The Syracuse Journal, Volume 20, Number 21, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 22 September 1927 — Page 8
PIRDVE SWINE DAY Plans are being completed for the seventh Annual Purdue Swine Day which will held September 30. Farmers and hog growers will have an opportunity on this occasion to see some interesting hog feeding experiments and get the feeding results. Thirteen lots of hogs art 1 on feed to compare tankages and other protein feeds. Processed garbage, manufactured from Indianapolis city garbage, is being fed in comparison with 60 per cent tankage. 40 per cent tankage and reduction tankage Methods of feeding these tankages will be discussed at the meeting. Other experiments are in pro gress to compare mineral mixtures for both pasture and dry lot feeding. Soybeans take a prominent place in the feeding exper ments again this year and valuable results will be reported. A feature of the program will be a discussion on “lk*ath aud Cripple Losses lin Marketing ilogs” by J. R. Wiley of the Purdue staff. Mr. Wiley's talk is based *»n an extensive study of shipping losses at a number of the leading markets of the country and will be ofinterest to all groweriand ship pens of hogs. Word received from a number of county Agricultural Agents indicates that a number of large delegations of farmers plan to attend the Swine Dav-meeting, and a record attendance is expected.
Classified Ads >; Classified advertising is ac- J’ cepted at the rate of 5 cents < > a line for each insertion. A <> booking ami collection fee of J 10 cents will be added for a o eharged account; no account will be charged for leas than J, 25 cents for a single item. G
FOR SALK -Ford 4-door sedan. Fine condition. Jargain at $225. George. 21-pd FOR SAI E Colc> A r heater, large size. in good condition. Gerald Bushong. 21-2tp FOR SALE One horse, sound; one wagon, good as new; full outfit of one-horse cultivators at a bargain. Win. M. Jones. 2ii-|f MELONS Watermelons and Heart of Gold and Golden Nugget melons, now for sale at our farm. Sun Rise Orchard. W. W. Kercher. Goshen. Ind... across the river from Blossers Park. Ml FOR SALE —Prunes and plums pion Fruit Farm. Phone 3013. James Dewart, Syracuse. Indiana. 19-2 t WANTEDB y middle aged lady, with 13 year old girl, work as housekeeper. Low wages, more for home. Write Box 73. Benton. Indiana. 19-2tp See DWIGHT MOCK for Vulcanizing and ftGciulcnc Welding &>uih SMe t.ake on ceijrtent Road Phone 514 Sv rarH<4' Fioo* s SdiKicfl and Ktilnislicd PUNTING IND DKtNHIATING J. C. Abbott PI ..Hr 731 Syracuse. In«l CRVftL G. CfIKR Fa neral Director Amhnlauce Service Syracuse, Indiana. Telephone 75 Alliece Shoppe PERMANENT WAVING 4nd all Kinds of Beauty Wort Phone ?>33 for Appointments Goshen Indiana Spohw RniWing BEX WINTER INPLOSURKS. ALTO TOPS. SLIP COVERS. BODY I PHOLSTERIML t TRI VK TOPS, SEAT CUSHIONS, tire covers, Hood covers RADI 4TOR COVERS. Goshen Aino Top and Trliimioil GOGOSHEN, INDIANA j
AMAZING EXPERIENCE ABOUT WONDERFUL NEW MEDICINE IS RELATED
Stubborn Case of Stomach Trouble Ended for Thi ! Syracuse Lady—Pours Out ' Gratitude to Nu-Tone. ■] —■ - I I T*dar hundreds in this city have' j K«MHi appetites and art* free from the [I torture* »*f stomach trouble because i he* bare taken St« M-k’s famous \u-|i Tm*e Too'r Tlte* are ear tn v meats, i ( and vegetables and other solid foods < *iH*h ut oad after eflfeet*. Instead of: i exbtln* mi liquids and lirht diets. Ibe *tiier day Mrs. Harley Miller, well known lady of this city, told of:i a pleasant experience she had with this old nature medicine. She said: : “Far the past few years 1 have 11 saffered with sts»»».-»ch trouble day I and nirht. The acidity of my stomach caused food to *«»ur and I would become so di stressed from the terrible eas pa»us and cramns that 1 cent I hardly keMk c<‘lmr. I simply felt miserable all the time. I was in a! rundown condition because of the *tltt.* My limb* would «o to Sleep’; m/ that I caukl hardly use them. I | ached all over.
