The Syracuse Journal, Volume 18, Number 3, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 21 May 1925 — Page 2
Classified List of Goshen Firms Who Offer You Special Inducements
AUTOMOBILES Goshen Auto Exchange Easy Terms on Used Cars. Tires and Accessories sos Less, 217 W. LINCOLN AVENUE SEE JAKE AND SAFE - * AUTO PAINTING QUALITY PAINTING is Our Motto All Paints and Varnishes hand flowen. which assures you full measure for your money. SMITH BROS. CO. GOSHEN •IS 8. 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 934 0-K Battery Service • > B. C. Dougherty, Prop. BATTERIES OF ALL MAKES REPAIRED AND RECHARGED All Work Guaranteed. 119 W. Lincoln BEAUTY PARLORS ALLIECE SHOPPE Phone 933 for A ppointmentt Spohn Building Goshen Bicycles and Motorcycles VVE WANT YOUR PATRONAGE Our priced and the quality of our workmanship Justify you in coming to us for your Bicycles and Bicycle Repair work. Buy • Harley. Davidson Motorcycle. C.C. AMSLER 212 N. MAIN BT. GOSHEN 4 • . . * ' ' ' • j • > • r ' CLOTHING SHOUP & KOHLER The ~ Clothiers and Tailors if 108 N. MAIN ST. jpusssssseeu—sssesessesms—W—W Drugless Physician Massage and Electrical Treatment*. Electric Blanket Sweat Bathe, Heavy Sweat—without heat—l hour complete bath. Minnie L. Priepke ■ Suite M Hawk>Gortner Blds. ISS GOSHEN, IND. (Elevator Service) a— i i ■■■■-■■ DENTIST * DR. H. B. BURR Dentist General Practice Dental X-Ray •VERADAkTS , GOSHEN
Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat DRS. EBY & EBY H. W. Eby. M. D. Ida L. Eby, M. D Surgery and diseases of Eye. Ear, Nose and Throat ' Glasses Fitted GOSHEN, INDIANA FURNITURE Williamson & Snook FURNITURE, RUGS and STOVES IJ> Furwh the Home for Less Money. GOSHEN. IND. LEATHER GOODS THE LEATHER GOODS STORE HARNESS AND ROBES Trunks, Traveling Bags, Ladies’ Hand Bags and Small Leather Goods Phone 85 115 East Lincoln Avenue, Goshen. Ind. PHOTOGRAPHS Somebody, Somewhere Wants Your Photograph The SCHNABEL Studio Ov»r B.ker*, Dru, Star. Phom 318 Goshen, Ind. PIANOS ROGERS & WILSON Headquarters for Victrolas Victor Records, Pianos and Player 0 Pianos. ESTABLISHED 1871 SHOES 'KCKrs THS FOOT wtu,"MORT IN VDLdu o Good Shoes — Hosiery Too 131 s. MAIN ST. GOSHEN TYPEWRITERS Adding Machines Office Supplies Check Writers HARRISON’S TYPEWRITER SHOP All Makes of Machines SOLO, REPAIRED OR EXCHANGED Room 38 Hawka-Gortner Bldg. Phono 188 Goshen, Indiana UNDERTAKERS E. CULP & SONS Funeral Directors Unexcelled Ambulance Service Res. Phom . Office Phone M 53 WALL PAPER, PAINTS Paint Your Bouse with Our Guaranteed Colored LEAD PAINT. pmto lgtSa»^ Gallon F. N. Hascall Company -
To Indulge in Idleness Occasionally is dust Plain Common Sense By HESTER HOWLETT, in Washington Post. THE perfect holiday is enjoyed only by those who understand the art of idling. And to be able to do absolutely nothing with exquisite thoroughness is a gift. In its most ecstatic state, idleness is achieved with not the slightest effort And only those over whom the gods have thrown their mantle comprehend whfit this means. The real thing can never be acquired, only imitated. ' To lie lazing in the long grass, the murmur of bubbling water in your ears, the hum of insects and the song of birds lulling you to sleep, is the essence of idleness itself. To be drowsily aware of farm folk at work in the distance puts the finishing touch to perfect bliss. To know that many tasks are awaiting your immediate attention and to have resolved to let them wait is to have the passport to Olympus. For idleness in its sublimest form demandslhat there shall be some work which we have left undone—and mean to leave undone. For there never will be one moment for any harassed mortal on this earth in which work, in one form or other, will not endeavor to obtrude itself upon him. Even Diogenes must have been under the necessity of moving his tub round at times in order to face the sun. And Nero, of fiddling fame, had to learn to play the instrument wherein his soul delighted. The very tramp must walk the roads. Amusement and games both demand effort; they have their uses and their place in our lives. But there are times when even they must be consigned to oblivion and the command to “consider the lilies of the field” be obeyed. For rest and sleep, twin mothers of forgetfulness, are essential to man’s existence. The greater the amount of work he performs the more does he need them. To indulge in idleness occasionally is just plain, sober common sense. Unless some hours are given up to this one cannot do work worth while. “Force Is Needed; Always Has Been Needed; Always Will Be Needed” By REAR ADMIRAL B. A. FISKE, U. S. N.. Retired. During the 20 years ahead of us it is clear that one of the most important factors in external politics will be an increasing foreign trade. I am not