The Syracuse Journal, Volume 20, Number 22, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 29 September 1927 — Page 8

.INDIANA CROP REPORT Corn prospects in Indiana declined 4,810,000 bushels in August. In recent years only 1921 showed a lower condition September Ist and in that year corn was nearer maturity than now. Considerable of the corn acreage will not be worth harvesting as grain but can be utilized only by grazing. Should frost come earlier than the normal date this portion of the acreage will lie larger than now assumed and while the production of corn may not be materially reduced the amount of merchantable corn would be much less than now expected. The condition improved somewhat in the three southern districts but declined in the northern two-thirds of the state. I Buckwheat is reported 10 points higher than in August hut no especial factor can be credited with the improvement. Potatoes also are reported higher than last month. This is opposite of the usual change in August, so indicates a considerable improvement compared with the average. In bushels the gain is 252,000. Sweet potatoes show considerable variation by districts but for the state as a whole practically no change occurred in August. Pasture is reported better than last month and ft points alwve the ten-ycar average, though not quite so good as a year ago. The greatest improvement in pasture the past month was in the southeast, where a gain of 24 points was reported. Soybeans and cowpeas improv-' ed considerably in the southern two-thirds of the state, but any change in the north was down-' ward. In the section showing improvement the change was less in degree in the districts having the largest acreages. Changes in the condition of fruits was erratic but the net results for the state were declines in the forecasts of apples and peaches and an increase for pears. The condition of grapes declined generally and rather sharply.

Classified Ads Classified advertising is accepted at the rate of 5 cents a lino 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.

WANTED—FamiIy washings. Call 394. 22-lt RADIO Something wrong with your radio? Call Owen Strieby. Phone 845. 22-lt FOR RENT My residence on I-ake street, furnished. Dan Mishler. 22-ts FOR SALE -Cole’s Air Tight heater, large sixe, in good condition. Gerald Bushong. 21-2tp LOST—Pocketbook, containing one $5 bill and one $1 bill. Finder please return to Glenif Walton. Reward. 22-pd FOR RENT Double garage first lot east of Lutheran church. O'Dell Sisters, address 719 Mi- 1 chigan st., Elkhart, Indiana. 22-3tpd See DWIGHT MGCK ‘ tor VuiGdoizine and flGetulena Ke idlno South Si<ir halt*- W awasee on cement Road. Phone .101 Syracnse floors sanded and shed VAINTIN (1 AND DECORATING J. c. Abbott Phone *734 Syracuse. Ind. OKVftl G. GftRR Funeral Director Ambulance Service Syracuse. ladiaaa. Telephone 75 REX WINTER INULOSURES, AUTO TOPS. SLIP COVERS, * BODY UPHOLSTERING, TRI CK TOPS, SEAT CUSHIONS, TIRE COVERS, HOOD COVERS RADIATOR COVERS. Goshen flow Tod and Trlmlno GoGOSHEN, INDIANA

Oil Heat

to Keep Your Gar age Warm The man who takes chances with his car in an unheated garage is foolishly gambling with high repair bills. For there has been developed a simple, inexpensive heater that you may put in the garage—light it —and forget it. QUAKER Oil Burning Garage Heater Saves its cost many times a over. Simply fill the oil tank j every day or so and let it > alone. There is no noise — I no odor—no care—no worry 1 —no coal —no dirt. May be 1 operated from a city gas line. 1 You will be surprised at the low cost of this important 4 device. Stop in today and / let us show it to you.

BECKMAN’S Home Furnishings Phone < 1

BOURBON FAIR October 4,5, 6,7, 1927 Free Entertainment, Fine Races, Great Agricultural Exhibits, Cow Calling Contest, No Change in Admission

INDIANA’S DAIRY INDUSTRY Indiana’s milk production in 192’6 reached the .astonishing total of 3,447.213,947 pounds, an increase of 167.067 037 pounds over 1925. accord ing to the annual report of the Creamery Li-, cense Division of Purdue University, one of the most important organizations in Indiana for the preservation of hea 11 h through close examination of milk cond tfcn-s generally. The examining board of the organization is composed of Prof. H. W. Gregory, of Purdue. William Senour. Brookvil’e and Henry SchIndianapolis. and the advisory members are Ben Scranton, Rising Sun; P. P. Triller, Indianapolis: T. M. Ice. Mt. Summit and J. E, Wray. Crawfordsville. With the continued growth of the indus.tr*’ the work of the creamery license division increases. When a new dairy manufacturing plant or shipping

