The Syracuse Journal, Volume 20, Number 28, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 8 November 1928 — Page 8
j; Classified Ads | !! Classified advertising is ac- S i » cepted at the rate of 5 cents £ < ► a line for each’ insertion. A <| ! ! booking and collection fee of a < ► 10 cents will be added for a ' • charged account; no account T ] I will be charged for less than 2, < * 25 cents for a single item. FOR RENT—Garage. Mrs. E. McPherson. 29-tp FOR SALE—Sow and 6 pigs. C. R. Hollett _■ 29-lt TAILORING—WiII do all kinds of tailoring. Satisfactory work. Call Phone 107. 29-2tp FOR SALE—Used automobile I parts, and used tractor parts, j Hollett Motor Sales.29-lt WANTED —Poultry of all kinds. Top prices. Phone 22, _or G. C. Tarman, New Paris. 2S-2t j SOR SALE—SI7S equity in ' Chrysler, Erskin, Hudson and , Essex, for S9O. Hollett Motor j Sales. 29-2 t , LOST—On the street Monday | evening a tart, felt hat. Finder please return to Journal office. 29-p FOR SALEr—Gold Coin steel range, in good condition, at a bargain. J. A. Mench. 29-2tp FOR SALE—German police pups. Papers furnished. Priced right. B. M. Koher, Cromwell, Ind. 29-2 t FOR SALEr—Old fashioned Walnut bed, oak library table, 4 chairs, 1 high chair 1 baby carriage. 1 motor crib, 1 Florence heating stove. Charles Kroh. 29-2tp GEESE FOR SALE—Order ' your Thanksgiving goose now. Will deliver alive or dressed. Fred Baumgartner, Phone 328. 28-3tp FOR SALE —200 single comb White Leghorn pullets; beginning to lay. Phone 22, or G. C. Tarman, New Paris. 28-2 t APPLES FOR SALE—Kings, Jonathan and Northern Spy for $2.00. R. L, 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. 27-3 t 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. If unfortunate in the loss of Horses, Cattle, Hogs, Phone 284 GOSHEN, Also Phone 202 For Prompt Removal FREE OF* CHARGE GOSHEN FERTILIZER CO. TO BRETZ FOR •_ GLASSES Jreuin' Bretz 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 Department — Glass for Windshields, Doors and Curtains, Cut and Ground to lit All Oars. Tops, Curtains, Cushions—And All Kinds of Trim Work a Specialty. Work Guaranteed— Goshen flow Top Go Phone 438 Go®lren> Ind.
SAY “MERRY XMAS” THIS | YEAR WITH A PHOTOGRAPH Then your holiday remem- | brance will be a personal one | —a gift that no one else can ■ duplicate. It wilj have a value ■ all its own —no matter how ! little it costs. Sit today. The Schnabel Studn N. E. Corner Main & Washington | GOSHEN, INDIANA I j COAL PRODUCTION IN STATE j a Total production of soft coal in . Indiana for the week ending 0c ■ tober 13 was 334 000 tons, or 6,- I ' 000 more than in the preceding | i week and 103.000 more than in | the corresponding week of last i year, according to statistics made ■ public by the United States Bur- ■ ! eau of Mines, department of com- ■ i merce. The average for the week s |in the last five years is 520,000 | tons. g Total output of soft coal for g 1 rhe week ending October 20 in ■ I the United States was 10,832,000 ■ j tons or 3.9 per cent decrease ■ • from the preceding week. The total for the calendar year | to date is 386.119,000 tons, as | compared with 423,992,000 tons ■ on the corresponding date of * 1927. J Production for the country as I a whole is the lowest in the last | five years, with the exception of | 1922 when 311,844,000 tons was | produced and 1924, with 376,974,- s 000 tons. A NEW POLITICAL VISION ■ The result of the presidential ■ I election may be taken as the | verdict of the masses whose unit- | ed judgment and power have | made the Republican party .the ■ instrument for carrying out their ! will. These millions, not the self- ■ appointed bosses nor the office j_ holders, have commissioned its r