The Syracuse Journal, Volume 16, Number 1, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 3 May 1923 — Page 8
> Classified Ads f ft ! Classified advertising is ac- g i cep ted at the rate of 1 cent $ ' a word for each insertion. A ft [ booking and collection fee of g i 10 cents will be added for a $ charged account; no account ft [ will be charged for less than g i 25 cents for a single item. ft
FOR SALE—Day old chicks— Buff Orpington and Barred Rocks, 14 cents each. Ready for delivery May 24. Please order early. Also Buff Orpington hatching eggs. Ralph Vail, Syracuse, Ind. l-2tpd For SALE—Good property, house and barn. Barn now rents for $6.00 per month; SBOO.OO, takes it. Reasonable terms. Geo. L Xanders. l-2t WANTED —Someone to plow a small garden lot this week if possible. About 20 minutes work. First applicant gets the job. Call Journal office. FOR SALE—At a bargain a good lot, good location. Phone 144. • FOR SALE—Fumed oak library table, 2 beds, springs and’ mattresses. Mrs. Wilbur Brickel. Phone 815. ’ l-ltpd PLANTS—For cabbage, tomatoes, salvia, pansies, egg plants, mangoes and other plants go to Seider & Burgener. l-2t FOR SALE—Baby stroller in good condition. Mrs. A. L. Winters. Phone 125. l-ltpd FOUND—A key ring with two keys. Owner can have same by calling at Journal office. 1-11 ’"CONCRETE WORK—See Emeral Jones. Syracuse, Ind., Route 2. Milford Phone 382. l-13tpd PUPILS WANTED Am ready to give beginners Cornet lessons. Have taken lessons from a pupil of Herbert L Clark, of Huntsville, Ontario, Canada. ■ See Theodore Harman, Phone 132. 52-2tpd FEED- I am now handling a line of the Kraus Milling Co.’s com'fnercial feed at the elevator. A. W. Strieby. 52-ts
u —— LINE COMPLETE The most complete line of all kinds of rugs, ever shown in Syracuse, are now on exhibition at Beekman‘s Store. 52-ts Demonstration — For a demonstration of the May Tag washing machine, see Mrs. Harry DeHart. Phone 445. 52-2t e ~~POULTRY FEED A good line of poultry feed on hand at all times. C. Disher. 52-2 t FOR SALE—Day old white Wyandotte chicks; also brooder stoves. W. A. Smith, Phone 217, New Paris. 52-2tpd NEW RUGS—36 new rugs are I now on the way to Beckman’s Furniture Store, 52-ts TAXES—Don’t forget your taxes. 52-2 t NO GRINDING-r-On account of repairing there will be no grinding for 30 days, beginning May 1. Will be open at all times for the sale of feed. C. Disher. 52-2 t PICTUReT” PRAM ED — Have your pictures framed at Beckman’s Store. 52-ts FLOUR—See us for flour. Prices from 85c to sl.lO. C. Disher. 52-2 t FOR SALE—A good Radiant home hard-coal stove. Cheap if taken soon. Inquire of N. P. Altland. 52-pd FOR SALE—Day old chicks. Call for further information phone 3511, Syracuse. Ralph Vail. 51-2tp WAIT for the new rugs coming in at Beckman’s Store. 52-ts TYPEWRITER RIBBONS for JL C. Smith, Oliver and Underwood machines at the Journal office.
