Newspapers / Jackson County Journal (Sylva, … / Oct. 5, 1923, edition 1 / Page 3
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6 Bell-ans Hot water Sure Relief _ell-ans gji? 754 PACKAGES EVERYWHERE ResinoJ does wonders for poor complexions ' Underneath most unattractive skins fa a clear, pleasing complexion-<-aH thatisneeded is the propertreatment! It is surprising how often a brief use of Resinol Ointment and Resinol Soap will clear away blotches, redness and Toughness and give the slcin its natural freslmess and charm. If yoor ?kin isn't Just what you want Itfo be, ask your deale* for Resinol Soap and Ointment Clear Your Complexion with This Old Reliable Rernedy? COCK SulphurCohpouhd For pimples. Made-bead*. freclde*, btotcbes. and taa . a* well a* for oaere icrtows bet, icalp tnd body eruption*, hive*, coma, etc., me thh joentifx compound ol wipfaur. A* a lo tion, itioothe* and heals: take* tatemafly? i few drop* la a gia** oi Mater? ft gets at tfce root of the trouble and purtfie* tbe blood Pkytldao* agree that tolpbar is one ot tbe ?ott effective Mood parnwr* known. Re member. a flood cwplcrioa iao't *kia deep -it's health deep. Be sure to a?k far HANCOCK SULPHUR COMPOUND. It ha* .been SS year factory results over 23 60c and $1J20 the bottle at your drugaW'*. if be can't (apply too, tend hi* same and the price In (tamp* and we will tend you a bottle direct. HANCOCK 1 JOUID SULPHUR COMPANY Baltimore, Md. Rami Stlpkw ComfomJ Omt mnl- jor md 6oc for in wtfA I it Lqtad Compound My Picture on Every Package P.D.Q.' P. D. Q., a chemical (not an Insect powcfcr) that will ac tually rid a house of Bed Bugs, Roaches, Fleas and Ants "1th Its proper use? Impossi ble for them to exist as it kills their eggs as well and thereby Hops future generations. A 35c package makes a quart. Free-a patent spot In every package, to get them In the lard-to-get-at places. Special Hospital size, $2.50, makes 5 fallons, Tour druggist has It >r can get It for you. Mailed jrepald upon receipt of price Jy the Owl Chemical Works, ferre Haute, Ind. Shave With ; Cuticura Soap The New Way Without Mug iJafa&ailiiqhb TMcilkminq&MiH \\\\W/ ll(uVAS^KRS MAK1.no ONE DOLLAR FEB ?"rk A, I. M. Free sample to ron;;;:? delusive territory. Write AIM .JURATION. SALEM. VIRGINIA. ~ PARKER'S ? hair balsam DAnaruff -S tops Hslr Fslllne p.. Color and "JS to5Vm* *** oOc. and li Mat 1_? ?toM RemoTM Owwl eomtortto tb? BABIES CRY FOR "CASTORIH" Prepared Especially for Infants and Children of All Ages Mother! Fletcher's Castorla has been In use for over SO years as a pleasant, harmless substitute for Cas tor Oil, Paregoric, Teething Drops and Southing Syrups. Contains no narcot ics. Proven directions are on each package. Physicians recommend it The genuine bears signature of , Being softy for others la often ? mild form of boasting. 1 Say "Bayer" and Insist! Unless you see the name "Bayer" on package or on tablets you are not get ting the genuine Bayer product pre scribed by physicians over twenty-two years and proved safe by millions for Colds Headache Toothache Lumbago > Earache Rheumatism Neuralgia Pain, Pain Accept "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin" only. Each unbroken package contains proper directions. Handy boxes of twelve tablets cost few cents. ?Drug gists also sell bottles of 24 and 100. Aspirin Is the trade inark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacidester of Sallcylicacid. ? Advertisement. There Is no sufficient recompense for an unjust slander. Old Colored Mammy Knew What to Do "I was distracted with fear when my little 9-month-old baby had dys entery, but an old colored mammy told me to give her Teethlna and she has given me no more trouble since," said Mrs. Nettle Barnes, South Bay, Palm Beach Oo., Fla. "With my last baby I got Teethlna before he began teething and he was never sick a day." It is not always safe to follow th? advice of old^ colored mammies, but when they are as well Informed as this one who recommended Teethina no advice could be better. All moth ers can Inform themselves as to the proper care of their babies by con sulting Moffett's Baby Book, which can be had free by sending 30c to the MofTett Laboratories, Columbus, . Ga., for a full size package of Teeth lna. ? (Advertisement.) There Is no pain so great that time will not soften It. K FEELING OF SECURITY You naturally feel seen re when you know that the medicine you are about to take ia absolutely pure and containa no harmful or habit producing drugs. Such a medicine ia Dr. Kilmer's Swamp Root, kidney, liver and bladder qgfredy. The aame standard of purity, strength and excellence ia maintained in every bot tle of Swamp-Root. It ia scientifically compounded from vegetable herba. It is not a stimulant