The Syracuse Journal, Volume 17, Number 47, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 19 March 1925 — Page 8

| Classified Ads • Classified advertising is ac- , > cepted at the rate of 5 cents * a line for each insertion. A J ■ !! booking and collection fee of J,, < ► 10 cents will be added for a o, ' * charged account: no account « ‘ o will be charged for less than < t < > 25 cents for a single item. < t FOR SALE—Two good lavatories. H. A. Bowser. 46-2 t FOR SALE—A second hand bookcase, at Beckmann’s Store. ”~FOR SALE—My home on the race bank. All modern. Jas. Rotihenberger. 45-4tpd _ PIANO TUNING — Pianos timed and repaired. Call Beckmann’s. 43-ts FOR RENT—Furnished room with heat. Apply at the Jvir»*.ti office- 4 X' pd FOR SALE—Several White Leghorn cockrels. $3.00 each. Stephen Freeman. 47-2tpd ~~ FOR SALE—Certified Manchu Soy bears, germination 97 per cent, inoculating soil and bags free. $3.00 per bushel f. o. b. Syracuse. Ezra E. Shock 47-4 pd FOR SALE—Pure bred Whit? Orpington rooster. Fine for breeding. $1.50 buys him. Gill at the Journal or phone No. 4. RUGS— Rugs in all grades and sizes are now on display at Beckmann’s Store. "~PICTURE FRAM ES — H a v e your pictures framed from the new mouldings just arrived at Beckmann's Store. , - L „„ ,■, ’> ' • ■ ——* — •—T REAL ESTATE—If you have property in Syracuse, or lake lots for sale, let me know. EII- - George. Phone 150. 46-2 t ~~FOR SALE—Several White Leghorn cockrels. $3.00 each. Stephen Freeman. 46-2tp FOR SALE-187 acre farm, with 7-room house, large bank barn. silo. Will take town property or small farm for part payment. Time on balance. J. E. Grieger, Syracuse. Ind. 37-ts BEDROOM SUITE S—N e w Bedroom Suites in French Walnut. the latest on the market, at Beckmann's. Store. ~~ CARDBOA RD—AU kinds of eardboard, suitable for drawing and maps, for sale at the Journal office. SMILES BY MILES * Aunx was LisnxM ano RUN OOWN ANO WUJL — > —.J* , <; ANCMIC. OOWNNtARTB* AMO HUIL ■ jLv < THIS CONDITION WAS CHRONIC - - / I’l I —r VJ-Z J/Vl ZT/pO jL ; — ; < •MT MMHXt TONIC — ARgi'iA,, iVx < K tiki/ Uf ’Z* - — . MAM. MM HAPPY AM NCARTY AN» MAMt/ A For anemia, low of appetite “that tired feeling" Tom iC

TO BRETZ FOR SUSSES »Read With treasure The complete enjoyment of your favorite magazine or newspaper, depends largely upon the condiUcN of your eyes* To those whose eyes tire easily while reading, a pair of our glasses will prove a revelation In comfort and genuine satisfaction. We Win Bo Glad to Serve Yon. NEVIN E. BRETZ Optometrist & Optician 130 S. Main St., Goshen Light for Rcvere’s Midnight R’Oe. There line long been a ••■.niru.'er* > jet ween the dweHitanta <»f tw«« fnta iiies con* em'nx the ithiitity of C* frh nd of Paul Revere woo placed t! • -Ignal ianteru in the obi North char* ‘ in Boston. Some assert that the lid*’* were placed by Robert Newman, nt that time sexton of the church, others contend that It was John Pulling, an Irtiiuate friend of Revere*# from the time of his boyhood. H>storinn« for the most pbrt now give the credit to Newman. O . — not Springs. 1 Hot Springs. Ark., is widely noted for the hot waters that flow from 72 springs, included in a space of ten acres on the west side of Hot Springs mountain. The waters of these springs range in temperature from 78 to 157 degrees F., and are especially beneficial in the treatment of chronic diseases. In 1832 four sections of land "were set off by congress as a government reservation. Since then the government han established on the mpuntain the Anuy und Navy General poo* pltal. o Pain's Positive Value Pain in Itself Is not without its alleviations. It l« seldom both violent and long-continued; and Its pauses and intenalsslons become positive pleasures. It has the power of shedding a satisfaction over interval of ease, which few enjoyments exceed.—Paley. B. & 0. TIME TABLE &. , EAST-BOUND No. 10—Daily.. 12:51 p. m. No. 32 -Daily.... I 6:25 p. m. No. 8- Daily 9:19 p. m. WEST-BOUND No. 45—Dally 5:28 a. in. No. 31—Daily 7:45 a. m. No. 7—Daily..... 11:44 a. m. Trains No. 45. No. 7, No. 10 and No. 8 are through trains and stop for passengers going or coming from Chicago, or to points east of Willard. Ohio. H. W. Buchholz, Ticket Agent.

