The Syracuse Journal, Volume 20, Number 46, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 15 March 1928 — Page 10

Classified Ads Classified advertising is accepted at the rate of 5 cents a line for each insertion. A booking and collection fee of io cents will be added for a charged account: no account will be charged for less than 25 cents for a single item.

w*. — MORTGAGE EXEMPTIONS— Geo. L. Xanders. 46-4 t FOR RENT—Good onion or mint ground. Calvin Beck. 46-2 t FOR SALE —Mixed hay, $7 a ton in the mow. John FOR SALE—Barn 24x24. See Chas. Rentfrow. 46-2 t FOR SALE—B Heifer calves and 4 male calves. W. A. Jones and Sons. 46-2tp WANTED—Hear from owner good farm for sale. Cash price, | particulars. D. F. Bush. Minneapolis. Minn. 45-4 t | RADIOt-Have you heard the wonderful Buckingham radio? Sold by Owen R. Strieby, Syracuse. Phone 845. 34-ts CHICKS—Don't fail to read the Milford Hatchery adjn this paper. 25,000 Quality chicks one day old and up. Special bargains. 46-11 FOR SALE —Clover seed. Buy direct from the grower. Phone 229 .Syracuse. Chas. F. Weybright, route 4. 44-3tp ■ WANTED TO BORROW—From private party S7OO or SBOO for 2or 3 years. Loan will be secured by mortgage on chattel goods worth four times amount of the loan. Address by letter only to A. B. C., care Syracuse Journal. 43-4tpd RADIO —Something w r o n g with your radio? Call Owen Strieby. Phone 845. 23-11 OFFICE SUPPLlES—Typewriter ribbon, carbon paper, typewriter paper, cardboard, blotting, etc., Tor sale at the Journal office. RIBBONS—We sell ribbons for T, C. Smith, Underwood and Oliver Typewriters. Journal office. OLD PAPERS —Large bundle for 5c at the Journal office. Bright B. Bortner Registered Civil Engineer ALBION. IND. Lake Subdivision & Consulting GEO. L. XANDERS Attorney-at-Law Settlement of Estates, . Opinions on Titles Fire and Other Insurance Phone 7 Syracuse. Ind. ORVfIL 6. GfIRR Funeral Director Ambulance Service Syracuse, Indiana. Telephone 75 J. C. Abbott DESIGNER AND BUILDER Decorating and Painting Phone 734 Syracuse, Ind.

(HEADACHEj ( 9t^onr Quick Relief Monthly Paint Headache Backache Neuralgia Toothache and pains caused by Rheumatism and Neuritis Dr. Miles’ Anti-Pain Pills relieve quickly and without unpleasant after effects. They do not constipate or upset the digestion. Pleasant to take. We will be glad to send samples for 2c in stamps. Dr. Miles Medical Company Elkhart, Indiana U DR-MILES' ' Anti-Pain Pills

Special Tire Sale Saturday 29x4.40 Goodyear Tire $6.69 Syracuse Auto Sales ! 't

TEN GREAT MEN John Haynes Holmes, pastor of > New York’s famous Community Church., declares that the ten greatest Americans are Abraham Lincoln. Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry David Thoreau, William Lloyd Garrison, Theodore Parker, Robert E. Lee, Walt Whitman, Mark Twain, Charles W. Eliot, and Eugene V. Debs. Os these two were philosophers, one president, one soldier, one poet, one satirist, one theologian, one educator and Garrison and Debs may be classed as Radicals. The outstanding feature of these ten seems to be that most of them went down to defeat before the principles they stood for were admitted. But America is better for their having lived. The list might be amended in many respects because America has had many great men, but the list is worthy of earnest study. ’ —o A Chicago newspaper is responsible for the story that 200 millions of cornstalks produced in this country each year, and said to be worth $5 per ton are to be converted into silk underwear. That would be encouraging prospect were it not for the Norwegian patent controlled by the DuPonts whereby cheap cotton linters produce the best synthetic silk at less cost than wood.

