The Syracuse Journal, Volume 23, Number 25, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 16 October 1930 — Page 6
H t P 1 \ --g’K «• ML t i tWIJK I >.wC£ HsY ■flA W T . ! '.'JJ ”> ■ MMOh *C\ u^ > ■■ r .1 > B ■ *» • fciUf — - Ji£ i k i -3T ;.:■. ■ "zS-Tl I l ■*■ ——- - -"- •*-"• . BSSVjaU I—Monument to Col. Patrick Ferguson, who fell in command of the British at the battle of Kings Mountain, South Carolina. 150 years ago, which was dedicated by President Hoover. 2—Police of Kansas City driving children from public playground in enforcing the infantile paralysis quarantine. 3—British light cruiser Danae, commanded by Capt. E. It. Bent, in the Washington navy yard for a week’s visit.
NEWS REVIEW OF CURRENT EVENTS President Hoover Talks of Problems and Policies in Three Speeches. By EDWARD W. PICKARD 'TjQIIEE public addresses in two 1 gave Ph’s 1I ■ ■ ■ <>pportunity to say a lot of things ab>>qt <>tir problems, .our institutions and our prospects. His utterances on eayh occasion were dignified' and. well ehtiMdered.; they were praised by his adtmrrifs and fellow Rej , and belittled by some Democrats and others who <!■• not riL-ree wah hi- national |»>y,<•;. s Speaking before the convention of the American Legion in Boston, rhe Pre-ddent j«ld the legionnaires'that Ihe ideals and purposes «»f th«-.r organization must be translated into cold realism of-the day to day. task of citizenship; and. he reminded them that the Legion is. consecrated by its constitution to the: high purpose bf upholding the laws of the eountiv. He touched OU pr« i paredi.iess, and Said that real pence In the world require- ; something more than treaties. that all international good'WiU Is founded on tnutual respect among the nations. Mr. Hoover expressed warmly the milion’s gratitude to the men who served In the World w:ir and its sympathy' for wounded and disabled • veterans. Hy continued: ‘ln addition to hoj-pitalDaGon, rehabilitation, war risk insurance, adjusted compensation, and priority in civil service, the government has uh-d«-rtaken through disability allowances to provide Dr some Too.ooO veterans of the World war.' our total outlays on all services to World war veterans are hearing $600,000,000 a year and to veterans of. all wars nearly $900,UOO.OOO per annum. “The nation assumes an obligation when it semis ft# sons to war. The nation is proud to requite this pbligay lion within its full resources. 1 have Peen glad of the opjiortunlty to favor the extension oi these services In such .a manner that they Cover, without question all esses of disablement whether from war or peace. "There is, however, a.deep responsibility of citizenship in the administration of this trust of mutual helpfulness which peculiarly lies upon your members; and that is that the demands upon the government should not ex< evd the measure that Justice requires and oil help can provide. If we shall overload the harden of taxation vve shall stagnate our economic progress and' we shall by the slackening Os his progress place penalties upon every citizen.” I A TER in the day the r-residetit appeared before the American Fedora~Hon of Labor convention ami gave the workers of the nation a message of hope and encouragement. He said thpt co-operation resulting from conferences which he initiated has materially minimized the adverse effects of th® business- depressloh,that wage levels have been generally maintained, that industrial strife has been reduced to a minimum and that some of the slack in employment has been taken up by the speeding Up of public works construction. He called for nation-wide teumwurk to pull the country out of the slump and set It once more on the high road to prosperity. Referring to the displacement of ns ninny as 2,000,000 workers by labor raving devices and a breakdown of wages on account of destructive competition, Mr. Hoover said that one key to a solution of the problem lies in reduction of this competition possibly by a revision of regulatory laws. This was interj>ret«ti as a suggestion for amendment of anti-trust laws. FROM Boston the President traveled down to the northern border of South Carolina and participated In the celebration of the one hundred fiftieth anniversary of the battle of Kings Mountain, which was a crucial engagement in the Revolutionary war. Tn his address he dwelt on the institutions. the ideals and the spirit of America, and took the opportunity to score the Reds. Likening the American “system” to a race, with the government as umpire, Mr. Hoover said that “Socialism or Its violent brother. Bolshevism, would compel all the runners to end the race equally.” while “anarchy would provide neither training nor umpire,” and “despotism or class government picks those who run nnd also those who win.” But all the menace does not come from without, the President said, adding Hat “there are always malevodent cr selfish forces at work which.