FRESH. GL&fIN M&flT Await yon at onr market at all times. Yon will find the juiciest cuts and the tenderest pieces here. We also handle smoked and L dried meats and a general line of canned meats. KLINK BROS. MEAT MARKET
WANTED—Man with rig or auto to sell high grade line oi teas, coffees, and grocery special-1 ties, direct to customer, liberal commission allowed, permanent position with good opportunity for advancement, must furnish small bond and give references. Address Grand Union Tea Company, 112 E. Jefferson St., South Bend, Ind. 52-2tpd RIBBONS—We sell ribbons for L C. Smith, Underwood and Oliver Typewriters. Journal office. WANTED—AII kinds of timber. Inquire of Coppes Bros. & Zook, Nappanee. 36-ts WANTED—Men or women to take orders for genuine guaranteed hosiery for men, women and children. Eliminates darning. Salary $75 a week full time, $1.50 an hour spare time. Beautiful spring line. International Stocking Mills, Norristown, Pa. 43-10 t PENNY PaDS—Merchants and mechanics use them for notes and figuring. Size 3x6 inches. Journal office. ADVERTISING — Try these little classified ads to sell those things you do not want any longer, or to find the things you need. LETTER HEADS—Lend dignity to your correspondence by using printed stationery. The Journal’s commercial printing department is well equipped for this kind of work. OFFICE SUPPLlES—Typewriter ribbon, carbon paper, typewriter paper, cardboard, blotting, etc., for sale at the Journal office. FOR SALE—Stove wood, fine and chunks, delivered. Phone ■ 316, or address Dan Mishler, | Syracuse. 36-ts CARDBOARD—AII kinds of cardboard, suitable for drawing and maps, for sale at the Journal office.
Job Printing We i are equipped to handle any kind of Job Printing, and when it comes to Service, we can only refer you to our customers or ask that you give us a trial.
LOTS FOR SALE at Redmon Point, Dewart Lake see Ike Klingaman Syracuse, Inti., Route 2. Get your FREIGHT via the SYRACI SE-FORT WAYNE TRUCK LINE J. E. Rippey Phone 101 Syracuse, Ind. "If I don’t haul your freight we both lose.” GEO. L. XANDERS Attorney-at-law Settlement of Estates. Opinions on Titles Fire and Other Insurance Phone 7 Syracuse, Ind. J. M. SHAFFER Chiropractor At the Darr Residence Corner Harrison and Henry Sts. Tuesday & Friday of Each Weea Hours: 2to 5 and Bto9 P. m. SPECIAL ATTENTION GIVEN TO ESTATES. DEEDS. MORTGAGES TITLES AND WILLS WILLIAM GRAY LOEHR Attorney-at-Law since 1916 Admitted to Practice in All Court* Collections, Notary Publie 118 J S. Buffalo St. Warsaw. Ind.
THE APPEAL FOR MORE IMMIGRANTS Replying to Judge Gary’s appeal for the cancellation of restrictions on immigration, that the U. S. Steel Corporation may secure a sufficient supply of labor, Commissioner Husband, of the Immigration Bureau, makes the flat assertion that there is no reason to throw’ down the barriers so long as many of i the countries have not nearly exhausted their quotas. The restriction on immigration operates only against Russia and south European countries, like Italy and the Slavic states, which have exhausted their quotas, and still have would-be immigrants clamoring at the ship agencies in their seaport towns. The Commissioner of Immigration suggests mildly that perhaps if conditions of employment ■in the steel mills of the United States were more humane, more adapted to attract a higher class of labor, it would not be necessary for the appeal to be made that the United States should throw open its doors to the least desirble class of men from the Balkans and southeastern Europe. There is still opportunity for 75.000 workers fronu Germany, Denmark, Sweden, Norway, and the states of northern Europe to enter the United States. Why is that opportunity not eagerly seized? It would be if conditions of employment were such as to attract desirable citizens. The twelve-hour day of the United States Steel Corporation cannot be held as a bright promise of better things for the self-respecting European worki man seeking advancement. Howard University asserts that there are 1.000.000 negroes in the south who are available ■ to supply any lack of labor in I the steel mills or other northern > industries." The southern planter. on the other hand, is anxious to keep the negro where he is because they have strong bodies, and their labor is cheap. The fact of the matter is we already have in the United States nearly as many “foreign-born” adults as there are real Americans. When the population statistic are carefully analyzed this i statement will be found practij cally correct. More than 11.000,000 of our total population are in the I’hillipines, Hawaii, Porto
