The Syracuse Journal, Volume 17, Number 49, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 2 April 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 ~ t < ► 10 cents will be added for a o • ' ► charged account; no account J * •; * will be charged for less than ( , ■ i 25 cents for a single item. < * FOR SALE—Range Eternal, like new. Telephone 75. 48-2tpd PEDESTALS—See tthe new pedestsfe in Beckmann’s show ™ dow '.- FOR SALE —Have tw> gocd homes for sale on monthly payments. Ellwood George 48-4 t LOST —Elk’s watch fob in Syracuse Tuesday. Finder please ' rettirn to D. H. Brunjes. 49-11 WONDER POLISH—Try abottle of Wonder Polish on your furniture and piano. For sale at Beckmann’s store. PIANO TUNING — 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. FOR SALE—Brick warehouse. 60x120, now occupied by-McClin-tic, Colwell & Gordy* Price $2,100, if sold within a month. Meyers & Fisher. New Paris, or call New Paris Bank. 48-3 t-pd FOR SALE—Certified Manchu Soy beans, germination 97 per cent, inoculating soil and bags free. $3.00 per bushel f. o. b. Syracuse. Ezra E. Shock 47-4 pd RUGS—Housecleaning time is at hand. which calls for new rugs. You wiR find them at Beckmann’s store. WANTED —Women who are now earning less than S2O a week, mail us your name and address and we will call at your home with full details. Demonstrating and taking orders silk hosiery and silk lingerie. NoeEqul Textile Mills. 803 Sherland Building. South Bend, Ind. 49-1 PENNY PADS—Merchants and mechanics use them for notes and figuring. Size 3x6 inches. Journal office. ♦ - FOR SAI^E —187 acre farm, with 7-room house, large bank barn, silo. Will take town property or small farm for part payment. Time on balance. J. E. Grieger, Syracuse, Ind. 37-ts ""BEDROOM’ S U I w Bedroom Suites in French Walnut, the latest on the market, at Beckmann's Store. OFFICE SUPPLIES—-Typewii-ter ribbon, carbon paper, typewriter paper, cardboard, blotting, , etc., for sale at the Journal office. CARDBOARD—AII kinds of cardboard, suitable for drawing and maps, for sale at the Journal office. Journal want-ad? are invest ments that pay dividends. ROBERT E. PLETCHER Funeral Director Ambulance Service Syraeuse ) Indiana. Telephone 75 I sell protection in Bankers Mutual Life Insurance Co., of Freeport, 111. Auto and Fire Insurance S. C. LEPPER Syracuse Indiana GeV your FREIGHT via the SYRACUSE-FORT WAYNE TRUCK LINE J. E. Rippey Phone 101 Syracuse. Ind. "If I don’t haul your freight, we both lose.” GEO. L XANDERS Attorney-at-Law Settlement of Estates. Opinions cm Titles Fire and Other Insurance Phone 7 Syracuse, lad. SPECIAL ATTENTION GIVEN TO ESTATES. DEEDS, MORTGAGES TITLES AND WILLS niLIAM GRAY LOEHR Attorney-at-Law since 191$ Admitted to Practice in All Courts I 11S| S. Buffalo St, Warsaw, Ind. l

TO BRETZ FOR GUSSES ♦ Ase Our Glasses AkvjSh Are jhfWl Charmingly J Becoming Don't alarm yourself by thinking that the wearing of glasses will age your appearance. Our superior optical service an* cures your being fitted with glasses that are perfectly adapted to your features, as well as helpful to your vision. Let Us Dssswstrsto This to Yow Nevin E. Bretz i Optometrist & Optician 130 S. Main St., Goshen SMILES BY MILES ✓ — SAID LITTLB TAH£ GRADY *OH > -T -I VC A TERRI But TAIM IN NV L __ ’tho‘ it hurt fit to KILL HALF AN ANTI--RAIN *PiLL — > HADE HER SUFFERING and disappear A DR. MILES' Anti*PUm Pills One or two and the pain is gone HOW’S THIS? HALL‘S CATARRH MEDICINE will do what we claim for It—rid your system of Catarrh or Deataesa caused by Catarrh. HALL’S CATARRH MEDICINE coasists of aa Ointment which Quickly Relieves the catarrhal inflammation, and the Internal Medicine, a Tonic, which acts through the Blood on the Mucous Surface#, thus aaetstin< to restore normal eonJltlonß. Bold by druggists for over « Tears. F. J. Cheney A Co., TMedo, a

| JUNK, ETC. We pay the highest market price for all kinds of junk, hides, rags and paper. Will make calls within IS miles of Syracuse. Syracuse Iron & Metal Shop Aron & Bankoff, Proprietors. Phone 137. Syracuse, Ind U FRESH. GLEAN MEftt Await yon at ear market at all times. You will find the juieiest eats and the tendered pieces here. We also handle smoked and dried meats and a general line of canned meats. KLINK BROS. MEAT MARKET

