The Syracuse Journal, Volume 16, Number 20, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 13 September 1923 — Page 8

I Classified Ads | Classified advertising Is ac- | cepted at the rate of 1 cent c a word tor each insertion. A * booking and collection fee of 10 cents will be added for a g charged account: no account g will be charged for lees than g *6 cents for a single item. « 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. Cottons, heathers/ silks. International Stocking Mills, Norristown, Pa. 19-1 Ot SEE us for new and used parts of all kinds and accessories. Miller & Lepper. 19-ts FOR SALE—Holstein heifer with calf by side. Esten Kline. 19-3 t FOR SALE—9| acres. Good house and barn, close to Syracuse on main road. John Porter, Syracuse, Indiana. 19-3tp. PEACHES- $2 per bushel and upward. Stephen Freeman. 18-3 t Front’d Art mirrors $1 at Beckman’s. 18-2 t FOR SALE—High class cottage in most desirable location on Lake Wawasee. Completely equipped and modern throughout. Also several desirable lots on Wawasee and Syracuse Lakes. Geo. L. Xanders, Syracuse, Ind. 12-ts SHOES—Comdex 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. 4-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 316, or address Dan Mishler, Syracuse. 36-ts HEMSTITCHING -lOc per yard at the Milford Electric Shop. Leave work at Connolly's dry goods store or send with Mr. Snobarger. 3-ts WANTED—AII kinds of timber. Inquire of Coppes Bros. & Zook, Nappanee. 36-ts CONCRETE WORK—See Emeral Jones, Syracuse, Ind., Route 2. Milford Phone 382. l-13tpd LETTER HEADS—Lend dignity to your corresffondence by using printed stationery. The Journal’s commercial printing department is well equipped for this kind of work " penny PADS—Merchants and mechanics use them for notes and figuring. Site 3x4 inches. Journal office. ~ TYPEWRITER RIBBONS for L. C. Smith, Oliver and Underwood machines at the Journal office. Classified Ads pay both —seller and buyer. RIBBONS—We sell ribbons for L. C. Smith. Underwood and Oliver Typewriters. Journal office. CARDBOARD—AII kinds of cardboard, suitable for drawing and maps, for sale at the Journal office. BPKCIAL ATTENTION GIVEN TO ESTATES. DEEDS. MORTGAGES TITLES AND WILLS niXIAM GRAY LOEHR Attorney-at-Law since 1916 Admitted, to Practice in All Courts Collection*. Notary Public 1181 S. Buffalo St.. Warsaw, Ind. Get your FREIGHT* via the SYRACUSE-FORT WAYNE TRUCK LINE J. E. Rippey Phone 101 Syracuse, Ind. “If I don’t haul your freight we both loee." GEOTVXANDERN Attorney-at-Law Settlement erf Estates. Opinions on Titles Fire and Other Insurance Phone 7 Syracuse, Ind. i LOTS FOR SALE at Redmon Poiat, Dewart Lake see Ike Klingaman Syracuse, ImL, Roate 2.

n * H 9 dfojed/ § H THE UNIVERSAL CAS I § CAR f ■ y Improved style, more graceful lines g E and a lower appearance, : are outstanding features of the new F Ford Touring Car □ - - ° [F These all have been effected through the higher radiator. Q £ The cowl has been enlarged and drops in a graceful sweep Q Q to meet the larger hood, giving the entire body generally Q longer lines. D j~| At the same time the attractiveness of the one-man top Q’ [2 and slanting windshield are enhanced. Q The exterior appearance of the car is given a further touch Q of completeness by the new apron on the radiator which connects with fender skirts, bringing a highly finished apQ pearance to the front. This new feature is standard on all Ford passenger car types. D Another improvement resultiny from the larger cowl is Q EJ the increase in lef room afforded occupants of the front seat, Q making far more comfort in riding. D 9 • 9 § C. R. HOLLETT | Authorized Dealer D SYRACUSE INDIANA Q n A □ g □□□□□□□□□□□□a □□□□□□□□□□□□□

ANOTHER PRICE DROP |»V UIIH <-<‘V|-RIAND Effective September 1, President John N. Willys of the WillysOverland Company, announces a price reduction in the entire Overland line as folows: Model Was Now Touring $525 $495 Roadster $525 $495 Coupe $795 $750 Sedan SB6O $795 Red Bird $750 $695 Chassis $425 $395 Equipped with the bigger, much more powerful new motor, these new prices make for greater value throughout the entire line. The greatest sales and largest production in the history of the Willys-Overland Company has made it possible to pass this price reduction on to the American automobile buying public. This price reduction follows closely on the heels of the reduction in prices in the Willys-Knight line recently announced by Mr. Willys. Each succeeding month breaks new records at Willys-Overland in both sales and production. The

