The Syracuse Journal, Volume 18, Number 21, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 24 September 1925 — Page 8
o Classified Ads <• * * Classified advertising Is ac- < > < . cepted at the rate of 5 cents X < ’ a line for each Insertion. A < ► ! ‘ booking and collection fee of < ’ o 14 cents will be added for a <> < ► charged account: no account * '3 will be charged for less than o o 25 cents for a single Item. £ New furntture is coming in at Beckman’s Store. FOR SALE—SO cords of mixed chunk stove wood. Inquire of L- A. Neflj 21-4tpd Have your pictures framed from the new mouldings just arrived at Beckman’s Store. FOR SALE—Radiant Home hard coal baseburner. Stove in good condition and no brokep narts. Call at the Journal office. One second hand buffet, quartered oak. at Beckman s Store. Can be bought cheap. FOR SALE—Chevrolet touring car in good condition. Only used three years. Will sell rea sonable. Call at the Journal office for particulars. 19-ts . FOR SALE—Modern 8-room house on Front street Fourroom basement. Furnace and bath. Cheap on easy terms. Emory Kindig. 20-2tpd FOR SALE- Eighty Papakeechie Lake front lots. See Simon L. Belt 134 f FOR SALE 10 foot flat bottom row boat, newly painted, with oarst For particulars call at the Journal office. 17-ts FOR SALE Brand new Remington 22-caliber hammerless repeating rifle, latest model, a beauty, with new canvas case and cleaning rod. Call at the Journal office. 10-ts OFFICE SUPPLlES—Typewriter ribbon, carbon paper, typewriter paper, cardboard, blotting, etc., for sale at the Journal office. TO BRETZ FOR GLASSES Your Eyes May be in the Danger Zone If so we can help them f' Nevin E. Bretz Optometrist & Optician 130 S. Main . St., Goshen SEEDS Bought and Sold We buy and sell all kinds of seeds Rodibaugh, Miller & Warner North Webster, Indians Call at the Hardware Store ROBERT E. PLETCHER Funeral Director Ambulance Service Syracuse, Indiana. Telephone 75 $ GEO. L. XANDERS Attomey-at-Law Settlement of Batates. Opinions on Titles Fire and Other Insurance Phone 7 Syracuse, Ind. BPBCIAL ATTENTION Om TO ■STATES. DEEDS. MORTGAGES TITLES AND WILLS WILLIAM GRAY LOEHR Attorney-at-Law Admitted to Practice in All Courts Real Estate, Culled leas. Notary 118| S. Buffalo St. Warsaw, Ind. I sell protection in Bankers Mutual Life Insurance (X, of Freeport, 111. Auto and Fire Insurance S. C. LEPPER Syracuse Indiana ’
SMILES BY MILES J* " / ✓ ✓ WHIN Wt Sint «pT/ Z flp > —- IT GAVE HIM 'RHEUHATiet AND TAIN LT S 1 TAIN PH.i.l MADt "BY MIL6S — i > — CH AHEAD HIS FROWN INTO SKILES A A > — . HE FELT HAPPY AND WELL OHCS AGAIN. itlUfhWi i— _ ■" ■ For the pains or rheumatism, sciatica and neuralgia A DR. MILES' Anti-Ptiin Rlls India has twice as many cattle as the United States and more than three times as many as Argentine . America has about forty millions sheep, but Australia has twice that number. In swine America leads the world, both in produetion and consumption. It has four times as many as any other nation. A classified ad will sell it.