unchecked, would destroy the very basis of our American life.” Mr. Hoover defended the conservative policies of his administration, and denounced governmental interference in business Sts “si destruction of equal opportunity and the incarnation of tyranny through bureau-, i-racy.” THS is the favorite season for national conventions, and some of she most important last week hear<l and - Considered some 'vital propositions. DeJeg.!M‘S to the A. F. of _L. meeting received the report of their executive Council dealing vvith means for itlicvlathm and removal of unemple'inent cau.-es a:;.I wi'h effort to carry forward attainment, of political objectives of unions; vylth the cam-, phigt) to unionize the South, nnd spe? . 1!..-- details of n.'tti'irial i>ol|ey toward i-.Hiu at .'-n : Judicial action in industrial disputes, and the approach of more intimate industrial association with enterprise, and. organization of other countries. I'resident William Green dwelt especially on the campaign for the five-day week. Among the resolutions submitteel was one fog change in the federation’s prohibition policy from modification to repeal. Another asked the federation to support unemployment insurance legislation. Before the National Association of ' Manufiietur<rs, in session in New York, President John E. Edgertou of Tennessee proclaimed the "unashamed resistance of organised industry” to governmental Tensions for the . aged, insurance for the unemployed and similar legislation. He declared nothing has Imppened to weaken the confidence of understanding minds in the soundness of the American economic system or scheme of government. James A. Emery, general counsel for the association, upheld lobbying for a.nd against legislation .as a private right and a public duty. He pounded a warning that public expenditures, "Unless checked, soon will consume one-fifth of the. national income. FALLOWING the lead of their fellow Latin-Amcricans in other coun-' tries, Brazilians took up the revolutionury movement, se«-king to overthrow the government of President Washington Luis and to prevent the inauguration of President Elect Julio Prestos. They assorted Prestes was elected by fraud and that new elections must Pe held. Such rapid progress was made by the revolutionists ' that their com|Jete success may be a miajter of history before this Is read, on the other hand, the federal government declared the revolt would be stippn-s-ed. The rebellion started almost simultnneousiy in several of the most irnffl-rtant states, notably Rio Grande do fiul, Parana, 51 imd I’ernambuio. By the middle of the week tl.e important city of Pen uatnbuco had been captured by the reviJutionists after two days of figtitirig, and large armies were converging on Sao Paulo, center of the vast coff'etegrowing region. Numerous smaller cities and towns’ were occupied without bhaalshed. . Os course the rebels were not having their own way everywhere, for the federal armies and the navy were active, and two clauses of reservists were called out. Measures were taken to protect Rio de Janeiro from attack. It was feared the food problem in the capital city might become serious. Banks there were ordered closed until October 21 to prevent speculation. PRESIDENT MACHADO of Cuba, who was given dictatorial powerswhen the congress suspended constitutional guarantees, told a big gathering In Havana that It was not necessary for him to use those powers because he had the support of the people, the army and the naty. He admitted be was the biggest man In Cuba but said he didn’t want to be a tyrant. The president told his audience that he would have a commission appointed to investigate all acts of the regimes of Presidents Menocal and Zayas a* well as his own. He said he would order amqeaty for Senor Menocal and Senor Zayas and their office holders if the commission turned up nothing detrimental against them. But, he said. If anything is found wrong, even his own government would be punished. The opposition objects to the bolding of an election on November 1 because, Its leaders assert, that assures the present government another five years In office. GREAT BRITAIN’S hope to revive her declining trade by the Institution of free trade within the empire was definitely shelved in the Imperial conference. After J. H. Thomas, dominions secretary, had given the facts and figures of England's distress and asked if something could not be done