□ SUPERIOR CORD TIRES B r ».,»... «. g q Guaranteed 10,000 Miles. 8 SYRACUSE AUTO SALES 9 JESSE SHOCK, Proprietor. F.G. FITCH, Optometrist MANUFACTURING OPTICIAN W« Grind Your in Our Own Shop WHY PAY MORE? Roa. Phpnn 1100. Office Phono 781. WARSAW. INDIANA FRESH. 6LE.AN M&flI | Await you at our market at all times. You will find the juiciest eats and the tend©rest pieces here. We also handle smoked and dried meats and a general line of canned meats. KLINK BROS. MEAT MARKET I _ _ , . . , _ .. wyij-j, ■ ■ ■ _ — ir—- __ruW I

first and second quarters of the j present year were the largest in ' the history of the company. July and August topped any similar Tmonths of the past and Septem- ‘ ber has started out to continue 1 the record breaking habit. Public ’ acceptance has made these records possible. o THE OUTPUT OF CIG A RETS. The American appetite for tobacco continues to turn in the diI rection of the cigaret, according to figures made public by the internal revenue bureau, which ' disclosed that taxes were paid on 5,839,767,747 cigarets during July, an increase owr July of ! last year of almost 600,000,000. As for-cigars, taxes were paid in Julv on 589.176,020 large and 42,341,00 small ones, the combined total being about 9.000,000 more than the number taxed in July, 1922. ; o Wanted It 8«t. To the clerk who bud Just eold her a thermometer a woman said: “Would S you be to kind at to set it at 05? I That’* about what the doctor aayt I’m > to keep the room at”

CHE SYRACUSE JOURNAL

I CHEVROLET | ! New Prices I § I | Touring - $495 | | Roadster - • 490 f 1 Sedan - - 795 I | Coupe - - 640 I | Utility Truck Chassis 550 j j Light Delivery - 495 I “ . I 2 £ | Miller & Lepper i I s s Phone 149 DEALERS

IMMIGRATION RESTRICTION I Every American who has visit- j ed Europe since the war, whether on consular w’ork, as special in-! vestigator, or in furtherance ofi political ambition, has reached the conclusion that if we let down the bars placed a few years ago against the influx of undesirables. the menace to America’s future will became very real. An analysis of our present population not counting our island possessions, the negroes, or those confined in prisons, asylums, ptxir houses, homes and charitable institutions, show's that the foreign born and their children are an equal number with the native American population. In addition to this we now have some 1,200 newspapers and periodicals, printed in 42 different languages with a combined circulation per issue of more tihan one million copies. Aside from our public school system we are doing practically nothing to Americanize this great mass of foreigners, and in too many instances have let that institution pass into the control of the foreign element. A good illustration of this is found in the plea of a naturalized Jew. before a recent congressional hearing, that the Yidish language should be placed on an equal footing with England as the official language of the United States. The conditions under which the unskilled laborer exists in Europe make him easy prey for the 'mmigration propagandist, who •s. chiefly, the agent for the steamship companies. There is at least one such in every town and large village in Europe, and '>n addition to his commission he receives a bonus on every so many ticket purchasers. The president of one of the North Atlantic. Steamship Companies made the statement recently that, for twenty-five years he had filled every village in Europe with literature about America, urging continentals to emigrate and some years as high as $50,000,000 had been received from third-class passengers alone. Millions of prospective immigrants are anxiously and impatientih’ awaiting June 30, 1924, when the 3 per cent law expires, unless renewed by the forthcoming Congress. They want to for-

DRIVE OVER, PEOPLE AUTOMOBILES ADMITTED FREE ATTEND/THE GREAT Elkhart County Fair and Pageant of Progress Exposition SMS: SEPT. 12-13-14-15 4 BIG DAYS-4BIG NIGHTS Half-Million Dollars in ExHibits sls*ooo in Premiums and Purses World’s Farm Products Exhibit BIG-FREE Hornbrook’s Congress of Western Riders in ATTRACTION pastimes of the plains Original-New Type-100 per cent Meritorious The Most Colossal County Fair in America GOSHEN INDIANA

