The Syracuse Journal, Volume 20, Number 16, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 16 August 1928 — Page 10

* Classified Ads . «— < > * Classified advertising is ac- I > cepted at the rate of 5 cents X * a line for each insertion. A f I booking and collection fee of | > 10 cents will be added for a & ’ charged account; no account f [ will be charged for less than X > 25 cents for a single item. FOR SALE—Plums. Stephen < Freeman. 16-lt ‘ FOR SALE—Pure pear cider < vinegar. Mrs. Vern Long. 11-ti FOR RENT—Semi => modern < house. See Russell Bertram or call 829. FOR SALE—Used Fordson. . Good. Low priced. Hollett Mot- I or Sales. FOR SALE —Alfalfa hay. $8 per load in the field. D. W. Nor- , ris. Phone 3010. 16-p LOST—August 8, linen pocket book between Tavern Hotel and Syracuse. Reward. Phone Tavern Hotel. £ 16 ~P LOST—Boston bull dog. Dark brown and white markings. Liberal reward offered for return. Millard Hire. ’ 16-lt FOR SALE CHEAP —Electric washing * machine and wringer, also 2 feed grinders and 60 gal. gasoline tank. Mrs. Geo. W. Mellinger, Syracuse, Ind., Phone 2811 * 16-p DON’T WORRY—Let ME do your collecting. A. 0. Winans, Syracuse, I d. Phone 150. 47-ts RADIO - Something wrong with your radio? Call Owen Strieby. Phone 845. CARDBOARD—AII kinds of cardboard, suitable for drawing | and maps, for sale at the Journal office. ORVfIL 6. 6ftRR Funeral Director Ambulance Service Syracuse. Indiana. Telephone 75 GEO. L. XANDERS Attorney-at-Law Settlement of Estates, Opinions - on Titles Fire and “Other Insurance Phone 7 Syracuse, Ind. See DWIGHT MOCK for ViUcanlzina and flcGiuicßG WGidina Battery Charging and Repairing South Side Lake Wawasee on cement Road. Phone 504 Syracuse ; TO BRETZ FOR GLASSES Qafe 8 Bretz Lv ‘ / OPTOMETRIST GOSHEN. INDIANA. Over Miller’s Shoe Store Showing of SUMMER SUITS FASHION PARK and MICHAEL-STERN CLOTHES KOHLER & CHAMPION 112 South Main Street Goshen, Indiana NEW DEPARTMENT Wrecked Auto Bodies— . Fenders, Frames, Tops, # Etc., Repaired. Glass Cutting and Grinding Department— Glass for Windshields, Doors and Curtains, Cut and Ground to Fit All Cars. Tops, Curtains, Cushions— And All Kinds of Trim Work a Specialty. —All Work Guaranteed — Goshen ftuto tod GoPhone 438 Goshen, Ind. f / 3 ■— ■" ■■ ■" J. M. BYLER, M D. General Practitioner NORTH WEBSTER, INDIANA. Nervous Diseases and Diseases of Women, and Diseases of the Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat. Eyes tested and glasses and frames made to fit the face. (

SPARKS’ CLOWNS IN NEW LAUGH STI NTS Forty fun-makers with big show appear in pranks to delight both young and old Coming to Warsaw Tuesday August 21 Many are of the opinion that j the circus clown’s mission is only I to amuse the youngsters. As far j as the clown and his work is concerned age tloesn t count at all among the people he must amuse and is matters not to him whether they are on the “blues’ or seated in the reserved section. No one gets too old to escape his wiles, and he will break through the gravity of a judge. It is human nature to laugh and it is the clown’s business to tickle the funny bone of old and young alike —and he does it. The “walk-around” of the clowns with Sparks Circus never fails to cause hilarity—mirth so infectious that it spreads from one end of the b.g tent to the other and breaks down the dignity even of those who believe that such pranks are for the delight. of the juvenile portion of the audience. Sparks Circus, coming to Warsaw Tuesday, August 21 afternoon and night, has three score clowns and these fun-makers ot the big top have conceived innumerable new laugh-provoking “stunts” this season. Seats will be on sale Circus day at Up-town ticket office at the same price as at the show grounds. 0 “Diamond Handcuffs,” a true story of a super gold-digger, at Crystal. Ligonier, next Sunday and .Monday. August 19 and 20.