□□□□□□□□□□□□□“□□□□a □□□□□□□ g SUPERIOR CORD TIRES ■ □ "Just wkat the Name Signifies" □ ■ □ xgrqsm. □ □ J P i 1 8 I I ■si L.. .J 1 • jr b| -V. □ is IMwS m □ ' ■ : 1 B 'HiSS □ ’■ llflw □ I I ■ -w- □ iw Mfis x □ 1® □ .11® I □ lIW cte -D □ W W □ □ □ evA. A Superior 30x3% Cord Tire □ for sls 00 —other size tires priced □ accordingly. Superior Cord Tires are Guaran- □ teed for 10,000 miles by manufac- □ turer and by us. The Superior Cord □ Tire Co. gives the Dealer the authorG ity to grant all adjustments that may □ arise. See us before buying your tires. s SYRACUSE AUTO SALES JESSE SHOCK, Proprietor. n
THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL
Rico. About 10,000,000 more are public charges—inmates of prisons, reformatories, asylums, poor houses, and public institutions. This leaves us about 90,000,000, of whom 24,000,000 are children under 10 years of age. Os this remaining 66.000.000 about 14,000,000 are foreign born. Deducting the foreign born adults leaves us with 52.000,000, of whom nearly 11,000,000 are negroes. This reduces the real native white American population including all children above 10 years of age to about 41.000,000, on whom the duty of Americanizing rests almost entirely. Figure it out for yourself, and after you have done that, consider the fact that there are over 1,100 newspapers and periodicals, among them 125 daily newspapers, in forty different languages, printed and circulated in this country, with combined circulations over the million mark. The best thing the United States can do for the generation is to adopt some national system of Americanizing those already here—if the land and government our fathers won for us is to be preserved.
JOHNNY’S CALF. DAD’S COW Here's a bit of jingle that has been going around in farm federation meetings that may be worth passing along: j Why One Boy Left the Farm I left my dad. his farm, his plow. Because my calf became his cow; 1 left my dad—"twaa wrong of course. Because my colt became his horse. I left my dad to sow and reap. Because my lamb became his sheep; I dropped my hoe and stuck my fork, Because my pig became his pork. The garden truck I had to grow Was his.to sell and mine to hoe. Why \nother Didn’t With dad and me it’s half and half— The cow* I own was once his calf; No town for mine, I will not bolt. Because my horse was once his colt; >4n go,ng to stick right where 1 am. Becat.-e my -beep was once his lamb; “I'll stay with dad he gets my vote. Because my hog was once his shoat; It's fifty-fifty with dad and me— A profit-sharing company. 0 ( GLAD TO LOOK OVER A Texas man who has’just inherited a half a million dollars announces that he will hunt for a wife. He won’t be compelled to invest a dollar in licenses, red tags, not long-nosed dogs for this hunt the game will be .glad to come and look him over.
THE RIGHT TO LIVE RIGHT The decision of the United States Supreme Court declaring unconstitutional the Minimum wage laws for women in the District of Columbia will add force to the agitation against decisions reached by a bare majority of one in this tribunal. The decision was rendered by’ a vote of five to three but Justice Brandeis did not participate, having been counsel some years ago in an Oregon case of a similar character. His individual opinions leave no doubt that, had he been sitting, he Woud have voted with the minority, making the decision one of those five-to-four verdicts which so seriously are disquieting the American mind. 'The decision is based upon the constitutional prescription of inalienable rights, holding that the inalienable right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness includes the right of a woman to sell her labor for less than the cost of subsistence, and the right of an employer to enforce not merely a starvation wage, but any conditions of employment which may contribute to his profit and which through his control of the labor market he can establish. In rendering the decision Justice Sutherland tersely stated that: “In principle there can be no difference between the case of selling labor and the case of selling goods.” This may be a five-to-four construction of the law, but it is a principle that rubs the average American the wrong way, for no American, Christian or Pagan, will endorse the argument that men, women and children must labor for* any price the “market” condition warrants, regardless of the cost of living. Many of the thinking men and women of this country long ago determined that any institution that did not or could not pay its labor sufficiently to live decently and honestly was a curse to the community and to society. Many towns and cities have refused to help manufacturers looking for new locations when it was found the average wage paid was below the cost of living. The effect of the decision will be far reaching. In at least fourteen states there are laws for the protection of women and children that may be annulled.
