The Syracuse Journal, Volume 16, Number 19, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 6 September 1923 — Page 6
Classified Ads | | c g Classified advertising ts ac- f £ cepted at the rate of 1 cent * I, a word for each insertion. * A g booking and collection fee of J *, 10 cents will be added for a J • charged account; no account * J will be charged for less than * «25 cents for a single item. « TUBES—The Harrison Puncture Proof Tube has arrived in Syracuse. They are guaranteed to be. and are puncture proof. On one occasion, it is a recorded fact, that there were 603 nails driven into one tube and the tjbe still rt’taimd the air. These tubes are here for your examination, and 1 will give you a free demonstration of these at any time. Roy Kuhr, Box 227. Syracuse. l<-::tpd WANTED Men «r women to take orders for genuine guaranteed hosiery for men, won * n. and children. Eliminates darning. Salary $75 a week full time, $1.50 an hour spare tinv'. CotSms. heathers, silks. International Stocking Mills, Norristown. Pa. ' 19-Wt LOST On carnival fmerry-go-round) grounds a K. of P. watch charm. Finder please retu n to Journal office and receive $2 reward. ' ■ lb-pd. SEE us for new and used parts of all kinds and accessories. Miller > Lopppr. 19-ts SPECIAL- Framed Art mirrors $1 at Beckman's. 21 REGISTER NOW FOR SEPTEMBER 4 Earn expenses if you should enroll early. Write South Bend Business College for full particulars. 15-stpd LOST Linoleum rug. on Bain--5 ter'.on road between Syracuse and Goshen. Finder please n >tify this office. 19-pd FOR SALE Holstein heifer with calf by side. Esten Kline 19-3 t FOR SALE *' ’®r house and barn, close to Syracuse on main road. John Porter. Syracuse. Indiana. 19-3tp. RECORDS Septembei Victot records now on sale at Beckmans. 18-lt • f ■ PEACHES--42 per bushel and upward. Stephen Freeman. 18-3 t SPECIAL Framed Art mirrors $1 at Beckman's. 18 2t CHICKEN DINNERS-Go to Drew's Ranch for your Chicken Dinners, $1.25 per plate. Best of everything served. For reservations call, Syracuse 566. 14-ts Ft)R SALE, H.gh class cottage in most desirable location, on Lake Wawasee. Complete’. > equipped and modern through-! out. Also several desirable lots! on Wawasee and Syracuse Lakes. 1 Geo. L. Xanders, Syracuse. Ind. 12 ts SHOES-* Comflex means shoes that are comfortable and flexible, that need absolutely no 'breaking in. that wear longer and better than any other work shoes made today. A. W. Strieby. 1-ts FOR SALE Framing timbers and some* lumber, located on lot one-half block south of Wright’s Grocery. Warren T. Colwell. 7-ts FOR SALE Stove wood, fine , and chunks, delivered. Phone 516. or address Dan Mishler, Syracuse. 36-ts I NG~per yard at the Milford Electric Shop. Leave work at Connolly s dry goods store or send with Mr. Snobarger. | 3-ts "wanted— All kinds of timber. Inquire of Coppes Bros. A Zook, Nappanee. 36-ts CONCRETE WORK See Enteral Jones, Syracuse, Ind., Route 2. Milford Phone 382. l-13tpd ■ ■ — PENNY PADS—Merchants and j mechanics use them for notes and figuring. Size 3x6 inches. Jour- ’ nal oifice. TYPEWRITER RIBBONS for L. C. Smith, Oliver and Underwood machines at the Journal office. ""CARDBOARD All kinds of cardboard, suitable for drawing and maps, for sale at the Journal office. Classified Ads pay both—seller and buyer. a ’”siGNS- 7 ‘For Rent” and “For Sale” signs are carried in stock at the Journal office. Subscribe for the Journal
