The Syracuse Journal, Volume 16, Number 15, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 9 August 1923 — Page 3

■ Lazy Dollars Dollars merely are not performing | I their natural function. They are not | ~ working. They are not doing the owner |P* | or the world any good. | Moreover, most hiding places thought to = be safe are decidedly unsafe. Not only g 1 thieves, but fire or other unforeseen | | happenings may rob you of your wealth. = • Saving Is Using = Dollars saved are safer! And they are g = constantly working to earn more for you. | They are constantly working for the J good of the whole community. = Consider thia. We pay you for = lug. And while you are saving. f A = your money ia never out of reach. I g • = It ia always ready for you and flllmEKfiHßa i easy to get when you need it S I Start with us today. One ay Mt" a /' j| dollar will do it. m ~ j To Saw / J / Your SwWf'k Jfi ® YourMontyS&fe BANK WITH US $ Stale Bank of Syracuse F. G. FITCH, Optometrist / MANUFACTURING OPTICIAN Wa Grind Your Lantoa in Our Own Shop WHY PAY MORE? Roa. Phono 1100. Office Phono 781. WARSAW. INDIANA r'--' - " " "" ' 11 Everything for Your bi ."J 1 a Baking Needs J egg Good home rl made bread, biscuit an d cookies always make a j -l “hit” with husbands and |t , ■ ..■Ji kiddies. And they’re 6c- /—■ x tied when you bake a N delicious cake. ** y° u are not S ettin ß k as Rood results as you Y \* would like to have, why ■kCfolSl a «c OM uk- n bu..»ou<«h. We have handled many different brands of flour and meal and know just *"""' " I ""* — * which are giving the best satisfaction. We invite you to profitbyourexperience. Telephone Orders Given Prompt Attention ? Seider & Burgener PURE FOOD GROCERS SYRACUSE. - INDIANA wtrw^? 1,,,— "" ARCH.'TECTURE? r EUnkiho-7 y \ 'h||f| MANUFACTUftiNG lj HI —-iCI INSURANCE. W \ A IlliMUDDLING PLANNING TXTHERE will you be ten years from now? The answer depends on V V the course you follow. Today, tomorrow, the next seven days, the next month and the years swiftly coming will tell the story. CEveryone who has not made a definite choice of his life work or . who is unsettled and desires better himself should get in touch /mxne'dia te/y with THE OPEN ROAD The Most Origfna/ Monthly in America Its department: “Jobe,—What the Times Are Opening Up,* and the ’’What Shall I Be?” series of opportunity artidea, prepared by experts, are helping thousands to Look Before Thcty Leap. And in every issue t here is plenty of rousing good fiction. €.We want you. oe someone dose to you. to eqcy and profit by tHs remarkable magsdne. Therefore ve make thia Get Aequafcatcd Offer—4 mantneMrenadnOar. (The regular price ia $2.50 a year.) Thia amaß Inviseminat may influence your future tremendously. Good judgment says: Do it anwl Hn sl-00 to thio offer and mafi it wi& aasne said addraa to THE OPEN ROAD MAGAZINE, 248 BoyUton Street. Boston, Mass.

ROOSTER NAMED FOR PURDUE POULTRYMEN It isn’t often that poultrymen achieve sueh fame that they get roosters named for them, but three members of the Purdue University Poultry Department can lay claim to such honor. Miss G. Ella Marquees, who has a poultry farm along Cedar Lake in Lake County, has a peppy, fighting White Leghorn Rooster which she has christened "Philcarone”, in honor of Profs. A. G. Philips, C. W. Carrick and L. L. Jones. His name Is a combination of Philips, Carrick and Jones. “You know I feel that the things I learned from their instructions at the poultry short course in 1919 and in extension work since they have been responsible for what little success I have made in poultry work,” said Miss Marquees. “I believe in Purdue methods. They have paid me well.” Miss Marquees is proprietor of a poultry farm which had 800 laying hens last year and will have about 1200 the coming season. “Philcarone” is boss of the poultry lots and last year in the county poultry show was declared by the judge to be the best cockerel that he had handled so far during the season. He was from Purdue poultry stock. He will be entered in the Coliseum Poultry Show next winter at Chicago. o COLORS WORN BY JOCKEYS There are records to show that King Henry VIII as early as 1530 dressed his jockeys in colors—but nothing to prove that the colors were always the same. In 1762 the Jockey club posted a notice to the effect that several owners of racing horses had selected colors to be worn by their jockeys. Some of the colors chosen then are still in use $y the same families. o WILSON’S CONDITION Woodrow Wilson receives very few visitors, even intimate friends. His physical condition has improved very little since his term expired, and the report that he contemplated a transcontinental tour is pronounced absurd by his physician.

