The Syracuse Journal, Volume 18, Number 42, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 18 February 1926 — Page 8

|: Classified Ads \! Classified advertising Is aei < cepted at the rate of 5 cents <' a line for each insertion, A ■ l [ booking and collection fee of o 10 cents will be added for a ' | charged account: no account \! will be charged for les*. than ' * 26 cents for a single item. SILK HOSE—One dollar silk hose now 78k:. Bachman’s. BEDROOM FURNITURE —See the latest in be4room furniture at Beekjniann’s stordf FOR SALE—Two Rhode Island Red roosters. $1.50 each. Roy Riddle. • __ 42-pd FOR SALE—Remington No. 10 typewriter in first class condition. Also an electric brooder. K. W. Hark less,” 41-2tpd. NEED SHOES -Buy from our Bargain Table and save one to two dollars per pair. Bachman’s. BEAUTIFUL PATTERNS^-See the most beautiful patterns of rugs at Beckmann s /'Store. FOR SALE -.About 6 tons of clover hay. See W:n. Darr. 41-2tpd RUGS—A large variety of spring rugs, all sizes, has just arrived at Beckman's Store. WANTED-Timber of all kinds —especially walnut. If interested please write Coppes Brothers & Zook. Nappanee, Indiana. 41-3 t BABY CHICKS—S. C. White Leghorn from own flock (that laid 70% last winter) sl3 per 100, $37 for 300. S6O for 500; heavies $2 per 100 moreu We also have a space for custom, hatching. Hatches come off every Wednesday. W f e are located 3| •miles north east of Syracuse. Phone 248. W. W. Stetler and Sons. Syr i use. Ind. 42-2tpd Sulesmaai Wanted Immediately Reliable, steady, intelligent, well recommended man, from 25 to 60 years of age, to sell to farmers in this Sta’o- Knowledge of -farming and farm conditions desirable. Must* Be willing to work six a week. Selling experience not necessary, personal training under local manager. Big pay every week. Good territory. All year work. Permanent position. Advancement. State if now employed, when you can start and if you have a car. Address Home Office Sales Dept. CDW. Box 1632, Philadelphia, Pa. 41-3 t SMILES BY MILES the BOY 3 WOULD ? AVOtO oaact ANO MAYftie 1 WEAK NCRVES ANO THE * GUIES WtOt TO BLAM6 Tia THEY TOOK MILES* NERVINE mv'nc seen — —; — < •** R.OCR POUND THEM g bg hiailthv happy