□□□□□□□□□□□□a □□□□□□□□□□□□□ □ g I {ffinwb i = THE UNIVERSAL CAH □ □ ' □ g 8 tcOUPE □ ■ □ □ R The Ford Coupe It an entirely new body design LJ bringing a distinctive exterior appearance, mare l_J C comfortable seating arrangement, increased luggage lJ carrying capacity and »generally rugged construction. j=j The doors are 1 age and heavily framed. The j I windows afford the maximum vision and the rear L_ O vision window is exceptionally large. L* U The front of the car is most attractive, the cowl [_ flowing in a graceful into the higher hoed and Q Q . radiator. A visor over the windshield and ventilator Q jn the cowl give added touches of quality to the car. ♦ ' . The carrying deck at the rear provides opportunity for storing cor.s derable luggage. Rear fenders Q are improved and strongly secured. Q D The interior is nest inviting. The deeply cush-f Q QI ioned seat is divided so as to make easy filling of the [_ Q , gasoline tank underneath it. At the rear of the seat Q is a small recess shelf for carrying parcels. Uphol- Q j~| stery is in choice materials. .[J Door windows xre equipped with the revolving H type window regulators and locks are provided on the Q Q doors. f C. R. HOLLETT I Authorized Dealer p SYRACUSE INDIANA p a . R a ' R ■ g □□□□□□□□□□□□a □□□□□□□□□□□□!_■
HOOSIERS* FIRST TON LITTER The first Hoosier Ton Litter of pigs to qualify in the 1923 contest was officially weighed Au:ust i. b\ F.-.r-u Adviser D. D. Ball, of Rushville, Indiana, for Jesse G. Gray and son of that bred Poland China pigs weighed ! 2.140 pounds on the 180th day. The official weights for differI ent periods follow: Date Weighed Weight Jpne 28 Julv 5 1.434 lbs. July 12 1.580 lbs. Julv 19 1.716 lbs. July 26 i,M2 lbs. August 4 2,140 lbs. The litter was weaned when twelve weeks old, and during the last 38 days two pounds per head per day was put on them with ground wheat and ground corn with soaked and skimmed milk. The total cost of feed was $120.00. The entire litter will be for breeding stock as they ire not overfed and stand well on their feet• according to Adviser Ball. If the litter had been
3 SUPERIOR CORD TIRES E □. • 30.3!, .. . $15.00. Q Guaranteed 10,000 Miles. □ SYRACUSE flll lO SALES § JESSE SHOCK, Proprietor. •, n » w miu.rrt.a»ir tarif ~ t t -fr — it-» it -r m—■ —■■ > iWir ir-w-rr -i r-rr— 11 “ -■»— —— — F. G. FITCH, Optometrist -r- MANUFACTURING OPTICIAN W« Grind Y»ur L«m is Our Own Shop WHY PAY MORE? Ro*. Phoao 1100. Offico Phono 781. WARSAW, INDIANA | t '9■ ■ a FRESH. 6LEAN M&flT j Await yoo at our market at all times. lon g will find the juiciest cuts and the tenderesf pieces here. We also handle smoked and | dried meats and a general line of canned meats. g ♦ j KLINK BROS. MEAT MARKET |
marketed at pork prices Augusi 4, ($7.00) they would have return ed $149.80, or $29.80 profit, be ing twenty-five percent on t‘h< cost of production. There i: money in hogs in 1923. | This was the dam’s third litter She has farrowed 38 pigs in three litters and has raised 34 of them The .granddam farrowed a tota: of 66 pigs in six litters. That 8 AB. One day the huull *u«l of ive In our firm uwde hla tuther a isit. On *rrlv»njr home be Informed Ida mother. “Mauuua. dudtly doaan't work do'.vn at th* ■•ttJea. He Juat aits there and first a man cotnea in and <lts down and he ta!:<i to him a long time anl then another man conies In md he talks to him. and that’s all he Joes all day.” Just Ont Hour Eash Day. An hour wasted dnily on tri ties or Indolence would, if devoted to self Improvement, make an Ignorant man or woman wise tn a few years, and. employed in good, work a »wou)d make a life fndtful and death a harvest of wonhy derdA Fifteen minutes a day levered to s, If improvement will" be felt nt the end of a year.—Samuel Smiles. ■