about it. the representatives of one dominion after another arose and declared in effect that they would not give up the protection of their own Industrie? for the sake of Great Britain. All of them, however, expressed hope that Great Britain would buy more of their . agricultural products, and there were covert suggestions of -a British tariff on foreign food, against which the present British government is ph-dge'l. Premier Bennett of Canada’ voiced what seemed to be the general opinion of the dominions when he said flatly : "In our opinion empire free trade is neither desirable nor j ■ sslble” Among other important matters be- ■ fore the conference is the formal deci Jaration of the right of any dominion :•> from the empire, and the 1 question whether empire nationality should he broken into seven distinct nationalities. rpNGI.ANps huge dirigible, R-101, ’argest in the World, crasliecE arid exploded near Beauvais, France, soon, after its start for India, andt 4S men perished, only seven of those aboard , surviving the disaster. Among the victims were Lord Thomson, minister of air; Sir \V. Sefton Braricker, director of civil aviation, and many other leading air experts and airmen. The ship was flying low through a dark, stormy night ami apparently dipped so far .that it struck a hill. The bag ripped and sparks from the motors set off the inflammable hydrogen gas. Following a day of official mourning in France decreed by the government, : the bodies of the dead were taken to London and placed .in state in Westminster hall. A solemn national funeral service was held and the remains were then interred in a coinnion grave al Cardington, the home port of the 111-fated dirigible. Most of the fatalities in this disaster were due doubtless to the use of hydrogen gas in tlie bag; Heliutn gas, which is used In American dirigibles, is riot Inflammable; but the United States has the only unlimited supply of that gas and its export is forbidden by law. It is likely this ban will be removed by the next congress. One of the big Lufthansa passenger planes of Germany was caught in a violent squall at Dresden. arid was dashed to earth. Six passengers, the pilot and the mechanic were killed. /J XNOUNUEMENT is made pf the 4* betrothal of King Boris of Bulgaria and Princess Giovanna, daughter ! of the king and queen of Italy. The official organ of the Vatican denies a report that the Vatican had consented to an arrangement by which tiie first •son of this union would be reared in the Bulgarian Orthodox church and any other children would be brought up as Roman Catholics. Presumably because King Carol of Rumania insists on being formally crowned whether or not his estranged queen is present, Juliu Maniu has rerighed as premier. Foreign •iin’ster Mlronescu was given the job of forming a new government. underworld “pulled a fast one” the other evening which caused Police Commissioner Alcbck and his men much embarrassment. Four young thugs held up the automobile of Mrs. Thompson, wife of the mayor, at the door of her residence and took ail the jewelry the lady was wearing, as well as the gun of her man-chttuffebr. It may have been sheer bravado or, as the police suggest, a frame-up to have Alcock ousted so that a man more lenient to organized crime in Chicago might have his place. The campaign to jail the Chicago master criminals or drive them from the city is progressing slowly and not so surely. Several of the worst gangsters have been arrested on vagrancy charges and h'ld In heavy bonds; but unscrupulous lawyers and magistrates who are ver-observant of technicalities may frustrate the best efforts^ of the crusaders. *■ BY A resolution adopted by the National Poultry, Butter and Egg association In annual convention in Chicago, an organized attack was started on the federal agricultural marketing act. The resolution “calls upon and implores the leaders of representative units of this industry to lay aside all other considerations and join a movement to perfect an organization with prestige and power enough to carry on a determined fight" against the farm act and any other “radical legislation in general and that affecting our own industry in parfleiflar." The officers of the association, whose industry is estimated by them to approximate a volume of a billion dollars annually, are instructed by the resolution to “accept it as a mandate to proceed with all possible force and dUgmteh,” ' (©. l»30. W Art era Newrpaper Cnlon.)
THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL.
Improved Uniform International Sunday School ' Lesson ’ (By REV. P. B. FITZWATER. D. D.. MNB* ber of Faculty, Moody Bible Instltuta of ChicaKO.) • (©. 1930. Western Newspaper Union.) Lesson for. October 19 SIMEON AND ANNA: THE INSIGHT OF THE PURE IN HEART LESSON TEXT—Luke 2:25-39. GOLDEN TEXT—Blessed are the pure in heart: for they shall see God. PRIMARY TOPlC—Being Glad for God’s Best Gift. JUNIOR TOPlC—Simeon and Anna See Jesus. INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR TOPIC—How to Know Jesus. YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADULT TOPIC—How Wisdom Depends on Character. Th£ lesson title is somewhat misleading in that it Implies that the insight of Simeon and Anna was due to their purity of heart.whereas it was due to the fact of the indwelling Holy Spirit. Those indwelt by the Spirit will be pure in heart, but not all the pure in heart have such insight I. Simeon (Luke 2:25-35). 1. His character (v. 25). (1) He was just. That is, honest and upright in all hl# dealings with men. We are not told what his occupation was, but we are assured that he was a man trusted by all who knew him.- If he were a merchant, his customers got the kind of goods representedwith full, weight and measure. In spfte of the'corruptions of his time, he did not take advantage of his fellow men in business deals. ' ■ ■ (2) Devout. . He was just because he wa§~Godfearing. Many boast of their morality w hile unwilling'to bow their knees to God in prayer. ' (oj lie looked for the Messiah. God s word had promised that Christ should come. He believed in, the truthfulness of that word. The same word that told of Christ’s first coming tells of his second coming (Hebrews 9:28). While waiting for the Messiah. he kept faithfully discharging ills duty. Intelligent looking for. the coining of Jesus Christ means diligence in daily duties, not idly gazing Into the heavens. (4) The Holy Spirit was upon him. This was the secret of his godly and practical living. The Christ-like life is only possible to those who are filled with the Holy Ghost. 2. His reward (vv. 26-28). The Holy Spirit revealed unto him that lie should see the Messiah before he died. At the appointed time the Spirit led him. into the temple where Joseph and Mary came to present Jesus to God. Simeon took him in his arms and blessed God. The most important event In every life is to see Christ, One has missed the greatest experience of life if he has not seen Christ. 8. Simeon s song (vv. 29-83). This is the Nunc Dlmittis sung by Christians since the Fifth century, A. D. Simeon was now ready to die because he had seen God's salvation. Salvation is in and through Christ s atonement on the cross; No one is ready to die until he has seen God's salvation which was wrought out on Calvary’s cross. ’ 4. Simeon s prophecy (vv. 34. 35). (1) The meaning of Christ to the world (v. 34). Everyone is affected by Christ’s coming His presentation to man either results in their salvation or condemnation. There is absolutely no neutral ground. Personal, attitude toward him determines all. (2) He shall be spoken against (v. 34). This has been fulfilled in every generation since its utterance. (3) Meaning to Mary (v. 35). This began to be fulfilled when she was oblige*! to flee Egypt In order for Jesus to escape Herod’s sword. It was an intimation of what the end would be when she clasped her child to her bosom. Her heart was pierced again and again as human hate swept against her son. Its culmination was reached when she stood below his cross. IL Anna (Luke 2:36-39). o 1. Her character Jvv, 36, 37). - She was irreproachable. After a married life of only seven years, she had lived as a lonely widow for about eighty-four years, during which time she devoted herself to God. She was what Paul called “a widow Indeed” (I Tim. 5:5). During these long years she endured many trials and temptations. leading a life of self-denial, for the sake of others. She was a woman of much prayer. 2. Her testimony (v. 38). She gave thanks and spake of him to all who were looking for redemption. She thus had fellowship with others who had this blessed hope. Though surrounded by wickedness, many were looking for the Messiah. The Blood on the Door Pott It is not enough that the Lord Jesus came and suffered and died for you; ' the bliMKi must b£ sprinkled upon the door post of your home, on the lintels of your heart. That, and that only, can make you safe.—Dr. Albert Banks. Prayer Prayer Is not monologue, but dla logue, God’s voice In response to mine is its most essential part. Listening to God’s voice is the secret of the assurance that he will listen to mine. —Andrew Murray, Fear Fear Is a real legitimate element in salvation. God works upon IL He did it then ta that night in Egypt Drawn by love or fear, see to it that you betake you in time to the only safety.—Rev. John McNeil. Seeing God It is a strange thing, but life is the kind of experience that blinds our eyes to God if we will not open them wide enough to see him.—Outlook of Missions.