prophesying; I am merely pointing out that the increasing volume and importance of foreign trade are making it probable that wars on the ocean will be much more frequent am! tremendous in the future. Now, in order that the United States shall be able to take her rightful part in this foreign trade, something more than mere intelligence will be needed. We must have a realization of the fact that'force is needed, always has been needed, and always will be needed, to support one’s rights. This being the case, the utmost we can do is to conduct our national affairs in such away as to avoid armed cOnfiiet so long as armed conflict is avoidable, and yet in such away that, if a conflict comes, we shall enter it on at least equal terms with our adversaries.- This means that we must always maintain a state of reasonable preparedness for war. No Greater Sendee to the Public Than to Promote Clear Thinking By R. F. GRANT, United States Chamber of Commerce. There is no greater public service which any person or institution can perform than to promote dear thinking. The Chamber of Commerce of the United States is attempting today to bring to bear on our national problems the best business thought of the country and to place before the proper authorities the result of this thought Most of our problems <st today are purely economic in character, the tariff, banking, transportation, commerce, taxation, etc. It follows, therefore, that they will not yield to political solution. Business and professional men are business and professional men because they have the ability to measure economic facts and reach condu- • •ions. That same ability which has made a man a success in business or profession, earnestly and unselfishly applied to our national economic . questions, will be of untold service and value in their solution. Our prin- . cipal difficulty has been with the business and professionabman himself, j He has l>een a tremendous asset to himself and an almost total loss to the country. Death Toll of the Motor Car Exceedingly Heavy on Bird and Beast By DAYTON STONER. lowa University. In this count only freshly killed carcasses of vertebrate animals lying ’ in or immediately at the side of the highway were taken into consideration. | In general, the greatest number of casualties were encountered on the good stretches of road. Byway of illustrating this point it may be noted that on the return journey behreen the laboratory and Marshalltown, lowa, a distance of 211 miles, all well graveled, 105 dead animals, representing 15 species, were counted; of these, 39 were red-headed woodpeckers. It will be sufficient to point out that on a summer motor trip of 632 miles over lowa roads, 29 species of our native and introduced vertebrate animals, representing a total of 225 individuals, were found dead as a result of being crushed by passing automobiles, and that this agency demands recognition as one of the important checks upon the natural increase of many forma of life. Assuming that these conditions prevail over the thousands of miles of improved highways in thia state and throughout the United States, the death toll of the motorear becomes still more appalling. < The Chance to Own a Home of Their Own Is a Blessing From Heaven By R. N. STANFIELD, U. S- Senator From Oregon. To the few that have wealth, either by inheritance, speculation, or happy investment, what I shall say makes no appeal; but to the honest, hard-working man and woman who carry the burdens aod perform the real work of the world, receiving for their services the simple right to live, with enough to eat, sufficient raiment for protection of the body, and a place to sleep, the chance to own a home of their own is a blessing from heaven. • ‘ Everybody wants a home of his own. Everybody wants everybody to have a home es his own. Everybody knows that everybody having a home of his own is a better American citizen. , V 4 The biggest thing our government can do in building real American atizenship and combating the destructive forces of bolshevism, socialism, extravagance, unemployment, and unrest is to aid men and women to secure homes of their own. ——•W.mi II I' ■ — John J. Tigert, United State Centeter at Education-Public education ianot a matter of age, sex or race. The education of immigrants who reside in this country in compliance with laws is the duty of the state of the Union for precisely the aame reasons and in precisely the same manner as the education of those whose ancestors came here generations ago from Europe, Asia and Africa. 7 Admiral Sims, U. S. N.—ls you offered me the finest and most gallant pilots and a well-equipped air force in time of war whm I was in command of a fleet and they were not navy men, I would say, “Take them sw.tr. ’ht'r’ll just ball up the game.”
THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL
One of the Pacific Fleet’s Ports of Call ▲ blrdseys view of WeHlngton ttarboc. New Zaaland. one of the pons which the Americao Pacfic fleet will stop at tn its western tour. Government May Drop Use of Ellis Island II T”” ~ '■ ■. “11 I 1 .i , , , I Aerial view of Kills Island, which jjgS in the near future mav be dosed by the Labor department as an immixratlon post The government is consld- t I erlng plans to examine all aliens 1 abroad and thus relieve the great coogestlon at American ports. ■
Hindenburg President of Germany I I I X.' : V* New portrait of Field Marahal von Hindenburg, who was elected President , of the German republic. Dirigible Safe but Nose Smashed I ■ Ij Twenty-nine hours after being torn from her moorings •» Pulham, England. and blown across the North sea. the British dirigible B-33 returned to her hangar with her bow badly crumpled. She to shown coming down.
From Far and Near
The only equine dental specialist tn tbe wertd to Dr. Frank Ja®» of InPinipnm. IndL, who to tike last 20 years baa pulled thousands of horsaf itota Broadcasting is an old idea; as early •a 1398, the capital of Hungary. Budapest, bad an organization called “Tte ton Hirmondo," which broadcast music. news and whole opera pieces by
▲ rich gold field baa been dlaeovered on the banks of a stream emptying into the Lena river in Siberia. Plans for a new tunnel under the eastern Alps would provide railway m t-iwit sar -an *»■■■ mifrjLrwt Pwftwmrilivjns Lrd ex owiUvi' 1 land, Italy and Bavaria. Georgia and Florida are cooperating in a study of the mlgniHona and life history ot quail living near tbe boun- -
| TEACHER IS NOVELIST ■ V* 4 BE 3w" i& ■'" I ' Mlm Mathilde Elker. a Washingtow school teacher. has just had published her first novel, “Mrs. Mason's Daughters." which is called one of the four best books of the year. It is Miao i Biker’s first book. but now site inj tends to write another. - — —■ ■ ; CAMP FIRE MESSENGER I s iBMr W ■ zlJb ; - 4 r - / /Wki % ■F - ” jQa 'H- } i . -**— ■B «r I ; -<1 Katherine Hayden, camp fire girl Is shown bolding “Radio,” the pigeot which brought the message which sin la reading from Chicago to New York The pigeon was dispatched from th* Chicago conference and made nearij aa good time as the Twentieth Cast tury train. Character and Goodmua No man deserves to be praised fbi his goodness unless he has the strengtl of character to be wicked. AU othm goodness Is generally nothing but th dolence or impotence of wiH.~L« tbUCOCIVULMUiU. , Prof «ssmr*s Error 'Human fossils are never discow ered." says a Tulane professor. How does he get that way ? We cun mg them walking übont the Mrueu uliuu® any day.—New Orleans Picayune.
