The Syracuse Journal, Volume 16, Number 49, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 3 April 1924 — Page 8
• ■ Classified Ads <• ;; Classified advertising Is ac- ! * < > eepted at the rate of .5 cents < > ' * a line? for each Insertion. A ; > J ( booking and collection fee of ~ < » 10 cents will be added (or a <» '' cahrged account; no account ; ► ! [ will be charged for less than < ( « ► 25 cents for a single item. £ FOR SALE — Double comb White Wyandotte cockrel. A beauty. Inquire at the Journa’ office. . 1— FOR RENT—My 10-acre farm. Jas. Rothenberger. Phone 847. 47-3tp HORSE FOR SALE—Five year old mare. See Russell Warner, south of town. 48-2tpd. NEW FURNITURE—is coming in every day at Beckman's Store. 48-ts FOR SALE—Airdale pups. Inquire P. W. Soltau. Oakwood Park. 48-2 pd. PERCALE—36 inch Percales best quality, light or dark. Special 20c. A. W. Strieby. 47-ts FOR SALE—Buff Orpington chicks and hatching eggs. Order in advance.. Ralph Vail, phone 3511, Syracuse. 48-3 tpd , - • ■.— ---- -- ■ * - - — WANTED - Boarders and room ers at Shumaker's Boarding Mouse. Room A board $7 a week. Best of meals served. 46-4tp WANTED— Washing and ironing. All work guaranteed. Phone 373. 46-4tp LADIES WORK AT HOME Pleasant, easy sewing on your machine. Whole or part time. Highest possible prices paid. For full information address L. Jones, Box 2, Olney, 111. 49-ltp RUGS—Select your rugs now at Beckman’s Store. The variety is complete. 48-ts WANTED—Man to work on a small farm. Must be handy at all kinds of work, and able to run a Ford truck. Roy Brown. 48-ts MATTRESSES—SIO.OO is thi price this spring on cotton felt mattresses at Beckman’s Store. Why pay more. 48-ts "GINGHAMS- 32-inch Zephyr gingham. Special at 25c yard. A. W. Strieby. 47-ts PARLOR SUlTES—Overstuffed parlor suites in the finest tapestry. The price is $145.00 at Beckman’s Store. 48-ts LAKE PROPERTY —ls ypu have any lake property for sa’o or rent, list it with F. E. Wood. Kale Island. 1-ake Wawasoc, Syracuse. Ind. Phone 561. 47-ts SILK CREPES—A beautiful selection of plain and fancy SiFk crepes for dresses and trimmings A. W. Strieby. 47-ts SeldTrown CABBAGE ONION. TOMATO plants SI.OO thousand, mail or express. Guarantee safe arrival. Produce vegetables three weeks earfier than hot bed plants. Catalog free. Attractive proposition offered Druggists. Grocerymen, Seedmen to represent us. Carlisle Seed & Plant Farms, Valdosta. Ga. 49-1 tpd FOR SALE — Strong, sturdy chicks of a quality that pleases, from free range stock. Barred Rocks and Rhode Island Reds. $15.00 per 100. Buff Orpingtons and White Wyandotte, $16.00 per 100. White Leghorns, $13.00 per 100. Order chicks in advance. J. P. Hughes, Phone 103. 40-2tpd SPRING CREATIONS— Mah Jongg crepes, the very latest for Spring Creations. A. W. Striebv. 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 Price Shouhl Have Beea ASJiOfi LAKE WAWASEE PROPERTY FOR SALE-60 ft. lot, subdivision Pickwick end Kale Island; cottage inexpensively built with idea te forget investment during winter months, however, has accommodations for sleeping nine people. Seawall built, rowboat, sailing canoe. also first class 4k passenger motor boat Prior' $5,500 and not $7,500 as was formerly stated bv typographical dkror. Real estate agents fullv protected. Not necessarily all rash. R. M. Woolpert, Go’hen. Indiana. 49-ltn FOR SALE Used vriißow sash at less than half price of new. They are ia good condition and suitable for cottagM. out4 $Vb from 2 ft 4 to x 2 ft 19 In. to U ft. x 4M- Ah*® eument blocks. O Ail Ip I Jl kV A V
•295 -- Order It Today! The spring rush for Ford Touring Cars has started ' , Arrange co place your order at once, so that you will not be obliged to wait for delivery. Detroit. Michigan If you do not wish to pay cash for your car, you can arrange for a small payment down and easy terms on the balance. Or you can buy on the Ford Weekly Purchase Plan. • See the Nearest Authorized Ford Dealer Me CARS • TRUCKS • TRACTORS
FRESH. GL&ftN ME.AT I -/ Await you at onr market at all times. You | will find the juiciest cuts and the tenderest pieces here. We handle smoked and dried meats and a general line of canned meats. KLINK BROS. MEAT MARKET |
