The Syracuse Journal, Volume 19, Number 14, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 5 August 1926 — Page 8
;• Classified Ads ; ' * Classified advertising Is ac- Y < > cep ted at the rate of 5 cents X *• a line for each insertion, A < ► booking and collection fee of J, 10 cents will be added for a <> < > charged account; no account < * If will be charged for less than < > 36 cents for a single item. <■ »eeeeeo f SILK HOSE -One dollar silk hose now 79c. Bachnxin’s. WANTED—Spring chickens. Phone Brunjes, 8235. 13-2tp _THE LATEST—Watch Beckmann’s show window. Always the latest, WANTED — A cook. Good wages, Mrs. J. H. White. Phone 404. ’ 14-lt FOUND—Brown traveling bag between Syracuse and Benton. Owner can have same by paying, for this ad. Call at the Eston McClintic residence. 14-lt LOST An Elgin gold wrist watch on Wednesday noon near Grieger’s grocery. Reward, Finder please leave the watch a‘ the Journal office. 11 i d RECORDS -Victor records going fast. Get in on the price, 3 for SI.OO, Beckmann’s. WANTED— Huckleberry pickers. Mondays ami Thursdays. Pickers get two-thirds' slwre. Marsh tiled. Two miles north and three miless east of Middlebury. Rajwnond Eash. 14-pd LAST CHANCE Your las! chance to Buy Victor Records, 3 for SI.OO. at Beckmann s, FOR SALE —My two residences on Lake street, one a 5roctm stucco house and the other a G-room house, both modern. Mrs. Edgar Rippey. Phone 101. 14-ts FOR SALE 5 lots side by each, on Lake street, cheap. See Simon Bell. 2-ts FURNITURE AND RUGS Ail the latest styles in furuVtuiv and rugs are now on display at Beckmann’s store*. For sale bills go to the Journal office. FOR SALE -The Ainos MedUm property on Hunting ton street, at a bargain. Cash or easy teams. For particulars inquire at tiie Journal office. NEED SHOES Buy from our Bargain Table and save one to two dollars per pair. Bachman’s. FOR SALE RENT OR TRADE —"Having accepted the posPion as manager of the Farmers’ CoOperative Elevator Co., at Ligonier, F offer my home for sale, rent or trade. It is a five room stucco bungalow, just south of the race on Huntington street and is modern in every way. Address me at Ligonier. Keys are at Foxford s, next door. U E. Schlotterback. 10-5 t RIBBONS—We sell ribbons for L. C. Smith, Underwood and Oliver Typewriters. Journal office.
ROBERT E. PLETCHER Funeral Director Ambulance Service Syracuse, Indiana. Telephone 76 x WILLIAM GRAY LOEHR \ Attornvy-at-Law 1 SPECIAL ATTENTION GIVEN TO ESTATES. DEEDS. "MORTGAGES TITLES AND WILLS Admitted to Practice in All Court* Real Estate. Collect loan, Notary f ! ’*H S. Buffalo St., Warsaw. Ind. v—— — 3 GEO. L. XANDERS - -i Attorney-at-Law Settlement of Estates. Opinions on Title* Fire and Other Insurance Phone 7 Syracuse, Ind. flogpGunnD ZTHIS OFFICE ILz is the place to have your printing done, n< matter what kind it may oe/ OODPPdTJQr
BUICKS FOR 1927 ROW ON DISPLAY New Standard in Looks and Performance Claimed. - «• A • On August first the Buick Motor Company introduced its new models for 1927. Many features never before found in cars of its price class are included in the new Buicks, and several important engineering developments are introduced as being exclusive Buick features. Chief among these is the Buick valve-in-h< ad engine, which is said to be absolutely without vibration periods and very silent at Aill speeds. This result is obtained, JSuick engineers say, through a combination of counter-balanced crankshaft and torsion balancer, with light, east iron pistons and a heavy flywheel. A new crankcase venti’ator and thermostatic water control prevent crankcase dilution .and make a complete