The Syracuse Journal, Volume 17, Number 15, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 7 August 1924 — Page 8
Classified Ads •• ;; Qasmfaur* advertising is aci > ceptedpat the rate of 5 cents <> P a Ibm for each insertion. A <> I. booWufe and collection fee of K , *lO will be ;idded for a v" ' caXrgfttf ac.counX no account ▼ k ‘ \ win Abe charged Jor le&U than £ “ < >'’t£g»»nts for a -sH&le itdn. •. *Pictures — Have your pictures framed at Beckman’s. 14-ts FOR SALE—Fox terrier puppies. Hugh Bushong. 15-lp 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 courses. Address, South Bend Business College. 13-stp PARLOR SUITES—New living and parlor suites are on the road to Beckman’s Store, 14-ts FOUND —On Saturday night, n ladies coat, between Syracuse and Waco. Owner can have same by proving property and paying for this notice. Phone 168. 15-1 tp FURNITURE— Watch the new furniture coming in at Beckman's Store this week. 14-tP CHOOSING YOU i. SCHOOL—You should get a Free copy of our new catalog. Ten fine up-to-date courses. South. Bend Business College. 15-Btp. FOR SALE—Complete set, 1. C. S. Text books on Electrical Engineering. Also Rogers Machinist’s Guide. C. A. McMillan, at the Journal office. 15-2 BREAKFAST SUITES -At S3O. See Beckman’s show window. 14tf HORSE SHOEING—CI as s y horse shoeing and general repair work done at my shop in North Webster. All work guaranteed. Phone 27. Phillip Beghtel. 15-3 t ,FOR SALE—Fancy spring chickens and hens delivered at your door twice weekly. Any amount of two or more. Order by v phone 22 or G. C. Tarman. New Paris, Ind. 12-7 t. R E MEM B ER—We handle a good line of poultry feed, tankage. midds, bran, hay, straw and chop. C. Disher, phone 98. 12-ts OANGOLEUM RUGS—In all sizes at Beckman’s Store. 14-ts. FOR REN T—Major Marsh's cottage home and its beautiful grounds in South Park, for t e season. 6-ts. WANTED—AII kinds of timber. Inquire of Coppes Bros. & 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. Beaut'ful line, all colors. International Stocking Mills, Norristown, Pa. 7-lQp. * FOR SALE Glazed Window Sash Cement Blocks Boats and a Canoe * Small Cottage HALLIE HOLLOWAY SPECIAL ATTENTION GIVEN TO ESTATES. DEEDS. MORTGAGES TITLES AND WILLS OLLI AM GBAY LOEHR Atton»ey-at-Law since 1916 Admitted to Practice in All Courts Collections Notary Public 118 J S. Buffalo St.. Warsaw. Ind. GEO. L. XANDERS A ttorney-at-Law Settlement of Estates. Opinions on Titles e Fire and Other Insurance Phono 7 Syracuse, Ind. ROBERT £ PLETCHER Funeral Director Ambulance Service Syracuse, Indiana. Telephone 75 Get your FREIGHT via the SYRACUSE-FORT WAYNE TRUCK LINK J. E. Rippey I i e 1®1» Syracuse, hid. ’lf I don’t haul your freight we both loee.” 0. A. BILLMAN Aermotor Windmills Water Supply Goods Well Drilling and Repairing. Phone 333 Ligonier, Ind.'
1 ! ml n tires /gip|i • ill y yfe 3 / 3 !K K/f ANY a car owner>s tire troubles Wl t JVL have been solved by this new 30x31£ inch “R” Tread Clincher Cord. yJIK IPs just as big a money’s wort 4 as the W standard Revere Cord. W There isn’t any better combination for long time tire service than one of these two 1 ’ tires and a Revere Tube. THE W. BINGHAM CO. Distributors Cleveland. Ohio
I FRESH. GLEAN MEAT i I; ■ I Await you at our market at all times. Aon g will find the juiciest cuts and the tenderest pieces here. Ilf also handle sniokml and g dried meats and a general line of canned meats. a 6 s I KLINK BROS. MEAT MARKET
NEW Bl ILDING AT I. V. A contract for the constrttcticn of Memorial residence hall, a student dormitory at Indiana university, was awarded to E. A. Carson, of Logansport, Ind . ai a ; meeting of the university board of trustees. Carson’s bid was $33:1.345. The dormitory is to accommodate 225 students. It will contain a specially equipped kitchen, two large dining rooms, lounges, parlors, and reception , rooms. It will be an ornate stone [structure, in keeping with architecture of other campus buildings. o WILD RJCFTSEED FREE If any organized fish and game nrotection club is interested in planting w ild rice seed in public waters of Indiana as food for wild waterfowl, it may be pr> cured free from the state conservation department through written application to George N. Mannfeld. chief of the fish and game division. From 10 to 30 pounds of seed was shipped to a number of organizations last year and planted during September. The department will provide the free seed again this year, Mannfeld savs. providing the request is filtd before August 15.
