The Syracuse Journal, Volume 17, Number 44, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 26 February 1925 — Page 2
Classified List of Goshen Firms Who Offer You Special > Inducements I, I*. ■ If.—..— II I I —
AUTOMOBILES Goshen Auto Exchange Easy Terms on Used Cars. Tires and Accessories for Less. 217 W. LINCOLN AVENUE SEE JAKE AND SAFE AUTO PAINTING QUALITY PAINTING is Our Motto All Paints and Varnishes hand Ooven. which assures you full measure for your money. SMITH BROS. CO. GOSHEN •16 S. Fifth Street Phone 374 . I AUTO TOPS . Rex Winter Inclosures. Auto Tops, Slip Covers, Btxly Upholstering, Truck 'Fops, Seat Cushions, Tire Covers, Radiator Covers, Hood Covers. Goshen Auto Top and Trimming Co. BATTERY SERVICE Agency for Permallfe Batteries Phone 934 0-K Battery Service B. C. Dougherty. Prop. BATTERIES OF ALL MAKES REPAIRED AND RECHARGED All Work Guaranteed. 116 W. Lincoln BEAUTY PARLORS • .ALLIECE SHOPPE Phone 933 for Appointment* Spohn Building Goshen Bicycles anti Motorcycles WE WANT YOUR - ” PATRONAGE Our prices and the quality of our workmanship justify- you in coming to us for your Bicycle* and Bicycle Repair . work. Buy a Harley • Davidson Mctorcycle. C. C. AMSLER 212 N. MAIN ST. GOSHEN CHIROPRACTOR Acute and Chronic Diseases Respond Readily to Chiropractic Adjustments. Examination Free. A. S. AMSBAUGH (Chiropractor) 104'4 South Main St. Goshen HOURS 1 to 5 and 7 to 8 p. m., except Friday and Sunday, by appointment only. CLOTHING «—t SHOUP & KOHLER The Clothiers and Tailors 108 N. MAIN ST. Drugless Physicism Massage and Electrical Treatments, Electric Blanket Sweat Baths. Heavy Sweat—without heat—l hour complete bath. Minnie L. Priepke Suite M Hawka-Gortner Bldg. RHONE 168 GOSHEN, IND. (Elevator Service) DENTIST I DR. H. B. BURR Dentist General Practice Dental X-Ray vm ADAM’S
Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat DRS. EBY & EBY H. W. Eby, M. D. Ida L. Eby, M. D Surgery and diseases of Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat ' Glasses Fitted GOSHEN, INDIANA i « " ' I __ - 4 FURNITURE Williamson & Snook FURNITURE, RUGS and STOVES IFe Furnish the Home for Les* Monti/. GOSHEN, IND. 6 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 Sonielxxly, Somewhere Wants Your Photograph The SCHNABEL Studio Over Baker’s Drug Store Phone 318 Goshen, Ind. ,« j PIANOS ROGERS & WIL-SON ©Headquarters *N 1 for 1 Victrolaa j Victor Records, Pianos and Player ESTABLISHED 1871 SHOES i Ml MMM «•» «6 MW- MMSCB *KCCFS TM< FOOT WtU‘ NOBLE’S Good Shoes — Hosiery Too 131 8. MAIN ST. GOSHEN Add.ng Machine* Office Supplies Check Writers HARRISON’S TYPEWRITER SHOP All Make* of Machin** SOLD, REPAIRED OR EXCHANGED Room 38 Hawks-Gortner Bldg. Phone 166 Goshen. Indiana UNDERTAKERS E. CULP & SONS Funeral Directors Unexcelled Ambulance Service Res. Phone Office Phone 54 53 WALL PAPER, PAINTS Paint Your House with Our Guaranteed Colored LEAD PAINT. . g Gullett when misaMi ready to us*. F. N. Hascall Company
Law for an Automatic Return to Taxpayers of a Reasonable Surplus By MARTIN B. MADDEN, Speech in House. FOR the fiscal year 1925 the estimated surplus is $68,000,000 and for 1926 it is $374,000,000. Whether this surplus will be realized depends very greatly upon Ute action of congress. If new obligations are not undertaken which will increase the present estimate of expenditures and if the new revenue act produces a satisfactory amount of revenue, there is every prospect that it will materialize. Personally—l do not speak for anyone except myself when I say what lam about to say—l would like to see some permanent law placed on the statute books of the country providing for an automatic return to the taxpayer of a reasonable surplus over the working balance whenever that surplus may accrue. I have an idea which I would like to outline. It is to this effect: That we might properly pass an act which would not interfere with any other tax legislation that might be thought proper, requiring the secretary of the treasury at the end of every fiscal year to report to the President of the United States the amounf of the surplus, whatever it might be, if any, over and above a safe working balance, and then after the receipt of that report from the secretary of the treasury the president should be required to direct the secretary automatically to return to the taxpayers whatever their proportion of the surplus might be, without any further application of law. That seems to me a sensible business proposition that would be inaugurated in any man’s business if he was controlling the business entirely himself. * ■ Imperative Need of Well-Trained Men in Conduct of Boy Guidance By ROY HOYER, Director, Notre Dame University. Until recently the only requisite considered necessary for a boys’ worker was interest. Fortunately, the realization of the imperative need for well-trained men has been gaining, until today boards responsible for the conduct of boys’ work organization’s are insisting upon certain educational and experience qualifications in addition to those of character. The course at Notre Dame university has been made a department of (■■hoo! of education. Since the primary object of the course is not to prepare men only for some one particular field of boys’ work, but on the contrary to tram experts in the free-time problems of the boy, every program and activity of value have been included. Os course, eventually each student is going to follow some one specific type of work, and so during the second year of the course he is given ample opportunity to specialize. In planning the course it had been felt that to train a man for any particular type of work, as for example scouting. it is necessary for him to have a thorough conception of the Y. M. C. A., the playground, the community center, the school, the church, the juvenile court, the big-brother movement, the boys* club, the woodcraft league, the civic and fraternal organizatjpns, and the host of others in the field, not to mention the social agencies that deal with defective and dependent boys either directly or indirectly. 