The Syracuse Journal, Volume 19, Number 8, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 24 June 1926 — Page 5

W~ . — 11 Fresh Vegetables } pg* 1 in Season J 1 h'3 ffi p- --— i&ggae. Eat plenty of r/f\ \! R.J vegetables and you Ijii* H 1 will enjoy good health. They are full of nourF -— ishment and have a ben- . eficial influence upon •jbMfr if/ your whole system. We keep a large and complete stock of all the fresh vegetables in season andsell l hem at prices you can / «*«*ly afford to pay. those not in season can be found in our E ' 1 d1 canned goods department, where quality and prices are al- , ®Vz ways sure to be just right. Telephone Orders Given Prompt Attention Seider & Burgener PURE FOOD GROCERS I'HOXES S 2 AX’D 172 SYRACUSE. INDHNA

I FRESH. GLEAN MEAT I Await you nt our market nt all times. You I will tiud the juiciest cuts >ad the tenderest e pieces hen*. We also handle munked »nd dried meats and a general line of eaaned meats. 9 0U j KLINK BROS. MEAT MARKET |

Easy to Sharpen Set sort Tu sharpen '■!<-'< US ,Ut pi»s.e O! mmdoatH'r in pie ■** O— —■ —. Photograph Eye Defeett By a new Imention eye detects art found by aid of pbottigrttpb*.

'in -. r— k O Outstanding Maytag Features I v 1 Washes faster, i I ®AVasKesdeancr. •■Tay* / j 3 l_irgc.t houriv i F || -ri- iiiir - ' > capac-tv. Tub I |« p JF- holds 21 gals. > ti“ U IM l washer made- ! takes floorspace | only 2> inches | -A' 7 :: . ... --1 ‘ < • ~ o ■ wuqs, rot, swell, i'i ? 1 split or corrode. IL I .1A ywJJkJ j I • Easily adjusted w I I ,o Ag 1 » li 7 Clothes can be H — fjßsjMUy | 1 put in or taken with the ‘ i—i w t T washer running. J ' I " 1 STub cleans itxf • A I I metal M. w - .'J , ’ W II | . adjusting. InwithoutelertrWir. II Vk stant tension L the Maytasb available with I I release. to built gaaoUne motoe. LA Q Reasons for JT World .l eadership c# will Convince you I IN your own home —test the Maytag. Do a week’s • washing without expense or obligat ion. Prove convincingly that it will wash everything—the finest ‘ fabrics, as gently as by hand—the heavy bulky things —even grimy, greasy work clothes —more thoroughly than any other way. Washes faster and easier. Prove that the Maytag washes tubfuls unusually clean in 3to 7 minutes —whole washings—so lbs. of dry clothes in an hour. Prove that it washes collars, cuffs, wristbands, without hand-rubbing. Phone for a Maytag—we will gladly deliver one for any washing test you want to give it. Test it as your . own —test it thoroughly —use it unsparingly. If it doesn’t sell itself, don’t keep it. Deferred Payments you’ll never miss ■ « ' 1 " r 11 » Ligonier Electric Co. Bowen & Robinson, Prop. Ligonier, Indiana . y Phone 700 ■ 9 ' ■»

Australia reports that its new compulsory voting law, which ! imposes fines for failing to exercise the franchise, has brought up the total v- *e from 57.95 per cent to 91.31 per cent, consequently the measure is considered a success.