BOURBON FAIR SEPTEMBER 29-30-OCTOBER 1-2, 1925 Free Entertainment-—Big Agricultural Exhibits—Fine Races No Change in Admission
□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□ □□□□□□□□.□□ |A Piano OpportunityLasting until Wednesday, September 30 we have placed on sale n _ B 8 PLAYER PIANOS § LJ p=! from one of the oldest and best-known factories in America at prices ranging from S4OO to $450. g Above prices are $125 to $l5O below regular prices. Straight upright $260, former price $335. □ We also have two slightly used high-grade players g at $370 and $390. Just like new. - □. . R All pianos are fully guaranteed. This is a real money worth sale of good standard honest goods. We do not believe in fake advertising or stool pigeons. Every piano bears the makers name and the name stands for quality and dependability. □ ' n 5 Your old upright piano taken in exchange. This is our fall clearance sale.’ Q Q . r—| Q Yours for better instruments for the home B ROGERS & WILSON § Established 1871 GOSHEN. INDIANA g
A PITIABLE PICTURE Our once wonderful Merchant Marine created at a cost of three billions of dollars, containing 1,480 ships, is today operating only 274. Six hundred and ninety are “laid up.” Four hundred and sixty-six are lost or junked. Cnee carrying 52 per cent of our foreign commerce, the Government keels are now carrying only a paltry 32 ger cent., and are losing out at that . Twothirds of the fleet is actually or virtually in the scrap-heap and the balance is on the way. Upkeep has created a terrific bill of costs swelling the original thrse billions to five billions This physical ruin and financial bankruptcy of the Governmentbuilt merchant marine is the greatest humiliation that ever befell American initiative and enterprise. No patriotic citizen J or business man can contemplate j it without a blush of shame be- i cause it has been needless. Certain critics attribute the cause to prohibition —it has been j i made helpless to meet foreign ' competition. Others attribute | the cause to politics. One thing is certain and that is the management is an indelible blot on the escutcheon of the nation. Meanwhile Henry Ford goes on adding to his fleet of ocean going vessels, and in addition to I making a bid for carrying air mail, is considering the establishment of a merchant marine not controlled by politics. POLYGAMY ADVOCATED As a result of the World War many of the loftiest minds of j Europe are advocating polygamy ! as a means of remedying social conditions. Mme. Kersis Kova. who is a deputy in the new born nation of Czechoslovakia, proposes that every man under fifty years, should assume, as a patriotic duty, the burdens of -polygamy. George Antequil, a prominent Frenchman, has attacked the problem in a book that has had an immense He openly adj vocates polygamy as the sal- | vation of Europe. Europe is toady in the condition that made polygamy natural in patriarchal times, and for all our prating of ideals, conditions control the morals. » In the United States there are 2,000.000 more men than women, but in Europe there are 18.000.000 more women than men. but Europe is in a frightful distress. Under such conditions lofty principles are first to go overboard
THE BHUCUBB JOURNAE “
HOUSEHOLD HINTS Milk will keep sweet longer in a shallow pan than in a • pitcher. Keep the brown sugar in a cool, damp place and it will not harden. Use paper toweling for draining foods, because it is highly absorbent. Heat the food chopper in boiling water, before running raisins through it, and they will not stick. Put some vinegar in the cleaning water for mirrors, windows and pictures, and it will help greatly in keeping flies away from them. Never salt meat until it is ready to be served. If salted before cooking it will toughen the best meat and tend to exJ tract the juiced It is unwise to scrape food . from any sort of saucepan. It , is almost certain to scratch or i mar the utensil. Use steel wool I and a reliable cleanser —but ■ never a knife! When soot is tracked into the ’ room and forms an apparently hopeless spot 'on the rug, sprinkle the spots liberally with salt and then sweep up. The soot will come with the salt. Ask your butcher which is better, the standing roast or the boned and rolled rjb roast. He will soon tell you to leave the bone in the roast, as it means more juice and sweeter meat. When planning to use nuts in cake or candy, shell them a day ahead of time. The air will take away that dry taste of the nut and bring out the oil and moistness which make nuts so delicious. Do not take off too thick a rind in paring potatoes The best part of the potato is near the skin. On the other hand, a thick rind should be taken off turnips. The turnip has an outer part that destroys the flavor of the whole if not removed.. u—o IMMIGRATION The Njvmna' Industrial Board finds that immigration under the new law has fallen off 60 per cent when allowances are made for the number of foreigners leaving the country, Italians, Greeks, Hungarians. Bulgarians, Lithuanians, Jugoslavs, Chinese, Japanese. Portuguese and Rumanians left the . United States in the fiscal year 1924-5 in numbers large enough to offset or exceed the arrivals. Countries that failed to fill’their quotas are Czechoslovakia, which fell short by 17 per cent, , Great Britain, by 12 per cent; Germany, by 11 per cent; Irish I Free State, by 5 per cent; Italy. by 10 per cent; Sweden, by 6 per cent. According to these figures the opposition to our immigration i hvas among foreigners is not so pronounced as some people would have us believe. 'F ———
