The Syracuse Journal, Volume 16, Number 26, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 25 October 1923 — Page 8

■ Classified Ads | ■ Classified advertising is ac- | ! eepted at the rate of 1 cent t 1 a word for each insertion. A * 1 booking and collection fee of £ ! 10 cents will be added fpr a j charged account; no account « ' will be charged for less than £ ■J t 25 cents for a single item. « ~ Sale Notice Wishing to dispose of any property in Syracuse and to awertain property values, I will offer the following property towit: ' One seven room briek house, good state of repair, wired for redecorated last year, situated on and including, kit No. 94 in Hillabold’s addition to the Town of Syracuse, together with abstract of title, etc. Payment in CASH, TRADE or TERMS. The house alone cannot l>e built for twice the price asked for property. I will reduce the price SSO per week as long as this notice appear* or is sold. PRICE $1,250. NOW SBOO. L E. Schlotterback, Syracuse, Indiana. SALE—At a sacrifice. 8room house; bath, garage, boat house, good basement Two nice Jots, fine shade. Fifty feet frontage on Lake Syracuse. Price. $3,250. Key at next door neighbor. E. L. Baumgartner, Jauesyille, Wisconsin. 25-2 t FOR SALE- Hedges Battery station and entire stock at a bargain for cash. Reasons made known to prospective purchaser for selling. Floyd Hedges. 26-pd FURNITURE—New furniture is coming in every day at Beckman's store. 25-lt BED SPRINGS—Get one of these Perfection springs, the best on the market today, at Beckman's store. 25-lt WANTED—Poultry, all kinds. Highest prices. Call me when ready to sell. Phone 22/ New Paris, Ind. 26-41. ““p^SALE— All wool bed blankets made by the Columbia City Woolen Mills. Siae 72x84. Floyd Hedges. 26-pd. LOST -Gold tassel off mesh bag. Finder please leave at this office or return to Neva Foster. FOR SALE—Good trailer. ’ Has new tires. Cheap/ Phone Syracuse 114. ? 26-pd. FOR RENT —Good eight-room house in Syracuse. See T. L. Hammond at Milford. 2-26 pd. GUARANTEED Hemstitching and Picoting attachment. Fits any sewing machine. Makes beautiful work. Literature and testimonials free. $2.50 prepaid or sent C. O. D. LaFlesh hemstitching Co., Dept. 2. Sedalia. Mo. • 26-pd. of all kinds daily. Highest prices paid. Phone 22. G. C. Tai man. New Paris, Ind. 264 t. RUGS—IB congolum rugs, sizes from 6x9 to 9x12. are now on display at Beckman's store. 25-lt LOST OR STRAYED—From Pickwick Park, Lake Wawasee, Sunday', October 14, eight months old female collie dog. Liberal reward for information. R. B. Kelly, Goshen,. Indiana. 26-pd. ”FOR SALE—Home-made~apple butter. Baldwins and other apples. Phone 303. 26-pd. AGENTS^ this and adjacent counties to sell coal saver and soot destroyer. A good repeater and a money maker for agents. Write W. H. Stiefel, Angola, Indiana. 25-2tpd. FOR SALE—High class cottage in most desirable location , on Lake Wawasee. Completely equipped and modem throughout. Also several desirable lots on Wawasee and Syracuse Lakes. Goo. L. Xanders, Syracuse, Ind. 12-ts FRAMES—Have your pictures framed at Beckman's store. 25-lt WANTED—Men or women to , take orders for genuine guaranteed hosiery for <nen, 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 SHOES—Comfiex 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. Strietg. . 4-tt

It Is Not too Soon to Choose Warm MOTOR ROBES For Winter Use Assortments are complete with every desirable type of robe. Prices are widely varied. So that choice is certain to prove satisfactory. e All-Wool Motor Robes Soft and warm, in the Scotch clan tartans. $5 to sls each. These robes are all the more practical as they are washable. Then they have uses in the home as well as for motoring. Some are reversible pla ds in mahy different color com; binatidns and they are richly fringed. Excellent values at $8.75 to $12.00. EXTRA SPECIAL! PlusK Robes in Plain Colors At $7.50. , These are deep piled and rrry be used on either side. Excellent values at this pri:e. Other motor robes priced from $4.75 to sls. Our Harness Department is complete. Double team harness, single harness, collars from $2.50 up, all grades and sizes. We can furnish any part of a harness. THE LEATHER GOODS STORE 115 E. Linboln Ave. GOSHEN Irwin Block

