The Syracuse Journal, Volume 23, Number 37, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 8 January 1931 — Page 8

PAGE of WORLD’S BEST COMICS Lighter Side of Life as Depicted by Famous Cartoonists and Humorists FINNEY OF THE FORCE ' Snoop’s Idea Works —l : —xwy ¥)i —: . k ??Yf/incAO» All T <soTTA DO \ / SOMEONE UJITU A, \ v /K GAME’S UP! - I Z / KNOW 1 PLAYED \ 5 I « 1 ■• y -■ ' -\ ■ m ■- — // Ji AL 1 . ZZ£k. ’\ WP 0 -M p W J /_,{ rahX t II Lw. — THE FEATHERHEADS Social Revenge IY. I'VE REEN SNUBBED I - II uml-uisll Td«»k A II EITHER MJU MUST IMMEDIATELY "\ C YOU DRIVE WE /iFNMY HENEBERRY HAD THREE TABLES \ oe tuopp VtIAYS IN VUMiCH TD P_j [ THROW A BIGGER AND SNOOTIER. \ ROLLS UP AN DOWN IN FRONT OF A—/OF BRIDGE ANOI iff V ( HANDLE THAT SITUATION— 2&uJ > AND H k *** I MUST CALLUP WE OOUS4JOYCE/ I HORN»- IT WILL SLAY UER f /\\\ \ TERTAINED HER NOONE ELSE I I —— K PEOPLE AND TELL EM MX) WANT AZ .1 1 Z WOULD HAVE ANYTHING TO DO WVM ’■FJ \^P£MONSTRATION fg || "Q r —" r ZY “ W' Z W W Jwte ' M ™ = ~.40a1i- - t SWOW II •’ • ' p c/tlong the Concrete • The Home Censor I >1 O-OH! 1 BELEIVE I LEFT 74/7 THE IGNITION TURNED ONI ' . irSlßitlAjyS : — ■-1 PySJkw i ’’ <\C jJZ /K\ £3 YEAH,THAT Si | OH WELL, THE MISSUS WILL NEVER W lIWHM L ~Z_ 1 WZJ.7.MI- F-T* A CLOSE CALL. P> LOOK UNDER HERE. < ' 7» Or 1 . £sS?s t • A rar \\ d * Tt k ffl L I U MICKIE, THE PRINTER’S DEVIL %±££*£l What’s SI,OOO a Week if Ye Ain’t Gettin 9 It? SAH Y WAS> 9IIAPLN WONDERFUL IN V CMtNf S>AN WHA.Y ATTRACTED TUEXK MOST— \\N\' k SS» // §|Xu t >es auo -W\Wi WAW W 'E ST -TO UAIT n ~ °* <3ERvM4TG > A KWW ** € 'xXxhx vM, • Z//X r / TO ymrdw SIT AMD FURERS! (MMOSEWER6THE fe HAW I AM-Z ■ _ k HAPPM DAMS I Z==X NOU «>TAKE ME TbJ IXJ \ <p. X ' — 1 / V ~^~~ ] A ocu-AP? A = SMbumk BEEN / = C £^^si1 wucaow yk / / I >fflS \ A\ H AgjTTME BU»A( / 4 4 / a I £P zl ®Ll »2> ■%> ii L g ' gO Cya / ®7ze LOS; l| Qg nc v ZLwIMG> in'HifW- N fILILMrW' -Imuir r® mWalTl - "n>at?a Good Reasott • ji || i| fl W XZ< By PERCY L. CROSBY 111 ' Jd<lMAllß* i Jr / zjfi IIKszzZZ IL,J II Jr IKII, ii e<T ■ ■■ "' ""* '■—

I . THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL.

J ® L Tomato r Can You Name Another? TXTHAT other food contains ’ ’ such a concentration of healthbuilding vitamins as is found in pure butter, ppre cream and red-ripe tomatoes? « These are used in the making of Monarch T omatoSoup. Itcpntainsno otherfat. If you have not tried Monarch, you have not tasted the perfect Tomato Soup. One of more than 250 Monarch Su- . per-Quality Foods. . b. Sold Only by Independent Grocere j| MONARCH Super>Quality FOODS QUALITY FOR 78 YEARS I. T : Song of Robin Hushed During Winter Months. In the spring the robin is the first of our birds to arrive. He is the “official harbinger,” and his “Cheerio! Cheerio!” in the treetop is our earliest prophecy of happfer days-and bluer skies. F. H. Collier writes, in the St. Louis Globe-Democrat, Now, for many weeks’ our robins have been pouring into the woods of South Carolina and south Georgia and Alabama—into Texas and Mississippi - and Louisiana. In great contrast to tlieir advent in our zone, they do not sing a note. It may be for this reason that our northern popular bird isS not cherished there with the same . affection that we feel for . him. although his-pisefulness is’justly regarded. He is just another bird —and they have so many—rather furtive ami quiet. We have watched robins flitting about in the low shrubbery near the ground in southern Mississippi in January, and from their complete silence and clandestine manner could hardly take them for the birds we know so well. . Perhaps they are overawed by the mocking bird, which is the petted warbler of thtyfmuth and does not entirely suspcXl his melodious arias even in midwinter. Because the robins receive no distinguished hopors where they are so retiring and selfeffacing that they are left to their ’ own seclusion, may account for their extreme earliness and precipitancy In 1 coming north. They return to a land where they are given their accustomed plaudits, even poems and paragraphs, just as soon as they can. They get their names in the papers. Associating so closely with us on our lawns and in our gardens, they no doubt develop some human traits and are not indifferent to the regard with which they are’- received. . , Carried Souvenir of Somme Fourteen Year* The true stories of strange war wounds are legion, hut one of the most curious, concerns a Kintore man, John Garden, who Is employed as a gardener in Inverurie, Scotland. Mr. Garden served in France with the Fourth Gordons, and was wounded by shrapnel during the battle of the Somme on August 18, 1016, near Guiilemont. Quite recently, in the course of tiis work, Mr. Garden had occasion to make a heavy Jift and felt a severe pain in the back of his hand beneath the bone of the middle finger. The pain became worse, and his hand swelled so alarmingly that he had to go to a hospital. An operation was performed, and a Hfle bullet an inch and a quarter long and a quarter of an inch in diameter was extracted. It had been lodged all these 14 years in the hand, beneath the bone, until the sudden wrench had loosened it from its position. Wanted to Be Sure , Seven-year-old Arnold was visiting at the home of a neighbor. After he had finished a piece of cake given him he was asked how he lfked4tJ “I don’t know yet,” replied the child. “Maybe I’d better have another piece!” Carrying a Point “You made some enemies,” said the consoling friend, “but you carried your - point.” “Yes.” replied Senator Sorghum, “sometimes a man carries a point with about the same amount of personal comfort that he derives from sitting on a tack.” Garfield Tea Was Your Grandmother’s Remedy

For every stomach and intestinal HL This good oldfashioned herb home remedy for c onstipatlon, Istomach ills and other derangements <ff the sys-

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tem so prevalent these days is in even greater favor as a family medicine than in your grandmother's day. Bowiinr Alley; <: college town 30.000: no compt-Brunswick equipment. Jt.OOO.Ttrma. Mielke Bros., Danville. Illinois. Sunshine —AU Winter Long At the Foremost Desert Resort of the West —marvelous climate— warm sunny days—dear starlit nights—dry invigorating air — splendid roads — gorgeous mountain scenes —flnest hotels—the ideal winter hens* Writ* Or— A Outtfr PALM SPRINGS (Wontto W. N. U, CHICAGO, NO. 1-IS3I. • ■ It '