H Correspondence ILU Neighborhood I ■' SOLOMON’S CREEK There will be no church services next Sunday. We will all go to Oakwood. Mrs. Ford Grissomer was taken to the Goshen hospitab on Monday for an operation. She is reported as doing well. Fred Ringwait had his hand, painfully injured on Monday afternoon in the gravel pit near Wakarusa, where he has been employed. One finger had to be amputated and two others were badly lacerated. WHITE OAK Mr. and Mrs. Ber.ram Whitehead Mrs. Rebecca Dewart and Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Dewart spent Saturday and Sunday with Mr. ami Mrs. Harry Strieby atElgin, 111. Mrs. Everett Tom is spending a feu days with her parents Mr. and Mrs. Guy Fisher. Chester Stiffler and family were guests of Mr. and Mrs. I mon Rookstool at Oswego on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. James Dewart and Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Mathews spent Sunday evening with Mr. and Mrs. John Roop. TAKE NOTICE the pens m, who sent us the article, signed h Journal reader, enclosing 50 cents, please call at out office? — o— GARRETT SHOPS TO MOVE According to a statement given out by officials of the B. and O. railroad that the heavy repair work in the locomotive shops at Garrett would be stopped soon, and the repair equipment moved to other points. Sixteen machines used for locomotive repairs have already been removed,'from the shops and shipped to South Chicago, Willard and Virginia. The car repair shops at Garrett will not be affected by the change. ' * The railroad officials stated that the change would not affect the maintenance of way, transportation and other departments, or railroad men. Garrett will still be the di vision point. MAGGOTS LX OXIOXS Onion maggots are rampant in the onion fields of Kosciusko county and large losses, possibly mounting to hundreds, if not thousands of dollars, will be suffered by growers in this community. Tom A. Parker, county agricultural agent, said regarding the pest: “The onion maggot is a larva of a fly that attacts onions during May and the first half ■ of June. It is now too late this year to control this pest as the damage has already been done. Onion growers must start May Ist and carry on a continuous system of poisoning the flies •hat lay the eggs as there is no way to destroy the maggots after they attack the onions. —__o The sale of poppies for relief of war veterans while Congress was voting $165,000,000 for public buildings and a much larger sum for rivers and harbors, involved a note of irony-—especial-ly in view of the fact that a bill for veteran relief was cut more than two-thirds. - oThe Navy department is financing an expedition to the North Pole to search for coal and oil. We have mountains of high grade coal in Alaska, but transportation costs make it useless. If found at the North Pole the Eskimo might be taught to w it. ♦ PENNY PADS Merchants and mechanics use them for notes and figuring. Size 3x6 inches. Jourial office. - -O— —————— * CARDBOARD—AII kinds of •ardboard, suitable for drawing tnd maps, for sale at the Journal office. SPECIAL I for the 4th of July Shampooing, Scalp Treatments, Marcelling, Facial Massage Manicure Sooth Shore Inn Beauty Shoppe Lake Wawasee. Phone 817

