Newspapers / Jackson County Journal (Sylva, … / April 20, 1923, edition 1 / Page 3
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"Made Mo Well end Strong jukotues whun who is huhifiil ior PE-RU-NA mj ?MMk tad boweta,batbr tbaaMoC Fe-rn-sa and Mum-Ub. I uiittul ?troMMHa. latapluiipafewfrjtitai i. fh? hAQM.1* ITm. flanil Asat. lattM SUT, Jllchoia, lan l?m.Gmy^**iweli|aeeHwe eitAwe __ b quit* as food ? mdr far aatanfc of UMafcMMeh.be* Stts&Sfossttems lot ertrydvr Ul*. . Send to tb* Parana Comtpt toukltlmmt mmtlrml mhirn. TaUrfs or Liqnl SoU Erajvlcie Not Entirely Artificial. "I was deceived In you," complained ttie husband. "Your teeth are hand made, your complexion is artificial and your hair is another's. Are you wholly faNe?" "No. not wholly," she replied. "I have a mind of my own, as you very well know." And lie was forced to admit the bitter truth of her statement. ? Bos ton Kvening Transcript. An Important Point Judge ? "Five dollars or ten days In jail." Prisoner? "What kind of a jail have you got?" Worse Still. "Your husband has been 111?" asked the vicar who was paying his monthly call. "Yes," replied the worried-looking ?ronian. "He hns been feeling very bad. I do my best to please him, but nothing seems to satisfy him." "Is his condition critical?" "It's worse than critical," she an swered, with a sigh; "It's abusive." ? London Tit-Bits. Question. "My youngest sister Is engaged." "Well, girlie-:" "I was just wonder ing." "About what?" Jbr Economical Transportation Chassis Only Utility Express Truck $ f. o. b. 575 Hint? i -J Mich. Utility Express is the lowest-priced quality truck in the world capable of fast heavy-duty service. It hauls your heavy loads quickly and economically. It is reliable. Long grades and deep mud are mastered by it without racing the motor or boiling the water because the 3-speed transmission provides correct gear ratios to meet any condition of load or road. v Yon get fast, heavy-duty service at the lowest operating and maintenance cost with this truck. It leads in high mileage on gasoline, oil and tires, living up fully to the Chevrolet reputation for unequalled economy. Prices f. o. b. Flint , Michigan Superior 2 Pais. Roadater .$310 Superior 5 Paaa. Sedan . >$860 Superior 5 Paw. Touring . 525 Superior Light DaUveay . . 510 Superior 2 Pais. Utility Coop* 680 Superior Commercial Chasiia 425 Superior 4 Pus. Scdanctta . 850 Utility Exptxaa Track Ch??ria 57 5 Chevrolet Motor Co., Detroit, Mich* Division of General Motors Corporation ,i i Dealer* and Service Station* Everywhere flhutradoa at left ah omo Utility Exprata Track with atandard geaaral puipoM body Instead ofKalsomi te-or Wall Paper FARM LIVE STOCK ? < EWES IN HEALTHY CONDITION Car* of Flock Hsu Important Relation to Financial Roturna From Lamb Crop. (Prepared br the United Stetee Department of Agriculture.) The care of the fleck before lambing has an Important relation to^he finan cial returna which may be expected from the lamb crop. Ewes which are In poor condition and lacking in vigor will produce a large percentage of small, weak lambs. Such lambs re quire more care and feed to develop rapidly enough to reach the market early when the prices are usually highest. If the ewes are thin in flesh at lambing time they will not produce a good flow of milk. This retards growth and stunts the lambs. A small, thin lamb nearly always seNs as a cull on the market. There is usually a large supply of culls with little de mand; consequently culls always sell for the lowest price. Sheep producers will find that It pays well, from a mar ket standpoint, to have the ewes in strong, vigorous condition at lambing time. If good winter pasture Is available it is comparatively easy to keep the flock in good condition. Fall wheat or other pasture with clover or alfalfa hay for dry roughage, makes an excel lent ration for pregnant ewes, and the exercise which they get while grazing will bring them to lomblBg In a vigor ous condition. Where clover or alfal fa is not available to supplement the pasture, oat straw or corn stover with Corrledale and Columbia Ewjb and Lambs at United States Sfceep Ex periment 