The Syracuse and Lake Wawasee Journal, Volume 9, Number 9, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 29 June 1916 — Page 7

r FRESH, CLEAN MEATS | | Await you at our market at all times. You will find j j the juiciest cuts and the tenderest pieces here. We j I also handle smoked and dried meats and a general 1 j line of canned meats. 1 I I KLINK BROS. MEAT MARKET | * . .. I Snobarger’S SYRACUSE AND MILFORD AUTO SERVICE Phone No. 5 Fare 25 Cents Each Way SCHEDULE AND CAR LEAVES SYRACUSE: . MILFORD: 7:15 A. M. 8:05 A. M. 10:35 A. M. 11:35 A. M. 1:15 P. M. 2:05 P. M. 4:15 P. m' 5:05 P. M.

r— Business Directory j KB. AND MRS. G. A. McEWEN Chiropractors. Office Hours —Wednesday and Saturday from 10 a. m to 8 p. m. Other Days from 5 n. m. to 8 p- m. On Sundays by appointment. * Telephone 19C. AUCTIONEER Cal. L. Stuckman Phone 535, Nappanee, Ind. — You can call me up without expense. J. M. SHAFFER Chiropractor Will be in Syracuse, Mondays and Thursdays. Office at Mrs. Landis Residence Opposite M. E. Church. printingll not the cheap kind but the good kind done here. We Are Always Ready to serve vou with good printing. No matter what the nature of the job may | be we are ready to do it at a price that will be Satisfactory Let Us Print I Your Sale Bills Always at Yocr | Service for Printing Needs! s there something you i need in the follow- M ing listt k Birth Announcements Wedding Stationery Envelope Inclosures fe I i Sale Bills • Hand Bills g i i Price Lists B L Admission Tickets B 'j 1 Business Cards , Window Cards S Time Cards S Letter Heads n I fl Note Heads ® Bill Heads g C.lllcd Cards Leaflets Statements I Milk Tickets Meal Tickets Shipping Tags Announcements Briefs , • Notes Coupons , Pamphlets Catalogues K i Blotters Circulars jn Invitations Posters Folders Checks , Blanks Notices Labels Legal Blanks Menu Cards Placards Dodgers Post Cards Programs Beceipts Prompt, careful and efficient attention given to every detail k 17 Don’t Send Your Order I Out of Town Until You I See What We Can Do I

LEE R. CORY, Auctioneer Sos of the T.nte Lincoln Cory. Cirndnnts of Jonen National School of AuctloueerlnKi Chicago. Phone at My Expense for Dates. Milford Phone 435. Syracuse. Ind. BUTT C& XANDERS ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Practice in All Courts Money to Loan. Fire Insurance. I Phone 7 SYRACUSE, IND. | ~ II DON’T FORGET When you need anything in the line of neat and attractive Printing. IsaxsssssMMii ■' iii ii, r' ■ - R U Scperstitious | Do You ls d ° X a judicious advereve t * Ber a . p. business man. Ju1R dicious advertising Always Pays . 7 and especially when ; you advertise in a j paper that is read L © by everybody in Ej its territory. 3 This newspaper reaches the eye !| of everybody who might be a | S possible buyer in this sec Son. h Wvw Ik ; W ■ >- ! YOU ARE i READING ■ This this very moment, are yon not-? You KNOW it is an advertise- * Inent, yet you read it; we all read it. I If YOUR “ad.” occuMe; this space it would be read and bring you good results. Try it and be convinced. =? n| Snfa... This Point W y ° U dO ’ that proves conclusively three FtiV/X} things . .. |—-That you’re not blind. I 2- That some one else I w dl see it as well as 3 — That this is an excellent space for YOUR M ad." Secure it I M i' 11 ' UII '..

THE SYRACUSE AND LAKE WAWASEE JOURNAL

j Traveling Coat of Gray Chinchilla /C..UL .«• / // • 4?: a ; ~T ■ / i<~ _— l ~- 2 >~-<r | \ \ F \ i - ‘ ® I -<=■> '■<

■ Everyone who goes traveling wants I a coat that will serve for walking and for motoring, to be esmforta- ■ ble and look smart in. Here is One ! that engages to fill all these require- ; ments, and do even more. How it ar- : rived at such chic lines, with so few I seams, is a thing to marvel at and to i commend in its designer. In the picture it is shown made of gray chinchil- . la, but one can imagine its elegance I in covert cloth, in homespun or al- > most any of the coatings that are made up for practical, all-round wear. The back of the coat and collar is all in one piece, and the top of the sleeve is extended to the collar. There are ample turned-back cuffs and serviceable pockets, and a collar that furi pishes both style and real protection, j The collar is faced with silk like the coat in color and may be fastened up

| Swimming Suits of Wool Jersey Cloth fl Uli ; Swu J -“-I "T: JgWWfr-..- * iflWr s illy - 41 I J ■ j "' - !- •' F ’** ft wfiir W 3 ■i t— v M I * ■ : Xs v'' ■ , i|| .-d —— ‘ « a

