The Syracuse Journal, Volume 17, Number 51, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 16 April 1925 — Page 8

■ ■ Classified Ads ■> 1 > —-—— J’.. Classified advertising is ac- J’ < ► cept ed at the rate of 5 cents < , ' ' a line for each insertion. A * » ] I booking and collection fee of J * 1 ► 10 cents will be added for a o ' * charged account: no account ’ ► o will be charged for less than J, < > 25 cents for a single item. < ► RUGS—Cbngoleum Rugs in all sizes at Beckmann’s Store. FOR RENT —Garage, centrally located. Sam Sorter. 51-Ip FOR RENT-—A good garden lot. Inquire A. L Miller. 50-ts FOR RENT—Two houses. Hallie Holloway. 50-21 ~WANTED TO BUY—-An outside toilet. See L. E. Schlottcrback. FOR SALE —Jersey heifer calf; full blood; 10 weeks old. Stephen Freeman. 51-11 PIANO TunTn~G Pianos tuned and repaired. Call Beckmann’s. 43-ts FOR SALE—Baby carriage, for sls. Mrs. Lawrence Deardorff. 50-2tpd FOR SALE—My home on the race Bank. All moderm James Rothenberger. 50-ts FURNITURE—Watch the new furniture coming in at Beckmann’s t Store. ~WELLS A "PUMPS-- Ed. H. Cripe does all kinds of well and pump work. 215 Denver Street. Goshen; phone 1086-J. 50-2tp FOR SALE—Dining room suite at a reasonable price. Make inquiry of Lawrence Stiffller. Route 3. 50-2tp TABLES—The latest in Davenport Tables arrived today at Beckmann’s Store. WANTED —Man • -wanted rs agent to handle farm buying in this section. Write Smith Farm Agency, 1407 W. York Street, Philadelphia, Fa. 50-41 ~ FOR SALE-The late Betty Younce residence property on south Main street. Priced reasonable to settle the estate. Inquire of S. F. Fryer, Ligonier. Indiana. 51-ts ~WONDER POLISH—Try a bottle of Wonder' Polish and make your furniture look like new’. On sale at Beckmann’s Store. SAND AND GRAVEL—We can furnish washed gravel and sand for foundations, walla and building purposes. Phone Milford 106. the StUrm & Dillard Co. 50-3 t FARMS WANTED—Farms and property wanted everywhere; 3Sc commission. Write for blank. Smith Farm Agency, 1407 West York Street, Philadelphia, Pa. 50-52 t DRESSES-Every woman appreciates that personal touch to her garments either in kitchen or bungalow aprons, porch frocks, house or street dresses. My samples are ready for your inspection. Alterations and special fittings by appointment. Call and see them, Mrs. L. E. Schlotterback. 51-2 t —‘ ■ - "" —>■ •— — ; ' LOST—Last Sunday afternoon, between Syracuse and B. & 0. water station, black tin seal leather bag, containing $32. bank book, gas bill, compact and other papers. Address Mrs. Jonas A. Swanson. 1322 Edwardsburg Ave., Elkhart. Ind. 50-2 t I sell protection in Bankers Mutual Lift* Insurance Co., of Freeport, HI. Auto and Fire Insurance 8. €X LEPPER Syracuse Indiana Get your FREIGHT via the SYRACUSE-FORT WAYNE TRICK LINE J. E. Rippey Phone 101 Syracuse, Ind. “If I don’t haul your freight, we both lose.” ■■ J GEO. L. XANDERS 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 T7IXIAM GRAY LOEHR Attorney-a t-Law since 1916 Admitted to Practice in All Court. OltectfoiM, Xetary Public S. Buffalo St, Warsaw, Ind.