change of oil necessary only four times a year. Silence and the elimination of closed car rumble are also claimed for these ears. These results come from rubber engine mountings at all three points of n, a silent transmission and rear axle, and a muffler and exhaust system which eliminates unpleasant noise. Among the many attractive features of the new Buicks are balanced wheels, w hich prevent wheel bobbing and chatter and aids in smooth riding. Upholstery and trim is of the nest in all mod. is, m >hair plush being used in the closed cars and genuine Spani h leather in the open mod ;... New color c mbinations are in Duco. Tires .~nd rims are jet black, add - ich to tha appearance of the cars. Attractive lines and several entirely new models feature the line. Prices are no higher, in spite of the many improvements. Earth’s Atmosphere The :>fjM’si•; c r*> >f *>'•» earth !• ■bout 1-5 by vohntie oxygen. % nitro Ku. K’.’hxa carbon 'dioxide. aid a variable proportion aqueous vapor Besides these there are traces of other common ga*es. as amn .u.ir. orvne, argon, helium, neon. krypton and xenon. The latter are pre---mt tn minute quantities only, and are Isolated by the employin' nt m low temperaturea. . — —o Records Not Long Kept Accurale precipitation records have been kept In the Boiled S'aies a com ... lj si ort th te: at few of. the stations de the records antedate LSflO, and most them date from laur than ls»9. —Minnesota Chats. - _o Big Bonehead Collection A collection of 6.000 skulls. som< dating from the year 9 K. C.. Is pos sesstsl by the R ge of Sur geons of Great Britain.
SMILES BY MILES JAIO TRfTTY YOUNQ NAH ' PROM NANTUGKET Jhz, C _ 2 THIS TAIN WILL MAKE., HE KICK THE *BUCKET—- > —— 6«E GREW Oetter - NOT WOO REE. — Von inqide. heA ■PURSE—- \ < WM AM 'AHTI«WUH TILL .AND NAN>TUCK<IT iB V** - U- 5 I Headache, earache, toothache, backache are usually relieved by A DR. MILES' Pills
Pennsylvania’s Contribution to the Sesqui • ’• i I ' -S-x \ . •-T ’Tr..' .- “ msPS**'.. » .«\\ -'i. ’** ’ : si 'l—f <>:. i IS C'Kgilw Here is the Keystone State's building at the great Sesqui-Centennial International Exposition at Philadelphia, celebrating 150 ysars of American Indepenuence. In this huge structure Pennsylvania is displaying her progress from the arrival of Penn to day. The building is one of the handsomest on the big exposition grounds and has proved a rendezvous for hundreds of thousands of people who have come from near and far to see the ent exhibits established by forty-three of the leading nations of the world. The Exp< sition continues until December 1.
This Six-Room Bungalow Adapts Self to Any Lot ~~~ . «j
THERE is much to be said in favor of the one-story dwelling, and when the ibmr plan is as expertly arranged as in this Colonial bungalow the usual object!..<ns of lack of privacy and long distances to walk, are avoided. This house may run either lengthwise or across the width of the lot. The exterior is of stained grey shingles with either a green shingled or tiled roof. The trimmings should be white and the shutters green to harmonize
with the roof. The three bedrooms are well shut off from the rest of the house. The large open porch or sunroom can be made to open off either the living or dining room. The kitchen has the desired built-in features, including the useful breakfast nook The cost of this house can be materially reduced by omitting the basement and allowing space on the main floor for a small boiler room. The w’alls and roof also are sheathed with celotex to keep »he temperature at comfort point the year round.
©, Celotechnic Institute, Chicago, 1928.