Two-Story Bungalow Type of Home Specially Attractive on Large Lot
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Rarely is a home found that will equal the individuality of exterior with convenience of interior of the above design. Its irregularity in roof construction accounts for its restful and charming appearance.
By W. A. RADFORD Mr. William A. Radford will answer questions and give advice FREE OF 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 to William A.. Radford, No. 407 South Dearborn Street, Chicago, 111., and pnly inclose two-cent stamp for reply. > Where the site for the new home is large and a building can be set Lack from the street, no type of house is better suited tlian the two-story bungalow” The bungalow is popular because it is convenient, most of the rooms being on the first But in tiie house shown in the accompanying illustration the bungalow style has been retained yet this is. in reality, a two-story house. It is 37 feet 6 inches long and 24 feet wide, the long dimension being exclusive of the sun '■l I AST; M II “ I HAIL I iLj-— -j First Floor Plan. porch. The bungalow* contains only five rooms but each of these is larger than is ordinarily found and there are a number of conveniences included in the design. Annual Check-up of Heating Plant Urged The prudent home <>w*ner will call on a heating contractor before cold weather sets in to make a thorough inspection of the radiator heating plant. These are Just a few of the points-that a competent man will note: Most hot water and steam boilers are fitted with regulators to. control dampers. The operation of the chains rind pulleys should be checked and worn parts replaced. Sometimes the turn damper becomes loosened in the shaft to the extent that the handle on the outside of the pipe does not indicate the true position of the damper. If the boiler door is badly warped or cracked, it should be replaced, since a door that is hard to close causes inconvenience and often results In the loss of draft as well as the inability to control the fire. .Hinge pins should be examined carefully.' Grates should be checked. ‘ The mortar between the bricks of a chimney and around the smoke pipe often deteriorates to a point where it is completely eroded by the weather. This condition causes a leakage of cold air into the chimney and often interferes with proper draft. • If an inspection of the heating plant reveals excessive accumulation <>f flue dirt, this should be removed in the spring. If this is delayed until the end of the summer, a thin layer of corroded iron will peel off with the soot. Soot should be scraped from the smokepipe, and all ashes and refuse should be taken from the ash pit and firepot. Modern Buildings Need New Painting Methods If you are planning some outside painting this summer—a new bouse, perhaps, or a garage, woodshed, workhouse, etc. —it is important to realize that paintiUK methods have changed radically in the last 20 years, Berton Elliot points out in Better Homes anti Gardens. Twenty years ago, says this authority, soft white pine was the only wood used in building and It was a comparatively simple matter to do a good Job of painting. Today white pine is used very little and in its place are many kinds of lumber of vastly different characteristics. Each requires a different paint mixture, although a rough classification can be made into three groups. In the first group are white pine, poplar, redwood, white cedar, and Oregon cedar, as well as lumber which has weathered for a long time without paint protection. The first coaL or