WHAT COLOR HAWAII? . - ... .1 I ..— I I II ■ mW

Bl ■ ~ — 1 <s tHAT color Hawaii?—is the 'question which is bobbing up in many minds. For H..-.v;.<i is

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composed, not of one do:ni:zzit rs.c?, as is the United States, b..t of rz. .. minor ones. Os course the Hawaiians are there, b..t they are c stantly decreasing in nc.n.b..', p.’.r' Hawaiians now mustering on;y ab u. five per cent, of the to: J n. The most numerous of all the racir.l groups are the. Japanese, then cc v.e white men—American, British, German, Russian, Portugese and Spam h. Among the others are hhipmts, Chinese, Koreans, Porto Ricans, and other small groups. Such a melee of races has, of course, produced strange racial mixtures. Tlii list of the first seven names from a baptismal register in an-Hawaiian town indicates how numerous are the races: Maile Scudder. David Heakoelkauaikelani Kalama, Marjory Erdman. Eugene Baguss, Lincoln Benjamin Kammeheiwa, Priscilla Yii. All Love Hawaii Yet one thing all these pem'le have in common—their loyalty to the Hawaiian Islands v hich have given them shelter. For one thing, Hawaii is, indeed, the land of opportunity. There are the cities with their opportunities for trade. There a’re the sugar and banana fields. But most of all, there are the great pineapple fields and the canning factories. For Hawaii is also loyal to the nineapple. Is it not the dish of lungs? And was it not one of the first plants introduced into the islands? According to tradition, it was in 1527, little more than twenty-five years after

<%%%♦«%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%*%%%*******♦*'*'*'*•************ I“PRETKRAFT” SIGNS ARTISTIC DISTINCTIVE ;; Outdoor Display Boards Commercial Signs Banner Work Boat and Cottage Names H Show Card Writing ; PRET MILES KRAFTERIES 2nd Floor Royal Store Bldg «> Syracuse, Indiana. <• MHWWUHWMHMMMMWWHHHWHWtUWWMHHUWHWVAMV

DOU BLE-.I OINTED EYES The eyes of a chameleon work within their sockets upon the s cup-and-ball principle, and each p one can be moved independently S so that the creature has the / power to look in front and be- i hind or above and below itself, e I at the same time. r = f CNERVOUSNESSP i

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NervinE ' I Your ability to think clear- . 1 1 ly, remember correctly, sleep ‘ ‘I -well and to enjoy life de- ; '! pends on the condition of . ; I your nerves. Don’t neglect ‘ them. Nervousness may lead .

1 . to ill health. Dr. Miles’ Nervine “I is a reliable nerve medicine used successfully in neri vous disorders for ' I nearly fifty years. ‘ Your money back if the first 5 full size bottle 1 fails to help you. v A generous sample for sc. in stamps.

e /4ioo\ t f ThITL A Dr. Miles Medical Co. y \brt^tcY’e y Elkhart, Ind.

Columbus discovered America, that ; group of Spaniards was shipwrecket on the South Kona coast, Island o: Hawaii. With them they had tools stores., garments and plants; anc among rhe plants are supposed tc have ’been pmeanple.s, brought froir Mexico. Ag on i'x the middle oi the c ntury a SpaA.d came to the islands. This time it was Juan Gaet no. and he, too, is supposed to have b. jght pineapple slips. For some ti.ne the history of pineapples is blank until we read that a Don Francisco de Paula Marin, from Spain, was ‘'raising oranges, figs, grapes, roses, pineapples, and vegetables, making butter, salting beef for strips, and making wine.” The Best Liked Industry Even though the Spaniards had undoubtedly started the raising of pineapples, they had little hand in the development of the industry. In fact, a citizen of Spain’s dearest enemy, England, was responsible. For in 1886, Captain John Kidwell, an English horticulturist, introduced a new variety to the islands, the Smooth Cayenne. And it was on the basis of this type of fruit lint the great industry was found.d which ranks second in Hawaii’s exports and employs so many people that a dining room in one of the factories will seat two thousand people at one time. The pineapple companies make a point of giving a square deal to every employee, so in addition to enjoying the type of work, the employees like their bosses. And that is why King Pineapple occupies a decidedly friendly spot in their hearts. *

