The Syracuse Journal, Volume 18, Number 19, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 10 September 1925 — Page 5

Grade Lard and * j Cooking Oils J There are many grades of lard and the LX 'wit t 1 price usual the quality. However, we can supply you with a high grade “"T | at a moderate price. BBTII We can also give you some very good values in imported olive oils and all the various cooking oils that you m»«ht need, for cooking and salads. fflp Our o ’i s com with all the requirements of ’ ■ , .. ■-J the pure food laws, so you can be sure their quality is right —And so are the prices. A Telephone Orders Given Prompt Attention Seider & Burgener PURE FOOD GROCERS PHONES 82 AND 172 ) SYRACUSE, INDIANA I USED FORDS Sale of used Ford cars and Fordson tractors is now on. Cars carry the usual Ford guarantee. This is your chance to get one. BUY NOW C. R. Hollett * Authorized Ford Dealer ;» > Syracuse. • • .... Indiana ;[ %%»%%%%v»%**%%»*%%*%*%****%*%***%*»******%*»***»********%*»**********>

Easily-Cleaned Table Top jf you have a kitchen t ble with a white wooden t< tire of scouring It. varulaii It with floor ramtah—the kind that will stand hot water. It will protect the table top and keep It front warping and save so tuueh needles* work. 0 i. Stand for Truth Watt nut till you are backed by numbers. Wait not till you are sane of an echo front a crowd. The fewer the voices on the side of truth the more distinct and strung must be your own.—Channing. _ * — O— —— Azores Emhrou/eriea By buying thread England and linen from Ireland pe<>i>te of the Axorvs produce embroidered goods worth $200,000 each year and send them to this country.

— — —■l «i—■ ■■ —— 11 W—«W» ■ ■!>■■> —* ■ * — , — IF VOVR BUK IS STRAINED I •j /tf”j from sitting in a cramped posi- ♦ 7 I1J& \ t,o ° aU ’ ,ay ,oe< ‘ week Bher | jSj ibjr— week, month after month, then ’ *’ ** certain Jrou nec< i our »p <na ® | adjustments. TJiey will work i jT* '•' marvels lor you in restoring the • natural stremfth and poise of « \h JT i vC<*l \ ■ - .' T> ur backbone. J - ' L STARH - ,K G - f SyracuMs Indiana la 4--* y I Office in the Mediant property | ' I on South Huntington Street. One | ■ • --' ' block south of bank. | *— - ----- — FRESH. 6L&AN M&flT Await you at our market at all tiitie*.« You will find the juiciest cuts and the tenderest pieces here. We also handle smoked and ’ dried meats and a general Une of canned meats. , KLINK BROS. MEAT MARKET I

Jewish Infante Infant tnorraiily rates arc lowesi •niongst the chihlrvn at Jewish par enta. an analysis nf statistics based on the study of .tUMM) Infants in ea-gir cities dein«»n*tmte« 0 Tea He! An nthwlsenwnt writer that offee helps one iMnk. We know the <»o» doea — lb.-ton Tran.«crl|it. The 199 Shipping Board vessels sold to Henry Ford will soon ’be con verted into automobiles. ’Though these ships cost American taxpayers many a hard-earn-ed dollor and were absolutely useless, they will be worth something as flivvers—mementos of ; the great sagacity and wisdom of j dollar-a-year experts.

Correspondence ST Neighborhood TIPPECANOE Mrs. Emmet Gordy called on Mrs. J. L. Kline one day last week. F ten Kline and family called at the J. Garber home last week one day. Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Scott entertained company from Elkhart Lsbor Day. Mr. and Mrs. Emmet Gordy and son Allen called on friends near Wakarusa Sunday. Ralnh Scott is driving the school hack this winter again. ! Ralph is a good man for that ' pla -e. | Mr. and Mrs. R. G. Mauzy of ■ New Paris took dinner with Josiah Garber and wife last Wed- ■ nesday. ' Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Mock and son Thurle. Mr. and Mrs. J. |L. Kline and family spent Sunday in Elkhart. Rev. Warren Bow’man of Topeka moved into the house formerly occupied by Mrs. Aida Mock, last Wednesday. Mr. Mrs. J. Garber and : Royal Kline spent Sunday afternoon in North Webster at the Isaac Kline home. WHITE OAK Mr. and Mrs. Earl Hamman were Milford shoppers Monday. Saukey Vorhis and family spent Saturday evening in Go-hen. Mesdames Er nest Mathews and James Dewart spent Tuesday at the Jacob Bucher home. Mr. and Mrs. Guy Fisher and family enjoyed Sunday dinner with Mr. and Mrs. Frank Bushong. Mr. and Mrs. Earl haminon and family spent Monday evening with the Forest Kern family at Jones Landing. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Howe of Bowling Green, Ohio, Prof. Merill Howe of Pittsburg. Pa.. Miss Eleanor Howe of Westville, Ohio spent Monday with their brother Beiton Howe and wife at Syracuse. SALOMON’S CREEK Russell Whitehead is on the sick list. 4 Mrs. Nathan Long who has been on the sick list is improving. Rev. Homer Schrock spent a few days in Michigan on business. Mrs. Dasha Whitehead spent Sunday night with her son Muri Whitehead anh family at Topeka. William Rex who spent a week with his grandparents Mr. and Mrs. Henry Rex, returned to his home at Milford. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Rex and slaughter Mildred of Avilla spent Saturday nights with his parents Mr. and Mrs. Henry Rex. Charles Shannon had the misfortune to have his collar-bone broken and received many bruises from an unruly cow. Remember the Sunday School at 10 a. m. each Sunday morning. Preaching Services following Sunday School. A welcome to all is given to attend these services. , • • Rev. and Mrs. J. H. Elder have been returned to the Solomon’s Creek charge for another year. Rev. Elder is a man of God, who preaches the w-hole gospel filled with the power of the Holy Spirit. Come and hear him. The following were Sunday callers at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Henrv.Rex: Mr. and Mrs. Orn Wherlev and two children of Elkhart, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Rex and daughter Mildred of Avilla. Mr. and Mrs. Will Fisher and children of Syracuse and ltrs. Leonard Rex and son, William of Milford. SELLS LIKE COTTAGE The Uz McMurtie cottage at Pickwick. Lake Wawasee has been sold to a Clinton. Indiana man for $20,000. — o The Federal Trade Commission is running down certain mail order houses and manufacturers who advertise “leather” luggage when a cheap fibre is used. In some cases the defense is that the advertising refers to only the comers which may be real cowhide. Cheap' stuff is always cheap in more ways than in price. __0 — Result of Research Work H. B. HOLLOWAY Chiropractor Is now using positive painless adjustments Days in Syracuse, Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays. 6;30 to 8 p. m. Thirteen years experience.