NOTICE TO NON-RESIDENTS Slate of Indiana. Kosciusko County. In the Kosciusko Circuit Court, Feb. Term. 1924. Warren T. Colwell. Administrator of the estate of James I. Robinson.; deceased, vs. Clyda L. Robinson, Marlon C. Robinson, Howard E. Robinson. Hellen V. Robinson. Complaint No. 15907. Now comes the Plaintiff, “by W’ar- j ren T. Colwell, attorney, and files his; complaint herein, together with an| affidavit of a competent person that I said defendants, Clyda L. Robinson. Marion C. Robinson. Howard E. Rob-? tnson, and Hellen V. Robinson, are not residents of the State of Indiana; I that said action te for the sale erf thefollowing real estate. Lots numbered 124. 127. 132, 134. 139 and 140, of Strom beck A Weaver’s Second Addition to the town of Syracuse. Kosciusko County, in the State of Indiana, and that said non-residents are necessary parties thereto. Notice Is therefore hereby given said defendants, last named, that unless they be and appear on the 22nd day of the next term of th® Kosciusko Circuit Court, being the Ist day <rf May. 1924. to be holden on the Ist Monday of April. A. D. 1924. at the Court Hou«e tn Warsaw, in said County and State, and answer or demur to said complaint, the same will be heard and determine*! In their absence. Witness Whereof I hereunto set! my hand and affix the seal of said ■, Court, at the office of the Clerk, thereof, in the City of Warsaw. Indi-’ sna. this 7th day of March,. A. D.. 1924. (seal) RUSSELL H. BUTUER 4«-4t. Clerk Kosciusko Circuit (Joutt. —I o NOTICE OF DISSOLUTION STATE OF INDIANA Department es State ED. JACKSON, Secretary <rf State ! To all t« whom these Preseats Shall Come, erecting: I, Ed. Jackson, Secretary of State of the State of Indiana, do hereby certify that the SYRACUSE WATER POWER “ COMPANY has this day filed in the office of the Secretary of State, the properly signed and attested consent», statements and papers required by Section 1 of an Act entitled "An Act prescribing the method and procedure ftrr th® voluntary dissolution of private corporations and voluntary associations, and declaring an emergency.” approved March 14, 1923. And I further certify that such written consents, statements and papers so filed as aforesaid, show that said company and the officers thereof have complied with the provisions of said Section 1 and that said corporation is now in process of dissolution. In Witness Whereof. I have hereunto set my hand and affixed the seal of the State of Indiana at the City of Indianapolis, this 25th day erf March. A. D. 1924. (SEAL) ED JACKSON’ ♦ X Secretary of State. By P. H. Wolford. Deputy. 49-2 t FOR SALE—Stove wood, fine and chunks, delivered. Phone OF &QQF6SS IvllsnieF, Svraeuse ... v ' ■ * ./■ - ■■ • .
STI NG LESS BEES APPEAR Tacoma, Wash.—Stingless bees I are now available. t$ add to the | scientifically developed world klass—the spikeless cactus, the stringless bean and the seedless i grapefruit. i The sting less bee is an exhibit t shown to beekeepers in this reigion by E. J. Campbell, of Teni ino. Wash. The bee, which is of the. Adel strain, has no offensive (armament whatever, and if attacked has no recourse save flyj ing away. According to Camobell, the Adel bee is an excellent honey gatherer and a great little playmate for the children. o TO GO OVER NIAGARA FALLS Niagara Falls. N. Y., March 22. Bobby Leach, who went over the Horseshoe falls in a steel barrel on July 25, 1911, announced Friday that he is negotiating with a rubber company for the manufacture of a rubber ball in which he plans to make a trip over the i falls early in June. The ball l will be of the thickness of an or- ' dinary large automobile tire and (will have a hammock inside in i which he will recline, —O—— 2 Gas On Stomach May . Cause Appendicitis Constant gas causes inflammation which may involve the appendix. Sim--1 pie glycerine, buckthorn bark, etc., as mixed in Adlerlka helps any case gas i on the stomach in TEN minutes. Most medicines act only on lower bowel but Adlerlka acts on BOTH upper and lower bowel and removes all gas and poisons. Excellent for obstinate constipation and to guard against appendicitis. Thornbunfs Drug Store. (4)
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THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL
STATE TAX RATE HEAVY The Hoosier tax bill this year, state and local, totals $124,866,889.79, W. C. Harrison, secretary tothe state board of tax commissioners, announced last week. He said it was the largest in the state’s history and greater by almost ten million dollars than last year. The amount of taxable property on which the burden rests is $5,281,804,728 or $56,112,333 greater than last year. Secretary Harrison said the taxes had been increased over last year while the valuation of taxables had increased only 1.07 per cent. Taking the state as a whole he said the tax payer would pay on an average of ten cents more per SIOO of taxable property thte year than last. In compiling these figures, Mr. Harrison