8tatien, Dubolt, Idaho. approximately quarter pound of cot ton-seed meal per day, may be fed. Where there is no pasture and it !? necessary to feed throughout the win ter season, a ration of three or four pounds per head per day of clover or alfalfa hay alone may be used. Ap proximately quarter to half pound of corn should be added three to four weeks before lambing. A more economical ration which may be used is two t* three poands of alfalfa or clover hay aod two pounds of silage. The silage must be of good quality and not frozen or voldy. Salt should be kept before the flock at all times; an unlimited supply of fresh water should also bo available. It Is important that the ewes get a moderate amount of exwclse, niwj where the flock is not en pasture the rough feed should be placed seme dis tance from the sheds ar barn so that the flock will get exercise In going to and from their feed Care must always be taken that preg nant ewes are not chased by dogs or jammed through narrow gates or doors, as any rough treatment will cause a large per cent of loss of lambs and perhaps of ewes. The shepherd's problems for the lambing season are very largely solved If lie has brought the ewe fleck to the beginning of the season In good flesh and thrifty condition. In addition he has made the first step towards pro ducing a product that will bring tlve largest market returns. LIVE STOCK FACTS i An old horse, like an old man, feels | the cold. ? ? ? The brood sow la the backbone of j the swine herd. ? ? * Use crude oil on the hogs to kill lice during the winter months. * * * Squaw fllnf corn or any of the early flint varieties are excqjjent for hog- j glng off. ? * ? As a bog poature alfalfa cannot be excelled, and the hogs do not require the attention that other stock do aa they do not bloat. Pasturing the field when wet damages the -crop, and wIH eventually mean a poor stand. ? ? ? Several extensive hog raisers use | houses without floors with apparent success. If plenty of fresh bedding Is kept In the houses the pigs will come along all right ? ? ? A good mineral mixture In which to | feed the salt Is: two bosh els of wood ashes or charcoal, ons peck of salt, one peck of air-slaked lime. ? ? ? The right kind of wtter and plenty of It Is supplied only when there Is good fresh water before the sows at all times. GOOD ROADS a - ? ?- ? ? ? ? > ROADS PAY FOR THEMSELVES Hard-Surf aced Highways Effect Big Saving in Maintenance and Qaeellne Casta. Tests made in many states to deter mine the actual cost of paved roads have shown that hard-surfaced highr ways effect such t>ig savings in main tenance and gasoline costs that they pay for themselves in from 10 to IS years. The estimates were reached only aft er careful checking of first cost as against traffic, comparative mainte nance on other type roads and exact experiments on the resistance on dlf Improved Roads Save Gasoline Bills. ferent road surfaces to motor vehicles from which the saving in gasoline is evolved. Fred R. White, chief engineer of the Iowa state highway commission, in ? statement issued recently said : "High way traffic has outgrown the road. This is not the fiftlt of the county en gineer, snpervlsor or highway commis sion. It will do no good to fire the engineer, supervisors or highway com mission. New men will be Just as Ignorant and still hare the same prob lems to solve. "Iowa, In highway matters. Is In the position of the boy who ha? outgrown his clothes. It Isn't his fault. It will do no good to scold or abuse him. The remedy is to get him a new and larger suit and also make allowanco for his continued growth." GOOD ROADS LENGTHEN LIFE ?r ior to Construction of Improved Highways Farmer* Led Compar atively Isolated Live*. Anything which contribute? to the physical or mental well-being of the individual helps to prevent disease to reduce disability and to lengthen life. Prior te the devrtopment of the automobile, and the building of oar good roads, most of the inhabitants ef oar raral districts led comparatively Isolated lives. The difficulty met in getting about the country, and tb? strenuousness of farm work, kept most of the farmers, their families, and their employees, tied down to the farm the greater part of the year. As a result |>f the monotony snd constant toll, men and womoo exhausted their streogth and energy early, became pre maturely old, and were often in capacitated through lack of proper rec reation and relaxation. *) . ROADS IN NATIONAL FORESTS Government Has Appropriated $94,542,. 