THE FEDERAL RESERVE A NATIONAL PROBUAI By WILLIAM E. KNOX Proibldent, American Bankers Assoela tlon ' ] The Federal Reserve situation is tin paramount problem before America! banking today. The time is approach lug when it wUL be necessary foi ' the \ nation tc consider th I i question of re ‘ chartering the; Federal Reserve WsL ■ Ban* 3 - The Federal - Reserve System must be pre William E. Knox served. It is one of the most banking systems in the world During the last ten years, through all the stress of war. inflation, depression and revival, it served thii country as no country was ever served by a banking system. We know thai without it our nation would have had a financial disaster far more devastab Ing than any that ever assailed it. While we have this great loyalty and obligation to the System, we must recognize that among its friends them has risen serious controversy ovei many matters of detail. There art many demands for change in the methods of its management and in de> tails of its operation. Where these demands represent broadly the greatest good of the greatest number we should support them. Where they represent merely narrow, diverse Interests of one part of the country or one tyrffe of business or finance, they should be subordinated to the common good. We should meet on the great broad ground of the common welfare—first to preserve the system in general as it is now constructed, and secondly to bring about, carefully and soundly, such changes as are required to adjust it to circumstances of today. The task of considering, sifting, weighing and co-ordinating discussion and suggestions regarding the Federal Reserve System has been confided to the Economic Policy Commission of the American Bankers Association. It is hoped that thereby the Federal Reserve System will be given the best thought and the best support off banking. There is no greater service banking can render the nation than this. It goes right to the' heart of good management of the public economy of America. The Mint’s Sidelines The United States mints make other objects besides coins. All of the medals for the army and navy are turned out by the mints. Medals of all the Presidents, the Secretaries of the Treasury, the Directors of the Mints, have been designed and executed by the mints. Recently the mints inaugurated the practice of making medals of the Under Secretaries of the Treasury. Congress has authorized the mint to make up 40.004 medals to commemorate the arrival of the first shipload of Norse immigrants on board the sloop Restaur Ationeu. which is to be eelebrated at the NorseAmerican Centennial in Minnesota next summer. At the last session of Congress there was a flood of bills seeking ta have commemorative half dollars minted. The prior session authorized the minting of the Huguenot half dollars and of 5,000.000 half dollars to signalize the start of work on the Stone Mountain carving, which will serve as a monument to the valor of the soldiers of the South. On the Federal coins appear Generals Lee and Jackson, the two leaders of the Confederate forces tn the Civil War. A Flood of Coins With the 150th anniversary of the great battles of the American revolution approaching, bills were passed last winter to issue coins commemorating the stand of the minutemen atLexington and Concord and the battle of the Green Mountain patrio ts at Bennington tn Vermont Proposals were made to pay tribute in a similar way to the battle of Bunker HUI, the victory at Yorktown and other events American history, such as the 200th anniversary of the founding of Stoughton. Mass., and the 50th anniversary of the admission of California to ths Union. Fearing that the growth of this practice would open the way to counterfeiting and make the protection of the integrity of the coins more difllenlt. Secretary Mellon openly opposed the creation of these special coins, but was not entirely sqcoeMful in his efforts. He insisted that the practice Introduced confusion into cur system of coinage, brought about as unnecessary expense and satisfied a very limited demand because the public genhas never shown a i pedal Uhto the commemorative coins. However. Congress felt that these great events were worthy of oogunenoration and authorized the coins—all of which are to be sold at a premium so that the promoters of these events may raise funds by this extra charge to defray part of the expense attached. The records of the Treasury show that the special coins, ax a general rule, are seldom absorbed In circulation. The Monroe coin isime was a dismal tattnre—2l7JMX) bf she 274,000 •truck off were turned lu ck to the Treasury for melting up. — Journal American Raw kero Association. Hall’s Catarrh Me dicine Those who are in a ~ran-d:*wn~ condition will notice that Catarrh t othera them * hen they !U * to « ood *”»*«*«* forty y ** MU F. 1 Oteney , Ohio.
