The Syracuse Journal, Volume 20, Number 9, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 30 June 1927 — Page 10

~ LIMBERLOST FOR SALE Limberlust Cabin and its environe, one hundred . and twenty acres of land on the shores of Sylvan lake at Rome City, forty acres of woodland may become the possession of Noble county and eventually an Indiana state park. J. Leo Meehan, son-in-law of Mrs. Gene Stratton-Porter, has offered the estate to Noble county for thirty-five thousand dollars. “Originally this tract f. was placed on the market at seventy five thousand dollars and a few years ago when the state federation of women’s clubs took up the plan to make the Porter estate a national shrine the price was reduced to fifty thousand, ’ says the Kendallville News Sun. “Mr. Meehan stated today that he and Mrs Meehan would just cut the original price fifty percent. When asked what the lowest possible figure would be he said if Noble county would take over the proposition he would sell the estate for thirtyfive thousand dollars.

Classified Ads Clarified advertising is ae- J * cepted at the rate of 5 cents < . a line for each insertion. A■< > booking and collection fee of J ‘ 10 cents will be added for a O charged account: no account ' ► will be charged for less than < ’ 25 cents for a single item. < >

FOR SALE 7-room house on Main street C. R. Holkatt. 9-ts WANTS D —Lake washings. Mrs. John Shick, 9-2 t FOR RENT—Cottage North shore Lake Wawasee. Phone 517. ■ 9-ts FOR SALE —F ord one-ton truck, $75. Hollett Motor Sales. 9-lt CHERRIES FOR SALEEarIy Richmond. Stephen Freeman. Phone 59& S-ts FOR SALE —Fond Coupe in go<xi shape. Cheap for cash. 0. G. Carr, Syracuse, phone 75. 7-ts FOR SALE— Baby carriage in good condition, cheap. Phone 8223. 8-2tp FOR SALE—Cheap, a residence near the proposed new high school. Hallie Holloway. LOST—Black leather hat box between Lake Wawasee and Milfont Finder please call National Military Home. Ada Goddard. Manon Natl. Sanitarium, Marion. Indiana. 9-lt DIRT CHEAP—WiII sell the Nicolai property near Syracuse Lake at your own price. To anyone wishing a home, now is your chance. It must be sold. Geo. L. Xanders. 9-3t* For best results, the Journal. ORVfIL 6. Gflftfi Funeral Director Ambulance Service Telephone 75 GEO. U XANDERS A ttarney-at-Law Settlement of Estates. Opinions on Titles Fire and Other Insurance Phone 7 Sy rar use. Ind. Floors Sanded and Rellnlshed PAINTING AND DECORATING J. C. Abbott Phone 754 Syracuse. Ind. See DWIGHT MOCK for * Vulcanizing and rtGGiuißnc Welding South Side Lake Wawasee , s on cement Road. Phone 554 Syracuse NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION Notice is hereby given that the undersigned has been appointed by the Clerk of the Kosciusko Circuit Court, in the State of Indiana. Administrator of the estate of Charles W. Johnson. late of Kosciusko county ce* cevsed. Said estate is supposed to be solvent. CHARLES a BACHMAN, Administrator. June 13. 1927. Geo. L. Xanders. Attorney for Estat* 7-3 t

Nu-Tone Has Taken Country By Storm Remarkable Medicine is Creating tbe Biggest Sensation Ever Known by Restoring Health to People. Ihpnand iGrenva .by Leaps and Bounds M Hundreds of New Reports Come Pouring lu From All Parts of Country.

