Newspapers / Jackson County Journal (Sylva, … / May 4, 1923, edition 1 / Page 3
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give your diges tion a "kick" with VVRIGLEVS. Sound teeth. ? appetite and proper digestion mean MUCH to your health. WBIGLEY'S Is ? helper In all this %vork ? a pleasant* beneficial plclc-me-ap. $3.50 BY MAIL .An exclusive fountain pen thai suits. Lbe exacting taste, made of thx latest Red Car dinal Rubber. Fitted with 14-ikarat ? ae4ld gold pen point, gold-filled clip, .and :J*>x jever tilling device. Hand ground and iridium pointed. Satisfaction frua rairteed. MODESTY FOUNTAIN I?E>' CO. 132 Nussuu Street New V'ork.City J.1STKN ! PORTO RICO POTATO PXAJST3; treated and Inspected. All leading ivarlHtiea pepper and tomato plants shipped in wwd orates and moss- packed. All plants ons price. 1.000, $1 35: 4,000. $5; 10.090, $12. ^JEx pres^ "nl>- PITTS PLANT CO.. Pitts. ?a MiilioiiH Porto Klco Potato Plant* ? Govern ment-inspected. 1.000. $2, 5.000. J!) &0 prepaid. 1.000. $1.65: 10,000, $15 express collect. -Sa.?as fsctlon guar. Conger Plant Co.. Tlfton. Oa. IN I'SE FOR 35 YKARS The Quick and Sure Cure for MALARIA, CHILLS, FEVER AND LA OUrPS It Is a Powerful Tonic and Appetiser Will cure that tired feeling, pains In 'bacjc, ilmbs and head. Contains no qnlnliie^ ?ruenlc or hablt-fermlns fnrrf illril '22 ?cpa Reduces its, Thickened, Swollen Tissues, Curbs, Fltte Tendons Soreness Bruises or Strains; Spavin Lameness, allays fain. Does not bliatec, re mow* -the1 hair o^lay up the horsa. Only) a few drops required at ?anh _ application. $250 a botfleJrt[ Ists or delivered. Book 1 A tree.; W. F. TOUNG, lac.. 319 T ?a*SL. Via*?*U. Sa*. BABIES LOVE MALVMOmsnmi Ik Uub' CUa'tbiihhr Plaaaant to line-alaiaat fee take Guaranteed porely rw ' lolateiy harmleia. overcome* colic, tatolaujr end It quickly dlarrboM other The formula like diaordeta. open pnbfiahed nla appear* an .?very label. {AtAUDfmuM* Oh, Joy! What Comfort! No more annoyance of offensive odors of the feet or body. Cobrael the Wonder Powder of the age. Prevents exces sive perspiration, heals that sore and chaffed condition, destroys bad odors. Don't delay, send 50c for a full eize can. THE COBRAEL CO. 6230 McClellaa Ave. CHICAGO, ILL. I Have you I RHEUMATISM I Lumbago or Gout? I TakaRHBCMACIDF to remove Uaeaaae I and drive the potion from the SJMMR. ? "BHKCUCtM 01 TJfl I MIDI I rrn auacaiTtaa oi the ocraua" At All DracKlate I Ju. Ba3y ft Sea, WMesale Dutribatart V livestock"! ?I,/ FACTS , > I HIGH-CLASS HORSES NEEDED W?ll*Bred Animals That Have Been Properly Fed and Broken Aro Always in Demand. (Prepared by Ukb United States Department at Agriculture.) The United States Department of Agriculture calls attention to the fact that there Is a market for high-class, well-bred horses and mules. The small umfle\ jlopedi animal of . poor quality is always a drug on the mar ket, but the offspring of good brood mares bred to pure-bred sires of the right tjflpe, if properly developed and broken 'to harness, nearly always find a rea*$y market. Figures based on the 1920 census show 'that about 200,000 fewer colts were iproduced in ttoe United States in 191? than were needed to supply re placements pf horses und mules on faums alone. Atwiut 225,000 high-class animals are neetied for annual replace ment in cities, making a shortage of more than 40CU900 hbrses and mules produced in'th? ffJnited States in 1913, fallow the number needed for replac ing losses. The department recommends that farmers prodaoe replacements enough, tn connection with general farming, to ; 'toe able to s?fll'off the older v/ork ani mals each .year. The market 4e i mands well-broken and trained horses : that will laafl. ; a long period of years. Therefore, iff ft he colts are broken ?