The Syracuse and Lake Wawasee Journal, Volume 12, Number 43, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 19 February 1920 — Page 2
COLDS Weed 1 Spread KILL THE COLD ONCE WITH . , HILL’S * CASCARAg QUININE bromide ■ Standard cold remedy for 20 years —in tablet form —safe, sure, no wajk opiates—breaks up a cold in 24 hours —relieves grip in 3 daft. Money back if it fails. The .^7nO AbbWL. genuine box has a Red cWl'tl'iil top with Mr, Hill’s flluv picture. -I "• \j 'NsBK. At AllDrur Stores Wasn’t Going Too Far. . *>. r James was much interested in a mule colt on his uncle’s farm. He fed it out of his hand while the opposite side of the fence and one day his uncle saw him patting its no&. “Why!” said his uncle, “Jinny, and you are getting to be good friends. First thing I knotv you will'be trying to ride on her.” ... . .. »‘Oh, no, 1 won’t” said Jhmes soberly. “You see, I’m only being friends with her head.” SALTS IF BACKACHY AND KIDNEYS HURT Stop Eating Meat for a While If Your Bladder Is Troubling You,. When you wake up with backache and dull misery in the kidney region it generally means you have been easing, too iTiuch meat, says a well-known authority. Meat forms uric acid which overworks the kidneys in their effort -to filter it from the blood and.they become sort of paralyzed and loggy. When your kidneys get sluggish and clog you must relieve them, like you relieve your bowels; removing all the body’s urinous waste, else 1 ’ you have backache, sick headache, dizzy spells-; your stomach sours, tongue is coated, and-when the weather is bad you have rheumatic twinges. The urine is cloddy, full of sediment, channels often get sore, water scalds and you are obliged to seek relief two or three times during the night. Either consult a good, reliable physician at once or get from your pharmacist about four ounces of Jad Salts; take a tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast -for a few •days and your kidneys will then act fine., This famous saljts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithla, and has been used for generations to clean, and stimulate sluggish kidneys', also to neutralise acids in the urine so it’ no longer thus ending bladder weakness. Jad Salts is a life saver for regular meat eaters. It is inexpensive, cannot. Injure and makes a delightrui, effervescent llthia-water drink.— A, ’v. Clubs Enough. “I want to get something for my husbam). He’s ft golf player.” “Why not get him a new club?!’ suggested the clerk. “Dear me, no. He belongs to three clubs already.”—Detroit Free , Press. . . _ ■ NOSE CLOGSED FROM" A COLD OR CATARRH' Apply Cream in Nostrils to Open Up, Air Passages. Ah! What relief! Your clogged nbs-\’ trils open right up, the air passages of your head are dear and you can breathe freely. No more hawking,' snuffling, mucous discharge,, headaches dryness—no struggling for breath at night, your cold or catarrh is gone.' , “ Don’t stay stuffed up! Get az small bottle of Ely’s Cream Balm from your druggist now. Apply a little of this : fragrant, antiseptic cream in your nostrils, let it penetrate through every air passage of the head; soothe and heal the swollen, inflamed mucous membrane, give you instant relief. Ely’s Cream Balm is juSt what Severy cold and catarrh sufferer has been seeking. It’s splendid.—Adv. • \. Rubbing It in. “Mrs. Blank is positively tactless.”., “Tactless! Why, that wqjnan wojild ake her husband out of an afternoon nap to show him her dressmaker's bill.” How’« This? We offer SIOO.OO ror any case of catarrh that cannot be cured by HALL’S CATARRH MEDICINE HALL’S CATARRH MEDICINE is taken internally and acts through the Blood on the Mucous Surfaces of the System. Sold by druggists for over'.forty: years. Price Toe. Testimonials free. F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio. Let the labor of your hands show your worth to the community? I < ! -■ , ■' Sure Relief M iwiaswwj 6 Bell-an s Hot water ' Sure Relief RE LL-ANS MFFOR indigestion | Money back without question , \ I if HUNT’S SALVE fails in the u 11 treatment of ITCH, ECZEMA, TflTSr RINGWORM.TETTEB or other fit if itching skin diseases. Price I 1 A 75cat druggists,.op direct from . -AB.Rlchird< Medicine Co.,shermn;l»j. Cuticura Talcum is Fragrant and Very Healthful Snap. 25c, Ointment 25 and 50c, Talcum 25c. FRECKLES AGENTS 'WANTED—SELL OLD SCOUT LINIMENT. Sure repeater. Full size sample £sc. The Rundel Co., Rochester, N. Y.
