The Syracuse Journal, Volume 19, Number 11, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 15 July 1926 — Page 5

Japan and China <^g» introduced the |S»/ world to tea, and * ts deli £ htful avor and soothing qualities have made it the universally popular * txa picking w japam beverage. 1 Buy Your Tea at Our Store and from our wide range of stock choose the leaf most suited to your taste. Keep in mind, too, that our supply of staple and fancy groceries is the best to be had. We assure . Courtesy — Cleanliness—Honesty—Service ■ i—i ' — wre Seider & Burgener PURE FOOD GROCERS PHONES 8* AND m SYRIrVSE, INDIANA «Smoffiaj«Mai«BttiB»SWaa®BKSB«6»S«aBSE»MB6ia®SBB»tBSBaSSSBSSBa»B I FRESH. GL&fIN M | Await you at our market at all times. You f 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

ECONOMIC WASTE Industrial engineer! have compiled facts and figures which show that waste is responsible for the loss of about ten billions of dollars every year—enough to pay all the taxes and first cost of all automobiles. This loss is caused by unnecessary duplications, and in marketing aid distribution. The increased post of marketing necessarily reduces the power of consumption with a corresponding decrease in production. During the pad few years competition between manufacturers has been materially reduced except in the matter of pushing sales to build up volume of production. There was a time when

While They Last I —i—_— I Never again will such an opportunity be given you i Victor At a tremendous sacrifice, including such world-known > artists as Henry Burr, Billy Murray, Paul Whiteman, Sou* j sa's Band, Pryor's Band, in fact every Artist in the Victor catalog. AU 10-inch Black Double-Faced MECHANICALLY cut records. Former price 75c; now 49c i AU 12-inch Black Double-Faced Records. Former > price $ 1.25; now ........ 83c ' AU 10-inch Blue Label Double-Faced Records. Former price $1.00; now ... 62c AU 12-inch Blue Label Double-Faced Records. Former price $1.50; n0w....................... 97c All Single-Faced Red Seal Records of Great Artists at the following slaughtered prices: All 10-inch, f Ormer price $1.25. Now 39c AU 12-inch, former price $1.75, $3. Now • * 49c Records Guaranteed to be In first-ch iss condition, same as received from the factory. This opportunity will not come again. Sale Closes September 11. • All Records Cash Over 7000 Records Must Go ROGERS & WILSON | 'GOShe n, Indiana. I ■' ■ ■ •

consumers sought merchandise, but today merchandise seeks the consumer, resulting in the installment plan which greatly adds to the cost of merchandising as well as to the cost of goods. The consuming power is limited to the earning power. With 80 per cent of the population renting their homes and only about 20 per c» ! nt of the population represented among savings bank depositors, ihe great mass of consumers are not only living from hand to mouth, but are mortgaging future earnings. It is a problem that must some day be solved and adjusted. — oOLD PAPERS—Large bundle for 5c at the Journal office.

Correspondence I".’ Neighborhood FOUR CORNERS Mrs. Crist Darr was a business caller in Gothen on Monday. Emeral Callander spent Sunday with; friends in Milford. Mrs. Eve Callander is ill with heart trouble.*She has been ill the past week. T ie son of Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Graff has been seriously ill for the past week. Mr. and Mrs. James Myers called at the Snyder home on Sunday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Howard MeSweeny were Goshen callers on Sunday' afternoon. Mrs. Howard McSwenny spent Friday at the home of Mrs. Joe Bushong in Syracuse. Harry Martin and Quimby Elkens of Milford called at the Crist. Darr home on Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Maloy called at ihje home of Charley Grove, near Leesburg. Sunday afternoon. Charles Detrick and Miss Geyer spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Darr, near Goshen. Mrs. James Callander and son of Gravelton called at the home of Clint Callander on Friday afternoon. Mn and Mrs. James Myers and Mrs. Howard McSweeny were visitors at Elkhart and Goshen on Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. James Chilcote, Mn, and Mrs. Moneyheifer of Nappanee called at the Christ Darr home, recently’. Mrs. Crist Darr spent Thursday at the home of Earl Darr, near Goshen. Mrs. Edna Geyer and daughter called in the afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. John Darr, Mr. and Forest Fisher and daughter Marie of Three Rivers, Mich., spent Sunday and Monday with Crist Darr and family. Mr. and Mrs. James Myens were Sunday dinner guests of Mrs. Hoover of Salem. Os course they knew (that fried chicken was to .be served. In the afternoon they drove over to Redmon Park. _ o Needle Mystery “A western Kansas man found the proverbial needle in the straw stack. How It got there he doesn’t know, but after he slid down the stack it required an hour for the surgeon to get the needle out." So records the Salina Journal. It was probably a needle some fanner lost when he “sowed his wheat.—Exchange.

