The Syracuse Journal, Volume 18, Number 8, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 25 June 1925 — Page 2
Classified List of Goshen Fir ins Who Offer You Special Inducements
AUTOMOBILES Goshen Auto Exchange Easy Terms on Used Cars. JTires and Accessories for Less. 217 W. LINCOLN AVENUE SEE JAKE AND SAVE * AUTO QUALITY PAINTING is Our Motto AU Paints and Varnishes hand flowen. which assures you full measure for your money. , SMITH BKOS. CO. 008 HEN •1S a 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 0-K Battery Service B. C. Dougherty, Prop. BATTERIES OF ALL MAKES REPAIRED AND RECHARGED AU Work Guaranteed. IIS W. Lincoln BEAUTY PARLORS ALLIECE SHOPPE 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 Bicycles and Bicycle Repair work. Buy a Marley • Davidson Motorcycle. C. C. AMSLER 212 N. MAIN ST. GOSHEN V CLOTHING SHOUP & KOHLER The ‘ Clothiers and Tailors 106 N. MAIN ST. llhfc Drugless Physician Electrical Treatments, r i . SIBnBBL Blanket Sweat BatWs* U Heavy Swekk without heat —1 hour cotflhteta bath. WPriepke FHVRS >w GOdteEN, IND. . s ' ■ ’W >W* V (ammvr wrviwj jUlba ila D« PmFila
Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat DRS. EBY & EBY H. W. Eby. M. 0. Ida L. Eby, M. D Surgery and diseases of fcye. Ear. Nose and Throat Glasses Fitted GOSHEN. ’ INDIANA I w FURNITURE Williamson & Snook FURNITURE, RUGB and STOVES JVe Furnish the Home for Less Money. GOBHEN, IND. "- 1 ?™ LEATHER GOODS THE LEATHER GOODS STORE HARNESS AND ROBES Trunks, Traveling Bags. Ladies* Hand Baga and Small Leather Goode Phone 84 118 East Lincoln Avenue. Goshen, Ind, PHOTOGRAPHS 1,1 ■ —• Somebody, Somewhere Wants Your Photograph The SCHNABEL Studio Over Baker's Drug Store 8 Phone 318 Goshen, Ind. f PIANOS ROGERS & WILSON Headquarters . for n J Victrolaa Victor Records, Pianos and Player < Pianos. ESTABLISHED 1871 SHOES TH. TOOT W.U.* NOBLE’S Good Shoes — Hosiery Too 131 S. MAIN ST. GOSHEN TYPEWRITERS Adding Machines Office Suppllee Check*Writers HARRISON’S TYPEWRITER SHOP *ST ■ All Makaa of Machines * BOLD, REPAIRED OR EXCHANGED Room 38 HawkaOortner Bldg. Phone IBS Goehen. Indiana UNDERTAKERS E. CULP & SONS Funeral Directors Unexcelled Ambulance Service Rea. Phone Office Pheno M 88 Uy all paper, paints I Vam. I * our Alouse with Qur Guaranteed Colored
“So Long as There Shall Remain Any Virtue in the Body of the People” By ROBERT SESSIONS, Phillips High School, Birmingham. Ala. (Champion Student Orator or the United States.j THE Constitution—this heritage of liberty, safeguarded and bequeathed in trust to us by the fathers of ’B7—what shall we of this generation do with it? The answer is clear. We must pass the priceless treasure on, unshackled and secure, to the next generation. The challenge is to you and me and every one who loves tins country •nd enjoys the “blessings and liberty” under the American flag. Soon after the adoption of the Constitution and before it went into effect, Washington, in a letter to La Fayette, wrote these significant words: “The Government can never-be in danger of degenerating into a monarchy, an oligarchy, an aristocracy or any other despotic or oppressive form so long as there shall remain any virtue in the body of the people?' Ladies and gentlemen, the words of Washington clearly point the way to the task before us. We must maintain virtue in the body of the people. ... Again we should further the popular means of increasing interest in and reverence for the Constitution of our country so that it will be reverenced no longer as an abstraction, but as a vital thirtg, understood and valued. Beginning in the home and public schools of the land, we should instil] greater respect for law and order, which is not blind acceptance of arbitrary control, but willing obedience to what is right and reasonable. We should educate the masses in the duties of good citizenship, in a better understanding and appreciation of the spirit of the American government, in the broader meanings of patriotism and a stronger devotion to the flag and the gfcrious things for which it stands. Let there be virtue in the body of the people and we shall hand down to “our posterity” those “blessings of liberty” bought with the blood of the patriots of old and preserved by the fathers in the finest example of free government the world has ever known. She Has Been a Very Much Abused Woman, This So-Called Nagging Wife By DR. EUGENE LYMAN FISK, in New York Herald. Marriage is the best life insurance in the world, both for men and women. Statistics prove not only that the average man or woman of average health and strength and average problems for meeting the economic problems of existence have a chance of longer life, if married than if