Attention | Pickle Growers j The D. M. Sears Co. I Fort Wayne, Ind. I is ready to contract for pickle acreage | for this season. Information can be ? obtained at the State Bank of Syra- I case. Journal office or Lawrence Juday. |

HORSES IN INDIANA The old horse apparently is bowing to the inevitable Latest statisti'i.* drw there are twenty-: seven thousand fewer horses in Indiana at this time than a year ago. H Is estimated vi’lue is $43,885,000 or $1,127,000 less than last year. According to ftgurcH announced by Miner ML Justin, director of the state cooperative crop reporting service, on January 1. there were 655,000 horses in Indiana- On the same draw a year ag> there were 682,000. , Allen county boasts the most horses, an honor it Ihte held for several years. In that county there are 14,400 horses. Boone and Randolph counties are tied for second piece, each having approximately 11,000. Ohio county, the sm all es t county in the state, has the fewest horses—l,3oo. The hardy mute held his own against the tide of progress, the enumeration at this time being the same as of a year ago—lol.000. There likewise was no Change in estimated value. Knox county, •with 4,400 has the most mutes in the state. Adams, Dekalb, Porter, Starke and Steuben counties with about 200 eadht, had .the least number of mutesHorses under one year old at present are worth an estimated value of $32 er| <h—s2 more than a year tago in Indiana. Animals between one and two years oM are worth an average of SSO and those two years old and over, $72. All classes also are worth slihgtly more than they were twelve montfte ago. Mules, too, showed a smaF fitsm in average value in two of the three classes. The older animrfe, (however, were valued the sTme. Mules, under one year old have a price of $35, -those be tween one and two, $52, and over two years old, SBO. o - STATE ROAD MAP The 1925 map of the state F-fghway system is ready for distribution to the general public. It has been supplemented with a log of all .towns of more than 250 population and all state highways. printed on the birders and back of the map. By referring to the log it is possible to find tIHe numbers of the state roads that pass through every town and the distance from it to any other point in the state by highway route. The routes of 55 highway i are printed in tlhe log, giving the towns each parses through and the miles separating each town. The new map shows that 671 towns and cities are served by the system. Os these 134 are of population mere than 2,500. The system now includes 4,200 milesi vrf road. 900 of winch are paved- It hrs been estimated that th|e system serves two-thirds of the population of the state.

TUB SYRACUSE JOURNAE

Gall Stones Before risking operations send for my free booklet, explaining simple home treatment for Irritations of Liver, Gall Bladder and Gall Ducts as associated with Gall Stones. Dr. E. E. Paddock, Desk AP, Kansas City, Mo. CHANGES IN TRAFFIC LAWS The most important changes in tbte new traffic laws, which went into effect on March 14, are as foHews: Motor vehicles can be operated at a speed not to exceed 15 miles per hour in the business district, 20 miles in the residence district and 35 miles along the public highways and outside of any corporation limit. The speed limit of any motor bus carrying passengers dhall not exceed 30 miles per hour. No cities or towns lhave the right to make any change in this law. Abandoned autos -will be turned over to the sheriff who will notify the secretary of state in case the auto is not claimed in thirty days, it* will be sold and the money turned over to the state. Any person operating any car or truck in the interests of their employer for commercial purposes, must have a chauffeur’s licenseAll machines! must be equipped witSi good brakes. No person under the age of 17 shall be permitted to operate my motor vehicle with the exception of those over 16 years vho have a permit from the g?vTnor. SpotligF Its shall be elevated so is not to. strike the road more han 200 feet ahead of the car tnd the spot must be thrown to the right of .the center of ti'ie read. o THE GASOLINE COMBINE But few men in the nation have a better first-hand knowladge of the inside workings of the gasoline industry than Sen-ator-elect W. H. McMasters (R), and former governor of South Dakota. Mr. McMasters flatly contradicts Mr. Bedford, chairman of the board of directors, of the Standard Oil Company of New Jersey in his explanation of the cause of the increased prices. He declares that the price has been increased, not as a result of the law of supply and demand, but as the “result of the law of successful ability to rob the public.” In support of his argument, Mr. McMasters asserts that according to the Interior Department, 1,200,000,000 gallons of gasoline were produced in 1924 in excess of consumption. With this big surplus, and more added to it during the winter months there is no justification for an increase in price at refineries of approximately 80 per cent in three weeks. Mr. McMasters asserts that because of this increase the stock value of the Standard Oil Company of New Jersey has increased approximately one billion of dollars, and according to the New York Times, that company is expected to show a net dividend of SIOO,000.000 for 1924, and at the increased price double this figure for 1925. During his term as governor filling stations were established throughout the state and the Prices largely controlled. When these stations were established. ; Mr. McMasters states, the oil companies were making a profit of nearly 12 cents per gallon. The Standard seems to have two methods of Obtaining profits—one by jumping the price of the product, the other by the stock route. The question will come before the new Congress, and from present indications Mr. McMasters will take the place of LaFoltette as a watchoog on whs subject. Aofftoaefioe Retnn I Alhmrt Nodon Paris lias ex 1 Aioen Notion, ram. nas maoe ex- i perioaeats which lodicate that all living | thing* are radioactive. j

