The Syracuse Journal, Volume 20, Number 15, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 11 August 1927 — Page 8

THE PRESI DENT SPEAKS “I do not choose to run fori President in 1928.” With this typically terse sen-| tence President Coolidge hasl answered the question that hasl confused statesmen and politi-| cians during the past year. Close] friends and associates who know] him best contend that he selected the word “choose” because he did not want to be put in the position of declining something not yet tendered to him. Others are of the opinion that the President does not desire to violate the custom or tradition that no man shall serve more than eight years as President and that he is really weary of the job. Whatever his real reason may be Mr. Coolidge is not likely to take the public into his confidence, but there are those who are aware of dominating political conditions that effectually muzzle even the President’s individuality. Sometimes this influence is designated as the "inner" Congress. The timeliness of jhis announ-j cement carries conviction of his] purpose and good faith. It! clears the way for others who! are ambitious for the nomination. and who have been holding back out of deference to him.; Naturally there will be a great protest from an army of office holders who feel secure under present conditions. But there is another and even larger army anxious to make a place, and new alignments are inevitable. Mr. Coolidge, while not of the Roosevelt type, has made a "safe” President —whatever that may K mean in political parlance. But that does not necessarily mean that he is essential to the prosperity of the nation or the success of his political party. The woods are full of strong capable, safe men, but no man can be greater than the power that creates him. He is a simple cog in the machine. A change may make for greater success. Who can foretell?

Classified Ads Classified advertising Is accepted at the rate of 5 cents • line for each Insertion. A booking and collection fee of 10 cents will be added for a charged account; no account will be charged for less than 25 cents for a single item.

FOR SALE—7-room house on Mam Street. C. R. Hollett. 9-ts FOR KALE My Ford truck Don Riddle. 15-2 p FDR SALE—3 burner oil stove in good condition. Norman Groves. 15-2 t-pd ~ PUBLIC TYPEWRITING—Utters, sermons, abstracts or anything that you may want typed. Miss Foster, South Huntington Street, near depot. Phone 844. PLACARD?- : Tor~R^nt}’ T ‘For Sale,” ‘"Furnished Rooms for Rent” and “Lots for Sale,” printed on heavy cardboard are carried in stock at the Journal office. The price is 10c each. CARDBOARD—AII kinds of cardboard, suitable for drawing and maps, for sale at the Journal office. PENNY PADS—Merchants and mechanics use them for notes and figuring. Size 3x6 inches. Journal office. See DWIGHT MOCK for Vulcanizing ano flceiulenc Welding South Side Lake Wawaaee on cement Road. Phone 504 Syracuse Floors Sanded and x Reiinisticd PAINTING AND DECORATING J. C. Abbott Phone 734 Syracuse. I nd. ORVfIL 6. 6RRR Funeral Director Ambulance Service * Telephone 75 GEO. L. XANDEBS Atteraey-at-Law j Istttomcnt of ■states. Opinions on Titles Fire and Other Imwaacn Plnm 7 Syracuse, I»A

CLOSE OF A FAMOUS CASE , After an exhaustive examination Governor Fuller of Mass decided that Miala Sacco and I bartalomeo Vanzetti had a fair trial and there was no justifiable reason for another hearing. This is the final chapter in one of the most celebrated cases in the history of our courts. These two Italians were accused of a pay-roll hold-up and the murder of two men at South Braintree. Mass., on April 15. 1920. During all these years the case has attracted attention not only in the United States but throughout the world, pwing to allegations that the Federal Department of Justice collaborated to obtain the conviction of the two men as undesirable radicals and that the conviction hinged on "class conflict.” Public opinion as to the justice of the verdict is strongly divided. The trial judge has been severely criticised and charges of frameup and manufacturing evidence persisted to the last. The only apparent appeal from the death sentence was to the governor. He called into consultation three eminent citizens. They reviewed the evidence. interviewed people connected with the trial and exhausted every avenue of influence in an endeavor to get at the truth. It was a severe trial to Governor Fuller, but he went through as a matter of duty, and the.protesting people, as well as the prisoners, will be compelled to accept his decision as final. __ O- ______ HUNTING HIS SISTER Clinton, Ind.. Aug. 3. —Conrad Bedell. 72 years old. walked here from Mt. Vernon, Knox county, Ohio, last week seeking a sister he had not seen since he was two years old. He had been told his sister. Mrs. Elzina Bedell Cook, 88. lived in a mining settlement between here and Terre Haute. Bedell enlisted the aid cf a local paper, and the story was reprinted in others papers in this district. During the week end the aged man became restless and left, presumably for Ohio, just a few hours before Mrs. Cook, who lives in Linton instead of Clinton, read the story in a paper there and called here. Now the sister is cartying on a search for the brother. “Broadway Nights” with Lois| Wilson and Sam Hartly, a story I of the Gay White Way in which the gay is sometimes sad and the white is sometimes blue, and the way is the way of the man and the maid. At Crystal. lago-' nier next week Tuesday, Wed-1 nesday and Thursday. August 16. 17 and 18.