BOURBON FAIR October 4,5, 6,7, 1927 Free Entertainment, Fine Races, Great Agricultural Exhibits, Cow Calling Contest, No Change in Admission
p. j ( HOUSEHOLD HINTS The color of canned sahnon is i no :n<lira* i<>n of its quality. It I indicates variety. There are several kinds of salmon and these vary in color after canning from a b ight red to almost white. Try a stuffing for green pepuers made of equal parts of frv.-h cor ' < a-ked macaroni (in small pieces), and tomato, seasoned with butter, salt and pepper. Any minced cooked meat on hand may be added. In serving a vegetable plate include one food that contains some protein, as for example, green peppers, or tomatoes stuffed with a meat mixture cauliflower or potatoes scalloped with cheese, spinach with hart! boiled eggs, or sweet com pud ding made with milk and eggs. Curried veal is a good dish to serve when lima beans are in - season, because the flavor of curry goes well with lima beans. Cut 2 pounds of stewing veal into small pieces and simmer in water*enough to cover until almost tender. Then add 2 cups of fresh lima bears. In another pan cook 1 medium-sized onion . chopped fine, and i a green pepper. chopped, in a small amount! of butter. Add to the meat J When the beans are done, thicken the liquid slightly with a little flour which has been mixed with J teaspoon curry, ,t teaspoons salt, and a little cold wa ter. Add 1 cup diced cucumber and cook a few minutes longer. Sprinkle chopped parsley over; the top when serving.
Saving uZ MILLIONS |i FOR MOTORISTS A list of automobile ey Jfr- nr long as your arm is the cost of fl that "Kettle of Hot Water roWarm jP- H Her Up** the morning after a [> night in a cold garage. Ruaker garage heater IT BURNS FURNACE OIL We have found a heater expressly de- ■ signed and built to heat garages. A simple, ■ reliable, inexpensive method of keeping a ■ constant temperature in the detached garage. We have found the answer and you will find it in this heater. ■ For a few cents a day you can keep your car in condition, slash into your repair bills K |L and make a much better bargain when you 3p war: to trade in. Furnace oil —34 to 36 I gravity—eight or nine cents a gallon is the 'I ideal fuel for the Quaker Garage Heater. ■ And fuel is your only expense. I Put oil in it and light it. Turn it up in severe I weather, turn it down in mild. That is all |3 there is to it. No “parts,” no wicks. Nothmg to wear out or adjust. 7. .'\l- < I Es Telephone. Let us send you a Quaker J. Garage Hester today. BECKMAN’S H j Furnishings Phone 71
“tin recommendation of friends. | save Nu-Tone a trial. Well sir, I felt better right after taking the first dose. T’ir relief was so quick 1 cwild h -dly believe It. Mr stum itch trout 1* was entirely relieved a*ler taking only fonr bottles of this wonderful health rest*«rer. 1 am eating heartily of everything now and don’t have a bit of trouble divesting it. “1 have persona”y reeonnmet: :ec this medicine tv many peoul* because it helped me and because I considered It th? most efiective prtpatotlun for any kind of stomach ailments.” Rid y<«ur system of the awful accumulation of Impurities tha* are dally sapping your strength and causlnv your stomach to rebel at practically ail kinds vs fiwd*. Know what it means to airain enjoy trie bom ant health of your youth. When Nu-Tone Is introduced to Ute system such ailments as biliousness, vas. and bloating. dizzy spells. Heartbank, pains in the back and sides nervousness, and rheuw’atlsm mir>t leave. Gel Nu-Tone today at the Thornburg drug store. Bottle. M. Six. for $5. Imitations wont satisfy you. Healers hi all nearby towns can supply you.
FACTS ABOUT OIL INDUSTRY The oil industry today represents a total of $11,000,000,000 | invested capital. It furnishes employment to 1,500.000 people. It is owned by 1,500,000 stockholders and royalty owners. Its products furnish to American railroads more than one-sixth of all the tonnage of manufactured articles which they transport. Os the 800,000,000 horsepower of mechanical power used in our country, more than half is produced by petroleum. More than 70 per cent of the entire petroleum industry of the world is in the United States. In addition to furnishing fuel to over 24.000.000 vehicles, this industry makes a larger contribution to the n vtK'.’s annul export of manufactured products than any other single industry, thereby contributing more than any other group of manufactures to maintain the country’s trade balance. An industry which performs such services, which thus distributes to the public the benefits of large production, high efficiency and improved methods and which occupies so large a 1 place in the country’s economy, is [entitled to be understood by the > public and to receive fair treat- : ment at a time when it faces a peculiarly difficult complexity of internal problems. ;—O “The Night of I*ve* with RomaH <olrman and \ ilnta Hanky the greatest pair of lovers oa the screen, at Crystal. Ligonier, jaext Tuesday. Wednesday. Thurs- • day. September 27. 2S. and ?l>.
THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL
CONDENSED COUNTY NEWS Happenings Throughout The County Briefly Chronicled in this Coin inn. Lloyd (Bud) Reasoner, who ran away from his Rtrbee Lake home when his fath?r threatened to whip him. four weeks a;_o. went to the home of a sister < at Frankfort, Ind. He was last seen in larwiE, August 20. v here he purchased a cap and a sandwich. It was not known; where he was during .he t me he was lost, but he was prob-i ably tramping his way to his sister’s home. Charged with having poisoned the well at the Mt. Ta’ or school in Scott township and causing the serious illness of 13 pupils. George Riley, 10, and his brother Robert. 12, are expected to go on trial in several weeks. The trial before Judge Royse in juvenile court is expected to be secret. “ The State Bank of Sidney was closed last week by deputy bank examiner T. D. Barr. It is a leged that the bank is in an insolvent condition. Application for the appointment of a receiver was filed in the circuit court by Mr. Barr. Tomato growers in the neighborhood of Pierceton are harvesting a big crop. The tomatoes are sold to the Reid-Mur-dock Co. at Pierceton to be made into One day 194 tons were delivered. A White Wyandotte pullet, owned by Prosecutor William G. Loehr, of Warsaw, won third prize at the state fair. o What is greatness? Screen stars and prize fighters seem to harvest most of the first-page space as well as the money. Military leaders are no longer “great,” neither are independent statesmen. Real greatness, however, seems to be found among scientists and inventors. And even among all these a German and an American, Einstein and Edison, stand out as the most practical genius of our day. o These wb<* danee must pay the piper. See “Dance Magic.** with Ben Lyon and Pauline Starke at Crystal. lagonier. next Sunday and Monday. September 25 and 26.
□ | Get the j Boy heady jfor i School
■a lj Tanned by the summer sun—two pi three inches taller— q Q tack to school he goes. g 8 Here are the clothes for the young son that will make Q 3 him look his best and keep him looking that way all term. ■ B o SONNY BOA’ SONNY ROY ■ B long Pants Suits, single Knkker Suit, real wear-C U and double breasted, full defying suit, all-wool fabric. ■ H wide trousers. s $14.75 sl2 - 75 . ■ The Service Built Suit with vest and two pairs m of knickers, all virgin wool; gray, tan. brown " q and ocean blue . 8 $9.75 5 w n r-» Skirts. Socks. Ties Belts, Sweaters for boys at jj m anu gaily large saviags. All new, high-grade merchandise —, specially reduced for school opening. « BThe Adams Store! □ ■ i ■ eoSBEX. INDIAXA The Store Rrf Boys Where Mothers Save ■ « Ml Ml 11 Ml WK M fl TW Il'S
ROLLING THE ECONOMY ROAD BY ERWIN GREER (President Greer College of Autom** tive Engineering. Chicago, III.) You can’t bounce a snowball. Flies should stay single. And a Rubber tire won t dance up and down on a nail or a broken bottles Hence, the man who stretches his rubber knows a thing oi two when it comes rolling up mileage. He knows that: Cutting of tires is most rapid when roads are wet. 'Fry cutting a dry piece of rubber with a dry knife. Wet both and try again Crushed stone, sharp curbs, won edges of street car rails, edges of I holes in concrete paving, de [enough mischief when dry, but when everything is wet they cut several times as deeply. Similarly those bent nails that some thoughtless citizen threw out in to the street with the ashes from his furnace will penetrate a wet tire more easily and deeply. L a cut goes through to the cotton ; fabric or cords, it is best to have I it repaired, or dirt and moisture I will work in. ; Light and heat cause rapid de- ! terioration. Spare tires carried (should always have opaque cov- , ers. Extra casings and tubes are 1 best stored in a dark, cool cellar or closet. When a car must be parked in the sunshine for several hours, a canvass or piece of i burlap thrown over each tire will do its bit to lengthen the tire’s useful life. Don’t rim-cut that “down” tire by running it to a “free air” station; someone might suspect you were too lazy to use the hand pump. Don’t run over all the ash piles, broken bottles, naily boards and other rubbish you can find; even a harmless appearing paper bag may have a brick in it. Dont’ park in that puddle of oil; oil eats rubber. Don’t use the curb as a brake; it may break a casing. Road friction is responsible for more tire wear than any other one cause. Os course we must expect some wear if we are to use our cars at all. but a great deal of wear now taken as a matter of course might easily be avoided by a little thought, care and patience. One severe application of the brakes may easily take off more rubber than would wear off in a thousand miles of normal running. Likewise racing the engine and dropping in the clutch suddenly to spin the drive wheels for a “smart” start means a lot of rubber left on the pavement. ■ o We print sale bills.
