The Syracuse Journal, Volume 22, Number 25, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 17 October 1929 — Page 3
ONE PRESCRIPTION : MADE FAMILY DOCTOR I; FAMOUS Seldom has any single act been of greater benefit to*mankind than that of Dr. Caldwell in 1885, when he wrote the prescription which has carried his fame to the four corners of the earth. Over and over, Dr. Caldwell wrote the prescription as he found men, women and children suffering from those common symptoms of constipation, such as coated tongue, bad breath, headaches, gas, nausea, biliousness, no energy, lack of appetite, and similar things. • Demand for this prescription grew so fast, because of the pleasant, quick way it relieved such ! symptoms of constipation, that by I'BBB Dr. Caldwell' was forced to have it put up ready for use. ; Today, Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin, ( as it is called, is always ready at any drugstore. * j AS FIRST AID Use Hanford's Balsam of Myrrh AU dealers are authorized to refund your money for the f i rst bcttlo i f not suited Kill Rats Without Poison H New Exterminator that Won’t Kill Livestock, Poultry, Dogs, Cats, or even Baby Chicks K-R-O can be used about the home,barn or poultry yard with absolutesafety as it contains no deadly person. 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 Arkansai State Farm. Hundreds of other testimonials. Sold on a Money* Back Guarantee. Insist upon K-R-C, the original Squill exterminator. All druggists, 75c. Large size (four times as much) $2.00. Direct if dealer cannot supply you. K-R-O Co., Springfield, O. K-8.-O I. KILLS-RATS-ONLY Like Rattlesnake Meat Is rattlesnake meat good to eat? Os course the uninitiated will at onee answer in the negative, says the Pathfinder Magazine. But not so with the fair students of the nature study camp of the Pennsylvania State college summer session. Some 2(10 students at the camp in the valley of the Seven Sisters mountains sampled fried rattlesnake and all declare "it tastes just like chicken or frogs' legs, and once you try it f ® you’re sure to come back for more.” Normans Should Speak Up Normans with William the Conqueror and his comrades at the battle of Hastings have many descendants and two French professors have been commissioned to trace them so that their names may be placed on a tablet which soon is to be erected in the castle of Falaise, where the duke of Normandy was born. j Time Does Fly She—“ Just think, dear we’ve been married 24 hours.” He—“ Yes. it seems as if it were only yesterday.” Begin “loving your enemy” by being polite to him fe i gH Acidity The common cause of digestive difficulties is excess acid. Soda cannot Alter this condition, and it burns the Ptomacli. Something that will neutralize the acidity is the sensible thing to take. That is why physicians ♦ell the public to use Phillips Milk of Magnesia. One spoonful of this delightful preparation can neutralize many times its volume in acid. It acts instantly; re-1 lief is quick, and very apparent. All j gas is dispelled; all sourness is soon I gone; the whole system is sweetened. I Do try this perfect anti-acld, and re« ’ member it is just as good for children, I too, and pleasant for them to take. Any drug store has the genuine, pro Bcrlptional product. Phillips 1 Milk , of Magnesia
OUR COMIC SECTION | 111 11 Events in the Lives of Little Meh J i (HEY YOU’whodoyou think YE AIR? \ X I poll over to the side there ! PUT THE FIX \ -U—a r ( IbetcherhewasgoinX > (ON HIM CAPSjwZV' fl /X MORE'NA HUNDRED / I i tel I teSSSnlli.' , - ... . the SPEED TRAP. (Copyright, W. N. U.) I THE FEATHERHEADS And Maybe Side-Splitting Znou) Trie iOFA'S IWS.MQ.PAMMX-A Til to / WE GET FOUR MEX.OiE JuST AS BAUD J bSsAxJO YOUR RCSULT-GETTIMG toNC 1 UEAOED AS TUS OUIER TAKE WEit/ WT ToT(4S EGG-UEAOI - WE AOVERTiSF WE K \ HCTURES, ADVERTISE "ME HAift-A ■ REJui-TS EVERV DAV PRoMtNSNTV?, ••• FIBST WE jB \gco<oiajg coxiest-^-\ doum and wen we full .and then tub 77 njf?o-GRO B I — ‘ \ MAIR DOTH APPEAR! I || 1.1 •vwi*. k=f r /' J> VWEN OUR MAN HAS eOTTEN 1b \. „ \ X* GOOD'. - VoORR IN \ [ WHERE HE NEEDS HiS FIRST RAIB-CUTWE j I/' chaRSE * •■ ME NAM 6 OF ) / SWASH THE FIMAU RESULTS IA» A Blfi FLOUR«U / o V ALL OVER WE COUNTRY?-THE IDEA IS WORTH 7 / DAK ii>r / tKS \tAWOXISi to You! V SP£CTACL& ?^ g wIA aw J i I JMp © Western Newspaper Union J/ y / 11 FINNEY OF THE FORCE . By Way of Illustration i s' ' / TtIAT WAGON IS FER HtQ \ \ / NOU) BENNY,” 01 ,y Y to PLAY WITH i - YEI PLAV \ \ VWANT YEI TO BE LAAViN \ SO COVGU BENNY FIRST TWINS ) /Xx® ftwr ww l I toj ww i 1 » J.’.J.l' ~’ i * £= 7 ? \ ( • *"'■ '-'■’C*'"• »'/"'* A - Mil ' l -1 " ✓ A. /wAv U *l- | . __ t'tXX'aXO’ ii l i I " L'' g>. KX <4; WW ©Western Newspaper Union AWMO6O.