BERLIN DEMONSTRATION IN WHICH MANY WERE KILLED Photograph taken' during the great demonstration in Berlin against the law governing workmen’s councils, The mob. is semi breaking through the lines of the surety police in front of the reichstag. Later the police and troops opened fire on the crowd, killing many persons. > NEW YORK SNOWED UNDER IN TREMENDOUS STORM ■■ SSIII ■ wsggsMi ' - ' ’ s ' New York city has been experiencing one of the worst snowstorms in its history, and its means of extricating itself proved wholly inadequate. For days vehicular traffic was almost at a standstill. The photograph shows a line of street ears stalled, in the snow-and abandoned’.
— 1> ■ MASSACHUSETTS GETS BATTLE FLAGS /■. i h 11 B I it R I HB W I jWfOIiSOaL'W j®; ' '•« ? • 4 ' X, Ceremony at the state house, Boston, when the fourteenth Railroad engineers, A. E. F., presented to the state of Massachusetts the national and state colors carried by the unit while serving through the great war. Governor Coolidge is at the left, receiving the flags. - J ' - NOVEL RECRUITING STATION ON WHEELS f If Sqm iilliiil willi Wwß i WW? < ■ sb j low wOoiOW • s* V ‘' t '' X?"' If ■ 5i,,,.;.. In various cities of the United States the army is using these rolling recruiting stations at which men are enlisted for all branches of the service. This one was photographed in Washington.
KERNELS Only one man in 200 is more’ than six feet in height. lit costs 8 cents to have a collar laundered in Paris. .Only one person in.15,0(J0 reaches the age of one hundred years. There are more herrings eaten than any other kind of fish. 'A deposit of white marble, said, to the best Italian In quality, has been discovered near Pretoria, Transyap. 1
THE SYRACUSE AND LAKE WAWASEE JOURNAL
In proportion to its size a bee is 30 times as strong as a horse. Champagne contains much less alcohol, in proportion, than port, sherry or Madeira. ~ From forty to fifty turtles are killed for the annual lord mayor’s banquet In London. To be perfectly proportioned a man should weigh 28 pounds for every foot of his height " Froude, It Is said, wrote ehch partigraph of his history five times before selecting the one finally adopted.
MRS. WATSON AND SIR COY m pW| BIS "W < O Wb :? 111!®w> '•/' v. v y ’* '* v K oflSn ' "xs3ht BIvzMM '7 x ;<? *jfeF Sir Coy, a tame coyote, parading on Michigan boulevard, Chicago, with his mistress, Mrs. L. M. Watson of Hayden, Colo., formerly of Chicago. The animal was captured by Mr. Watsor and is completely domesticated. MUCH TRAVELED MASCOT : r > ■ - f ’ffl 11 a J .yp > '• 5 • J This is the mascot of the battleship Brooklyn. She has accompanied that vessel during its five years of service in Asiatic waters and. is now with it at San Francisco. ( And That Look Counted. “As J look, into your eyes,” he murmured, “I see much happiness in store ’ for us.” “I fear there’s nothing to it, Oswald,” she replied, not unklndy. “Papa has been looking into your rat* 1 ing.”—Kansas City Journal. i ' Earlier Still. i “The first use of playing cards w. : when Satan played the deuce in the Garden of Eden,” says an exchange, r Wrong! It was when the sun lay over > everything with his first flush. —Boe ,ton Transcript
G»®lL STRICTLY ORNAMENTAL. “I hear Giddison has a new stenographer.” . “So he has.” “Do you suppose she can spell and punctuate?” “I don’t know, and I don’t believe Giddison knows either. When I asked him about her qualifications all he could say was, ‘Such eyes, such hair, such a figure!’ ” Printers’ Fun. . “There never was any variety in this bill of fare,” growled the pessimistic patron. “You forget the typographical errors, sir,” replied the facetious waiter. “What?” “We have a new lot every day, sir, and, upon my word, some of them are most amusing.” A Merciful J-;dge. “Judge, I wish you’d put me on probation.” “How long did I sentence you,for?” “One year. But I want to .get married.” “You wish me to substitute for a sentence of one year a sentence for life? That would be unconstitutional.” A Perfect Chesterfield. “I must say this condemned murderer was polite to the last.” “Well?” “When he was being strapped into the electric chair he apologized to the doctors, newspaper men and prison officials present for occupying the only chair in the room.” B*, QUALIFIED. She (romantically) —The man I marry must be willing to go through fire for me. He —Then I’m your man. The boss has fired me for telephoning you so often. Sense and Sound. How oft you find the boisterous boys Into oblivion sinking! The brass band makes the biggest noise. But doesn’t do the thinking. Merely Descriptive. “Mr. Shadd acknowledges he is impecunious.” “Then he oughtn’t to be insulted if any one calls him a poor fish.” The Strain. “It Is n wonder that some of the photographic plates stand the faces put on them.” “Why so?” “Aren’t they sensitive plates?” Laboring Under a Handicap. “This author says he has tramped about ffie country, beaten his way on freight trains and been thrown Into jails to get material for bis stories.” “That’s the way to study life at first hand.’’ “Quite so. But he wants to lay the scene of his next story in a fashionable hotel. He says he’s too old to be a bellhop and too poor to be a guest.” Nothing of the Sort. “I understood the two men had quite an epistolary argument.” “No pistols about it. They took it out in writing letters.” Not Possible. “I read an -account somewhere of an odorless onion.” “That must be about as Interesting as a smokeless pipe.” » Many Blushes. "I enjoy these old-fashioned husking bees.” “Red ears mean kisses, eh?" “Yes, and kisses mean red ears.** A Losing Venture. “How’d you make out with your radium mine?” “Lost money.” ’‘Thought you sold all the stock at 10 cents a share.” “I did. But it cost more than that to print the stuff." True to Life. Photographer—Try to look pleasant, please. Wife of Victim —Don’t ask him to do that. This picture is for my mother, and she wouldn’t recognize it Sufficient Reason. Mrs. Scalds—And just think of what a loving couple they were when they got married. I wonder what caused them to quarrel so. Mrs. Gossiphe—l found out today. She plays a better game of golf than he does. An Early Shade. Wise —Robert,, that, spool of plum <!olored silk I asked you to get isn’t plum colored at all; U’s green. Hub—-Oh, it’s plum colored, all right; it hasn’t ripened yet, that’s aIL
FIND WEALTH IN WINTER ■J ——— Canadian Farmers Turn Winter Months to Good Account. Large crops and good prices for the wheat, oats, barley and flax from Canadian farms have made the winter resorts in California at times resemble a meeting of a Canadian farmers’ institute, but the practice among successful farmers of spending their winters holidaying seems to be on the wane. After all, nothing can be more tiresome than having nothing to do, and the farmers of Western Canada are now finding winter employment right on their farms which rivals the attractions of the sunny South. Live stock is the explanation, according to a six-foot Westerner who j dropped into the Canadian Government j Information Bureau at 311 Jackson street, St. PauL He was on his way j back to Western Canada with a carload of selected breeding stock which had carried off blue ribbons at several state fajrs in 1919. “We have found.” said he, “that there is just as much pleasure and a great deal more profit in developing a herd of prize stock as In listening to the murmur of the sad sea waves. Where we used to grow grain exclusively now we are raising stock as well. The fact that steers, raised in Western Canada todk the grand championship at the International Live Stock Show at Chicago two yeaTs in succession shows how well we are getting along. And instead of depleting our bank rolls we add a tidy sum to them.” “But don’t you find the life monotonous?” ■ . “Not in the least. You see, we hayl a rural club which meets in our school house, where we thrash Put all kinds of problems. Here we exchange ideas also have occasional talks from government experts, and the man who goes abroad for the winter only realizes how much he has missed when at a summer picnic he hears an address by a neighbor that would do credit to a graduate. “It was at these meetings that we decided to import a prizewinning stallion, apd today our district is raising some of the horses in Canada. The carload of breeding stock which I am now shipping to my farm is indirectly the result of our club meetings. We are going to make that little corner of Saskatchewan one of the big stork centers of America. Why shouldn’t we? Everything is our favor—climate, fertility, cheap land, free grazing land adjoining lots of farms, creameries, government supervision. You know how energetic the northern climate makes a man? Well, it’s just like that with stock. They get to be great, husky fellows, hardy and bigframed —and that counts on market day. “Come up and see me some time,” were his parting words as he left to catch his train. “I’ll showLyou some of the finest land and live stock out of doors, and treat you to a real farm meal—everything but the coffee and grown right on my farm. »That counts some in these days of high prices.”—A d verti sem ent. Gone for Gowns. Simpson—l see by the society joitrnals that Mrs. Dashaway is going to Europe for her gowns. Keene—Judging from her appear-, ance I think she must have left her clothes somewhere. —Cartoons ilagazine. RECIPE FOR GRAY HAIR. To half pint of water add 1 oz. Bay Rum, a small box of Barbo Compound, and % oz. of glycerine. Apply to the hair twice a week until it becomes the desired shade. Any druggist can put this up or you can mix it .at home at very little cost. It will gradually darken streaked, faded gray hair, and will make harsh hair soft and glossy. It will not co’or the scalp, is not sticky pr ° greasy, and does not rub off.—Adv, Mournful Change. “The word jag will now become obsolete.” “Yes, and it used to be, absolute.” y « • » » ■» ■» » ■ ■ ■ YOUNGSTERS! ! Need “Cascarets" when Sick, Bilious, Constipated. When your child is bilious, constipated, sick or full of cold; when the little tongue is coated, breath bad and stomach sour, get a box of Cascarets and straighten the little one right up. Children gladly take this harmless candy cathartic and Lt cleanses the little liver and bowels without griping. Cascarets contain no calomel op dangerous drugs and can be depended upon to move the sour bile, gases and indigestible waste right out of the bowels. Best family cathartic because it never cramps, sickens or causes inconvenience.—Adv. The Difference. “Our men went overseas in uncertainty.” “So they did, but they came home in transports.”
