The Syracuse and Lake Wawasee Journal, Volume 15, Number 38, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 18 January 1923 — Page 2

LOS ANGELES I MAN SAYS IT NEVER FAILS “Tanlac Is my stand-by, and I Wouldn’t think of being without it It has set me on my feet more than once when I bad such bad spells of stomach trouble. I thought I couldn’t get well.” This emphatic statement was made recently by W. C. Wallace, 820 N. Normandy Place, Los Angeles, Calif. “An acid stomach and indigestion caused me indescribable suffering for more than four years," he said. “Awful pains would strike me soon after eating, and I would be almost doubled up In agony. Often I had to take to my bed. and I would lose much weight with every spell. I was told I had ulcers, enlarged stomach and other all- < niebts, but all my efforts to get relief failed. I kept getting worse, and figured I would have to get something to help me or I couldn’t keep going much longer. “I read In the papers where Tanlac was helping others with stomach troubles, so I began taking it. It never failed to straighten me out, and I gained back my lost weight, too. I am more grateful than I can say for the good this medicine has done me, and I do not hesitate to give it my fullest recommendation.” Tanlac Is Hold by all good druggists. Over .V million bottles sold.—Advertisement Necessary Repair*. Mabel—l hear you and your fiance have kissed and made up. Philippa—Yep. And a girl has to • make up a whole lot after one of bls kisses. Children’s handkerchiefs often look hopeless when they come to the laundry. ’Wash with good soap, rinse Ln water blued with lied Cross Ball Blue. —Advertisement Massachusetts Long In Lead. For more than 150 years, from the earliest colonial days. Massachusetts held Hie lead in industrial chemistry in America.

Mr*. Blanch* A. Lewi*. Warren. Ohio.—“ After a serious alege of influenza I took Dr. Pterce’a Golden Medical Discovery a* a tonic tad builder and It benefited me so tnuch that I take the greatest pleasure In recommending it. As a tonic after an acute and prost rating illness Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery Is uneqoaled.” — Mrs. Blanche A. Lewis, 312 Swallow St. Dr. Plerce’B Golden Medical Discovery la a well- known tonic and builder that can be procured ip tablets or liquid from your neighborhood druggist, or send 10c to Dr. Pleree’s Invalid's Hotel In Buffalo, N. Y„ for a trial pkg. of the tablet* and write for free medical advice.

Beauty. Many-of the smartest beauty shops are adding courses in physical culture and have Inst rectors who provide reducing exercises. The theory is that a woman must have a slender figure as a foundation for all beauty. It sometimes happens that the parson who gets a SlO marriage fee profits by the mistake* of other*. A* * rule, the silent partner ha* a good deal to any.

®| |y Your Most Vita) Organs Your kl<fn»p hare the groatmt direct * effect oa your haehh. Inactive, *iuggi»h kidney* caui* more disorder* than any other ocean. Guard them c lowly. If you have headache*, backache*, or a puffin*** under the eye*—take Dodd’s Kidney Pill* — DODD'S, Recoro* mended by good druggist* everywhere. Prompt relief or money back. Large box, 60c. If your dniggiat’i supply is out, send Me direct to wrs umoiu ctk. ma*te m. ma m. t. T»y POO’S | COUGH mmhm| iff ffigSWWMSi U.INW

FEM DEPMT . SeOion Devoted to Attractive Magazine Material

Something to Think About ByF. A. U7ALKER

YOUR TOMORROW AS YOU go about your duties today, acquiring a larger knowledge of your obligations to others and a better understanding of your wrfrk, you are paving your way to a better tomorrow. If you are careful, conscientious, even-tempered and loyal today, determined to make every stroke tel 1 , you will not be lacking in these excellent qualities tomorrow. - By holding steadily to such 8 course, there will come to you gradually a new-born strength which will ease your burdens and Inspire a iftw confidence in your ability. • • • fl Power Is not given to ordinary mortals to go at one stride to the top. The summit of hope can be reached only by repeated steps, sometimes hard and painful, calling for patience and un extraordinary control of the heart, the hand and the tongue. If you succeed In mastering yourself. today, it Is likely that tomorrow will be less Imperious in its demands upon you, and yield a little in its inclination to get you in trouble. Upon the other hand. If you are Indifferent, careless and indisposed to make the best of opportunities today, tomorrow will hold these shortcomings against you, and begin at the breakfast table to make you unhappy. It will follow you as you go to work, snapping at your heels like a surly dog. And when you confront your task you will feel the sweep of contrary cross-currents and inconstant squalls, ready at the first drop of an