NEW ALFALFA FIELDS IN STATE THIS SPRING Alfalfa will make its appearance on many Indiana farms for the first time this spring, it is predicted by the Blue Valley Creamery Institute. High prices of red clover seed and the risk of planting poor, unadapted Euro pean seed, will turn many farmers to planting alfalfa in place of red clover. “Between 100.000,000 and 110,000,000 pounds of clover seed are planted in this country every year, .but only two-thirds of this amount was harvested last year,” according to the Institute. “Farmers who have been depending upon red clover as their legume plant are therefore faced not only with sky-high prices for seed, but also with the risk of planting unadapted, imported seed in their fields. And rather than t a change on the success of their crop, they are turning to ali:dia». Although alfalfa and red clover stand pre-eminent ak the chief legumes in the United States, alfalfa has proven tire greater feed in many ways. It has greater feeding values for all classes of livestock, its yields are higher, and once established if. is certain to make a good stand, and go on producing for serveral years.” In anticipation of the large number of red clover farmers in this locality who have never grown alfalfa and who may need help in starting to grow alfalfa the Blue Valley Creamer "Institute, Chicago, is offeringj|s services. In cooperation vjflo far mers. business men, agri cultural agents and others inter c'*ed in agricultural develop ment. the Institute is ready through its Alfalfa Clubs, to a sist communities where alfalf; can and should be grown. Local fanners planning to plant alfalfa or more alfalfa can get valuable •>id in this work from the county agricultural agent and from the rt.-it*' iKTVMiVmraI college or experiment station. COAL STRIKE ENDED T ; e anthracite coal strike end--ed Friday subject to ratification by a miners’ convention which is to be held this week. It was the longest general suspension in the history of the industry, involving a loss in wages to the minors of more than $150,0004)00 and a curtailment in coal production of approximately 35,000,000 tons. The losses to the coal operators and other business interests, such, as rail raids and retailers, was enormous. The men returned to work at the old wage scale, subject to modifications each year. The new agreement does not contain the form of arbitration contented for by the operators. The checkoff demand is left to the coneilliation board which is empowered to adopt such rules as to make for efficiency and harmony in the industry. o \ TALK WITH A SYRACUSE MAN Mr. Krieger Tells Something of Interest to Syracuse Folks. * There’s nothing more convincing than the statement of someone you know and have confidence in. That's why this talk with Mr. Krieger should be mighty helpful here in Syracuse Chas. Krieger, Syracuse, Ind.. says: “When I tried to lift, terrible pains caught me in my back. My kidneys were sore and lots of time, the stiffness in m. shoulder prevented me from moving around quickly. Tht secretions were also scanty ant’ passed too freely. I used Doan’s Pills and they put ray kidney* in fine condition. They have remained that way since mv cure." 60c, at all dealers. Foster-Mil-burn Co.. Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y. — Advertisement. - - 1 — EH! WHAT? and sitting for a portrait is. after all, not such a tedious task. Just a few m Suites of your time—a pleasant dressing room to fix up in-—a cheerful posing room —a camera man who is confident he will please —and prices that will not scare you. Sit now. The Schnabel Studlc (hrer Baker’s Drug Store GOSHEN, INDIANA SPECIAL ATTENTION GIVEN TO ESTATES. DEEDS. MORTGAGES TITLES AND WILLS WILLIAM GRAY LOEHR Attorney-at-Law AAmfttad to Practice 111 All Court*

Rest Exercise Thai Will Be of Benefit Here are a few simple directions for rest exercises: Manufacture and mix your own drugs and keep your body going. Be superintendent of your own plant yourself. Rest your thyroid, which produces your iodine or energy for the body. To rest your thyroid, relax the whole region where the thyroid Is. Relax your neck and every time that it tenses or starts to tense, stop it To rest your thyroid still, more, use less of its product To use less of its product distribute what you have it make, where it belongs. To distribute what energy you make where it belongs, practice any form of exercise you like which intensively balances the body. By balancing the body—the most effortless exercise there la, an exercise which is done better the less effort it takes — the friction in the body which has kept calling on the thyroid for ten times as much iodine as anyone has a right to ask it to make, comes to a stop, and at the same time that you are relaxing your neck, and making iodine less, the body stops drawing on it for more. —Gerald Stanley Lee. In Hearst’s Internationai-Con-mopolitan. , Human Traits Evolved by Young Chimpanzees Remarkable human characteristics have been discovered in apes by Prof. W. Kohler, a German scientist He i captured and kept nine young chimpanzees in his jungle home on Tone* rifle, off the African coast, studying his peculiar family for six years. The apes knew and loved him. growing livelier In their games when he ' joined in. His personal appearance was well known, and > when he ap- j peared in riding breeches the apes | puzzled and studied the breeches mi- j nutely. They would take off his sum j glasses and try them on their own noses; and when the professor shaved off his beard there was a great commotion, the apes stroking his face, neck and chin, and even poking down his collar to find the vanished hair. Chimpanzees have a sense of humor, show great affection, and know when they have misbehaved and deserve punishment being highly indignant' with an offender who has been caught Dispute Over Atolls The scientific controversy regarding the origin of atolls is an old and famous one, and is not yet fully settled. Darwin held that the Tings of coral, which sometimes rise from depths far below the limit at which reef-building polyps can live are the result of the gradual wearing away or aubsidence of a central land mass, accompanied by the equally slow growth of the girdling reef. According to this view, each atoll is In effect the barrier reef of an island which has vanished. or of a submarine mound which approaches the surface of the sea. More crudely stated, the atoll is the crown of a sinking volcano. Sir John Murray, the botanist Guppy and Prof. Alexander Agassis combated this theory and showed that reefs exist in parts of the Pacific where there Is no evidence of subsidence, but where, on the contrary, there has been uplift Real Estate Bargains Peter Mlnult's bargain lof of real estate —Manhattan Island —purchased from the Indians for a value of less Mian $24, has a parallel In another real estate transaction to the attention of the National Association of Real Estate boards by the board of realtors of the Oranges and Maplewood. N. J. The territory now embraced, in the cities of Orange and East Orange, the town . of West Orange,- the village of South Orange and the township of Maplewood, estimated to contain the homes of one-tenth of the population of the United States, was bought from the Wlnacksop and Shenacktos Indians In 1678. The consideration, according to David Lawrence Pierson, historian of the locality, was “thirteen kazu of rum, three coats and tw« guns.". Burned Up Dollars “When the old-timers chopped down walnut and ash and oak trees to feed the locomotives and the hearth it never occurred to them that it was like burning up dollars. Some persons are almost as Improvident with their trees today, IPs high Mm* that we get busy restoring the forests to make amends for onr thoughtlessness. We owe It to those who will follow us.” It has been noticed, says the writer of the above, that tourists seem to be more enthusiastic over the trees they encounter than any other feature Especially on hot and dusty days, when the earth appears almost baked, does the traveler welcome the cooling shade, he finds in passing through some <‘ld forest from which the fatal ax has been withheld She Knew the Breed Little Marion and her next-door neighbor, Donald, were engaged in an absorbing conversation. “What axe anarchists?” asked little Marion. Then Donald swelled with wisdom. “They want everything anyone else has got and they never wash themselves," be’ replied. “Oh, yes!” cried little Marion, with enthusiasm. “I see—they la just little boys growed up!”—Gulf Coast Lone taliMß o * For best results, advertise in the Journal. ROBERT E. FLETCHER Fatten! Director Ambulance Service 3yr*cum* iNiUH» j ,• /v. n

% THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL

Suspicions About Wall Street and How They Arise By FRANCIS H. SISSON, President Trust Company Division, American Bankers Association WOULD-BE economists, political orators and the general public make frequent positive assertions about, the function* Os Wall street without anv realization of what constitutes

OU CCI WHiIUUI ttiljr icouzacwwvu V* ” Wall Street or what purpose it serves. Lack of knowledge breeds suspicion. Yet it is not difficult, to understand the nature and function of Wall Street. Let us set down a few of the facts which account for the existence and nation-wide, as well as international, services of Wall Street „ v , ... There are 316 banks in New York with combined capital and surplus of about $1,400,000,000. Their deposits aggregate over sll,500,000,000, and during 1924 their total volume of business reached nearly $250,000,000,000.

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F. h. Sisson The New York Stock Exchange in 1925 sold 463,000,000 shares of stock and in 1024 $3,828,000,000 worth of b nds. Wall Street is the national credit and money market. It is just as essential that there be markets for money and for

stocks, bonds, mortgages and other securities as for cotton, corn, tobacco, wheat, hogs and other commodities. If Wall Street Were Destroyed Wall Street is the natural evolution of the forces of trade and finance. It exists because there is Imperative need for it in the nation’s business. If some cataclysm should destroy the financial district of New York we would see frantic efforts to re-estab-lish it so that trade and industry could continue. If the production and marketing of agricultural and industrial commodities did not need such a financial institution. Wall Street would not exist. We depend upon the fanner to help maintain the general level of prosperity. Wall Street as a money market is called upon to finance the growth and marketing of farm crops. Many Wall Street bankers were born and raised on farms. If they were not thoroughly familiar with: agricultural requirements, they could not hold their present positions in the financial world. In the period of deflation. Wall Street suffered proportionately as much as the farmer. The aggregate losses of Wall Street banks mounted to a staggering sum. Wall Street is uot an independent institution, but an organic part of the country’s businese system, necessarily reflecting the ups and downs of business. Four Billion Dollars An approximate estimate of the main Items in Wall Street’s financial operations in handling farm crops shows that New York banks for the purpose of agriculture put out commercial loans to the value of one billion dollars, hold bankers’ acceptances for another biHion, buy commercial paper such as cattle and sheep loans for a third billion and carry balances of country banks for a fourth billion. Thus Wall Street furnishes a $4,000,000.000 river of credit annually to produce farm products and float them to market. The outward flow to rural banks. enables them to make the required advances on farm crops and for warehousing and handling cotton, tobacco, wheat, raisins, prunes and countless other products. Outside of his own personal efforts on his farm. Wall Street le the biggest single factor in the prosperity of the farmer. After these commodities have been moved to market, the money used in handling them returns to Wail Street for investment. New York is the largest security market in the country and offers a use and market for the idle capital of the rural banks between crops. Fuads from every part of the country flow to New York, attracted by tie greater opportunity for their profitable use found In this center. Thus the accumulations of depoaits are large, and in turn the openings for the useful employment of these funds in STRAIGHT TALKS WITH AUNT EMMY ON “BAD LUCK" “The Brownes are the unluckieet people I ever sew. Auaty,“ remarked Emma, as she and Aunt Emmy walked by their house. “They were just getting on their feet after James lost so much money in stocks. Maud told me only last week that he was putting his savings in government bonds now. Yesterday. hie office was robbed and the bonds stolen out of his desk. Vive fIM bonds gone. It’s the only money they have been able to save since he lost his savings in that radio stock.” “That certainly is bad luck, if you call It bad luck." commented Aunt Emmy. “I ceil It stupidity, myself." “Stupidity! why Aunt Emmy, how could James know, that thieves would get in his office!" exclaimed Emma “It doesn’t seem stupid to me." “I don’t want to be too hard oa James, my child, but If he had only ’uSed ordinary precautions, he need not have lest what was for him a large amount of money on that radio stock and he surely need not hare bad those bonds stolen." "Why Aunty. James isn’t a mind reader’ or a fortune teller.“ “No, of course he isn’t. But neither is every successful business man a seer. Lech is ninety per cent common sense. If James had gone to his banker and asked him to look up the radie company whoa* stock he was

