The Syracuse Journal, Volume 19, Number 35, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 30 December 1926 — Page 8

- —™— — 1 — ;■ Classified Ads • • J ; Classified advertising is at- ; ’ ( , cepted at the rate of 5 cents . , < > a line for eaeh insertion. A ► ! [ booking and collection fee of j , ' ! 10 cents will be added tor "a o, 1 » charged account; no account ’ J ] [ will be charged for less than < , < ► 25 cents for a single item. <» < »»»»»♦♦♦«»»♦»»♦»♦»•»♦♦♦»♦ FOR SALE —Eight shoats, 10 weeks old. Eston Kline. 342tp KITCHEN CABINETS—White enameled inside. Price $35.00. Beckmann’s store. FOR SALE—Two modern houses and one vacant lot on Lake street Emory Kindig. 35-4 tpd "apples, apples, apples Grimes Golden, Jonathan, Baldwin, R. I. Greenings. First grade, $1.00; second, 50c. Cider apples 25c. Stephen Freeman, Phone 586. 25-ts FOR SALE—Ford coupe, 1923 Ford touring car, 1922 Ford touring car, all in good shape. Holiett Motor Sales. 33-ts PICTURES FRAMED—Now is the time to have your pictures framed at Beckmann's store. FOR SALE-One second-hand settee, mahogany, and arm chair covered in tapestry. Beckmann’s store. FOR SALE—Good four-burner kerosene stove-range, guaranteed to be in first class condition. Worth $50.00 new. Will sell for S2O. (Ml. EL N: McMichael. Phone 189. 35-lt FOR RENT -Onion ground also other farm land. See Mrs. Martha Jordan, Syracuse, Ind. 355-ts FOR SALE—T w o purebred Holstein heifers 2 months old. Here is a chance for someone to get a start for a purebred herd. C. J. Kitson. 34-2 p LAMPS—See the beautiful lamps arrived this week a 4 Beckmann's store. HELP WANTED—Big salary to commence. Men 18 to 35, Railway Mail Clerk positions. Experience unnecessary. Write George Robbins, for free particulars about instruction for this examination. 525 F Bu rebel Bldg., Washington, D. C. 33-3 t "Victor machines f f you wish to hear music *hat is worth while listen to is the Orthophonic Victor machine at Beckmann’s store. PENNY PADS— Merchants and mechanics use them for notes and figuring. Size 3x6 inches. Journal office. « CARDBOARD—AII kinds of cardboard, suitable for drawing and maps, for sale at the Journal office. RIBBONS—We sell ribbons for I* C. Smith, Underwood and Oliver Typewriters. Journal office. ADVERTISING — Try these little classified 'ads to sell those things you do not want any longer, or to find the things you need. BRICK In Stock J. C. Abbott Phone 734 Syracuse, Ind. All Roads Lead to Gm W. WlGklzer GENERAL AUCTIONEER and FORD SALESMAN Ligonier Indiana Phone 145 Beverse the charges fur Sale Dates. ROBERT E. PLETCHER i Funeral Director Am bn la nee Service Syracuse, Indiana. Telephone 75 WILLIAM GRAY LOEHR Attorney-at-Law BPBCIAL ATTBNTION GIVRN TO ESTATES. DEEDS. MORTGAGES TITLES AND WILLS Admitted to Practice in All Courts Beal Estate, Collections, Notary 118| S. Buffalo St., Warsaw. Ind GEO. L XANDERS A t torncy-at-Law Settlement of Batatas, Opinions on Titles Fire and Other Insurance Ftaaae 7 SyraeKte. Ind.