MISSING—IN COUNTLESS HOMES Childhood photographs! Are you postponing the children’s visit to the family photographer? Make an appointment now. The Schnabel Studio N. E. Corner Main & Washington GOSHEN, INDIANA

TO BRETZ FOR GLASSES jSreZz 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 Sfi < 115 E. Lincoln Ave. Gowhen. Ind. SUITS and OVERCOATS FASHION PARK 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 Aino Tod and Trimming GoGOSHEN, INDIANA

HOMES OF EARTH Earth has been used for building dwellings and other structures for many centuries. One method of use, superior to otherand which was known and used by the Romans, is being revived for modern buildings. The method consists of ramming slightly moist earth, without the addition of strawy or other material, between movable forms, and is known by its French name "pise de terne” which means “rammed earth.” Rammed earth is a reliable building material when properly handled and is admirably adapted to buildings on farms, especially if suitable earth is at hand. Where it is difficult to obtain other building materials such as are commonly used for farm structures, earth may be a successful substitute because, it is already on the building site. A suitable soil consists of a mixture of clay and sand. Earth that forms into clods when dug will likely prove suitable. Earth of the proper kind, tamped hard in forms like those used for concrete construction, will make very desirable walls, possessing excellent insulating qualities. Such walls have been known to stand for a hundred years or more. Instructions for I "rammed earth” construction can be obtained from U*. S. Department of Agriculture. o German chemists are attempting to produce synthetic sugar from the air. Scientists assert that it may be technically possible but at a cost that will not permit commercial competition. • o Lon Chaney in “The Big City,” the most exciting of all crook pictures—and Chaney without a make-up—at Crystal. Ligonier, next Sunday and Monday. March 18 and 19. o— Is Your Money Working? If you have idle money, why not put it at work drawing 7% interest. I have on hand mortgage paper, well secured by first mortgage on real estate at 7%. See me, or write for further particulars. T. J. PRICKETT Nappanee, Indiana

See DWIGHT MOCK for Vulcanizing and ftauiGiic Welding Battery Charging and Repairing South Side Lake Wawasee on cement Road. Phone 504 Syracuse “PROSO,** A NEW FIELD GRAIN FROM RUSSIA An Ideal Chick Feed A nursery in northern lowa has beea growing PROSO tor the past twelve years, using it as a cover crop for cleaning ground, getting it ready for setting to strawberries and other nursery products. The grain has ticaily the same analysis. pound for pound, as wheat, and in Russia it is used for making bread, etc,, as we use wheat. A single PROSO plant and branched and grew 21 heads of grain. One of the larger heads counted oiii_l.lßs seeds. A . co ” Ber **' tive average for the 21 heads was around 500 seeds to the head or a total of 10.500 grains of seed on the plant grown from a single seed, making an Increase of over ten thousand *°This new grain makes an ideal chick feed, and can be fed in the bundle, as it comes from the threshing machine, or ground into mean alone or in combinations with other grains. It is a great egg and meat producer. PROSO plants grow to about-the height of tall oats and the crop is. • harvested and threshed the same an- oats- The seed Ray.,** plahted any time after corn planting to July 4th the crop being oartier to mature than either millet or buckwheat and a much heavier producer of both grain and straw, the lattert making a splendid rough feed for all sorts of stock. For use in clearing up land infested with Quack or Thistles. PROSO has no EQUAL. Tou can save a lot on your feed bills by’ growing a field of PROSO. Write to THE GARDNER NURSERY CO.. Box 10, Osage. lowa, mentioning this paper, and they will aend you a big 4 os. package of PROSO SEED, postpaid. for 25c. This is enough to grow one-sixteenth of an acre if drilled in rows and should yield from five to ten bushels of grain. Write today, for this offer may not appear again. If you want to try a larger amount gey will send five packages, postpaid.

THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL

CHICKEN RAISERS—’“XT* 25,000 Quality -ChicKs For Sale One day old and up. Your chance and choice. Come new. All leading heavy breeds sl4 per 100 Leghorns sl2 per 100 Heavy breeds, mixed $lO per 100 Special prices on larger orders. '* Custom hatching, 6c per live chick. Pay only for chicks and not the eggs. We have in stock the world’s greatest equipment of Uprite feeders, fountains and stoves. MILFORD HATCHERY Phone 178. FRED BETZ, Prop.

