and the colonial type open porch with boxed pillars and a gable roof. The house is of frame construction and set on a concrete foundation with a single brick veneer wall below. an experienced electrician before installation. Electric ranges installed in such old homes should have separate wiring installed. This can be done at a small expense. The dealer who sells a new appliance can give tlie wiring of your home an inspection and advise you if additional wiring is necessary. Tells of Methods to Prevent Leaky Roofs Drippy leaks that come with every rain or snow storm irritate the nerves as well as cause damage to furniture, walls and floors. J. Paul Atwood writes of ways to prevent leaks of the roof in the People’s Home Journal. He advises the placing of a new flashing around the chimney or stand pipe on the roof to close a bad leak. “Buy some flashing,” he says, “copper is begt, but you may use lead, zinc or galvanized iron. Mark out a goodsized area around the pipe and carefully remove the shingles. Then fit a piece of metal around the vent pipe, as well as over the area that you have uncovered, and nail it down with good rust-proof nails. To prevent rain or snow from working its way down between the pipe and the flashing, get a threaded iron cap and screw this down. Next you must relay the shingles. Drive the nails in a few inches from where the old ones were. “The most vulnerable portions of a roof,” continues this writer, “are the valleys, the ridge, the gutters, and the slopes where chimney, dormer or other structure penetrate. A roof with a few angles, few penetrations and a good slope, is the best The slope should never be less than thirty degrees with the horizontal and all projections should be kept away from the valleys. If they aren’t, there is bound to be trouble, for the snow and water will not be able to flow off freely, and after a while it will back up, work its way under the shingles, forcing them further upen until you have a leak.” Plaster Cracks Can Be Mended by Home Owner Cracks in plaster are a bane to every home owner. Fortunately, most of such cracks can be repaired by the home owner himself with no more trouble than is expended on any of the average jobs that he does around the house. Care should be exercised, however, to use a regular patching plaster which has been manufactured specially for such work. This will in sure a good job. Such a patching plaster can be purchased tn two and one-half and five-pound packages and requires only the addition of water tc, •make it ready for use. Charming House The charming house is never easj to define or explain. It is seldom du< simply to one or two outstandinj beauties. The charming house ii rather the result of a multiplicity o: carefully considered details, combin ing to give the harmony, ease ant shining cleanliness that is the goal o: every home owner of good taste. I
-LEADING— I RADIO PROGRAMS N. B. C. RED NETWORK—JuIy 14. 3:00 p. m. National Sunday Forum. 6:30 p. m. Maj. Bowes' Family Party. 8:15 p. m. Atwater Kent Radio Hour. 9’15 p. tn. Studebaker Champions. N. B. C. BLUE NETWORK 1:00 p. m- Roxy Stroll. 2:00 p. m. friendship Hour. 4:30 p. m. Twilight Reveries. 5:30 p. m. Whittail-Anglo Persians. 7:00 p. m. Enna Jettick Melodies. 9:15 p. tn. Light Opera Hour. COLUMBIA SYSTEM 3:00 p. m. Symphonic Hour. (Symphony orchestra). 3:30 p. m. Hudnut Du Barry program. (Musical program) 4:00 p. m. Cathedral Hour. (Religious musical service) 8:00 p. m. La Palina program. 8:30 p. m. Sonatron program. (Famous Broadway Stars) 9:00 p. m. Majestic Theater of the Air 10:00 p. m. Arabesque. (A Modern Thousand and One Nights) 10:30 p. m. Around the Samovar. (Mu sic by Russian Musicians) N. B. C. RED NETWORK—JuIy 15 10:15 a. m. Radio Household Institute. 7:00 p. *n. Voice of Firestone. 7:30 p- m. A. & P. Gypsies. 8:30 p. m. General Motors Family Party. 10:00 p. m. Gilbert and Sullivan Operas N. B. C. BLUE NETWORK 1:00 p. tn. Montgomery Ward Hour. 1:30 p. m. U. S. Dept, of Agriculture. 6:30 p. m. Roxy and His Gang. 8:00 p. m. The Edison Program. COLUMBIA SYSTEM 11:00 a. m. Ida Bailey Allen. (Talks to Home-Makers) 8:00 p. m. Musical Vignettes. (Musical pictures of all parts of the world). 8:30 p. m. Ceco Couriers (Popular musical program). 