Any numbet of clever answers to the question of beach clothes has put the unsightly bathing suit entirely out of c< untenance. Swimming suits, bathing frocks and shore dresses are designed to add to the enchantment of the beaches, for the j summer girl insists that they must |be pretty. Dresses for the shore and j for bathing are made of taffeta, pop- ' lin, pongee, fiber silk, and other stuffs, 1 with hat dr cap, shoes and hose all i carefully thought out, and the outfits I for water sports are as pleasing as I any others. For the girl who swims much, or paddles the precarious canoe, regular swimming suits are made of wool jersey cloth like those shown in the picture. Navy blue remains the bestliked color, but there are brown and green and two-color mixtures as well. Nearly all the solid-color suits are bordered with a braid in white or white with a color. In two-color mixtures one of the colors is used for the narrow bands that make the borders. In bathing frocks plaid silks are used for trimming plain colors. Broad gtripes and pointed skirts are novelties that are liked, and sashes of knitted silk have added color touches. Swimming suits are In two pieces, with, knickers extending to the knees. PUT UP IN SMALL PARCELS . A recent official estimate gave New Zealand a population of 1,164,745. Argentina requires imported potatoes to be accompanied by certificates showing that they were grown in sanitary soil. Mrs. John Roberts, while fishing from the municipal pier at Hermosa Beacn, Cal., caught five different kinds of fish on five hooks at the same time. The fish were mackerel, bass, jack amelt. yellow fin and barracuda.

high at the throat or left open. Byway of variety in color and re- J sistance to the dust of travel, very : .dark blue facings for collar, cuffs and • pockets make a fine contrast with ; gray cloth. Either blue cr brown sac- I ings are presented on tan coats, and ; black with tan is always a good com- I bination. Rows of machine stitching I are the very best style for decorating ! utility coats, and they may be done in I a contrasting color on a plain cloth. The unbroken lines and the shapeliness of the coat pictured will recommend it to stout figures. For the very slender woman there are coats with capes which are adorably becoming to the too flat-chested. There are models with both capes and ample collars, and others with lofty collars that keep one guessing as to whether they are collars or capes.

The one-piece overgarment sets close ; to the figure and fastens on the shoul- | der or slips cn like a sweater, without fastening. It is slashed up at each side in order not to hamper the swimmer. Occasionally a suit is shown with elastic bands across the service. ; With these trim and practical suits satin sandals are worn and brightcolored diving caps of rubber. They are for the girl who spends her time in the water, and are made tor real service. Bathing frocks for the beach and bathing are made with blouses and full skirts, and there are swimming suits less scant in the skirt than those shown in the illustration, but added fullness means added weight. For those who like the beach but not the water, there are shore costumes, but they are few as compared to the unending variety to be found in bathing frocks. The world’s highest powered motorship has been built in Italy for the Brazilian navy, Its oil motors developing 6,400-horse power. The livers of ten codfish are needed to produce a gallon of oil. There is one grocery store to every 300 inhabitants in this country. In 1914 the mica produced in the United States was valued at $328,746. The output of sheet mica amounted to 556,993 pounds, and that of scrap mica amounted to 3,730 pounds. The coldest inhabited country Is said to be the province of Werchojansk, in oriental Siberia. The daily mean temperature of the entire year is 2.74 degrees below zero.