duly choosen representatives to £ administer their affairs in ac- r cordance with the principles and promises never more distinctly L expressed. <_ President-elect Hoover will [ have the political support of [ both houses, of Congress and r there will be no excuse for fail- rure to deliver the program. It is a task that will require L the highest degree of statesman- L ship, of singleness of purpose, of £ honesty and sincerity, free from £ petty selfishness and personal r plunder, political and otherwise, r= The temper of the American peo- L pie, sensitized, by a closer con- l. tact and familiarity with nation-’ £ al and international events, de- £ mands a square deal for every [ man regardless of color, creed or p condition. Party loyalty and != party rule are loosely held. The L organization that endures must L deserve approval, else it will be £ something else. The task that confronts Mr. r Hoover is a real man’s job. The p task that confronts the Republican party representatives is no L child’s play. C The people have caught a new £ vision of government, a new kind | of politics in which service to ■ the nation and service to human- ! ity shall dominate over mere con- ■ sfderations of party and political I positions. Men may come and go | nut the march of the centuries | means “Forward.” o FIRST TIME IN 20 YEARS Children will romp about the ■ White House in the next admin- I istratioh for the first time in 20 | years. H. C. Hoover 111 is just one ■ year old now, but within two or E three years he will have reached J the age that delights in riding a I velocipede on such places as the | east room’s shiny floors. “The Cat and the Canary,” with | Laura La Plante, a super-mystery ■ picture, a real thrill for every- ! body, at Crystal- Ligonier, next ■ week. Tuesday, Wednesday and I Thursday, November 20, 21 and | 22. ■ 1 Notice to the Public I Highest prices paid for all I kinds of FURS and HIDES I Also old automobiles and | junk. We also sell old and j new automobile accessories. ■ Goshen Iron, Metal and I Automobile Wrecker ! I 217 West Lincoln Ave. Phone 537 GOSHEN, INDIANA I
■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■mm ■ ■ I . I *\b A ■ b © ih.7 Z, 1 !:t < : * ■■ ! ■ r ’ E• ' . ! ■ ' NOW ALL TOGETHER, FOLKS! | □ - D □ . ■ I=l - 3 Rah, Rah, Rah, for Syracuse g “i v ■ ' B H ■ □ 1 ’ □ □ Holler your heads off, folks-—let the □ q world, far and wide, know that we § | folks in Syracuse are just a great big happy family. A □ =| smile, a handshake, a cheery greeting for friend or for § □ stranger. A strong, practical idea that it does pay each □ ■ one of us great big plus returns on our money, to buy ■ S everything we can from Syracuse merchants. A pride in g ■ our Syracuse that will make every stranger wish to be- ■ ■ come one of us—and that is exactly what we do want. ■ i Join us and welcome. There’s room for all—we 11 do J ■ everything we can to make you glad you did come to ■ ■ Syracuse to live. ■ | . : S' The folfoffing business an! professianal interests stand ready to serre yon and Syracuse: ■ ■ SYRACUSE LUMBER & COAL CO. THORNBURG DRUG CO. 3 “Everything A Drug Store Should Have” B ■ Coal, Lumber, Sash, Doors, Firet Door West of School Houso Lime and Cement Phone 69 Quality and Service \ ■ z THE ROYAL STORE I D I UAfU ' LADIES’ AND MEN’S WEAR r. L. Iluvn DRY goods THE REXALL STORE Drugs - Mediei.es - Periodicals HOLLETT MOTOR SALES STAR CARS ■ FRANK YODER Tlffi SYRACUSE JOURNAL | Successor to Wm. Snavely . ' PRINTING AND PUBLISHING QUALITY COALS—FERTILIZER , <A Classified Ad Will Sell It* ■ Phone 92 Syracuse, Indiana X E P MMBMM W p^ww»^MTinnnaaaaaaaDaaaaaaDW—■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■
THE »YRA,CUBE JOURNAJL
