The Syracuse Journal, Volume 19, Number 47, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 24 March 1927 — Page 8

Classified Ads Claimed advertising la accepted at the rate of 5 cents a line for Meh Insertion. A iMjoking and collection fee of 10 cents will be added lor a charged account; no, account will be charged for less than 25 cents for a single Item.

PAPER High-class work guaranteed. “Clint Lewis. Phone 81. 46-11 FOR SALE—Pekin duck eggs. 50c 4 setting, Mts. Vic. Niles. 46-pd FOUND--Pocketbook containing money and a few keys. Owner can have same by paying for this ad. Arnold IJeckman. 47-11 APPLES, APPLES, -APPLE —lt I. Greenings. SI.OO per bushel—Grimes Golden seconds, 25 cents per bushel. A real bargain. Stephen Freeman, phone 596. _ 464 f LOST— Saturday between hone and Maili street small change purse, containing about $2 in change and a safety deposit box key No. 164. Neva Meek. 47-lt WANTED To hear from owner of land for sale. I). M. Leight, Alza.da. Montana. 45-ti FOR SALE OR LEASE 24acre farm half mile south of Syracuse. Fairly good four room house, chicken house 16x30. new barn. Good place for truck garden or chicken ranch. Ed. Craft. Syracuse. 42-pd FDR SALE Nine dwellings. Modern and otherwise. Various locations, all prices and terms to suit. Now is the buy. George L. Xanders. 42-ts BABY CHICKS- We have one. of the largest S. C. .White Leghorn breeding farms in northern Indiana. Clucks from our flock are 12c in March and April. Come and look at our breeders, which are all old hens, before ordering. 'Hie heavy breeds are 2c higher. They are from good culled tann flocks. Chicks every Wednesday. Custom hatching 3|c per egg. With tin order of chicks we give a discount on Newtown brooder stoves. We also have meat scraps, cod liver oil and drinking fountains for chicks, incubator has been running since January 10. We are located 3| miles northeast of Syracuse White Egg Poultry Farm, W. W. Stetler & Sons. Phone 248, Syracuse, Ind. 42-If

PENNY PADS—Merchants and mechanics use them for notes and figuring. Size 3x6 inches. Journal office. •• I - ORVftL 0. GftRR ' Funeral Director Ambulance Service Syracuse, Indiana. Telephone 75 LEU. U XANDERS Attorney-at-Law Settlvtneiu ot Rotate*. / Opinions on Title* fore and Other Insurance Phon<-< 7 SvraciKo. Ind. Floors Sanded and Rdlnlstiod PAINTING AND DECORATING J. C. Abbott Phone 734 Syracuse. Ind. „ i . laaisriaiiaaaa: Come In and see us the next tune you are in need of good printing . We are special- > ists in J the kind of work IL that pleases. ) J A trial ▼VC <»IV« m • ■■■■■■■■■■■■

PLANNING IDLE ACRES Many farmers of the are ‘aking advantage cf the forestry tax exempt law and planting their idie 4cres- to ximber production as evidence in advance orders* for spring delivery of 140,000 seedling trees from the state nursery. * Richard Lieber, state conservation director, says more trees have already been sold for spring elivery than* dhe total of any previous year, and as ‘he nursery’s available supply is nearly exhausted. * the department is now making arrangements to secure additional trees in Penndyvania and Vermont to supply the Indiana demand in order our reforests, ion program not be retarded. The forestry division reports numerous farmers using the tax savings, due to classification of land under ’he forestry law. .to improve their woods by cleaning out undesirable and reinforcing the open places with oaks, popular and black walnut, types that command a splendid price in the markets. In many instances idle clear land is included for classification and is reforested with plantings. The department recommends pines for poor soils and our native hardwoods are favored wherever possible. J. A. ChaiUaux <»LWest Baden recently classified 691 acres of forest land and ‘his spring will pkmt 15.006 trees obtained at cost from the stair nuisery and experimental station at Henryville. Tliis nursery is now being expanded to care for additional orders t" ch year, as nresent facilities are inadequate to meet the demand increasing as farmers are becoming awakened bo 'he advantages of tree growing Ordeis have doubled each year since the nursery was started. Mr. Lieber says. ’J he department's policy is to sell trees to land owners at actual cost of production at the nurseTy and thus contributes to the reforestation program. The forestry office further advises on what species are, best suited for the most profit in each individual case of planting where such advise is sought, ——-—-—o- —'■ —• ' According to the report of the Bureau of Railway economics Class I railroads were more prosperous last yesr than ever bei fore.. Tot 1 revenues increased 262 millions, an increase of 4.2 per ednt. The total net income was $1,232.000,000, an increase of 8.2 per cent over 1925. The rate of returns on “valuations’* was 5.16 per cent.