JTomeM /TowiW & Helps LET EACH CHILD HAVE PLOT School Gardens Should Be Divided So as to Give an Individual ° Responsibility. should have individual gardens. Give each child a plot and have the responsibility his alone if only a single plant can be grown on that plot, or use a pot plant, advises the Washington Star. Let the child see the result of his care or neglect. This cannot be accomplished where several children work in the same plot or care for the same plant. Not many grown people, if they are really good gardeners. would care to have each of the neighbors come in and take a hand at I his garden. Individual work stimulates the interest and pride in the work, encourages skill and judgment that is entirely lost by collective work and at the same time develops the idea of responsibility. Limited space necessitates the use of only compact, low-growing plants. In vegetables, radishes, lettuce, beans,’ beets and similar plants. The children should do all the work, preparing me land, planting the seed and caring for the plants, the teacher I explaining each step. Bulletin 218 of ; the department of agriculture describes the work and it is sent free on ! application. ! From Washington southward seeds ! may be planted In the open ground, but in the North the seeds should be I sown in boxes and kept growing until i the middle of May to the first of June, i according to the latitude, when they i can be planted in their permanent loj cations. Flowering plants that are good for the purpose are ageratum, nasturtium, petunia, California poppy, zinnia and portulaca. THE HOME TOWN Some folks leave home for money And some leave home for fame, Some seek skies always sunny, And some depart in shame. I care not what the reason 3<len travel East or West, Or what the month or season. The home town is the best. The home town is the glad town Where something real abides, ’Tis not the money mad town | That all -its spirit hides. Though strangers scoff and flout it And even jeer its name, It has a charm about it ' No other town can claim. . The home town skies seem bluer Than skies that stretch away. The home town friends seem truer And kinder through the day, And whether glum or cheery Light hearted br depressed Or struggle fit or weary I like the home |own best. Let him who Will go wander To distant towns to live. Os some things I am fonder Than all they have to stive. ; The gold of distant places Could not repav me quite For those, familiar faces That keep the home town bright. —Detroit Free Press. How to Use the Pruning Shears. Double-cutfcer shears used in orchard pruning give good satisfaction when I used upon limbs smaller than three inches in diameter, writes M. G. Kains in Farm and Home. When care : is taken to cut through the bark all I around the branches to be removed, the wounds heal over much better than when the growing la«>r of bark i and young wood are crushed by being . squeezed from opposite sides without being cut all around first. One caution is necessary in using this implement : IVhen making cuts of forked limbs it is necessary to avoid bearing down. . because the main branch to be left is likely to split, and a heavy load of fruit the following summer is almost sure to break the limb at this point, i Effort should always he made to lift ' when making such cuts. Indeed, it is a good plan always to cut off the branch a foot or so beyond the point where the crotch is and then to remove the stub with a second cut. Advantage of Playground. Some small towns have adopted the plan of providing golf, baseball and’ tennis grounds for the use of the pub- | lie, and the experiments made along i this line so far have been highly sue- ' cessful. One of the first and most sat- I isfactory results of providing play- i grounds is made evident by the young ■ people being content to remain at home rather than to wander off after i entertainment and amusement else- I where. Every step toward taking the j dullness out of the small towns will help to lessen the congestion in the large cities. Make Lawn Attractive. Don't neglect to provide space on the house lot for a flower garden and shrubs. A nice lawn is attractive and needs something to relieve the monotony of color. i City Building Plan Adopted. Sacramento, Cat. recently adopted, I through its commissioners, a city plan, i which provides that industrial plants shall be permitted only in designated districts. Good Paint on Bad Surface. Good paint on a bad surface is like unto a house builded upon the sand. Uncle Eben. “If time was sure-enough money,” said Uncle Eben, “not near so many of us would feel like we Could afford to go fishin’.” One Trouble. The trouble about efficiency is that too many people .spend all their time talking about it. —Grand Rapids News. Modem Bookmaking. Eighteen thousand bricks can be manufactured by the steam process in ten hours.

. Lamo on May. What hp-ronsidered the servile laudation of the month of May drove Charles Lainb to protest. “I do not I mind the utmost rigors of real winI ter,’ he wrote to Bernard Barton, “but j I these smiling hypocrisies of May with!er me to death. What lies yon poets I tell about May ’ It is the most un- ' genial part of the year.” — London Chronicle. Every man expects to become great some day. hut he keeps putting it off.

The Effects of Opiates. THAT INFANTS are peculiarly susceptible to opium and its variouß preparations, all of which are narcotic, is well known. Even in th* smallest coses, if continued, these opiates cause changes in the functions and growth of the cells which are likely to become permanent, causing imbecility, mental perversion, a craving for alcohol or narcotics in later -life. Nervous diseases, such as intractable nervous dyspepsia and lack of staying powers are a result of dosing with opiates or narcotics to keep children quiet in their infancy The rule among physicians is that children should never receive opiates in the smallest doses for more than a day at a time, and only then if unavoidable. The administration of Anodynes, Drops, Cordials, Soothing Syrups and other narcotics to children by any but a physician _ cannot be too strongly decried, and the druggist should not be a party to it. Children who are iu need the attention of a physician, and it is nothing less than a crime to dose them willfully with narcotics. _ _ ’ Y Castoria contains no narcotics if it bears the ' -r ) signature of Chas. H. Fletcher. Zz* \ Genuine Castoria always bears the signature V

Rare Treat. Tommy wanted to go to the movies, ' but his mother objected. I “Av,-, you never let me go no place,” ’I he whimpered. “Why. Tonmiy.” exclaimed his mother; “what shocking bad grammar you ; use! Can't you speak more correet- • i lyt” “Sure 1 can,” said the boy. “if you'll” only give me a chance. You omrht to ■ hear me say: ‘Yes. mother, you let me i go wherever I want to.’ ” 1 I’luck loses no time, on account of , I tough luck.

