The Syracuse Journal, Volume 18, Number 14, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 6 August 1925 — Page 8

i: Classified Ads • • < ’ Classified advertising is ac- < * <, cepted at the rate of 6 cents X < ► a line for each Insertion. A < ► ’ * booking and■. collection fee of o o 10 cents will be added for a o, < • charged account; no account < ► ; ; will be charged for less than < ( < * 25 cents for a single item. <e WANTED—A few washings. Call Mrs. D. Strock. 14-2 t FOR SALE—Ford Coupe, $25 a month. Ellwood George. 14-2 p CONGOLEUMRUGS-See the new patterns of Congoleum Rugs just arrived at Beckmann’s Store. FOR SALE—Ford truck and Ford touring car. Cheap. Hallie Holloway. 13-2 t FOR SALE —Plums, good for canning. Stephen Freeman, call 596. 14-2 t LIVING Expenses Easily Earned—by South Bend Business College Students this'" Fall. Write for new 32 page catalog and particulars. 13-stp BED SPRINGS—If you want to rest and sleep all night without waking up, get a Perfection Spring at Beckmann’s Store. WANTED —General office girl, capable of operating typewriter. Wawasee Cedar Chest Co. 14-11 % ’ FOUND—Large Collie dog. Owner can have same by proving property and paying for this notice. Call John Egbert, Pickwick Park. 14-lpd FOR SALE—Belle Island Dinge boat with oars; like new. Also a new 20x20 imported flax cover for boat house. Cheap. See J. W. Cremens, Kale Island. 13-ts LOST—A bunch of keys (4). somewhere between Victor Nites place and Major Marsh residence. Finder leave at Journal office. 14-lpd FOR SALE—Eighty Papakeechie Lake front lots. See Simon L. Bell. f 13-ts FOR SALE—Two lots in Dolan & Miles Addition. Inquire of Mrs. C. £ Brady.,l2-2t DA’S" BEDS—The latest in day beds arrived at Beckmann’s Store. Just the kind for cottage and summer use. HICKORY FURNITURE—CompIete suites of Hickory Furniture at Beckmann’s Store. FOR SALE—Lake lots, your choice; 58x150 and 50x200 feet, in Syracuse and adjoining Potawatomi Park. Priced right; cash or time. See Dr. 0. C. Stoelting. 2-ts PORCH SWINGS—Have you seen the latest iin fine porch swings at Beckmann’s Store? , FOR SALE—Brand new Remington 22-caliber hammerless repeating rifle, latest model, a beauty, with new canvas case and cleaning rod. Cail at the Journal office. 10-ts RUGS—A beautiful selection of the best Axminster Rugs just arrived at Beckmann’s Store. IRON BEDSA large variety of Iron Beds, full and single sixes, from SAOO to $20.00, are now in stock at Beckmann’s Store. in need oi Ajlz Printing see what we can ■ do before you ■ go elsewhere MMMOMMaMMMMMRI' BPBCIAL ATTBNTION GIVBN TO BSTATBS. DKRDS, MORTGAGES TITLES AND WILLS WILLIAM GRAY LOEHR Attoraey-at-Law si ace 1916 Admitted to Practice tn All Ooarta f'vllectioiu, Notary Public 1184 & Buffalo St. Warsaw. Ind. i»m.i ■ mar.i-i. I sell protection in Bankers Matnal Life Insurance <K of Freeport, 111. Auto and Fire Insurance 8. C. LEPPER Syracuse , Indiana Get your FREIGHT Via the SYRACUSE-FORT WAYNE TRUCK LINE J. E. Rippey Phase Isl Syracuse, lad. ’ ‘‘le wi srigni,

ROBERT E. PLETCHER Funeral Director Ambulance Service Syracuse, Indiana. Telephone 75 GEO. L. XANDERS Attorney-at-Law Settlement of Estates, Opinions on Titles Fire and Other Insurance Phone 7 Syracuse, Ind. o * B. & O. TIME TABLE EAST-BOUND No. 10—Daily12:50 p. m. No. 32—Da11y6:25 p. m. No. 8—Da11y..9:31 p. m. WEST-BOUND No. 15—Dally5:00 a. m. Nn?3l—Dally s:4s a. m. No. 7 —Dallyll:44 a. m. Trains No. 15. 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. Toledo. Dayton, or Clncinnatk H. W. Buchholz. Ticket Agent.