FALLEN WIRES MH HaMMSMUMKaiDAsjxsKaKwaBuaMmaMaHunuuuBBMUBMHi - at 1 1 OCCASIONALLY electrical wires are || blown down during a storm and lie If on the ground or dangle over the side walk. - Keep away from all wires whether on the ground or swinging overhead as a alight touch might prove fatal Parentswill please impress this fact upon their This company, in the promotion of safety and good service, earnestly requests that anyone seeing broken, loose or dangling •leArical wires anywhere, will please notify the office at once. We will greedy icupreciate your cooperation. INTERSTATE *** SERVICE—- ? i -- r ’ Y

• station which buys milk or cream . on a butterfat basis, is opened, a i creamery license must be issued, a tester examined, and a tester’s license issued. During 1926. the ‘(division issued 1,903 creamery licenses, examined 876 candidates for testers’ licenses, and issued 2.701 testers’ licenses. j Approximately 200 complaints of law violations were investigated, and a total of 52.480 pieces of 1 glassware and 228 nine-gram weights were examined for accut racy. I Some extremely interesting ’ figures on the dairy’ industry are ; contained in the report, which ’ I shows that 56,091.822 pounds of I creamery butter were produced; ■ 10.8fX1.000 pounds of dairy butter: 1,254.687,500 pounds of milk ’ j consumed direct; 29,656,250 . | pounds of cream consumed di--1 root; 8,375,000 gallons of ice ' I cream: 36,597,245 pounds*of con- ‘ j densed milk; 216,548 pounds of I cheese and pounds of ■ cottage cheese.

THS BTRACUBB JOURNAL

CONDENSED COUNTY NEWS Happenings Throughout The (’minty Briefly Chronicled In this Coluniu. Sheriff Frank McKrill was called to the David Ryman farm, j two and one-half miles south-! west of Atwood on Monday morning to investigate the theft of chickens. A large number of White Leghorns were taken some time Sunday night, and tracks in a potato patch and a field, showed that the thief had driven a one horse wagon to the chicken house. A meeting is being arranged for the elderly people who lived in and near Leesburg in the fifties and early sixties to be held at the K. of P. home in Warsaw’ Thursday, September 29, at 1:30 p. m. It is hoped that all such people will be present at this promises to be an interesting gathering. Martin Van Buren Ross, charged by a grand jury’ indictment of murdering Frank Tucker. Warsaw’ cigar clerk January 28 last, in circuit court, chose M. L. Gochenour as his attorney. Gochenour did not desire the appointment and so informed the court and gave notice if named he would file notice of a change of venue. Judge L. W. Royse named Ernest Bright as receiver of the Sidney State Bank, which closed its doors two weeks ago. Mr. Bright was the former cashier of the bank. o — “Becky,” a snappy story which ran in the Hearst newspapers, with Sally O’Neil at Crystal, Ligonier. next Sunday and Monday. October 2 and 3.

PRENERVE 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 Drag Store GOSHEN, INDIANA

An Open Letter to the Editor From the President of General Motors

Last SPRING I wrote you that my belief in the country newspaper had led us in General Motors to decide to advertise our products together in the small-city press of the country. The returns from the series of the messages recently published have justified that faith; and we shall to advertise in your community through your newspaper this fall. It occurs to me, however, that some of your readers may be asking: “What is General Motors?** and “Why is General Motors?** These are fair questions and I should like to answer them as frankly as I can. General Motors was organized some yean ago on the theory that a group of large companies, working together, could render a better service than they could separately. In this we simply applied to industry a principle that is as old as civilization as regards the human family and human progress. Original members of the General Motors family were Buick, Cadillac, Chevrolet, Oakland and Oldsmobile, together with the DelcoLight Company and other well-known companies manufacturing automotive equipment. By joining together their resources, we were able to establish great Research Laboratories, a 1245-acre Proving Ground and the GMAC Plan of credit purchase; to effect vast economies in purchase and manufacture and distribution; to assure and maintain thequality of every product in the General Motors family. Has the General Motors family principle proved itself in practice? The best answer, I think, is to compare the Chevrolet, Buick, Cadillac, Oldsmobile and Oakland of today with the models of five or ten years ago.

GENERAL MOTORS • to CHEVROLET- PONTIAC- OLDSMOBILE -OAKLAND -BUICK- LASALLE- CADILLAC FEIGIDAIKE— Tie fiectric Ktfrigmt.r • DELCOdIGHT-Eltctrit GM AC »f Ti-t N r »"t>

MISSING MAN RETURNS Not having been heard from since he left home eighteen years ago at the age of fifteen, and believed by relatives to have been killed in the world war, Joel Conrad appeared at the home of his mother at Logansport. He has been living in New York and Florida. When relatives of Conrad saw his name in the list of missing reported from the front in France in 1918, they believed that he had lost his life. Conrad explains that he was seriously injured and was in a government hospital one year. —o Commercial agency reports covering the past 40 years show that the chances of success in industrial or retail business arg one in twenty. In other words 19 of every 20 business ventures actually fail during one’s lifetime. In the oil industry it is found that the chances of winning are one in forty, and the chance of winning in Wall Street gambling is considerably less. And yet the sucker-list grows.

