The Syracuse Journal, Volume 22, Number 26, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 24 October 1929 — Page 9

?« 2 0 0 * \k w S -> • \/\v y 3 “ ' \ Exclusive structural and operative superiorities have definitely established Champion as the better spark plug. That is why Champion outsells all others throughout the world. CHAMPION SPARK PLUGS TOLEDO, OHIO Why Net? Car Salesman—Ami is there anything else I can show you about this new model ? Young Lady—Yes; please show me • how to turn on the radiator if the car j gets cold. —Bath Chronicle. For Best Resuits i in Home Dyeing You can always — give richer, deep- v?’7 er, more brilliant colors to faded or BW-CTSYCT/ out-of-style dresses, hose, coats, draperies, etc., with gi& Diamond Dyes. And the colors stay .in through wear and washing! Here’s the, reason. Diamond Dyes contain the highest quality anilines money can buy. And it’s the anilines that count! They are the very life of dyes. Plenty of pure anilines make Diamond Dyes easy to use. They go on evenly without spotting or streaking. Try them next time and see why authorities recommend them; why millions of women will use no other dyes. You get Diamond Dyes for the sajne price as ordinary dyes; 15c, at any drug store. Superficial Flesh Wounds Try Hanford's ' Balsam of IVSyrrh AU dealers are authorized to refund your money I for the first bottle if not suited. ■—— I AKE YOU HAPPY? Do you know how to I attract what you desire? Don’t waste your life! Send stamped envelope for information. AL-RAY, HUT Broadway. New York. PARKER’S ~1 HAIR BALSAM Removesbandruff StvpsllairFalline Restores Color and Beauty to Gray and Faded Hair 60c. and SI.OO at Druggists. Hiscox Chem. Wks. PatehOß«e.N. Y. FLORESTON SHAMPOO—IdeaI for use in connection with Parker's Hair Balsam. .Makes the hair soft and fluffy. 50 cents by mail or at drugcists. Hiscox Chemical Works, Patchogue, N. x No Harm “Doctor. 1 dream constantly of golf.” “How did you make out?” “Fine.” “Well, there’s no harm in a man playiug a little good golf in his sleep.” For your daughter’s sake, use Russ Bleaching Blue in the laundry. She will then have that dainty.well-groomed appearance that girls admire. —Adv. Apply It to Yourself We often say that we can “talk people out of it.” That phrase Is true to the facts and truer yet when applied to our inner conversation with ourselves. —American Magazine. HAS THE LAXATIVE IN YOUR HOME A : DOCTOR'S APPROVAL? Some things people do to help the bowels whenever any bad breath, feverishness, biliousness, or a lack of appetite warn of constipation, really weaken these organs. Only a doctor knows what will cleanse thF“system without harm. That is why the laxative in your home should have the approval of a family doctor. ' The wonderful prod Jet, known to millions as Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin is a family doctor’s prescription for sluggish bowels. It never varies from the original prescription which Dr. Caldwell wrote thousands of times in many years of practice, and proved safe and reliable for then, women and children. It is made from herbs and other pure ingredients, so it is pleasant-tasting, and can form no habit. You can buy this popular laxative from all drugstores.

OUR COMIC SECTION Speed “I! ✓ = n B6URIN6 2SOOO MILES IF -x ' M 355 VAILES KH CTCT. \T \MO\)L7 OKS/ VESS CTK s SECOHPS -TO cootv vvorA the. TO THE YR'S CO Bib ft / Bib- | (Copyright, W.N.U.) - ‘FINNEY OF THE FORCE Why the Very Idear! "1® I IswkrovA / iiSI mSro HAVt S | f WUCER L-AS A MATTHJ OF ’ \eXB TBACH *tR T& OA»ce~/ wV’STASE i, Swwhii (Sex "® & /rZX ® OMtvX FAAT / FATE THAT KEPT 'CT W MOORS Mgs. ShlooP.TdAT I FCOM MMff AJi W MAPES A GCEAT MAMV IV 115 l THE FEATHERHEADS Felix Doubts the Tonic’s Qualities t' CT IVSSBCUBtD WE CT. / * 6OE U£ / 1 fclT FEATUEU- \ lAMirv'cl /ssavicss of WEEBAgb* \ I , —1 «S WMIJ/ WfcAD‘-MW*touUWT\ AN iCKj / HEADED MfcN R» OUR *UAIQ- I I FyX- / / cah, VMIS glntiemajJ 1 POGDO /GAlSl>46 w CONTEST, AXJDWt ) | fILJSIKT! EXACTS BAID. V*XAW KUUKU I FOURTH MAN SMODU) 86 WOE Z L—_ A_J V VbO?•••' 7 \ATjvMINDTE -- jkPwa HL fl , js> y p Wfl BHp J ■ ? ’ ujjl il I \

HE’D HAVE TO BE // v 7zP 1 4J - K.<9 d Martha—“l think he was crazy to

kiss me.” ‘‘Well, I should think that he’d have to be.” Raised on the Fly The New England housewife certainly is clever. Mixing a batch of bread in Pittsfldld and baking It In Lenox, Is the story told of a mother in Pittsfield. A daughter had called to take her to Lenox. The mother said she couldn’t go because she had dough in the pans, ready for the oven.

THE SYRACUSE JOURNAI

Rut at the suggestion of the daughter. the pans were placed in the automobile. On the arrival at Lenox, the dough had risen considerable, and was soon in the oven from which it came with a rich brown crust.—Boston Post These French I “How did you manage to get youil rich aunt to make you her chief heir?”i “She underwent a beauty treatment and I made believe I didn’t recognize her.”—Pages Gales.