9:00 p. m. Physical Culture Magazine Hour. 9:30 p. m. U. S. Navy Band. 10:00 p- m. Black Flag Boys. 10:30 p. t”. Night Club Romance. N. B. C. RED NETWORK—JuIy 16 I 10:15 a. m. Radio Household Institute. 6:30 p. m. Soconyland Sketches. ! 7:30 p. tn. Prophylactic. 8:00 p. m. Eveready Hour. 9:00 p m. Clicquot Club. N. B. C. BLUE NETWORK 1:00 p. m. Montgomery Ward Hour. 1:30 p. m U. S. Dept, of Agriculture. 5:30 p. m. Savannah Liner’s Orchestra 7:00 p. m. Pure Oil Band. 7:30 p m. Michelin Tiremen. B'oo p. m. Johnson and Johnson. 8:30 p. m. Dutch Masters Minstrels. 9:00 p. tn. Williams Oil-O-Matics. 9:30 p. m. Earl-Freed Orchestradians. COLUMBIA SYSTEM 11:00 a. m. Ida Bailey Allen (Talks tc Home-Makers) 2:45 p. m. Theronoid Health Talk. 8:00 p. m. Kotlarsky and Harding (Joint recital). 8:30 p. m. Flying Stories (Aviation news). 9:00 p. m. Old Gold (Paul Whiteman hour). 10:00 p. m. Fada Program (Orchestra). 10:30 p. m. Story in a Song. N. B. C. RED NETWORK—JuIy 17. 10:15 a. m. Radio Household Institute. 6:30 p. tn. LaTouraine Concert. 7:30 p. m. Happy Wonder Bakers. 8:00. p. m. Ingram ■■ Shavers — Ipana Troubadours. 8:30 p. m. Palmolive Hour. N. B C. BLUE NETWORK 1:00 p. tn. Montgomery Ward Hour. 1:30 p. m. U. S. Dept, of Agriculture. 7:00 p. m. Yeast Foamers. 7:30 p. m. Sylvania Foresters. 8:00 p. m Flit Soldiers. 8:30 p. m. Forty Fathom Fish. 9:00 p. m. ABA Voyagers.. 9:30 p. m. Stromberg Carlson. COLUMBIA SYSTEM 11:00 a. tn. Ida Bailey Allen (Talk on ■ Cooking). 11:30 a. tn. Interior Decorating (Talk with Musical Program). 8:00 p. m. Hank Simmons' Show Boat. 9:00 p. m. United Symphony Orch. i 9:30 p. m. La Palina Smoker. | 10:00 p. m. Kolster Radio Hour. 10:30 p. m. Kansas Frolickers. N. B. C. RED NETWORK—JuIy 18. 10:15 a. m. Radio Household Institute. 6:30 p. m. Coward Comfort Hour. 8:00 p. m. Seiberling Singers. 9:00 p. m. Halsey Stuart Hour. N. B. C. BLUE NETWORK 1:00 p. m. Montgomery Ward Hour. 1:30 p. tn. U. S. Dept, of A; riculture. 6:30 p. m. United Reproducers. 7:00 p m. Lehn and Fink Serenade. 8:00 p. m. Veedol Hour. 8:30 p. m. Maxwell House Concert. 9:30 p. m. Around World with Libby. COLUMBIA SYSTEM 10:30 a. tn. Around the World with Mrs. Martin. (Musical Program, Household Hints) 11:00 a. m. Ida Bailey Allen (Talks to Home-Makers). 11:30 a. m. Du Barry Beauty Talk. I 2:45 p. tn. Theronoid Health Talk. 8:00 p. m. Vincent Lopez and Orch. j 8:30 p. m. U. S. Marine Band. 9:00 p. tn. True Detective Mysteries. 9:30 p. tn. Light Opera Gems. 10:00 p. m. The New Yorkers (Concert). N. B. C. RED NETWORK—JuIy 19. ; 10:15 a. m. Radio Household Institute. 6:30 p. m. Raybestos Twins. 7:00 p. m. Cities Service Concert Orch. 1 8:30 p. m. Schradertown Brass Band. 10:00 p. m. Skellodians. N. B. C. BLUE NETWORK 10:00 a. m. Mary Hale Martin’s Household Period. 1:00 p. m. Montgomery Ward Hour. 1:30 p. tn. U. S. Dept, of Agriculture. 6:15 p. m. Squibb’s Health Talk. 6:30 p. m. Dixie Circus. 7:00 p. m. Triadors. 8:00 p. tn. Interwoven Pair. 8:30 p. m. Philco Theater .Memories, 9:00 p. m. Armstrong Quakers. COLUMBIA SYSTEM 11:00 a. m. Ida Bailey Allen (Talks to Home-Makers). 11:45 a. m. Radio Beauty School (Beauty talks). 7:30 p. m. Howard Fashion Plates. 8:00 p. m. Hawaiian Shadows (Native Musicians). 8:30 p. m. The Rollickers (Quartet). 9:00 p. m. True Story Hour. 10:00 p. m. In a Russian Village (Russian music). 10:30 p. m. Doc West (The old philosopher). N. B. C. RED NETWORK—JuIy 20. 10:15 a. m. Radio Household Institute. 8:00 p. m. General Electric Orchestra. 9:00 p. mi Lucky Strike Dance Orch. N. B. C. BLUE NETWORK 2:30 p. in. RCA Demonstration Hour. 5:30 p. m. Gold Spot Orchestra. COLUMBIA SYSTEM 8:00 p. m. Nickel-Cinco-Paters (musical). 8:30 p. m. Babson Finance Period. 9:00 p. m. Nit Wit Hour. 9:30 p. m. Temple Hour (Musical program). 10:00 p. m. National Forum from Washington. 10:30 p. m. Dance Music. Aylesworth Sees Radio as International Help That radio will be one of the greatest factors in promoting international peace and understanding is the belief of Merlin Hall Aylesworth, president of the National Broadcasting company. “It requires no particular strain of the Imagination to forsee responsible representatives of English speaking countries debating freely and frankly over the air questions of international relations,” Mr. Aylesworth said.