THE BYBAOUBE JOUHXAE

QUOTES BIBLE TO SHOW MILK’S VALUE That the ancients had a clear idea of the high value of milk jevtn though they were ignorant lof its vitamine content, is contended by M. D. Munn, president of the National Dairy Council who cites the fact that milk is mentioned 49 times in the Bible in his support. Butter and cheese are mentioned several times from Genesis to Revelation?, he says, and the cow very frequently. “F o r ihstance,” says Mr. Munn, “in Samuel, 17:28 we read: ‘And Jesse said unto David, his son.. .bring these ten | ’leeses unto the captain of their thousand and look how they brethren fare.’ In Genesis 18:8, we find: ‘..and he (Abraham’s servant took butter and milk and set it before them...’ Proverbs 30:33 says; ‘For the churning of milk bringeth. forth butter.’ And while it is net probable that the butter referred to was» butter in ,the sense in which we understand it today, because of the climatic conditions of Palestine, it dees show that the people of that period knew and appreciated the value of milk and milk products for human consumption.” The close relation between the cow and human beings is pointed cut by Mr. Munn as follows: “Coming down through the centuries we find that those raoes or tribes of people who were most healthful and most physically and mentally perfect were the “ones* that lived largely by their herds and used freely of milk and its products. The! Ayrans, the earliest race of j which we have any record, even made the dairy cow a part of their religion. Later races deemed milk so vital to their life that they deified the cow in many forms and pictured her in various constellations in the heavens. With some the milking of the cow was accompained by a religious ceremony. Too, in many instances the most valued tribute victors in war exacted from the vanquished was* thfe cow and ofttimes her products, and the Hebrews three thousand years ago expressed the'r hope of finding contentment and the requirements of their bodily needs in a ‘land flowing with milk and honey.’ “Today (conditions are very mi! h the same. Those nationalities who live in countries where the dairy cow is prominent are physically strong and mentally efficient. And the difference cannot be accounted for by climatic conditions, for the Arab, a liberal milk user, both in olden days and, today, is a splendid physical specimen, alert and active, capable of great endurance notwithstanding the beat and barrenness of the desert country in which he lives. He is but a living proof of the value of milk in the human diet which, scientists claim, is the most perfectly balanced food, especially for growing children.” - o DEBTS • The getting-ready-to-begin to nay debts by passing it on to coming generations indicates a practically bankrupt condition in many of the European nations. Italy talks of a moratorium of 10 years before beginning to pay, and France is jockeying for is long a delay as possible. AftAr they begin to pay their installments will not equal what we are .paying in interest alone,on the same debt. Treasury official estimate that I the whole American debt may be wiped out, by American taxes alone, in 25 years. Before these nations get started we shall have finished. Our war financing was very much like our war ship and air-plane building—most of it going to the junk pile.