Willys-Overland . Fine . Motor. Cars

I FRESH. Gt&flN M&AT ■ g Await you at our market at all times. Yen will find the juiciest cuts and the tenderest pieces here. We also handle smoked and dried meats and a general line of canned meats. | KLINK BROS. MEAT MARKET ?

Wash with it NEXT WASHDAY or any day you wish ! h *'-; 3 ra v j -Ay No obligation at all. We want you to try thia super-washer which women themaelves have named "The Miracle of Monday.” > ? 9 Outstanding Maytag Features 1. Washes faster. The Gyrafoam Principle crel .' ates a more highly energized, turbulent and continuously effective water action.- No idle water. 2. cleaner. The Gyrafoam Principle mixes soap evenly through the water and forces the super-cleansing, soapier washing solution through the meshes of the clothes. No idle suds. 3. Largest hourly capacity in the world—so pounds of ordinary family washing per hour. ■ 4.—Most compact washer made —takes floor space only 25 inches square. 5. Cast aluminum tub—can’t warp, rust, rot, swell, split or corrode. 6. Easily adjusted to your height, and height of your tubs. 7. Clothes can be put in or taken out while the washer is running. 8. eleans iteelf in 30 seconds. , 9. Metal, swinging wringer. Low. Swings into 7 positions. Adjusts itself automatically for handkerchiefs or blankets. Automatic draining board. Instant tension release. AU parts enclosed. 9 Reasons For World Leadership Electric Shop Telephone 220 Ligonier, Ind.

Many National Parks in the United States There are 19 national parks. They art: Hot Springs, located In middle Arkansas and containing 48 springs; Yelloustone. In northwestern Wyoming; Sequoia, middle California; General Grant, central California, created to preserve the General Grant tree, 35 feet In diameter; Mount Rainier, Washington, with 28 glaciers; Crater Lake, southwestern Oregon, extinct volcano. Wind Cave, South Dakota, with miles of galleries; Platt, southern Oklahoma, containing sulphur springs; Sully HIU. North Dakota, a game preserve; Mesa Verde, southwestern Colorado, with prehistoric cliff dwellings; Glacier. with <SO small glaciers rftocky Mountain, middle Colorado. with peaks 11,000 to 14.255 feet high; Hawaii, includfhg the volcano Mauna Loa; Lassen Volcano, northern Mount McKlnlpy. Alaska, highest mountain in North America; Grand Canyon, northern Arizona; Lafayette. Desert island, Maine, with group of granite mountains; Zion, southwestern Utah, with canyon 2,000 feet deep. In addition to these there are several dozen smaller reservations, with caves, natural bridges, battlefields and similar places of natural or historic interest These are known as national monuments.

THE SYRACUSE JOUBNAE

HAVE YOU A BAD BACK! Then the Advice of This Syracuse Resident will Interest Yoe Does your back ache night and day; Hinder work; destroy your rest? Are you tortured with stabbing pains When you stoop, lift or bend? Then likely your kidneys are weak. More trouble may soon appear. Headaches, dizziness, nervousness; Or uric acid and its ills. Help your weakened kidneys with a stimulant diuretic. Use Doan’s Pills. Read this Syracuse testimony: Jesse Shock, prop, garage, S. Main st., says: “Some mornings I could hardly get up, my back was so lame and painful. When I stooped, my back kinked and there wasn’t a day I didn’t have a steady ache in my back. My kidneys became weak and I had to get up during the night. Doan’s Pills, from Hoch’s Drug Store, cured me.” 1 60 c, at alj dealers. Foster-Mil-burn Co M Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y. —(Advertisement. o .... .. — NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS Sealed proposals for the Improvement of Huntington Street in the Town of Syracuse, Kosciusko County, Indiana, as per plana and specifications on file with the Clerk of said Town, will be received by the Board of Trustees, by the Clerk thereof, of the Town of Syracuse, until 8 o'clock P. M. of August 11, 1925, at the Town Hall, at which hour the blds will be publicly opened and read. The bids 1 will then be examined and considered, and the Board will proceed without unnecessary delay to designate by preUminary order the kind of pavement to be used in the improvement, the Board expressly reserving the right to reject any or all blds, and to judge of the character and sufficiency of any materials bid upon. Each bidder is required to name in his proposal the following: (a) A price for const ruetfti< catch basins complete, each. (b) A price for constructing inlets to catch basins, complete, each. (c) A price for constructing manholes, complete, each. (d) A price per lineal foot for combined curb and gutter. (e) A price per lineal foot for the necessary marginal stone curbing. (f) A price per square yard for the particular kind or kinds of pavement bid upon which price shall be for the pavement complete, including excavating, filling, grading and concrete foundation. Bach bidder is required to deposit with his bid, a certified check for an amount not less than two and onehalf per eent of the engineer's estimate of the cost of such work bid upon, but in no case shall any such check be less than the sum of 3100. said check to be certified by a reputable bank doing business in the state of Indiana. In case the bid is not accepted, this check will be returnedth*the bidder; but if the bld Is accepted, and the bidder shall refuse or neglect to enter into a contract with the said Town of Syracuse. within 10 days from the time he shall have been notified of the acceptance of the same, said check shall be forfeited to the Town of Syracuse, as ascertained and liquidated damages for failure so to do. In case the specifications permit the use of either, or any one of two or more materials, the bidder must state specifically on which his bid is based. The estimated cost of said Improvement for the highest priced pavement, is S2T.tT«. The Town of Syracuse will pay for all street and alley intersections out of the street or general fund of said Town, er bat h. and by special assessment Plans and profiles are on file In the office of the Clerk of the Board of Trustees, of said Town, and at the office of the Town Attorney. Geo. L. Xanders, at the Town of Syracuse. Indiana, and bidders are expected to examine them before submitting their bids. The estimate is believed to be correct, but the Town of Syracuse will not be responsible tor any errors in the same, or tor any errors or inaccuracies in the plans, profiles or specifications. WILLIAM T. BOWLD nevtn McConnell EMORY L. STRIEBY Board of Truatoes of Syracuse, Indiana. Charles CL Crow. Town Clark. 13-2 t