Children like Dr. Miles* Laxative Tablets Don't struggle trying to get your children to take Utter, evil tasting laxatives. Get a package of DR. MILES’ Laxative Tablets and the children wiD beg for them — they taste so good. Adults and children find these tablets mild, 'sure and thorough. Your druggist sells them st pre-war prices—25 doses 25 cents.
BURGLAR PROOF CAR The latest improved burglarproof mail car passed through Plymouth enroute to Washing‘tan, D. C.. for final inspection. It is ah all-steel car. lined with < armor plate. Port holes on t"° sides of’the car enable the mail ! clerk to hoot out at any intrudi ers. There are also places wh 're 'the clerk can shoot through the floor, the shots falling on a steel (construction underneath the car which scatters the shots, so they will penetrate anything within ' several feet. ! BROTHERS FULFILL VOW Logansport, Ind., Aug. I.— With the presentation of $40,000 ■ in government bonds to the Wit--1 tenberg college, Springfield, Ohio [with which to endow a chair, jjohn Guard. 60. and his brother. ■ William, 63, of this city, have carried out a lifelong vow. The | two, as youths, promised their [ father, a Lutheran clergyman, that they would endow the Witi r er.berg .college with a $40,000 gift. » * ' One Canadian manufacturer of dried milk has sold the whole | output of his factory for the next |fi ve years tp a large British eatcrliiv*firm. Another British firm is trading for the entire asbestos output of Australia. Gas On Stomach May Cause Appendicitis Constant grus causes inflanunatio* which may involve the appendix. Simple flycertne, buckthorn bark, etc., as mixed In Adlerlka help# any case gas on the stomach In TEN minute*. Most medicines act only on lower bowel but acU on BOTH upper and lower bowel and removes all gas and poisons. Excellent tor obstinate constipation and to guard against appendicitis. Thornburg’S Drug Store. (4) — —OGas si fled Ads pay both -seller *nd buyer. I I • 'vAcT--- - x
THE SYRACUSE JOURNAE
FUR-BEARING ANIMALS [' PROTECTED BY LAW Indianapolis, Ind., Aug. 4.— There is some misunderstanding : among landowners regarding the laws protecting fur-beaiing animals: when said animals may bo lawfully killed and trapped, and when fur may be taken, conservation officials said todays ' Acccrding to George N. Mnnnfeld, chief of the fish and game division, it is unlawful for any person to kill or possess any fox. raccoon, skunk, opossum, mink or muskrat, or the freshly skinned hides thereof during the clesed seasen. February 10 tn November 10. except that landowners have the right to kill such animals when found doing damage or destroying property on their premises. When an animal is so killed, however, the fact must be reported tc. the conservation department, in writing within five days, and arrangements made for disposition of the hide or fur. '>• This law carries the provision that holding fur animals for breeding is legal when the narty holding same registers with the department, and has received a certificate of inspection. Such certificate will not be issued un til proof is established that said animals were caught in the lawful open season. There is no provision. he says, for taking fur animals in closed season for breeding or any other purpose. Fur farming is raoidly growing in popularity in Indiana, and a number of citizens are realizing a handsome income from it. | Records in Mannfeld’s office show that 110 persons registered 1 as breeders of game birds and fur-bearing animals in the past year. A certificate of inspection which entitles the holder to propagate wild animals in captivity costs $5 and is renewable annually. 70 EGGS IN 70 DAYS Lafayette. Ind.—A continuous production mark was established in the Purdue university poultry flock, when a Single Combed White Leghorn hen laid eggs in seventy days. The hen has laid 206 eggs and has four months to go before completing her pullet year. The pullet started laying last November and produced fourteen in December. In January, February and March she produced twenty-four each month; twenty-seven in April, thirty-one in May, twenty-nine in June, twenty-seven in July, including one on July 29, when these data were compiled. Her seventy-day period extends from April i 9 to June 27.
