The Syracuse Journal, Volume 17, Number 48, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 26 March 1925 — Page 8

z £ u Classified Ads 3 ; ’ Classified advertising i» ac- J [ <» cepted at the rate of 5 cents <> 4 * a line for each insertion. A < * , [ booking and collection fee of J ( < > 10 cents will be added for a o. J * charged account: no account ’ J * ’ will be charged for less than ~ < • 25 cents for a single item. o «»+•••••••>♦•♦♦•****♦**♦♦♦ FOR SALE— Range Eternal, like new. Telephone 75. 48-2tpd "PEDESTALS—See the new pedest'.'s in Beckmann’s , show window. FOR SALE—Hiwe tw> good homes for aale on monthly payments. Ell wool George 48-4 t FOR SALE—My home on the race bank. All- modern. Jas. Rotihenberger. 45-4tpd ~ WONDER POLISH—Try a bottle of Wander Polish on your furniture and piano. For sale at Beckmann’s store. ' PIANcT tU N ING — Pianos tuned .and repaired. Call Beckmann's. 43-ts FURNITURE—The latest style and'finish in bedroom and dining room furniture at Beckmann's store. • FOUND —Auto licenses No. 283570 Ind., and 305-419 Ind. Owners can have tihe licenses bv cofrimg to the Journal office and ” paying for these nctioes. FOR SALE —Brick warehouse, 60x120. now occupied by McClintic. CobweM & Gordy- Price $2,100, if sold within a monhh. Meyers & Fisher, New Paris, cr call New Paris Bank. 48-3 t-pd FOR SALE —Certified Manchu Soy beans, germination 97 per cent, inoculating soil and bags free. $3.00 per bushel f. o. b. Syracuse. Ezra E. Shock 47-4 pd RUGS— Housed leaning time is at hand, whidh calls for new rugs. You will find them at Beckmann's store. FOR SALE—Stock rack for . onb-ton Ford truck, 1 h h. p. gasoline engine, new row boat, never been in the water. Geonye Schick, Syracuse, Ind. Phone 818- , 48-lt 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 S"U I e w Bedroom Suites in French Walnut, the latest on the market, at Beckmann's Store. OFFICE SUPPLlES—Typewriter ribbon, carbon paper, typewriter paper, cardboard, blotting, etc., for sale at the Journal office. CARDBOARD—AII kinds of cardboard, suitable for drawing and maps, for sale at the Journal office. Journal w<»nt-ad« are invest mcnts that pay dividends. ROBERT E. PLETCHER Funeral Director Ambulance Service Syracuse Indiana. Telephone 75 I sell protection in Rankers Mutual Life Insurance Co M of Freeport, 111. Auto and Fire Insurance 8. C. LEPPER Syracuse Indiana Get your FREIGHT via the SYRACUBE-FORT WAYNE TRICK LINE J. E. Rippey Phone 101 Syracuse, Ind. “If I don’t haul your freight, we both lose." GEO. L XANDERS Attorney-at-Law Settlement of Estate*. Opinions on Title* Fire and Other Insurance * Phone 7 Syraeuse, Ind. SPECIAL ATTENTION GIVEN TO ESTATES. DEEDS. MORTGAGES TITLES AND WILLS X7ILUAM GRAY LOEHR since 1916 Admitted to Practice in All Court* CeUecttaas Netary Publie 118 j S. Buffalo su Warsaw, Ind.

