The Syracuse Journal, Volume 17, Number 42, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 12 February 1925 — Page 2
Classified List of Goshen Firms Who Offer You Special I ’ ' Inducements
automobiles Goshen Auto Exchange Easy Term* on Used Cars. Tires and Accessories for Less. 217 W. LINCOLN AVENUE SEE JAKE AND SAFE AUTO PAINTING QUALITY PAINTING is Our Motto All Patnts and Varnishes hand fiowen. which aesures you full measure for your money. SMITH BROS. CO. GOSHEN 616 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. BATTERY SERVICE Agency for Permalife Batteries Phone #34 0-K Battery Service \ B. C. Dougherty, Prop. BATTERIES OF ALL MAKES REPAIRED AND RECHARGED All Work Guaranteed. 116 W. Lincoln BEAUTY PARLORS ALLIEGE SHOPPE , Phone 933 for Appointments ’ Spohn Building Goshen Bicycles and Motorcycles t WE WANT YOUR PATRONAGE Onr price* and the quality of our workmanship justify you in coming to ns for your Bicycle* and Bicycle Repair work Buy a Harley - Davidson Motorcycle. C. C. AMSLER 212 N. MAIN ST. & GOSHEN CHIROPRACTOR , Acute and Chronic Disease* Respond Readily to Chiropractic Adjustment*. Examination Free. A. S. AMSBAUGH (Chiropractor) ■0454 South Main St Goshen HOURS 1 to 5 and 7 to 8 p. m„ except Friday and Sunday, by appointment only. Clothing SHOUP & KOHLER The Clothiers and Tailors z IOS N. MAIN BT. Drugless Physician Massage and Electrical Treatments, Electric Blanket Sweat Bath*. Heavy Sweat —without heat—l hour complete bath. Minnie L. Priepke )■ Suite 36 Bid 3 PHONE 168 GOSHEN, IND. a IB- * m V -F4B .Vi BE.. y DENTIST "■ ——— DR. H. B. BURR Dentist ■ — ——
Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat j DBS. EBY & EBY H. W. Eby, M. D. Ida L. Eby, M. D • Surgery and diseases of fcye, Ear, Nose and Throat z Glasses Fitted ’ GOSHEN, INDIANA t I FURNITURE Williamson & Snook FURNITURE, RUGS and BTOVES We Furnish the Home * for Less Money. GOSHEN, IND. LEATHER GOODS THE LEATHER GOODS STORE HARNESS AND ROBES Trunks, Traveling Bags. Ladies’ Hand Bag* and Small Leather Good* Phone 86 116 East Lincoln Avenue, Goshen, Ind. PHOTOGRAPHS Somebody, Somewhere Wants . Your Photograph The SCHNABEL Studjo Over Baker’s Drug Store Phone 316 Goshen, Ind. PIANOS ROGERS & WILSON Headquarters upy'-'-frj for 1 Vlctrolas Victor Records, Plano* and Player Piano*. ESTABLISHED 1871 SHOES ‘K«FS THS FOOT WELL* NOBLE’S Good Shoes — Hosiery Too 131 S. MAIN ST. GOSHEN TYPEWRITERS Adding Machine* Office Supplies Check Writers HARRISON’S TYPEWRITER SHOP AU Make* of Machines SOLD, REPAIRED OR EXCHANGED Room 88 Hawks-Gortner Bldg. Phone 166 Goshen, Indiana UNDERTAKERS E. CULP & SONS Funeral Directors • Unexcelled Ambulance Service Res. Phone Office Phono 64 S 3 WALL PAPER, PAINTS Paint Your House with Our Guaranteed Colored LEAD PAINT.