RODENT PESTS The rodent pests, su;h as woodchucks, field mice and rats, fire a source of great losses to the people of Indiana, every rat, for example, being responsible for a loss of $2.00 according to government authorities. During the past month the U. S. Biological Survey, through Carlisle Carr, has been co-operating with the Purdue University Agricultural Extension Department in organizing and conducting campaigns i these pests in several counties in southern Indiana, in-1 eluding Morgan. Johnson, Dearborn, Washington, Martin, Knox. Gibson and Ifcirke. So successful' has been the results that plans, are being made for an initial. campaign in 1924 to completely' exterminate woodchucks or i ground hogs in Morgan County. For the control of woodchucks, noisnn gases are used, while for field mice a poisoned oatmeal bait properlv used has given excellent results. Rats and hc/me mice are among the most destructive rodent I nests in Indiana, according to Mr. Carr. They may be best controlled by poisoning with barium carbonate with one of several baits. Mr. Carr offers the following suggestions in noisoning rats and home mice: Three types of bait are available, meat baits such as hamburger and fish, cereal baits such as bread and rolled oats. and vegetables and fruits sv-h as apple and canned corn. Mix one; part of barium carbonate, which can be purchased at drug stores, i with four parts by weight of the ; bait. Mix thoroughly, adding: water when necessary to make; the bait moist. . Place a teaspoon-: ful of the bait in a piece of news-i paper, enclosing it by bringing!

g < 1 CHEVROLET I § I New Prices . [ I■ ■ 1 | Touring - $495 | j Roadster - 490 g I 1 Sedan - - 795 t Coupe - - 640 I Utility Truck Chassis 550 » , Light Delivery - 495 | | Miller & Lepper j Phone 149 DEALERS

F. G. FITCH, Optometrist MANUFACTURING OPTICIAN We Grind Year Leasae ia Our Ovra Shop 'why pay more? *w. rv,» i too. ortu. ru... rai. Warsaw. Indiana

FRESH. GL&fIN M&fiT Await yon at onr market at all times. Yon will find the jnkiest eats and the tenderest pieces , here. We also handle smeked and dried meats and a general line of canned meats. KLINK BROS. MEAT MARKET

the edges of the paper together and twisting. Set these about in places frequented by rats and mice. It is best place all types of bait out the first night, the second night altering the selection by using those baits which were eaten and substituting other baits of the same type of the baits least molested. Precautions should be taken to gather up the baits and destroy them. If in a chicken yard for example, place .the baits about after the chickens have been locked in their houses. Before releasing the chickens in the morning the baits should be gathered and desi tmved as they will poison the I chickens. o “I AM THE TELEPHONE" "I am the telephone. While I \ am not broke, I arq in the hands of a receiver. I have a.mouth-nie-'e. but unlike women, I never use it. Fellows use me tn .make dates with girls, and girls use me to h’-eak dates. Husband s call up their wives over me and wives call their husbands down over me. I never get to call anywhere, but sometimes the company comes and takes me out. I air; not a bee, but I often burz. I am the ‘Bell’ of the town, and while I do not wear .iewelrv, I often get rings. lam the telephone.” HEMSTITCHING —lO c per yard at the Milford Electric | Shop. Leave work at Connolly’s dry goods store or send with Mr. Snobarger. 3-ts FOR SALE —Stove wood, fine and chunks, delivered. Phone ; 316, or address Dan Mishler, . Syracuse. 36-ts

- THE SYRACUSE'JOURNAL

* ‘.i Hi * MTl' Hfilkw yjil W'iW ml*aß aPi '

