The Syracuse Journal, Volume 20, Number 37, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 10 January 1929 — Page 8
|| Classified Ads | ) ! Classified advertising is ac- £ < > cepted at the rate of 5 cents Z < > a line for each insertion. A H booking and collection fee of 4 ► 10 cents will be added for a <s> { * charged account; no account £ \ | will be charged for less than < ► 25 cents for a single item. $> o * FOR SALE—Registered German police puppies. Price $lO. Mrs. 0. C. Stoelting. 37tf FOR SALE—2S head good breeding ewes and 2 bucks. Phone 124, Fred B. Self. 37-p FOR SALE —Several good used cars. Harry Clemens, Chevrolet Dealer. 37-2tp FOR SALE—Fresh cow. Vefry very heavy milker. Elmer Dewart, phone 3114. 37-lt WANTED—Salesman for lubricating oil and paint; two lines combined. Salary and ■ commission. The Royce Refining Co., or The Royce Paint Co., Cleveland, Ohio. WANTED —Girls, experienced or unexperienced, to work in shirt factory. Earn while you learn. Chicago Garment Co., Milford, Ind. 30-ti ""DON’T WORRY—Let ME do your collecting. A. 0. Wmans Syracuse, Ind. Phone 150. 47-ts RADIO - Something wrong with your radio? Call Owen Strieby. Phone 845. BLOTTERS— Large sheets, 19x--24, for 5 cents, Fine for desk. Journal office. ~RiIbONS—For L. C. Smith and Underwood typewriters at the Journal office. PLACARDS—“For Rent,” “For Sale,” ‘‘‘Furnished Rooms for Rent” and “Lotg for Sale,” printed on heavy cardboard are carried in stock at the Journal office. The price, is 10c each. OFFICE SUPPLIES—' Typewriter ribbon, carbon paper, typewriter paper, cardboard, blotting, etc., for sale at the Journal office. OLD PAPERS—Large bundle for 5c at the Journal office. A classified ad will sell it. If unfortunate in the loss of fiorses, Cattle, Hogs, Phone 284 GOSHEN, Also Phone 202 For Prompt Removal FREE OF CHARGE GOSHEN FERTILIZER CO. GEO. L. XANDERS Attorney-at-Lftw Settlement of Estates, Opinions on Titles * Fire and Other Insurance Phone 7 Syracuse, lud. TO BRETZ FOR GLASSES £retz\ OPTOMETRIST GOSHEN. INDIANA. Over Miller’s Shoe Store Showing of Winter Clothing FASHION PARK and MICHAEL-STERN CLOTHES KOHLER ft CHAMPION 112 South Main Street Goshen, Indiana ORVfIL 0. GftRR Funeral Director Ambulance Service Syracuse. Indiana. Telephone 75 See DWIGHT MOCK for Vulcanizing and /Mlenc Welding Battery Charging and Repairing South Side Lake Wawasee on. cement Road. Phone 504 Syracuse
BUG STAR COMING ! Laura La Plante, the popular * creen blonde commedienne. slip- > ped very easily into her role as l a department store clerk in * “Homo James,” he£ newest hit, > which will open at the Commun- \ ity Theater, Wednesday, January | 16 for a two days’ run. > The star recalled to mind those dim, ' early days when earning a living for herself and her mother was her sole object in life. She thought of a certain few during which * she sold art gadgets over the counters of a large department store., When she remembered how she kept one eye on the customer and the other on the floorwalker, the portrayal ot Laura Elliot in ‘‘Home James, ’ was easy for the Universal, act- j ress. ® j Miss La Plante had left San Diego high school to go to work. She had many different jobs before she came to Hollywood to play extra roles. “If you had come to Hollywood in the first place you woul have achieved success in motion pictures a lot sooner,” a friend said to Laura recently. “I might have,” she replied, “but 1 would have missed a lot of experience that is proving of great benefit in helping me act my roles today. Supposing I had never been a clerk in a department store, I couldn’t have* acted my current part so truthfully without the actual experience.” Experience with life, if anything, has made Miss La Plante funnier than ever in “Home James.” Charley Delaney ap : pears opposite, the star. Others in the cast are Aileen Manning, Jaon Standing, George Pearce, Arthur Hoyt and Sidney Braey. —— — o _. — LOST SIGHT OF ONE EYE A rifle bullet which ricocheted from the roots of a tree cost Lee Heller of Fort Wayne, the sight of his right eye in a hunting accident at Lake Wawasee last week. Mr. Heller, * accompanied by George Bishop, was hunting rabbits when the latter fired at one near the foot of a tree. The bullet glanced and penetrated Mr. Heller’s eyeball Dr. Herbert Senseny removed the injured member in an operation at St. Joseph hospital in Fort Wayne. HUNTING SEASON fLOSED The open season for rabbit hunting will close Thursday, January 10, hunters are reminds ed. The snow and cold weather have made the last few days good for hunting and Kosciusko county hunters are expected to take advantage of their last days of grat*?. With the closing of ! the rabbit season, game huntingwill come legally <>» tin end. Hunting and trapping fur bearing animals will still be permitted as these are not considered £7tme, but penalties will be attached u> f}UY violation of the game laws, it was