takes no account of taxes paid direct to city treasurers in a half dozen or more cities in the state. o DANGER IN DELAY Kidney Diseases Are Too Dangerous For Syracuse People To Neglect. The great danger of kidney troules is that they so often get a firm hold before the suff-rer recognizes them. Health will be gradually undermined. Backache, headache, nervousness, lameness, soreness lumbago, urinary troubles, dropsy, gravel and Bright’s disease may follow as the kidney’s get worse. Don’t neglect your kidneys. Help the kidneys with Doan's Pills, which are so strongly recommended right here in Syracuse. Adam Darr, city marshal, S. Main St., says: “My back was lame and when I bent over, a darting pain went across my kidneys. My kidneys didn’t act right at all. Doan’s Pills, from Hoch’s Drug Store made my kidneys act right and the pains left my back.” Price 60c, at all dealers. Don't simply ask for kidney remedyget Doan's Pills—the same that Mr. Darr had. Foster-Milbum Co.. Mfrs.. Buffalo, N. Y. —(Advertisement) SPECIAL ATTENTION GIVEN TO ESTATES. DEEDS, MORTGAGES TITLES AND WILLS VTLUAM GRAY LOEHR Attomey-«t>lAW sinee 1916 Admitted to Practice In All Court* Coll ret lon% Notary Publie 118| S. Buffalo St, Warsaw, Ind. .Get your FREIGHT via the SYRACUSE-FORT WAYNE TRUCK LINE J. B Rippey Phone 191 buL | “If I don’t haul your freight we both hit"
LOW PRICED CAR THE CAR OF THE FUTURE How clearly Henry Ford saw the future of the automobile and bow 1 well he prophesied it. is shown in an article written by him in February, 1910. and published In a Detroit newspaper. In 1909. as the article states, 2,000.000 horse-drawn vehicles were -sold as against 80,000 automobiles. How the prophesied reversal came appears in figures for last year which show the sale of approximately 4,900,000 motor cars during 1923 as compared with 100,000 horse-drawn vehicles. The article follows: “The automobile of the past attain, od success in spite of Its price, because there were more than enough purchasers to be found to take the limited output of the then new industry. Proportionately, few could buy. but those few could keep all the manufacturers busy, and price therefore had no bearing on sales. “The automobile of the present is making good because the price has been reduced just enough to add sufficient new purchasers to take care of the Increased output. Supply and demand, not cost, has regulated the selling price of automobiles. The car of today is better by far than the car of a few years ago—the natural result of experience. The price is lower, just enough lower to add sufficient possible purchasers to buy the increased output. “The automobile of the future must be enough better than the present car to beget confidence In the man of limited means and enough lower in price to insure sales for the enormously increased output. The car of the future must be the car-for the people, the car that any man can own. who can afford a horse and carriage; and mark my words that car is coming sooner than most people expect. “In the low priced car dwells the future success for the automobile. Comparatively few persons can afford even a >I,OOO car. A limited number of factories can easily supply all the demand for high-priced cars, but the market for a low priced car is unlimited. More than 2.000,000 horse drawn vehicles were sold by American factories in 1909. When yOu substitute a motor-driven vehicle for each of these two million wagons and carriages, you get an idea of the automobile of the future. “The low-priced car will n>t be a makeshift, an automobile by courtesy, a machine built for a price. It is harder to sell to a man who can only afford a low-priced car than to the man whose money conies more easily. Not only must the successful car of the future be low priced, but it must present at least equal value with the present high-priced cars. “The low-priced car should nctual’y be better than the car at a higher orice, for more is expected of It. The man who can afford the high priced ear can afford a man to keep it in vrder, while the man who has to buy a low-priced car. If any, has to look after it himself, whether or not he has any mechanical ability. Likewise, when he buys, he buys for bust, ness use and pleasure too. That condition prevails today. The low-priced ear must be better built than the higher-priced product, because it receives harder use. The successful low priced car of today is successful because it stands harder usage than is accorded to $5,000 creations. "Equally important with low cost as a qualification of the <ar of the future is 'low cost