The Syracuse and Lake Wawasee Journal, Volume 15, Number 1, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 4 May 1922 — Page 2
THANKFUL FOR A ljitlechild Mrs. Mertz Tells How Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound Helped Her Kutztown, Pa.—“l wish every woman • who wants children would try Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegetatable Compound. It has done so much for me. My baby is almost a year old now and is the picture of health. She walked ateleven months and is trying to use her little tongue. She can say some words real nice. I am sending you her picture. I shall be thankful
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as long as I live that I found such a wonderful medicine for my troubles. ’’—Mrs. Charles A. Mertz, Kutztown, Pa. Many cases of childlessness are curaable. Perhaps yours may be. Why be discouraged until you have given Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound a faithful trial ? Spoken and written recommendations from thousands of women who have found health and happiness from its use have come to us. We only tell you what they say and what they believe. We believe that Lydia E. Pinkham s Vegetable Compound is so well adapted to the conditions which might cause your trouble that good will come to you Dy its use. . Merit is the foundation of .Lydia E. Pinkham’sVegetable Compound. It has behind it a record of nearly fifty years.
SLOW DEATH Aches, pains, nervousness, difficulty in urinating, often mean serious disorders. The world’s standard remedy for kidney, liver, bladder and uric acid troubles—• GOLD MEDAL bring quick relief and often ward off deadly diseases. Known as the national remedy of Holland for more than 200 years. All druggists, in three sizes. Look for the name Gold Medal on every box and accept no imitation . THICK, SWOLLEN GLANDS that make a horse Wheeze, Roar, have Thick Wind or Choke-down can be reduced with also other Bunches or Swellings. No blister, no hair gone, and horse kept at work. Economical —only a few drops required at an application. $2.50 per bottle delivered. Book 3 A free. W. F. Young, he., 310 Temple St., Springfield, Man. Think twice before you speak, is advice lost on those who can’t think once. You’ll Get A Year’s Wearormore, W 1 g when you buy \ J ExcellO 1 SuspenderS ■ No rubber to rot. Phoephor Af 7 W * Bronze Springs give the llp \ stretch. Ask Your Oealertv,ysy \ for Nu-Way Suspendere/MlS*- ZkNjrt? V,Garters and Hose Supporters. / ) ¥ ’k If he hasn’t them, send direct, f 1 dealer's name, Every | Zjf i pair guaranteed. I- I iIA 1 Fl St. ech Suspender V; \ rtfcn. Co.. Mfrs.. Adnan. TO KILL RATS and MICE \ Always use the genuine STEARNS’ ELECTRIC PASTE it forces these pests to run from the building for . water and fresh air. Rats, mice, cockroaches, waterbngs and ants destroy food and property and are carriers of disease. READY FOR USE-BETTER THAN TRAPS Directions in 15 languages in gyfry box. roz. size 35c. 15oz. size 81.50' MONEY BACK IF IT FAILS Full Supply. “Do you keep paint?" ' “Oh, yes. Face or fence?”—Louisville Courier-Journal. An Expert Writes: “1 used to be called a poor cook, and never pretended to bake a cake worthy of praise, but now I am called the champion cake baker of my community, thanks to the Royal Baking Powder.” Mrs.R.W.P. ROYAL Baking Powder Absolutely Pure Contains No Alum Leaves No Bitter Taste Sand for Naw Royal Cook Book —lt’, FREE. Royal Baking PowderGo.,l26WilliamSt,NewYork W. N. U.TfORT WAYNE, NO. 18-1922,
OUR MAGAZINE 80 SECTION SW Interesting Features for the EntirrFamily
Something to Think About By F. A. IDALKER
THE REASON WHY TN EVERYDAY contact with such ■L lems as regularly come up for solution in the home or the office, adopt a process of reasoning them out in your own way. You will find if you steadfastly persist in such a course that you will soon reach a higher stage of thinking, necessary always to a higher state of efficiency. Accepting some one’s say-so without giving serious thought to the answer or inquiring as to the reason why, is an unwise thing to do. In spite of whatever innate cleverness you may have, if this dependence on some one else is continued, there will never come to you an opportunity to show this ability. You will form the harmful habit of leaning on others instead of standing alone in your own strength and trusting unreservedly in self. Those upon whom you rely for advice will keep ahead of you just as long as you court their company and assistance. By pursuing such a course you admit incompetence and lack of force, which disqualify you for leadership