TO BRETZ FOR GLASSES Read Wilh • pi® 318111 ® The complete enjoyment of your fa write magazine or newspaper, depends largely upon the condiUoa of your eyes. n To those whose eyes tire easily while reading, a pair of our glasses will prove a revelation In comfort and genuine satisfaction. We Will Be Glad to Serre Tam. NEVIN E. BRETZ Optometrist & Optician , . f 130 S. Main St., Goshen i Bird Believed Extinct. The biological survey says that the Ivory-bill wood|»ecker is found the present time in the west and heavy semi-tropical woods of the southeaster!. United State*. The Carolina paro duet was so a» ■* In practically the same regions. It Is believed by scientists to be extinct inasmuch as specimens have not been seen tn several years. When last seen these birds were found in Florida. * —o Sees Dog Ghosts Ad Felowes, London humane officer, declares ,he Is haunted in bls dreams at night by the ghosts of the dogs be has killed. He says the dreams always end with what sounds like the tremendous walling of hundreds of pis canine victims. .Medical authorities are en deavoring to correct the delusion. SMILES BY MILES **■ A JAID PRETTY YOUNG NAM FROM NANTUCKCT /"!' H —— • Hfß PAIR WILL MAKE.. ME KICK TME 'BUCKET—- > - < SMI. GREW OETTtR • NOT WOR6E. — I _ I ■For inside. her PURt< — I : 4 Wm an amti-wum Till , ANX> NAN-TUCK-IT vR WTA Headache, earache, toothache, backache are uaually relieved by A DR. MILES' Anti-Pun Pills : You Say You Can’t :■ Advertise? ■; —/ That's what others have I said and <1 of a sudden found some competbor was doing what they thought they couldn't do. And getting away wkhk Get the bulge on your competitors by telling your story man attractive manner so it wffl be reed. You'll get the results. ' W- S~> Awriaa* Sa Ktla WC JIIW n2AWw W sxqp

Paper Cape and Dishes Made by Electricity Exemplifying the many diversified applications of electricity, ingenious machines are now used for making paper cupe and dishes by a manufacturing concern in Brooklyn. The creation of these paper cups is an interesting process. Mechanical fingers <m an ingenious electric-driven machine pick up a single disk of fine quality paper and place it in a section of the machine for pressing. This pressing gives the cup its shape, plaiting the sides for strength and rigidity. Tin piece is then transferred to anotljei unit of the same machine, where It is sterilized by heating. When the second step has been completed, the cup has assumed Its final form with plaited sides, natural curved lip and tumbler shapes. But. as s measure of added efficiency, it is put through a third process, being sprayed with hot paraffin, which seals the plaits and gives Increased rigidity anti crispness. From this point the cup passes into a baking chamber, where the paraffin in drained off. The finished cups are carried along on an endless conveyor past a fan, the breeze from which hastens drying. Relieves Workers of Stigma of Suspicion To save workers In factories which employ In their products gold, silver, or precious stones from suffering the Indignity of being selected for searching, a Danish engineer has Invented a special apparatus. Hitherto, the custom has been to stop a certain proportion of the workers leaving such factories at night, thus apparently casting suspicion upon the individuals selected. By the new invention the worker asked to adjourn to the searching-room is chosen by a machine. The apparatus consists of a container holding a number of balls, corresponding to the number of workers engaged In the factory. Some of the bails are made of a material conductive of electricity. As the workers pass to the exit they press a button, when a ball Is released. It rolls out of the container and a white lamp glows for a moment In such case the worker passes on. Should one of the conducting spheres roll out. the electric current turns on a red lamp, which means that the person Indicated Is one of those to be searched. Wife Wax Hie Memory “Your story of the absent-minded minister,“ writes a contributor to the Youth's Companion, “reminds me of a minister whom I knew In a little Wisconsin town many years ago. He had a wretched memory, but for all that be was nothing less than a saint. "His absent-mindedness was chronic. He seldom could remember his text, and, being averse to notes, he depended on his good wife to come to bls rescue. He would lean over the pulpit and say, 'What was my text for today, my dear? “She would tell him, and he would them proceed to preach a fine sermon from It “One Sunday after the singing of the second hymn he opened his Bible and, leaning down, made* the usual request: ‘My text for today, my dearF *“I don't know, I'm sure,’ composedly replied his wife. ‘You forgot to tell me!‘* * Butterleee Land The supply of fluid milk in the Dominican republic is fairly adequate, and although it la ha general use for adults, modern methods of production and distribution do not prevail. A large amount of condensed, evaporated end powdered milk is Imported Into the country each year and one or the other of these preserved milks is always used for Infant, feeding. No butter Is made anywhere in the republic and the demand for this commodity In the local market Is met by Importations chiefly from the United States and Denmark. — New York Times. k SA« Pitied the Lion Unde had just returned home from an expedition into Africa after big game, says the Tatler; be was delighting all the family with stirring tales of adventure In the jungle. “One of my beaters was so savagely bitten by a Hon once." he announced “that he bad to have his arm amputated.” There was a short silence while the Information sank In, and then the small daughter qf the house said In a sympathetic voice: “What a pity, unde; the poor Hon might just as well have had it.** Skis and Snowshoes Owing to the thick forests of America the snowshoe baa been found to be more suitable for use than the ski. which is preferred Is less wooded regions. The large, flat surface of the snowshoe furnishes a larger plane of resistance to the soft now and by distributing the weight of the wearer over a larger surface does not break the brittle crust on top of snow, trhlch makes progress without sooeslmmni latpoartbla, W A Little Learmng" Etc Some people imagine there’s nothing more to learn. They know it ail and cannot bo told anything more. They not only stand still while the world goes forward, but, awakened to this fact, blame the world instead of themselves They don't know enough to piece blaye, where KJtretongs.—Grit Hall’s Catarrh Medicine Those who are in a “ran down" condition win -notice that Catarrh bothers them much more than when they are in ®ood health. This tact proves that white Catarrh, tea RALUB CA C TARRH U MEDICINE con- ! stets of an Ointment which Quickly Relieve* local sjjriky

