The Syracuse Journal, Volume 17, Number 47, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 19 March 1925 — Page 2

Classified List of Goshen Firms Who Offer You Special Inducements

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 . fiowen. which assures you full measure for your money. SMITH BBQS. CO. GOSHEN •18 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 934 0-K Battery Service B. C. Dougherty. Prop. BATTERIES OF ALL MAKES REPAIRED AND RECHARGED AH Work Guaranteed. 118 W. Lincoln BEAUTY PARLORS ALLIECE SHOPPE Phone 933 for Appointments SjMihii Building Goshen Bicycles and Motorcycles SvE WANT YOUR PATRONAGE Our prices and the quality of our workmanship justify you in coming to us for your Bicycles and Bicycle Repair work. Buy a Harley - Davidson Motorcycle. C. C. AMSLER 212 N. MAIN ST. GOSHEN v CHIROPRACTOR Acute and Chronic Diseases Respond Readily to Chiropractic Adjustments. Examination Free. A. S. AMSBAUGH (Chiropractor) 204'/ 2 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 108 N. MAIN ST. « — DruglesS Physician Massage:.and Electrical Treatment*. Electric Blanket Sweat Baths, Heavy Sweat—without heat—l hour complete bath. Minnie L. Priepke Suite 38 Hawka-Gortner Bldg. PHONE 188 GOSHEN, IND. (Elevator Service) DENTIST DR. H. B. BURR Dentist General Practice Dental X-Ray •VBR ADAM’S GOSHEN

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 FURNITURE Williamson & Snook FURNITURE, RUGS and STOVES Jf'e Furnish the Home for Less Money. GOSHEN, IND. LEATHER GOODS THE LEATHER GOODS STORE HARNESS AND ROBEB Trunks, Traveling Bags, Ladies* Hand Bags and Small Leather Goods Phone 86 115 East Lincoln Avenue, Goshen, Ind. PHOTOGRAPHS - Somelxxly, Somewhere Wants Your Photograph The SCHNABEL Studio Over Baker's Drug Store Phone 316 Goshen, Ind. PIAXOS ROGERS & WILSON Headquarter* /''’""'T tor Victrola* Victor Records, Pianos and Player Piano*. . ESTABLISHED 1871 SHOES , vn** m*m* want «a g mr emc* V THt FOOT WK LX* NOBLE’S Good Shoes — Hosiery Too 131 8. MAIN ST. GOSHEN TYPEWRITERS Adding Machine* • Office Supplies Check Writers HARRISON’S TYPEWRITER SHOP All Makes of Machines SOLD, REPAIRED OR EXCHANGED Room 38 Hawk»Gortner Bldg. Phone 186 Goshen, Indiana UNDERTAKERS E. CULP & SONS Funeral Directors L Unexcelled Ambulance Service Re*. Phone Office Phon* S 4 S 3 WALL PAPER, PAINTS Paint Your House with Our Guaranteed Colored LEAD PAINT. . Casto but S&3O • Gallon when mixed ready to see. F. N. Hascall Company * :■ . ■ ■ : ’ -■ • j. ' > ~>• , 88P-