Overland Champion J Is Farmer’s Friend A New Closed Model Is Beautiful All-Family Car with • Wonderful Utility Qualifications

At last the farmer has been riven a closed car of auperlor finish inside and outside, that he can utillXf for various farm jobs and chores" with the same cheerful abandon as he does his open touring car Thousands of farmers have expressed the opinion that ithey would gladly use closed cars If they could press them Into practical -work and get out of them the same all-around •ervice the touring car provides This has been the farmer’s winning argument for the touting car over the closed car for some years and It Is admittedly a reasonable one. Practical service on the farm means the hauling of grain and other material of a highly "spillable” nature A !••»<! of bran or shorts for Instance leaves a car resembling the interior of a feed grinding room Whole grain, despite every precaution, will persist In •‘ereeping" out of the bags and scatter to every corner and crevice of the car - Summing up “practical service" for the farmer means the haulage of milk cans, live poultry root crops, cans of kerosene, machinery oil. household supplies, garden tools, implement parts, rolls of belting and a long list of every conceivable sort of usable material bn the farm from wire fencing to an occasional live calf. No wonder the farmer hesitated to Invest his money in a closed car But now the wonder ceases with the ud vent of the new Overlaid closed car fittingly named the Chartirton. for the flood and logical reason that at tS9S it eads the world In dosed ear valued and "champions" the Cause of the farmer in every respect; This new model, having as manj personalities as a South American Chameleon, ean proudlv claim the-dis Unction of being called "America’s most versatile car' for tn mtroduclng the I’harnpion Willy Overland has succeeded in bringing out something absolutely novel and radically unique.

SOY BEANS VXD PORK W. S. Walker, of Jefferson County has 46 acres of soy beans. On a field of 12 acres, Mr. Walker has 75 hoars that were turned in one month ago and at that time thev weighed 50 to 75 pounds. They had been fed bran and shorts but after they were turned into the beans, this feed was stopped. They now weigh about 160 pounds showing what a very rapid, gain on soy beans alone that hogs will make. In addition to the hogs, three weeks ago. ten head of cows were turned in on the same field each night. Before turning the cows in they received blue grass pasture and 4 pounds of bran and shorts per day with some alfalfa, but this ration was discontinued after they were turned into the sov beans. The cows gained five gallons of milk and produced $3 more butter fat per week. Figuring the hoers making an average gain of 50 pounds, the twelve acres of sov beans will produce 3.750 oornds of pork and this figured at 8c per pound, means that the twelve acres produced S3OO worth of pork and in addition made a saving in feed of the cows of $52.20. making a total i for the twelve acres of $<52.20. not taking into consider-? ation that the stem and stalk are' left tn turn under and improve! the soil for the succeeding crons, i Mr. Walker co-oner Med with] County Agent, B. H. Doddridge in a soy bean demonstration. q : WANTED—AII kinds of timber. Inquire of Coppes Bros. & Zook, Nappanee. 36-ts • o —— Advertise in the Journal.

TO BRETZ FOR BLASSES This Man Needs Bifocal Glasses . There la qo necessity for we&rinr reading glasses that require you to peer over their top* to see distant objects. Our InvitibU Bifocalt enable you to see near and far—all In one pair of lenses—without the disfiguring, cemented aegmenta. Coma hi . •■d Lot U» SUw Thom to Yom NEVIN E. BRETZ Optometrist & Optieiaa 130 S. Main St., Goshen