Goshen Fall; Festival g August 18, 19 and 20 § j Free Barbecue Four Big Free AcJsq 3 Bands, Amusements, Rides, Etc. nnmnnnnnnnnnri»nnnnnnnnnnnnß

NEW CARS COMING The "saturation point” in auto j mobiles seems as far off as ever. ■ For the first six months cf 1927 1 General Motors sold 840,481 cars •against 620,190 in 1926 and 396. 3-4) nr 1925. An increase of 74.000 cars per month in two years is not bad. The big motor boom and fight are expected in the autumn, iwhen Henry Ford’s new car will ; make its bow. Ford is quoted to I the effect that the country can ‘easily absorb two million new l cars every year, since, at the , present rate of car ownership, i that would mean every car u’ould have to last six years. Mr. Ford knows that 2,000,000 new cars a year is a ridiculously low estimate. Will Rogers describes a poor family as a family "having only one car.” And that is not exaggeration. Every active individual, including bigger children in prosperous families, needs his owm car, and the four-car family will soon be numerous. Two cars to a family should be the average. To say that four million cars, trucks, etc., can easily be absorbed in this country every year is putting it mildly, ar suming. of course, that intelligent advertising is done in valuable newspapers. —o <- FREE TRAINING The Moody Bible Institute of 'Chicago offers free training to | young men and women who j would like to engage in Christian work as a vocation either at home or abroad. Mission work, pastoral work. religious education work, training for almost every form of Christian service is included in its General Course and five special courses. College graduation is not a requirement for entrance. Foreign speaking youth are instructed in English. There are no denominational restrictions. Married couples, even with young children, are welcome. provision being made for them to keep house. Students who have to work their way through, that is. to pay for their room and board, are aided by an efficient Employment Bureau. Everything possible is done to encourage and equip the right kind of Christian workers. The Fall term opens September 8, but students may enter free at any time. A cata’ogue giving full information will be sent freer to 'any address, by writing toHS3 Institute Place. Chicago, Illinois. I — Fire causes a yearly damage to the forests of the United States amounting to $30,000,000, not including the harm done to young growth, watershed proj tection, and recreational and other resources.

THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL

I 1 REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS J' fRv H. C. Frazer) | j John E. Boyts to Maude Gra-! ham, part lots 1,2, 3 and 20 Vaw- j ter Park, $5,000. ’ Louis J. Solt to same, let ini section 22, Turkey Cieek townI chin John H. Kelly to Earl M. Kelly, lot in sec. 18, Wayne township. I S4OO. I Linnie M. Hoopingarner to Jns. IM. and Ollie I sec. 15, Vanßuren tp., $9,000. I Joseph S. Eash to Frank E. Yoder, lot 34, Light & Power Co.’s ad Syracuse, sl. Alex Makane to Roscoe H. and I Mary E. Rex. lot 3 S. & W. ad. I Syracuse, SI,OOO. [ Milo E. Kiton to Mary E. Mc-i I Pherson, lot 1, Syracuse. sl. I Mary E. McPherson to Milo I McPherson, lots 29. 30, 31, S. & ID. ad. Syracuse, $l2O. I Papakeechie Corp, to John C. I \iillott. lot 19, subd. 1, PapaIkeechie, SOOO. I Mary E. McPherson to Milo E I Kitson, lots 29, 30 and 31 S. and ID. add Syracuse, $l2O. I Clara J. Warren to Otto WarI ren. lots 3, 4 and pt lot 2 Redmon Park, sl. Lewis S. Roth to Catherine and Thos. Edgell. lots 1 and 2, Bachman ad Potawatomie Park $6,900. John W. Cremens to Reinnett Carr, lot 33 Kale Island, $lO. —: o INDIANA UNIVERSITY NOTES Indiana University graduates, who are now presidents or expresidents of institutions of higher learning numbered 34 with the recent election of L. A Pittenger to the presidency of the Ball Teachers’ College. Muncie. Mr. Pittenger was graduated from the state unviersity in 1908. Sixteen hundred meals a day were served at the Indiana University cafeteria during the summer session at an average cost of 18 cents'- for breakfast, 32 cents for lunch, and 33 cents for dinner. Thirty thousand dollars will be used in repairs and improvements on Indiana University buildings beginning in October, according to Charles Hays, superintendent of buildings and grounds. “It is now that poison ivy is .very much in season,” says Protestor F. M. Andrews, of the Indiana University botany department. "All three-leafed climbing plants should be avoided until the observer is familiar with the specimen he examines.” CENTENARY^EXHIBITION The Centenary’ Exhibition and Pageant of the Baltimore and Ch a Railroad, to be held Septen her 24th to October Bth, at Biib-more, Maryland, will be a public affair, to which everyIbody is cordially invited. There will no admission charge of any k ; nd or special invitation required. The President, Directors and officers of the company extend a hearty general invitation to everyone. The exposition will be open from ten o’clock in the morning until six o’clock in the evening. The pageant will be held in the afternoon. There will be a grandstand for viewing this feature, seating twelve thousand, in addition to ample standing room on the lawn nearby the route of the pageant. o DR. SHUMAKER SENTENCED Indianapolis, Aug. 6.—The Indiana supreme court today sentenced Dr. E. S. Shumaker, superintendent of the Indiana AntiSaloon League to sixty days on the state penal farm following his conviction yesterday of contempt of the court in connection with publication of an article held derogatory to the supreme court in the official magazine of the league. The'court also imposed a fine of $230. o Farm physicians and surgeons again changed their diagnosis and came to the conclusion that there are too many farms and the small farmer must go. Big business demand farming on a big scale. The small fry must be eliminated. That ought to be an easy task because half the farms are mortgaged for more than they will sell for. — o— Fights 18 Years To Get Rid of Gas ** I had stomach trouble for 18 years Since taking Adlerika I feel better than for years and hare not been bothered with gas.”—L A. Champion. Bren the FIRST spoonful of Adlerfka relieves gas and often removes astonishing amount of old waste matter from, the system. Makes you en- ] JoM your meals and sleep better. No i matter what you have tried for your J stomach and boweK Adlerika wIH : surprise you. ThornWg Drug Ceopaay 1