*t about three jyears of age and nsefl <on the farm a few years, these young horses, together with the breeding stock, will (furnish the power for ?he average farm and the young stodk -rvlll lie increasSnK in sale value. Horses Good Horses and Mules Should In crease ttneome of General -Farmer. reach Umr maximum sale vulue at about six, years of age, Jind .the sur plus animals should be sold at this time. YV-flU-bred horses uu<l mules that have be^fi properly feul .am! well broken a?e usually salable ;at.a;|w<?lit able flgiure and should Increase the Income ?futhe general farmer. MATERg&LS FOR HOG -MORS ( Concrete 4s Sanitary, but jQfterXold and iQamp ? Animals JJefluie^ <?Jeant Warm Mest. \ 1 The aguicuHural eriginflwinsidrrtslon at UniveMi?y farm has been .retching Inquiries -?MUcerning the <?ustcuclion of bog bulges, especially a? .to the material to .use for floor*-. , "The hogiJiouse floor its ?eiy injftor taut if th? iteuiiding is to be permanent and satisfactory," says PjwI. Jfcl. .li. White of <tb^ division. "Hags desire a clean, wanm dry and v?tl-h?dded 1 nest, and ibis requires aue .In itbe . choice and placing of the miOeirjHk; Jjm ithe floor. "Concrete <nw Ices a sanitary fto?r,lbi;t iut I? oftep cxttrl and damp aud jaot sflrable for *mall pigs. A rtme.vtfbie itl t?or of \vow3 lor the nest to be uaell ?At farrowing ititnae is a great :?ent. Cork fauuck or creosoted bdo^lss ritta also used fier the floor of the meat. -"Hollow buBfling tile laid on vnelU < drained grnvel <tavered with about :lnch of sand at*? with the joints be itwtex. n the tile Cited with sand makes a d^T, warm flaar. In some cases aan inch <of concrete over the tile is pne ferrefi, as it makes a more easily ?aleanei surface, alttiough not so dry." A ?ood grooming cosis no money and is u^unl to two quarts of oats. ? * liujyijeeri; say that a Iwcse can do the work o? ten men. ? * ? Hie broc.d tow does not need an ex pensive ajud .elaborate liog bause for shelter. * ? ? Hogs, wbeo fed a small graia ra tion, will make rapid and profitable growth un alfalfa. ? * ? During the months that thg farm horses stand idle or have compara tively light work to do, a saving can be made in the feed costs by feeding a greater quantity of roughage than ttm horses get when nt heavy work, i ? ? ? ? While the ewes are lambing, the suc cessful shepherd watches the flock closely and is always at band to give the ewe or lambs assistance when needed. v ? ? ? No fanner need hesitate In starting with sheep because he has not suffi cient barn room for them. In fact, sheep do pot do 8o well when housed in a close barn with other 'inimals. <?' ? ?' * A sow that has had proper rations n to the farrowing time will be quiet ?c the time of giving birth te.toer litter. IMPROVED UNIFORM WTERNATIG^M Sunday School ' Lesson ' (By REV. P. B. F1TZWATER. D. IX, Teacher of English Bible In the Moody Bible Institute of Chicago.) Copyright, 1923. Western Newspaper Union. LESSON FOR APRIL 29 RUTH THE FAITHFUL DAUGHTER LESSON TEXT ? Boole of Ruth. GOLDEN TEXT? Thy people shall be my people ana thy God my God. ? Ruth 1:16. PRIMARY" TOPIC? The Story of Ruth. ?JUNIOR TOPIC? Ruth and Naomi. INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR TOP IC ? Ruth's Choice and Its Outcome. YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADULT TOP IC? The Secret of Ruth's Noble Life. \ L Ruth's 'Connection With Naomi (Chapter 1 :1-15). On account of famine ia Bethlehem of Judah, Naomi with her fcusband and two sous sojourned in the load of Moab. After the death of her ?husband her two sons married Moablt iali women. After a time her sons died ?also. After the death of her sons .Naomi resolved to return to her home land, having heard that the Lord had ?visited His people in giving theui 'bread. They went to Moab to escape (trouble but only got into more. It was not until Naomi was thus chas tised that she resolved to return. Naomi had the good sense to recognize ''that the hand of the Lord was upon her for good. When the time came for her to go Ruth and Orpah accom panied her, for a distance. This she < permitted but determined place be fore them frankly the difficulties which would necessarily confront them. It was this frank presentation of the dif- j Acuities and her repeated urgiug them! to go back that called forth from Ruth the expression of her noble choice. II. Ruth's Noble Choice Much as Naomi loved her daughters-in law, she would not have them go ?Into this matter blindly. She told them the worst that could come upon them. This principle ought to be carried out by us in all our relations Ln life. In 'busi ness the