THE SYRACUSE JOURNAE

Apple in High Place as Family Physician Thia is what an appile does to one: It starts ail the secretions into vigor- 1 ous action and floods the system with ] a new tide of life. ( It la a friend to health and a foe to disease. J It la a food, tonic, condiment and 1 cosmetic all In one. i It kindles the brilliancy of the eye * and it plants roses in the cheeks. You cannot eat too many—after the heartiest meal there is always room t for an apple. -J An apple is a social fruit; it draw* human beings together tn fellowship. Plenty of good apples will keep the ’ children at home and tn at night—hus- ■ bands as well —and keep the doctor i away. | It promotes temperance. It appears on our table in many ap- . periling forma Kaw fruit, as It comes fresh and crisp from the trees and the refrigent ' tore, needs no culinary art to Improve J It. ' ] A knife spoils It; let It be crushed and crunched In the mouth, and then ft gives out its richest flavor and yield* the greatest satisfaction. The. apple family contains in Its varieties exquisite flavors adapted to all taste* It is the oldest of our known food necessities.—American Pomoiogical Society Bulletin. Cook Did Her Best, but Big Egg, Wouldn’t Boil The often embarrassing trick that Chinese servants have of obeying an order literally is well known. The classic example perhaps is that of the cook who, once observing his mistress who was making cake throw away a spoiled egg, ever afterward cast aside an egg when he was making that particular kind of cake. A contributor sends us this amusing anecdote of a servant, not Chinese, but negro, who did her best to do exactly as she was told: A New England woman who had recently moved to a remote South Carolina plantation home handed an egg and a small minute glass to the old colored cook who was part of the estate and said to her, “801 l this by the glass until it runs through three times.” In a little while the woman stepped into the kitchen and asked whether the egg were not ready. '•Law, no, Miss ’Melia.” was the astonishing reply. “I bile uni right side an’ side wid de leetle wasp-wals* bottle, but dis big egg ain't able to run troo um de fust time yeti”—Youth’s Companion. -1 Irish Wake A wake Is a vigil with a corpse. The word Js derived from “waecan,” Anglo-Saxon for a watching. It is still customary in many countries for friends and neighbors of the deceased to sit up nights with the corpse until it is buried. The custom probably originated in the ancient superstition that unless carefully ‘guarded a corpse was in danger of being carried away by spirits from Hades. The | Irish wake is especially notorious. In : some parts of Ireland those remain- 1 Ing up nights with a corpse spend the time in drinking, dancing and telling jokes and stories. It is a highly festive occasion. Grace Greenwood in her “Stories of Travel” has this to say about the Irish wake: “A wake, sure It’s an entertainment a man gives after he is dead, when his disconsolate friends all assemble at his house, to discuss his virtues and drink his poteen.”—Pathfinder Magazine. Dignities in Store The dignities that confront the elder brother are usually appalling to the small sister, and there Is a little girl In Baltimore who lats been giving to the aubjart much careful attention. She electrified the family at breakfast on one occasion by announcing : “Next year SamnM will be a lawn mower. I wander why they call him that" “A lawn mower?" echoed ihe astonished mother. “What do you mean ?" “That Is what you told me,” replied the little maid, gravely. “This year he was a freshman. Next year he’ll be a lawn mower, and then a janitor and then a senior. And then he'll graduate." First Wireless Messages A record has been discovered of alleged Wireless telegraphy as long ago as 1002. In that year a book by P. de I’Ancre was published, in which the author reported that a man had demonstrated to King Henry of Germany a means of communicating 'with absent persona The Inventor rubbed two needles against a magnet, and attached them to different clock* As an operator turned the needle on one dock dial the needle on the other made the same movement, regardless of the distances which separated the docks. King Henry. It is stated, forbade the publication of the invention I Time at the Poles The Naval observatory says the phrase “local mean time” has no meaning at the petes; but the common practice all over the earth is not to keep local mean time, but that of some meridian passing near the place. In the United States the time Is that of the seventy-fifth, ninetieth, one hun dred and, twentieth meridian. At the poles, as elsewhere, some meridian would have to be agreed upon. From a purely theoretical standpoint, one meridian would be as good as another. Proudly the efficiency expert gazed upon hia completed work. Over every desk In that great financial office hung the motto: “Do Him Now.” * o Record for Air Sendee. During the year Just passed not one fatal accident occurred in the air ■mH service of the Post Office depart ( fIMBL . I *