in fact a type of motor car that the farmer has long wished so now has It is probably the most extraordinarily useful car for the farmer that has ever been produced, with an all-steel body bailt on a standard Overland chassis cradled on the famous Triplex springs and powered with the larger Overland engine Exclusive features, utilities and economies mark this model as a remarkably convenient car. warranted to give the utmost In closed car benefits to tbs farmer. In the Champion, the rear seat and Upholstery is entirely removable, providing fifty cubic feet of dear carrying space. Apart from thia, both front and rear seats Quickly adjust forward i and backward. The front sea* adjusts ( to three positions so that a tall driver can move it back to drive without leg cramp and a short driver can move it forward so as to reach the peaale ■ without stretching The rear seat can be adjusted backward so that rear seat passengers will not be crowded ' when the front seat Is moved back. Another clever feature of this car and characteristic nf the unusual foresight tn design. Is the arrangement of both front and rear seats ’ which with the upholstery can be entirely removed and made up Into a luxurious bad tn ths car, occupying > the w hole length and width of the ear. What a boon to the farmer and his family who want to spend the night away front home on a little hunting taunt But this does not end the roan> i amazing advantages Included Ip the Champion and nerhaus the moat outstanding superiority from the farm er’s viewpoint Is the fifty cubie feet •>f space obtainable In the car by removing the rear seat with the upholstery This arrangement leaves an absolutely clear carrying space capable of real service to the farmer who cun load his tools, bags of fodder, pivduva, and ao forth. Late the oar

Advertise in The Journal

THE HUDSON CO.

Goshen, Indiana

Merchandise Worth While

BLANKETS Nashua 72x84 large plaid blankets. Priced s3*so P r - Nashua Storm King Blankets. Fancy plaid 66x80. Priced 33.85 P r - Nashua Supreme Plaid Blankets. 66x80. Heavy! Priced 34.50 P. r > Nashua Wool Finish, Plaid Blankets. 66x84. Priced 34.85 pr. Nashua Large Size Wool Finish Plaid Blankets. 72x84. Priced .... 34.95 P r - Chelsea Large Size Plaid Blanket. 72x84. Special Price 34.89 P r - Fancy plaid Wool Blankets. Bed size, 66x80. Priced —..... 38.50 P r - All Wool Black and White or Red and Black 66x80 Blankets. Priced.. ,310.00 DOMESTICS Heavy Twilled White Outing Flannel. Worth 30c. Priced - 25 C Unbleached Bed Sheeting (94.) Very low priced at SOC y«* Fahey Outing Flannels in light colors. Priced 18c jd. Sateen, 36 inches wide. All colors. Priced , • •• SOC yd. Colored Table Damask. Red, Buff and Bine. Priced 31.00 yd-32-inch Dress Gingham. Good for House Dresses. Priced 19c yd.

i B | V BjFsSt jt >7. fcißwwMSSfljffjf fii®F«s£ A setoSph - tts

through the wide rear door, with the satisfaction of knowing that the car can be thoroughly cleaned out later and the rear seat Installed for passenger tripe. The long grain Spanish upholstery Is washable and wearable, to say nothing of being comfortable. Then on the back of the car Is a commodious trunk of ample proportions with a warranted lock, in which there is plenty of room for personal effects when traveling or shopping tn to*a>

COATS Coats of the higher class at exceptionally reasonable prices. Only the best materials and furs are used in these garments. $59.50, $65.00, $75.00, $85.00, $89.50 Cloth coats that have style and quality at popular prices. Coats for dress or utility wear. SIO.OO to $50.00 / Plush Coats for stout people. Coats are made . of Salts, Peco and Esquimette Plush. $25.00. $35.00. $39.50 Coats for children. Made of warm, woolen materials. Pretty styles and colops. Sizes 2 to 14. Priced $5.00 to $19.50 Real Silk Hosiery “Sub-Standards” Every Saturday we have a sale of Real Silk Hosiery, Substandards, for men and women. Small imperfections cause these stockings to be classed as substandards. The imperfections are so slight they are hard find. If you have never worn any try a pair and see what you can save on silk' hosiery. i

LADIE’S 80c

> The Champion Is solidly bn lit with ' that thoroughness of workmanship ' characteristic of all Wlllyg-Overland products, 'ftte unusually clever general utility points of this exceptional car are the result of long and careful study on the part of the designers, who had In mind at all times the farmer and his particular needs. and for this reason the Champion will have a strong appeal to the man llvIng away from the metropolitan c«gw Ura

Nothing to Brrg Os. An advertisement rends: “The best nms are grown in America.*’ True enough, but why brag about 'em? Elaborate Tattooing. A feature of 'ißortland la tattooing. Some of the extraordinary facial features take six years to eompleie.

MEN’S 50c pr.