spirit of frankness should be manifest. At botne we should deal with each other in fhe most straight forward way. H?e same thing should characterize <Mir behavior in the church and society. Note -the difficulty which confronted Ruth : No Cliaaoe t>? Mtirr.y Again. Naomi told her that she had no more sons for whom she could wait. In that day to be unmarried was the greatest disgrace. Society differed then from now. 2. She Must fiegmunae .Her Gods. Her Idolatrous worship could not be curried on ia .the lunti where God's people dwelt. Tills was delicately touched upon when <*npmli went back (v. 15). Orpah went back wh&n It was plain there was no chance to get a husband. Now Naomi .puts an addi tional test up?n Roth, .that of giving up her religion, iliuth was equal to the occasion. Her wind wttc fully made up. She was wisHing to .accept as her God the one wfco was able to produce in his subjects the liability of cimracter she had observed in Naomi. Naomi's very frankness to dealing with her caused Itutii to fee more determined to cast her lot with iher. ItuUh'-fi position was so definite ?d unfaltering that the very expressions have come down to us in words vnhieti "no poetry lias out-rivaled, and bm pathos Jias ex ceeded, and which has gone through centuries with the mutiie that will not let them be forgotteau" She was de termined to share NaonTs journey, 'her ! home, her lodge, her lot In life, and her ?grave in death, whatever that would (be. To crown it all she would re nounce her heathen gods and iwrshrp jJehovah. , III. Blessings Which Attended JtntMfs [Faithfulness. Ruth was never sorry tfar her choice, because ? a. She Found the True God (1:16). instead of her heathen gods who were <nnat)!e to help her she now had a living God, the God of Israel, as her <God. 2. .She Found Human. Friends. (Chapter 2). As she went to glean in ibe field she was led to the field of Boaz, a *uan of wealth and grace. The servants of Boaz treated her with con sideration. Even 'Boaz gave instruc tions for special consideration to be given her. 3. A Good Husband and a Happy Home (3-4). She not only secured a husband, but a man of God who had an abundance of this world's goods* 4. An Honored Place in the Israel itlsli Nation (4:13-17). Though she bad to forsake her own people she be came one of a nobler people. 5. She Became a Link In the Chain of Christ's Ancestry (4:18-22 compare Matthew 1:5). The one who fully de cides for Christ and gives up all for him shall get a hundred-fold In this life, and in the world to come, eternal life. Sharing Misfortunes. Some people think that all the world should share their misfortunes, though they do not share In the sufferings of any one else. ? A. Polncelot. Those Whe Mean to Be True. Those who honestly mean to be true contradict themselves more rarely than those who try to be consistent? O. W. Holmes. Fearless Minds. Fearless minds climb soonest unt* crowns.? Shakespeare. / "Ni PE-RU-NA FOR CATARRH OF THE HEAD AND HOSEl fetal Mr Ml tall, "I began using FE-BU-NA Tablets three yean ago for catarrh of the head and nose. Was un able* to do anything. I saw a decided improvement after one box and after Tablets or Llqvld using five boxes be- 5 lieve I am cored as there has been no return of the dis ease in two years." Fifty years of use fulness is the best guarantee of Pe-rn na merit. <? > Sold Everywhere 'Enslavement of Negroes. The enslavement of the African race for commercial purposes had Its be ginning In southern Europe about half a century before the discovery of America by Columbus. It was carried to Central and South America by the Spaniards, and It existed there a hun dred years before being transplanted to the English colonies of North Amer ica. From a small beginning made in Virginia the institution grew and spread to other colonies as they were founded, and at the opening of the Revolution there were about 600,000 slaves in the colonies. A woman's face may be her fortune, or the making of some druggist's for tune. PUCE GUARD OVER TONGUE "For Evil Is Wrought by Want of Thought as. Well as Want of Heart." 