INDEPEHDENCf OF THE FINANCIAL UNO By WILLIAM C. KNOX elation. The principle upon which Amarine wsa founded wee Independence. The primary duty of the pioneers of this ... i.... country was to M interpret In depeodonM in its political sense, but independence today baa another apodal significance in its financial sense. The ability to apply the primary prinWilliam t Knox P®r»onal I economies, to use tstolHgenUy that common thing we caU “a pay check,*’ has as much to do with individual independence as any other force in life. The greatest problem of independence of the average man or woman is bow to get cut of what they earn a good living and a reasonable degree et financial comforts in old age. We cannot maintain a high standard of national life witboat an intelligent management of the financial matters that constantly confront the average individual and family. In the accumulation of capital in the hands of the masses lies the hope of the tree Independence of a nation's people. The ehief> concern of wage earners is to get a reasonable degree ct finsmrial independence out of what they actually earn. This question of how to attain pereonai financial independence has not been worked out on the principle of Individual responsibility. The most important social needs today are a course of inatruction in public education to give young peopte a practical notion of bow to start life on a sound economic basis; and.-secondly, a broad cooperative plan in American industry whereby men and women shall be helped to work out a personal financial program that will guide them toward • definite goal of financial independence. There ought to be away tor a man. for every dollar put aside each week now, to get beck four or five dollars a week forty or fifty yeans inter, regardlees of where he works. The present policy in American industry of helping employees is based on the assumption that they will ultimately become dependent Old age pensions and other forms of charitabto compensation are to be commended in lieu of a practical alternative, but in principle they are wrong and contrary to the purposes of democracy. What we want Is an organised plan that wffl direct working people toward Independence. No system can claim complete ooceecs that does Mt contemplate the financial Intependenee of every employee, according to his eblt eity to earn. It can be shown that American employees, with reaaonabte prudence on their own part, can reach a fair degree of tadependeneo while they are still working. There must be injected into our to* dustrial policy an additional econonde element of mutual benefit and permanent value to both labor and capital, concerned not stone with the amount of wages and profits that are earned bat with how these earnings shall be used. lam arguing tor an industrial savings policy baaed upon the prtneiple of independence. lam arguing far u new basis of cooperation in industry. for the eiimtaatioa of poverty, and for a practical demonstration at economic democracy. Wheat public education tus rhea achool otadents how to manage the* personal affaire intetllgeatiy. aad when the heads of firms make it a requirement that every young mn and young woman who accepts a poettfon shall be working toward a defintto gaal te saving money, then wo wfll attack Moaomte URterecy nt the source and begin to save men from the tragedy of financial depeodeney. WHERE EOBEY IS A KUtSMCE Amaricaae have reason to bo thaato M tor their simple and reliable money. The compHcatfons of the CbteSM currency are endless China pooooeooß T 3 different mcney val Ma. As to tbe SMNtoy of account, the ft Aten n Thai, familiar is eotuMMtion with ths customs, the Hankow, Eeanfiuag; Beaoptng, Tookwai and others, each differ by' varying percentages of weight from tbe **ttasg.** dr Ch tn see ounce of silver. K a traveler from Rhanghal were to make as extoodad tour tat© the interim, passing through the districts where a manifold variety of eotna circulate, the constant exchange from one weight or coin to another would dtoripats a very large part of Me eagttal An experienced trevoßer has been kMwn to taka acaloe with him. aad still his weights and tbe purity at Ma siivur ware snbtMtad to dfaperta m ji san— MfciM A A swam red uwMedst uui«rasi as kw— Mexlcap. Yuan, Dragon, Heng-Kong aad Hankow dollars are an onmi, each', havfag Ms owa defined exchange baa A Im mlilla 4m vaSAWW Ma wMW Am interior the added tntricaciaa <rf dealing with cents aad camper cash are so groat that it Is aataniriring how bariMM can be carried on wjfWww dispMec and a < Table handicap to trade. ' ?1‘ B * ‘Twlwihiin II ? 1