Appeal to the American Women to Support Shenandoah National Park By MRS. JOHN D. SHERMAN, Pres’t Gen. Fed. of Women’s Clubs. THE Southern Appalachian National park committee appointed by Secretary Work eight mouths ago has concluded its study of a great scenic and recreational region. It has reported that, among the opportunities discovered, two areas stand out which possess extraordinary qualifications to represent the Appalchians in the picture gallery of American scenic masterpieces which is officially called our National Parks System. * The greater of these from the scenic and natural wilderness point of view is an area in the Great Smoky mountains upon the boundary line between North Carolina and Tennessee. But the committee recommend* for the first Southern Appalachian National park a location in the Blue Ridge of Virginia for the reasons that it is more centrally located, will serve better a far greater body of people and can more quickly and cheaply be brought into service. This choice, observe, has not been determined by comparative grandeur of scenery but by the service it will give to the people of the United States. The General Federation of Women’s Clubs is a service organization. The women of America constitute the largest body for service in the world and there are n6ne more devoted. I appeal, not to General Federation women only, but to the women of America, to support whole-heart-edly and enthusiastically the choice of Secretary Work’s committee. Our National Parks System is a service system or it is nothing. The General Federation of Women’s Clubs has consistently supported and defended our national parks for many years. It has long advocated national parks in the East It welcomes the Shenandoah National park. I hope that in the near future we shall have the opportunity to welcome the Great Smoky Mountains National park, which is conceded to be a scenic area of even greater magnificence and beauty. Clijb Work for Over 400 Indian Boys and Girls on Seventeen Reservations By CHARLES H. BURKE, Commissioner of Indian Affairs. The reimbursable fund has probably been the main factor in the industrial progress of the Indians. Its use is widespread, ranging from the purchase of seed, fanning implements and sawmills to breeding stock, etc. In all cases the beneficiaries are carefully selected. This appropriation is teaching the Indians to pay for what they get Club work for boys and girls has been inaugurated for 17 reservations, with a total enrollment of more than 400 children from nine to fourteen years of age. The projects embrace sheep, pig, poultry, calf, corn, potato, garden, bread, canning and sewing clubs. The public school, because now attended by a great many Indian pupils, is used as the point of contact for club work. The proposition is placed before the Indian children the same as the white children by the county agent. The club leaders include Indian service farmers, public school teachers, neighboring white farmers and Indian men and women »ho have met with success in such work. “The Answer to the ‘Lucky Man/ We Think, Is in the Man Himself’ By K. P. LITTAUER, in Popular Magazine. We are not yet ready to believe in luck as a principle. Everybody, of course, encounters sudden coincidences that may temporarily alter the trend of a logically planned train of circumstances. But we still insist that the vast majority of opportunities are made by men, that the vast majority of disasters are avoided or mende|i by deliberate mental and moral intervention. We deny that chance can make a weakling strong or that fate-can permanently injure a strong man determined to trample on it The answer to the lucky man, we think, is in the man himself. Baseball players will tell you that nine out of every ten so-called “lucky breaks” can be traced back to the rapidity with which teams as a whole or individual players on those teams react to situations. It is so with the “lucky breaks” of life. Some men can analyze complicated situations in a flash, subconsciously, and react with greater certainty and rapidity than other men. Sometimes they are born with a talent for this, sometimes they train themselves until they have the faculty. However they come by it, the fact is that they have it. And by that much they are superior to their fallow*. Good Health the Reward of Good Living; No Price Is Too Dear for It By DR. H. N. BUNDESEN, Chicago Health Commissioner. We should be thankful for a healthy physique, for its coherent and unified working for our good. Health may be the vain seeking of the rich, or the priceless riches of the poor. Good health is the reward of good living. No price is too dear for it Here is a 1925 health creed: I desire, to be well and I will strive to fulfill this desire. lam convinced that there is no greater blessing than good health; to maintain health I will use intelligent thinking and make whatever material sacrifice may be necessary to have and to hold this valuable state of being. I know that in order to keep well I must regulate my life in accordance with the rule >f right living. I will study and adopt those measures' that will keep me in a condition of mental uplift and physical well-being. I will try to be temperate in all things, to keep my thoughts dean, my blood red, my muscles hard, my sleep tound, my digestion good, my body erect and my nerves steady. I will** far as possible live • good and pure life, sc that I may be able to give the necessary service I owe to my God, my country, my family, my neighbor and myself. “I Propose That Master American for President of the United States” By W. D. UPSHAW, Georgia, Speech in Hoose. Mr. Speaker, with Woodrow Wilson gone and Henry W. Grady dead, I had not supposed that there lived on the American continent a man who could make such a speech—such a masterful compass of thought and language, eloquence, and statesmanship—as we heard in that wonderful memorial address of President Edwin Anderson Aiderman of the University of Virginia. I kept saying in my soul: Why not make that man President of the United States? We should rejoice to place this premier scholar-states-man where his princely powers and alpine personality would stir pride of all American patriots regardless of party lines. Fellow Americans in congress, I propose that master American, the present president of the l|mversty of Virginia, for President of the United States! -• ) — — ‘ Dr. Alonzo E. Taylor, Stanford University—A national dietary, comparable to the present and fully competent in the nutritional sense, car be supplied for a population of 175,000,000 in 1980, with such increase only in number of domesticated animals and in area of harvested crop* and improved land as lies ready within the agricultural capacity of th* country. The to be feared pressure of population it not on the food supply, but on the supply of fibers, lumber and paper. • I Dr David Friday Former President Michigan Agricultural Collesw I
THE SYRACUSE JOtTRNAB 1
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