GASOLINE INCREASE 56% The Massachusetts Commission which has been investigating the causes for increasing prices of, gasoline, has filed its report. The Commission finds that the average increase throughout the country is 56%. and the distributor’s margin is about 9 cento per gallon. Last December the president appointed, a federal conservation board to investigate all phases of the oil industry for the purpose f fcrmuHting a national policy to prevent waste and combinations* on prices, and also to study the question of governmental regulation of production and of prices. As a result, the attorney general of the United States ha« brought suit against a number of dominant oil concerns, allegin'! *’hat agreements exist which constitute a combination and conspiracy to restrict the production and distribution of gasoline and control prices. The government plans to break up the pooling of patents and permits granted small refineries nn high royalties under restrict ed production. To do this it may become necessary for the government to institute a control similar to that exercised by the Interstate Commerce Commission over the railroads. Bathing His Opt'cs ‘’Presently he spoke of love and Its beauty, and as he dhl so he plunged his strange eyes straight into Betty’s." —From a Story. I ! TO BRETZ FOR GLASSES I ur • Charmingly KW/ Becoming JbF l !* Don’t alarm yourself by thinking that the wearing of glasses will age your appearance. Oitr superior optical sendee aa<tires your being fitted with glasses that are perfectly adapted to your features, as well as helpful to your vision. Let Us Demonstrate This to Your Satisfaction. Nevin E. Bretz Optometrist & Optician 130 S. Main St., Goshen SMILES BY MILES ' THE BOYS WOULD AMMO GQaCE ANO MAYME *" — 1 “ '*4 WEAK NERVES ANO THE BUIES WERE TO BLAME —: I < — TILL THEY TOOK MILES* NERVINE I pO NOW WHENEVER TMEYRfc SEEK I — ■ -- < MEH FLOCK ROUND THEM LIKE MOTHS ROUND A FLAM* You can’t be healthy, happy or attractive if your nerves are out of order Ik 1 IMLMXES z P Nervine

• 1 - Notice Baby Chicks Per 100 S. C. White Leghorns. .812.00 i Barred Plvmo'ath. Rocks i 15.00 ! White Plymouth Rocks 15.00 White Wyandottes .... 15.00 S. C. Rhode Island Reds 15.00 S. C. Buff Orpingtons 15.00 Hatch Every Monday We aJso do Custom Hatching J. P. Hughes Phone 62. Syracuse, Indiana BELATED CREDIT GIVEN TO MR. HENRY FORD As the result of a comprehensive inspection made by members >f the staff of the Railway Age. that publication now admits that manj’ of the policies adopted by Mi*. Ford in the management of the Detroit, Toledo- & Ironton Railroad might well be emulated, with a view to attaining similar success, by other railroad managers. These investigators state that Sunday -work has bedn eliminated and that a strict eight-hour day, sik days a week, is enforced; all “red tape” has been abolished, employees are used for any type of work requiring attention; requirement of cleanliness in person, tools and equipment; and the compajny does not deal with the unions but eliminates-all such necessity. The Railway Age states that j expensive officials are eliminated with wages averaging S3OO to $375 a month for engineers and conductors; S2OO to $275 a month for firemen; $250 for flagmen; $6 te. $8 a day for machinists. No employees are on piece work. In their idle time they are assigned to entirely different -work. Employees are encouraged to be thrifty, and the road sells them certificates similar to stock in the company, which paid 14 per cent in 1924. The outstanding feature is the fact that labor is supporting Mr. Ford, and the employees prefer his methods to t'ho.i? which their upions have imposed upon other carriers, and ideas that were ridiculed and denounced as Revolutionary" are now admitted to be highly practical and helpful to all concerned. o WINDMILLS PASSING As the of Holland are fast passing away, no new ones are being built. Thev were intricate machines and the art of making them is being lost. A windmill costing SIO,OOO develops eleven horsepower, and the •wind - blows with, sufficient strength only 1440 hourti a year. Electric motors are supplanting windmills. o The chairman of the New York State Commission on housing reports tfhat no provisions are made for the great mass of renters whose incomes are $2,500 or less per year. He points out that the lowest rental scale, $lO per room, is beyond the reach of a man whose wages are S4O per week — unless he can live in four rooms, and that is -w‘hat is happening. DON’T MISTAKE THE CAUSE Many Syracuse People Have Kidney Trouble and Do Not Know It Do you have backache ? Are you worn out 1 Feel dizzy, nervous and depressed ? Are the kidney secretions irregular ? Highly colored; contain sediment ? Likely your kidneys are at fault. Weak kidneys give warning of distress. Heed the warning; don’t delay. Use a tested kidney remedy. Read this Syracuse testimony. Wm. F. Wogaman, farmer, Box 187, says: “I suffered with lumbago and when I got in a cramped position, my back felt as though it were going to fall apart when I tried to straighten. When I tried to lift the strength fled from my back. My kidneys became weak and sometimes it was necessary to get up at night. I got Doan's Pills at Hoch’s Drug Store, and they cured me.” 60c, at all dealers. FosterMilburn Co., Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y.—Advertisement.

