The Syracuse Journal, Volume 17, Number 14, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 31 July 1924 — Page 8
■ ■ Classified Ads •• <> < > J ‘ • Classified advertising Is ac- J J < ► cepted at the rate of 5 cents ’ ’ a line for each insertion. A ( ’ J[ r booking and collection fee of < , < i 10 cents will be added for a < > ' ’ cahrged account; no account J [ will be charged for less than o o 25 cents for a single Item. < > < ■>»>»»»»»»♦♦»»»♦»♦♦»♦♦»»♦♦ PICTURES — Have your pictures framed at Beckman s. 14-ts FOR SALE -A No. 1 gravel bed. Chas. Parsons. 14-1 tp COAL AND COKE—Leave your order for hard coal and coke. C. Disher, Phone 98. 12-ts FREE New School Catalog,outlining ten up-to-minute course es. Address, South Bend Business College. 13-stp PARLOR SUITES New living and parlor suites are on the road to Beckmans Store, 14-tl INDIANS coining from South Dakota reservations. Members of the Sioux Tribe will perform here*. Were with Buffalo Bill in Europe. Will be at North Manchester Fair August 5,6, 7, 8. 13At S3O. See Beckman's show’ window. 141 f FURNITURE- Watch the new furniture coming in at Beckman's Store this week. 14-ts WANTED Property to list. Have clients who want to buv residence property on a small initial payment, balance each month like rent. Simon L. Bell. 14FOR sA L E Fancy spring chickens and hens delivered at your door twice weekly. Any amount of two or more. Order by phone 22 or G. C. Tarman.l New Paris, Ind. 12-7t.| FOU N D A bunch of keys Owner can have same by calling at the Journal office and paying for this notice. 14-11 REME MB E R We handle a good line of poultry feed, tankage. midds. bran. hay. straw and chop. C. Disher, phone 98. 12-ti *CONGOLEUM RUGS In all sizes at Beckman's Store. 14-ts. FOR RENT— Major Marsh's cottage home and its beautiful grounds in South Park, for the seasotL b-ts. Classified Ads pay both—seller and buyer. WANTED— AII kinds of timber. ’ Inquire of Coppes Bros. J Zook, Nappanee. 36-ts FOR SALE-Stove wood, fine and chunks, delivered. Phone 316. or address Dan Mishler, Syracuse. 36-ts WANTED -Men or women to take orders for genuine, guaranteed hosiery for men. women, and children. Eliminate darning. Salary $75 a week* full time, $1.50 an hour spare time. Beautiful line, all colors. International Stocking Mills. Norristown. Pa. 7-100.
FOR SALE Glazed Window Sash Cement Blocks Boats and a Canoe Small Cottage ' HALLIE HOLLOWAY SPECIAL ATTENTION GIVEN TO ■ ESTATES. DEEDS. MORTGAGES TITI.ES AND WILLS WILLIAM GRAY LOEHR Attorney-at-Law since 1916 Admitted to Practice In AH Court.! Collection*, Notary Public Ilß| S. Buffalo St.. Warsaw. Ind. CEO. L XANDERS Attorney-at-Law Settlement of Estate*. « Opinions on Title* Fire and Other Insurance Phone 7 Syracuse, Ind. ROBERT K. PLETCHER * Funeral Director Ambulance Service Syracuse. Indiana. Telephone 75 Get your FREIGHT via.the t SYRACUSE-FORT WAYNE TRUCK LINE J. E. Rippey e 101 Syracuse, Ind. ’lf ,1 don't haul your freight we both lose.” O. A. BILLMAN' Aermotor Windmills Water Supply Goods Well Drilling and Repairing. Phone 333 Ligonier, Ind.:
U.S.Royal Cords BALLOON - BALLOON-TYPE - HIGH PRESSURE Built of Latex-treated Cords RIGHT now the user of Royal Cords is . profiting by a development in tire building that is anywhere from three to five years ahead of the industry as a whole— Latex-treated cards. The Latex Process, which gives so much added strength and wearing quality to Roy-1 f* lilial Cords, was invented and patented by the f makers of United States Tires. /r? It will undoubtedly supersede al! other / rj fepT/ip methods. pf nf W You can get the benefit in Roy." I Corl /(; SflpO $ \ Wmß $ High Pressure Tires of all sizes from 30 x 3& f’J I ’ inches up, in Royal Cord Balloon Tires In H | for 20 and 21 inch rims, and Royal Cord „ ■ IIM g I • Balloon-Type Tires that fit your present I £ IJ wheels and rims. B ! * And you can get it now. I ; United States Tires ini O g H are Good Tires »i IT —— . & || (JJ rwar-]! jgi . -riOfe SHll—lß Buy U.S. Tires from A . C I Syracuse Auto Sales Syracuse, India: a