DRILLING FOR OIL AND GAS i The geology division of the state conservation department is ■compiling a directory of opera-, tors of natural resources in this i state, the list to contain the ! names of the firm, location, 'character of materials handled, ! and location of the deposit. Some information on the statistics of drilling for oil and gas is also being compiled. The report, according to W. N. Logan, state geologist, under whose supervision the work is being carried on, will cover a period of several years and show as accurately as can be obtained, the number of wells drilled, the per cent that produced oil and gas, and which are dry. This division of the state department has for years worked ■with legitimate operators, to ob-1 tain the best results from natural resources, and has been very instrumental in curbing the activities of the fake operator or exploiter, whose principal object is to enlist capital, oftentimes in Enterprises in which there is virtually no chance for financial returns. o FISH AND FOOD the Washington government propogated and distributed nearly 6 500 millions of fish, chiefly cod, haddock, pollock. and winter flounder. The remainder were white fish, herring, shad, pike, and lake trout for the Great Lakes and interior waters. This was in addition to other billions supplied by state hatcheries. Os course this cost the taxpayers a large sum of money, but it is done for the purpose of providing the people with a plentiful supply of fish food, controlled by fish trusts, and generally commanding retail prices higher than beefsteak. Naturally the farmer cannot understand why the government supports the fish business but refuses to extend aid in any other food producing activity. The answer might be found in the political influence of campaign contributions. o GROWING CORN MAKES NOISE Lapel, Ind.—Uorn in fields near here makes noise while it grows Elmer Milburn, farmer, living two miles north of here, asserts that while he and members of his family were* picking blackberries, they heard a sound something like “check, check,” and investigating, found corn in a nearby field was the source of the sound. When a boy, Milburn said, he once had the same experience. Moody Ellingwood, star route mail carrier between Andersen and Noblesville, asserts that when a boy, he, too. heard corn grow on the farm of his grandfather, Andrew Fisher. A similar experience was related by E. D. Pass water, Those believing in noisy corn declare the sound is heard only when rain is immediately followed by high temperature, speeding g”owth. SUCH IS PROGRESS It is pleasant to learn that this nation spends more on public schools than on any other government function —not ex cepting the coct of keeping ready for war. Our public schools cost two thousand million dollars a year, about onefourth the total amount spent for public purposes. Two billions a year seems a great deal, but it is not much really. Public education, on which the future depends, absolutely costs less than twenty dollars per capita. And, by the way, it costs less than half the money spent on cigarettes. That last in an encouraging fact. It proves than when the people want a thing they get it, somehow or other. o NOTICE TO NON-RESIDENTS State of Indiana. Kosciusko Count;, ss: In the Kosciusko Circuit Court, April Term. 1827. WAWASEE CEDAR CHEST COMPANY vs. CHARLES F. FITZSIMONS Complaint No. 16998. Now comes the Plaintiff, by Brubaker & RockhiU. its attorneys, and tiles its complaint herein, together with an affidavit of a competent person that said defendant, Charles F. Fitzsimons is not a resident of the State of Indiana; that said action is on account and that said non-resident < is a necessary party thereto. Notice is therefore hereby given said I defendant, last named, that unless ; he be and appear on the 19th day of ' the next term of the Kosciusko Cir- | cult Court, being the 26th day of < September. 1927. to be holden on the I first Monday of September. A. D. 1927. J at the Court House in Warsaw, in ; said County and State, and answer or ; demur to said complaint, the same 1 will be heard and determined. in his I absence. | Witness whereof. I hereunto set my | hand and affix the seal of said Court. ; at the office of the Clerk thereof. in ; the City} of Warsaw, Indiana, this i 27th day of July. A. D. 1927. ! (SEAL) RUSSELL H. BUTLER, j Oterk Kosciukso Circuit Court. | 14-3 L

; - -- ( I HOUSEHOLD HINTS If you need help with dressmaking problems, send for Farmers’ Bulletin 1530-F, “Fitting Dresses and Blouses.” Cream fox whipping should be 24 hours old, and should be very cold. The bowl and beater should be chilled in order to have successful results. Add sugar and flavor when the desired whip is reached. Waxing or varnishing is said to improve the appearance of linoleum and to make it last longer. Wax should be used on the inlaid and plain kinds and varr.’sh on the printed ones, for wax sometimes tends to soften the printed surface. A chance bedbug is no disgrace but a family of them is an indication of relaxed vigilance on the part of the housekeeper. If you discover any, force kerosene, gasolene, or benzine into cracks* or crevices of the bedstead andj along the mouldings and baseboards of the room. Successive applications should be made every 3 or 4 days for about 2 weeks to kill any bugs hatched in the intervening periods. Apples appear on the table in many forms “during the early fall, for th&'e are sure' to be | windfalls ana imperfect apples which must be cooked to be saved. Some of these should be canned as applesauce or pie apples, of course. In addition to pie and dumplings, some may be used for apple betty, apple cobbler, apple snow, Dutch apple cake, upside down apple cake, apple fritters, baked and steamed apples; others may be put into fruit salad or fruit cup; with the meat course one may have fried apples, sweet potatoes and apples, or cabbage and apples. Stuffed baked apples are also suggested.