1 ? ? ? ? Whether we give occasion or not, there are those who in certain moods will speak spitefully of anybody, and there are some who go about speaking evil of everybody. Yet these very people, even those whose lips rarely open but to utter something malicious, may have good ness In their hearts which would pre vent them from malicious action. If we judge them by their deeds we may find them no worse than their neigh bors ? perhaps better ; If we judge them by their words we have to con demn them severely. But in reality the least part of the matter is that which concerns our selves; tiie serious part Is that which concerns the character of the back biter. The whole character is vitiated and perverted by this unhappy habit; it proceeds from an entire lack of self restraint, and can only grow from bad to worse, till the person is a slave of the tongue instead of being its master. Society would be unbearable if everybody spoke according to mood, impulse or physical condition ? Arthur L. Salmon, in the Chicago Daily News. Cuticura Soothes Itching Scalp. On retiring gently rub spots of dan druff and itching with Cuticura Oint ment. Next morning shampoo with Cuticura Soap and hot water. Make them your everyday toilet preparations nnd have a clear skin and soft, white hands. ? Advertisement STUDY SECRETS OF NATURE Writer Suggests Effective Method of Making Work for Hands That Are Idle. Dispersing clouds by magnetized sand is only half the trick. How to make 'em is the other half. Probably making clouds is the piore difficult half, although it is only evaporation on a large scale. It Is a problem in heat and moisture. All the^e matters are something on which to bHsy the In finite human mind. And yet millions of us think our most satisfying en deavor is to "kill time." Couldn't we kill time quite as effec tively by studying some of the secrets of nature? Here are men who have been doing intellectual stunts in pry | Ing into those secrets. For want of "nothin* else to do," why can't we all dabble a little in the same pastime? Give us a laboratory and let us go to work with due safeguards against blowing ourselves up. May not thousands more of us play at chemistry, physics, mechanics and so on? ? St. Louis Globe-Democrat. Near Enough. California contributor reports hav ing overheard this conversation: Customer ? Give me 25 cents worth of New England codfish. Clerk ? We have none from New England, but we have some from Massachusetts. Cust- ner? That's near enough. /Gimme that. ? Boston Transcript. WOMEN OF MIDDLE AGE Much Interest Being Shown in the Large Num ber of Women Safely Carried Through the Change of Life by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound The Following Letters Are Impressive Owing to modern methods of living, few woman approach this perfectly natural change without experiencing very annoying and often painf al symp toms. Those dreadful hot flashes, nervousness, headaches, melancholia __ and irritability are only a few of the symptoms incident to this trying period of a woman's life, and the following letters prove the value of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound to overcome these abnormal conditions. " Flsherville, Ky. ? "For several months I was under the doctor's care as he said my nervousness, chills, hot flashes and weakness was caused by the Change of Life, but I did notseem to get any better. I was not able to work ana spent most of my time in bed. A friend called to see me and asked me to try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and I cannot tell you bow much good the medicine did me, as I had sucn a hard time be fore taking it. I can only advise every woman passing through the Change of Lire to take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, as it did so much for me." ? MraEDWARD B. Neal, Star Route, flsherville, Ky. A Michigan Woman Helped Ionia, Michigan.? "I was passing through the Change of Life and had been under the doctor's care without any relief. A friend in Lansing, Mich., asked me to try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and I feel fifty per cent better already. If any one in this condition doubts the ability of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound to help them I will gladly answer their letters."