of upkeep'. The weekly expense of an automobile will be more important to the man whose Income is SIOO a month than will the cost price. The one he saved by easy stages, the other must be taken out of his earnings. Gasoline ’bills, repair bills, tire bills must be low. They should be as low as the expense bills for a horse and carriage. This low maintenance account can result only from, light weight "So the car of the future will be light as well as low priced. This means the substitution of quality for quantity even to the use of materials not yet discovered." It is notable, also, in connection with the foregoing prophesy by Mr. Ford, that during last year 2.090,959 Ford cars and trucks were produced, fulfilling the statement made In 1910 that the light, low-priced car would enjoy the greatest popularity. TOBRETZFORBLASSES d° You Suffer From jKrl F re< l Uent ' Headaches? Ton probably have been taking 4rug» and are discouraged because oajr tempurary relirf has be« attvrociL The chances are your vtskm In impaired and gissses are what you Deed. Remmuber TO per cent of aD hMdachee are due to eye strata. Horn lb Emunino Tour Kysa. NEVIN E. BRETZ Optometrist -a Optiriam 130 S. Main St, Goahen
7 RO/ r / Safety The 7 percent CUMULATIVE PRIOR LIEN SHARES OF THIS COMPANY Stile is a SOUND INVESTMENT, based StyenitiH upon the stability, growth and prosperity of the 100 or more communities served with Electricity, Gas or Water, ? all public necessities. These Shares are TAX Exempt in Indiana and free from normal FEDERAL INCOME TAX. Price, SIOO per share and accrued interest. Cash or on our Investment Savings Plan. (Subject to any mortgage and other Indebtedness of the Company, the Prior Lien Stoek has claim on property and earnings of the Company, Senior to all the other Preferred and Common Stock of the Company.) Ask any Employee. Phone, Write or Call Mr. Simon P. Blough Investment Department INTERSTATE PUBLIC SERVICE COMPANY Goshen, Indiana.
April Displays At HUDSON’S _—|—: r _.- Coats for Ladies and Misses Smart spring coats for the lady, miss and stout woman. Materials are all wool and in plain or plaid. Shades grey or tan.... $15.00 Large selection of coats in sizes for ladies and misses in the seasons new plaids and All fill lined coats $25.00 - Exceptional values* are the coats in the group. Lined with crepe de chine and made of the most desirable materials for spring wear.... $35.00 High grade coats of Hy-10, Mah-Jongg, Lambfleece, Camels Hair, Charmeen, and many other high grade fabrics. Priced $50.00 t 0.... $75.00 Dresses for Ladies and Misses Smart frocks for sportswear and parties, in the season’s shades of powder blue, Lucille green, tan, grey, and many others.... $25.00 Smart frocks for the miss in sizes 13, 14,15, 16, 17, 18, in all new shades and becoming styles. Priced $15.00 to $22.50 Flannel frocks will be worn the entire summer. We have some pretty styles in plain colors and small plaids. $15.00 to $25.00 Trico-Sham and Krepe-de-Leen dresses in sizes 38 to 46. "Good dresses for practical’ wear. Priced exceptionally low SIO.OO
Coats for Gris Coats for girla ages 10-12-14 in a complete range of colorings and styles. The values are unusual at the prices. SIO.OO - $15.00 Coats for girls 7-8-9-10 in the most clever styles and materials. The stock is now quite complete. $7.50 to $15.00 For infants and little girls ages 1-2-3-4-5-6 we have a pretty assortment of coats. ss.so to SIO.OO
MATERIALS FOR DRESSES Krepe-de-Leen, the genuine cloth, for blouses and dresses. In a of colorings. The material will not sag when made up. Yard $1.50 French Flannels in 54 inch width. In bright colors, plain only, Jockey Red, Lucille Green, Buff, Grey, and Brick. Yard $3.50 Dress linens in two qualities at very low prices. In afl bright colors that will be worn this coming summer. Priced, yard, SI.OO and..... oOC Tubular Vestings in shades of peach, orchid, flesh and white. Vests are easy to make of this material. 24 to 27 inches is all that is required, yd.. SI.OO Embroidered dress linens in the brightest sport shades for summer frocks. This is a material of exceptional quality at a very low price. Yard, $2.00 and $1.59 Silk and cotton crepes in clever patterns and color combinations. Nice fabric for blouses and frocks. Priced reasonable. Yard. $1.25 fa "I II
Millinery p. 75 $5.00 $7.50 Our showing of millinery is as complete as you will find anywhere. The prices are unusually Tow, and you can save from $1.25 to $5.00 on your new hat by buying here. The assortment includes all the new shades and shapes. You will find any shape you desire.
