The Syracuse Journal, Volume 17, Number 30, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 20 November 1924 — Page 7
Classified List of 4 Goshen Firms Who Offer You Special ) Inducements If ■' • . z
AUTOMOBILES Goshen Auto Exchange * Easy Terms ort Used Cars. Tires and Accessories for Less. 217 W. LINCOLN AVENUE SEE JAKE AND SAKE AUTO PAINTING QUALITY PAINTING is Our Motto All Paints and Varnishes hand fiowen. which assures you full measure foryour money. • SMITH BROS. CO. GOSHEN 616 8. Fifth Street Phone 374 ' U! LU— . 1 * AUTO TOPS Rex Winter Inclosures. Auto Tops, Slip Covers, Body Upholstering, Truck Tops, Seat Cushions, Tire Covers. Radiator Covers, Hood Covers. Goshen Auto Top and Trimming Co. BATTERY SERVICE , Agency fbr Permat ife Batteries Phone 934 0-K Battery Service B. C. Dougherty, Prop. BATTERIES OF ALL MAKES REPAIRED AND RECHARGED All Work Guaranteed, lit W. Lincoln BEAUTY PARLORS ALLIECE SHOPPE i Phone 933 for Appointments Spohn Building Goshen <i "'.'i • «*■■—■■■( .m Bicycles and Motorcycles WEWANTYOUR PATRONAGE Our prices and the quality of our workmanship justify you in coning to tfd for your Blcycles and Bicycle Repair work. • Buy a Harley - Davidson Motorcycle. C. C. AMSLER 212 N. MAIN BT.GOSHEN CHIROPRACTOR Acute and Chronic Dleeasea Respond Readily to Chiropraetic Adjust mente. Examination Free. - A S. AMSBAUGH (Chiropractor) 204 Va South Main St. Goshen HOURS 1 to ft and 7 to I p. nt, except Friday and Sunday, by appointment only. CLOTHING SHOUP & KOHLER The Clothiers and Tailors 106 N. MAIN ST. UU— _ I--.-Drugless Physician Massage and Electrical Treatment* Electric Blanket Sweat Baths. - Heavy Sweat—without heat—l houi , complete bath. * Minnie L. Priepke Suite 3« Hawks-Gertner Bldg. PHONE 168 GOBHEN, IND (Elevator Service) i nisi ■■■■■—— DENTIST 1 DR. H. B. BURR Dentist General Practice LJCUHU -a*. ▼
Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat DRS. EBY & EBY H. W. Eby, M. D. Ida L. Eby, M. D Surgery and diseases of Bye. Ear. Nose and Throat Glasses Fitted GOSHEN. INDIANA FLORIST Love’s Elower Shop 309 South Main Street GOSHEN, INDIANA Office Phene 343 " Residence 1 '• ■■ 1 I 'I-S FURNITURE Williamson & Snook FURNITURE. RUGS and STOVES FFr Furnish the Home for Less Money. f GOSHEN, IND. LEATHER GOODS THE LEATHER GOODS STORE HARNESS AND ROBES Trunks. Traveling Bags, Ladies’ Hand Bags and Small Leather Goods Phone 86 115 East Lincoln Avenue, Goshen, Ind. ; PHOTOGRAPHS | Somebody, Somewhere Wants Your Photograph The SCHNABEL Studio Over Baker’s Drug Store Phone 316 Goehen. Ind. IH ■ bT PIANOS ROGERS & WILSON /FTX Headquarters /’’’’"""X Vietrolaa Victor Records. Pianos and Player Pianos. ESTABLISHED 1871 SHOES i **csee ths roof wiu* NOBLE’S Good Shoes — Hosiery Too . 131 S. MAIN ST. GOSHEN ■suMunamnsonamsnmwnwn—swm—oanwwf—as——■■gg ; TYPEWRITERS - Adding Machines Office Supplies Check Writers HARRISON’S TYPEWRITER SHOP All Makes of Machines " | SOLD. REPAIRED OR EXCHANGED Room 38 Hawke-Gortner Bldg. Phone 166 Goshen. Indiana , UNDERTAKERS E. CULP & SONS j Funeral Directors i Unexcelled Ambulance Service ■ _ Re*. Phone Office Phone 54 S 3 ' J -I-M WALL PAPER. PAINTS Paint Your House This Fall LEAD PAINT. ■■ . : ■ - ■. Ceytw but ttv3o > G&tt&lli -JI WWW
Pays to Build Well; Use Lasting Material In these days when building costs so much more than formerly It is doubly important to get one's money’s worth In good substantial material that will last. It Is far better to build a house of good material and add to It later than to build a larger bouse of flimsy construction for the same money with cheap trimmings and material that will not last. The life of a cheaply built house Is seldom more than 35 years; by that time the amount of repairs it has required to keep it standing Is almost equal to the cost of rebuilding it. There are many houses of masonry in this country which are more than 100 years old, and In Europe there are many more which have been standing for more than 500 years. Most of these houses are giving good service today. Good construction does not deteriorate or depreciate. Get