• THE SYRACUSE JOURNAE

Too Much Mechanism for the Modern Mind? Complete civilization will be here when our modern conveniences do not annoy us as much as they help us. Disquisitions are multiplying In the public press on the perils of the mechanical results of our Inventive ingenuity .It requires such vigilance and intense application to carry on all this machinery of our civilization. The complaint is made that the mind is left no time for abstract thought or contemplation or even for a healthy following. Can we live "on the Jump," and ilve long and profitably? Every moment of our time feels the demand of some new distraction. We are not in Alaska, where they can “set and think," through the long winter nights, and the advantages of "setting and thinking" are not to be belittled. By and by, Alaska may begin producing our sages and philosophers. Down here In sunnier and busier climes, we have no time for Plutonian ratiocination. A generation or two ago we reasoned out a fairly tenable philosophy on “What is man?" and "What are his purposes?" but now we are not so sure. W. G. Wells, somehow. Is not so convincing as John Stuart Mill, and what giants have arisen since Darwin and Spencer and Huxley and Tyndall? Machinery, machinery!—St Louis Globe-l>emocrat. Cultivation of Hobby Remedy for Overwork Many remedies are suggested for the avoidance of worry and mental overstrain in • persons who over prolonged periods have to bear exceptional responsibilities and discharge duties upon a very large scale. Some advise exercise, and others, repose, Some counsel travel, and others, retreat Some praise solitude, and others. gaiety. No doubt all these may play their part according to the individual temperament. But the element which Is constant and common in all of them is change. Change is the enough merely to switch off the llghtt which play upon the main and ordinary field of interest; a new field ot Interest must be Illuminated. The cultivation of a hobby and new, forms of interest is therefore a policy of first importance to a public man. To be really happy and really safe, one ought to have at least two or three, and they must all be real.—Kt. Hon. Winston S. Churchill, in Hearst's In-ternational-Cosmopolitan. Fish Change Color Many species of fish can change color at will to suit temporary needs. Experiments in aquaria have shown that the changes In color depend entirely upon the sight of the Individual, since the color of blind specimens remains unaffected by changes in the color Os their environment. The method by which a fish changes color is well known, says Nature Magazine. The color cells in the skin may contain red, orange, yellow aqd black pigments. and the variations in color result from muscular action, cons* * >us or subconscious, upon one or more of ■ the color cells. The changes of color, generally under the control of the individual, are chiefly made for the purpose of concealment; but they are also made for many other reasons, including the capture of prey, for mimicry or for courtship. Slow Breathing Best It has been noted by scientists that the slow breathing animals are the longest lived and the least susceptible to tuberculosis. The rabbit, which is the most susceptible to the disease, breathes 55 times a minute, while the horse, the least likely to contract It, breathes but ten times a minute at rest. The animal which never Is attacked by tuberculosis and which is perhaps the longest lived is the turtle. Its respirations are so few that they are scarcely perceptible. The observations and tests on animals have been made by experts In pulmonary diseases for the purpose Os trying a slow breathing treatment on tuberculosis patients. First English Theater The first real theater in England was built in 157 ft (in 1476 the first hook was printed in England). The Puritanism of London made it necessary to build this theater on the Surrey side of the Thames. Only one bridge crossed the river—old London bridge, with its houses and shops. Across this bridge streamed the apprentices and their lassies, the workmen and non-Puritanic craftsmen. The mansions of the great were built upon the river bank —hence the name of the street: Strand. Steps led to the water and gay barges carried the “quality-folk" across the river, the ladies frequently masked to esc«t>e rudeness and jest Many Tobacco Varieties A variety of types and grades of tobacco are grown in the United States. Some are suitable for use in the manufacture of two or more kinds of product The bright flue-colored type, grown mostly in Virginia, the Carolinas and Georgia, is the principal cigarette tobacco. More of this type of leaf than any other is exported. Burley, grown chiefly tn Kentucky, is used mainly in the manufacture of smoking and chewing tobacco, but largely also In cigarette production. The dark-fired type, produced for the moat part tn Kentucky and Tennessee, is need tn the manufacture of snuff and smoking and chewing tobacco. 666 is a Prescription for Colds, Grippe, Flii, Dengue Bilious Fever and Malaria It Kills the Genas.

