The Syracuse Journal, Volume 20, Number 27, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 1 November 1928 — Page 8
3 Classified Ads t 6 t ; I Classified advertising is ac- X < > cepted at the rate of 5 cents <s> ’‘ a line for each insertion. A J [ booking and collection fee of k o 10 cents will be added for a <e> ' ' charged account; no account * J I will be charged for less than X <► 25 cents ffflf 1 a single item. | FOR SALEAVinter apples. Call at McKane Bros. 3 miles north on Huntington road. 26-2tp • FOR SALE-r-Piano, cheap if taken at once. Mrs. Hallie Holloway. 26-11 FOR SALE—One used radio outfit. SSO. Hollett Motor Sales. 27-lt FOR SALE—SIS buys a used Grebe radio. Hollett Motor Sales. 27-lt FOR SALE— Practically new piano at a bargain. Hollett Motor Sales. 27-lt FOR SALE—Used piano in fine condition. Hollett Motor Sales. FOR SALE—Radiant Home hard coal burner. Also range cook stove. Harry Clemens. 27-ts ' FOR SALE—Used Ford, $35. Hollett Motor Sales. 27-lt LOST —Last week 30x5 truck tire and rim. Reward for return. Jesse Cable, Phone 585. 27-pd WANTED —Ten men to husk com next Friday and Saturday only. Virgil Mock, Phond 165, New Paris., 27-ltp FOR SALE—Quarter sawed oak china closet. Mrs. R. W. Osborn. .•$, 27-ts APPLES FOR SALE—Kings, Jonathan and Northern Spy fj>r $2.00. R. I. Greenings, Tulpehockin, Stayman, Wine Sap, Macintoice Red, Spitzenberg and York Imperial for $1.75. Also have Golden Delicious and Stark’s Red Delicious. James Dewart, Champion Fruit Farm, Syracuse, Phone 3013. _27-3t APPLES, APPLES—Grimes Golden, Jonathan and Rhode Island Greenings. Firsts $2.00, Seconds SI.OO per bushel. Stephen Freeman. 24-ts DON’T WORRY—Let ME do your collecting. A. 0. Winans, Syracuse, Ind. Phone 150. 47-ts RADIO - Something wrong with your radio? Call Owen Strieby. Phone 845.
ORVfIL G. GftRR Funeral Director Ambulance Service Syracuse. Indiana. Telephone 75 See DWIGHT MOCK for Vulcanizing and rtGctulcnc Welding Battery Charging and liepairing South Side Lake Wawasee on cement Road. Phone 504 Syracuse TO BRETZ FOR GLASSES Ne\An.G' Bretz /OPTCIANX / OPTOMETRIST GOSHEN. INDIANA. Over Miller’s Shoe Store Showing of FALL CLOTHING 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 DepartmentGlass for Windshields, Doors and Curtains, Cut and Ground to Fit All Oars. •Tops, Curtains. Cushions— And All Kinds of Trim Work a Specialty. AH Work Guaranteed— Goshen fluio Tod GoPhone 438 Goshen, Ind,
Bring the World of Music and Entertainment right to your fireside with an £ Atwater Kent RADIO Atwater Kent gives you more radio per dollar of investment than any other known make. This is made possible through the production of over 8000 sets per day. See and hear the new models— TODAY. Beckman’s
THOMAS A. EDISON Because of his distinguished work “in illuminating the path of progress” through the development and application of inventions that have revolutionized civilization in the last century. Thomas A. Edison has been presented with the Congressional medal of honor—the highest honor Congress can bestow on behalf of the American people. The ceremony at his West Orange. N. J., home, was attended by many of the most prominent educators, statesmen and proTessional men of this country. While Mr. Edison never had a college education, and very little schooling in the grades he has given to the world hundreds ol patents along almost as many lines. From, his mother he received most of his scanty book educa tion. He took it up in the laboratory where she left off. He went to work as a newsboy at 12. Now at 81, world famous, with a secure place in history, Mr. Edison spends his working hours, as he has for 50 years, in his laboratory. developing new lines of usefulness. - o— ; . SYNTH EPIC G ASOLI N E , Lecturing at the current American Chemical Society Institute at Northwestern University, Evanston, 111., Dr. Gustav Egloff, research director of an oil company declared that fish oils, wood tar and similar products other than