Solves Farm-Mix Mash Problems The NEW Mayne 20 per cent makes it practical to combine your ground farm grains into au economical farm-mix laying mash of superior quality. It brings you 12 essential, high grade ingredients (all blended together) that are not produced on the farm. STIEFEL & LEVY A. W. STRIEB Y. Manager Syracuse. Indiana

NU-TONE ACTED LIKE MAGIC IN THE CASE OF MR. R.D.BYRKET

Syracuse Man Says: **lt Is The Qnly Real Medicine 1 have Ever Taken/* Declaring that Steck’s famous Nu-I Tone Tonic Is the best medicine on the market for constipation and general stomach trouble, Mr. R. D. Byrket. 29, Syracuse, ts telling his large number of friends of the wonderful benefit he got from its use. “This Nu-Tone acted just like magic In my case, fet* constipation and general stomach trouble that I suffered with for 2 years disappeared like eolns in the hands of a magician,” he says, “I was almost forced to quit work on account of my poor physical condition, but Nu-Towe restored my waning* health and now I jrork hard all day and I am not bothered with exhaustion caused by my condition. “I was all in, so to speak. Indigestion and constipation had put in their licks for so long a time that my nerves were always unstrung and I was . almost a physical wreck. I couldn’t

MAYOR DUVALL CONVICTED Mayor John L. Duvall of Indianapolis was found guilty Thursday by a jury in criminal court of charges of violating the corrupt practices act. The verdiet calls for a fine of SI,OOO and a sentence of 30 days in jail. After the jury was out a little more than two hours they reached a verdict. Duvall went on trial as a direct result of a year’s investigation by the grand jury into allegations of political graft in Indiana that were made by Thomas H. Adams, Vincennes publisher, and D. C. Stephenson, former grand dragon of the Ku Klux Klan and now a life term prisoner in the Michigan City prison. - o Classified ads pay both —the seller and buyer.

Showing of FALL SUITS FASHION PARK » and MICHAEL-STERN CLOTHES KOHLER & CHAMPION 112 s South Main Street Goshen, Indiana

Then add Pontiac, a General Motors crpte» tkxi. Add LaSalle, another General Motors creation. And then consider how General Motors has developed these cars into a complete line, within which any family may find a suitable quality car at the price it plans to pay; “A Car for Every Purse and Purpose.** Another example is Frigidaire, the electric refrigerator. General Motors had the resources to spend millions to develop a satisfactory refrigerator, and then to apply to its manufacture the same processes which have increased the utility and lowered the cost of the automobile. We believe that this record justifies General Motors as an economic institution. Its products are quality products, first of all. Their prices represent the economies of united effort passed on to the purchaser. In the last year one in each three automobiles chosen by the public has been a General Motors car. The serviced Delco-Light electric plants has extended to more than a quarter million homes, while Frigidaire has become the world's largest selling convenience of its kind. We believe also that the values now offered in the current General Motors products - (which are listed below) prove anew that “many minds are better than one** and that a family of companies, working together, can produce results which are decidedly in the public interest and of increasing benefit to the individual family. Very truly yours, Alfred P. Sloan, Jr M President General Motors Corporation Detroit, September 23,1927

eat or sleep. Even my disposition was affected. I would wake up in the morning feeling cross and In ill % homer. Everything seemed to go wrong with me. Gas pains would attack me right after every meal. I had dissy spells and headaches frequently. “I tried all kinds of medicines, but none of them helped until I took NuTctoe. Then It was that I experienced the first relief In 2 years. My bowels move regularly, the pains around my heart ceased, my nervousness disappeared, my appetite increased to an amazing extent and I was again able to sleep the sleep that is produced by tiredness of a healthy body. Nu-Tone Is by far the best medicine on the market today. , It has given me 10® per cent relief.” Remember, there is only one NuTone. There are other medicines for the stomach, kidneys, liver and bowels, but none that are thorough in its action as Nu-Tone. Look for it tn the orange and blue carton Sold here by the Thornburg drug store. Bottle, sl. Six for $5.

Alliece Shoppe PERMANENT WAVING And all Kinds of Beauty Work Phone 933 for Appointments Goshen Indiana Spohn Building TO BRETZ FOR GLASSES OPTOMETRIST GOSHEN. HMANA. 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 E. Lincoln Ave. Goshen, Ind.