Lake Lots for Sale SYRACUSE LAKE PottAwatsmi Park Addmare Park WAWASEE LAKE Cottingham Beach Ogden Island Oak Noll Park Waveland Beach Grand View Park Highland View Gardens Oak Knoll Park Second Pht Wawasee ’* Several Desirable Town Properties Cottages for Sale or Rent GE4k L. XANDERS SYRACUSE, IND. ' r*

I I I REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS ’ • H. C. Frazer} | Epworth League Institute to Clara Rothenberger, lot 47, blk J, Epworth Forest. $450. Epworth League Institute to Ira Rothenberger, lots 12 & 28, blks C & G, Epworth Forest, S7OO Roland G. Todd to Wm. W. Wigton, lot 1, subd. 4 Papakeechie Park, S3OO. Sarah Lingofelter to Dora Sawyer, et al, 17 A., Sec. 8, Turkey Creek tp., sl. Emanuel Hamman to Wm. R. Babcock, lot on Main Street, North Webster, sl. Louie D. Mann to Nathan C| Inslev, lot 3, Lake view' Park, S7OO. Geo. Schick to Charles S, Roher, lot 54, blk. C, Elworth Forest, SBOO. Joseph P. Dolan to Frank E. and Lena Wood, 3A. adj, Oram Island, Wawasee Lake, sl. Trustees Evangelical Association to J. H. Evans et al. trustees 40 A, sec. 8, Turkey Creek tp, sl. John W. Cable to Ellwood H. George, lots 2 & 3, Forest Park, SI,OOO. • . NEGRO PROGRESS a. In a message to the American people, the Negro National Eductaion Congress at the last session of its twenty-seventh annual meeting at Kansas City, recited the progress of the Negro race since emancipation, expressed gratitude for the aid of the white race and called for pbservance of the “Golden Rule” in all matters pertaining to racial welfare and relations in the United States. Statistics on Negro progress since 1866, prepared by Tuskegee Institute included: Homes ow ned, 1,200 to 600,000;, business conducted, 2,100 to 50.000; farps operated 20,000 to 1,100,000.000. Gains in education: Literacy from 10 to 80 per cent; colleges and normal schools, 15 to 500: students in public schools 100,000 to 1,800,000; teachers in all schools, 600 to 38.0'0; annual expenditure.for education, $700,000 to sls 000,000. Number of churches from 700 to 43,300; communicants from 600,000 to 4,800,000; value of church property from $1,500,000 to $84,400,000. r O HOW PROHIBITION WORKS After traveling more than 10,600 miles and visiting, many states. B. C. Forbes, the financial writer, asserts that one thing that has contributed more than anything else to the great improvement in living conditions has been prohibition. While the country is far from being absolutely dry, but it is true that the phenomenal growth of building and loan associations, the cedented increase in savings bank deposits, the vast extension in life insurance, the amazing multiplication of families able to own an automobile, the overcrowding of colleges and universities, the nation wide acceptance of the radio, and the abolition of slums, poverty-stricken districts and jails, have a decided bearing on the subject. In Great Britain conditions are far different. Her worst curse is drink—not only because of the money spent, but because of the effects of hard and steady drinking. On Mondays, the busiest places are the pawn shops, and suffering is seen on every hand. Drink an 4 depression seem to go hand in hand—so does prohibition and prosperity. o ** BEST GOVERNED NATION The estimated population of New Zealand is 1,324,000 the postmaster general reports that of this number 850.000 are depositors in the pcstoffice savings banks with an average of $320 each. This is a world record in percentage, both in number and amount desposited. Political and economical experts assert that New Zealand is the best governed nation in the world, and asra result of their systems wealth is well diffused and conditions of life excellent. SEEDS Bought and Sold We buy and sell all kinds of seeds Rodibaugh, MillerS Warner North Webster, Indiana Call at the Hardware Store

Home Coming Jubilee Day Syracuse, Ind. September 18 and 19 Two Big Days Races for the Children Games for Men and Women FUN FUN FUN Baseball Game Both Days Special Feature for Friday Evening Street Dancing Music by Ross Franklin’s Waco Orchestra Syracuse and Milford Bands Amusements of various kinds Remember the Dates and see Complete Program sssNSsssHsssatasssssfiiMsssfisssrfessssssssMsssaiassasHffl

—...— x * ,x [ /Cept\fr gsJi > [ COFFEE SERVICE Blended-fQr’FIavQrCQFFEES Mrs. Eli Grissom, Syracuse Mrs. Richard Guy, R. F. D. 2 COUPON If the persons whose names appear above will clip this coupon, sign it and present it to J. E. Grieger th»y will receive FREE one pound of McLaughlin’s Kept-Fresh Bulk Coffee. Name Address—

Famous Mount Treatment o f Flax The Mount of (Hives is a ridge with; pj ax was ordered to be grown in three summits, stretching porth and j England by statute passed In 1538 tn southeast of Jerusalem, tn height 150 i reign of Henry VIII. For many feet above the city. 4»M> feet above the ■ years the core of the flax plant was Intervening valley of Kedron and 2.632 separated fr<>i* the bark by hand. A feet above sea level. It derives its j mullet was next used, and then a wa* name from the fact that It was at one ' t e r mill was Invented in Scotland time studded with olive trees. , } about the year 1750.

Willys-Overland . Fine . Motor. Cars

Bres We ACINE op to think [ection of a mportant to selection of u. i to run a car we have to less on ours. I RACINE j they have their good teen years. Wright’s Tire Shop Successor to Hedges Tire Store SYRACUSE, - - • - • ' INDIANA