HIGH LIGHTS ON . “HOLDING COMPANIES” “While an organization like : the Middle West Utilities Company is referred to as a holding company, it really is nothing more than an investment company,” said Martin <J. Insull, president of the company, in speaking of the functions of such organizations. “These investment companies,” said he, “have, to a very targe extent, been the cause of the great development of the electrical industry in the United States during the past fourteen or fifteen years. W ithout them, • the developments that have I taken place would have been! impossible. Due to' their high standing in the financial world they have been enabled to secure money to finance projects which could not under, any possible condition have been I financed in a local way; and the financing of those projects has . brought to the small towns and! hamiets, and even to the rural districts now, a class of electric service only second to that of the larger cities, and in some eases not even second to them, which they could not possibly have secured had it not been fcr the massing of capital in these investment companies. “Investment companies are really financial institutions in which those who want to invest ■ their money have an opportun-| ity of investing it in an essential business with a diversified risk due to the fact that the investment company’s business is scattered all over the country, and where they are reasonably Fore of securing a return of their principal when they require it. • “The primary function of these holding or investment companies is the financing of their operating utilities. , “There is no doubt in my mind that during the war period if it had not been for the holding and investment companies in the utility business there would have been many operating companies that would have gone into the hands of the receivers. I believe the fine record the electric light add power business made during those hard times, particularly 1917 and 1918, was largely due to the ability of the holding companies to use their own credit to support their operating companies. “The advantage to the customer owners of the operating companies whose preferred stock they buy of those companies being controlled and dominated by a strong holding or mj vestment company, is that the investment company has its money invested in a stock that is junior to the stock sold to the customer owner, and, therefore, the investment company Must make the stock held by the customer ownejr good both as to return and principle before it can make the stock it owns itself good.” > ; One of the greatest advantages to the public of a holding or investment company which is made up of a group of utility companies is that it can furnish a type of management which can make possible « service to customers by local companies, which it would be impossible for isolated local plants to render. —o NOTICE TO HEIRS, CREDITORS, FIX . In the matter of the estate of Lydia Wolf, Decased. In the Kosciusko Circuit Court. February Term. 1925. Notice is hereby given. That Daniel R. Wolf as administrator of the estate of Lydia Wolf deceased, has presented and filed his accounts and vouchers in final settlement of said up for examination and action of said Circuit Court on the 30th day of March, 1925, at whidb time all heirs, creditors, or legatees of said estate are reouired to appear in said court and show cause, if any there be, why said account and vouchers should not be approved. Dated at Warsaw, Indiana, this 11th dav of February. RUSSELL H. BUTLER, Clerk Kosciusko Circuit Court. 463 t —, O NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION Notice is hereby given that the undersigned 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 Kosciusko County, deceased. Said estate is supposed to be solvent. HARRY M. HIRE. Administrator. March 2, 1925. WARREN T. COLWELL Attorney- - Not by a Jug Full. People with beautiful disposition* can’t always be depended on to get things done.