I--- ' . . - —-J GEO. L. XANDEBS Atton»y-»t-l»w Settlement of Estates, Opinions on Title* Fire and Other Insurance Phone 7 Symtiie, ImL|

the facilitation of trade. Industry and investment are upon a correspondingly ample scale. It is dear that those funds must be employed sanely, constructively and to the real service of the business community. Otherwise they would inevitably soon be withdrawn. Huge investments Help Farmers These huge Investment operations in Wail Street are of significance to the farmer. Much of the $10,000,000,000 invested in farm mortgages was ad- , vanced by Eastern financial institu- I tions. In no sense Wall Street’s interest In agriculture local or sectional The main function of New York financial institutions is to send money where it is most needed. Another service rendered to agriculture by Wall Street is the purchase of Farm Loan bonds, Joint Stock Land Bank bonds and the debentures of the Intermediate Credit Banks. There is a, total of $1.45!,800;«0Q of this p&per outstanding, of which Yonrk banks took about one billion. Wall Street loans to country banks are made at low rates, usually below 4H per cent. The local banker’s rates to his customers are adjusted to - local conditions, which cannot justly *be laid at the door of Wall Street. General financial service to other Industries related to agriculture also helps the farmer substantially. Wall Street loans to the packers, railroads, millers and farm-machinery manufacturers to help them serve agriculture. Wall Street is as necessary and serviceable In the handling of credit and capital as is the cold-storage plant In caring for seasonal perishable products. The necessity of such a credit center in a country with a $60,000,000.000 annual business is obvious. What the People Want Every great international hank in New York maintains close relations with thousands of other banks in the United States and in every foreign country of any importance. The movements of commerce and investment are supported upon this Interrelated system of domestic and foreign banks. Thus it comes about that the products of the farm, factory and mine are financed by these banks all the way from the producer to the foreign consumer. Wall Street in the discharge of its true functions as the nation’s reservoir of capital and credit includes the whole bosinees community in Its field of operations. Its control lies with the peopte. Their demands go .. it. and their presence or absence from the market determines Its trends. Wall Street prospers as farming and industry prosper. Its service is to the people of the whole country and. for them, to the people of other countries. It is the direct reflection of American agriculture. Industry and commerce.— From the Country Gentleman. thinking of buying, the chances are that he never would have bought it after he got the bank’s report. Banks can get the record of any company issuing stock and if the company is not well financed, if it has not been paying dividends, if the officers of the company are hot men with clean, honest records, the bank can find that oat. The radio company that James invested in made a disgraceful failure a month after he bought his stock. If he had taken the trouble to find out something about it first, doubtless ha would have that money today." “Well, Aunty, that' may be true shout the stock, bat who in the world would anticipate thieves?" “Anybody who reads the paper* today knows that thieves are pretty aotive,- said Aunt Emmy dryly. “Why ignore them? If James had kept bis“ bonds in a 'safe place, at a bank, be wonld have had them yet James has been careless, if not actually stupid. His bad luck is mostly James himself.”—Anne B. Aymes. rA bankers help The Minnesota Bankers Association at its annual convention adopted the following resolution: “We believe it to be the duty of every banker in the state of Minnesota to cooperate with our Agricultuml Committee and ,to call the atten-' Hon of Its farmer patrons to he excellent work being done by our Agricultural College, and the means thereby available for the Improvement of farming conditions and for the practical education of Uta boys and ‘girls from our. f anna."