BUSINESS DIRECTOR The ST ANWAR automatic water pump require* no tank. The pump is a pressure tank and pump combined. On display at your local plumbers The Lincoln Eleetrit Go. (aonhen Indiana ¥. N. HascalF Company INTERIOR DECORATING WALL PAPER PAINTS WINDOW SHADES PICTURE FRAMES GOSHEN - INDIAN’ Minnie L. Priepke DRUGLESS PHYSICIAN SPECIALIST in Tuberculosis, krd ney. bladde and liwr trouble. Prolapset stomach and bowels rwtaret’. The only treatment known tha will actually bring them back t« normal. 36 Hawks-Gortner Bldg. Phone 16S. Goshen, Indiana Your Child’s Photographs Not the immediate joy, hot the pleasure in the years ahead is the real reason for having your child’s photograph taken often. The Schnabel Studio Over Baker’s Drug Store GOSHEN, INDIANA

and /ana Fish Have Hiding Places There la a mystery surrounding the fur seal which has never been solved. No one has ever been able to discover where they go In winter. No one has • yet been able to make a record of I their hiding place. i All -that la known, says the Minneapolis Tribune, is that on the islands of St. Paul and St. George, in Alaska, the seals begin to appear about , the end of April or the first of May and toward the latter part of August or in the first weeks of September they disappear as strangely and mysteriously as they came. In this respect they ere not less pussling to scientists than the huge schools of tuna fish which appear and disappear from the waters of southern California regularly each

year. Tuna fish have been caught, marked and turned loose, with the hope that some of them might be caught tn other waters during the winter months, but so far none of them has been captured. A similar method of marking seals would do no good, for they are never seen during the winter months. Tears ago the seals numbered 5,000,000 or more, where today they may be counted only up to four or five hundred thousand. Tet even la the days when they were most numerous, their habit of disappearing suddenly without leaving a trace of their whereabouts and as suddenly reappearing after an absence of several months was just as mysterious as it.is today. Paris Bank Messenger Needs No Armed Guard The Paris bank messenger wears a cocked hat with an air of dignity. His coat is liberal In cut and you can see the big brass buttons on It glittering tn the sunshine quite a long way off. A brass plate over bls heart bears a number and under his arm he carries a leather satchel attached to a big chain secured about his waist. There Is an air of prosperity about him. He is of liberal proportions and plants his feet firmly. He inspires confidence and wo might trust our fortune to his keeping and still sleep peacefully at night. We meet him often in the busy morning near tbe opera pursuing his steadfast way along the crowded pavement. He. least of anyone. Is in a hurry. He is picturesque, slow and sure. And that we feel we may confide our treasure to him is due not to the chain of shining steel with which he grapples it, nor his glittering buttons, nor the brazen number on his breast, but he is secure, Inviolate because he is fantastic, and treasure walks the streets unguarded save by the fantasy ora glorious'cocked hat.— From the Continental Edition of the London Mall. X