V ■ W'sSV' 4. C ■ ITIE SYRACUSE JOUBKAJC

FIRE LOSS IS REDUCED * . — Indiana’s loss from fires during 1924 was $7,449,561, a reduction of about 7 percent under 1923. according to the annual report , of Newman T. Miller, state fire? marshal. Twenty-six of the 4,995 fires reported to the fire marshal were! caused by incendiarists. Faulty! fluesi were responsible for 215 j alarms, with a total loss of $502.000. Lightning started 113 fires jp and caused a property wastage, of more than $250,000. 'More than fifty conflagrations startedwith gasoline or kerosene explosions. Flying sparks ignited the I shinvle roofs in many cases, adeb: ing $231,000 to the fire bill. Village and rural property for I the most part, unprotected by! fire fighting apparatus, continued ! to pay a heavy tribute in total losses, the marshal’s report said. Os the 1.172 fires, reported from villages and rural communities. unprotected or inadequately protected, in 1687 cases the property was a total loss. This was 65 percent of the cases reported. The total loss for village and country property in 1924 was $2.890,985, a reduction -of about $750,000 from the 1923 kss, Mr. Miller’k report continued. During the past 12 years, or since the organization of the fire marshal’s office, the average number of fires in a year has been 5,959, Miller said. The 1924 total of 4.995 is well under this average, he points out. “Notwithstanding the fact that the number and tbe value of the buildings subject to fire constantly are growing, the campaign of fire prevention has been able, not only to hold the fire loas in check and prevent increases, but is on the whole making gains by cutting down the number of fires from year to year," Miller con-eluded. o_ THAT TIRED FEELING The use of sulphur and molasses? to relieve that tired feeling in the springtime, while effective, never proved a pleasant dose, and those accustomed to the use cf such a remedy will no doubt read carefully what Mias Aneta Beadle, of the Purdue university home economics extension department, says cf the use of fresh vegetables and fruits as substitutes Raw vegetables and fruits should be eaten whenever possible. according to the Purdue specialist, who also states that while they prove most effective at this time of year, that beneficial results can be expected by making a habit of eating them the year around. Here are a few on the list that Miss Beadle characterizes as “nature’s own tonic”—and which She advises all to eat liberally—spinach and other greens; string beans, peas, cabbage, asparagus, lettuce, carrots, squash, beets, radishes, celery, turnips, tomatoes, onions, potatoes with the skins oji; dates, raisins, prunes, figs, apples, oranges, rhubarb, oineapple and lemon. Then for good measure is thrown in milk, oatmeal, whole wheat, lentils and chicken. If your daily menu does not include one or more of the above, see that it is changed and note the good results. HOLD TITANIC SERVICES Washington, April 14.— K memorial service on the spot where the Titanic was sunk by an iceberg was observed April 14, Yhe date of the disaster, by the coast guard service. The ceremony, which has become a tradition in the coast Tuard, was held as near as posable at the exact location and the exact hour that the Titanic went down, north latitude 41.46 and west longitude 50.14 west, in the early hours of April 14, 1912. Full military honors were paid to those who lost their lives. There was a muster of the crew in full dress, prayers by the commanding officer, the sounding of taps, and the firing of three volleys. o '■ ‘ Subscribe for the Journal.