crude oil is supplying one-third of the “gas" used in the world today. He asserted that last year by the “cracking” process, 4,500,000,004 gallons of “gasoline” were made from oils which contained no gasoline, as such. Dr. Egloff estimated that 450,00,00 fewer barrels of crude oil were required to drive the world’s 29,500,000 automotive vehicles. Notwithstanding this great conservation of crude oil, the retail price of gasoline, exhibits a tendency to advance rather than decline. RETURN FROM EUROPE John S. Hunt, General Manager of New Jersey and Carl M. Phillips, Chief Body Engineer, arrived Friday aboard the steamship Aquitania, from Europe. Mr. Hunt and Mr. Phillips went to Europe last month to confer with Mr. Durant in regard to the new Durant plant in Germany and to inspect European automotive plants. While there the attended both the Paris and London Automobile Shows in order to see European automobile developments. o The Director of the Bureau of Employment of Pennsylvania has issued a booklet containing the names of 1,600 employers in the state who do not bar men from employment on account of age when physically and mentally able to meet the requirements of the positions. Many of these have abandoned the age ban, and others never did recognize it. SEND “GRANDMA” NEW PHOTOGRAPHS OF THE CHILDREN TODAY. , “Grandma” is always interested in the children and just imagine how she will appreciate receiving new photographs of the kiddies. We specialize in children’s photographs. The Schnabel Studio N. E. Corner Main & Washington GOSHEN. INDIANA
HOUSEHOLD HELPS A regular bath makes healthy house plants. Wash the leaves once a week with thin suds oi soap and lukewarm water. To keep the sink white and shining make a soap jelly by dissolving soap in warm water and adding a few tablespoonfuls oi kerosene. Keep this in a glass or w de-mouthed jar. If you have green tomatoes on the vine late this fall which will not ripen before freezing weather arrives, pick them and wrap each one separately in heavy paper, and store them away in a cool place. They will ripen slowly and provide you with choice tomatoes, for sliced tomatoes taste mighty good around Christmas time. A cellar will appreciate the brightening effect of a couple of coats of good cement paint, applied to the walls and incidentally it will be fortified against the encroachments of dampness by this process. If you choose a good paint, you will have a resulting surface that is dense and hard and permanent. It will not peel, chip, blister or chalk off and strong soap and water even may be used to keep it clean. Besides making your basement a more cheerful place to work in, it will assist in damp proofing it. o TRUST BUSTING During the past year the antitrust division of the Department of Justice has settled 14 cases involving violations and collected $111,600 in fines. About one-third of the 40 cases before the department are criminal. The criminal cases instituted during the past year involve restraints of interstate trade and commerce in motion pictures, quinine, confectionary products, metal lath, “built in” kitchen cabinets and glazed bathrooms cabinets. The civil cases instituted involve restraint of trade in motion pictures, quinine, asbestos, gasoline, cash registers, safety razors, metal lath, sardines, confectionary products, meat packing and transportation of grain on the Great Lakes. A large number of the cases involved price agreements affecting the consumer and others were for combinations in restraint of trade. It seems that illegal liquor is not the only business that tries to circumvent the law. o 6 Espey Albig,- expert statistician of'the American Bankers Association, announces that nearly 14,000 schools in the United States, with 4,000,000 pupils, have entered the school savings campaign, and that the children now have $26,000,000 on deposit. o_ “Ramona” at Crystal, Ligonier, Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday November 6,7, and 8.
