The Syracuse Journal, Volume 17, Number 34, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 18 December 1924 — Page 2

Classified List of Goshen Firms Who Offer You Special Inducements

AUTOMOBILES BP" ■ ' '. ! " Goshen Auto Exchange Easy Terms on Used Cars. Tires and Accessories for Less. K 117 w. LINCOLN AVENUE SEE JAKE AND SAVE AUTO PAINTING PAINTING is Our Motto AU Paints and Varnishes hand fiowen. which assures you full measure,for your money. SMITH BROS. CO. GOSHEN •IS 8. Fifth Street Phone 374 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. j II ill ■ BATTERY SERVICE « Agency for Permalife Batteries Phone 934 t '* 0-K Battery Service Ijfez- • 1 • B. C. Dougherty, Prop. BATTERIES OF ALL MAKES REPAIRED AND RECHARGED All Work Guaranteed. 118 W. Lincoln | BEAUTY PABLyttS ’ ALUECE-SHqfpE I ? Phone 933 for Appointment* Spohn Building Goshen’ H Bicycles and Motorcycles IjVE WANT YOl H \ PATRONAGE wOur price* and the quality of our workmanship Justify you In coming to ua for your Bicycles and Bicycle Repair | work Buy a Harley - Davidson Motorcycle. > C. C. AMSLER IT2 N. MAIN BT. ' GOSHEN j CHIROPRACTOR j Acute and Chronic Diseases Respond Readily to Chiropractic Adjustments. Examination Free. A. S. AMSBAI’GH (Chiropractor) •04'/, South Main 8t Goshen HOURS 1 to 5 and 7 to I p. m.. except Friday and Sunday, by appo.ntment only. CLOTHING SHOUP & KOHLER The Clothiers and Tailors 108 N. MAIN ST. a L _ ■' --- ———— Drugless Physician Massage and Electrical Treatments, Electric Blanket Sweat Baths, Heavy Sweat—without heat—l hour complete bath. Minnie L. Priepke Suite 38 Hawka-Gortner Bldg. RHONE 188 GOSHEN, IND. (Elevator Bsrvles) * DENTIST DR. H B. BURR Dentist Dental X-Ray •VER ADAM’S GOSHEN <4 '

Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat DBS. EBY & EBY H. W. Eby, M. D. . Ida L. Eby, M. D Surgery and diseases of Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat ' Glaaaes Fitted I GOSHEN, INDIANA I " I - I FURNITURE | Williamson & Snook I FURNITURE, RUGS and BTOVES Jfe Furnish the Home fur Lt;** Money. <■ GOSHEN, IND. * LEATHER GOODS < THE LEATHER GOODS STORE HARNESS AND ROBES Trunks, Traveling Bags. Ladies’ Hand Small Leather Goods Phons 88 -YIS East Lincoln Avenue, Goshen, Ind. PHOTOGRAPHS _ » _ I : Somebody, Somewhere Wants • < Your Photograph The SCHNABEL Studio I Over Baker's Drug Store I Phone 318 Goehen, Ind. ! PIANOS I ROGERS & WILSON I Headquarters ,or ramJ Victrolae i Victor Records, Pianos and Player Pianos. ESTABLISHED 1871 SHOES J t — -ST *KKKPS THS FOOT WXUX* NOBLE’S Good Shoes — Hosiery Too 131 8. MAIN ST. GOSHEN TYPEWRITERS Adding Machines Office Supplies Check Writers HARRISON’S TYPEWRITER SHOP All Makes of Machines SOLD, REPAIRED OR EXCHANGED Room 38 Hawka-Gortner Bldg. Phone 188 Goshen. Indiana UNDERTAKERS E. CULP & SONS Funeral Directors . Unexcelled Ambulance Service Rea. Phone Office Pheno 54 n WALL PAPER, PAINTS Paint Your House with Our Guaranteed Colored LEAD PAINT. Costs but BSL3O a Gallon when mixed ready torn*. F. N. Hascall Company