Railway Success Based on Judicious Combination of Deeds and Words By C. H. MARKHAM, in Railway Age. RAILWAY success today and for the future must be based upon a judicious combination of deeds and words. The big thing, of course, is performance, for the railroads exist only to give service. Nothing must be allowed to conflict with adequate service to the public. The most important problem with which the railroads are now confronted is that of keeping up with the growth of the country. Recently they hdve beep doing that fairly well. The record traffic of late 1924 has been handled satisfactorily. In the past the amount of business carried on in this country has increased at a rate greater than that of the population increase, due to the growing per capita requirements of our own people and the increased volume of our foreign trade. Nothing is more certain than that the amount of business carried on will continue to grow. The demand of the future places upon the railroads an obligation to equip themselves not only with cars and locomotives, but with additional trackage and other including grade revisions, that will make possible the more economical and ; more satisfactory transportation of the business offered. Only the railroad that is making money is the railroad that can afford ' to keep its plant up to a standard well in advance of the needs of its ; patrons. The net earnings of the railroads will govern their ability to expand their facilities to take care of the country’s growing commerce, but j it is the state of public opinion which first determines the net earnings ' which the railroads shall be allowed to realize. It follows, therefore, that ! the creation and maintenance of a favorable public opinion is essential to > railway success. It is in this connection that it becomes necessary for the railroads to translate their deeds into words. An important part of every railroad’s work should be the cultivation I of public confidence by the recital of achievements made and the promise of progress in the future. That work, I believe, will come to take rank with the work of running trains. In the final analysis, public confidence ■ is the fuel that keeps the trains running. “Everything That Is Came From Something That Was Before That” By ERNEST FREMONT TITTLE, in Rocky Mountain News. Slowly, but surely, the conviction is gaining ground that the fact of . evolution will have to be accepted. In “Uncle Tom’s Cabin," the delicious and irrepressible Topsy blandly announces that she never had any parents, she just grew, but we | are now in a position to affirm that there is nothing in all the world that never had any parents. Everything that is came from something that was. Everything that was came from something that was before that, and before that, and be- ; fore that No man or mountain, no lion or lichen, no fish or flower was ever created outright. Everything has evolved, higher forms of life from lower forms of life,'and these lower forms from other forms lower still. , That is the belief of increasing numbers of men who have devoted a lifetime to the study of the evidence. And so the conviction grows that, however little we may yet know about the method of evolution, the origin of species, the fact of evolution will have to be reckoned with by intelligent persons. * It Was the Men Who Fought the Revolution Who Wrote the Constitution By SENATOR UNDERWOOD, Speech in Senate. You must bear in mind that it was the men who fought the War of the Revolution who wrote the Constitution of the United States, and | One of the battle-cries that they followed on the Revolutionary battlefields was that taxation without representation is unjust Therefore, | when they wrote the- Constitution of the United States they provided in the limitations of that instrument that all bills affecting revenue must originate in the house of representatives; and why? Because that body more nearly represented the mass of the American people who pay taxes. We may today pay a portion of our taxes measured by the standard | of wealth, but we had no income tax in the days of the Revolution. We , collected our taxes largely per capita; we collected them on the food the , man ate, or the clothes he wore, or on some service rendered. Therefore we placed in the Constitution of the United States a limitation that provided that if you were going to tax him the taxing power must origr nate in the house, primarily representing the mass of the American < people. “The Rash Idea That in a Few Hundred Years Man May Become Blind” By DR. E. F. GLASER, California State Board of Health. Because so many people now wear glasses, the fallacy has arisen that the human eye is deteriorating, and one unscientific man has ventured the rash idea, that perhaps in a few hundred years the human race may become blind. This is far from the truth. Just as the average human life has lengthened so the eyes have become more efficient organs of vision. The last census showed a decrease in the number of blind in the United States, and the schools for the blind are showing each year fewer eligible blind pupils. This has been brought about by the great amount of preventive and educational work, and by better understanding in the care and hygiene of the eyes—not only the wearing of glasses, but the proper care and the proper use of the eyes to keep them strong and well, and the proper and immediate diagnosis and cure of disease. Our Belittling the Assistance That France Gave to the Colonists By SENATOR DILL. Speech in Senate. Fk>r my own part, I can see nothing to be gained at this time by our belittling,in any way the assistance that France gave to the colonists in the days of trial in their trouble with England. I agree with the senator from Maryland that without the aid of France the Revolution would have failed or, if not, it would have been prolonged for many years. Her service and her Help to us were almost as valuable as our service and our help to her during the late war. Neither can I see anything to be gained on the part of France by belittling the assistance that we rendered in the World war to her, for, aa suggested yesterday, we did help to save her life. Let me add that I agfee absolutely that France has waited all too long and that she ought to make a proposition for settlement of the debt and make.it now in order that the talk of repudiation may be stopped for all time. C. H. Markham, President Illinois Central Railroad—Through this expansive country we make daily use of steel products that are fabricated at Gary and Pittsburgh, we burn coal that is mined in West Virginia, Kentucky and southern Illinois, we eat bread made from flour that is milled at the Twin Cities from wheat that is grown in the Dakotas and our tables bear vegetables from the gulf coast and fruit from the tropics. Our entire economic structure has been thus closely interwoven with all of its parte in terdepen dent Secretary Herbert Hoover—The only case where unlimited diverai-

THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL

OUR COMIC SECTION 1 Ether Waves . —Il - ■ 11— mil JOHH,PO C I tmr SEE AS HOW YOU IF 1 tVER Got ANyffllNto W 'll poiNto ? Jw R,fcHr WAY IHIS THINO (5 HOOKep / ' L w ! • ■■ Trouble MICKIE, THE PRINTER'S DEVIL Reason Enough I I I,z qTT jpn V WW OOU6 RIGHT 0% 1 AIUY V C VJWEU \ TOOK TMAV OIL JOS, THEM TDU> 1 WUX. x* KEEP TH' STORE ALLup Ml’ TV' JUWVC GVEAMED OUT, VBTCH I DOME AH' GOT — — ■ , .Ifr g a , JA MJ GEE, MOW Twer eOUE T 1 GIkAkAE TH' 9OKA9 MUGVA \MUX > \ SUREMJ < A PAIR O’ MEtVOW SHOES 1 m TV' STONE \ J V )WM euouuJn 1 I I VlO't- MO GOOP TV' BOSS VOißhl PEOPLE AM' TVEM UKXJLDMT FVT NOME OF 'EM \ _____ WHAT’S THE USE The Early Bird 3 HSLLO , JAHVIS / IAM — HE'S QUiTe a Y I SHOULD SA7 «O, ~l touße look uh Ft eemarkabl'E old /he ?tu.l gets up kiNDA TiQED /( BEEN VISiTiNG MAN , iSNT / EVEGT MOr2 NING 'v TUiS MOGNInG J t Ut FoR T / X 'MEEKS J V * * HOV'ti ’I J L 9 5 d- ~~*>—iciniSL i " n=r L /io yr /wb /v| f t , me 'g 'what r>oe? me \ 5 OCLOCkY I been Doing fVr »> <sett<ng up W but dhturb \ * / IT ALL Ml? I Tm * t HOuQ • BODY I < A life Z <. \ BL,E ,M THE / HOUSE / I. A- m

LATEST iifk •TY»-E Turtle — My tights do art off BuTi' Mlm Frog’* figura. ISP The sick soul must cure itself.

VERY LIKELY A OKA Some say the telephone glrle listen In. Nothing to It If they did they *al woui(i ■?* to eut short some %¥ Ml E of this afterX noon tea conversctlon. The spirit never grows ol<L *

■BTKW.V> XX X* THE REASON. Vx«?Y m ****• to 'marry your big x\x \ sister if we are to yX have a cry baby \JK x in the family. 'YQ\ 7jW What are you V Lgw cr y* n ® about? -JKii ’Cause you’re UT~ comin’ inter de * Be preacbea well by living well.