Around ■ SPRAYING PLANTS MADE STATIONARY High-Power Pump Pushes! Liquid Through Pipes. One of the present-day tendencies I in spray equipment is the introduction of stationary spraying plants. From a central point at the source of water supply, pipes are run to all parts Os the orchard. Hose may be connected to outlets spaced at intervals through the whole piped area. A high-power pumping outfit pushes the spray material through the pipes. It is necessary to have this high pressure at the plant because the friction of the small pipes i rapidly reduces the pressure if the ! distance to the outlet is great. The original investment in this type i of spraying equipment is high. To be economical, it is essential that the I orchard area be compact. If it is not compact, the piping cost becomes prohibitive. A few growers in the Middle West are now putting in this type of spray equipment. They’ are very common in the far West, where the acreages are compact and usually not more ■ than 40 acres in one unit. There are several objections to this type of equipment in some sections, i In Illinois many fruit farms are very ; large. This would require either sev- j eral central plants or else one very large one with a great expense for piping due to the large size pipe that it would be necessary to use. The water would have to come from ! ponds in most cases in Illinois. If the water in the pond which supplied the central plant gave out, the grower j would face a very difficult problem indeed. Naturally the large original invest- I ment would hinder its adoption by ! many growers, who might otherwise consider it applicable to their condi- , tions. From the way this system has been I adopted in the Far West, there seems ; little doubt that it may be used in ■ Illinois extensively before many years, j >At least it is a development which i growers can afford to watch. Several Insects Check Pests of Peach Trees (Prepared by the United States Department i ot Agriculture.) There are several insects that assist 1 materially in checking multiplication of peach insects, says the bureau of entomology of the United States De- ! partment of Agriculture. Ladybird beetles are perhaps the most beneficial I of these. They prey upon scale in- | sects, aphids, and thrips. The twice- i stabbed ladybird beetle is usually ' prevalent On peach trees that are , heavily infested with the San Jose j scale. It is jet black in color and has two orange or red spots on the back. Ladybird beetles take their nourishment by sucking scale - insects dry. They also assist materially in checking Infestations of the rusty-brown plum aphid or other aphids. The adult ’ and young ladybird beetles are sometimes erroneously thought to be the parent of aphids on account of their close relation with these pests. Peach j growers should encourage the multiplication of twice-stabbed and other ladybird beetles. Syrphus flies, lacewing flies, tachina flies, ground beetles, and some of the assassin bugs and preying mantids are other insects that are beneficial to the peach grower. Predacious and parasitic insects give considerable aid in controlling peach insects, and without the help of these beneficial insects it would be very difficult to grow a crop of peaches, even though artificial control measures were enforced. | Horticultural Hints | Trees respond to cultivation just as corn and potatoes do. * * • Unsatisfactory results are more often due to poor spraying than to other factors. * * * Black raspberries perhaps stand next to strawberries in desirability and in adaptability. ♦ • • The importance of thinning fruit in orchards in which the trees are overloaded cannot be overemphasized. • * * Thinning reduces the amount of breakage in an overloaded fruit tree and cuts down" the expenses of propping. * * * The strawberry is adapted to a wide variety of soils, and is comparatively free from injurious insect pests and plant diseases. The plants rarely require spraying. * * * Fruit growers of experience who have studied their problems are getting beyond the fixed spray schedule. They have found that the spraying program may often give the best results if planned for particular varieties. • « • Deep plowing in an orchard is not advisable, especially in older orchards, because of the danger of injury to the roots. Any method that will break the crust and form a dust mulch is satisfactory. This mulch is necessary for the conservation of moisture. * * * All plum and many apple trees are self sterile. Lack of pollination may explain the lack of fruit. This condition may be overccme by planting trees of different varieties so that cross pollination is possible. • • • The currant jvorm can be fought successfully with arsenate of lead, one and a half pounds to 50 gallons of water, as soon as the caterpillars appear. If a second brood comes on the scene when the fruit is nearly mature, hellebore may be dusted on the leaves in ! early morning. I