...., ■ ■ . * OUR COMIC SECTION Our Pet Peeve jh/ y nT jllll i ■ _ cj fw 2 WHe<CwHgKW?N.V.) 3 ■ ' ■ ' , In a Hurry Too FELIX NEED A NEW BEDROOM f Ye< . QNB W ALL RIGHT -• SET ThEY'GE HAVING SOME f / ’Ju H TAKE Teal* 9ET, FANNY WONDERFUL AT %OME OP V (<5 395- /I The h«sh class fuonITuRE f /X I J — Z MOUSES The PRICES ABE f LET’S I ' i VERY Low - Go / / / /\vvi II W ■ Ws. —V fe.oM I fe i : ifj,.—.. wir l\ \\yi •. | ini \ lT7\ II Wm Il IrW-rufi oh Sr# jusr The Bei> that's ?ib, | sr« \ WITH Box CPQiNG & MATTUES’J ITB I Going DO'WN, W yes—- — and The 'WHOLE 9ET e <iiß ? H Going 221* 19 4 HBS» 1 / NSL; .®% fej l& nJliri 3 aW<‘ s ■’* ©JnM £ D I -= g wmmm nmwew 'viwi f Al U ifi J 1 —L "Accidentally” Sounds Correct ferf /GCKM JUNWWft N rH vMDcws'. wo s r Lu — I UPGGTTMS IUK4 of] p- ' \ NOUR VJOMK.4/ teggTO I (Ves I / y Sira /\ sZ zf <F. \ <&oo hoc) / As HAW* \VUST\UQ I I i Jt u/ MAIV ’ Xzs' fT < B «3K

giro— how? Hobby: Ton'll ruin me with your extravagant tastM. Wlfie: Howl Ton never gratify thorn. do youT An honest enemy often proves to be • nan's best friend. i' *. .. * ........ .it.*. ...>.

THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL

OUCH! IjJLjLg|« Furnace Shovel: toTwJK there gone Mr. [Sa * Kindling Wood ud Mr. Coal. I Stove Plate: J\\ ajj Tea. they're grate *1 Jk fIF Crienda / • \ T/ Swallowing sage ton is no way to drink to wisdom. . .

EVERYBODY C t DOEa ' W' Willie: Whafe ML the xoeanln* of A “Ultimatum" popt -erlh'gf d Pop: It*» time enough to find that out when you gtt married. — \ii&h rib > Seek Information from the expert enced. \ 't- -s.' ' -