SMILES BY MILES I MRUIM host TOSfiCO AMO TWNBMt© AU. MIGHT LOOKtO AND FELT tVtfW MOAN LM<C A FBIGMT wOafito Jr t £ _ f ■; m MILO NCAVINC MAM | HCN SLOP —— a I jlmT; * —■ OfACEFVL. RESTFUL AMO O«P < MtUN POM LOOKING M>TCO ANO MIONT/ ik ‘xylk? A good night's rest puts you in shape for the day’s activities NervinE bring* refreshing thap. Did H Work? Our Idea of a dumb man is one who strikes a match at midnight to sea what time it la by the sun diet—Virginia Sniper.

HUDSON’S Final Clearance FINE WASH FABRICS AT 25c Hundreds of yards of fine 50c Quality, 40-inch Dress Voiles, in dark and light colors. There are dozens of designs for your selection. WASH FABRICS AT 39c In this group are imported Ratines, formerly priced vt SI.OO, plain or printed. Fasheen, and other fabrics on which you can make big savings. SUMMER FABRICS AT 59c Fabrics that are most durable—Silk and Cotton Crepe mixtures, in plain colors and fancy patterns, embroidered Voiles, plain and striped Linens. «■" ■—■■■■. I. ■■ ■■— ■ II I I BEST FABRICS AT SI.OO Silk and Cotton Printed Dress Crepes, and all summer novelty dress fabrics that formerly sold to $1.50. Your choice of any in the group for SI.OO a yard. — TURKISH TOWELS AT 29C Heavy white absorbent Turkish Bath Towels, size 20 by 40 inches; double warp, which gives long wear. This towel : sells regularly at 39c. . Tl RK LSH TOW ELS AT 39 C Extra large size, 22 by 44 inches, Turkish Towels that regularly sell at 50c. They are very absorbent, with heavy double warp, and white. This sale Saturday only. —■ — IL. I ■!»—IFABRICS AT 33c YD. Beautiful patterns and color combinations of fine grade 32-inch Tissue Gingham, and the most desirable plain color of Beach Cloth (fast color). II I*l „ ' . .'......■■■■■.J

BUSINESS omiff The STANWAR automatic water pump requires so tank. The pump is a pressure tank and pump combined. On display at your local plumbers The Lincoln Electric Co. Gfidben Indiana Minnie L. Priepke DRUGLESS PHYSICIAN SPECIALIST la Tnbercnlosia, kidney, Mndder and liver trouble. Prolapsed stomach and bewds restored. The only treatment knsum that will actually bring them back to normal. . M Hawks-Gortner Phase 148. Goshen, Ito Hana F. N. Hascall Company INTERIOR DECORATING WALL PAPER PAINTS WINDOW SHADES PICTURE FRAMES GOSHEN - INDIANA The New Lacqaer Finish that is more durable. Will not spot white, check-proof, aad improves with hard usare. Five days for a bigl class job. Write for booklet. Smith Bros. Co. Rear 316 South Main St. Ph. 374 GOSHEN, INDIANA AS A CHILD you just hated anyone who broke a promise. And you have been promising your photograph again and again. We’ll make you such a wonderful portrait that you will never break that promise again. Sit for your portrait. The Schnabel Studio Over Baker’s Dreg Store GOSHEN, INDIANA