Attention Pickle Growers; The D. M. Sears Co. j Fort Wayne, Ind. I * ' 4 is ready to contract for pickle acreage | for this season. Information can be 1 obtained at the State, Bank of Syra- j cuse. Journal office or Lawrence Ju day. |

AUTO SENSE * — (By Erwin Greer. President Greer Colleg of Automotive Engineering.) w Out of the bitterness of my own experiences I am prompted to offer the following advice to those of my readers who want maximum efficiency from their automobiles. Naturally an automobile operates at least expense per mile when it is running in high gear with the spark advanced. Sometimes, however, this is not the case. When it is running slowly this condition is a costly one. ■ First: because spark is then too [early, which produces a spark (knock. Second: because the im- } pulses of power are further apart ' and the action is tJhereefore less [even, power being consumed in overcoming the inertia of the flywheel, which is very great at an uneven torque. z Many drivers try to stay in high gear and keep the spark lever advanced all Afoe way un the tangent as long as possible in climbing a hill. Under these conditions, when a change has to be made, it is necessary to drop into low gear, whereas second gear would have sufficed with a little more momentum. With the engine laboring there is a great strain on all the parts and, of course, too much gasoline is being wasted in this destructive effort. Most drivers who do this, think they are economizing on fuel because they figure their engines are turning over fewer times in a given distance, and hence, less gasoline is being passed into the engine and burned. That is net go. many of them will be surprised to learn, for if a change were made into second gear, less gasoline would be consumed. Have you ever watched the expert driver when his car starts to skid? He does not jam down his feet on the brake and accel erator. He simply throttles the engine down quickly and turns his front wheels in the direction the car is skidding. The rear wheels, turning so slowly, in nine cases out of ten pull his car out of the skid. Then he pick§ up again and is gone before you realize he even started to skid. It is a mighty hard thing to d>, that of keeping your foot away from the brake jvhen a car starts sliding, but it must be done or you will end up in a bad smash. The car starts swaying; the occupants scream; you lose your head and down goes your foot to lock the brakes, then —crash! You are afraid of skidding and so am I. The way I overcame it on my car was to go out on a rainy night on a wide, quiet street and slide around until I mastered the art. Such an experience was hard on the tires but was well worth while, because when tfye unexpected came I was prepared. o TIGHT CORSET BANISHED London. —The ti cht corset has disappeared and wall never come back because science has decreed against it. Prof. W. W. Dixon, of Cambridge university, asserted recently in a lecture under the auspices of the People’s League of Health. Twenty years ago the London hospitals were visited regularly by great numbers of girls and women suffering from anaemia most of them workers in factories and offices. “The kind of anaemia which the doctors of those days had to contend with has entirely disappeared.” averred the lecturer “and the reason is that the tightlaced corsets are no longer worn by the young women of today •who are interested in keeping their health.” .: * O For best results, advertise in the Journal. ROBERT E. PLETCHER Fn neral Director Ambulance Service . Syracuse, Indiana. Telephone 75

Do Not Force Flants If a plant has been growing thriftily for some time and then begins to go back It probably heeds a rest, and no amount of forcing will do any permanent good. During the resting period a plant is better if left entirely alone In a dry, cool cellar. It will of its own accord and without any attention of any kind begin to put out new green s shoots. When these new shoots show I themselves the plant should be given a , thorough watering, a repotting if nec-1 essary, and brought up into Us place i In the sun. After it Is growing well it j may be given fertilizer. * “The Mills of the Gods This Is an old Greek aphorism taken from the “Dracula Slbylllna.” The original, literally translated, reads aa follows: “The mills of the gods grind slowly, but they grind small.*’ Longfellow, In translating It, Inserted the word "exceeding” and made it read: “The mjlls of the gods grind slowly, but they grind exceeding small.” The same thought is found In Plutarch and other ancient writers. —Exchange. o , WOMAN 114 YEARS OLD DE4D Worthington, Ind.—Mrs. Sarah K. Hayden, believed to be the oldest person in Indiana, was buried Friday. Her relatives gave her asi 114 years, saying they verified that she was born July 17, 1810, ; n Smith county, Virginia. She had lived vicinity for 93 ye®rs. She was the mother cf eight children, four of whom survive. She is also survived by sixteen grandchildren, thirty-two and eight great-great-grandchildren. . Q. , , HOW’S THIS? HALL’S CATARRH MEDICINE will do what we claim for it—rH your system of Catarrh or Deafness caused by Catarrh. HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE consists of an Ointment which Quickly Relieve* the catarrhal inflammation, and the Internal Medicine, a Tonic, which acts through the Blood on the Mucous Surfaces, thus assisting to restore normal conditions. Sold by druggists f6r over 40 Years. F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O. B. & 0. TIME TABLE EAST-BOUND No. 10—Daily12:51 p. m. No. 32—Daily6:25 p. in. No. B—Daily9:l»B—Daily9:l» p m. WEST-BOUND No. 45—Dai1y..5:28 a. m. No. 31—Dai1y,.......7:45 a. m. No. 7—Dailyll: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 The Journal 52 times a year for $2.