single, but also prove that marriage prolongs life, upon the whole, even where health is poor or unstable at the outset, as measured against that of the bachelor or the unmarried woman. Married people saddled with the responsibilities of family have got to keep their health, such as it is, and if possible try to improve it An end to which the average man is driven, first by blind unconscious instinct and second by plain common sense, egged on perhaps, on occasion, should he need it, by a nagging wife. She has been a very much abused woman, this so-called nagging wife, but if the truth were known I think it would be found that the world owes an incalculable debt to wives of a nagging propensity, and certainly every rightly constituted woman must have the potentialities of a “nagger” if the best and highest possibilities of her man are to be realized. The Vast Improvement of the Relations Between Capital and Labor By CHAUNCEY M. DEPEW, on His 91st Birthday. The greatest and most beneficial change which has occurred in our ; time is the vast improvement of the relations between capital and laoor. In the early days all industry belonged to individuals, and there was a constant struggle between the owner and his employees as to the share to which they were entitled. Labor, to protect itself, rushed into unions and legislation. Then the smallest ofc wage earners, and the poorest paid, was labor. Today there is an extraordinary change. A skilled mechanic earns more than the average storekeeper, lawyer, doctor or minister. He has a surplus which he invests in a home which he owns, in the industry in which he is employed, and in labor banks. The industries have become so vast, and their stockholding interests so enormous, that all of them are run necessarily by managers. These managers are employees, and so are the whole operating forces of our great industries. The result is, there is an intelligent and almost brotherly co-operation by which capital and labor equally share in the results. Labor is fully protected and is largely satisfied. We Are Becoming Less Dependent Upon Wood for Home Construction By HOWARD F. WEISS, Research Enquirer. Each year we are becoming less and less dependent upon wood for the construction of our homes. Both the per capita and the total consumption of lumber are rapidly declining, and for the more modem types of building* wood has been almost completely supplanted hy other material*. a In the vast majority of eases wood ta used as a building material not because it is the best material available but because it is the cheapest. The extent to which it is grown and the price to which it goes will depend upon the ability of wood to compete with other products in the world’s commerce. ( While it is true that our use of wood as a cumtructiou material is or the decline, nevertheless, our consumption of it for other purposes is on the increase. This is particularly true of the manufacture of pulp and paper and allied products. Here the consumption is increasing every year and will undoubtedly continue to do so. But Now the Brazen Leg Has Issued From Its _ Home and Won the Vote By CHARLES S. BROOKS, in Yale Review. And there were stepping-stones upon our street, so that a lady might mount to her victoria without exposure of a prudish limb. Mincing steps of stone —for the clock upon her stocking was not, as now, a public dial. Where are those ladies who took the air with colored parasols tipped screws thetf shoulder* to guard their pink complexions from a freckle ? . . . When old, they wore a cap of lace and congress gaiters with cloth elastic side*. And Time in softer wrinkles wrote its re<«rd on their face without concealment. ... * Those were the days, as an older noveliM would say. when a blush mantled a lady’s ciieek. Her limbs moved then in the secret twilight of a petticoat-—once the symbol of the tex—but now the brawn leg has issued from its home and won the vote. And, with the passing of the limb, these stepping-stones are gone. The snows of yesteryear! Frost and summer moon, daffodils and petticoat, have yielded to the changing season. Dr. Bussell T. Uhls. Medical Director Near East Relief for Russian trwnh—ln two fields of international endeavor, the United States set* the standard for the world: The American dollar » today ths world-wide measurement of things economic and American ideals have similarly become the standard measurement of things philanthropic. — Rear Admiral Bradley A. Fiske, Retired—Every great nation, withexeention whatever that smsawwi wealth and lived for a lona period in peace, became effeminate and ceased to practice the exercises that a poorer but more virile nation conquered it and sciwd ite wealth.
THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL
OUR COMIC SECTION zffong fAe Concrete ~ WHATS THE USE Differences WELL DID \ /DOESN'T PUN DOWM HH.I \ You I I GUY DOWN IN The LOUNGE you EVER saw-he didn't tell me. Succeed ? J / but I’m positive he's a bank president or a retired n=Bl y l CAPITALIST. WE GOT FRJENDLY RIGHT AWAY AND IM PRETTY . ■UnAN TANNY'A ®ri-T \ SURE ne’li Put several HUNDRED Thou in my Florida/ advice nY 5 1' ■(’ rr c JUICE nr FELIX WENT S’ 0 * ' CT I - DOWN IN THE I L <BO MOTEL LOBBY TO PICK UP A , « . _ — ><4 RICH ' 1 ~ STRANGER W > WHO WOULD )7 IN ' 0 • his new __ ’ , V-r-LU A I orange juice =cJ-/\ jkLA rSB } ’ INVENTION. 7\ \® ' n 1 | \VB 6 the stranger was J—> _..- c ! -A \ \ HE HOUSE DETECTIVE, V /U \ \ \ BUT FELIX NEVER \\ (f \\Y LVf Jf H (f \ \ \ SUSPECTED IT. j\\\A W 11 // 1 \ ] /OH HE'S GOT MONEY ALL RIGHT -'ftW SHOULD ) / ThAT DIAMOND MAY BE GLASS — ' r °° 00 I RAVE SEEN THE DIAMOND ON MIS RN6ER - / | | I COULD CALL ROCKEFELLER AND C THERE YOU GQ / I HE CALLS MORGAN AN' ROCKEFELLER BY \ T MORGAN BY THEIR FIRST NAMES BUT \ CRABBY | ftEIR FIRST NAMES —ME TALUS ABOUT RATES JzEETI IT WOULDN'T MEAN ANYTHING- AND I EVERYWNG IOF EXCHANGE • AND Z ll +1 ■ MS IDEA OF RATES OF EXCHANGE / I DO / J V —— — "J J I MAY BE YOUR TEN DOLLARS FOR/^-p,——— c O * nt" '* — His FIVE c /\ /I I J 11 1 I I 1 I ixl —V J Pfam Foofefaew see MOW* J TWWK* A WORD OF TEM f IFI letters meamiwg »uh« I V ’•HOUD-VP '■rtwe OUGHT Ji ' TD Be EASV, Buy i gamy of rr it ant] nor,*'** j {(§ \ 1 —y — 7" OAWGOME \ "TH’ SOONER, t GIT no J K BETTER ‘ PRO6ABUV GOME DERM WORD THAT MOBOOW S EVER HEARD OF BEFORE., Uk£ , r . SitfwAf I 11 -■ I ——
TTk °» thlnk *' \\ that man will —•'Jar fly aa wail Z/*S\ V' ** b,nto? I I ml Battar than tZd I Mnfo *" • om ® \4fl raapeets. Lota 1® °* bird* can't O»||§gygg un loop the ,<K>P Os ’|| do a aplrai, r? r '.x.* ...v “. . _Z .-..L* ,_•?... a..?.. r.s.. :
A NATURAL -O REQUEST Lrttla Fish— Can * * have • Jr’yv‘ c ~pioca of hraafl ~r~ wtth aoma butter B** l ®° ** T~ — ,na?
V HOW ™EV ftOR LOVE EACH g J > ” OTHER C x4b ) *"** *° ’ r *’ x, \ a f***hd him on the S’* oo *** B»at K / l am too young X *• m*rry%y» ■■«>, Oh, you clever x flirt Who elae K K w o“* d have V thought of that a*irj «xc ua a from ■5 ®l y<>u?