■ ' THE SYRACUSE JOVRNAL ~t
ELKHART COUNTY FAIR Our neighboring city Gosher j will have a big fair and Pageant of Progress Exposition on Sep tember 12, 13, 14 and 15. Follo.virp is the p: giv a Wednesday, September 12. Gates open at 7:UO a. m. Judging in all departments begins at 9:00 a. m. 10:30—Band concert. 12:00—Noon, raising of large American flag donated to the school children of Elmhart County by Hon. Wm. CharnJey. Ex-Mayor of Goshen. Singing ol America, accompanied by Banc’ and firing of twenty-one bomb 1 in a salute to “Old Glory.” 1:30 p. m.—Races and band con cert, followed by Hornbrook: Congress of Western Riders ir past times of the plai"s. - 6:15 p. m.—-Grand illuminatioi of grounds with special attrac tions in all departments. 8:15 p. m.—Ban.l concert Hornbrooks Congress of Riders. Etc. Thursday, Septembe” 13. Gates open at 7:00 a. »n. Public inspection of blue rib bon winners. “Here’s where town and cotfnty meet ?nd greet. The great show window o farm and field, shop and faetorv.’ 10.30 a. m. —Grand live-stock ■ n ( .t,.de. ' ■ . 1:00 p. m.—James- F. Boyer (Our Jinp and his celebrated In strument City Ba»d featuring Mr.' Robert Bruce, Premier Cornetist, America’s finest Saxophone Sextette, etc. ! 1:30 p. m.—Beginning of races, followed by Hornbrooks Congress 1 of Western Riders. King, High- , school educated horse. Etc. ‘ I 2:00 p. m.—Horseshoe pitching I tournament begins. ; 6:15 p ,m. —Illumination ol [ grounds. Special demonstrations i of latest models in automobiles, . trucks and tractors, in the great ' Golden Jubilee Tent. 8:00 p. m.—Band concert, HarI mony Quartet, Hornbrooks Con | gress of Western Riders, etc. i Friday, September 14. Farmers’ Day I Gates open at 7:00 a. m. People from all rural districts I of Northern Indiana and South- | ern Michigan are expected to |pe | present. i 10:30 a. m.—Grand live-stock I parade. 1:00 p. m.—Band concert and races. Hornbrooks Congress of ) Western Risers and other special Horse-shoe Pitching Tournament. . 2:00 p. m. -Continuation of attractions. 1 Special demonstrations of Purdue University i n Dairying, Poultry '* Raising, Soil, Crops, etc. State e Etomology and Bee Culture Dis- ' play< World’s Farm Products. 6:15 p. in.—lllumination of r - grounds. e 8:00 p. m.—Band Concert. ’• Hornbrooks Congress of Western tl Riders, etc. Saturday, September 15. Workingmen's Day Gates open at 7:00 a. m. c This is the day that all factories are expected to close to allow their employees to attend. 10:30 a. m. —Grand Live Stock i parade. 1:00 p. m.—Band concert and i races. Hornbrooks Congress of • Western Riders and other special attractions. 2:00 p. m.—Special attractions in merchants, manufacturers, automobile and agriculture departments. 6:ls—lllumination of Grounds. 8:00 p. m.—Band concert. ’ Hornbrooks Congress of Western Riders, etc. ' 10:00 p. m.