‘America Wants the Peace of Good Will and of the Golden Rule” By PRESIDENT COOLIDGE, Address in Washington. EUROPE does not want our benevolence. It does want our help and we are ready to give it America wants the peace of good will and of the Golden Rule, not the peace of force imposed by those who have power. It wants peace as the normal, the right, the assured estate in a world from which a wiser generation shall have forever outlawed aggressive war. I do not think that our country needs to assume any attitude of apology. I have every respect for the governmental and social institutions of other peoples, but I have little sympathy with our fellow citizens who profess to see in them something better adapted to their own needs - than those which we have developed ourselves, and who are vaguely apologetic of the fact that they are Americans. Neither have I any sympathy with those who are unwilling or unable to look beyond themselves with an equally vague and unmeaning assertion of their Americanism. I reserve my approval for those who while thoroughly American, yet do not propose to live unto themselves alone, who are neither oblivious to duty or to bharity, but who cherish as individuals and as citizens the Golden Rule of action among our own people. We might have taken the attitude that we had completed our obligation to Eujrope the day the armistice was signed. But the object of America 4 in the war was greater than military victory. It was the maintenance of human institutions, re-establishment of orderly governments and preservation of civilization itself in Europe. It is through such practical, workaday procedures that our country has sought to be helpful in a world filled with troubles. It may be admitted that our people have given little confidence to fine professions and pious phrases. They have placed small faith in plans to insure peace by the threat of using force. They want peace and will do their full part to assure peace. / But they will sacrifice no part of their absolute control over their own destinies. They will assent to no international trusteeship to share their future relations to the rest of the world. s .. . . . Now, Here 1$ the Real Native American Way of Slinging Language By ANNE O’HARE McCORMICK. in New York Times. A pessimist in these large lands is a man who says that the Northwest has suffered enough hard knocks to prostrate any country that is not - the Northwest., The. optimist is he who contends that what are called bad times out here would be good times anywhere else in the world“The trouble with you Easterners,” expostulates a twinkling Dakota editor, “is that you have imported the un-American habit of qualification. You cultivate a niggardly precision in the use of language. Out here we throw it about as generously as dollars, when we have ’em. That’s the your reporters don’t get us right. They don’t appreciate that when we have hard times we don’t really enjoy 'em unless they’re the most desperate times that ever were. “That’s the real native American way of slinging language. What’s a man who plows up four sections for wheat and can't see a field smaller than a hundred acres to do with piddling adjectives of an English market gardener ?** —————— Our Critical Faculties Laying Aside Foreign Swaddling Clothes By FRANK K. REHN, in Art News (New York). Our critical faculties are laying aside their foreign swaddling clothes and functioning for themselves. Along with this has come a change the picture-buying public. It is a public today, and pot as a few years ago a small group of sometimes rather timid and conventionally minded collectors.- Now Mr. and Mrs. Average Citizen are taking an interest, and a buying interest, in art. So-called modern art has been a big factor in this change. It has shocked people into convictions—shaken others out of ruts and largely dissipated the humble ‘*of-course-I-know-nothing-about-art attitude, as though art was a thing apart from life and pot a matter of emotion, perception and reaction like all the rest of existence. f Modern art, so called—for very little of it is modern, and a great deal of it is not art —has been a very real nightmare from which a fewgleams of a new beauty will remain with us when all the bombast and j buncombe are forgotten. When All States Examine and License Drivers of Motor Vehicles By R. B. STOECKEL, Connecticut Commissioner. — The time is not far distant when, for the protection of careful moj toriets and pedestrians, all states will license thfe drivers of motor vehicles • upon examination as to the fitness and will revoke licenses upon violation I cf anv of the rules by which it is held. It is admitted common sense that the greatest variable factor in the whole problem of safe operation of motor vehicles is the ego, the personal- ; ity, the individualism of the operator. A standard to measure this can. jof course, never be exactly set But at least tests of mentality and of ' proper driving experience can and should be efficiently applied before an ; operator h licensed, and those tests kept applicable through his whole I driving period. The license system provides the necessary machinery to accomplish i thia Under it can be had examination of all operators before license » issued, and discipline and education of all operators while licensed. During the course of an examination all that class of persons who are by nature, disease, or habit unfitted to operate motor vehicles will be finally el imi nated. I Americans Have Made Inroads on the Art Collections of Europe ‘ By KARL FREUND, New York Art Expert History is repeating itself. In the Eighteenth century the British were regarded on the continent as savages in art, but they became very wealthy as a nation and they acquired many of the finest treasures of art in the continental countries, and the collectors of those countries later had to go to England to buy back the choice works. Now the Americans, who had long teen regarded as savages, have made such inroads on the art collections of Europe that Europeans must come here to repurchase some of their lost treasures. The Germans were over here last year buying pictures, and the French, Italians and English have taken many tapestries back. Dr. John L. Marquis, New York. —If any harm comes to America, it will come from inside and not from foreign shores. What is the chief difficulty in America today? One great writer has replied: “Too much Belf-a>mplacency.” Are we suffering from too much moral and spiritual complacency? Have we too much prosperity? We would be superspiritual men and women if it were not for too much materialism. Prof. C. C. Williams, University of Illinois—ls all the buildings of a . dty of 10,000 population shotlid be swept away by a flood, the public would be horrified; yet the loss would not be greater than occurs annually ft