and is taken in teaspoonful doses. It is not recommended for everything . It is nature's great helper in relieving and overcoming kidney, liver and bladder troubles. A sworn statement of purity ia with every bottle of Dr. Kilmer's Swamp Root. If you need a medicine, you ahould have the best. On sale at all drug stores in bottles of two sizes, medium and large. However, if you wish first to try this great preparation send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer 4 Co., Binghamton, N. Y., for a sample bottle. When writing be sure and mention this paper. ? Advertisement. The opportunity Is often lost by de liberating too long. Hall's Catarrh Medicine rid your system of Catarrh or Deafness caused by Catarrh. / Sold hy drmuutt for ovtr 40 ytm F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, Ohio (iSWD^QYEARs^ A Fine Tonic. Jl^ERSHlTH's Builds You Up Chill Tonic Prennt. ?nd rcuctu ' a'ar?a- Chills and Fever -DenGue LIVE" STOCK Pure Bred Live Stock Solve Feeding Problem (Prepared by the United State* Department of Agriculture.) The extent to which pure bred live stock helps solve farmers' feeding prob lems' is a striking result of a ques tionnaire investigation Just completed by the United States Department of Agriculture. In this study nearly 500 practical stockmen described what their most serious feeding problemi were and how they are meeting them. In answer to the question, "Do you find that live stock of improved breed ing make greater gains or produce more than scrubs or common stock when fed in the same way?" there was | almost unanimous agreement on the , better results obtained In feeding im j proved live stock. Most replies gave | specific figures on the extent of su periority as shown by financial returns. The figures varied widely with an av | erage superiority of 39.6 per cent for | the Improved stock. In general, pure bred stock excelled the grades and the grades greatly excelled scrubs. Commenting on the result, live stock specialists In the Department of Agri culture point out that Improved stajpk Is more likely to receive somewhat bet ter feed and care, yet, since good stock and good feed and care go together so commonly, the per cent given is about what others may expect when they im prove their herds or flocks. While the result lacks the preciseness of scien tific work, It has as a background the average of 20 years' experience of nearly 500 practical live stock owners, under farm conditions. The figure given Is strikingly similar to that of 40.4 per cent obtained by the department more than a year ago as showing the su perior utility value of pure -breds over common stock from a general farm point of view. ( Many farmers, In discussing the su perior ability of pure breds in utilizing j feeds, gave interesting experiences. A southern hog grower states that his ! pure bred swine make 50 per cent bet ' ter growth than scrubs on the same feed and care. A South Dakota farmer told of sell ing three good grade steers on the Omaha market for $55.36 apiece more per head than scrubs raised with them. An Ohio dairyman kept milk records of some common cows and pure breds with the result that showed a produc tion at the end f f the year double that of the common stock. ! Another farmer reported a feeding test in which he kept weli-bred cattle and scrubs in the same yard, all receiv ing the same ration. The good cattle fattened while the scrubs remained poor. Scores of similar experiences Indi cate that well-bred live stock Is an im portant means In reducing feeding costs and Increasing financial returns. It is of interest to note, however, that, no matter how strong the consen sus of opinion may be, there are gen erally a few on the negative side. Of nearly 500 experiences, five or about 1 per cent, for one reason or another, had failed to succeed with improved stock. This fatt, taken into consideration with the foregoing data, points to a 99 per cent probability that pure bred and other Improved live stock will aid greatly In solving economic feeding problems. Details of the department's recent study of feeding questions may be obtained from the bureau of animal Industry, United States Department of Agriculture, Washington, D. C. Proteins and Minerals Necessary in Hog Feed Considering the whole problem of economical, successful and satisfactory pork production with a minimum chance of loss from disease when one studies the problem a little, It Is easy to see that the things necessary are a program that provides as cheaply as possible plenty of proteins and min erals in the ration. And in getting them cheaply by the use of growing crops, we have gone a long way in satisfying the sanitary requirements by eliminating chances of loss from some of the contagious