Uncommon Sense KMIN BLAKE

■ ■ YOUR GRIEVANCES ’DEFORE you complain, analyze your complaint. The chances are you will find that It Isn't really a complaint at all. For example, many men feel aggrieved because others, doing apparently the same work, are better paid. Watch them a while, and you are pretty sure to find that they are either doing more work or better, work than you are. If they are brothers or cousins of the boss, and are better paid for that reason, charge that up to human nature. You are bound tb run into cases of that sort. They are not grievances, but just the ordinary fact* of life which you have got to meet. If you are aggrieved because your clothes cost too much, find out if you can’t get perfectly good clothes at cheaper prices by looking somewhere else. Nine times In ten you can. And anyway, If you start * little investigation into your personal expenditures you will discover that you are spending, wfthqut any complaint whatever, extravagant amounts on things that you do not need. There is no denying that for most people the fight sos existence l* pretty tough. But it Isn’t tougher for you than it i* for anybody else. And all around you men are getting Into better position*, earning more money, accomplishing important things. And most of them started with exactly the same chunce that you have. Don’t complain of your luck; hard

Hlotner’s Cook Book

It la a great office to make life pleasant, to make it worth living. So far as it la done. It la done chiefly by women, but not by women whose motto is •'Women for women," or "Every woman for herself."—Edward banford Martin. FOOD FOR THE FAMILY XX7E TIRE of the sameness of food, ““ no matter how well prepared and served. "Variety is the spice of life." Let us remember this and vary the menus. Graps Juice. Cook a kettle of grapes with a very little water until the juice has been well drawn from the fruit. Drain and add one cupful of sugar so each quart of the juice. Boil, skim and pour into bottles boiling hot Seal w|th paraffin. Apple juice or the juice* dr any fruit may* be bottled tn the same way and will be nice to use not only as drinks but for pudding sauces and in various other dishes. Scalloped Potato With Ham. , Take stat cupfuls of diced potato, two cupfuls of diced bam. four cupfuls of hot milk, one-third of a cupful of flour, one-third of a cupful of ham fat, one and one-half teaspoonfuls of salt, one-fourth of a teaspoonful of pepper, two tablespoonfuls of parsley. Melt the ham fat, add the flour. Mir until smooth, add hot milk and bring to a boiling point, stirring / 4

\ SYRACUSE AND LAKE WAWASEE JOURNAL

ugly word to make you thoroughly miserable. • . er • It Is too late now for regrets. You have lost a day and are slipping down hill, while the “still small voice” is calling in your ears to be steady, dutlous and thoughtful of your future. Thousands of light-headed, variable young men and women have missed their goal through their unconcern of tomorrow. Instead of looking forward, sharpening their wits, keeping their vision unclouded, add giving each hour the best that is inxthem, they play fast and loose. with today, and thereby misstep with the progressive and fall behind. Though they rail against the Fates, which they feel will bring them the frown of tomorrow, they shun helpful faith and courage, forget their prayers and slip hopelessly down and down to the yawning abyss of despair, too weak to rise or turn their faces toward the still smiling countenance of Hope. <® by McClure Newspaper Syndicate.) luck isn’t a complalnt/it is necessary discipline. It comes to everybody, and unless you can succeed in spite of it, you don’t deserve to succeed. Sickness, bereavement, acctdents you can’t help. They are real grievances. But 90 per cent of your grievances are only fancied. Analyze them and see if that isn't true. (Copyrivht by John Blake.) O He Had Some Fast Food. “Whacha selUn’?” A yawning taxicab driver asked the question of a negro sandwich vender near the Union station. The negro, solemnly drawing back the white napkin covering the contents of his basket, answered: “Ah has some fast food. Ah sells the climbin' bird and the runnin’ boy.” Which was the negro's way of saying squirrel meat and rabbit. —Kansas City Star. I

| SCHOOL DAYS | 4 Gu ——x A F * -Mt mus. Mf. wnaa / f'’ V -—si —T SMeunr , L / X \ I TR** iJ V 4-1 ' ' 'i ktfFO'n'N jII y I <1 I TOtr fn. lILIJ-lX —< J t . I MiwtSWOWe * — J I terwie Swetu \ I R»sh. Ttie ASATETiDAWbfe, rxA. FOR- all WMIiER-

constantly; season. Cut cold boiled potatoes in half-inch dice, dice the ham. Put all in a casserole and bake twenty minutest When serving, add parsley. Detroit Salad Dressing. Take one-fourth of a cupful of mayonnaise, one-fourth cupful of ONCEIS£N®fiH (will You?