Tree-Clfybing Fish In India there S a flat known az the tree-climbing perch. Technically the scientists call It “anabas testudlneus I scandens.” By means at its fins and | gills this fish can travel overland from ; one body of water to another. Its breathing apparatus is adapted for life out ot the water. Stories about this fish's ability to climb trees should be taken with' liberal portions of salt. The i United States bureau of fisheries In- | forms us that these tales of Its tree- I climbing propensity “are heritages I from early travelers and are largely I mythical.” However, the climbing perch has been known to work Its way upon stones and. inclined tree trunks. This is as dose as it ever comes to dtmbing trees.—Exchange. She Wanted a Change Betty had only lately been-instructed In the matter of evening prayers, and her performance was exemplary until the occasion when she startled het mother with the petition 5 “Bless Thy little pig tonight." She was reminded that the correct word whs “lamb.” but refused to return to orthodoxy. At last, when pressed for the cause of this stubborn naughtiness, she replied that she was tired of being a iamb. “Every night.” she protested, “it has been lamb. lamb, lamb! So tonight I’m going to he a pig. and tomorrow night I am going to be an elephant." Gelatin as Food The potenfiHl energy «f ’elatln is calculated to be even more lhan that of some fats and albuminate, and yet in the body it is very inferior in the production of energy, it cannot, therefore, take the place of proteins for growth and repair and must lie regarded solely as an albumin sparer. Neither can It replace albumin, the l<nss of whidi still goes on to some extent even when gelatin is eaten in large quantities. It is used in the body very thwh like the carbohydrates and fats. 1. e.. not'as a tissue bulkier, but as a fuel food o The Journal 52 times a year for $2. * B. & 0. TIME TABLE EAST-BOUND No. 10—Daily.... 12:51 p. m. No. 32 —Daily .6:25 p. m. NO. "8 —Daily ....9:19 p. m. WEST-BOUND No. 45—Daily 5:28 a. m. No. 31—Dai1y..... 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.

Willys-Overland . Fine . Motor. Cars '--JJU L--■JJ.J.JL'U'I 1 LU.J.JIL-JLI. L-JH'l S.!.R !_■■■■!-■'■ 1 ninuuuiuunuuutuiunmmtmniKttiiuumxtnusunmttttnmmnuuinuuuumn £' *■ ■ Ri ' -I i I I I : ! I Wedding Invitations | I and Announcements Visiting Cards Society Stationery 'l A fine line to select from Syracuse Journal • : ■ ' • * ■ 1

IUSINESS DIRECTORY * The ST ANWAR automatic w>ter pump requires mo tank. The pnmp is a pressure tank and pnmp eombined. On display at your local plumbers The Lincoln Electric . * ’Co. * Goshen Indiana F. N. Hascall Company INTERIOR DECORATING ’ WALL PAPER 1 PAINTS WINDOW SHADES < PICTURE FRAMES GOSHEN - INDIANA Minnie L. Priepke 5 DRUGLESS PHYSICIAN i SPECIALIST in Tuberculosis, kidney, bladder and liver trouble. Prolapsed stomach and bowels restored. The only treatment known that will actually brin" them back to jz normal. 36 Hawks-Gortner Bldff. Phone 168. Goshen, Indiana Your Child’s Photographs Not the immediate joy, but 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 PENNY PADS—Merchants and mechanics use them for notjeg and figuring. Size 3x6 inches. Journal office. \