New England Atmosphere With 1926 Improvements
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■Jng the living and entrance porches around can be built on a wide or narrow lot without spoiling it architecturally. . The house is sturdily built and has an exterior of wood siding except for the unusual stucco panels that start at the level of the secmd d<.K>r u .ti
duws. The roof is of stained shingies. preferably moss green, in keeping with the window shutters. A house of . this compart style is very easy to heat, especially •when the specifications call for insulation throughout with celotex. which prevents heut leakage, and keeps the house ewl in the summer. The living and dining rooms are here combined into one large room flooded with light by windows on three sides. The two bedrooms on the second floor each have double exposure and an extra large closet in which a winded may be placed.
©. Celotschnlc Instltut*. Chicago, IMS.
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ANY one who has ever motored through the quaint sleepy towns of New England has fallen in love with the small houses that abound in that section of the country—neat, white, unpretentious and with a touch of reserve about them. Just such a house is the one pictured here. It is equally adaptable for town or country, and by merely shift-
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Gram/ Canyon Yields Fossils New finds of footprints of reptiles left in soft sand at least 25.000,000 years ago have been made in sandstone 1,800 feet down from the rlxn of the Grand canyon. This is the greatest depth in the canyon at which such prints have been found. The level at which the fossil plants and reptiles have been found belongs to the latter part of the carWniferous period, or the time when the great coal beds of the world were being formed, and was a few million years before the famous reign of the dinosaurs. One specimen shows a row of trecks very much like mouse tracks impressed in a small slab of red stone, and in among the tiny footprints Is a wavy line which represents the track of the animal's tall. Other exhibits show prints larger than a man’s hand, Indicating that some of the reptilian creatures at this age may have become as large as crocodiles. No bones of these creatures have been found In the‘Grand canyon, though some bones of reptiles making similar tracks have been found elsewhere.—New York World. Spot Made Famous by Genius of Alexander The site of the most brilliant coup of Alexander the Great’s campaign In India has been located by the eminent archeologist. Sir Aurel Stein, according to dispatches received in this country. In a section of the hills of Upper Swat known as Torwal, near the northern frontier. Sir Aurel believes that he has identified the site of the fortress of Aornos. captured from the warlike hill tribes by Alexander in 327 B. C. According to the classical historians the stronghold was perched ou a rock over the river Indus and had even resisted the attacks of the legendary Hercules. The particular features of the rough and rocky regions which suggested this site are said to agree more closely with the account of the Greek historian Arrian than a previous tentative location at Mahaban. The strategic value of this hill country has been appreciated and utilized by petty chieftains down to the present day. and it is only recently that conditions have been sufficiently settled to allow archeological exploration. Pretty Indian Legend Long ago, before the white man came to this country, a great famine spread over the land, says the Detroit News, in telling of the legends of Michigan Indians. One day a mother bear with her two hungry little cubs, walked along the shore of Wisconsin and gazed wistfully over at Michigan. Finally, driven by the pangs of hunger, she plunged Into Lake Michigan, followed by her two babies, and struck out for the Michigan shore. When only a few miles from the land of plenty, one cub, too exhausted to go further, sank. She struggled 'to reach shore with the other, but, it too, sank. She herself at last reached shore and sank exhausted. As she gaxed out across the waters, two beautiful Islands slowly arose to mark the graves of her children. And these are called Manltous. meaning the home of departed spirits. American Indians’ Shields The heavy iron shield used by knights in the days of chivalry had ! Its prototype in the rawhide disk of the American plains Indiana While the design imprinted upon the iron defender of the medieval