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Why “Grate Widow?” Authorities have never definitely been able to trace the origin of the term “grass widow.” It is to be found in many languages. Some believe that it is a corrupted form of “grace widow”—-that is “widow by the grace of circumstances.”/ There are no facts to substantiate this belief, however. According to Doctor Brewer, the modern use of the term seems to have originated among Anglo-Indians, about the middle of the Nineteenth century, from the practice of European husbands sending wives to the hills during the hot season in India. In this section the grass is plentiful. Another suggestion is that it arose in America during the gold rush In California. A man not Infrequently put his wife and children to board while he went to the diggings. This he called “putting his wife to grass," as a horse is put to grass when not in use for work. Joke Had Rebound A Rockland girl was entertaining her beau, a policeman from a neighboring town, and the maid’s young brother thought he would like to put on the handcuffs the caller carried in his pocket? The genial copper was willing to oblige and the wristlets were fastened on the youngster, who was confident he c-«uld get them off without any aid. But they were obstinate, and finally the. courting cop was asked to Unlock them. Then the otfieer began to get chills and fever. A hunt of one pocket after another failed to locate the key. As a last resort the flustered officer of the law was obliged to bundle up little brother and carry him to the home In another town where the key had been left. All that occupied quite a lot of time and that Sunday evening was practically wasted for the kid's sister.—Brockton Enterprise. Odd idea About Birds Hibernation of birds was accepted by some early writers. It is mentioned by Aristotle, while much later, in ITO 2, tn Loudon, another idea related to bird migration was made public in an anonymous treatise. In it. it was solemnly declared birds escaped cold weather by flying directly to the moon, where they si>ent their winter days. The journey was supposed to require sixty days’ time, according to the estimators of that date, the birds flying constantly and without foojJ. life being sustained by the abundance of fat the little feathered travelers had stored 'on their bodies. That book is said to have had wide circulation and Its teachings were accepted by many. Radio for the Deaf It depends entirely upon the type of deafness and the degree to which it is developed, whether a radio can be of aaetstknee. Persons who are entirely deaf or nearly so cannot be aided by this instrument, but successful results have been obtained by persons whose hearing is partially affected. The reason lies in the fact that when the ear phones are used the sounds are greatly magnified, which enables them to distinguish sounds more readily. The instrument can be tuned to such a degree as to make the Incoming sounds very loud, tn fart, a great deal louder than the speaking voice or other sounds. GEO. L» XANDERS Attorney-at-Law Settlement of Estates. Opinions on Title? Fire and Other Insurance Phon© 7 Syracuse, Ind

MARRIAGE IXSIRAXCE An international feminist advocates that every female child be insured, from birth, against both singleness, and divorce, should she get married. That’s an idea which might be extended in several directions. Why not insure boys, at birth, against marriage, and also against the possibility of divorce and the paying of alimony. The purpose of marriage is not | to make one person dependent' on another, nor is it so destruc-, tive of personality that one must insure for or against it. The best and wisest insurance for any man or woman, young or old, is tihe development of + he' whole personality, so that there is freedom, independence. Self-. sufficiency that can be willingly merged with the self-sufficiency of another. When we can all I support ouselves when none of ! us seek to soldier on other, we will all be better insured for I and against happenings of human life. When we are ill, we should be eared for, but it is stupid +o look on one’s material j fate as illness or disease. We can ! be happy, if we are really ade-l

BATTERIES ACCESSORIES t A Jf :sp jf/ i •’er* ' w * Ar/ <v io v We are conveniently located, where you can buy absolutely dependable tires, made by Goodyear, at very reasonable prices—and enjoy efficient and complete tire service. Low-Priced Pathfinders Bis, sturdy tires, built by Goodyear for the motorist who wants a lar?e measure of genuine quality at the lowest possible cost. Pathfinder Balloons Pathfinder Cords * 29x4.40 - - $14.25 30x3£ - SIO.OO 31x5.25 ’ - - $21.00 32x4 ( $18.50 33x6.00 • $37.00 33x5 - $31.00 Individualized Tire Service Real Service Syracuse Auto Sales . - — .■■ ■ llll ■ 11 111 ~ -

quate to do whether we marry or not. Life is more than marriage, even for the female and any movement which tends to make the female subsevient to her sex in a sense that the male is not. is destructive of the finer capacities of both and of the greater reaches of culture and civilization. - | NOTICE Take Notice that the following ( policies of the Fidelity-Phenix Fire Insurance Company have been lost and destroyed. Not having been executed, they are void. Any or iuli persons under whose hands they may come are requested to either ' deliver or mail them to the Fidelityi Phenix Fire Insurance Company, Chb-ago, 111. Fire Policies No. 1505 to 1550, > inclusive. Tornado Policies No. 501 to 510, (inclusive. 1 Comb ned Dwelling Policies No. 5034 to 5050, inclusive. Dwelling policies No. 801 to 810, i inclusive. (8-3 c