------------------- ——— EASY * . I ! By WILL M. MAUPIN ! T BOUGHT my wife a meerschaum pipe And kept it hid away; Until I could hand It to her Upon last Christmas day. For me she bought a collarette— A sealskin beauty, too. She hung it on the Christmas tree And said: “Dear, It’s for you.” , That evening, when 'twas time to dlnC We both sat down to sup. She with the pipe. I with the fur— And traded, even up. (Copyright by WHI M. Maupin.)

MEN YOU MAY MARRY By ETHEL R. PEYSER Ha* a Galoot Lika Thl* Proposed to You 7 Symptom*: He’s awfully smiling and affable. He hasn’t a share in any oil company . . . but ... no one has It on him for oiliness. Slippery! If you think you have him in one hand, he will slip through the other. When he goes anywhere, he can make bitter enemies think that he agrees with both sides. ... It doesn’t matter how many miles of railroad stretches between the two opinions. His clothes look slick enough if you don’t call out the ’Public Service Commission to investigate the dizzy, crag-like edges of collies and cuffs. He always has a small job and is continually oiling his friend's inclinations for a possible new one. IN FACT He is the Original of the "Call-me-oily-Mother-Dear” type and the World’s best Base Slider. Prescription to Future Bride: ■D Some sand in all your food. Absorb This: Os Sliding and Striding, Striding'* Abiding. (© by McClure Newspaper Syndicate.)

heavy cream beaten stiff, one hardcooked egg chopped, two teaspoonfuls of chives, one green onion or shallot both chopped, one tablespoonful of powdered sugar, two teaspoonfuls of cooked chopped beets, the same of parsley, and red pepper, one-half teaspoonful of salt, two teaspoonfuls of caviar, two teaspoonfuls of chill sauce, one-fourth teaspoonful of paprika and one tablespoonful of tarragon vlnearar. Mix thoroughly and allow the mixture to stand in a cool place to become seasoned. Serve with lettuce. — Tip Top Omelet Boil one-bal f cupful of in ilk. add a tablespoonful of butter and mix with one cupful of bread crumbs Season well, add the yolks of three eggs well beaten. Mir In slowly the stiffly beaten whites and brown in a well-buttered frying pan. Newspaper Vntoau) o An Offset “He thinks he’s flying high with hu golf talk.” J “Come back at him with polo.” O-

1 rSS

MAYBE? She: I used to think you were one in a thousand. He: And now you'redlsappolnted because I*m not the other 9H.

Daddy s Fairy Tale zfc'ZVRY GRAHAM BOMMER

BILLIE BROWNIE'S TRIP "Well," said Billie Brownie, as he came back to Brownieland, “I cer-

tainly had an interesting trip, and saw so many wonderful sights. Billie Brownie threw his long brown cap beside him. and sitting in his favorite seat in the hollow of an old woodland tree, he began to tell the other Brownies all be had seen. “I saw a rooster strutting and crowing in a barnyard. He was very proud because it seems that in a poultry show they

“He Was Very Proud.”

had used his picture or the picture of a rooster in announcing and telling about the show. "‘Yes,’ he said, ‘there were ducks, and geese, and pigeons, and hens, and guinea pigs at the show, but the rooster’s picture was the one they had on the tickets and outside the door and in the papers.’ “He was very proud of thaL “ ’Of course,’ he added, as he crowed some more, ’that is Just as it should be.’ 5 “Then I stopped in at a circus for 1 a few moments, and there I saw an act where many of the performers were dressed to look like butterflies, and had wings of some sort which kept them up. “I thought it would be nice if sometime we gave a surprise fancy dress party, and went to visit the fairies dressed up as butterflies of all kinds.” "It would be a fine idea,” said all the other Brownies. So they decided they would go In a very short time —just as soon as they could get their costumes ready. “It was a. very pretty act,” said Billie Brownie, "with the lovely wings of different colors. “And I saw a lot of children having a party on the back porch of a house. “They had dressed up peanuts to look like bugs, and they had a peanut hunt for these things. “Instead of having regular peanuts to hunt for, they hunted for these dressed-up peanuts. It was more fun when one of these were found than when an ordinary peanut would be found, for there were not so many of these, and they had been hidden in very difficult places. “I must tell you how they were made, for I thought we could have a peanut hunt with some of these fixedup peanuts to hunt for as well as the other kind. “The peanuts were painted. Then legs were attached, and the legs were made of pipe cleaners. There were little bits of old feathers for the tall, and the pipe cleaners were painted where they were turned up to look like feet —and the toes were marked in palnL “They had painted eyes, of course. They were very funny in appearance, and I think we could fix up some of these creatures for our next party. The more ideas we get the better it is.” ’•The better it i*,” agreed the other Brownies. "I saw a red-headed woodpecker eating suet on a lilac tree, and there were a few little signs of buds on the lilac tree which made me know that Mistress Springtime had sent word that she’d be visiting us before long. “And I visited some bees in a cellar. They were eating their honey and having a fine time. “Some one was going to make a business of honey and was starting in with these bees in the cellar during the winter time, and as soon as there were enough boxes the work would begin. “The bees said their honey was quite delicious! “And then 1 saw some figs in a fruit store. •They were very angry, for It seems that some one had been In the store,

and when this person was talking she bad said: “1 don’t care a fig for walking,* and her lip had curled as she said ft. <The flgs said they didn’t like their name to be used like that — especially the way people had of saying they wouldn’t give a fig for this, or they didn't care a fig for that The flgs said