diseases and para Bites of the overcrowded hog lot ' - ? LIVE STOCK NOTES Kill a scrub bull Monday and on Tuesday you'll be better off. , t t t , If you are planning on raising some good pigs and getting into the busi ness, It is none too early to plan now for your next year's pig crop. ? *? * Exercise for the gilts and especially the old sows is necessary if large lit ters of strong, healthy pigs are to be expected. ? * ? Every progressive farmer should raise pure bred live stock, and every progressive breeder needs records for keeping track of his herd. ? ? ? It is best to have more than one pasture for sheep, alternating each year. In this way troubles from para sites are reduced to a minimum. * * ? What good are horns for domestic cattle? Except for purposes of de fense on the range where, coyotes and bears still do some damage, horns are a menace and a needless expense. a ? i i j EVERYDAY STORY \ I *> i i I l i By AGNES G. BROGAN (?. 1923. Western Newspaper Union.) THIS is the story of Dulcie and Dan. There is always a Dulcie and Dan, or a Jack and a Jill, to every love story, no matter how uneventful is a simple tale. For true love has ever Its great Joy and Its tragedy. The Joy may be of one perfect day; the tragedy of misunderstanding. Dulcie could not know all this as she stood before the clouded mirror of the city boarding house. She was doubtful that love would come her way. Across the dingy hall 6f the board ing house Dan Gordon was arranging before & like clouded mirror his neck tie. Dan thought he would go to the "movies." s Dulcie's hat becomingly adjusted, and Dan's tie correct, both, as with one motion, threw open the corre sponding doors of their boarding house rooms and stepped outside. Dul cie, turning the key in the lock, stared. She was unconscious of this rudeness and was thinking pleasurably what a fine, strong face this unknown young neighbor had, while he stood hesitant, admiring. They smiled as they passed on the stair and then, naturally it seemed, fell to discussing the possibilities of the weather. Dulcie did hope that it would not rain after the Temple street church sociable was dismissed. Then, with a parting smile or two each went their way. But It did rain and here began Dulcie's great adventure. As she waited undecided in the Tem ple street church doorway, came to ward her In purposeful manner the upper hall neighbor of the "fine, strong face." > "I remembered what you said," he greeted her, "so I came after you with an umbrella. Mrs. Finch sent her rub bers." After that evening of exchanged con fidences, beneath the dripping rim of Dan's umbrella, there was no need of further introduction. Dulcie's bright eyes took on an add ed light, and Dan whistled cheerily as he went about his work. It was wonderful, Dulice thought, to find one's manly Ideal in the dingi est hour in one's dingy boarding house. And it was marvelous, Dan thought, to find the jolliest little home-maker, just when a home-maker was longing ly needed. So they became engaged. Mrs. Finch, sympathetic in their joy, Invited them to Sunday night tea In her own part of the big house. It was when the happy pair were planning ways and means of marriage that the tragedy of a quarrel upset all plans and like any storm banished the sunshine completely. It is not cer tain what the bitter quarrel was about ? it may have been that Dan failed to tell Dulcie that his employer had requested him to escort his fair young daughter to the theater, or It may have been that Dulcie allowed a Tem ple church usher to walk home with her after service ? the quarrel came, and cause does not alter fact. Dan glared at her with all a lover's hatred. And Dulcie defied and dis missed him. If she was regretful of the note later slipped beneath his door, declaring that all was over be tween them, Dulcie's forbidding man ner gave 'no clue. And if Dan's mer ry whistle sounding down the drab cor ridor was but a mockery of mirth, Dulcie In heart sickness could not know. , So the breach grew. It had become unbearable, when, secret tears washing away Dulcie's pride, she de cided to humble herself and to ask forgiveness. I n i -u The hall was dark when Dulcie turned the key in the lock of her door. There was no answering light beneath the opposite door. Mrs. Finch climbed the stair, after an interminable time, to report that Mr. Gordon had re turned unexpectedly to Boston. "The firm sent him back there," she ex plained. "He hurried off to catch the evening train. No, he left no word." No word of good-by. Gone forever, Dulcie's tragedy! She could not stay In the hall room ; she did not look into the mirror as she adjusted the little hat; she just went on miserably down the desolate street. She entered the "movie" theater