Willys-Overland . Fine . Motor. Cars

FRESH. 6LE.AN M&flT I ■ ~ * j Await you at our market at all times. Yon will find the jnieiest euts and the tenderest pieces here. We also handle smoked and dried meats and a genera] line of canned meats. KLINK BROS. MEAT MARKET 1 I -

Putting the Hog on a Normal Basis "r-m'-l ■ Hw CofrirtgL. tWownf 9 Unitnmd. N. Y.

« a ♦ Many years of study and experiment have ended uncertainty as to what is best for the hog, says a recent report In pork raising, as In building up any other source of profit on the farm, much can be learned through the experience of others. The XL 8. Government and Agricultural Colleges spend big sums each year at their experimental stations. Both the Government and the Agricultural Colleges issue literature whlib tells about these experiments detail. Anyone interested can secure the literature without cost by writing the U. S. Department of Agriculture or such Agricultural Experimental Stations. The great value in Government bulletins lies In the fact that they are based on the results of observation and study by trained, experienced men and at an expense which makes it prohibitive for the farmer to make these experiments himself. Generally speaking, hogs have a normal period of growth and development. Many raisers ship before the hogs are finished—others hold their hogs and feed them beyond the period that the herd would be most profitable for them. It Is natural, with high feed prices, that the raiser is reluctant to hold

BUSIHESS MCTOIff The ST ANWAR automatic water pump requires no tank. The pump is a pressure tank and pump combined. ' On display at your local plumbers The Lincoln Electric Co. Goshen Intliana F. N. Hascall Company INTERIOR DECORATING WALL PAPER PAINTS WINDOW SHADES PICTURE FRAMES GOSHEN • INDIANA Minnie L, Priepke DRUGLESS PHYSICIAN SPECIALIST • in Tuberculosis, kidney, bladder and liver trouble. Prolapsed stomach and bowels restored. The only treatment known that will* actually bring them back to normal. 36 Hawks-Gortner Bldg. Phone 168. Goshen, Indiana Permanent Waving Mr. Wayd of Chicago will be at the Marinello Shop in the Spohn Bldg.. Goshen, during the permanent waving season. He has had 14 years experience in the beauty s business. Come in and see him, or call 933. MISS ALLIEOE LIDDELL Goshen, Indiana PENNY PADS—Merchants and mechanics use them for notes and figuring. Size 3x6 inches. Journal office. OFFICE SUPPLlES—Typewxiter ribbon, carbon paper, typewriter paper, cardboard, blotting, etc., for sale at the Journal office.

market is good; but it is a mistake to start raising a market herd and quit before the job is really finished. i Judging from prices of the past few months, a fat hog is the one that is commanding a premium and. experts say. will continue to do so for some time. That is because of the large numbers of unfinished hogs that have been and are still being sent to. market. Using the. Chicago hog market for a day fn mld-Deeember, 1924, a 170 lb. hog brought 114.10, while a 265 lb. hog brought 126.55, or a difference of $12.45. The average bog raiser knows that it takes about 400 lbs. of com and 40 lbs. of tankage to bring in that last 100 lbs. ot weight, or in. dollars and cents, approximately 110.00 for the last 100 lbs. in feed expense, leaving more than $2.25 per pig for the additional trouble. Shipping weights ot hogs are reflected in the feed crop. Last year the com crop in many sections was small and therefore most of the hogs sent to market ranged around the 175 lb. class. Unless relative market prices on either hogs or feed are extremely abnormal, it pays the raiser to go through with his feeding program up to that stage where he can secure the greatest- benefit from his efforts best market price for hl* — . . . — ».• s