TO BRETZ FOR GLASSES Arete X J /MUX ' Z OPTOMETRIST GOSHEN. INDIANA. Over Miller’s Shoe Store

CWERVOUSHESSO Sleeplessness, \ Neurasthenia, 1 Nervousness, SvC. Neuralgia J Ir\ kIX. -N ervous / XAiVp Dvspepsia ’ / WvV\r Nervous ./ x Headache, nnDR. MILES'— Nervine Your ability to think clearly i 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 ‘ w——■■ b a reliable nerve ESWHUiI i medicine used suecessfully in nervous disorders for ®®|J“ nearly fifty years. « Your money at, a back if the first full size bottle yaffil fails to help you. A generous sample for sc. in stamps. | ( j l *- MDes Medkal <*• * ElKh>rt, Ind. a& 0. TIME TABLE ♦ EAST-BOUND No. 10—Daily...12:W P- m. Na 32—Da11y...6:35 P- m. Na B—Daily..p. m. wpor.RniiMn Na IS—Dally a. m. Na 31—Dally,C•:« a. m. Na 7—Da11y...13:44 a m. Trains Na 15, Na x. Na 10 and Na 2 are through trains and stop for passengers going or coming from Chicago, or to points east of Willard. Toledo. Dayton, or Cincinnati, i H. W. Bocbholz. Ticket AfenL

THE SYBACVEE JOVHNAL

Nursery Stock and Landscape Work 1 can supply you with fruit trees, shrubbery of all Kinds, shade trees, roses, privet, berry plants, choice gladiolus, large flowering cannas, and hardy plants. Improve the appearance of your home by making a p anting of flowering shrubs. J do extensive landscape work and can make a planting for you at a reasonable price. Buy your cut flowers and potted plants at the Milford Greenhouse. HENRY BEER Phone 277. Milford, Ind.

'UPROSE YOUR* CAR WAS MX>LEN• BY ERWIN GREER (President Greer College of Automo- ! the Engineering. Chicago, ill.) Could you indentify your car if it had been stolen and recov-; t red by the polic? You could? But that is what all owners say. And yet when they see their bus • what they think is their car—l in the police garage, why it is a 1 ten to one bet'that they cannot dientity it. The police prove it time and time again. As a matter of facts most car owners depend for identification pn some scratch on the body, some broken screw in the chassis or some other equally uncertain factor. They do not stop to consider that our big .manufacturers are turning out models in ten thousand lots that differ from each other in not the slightest discernible degree. , By the time a successful thief has run a stolen car through his "service station" it would puzzle the most careful owner on earth to indetify his vehicle. The on>y safe method of placing identification marks on a car is to place them on all major parts of the mechahis..i. Perhaps the most satisfactory method of doing so is to place punch marks on the various units. All such marks should be put in places where they ? will not be readily discernible; for instance, on the inside of the axles, on the flywheels, on the upper side of the gearset. houseing. After the marks have been made they

Gym in Attic Provides Joy for Youth

ar. ! g W I ? ~ vShsJ ’ «) Celetvckaß Imiuuik. Chlcaco. !»:*

WHO Is the most popular, th* most envied boy in the neighborhood? The one who has a gymnasium all of his own fixed up tn the attic. This is a place where he can bring home al) the “regular fellows." play for hours on rainy days and put on acrobatic and athletic performances well worth the two pins admission price charged. Incidentally, the rest of the well take advantage of this opportunity to keep physically fit and bard the year round. A couple of heavy gymnasium mats are all that an* needed to start with. These will make first-class downs and acrobats of pretty nearly al! boys. To these may be added from time to time, as birthday and Christmas presents or out of the boy’s own savings, such equipment as pulleys. Indian dubs, punching bag. and a combination of swinging rings, trapeze and swing made especially for the small home gym. It la well to plat. for from the start where each piece of equipment will logically have to go when the time comes to add it. allowing plenty of room to avoid swinging into dormers or humping against the gables. Girders may be put up to bear the strain. The next step is to seal the interior of the attic with celotex insulating lumber from the tough, strong fibers of sugar, cane, not just for the sake of appearance but to keep the gym cool tn the summer and warm enough in the wipter. The heat rising from the floors below will ordinarily furnish