DANGER IN DELAY Kidney Dtsea.*es Are Too Dangerous For Syracuse People To Neglect. ' The great danger of kidney troules is that they so often get a firm hold before the sufferer ©cognizes them. Health will be gradually undermined. Backache, leadache, nervousness, lameness,] soreness lumbago, urinary troub-* les, dropsy, gravel and Bright’s iisease may follow as the kidley’s get worse. Don’t neglect zour kidneys. Help the kidneys with Doan’s Pills, which are so strongly recommended right here n Syracuse. Adam Darr, city marshal, S. Main St., says: “My back < was 'ame and when I bent over, a darting pain went across my kidneys. My kidneys didn’t a€t right at all. Doan’s Pills, from Hoch’s Drug Store made my kidneys act right and the pains left my back.” Price 60c, at all dealers. Don’t simply ask for kidney remedy—get Doan’s Pills—the same that Mr. Darr had. Foster-Milburn Co., Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y. —(Advertisement.) o Soak Silver in Buttermilk Have you ever soaked silverware or tarnished copper and brass articles over night In buttermilk to make them ■lean snd bright?

| Also Five Big Vaudeville Acts LOOK Zane Grey’s “Thundering Herd” Greater than “North of 36” or “Covered Wagon’” \ 4 Days Beginning Sun., Apr. 5 ORPHEUM - - Elkhart BLACKSTONE - South Bend

HUDSON’S HUDSON’S ‘ HUDSON’S Easter Wearing Apparel FOR Ladies, Misses and Girls Coats, Dresses, Suits and Millinery Ladies’ and Misses’ Coats, $lO to $59.50 Stout size Coats, sls to $39.50. Girls’ Coats, sizes 7 to 14, $5.95 to sls. Coats for Tiny Tots, $5.95 to $lO. Dresses, $lO, $16.50, up to $25. Millinery for Ladies and Misses, $2.95, $3.95, $5.95. Girls’ Jlats at $1 up to $2.95. I ■ r- " - Qthe

I REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS j Milo Maloy to TTie Sturm & Dillard Co., 80 a, sec. 11, vanBuren tp., $6,000. M’T’i D- Snyder, to Simon & Hattie Ackerman, pt. lots 29 & 30. Natti Crew Beach. SBOO. Catherine to Clara E. Stookey. lot 68, Syracuse. $2,800. Orvie Dewis to Andersen K. (Strieby, lota 63, 67 & 68 D & M Ad.., Syracuse, $2,800. Andersen K. Strieby to Orvie Davis, 60 a sec 30, Turkey Creek tp- $3,800. Epworth League Institute to J. Ira Jones, lot 51. blk. a, Epworth Forest, SI,OOO. Leonidas B. Boyd to Chas. W. Foutks, lot 54, Maxwelton Manor. sl. Warren Dargt to John D. Baumgartner, tract sec- 9, VanBuren tp. $1,200. •Mary E. Gilbert to Lewis E SrhJotterback, S. pt. lot 10, Jones’ add. Syracuse S3O. Ida Gawthr ip to Wm- M. Dorsey, 46 a. sec. 22, Tippecanoe tp. SBOO. Emma Cummins to Freeman Kelly, 10.57 a. sea. 20, Turkey Creek tp. s!*• Eewortb; League Institute to H. E. Rood, lot 47, blk. a. Epworll'i Forest SI,OOO. Lester Webber to Henry C & Anna D. MeDivitt, 30 a. sec- 26, Tippecanoe tp. $1,770. o Why Some Men Fail Some men never accomplish anything because they permit the means ' t«> overshadow the end.—Birmingham

BUSMESS DIHECTORY ty The STANWAR automatic water require* uo tank. \ The pump is a pressure taak and pump eomWned. \ On display at your local X plumbers w The Lincoln Electric X Co.’ . Goahen Indiana F. N. Hascall Company T INTERIOR DECORATING WALL PAPER PAINTS WINDOW SHADES PICTURE FRAMES GOSHEN - INDIANA " '~ T " JJ Minnie L* Priepke ' DRUGLESS PHYSICIAN 4 SPECIALIST in Tuberculosis, kidney, bladder and liver trouble. Prolapsed stomach. ami bowels restored. The only treatment known that will actnaUy bring them back to normal. > 36 Hawks-Gortner Bldg. Plume 168. Goshen, Indiana ijgr-: Your Child’s Photographs Not the immediate joy, but the pleasure in the years ahead is the real reason for your child’s photograph taken often. The Schnabel Studio Over Baker’s Drug Store g GOSHEN, INDIANA Always a Remedy There is some help for all the defects of fortune, for If a man cannot attain to the length nf his wishes he may have his rem My by cutting them shorter. OFair Warning “Mummle. I may as well warn you , that I’m going to start prayin’ for a bicyrie. so you’d better begin savin’ up." —London Humorist.