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THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL
VOTER’S GUIDE For the guidance of voters we publish below the Republican and Democratic ticket, the two leading political parties, for thg election on Tuesday,.- November Republican Ticket For President —Herbert C. Hoover of California. For Vice-President —Charles Curtis of Kansas. For Govennor—Harry G. Leslie, West Lafayette. For Lieutenant Governor— Edgar D. Bush of Salem. For Secretary of State—Otto G. Fifield, Crown Point. For Auditor of State —Archie N. Bobbitt, English. For State Treasurer —Mrs. Grace B. Urbahns, Valparaiso! For Attorney General —James M. Ogden, Indianapolis. For Reporter Supreme Court —Miss Geneveive Brown, Winamac. For Superintendent of Public Instruction —Roy P. Wisehart, Union City. For Judge Supreme Court, Second district—David A. Myers, Greensburg. For Judge Appellate Court, First division—Early Lockyear, Evansville. For Judge Appellate Court, Second division —N. C. Neal, Noblesville. Prosecuting Attorney—H. V. Lehmaft. County Clerk —L. Kinsey. County Treasurer—L. Huffer. Sheriff—Frank McKrill. Surveyor—WJ. Taylor. State Representative—Forrest Knepper. State Senator—C. L. Strey. Commissioners—S. O. Stookey and J. Shroyer. Democratic Ticket For President —Alfred E. Smith of New York. For Vice-President —Joseph T. Robinson of Arkansas. For U. S. Senator—Albert Stump, For Governor —F. C. Dailey. For Lieutenant-Governor— Addison Drake. For Secretary of State —Arthur J. Hamrick. For Auditor —Geo. W- Swigart. For Treasurer—Jap Jones. For Superintendent of Public Instruction—John A. Linbarger. For Attorney General—Curtis Shake. For Reporter of Supreme Court —Mrs. May Hack. For Judge Supreme Court, Second District —Thomas H. Branaman. * For Judge Appellate Court, First District—W. W. Curll. For Judge Appellate Court, Second -District —Glenn J. Clifford. . — For Congressman—Chester A Perkins. For Joint Senator —Chester E. Troyer, For Representative—Donald Vanderveer. For Prosecuting Attorney— George M. Bowser. . For Clerk Circuit Court —John Postma. For County Treasurer —William Shaffer. For Sheriff—Allen E. Daugherty. For Coroner—Lewis J. Bibler. For Surveyor—-Walter D. Irick. For Commissioners —R. B. Allison and Carlin Myers. —2 o— : “Painting the Town.” starring Glen Tryon and Patsy Ruth Hller. A splendid comedy that is certain to please you. At °rystal, Ligonier, next Sunday and Monday, November 4 and 5.
Vote for a a g (Frank McKrill a a I For Sheriff a x a- ' of Kosciusko County a' ' J a ITO THE VOTERS- ' a | While I have beep Sheriff of this county I have upheld the Constitution of the a Uilited States and of the State of Indiana, and I have discharged the duties i of the office to the best of my ability, S 3 / 1 and if I am elected to a second term I S’ I will continue to follow the same policies. SI 1 take this privilege of thanking you in advanc? for your support. a I Frank McKrill (Advertisement)
GRIGSBY’-GRUNOW CO. In view of numerous inquires concerning Grigsby-Grunow and growing interest in this stock it I is believed timely to present an I up-to-date picture or analysis of this company which for some time has been the unparalleled sensation of the Chicago Stock Exchange. President Grigsby recently said: “Earnings wereymore than S2O per share in first four months of fiscal year ended September 30, 1928, and profits for September were $650,000; company has more than $20,000,000 unfilled orders. We are employing about 6,000 people; we have 55 distributors, and more than 8,000 dealers distributing ‘ our products throughout the U. S. The outlook for the balance of the year is exceptionally good, when you consider that during September alone we earned $8 per share, with prospect of $5,000,000 sales for October.” Grigsby-Grunow is without ex ception the outstanding development in the radio trade during the present year in its spectacular growth. But a short time ago a prosperous but comparatively small concern engaged solely in the manufacture of electric power units for radio receivers ' the company now ranks as one of the most powerful and important radio set producers in the world. Its products, marketed under the trademarked name “Majestic” are distributed thru jobbers and retailers thruout the entire United States, and in most sections enjoy a larger demand than those of any other manufacturer. Grigsby-Grunow Co. makes practically everything in a radio receiving set the tubes. Company builds its own cabinets; and as a producer of power units the company is the largest in theindustry. o , TO DISPLACE OCEAN LINERS Sir Vyell Vyvyan, one of England’s experts on aviation, and air marshall for England during the World War, says that within 20 years America will be chartering airships to Europe and they will replace ocean liners to a great extent. Ocean steamers require about $25,000 worth of fuel for the ten-day journey from England to America. An airship, carrying a large number of passengers, may do it on as little as SSOO worth of fuel. He predicts that a traveler bound from London to Egypt or to America will make the trip for from $25 to SSO, in airships carrying 200 passengers and 20 tons of baggage and mail. The two big English ships now under construction, will run to India and Australia next yeart. o—- ———— A rough survey by the Department of Commerce reveals that more than 1,000 millions of dollars are annually lost because of unwise credit extensions. Lack of information of ability to pay seems to be the weak point in the installment system.