How to Use Plumbing Outfittings in Home Plumbing is to the house what veins and arteries are to the body, for upon plumbing, as upon, the blood channels of the human body rests the responsibility for the well being and healthfulness of the occupants of the home, states a writer in Better Homes and Gardens, who suggests proper fixture uses and plumbing practice. The plumbing system of a bouse consists of the water-supply system, the sewage disposal system and the fixtures, writes the author. The wa-ter-service line may be of lead or copper, wrought iron or galvanized steel, depending on the chemicals in the water and soil. Some kind of flexible metal piping should always be used at the connections to the water main because the pipe is subjected to traffic vibrations. Much expensive cutting into paving can be avoided, continues the Better Homes and Gardens article, if a pipe of adequate diameter is laid. For the average six-and-sev-en-room house with two bathrooms and an extra downstairs lavatory, a
A glance at the floor plan will show that the living room is 13 feet by 23 feet with an open fireplace set in the center of the outside wall. At the hack, alongside the fireplace, are double french doors opening into the sun porch, which is 8 feet wide and 18 feet long. Th> entrance hall is near- * \ | N o ■Rxr —■ Second Floor Plan. ly in the center of the building and at the right is a large dining room with a bay window containing four double sections to make it a cheery and airy room. Opposite the dining room at the front is a breakfast room, 6 feet 6 inches by 7 feet 6 inches, back of which is the kitchen. Upstairs there are two large bedrooms arid bath, all opening off a hall at the head of the stairs. This is an unusual homebuilding design and will appeal to those who desire a home which is out of the ordinary in exterior appearance, has spacious rwuns although not so many of them. What trees, shrubs and flowers and a wide lawn will do. for a home of this type is shown by the illustration. o primer, for such woods should be reduced to a medium-thin consistency with practically raw linseed oil, with Just a little turpentine added to insure thorough penetration, say about half pint to one pint of turpentine to one gallon of oil. One to two weeks should be allowed for drying. In the second group are iir. spruce, red cedar, and such other woods of a similar nature which have mediumslow absorption qualities. The priming* coat for these woods must be reduced Jo a very thin consistency, and penetration into the fibers of the wood stimulated by the use of a large amount of turpentine. Ordinarily, about half turpentine and three-quar-ters oil is about right. In the final group are the difficult woqds: yellow (or southern) pine and cypress being two of the most outstanding examples. Penetration into these woods must be forced with a liberal amount of turpentine. The primer should be mixed to a very thii consistency with at least halif the total amdunt of thinner used, turpentine, that is. half oil and half turpentine. For the middle coat some turpentine should always be used, for it not only helps to cut the gloss and make r hard, firm coating, but it also assists in further penetration into the wbod. The middle coat should carry less liquid reducer (oil and turpentine com bined) than tiie priming coat. Tiie final coat should always be a full oil coat, arid with very little, if any. turpentine tn it. thus insuring a full oilgloss luster and producing an elastic film that will best stand severe outside exposure. Many Types of Roofings From Which to Choose Wood shingles, asphalt shingles, asbestos shingles, slate and tile are all widely used as present roofing materials. A man is governed in his choice of these materials by his individual preference, by the type of his house, by the locality in which he lives, and by the state of his pocketbook. He is not bound, however, to “this type" or “that type" to any great extent, no matter whether he has an English, a colonial, a French or a Georgian home, for we are not very restricted in the use of oar materials and considerable latitude -is-allowed in the choice of rooting. Choose as good a roofing as you can afford and as appropriate a one, and as for its colors, avoid the too vivid, too spectacular roof. If you really wish a very bright and colorful roof, consider the other roofs in your neighborhood and make sure that yours will its neighbors.
