The Syracuse Journal, Volume 16, Number 51, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 17 April 1924 — Page 5
■□■□■□■□■□• OB □ * <r v ' | ■ Buy your garden seeds ih n 1 BULK ■ : - j □ . □ n We have the best by test ■ 1 ■ ■• — g ■ □ Many of our market gardeners q 2 use our seeds sold in bulk ■ □ □ , ■ ■ s ■ Seider & Burgener ■ PURE FOOD GROCERS ■ S Syracuse, Indiana H ■
< w ** ,| ** fl '*** <W *** <M *‘ W '************** 1 |klOW IS THE TIME TO HAVE | n YOUR CAR EXAMINED A slight repair or a trifling adjustment now may save 2 you a big repair bill later on. • Let us check up on your car now and you can feel S assured that your car will give you good service for the S* sciison. S Do you know that you can buy a 30 x 3j Goodyear o Cord Tire as low as $9.25. S One SI.OO can of New-Namel free with each tire. I Syracuse Auto Sales
A LOOK AHEAD Thomas A. Edison is no vision- , ary. He sees the time coming, as the great industrial plans for cheaper production of * super power” ire growing so rapidly, when work on our farms is going to be revolutionized by cheap power and more farm machinery. Farming in the United States, some years from now. is going to be just as settled, as scientific and as big a business industry as any big manufacturing industry of the country. And we shall we the farm organizations leading the way, and making that possible. We shall see, on our farms, machines working with transmitted power, that will do as much as ten men could now do without such machinery. The late Charles P. Steinmetz, the biggest electrical expert of ’ this country, before his death, predicted that this motive power will be so qheap that it will hardly pay to keep check of it with a meter.
You can save Hundreds of Dollars We believe the new Michelin Comfort Cord will revolutionize all motoring. Twice as big as ordinary tires, inflated to lest than half the pressure, it cushions cars so perfectly it will save you hundreds of dollars in car upkeep and depreci- . ation. It fits present rims and costs about the same as ordinary tires. Will you come in to see it! Hedges Battery Station l«U to taa «M» «•«» •«»«*« AmsM — 3 ,= ■ • ■?/" ■ ■ '
When that day comes, a good farm is likely to be a pretty valuable piece of property. And the man who owns a good farm will be just as well off as the man who. today, owns a factory. This is hot a flight of fancy. It is what the biggest and brainiest of our leaders in finance and in the field of applied electricity absolutely are convinced is going to happen. The men and women on the farm who. today, are wise and intelligent enough to look ahead into those wonderful days of cheap motive power in this country, are going to be the first to reap the rich results from it, when those days do come. HOW’S THIS? HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE wttl do what wo claim for K-rtd your tyrtem of Catarrh or Doatnosa caused by Catarrh. HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE consist* of aa Ointment which Quickly Relievos the catarrhal tnflammation. and the Internal Medicine, a Tonic, which acts through the Blood on the Mucous Surface! thus assisting to rosters nortn(k>M<byl druggists for over 40 Years. F. J. Cheney a Co-. Toledo, O.
JEWS ITEMS FROM OOR SURROUHDiNGS Contributed Notes on the Happenings in Nearby Communities. Pleasant Ridge Miss Minnie Robinson spent Friday afternoon with Miss Dora Arm’juster. Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Cripe spent Sunlay with Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Cripe and family. Mrs. Roy S. Robinson. Miss Ruby 3ailey and Miss Minnie Robinsory #ere Goshen shoppers Saturday, f Mr. Charles Strieby and Mr. and Mrs. Akiean Hlman spent. Sunday afernoon with Mr. and Mrs. John Hurtlg. Mr. and Mrs. Glen Stookey entertained company from Ohio a few lays. Mrs. Stookey remains the same. I Mr. and Mrs. Charles Egolf and laughter and Mrs. John Evan* caled on Mrs. Ellen Robinson Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Guy McDowell and Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Coy spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Lee Decker, of near Millersburg. Mrs. Sarah Ungeofelter, of Goshen spent Monday with her sister. Mrs. Ellen Robinson. Mr. and Mrs. P. Bogal called in the evening. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Ketring and daughters. Hazel. Thelma. Laura. and Betty Rose spent Sunday afternoon with Mrs. Ellen Robinson, Mrs. Ketring’s mother. Mr. and Mrs. Roland Ringer, of Elkhart, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Brown and Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Vail and* son, Raymond, were Sunday afternoon callers at the Emmett Weaver home. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Scholer and daughter. Thella, of Ligonier, and Mr. and Mrs. Glen Leslie and infant son spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Joe Eckart. Mrs. Leslie and baby remained for a few days visit. West End Mr. and Mrs. Earl Miller spent Tuesday in Elkhart with friends. Elden Luts and Eugene Sheffield spent Sunday afternoon in Elkhart. Mrs. Lena Steward was granted a divorce from John P. Steward, cruelty being the charge. J. F. Weybright, who was in the North Manchester hospital for several weeks, is home again. Mrs. Lizzie Trop and daughter. Mrs. Mary Kisey, are spending the week with friends in Bristol. Mrs. Melvin Weybright. of Elgin, 111., was called to Elkhart on account of the illness of Mrs. Walter Weybright. Those who called on Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Sheffield Sunday were Mr. and Mrs, Hubert Cripe. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Ogle and son Billie, Mr. and Mrs. Ray Bennindorfer and baby. Wm. Gardner and family, of Goshen, Mr. Mrs. J. W. Rowdabaugh. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Weybright. Mr. and Mrs. Jess Metz and Mr. and Mrs. Clat Beard. Solomon's ("'reek John Darr sports a new Overland automobile. Miss Miriam Darr spent Saturday with her aunt Mrs. David Holtzinger. Ed. Good and family, of Leesburg, were guests of Mrs. Fanny Good Sunday. Mrs. Harry Good and little daughter spent Wednesday with Mrs. Muri Darr. Geo. Darr and family were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Zimmerman. Mr. and Mrs. Levi Pearman called at the Paul Ringwald home Monday afternoon. Rev. and Mrs. Saylor and son. Paul, were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Long. Mr. and Mrs. Rutherford Miller, of Elkhart, spent Sunday at the Paul Ringwald home. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Rex called on Mr. and Mrs. Dan Warbel In Syracuse Saturday evening. * Mr. and Mrs. Levi Pearman took Sunday dinner with Anderson Juday and Leela. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Good and family were Sunday Quests of Lee Good and family in Ligonier. Mrs. Lon Rookstool came home from the Elkhart hospital Friday and is getting along fine. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Cripe, of Goshen. called on friends In this community Sunday afternoon. The Ladies Aid will give a chicken supper Wednesday evening. April 13. in the basement. A general inritation is given. ' Mr. and Mrs. Will Juday. Mrs. Pete Dierdorff and two daughters of Goshen, spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Ollie Pence. Mr. and Mrs. Bird Darr, of Goshen, callgtf at the Paul Ringwald home Sunday evening, then attended service! at. the Solomon’s Creek U. B. church. Sunday school at 10 each Sunday morning. The series Os meetings trill continue this week. A general Invitation is given to al! to attend these services. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Snyder and children. Miss Clay Darr, Mrs. Louisa Hapner, Mra Bertha Hapner and
THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL
children were Sunday guests of Mr. I and Mrs. Warn Juday, in Goshen. Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Rex and son, William, of Milford, spent Sunday with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Rex. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Rex and daughter, Mildred, of Avilla, called tn the afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Rookstool, of Elkhart, and two sons spent Sunday with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Clint Rookstool. The two sons will remain with their grandparents for a few days. White Oak Mrs. Cora Weyland spent Monday in Syracuse with Mrs. Case. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Mathews spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Bucher. ' Mr. and Mrs. Guy Fisher and fam ily spent Sunday] with Mr. and Mrs. Frank Bdshoftg. Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Dewart and family, of Milford, enjoyed Sunday at the Emeral Jones home. Mr. and Mrs. William. Fackler, of north of Syracuse, were guests at the Berton Howe home Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Emeral Jones are the proud parents of a new baby srl who came to live with them Saturday morning. Mr. and Mrs. James Ingals entertained at Sunday dinner. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Smith and family and Mr. Samuel Dewart. OMeCRAY JURY DISCHARGED Indianapolis, Ind., April 12.— t The jury in the trial of Gov J Warren T. McCray, charged with larceny and embezzlement of ’state funds, disagreed and was ■Hscharged at 5:40 p. m., Friday afternoon. Thirty-five ballots were taken hv the jury, the vote ranging 'rom 11 to 1 for conviction on first ballot, to 8 to 4 for conviction on the last. • o With fourteen investigations n the Senate and ten in the House our political machines have become threshing machines, threshing out wild oats. The product being chaff, of course haffs.