ECZEMA U CAN BE CURED Free Proof To You JEfl All I want is your name and address so I can send yon a free trial *• c, l SSSmfc l *» treatment I want you just to try this treatment—that’s all—Juat - try tt» That’s my only argument. I've been in the Retail Drug Business for SO yean. I am President of the Indiana State Board of Pharmacy and President of the Retail Druggists’ Association. Nearly everyone in For* Wayne knows me and knows about my successful treatment Over twelve thousand five hundred Men, Women and Children outside of Fort Wayne have, according to their own statements, been cured by this treatment since I first made this offer public. If you have Eczema, Itch, Salt Rheum, Tetter— never mind how bad— my treatment haa cured the worst cases I ever saw— rive me a chance te prove my claim. Send me your name and address on the coupon below and get the trial treatment I want to send you FREE. The wonders accomplished in your own case will be proof. laapauaauuaaunuaraauanui CUT AND MAIL TODAY wmmamumummMsmmaawe S.C.HUTZELL, Druggist, No* 3288 West Main St., Fort Wayno Ind. Please send without cost or obligation to me your Free Proof Treatment. Nam. ■- ■ ■ - . - Are ■- ■ ) PtetCfikT 1 . • — State , ■ Stroetand No . i ■■ ■*’ ’ 1
DO ALL MY i HOUSEWORK Before I took Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound I could hardly stand, says Mrs. Kwarcinski. Chicago, 11l. —“I buffered with displacement and irregularities and I did
not know what to do. My mother advised me to take Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound and use the Sanative Wash so I took her advice and used these remedies and cured myself. I feel fine ana do all my housework which I could not do’before, as I could hardly
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stand up and I have three healthy children. You can use this letter if you wish, for your remedy is certainly wonderful for sick, run down women.”— Mrs. A. Kwarcinski, 3627 W. Oakdab Ave., Chicago, 111. For forty years Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound has been making women strong and well, relieving backache, nervousness, ulceration, and inflammation, weakness, displacements, irregularities and periodic pains. It has also proved invaluable in preparing for childoirth and the Change of Life. Women who suffer are invited to write for free and helpful advice to Lydia E Pinkham Medicine Co. (confidential), Lynn, Mass. It is free and always helnful. RHEUMATISM Mustarine Subdues the Inflammation and Eases the Soreness Quicker Than Anything , Else on Earth. Pay only 30 cents and get a big box of Begy’s Mustarine. which is the original mustard plaster and is made ot .strong, real, yellow mustard—no substitutes are ; used. It’s known , as the quickest pain killer oh earth,' for- in hundreds of instances It stops headache, neuralgia, toothache, earache and backache in 5 minutes. It’s a sure, speedy remedy—none bet- ! ter for bronchitis, pleurisy, lumbago, and to draw the inflammation from your sore feet there is nothing so good. i You get real action with Mustarine—it goes after the pain and kills it right oft ,' the reel. Yes, it burns, but it won’t blister—it doesn’t give agonizing pain a slap '[ on the wrist. It does give it a gdod healthy punch in the jaw—it kills pain. Ask for and get Mustarine always in the yellow * box. I S. C. Wells & Co.. Le Roy. N. Y. Your Liver Is Clogged Up Thai’s Why You’re Tired—Out ot Sorts — Have No Appetite CARTER’S LITTLE LIVER PILLS will put you right in a few days They act quickly |7* il StFD’C though gently VrAoX a KLI\ w and give na- KSIIITTLK ture a chance fl I \/ E R to renewyour A Ljs Fi IB I health Cor- q rect constipation, biliousness, indigestion and sick headache. .Small Pill—Small Dose —Smalt Price DR. CARTER’S IRON PILLS, Nature’s great nerve and blood tonic for Anemia, Rheumatism, Nervousness, Sleeplessness and Female Weakness. Ceiglse mas! bear slgnetgre Here’s a Fine Tonic Laxative, Says Druggist If you want better blood; clear complexion and sparkling eyes take : Celery King Normal bowel action, perfect working stomach and sweet breath follow its use. Children drink* it with enjoyment. “TOO - LATE Death only a matter of short time. Don’t wait until pains and aches become incurable diseases. Avoid painful consequences by taking COLD MEDAL ■ The world’s standard remedy for kidney, liver, bladder and uric acid troubles —tha National Remedy of Holland since 1696. Guaranteed. Three sizes, all druggists. Leak foe tha aama Gold Model oa every he* and accept no fanitetion W. N.TITfORT WAYNE, NO. 8-1920,