Another and equally important effect of the decision will be a knockout blow to any proposition by farmers for stabilizing commodity prices. Under this decision any such legislation would be declared unconstitutional. Another effect of the decision may be to stiemjilate labor organizations and in the end, result in an amendment to the constitution along the lines proposed by Senators, Borah, LaFollette, Norris, and others, restricting the power of the Supreme Court in reversing any act of Congress. The fact of the matter is that minimum, wage laws and child labor laws ought to be unnecessary in this nation of peace and plenty. Buet unfortunately there are those who have less regard or interest in human life than they have for mine mules and knitting machines. The decision involves the question of the rifht to live right. o_ SPEAKING OF SINGLE RIGS It may be rather far-fetched, but it recalled the story of the minister, who told the members of a family living in the country that he would drive out to see them during the succeeding week. The day w r as fixed, and then the minister asked how to reach the farm. They had some difficulty in describing the crooked road that led to their place so the man said said: “If you’ll make it a point to come about 9 o'clock in the morning I’ll have the little boy to watch for you at the fork in the roads and show you which way to come from there.” The minister drove and drove, but no little boy hailed him at any place. Finally he turned around and drove back, and in due time encountered the lad he was looking for. “I saw you go by a little while ago,” explained the boy, “but you was drivin’ a team and that fooled me.” “What has the team got to do with it?” asked the minister. “Why, paw said you was only a one-horse preacher." o Journal want-ads are invest meats that pay dividends.
REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS By Houton C. Frazer. Warsaw. Joshua Bareham to Floyd Kline, lot 5 Sec. 19, Washington tp., $3,000. Princess Cook to Fred McKown, lot 30, Silver Lake, $3,500. Wm. 8. Felkner and Estil A. Gast to Wm. G. and Vesta R. Walgamuth. S U let 85 Williams add., Warsaw, $1,200. Jesse Klotz to Frederick G. Klotz. 10 A. Sec 12, Vanßuren tp., $1,725. Della Anglin, et al, to Oren D. Stackhouse, 80 A. Sec 31. Scott tp., $12,800. Grover Long to Rhoda Sununy, 90 A. Sec 24. Washington tp.. $7,000. Oliver P. Stoner to Wm. C. Frush. tract secs 27 & 28. Wayne tp.. $2,500. Wm. C. Fruxh to Ambrose Horlck. tract secs 27 & 28 Wayne tp.. $3,500. Owen Stackhouse, et al, to Della Anglin. 35 A. Sec 29, Scott tp., $3500. Cyrus A. Spitler to L’da A. Spitler, j part lot 13, Atwood. SSOO. Victor M. Hatfield to Nathaniel W. Mauzv, lot 18 third- a<b!.. Winona. S3OO. Victor M. Hatfield to Ford H. and Hilda A. Hardman, lot 19 M M add., Winona. S4OO. Sarah Bixler to Board of Missions. M. E. Church. 180 S A. seen 13, 19 & 24. Plain and Tippecanoe tps„ |l. Wm. G. Walgamuth to Estil A Gast, pt lot 11 Boss add., Warsaw S4OO. Walter Swartslander to Andrew C. Hochstetler, 10 A. sec 21. Jefferson tp., $825. Edward W. Felter to Frank W. George, 80 A. sec 26. Scott tp.. SI4OOO. Frank W. George to Edward W. Felter. 120 A secs 12 & 13, Scott tp.. $23,000. Banka A. Hoffer to Jancy S. Slabaugh, 40 A. sec 30, Jefferson tp.. $4,000.