a /C// - ± // A \ ■ . .■ .. Sailors And Sauerkraut

/XAUERKRAUT is to be a staple in the American navy’s menu for the coming year. Although it has been used, to the imount of several hundred thousand pounds, the bids for this year’s supplies are over 70 per cent higher than ever before, amounting to 1,090,000 pounds. The increased interest in sauerkraut is thought to be due to the same reasons which have interested the housewife. For one thing, the wider knowledge of Captain Cook’s feeding his sailors sauerkraut for the prevention of scurvy in his expedition in 1776 made a real impression. And in addition to its high vitamin content, sauerkraut contains lactic acid which has a most desirable effect in the body. These facts, coupled with its delicious flavor and the many ways in which it can be used, matt it inevitably popular at home and at sea. Here’s a Good Recipe Sauerkraut is served with meat, in soup, or in salad. It is delicious

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Grapefruit—Today’s Flapper

Zfl-ITRUS fruits, once the luxury QL of kings, now rank among the everyday necessities of life. Oranges are, perhaps, the most used of the group, although lemons always will fill their niche. But the newest one of the three sisters, grapefruit, is rapidly coming into her . own. She might be called the flapper of the group. Porto Rico was growing grapefruit in 1898 when the United States took her under her wing; but it remained for Americans to see the possibilities in the new fruit. To the surprise of New York, a new fruit appeared on the market ■ — grapefruit. Then, a few years later, canned grapefruit was prepared. To prepare it women wash, I

... yet Buick clears the ruts and gives head-room as well Buick's remarkable combination of modish, graceful beauty—mninum head-room—and abaity to c * ear t * ie * u ** — “ **** < i“ ect re * u^t This brilliant advancement, pioneered by Buick months ago, places Buick fisr ahead of ot * >er cars “ beauty, safety and all-around roadability. SEDANS $1195 to $1995 » * COUPES $1195 to fil*sd SPORT MODELS $1195 t 051525 4U|XKa,/.«. S.Flhw, JWNA.ivwnmM/ltfiMitokdWM. TkeGAA4.C.#MM«Hto > kM«t AmmSK a toaiiaMk. ROBINSON MOTOR SALES Warsaw, Indiana

prepared in the following way: cut a piece off the stam end of six green peppers of uniform size, remove the seeds and partitions and parboil them for five minutes. Fill each with a stuffing made of one cup soft bread crumbs, one cup sauerkraut, two slices onion and one-eighth teaspoon paprika. Cover the tops with bread crumbs and place in a baking dish containing about half an inch of meat stock, and bake for thirty minutes in a moderate oven. As vinegar destroys the lactic acid ferment in sauerkraut, all salad dressings should be made with lemon juice. An excellent recipe is this: whip one cup sour cream until stiff, adding two tablespoons lemon juice during the whipping. Season with salt, and add a dash of curry powder. In making French dressing the regular recipe may be followed if lemon iuice i« onlv substituted for the more ordinary vinegar, when the dressing is to be used as part of a sauerkraut salad.

core, and peel the fruit and separate its segments from .the pith. The segments are then packed in cans with sugar, sealed and cooked. By this method the fruit retains its original flavor, and is ready to use in the manv places wht’e its tangy flavor will fit. . Uses of Grapefruit Grapefruit in common with the other citrus fruits, is particularly good from a dietetic standpoint. It is high in the vitamin C which averts the dread disease scurvy. Canned grapefruit is especially good for use in the children’s diet. Syrup from the grapefruit is also , the basis of many unusually delicious fruit drinks.

electrical development London has 60 electrical companies, selling 39 kinds of current} Chicago has but one company selling only one kind. But Chicago buys at one-half the London price, and uses many times as much electricity. The Chicago worker, the same as the factory worker of all America, produces three times as much and draws several times the wage of the London worker, because by using standarized power he can do so much more and do it cheerfully. According to statistics compiled by the International Labor Bureau at Geneva, Switzerland organized labor throughout the world now has a total membership of more than 37,000,000. — o “Chubby” Parker in person from W. L. S. with his little banjo Mud old tyme songs, also “Loves of Carmen.” a big superspecial picture with Dolores Del Rid and Victor McLaglen, at the Crystal, Ligonier, tonight. Shows at t and 9:15.