The Truth About this Light-Six—plus proof on proof ,I ' r f ... it- pl MIIS Studebaker Light-Six is years of test for its purpose. On some cars in this class called in auditors to • <1 the supreme value in the we pay the makers 15% premium to compare the operating costs. Iney ' JL “thousand-dollar” class, get them exactly right. made comparisons on 329 cars, runIt offers, not a few, but scores of The crankshafts are machined on nmg up to 25,000 miles. advantages. In its chassis it repre- all surfaces, as was done in the it was found that this Studebaker cents the best that modem engineer- Liberty Airplane Motors. This to Light-Six cost for operation 11.4% ing knows. In its steels and quality give perfect motor balance, at an ex- less than the average of its rivals, of construction it is identical with tra cost to us of $600,000 yearly. This figure included depreciation, the costliest cars we build. It has more Timken bearings than That meant $207.50 saved on 25,000 j This is to offer you proofs. Then any other competitive car within miles. AU because of this quality coni urge that you see it before paying $1,500 of its price. struction. 1 SI,OOO or more for a car. What it saves you \ Some evidence — - * We build 150,000 cars > . The extra values which . yearly * AU SUCh m - ai ° r this car typifies have FF costs as engineering I made Studebaker the ® ’ largest builder of quality divided by 150,000. cars. build in model They have made these plants, with modern maun a sensation. Sales chinery, which have imhave almost trebled in W JVEn fiMQK Bu mensely reduced the , %• three years. Last year \1 *' manufacturing costs. 145,167 people paid $2Ol,- A car like this, built 1 < 000,000 for Studebaker under ordinary condiif muwwc <>.- Studebaker Light-Six 5 mand has forced an m- Scores of extra vahieS i Learn, for your own ! in model plants and Built by the leader in the fine-car class. One of the sake, what that means to < equipment. Os this, S3B,- cars for which people last year paid $201,000,000. y .4 000,000 has been spent in Built in a model $50,000,000 plant, producing 150,I ! the past five years, so 000 cars yearly. And saving you by quantity produc- Send tor the book • y the plants are up-to-date. tion from S2OO to S4OO. I , i k The engineering de- BuUt of the same steels, with the same care, as Mail us the coupon bet * whi«*h designs the costliest cars we make. low. We will send you Kd sunerintends this The tar that saved 11.4% in operating cost under free our new book that Light sE ctMt, WMOO ri-alx The car with 14 Timken bearings. wM inform £ .. . , coupon for book about it va^e of a car< r machines which - For instance: It will en1 build it are modern and / a bl e you to look at any inch. 122 operations are exact to cushions are of genuine leather, and ened to meet a price or otters one-half l/1000th of an inch. are ten inches deep. quality. 1,200 inspectors are employed to Every part and detail accords with it will tell you why sone care subSt to Studebaker traditions. And the name ra ttle at 20,000 miles and others 32J000 msneetions. Studebaker has for 72 years stood for don't. It shows one single point m a quality and Hasa dosed car which measures whether Infinite ctffe . you’re getting top or medium quality. - Th. ««1. « wilted from 35 The book i, free-dip lhe ooupoa •• i formulas, each one proved best by Some men who operate fleets or Deiow. - =sssss=ss== ssssss=sssst "' ' ■ -sssaa LIGHT-SIX SPECIAL-SIX B I G - S I X Roadster (3-PaM.j 1025 Roadster (2-Pass.) 1400 Speedster (5-Pass.) . . . . . 183 Coupe-Roadster ( 2-P») . - - |195 (S .pa«.) 1895 Coupe (5-Pasa.) 2495 Coupe <5-Pms.) 1395 .... 1985 Sedan> 2685 QUI prices f. O.&factory. Termr ro meer your convenience.) Fm XTL""F o'r’ BO"OK; z . j. J STUDEBAKER, South Bend, Indiana FLOYD HEDGES, Syracuse, Indiana • PleMe mafl me book. can- ■ : - F “ ■ not Judge Value by Price.-' , ■ I ■ • : THE WORLD’S LARGEST PRODUCER OF QUALITY AUTO MOBILES -
I A Brooklyn Greek will sell I fruit, candy, soft drinks, and other articles at the Battery landing on the harbor front. For two stands he will pay $30,000 a year for three years. He was successful bidder at the concessions auction. The same stands rented for SIOO a month in 1920. o With the discovery that between 6000 and 8000 children of school age are employed annually in the beet fields of Colorado, sentiment favorable to the enactment of a child labor amendment to the Constitution of the United States is becoming more pronounced. . o Auto thefts increase steadily. In 28 leading’cities last year, about 40,000 cars were stolen. Over 32,000 were recovered. The “not found” cars were 18 per cent of the total stolen, compared with 29 per cent in 1920 and 1921. - . Q Henry Ford uses the radio on his railroad for dispatching trains and issuing orders. The system is so successful that it will be increased from 400 to 2,000 messages a day. o NOTICE TO HEIRS, CREDITORS, ETC. In the matter of the estate of Elizabeth A. Stuard, deceased. In the Kosciusko Circuit Court, February Term, 1924. Notice is hereby given, that Sherman Stuard as administrator of the estate of Elizabeth A. Stuard, deceased, has- presented and filed his account and vouchers In final settlement of said estate, and that the same will come up for examination and; action of said Circuit Court on the 25th day of Apri), 1924, at which time all heirs, creditors, or legatees of said estate are required to appear in said court and show cause, if any there be, why said account and vouchers should not be approved. Dated at Warsaw, Indiana, this 31st day of March, 1924. RUSSELL H. BUTLER. [ 49-3 t. Clerk Kosciusko Circuit Court.
Building Material of all Kinds LUMBER 2x6, 2xß, 2x10,3x8,3x10,3x12 LARGE TIMBERS 6x6, Bxß, 10x10, 12x12 CRUSHED STONE _ CORRUGATED SHEETS Angle Irons, I-Beams, Channel Irons. If you build this spring see us Rissman-Levey Salvage Co. (Old Cement Plant,) Syracuse, Indiana Phone 87 Salesmen on Premises Every Day SSSSSaES&SSSSHEESSESBSKISEBBSKSSBBSB3SiSBSSESBEBT3S JSSSSSSSJSSSSMSSSSSSESSSSiSSSSBSSSKSSSSSSSSBiSBSRa FRESH. 6LE.HN M&flT Await you at our market at all times. You will find the juiciest cuts and the tenderest pieces here. We also handle smoked and dried meats and a general line of canned meats. A KLINK BROS. MEAT MARKET . - ‘4 f