WHEAT AS CURRENCY That the money of central Europe, scarcely worth the paper it is printed on, must soon be repudiated, in every day becoming more apparent. Os course, something will have to take its place, and what to base it on is v a topic'widely discussed in Germany and other countries. In some of the nations wheat is used as a basis of currency, and the same system seems to be making successful headway in Germany. The fact is the United States is today issuing Federal Reserve Bank certificates, as mpney, based on ccAnmodities instead of gold or silver, and Secretary Mellon recently asserted that there is not a dollar of circulation against our huge.stack of gold. Conditions compel changes in almost every line of human endeavor. 0 Classified Ads pay both —seller and buyer.
HUDSON’S Goshen, Indiana 0 Real Values IN YARD GOODS Gaze Marvel Tissues, 32 inches wide,.. 59c Ratines, all colors, 36 inches .wide 50c Dotted Swisses, all colors, .40 inches wide,..........59c Voiles, Egyptian patterns, 40 inches wide, 50c Belmar Tissues, 32 inches wide ,39c Lingerie, genuine, all shades,... 75c Beach Cloth, all colors, 36 inches wide, 35c Crepe Frantais, all colors, 36 inches wide 75e Nucrepe Suiting, all colors, 36 inches wide 50c Ratine Suiting, all colors, 36 inches wide..., 50c Leno Crepe, hand drawn effect, 36 inches wide,.. .SI.OO Dress Ginghams, fine quality, 32 inches wide 30c Percales, all colors, 36 inches wide ...18c Pillow Tubing, 42 inches wide ~42e Pillow Tubing, 45 inches wide 45c Flesh Batiste, 32 inches wude 25c Meadowbrook Shirting, 32 inches wide 50c Curtain Marquisette, 36 inches wide .20c Quaker Filet Curtain Nets, 36 inches wide ..39c Cretonne, 36 inches wide, fancy colors 29c Sunbeam Crepe, new knit silk, 36 inches wide... .$2.25 Black Taffeta, 36 inches wide...,. $1.95 Flat Crepe, all shades, 40 inches wide $&25 Canton Crepe, all shades, 40 inches wide $3.25 Tweeds for Skirts,.sß inches wide Eponge, all wool, for skirts, all colors $2.25 Striped Wool Skirtings, 42 inches wide $1.50 Striped Wool Skirtings, 58 inches wide $3.25 Silk Trico for Skirts, white only. $1.59 Tubular Silk for Undervest .SI.OO to $1.50 Lithe HUDSOMcqIJ
* CAN’T DO- THE WORK It’s too much to try to work every day against a constant, dull backache, or sudden darting pain in the small of the back. Be rid of it. Try Doan’s Kidney Pills. Your neighbors recommend them. Ask your neighbor! Wm. F. Wogoman, farmer, Box 187, Syracuse, says: “I suffered with lumbago and when I got down to work in a cramped position. my back felt as tnough it were going to fall apart, when I tried to straighten. When I tried to lift, the strength fled from my back and mornings there was a soreness across my kidneys. My Sidneys became weak and acted in a poor way. Sometimes it was necessary to get up at night to pass the kidney secretions which were highly colored. My muscles were sore and I was out of trim all over. I saw Doan’s Kidney Pills advertised and the first box which I purchased at Hoch’s Drug Store eased the pains in my back. The second box of Doan’s drove away every sign of kidney trouble. My kidneys have been acting right ever since Doan’s cured me.” 60c, at all dealers. FosterMilburn Co., Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y. —(Advertisement.
Subscribe for the Journal. CONSTABLE’S SALE There will be sold at Louis Solt’s store, Vawter Park, on Friday, May 4, 1923, at 2:00 o’clock p. m. 1 two-horse corn plow; 1 mower; 1 corn planter. 52-2 t OCAL CRAFT, Constable. o NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION Notice is hereby given that the undersigned has been appointed by the Clerk of the Kosciusko Circuit Court, in theJState of Indiana, Administrator of the estate of Lydia Wolf, late of Kosciusko County, deceased. Said estate is supposed to solvent. DANIEL R. WOLF, Administrator. Warren T. Colwell, Attorney. April 25, 1923. 52-3 t