should be rubbed over with grease until they are nearly indistinguishable as possible. The car owner can have a prick punch made with his initials on it in very line type and with this it is possibly to place identification marks on the various parts that will generally escape notice and yet remain permanently. Another clever idea is to bore a few small holes a mere fraction of an inch into the framework at a given place carefully measured from permanently located landmark. Then fill these holes with lead and smear the spot well with grease. If there comes a time when it is necessary to indentify the car, it is a simple matter to measure off the proper distance, scrape a little lead off and prove ownership of the car. The individual owner can probably find a dozen distinctive ways of making his car for possible identification, but the that, this should be done, because when a car has been stolen the police demand something more Ithat say-so on the part of the owner before they return it to him. o : C-veizl' counties in East Tennessee each ship from 350 to 500 barrels of black walnuts for which the growers receive 50 cents per pound. No attempt has been made to organize the business or improve the wild conditions by grafting, fertilizing or spraying. The trees mature rapidly, grow tall and frequently measure five feet in diameter, and the timber value has but few equals.

all that Is necessary, as the temperatire of the gymnasium should not be over sixty degrees to be healthful. Thu Insulating lumber is nailed in large boards under the rafters, with side walls up to a height of three feet. The spaces so formed under the eaves may easily be lined with the same lumber and used for storing trunks and window screens. If a rough flooring la already down, thia should be covered with a layer of the insulating lumber and on top nt thia canvas sewed In strips stretchwl tightly across. This makes a splendid floor for this purpose, especially as the celotex has sound deadening properties which will tend to keep. the noise from going downstairs. Also, this floor layer of the Insulating lumber, while it will tend to make the attic a little cooler because it will retard transmission from be low, will‘ conserve just that much more for the rooms that really need it. The fuel saving of the house insulated this way varies according to the conditions tn each house but as high as 25 per cent is no uncommon raving. Above all, the gymnasium should be "liberty hall." for the boys to do tn as they like and they should be held responsible for taking care of it them selves. Two precautions will spare every one concerned a lot of expense and grief: put wire screening ovet each window on the inride and buy guards to put over the electric light bulbs. • Cslotschnte Institute, Chicago, ISM.

RADIOED FROM USDA Heifers get their inheritance for producing ability equaib from their sire and their dam. Pasteurization doesn't destroy food value in milk. A temperature of 145 degrees Fahrenheit , for 30 minutes hasn’t any marked effect on the chemical make-up of milk, or its growth-promoting properties. Some scientists say that pasteurization makes the vitamin which prevents scury. less effective. But this same vitamin is also found in fruits and vegetables, so it probably doesn’t matter so much. Pasteurization kill disease-producing bacteria in milk. You can continue a strawberry patch more than two years if you will keep it clean, well cultii vated and fertilized, and take out the old plants and save strong young plants each year. It is usually preferable to set new plants each spring and tame out [the two-year old plants after they have fruited. The chief advantage resulting from the green sprouting of seed potatoes in the light, is that of indicating the strongest eyes. In cutting such tubers it is possible to discard the weak and blind or dead eyes, thereby, insuring a .practically perfect stand of plants of uniform vigor. When grown for an early crop the plants from sprouted seed are usually ready to dig a few days earlier than those from unsprouted. seed and the yield is usually greater. You can't expect tonics, which the hens take internally, to kill cooties, mites, blue bugs, fleas, and those sorts of parasites. Don’t- waste your money that way. You won’t kill the bugs—but you .may kill the chickens. * Don’t sprinkle the dropping boards wi t h hydrayted lime. You’ll lose a lot of the ammonia 1 that way. A better practice is to mix acid phosphate with the > droppings when they are stored. o — [ See Norma Shearer in “The > Detail Bride.” She didn't fall in love, she leaped. See her at .Crystal, Ligonier, next Sunday • and Monday, March 27 an I 28.