Uncommon Sense OHN BLAKE ||
H =====■ MARRY “FOR KEEPS” TF YOU have a capital of a thousand dollars, and only a thousand dollars, you are likely to be a little particular about investing it. Yet you invest your capital of happiness, which is all you have, and all you ever will have, on the first pretty face you happen to see. The average youth devotes more care to the selection of a suit of clothes than he does to the selection of a wife. When his marriage turns out unhappily, he wonders why he happened to have hard luck/ or cynically observes that you never can trust a woman. About 90 per cent of the labor and expense of the divorce courts could be avoided if young men and women would expend a little serious thought about the most serious business of their lives, which is getting married. Neither men nor women can so skillfully disguise their true natures as to deceive anybody who is really in earnest about investing his capital of happiness where it will pay dividends for all time. Nobody ever falls so head-over-ears-in-love at first sight that he hasn’t time to think over the seriousness of picking a wife before he sends for the best man and engages the minister. There is no source of unhappiness in the world so prolific as marriage, chiefly because nobody ever appears to think that it should be entered in any way save by accident. If the reformers who cry out. against divorce, when it is too late, would spend the same amount of time and energy trying to teach people to find the right kind of mates, there would be less.divorce, less scandal and more
IHottier’s Cook Book
As it fe.ll upon a day In the merry month of May, Sitting tn the pleasant shade Which U grove of myrtles made. —Barnfield. SEASONABLE GOOD THINGS SKIM MILK will prove a boon to many housewives who have forgotten that it may be used in nearly all dishes instead of whole milk, and can be bought in many places for very little. In ’cream soups, adding a little more butter, the skim milk is especially good. Sticky Cinnamon Buns. Take one quart of raised dough, add one-half cupful of sugar, two well beaten eggs, two tablespoonfuls of soft butter, one-half cupful of brown sugar; mix well and roll out. Spread with two tablespoonfuls of soft • butter; sprinkle with one-half cupful of brown sugar, mixed with two teaspoonfuls of cipnamon, one-hajf cupful each of currants and seeded raisins. Roll and cut in slices. Brush a deep, heavy sheetiron pan with fat, sprinkle with brown sugar and set in the buns so that they do not touch. Let rise until light. The buns should be five inches high when baked. Cut the roll in two-and-one-half-lnch slices when put to rise. Place an asbestos mat under the pan and be careful not to bake in too hot an ov,en. Anise Seed Cookies. Take one : half cupful of shortening, one cupful of sugar, two eggs, two tablespoonfuls of milk, four tablespoonfuls of anise seed, five tablesp
and advertise to your employers that you are a second-grade man or woman, incapable of forming judgment without help from others. To observe, reflect and apply ought to be the high purpose of every man and woman in the stern battle of life. Observe as a child and keep observing until you find the reason why. If you will reflect, sift out the chaff from the wheat, you will in a short time be qualified to judge the good from the worthless and pick out the best every time you are called upon to make a decision. With this newly acquired ability, you will know unerringly how to choose the right course and follow it with strength and assurance. Instead of being a weak dependent, wavering, uncertain and timid, you will grew steadily into a strong, bold leader capable of shouldering great responsibilities. Keep your eyes open, use the mind given you by the Creator, figure the value of everything that has a direct bearing on your work, apply the useful and you will encounter no real difficulties in finding the reason why, or in piercing the bull’s eye of success with an arrow of your own making. (Copyright.)