11 i ! Starts Toward the Ownership of a and in a short time you will have a car of your own. Then all “out-of-doors” will be yours to enjoy with your family. Think of the comfort, the pleasure and happiness which will be yours. Buy your car under the terms of the R>r as little as $5, you can select the Ford you want and place your order at once. We will put this money in a •*- bank for you —at interest. Each week you add a little more. This also draws interest. Soon your payments* plus the interest earned, makes the car your own. Come ini Let us give you Mi particulars about this new plan. C. R. Hollett I Dealer I SYRACUSE, INDIANA t

THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL

B. & 0. VET. ASS’N. OUTING Probably the largest gathering of railroad men at a one day outing will be witnessed on Thursday,. August 23. On this date the Baltimore and Ohio Veterans Association have arranged for an outing at “Chester Park,” Cincinnati, and have designated the affair as Galloway-Fries Day in honor and commemoration of Vice Presidents C. W. Galloway and Archibald Fries, these gentlemen having completed 40 years of continuous service with the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad. The outing will be a Baltimore and Ohio System affair taking in the entire line from New York to St. Louis and an attendance of 15,000 to 20,000 people is expected. In order to provide ample accommodations for employees, their families and friends, all of whom are invited, all regular trains on this date will carry extra equipment and a number of special trains will 'oe operated from various points direct to Chester Park station. During the outing, Vice Presidents Galloway and Fries wifi be presented with Diamond Studed Gold Emblems of the Veterans Association. Numerous committees arranging details headed by prominent officials of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad are hard at work in an effort to make this outing a memorable one. o AMERICAN LEGION Michigan City, Ind., Aug. I.— Michigan City is making elaborate preparations for the entertainment of the state convention of the American Legion September 10, 11 and 12. Fifteen thousand visitors are expected and all will be housed and fed without straining the city’s resources. A citizens’ committee is raising an entertainment fund of SIO,OOO by popular subscription. The program for the three-day meet will include a great industrial and military parade, an exhibition by a dozen flying ships from Rantbul field, display by naval ships and coast guards, boxing contests in the new SIOO,000 concrete arena, aquatic sports and trips through the beautiful dunes country. Forty bands and drum corps will play during the carnival of fun. o Subscribe for the Journal.

BIBLE CONFERENCE — The twenty-ninth annual Bible Conference of Winona Lake August 17-26, under the leadership of the Rev. W. E. Biederwolf, D. D., director, promises to exceed in talent and program the previous years of splendid accomplishment. Two unique features are woven into the program for this year: a missionary hour, with speakers from all parts of the world, and an exclusive hour for minister? in charge of th egreat pulpiteers of two continents. The array of exceptional talent includes the following: Drs. Hutton, Glasglow; Fletcher, London; Erdman, Princeton; Wishart, Wooster; Stone, Chicago; Bishop Hughes, Boston; Candler. Atlanta; Drs. Philpott, Chicago; Grif-fith-Thomas, Toronto; S. P. Long, Chicago; Landrith, Chicago: Robertson, Louisville; Kyle, Xenia. Visitors will t.nd a rejuvenated, beautified grounds and an expanding institution rendering an increasingly large Christian ministry to the world. o— — MAPS LONG USED IN PERU Mapmaking goes back to he earliest known time. It was a branch of the early picture writing practiced by savages. In Tahiti, for instance, the natives were able to make fairly good maps for the guidance of explorers. Maps with raised lines were in use in Peru before tihe Conquest. The oldest known map is that of the Ethiopian gold mines, dating from the time of Sethos I, the father of Rameses 11, long before the time of Aristagoras and his bronze tablet on which were inscribed the circuit of the earth and all the seas and rivers then known. o Every man’s soul is his own, but many a cuss is dead willing to give it away to the devil.

*’B M B S b ■BflH B. Imlb b® BiBI BWB b BP ii ♦♦♦ Bbl b b H wi! £ I ■ ® “ ■■ wn t TO BECOME MOULDERS AT THE DALTON FOUNDRIES WARSAW, IND. X e ■=s==== | An Opportunity to Earn | Best Pay in the County. ❖ .

I Special Sale Trunks & Traveling Bags £ Wardrobe Trunks: 18 styles to select from, of the best known makes. v We guarantee these prices I very low, $27.75, $31.50, ;• I I I III' ,I $37.50 up to $75.00. I Box and steamer Trunks: Some at special cut prices. SERVICEABLE LEATHER TRAVELING BAGS, leather lined, from $7.50 up to $35.00. Cheaper ones as low as $2.75, $3.75, ss.o(k COWHIDE LEATHER SLIT CASES. SIO.OO to $42.50. j CHEAP FIBRE CASES from $1.35 up. LADIES’ HAT BOXES, for two or four hats; LADIES’ “WEEK-END” CASES AND BAGS from $3.00 j! up to $25.50. ;! “OVERLAND CASES,” with tray—very roomy, $lO to ;! $25. I BOSTON BAGS, real leather, from. $2.00 to $12.00. All sizes. MOTOR RESTAURANTS OR LUNCH KITS for four people SIB.OO value, cut to $12.00; for 6 people, S2O value, cut to $15.00. MEN’S BILL FOLDS, CHANGE PURSES, KEYTAINERS, BRIEF, INSURANCE CASES AND CATALOGUE CASES. New shipment of Ladies’ Leather Hand Bags and Purses. [HARNESS, ROBES etc —We make harness, halters etc, and do repair work. 2 We guarantee everything we sell to be as represented. j THE LEATHER GOODS STORE !> 115 E. Lincoln Ave. GOSHEN Irwin Block ,*%«4*«4A««M4Mt**Wl4«%%*«**%Wl**%%**V*M*%*«%**«***W*M I Advertise in The Journal