HUDSON’S HUDSON’S —: — ‘ — ’ Better Values-Lower Prices CURTAIN NETS GIRLS DRESSES CREPE NIGHT GOWNS 35c Yard SI.OO Each SI.OO Each New spring patterns—fine School dresses for girls— F ancy Krinkle crepe night filet curtain nets. 36 inches sizes 7 to 14. Made of fast gowns for women or misses, wide. color printed fabrics. Pretty styles and colors. f - £ — —: “ ■ * RAYON BLOOMERS CREPE de CHENE RAYOLA 95c Pair $1.75 Yard 75c Yard Rayon Bloomers for women Full 40 inches wide, guar- Popular fabric for costume or misses. Flesh, peach or anteed washable. In a full slips or dresses. Yard wide fawn shades. line of colors. and all shades. t ’ UXUEMB VOILE ' SPRING COATS Plain voile or jersey weavg $16.50 $25.00 $39.75 i A> voile. Yard wide and all Stylish Spring Coats for Women or xAwv shades. Misses—direct from New York, the sash- r JtrX — — ion center of this country. Good coats CREPE PAJ AYI AS of twilled fabrics, satins, kasha cloth or fi v $1.59 Bair tweed mixtures. We have a dandy asar Fancy two piece crepe sortment of styles and shades for your pajamas for women or misses, selection. DIAPER CLOTH SPRING FROCKS 10 yanls. f<rr SU->9 $25.00 $35.00 > Red Star fine inSmart frocks for Spring and Summer Sg eye diaper cloth. 27 inches , , JT ■ . , wear. Women s or Misses styles for 1C street, afternoon or sport wear. Quality Aal HiVDX VRSTS garments at very low prices. Frocks ‘ ‘ , that are made of inspected silks by high- IB wu ‘4. n k k k grade makers. You can easily note the White, flesh or peach shades -fine rayon vests. Sizes 34 snpenor quahty of our dresses_ \\| v>«. , SPRING HATS \ I NEW CRETONNE $2.95 $3.95 $5.00 \ / 35c Yard - A gay assortment of styles and colors A I 36 inches wide, beautiful are here <or your selection-Remember . „ . j_ you can always find hats here-ADat will w lit patterns and extra fine gra t g t on sizes roFthoSe W at this price. h ave difficulty in finding large sizes. New Dress Fabrics Store Specials Suede Crepe. $3,50 value, fine silk d»O QC Dress Gin^ y ard wide ’ neat checks 15c crepe, all new colors, yard... O r stripes, yard Evriday Zephyr, new printed fabric for qq. Brown Muslin-good grade for general JQ c washable frocks, yarduse. Yard wide, yard Honan Pongee, washable, pure silk. Cl QC Daisy Outing-fine grade for diapers or 20c New summer shades, yard* infants wear, yard Printed Silk Brepes, fine 40-inch <1 QC Bleached Muslin, Farmers’ Choice or grade. Neat patterns, yard* x Hope brands, yard 65c Pond’s , Uthe HUDSONco J c ?“. "■ ”*

HOUSEHOLD HINTS ’ v »■ Colors in foods add attractiveness to a meal. Green or other bright fruits and vegetables, egg yolk, yellow cheese, browned meats or or cake crusts, are all examples of appetizing colorful foods. Very sweet foods have a tend-i ency to blunt the anpetite forj other foods that supply materials the body needs. It is best, therefore, to serve sweets in small quantities, or toward the end of a meal. Rich, heavy foods should be served with, lighter, more succulent foods. This evens up the calories and avoids too heavy tax on the digestive system. For ex-. ample, a light lettuce salad is re-• lished with a heavy meat dish. : In making boiled icings for a cake, if it does not be cooked enough after it has been taken from the fire, it can be reheated in the top of a double boiler, even after the sirup has been poured over the egg white. An appetizing dessert or salad ■can be made of cooked prunes with the pits 1 emoved and the cavaties stuffed with cream cheese or cottage cheese seasoned with salt and thick cream. Dates and figs can be used in the same way. Contrast in flavor is important i in a meal. Don’t repeat the same ■ flavor too often. For instance. • even though we liked tomatoes, we would not relish a meal-com--1 mencing with tomato soup, XolI lowed by tomato -sauce on the , meat, or stewed tomatoes, and . fresh sliced tomato salad.

At Eastertide For sweetheart, mother, sister or friend, a photograph will be just exectly right. Sit for it now. The Schnabel Studio Over Baker’s Drug Store GOSHEN. INDIANA

Advance Showing Spring Suits KUPPENHEIM ER and MICHAEL-STERN CLOTHES KOHLER & CHAMPION 112 South Main Street Goshen, Indiana LEX WINTER INCLOSURES, AUTO TOPS, SLIP COVERS, JODY UPHOLSTERING, TRUCK TOPS, SEAT CUSHIONS, HRE COVERS, HOOD COVERS RADIATOR COVERS, Bosticn flino Tod and Trimm no Go- ■ GOSHEN, INDIANA The Leather Goods Store HARNESS AND ROBES Trunks, Traveling Bags, Ladies’ Hand Bags and Small Leather Goods Phone S 6 115 E. Lincoln Ave. Goshen, Ind. Alliece Shoppe PERMANENT WAVING And all Kinds of Beauty Work Phone 933 for Appointments Goshen Indiana Spohn Building OFFICE SUPPLlES—Typewriter ribbon, carbon paper, typewriter paper, cardboard, blotting, etc., for sale at the Journal office.