BASS JUMPS INTO CANOE Akron, Ohio, Aug. 2. —This is a fish story. A true fish story. So help me Hortense! Mr. and Mrs. Walter Titus and a male friend were paddling across Chippewa here the other evening at twilight. Suddenly there came a flopping splashing, screaming —as Poe might express it—and a 17-inch big-mouth bass landed in the middle of the canoe. The bass was found to have a small bluegill in his mouth. Evidently the weeping blades of the canoe surprised it in its quest for food. oCRIME AVAVE IN CHICAGO Chicago, Aug. 1.-c-A murder a day was committed in Chicago in June and July, according to a report of the Chicago crime commission which is making arrangements for a conference’for the formation of an anti-crime council. There have been 205 murders here in the first 213 days of the year, the report states.
Your First Chance—Your Last Chance to see it at POPULAR PRICES While You’re Visiting the Fair Don’t Fail to go to the BLACKSTONE to see The ’ . “Covered Wagon” THE DATES FAIR WEEK-Angust 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23 SOUTH BEND—The Blackstone TOP PRICE sOc
THE RIGHT TO HUNT AND FISH IN INDIANA Indianapolis, Ind., Aug. 4.—' s State game wardens arrested 209 i alleged violators of fish and game < laws during June, and of this < number 192 were convicted and ] eaid fines and costs amounting to $3,738.05. . ■. ' In a report filed With Richard I Lieber, director of the state conservation department, George N. Mannfeld, superintendent of the fish and game di vision, says that 43 salaried wardens worked in June this year compared to 37 d ring June a year ago. The division has at its disposal 31 motor.cars of which 23 are used by wardens in patrolling the state, and eight are used by hatchery employees distributing baby fisn tc. the various public waters. Mannfeld calls attention that some confusion and misunderstanding exists concerning the rights of honorably discharged soldiers to hunt and fish in Indiana without a license. Only former service men who are dents have this privilege, he says, and that non-resident former service men do not have this privilege under the Indiana law. The law establishing the resident hunting and fishing license expressly states that only soldiers, sailors and marines who actually served in a war may nsh and .hunt without a license. Civu war veterans of the whcle United States, however, may hunt and fish free in Indiana. Mannfelc suggests that if ex-soldiers and service men claiming their right Sunder this law will carry their discharge papers while hunting ' and fishing, much confusion now prevalent can be avoided. He further suggests that if persons contemplate fishing far from home to obtain a license before leaving their county, or ord- • era license direct from the clerk of the county wherein they expect to fish. This is because of recent complaints that some people paid so-called agents who > gave them a receipt and proniisHed to procure them a license. To date they received no license. I Wardens will not accept a receipt in lieu of a license, Mannfeld i says.
BEAL ESTATE TRANSFERS [ (By Houton C. Frazer) James S. Smith to Sarah A. ’ Leng, lots 9 and 10, first add.. The Highlands. S6OO. I Arthur H. Blanchard t$ Albert IH. Laughlin, lot 89, Hillabold’s add.. Syracuse, $550. Silas L. Ketring, et al to Howard A. Marvin, lot 10, Ideal Beach, S7OO. Silas L. Ketring et al to Hugo and Mary E. Winterhoff, lot 16, Kale Island, $650. Caroline Clauss to James F. Peterson and James T. Shepard, 155 a., secs. 3, 2. and 30, Aan Buren twp., $17,■000. . o STORK BRINGS NO. 22 Noblesville, Ind., Aug. 4. —The stork last week left a baby boy at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Crail. It was the twentysecond child in the family, which includes t%ro sets of twins. . o ■ — ’ NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION Notice is hereby given that the undersigned has been appointed by the Clerk of the Kosciusko Circuit Court, in the State of Indiana. Administrator of the estate of Catherine Otis, late efi Kosciusko County, deceased. Said estate is supposed to be solvent. DELLA OTIS, 15-3 t Executrix. August 1. 1924. Geo. L. Xanders, Atty-for-Estatc.