KEPT AMONG FANS o C y Biggs—“And you didn’t feel the heat
at all attending the ball games all summer?” Jiggs—“Not at all —I kept right among the fans.” Longing for New Heights “I wish, Henrietta,” said Mr. Meek- , ton, “that I were an aviator.” “And why?” “If I could get you a couple of thousand feet in the air with no one to depend on but me for getting back to earth, I’d feel for once like the real boss of the family.”—Washington Star.
THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL
Happy Dream I Father (at la. m.)—ls that young man asleep, Helen? Daughter—Hush, father! He has just asked me to marry him and make him the happiest man on earth. Just as I thought. Wake him up. Horrible Thought! you ever been in a railway accident?” “Yes, I once went through a tunnel and kissed the father instead of the daughter.”
DADDY’S JO EVENING M fairytalellQ Graham Bonner cartivufr arutxnMxuUMOlvMr LOVELY WEATHER “It is getting colder,” said Mother | ■ Polar. “But when my children were | young last year it was really nice ano , ley. “They didn't mind the cold. 1 kept them comfortable at first and then ' they went into the icy water, and . loved it, the precious Polar dears. “Os course when it’s winter where I the people live they bundle up amt ' 1 shiver. “They have great enormous tires burning and they live in houses and buildings and apartments that are 1 heated so that we would probail;. shrivel right up and die should we ■ : ever get in one.” *“\Ve never will though, will we?’ I asked a young Polar bear. “No, well never be invited in or ' taken in I'm thankful to say. but I I hear all this news from those who are * called explorers who come to this i land. “I’ve escaped them too I’m thankful , to say. “They called it cold here this sum- I mer. Ila. ha, that’s a good joke. “But now, 1 am thankful to say it j is getting colder. “They say that when our cousins ' in the zoos go into the icy ponds given ; to them in their dens that the people fL 1 Jv ' J /■ - * 1 ' i “It Wouldn’t Be Our Sort of Weather." shiver and draw their furs more dose- , ly around themselves. “They cannot understand our consi ins at all. They could never under- * stand us.” “Well,” said the young polars. “they do not know enough to enjoy lovely cold weather.” “Just the trouble with them,” said Mother Polar. “They only go in swimming when it is hot in the summer and then they wear funny bathing suits I’ve heard. “Now we go right in just as we are at all times of the year. We don’t fuss about our swimming. “We take tc it so naturally. “When it is hot I’ve heard that the zoo keepers give our cousins pieces ot ice but oh, they melt so quickly in their hot weather.” “It wouldn’t be our sort of weather,” said the young polars. “It will never be hot here as it is there.” said Mother Polar. “We will always have cold weather. “It is so gorgeous in our part of the world where it is always lovely and cold, and where there is always plenty of ice. glorious cooling ice, beautiful cold ice. delightful solid ice." So the Polar Bears talked, and they were happy tor the weather was growing still colder and they knew it would soon be really winter. How they waved their heads and i lifted them to every cold breeze, every bit of icy weather. "Beautiful cold weather! How they loved it. Lovely cold weather! How they adored it. Dog Identifies Coat How an animal can sometimes accomplish what a human being fails to I do is shown in this amusing story of a dog. A man left a London-bound train in the Midlands and forgot his coat from the luggage-rack. On discovering his loss he wired to his father, asking him to claim the coat when the train reached the London terminus. Accompanied by his son’s dog. the father went to the parcel office and identified the coat, but the attendant said he was sorry that, as there was no legal proof, he could not give the coat up. So the father had to leave the matter. But not so the dog. who had been exploring the office. He suddenly saw the coat hanging from a peg, recognized it at a sniff, and proclaimed his find with a loud barking of joy. The attendant needed no further proof, and dog and man went away happy. Not Lonesome Emily’s brother and sister were away for the day and when grandma, saw the child sitting alone in the chan she asked if she were lonesome. “No, gramma,” she answered nonchalantly ; “I haven’t anybody to play ‘hide the thimble’ with me, so I hid it myself and now I’m waiting until I forget where I put it.” Pert Inquiry “Daddy, teacher inquired after you j today.” “Really?” “Yes; he said he would like to know j what sori of a fool my fathir was.” Hawks and crows are often blamed ! for chick losses that trace to stray cats. These thieves can be caught in box traps, set near the poultry runs, and baited with a dead chicken. • • • Clean management is important in growing healthy chicks. Take precautions to prevent carrying disease from mature stock to the chicks on the clothes and shoes of the persons taring for the poultry. Disease may be spread also on poultry equipment and by allowing old and young stock to run together.
