The Syracuse Journal, Volume 17, Number 46, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 12 March 1925 — Page 8

+000900900»oo»«900990b*»*’ o Classified Ads <> ; .. < > < ’ Classified advertising is ac- J J < h cepted at the rate of 5 cents < > o a line for each Insertion. A «► <> booking and collection fee of ], ! ► 10 cents will be added for a o < * charged account; no account < ► J J'will be charged for less than o < > 25 cents for a single item. < * J LHIHWHIHnHHMHH FOR SALE—Tw6 good lavatories. H. A. Bowser. 46-2 t FOR SALE—A second hand bookcase, at Beckmann’s Stors. FQR SALE—My home on the race bank. All modern. Jas. Rotihenberger. 45-4tpd PIANO TUN ING —Pianos tuned and repaired. Call Beckmann’s. 43-ts LADIES. ATTENTION—I am agent for the Shaughnesfcy Olovnit Lingerie and dresses. Will show samples. Mrs. H. A. Bowser. 45-2tpd RUGS—Rugs in all grades and sizes are now on display at Beckmann’s Store. — Have your pictures framed from the new mouldings just arrived at Beckmann’s Store. WANTED—Men to clean bricks. Apply L. B. Boyd, care of Grieger's Grocery. 46-It REAL ESTATE—If you have property in Syracuse, or lake lots for dale, let me know. Ellwood George. Phone 150. 46-2 t FOR SALE —Several White Leghorn cockrels. $3.00 each*. Stephen Freeman. 46-2tp FOR SALE—IB7 . acre farm, with 7-room house, large bank bam. silo. Will take town property or small farm for part payment. Time on J. E. Grieger, Syracuse, Ind. 37-ts BEDROOM SUITES—New Bedroom Suites in French. Walnut. the latest on the market, at Beckmann's Store. ~ EARN WHILE YOuTeARN— Why not settle now the question of a good, permanent, paying portion by enrolling with the South Bend Business College? Resident or Horife Study. Ten Courses. Catalog FREE Write; know what the college can do for YOU. 43-4 tp ’ CARDBOARD—AII kinds of cardboard, suitable for drawing and maps, for sale at the Journal office. SMILES BY MILES . ~— 1 n JgAM BUOKt OIOHT CAAt FOR JACK BLOOM — O ® . THOUGHT HAM NERVOUS ANO CROSS ANO A (M.OOM Jk MS ll | | ill > .J till Mg TOOK MILES ' NERVINE «— k *HES A CHANGED MAN * SAID JEAN — 30 SHE MARRIED —■ AND JACK WAS THE OMMm/ (Warn life depends on steady - nerve*, take A ■ no Mil FS ' f“

' TO BRETZ FOR GUSSES • id aL. Read ' With i Pleasure j The complete enjoyment of year I favorite magazine or newspaper, depends largely upon the condition of your eye*. To those whose eye* tire easily while reading, a pair of our glasses will prove a revelation Id comfort and genuine satisfaction. We Will Be Gad to Servo T* NEVIN E. BRETZ Optometrist & Optician 130 S. Main St, Goshen V Famous Ntw England Woman The first woman preacher of the gospel in New England and the first woman to be ordained to the Universalist ministry was Phoebe Ann Coffin Hanaford. who was born at £>antucket. Mass., a member of the famous Coffin family of that island, 95 years ago. Before entering the pulpit she was s teacher and a lecturer. In 1883 she was ordained and filled pastorates at Hingham and Waltham. Mass.; New Haven, Conn., and Jerrey City. She was also chaplain of the Connecticut state legislature, the first woman to hold such a position. Doing Wall sportsmen were talking about how domestic fowls and animals sometimes revert to a wild life. "A pigeon,” declared one, “can always maintain itself if it can find a union stnflnn.** This i of thought seemed no unusual iu.«t lie was asked to explain which he did. “The eaves of the edifice provide nesting places, and the intelligent bird can live on the rice from wedding parties.**—Loulsvllle-Journal. . " Study in Aplomb Nervous Old Gentleman—Sir, you are sitting on my hat Much-at-Ease Visitor—What! Are you going, then?—London Evening News. , , __ .. , —oR. A 0. TIME TABLE EAST-BOUND No. 10—Daily 12:51 p. m. No. 32—Dai1y...., fi:2s p. m Na B—Daily 9:19* p. m WEST-BOUND No. 45—Dai1y...... 5:28 a. m. No. 31—Daily 7.45 a. m. Na 7—Daily 11:44 a. m. Trains No. 46, Na 7, No. 10 and No. 8 ware through trains and stop for passengers going or coming from • Chicago, or to points east of Willard. Ohio. * 1 H. W. Buchholz, Ticket Agent. BUSINESS DIRECTORY The STANWAR antomatic water pomp require* no tank. The pump is a pressure tank . and pump combined. On display at your local plumbers The Lincoln Eiectrii Co. F. N. Hascall Company INTERIOR DECORATING WALL PAPER PAINTS WINDOW SHADES PICTURE FRAMES GOSHEN • INDIANA Minnie L> Priepke DRUGLESS PHYSICIAN SPECIAUST « la Tubercnhwis kid Bey, bladder and liver trouble. Prolapsed ytomarh and bowels restored. The only treatment known that will actually bring them baek to normal. M Hawko-Gortner Bldg. Phone 168. Yoor Child’s Photographs Not the immediate joy, bat the f pleasnre in .the years abend is the real reason for having year ehikFs photograph taken often. The Schnabel Studio Over Baker’s Drag Stole GOSHEN, INDUNA v- ■. - .... ■