WHY HEELS ON SHOES The question of “Why heels on shoes” was raised at Indianapolis in a report read by Dr. M. • i S. Harmolin, before the National 1 Association of Chiropodists-Pod-, iatrists, holding their sevente-, enth annual convention. Dr. Har--molin is chairman of the scientific commieett. 1 Dr. Harmolin stated: “The ( reason for high heels is recognized as being the vanity of man, j the masculine is used advisedly > since the high heel was invented by a vain but abbreviated king. “One contention is that a heel makes walking more secure. However, it does not. Heels cause slipping, and that’s why people in the far north wear heelless boots. Another contention is that they lessen the shock to the spinal column, but the rubber heel was invented to overcome the shock from the solid heel. * Man is a jump and a half ahead of nature as far as adaptation is concerned. The flat, unyielding pavements and floors on which we walk with feet mechanically constructed for the uneven surfaces they have always known, and every step of the thousands we take each day receives the same hard jolt. Without shoes we raise our body weight all the way from the flat ground or floor with never a bump, clump of weeds or grass. | or eneven surface to help us on our way. The heel elevat.on ol the shoe which is intended to replace uneven surfaces of fields, woods and rugged foot paths is a mechanical aid to walking. “Perhaps those wlio first introduced the heel elevation were not aware of the unyielding, underlying principles, but what they evidently did know was the fact that it was less tiring to walk on perfectly flat unyielding pavement • with this heel elevation than without it.” In replying to the question of how much decadence is due to the wearing of heel shoes, Dr. Harmolin declared that poorly from the standpoint of mechanics are the dominating factors contributing to this decadence. “There are many other mechanical factors involved.” he said, “some introduced by our mode of living, to which the organization of the body must fradually adapt itself, and some to vanity and passing fashion.” o Keep smiling with Colleen Moore in '“Happiness Ahead.” at Crystal, Ligonier, next week, Tuesday. Wednesday and Thursday, August 21. 22, and 23.

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8 . -□ 8 The Most Stupenduous Sale in | I —l * 8 Shoe History Begins Thursday e g Morning at 9 O’Clock □ F □. . E □ The Bankrupt Stock of the Miller f g Shoe Co. Must be Turned | □ Into Cash E R D □ H □ Regardless of cost every pair of MEN’S, WOMEN’S □ □ and CHILDREN’S Shoes must go—Street Shoes, Dress □ Shoes, House Shoes, Sport Shoes! You can buy three □ □ to four pair for the original price of one. Come prepared to witness the greatest price slashing you’ve ever seen R □ □ D MILLER SHOE CO. Goshen, Indiana R‘ ‘ 8 nnnnnnnnnnnnn a nnnnnaaamaauaaODaaaaaDaDD s QQDDDDDODDDDEJ ■

TKX BYRACTTB® JOURNAL

HENS SELL FOR $16.66 EACH ■ Word comes from Vancouver, B. C. that after an experimental purchase last year the Japanese Government has just placed a large order for British Columbia live poultry to be shipped to Japan. It is claimed that no other poultry-breeding center in the world could have filled such an j order at this season or have sup- j plied birds of such quality, I Principal breeds are White Leghorns Barred Rocks, Rhode Island Reds and White Wyandottes. The shipment is part of a 10-• year program and is a direct result of the World’s Poultry Congress at Ottawa last year. It consists, of 300 birds with an aggregate value of $5,000, an average price of $16.66. CHAIN SHOE STORES Massachusetts shoe manufacturers are organ.zing a million dollar corporation known as the Footwear Guild for the purpose of organizing both retailers and manufacturers to meet the chain store system. It is not proposed to change the structure of any concern involved but it is proposed to do away with all traveling and middle men and reduce competition by eliminating smaller dealers. There are | now 590 chain store companies, onerating 6,462 stores in the United States. While individual dealers number 72.7 per cent of the total number they only do 48.2 per cent of the business. 0 The Canadian Pacific railroad is running special trains from Quebec to Winnipeg in an effort to supply 44,000 harvesters to reap the bumper grain crop. ( Only strong men accustomed to ■ hard work are wanted. Notwithstanding the tendency • of young men to do without ( headgear, the 21 American manufacturers of wool-felt hats re- ’ port an increase of 18 per cent for 1927 as compared with 1925. BABY DAYS ARE SOON GONE! f The photographs of baby we 1 make now will be treasured j through the coming years. Bring the baby in today. ! The Schnabel Studio ’ N. E. Corner Main & Washington GOSHEN, INDIANA

See The New Models of | (oleman (ookerg | ' I I l' ‘ I • i See these stoves that make and burn their own gas —that give you gas heat cooking service no matter where you live. See the complete line of beautiful new models. See them in action —the Instant Gas Preheater, producing full cooking heat in less than a minute —the clean, clear, blue smokeless gas flame which gives you any degree of cooking heat you want. Come in and see this wonderful stove whether you are figuring on buying a new cook stove or not. We will gladly show or demonstrate it to you. OSBORN & SON A Classified Ad Will Sell It A