FINAL CLEAN-UP SALE It Begins Thursday Morning Ultimate Price Reductions on Hart Schaffner & Marx THREE-PIECE SUITS S3O and $35 S4O and $45 SSO, $55 and S6O Suits, Now Suits, Now Suits, Now ’fl 8 ? «29 87 $ 34 87 f ■ • One lot of Suits, sizes 33 to 36 SO-95 only, values up to $35, now We’ve kept stocks up. You never saw a finer assortment to choose from. Now we’re cutting prices to the bone to sell them quickly before fall goods come in. . . ’ ■ j - The years greatest values are here for you at this sale Goshen L. SIMON CO. G ° shen

THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL

NORTH WEBSTER Mr. and Mrs. Cecil likens hjave both been on the sica list. Mrs< Chas. Gross is again at her home here after spending ten weeks at North Manchester College. Miss Vera Grubb returned to her home here after a short visit with relatives out of town. * Mr. and Mrs. Ross Rodibaugh and son George spent S. nday at Syracuse, at the Lawrence Deardorff home. Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Whitehead are attending the sesquieentennial celebration in Philadelphia Penn.. Miss Elizabeth Bainning has returned from North Manchester Colkge. where attended the rfbrmal term. The Misses Martha and Madeline Bockman gave a vocal duet during preaching services at the Methodist church on Sunday morning. Thirty-five numbers of the , Epw'orth League of the First Methodist church of Warsaw, motored to Webster lake Friday evening and enjoyed a picnic supper at Epworth Forest. The evening was spent in games. Mrs. Hattie Baigher and Paul Beady were quietly married on Saturday afternoon. However, the newly married couple w'ere given a rousing old fashioned “belling” on Monday evening. WHITE OIK Mrs. Carl Walker was a caller at the Ernest Mathew’s home on Wednesday morning. Miss Josephine Tam and. Mrs. Ellen Wyland of Pierceton spent a few- days at the William Wyland biome. Mr. and Mrs. Firm Milles and family of North Dakota are spending a few days with the former’s sister, Mrs. Guy Fisher and family. Mr. and Mrs. Orvil Neff of Milford called at the Ernest Mat'uews home on Monday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Rial Troup and family spent Sunday -with Mr. and Mrs. J. A.Fisher. Mr. and Mrs. Chester Stiffler spent Sunday tlhe former’s brother. Orland Siffler, and family of Syracuse. Mrs. lona Ryman enjoyed Sunday with her sister, Mrs. Edith Smith. o Too Late With Invention t Francis Maceronl, an English inventor and soldier of fortune of Italian descent, just missed lasting fame. He invented an Improved type of steam coach for ordinary roads, but the introduction of railways made it valueless.

Six Burners » No. 415 Four burner cooking top. Oven has two burners and bakes as fast as gas. Finished in durable white porcelain and black enamel. Improved construction eliminates all bolt heads, crevices and projections, making surfaces perfectly smooth and easy to clean. Size of top, 22x28 inches. Height 32i£ inches. Size of oven, 18 in. wide x 14 in. deep x 12 in. high.

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Embarrassing Question While Jane was attending a vaudeville show with her mother the ‘‘headliner’’ appeared In all her glory, reclined upon a chaise longue, and began to sing a beautiful love ballad. All was so quiet you could hear a pin drop when Jane spoke up. loud and clear: “Oh, mamma, don’t you wish you was, nice like that lady?” o On Safe Ground They inquired about his trip abroad. He began enthusiastically, but stopped short. “Has any one here been to Europe?” “No.” “Well. then. I can speak freely."—Boston Transcript O ? • House and Barn The old idea that the barn should be larger than the house still maintains, but not that the barn should I be better than the house. We are , now getting the big thrilling idea that human beings have some rights as well as domestic animals. is a RrMJeriptioa for Colds Grippe, Flu, Dengue Bilious Fever and Malaria It Kills the Germs.

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f'Free Examination a : “ B \ Save Youc Trees t —.. a S I W. O. PAPE Tree Surgeon and Landscape Gardener a .■ a ■> a | Phone 243 Warsaw, Ind.

Old Gambling Game Faro Is one of the oldest gambling games and is Supposed to be of Italian origin. It belongs to the same family as lansquenet, florentini and monte bank. Under the name of pharaon it was in great favor during the reign of Louis XIV and came to America byway of New’ Orleans.

Osborn & Son Syracuse, Indiana

Assurance Follows Poise “No good workman holds his tools tno closely." It ts the child Just., learning to write who grasps his pen* as If he feared tt might slip from hts Angers. It is the amateur who leaves the print of his hands on the implement he wields. Inward poise means outward assurance. —London Mail.