8 B ■ IT ’W i ■
NERVOUS IRRITABILITY Do you become irritated, at / trifles, lie awake nights, start at / sudden noises? Better look out Z , WFAM f° r your nerves OT you h* ve a f serious nervous breakdown. X Dr. Miles’Nervine' iy - Is a good nerve medicine to take under these conditions. I Used with success fbr nearly half a century. |gjagM Try it for m gltaiLltl Nervousness, Sleeplessness. Neuralgia. |MS»I Nervous Dyspepsia. Nervous Headache, Neurasthenia |f c If you would like to try Dr. Miles’ Nervine, we’ll send a generous sample for 5c in stamps. Mike Medical C<u Elkhart, Ind. MR W NkrvinE ■
ESKIMOS HAVE TO MARRY ’ Whenever there has been talk of a tax on bachelors in England, there has been a chorus of protest. Yet their bachelors may consider themselves lucky, for imongst the Eskimos of northern Canada marriage is compulsory. Christian Leden, the Norwegian explorer, who recently returned from a three years’ stay omong them, says that no people live a cleaner family life than the Eskimos. Each man has as many wives as he can support, and all are remarkably good natured. Bad temper is considered a sign of being possesssed by a devil, and lying is a crime punished by death. Leden came across only one woman who was not married, and that was due to the fact that her hair was too short. ; o Caspar, Wyo.. is the first town to boast of a “Drive it yourself’ airplane club. The organization jointly owns an airplane which will be rented to members at Sls per hour for cross-country flying. Non-members may rent the ship for sls a hour plus the personal expenses of the pilots while away from headquarters. The plan promises to be adopted in many parts of the country. ! PRESERVE CHILDHOOD’S CHARMS Keep pace with the fast moving march of childhood! Capture for tomorrow the innocent charm you so admire today. Have the children photographed regularly—here. The Schnabel Studio Over Baker’s Drug Store GOSHEN. INDIANA
oiMiiiMinnauMnamgnnnaiiiii i imiuiiw—mu min iniimii i ißaaaaaw | - HUDSON’S Fall Specials I Girls Felt Hats isljw Each Mew felt hats for girls—an assortment of very pretty styles in the new Fall colors. X Fancy Woolen Goods SI.OO Yard Jamestown fancy woolen novelty dress fabrics in a I varied assortment of patterns and colors. : ■ : | — Children’s School Hose 19t Pair Sixes 6 to a good quality full length stocking for I boys or girls school wear. I 72x80 Inch Plaid Blankets at Pair Double blankets 72x80 inch sixe—in pretty colors—a | I; good weight fancy cotton blanket. Part Wool Blankets at S&7S Pair Guaranteed to be first quality—large size 72x80 inches. In all colors—heavy weight double blankets. ' 40 Inch Satin Crepes at $2.75 Yard Perfect quality silks in all of the new Fall shades—4o inches wide —heavy weight. Silk and Wool Crepe . SUR Yard Canton crepe of silk and wool constructionr-in a pretty | assortment of Fall colors for selection. IQthe > WIJ( IMF — ©OSHEIWnNDIAHA.
Showing of FALL SUITS FASHION PARK and MICHAEL-STERN CLOTHES KOHLER & CHAMPION 112 South Main Street Goshen, Indiana TO BRETZ ~ tor . GLASSES OPTOMETRIST GOSHEN. INDIANA. , Over Miller’s Shoe Store The Leather Goods Store HARNESS AND ROBES Trunks, Traveling Bags, Ladies’ Hand Bags and Small Leather Goods, Phone 86 115 FL Lincoln Ave. Goshen. Ind. GEO. L XANDERS Attorney-at-lAw Settlement of Estates. Opinions on Title* Fire and Other Insurance Phone #7 Syracuse, Ind.