The biggest thing in the drug trade today is Nu-Tone. Month by month the demand for this famous health builder has grown by leaps and bounds until now it is almost incredible. Syracuse drug stores report it a most unusual seller. Daily scores of people call and invarlbly testify to its health giving

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powers. Stock's Nu-Tone is well advertised but it taAe* more than advertising to bring about such a large and rapidly growing demand. Nu-Tone brings about a real ’and substantial benefit bi the way of health. strength and vigor. It is a truly wonderful reconstructive tonic, body builder and a syKem cleapser. You can tell after the first few doses that you are being benefitted in a natural substantial way. When You Need Nu-Tone One or two teaspoonfute before meads corrects disorders* or the stomach. liver, bowels and kidneys; aids digestion. builds up a natural appetite. As a result you soon begin to feel l.ke yourself again, brimful of new IHe and energy. If you feel heavy* and drowsy after eating if your tongue Is coated and your breath offensive—M your appetite is poor ami nothing tastes right —if your complexion is bad and your eyes dull, yon should not waste a minut>* in gettng Stock’s Nu-Tone. If food sours on your stomach, causing spells of sickness and fainting*. Nu-Tone will prove a Godsend to you. if you have frequent headaches, backaches and pains in your stomach —if you are nervous and irritable and do not sleep well at night—ls you wake up in the morning feeling heaw and draggy and aU out of sorts if you have that tired, listless womout feeling and are losing weight then there is nothing else on earth like Stock’s Nu-Tone to put you on your feet attain and bring back your aid time glorious feeling of vigorous health. Remember. Stock's Nu-Tone Is soM in Syracuse by the Thornburg Drug store and all «ood drug stores everywhere. There is only one genuine Nu-Tone. Insist on tXking Stock’s Nu-Tone and you will not be disappointed. Botle. >l. Six bottles. 15.00. —Adv.

4 CIRCUS AT WARSAW John Robiinson s circus, pioneer circus of the world, will exhibit at Warsaw*, Monday, July 4, giving afternoon and evening performances. This famous “white top” organization needs, no introduction to the circus enthusiasts of this comanunity, as its high grade meritorious performance has never failed to please, John Robinsons circus is this year absolutely new. From the very opening, which is a gorgeous fairyland pageant, the audience is held spell bound to the final thrill of thrills, the sensational hippodrome races. John Robinson's representatives have imported the foremost European. Oriental and Occidental troupes and acts. Wild animals atcors that perform in the steel arena will be subjegated by such world famous trainers a s Theodore Schroeder. lone Carle, Bert Sargaret Thompson, and Butler. A short but I portrayal of western life will be presented by C. Carrion his cowboys, cowgirls, and a tribe of Sioux Indians from the government reservation at Pine Ridge, & D. Standard circus acts and features include the best Obtainable. Robert Thornton, with his performing pure bred Arabian Stallions. the McKeon family from Scotland, the Rudy RudynofT troupe of Equestrians from Austria. the Barron sisters, airialists, direct from the* London Hippodrome. the Eddy duo, premier English wire artists, Ben Hasans Arabs, and s Boys are but a few of the many acts of international fame. o—- * HOME. SWEET HOME Newly wed, to the real estate salesman, who is trying to sell her a home: “Why buy a home? I was born in a hospital ward, reared in a boarding school, educated in a college, courted in an automobile married in a church, get my meals at a cafeteria, live in an apartment; spend, my mornings playing golf.” my afternoons playing bridge; in the evewe dance or go to the movies; when Pm sick I go to the hospital and when I die I shall be buried from an undertakers. Why should we buy a house. I ask you? AH we need is a garage with bedroom ” Johnny Hines in “All Aboard” '-'s. ‘-i -• _ ’ -

Hard Water Made Soft As fast as it will run. Ask any user, Mrs. Etta Ott, Mrs. John Wingard, Mrs. Hollett Or let us tell you. Hollett Motor Sales SYRACUSE INDIANA