= = —■ -y — — TO SIMPLIFY INDIANA'S FISH AND GAME LAMS Because many of Indiana’s fish and game laws as regards open and closed seasons are conflicting and confusing, George N. Mannfeld, superintendent of the fish and game division of the state conservation department, is hopeful the forthcoming legislature will take cognizance and simplify same. • According to this state official there is and long has been a general misunderstanding of the open season on rabbits. The Act of 1913 makes it; lawful to hunt any kind of game except wild ducks and other waterfowl at any time from the twentieth day of December to the first day of April the following yean also provides that nothing in the Act shall be constructed to prevent hunting rabbits between the twentieth day of December and thejQth day of January the following year. Some persons construe this act to mean that the only open season on rabbits is between December 20 and January’ 10, and that wikkducks and other waterfowl may be hunted in Indiana ucpil April 1. The facts are wild ducks and other waterfowl can no longer be Lawfully shot Jto April. According to federalf regulations under a treaty with Great Britain, January 15 is the last day of the open season. The season opens on October 1 and closes with January 16. Reports to the office of Richard Lieber, conservation director, credit huiying not as good this season as in several years past. Complaints have been registered of a scarcity of rabbits in several section compared to 1925. The same source provides the information that hunting accidents are fewer so far this season compared to previous seasons, which leads officials to believe that hunters are exercising more care, because hunting permits are in excess of previous years. The sta‘e department has repeatedly urged hunters to respect the property rights and wishes of farmers when they enter upon their lands, and reports from .all parts of the state indicate a much better feeling exists between the city hunter and Land owner. Most land owners don’t object to the city feller hunting on their land if they will not try to kill all the game, and especially not molest live stock, poultry and will open and shut gates instead of tearing down fences. CHICKEN FLAVORED Domestic rabbit nveat possesses delicious flavor, important food value and tastes mo. 3 bke chick en than like wild rabbit, says ;he Bioksical Survey of the United States Department, of Ag ricultuix*. Domestic labbits die raised m hutches, where they have -ml .• limited exercise and where they can be properly f«*d. They are cleanly in habits. »u;d their diet, consisting chiefly of oats, barley, and alfalfa hay, makes the meat sweet, tender and of excellent flavor. - ——— -'-0 ■ Ken Maynard. a hie new screen star in “Seimr Daredevil,” a new type of out d«»or picture. See it at Crystal, Lirjonivr, Ciis Friday and Saturday. 6 66 Is a Prescription for Colds. Grippe. Flu, Dengne Bilious ('ever ami Malaria It Kills the Germs. Neurasthenia, 1 Nervousness, Neuralgia Nervous / AI - Dyspepsia, / Nervous kA Headache, JF Nervine Your ability to think clearly, remember correctly, sleep well and to enjoy life depends on the condition of your nerves. Don’t neglect them. Nervousness may lead to ill health. Dr. Miles’ Nervine gy—eg b a reliable nerve medicine used sue- -Successfully in ner- SS vous disorders for nearly fifty years. Your money I \ « bock if the first full she bottle fails to help you. •A generous sample for 6c. in stamps. /VS \Dr. MB" Medical (X j Ktthartt umL

A SABBATICAL YEAR A movement has been started in Washington and some other cities to grant school teachers a sabbatical yecir, a boon that is cqmtmonly enjoyed by college professors. If this plan goes through, teachers in these cities will work six years five days a week, with there months vacation and then withdraw from school for a year—of course, on pay. This seventh year is designed for travel, study or other means of seif-improvement. The idea of a sabbatical year is very attractive. All working folk would like it, and probably would be the better for the year of release from toil. But it is out of the question for them. Most of them have to be content

<50% WASTE. . Trimmings, core, ends cw</ y A a Y S o * o Sudan mdl, jmee is extracted afftf ■ Pineapple | ENOS SHELL /lb* CORE ZSJI 7 J S SHELL •EXTRA . "STANDARD “BROKEN Dueto irregular and badlu broken I QUALITY* QUALITY SLICES" Was this is crushed and com- _ v owed with shell extraction Sliced Hawaiian Hawaiian Pineapple THE CANNING OF PINEAPPLE By Capitola Williams Ashworth

THE story of the canning of pineapple is a romantic one, from the picking of the fruit on the plantations to the actual Kicking in the dans, cooking and belling in the canneries. To begin with, the-' labor employed represents many different nationalities. Ther/ are Chinese, Japanese, Portuguese, Filipinos, Fiji Islanders, Americans, and native Hawaiians, called kanakas (men) and wul’nia (women). These people may be seen in the fields during the picking season and in the canneries during the canning season, mingling in friendly fashion and humming the popular airs of their native lands, or more often singing an Hawaiian tune. In fact, many a can cf pineapple is packed and sent spinning along its way to the tune of Aloha Oe or some hula sang. The interior of a canning plant In Honolulu during *he busy season is unique and picturesque. Many different races and a hundred different types may be seen. Dark skins, yellow ekins, and fair skins burned red by the tropical sun are seen side by side. AU are clean as there are rooms in the plant provided with shower baths for their convenience, and they are required to wear long white aprons and caps and rub- < her gloves, thus assuring the most sanitary conditions for the fruit. - But the Hawaiian maidens, white very efficient in their work will fiot permit anything to kill their love of color and life, and insist I on wearing bright flowers tucked i under their ears and leis, which j are long ropes of bright and fragrant flowers, about their necks. Thus the cannery is not only a < place where the fascinating process of canning pineapple may be i been, but a place where many in- i