FT!

the people sound- Thay Were ytty ed as though they Angry." thought the fig was about as unimportant as could be, and the figs thought it was very rude, of them. “So, you see. I saw lots of things and had a most interesting trip. Yes. whene all is quiet and no one is noticing Billie Brownie he likes to take a trip and see the rights!” His Distinction. A little boy came home very proud because he bad taken part hi organizing a small club. His mother asked: “Are you the president F •No.” The secretary?” “No." -The treasurer?" “No.” , “What are you, then?” Tm the boas of the whole thing; I am the majority I”—Sunshine Bulletin. >

2 or 3 Cans of Baking Powder Are Not Worth the Price of One If they are the “big can and cheap” kind because they may mean baking failures. CALUMET Economy BAKING POWDER

fiUOMH BEST BT TEST

THE WORLD’S GREATEST BAKING POWDER

1 Lazy - “Lazy, Is he?” “Lazy? Wtyy, that man Is so lazy, he’s too tired even to talk about it 1“

5*525 f. o. b. Flint, Mich. Lowest Priced Quality Automobile Every Chevrolet is fully equipped when sold. It has electric lights and starter, gasoline tank in the rear, demountable rims and extra rim and tire carrier, 3-speed transmission and reverse, speedometer and all necessary indicators on the instrument board, curtains open with doors of open models. All closed models have high grade Fisher Bodies with plate glass windows. There is nothing more to buy but the license. Costs least per mile for gasoline and oil There are more than 10,000 dealers and service stations throughout the country. Repairs are made on a low-cost flat rate system. & for Economical Transportation MH Prices F. O. B. Flint, Michigan SUPERIOR Two Pumnser Roadster . .$5lO SUPERIOR Five Passenser Tourin* . . 525 SUPERIOR Two Passen*er UtiUtv Coupe 680 SUPERIOR Four Pamnger Sedaneae . 850 SUPERIOR Five Paaaenger Sedan ... 860 SUPERIOR Light Delivery 510 Chevrolet Motor Company Detroit, Michigan

Notice! Is Your Farm For Sale? If so, write us complete description and price. We have successfully sold farms ranging from 100 to 1200 acres in more than 12 states, which is positive proof of the soundness of our methods. No obligation on your part by answering this advertisement. National Realty & Development Co. W. A. Caudill, General Manager ' Todd Building, Louisville, Kentucky

WESTERN CANADA Wheat Crops A jT Canada so the world’s H producer of wheat—second only to ■ the United States—yet only about 12% of ■ the tillable area has been worked. Yields of 40 bushels of wheat » ■ per acre are not uncommon. Oats have given aa high as 100 tfIUnKL <u-S ■ bushels per acre, while 40 to 50 bushels per acre are ordinary * ■ yields; barley and rye in like proportion. Cattle and horses _JWNKq- 'M ■ thrive on the native grasses which grow abundantly and corn -«»»»,.’ <E®lssf' V ■ aad sunflower culture are highly successful. * * ■ Stock Raising, Dairying and ■ Mixed Farming ■ secure for the industrious settler ample returns for his energy. \ <’ ■ Clearing the cost of one’s farm with a single year’s crop has an H appeal, and hasbeen of Western Canada w". climate, attractive social conditions, good neighbors, churches, ■ schools, telephones, excellent markets and snipping facilities ■■ *ne¥e Hb» happy as well as prosperous. ■ For illustrated - flB reduced railway rates, write ■ W. S. NETHERY, 82 East Rich Street, ■ Columbus, Ohio t M. J. JOHNSTONE, 116 Monument Place, Indianapolis, Ind. wctmH Ej/k W JcAarlll

Don’t let a BIGCAN or a very low price mislead you. Experimenting with an uncertain brand is expensive — because it Wastes time and money. The sales of Calumet are over 150% greater than that of any other baking powder.

• A Doubtful Collegian. Jones (to college senior) —When do , you expect to graduate? > College Senior—Every year.—Judge;,