HOUSEHOLD HINTS y “Mock duck” is made from Hank steak spread with a bread crumb stuffing, roiled, tied, and baked. Always grease an iron with lard or vaseline before jetting it away for a long time, or it will rust To remove rust on an iron, scour it with scourin: powder, and rub well with a flannel cloth. Jars to ’be filled with boiling fruit should be placed on pbout five thicknesses of a towel which has been wrung cut of \tepid water This will be found much better than heating jars to be filled or placing a silver knjfe in them. Biscuit dough is useful in many w’ays other than for leaking hot bread. It has no esual for making fruit shortcakes, or for chicken shortcake. It can be used for a crust for a meat pie or a fruit cobbler. Sweetened and spiced, with raisins added, it is transformed into tea cakes. Pinwheel buns are made by sprinkling the surface of the rolled out dough with sugar, cinnamon, nuts and raisins, and then rolling it un, to be cut across like jelly roll. These pinwheels are sprinkled with more granulated sugar and baked, and are wholesome for lunch or afternoon tea _q HAY FEVER Has be'rated by narnral Methods Start ak'o.r troatk.ients now before the ow begins. See Dr. Warner, 214 S. sth St, Goshen. lu<U Phone 176. s

n "”'. "?• J . ...” v X i 's »*! ? *MX.- < 4 ; 1 P' d? -<a ?? ‘ ~ 7'~ '<■* -r i ' ' ! >"*' ' . g. ' Circus lovers ot this vleinlty will have an opportunity to witness Philip Eddy, originator of the aomersaalt on the tight wire, when John Robinson's Cirrus comes in the near fntnre. Eddy was the trai man tn ever turn a somersault on the wire and has appeared in practically every country on the face of the globe. Several imitators have attempted the same feat with varying success the past few years. Caroline Eddy la a sensational dancer on the wire, doing aU the steps from the Valencia to the Black Bottom. The Eddys are just one of the many acts of international repntatioa with John Robinson's Circus. At Warsaw, Monday, July 4 Acute Rheumatism There’s relief in this *■**■••• 1 U\ For \7 *** n B fiTlVThroat, NeunMn. u f Sciatica, Lumbago, HoodsrU, I Toothache, ffnrnrhe, Mnnihty pains. Relieve the Pain Dr. Mties’ Aggfolfhtt relieves, and Wipe to remove the conditions that cause Acute Rheumatism. It is plrneant to take and «uick and effective in action. Yew druggist has M. 15c and 15c Bk. Ute Medfeal Kkhart. ted.

THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL

'LEVIATHAN OF THE AIR London. June 16. —Statistical details of the construction of the leviathan of the air now under construction by the British government have been revealed by Commander Q D. Burney, designer of the huge dirigible. The new airship will have cabins for 100 passengers and fly at miles an hour. It will be capable of flying from London to Canada in 48 hours, to South Afric • or India in four days or Austiailia in seven days The gross weight of the vessel is greater than that of the vessel in which Columbus crossed the ocean and discovered America. If the rivets going into .the construction of the dirigible were laid end-to-end they would make a line of rivets seven miles long. It contains eleven miles of tubing, two miles of insulated electric cable, and four and one- half acres of outer covering. It is approximately 750 feet long and 130 feet in diameter at its thickest part. The lifting power will be hydrogen, and the motive power will be supplied by engines running partly on fuel and partly on hydrogen gas, gradually withdrawn, from the envelope of the dirigible in proportion to the lightening of the load due to the consumption of the liquid fuel. o See “The Fire Brigade.” A thousand -thr|’ling moments. It* 10 reels long and seems like <mly <ix reels. A truly wonderful picture at Crystal, Ligonier, next Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday, Ju.'y 5. 6 and. 7.