1,750,000th Buick Built ’ "?& ’ < * £«’IS 4- « ’a - ss* c 'YI. 4’ $• Is

THE General Superintendent of the Butt Motor Company recently telephoned E. T. Strong. Farmer General Sales Manager. and now President and said: “At about two o’clock the one miUicn, seven hundred andfifty thousandth Butt still be driven off the assembly line. “Mr. Strong was on hand to witness this epochal event, and at four minutes of two Butt number 1.750,000 responded to the throttle and was driven away. This demonstration of manufacturing efficiency j was secondary, however, to the car which is shown | above, being examined by Mr. Strung. The new Butt President has played an important part in the In November. 1935. Butt celebrated the building of car number 1.500,000. November 1926 marks the building of this Oft mnhbcc 1,750*000* Strong is justly

THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL

with two weeks vacation. Ye editor very rarely gets the two weeks—and if he does he has to make it up by longer hours. This new scheme is not likely to win the approval of tax-payers. o WHO OWNS THE FORESTS! The forest land of the United States, in round numbers, is split up approximately as follows: Federal Government. 89,000,000 Stites, 10,500,000 acres; municipalities and counties, 700,000 acres; large private owners, •220,000,000 acres; small private owners, 150,(MX),000 acres. o Almost one-half—or about 12,000,000—of America’s school children are being taught in oneroom country schools.

teresting human traits and racial characteristics may be observed. The actual steps through which the ripened and properly matured pineapple goes before it reaches the American table are somewhat as follows: The pineapples are graded at the plantation according to size. Here it is the diameter that counts, — not the length of the pineapple. They are packed into big boxes in the fields and loaded on motor trucks and hauled to the nearest railway loading point where they are put into the pineapple cars and taken to the plant At the plant they are unloaded and placed on travelling chains which carry them into a machine where they are shelled, cored and the two butt ends are cut off. The pineapple meat comes out in the form of a cylinder. Inside the rind which is thus removed is much good fruit which is cit out by a knife to bo used for crushed pineapple, which is also canned here. From this machine the cylinder shaped fruit comes down onto a travellirg belt where women are lined up on either side, to trim from the fruit remaining bits of the shell or any imperfection in the fruit Now the cylinder of fruit goes through a slicing machine, after which it is again separated into three grades. For the first and best grade the fruit that is ripest and most golden in color, also the most neatly sliced is chosen, is put into cans with the addition of a larger amount of sugar than the other fruit, and, upon reaching the market is sold as “fancy canned” at a price somewhat higher than the other grades. The second grade which is sold as “standard” Is almost enoally i as good ls the fancy, but has not

proud of the fact that the last quarter million cars were produced within twelve months, while it took about . B twelve years to build the first quarter million. Os the one and three-quarter million cars built and sold, a H million and a half have been delivered to consumers since Strang took up the reins as General Safes Manager 51 of the company ten yean ago. H The car pictured is the Ccnvertabfe Coupe, a g , deluxe model on the Scries 128 chassis. Zt-is the newest Butt model, and fe an example of the latest trend in ij, body design. It is equipped with leather upholstery, a g’ deck seat and a top which may be raised or lowered, according to the season. The windows may be placed in any position, regardless of whether the top is up or down. This model was introduced November first and H still be one of the new features at the automobile show thro stintar.

GASOLINE A total of 3,560,987,580 gallons of gasoline were taxed during the first six months of 1926. All of the states except Illinois, Massachusetts, New Jersey and New York imposed a gasoline tax, the r&te ranging from one to five cents with an average of 2.39 cents per gallon. An additional 856,450,000 gallons, it is estimated*. were consumed in the four states in which the tax is not collected. Since 19,,697,832 motor vehicles were registered in the six-months -period, the gasoline consumption per vehicle averaged 225 gallons. o Mae Murray in “Valencia” with I Lloyd Hughes at Crystal, Ligon* j ier, tonight.