A|| SCHOOL DAIJS || A / (hJkn lows ,D«n* "IwwzSSwr-E —'fetns.si*! —* iiiligß / h Heaven’s copyright Sack
room in the newspapers for instructive news. You can’t tell a man anything he doesn't know about the mistake of an unhappy marriage if he already has made the mistake. You can tell him a good deal about if beforehand. Some day preachers and editors and educators will organize instruction in matrimony; parents will devote a little time to talking to children about it, and as a result there will be about 50 per cent more happiness in the world. (Copyright)
of baking powder and three to four cupfuls of flour. Mix and add the seeds. Roll and cut in fancy shapes. Bake in a hot oven. Nut Wafers. Take three tablespoonfuls of butter, add five tablespoonfuls of pulverized sugar. When the sugar and butter creamy, add three tr.blespoonfuls of milk, drop by drop, stirring constantly; then add nine tablespoonfuls of flour and a few drops of vanilla. Brush a pan with fat, drop by spoonfuls and sprinkle each with chopped nuts. Dust with cinnamon and bake in a slow oven. Spicy Fruit Cake. Take one-half cupful of New Orleans molasbes, one cupful of brown sugar, cinnamon, ginger and nutmeg to taste, one egg beaten well; add one cupful of sour cream, a teaspoonful of soda and three cupfuls of flour. Mix well and add one-half cupful of nuts with raisins, figs and dates chopped and mixed to make one-half cupful. Bake in a loaf in a slow oven. Copyright, 1922. Western Newspaper Union. o The Hands of His Friends. “Your enemies call you a spotlight grabber.” “I’m not,” protested Senator Sor•ghum. “I simply undertake to leave the spotlight apparatus in the hands of those who will aim it'in my direc-
SYRACUSE AND LAKE WAWASEE JOURNAL
illllllltlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllU Kiddies six I ✓ Will M. Maupin | nillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllin
WANTED—A NAME TXT ANTED—A name for the baby; That sweet little mite of a miss. With pink hands and fwt, and puckering lips sweet Held up for a fond parent’s kiss. Rosie, or Josie, or Mary; Or Margaret, Lilly, or May; Priscilla or Prue—does any suit you? We’ve just got to name her today. Wanted —A name for the baby That’s nestling there fast asleep; A precious wee mite on her pillow ol white God gave us to guard and to keep. Annie, or Carrie, or Hazel; Or Annabel, Oral of Jo; Annette or Sue—does any suit you? We’ve just got to name her, you know. Wanted—A name for the baby, That little pink image of love That came with the year with a message of cheer, Straight down from the mansions above. Maggie, or Katie or Flora; Or Amethyst, Kittle or Bess; All good, I suppose—but dear goodness knows We’ll just call her “Sister,” I guess. (Copyright.)
YOUR< II A I\TT\ ul Characteristics HAIN ant j Tendencies — the aaraaHsnwraiMa’ Capabilities or Weaka nesses That Make for Success or I Failure as Shown in Your Palm THE HAND OF A MUSICIAN TN THE hand of a person who is talented in music, the skin is very smooth and soft. This indicates a refined, sensitive nature, with a great dislike for anything that is coarse or unrefined. As a musician, of either sex, must pay attention ito details, the fingers must be long'in proportion to the rest of the hand. ' In the hands of masy musicians, the thumb, at its outer angle or joint, is quite pointed. This is held to show a good idea of time or jbythm. A sense of tune is sometimes seen in a point or protuberance on the outside of the thumb, below the joiht. The mount of Venus should be fairly strong and high, to show melody, and this characteristic is seen also in a good mount of Saturn at the base of the middle finger. When there are a good mount of Apollo at the base of the third or ring finger, and a good mount of the moon near the wrist, 9. decided sense of harmony is shown. (Copyright.) o Dust and Explosions. Various forms of dust, when mingled with air in certain "proportions, are capable of producing explosions. This danger sometimes exists in flour mills. A case is on record where sugar dust caused an explosion. XT o
THE CHEERFUL CHERUB Ihy jo b«hful ,my bright shining light ’Neath -u bushel cF shyness is kid, 5o I gossip dong with my friend, Inner JeJr, Like Marcus Aurelius did. ✓-‘K Rn‘C*"" tad
MARY GWiAM BONNER, ■-iii.—— .. comicmt r» wu* NtvvMU FAIRY QUEEN'S ADVENTURES "Well,” said the Fairy Queen, “so many adventures as I’ve had today! In
the first place of oIL I’ve seen so many balloons. "There have been pink ones and blue ones and red ones. Oh, balloons of all colors, and some of them got away from their owners. broke their strings and went high, high up in the air. “I saw one fastened to a painter’s scaffold, and it looked so pretty high up like that.
"High Up in the Air.” ’
“They are so lovely,” continued the Fairy Queen, "that I am going to give a Balloon Ball next week and I want everyone to come to it. "Everyone must be dressed like a balloon and everyone must bring n balloon, too. It will be a beautiful ball, rm sure,” “Oh, It will be a lovely ball,” said the Fnlrles. “But tel us the rest of your adventures,” they added. •“Well,” said the Fairy Queen, “I saw three fine boys named Tony and Joe and Marllp They were busy playing checkers, and they had a visitor who came and played with them. Two played at a time, but Marllo beat all the others. “I peeped behind a plant which was growing in the window and saw all these checker games. I like it when people have plants. Theifl can see so much more, as I can hide behind the plants. “I always carry my wand with me that I can wave so as to make myself small or big. as I choose. “Then I saw a little girl whose father always calls her Mrs. Kittens. “I asked how shp had received this name and I was told that her father thought she was just like dear little kittens one wanted to hug and love and pet. “I passed a quince bush which has been In a garden for years and years and years. “ ‘Are you going to bloom this year?’ I asked. ‘I mean by that, are you going to yield or give any quinces?’ “ ‘l’m not sure,’ said the quince bush. ‘You know, I had a quince on my bush one year.’ “ ‘You are forever talking about that one quince,"-T said. ‘I have heard about it for the greatest number of years, and I believe it is the only quince that was ever on your bush.’ “ ‘You’re right,’ said the quince bush, ‘but I still talk about it, Fairy Queen.’ “Then I saw some children and I beard them talking about the different tricks they had played on April Fool’s Day. “It seems they had stopped everyone and told them they had dropped some money, or that there was some money in front of them, and then they had said ‘April Fool “They had played it on each other, too. “ ‘Oh, see the penny coming out of your shoe!’ one had said, and some one had stopped to look at such a curious sight when, of Course, the child had called out: “‘April Fool!’ “I saw a little city garden, with trees coming out and showing that it was the springtime. There were crocuses already out and seeds had been planted and the trees were soon to be in bloom and would later have lovely leaves. “I saw skipping and jumping games, and many, many games of marbles being played. " “And such fine rope-skipping as I saw! Oh, some splendid rope-skip-
“Fine Looking Mud Pies.”