MILLIONS OF PLANT LICE PREVALENT Thousands of trees in Indiana’ are this season losing their foliage much earlier than usual and being considerably damaged, all due. says Harry F. Dietz, assistant state entomologist, to the millions of plant lice that seemingly are prevalent in all parts of the state, as 500 calls for assistance received at the state conservation department in the| Irst ten days indicates. It is one of the worst seasons for plant lice in many years because the continued wet weather. Deitz says, and the state department in view that lice have attacked various species of plants such as rose bushes, spirea, tomatoes and many kinds of flowers, recommends a nicotine sulphate and soap spray w4iich together with the natural parasitic enemies of lice, will go far to curtail their activity and da mage. Plant lice are soft bodied insects .that cluster on the under sides of leaves and on young and tender shoots of plants in immense numbers, or infest the roots. Seventy-five different kinds of plant lice have been recorded from Indiana infesting a wide range of plants. These vary in color from white, through various green and pink to almost black. They suck the food carrying juices from plants through minute needle-like hollow beaks and give off a sweetish, sticky, varnish-like substance .known as honey-dew The (most conspicuous of all plant louse infestations in the state now on is Norway maples where the leaves have a varnished, sticky appearance and sidewalks beneath the trees are covered with this substance. Automobiles parked beneath infested trees become covered with it. If the leaves are examined there will be found large numjbers of greenish-black marked lice, on the leaf stems and the point from which the principal veins radiate toward the edges of the leaf. DrainjOn the food supply of trees due to loss of juices extracted by lice causes the green leaves to fall in great numbers.

Since plant lice are sucking insects and penetrate the tissue through needle-like beaks, the most effective way to combat their ravages is through a poisonous substance directly on the lice. To this end the division of entomology of the state conservation department recommends a contact spray of nicotine sulphate and soap which Mist reach every insect to be most effective.

JIX®. Making Indigestible Foods Digestible

AH N old-faxhioned dinner, served not long ago by a new-fashioned hostess was acclaimed with delight and amazement. “But I thought with present day dietetics we were to be denied all these rich things to eat!** exclaimed one of the guests. “You can combine a knowledge of modern dietetics with old-fash-ioned food,” replied the hostess and she proceeded to explain the digestibility of some of the seemingly indigestible foods. The secret lies tn combining pineapple with heavier and less easily digested foods, since the pineapple, itself, is a powerful digestive. Pincappit Dumplings made just as our grandmothers made apple dumplings by replacing the old-fashioned ipplt by the modern canned Hawaiian pineapple which contains an ensyme bromelin sets as a direct aid in the digestion of other foods—especially meate. They are made by mixing and sifting two caps of flour, four teaspoons baking powder, two tablespoons sugar and onehalf teaspoon salt. Cut in three tablespoons fat and add one-half to three-fourths cup milk, enough to make a stiff dough. Roll out on a floured board to one-fourth inch thickness and cut in four inch squares. On the center of c-en •quart plaet one well-drained L’ee es Hawafltn pineapple and one teaspoon sugar. Fold up the •dms fltflif been moisteneds i SSded "Maad 1 Via Wny fH<li llbM* fa > WkidsmtG i

However, on trees with heavy | foliage such as Norway maples. | use a garden hose with a heavy l water pressure directed on the lice is a very positive method for riding the leaves of them. Plant lice infestations on other plants reported this season are green lice on tips of spirea, green lice on the tips of roses, green lice on growing shoots of green and pink lice on tomatoes and iris, black lice on the under sides of nasturtiums, black lice on the leaves of snowball. rusty brown lice on the tips of plum and cherries. Natural enemies of plant lice such as the larvae and adults Os the ladybird beat les, the larvae of the golden-eyed lace-wing flies 1 and the maggots of “swreat bees’’ or syrphid flies are being found devouring lire and the grubs of which eat out the vital organs of their host, are working together I with science to bring the plant lice out-break under control. FLOOD DEVASTATION The real problem of helping thousands of people who lost their all in the Mississippi flood is becoming vital. In the opinion of men who know’, the devastation caused by water is greater than that caused by war in France and Belgium. Returning refugees find homes swept from foundatinos, outbuildings, bams and fences washed away, livestock drowned and a sea of mud i where once luxurious crops flourished. | There is no chance of raising ! regular crops this year, and with|out cows, horses, chickens, pigs, !etc ? the plight of the people is I pitiable - To make matters worse • there is further danger of more ' floods because erf broken levees. The government will be compelled to take early action toward a more comprehensive system of relief and rehabilitation if serious results are to be avoided. o See “AU Aboard.” It’s Johnny Hines* fastest and funniest comedy. See it at Crystal, Ligonier. next Sunday and Monday, July 3 and 4.