NOTICE TO HEIRS, t| CREDITORS, ETC. In the matter of the estate of Catharine Otis, deceased. i a ln the Kosciusko Circuit Court. ! September Term. 1925. Notice is hereby given. That I Della Otis, as executrix of the estate .of Catharine Otis, deceased has presented and filed her accounts and ; vouchers in finaK settlement of said | estate, and that the same will come up for examination ‘and action of 1 said Circuit Court on the 20th day of I October, 1925. at which time all heirs, creditors, or legatees of said estate are required to appear in said Court and show cause, if any there be, why said account and vouchers should not be approved. Dated at Warsaw, Indiana, this 17th day of September, 1925. RUSSELL H. BUTLER, Clerk Kosciusko Circuit Court Geb. L. Xanders. Attorney for Estate. 2t-3t NOTICE Til HEIRS, CREDITORS, ETC. In the matter of the estate of Ida Knorr, deceased. In the Kosciusko Circuit Court. September Term. 1925. Notice is hereby given, That | William M. Self, as executor of the • estate of Ida Knorr, deceased, has presented and filed his accounts and I vouchers in final settlement of said estate, and that the' same will come up for examination and action of i said Circuit Court on the 20th day of ; October. 1925. at which time all heirs, creditors, or legatees of said I estate are required to appear in said I I Court and show cause, if any there I be. w-hy said account and vouchers should not be approved. > Dated at Warsaw. Indiana, this 1 17th day of September. 1925. RUSSELL H. BUTLER. r i Clerk Kosciusko Circuit Court. ; Geo. L. Xanders, Attorney for Estate. 21 -3t O Worms and Rain The Smithsonian institution >my» there Is no foundation In fact forth» ! superstition that worms ever descent’ with the rain. They are already ir cracks and crevices of the earthThe New Fall Woolens Are Here Merchant Tailors and Clothiers KOHLER & CHAMPION Successors to Shoup & Kohler 112 S. Main St. Goshen
| At HUDSON’S I I . 1 Displays of | NEW GOODS * 2 t — : NW FALL DRESSES SIO.OO $15.00 $25.00 I A beautiful display of new fall dresses, in silks> and g I woolens, also attractive line of two piece Balbriggan dresses. | : NEW MILLINERY $1.95 $2.95 $3.95 $5.95 $8.95 §As attractive a line of hats as is possible to find and j more reasonably priced than the majority of lines. I . NEW FALL COATS ® SIO.OO up to $89.50 A wonderful line of new coats in all of the new colorings : and styles. Fur trimming is on practically all coats. NEW' FUR TRIMMINGS 50c to $3.25 Yanl i A large showing of fur trimmings in one and two inch f widths. In the cocoa, grey and fitch colors. : : I NEW WOOLEN FABRICS n $1.25 to $4.75 Yard / ? New all wool challis, bordered, 54 inch twills and flannels j 40 inch novelty materials for girls and ladies dresses. COLORED RAIN CO ATS,'SPECIAL $5.00 New rainproof slickers, in bright colors, red, green, yellow. In sizes 16 up to 44. Specially priced this week only. / B Uthe HUDSON.cq|J goshenW’ihdiaka. ]
BUSINESS DffIECTORY The STANWAR automatic water pump requires no tank. The pump is a pressure tank „ and pump combined. On display at your local plumbers * The Lincoln Electric Co. Goshen Indiana Minnie L, Priepke DRUGLESS PHYSICIAN SPECIALIST in Tuberculosis, kidney, bladder and liver trouble. Prolapsed stomach and bowels restored. The only treatment known that will actually bring them back to normal. 36 Hawks-Gortner Bldg. Phone IBS. Goshen, Indiana F. N. Hascali 1 Company INTERIOR DECORATING WALL PAPER PAINTS WINDOW SHADES PICTURE FRAMES GOSHEN - INDIANA The New Lacquer Finish that is more durable. Wil! not spot white, check-proof, and improves with hard usage. Five days for a high class job. Write for booklet. Smith Bros. Co. Rear 316 South Main St. Ph. 374 GOSHEN, INDIANA PACK YOUR PHOTOGRAPH in his grip when he starts on ,a<jc>urney. -We have a neat little portrait style just for that purpose and have a larger one made for his desk at the same time. Shorn his you care The Schnabel Studio Over Baker’s Drug Store GOSHEN, INDIANA