When Poachers flourished As a profession, poaching has fallen off, greatly In Great Britain. A hundred year* ago the nights between tha harvest and hunters’ full moons were the nights of the poachers' delight, and there would be a steady flow of game, not killed by shot, to the cellars of dealers in country towns, to the country inns, and to the boxes of such coachmen and guards and country carriers as were willing to do a little business In handling game. A hundred-year-old record shows that no fewer than four-and-fifty poachers were sheltered in Lewes Jail at one time. There were poachers in every town and village. hence the threatening notices, “Beware of Mantraps,” still often to be seen la British woodlands. > Fires in Forests It is not practicable to equip forests with lightning rods. No remedy Is now la right for disastrous forest fires duq to lightning, such as have occurred on a vast scale in the western states during the last season, says Nature Mag. azine of Washington. When lightning strikes a tree the ordinary result is to splinter the wood or strip off bark through the sudden generation of steam. In the great majority of cases tbe tree is not set on fire. Nevertbe. less the aggravate number of forest fires started by lightning la, in many parts of tbe country, greeter than the number due to all other causes combined. Paper in Farming A 50 per cent Increase in tbe pineapple crops of the Hawaiian islands hag been accomplished by use of broad stripe of brown paper that completely cover the soil around the planta. The paper smothers the weeds, thereby leaving all the nourishment for the plants, which force their way up through tbe covering. Also, the paper protector conservea tbe moisture in tbe soil. The waste fibers of sugar cane, once considered vslueless, are need for making the paper. Seventyfive thousand rolls of It at a coot of OOOjOOO are used yearly to cover the XSOO acres of pineapple plantations in the islands.

At Last How often the wild rose has moved tto first lame along tbe skirts of hornbeam hedge or beech thicket, or the honeysuckle begun to unwind her pale horns of Ivory and moongold. and yet across the furthest aim-tops to the south the magic summons of tbe cuckoo has been still unheard tn the windless smber dawn, or when, as in the poet’s tale, the myriad little hands of twilight pull the shadows out of the leaves and weave the evening dark But when the cry of the plover fa> abroad we know that our welcome spring is come at last—Fiona Macieod. in “Where the forest Murmurs.” Hall’s Catarrh Medicine Those who are in a “ran down” condition wIU notice that Catarrh bothers them much more than when they are in need health. This tact proves that while Cztarrh is a local dispute, it is greatly HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE consisu of an Qtatment which Quickly Relieves by local application, aad the Internal Medicine, a Toaic. which assists tn improving the Oeneivrl.Health. Sold by druggtalß tor over 4B Yean. F. J.Cbeoer St Co.. Toledo, Ohio,

OTE SYRACUSE JOURNAE

Ocean Waves Trifles to Those of the Air it is rather startling to lehrn, and from high scientific authority, too, that ; we are living most of the time submerged In waves to which the greatest I waves of the ocean are mere ripples |ln point of size. When a current of air blows across a water surface wafer waves are produced, and when a current of air blows across a surface of quiet air, or air having a different motion from the first current, then air waves are produced. These atmospheric waves, we are assured, have ail of the phenomena of water waves—troughs, crests, foam, breakers and spray—but since the qualities of air and water are so different the air waves have dimensions over 2,500 times those of the corresponding water waves. Thus the great ocean waves of perhaps twenty-five feet height would have atmospheric counterpart# extending upward a distance of ten or twelve miles above tbe earth’s Shyface. The undulating movement of snch air waves accounts in part for the intermittent gusts of wind which we notice so frequently in storms. —Washington Star. Little Reverence for Long-Dead Statesmen The Pantheon is visited nowadays under conditions which seem decidedly lacking in the respect due to the memory of great men. You pay a franc to, get Inside the building, and for 50 centimes more you can Join an assembly of trippers for a visit to the crypts in the wake of a guide who appears to be on very familiar terms with the distinguished dead buried there, says Paris Figaro. The aforesaid guide will rather disdainfully show you the basement where not leas than forty statesmen of the first empire sleep. The other day he pointed out the tomb of Zola, Jaures and Carnot, and "an English woman In the party asked if she might go into one of the tombs. To this the guide replied carelessly that it really was not worth while, as she could see all these fellows at the Musee Grevin, “where they’re all lifesize and made of wax.**