FOR OVER 40 YEARS MI-OS CATARRH KKOICtXS ha* been -ccesaluUy us the treatment of ■ :r rr'3. * TA’S CATARRH HEDICITE conU Ointment which Quickly - hy local .application, and the edictee, a Tonic, which act* tne Blood on the Mucous Sur-u-i.:- reducing the inflammation. .~dc by all druggists. V, 4. Cheney 4 Ca, Toledo. Ohio.

Will You Reach Old Age with Good Vision? J Wasting eyes daily through blurred sight, nervousness and headaches has cost many persons you know poor vision in old age. Do your eyes struggle with your feelings daily for relief? Let a Jackson examination be your standard of vision. Glasses that fit your nerves; prices that fit your pocketbook.

DR. W. D. “JACKSON Optometrist at Amos Jewelry House 116 S. Main Street • Goshen, Indiana

The Leathef Goods Store HARNESS AND ROBES Trunks, Traveling Bags, Ladies’ Hand Bags and Small Leather Goods Phone 86 115 E. Lincoln Are. Goshen, Ind. REX WINTER INCLOSURES, AUTO TOPS, SLIP COVERS, BODY UPHOLSTERING, TRUCK TOPS, SEAT CUSHIONS, TIRE COVERS, HOOD COVERS RADIATOR COVERS, Gos Hen fluto Top and Trimmioo GoGOSHEN, INDIANA Alliece Shoppe PERMANENT WAVING And all Kinds of Beauty Work Phone 933 for Appointments Goshen Indiana Spohn Building Spanish-Mexican Town The first town founded in Mexico by Porte*, the Spanish conqueror, was Villa Rica, which was begun In May. 1519. It was first called Villa Rica de la Vera Cruz, afterward shortened to Vera Crux. o Short Length of Life In iionie during the Third id Fourth centuries A. D. the average length of 'life of a Roman citizen was only twenty-two years. o— Resolution Too Late The resolution to avoid an evil b seldom framed till the evil te so fai advanced as to make avoidance impo* sible.

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Clothing and Men’s Furnishings BIG LINE OF FALL SUITS Special Two-Trousered Suits For the Boys KOHLER & CHAMPION 112 South. Main Street Goshen, Indiana , TO BRETZ FOR GLASSES OPTOMETRIST GOSHEN. INDIANA. Over Miller’s Shoe Store Warren Kesler DENTIST Practice limited to Orthodontia, extracting, minor mouth surgery, examination, consultation and X-Ray diagnosis. Phone 242 Goshen - - - Indiana Geese Travel Far The biological survey says that geese breed in the Far North. They winter In Maryland and sometimes as far south as Texsa A number slso winter InQNew Jersey If the weather permits, but very few sre found during the whiter months la the aorthonatern Staten. I sell protection in Rankers Mutual Life Insnrance Co„ of Freeport, 18. Auto and Fire Insurance S. C.WLEPPEI | Syracuse Indiana