September’s Eig Part in Story of America September in America’s story. Balboa discovered the Pacific ocean, 1531. St. Augustine settled. 1655. Hendrik Hudson discovered his river. 1609. I. Winthrop settled Boston, 1630. First Continental congress met, 1774. British captured Ethan Allen. 1775. Briti ish entered Philadelphia. 1777. Rev olutionary war treaty signed, 1783. New United States Constitution signed. 1787. Battle of Lake Champlain. 1814. “Star-Spangled Banner” written three days later at the bombardment of Fort MrHenry. First baseball club i organized. 1845. Scott entered Mex--1 ico City. 1847. Flogging in United i States navy abolished. 1850. Burnside I occupied Nashville. 1863. President j McKinley assassinated, 1901. French stopped Germans at the Marne. 1914. Americans in attack on St. Mihiel salient and Bulgaria surrendered, 191 S. Florida hurricane. 1926.—San Fran j cisco Chronicle. Time Spent in School According to a statement of Dr. W S. Deffenhaugh of the Bureau of Education, if a child attends school 6 hours for 200 days of the year from the age of six to seventeen, inclusive, he is in school only 14.400 hours. Assuming that 9 hours are spent tn sleep, he has 15 hours a day at his disposal during the 12 years in which he is awake 65.700 hours. Consequently he is in sch<»ol only 21.9 per cent of the time awake from six to eighteen years. As the actual average school attendance is only 152 days a year. American boys and girls are spending only 11.4 of their waking time in school. Fortunate Move When they moved their beds to the front porch last summer to escape the heat. John Beiger and his family, at Salina. Kan., escaped with their lives. Awakened by shots, they discovered a fire had spread from a storeroom to the bedroom. Several boxes of shotgun shells exploded in the storeroom. Their home was destroyed.— apolis News. Those Foreign Names “‘Umbrage! is taken by Moslem, leader,’ says a headline. This recalls ■ aii incident of the Boer war. An ari tide in an American paper said the Boer leader had ‘taken umbrage at the act of an unfriendly nation, and the head told the readers that. ‘The ! Boers Have Captured Umbrage.’”— - St. John (N. S.) Tiines-Globe. But Have You a Fiance? “An unfortunate chance prevents my I fiance from taking me out in his RollsRoyce.” “But has your fiance a RollsRoyce?” “No, that is the unfortunate chance.” Godsend for Funny Men A young scientist claims to have discovered a force that eliminates I gravity. Many music hail comedians are said to he anxious to use it.—Lon don Opinion. Russ Bleaching Blue should be used in every home. It makes clothes white as snow and never injures the fabric, i AU good grocers.—Adv. A novel little lamp atached to a typewriter throws its beam on the i keyboard and does not shine in the I eyes of the typist. Everyone has foolish moments and j wants no law against having them.

Makes More Bread Than Any Flour I Ever Used"

ft* Mrs. G. H. Blodgett K.R.N0.1. Waverly. Minsk “My neighbor who bakes 28 to 30 loaves of bread a week came over one day in tears. She said her bread turned out like lead and almost black. I told her it served her right because she did not use Gold Medal Flour that’s ‘Kitch-en-tested’. She got a sack of Gold Medal and she said, ‘Why, flour is just like cake flour*. I told her there’s never a failure with Gold Medal—besides it makes more bread than any kind of flour I ever used.” It's Easy Now For Women To Have Baking Success XTO longer need they worry In about perfect results. Now, they can be sure of success every time with pies and cakes, bread and biscuits. They use a new-type flour for all baking purposes—

"Ltcten in to Betty Crocker, 9:45 to 10:00 A.M. Central Standard Time,lo:4s to 11:00 A.M. Eastern Standard Time, Tuesday and Thursday, Stations: KYW, WWJ or WSAI.” GOLD MEDAL FLOUR j _ “Kitchen-tested” Always sold in trade-marked sack—never in bull

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The Zebra’s Stripes Little Freddy—Oh, papa, what do you think I saw at the park today? Papa—Well, what was it? Little Freddy—A funny little horse that had its bathing suit on. Justice is, but distributing to everything according to the requirements of its nature.—Glanvil. “Competition is the life of trade.” is a consumer's motto.

“Never a Failure With Gold Medal ‘Kitchen-tested’ Flour.' The Only Flour For My Family’* Says Mrs. Blodgett

—il '■'* W. Not No*? K • 1 H fl Gold Medal tl Kitchen-tested" Flour—that simplifies baking remarkably and banishes the cause of most baking failures. Failures, experts found, were mostly due to the fact that 2 sacks of the same flour often acted differently, even with the same recipe... it was not uniform in oven action.

Cleaning Porch Furniture > A writer in People’s Home Journal suggests that for cleaning wicker or , reed porch furniture that a stiff bristle ? clothes brush or whisk broom be used. These reach in the crevices ami re- «- move the dust better than d cloth. f If a man wants to show off he has certain advantages away from home. ” Easy money is so-called because it’ > is so easy to get rid of.

So now all Gold Medal Flour is 'Kitchen-tested” before it comes to you. As each batch comes through the mill it is tested by actual baking—bread, cakes, biscuits, pastries—in an oven just like yours. Only flourwhich acts the same perfect way every time is allowed to go out to you. Thus you know in advance exactly what your results will be. Special “Kitchen-tested” Recipes In Every Sack (Changed Every 3 Months) Please accept, free of charge, simplified recipes for 12 of Betty Crocker’s most delicious .baking creations. Recipes for the daintiest cakes, the finest cookies, the most popular pastries known. Each one is “simplified” until it is remarkably easy, too. All 12 of these simplified ltKitchentested” recipes are inside every sack of Gold Medal "Kitchen-tested” Flour. You can get a full set today —simply ask your grocer for Gold Medal” Flour. Washburn Crosby Company