1 inch or I*4 inch service pipe is necessary, requiring a 1-inch meter. A I*4-inch pipe is used for the lavatory, closet combination and bathtub, and a *4-ineh or %-inch pipe for shower. Laundry tubs and kitchen sinks need supply pipes, sillcocks requiring %-inch pipes. Every bathroom should have its own shut-off valves in the basement, advises Better Homes and Gardens, so that if necessary to make repairs on any fixture, the water may be turned off for that group of* fixtures only. There is rarely need for placing pipes in outer walls and in other places where there is danger of freezing. If necessary to run pipes in exposed places, use insulation materials. The circulating hot-water system gives an instantaneous flow of required hot water. To avoid drainage noise, waste pipes can be sound proofed with a 1inch thickness of hair felt With fixtures themselves costing less than a third of the plumbing in a home and the other two-thirds going for labor and for the so-called “roughing-in” materials one can have two bathrooms for less than twice the cost of one.
GOODNESS...WHAT RICH SUDSI AND MY WASH IS AS WHITE AS SNOW /i\ : ! i\ MB , \ ; I Was “Yet I didn’t scrub or boil!” 48 she tells friend "TTL NEVER stop thanking you for telling me about Rinso. I might still be scrubbing and boiling clothes in the old-fashioned way. "Just think —these clothes were just soaked in nice thick Rinso suds. That’s all —just soaked. And did you ever see such gleaming, snowy whiteness!” Saves the clothes, Clotheslast much longer when they’re soaked instead of scrubbed. Rinso is safe for the finest cottons and linens. The makers of 38 famourf washers recommend it. So economical, too; cup for cup it gives twice as much suds as lightweight, puffedup soaps. ■ Try RinSo’s creamy lasting suds too! Wonderful for all // f Fl g Kit cleaning. /I* -!J Am/ Get the BIG package. MILLIONS USE RINSO in tub, washer and dishpen Wonderful Digestion Snakes are said to have the greatest digestive powers of any creature. They swallow their food whole. Ducks,' pigs, rabbits go down with feathers, bones, fur and all. New Medicine Cabinet Bottle FEEX-A-MIXT vdufi 50«5 DILLARD'S ASPERGLM The Right and Easy Way «» w > to take Aspirin Value X«»c Total Value 750 Feen-a-mint isAmerica’s'most Popular Laxative. Pleasant, safe, dependable, non-habit forming. Keep it handy iD this attractive economical bottle. Aspergum is the new and better way to take aspirin. No bitter tablet to swallow. Effective in smaller doses for every aspirin use. At your druggist’s or HEALTH PKODVCTS CORPORATION 113 North 13th Street Newark, N.J. Latest for Bathtub Reading “I see this volume is bound in rubber." "For bathtub reading.”—-Louisville Courier Journal. and coughing stops at Relieves where others faiL Contains nothing injurious—but, oh, 80 effective! GUARANTEED. Boschee’s druggists Syi*up Snail’s Many Teeth In some kinds of snail, the tongue has 15,000 microscopic teeth arranged in rows along it. The spider is an expert fly-fisher. Hotv Old Are Yous When Will>| OQ You Be ■ Today You Say—And That Is That—But Tell Me, Aye You Very Fat? Well, if you are—lt’s probably your own fault —You don’t know how to eat right and that’s’one reason. If you would like to learn how to lose the fat you hate —and no one else likes —do as I did —Take this 30 day test— Cut out candy, cakes —pies and ice cream—cut down potatoes, rice —butter —cheese, cream and sugar— Eat anything else you feel like eating, but moderately—lean meat — fish — chicken — vegetables and fruit are best — Take one-half teaspoonful of • Kruschen Salts—in a glass of hot water every morning before breakfast—don’t miss a morning—follow this advice. One woman lost 19 pounds in 4 weeks —another got rid of 47 pounds in 3 months—a New York woman lost 14 pounds with one bottle of Kruschen and is full of vim and pep, so she write's — At any drug store in the world you can get these magic salts—one 85 cent bottle lasts 4 weeks—Ask for Kruschen Salts—an enemy to Fat*