I FRESH. CLEAN MBflT i... . ' i Await yon at our market at all times. Aon will find the juiciest cuts and the tenderest pieces here. We also handle smoked and dried meats and a general line of canned meats. I KLINK BROS. MEAT MARKET I
NEW PARK SITE Bloomington, Ind. A quarter of a million dollar park site for what is expected to bee om e eventually one of the mose extensive hospital and medical units in America has been approved by the Indiana; olrs park board as a gift lu the people of Indiana. The one hundred acre park will surround the various units of the Indiana university school of medicine, including th medical school building, the Long hospital, the Riley memorial hospital, and the Indianapolis city hospital. Additional units likely to lie constructed in the near future are a state psychiatric hospital, a state hospital for women, a state hospital limited to general and special suigi new medical rc-earch laboratory, and possibly a dintai cllegbuilding. Under the plana drawn by Lawrence V Sheiidin. consulting landscape architect beautiful bonlev c4i will thread throuir'i the er ■ o*h. pla ygrnunds will he provided for convalescent children from the Rilev memorial hospital, and beautiful wooded stretches w.’l L«» ed for aattoKS from the other great ho; ais of the In bans unit. HAY FEVER SUFFERERS READ THIS LEITER Campbellsburg, Ind. July 21. 1924. Mis. Chester R. Brown, Syracuse. Ind. Dear Mrs. Brown: In answer to your inquiiy about H. B. Holloway. D. C.. 1 had hay fever about as bad as any one could have had. The adjustments given me by H. B Holloway gave instant relief and today my hay fever is gone. Give him a good fair trial and I believe what he did for me he can do for you and others. I certainly do know how to sympathize with anyone who has hay fever Hoping you get good results. I ■ am. yours truly. ! MRS. LIGE HAYS Box. 18, Campbellsburg, Ind. RAY FEVER Palmyra, Ind., July 19,1924. Mrs. Chester R. Brown, Syracuse, Ind. Dear Madam: - Replying to your inquiry about H. B. Holloway. D. C., I am sure if yc® give Mr. Hollowav a trial he w’ill cere you. 1 had asthma and hay fever all my life until about six years ago. 1 took about fcrtv adjustments, received no noticeable results until the last adjustment, at which time I was ■completely relieved of the disease and haven’t had it since. You say all other methods have failed to relieve you. Just give Mr. Hollowav a trial and I am sure you will be a well woman. Yours truly. MATILDA SEARS
ELKHART FARMERS SOW MORE ALFALFA i ■ i ■ As a result of an alfalfa tour held in Elkhart County, the fol- ■ lowing important facts were i brought out: That lime is necesj sary on the majority of soils for ' the successful .growing of alfalfa 'and that lime in the form of j ground limestone or marl are the most successful forms of lime to 'use; that Grimm or Cossack varieties do better and are far surer in that section than the comj mon varieties; that this variety of seed is very scarce at present end that all desiring seed to so* this fall had better buv at once: that the application of barnyard ’manure*or organic matter in jsome form gives best results; and i tb»t the application of commercial acid phosphate gives big re- , turns. A great deal t>f interest iis being shown throughout the c ’itify in *he production of alfalfa, one township having an acreage of acres. Nearly 11000 acres-will be seeded in the county this year, county agent C. A. Jackson reports. BROOM SALE CAUSES RIOT ' Morristown. Pak July. 25. ’ Twenty persons, most of them ; women, were slightly injured in a bargain counter crush Brday when a new stare advertised the sale of one cent brooms. Twelve of the women were taker, to a hospital suffering from cuts aiftl bruises. The crowd began to gather *before the store onencd and those nearest the entrance were pushed against the show windows. Jn the scramble to es--ape the falling glass mahv wonen wore knocked down. Other 4 were injured by beimr crushed Wins* the entrance. Many pocketbooks were lost. - ■ N 0 ‘ When you are sick you owe it to yourself to place yourself under the expert care of Dr. Werner, 214 Sc. sth, Goshen. His scientific examinations and treatments get results. Treatments painless. 14-lt. I zWwz II I I • W/kAA - I I owm? * —- _ —-
THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL
YELLOWS RESISTANT CABBAGE ONLY SURVIVOR Oliver Schmidt, market gar doner near Evansville, decided he would give this yellows resistant cabbage a thorough tria’ to find out if it was any good. He picked out a piece of land where cabbage has continually been a flat,failure. In this place he planted nirte rows of cabbage, alternating two rows of resistant with two rows of different common varieties like Charles ton. Flat Dutch and Copenhagen. He used the Wisconsin Hollander. Wisconsin All Seasons and the Indiana Yellows resistant i cabbage in the alternate rows. When Mr. Schmidt was visited by Dr. C> T. Gregory, of Purdue University Agricultural Exten- • sion Department, July 15 he said, ' “Well I am satisfied. I will not grow anything but these resistant varieties from n w on. ’ ■ When asked why he was sn certain he said: “Ccme evt and see for yourself.” One look wa c i enough. He had two rows of good cabbage, then two blanks; | next were two mere good rows followed bv two blanks. The ordinary cabbage had failed aeain. (killed bv the yellows, while the res’stant varieties were 95 per cen+ successful. . The Indiana yellow resistant cabbage stands un witfi the best of them. Moreover, the leaves have small veins, nrodacint* a finer quality head. Cabbage like this is more papular on the market. OLD HEN STILL AT IT Columbia, Mo—By laying six eggs in seven days. Missouri Ann. the 7-year-old white leghorn hen at the University of* Missouri, has completed her last lap on the VMM) egg record. This remarkable hen, hatched March 21, 1917, Kbgan laving when 206 days old, and had ten eggs to her credit by November 1. Her record from November 1 to October 31 has been as follows: 1918, 203; 1919. 189;’1920. jpg; 1921. 138: 1922. 114: 1923. fM>. and to date for 1924. 57, making a grand total of 1000 eggs. Missouri Ann comes from a nroductive farpilv and one noted r or longevity. He* mother laid 896 eevs in seven years. A niece has 612 to her credit in three vears Slie has several 200-e<rv daughters, and one ®f her granddaughters produced 247 eg-rs last vear. while another laid 415 in two years. Q * OLD FASHIONED STOVE Bicomington, Ind.—An old fashioned Franklin stove, invented by Benjamin Franklin and brought to Bloomington by Andrew Wylie, first president of Indiana University, is in the pos-i session of Dr. Fiank M. Andrews of the Botany department of Indiana University. Franklin recognized that fire places were impractical and set about to remedy the situation by making a stove of iron, setting U out in the room, and connectihg it to the chimney with a flue. The Frankl'm stove was rapidly im'Prcved upon and only a few of them were manufactured, but they were of such solid buikl that them- are still used today for heating purposes more ♦han one hundred years after they were manufactured. Subscribe for the Journal,
AROUND THE WORLD WITH THE GOSPEL HORN r mil ’ OBllJ»> fl t ■ ilßiißWife i mi iHslc WIQML ClW.Mnfi'iiWTtS ■ it-’f ®" '-f C ■ :■ w ■ W ■'> •>.. OC ..zTOP— A wferd group.of Thibetean daneere in northern China being inspected by Homer Rodeheavcr in his gospel trip around the world. Bnlow —Rodebeaver with the Chinese band tn a Chinese rug factory, playing “Brighten the Corner.” Before leaving America. Rodeheaver had the record of playing with and before 40.000,000 people. He is shown here teaching them the same gospel music he has used in the “Billy’’ Sunday campaigns and tn his Rainbow records. Rodeheaver believes gospel music is the universal language.
■ j’. •iBfeCTwRhMI ffcaf TRAVEL DE LUXE in the Philippines, according to Homer Rodel.eaver, celeb'ated chorister, who is shown riding with as much comfort as possible ,at one stage of his trip around the world. This speed was the best he could do under the circumstances to , reach America in time for Sacred Music Week, to be held at \\*nona Lake, In liana, August 16 co 21, where he will be one of -the leading Eguree.