? Mrs. Max W. Hahn, 537 N. Jefferson Street, Ionia, Mich. A New York Woman Helped Syracuse, N. Y.? "I was used up with nervousness, weakness and hot flashes so 1 could nardly keep around, and could not get out much on ac count of those awful prickly feelings. I read about Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound helping another woman with symptoms like mine. My husband got some for me, and after taking it five months I can get around and even do my housework, washing and ironing included, and my friends can see what a change it has made in me. "?Mrs. Sidney Humphrey, 826J4 , , _ _ Burnet Avenue, Syracuse, N. Y. Lydia E. Pinkham's Private Text-Book upon "Ailments Peculiar to Women " will be sent you free upon request. Write to the Lvdia E. Pink ham Medicine Co., Lynn, Massachusetts. This book contains valuable information. The Real Issue. "Doggone it, Bringsley. I don't know what is going to become of the country. Things are going to the dogs.'' "Your business slow?" "No, not that; but last night my partner led the king when I held the ace, and when I came back with the ace to hold lead and kill the suit she trumped my ace. and then got the Idea diamonds was trumps when I had made it hearts. I tell yuh, women are getting too darned Independent!" GREAT ARTISTS IN DISCORD Really Happened. Green hands are generally taken on at the department stores during the holiday rush and doubtless It was one of those who made the following break : Customer ? I'm looking for a copy of "Beyond the Desert" (by Alfred Noyes). Flustered-Looking Clerk? I don't think we have It. (Turns to regular clerk) ? Have "we "The Bee on the Desert"? ? Boston 'Transcript. Sensible Chap. There was a man who never wrote an acceptance to an invitation without adding W. P. His friends asked him what the letters meant? if they stood for "weather permitting." "No," was his reply; they stand for "wife permitting." ? Boston Transcript. Famous Italian Painters Evidently Were Not Easy Persons to * Get Along With. In the golden ag?s ot' art in Italy/ Michelangelo, Leonardo and Itaphuel painted side by side In Florence for a sllort time. There was continual dis cord between Leonardo and Michel angelo causing the latter to leave Florence. Not to be outdone in cour tesy or discourtesy, Leonardo departed for France. Although we should like to think of the masters living in har mony, It would seem tlfat considerable friction existed among them. Michelangelo, say his commentators, had a particularly caustic tongue. He could not brook criticism. Francia. the painter and goldsmith, who went to see a bronze statue of Pope Julius II, or dered by that pontiff and which the master had Just finished, was thought to have censured it. After calling him a dunce before the people standing near, Michelangelo remarked to a son of Francia, noted for his beauty: "The living figures made by the father are handsomer than those , ? " . -j* ? \ Keep* Off Rust. A few drops of linseed oil applied with a cloth to the outside of the gas stove or the inside of the oven will Evening I keep the stove from rusting and will make it easier to care for. Here's die Food-Iron Nature intended you to hive ?t Nuts I \ ??t J ?> V. KIND and skilful Mother Nature planted under the outer eoat of the kernels Qfher best food-grains a store of iron for human use. Many present day foods are robbed of this and other vital qualities in the extra "refinement" of preparation. Grape-Nuts, that famous wheat-and-malted-barley food, supplies iron, phosphates and vitamin from the natural grain; and in its splendid, well rounded nutriment and easy digestion it is a wonderful builder of health and energy. There's a delightful charm of crispness and flavor to Grape-Nuts? a welcome serv ing at any meri. Ready to serve, with cream or milk. , Order from your grocer to day. There are many servings, providing exceptional nourish ment, in a package of this truly economical food. GrapeNuts ii THE BODY B1HI.DER Therms a Reason " Mad* by Poctnm C?tm1 Col, In* Battle Cnwk, Ifich.
Jackson County Journal (Sylva, N.C.)
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May 4, 1923, edition 1
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