092 for Building Highway* and Trail*. A total of |34?4fc062 has been ap propriated by the government to the states for roads and trails within or adjacent to the national forests. Total expenditures of federal and co-opera-, tlve funds amonntlug to $22,316, T^A have already been disbursed. To date, 4,700 miles of roads and 0,111 tfillea of trail have been constructed and 8,144 miles of road and trail have\been repaired and Improved, says the forest service, United States Department of Agriculture. GOOD ROADS BUILT IN 1922 Total of 28,000 Miles Constructed Last Year? Half of It With Fed ei%l Aid. A total of 28,000 miles of good roads was built in tlie United States last year, or a distance equal to ten tlmea the width of the country. Half of this mileage has been built by the state governmenta la conjunction with federal aid. The remaining 14.000 miles were obstructed independently of federal Pay for 8 advice Rendered. If the public surfaces a road and saves the owner of the rolling stock a large percentage of the cost of oper ating his car, the owner should be re quired to pay back a fair share of th? savings. This should not be called a tax, it would be a charge for service rendered. Concrete Paving Price*. Concrete paving prices during 1923 have been averaging on contracts for 125 miles of 18-foot pavement, appro& Itnatfiy {26.400 * mile. ?> FROM GENERATION TO GENERATION ? Mothers Advise Their Daughters to Rely upon Lydia EL Pinkham's Vegetable Compound to Keep Them in Health A Mother's Advice Prevents Corcna, N. Y.? "I bad a terrible pain In my left side and had to go to bod every so often. Doctors had told me I most be operated on, bat I do not believe in the knife and would rather suffer than go through it My mother also did not believe in it and she made me take Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound because it had helped her. It has also helped me for I am better and able to do all my work. I recommend your medi cine and give yon permission to use my letter as a testimonial."? Mrs. J. Busch, Jr., 11 S. Railroad Avenue. Corona, N. Y. Mahoningtown, Pa.? "I would like to say a few words about Lydia E. Pinkham'a Vegetable Compound. About a year ago I thought it would be necessary for me to take my daughter out of school. She was losing weight, was nervous, and when she would come home from school she would drop into a chair and cry, and say, ' Mamma, I don't believe I can go to school another day I* I A Sickly Child Bve her Lydia E. Ptakham's Vege t>le Compound and now she is a healthy, happy, hearty, strong girl and weighs 120 pounds. She baa no difficulty in doing her 'gym ' work, and Bhe works at home every night and morning, too. I am a mother who can certainly praise your medicine, and if it will be of any benefit yea may use this letter as a reference." ?Mrs. George E- Whitacre, 621 W. Madison Ave., Mahoningtown, Pa. Every girl wants to be healthy and strong, and every mother wants her daughter to do well in school and to enjoy herself at all times. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is a splendid medicine for voung girls just entering womanhood. Mothers may depend upon it. Remem ber it is prepared from roots and herbs, contains nothing that can in jure, and tends to tone up and strengthen the organs concerned, so that they will work in a healthy and normal manner. For nearly fifty years it has been used by women of all ages, and these women know its great value. Let it help your daughter and yourself. ZoHor Springs, March St Fls.1 1820 1 Anrfo-Aiacrican Drag Co., 215 Pulton St., New York. Dear Sirs: lam tiring Mrs. Whitlow's Syrup. It saved irybaby from dying of colic, which she had for Hires rr-onth.".. Some one advised me to get Mrs. Winslow's Syrup and I did. Youra truly, Warns <m rtqvsit) I _ !