get all about worthless rubles, kopecks, kronen and marks, and learn about the real dollars which the steamship agents have taTd them are gathered so easily over here. And the pity of it is that there are “captains of industry” so short-sighted that they encourage this class of in> migration. The question is whether the America of tomorrow shall be the America its forefathers conceived, devised and cherished, or a dumping ground for the worst of foreign elements, the class of which every other land wants to rid itself, the adventurer, the lawbreaker and the anarchist. That question is to be decided by Congress this coming winter, and the American people must not be found asleep at the switch. O — CATHOLIC POPULATION. There are 20,103,761 Catholics in the United States, according to the’ “Catholic Press Directory” just issued by Joseph H. Meier of Chicago. According to the directory, there are 59,347 sisters and nuns, 22,545 Catholic i clergymen, 17,062 Catholic 1 churches, 212 seminaries, abbeys and scholasticates, 586 convents and noviates, 608 academies and boarding schools, 599 Catholic high schools, 559 hospitals and sanitariums, and 594 charitable institutions. o — The Old Beau’s Regret “Alhs. things have changed." sighed { the rich old party. “Formerly, my polite attentions were taken for declarations of love; now iny declarations of love are taken for polite attentions." O Sheffield Steel Supreme. Shefflold la atm credited with making the best steel In the world. Its virtues are attributed partly to the secrets known only to the manufacturers. and portly to the water used ; in tempering It. Hall's Catarrh Medicine Those who are in a "run down” condition will notice that Catarrh bothers them much more than when they are in Sad health. This fact proves that while tarrh is a local disease, it is greatly Influenced by constitutional conditlona HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE consists of an Ointment which Quickly Relieves by local application, and the Internal Medicine, a Tonic, which assists in Improving the General Health. Sold by druggists for over 40 Tears, F. J. Cheney A Co.. Toledo. Ohio.

PROGRAM ARRANGED FOR BULL TRAIN The program has been completed for the Indiana Dairy Sire Special train which will be operated over the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad in Southern Indiana September 17 to 28, starting at Lawrenceburg and ending at Vincennes. Eleven one day « +r >ns will be made and at each place a valuable registered sire Jd enough for service will be (riven some farmer who has a scrub bull to trade for him. The bulls are being bought by the local civic or farm organizations. Others will be sold at cost to local farmers. At each stop, R. D. Canan of j the Purdue dairy extension staff will speak on “The Feed and Care of Dairy Cattle and the Future of Dairying.” O. K. Quivey, agricultural agent of the railroad, will discuss, “The Better Dairy Sire Special” and Hugh G. Van Pelt of the American Jersey Cattle Club will give his famous cow demonstrations. Miss Anna Lamb of the National Dairy Council will speak and motion pictures will be shown at evening meetings. o New Zealand Bird a Plague. 1 The kea, a parrot of New Zealnnd. ; a« large aa a chicken hawk, has been ; known to kill thousands of sheep yearly to satisfy a craving for kid- , ney fat.

The Hudson Co.

GOSHEN, INDIANA For Friday and Saturday SEPTEMBER, 14th & 15th '■ ' — ' T~ Yard Goods Offerings 36-inch Scout Percale (all colors) yd. 36-inch Heavy Outing (light or dark) .: 25c yd. 36-inch Hope Muslin (bleached) 17c yd. 36-inch Comforter Chailies (new patterns) 20c yd. 9-4—(81-inch) Unbleached Sheeting 43c yd. Imperial Chambra (all colors) 45c yd. 36-inch Unbleached Sheeting (15c quality) 121 c yd. 32-inch Dress Ginghams (fine quality) 19c yd. Hosiery Offerings Real Silk Hosiery, Substandards, for ladies. Worth' $1.50 80c Real Silk Hosiery, Substandards, for men. Worth SI.OO 50c Children’s Stockings, good weight for school wear 25c NEW COATS Lots of new coats are arriving daily. Your chance of getting the best style and price is better now than it will be in a few weeks. Sport models SIO.O0 —$15.00 —$25.00 —$45.00 , Velour Coats $15.00 to $35.00 Bolivia Coats $22-50 to $89.50 Our stock of Plush Coats is also ready.

DRESSES Many new dresses have recently filled up the racks of this department. The materials used are Satin Crepes and Satin Cantons. The colors are black, brown, cocoa, and navy. Silk Dresses $16.00-$25.00 and up. Wool Dresses SIO.OO-$15.00 and up

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TO BRETZ FOR GUSSES Expert OPTICAL Repair / Work Emerson, the philosopher. Mid “Perfection Is made up of triflen, but perfection Is no trifle.” Our optical repair department embraces perfection In ah it> branches. L Whatever your requirements, wn will quickly and satisfactorily nfr } tend to them. lOur Repair Work I« of Superior Qu* l NEVIN E. BRETZ Optometrist & Optician 130 S. Main St., Goshen Various Usas of Honey. Honey can be used safely in diseases where other sweets are interdicted. In diabetes honey and saccharine replace other sweets. In the various diseases in which cod liver oil is prescribed, honey and cream, or honey and butter, can be used as a substitute. o Largest American River. The largest river under the American flag is the Yukon. In Alaska. It Is navigable for more than 2.000 miles.

Millinery The millinery department is showing an exceptionally smart line of hats. And so reasonably priced. The department is our own so you may be sure of getting the same attention as elsewhere in our store. Priced — $3.75 $6.75 $5.00 SIO.OO.