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Time Plays Important Part in Heart Affairs •'The fabric of affection can only be wo ,en on the loom of time,” says Dorothy Canfield, discussing family relations in Woman’s Home Companion. “Too great impermanence of human relationships kills it. If we wish to preserve affections as an element of our • human lives, we must provide for them a fair share of permanence in human relations. “No one can feel affection for a fellow traveler who gets into a train at one station and out at the next. Nor can you have it for the man who sells you your ticket and whom you never see again. “Yesterdays are a part of affection. Today is not a broad enough canvas on which to paint that picture. A mother cannot love her child, nor a child his mother, nor a little girl her doll; a man cannot love his profession or a golf club or his wife, without having shared with them many yesterdays and without looking forward to giving them many of his tomorrows.” Sponge-Rubber Flooring Flooring made from sponge rubber is to be introduced in England soon. Products already shown there include sponge rubber upholstery and tires. For durability, comfort and hygiene, the new type of flooring is said to be far superior to any other now made from rubber or rubber substitutes. The war has made table linen very valuable. The use of Russ Bleaching Blue will add to its wearing qualities. Use it and see. All grocers.--Adv. Thrifty He —I threw myself away when I : married you. She —Well, I never knew you to throw away anything that was worth anything.—Vancouver Province. Food for Thought Moron—Will marriage settle my troubled mind? Robot—No, but It will give you something new to worry about The best pavements in the town may lead to the jail. If at first you don’t succeed, try something else. Nature overshadows education. COULD NOT SLEEPNIGHTS Helped By Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Fairhaven, Mass.—“l am taking liydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound during the a Change of Life and I think it is a won> derful tonic. When I feel nervous and run-down my husband gets me a bottle right away. It is a'great help to me and I think that if other people would only take it when they feel all run-down and take It as the directions say, they would find it a great benefit. My worst symptoms were Nervousness and tired feelings. could not sleep nights and I did not care about my work. I was bo nervous I would cry if anyone looked at me.” — Mbs. Ada Besse, 196 Washington Street, Fairhaven, Mass.
No Brain* Jack —Was that girl you were out with last night dumb? Jim—Dumb hardly expresses it! She thought the arms limitation conference was a meeting of reformers who were planning to put the kibosh on petting parties. , j Up* and Down* Two friends me| in midair. “Fancy meeting you here,” cried one. “I’m falling from my airplane.” “That so?” replied the other. “I’m rising from my gas stove.”—Leicester Chronicle. More Camouflage Mother— Willies I told you to wash your neck cleans Willie—Well, mother, ain’t I going to wear a collar? In a schedule of probable expenses nothing ever seems to cost less than you estimated. The Right Way to Redye Fine Silks Textile makers al- A I ways use special TO 1 dyes for silk or wool. Uh|*i They know that is the best way. The makers of Diamond hWR «ji Dyes are the first to I A® enable home dyers to aWmfiyy follow this plan. Next time you want to dye some of your more valuable articles of, silk or wool, try the special Diamond Dyes in the Blue Package. They will give these materials clearer, more brilliant colors than any “all-purpose” dye. And they are just as easy to use as ordinary dyes. Like the white package Diamond Dyes, these dyes contain an abundance of the highest quality anilines. The blue package dyes silk or wool only; the white pdcfcage dyes, or tints, any material. Either package; 15c, drugstores. " MARVEL X-RAY TOE C1 Thru tSr tva stone, wood, cloth, etc. See the bones n your iVltf V fingers, lead in pencil, \jgSA Itfrs (—• etc. A marvelous; optical ' Illusion. Price 10c each, prepaid and our big magical catalog Ire*. KLEIN MAGICAL CO. 150-17 114th Road. Jamaica. N. Y., Dept. A. Health Giving taunsbiif ■< AM Winter Long Marvolqus Climate —Good Hotels — Tourist Campo—Splendid Road*—Gorgeou* Mountain View*. Th* irander/u I desert resort of the Hat P Write Cree A Cheney alm ARE YOU HAPPY! Do you know how to attract what you desire? Don't waste your life!- Send stamped envelope for information. AL-RAY, 1947 Broadway. New York. Personally Conducted EXCURSIONS to the Lower Rio Grande Valley of Texas to inspect our OKANGB and WKAPBEBVIT Groves. AsM GREAT 804 THERNLAN I> CO. Fidelity Trust Bldg. Dot rolt, Mich.
I— ===== REDUCE PUFFED ANKLES
Abeorbine reduces strained, ankles, ly mphangi tis. poll evil, fi state. vlg, boils, swellings. Stops lameness am i allays pain. Heals sores, cuts. btuises. V' J boot chafes. Does not blister or ro» >sj move hair. Horse can be worked whiM F ■ treated. At druggists, or $2.5C poet* I H paid. Describe your case for tipeciM I I instructions, Horse book 5-S free. f S Grateful user writes: “Have W thing. After 3 annheations of Aseorbn, J, > found swelling gone. Thank you J—- ' wonderful results obtained. I wil recort* gjaf mend Abeorbine to my neighbors W. N.U, FORT WAYNE, NO. 41-192 K