ping. “There were some fine chalk drawings that I beheld, too. Some of them were very fine and some were very funny. “I saw my old friend, Beauty, who said she was still busy going her rounds and giving Beauty Sleep to folks to make them handsome. She is certainly handsome herself. “And I saw sailboats in ponds, and even . sail-
boats in mud puddles, and mud pies being made—tine looking mud pies. “I §aw a little seashore garden where there were big pansies and brown and yellow wall flowers out, and lovely double daffodils, too I “But there! I’ve talked eough. We must make ready our invitations for the great Balloon Ball. Heigh-ho, heigh-ho for the great Fairyland Balloon Ball!” Educated Dog. “Lay down, pup. Lay down. That’s a good doggie. Lay down, I tell you.” “Mister, you’ll have to say ‘Lie down.’ He’s a Boston terrier.” Raining Candy. Little Robert, aged three, was very fond of lemon drops. One day while he was out on the porch a sudden and violent hailstorm came up. “Oh, oh!” he exclaimed with delight, “it’s walnii/ tandy.” Boy’s Apt Reply. Traveler —Now, what ought little boys say when a gentleman gives them a penny for carrying his bag? Email Boy—’Tain’t enough ’—The Traveling Bag.
WRIGLEYS This new sugar-coated gum delights young aUd old WlL//\\< It “melts in your \3\ mouth” and the gum in the center remains to aid digestion, brighten teeth and soothe mouth and throat. There are the other WRIGLEY friends to choose from, too: a C2B
He Loses Out. “I married that girl because I bought she could cook.‘ She used to lip pancakes in a restaurant window.” “And can’t she cook?” “Naw. Seems the batter was mixed ior her. All she had to do was to jugjle the turnovers and look pretty.”— Louisville Courier-Journal.
one-eleven || g| cigarettes : zM\_ Three Friendly H ffiwOyjF 1 TURKISH A )a®BURLEY * >’/•«* mi vUK FIFTEEN In a new package that fits the pocket— At a price that fits the pocket-book— The same unmatched blend of Turkish. Virginia and Burley Tobaccos ® c ~ Guaranteed by FIFTH AVE. W ■g ■ NKW YORK CITY Sporting Man’s Virtues. Publicity Music. To brag little, to show weil, to crow “Don’t you want the trumpet of fame gently if in luck —to pay up, to own to sound your name?” up, and to shut up, if beaten are the “No,” replied Senator Sorghum. “I virtues of a sporting man, —Oliver want to be in touch with my time. Wendell Holmes. I’<l rather have my name sounded, if —- „ possible, by a saxophone in a jazz orVery young people like to be “free chestra.” thinkers.” When they get old they And it isn’t worth while. Meanest of “isms” is rheumatism. Aspirin WARNING! Say “Bayer” when ypu buy Aspirin. Unless you see the name “Bayer” on tablets, you are not getting genuine Aspirin' prescribed by physicians over 22 years and proved safe by millions for Headache Colds Rheumatism Toothache Neuralgia Neuritis • Earache Lumbago Pain, Pain Accept only “Bayer” package which contains proper directions. Handy “Bayer” boxes of 12 tablets—Ako bottles of 24 and 100—Druggists. Aspirin ta the tr.de mark of Bayer Manufacture of Moaoaeetlcacldeater of Sallcrllcacid
Good Things Going to Waste. A childless couple have a whole yard > of pets which are a delight to the ' children of the neighborhood. Ellsworth, on his return from there the other day, heaved reminiscently and remarked: “My, that would be a nice fambly for some little boy to be horned-