because Its glinting sign flashed the title, "Loved and Lost" Dulcie wanted to know how another might bear this terrible empti ness of living. She found the familiar seat in the darkness, and got her hand kerchief out of her cloak pocket Tears were forcing their way down her cold cheeks. A hand touched hers, touched soft ly, then fiercely held It,' and the hand kerchief, together. There was but one hand like that ? gentle In its strength. "Dulcie!" breathed a voice in her ear. / There was but one voice like that ? tender, thrilling. "I thought," she whispered, trem bling, joyous, "that you had gone, Dan." "Train doesn't leave until midnight," he answered her. The clasp tightened. "I am going to telegraph them," Dan went on decisively, "that 1*11 stay over, and then bring my wife along." Dulcie folded the handkerchi& back Into her pocket. ?'All right, Dan," she meekly agreed. In Sunday School 73 Years. Mrs. Nancy J. Dunmlre of Waynes boro, Tenn., boasts of having been ? member of a Sunday school for the last seventy-three years, having first begun at the age of three rears. ^ Why He Called It "Portland" Cement In 1824, an English mason wanted to produce a better cement than any then in use. To do this he burned finely ground clay and limestone together at a high heat The hard balls [called clinker] that resulted were ground to a fine powder. When a mixture of this dull gray powder with water had hardened, it was the color of a popular building stone quarried on the Isle of Portland oS the coast of Eng' land. So this mason, Joseph Aspdin, called his discovery "portland" cement. That was less than one hundred years ago. Portland cement was not made in the United States until fifty years ago. The average annual production for the ten years following was only 36, OCX) sacks. Last year the country used over 470,000, 000 sacks of portland cement Capacity t, to manufacture was nearly 600,000,000 sacks. ' Cement cannot be made everywhere because raw materials of the necessary chemical composition are not found in sufficient quantities in every part of the country. But it is now manufactured in 27 states by 120 plants. There is at least one of these plants within shipping dis tance of any community in this country. lb provide a cement supply that would always be ample to meet demand has meant a good deal in cosdy experience to those who have invested in the cement industry. There have been large capital investments with low returns. In the last twenty-five years, 328 ce ment plants have been built or have gone through some stage of construction or financing. 162 were completed and placed in operation. Only 120 of these plants have survived the financial, operating and marketing risks oi that period. Their capacity is nearly 30 per cent greater than the record year's demand. These are a few important facts about an industry that is still young. Advertisements to follow will give you more of these facts, and will tell something of the important place ce ment occupies in the welfare of every individual PORTLAND CEMENT ASSOCIATION 111 West Washington Street CHICAGO [cA National Organization to Improve and Extend the Uses of Concrete Atlanta Dearer Kansas City New York SanFrandaco Birmingham Des Moines LoiAngeles Parkersbun Seattle Boston Detroit Metaphn Philadelphia St. Louis Helena Milwaukee Pittsburgh Vancouver, B. C. ~ Indianapolis Minneapolis Portland, Oreg Washington, D.C Jacksonville New Orieana Salt Lake City ISTYLE~shoes for milady-comfort Styl: E-71? Made from bright glazed kid ? postpaid common sense heel with rubber top lift ? oak turned soles? Oh! M> flexible and easy on thfc foot Widths C, D, E & EE. Sizes to 9. Send for Fret Catalog Style E-96 ? With its brilliant kid upper ? no seams over the tender toe joints ? its flexible turned oak 6ole ? is a prescription for Hapby Feet, yet it has all the chic style so necessary * in Miladies footwear. Widths C, D, E & EE; Sizes 2% to 9. I ANPF m iwr% P-O- BOX 45 STATION V LrtHUL LU. INC. DEPT. 10 N.Y. CITY. Ion't Neglj Inflamed eyelids or other eye irritations. You will And a soothing and safe remedy In MITCHELL EYE SALVE. at all druggists. & DOG rBOOK FREE5 t2 pace book^-iow to keep your dor well ? bow to care for him When nick. Result of 85 years' experi ence with every known do* disease. Halted ritEE. Writ* today. Drpt.1t. H. CLAY SLOVEN. VCS lO W?t t'lh IX tbwTart Allen; COPPER Ranges FAMOUS for its perfect baking oven ? tested * by twenty - five years of constant service. Write for our illustrated catalog and name of dealer near you. Allen Manufacturing company NASHVILLE TENNESSEE
Jackson County Journal (Sylva, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 5, 1923, edition 1
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