The Syracuse Journal, Volume 18, Number 2, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 14 May 1925 — Page 2
Classified List of Goshen Firms Who Offer You Special A Inducements
■ AUTOMOBILES Goshen Auto Exchange Easy Terms on Used Cars. Tires and Accessories for Less. 217 W. LINCOLN AVENUE SEE JAKE ANp SAVE AUTO PAINTING QUALITY PAINTING is Our Motto AU Paints and Varnishes hand flowen. which assures you full measure fer your money. SMITH Blips. CO. GOSHEN 818 3. 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 >34 0-K Battery Service B. C. Dougherty, Prop. BATTERIES' OF ALL MAKES REPAIRED AND RECHARGED AU Work Guaranteed. 118 W. Lincoln BEAUTY PARLORS ALLIECE SHOPPE T * Phone 933 for Appointments Spohn Building Goshen Bicycles and Motorcycles WE WANT YOUR • PATRONAGE Our prices and the quality of our workmanship justify you , in coming to us for your Bi- , | cycles and Bicycle Repair work. Buy a Harley • Davidson Motorcycle. C. C. AMSLER 212 N. MAIN ST. GOSHEN 4 ' \ ■ I CLOTHING SHOUP & KOHLER The . * Qothiers and Tailors 108 N. MAIN ST. Drugless Physician Massage and Electrical Treatments. Electric Blanket Sweat Baths, Heavy Sweat—without heat—l hour complete bath. Minnie L. Priepke Suite SS Hawko-Gortner Bldg. PHONE 188 GOSHEN, IND. - (Elevator Service) DENTIST DR. H. B. BURR Dentist (rencrip Practice
Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat DRS. EBY & EBY H. W. Eby, M. D. Ida U Eby, M. D Surgery and diseases of Eye, Ear. Nose and Throat ' Glasses Fitted GOBHEN, INDIANA * I t * FURNITURE Williamson & Snook FURNITURE, RUGS and STOVES JFe Furnish the Home for Less Sloney. GOSHEN, IND. LEATHER GOODS THE LEATHER GOODS 'STORE HARNESS AND ROBEB Trunks. Traveling Bags, Ladies’ Hand Bags and Smail Leather Goods Phone 88 118 East Lincoln Avenue. Goshen, Ind. PHOTOGRAPHS Somebody, Somewhere Wants Your Photograph . The SCHNABEL Studio Over Baker's Drug Store Phone 318 Goshen,* Ind. --g - "~' --- — PIANOS *•- ROGERS & WILSON X’T&X Headquarters for Victrolas Victor Records, Pianos and Player Pianos. ESTABLISHED 1871 SHOES /«•*•* WNM CM* SM stool. t THE FOOT WtU’ NOBLE’S Good Shoes — Hosiery Too 131 8. MAIN ST. GOSHEN TYPEWRITERS z Adding Machines Office Supplies Check Writers HARRISON’S TYPEWRITER SHOP All Makes of Machines SOLD, REPAIRED OR EXCHANGED Room 38 Hawks-Gortner Bldg. Phone 188 Goshen. Indiana UNDERTAKERS E. CULP & SONS Funeral Directors Unexcelled Ambulance Service *«. Phone Office Phono 84 S 3 if. -i in WALL PAPER, PAINTS Paint Your House tTitfi Our Cxi taranteed, T T? tTS T> A TVU I | A' ' at ■ ~ - A.