hue \ e I I: ROSA : mimi Two Friends E'THEL’S two friends, Caroline and *-• June cause her a lot of perplexity. She’s, known them both for years and In her heart of hearts, June stands first with her. Yet other people criticize June constantly, while they unite in loving admiration to the fair Caroline. “Why on earth do you run around with June so much?” demands Nancy. “She’s the most untrustworthy, deceitful creature I ever knew. Her whims and her moods get on my nerves. She’s the most unpopular kid in school and yet you stick to her like grim death.” Ethel sighs. She doesn’t know herself why she sticks to June. Certainly that young lady is difficult enough—a creature of eternal changing moods and ideas—a maiden of violent likes and dislikes. And why does she seek June’s society in preference to Caroline’s. Caroline, sunny-haired, unimaginative, quiet, precise, stands for quiet security. She has no moods. She is always the same. Hers is a quiet self-satisfied calm which brings peace to the lives of her more turbulent friends. Yet Ethel’s natural shrinking from her is a perfect case of intuition without reason. For of her two friends, June is the one to be counted on the final analysis—and Caroline the one tc be avoided. It is so very often the case that the girl characterized as moody, irritable and flighty has the true stuff in her — while the calm phlegmatic bundle of self-satisfaction who wins praise and admiration —is not to be counted on in an emergency. June you see is passing through a difficult phase. Her opinions are of no value, but her friendship is. Her very attitude shows that she is not seeking popularity—that ber idea of a perfect existence does not necessitate her being the center of an admiring group of friends. Now she makes enemies oftener than friends. Yet the friends she makes should trust her, for she is to be depended on. While Caroline, calm, competent, sunnily smiling is on the way to make every moment —striving to attract new friends—doing her best always be the one girl everybody loves. Now you know, no girl In the world can achieve that. She must either take a stand on one side or the other. Is There a Chance? uLJAVE 1 got a chance of happlU* ness with Nat?” asks Isabel pathetically. “He wants me to marry him and it seems to me 1 love him, but there are so many drawbacks. He is much older than 1 am, and I’m sure that he won’t want to dance or go out at all in a few years’ time and I’m too young to give up parties. Also isn’t really interested in the things which interest me. And he’s nearing middle age and he isn’t a real success in life. Am I taking too big a chance marrying a man who has no really brilliant future and who may be old before I’m thirty? I would love to marry him if only 1 could set my fears at rest.” Well, dearie, your fears are doomed to remain wandering restless spirits, if you want them lulled by me. You haven’t the slightest chance of success in marriage with anybody if you go into the proposition in the frame of mind indicated by your question. Success in marriage as you may have heard some four hundred thousand times before this —means comprorrffse. And do I hear a word about compromise from your ruby-red lips? I do not. The only thing makes Itself clear to me is this: That Isabel wants to have a good time even after a few years of settling down —that she resents Nat’s not being interested tn her hobbies —that she wants to have enough money to live comfortably and Nat ought to supply the internal revenue. That’s all she wants. Not a word about whether you’re willing to do your part, child. Not a word about wanting to help Nat to make the success which has eluded him through a rather dismal business career. Just the plain statement that you want cash and a successful husband — and will Nat do? No, he certainly won’t do for you, nor will any other poor