THE SIGNATURE SNATCHER J Pointing out that forgeries eatue losses of $100,000,000 _a year, the American Bankers Association has issued a warning against* “Signature Snatchers.” They pick discarded deposit slips out of bank wastebaskets to copy depositors' signatures on fake checks. “Be careful of your signature,” says the association.—A r ew« item. ■g-"" — — — ■ I I.

STRAIGHT TALKS With aunt emmt ON “SUCKER LISTS" “*v*r zineo I (bought that ssofi •toctrle company bond. Aunt Emmy,” ■aid Helen, “I have been pestered by all aorta of bond salesmen to buy other things. I should like to Invest again, but I am beviierod. Every day or so sometiuug that sounds co good. But I don't know what to “That reminds me,” said Aunt Emmy, fishing through her wortbosket aad taking out some clippings from her needle book. “I have an article from a magazine that will help. The writer gave some questions to make a bond salesman answer tn writing and said that if the salesman were on the square he would answer the questions satisfactorily. Hero they are,” and Aunt Emmy began to read: “*L Will my bank say that the house which Is offering the security io reputable? * “T. Give an exact description et the eocurity? ***. What provision is made for off this and other securities of the company? x “*4. What is the nature of the business of the company? ”*6. How of a margin did the company earn annually over all Its depreciation and interest charges for each of the last ten years? “*C What dividends has the company paid on its stock for each at the last ten years? “T. What are the company’s total ■setts and liabilities and has it sufficient funds to carry on its business? “1. What are the experience and reputation pf the men controlling and operating the company?* “Then the next thing to do is to go to your banker and let him check up all this information tor you.” added Aunt Emmy. “Now that you know your name is on a *sucker Hst* be doubly careful** “What’s a ‘sucker Met,’ Aunty?” “It io a list of the names of people who have purchaced oecuritiee or fifth paired about them. Such lists |ro bought by so-called investment brokerage houses all over the country. Lots of bad securities are sold through unscrupulous brokers writing to tbe uasnes on those lists.” “Oh. that's U. is It?” exclaimed Helen. “1 suppoee the poor people are Battered at getting each letters. I know I was.” “Just so,” Auat Emmy said, wtth a smile.—Anne R Aymea. HOW BANKERS HELP , ♦ Seventeen students are securing an education in the Georgia State College of Agriculture through financial aM which the Slate Bankers AseocisUoa to giving. In 1223 the Association increased tte* annual dues so as to contribute toward the education of bops and girls in club work who could not otherwise receive a higher j education. This year, therefore. > I L*M VM put into a treat fund with : the CoMogo to be loaned to stndmits who need help, it was placed in what to known as the ~Ex-Precident*e Fund.” a find which has been receiving vohurtary contributi&u from tbe getiriitg nf tha Unkßre Aaoortatto* stnee 1915. In asnunt the find is now 17.153. Fifty students (have been helped prior to this year.. Stoking a total of slxty-oeven.

