The Syracuse Journal, Volume 16, Number 9, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 28 June 1923 — Page 5

...THE... Delmar Dance Orchestra Os ST. LOUIS. MO. Sis will play avary Saa4ay aad baliday aftaraeaa*. far daaciag. at tlw Bar-B Dance at Barbee Lakes.

If You Never Need Help you don’t need insurance. But if you ever have need for the fire-department or the banker—you must protect yourself with insurance. INSURE TODAY WITH Geo. L. Xanders Elhm Fir* (mrittlCMHllK

Your Dollar’s I * Opportunity i $ ©r .s Your dollar’s opportunity is dow. today! = Set it to work for you. Give it the task = of multiplying itself. In doing so it will = perform its part in the world affairs. | Every man’s money should be making use j of this opportunity. Farmers, for instance, g 9 can not only feed the world; through | businesslike handling of their farms = and businesslike handling of their in* 5 Saving U a form of serving. It la one of the biggest 31 Our first preaident said. “Economy makes happy § Si homes and sound nations. . , 1 g =i| apending or putting things II J good babrt. A » • / r ■ I * * ‘•' • fWwOois ght lb Save " Your Mon®: ■ // and Make ® YourMontyS&fe IMw” at .11 x JLBANK WITH US jtate Bank of Syracuse F. G. FITCH, Optometrist MANUFACTURING OPTICIAN W« Grind Yen* £•■*•• in Our Own Shop * WHY PAY MORE? tea. phnan 1100. Office Pbnne TSI. WARSAW, INDIANA

Scientists say that whole wheat contains all the J€y. a ~ food elements essent*a> to man - Bread is the staff °* *^ e ! b ut th® nutr *t' ve va i ue I, depends on the quality of flour that is put into it. Our Stock of Flour Is the Best the mills can make, and you have a choice of several excellent brands at this store. We sell also a select line of staple and fancy groceries. Our business policy, as you know, is * . Courtesy — Cleanliness—Honesty—Service r **~ Seider & Burgener PURE FOOD GROCERS SYRACUSE, i INDIANA .

NEWS ITEMS FROM OUR SURROUNDINGS Contributed Notes on the Hap* penings in Nearby Communities. McColley’s Corners Miss Beatrice Juday spent the week end at the Ted Poppenfoose some. Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Richcreek took Sunday dinner with Mr. and Mrs. Graham Tyler. Mrs. Ida Richcreek' and Mrs. Millicent Miller were shoppers in Goshen Thursday. Miss Lottie House spent the week end with her parents, returning to school Monday. Edward Richcreek spent Sunday at the home of his uncle, Dick Miller and family. Mrs. Ida Richcreek and Mrs. Graham Tyler-visited with Mrs. Orvie Richcreek Wednesday forenoon. Mrs. Ted Poppenfoose and son Glenn and Dalias Poppenfoose

spent Tuesday evening at the Harley Miller home. Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Richcreek, Arnel Miller and Miss Viola Kauffman were shoppers in Fort Wayne on Wednesday of last week. Mr. and Mrs. Greeley Yoder and family and Miss Mabel McClintic spent Sunday evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Nat House and family. , West End Merle Troup of Chicago spent Tuesday with his aunt, Mrs. Mik Troup, Mrs. Wm. Weybright ano daughter spent Friday in New Paris with Mrs. Joe Hartsow. Mr. and Mrs. Claude Niles spent Sunday in South Bend at the home of Mr. and Mrs. John Honer. Little Bobbie Honer of South Bend spent last week with his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Claude Niles. Mrs. Mary Mathews, whc spent the past four months in Goshen, has returned to her home in Milford. She has been in very ill health. Those who spent Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Wm. E. Sheffield were: Harry Zolmon and Howard Devenia of So. Bend. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Jenkenson, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Sheffield, Mrs. Anna Jenkenson of Mishawaka, Mr. and Mrs. B. H. Doll and children and Mr. and Mrs. Ray Ogle and son of Goshen. Pleasant Ridge Miss Ruby Bailey spent last week with Mr. and Mrs. Roy S. Robinson. William Layering spent Monday with his niece, Mrs. Ellen Robinson. Mr. and Mrs. Ben Hoopingarner called at the Emmett Weaver home Thursday evening. Mrs. Roy Robinsen and son Junior spent Wednesday with Mrs. Ellen Robinson. Mr. Robinson called in the evening. Miss Dora Armbuster and daughter Ruth called at the EHen Robinson home Tuesday forenoon. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Parsons and son Robert called on Mr. and Mrs. Albert Parsons and family near Cromwell Saturday evening.