mortal man who needs a wife’s ••■—fort and sympathy and unders' u and companionship—not he iperious demands for mental ami financial satisfaction. You’ve got the best chance in the world of being happy with a man if you’re willing to take the bad breaks with the good. With that spirit in your heart you could stumble into any one of half a dozen marriages and make a success of things. But if you’re the wide-awake young self-satisfier, eager hands outstretched to take everything, eager lips forming the immortal word “Gimme,” you’re bound to bump Into a few snags even though you marry the most perfect specimen in the world. Learn to think about what YOU can do to make your marriage a success. (© by the Bell Syndicate. Inc.) Ignorance I* Bliaa Probably the most trusting. nature is that of the person who goes from house to house with a sample case, trying to get orders for something, and thinks no one Is at home because the bell isn’t answered.—Ohio State Journal. Weak Illumination Before the coming of the oil lamp lighthouses were lit by candles or coal fires. The last of the latter was the lighthouse at St Bees, where a coal light burned until 1822.
A. Sour Stomach In the same time it takes a dose of isoda to bring a little temporary relief of gas and sour stomach, Phillips Milk of Magnesia has acidity completely checked, and the digestive organs’ all tranquilized. Once you have tried this form of relief you will cease to worry about your diet and experience a new freedom in eating. This pleasant preparation is just as good for children, too. Use it whenever coated tongue or fetid breath signals need of a sweetener. Physicians will tell you that every spoonful of Phillips Milk of Magnesia neutralizes many times its volume in acid. Get the genuine, the name Phillips Is Important Imitations do not act the same! PHILLIPS I Milk , of Magnesia Mules Scored Victory Driving along a Kansas City (Mo.) street, Glenn Hakes met a team of mules. The mules were driverless, obstinate, and in the middle of the street. It was impossible .to pass them, and in the hope that the animals would instinctively step aside. Hakes stopped his car. Not so! The mules advanced steadily and the only alternative was to back the automobile. At this the mules quickened their pace, and soon there was a peculiar race in progress. Then Hakes backed into the courthouse driveway, the mules still following. The marathon was ended only when Hakes’ car was up against the courthouse wall. Use Tanglefoot Spray for flies and’you will kill all other household insects too. There’s nothing more effective —noth* ing safer or more dependable. Tanglefoot is free from objec* tionable features. This super* quality is worth demanding. Prices have been greatly re* duced. Pay less and get the best. (."Wlinpil For flies only. Tanglefoot Fly Paper and Fly Ribbons are | the most sanitary and economical destroyers. TANGLEFOOT SPRAY Early Written Works Illuminated are those whose texts are brightened and heightened by vignettes and otherwise decorated in colors or in gold and silver. Fifteen centuries before Christ the papyrus rolls of the Book of the Dead were illuminated with brilliantly colored scenes. Later, as writing became alphabetic, the important letters were illuminated. No ugly, grimy streaks on the clothes when Russ Bleaching Blue is used. Good bluing gets good results. All grocers carry it.—Adv. Well, That’s Different “Is the manager in?” “Yes, but he’s taking dictation?” “Taking dictation?” “Yes —over the telephone.” It is dangerous to try to tame another man’s enthusiasm. He will not think well of you for it You will never be happy if you envy the happiness of others. RECOMMENDS IT TOJJTHERS EyxKa E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound Helps Her So Much Cleveland, Ohio.—“l sure recommend Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable "| Compound to any woman in the condition I was in. I was so weak and run-down that I W could hardly stand up ‘ * * coul( i not eat and was full ’ •. of misery. A friend living on Arcade Avenue told me J| about this medlcine and after tak * iQg ten bottles my weakness and nervousness are all gone. I feel like living again. I am etill taking it until I feel strong like before. You may use this letter as a testimonial.”—Mbs. Elizabeth 14913 Hale Ave., Cleveland, Ohio,