4 — — The Migration of Superior Individuals From the Rural Communities • —...—f By PROF. HORNELL HART, Bryn Mawr College. The migration of superior individuals from rural communities to the cities is likely to depress seriously the ability and energy of the farming population. Surveys of social conditions in rural districts in the East and Middle West indicate deterioration in the recent decade. The average age at which a man migrates to the city is twenty-three’years and for a woman twenty years. On the other hand to summarize such findings as can be drawn from avail Ade date, it seems probable that-the rate at which urban population is outstripping rural is likely to decline rather than increase in the future. As to the growth of population in individual cities: If chambers of commerce should become scientifically interested in ascertaining the factors which actually determine the growth of cities, instead of engaging blindly in publicity and propaganda, they might promote the working out of basis principles as to the influence of rail and water transportation facilities, topography, location of industries, rates of wages, costs of living, rents, births and death rates, efficiency of city government and other factor* in influencing the speed of urban development Man of Future Is Sure to Lose Teeth and Hair, Fingers and Toes By PROF. E. E. RAYMOND, Harvard University. The future ma* is as certain to lose his teeth as the ape man of the past has lost his tail. The ape man used his teeth to tear sinews, break nuts and as weapons of offense in fighting. Civilization has done away with these conditions. Hair is a defense given us by nature against cold. Civilization gave men coats and Artificial covering. Baldness is ever on the increase, while it probably Dever existed on ancient man. That man will lose certain of his fingers and toes also seems to be a biological certainty. When man climbed trees to escape from animals his toes were needed to give him footholds. Now they are quite useless. The shape of the human skull and man’s erect position are designed to promote an increase in the size and height of the brain. These changes will not be until man has passed through a series of •volutionary phases which probably will consume 40,000 to 75,000 years. f The Population of the World Is Doubling Itself Every Sixty Years • By PROF. A. B. WOLFE, Ohio State University. population of the world is doubling itself every sixty years and | ire shall be pointedly confronted with the choice of reducing our birth rate or our standard of living. Only inferior lands, limited in extent, remain for settlement. In the main, future improvements are to be looked for in the fourth decimal place. The engineering and economic problems are confused. Some things technically possible are possible economically only at prohibitive cost and lower standard of living. In the absence of an effective method of adjusting international differences we are, as the world now reasons, caught on the horns of a dilemma. If we do not breed like rhts, regardless of economic consequences, we shall be in danger of attack by other and envious nations, in which unlimited multiplication will have afforded both a reason and a means for aggression. And if we do so breed, we shall reach the subsistence level, in which death will continuously reap a fat harvest without any foreign assistance. Economically, every nation will be caught in a vicious circle. Frederick Q. Tryon, United States Geologic Survey—For the immediate future our resources are sufficient to support an increasing population at a rising standard of living. But they are not sufficient to afcpport our present population permanently at even present standards, unless possibly science should discover some new source of energy not now available to us. Prof. D- D. Lescohier, University of Wisconsin—We should frankly face the fact that we are working under conditions of minimum costs in , , - . ffiiirrirnitsnts most work under omditions of m. —2l
THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL
OUR COMIC SECTION '■. . ' t Our Pet Peeve —I I - . — —l iJM HI (Copyneht. W. R V.) ~~ ~ • i WHATS THE USE . That Guilty Feeling Bur This X i knomj-BuT xxje no,w 121X4 Do ’ wm To ™ e \ AW GEE supposed t o be can’t use The dicing S= deuCatessems and \To come Thru A non -‘mouse- \f2OON STAIRS " 6ET A 0P Cf?EAM / TwE LOBBY ™ Trt KEEPING ARAQTmenT ) ALL TmE Time —ITS i- / k A LOAF ° F B REAO_ / * RACI’AGE Like J ~ I’ll make Some coFpee 1 That-• it makes ITT kJ™ funny ’.A — 1 /IF 3 EZTE —an | »]| I oh bosh f ihoT \ — Felix felt >mhen L.. —= I ALONG , IM .L - | MS QETuQNED j \ Getting hungry J Th'i'tiT i § is h J® 7 . MICKIE, THE PRINTERS DEVIL So It Has Come to This! r T\ MR.. SUVXVIT Koourr “ft*' A " pi ordered rr, akao GtGM VJE L i w DaAVER-'UG VT f PRIUTEO RXV I f J’Z? f SMttVfe OMI3ERJ f \ U k ' ' L ' shop \ J K. I • uved xb see] J u- I 1-Tw®£k 2 - , ■■ - ~ i ■■■—■ p-rfe 1 AkM OF MOO \ & « R6A.VS. I ALSO CUt < j KAE»fe HAIR.* / J SJE ALSO L Eg ,1 A eur WiTTk .... - - 1
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STRONG IMAGINATION. Q«! DU to d* Mont fer a hot 4My! Settln* here reedin’ Peary** Arctic travels!
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k pawnbroB KER’S HAVE L bEnse. B Bay, Fred, lend m me a fiver, will yout I Oh, go soak 1 your head! ■ I’d be deuced K glad to, but they m won’t give anyfc" thing on IL
Think twice before you speak to yourself and look behind you one®. — --- .• - -
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main thing. You’re the only girl I ever loved. That’s Interesting but immaterial. What I want to know te, am I th* only girl you're ever going to love?
> A pessimist znay be excellent sane for a muah-taiking erowd.