It’s a Picnic Getting Ready for a Picnic If you choose Spanish Olives Pickles CSweet Relish Ham Loaf Veal Loaf Chicken Loaf Fruit Preserves Jellies Apple Butter Luncheon Meats Perk and Beans i ' to Serve Food Products fIF / Insist on Libby’s at - ±' Qur grocer's & Libby, McNeill & Libby k . ' Chicago /! /

BROWN'S LATE HOME-COMINGj Striking Clocks Registered a Record < for Gentleman of Somewhat Convivial Habits. Brown had con e home very late i after a convivial evening at a smok- ! j ing concert, and had consumed more i i cigars and refreshments than was i I good, for him. It was midnight wtieu | i he reached home, but he did not know : ; It- J “Ah!” he muttered, “if the church I ! clock would < nly strike. I should know , | the time. It’s toe dark to see.” i Biit hark! Just as he spoke the i ■ cl-ack, began to strike. Breathlessly. : : Biown vaunted, “(hie, two, three, four, I five. six. seven, u ight, nine, ten, eleven, ; twelve!” , T , But at tliat moment another clock began. "Thirteen,” 'bunted Brown, “four- | teen, fifteen —great Scott!—sixteen, seventeen, eighteen—-gracious—fiine- ! teen, twenty. (!!!). twenty-one. t - ’enI ty-two (!!!). twenty-three—mercy on I us ! —twenty-four ( ! I!).” I Mopping bis steaming brow he ex- [ claimed “My word, I’ve never been i ->ut s.> late in al! my life!” —I’ittsburgh Chronicle-Telegraph. Speedy. “Does that new watch of yours keep good time.” j "You bet it does! There isn't a clock in town that can keep up with it.”'

rjqj They IgsdWP'. Stand UpUnlike common com flakes, the New Post Toasties don’t mush down when milk or cream is added. And they have a charming new flavour —delicious, different, the true essence of the corn—not found in corn flakes heretofore. ' The intense heat of the new process of manufacture raises tiny hubbies cn each delicious brown flake and these little puffs are the identifying feature. These new flakes are firmer, crisper, and don’t crumble in the package—in comparison, ordinary com flakes are as “chaff.” Your grocer can send you a package of New Post Toasties

! Lp.C_. “There is nothing like rhe weather as a topic <if conversation. “That ■’remark,” observed Senator I Sorghum, “leads me to infer that you ; have never comerned yourself tmleh about the tariff.” —Washington Star. Wash day is smile day if you use Red Cross Bail Blue, American made; therefore the best made. Adv. The man who looks straight ahead misses a lot on the side. *

Honk! Honk. The fatalities due to automobile ac- . cidents are distressing enough, blit one encouraging fact in connection with them, as stated in a government I report, is that during the last five years the number of fatal accidents i lias not increased nearly as fast as | the number of ears.- The cap have in- ' creased 775 per cent, while fatalities j have increased only 258 per eent. This I seems to indicate more careful driving at present. Blessings of poverty only look good 1 to millionaires. ,

SCHEME PROVED A FAILURE ! Tight-Fisted Old Gentleman More Than Met His Match in Shrewd Physiqpan. A tight-fisted old man. feeling very sick, asked a friend to recommend a physician. The friend named a certain specialist. ■‘ls he very expensive,” asked the sick man. “Well, not so very. He'll charge you four dollars for the first visit and two dollars for each one after that.” The old fellow soon afterward walked into the office of the physician named by his friend, and upon being admitted J to the consulting room planked two dollars, remarking: “Well, doctor, here I am again." The physician calmly picked up themoney and put it in’a drawer, which he "locked securely. The sick- man looked on expectantly, awaiting the next move. “Well, I’m ready to be examined,' 1 he said at length.” "1 don't think it’s necessary.” re« plied the shrewd specialist “There’.l no need to do it again. Keep right on taking rhe same medicine. Goodday, sir.” . 'tGood Cause. “What a leaden color your bus* batid has, Mrs. Jones.” “Yes’m; Jie’s don’ got de plumbago, ma’hni.”