LEFT —Being a bachelor, Homer Roc’eheaver has no first hand experience bow wives should be treated. The picture shows hie interest in the famous “Burning Ghat” in India, where widows were burned to death until the law prohibited that practice. Right- Rodeheaver te shown In front of the famous Peng Yang monuments in Korea. Here, as always, he is interested in children, believing that they should get the Christian message early in life. He has published many songs and books to help bring this about. He finds that the. Koreans and other Asi; tics respond to gospel music the same as the A%ieri< ans.
k Wl>tUw a ' di liij J.lwhr iB • ■ ■ Utob ■ *■ * LEFT —Homer Rodeheaver shown with Ugo Nakada at latter's home tn Japan. This young Japanese was inspired by hearing Rodeheaver’s songs on phonograph records. When Mr. Rodeheaver met him on his trip around the world he was impressed by the youth’s musical ability and arrangements were made to send him at once to America. Nakada is in the United States at the present time studying at Winona Lake, and will participate tn Sacred Music Week there August 16-21, under Rodeheaver’s direction. 4 Right—The Cathedral of St. Thomas in St. Thome, Madras. India, said to be the place where the bones of St. Thomas are buried. According to Homer Rodeheavej, thia is one of the most impressive buildings seen in his eat ire trip. ‘
BEE STING CAUSES DeVtII Kankakee, Ill.—Frank M. Lane 43. Ottawa county farmer, died from poisoning 15 minutes after being stung over the ri jht eye by a honey bee. Lane was a bee farmer and had been stung many times previously apparently without-serious result. a __ RIBBONS—We sell ribbons for j L C. Smith, Underwood and Oli- i ver Typewriters, Journal office.
Many Women Use Glycerine Mixture Women appreciate the quick action of simple glycerine, buckthbrn bark, etc., as mixed in Adlerika. Most medicines act only on tower bowel but Adlerika acts on BOTH upper and lower bowel, and removes aU gasses* and ’ poisons. Excellent fpr obstinate constipation and to guard against appendicitis. Helps any case gas on stom|ach in TEN minutes. Thornburg’s I Drug Store, (3)
TO BRETZ FOR GLASSES Good T ° Your Eyes \ In the matter of glasses, solid comfort should supercede every oilier consideration. We constantly endeavor to furnish glasses that are particularly becoming, but our main thought is to render a service that assures sight satisfaction to each and every patron. Learn to Know U» to Your Advantage. NEVIN E. BRETZ Optometrist & Optician 130 S. Main St., ’ Goshen INDIANA SWINE JUDGES TO MEET AT PURDUE AUGUST 5 The 36th annual meeting of the Indiana Association of Expert Fwine Judges will be held at the Purdue Judging Pavilion, Lafayette, Indiana, on, Tuesday, August 5. The- program will start at 10 o’clock. During the forenoon the work will be the scoring of individual hogs of the various breeds. In the afternoon several rings of hogs of the different breeds will be ju.’ged and placed ?n a comparative basis. Those who are successful in the work will be awarded a judging license by the Association. 'Comparative judging is a new feature cf the swine judges' meeting. Heretofore the entire time has been taken up by scoring individual hogs. Thfis .hange will add to the interest and practical features of the meeting. Farmers and breeders, as well as men who do judging work at Indiana fairs, will find this meeting worth while. The good swine judge always keeps in mind the market demand as well as the demands of a good breeding and feeding , hog—one that will produce pork the most economically and profitably. Plan to attend this meeting. It will be made as practical and valuable as possible. Bring a neighbor or two along. EDUCATIONAL FILMS Bloomington. Ind.—C oun t y Agents show the greatest increase in the use of educational movies furniAed by the Indiana university extensi'n division of I any class of exhibitors, according to Hugh Norman, director of the I. U. bureau of visual education. More than 400 different Hoosier communities rented films practically at cost last year. The I. U. film library includes approximately one million feet lOOti different subjects. One hundred additional reels will be added this fall. o_ — ; . j STUDEBAKERS ENJOINED, South Bend, Ind., July 26—The Studebaker Corporation of America today filed suit here to enjoin Clement Studebaker and George M. Studebaker from using the name; “Studebaker Brothers, Inc.,” in a mail, order business recently established. The automobile concern contends it alone has the right to use the name “Studebaker” having purchased the original Studebaker Brothers manufacturing company, its good will and assets. Take a box "witli yott, If you have headache, backache, toothache, neuralgia, rheumatism, sciatica DR. MILES’ Anti=Pain Pills will give you quick relief, A package of these pills in your pocket or in your shopping bag may save you bouts of suffering. > Your druggist sells them at pre-war prices—25 doses 25 cents. Economy package, 125 doses SI.OO.