A PYRE FOR CORN BORERS ' - •' '• i-.’ St' Rarely have hay rakes been used for anything but hay. Today they are used in Indiana to rake cornstalks, fw raking and burning cornstalks are strongly recommended by Indiana and Federal entomologists to help destroy larvae of the European corn borer. Kaking alone doesn't hurt the ’ rer, but the burning that follows does mor< than hnrt—:t F’’ ’

= H OLD EAST MICHIGAN INDIAN MONUMENT RECALLS THRILLING LEGEND - (By E. M. T. Service) S ■'' mri Copyrighted, 1927 A-. * - - - - , ■ i F X '• .. 1.4 A : ! jk Mfr ■ k ** A jfr Uls -.c j . -X,.

SIX miles from Rogers City, Michigan, which is located on U. S. Highway 23, on the rim of Lake Huron, stands a giant limestone boulder. Sacred Rock it is called. It stands a legendary monument—defying the onward inarch of centuries, impervious alike to the battering barrage of Huron's lee in winter and to the seductive sWish of Huron’s satin waves in summer—solitary, aloof —a tacit reminder of the aboriginal Indians who roamed this section centuries ago and to Whom this boulder became a temple, a place of worship. Sacred Rock is situated in the heart of one of the resort and tourist sections of that great summertime "Vacationland** r- East Michigan. Here thousands of residents of Indiana come annually on that persistent, persuasive, predominant and universal quest, th4 master passion of life, the goal Os the human race—Happiness. Hundreds of Indiana residents/who last summer flatted Paul H. Hoeft State Park—one of the 34 state 7 parks in East Michigan— also visited Sacred Rock. And flMhboyant white initials, carefully carved by those possessing tools or hacked and gashed out by others, almost invariably on the face fronting the lake, testify to the number who have visited the boulder. Presque Isle County, in which the robk is located, was believed by the Indians to be sacred ground. Later, sabredness did not affect the entire county or that section which is now designated as . the county. It merely affected as sanctified the area between the mouth of the Waw-waugh-wbugh-que-oc River, which empties into Hammond’s Bay, IS miles north of the present site of Rogers City, and Swan River, which debouches into Lake Huron four miles south of Rogers City. Waw-waugh-waugh-que-oc is now spelled on all Michigan maps Ocqueoc. Hundreds of years ago there were two tribes of Indians in this section. Where Sacred Rock now stands marked the boundary line between the two ; tribes. A keen rivalry existed between T MwMaa|l w • ijiSSi

SIMPLE, BUTIT WORKS I -i.- ssss Necessity w ’he mother of Invention in farming as in other fields. ' Indiana farmers have resorted to this homemade stalk shaver to cut cornstalks before raking and burning, in ordor M destroy any European corn l*re» larvae that may he .

the tribes. The men of both, wore fierce warriors. They often engaged with other tribes in bloody combat. They scalped their foes always. An Indian burial ground was located at the mouth of the Ocqueoc River. Up to a few decades ago, this burial ground was in a state Os perfect preservation. The individual burial places were marked by little houses, constructed of smooth, lath-like pieces of wood and birch bark. One beautiful Indian summer after* noon, the two chieftains me< alone. An argument was followed by a fight GitOhle Manitou, the Great Spirit, who was summering in the Lake Superior territory, according to the legend, looked down and beheld his children violating his mandate of peace and amity. Impatient at both chieftains, he seised the Sacred Rock and. hurling R down, crushed the red warriors beneath its tremendous weight Such was the impact when the 'rook struck the ground that a cataclysm resulted. The banks on the shore trembled ahd heaved. They started to slip and slide and they have, been sliding since. With the death of the warring chieftains, the two tribes made peace. The rock became an object of worship, a place of protection against famine, an altar Which provided peace and prow perlty. And thanks was offered to the Great Manitou at the shrine of the' spirit, Sacred-Rock. Today the hills tower 80 feet above the level of Huron, but they tremble still. The banks, coinposed of Clay and And, are continually shifting. When the. tourist stoops to take • drink from one of the fresh, spark* ling water springs, bubbling by** hillside, he can hear the mulfled sound of the sliding, shifting, shut- . fling surface. , 1 And this sound—even today wit* its ’ - cynicism and skepticism—heard by the tourist above the rippling mtar* mur of Huron's waves in the witehing environment of Sacred Boek, supports to some extent In Abe minds of many the legend that has survived the ravages of time? .. ' 1