The Laws and Processes of Nature in All Natural and Human Relations By DR. C. D. WALCOTT, Retiring President A. A. A. S. IS IT not practicable for the American Association for the Advance* ment of Science to organize a progressive, live committee of men and women to deal with the popularizing of scientific knowledge? It might arrange special sessions for the public to which the layman could go with the feeling that they were for his entertainment and his instruction and not solely to arouse the interest of specialists in their par ticular field of research. Os all human beings, the child is the greatest and most active investigator of all that pertains to his environment. Why not provide for a junior section of the American association, and last and in some respects the most important, a woman’s section and sessions, at which all the scientific problems of peculiar interest to woman could be considered? Then there is the mu eh-discussed business man. who has a more oi less hazy conception of science and scientific method, depending on whethei he considers it affects his interest for good or evil. He wduld be a bettei business man, a better citizen and more successful in all his relations in life if he had a working knowledge of scientific method and principles at his command. » ' Every member of our association should work individually and collectively according to his or her opportunity and ability in supporting the scientific method and in insisting that, in all education of every kind and degree and fur all classes, the purpose is to develop without prejudice or preconception of any kind a knowledge of the facts, the laws and the proc-' esses of nature in all natural and human relations. The natural weakness and incompleteness of all things of human origin will frequently baffle, mislead and confuse, and may even apparently bring temporary defeat, but in the long run there is no other way to eradicate scsoeophy, advance the physical, mental and moral welfare of the race and justify our existence and opportunities for service as sentient human beings. Most Serious Evil Colleges Have to Contend With Is Athletics By DR. SAMUEL P. CAPEN, University of Buffalo. The most serious evil that the colleges have to contend with is the present status of athletics. It has become the principal industry of the colleges and no intellectual attainment can compete with it. It has also become a very expensive proposition for our colleges, because of three big factors. The first of these is that in seeking players of rare physical endowment it entails dishonesty, as boys are hired to go to college to play on teams, in spite of subterfuges to hide this fact. The second factor is the athletic coaches. It is known that they receive more than professors in many eases. I consider the typical coach an example of evolutionary retardation. A third item is the cost of the paraphernalia used in connection with tthletics, not the least ot these being the college stadia, toward which millions of dollars are given each year. As the athletic system is carried on by joint bodies of alumni and students, the colleges are unable to control them, so that any effort to make the colleges a real institution will be retarded. Variety of Hazard Signs Constitute a Menace to Every Motorist By THOMAS P. HENRY, Preaident A. A. A. The motorist runs into every kind of design, color and symbol, and he must learn a new set of hazard signs whenever he goes into new territory. This lack of uniformity which is the bane of the highways today applies to all types of signs, the caution signs at danger points, the traffic control signs, and the distance and direction signs as well. Proper road marking is essential to maximum service, while poor road marking and the variety of signa for the same purpose constitute a standing menace to every motorist. The inevitable reaction of the motorist to the -confusing, variety of signs is that while motoring he misses the warning for a bad curve or a sunken road entirely and is further confused by the prevalence of commercial signs, many of which specifically imitate warning signs. Before there is uniformity there must be a national code subject to ratification and adoption by all the states. This is something behind .which all motorists can get, and the A. A. A. is putting it forward as a practical and urgent step in a safety program.’ ? Uncle Sam Not Regarded as Character of Supreme Benevolence By PROF. ALBERT B. HART, Harvard University. The United States has never considered, and will not in practice regard, other nations, governments and peoples of the world as equal. The United States has taken over the government of six of our neighbore—Haiti, Honduras, Nicaragua, Porto Rico, Cuba and Panama. Marines are located in each of these nations to protect native Presidents who are friendly to the United States. Unde Sam does not intend to treat these people of darker races as equals, for there are certain interests which he feeb must be protected regardless of other moral considerations. We gain our concept of Unde Sam by contrasting Washington with Frederick the Great, Lincoln with Bismarck and Roosevelt with the kaiser. But today a study of the question of races, one of tremendous importance, due to the new race consciousness of China, Japan and India, gives no indication that he is universally regarded as * character of supreme benevotenceu a I ■ll»l _ ■ . ■ . ■■ Children Misled Into Thinking War Nearly All Heroics and Glory By PROF. ISAAC J. COX, Northwearten University. The public school is the training ground for future citizenship. The textbook on history, which should be merely an effective tool for the school, frequently becomes a target for abuse in which suppression or perversion play as great part as truthful expression. Back of the propagandist stand various groups, upon whom he may rely for undiscriminating hel p whenever he chooses to give a so-called patriotic twist to his words. It would be just as wrong so to word a history as to encourage national pacifism as it would to fill it full of thrills regarding our glorious armies and their achievements. My stand is simple: Let the children have the truth and that will suffice. Generally, however, our histories have expanded upon the victories upon the battlefield instead of treating the political, economic and social causes which brought on the war; children also have not been able to read about the seamy and terrible side of war, but have been misled into thinking of it as nearly all heroics and glory. Walter Dill Scott, President Northwestern University—Universities have never had a monopoly in the discovery of truth. They have, however, in most esses supplied the indispensable preparation for practical Th* rendta obtained bv men trained in scientific methods in h.™ nnt attention of the business world. Evi. den< * arenot in the bu ttepX I " 1 ' ” 1
THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL
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