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CTB EYBACTEB JOURNAE

Save on Your Gas and See the Scenery! By WILLIAM E. KNOX ’ President American Bankers Association. A long, long time ago, a very great teacher said, “Man shall not live by bread alone.” That Is true. A man who Hyes by bread alone and simply feeds his body will be noth i ing more than an animal. There is more than bread that goes ta the making of a life. There are the « things of the William E. Knox a ® d the spirit, and we are oil of us making a great mistake if we measure success in this world by material things. Material things are all right and ought to be emphasized to some extent, but they should not occupy more than their pPoper place in the scheme of things. Over and i above and beyond them are the things of the intellect, and over and above those are the things of the spirit, the finer things of life. If. in reaching out for material prosperity, we forget those things, we may get the material prosperity, but we will not get true joy and true happiness out of life. I want to commend to every one that, in addition to striving for the good things of this life which are good in their way, to remember the other things also. I promise you if you do that, it will not make any difference whether you get great rewards or not; it will not make any difference whether you arrive at high position or not. You will have instead a great inward satisfaction. and you will feel that you have lived a pretty good life and had a good time while you pere doing IL Have your good time as you |o along. Don’t be like the automobilists that go whizzing over the country at sixty miles an hour and arrive at their destinations at the end of the day's run not having seen the beauties ! et the country they went through; havi tag seen nothing of the birds or tbe ! flowers, of the streams and the trees aad the hills, but having just totaled up so many miles on such an expenditure at gas. Savo on your gas and enjoy the scenery as you go along through life. Just put that into oper- | ation—eave on your gas and see more I eC the scenery! — WHY FARMING DECLINED A review at the present status of sgrtauUnre ta New England has shown that* the more important contrihuting causes at the condition which exists are: Waste of farm resources; failure to understand and practice the fundamental principles of busts sew; lack at an adequate pro great at tana management and soil maaageesenL with the attendaat de ptottaa of eefl fertility; choice of on suitable and oftentimes unmarketable varieties; the nee of poor seed; the keeptag aad breedtag at inferior aaimata; the use of purchased feeds instead of hosse grown grain; quantity { instead of quality production; and failure to grade produce properiy,and according to taw. The decline of New England agriculture presents a ; sertoos problem which deserves the j moot easeful study-— Baakar-Fanw. [ Baahs at Lee County. Mississippi, have a budget of $5,900 which they ose ta keeptag an expert going about tbe county urging more dairying and better dairying, an advisor on all tatty operations. Two hjwrflred cars < heifers and cows wpre shipped oct at the fOßßLk.la«Mrt£r- ._. _ 3 * ' I .z . _

’ r ■ 1 - '-I Romanes of a Red Sweater and What Happened to Elaine

Maps of the Old World contain a new interest for Miss Elaine Shadday. winsome little public school student at Vevay. Ind. When her Sunday school teacher used to tell the story of the early Macedonian Christians, this ancient Biblical land that two thousand years ago sent a call to the Apostle Paul, seemed to Elaine ever and ever so far away, and Greece—why. Greece, when she hunted for it in the school geography, looked to be so remote from America that who would ever dream of actually receiving letters from there. Certainly Elaine had no such dream. ELAINE SHADOAV Now, it is all changed and tbe world that used to seem so big and so far ' around isn’t nearly so large, for Elaine has had a message from the very heart of Macedonia. The little girl feels that the letter is a soil of modem cry from a people who once called to the Apostle, to “come over and help us.” Elaine wishes that every boy and girl who have warm hearts for distressed humanity, might see and read her letter with the serious looking foreign stamps plastered across the envelope. It is about a bright, warm red sweater which today is giving comfort to a little Greek girl in the midst of a bitter Macedonian winter. Last summer / when Indiana school children and those of other states were gathering old clothing for Bible land destitute, Elaine obtained the brightest-hued sweater and th* warmest one she could find. Before the garment was packed with other warm things, Elaine's mother wrote tile child’s name and address on a piece of paper and pinned it in the sleeve. The clothing started on its long journey of mercy and the incident was forgotten. Now comes the letter, full of pathos, dated Drama, Macedonia, from a Greek boy—Basso Koutsogiannopoulos