June Days A Marvelous New f Face Powder June Bloom Powder, price 50 cents, is the powder you have been looking for. Its fine texture makes it go on smoothly and stay on indefinitely—you will love its fragrance. Sold exclusively by druggists
models THE OPEN MIND THE public, with its healthy desire for the new and the better, insists upon continuous improvement, and will withdraw its patronage from any product or service which stands still. Nowhere is this more true than in the automobile industry. The car is more than a utility. It is a personal thing, involving your convenience, your comfort, your safety, your sense of beauty and color, your pride of ownership, your complete environment for many hours of your life. Customs and habits of living change fast; and the past holds many warnings of how quickly your favor can shift when an automobile, for even a single year, fails to show progress. ’ So continuous improvement is more than a policy with General Motors. It is a vital necessity THE PUBLIC DEMANDS NEW MODELS And the public is right. Out of that demand have come electric starting and lighting, the closed body, Duco finish, four-wheel brakes and hundreds of refinements, big and little. Improvements that might have taken a generation have been bora within a few years because people want greater performance, beauty and comfort. Equipped with the largest research laboratories, proving ground and body building plants, and guided by an Open Mind which is ready to revise its thinking in response to new facts, General Motors believes that it is peculiarly fitted not only to sense but to anticipate public demand and to give the people better automobiles at better values year after year. As evidence of that faith we presented some months ago the New Chevrolet, the New Pontiac, the New Oldsmobile. And now we offer, with equal pride, the New Buick, the New Cadillac, the New LaSalle and the New Oakland. • CHEVROLET. 7 Biggar and Better models, $495 to $715. 4-wheel brakes. More powerful engine. Luxurious Fisher Bodies. New colors. Also Light Delivery’Truck chassis; $375; Utility Truck chassis with 4 speeds forward; $520. PONTIAC. 7 models, $745 to $875. Lowest priced General Motors Six—now offers more power, greater economy —4nore speed, greater acceleration. Arresting beauty of bodies by Fisher expresses the vogue of the hour. OLDSMOBILE. 7 models, $925 to SIOBS. Also 5 DeLuxe models, $1145 to $1235. “The fine Car at Low Price.” /Bn|ltt||||njyk Completely redesigned and improved N|ll|Hm||li|l|» by General Motors. More powerful. 4wheel brakes. Longer, roomier Fisher Bodies. z . , OAKLAND. 7 models of the new All American Hn/I||fil» Six, recently announced, $1145 to $1375. Distinctively new original appearance. Splendid new nSSy performance. Luxurious appointments, in new Xnr bodies by Fisher. A car you’ll be proud to own. BUICK. 18 Silver Anniversary models on I 3 wheel-bases. $1195 to $2145. Lightning flash getaway. Masterpiece Bodies by Fisher. Comfort and luxury in every mile. ] Power for the steepest hill and the longest run. t LASALLE. 13 new models, $2295 to $2875. Attractive car of Continental lines. Companion car to Cadillac. 90 degree V-type 8-cylinder engine. Beautiful Bodies by Fisher. Striking Duco color combinations. (CADILLAC. 26 models, $3295 to S7OOO. Standard of the World- Famous 90 degree V-type 8 cylinder engine. Luxurious Bodies by Fisher and Fleetwood. An extensive range of color and upholstery combinations. (ALL PRICES F. 0.8. FACTORIES) GENERAL MOTORS
CLIP THE COUPON GENERAL MOTORS (Dept. A), Detroit, Mich. I I II —| CHEVRQT FT Pleasesend.withoutobligationto me, illustrated | * —* literature describing each General Motors product . [ | PONTIAC I have checked — together with your booklets ' I □OLDSMOBILE I [ □ OAKLAND Name— I DBUICK Address 1 ’ | □LaSALLE I □CADILLAC | ■ Q raCJlDdUßEdUtomaticKcfricsrator Q |