Few "White” Buffaloes In the old days Indians cherished the white buffalo robe as almost beyond price. In 1832 or 1833 the Mandans. says the Pittsburgh Sun. hearing that tha Blackfeet at the mouth of the Yellowstone had a white buffalo robe, sent a delegation with eight horses and with trading goods the 200 miles to procure tbe robe if possible. * The delegation left the horses an<j the goods and returned afoot with ths robe. This was consecrated to ths Great Spirit and hung upo\ a pole, out of touch, as powerful medicine. It Is said that not one In 100,006 buffalo was white. Even at that, the color was likely to be a yellowish white, and the robe was known by the plainsmen as a “buckskin” robe. The pure white robe scarcely existed. * \ Basilicas The name "Basilica” was given In ancient Rome to buildings used as meeting places for business men, and as courts of justice. A basilica con» slated of a long central hall or save, with aisles, the aisles being separate*) from the nave by pillars supporting the roof. 'At the end of the nave, opposite the entrance, was a raised plat> form, or dais, with seats for ths judges. To give additional space therq was sometimes added at this farther end, a semicircular structure called an apse. After the Introduction of Chrlstisnty, basilicas were very generally converted into churches, and thus it is that the form of the modern cathedral is derived from the ancient Roman basilica.—Kansas City Star.

Patriotic American The pledge to the American flag that is used in most of our schools is attributed to James P. Upham, a Boston publisher, who in 1888 snggested its use in the schools. The idea was adopted by the National Education association, which persuaded congress to urge it to the attention of President Harrison, who. by proclamation of July 21, 1882, naming October 12 as a holiday in commemoration of the fourhundredth anniversary of the landing of Columbus in the New world, suggested the pledge to the flag be recited by the pupils and the flag raised over every school bouse. Testmr the Pay Envelope A writer in a recent number of Printers Ink asks this question, in substance: “Would you rather receive S3OO a month and know you were worth more than receive 5300 with a sinking conviction in your heart that by the standard of wages paid to others you were being overpaid?” There ere probably quite as many people overpaid In the business world as there are those who are underpaid. When business slumps the overpaid ones are headed for a fall; the underpaid ones keep what they get and perhaps a little more. Offered Congress Home The first fiscal proposal received by congress looking to tbe location of tbe seat of government came from Kingston. N. Y„ the state legislature having, on March 14, 1783, authorized the trustees of the township of Kingston to grant to congress “a sufficient quantity of land within tbe said township to secure to congress a place of resi dence adequate to their dignity.” Odd Species of Fish Only one known species of fish has tbe habit of swimming on its back. This Is an inhabitant of tropical waters. known as tbe globe fish. The skln on the under side of this fish is loose and can be filled with **r at will. When tbe fish blows itselt out in this manner It naturally turns bn l ,s back and goes on its way in that position.

AMERICAN TELEPHONE ' SYSTEM UNEQUALED ; More than 2,500,000 tele- j phones are in use in the New ; York territory served by the ; New York Telephone Company, I a net gain of 205,000 in 1924, ac- ; cording to James S. McCulloch, ; president of the company. “After more than five years of ; continuous effort,” says Mr. Me- ; Cuiloch, “we have succeeded in ! meeting practically all of the j backed-up service demands ; which accumulated during the recent building boojns and postwar period of business expan-/ sion, and we now are abfe in practically every part of our ter-, xitory to care for new service re- ! quiremfints,promptly. “Even though the number of | telephones in service has almost ’ been doubled within the past six or seven years, the necessity for the continued enlargement ofj I the system is great, for nowhere is there any evidence that I the saturation point has been; reached.” Conditions in New York are typical of those which the American telephone system has had to meet in practically every state in the Union in rendering :a national communication ser- ' vice unequaled or even approximated in any other nation in the world. . X-—o GO RIGHT AT IT • ' Friends And Neighbors In Syracuse Will Show You A Way. Get at the root of the trouble. Rubbing an aching back may relieve it v But won’t cure it if the kidneys are weak. You must reach the root of it—the kidneys. Doan’s Pills go right at it; Reach the cause; attack the I pain. Are recommended by many Syracuse people. Mrs. M. H. McPheraion, N. Harrison St., Syracuse, says: “The nains that went through me almy breath and I had to be perfectly still. I became veak and was so dizzy, I could hardly get around. I also felt nervous and my kidneys acted too frequently. Doan’s Pills ; f rom Thornburg’s Drug Stare, cured me and I have had no need to use them since.” 60S, at all dealers. FosterMilburn Co., Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y. —(Advertisement.

NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION Notice is hereby .given that the mdersdgned has been appointed by the Clerk of the Kosciusko Circuit Court, in the State of Indiana, Administrator of the estate of Julia A. Ott, late of Koseiusko County, deceased. Said estate is supposed to be solvent. HARRY M. HIRE. Administrator. March 2, 1925. WARREN T. COLWELL, 45-3 t • Attorney. o The Journal 52 times a year for $2. ROBERT E. PLETCHER Funeral Director Ambulance Service Syracuse, Indiana. Telephone 75 < I sell protection in Bankers Mutual Life Insurance Co n of Freeport, 111. Auto and Fire Insurance S>C. LEPPER Syracuse " Indiana Got your FREIGHT via the SYRACUSE-FORT WAYNE TRUCK LINE J. E. Rippey Phone 101 Syracuse, Ind. “If I don’t haul your freight, we both lose.” GEO. L. XANDERS y Attorney-at-Law Settlement of Estates. Opinions .on Titles Fire and Other Insurance Phone 7- Syracuse, Ind. SPECIAL ATTENTION GIVEN TO ESTATES. DEEDS. MORTGAGES TITLES AND WILLS VILLIAM GRAY LOEHR Attorney-at-Law since 1916 Admitted to Practice in All Courts Collections, Notary Public ÜB| S. Buffalo St, Warsaw, Ind.

[ Because people can’t do without electricity it the reason ! why the companies supplying it are Safe Companies to invest nv ney in, the reason why Interstate 7 percent Prior Lieft Shares have never missed a dividend. Sold for Cash or Monthly Payments. Information cheerfully given at your Local Interstate ; < > ; Office. , “Before you Invest—lnvestigate” [ Subject to aay mortgage and other indebtedneee of the Company, J the Prior Lion Stock hae claim on the Pioporty and Earning* of the Company, senior to all th. Preferred and Common Stocl of > the Company. ]! [ Phone, write or call at any office of the Company. Interstate Public Service f Company * 5 f Attention | ! Pickle Growers! I T 1 I The D. M. Sears Co. I * . * | Fort Wayne, Ind. * . I | is ready to contract for pickle acreage g f for this season. Information can be g | obtained at the State Bank of Syra- | | cuse. Journal office or Lawrence Juday. | Willys-Overland . Fine . Motor. Cars Fun to Come Ambrosia in Mythology Some day somebody with the requl- According to classical mythology site nerve is going to step out and de- am brosia was the food the gods of mand an intelligence test of the men Q] vnl p U s. It was broup it by doves to who prepare Intelligence tests. It prob- Jupiter, and was some'imes bestowed ably will be the laugh of the century.— by him upon such mortals as were his New York Telegraph. j favorites. ■ *>♦* I- ; I . I I I | Wedding Invitations { | and Announcements Visiting Cards i Society Stationery | I A fine line to select from :: a-- ; :?'1 u ' . -X :/ ‘ • ' J Syracuse Journal I J' i I s mriiinmi!riniiiiiiiiiiiniiiniiiiiiiiinTninTnmnnniiinnniminmrmT«ttttnTiTnnii 1