THE MAN BEHIND The camera is as important as the sitter in front of the camera. Appreciating this, our best efforts are always at the disposal of our patrons. The Schnabel Studio Over Baker’s Drug Store GOSHEN. INDIANA

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VITAMINS IN CANNED PINEAPPLE

CAPTURING vitamins and keeping them is the greatest game of food scientists today. In the case of canned pineapple, sunshihe captures the valuable vitamin and canning keeps it. After that the game is easy—any one can eat pineapple because pineapple is easy to eat. Over there in Hawaii, whence comes our canned Hawaiian pine-j apple, great plantations of pine-' apple are spread out like a magic earpet in the sunshine of the tropics. There the fruit absorbs sunshine for eighteen months. Being an “air plant,” it lives on air and sunshine, and sunshine scientists tell us is largely responsible for the presence of vitamin D. This particular vitamin is beneficial for children since the preserce of it prevents rickets. Other mysterious forces, which only Nth-re understands, are busy

Accounts For Sale y The following accounts are offered by the undersigned ; I > as Agents, for sale to the highest bidder. The right is re- H ; served to reject in full or in part any offer. ; Chas. Weaver Syracuse, Ind. Hardware $16.00 ;! i. Heber Outland Syracuse, Ind. Hardware 10.65 ]! ■ Charles Harris Syracuse Ind. Automobile 16.69 !; ’ Forest LeCount Syracuse, Ind. Groceries 18.03 ;; Cott Sharp Syracuse, Ind. Gas, Oil & Access. 15.18 ;! Russell Reed Albion, Ind. Automobile 20.00 H Art Schroeder Syracuse, Ind. bal. car supplies 38.85 <; Arthur Drerdge, Syracuse, Ind. supplies 7.00 ;! The above listed accounts are guaranteed by the owners ;! to be CORRECT and UNDISPUTED, and will be advertised ;; for sale until sold. All bids for the purchase of the above <; accounts will be received at the office of the undersigned. CREDIT ASSURANCE COMPANY OF THE U. S. H ns usdk st. VOLUNTARY ASSOCIATION in. Merchants and professional men desiring to dispose of ;; their judgments, notes and accounts will be given full infor- ! > mation on request. * 1!

Hot Weather Suits and Underwear KVPPENHEIMEK and MICHAEL-STERN CLOTHES KOHLER & CHAMPION 112 South Main Street Goshen, Indiana REX WINTER INCLOSURES, AUTO TOPS, SLIP COVERS, BODY UPHOLSTERING, TRUCK TOPS, SEAT CUSHIONS, TIRE COVERS, HOOD COVERS RADIATOR COVERS, Goshen fiuio Tod and Trimmino GoGOSHEN, INDIANA The Leather Goods Store HARNESS AND ROBES Trunks, Traveling Bags, Ladies* Hand Bags and Small Leather Goods Phone 86 115 FL Lincoln Ave. Goshen, I nd. TO BRETZ FOR GLASSES OPTOMETRIST GOSHEN. INDIANA. - Over Miller’s Shoe Store Alliece-Shoppe PERMANENT WAVING And ail Kinds of Beauty Work Phone 933 for Appointments Goshen Indiana Spohn Building

I in the meantime capturing two ’■ other vitamins, found especially in fruits—Vitamin B and Vitamin C. The former is very essential for children because experiment shows that without Vitamin B young animals soon cease to grow and finally die. Once captured, the next c‘.ep is j keeping these vitamins. Just as j soon as the pineapple is fully ri- ’ pened in the fields, it is rushed to , the big canneries, canned quickly, so that even that most volatile of vitamins, Vitamin C, may hav< no chance of escape. Canned foods retain vitamins in greater amount than home-cooked foods, recent research at Columbia University has established, due to the intense heat used in the quick process of canning and certain conditions in the sterilizing process.