—Closing of the; Golden Jubilee, the Fiftieth An-1 niversary of The Elkhart County Agricultural Association. A speed program has also been arranged for. each day and attractive purses are offered in trotting and pacing races. — Q—■ Drove Through Ghoat. One dark night when 1 was driving , along a lonely road, my honse bet-ama i frightened and refused to ptocwd. la looking ahead to 11mover the ‘cause, I saw a ghostlike figure atauding In the middle of the road. Believing that someone was tryir.g to frighten me, I whipped the horse and attempted to run the Joker down. 1 was very much surprised when I rau my horse completely through the ghost—a dense pillar of fog rising from a mud puddle.— Chicago Journal. • ■ —O ; Banana Leads Food Production. The banana produces more food ts the acre than any other plant. Its yield is about fifty times more than the potato, and about one hundred and fifty times more than wheat O , Parisian Modiste Rewards Help. Every year one of the famous Parisian drvssmakera allows each of his women employees to choose a drees and have It made up according to her own taste. Hairs Catarrh Medicine Those who are in a **ran down” coadlwin notice that Catarrh bothers themxmuch more than when they are in good Health. This fact proves that while Catarrh is a local disease, it is greatly influenced by constitutional conditions. hajlL’B catarrh medicine consists hf an Ointment which Quickly , Relievee by local application, aad the Internal Medicine, a Tonic, which assists I in improving the General Health. Sold by druggists for over «0 Tears. F, OMaqr A Co., TWedo, Ohia
ANOTHER SYRACUSE CASE ’ It Proves That There's a Way ; Out For Many Suffering Syracuse Folks. Just another report of a case!; ,n Syracuse. Another typical ■' :ase. Kidney ailments relieved; I n Syracuse with Doan’s Kidney ; Pills. Ernest Richhart, Boston St., ■ays: "I worked outside in the lampness. I caught cold and it settled on my kidneys. I had all tinds of trouble with my back. My kidneys were sore and there vas such a pain in my back I could hardly go. The throbbing jain took my strength and I was in pretty bad shape for a few Jays. My muscles felt heavy md I felt sore all over. I knew > something was wrong with my! ddneys for they were so slug- i yish that the secretions were scanty in passage. I was worse iff after inflammation of the dadder set in. I used Doan’s Kidney Pills and they made me eel one hundred percent better. My back ceased to ache; the inJammation left my bladder and 1 my kidneys acted right. My cure las lasted several years.” 60c, at all dealers. FosterMilburn Co., Mfrs., Buffalo?N. Y. — (Advertisement. o > ACREAGE OF OATS REDI’CEI) Acreage of oats in Indian/ gradually has been reduced each vear until probably 600.000 fewer icres are planted with the grain than ten years ago, George C. Bryant, state agricultural statistician, has announced. The oats yield this year, will be taken from approximately 1,644,000 acres. Mr. Bryant said. The automobile has played a prominent part in the weakening of the oats market, Mr. Bryant said. With the rapid decrease in the number of horses in the cities and the Subsequent decline in feeding, the demand of oats, naturally has subsided, he pointed out. The farmers, too, have taken over gasoline propelled machinery rather than using horses in the fields' he said. More farmers each year are grinding w’heat and oats for hogs and cattle, it was said. —: o Old Sare«ry Still Practiced. T*o thousand five hundred years ago Hindus performed surgical operations for cataract by a method which still survives.