YOUR CHILDREN w’on’t be little long, but photographs will keep them as they are today, for all time. Let them sit for that portrait today. The Schnabel Studio Over Baker’s Drag Store GOSHEN, INDIANA

, oven thirty minutes and serve with a a hot sauce made from the syrup s drained from tha pineapple. Pineapple Cocoanut Meringue Pie is made by heating one J and one-half cups milk, and 1 mixing four tablespoon flour, 1 one-eighth teaspoon salt, one-half cup sugar and adding the hot milk. » Cook in a double boiler for about . twenty minutes or until mixture iis thick and flour thoroughly i cooked. Pour over two wJI-beaten - egg yolks, return to double boiler » and cook until eggs thkkcn, or ) about three minutes. Cool, sdd one r cup well-drained crushed Hawaiian , pineapple, one-half cup shredded coeoanut and one-half teaspoon vanilla and pour into baked pie 1 crust Add two tablespoons ! powdered sugar to two stiffly- ■ beaten egg whites and spread on 1 top. Sprinkle with cocoanut and • brown quickly in a hot oven. Pineapple Turnovers, another old-fashioued favorite are easily , digestible when mnde thus: Roll pakt- y thin and c-1 into four ' inch sqsur.s. ThorougLuy drain ’ the sirup from one can of sliced ‘ Hawaiian pineapple. On the cen- ; ter of each s~uare place a slice of t the drained pineapple and one teaspoon if sugar and latter. ZLis.er. the edges of the pastry and foil together in the form of triangles, ‘ pressin* the «!ges firmly tu-ether. ‘ Fry until bivwn h» deep hot fat, . drain •an brown papu 1 , sprinkle i with . powdered sugar and serve I ; immediately. J Pineapple Pancakes with ll Honeyun more delicious as well lias more digestible than other kinds.

Spring and Summer Clothing KUPPENHEIMER and MICHAELSTERN CLOTHES KOHLER i CHAMPION I 112 South Main Street Goshen, Indiana REX WINTER INCLOSURES, AUTO TOPS, SUP COVERS, BODY UPHOLSTERING, TRUCK TOPS, SEAT CUSHIONS, TIRE COVERS, HOOD COVERS RADIATOR COVERS, Goshen fluio Tod and Trlmm no GoGOSHEN, INDIANA The Leather Goods Store HARNESS AND ROBES Trunks, Traveling Bags, ladies’ Hand Bags and Small ILeather 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 J , , TO BRETZ FOR GLASSES GOSHEN. MUANA. Over Miller’s Shoe Store , j A classified ad will sell it.

t Mix and sift two cups flour, «M> > half teaspcgm salt and four teaspoons baking powder. Add one beaten egg, mixed with one and p one-fourth cups milk, one cup • 'crush'd Hawaiian pineapple and I, one tablespoon melted fat. Bake , on a hot greased griddle and serve '’with honey instead of syrup. Crisp Bacon with Pituappto Fritters is a delightful breakfast or luncheon dish. Fry bacon slices crisp and serve on • platter with pineapple fritter* made as follows: Beat up an egg in a bowl, sift in a cupful of flour, gradually and add one-half cupful of milk, one-fourth teaspoon salt and a" teaspoon of olive oil. Mix until smooth and glossy. Allow to stand in a cool place for an hour, than add a teaspoon of baking powder. Dip one slice of pineapple at a time, drop into smoking hot fat, fry for a few minutes, then drain and sift with sugar. Baked Ham with Pineapple is a new version of th* eld Eout ieni dish. Place six slices of Hawaiian pineapple in a battered pudding dish. Cut three sweet potatoes lengthwise and cover pineapple. Add a third layer of three sliced apples topped with two ham slices. Pour over layer* either pineapple juice or one-half cup of water, depending on sweet* ness desired. Cook in a slew oven in a covered dish for two bourse or until tender. Dredge the top with brown sugar, dot with bit* of butter, and return to th* hot even or broiler for browning. Sprinkle with parsley before serving, \