warrior was symbolic, it was not magical like those emblems painted upon the abi original escutcheons now In the posI session of the University of Pennsyl-. ! vania museum, says the Philadelphia Inquirer. Art alone did not prompt the Amer- ■ lean Indian to embellish his defensive ; weapons, but a belief In the supernatural power of color laid in designs I to ward off evil, according to Henry i i Usher Hall, curator of the section of : general ethnology of the museum. French “Independence Day** i The name "Day of the Bastille” is given in French history to the 14th of July. 1739, because on that day the mob. assisted by the Gardes Francaises. rose In insurrection and destroyed the prison fortress of the Bastille. During the years 1790-1792. the , anniversary of this event was called “La Fete de la Federation." The Day of the Bastille is also known as the "Day of July.” and is celebrated by the French as a patriotic holiday, much as the Americans celebrate the signing of the Declaration of Independence on the Fourth of July. Asked for It Said the teacher: "Now. boys, quadraped and biped, you know, are two kinds of animals. Quadruped, animal with four legs, such as cow, elephant and horse. Biped, animal with two leg! such as—well, ah— Yes, there is a biped"—pointing to a picture of a gnose on the wall—“and I am a biped, and you are all bipeds. Now, what am I?" A breathless pause, then one of the bipeds answered. “A goose, sir!" Cold Feet “Do you suffer from cold feet?” the doctor asked the young wife. “Yes," she replied. Hr promised to send her some medicine. “Oh," she replied nervously, “they’re —not —not mine.” O ' VFfiy He Is a Pessimist An optimist proclaims that we are living In the best possible of worlds; the pessimist fears that this is true.— James B. Cabell. ~ o Suggestion Sign on the back of a ten-ton track: “If you bump me, use your head I”— The Outlook. 1
The Leather Goods Store HARNESS AND ROBES Trunks Traveling Bags, Ladies* Hand Rags and Small Leather Goods Phone 86 115 E. Lincoln Ave. Goshen, Ind. REX WINTER INCLOSURES, AUTO TOPS, SLIP COVERS, BODY’ ITHOKSTERING, TRUCK TOPS, SEAT CUSHIONS, TIRE COVERS, HOOD COVERS RADIATOR COVERS, Goshen ftuto Too and Trimming GoGOSHEN, INDIANA Alliece Shoppe PWMANEXT WAVING knd all Kinds of Beauty Work Phone 933 for Appointments Goshen Indiana Spohn Building Odd Mixture of Races Found in Madagascar The peoples of Madagascar have long furnished a fascinating mystery for ethnologists and archeologists, says the Detroit News. They are of extremely mixed cultures, inclusive of three apparently main elements — Bantu negroes from Africa; the Hovas of Malay stock, and a fringe of Arabs all along the coasts, the descendants of the Fatimite caliphs, who were driven out of Arabia and Egypt in the Eighth century. These three elements are subdivided into fifteen or more main tribes, which In turn are divided again Into smaller partially distinctive groups. There are also hints of a pygmy ele- . ment among the populations. Madagascar, incidentally. Is the only spot In the world where lemurs, believed by evolutionists to be the l parent stock of both monkey and man, are still numerous. Elsie Knew All About It Elsie —"Mother. Bobbie and I were playing we’re inarrleu and *we quar- ' reled and Tin going out to get a divorce.” Mother—“A divorce, dear?” Elsie —“Yes. I know how to get one; you Just go to a Judge and get « i transfer.’’ —Boston Transcript.
If you want anything, try a Journal Want Ad And you will get it If you have anything to sell, try our For Sale Column And you will sell it Our classified ads bring results
Slip into one of our Cool Comfortable SUITS for the hot day# 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 Ortho* dontiu, extracting, minor mouth surgery, examination, consultation and X-Ray diagnosis. Phone 242 Goshen - - - Indiana Proverbial Phases “The horns of a dilemma" comes from the scholastic afgumentum coruutum; “to make a eatspaw of’ is from an Italian tale of the Fifteenth century; “to bell the cat.” is from an old fable. 0 din Close Alliance Quoth Thomas Paine in his “Age ot 'Reason”: "The sublime and the ridiculous are often so nearly related that It is difficult to class them separately. One step above the sublime makes the ridiculous, and one step above the ridiculous makes the sublime again." YOUR WIFE. DAUGHTER SISTER—keep her with, you always, in a photograph. Ask her now when it will be convenient for her to sit. Then phone us. The Schnabel Studio Over Bakefi's Drug Store GOSHEN, INDIAN A