- * White Oak Miss Mary Bushong spent Sunday with Miss Violet Fisher. Mrs. Ellen Warble spent Sunday with her sister, Mrs. Jane Rookstool. Mrs. Chauncey Coy of Mishawaka spent a few days with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Bowser, Mr. and Mrs. Loyd Dewart and family of Milford, and Mr. and Mrs. John Dewart spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Bert Whitehead . Those who spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Edward Smith were Mr. and Mrs. David Smith, Mr. and Mrs. Guy Letherman and family and Samuel Dewart.

O ; ' ADVERTISING The advertising of American business in American monthlies and weeklies amounts to about $150,000,000 a year, and daily newspaper advertising to about $650,000,000 a year, making a total of $800,000,000 in all, which is about as high as the bill for America’s chewing gum, or lip sticks, rouge and powder. The value of what the United States produces amounts to about $40,000,000,000, and this advertising bill of $800,000,000 is, therefore, only about 2 percent of the total amount of goods produced. Advertising is an important i and essential element in distriibution. It is more than that—it is the self-expression of busiI ness enterprise and keeps it : wholesome.

ITSZ SkSTSe 1 1 w> iw w«*s n»i ■ V kga , ' Chitt£hF tt. OU Block It JUNISKB UttleNN t Ooe-thiM U». r*r»Ur doM.-Mad* «< mm incredtent.. Urea candy Forchddr.n ThMMurr* Dow Store

THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL

TWO SIDES TO YHE * RUSSIAN SITUATION The plan of sjmie half dozen United States Senators to conduct a six-weeks school in Russia to study conditions at first hand, promises information more substantial than is yspally given to the press by people who form and express an opinion some forty-eight hours after arriving in Moscow. This applies to both ;hose who sympathize with Russia as well as those who denounce everything connected with Sovietism. In this connection, however, ind in view of the preponderance of denunciation and criticism, the report of Bishop Blake and Dr. T« O. Hartman, observers for the Methodist church at the Moscow religious conference, is deserving of at least casual attention as a matter of fair play. Dr. Hartman is the editor of Zion’s Herald, Boston. He not only endorses all that Bishop Blake has said, but ipaterially adds to it. Dr. Hartman says that the Soviet army in morale and in discipline are not equalled in Europe. And they are a singing army—singing in all places and on all occasions. He says that every man in the army is being taught to read and write, and in illiteracy will be liquidated by 1927, the tenth anniversary of the revolution. It is also proposed that at least 75 percent of t&e population will be able to read and write at that time. Dr. Hartman asserts that the prelate who was executed was a Pole. Documents were found on his person which proved that he was carrying on treasonable negotia-

lions with Poland. He asserts that there is but little doubt that “the Soviets inaugurated and are succeeding with tjie most colossal social experiment in history, and when the truth of it is known it will be rightly appraised.” —o— THEIR TIME jREGULATEJ) Mab had visaed a railroad town where a great number pf people regulated, Aheir activities by the blown at the home she described it to her whistled to work in the morning, they’re whistled, .to the dinner, and they’re whistled to stop in the afternoon. , , . ■- S —o Subscribe for the Journal. -