GASOLINE THIEF SHOT ’ | Expressing deep regret at the shooting of an alleged gasoline thief at Vincennes recently by a sheriff’s posse of Knox county, state highway officials said they believe this determined measure will have a wonderful influence toward breaking up petty thievery around state highway gar* ages- over the state. The state highway commission, acccrding to John D. Williams, director, maintains some thirty small .garages over the state aside from the big central garage in Indianapolis. In addition there are numerous gasoline and oil supply stations in the various sub districts where highway equipment is kept for road maintenance. bespite the fact equipment. including the gas and oil supplies are kept under lock and Key. thieves have forced entrance and stolen considerable gas and oil from supply tanks . In some instances they even siphoned the gas from trucks standing in the garage yards. In most cases the local highway employees were able to stop the pilfering, but when a check was made at the Vincennes plant one morning and it was discovered that a large quantity of gasoline and oil had been stolen, the matter was laid before the Sheriff. Next night the sheriff’s posse lay in wait and when two young men appeared about mid-, night, broke the lock of the gasoline house and started, siphoning the gas into milk cans, they were set upon by the officers. In the melee that ensued one of the alleged thieves was shot and dar. gerously wounded. He now lies . in the Vincennes hospital in a critical condition. His companion escaped and so far the wounded man refuses to reveal his ’ identity. ’ Supt Hauk of the Vincennes i district says that in the last few months approximately 300 gallons of gasoline and 25 gallons ’ of motor oil have been stolen. So far the thieves confined their pil- ‘ sering to motor fuel and oil. From time to time small thefts . of gas and oil are reported at garages from various points of the state, but so far as highway officials can check, the more costly ! depredations have been confined to the Vincennes district. o TO DEDICATE TABERNACLE The dedication of the new Epworth League tabernacle located . at Epworth Forest, at North ' Webster Lake, will take place Sunday, Aug. 10. The new tabernacle will seat 1,700 people.
i At HUDSON’S I —.———— I Saturday Specials 32 INCH GINGHAM AT 20c YD. : AVe just made a lucky purchase of 1000 yards of dandy : quality fancy 32 inch dress jriuglianis. The patterns and cokrrs are ths? most desirable. | WINIWOR LINGERIE CREPE AT 25c YD. | The crepe for night gowns, or underwear. This is the cloth g that needs no ironing. This is a verj- low price for this material, in fact a saving of 10c a yard. (Flesh only.) WASH FABRICS AT 3fe YD. I AH silk filled Gaze Mane! tissues fine 40 inch voiles, dot | and flock dot voiles, and many other fabrics that sold from 50c to 75c throughout the summer. WASH FABRICS AT 25c YD. : 40 inch voiles, printed batjstes, and thousands of yards of I extra fine 32 inch dress ginghams. You can make tremendous savings i>n wash fabrics here. APRON GINGHAMS AT 15c YD. An exceptionally nice quality of blue and white checked apron ginghams The width is 27 inches. This is a saving of 5c a yard for you. 40 INCH UNBLEACHED MUSLIN AT 17c YD. A cloth you have so many uses for. 17e is a lo>w price for as fine a cloth as we are offering. And it is four inches wider than the regular muslin. • |' dTHEHUDSOHgaM uniniiimiHiHm.HiHiumMiUHuuiiiuumiHHHniHmnnnutnHHTtttinmrtmmi
TO BRETZ FOR GLASSES Enjoy The Happiness of Perfed 3 Sight ClearneM of vUlon tends to phyHlcul comfort aud mental uggresHivenww. Defective vision materially lessens the enjoyment of life’s pleasures. Conserve your sight—if at all Impaired—by the wearing of glasses best suited to your particular needs. We Knot- How to Make the Glasses You Should Wear. NEVIN E. BRETZ Op tonne trisf % & Optician e 130 S. Main St., Goshen
DON’T WAIT Take Advantage of a Syracuse Citizen’s Experience. When the back begins to ache. Don’t wait until backache becomes chronic; ’Till kidney troubles develop; ’Till urinary troubles destroy night’s rest. Profit by a Syracuse citizen’s experience. N. P. Altland, grocer, S. Lake St., says: “Dull pains caught me in my back and the more I worked, the more severe they became. My back weakened when I lifted and cutting pains across my kidneys took my strength. My kidneys didn’t act right at all. I got Doan’s Pills at Thornburg’s Drug Store, and they drove the trouble away.” Price 60c, at all dealers. Don’t simply ask for a kidney remedy —get Doan’s/ Pills —the same that Mr. Altland had. Foster-Milburn Co., Mfrs., Buffalos N. Y.—Advertisement. o The little island of Cyprus is swamped with orders. Chechoslovakia has offered to buy all the skins Cyprus can send. France" is taking 20.000 dozen shoe heels, and the United States wants more fancy needlework and embroidery than she is likely to obtain.