I The Studebaker I Five-Passenger Touring Car 5 995 |AW Don’t Experiment Buy a 1924 Studebaker The 1924 Studebaker Light-Six Touring Comparison with other cars costing more car, with Us refinements and improvements, —or less —wiU provide convincing proof of offers the closest approach to mechanical per- its greater doliar-for-dollar value, its dependfection in moderate priced cars yet produced. able* performance, ample power, extreme It continues to set the pace in thi amount coa^ort - “<* ““Y othcr desirable features, of value for the money invested. No radical The Light - Six is practically free from departure from approved design has been vibration because Studebaker machines the attempted. There’s nothing experimental crankshaft and connecting rods on all surabout it—everything of recognized merit. faces. No other manufacturer follows this Every vital unit has proved its satisfaction practice on a car at anywhere near the in the public use. Light-Six price. This is just one of many No matter how much money you expect to superiorities. invest in a car, by all means see this Light-Six After seventy-one years, the n&ne StudeTouringcar, ride in it—and drive it yourself, baker enjoys confidence and respect more ■ It is then that you realize the difference. than ever. HewaU-rtcel body at striking beauty. One-piece, rain-proof windshield with attractive cowi lights set in bate. Quick -actios cowi ventilator. Door curtains, bound os three aides by steel rods, open with door*- Removable upholetery in tonneau. Door pocket flaps with weights hold them in shape. Upholstered m genuine leather. Large rectangular window in rear curtain. Thief-proof transmission lock. Eat More Wheat Products and be Healthy S TUP E B A Kjm * 1924 MODELS AND PRICES—A o. b. factory SI 0 >/j ■ LIGHTSIX BIG-SIX W s-PaM.iirw.a. s-PaM.urw.B. r-Pa»a.,uew.B. «&■■■■■ 40 H. P. SOH. P. tOH. P. V M Touring J 995 Touring $1350 Touring $1750 Roadster (3-Pasa.)_ 975 Roadster<l Pnse.).. 1325 Speedster (S-Paae.) 1835 Qwe-M/3-PaM.»»5 Coupe (S-Paae.) 1975 Coupe (S-Psn.) 3550 Sedan 1550|sedan.„ ~ 5050 Sedan 3750| * Term* to Moot Tour Conronioneo FLOYD HEDGES, Dealer Syracuse, Indiana THIS IS A.' STUDEBAKER YEAR ♦
DRIVE OVER, PEOPLR AUTOMOBILES ADMITTED FREE ; ATTEND THE GREAT Elkhart County Fair and Pageant of Progress Exposition ’ SMV: SEPT. 12-13-14-15 4 BIG DAYS-4 BIG NIGHTS. Half-Million Dollars in Exhibits $15»OOO in Premiums and Purses World’s Farm Products Exhibit BIG-FREE Hornbrook’s Congress of Western Riders in ATTRACTION pastimes of the plains yOriginal-New Type-100 per cent Meritorious C The Most Colossal County Fair in America GOSHEN E S„ H^ T INDIANA
Thg Letter Q. The origin <»f the letter Q 1$ inter- I Mting in view of its similarity to the > letter O. The name is derived from I the French word Queue, meaning tall, sa the letter is O with a tull. —o Peceimirtic Doctrine. The highest order of mind is accused of folly, m well as the lowest. Nothing is thoroughly approved but mediocrity. The majority has established this, and it fixes Its fangs on whatever gets beyortU it either way.— Pascal. o — 6 Ant Travels Rapidly. If we moved our legs proportionately as fast as an ant, it is calculated we could travel nearly 800 miles an hour. Qrnl*ological. Swallows bare shown a marked Improvement in their nest building, it is said. Q Foil Burglars 100 Year*. For Hioft than 100 years a famous firm Id London has been inventing and manufacturing Locks aud safes to baffle burglars. o Largest Animal is Vegetarian. The food of the elephant is wholly vegetable, chiefly grasA leaves of trees and roots.
OMest Log Hous*. The first known log house, built by* white men within the bounds of arhat i Is now Colorado, was erected in 1816 for a troop of Spanish cavalry patrolling the Arkansas, near the site of * Pueblo. ,— —o That’s an Idea. Efficiency Expert (after tour ot office) —Well, sir, I find an awful lot of pins on the floor. If you will give orders to the help to pick them up, they will receive bending exercises and you will save a lot of money on plna. U-o—. Nero’s Golden House. Nero built the costliest palace the world has ever known. It was called the ’’Domus Aureo,” or Golden House. Remains of one end of this colossal dwelling have Just been unearthed. It Is said to have contained 100,QUO rooms. SPECIAL ATTENTION GIVEN TO ESTATES. DEEDS. MORTGAGES -TITLES AND WILLS WILLIAM GRAY LOEHR Attoruey-at-Law since 1916 Admitted to Practice in All Courts Collections, Notary Public 118| S. Buffalo St. Warsaw, Ind.
8 ERVICI