'♦ ( \ \\v .■ jgp? ' —llja feSj BfJ 31m lOi yTORE than one million auto- ■ Xvl mobiles now have been built and sold by Willys-Overland. Many of these Overlands and Willys-Knights are playing a tremendous part in the life of our own community — putting our families on swift wheels — multiplying the earning power of our men —lightening the work of our women carrying our children to/school-— bringing our people together. m Today’s Overland and WillysKnight cars are the best automobiles r<“ \ Willys-Overland ever built and r—‘ are sold at the lowest price. All K\ F /" '-'Srwi P 3 achievements are excelled in \ ~ ijl/j ‘ beauty, comfort and performance—- ’ ’'' / I in the giving of real value. |bx CsFy^/L Reflecting such quality, sales this I 'yp season are the greatest in our his- 1 k '®| tory. The public has registered its I z ‘ I appreciation of great value. I . 7^. j!±? SYRACUSE AUTO | SALES WILLYS-OVERLAND

100 R.R. CARS WILL BRING GIANT CIRCUS Arriving aboard 100 doublelength railroad ears forming trains more than one and onethird miles long, and made even greater than in 1922 by the addition of many big new foreign acts, Ringling Brothers and Barnum and Bailey combined will exhibit at South Bend, Friday, July 13. Those who read the daily papers or who keep in touch with the movie news-reels need not be reminded of the shipload of acts and animals recently imported by the Greatest Show on Earth. The remarkabe cargo included two companies of baby elephants are now joined with { the. forty adults of the mammoth herd. There were alsd 100 more performing horses accompanied by Europe’s greatest trainer and many wild animals, some of which have been added to the scores upon scores of trained jungle beasts, while others have become part of the marvelous menagerie. Big as is this wonder circus of 1923—with iU more than thirty trained wild animal displays in steel arenas, fully 200 wonderfully schooled horses, 700 men and women performers, 100 clowns .and scores of features—the price of admission is no more than before. And though the trained animal numbers and the immense horse show were circuses in themselves while 0 touring Europe, they are not offered as separate attractions by the l Ringling Brothers and Barnum and Bailey combined shows. Every thing is in one mammoth main teat. One ticket admits to all of these and to the tremendous double menagferie. There are more than a thousand animals in the zoo of this circus and these include entire families of hippopotami and giraffes. Another remarkable zoological feature is an armored rhinoceros, the only one known to exist and alone worth $50,000. The wren monoplanes, with a 3.5 horse power engine, wing span 37 feet, length 23 feet, made a flight in London of over an hour, traveled at a52 mile speed, arose to 2350 feet high, and used less than a gallon of I gas and a’pint of oil, or nearly 100 miles to the gallon.

$200,000 SWINE BARN Indianapolis, Ind., June 25. — The State Fair will soon have one of the most beautiful and practical swine barns in the country. Contract for the new structure was awarded recently and work is well under way. The building when completed will cost approximate $200,000 and will provide ample room for the large exhibit which will be made. One of the big features of the Spotted Poland China show this year will be the futurity in which a large number of entries have been made. Among those who will contest for state honors are C. Leonard and Son, Portland; James H. Williams, Bryant; W. F. Kerlin, Rockfield; John

United StatesT res areCoodTres II -and "U SCO" JO nfirms YOUR enthusiasm over “USCO” performance won’t surprise the motoristXvho knows the fabric tire ficlJ. Every 30 x 31At'rc user recognizes “USCO” as a value to be respected end to be investigated. * The users of “USCO,” know it as a money’s worth that came before the public as a leader and that has maintained its leadership. “USCO?* is made by the same people who make Royal Cords. Where to buy US.Tines ~ SYRACUSE AUTO SALES J£SS£ SHOCK. Proprietor SYRACUSE, INDIANA

Wilt, Hillsboro; and S. R. Youkey & Sons, Thorntown. The contestants will be increased by entries to be made from winners in a large number of county futurities to be held in August over the state. Among the largest county shows will be the ?ontests in Jay, Fountain, Tipton and Hancock counties. Fred L. Obenchain, secretary of the National Spotted Poland China Record, after a survey of the state announces that the Spotted Show at the state fair will be the largest in the history of Indiana. There is every indication that the pig club show will also be the most successful in history. < o Subscribe for the Journal.