a good concrete foundation and a good cellar wall of concrete or concrete block. When you get up to the ground level It costs very little more to carry the same construction to the«roof line. A more beautiful type house construction than good concrete block walls covered with Portland cement stucco or special concrete cement faced units cannot be obtained. A wall of stucco or concrete facing does not require frequent mending and repairing. A cheaply built house will sway, sag and settle, but ‘ a house with ! masonry walls is rigid, so that the plastering will not cyack. floor Joints will not open, doors will not Jam and the house will not settle. Extension Work Has Had Splendid Results Improvement in the appearance of the grounds and surroundings of farms and homes tn the Southern states is receiving increased attention as a result of extension Work in those states by a horticultural specialist of the United States Department of Agriculture. according to reports received by the department. For example, as a result of such-work 6.925 fences were repaired in 1921 and 4.436 In 1922; 3.484 unsightly buildings were .repaired or removed in 1921 and 3,523 In 1922. The number planting trees and shrubs rose from 8.308 to 26.313; of those planting flowers and vines, from 42.396 two years ago to 48,437 in 1922; of lawns seeded. from about 1.6060 to 2,000. More than 45.000 • planted shade trees and ehrubs last year. In some of the states, particularly In North Carolina and Mississippi, the Improvements are very marked. Girls' and women's Hubs have been active in stimulating Interest in making the home surroundings more pleasing, and the beneficial effect upon communities generally has been very marked. Paint and Sale Value A carefully considered Investment In paint—g»MHi paint—ls like putting money In the bank. It not only greatly improves the outward appearance of the home but also adds much to Its sale value. There is another thing to consider when you are thinking of paint as an investment. No matter what your house i is built of. without several coats of the , best paint It will quickly depreciate in value. Without the pr»»|»er amount of paint for protection as well as tieauty. the moisture will cause tiny fissures, which will soon iMPcome loug and unsightly : cracks The beards will warp and the joints will open up. J You wouldn't consider It economy to J buy a cheap, shoddy suit of clothes; ’ neither la It economy to buy any but ’ the very best paint it is j»o«aible to get. —lndianapolis Star. Fertilisers The use of fertilisers Is an absolute necessity If one would keep his lawn and shrubbery in a healthful condition. The vegetation requires a certain amount of i»lant fi»od which must > be supplied to the ground and the I only manner In which thta can be done Is through the application of fertilising material. Commercial fertlilxers which are complete and carry all the elements necessary are most excellent means of carrying out this condtHoa. hut it is necessary that one exqrclse considerable caution in the appiicaI tk>n or they are liable to Injure the lawn and shrubs through burning caused by too much fertiltaer. It Is better to use too little than too much. Immediately after using this type of fertiliser the ground should be thor- | 4 oughiy wet tn order to wash the material from the plants and Into the J ,r.. n n.L BuemeSe Man's Creed nnt—Vtof no favorite, particularly 4n v<>ur own organisation. People will ! play the game straight and clean with you if you let them. Never let chum mlness reach the point where it will inttuence your Judgment. Second—Live up to youc own words.Third— Keep your record clean sn that nothing you do will ever arise to thwart you In doing what duty dictates.—A. P. Giannini, President. Bank of Italy. San Francisco, tn Forbes Maxine. Caneuerar Could Not Write Documents prove that William the Conqueror, the first Norman king In Fnglsnd, could not sign hit own name. Noiset t Affect Hearing® Most middle-aged residents of large dUes are slightly deAt, due, it Is said, to the continuous roar of traffic.
THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL
OUR COMIC SECTION r Our Pet Peeve [ ~1 STRANGE 1W MAM HASfIT WELL U/6 WON’T | ? |\\U 111 Mft I \ H F COME TO PVT UP OUR- WAIT ANV \\\H| HM \ I STORM WINPOIA/S jtL ir _ZJLgX \ <Copyric>it. W, N. U.l \ \\ ' yy Some Booster 'Y<XjQe""a*"T?NE KIND V \WELL DONFEU/, YOu'tJE CuiNtHG \ A'W KEEP CJmET / OF A. HUSBAND, ) JAWING AT ME/- V J ThAT W/iNIXXW PRXING YOU CAN GIVE Me leaving '(our key / y'hat vjon't open Tx it open with a /a Boost in in IM The HOUSk/ / ThE jjooq / SPAPE/ X—Tt=< A lffl= M kC- — ow 1 JL § — ((' P —— ~ nTp _____ ' I I j 11 fHueoY upA go roon-d ano open The oooe es (V _ r— x-x FOQ m e/- don't keep I' X. y\f // /' / fi n V ME STANDING OUT ] yr Z/ // /A 11 t . HEf?E ANY LONGER / / _ \XZ . _ ■ — — > Sharks spot v/heoe • —.xtwwmm | BqCn lAHQt-p / 4 Penny Ain 9 t What It Used to Be > (oo MOD e»GWf • > \ BOM WHO MKXJLO SHOW r’ OM * TME W/ MJD CARRM J JkiV V l6 WWCRE - Sd ° \ X 1$ updated \ 4 “'A W I Dou.wxUE’ ( Vp Jk ) py \ Street \Q\2~v Jmm — ■ — V7* ■> r. X _ < > UOOKIU' per X I n JOBr 8 (O sl wBl <5 j) p «a—l -* ' — □ . ><***>*. 1/// NOT HIS FAULT. IWXW EAST. /<} 7\ ' CHARMING -IAjCJj Mr. Elephant; /(If Jr/’\ Wifey: It HOSTESS. But X can stay looks as though f under water an WWpftfflMKUjF there was a storm • he make By ( hour. \1 W I approaching. you feel at home? \ Mr. Hippo: I yUfl.s iBR Hubby: Well — No, but ahe . £ could too. if I had xIT j haven’t done ma wUh I M~l®lrT* a rubber how like ¥ 5 < wffik anything to bring ma , ff you to breathe ¥li \ X/j iff# jQgl one on. M through, ? * ffS • d es The evU wound but not] Tim eye that sees all things else
Just JF' WSmfiO P J MUTUAL HAPPINESS Mr. Bentley (in the heat of passion) —There’s not a single hour in the day when our house Is perfectly happy. Mrs. Bentley—Oh, yes, there is, dear. Mr. Bentley—l’d like to know when It comes in, then. Mrs. Bently—lt comes in just afteg you have gone out. Needless to say, the happy hour started at once. 1 Did She Pay? Two sweethearts from Aberdeen were rambling ’round when they came to a movie. The young man ran his eye over the front of the building. It rested on a title in large letters —”The Woman Pays." "Jean.” he said, *T/think we’ll gan| In here.” Z Some Town First Politician—He sure made a good suggestion at the chamber meeting today. Second Politician —Any Improv, a* ments for the city? First Politician —Yes. Wants Interpreters on the street cars when the conductors call out the streets.. SOUNDED FUNNY TO HER Mrs. Arlsth Kratt—BuL my dear, that was one of Wagner’s operas yo« heard—not a comic opera I Mrs. Nurich —Well, it sounded pretty; funny to me. Disproportion That prodigy is incorrect And doomed to painful quarrels, t Who starts with so much intellect He hasn't room for morals. More Dependable Teacher (during a lecture on success)—Why should we endeavor to rise by our own efforts? Tommy —Because there’s no knowing when the alarm clock may go wrong. Tra« Enotsgh did Caesar defeat the greatest number? \ Stud—l think on examination day. —Kansas Wesleyan Advocate. 1 Lucky Angler Maud—The dictionary says that S "bob” Is something used in angling. Marie —I suppose that’s why yon got yours, deaf. Easy to Build A. I mean Mary is engaged to a contractor. B. —Yes. but the only contract be has so far is for castles in the air. CAUSE FOR FEAR ■ " i - He—Why are girls always so afraid of mice? 8he —Naturally a girl doesn’t want to be thought a cat. TAe Joke's on Us The optimlet cried. ~Holy Smoket This life of ours is just a joke. Replied the pessimistic cuss, -Rxactly, and the joke’s on as. » Contradictory Sire —You’ll have to settle down and go Jo work. Why, at your age, work should be a pleasure to you. goo—It is, ahd you’re the one who told me Pd have to cut out ail my pleasures. Satisfactory Mae—How did George take it when you told him you didn’t love him?” June —Simply wonderfully I He carried on like a wild man.—American Legion Weekly. Hdll Have to Wait He—Gosh, if one were only dead and buried! She—Tea, I suppose you’re referring to me, you mean thing, but you’re not going to have that pleasure as long as I’m living! Easily Identified She (gushingly)—Let me see. lam sure we met somewhere before. Were we at school together? Young Man (tactlessly)— Te* yon were my teacher. »