| Colic is quickly overcome by this pleas ant, satisfactory remedy, which relieves diarrhoea, flatulency and constipation, keeping baby healthy and happy. Non- narcotic, non-alcoholic. MRS. WINSLOW'S SYRUP The Infants' and Children '? Regulator Formula on oerylabsL Write for free booklet containing Wren from mothers. At All Druggists. ANGLO -AMERICAN DRUG CO. 21*417 Fulto. Stnrt NEW YORK Gmtnl Ae?f: Monti T. SUM* A Ob. . Jw. . Htm Y~hJ*nmU. UaUtm , ft**? Oyster 80 Years Old. An oyster eighty years old hss been taken from Delaware bay. It Is report ed. Scientific Investigators agree and assert that the age of an oyster Is In dicated by the ridges or wateriines on its shell, Just as the nge of a tree is Indicated by the annual rings that form on Its trunk. A ridge appears on an oyster every year, according to these savants, up to the fortieth year. After that the shell takes on one only every ten yeers. This venerable Delaware oyster had 44 ridges; hence it was eighty years old. . Don't Forget Cuticura Talcum When adding to your toilet requisite* An exquisite face, skin, baby and dust ing powder and perfume, rendering ether perfumes superfluous. You may rely on It because one of the Cuticara Trio (Soap, Ointment and Talcum), 25c each everywhere. ? Advertisement. Net That? We want our friends to think about uk, but not ?o reflect on us. ? Boston Transcript Dr. Pear's "D?juS Shot" la powerful bat aata. On* doae ia ?eou*ta to exj>*l Worm* er Tapeworm. No caator oU aeoaaaarr. A*v. A woman doesn't really have faith in a man until other people lose It. Don't Hid* Thorn With ? Veil} Remove Thea With Otlun??D?uhl* Strength This preparation for the treatment of fr?okl?? Is uanally so wooiafil in removlpc freckles and giving a clear, beautiful com plexion t bat It U sold under guarantee to irfocd the noMjr if It fails. DooTt bid* year treektee under a veil; vet aa ounce of Otblaa and remove them. Bra* the Bret few application* should show a wonderful Improvement, some of tbs er freoklee vanishing entirety. sure to aak the druggist tor the double-strength Otbiae; It la this that io ?old on the money-back guarantee. An Up-to-Date Young F Two high -school girls, short-skirted, bob-haired, bright-eyed and talkative, sat in a downtown motion picture the ater while on the screen before them a story of love was unfolded. The central figure was a man whose chief distinction, outside his motion pic ture success, Is that of a certain brand ef trousers which once were mimed for kirn. One girl sighed. She turned to her companion and whispered: "Oh, Nell, wouldn't you Just love to hate a man like that?" ? IndicnapolU News. He is n wise man wlie wjurtes no en ergy on pursuits for which he Is not fitted. ? Gladstone. IF SICK, BIUOUS! STARTYOUR LIVER Don't Take Calomel! "Dodson's LiverTone" Acts Better and Doesn't Gripe, Salivate or Make You Sick? Dont Lose a Day's Work? Read Guarantee! Ugh ! Calomel makes you sick. If s horrible! Take a dose of the danger ous drag tonight and tomorrow yon may lose a day*? work. Calomel la mercury or quicksilver, which causes necrosis ?f the bones. Calomel, when It comes Into contact with sour bile crashes Into ft, break ing It This Is when yon feel tha? awful nausea and cramping. If you are sluggish and "all knocked out," if your liver Is torpid and bowels con stipated, or you have headache, dizzi ness, coated tongue, If breath Is bad or stomach sour, just try a spoonful of harmless Dodson Liver Tone to night. Here's my guarantee? Go to any drag store and get a battle erf Dodson's Liver Tone for a few cents. Take a spoonful and if It doesn't straighten you right up and make yon feel fine and vigorous I want yon to go back to the store and get your money. Dod son's liver Tone la destroying the sale of calomel because It is real liver med icine; entirely vegetable, therefore It can not salivate or make you sick. Makes Old Waists Like Mew PitMi Fadeless Dyes? dyes or fiats as you wish
Jackson County Journal (Sylva, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 20, 1923, edition 1
3
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