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HUDSON’S HUDSON’S SPRING COATS For Ladies/Misses and Girls f Coats in Extra-Large Sizes j Sizes 43 to 53 < at $12.75 to $39.50 << For the woman that requires a large size coat we are offerZLWing an unusaily large assortment Materials, styles, and ;; /Jaß I colors are so numerous that you cannot fail to find a garment here that you like. I Ladies’and Misses’Coats L . VI 1 Sizes 16 to 44 I ; / 1 The smartest styles, the newest materials, and the most de- ■i I ♦ \ sirable colorings are here in this targe and beautiful assortIf i ment of Adies’ and misses' coats. : j It V — E ■ C° ats f° r an< * T‘ ny T°ts \ | / Sizes 1 to 5 and 6 to 14 | u tj: )k\ at $5.95 to $15.00 gry i In any of these sizes you will be able to pick a nice new ; |L - "~ * i coat at the price range named. The garments are unusual ” values. An early purchase is advisable.* ; _ ■: „ N :: p-a d n z. u. the HUDSOKcoU — $5.00 » 1 . |

—who tells Elaine bow his family wWM thousands of other Christian* were expelled by the Turk from thrir aft* cestral homes in Asia Minor. PHitoi, ragged refugees, the boy-17 years old, applied to the Near East Beller tftf American old garments to keepl bl* family from freezing, A sweater, th« very one Elaine sent over, fell into bis hands and now it is keeping big little sister warm. “It is my duty to expres* you tnj/ thanks,” Basso writes, “as well as tag gratitude of my brother refugees, ti alt for their kind interest ill assisting thousands of poor families. I am 17 years old and was a student, tot now unhappily I have abandoned my studies, being obliged to work night and day to procure the bread to our numerous family.” The boy begged for a reply to his letter and one is going to him from Elaine's father, Wilmer Shadday, Switzerland county assessor. The thing that puzzles Elaine is tbe boy-writer’* namfe. She doesn’t attempt to pronounce it because she hasn’t much acquaintance with Greek. “Whatever would 1 do,” she laments, “it 1 had to introduce him to my friends.” In an emergency call for used clothing now being made by the Near \ East Relief, Elaine suggests that every boy or girl who can spare a warm sweater, give It cheerfully for those who are less fortunate than American children. 1 I V ' BASSO KOUTSOGIANNOPOULOS i £ _ s Overseas warehouses are empty of - clothing while 802,000 former Christian s citizens of Turkey—Greek and Armei nians by descent—including 100,000 i fatherless and motherless children, are » out in the cold, many of {Bern shelter- . less and without garments to clothe - their shivering bodies. Any kind of i warm, worn or new clothing and shoes are needed. The clothing should be , packed and addressed to the Near k East Relief, 526 People’s Bank Buildj ing, Indianapolis.

| NOTICE GF ADMINISTRATION Notice it hereby given that the unrUrrigned has been appointed by the Clerk of the Kosciusko Circttit Court, in ths State of Indiana, Administrator of the estate << Julia A. Ott, late of Kosriuako Cownty, deceased. fUid ertate is supposed to be\ ► HARRY M. HIRE. v Administrator. March 2, 1&25, WARREN T. COLWELL. 4&4t Attorney- — = Halft Catarrh Medicine Th«** who *m tn « “ran down” condition w»H that Catarrh bothers'-r mu«i> morv than when they are in Ttaatlh. Thia fa> t proves that while Cflarrh i* a lo«ai aioeaoe, it ia greatly ..'iflueneed by noMtnuUonal condition*. HALI/fi CATARRH MEDICINE consist* of an Ointment which Quickly Relieve* by local application, and the I Internal Medicine, a Tonic, which assists in improving the General Health. Sold by druggists for over 40 Years. V. J, Cbtotv a Co., Toledo. Ohio. i ROBERT E. PLETCHER Funeral Director Ambulance Service Syracuse. Indiana. Telephone 75 I sell protection in Bankers Mutual Lyre Co., of Freeport, Til. i Auto |fnd Fire Tnsurance sfe LEPPER Syracuse Indiana Get your FREIGHT via the SYRACUSE-FORT MAYNE TRUCK LINE . J. E. Rippey Phone 101 Syracuse, Ind. . “If I don’t haul your t freight, we both lose.’’ t » GEO. L. XANDERS Attorney-at-Law ’ I Settlement of Estates, i Opinions- on Titles ’ Fire and Other Insurance . Phone 7 Syracuse, Inti. ■I ■»ii — .mi m. 1 SPECIAL ATTENTION GIVEN TO - ESTATES. DEEDS. MORTGAGES ’ TITLES AND WILLS OLLIAM GRAY LOEHR Attorney-at-Tjiw since 11)16 Admitted to Practice in All Courts Collections, Notary Public ÜB| S. Buffalo St.. Warsaw, Ind.