1 quite so much sugar added and . may not represent quite the peri section of slicing as the fancy I grade. > The third grade is the pineapple : that has been broken in the slicing machine or elsewhere. Much I of it is equal to the best in color, i ripeness and flavor, but, being • broken, it is put on the market . at a considerable reduction in i prices. Some pieces are too badly brok. ; en to be canned as sliced pine- ' apple and are sent over to the i department where crushed pineapple is being prepared. After this grading is done the fruit is packed into cans and sent through a vacuum machine where the fruit cells containing air are exploded. Then hot syrup made of refined pineapple juice and pure cane sugar is added. Now the cans travel into an exhaust box where the air is driven out and the temperature ’ is raised. Here the fruit stays for about six minutes at a temperature of 135 degrees. The cans- are now ready to be sealed, anq are then cooked at a temperature of 195 or 200 degrees Fahrenheit for about ten minutes, according to the size of the can and the nature of the contents. After cooking, the cans are sent through a lacquer bath to receive a protective coating against rust and to give an attractive appearance. Now the cans pass through a cooler where the temperature is reduced so that the fruit will not continue to cook. The complete process of canning the pineapple is almost automatic, the only hand work being the trimming of the fruit after the shell has been removed and the packing into cans. The entire process takes only about 35 min- , ntes though this varies according to the size of the can.

HOUSEHOLD HINTS I • 4 XJ You can keep milk four or five days by boiling it. Sterilize bottles and paper ewers. When cool, put near ice. Two tablespoonfuls of olive oil at the root of your fern or palm once each month will make a decided improvement in the plant. When preparing a tnustard plaster, try using the white of an egg instead, of wa'er to mix it. You will find this sort of plaster will not blister. A cloth wet in hot wash suds and the addition of a few drops of kerosene will remove every ‘race of dirt from the wire clothesline that is left out all the time. To prevent damp salt coroding the top of -salt shakers, heat paraffin and spread it inside Vhe top. While the paraffin is cooling open the holes with a toothpick through which the salt will pass easily. When washing blankets for the first time always soak them overnight in cold water in which a liandful of borax has been dissolved. They are much easier to wash when treated in this way if put straight into suds. Uses for Vinegar Vinegar has so many uses about the kitchen. A teaspoon of vinegar added to a roast will make it get i tender far more quickly .and will not taste. When you want to keep either mayonnaise or boiled salad dressing for several days pour just a little vinegar over it in the bottle or bowl and no crust will form. Salt and vinegar has always been a standard cleaning agent for brass or copper. A few drops of vinegar in the water in which eggs are poached will coagulate the white more | quickly and it is not so likely to mix with the water and be lost. If you are using a strong soap or concentrated lye and it begrns to irrita/e the hands a quick wash with a solution of vinegar kills the alkah. EVENTUALLY! —and because you must do it eventually—and because the longer you wait the older you grow—therefore do it now—today if possible! Sit for your Portrait, The Schnabel Studio Over Baker's Drug Store GOSHEN, INDIANA

(HUDSON’S HUDSON’S -■, ■ z ■ 1927 Haopy New Year 7 o All We take this measure of thanking you for your business during the past year, be it large or small. We appreciate our friends and i will always try to treat you in ; such away that you wiil know cur appreciation is sincere. May 1927 bring you true happiness and lasting prosperity. | i 0 * dTHEHUDgOKcaU

(SUITS and OVERCOATS KUPPENHELMER ♦ and MICHAEL-STERN CLOTHES KOHLER & CHAMPION 112 South Main Street Goshen, Indiana TO BRETZ FOR GLASSES ( p Bretz j V. /OPPCIANX / OPTOMETRIST GOSHEN. INDIANA. Over Miller’s Shoe Store REX WINTER INCLOSURES, AUTO TOPS, SLIP COVERS, BODY UPHOLSTERING, TRUCK TOPS, SEAT CUSHIONS, TIRE COVERS, HOOD* COVERS RADIATOR COVERS, Goshen fluio Too and , Trlmmlno GoGOSHEN, INDIAN! 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. Alliece Shoppe PERMANENT WAVING And all Kinds of Beauty Work Phone 933 for Appointments Goshen Indiana Spohn Building Classified ads pay both—the seller and buyer.