pointed out. OLDEST HA SON DEAD Johnathan Osborn, 96, believed to have been the oldest living member of the Masonic Order in Indiana, died at Valparaiso, Ind., Friday, of influenza. He was bom in Wayne county, Indiana, and came to Valparaiso, fifty.pne years ago. He became a Mason f>s years ago and for the last 31 years ugs been prelate of Valparaiso CotatnaUfjefy and pever missed a meeting. Hp cast his first vote for John C. Fremont in 1856 and twice voted for Abraham Lincoln. If machinery and fight the next war, th e will be whether non-partipipa-ting onlookers are to be the victims, or whether the slaughter shall be confined to promoters and profiteers. . v ■■■ — ■ > y>\ l — For Your Photograph Go to the The Schnabel Studio N. E. Corner Main & Washington GOSHEN. INDIANA ISOieYEIIjOW PENCIL (jf^DBANb ■eagle^2L&
STANDING OF TEAMS Won Lost Per ct. ! Mentone ..... 8 0 1000 ! Warsaw 2 0 1000 Milford 5 1 .833 Syracuse ..... 6 3 .667 Atwood 6 3 .667 Leesburg 7 5 .583 Silver Lake ... 5 4 .556 Claypool 5 5 .500 North Webster .4 5 .444 Piereeton .... 3 5 .375 Sidney ....... 3 6 .333 • Etna Green .... 2 6 .250 Burket ....... 1 ' 6 -143 Beaver Dam ... 0 4 .000 j This percentage column in- 1 eludes only games played by | county teams with other county ] teams. ' O ' COMMISSIONERS MEET The board of county commis-j sioners organized Monday with the re-election of Jacob Miller,! of Sidney, as chairman. Samuel E. Stookey succeeded Charles R. Beatty as commissioner from the j northern district. Everett E.' Rasor was re-elected ns county j attorney. The terms of Milo Maloy, su-1 perintendent of the county home j and Clarence E. Helvey, high-1 way superintendent, do not ex- j pire this year, so these two offi- j eers will hold over. The board of commissioners j has raised the dog tax from $2 to $3, to $3 and $5 a year. This j was made necessary it is claim-i ed, by the fact that township 1 trustees have no funds to reim-: burse farmers whose sheep have been killed B by dogs. This is j paid out of the dog tax. i Dr. W. B. Siders was re-elect-) ed county physician by the board ; of commissioners, NO MORE SWIM PARTIES John M. Morrow, of Wabash who says he has seen 60 winters, declared he was through with New Year’s swimming parties such as he and 14 other persons staged at Silver Lake on New Year’s day. When his son-in-law, Homer Showalter, heard of the decision, j he likewise announced that he also would discontinue, starting the new year with a swim at Silver Lake. Thus a w a £ e r, made at the Morrow home six j years ago, came to an end. o | THE PIG CAME BACK Fata r-FP npt the only animals j that come back. Lee Rager, of Wabash county has a pig that can almost beat the cat record. A couple of weeks or more ago, a pig was missing from his herd. He hunted an(l advertised for it, but could hear nothing abwut i it. A few mornings ago the pig! appeared at the barnyard gate and squealed to be let in with the others. It was fat, sleek anj iq good condition, but where i% had been keeping itse|f i§ a mystery, for none of the neighbors had seen it. CRIMINAL HIDES IN COURT A swindler and criminal with a prison record in Vienna, whpm the police were seeking under a new charge, that the best place to hide was iq the court which had issued the warrant for his arrest, fck) fie forged a diploma and a n attorney’s license ami began practice in she; court. During the aix months i the police sought him, he sue- 1 cessfully defended a number of; cases in the court. Finally the ; judge suspicious, started an investigation ,and Iparped the truth that set the whQlg’ i city laughing. | o ■ hfhr, Gilbert and Greta (Jar-1 bo ip •“Love/' plight.v screen j triumph. at the Liggn-' ier, «p\yt Tuesday agd Wed lies- ! day January 1,5 apd 16.
It. H. p. 4. STEIN METZ I I s ‘ I Expert Radiator Repairing ! M WRECKED AUTO BOWES — FENDERS — FRAMES jj — TOPS ami POORS REPAIRED || WOODWORK REPLACED ON ALL COUPES AND || .. SEDANS ij PLATE CLASS for WINDSHIELDS and DOORS, CUT jl I and GROUND TO FIT ALL CARS Tops, Curtains, Cushions and all kinds of Trim Work a Specialty. !» Best Equipment, Mechanics and prices in Northern Indiana. ! —SEE US FIRST—ED and ORA Goshen Auto Top & Trimiping Co. ! GOSHEN, INDIANA Corner Third and Washington Sts. PliouC 438 jj
THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL
UNCLE SAM. PRINTER j The Red Wing, Minnesota, Republican said editorially, Novem- ! her 12, 1928: ; “Uncle Sam’s Post Office De- ! partmant, which it is estimated ' will have a deficit of $100,000,000 j during the present fiscal year, ; will continue in the business of , competing with local printers j in the furnishing of printed en- ; velopes, having recently award|ed a contract 'involving more ; than $15,000,000 in this coni' nection. “This means that one con- ! cern will have a monopoly of | this amount of gross business, j a large portion of w r hich will be | diverted from country publishI ers, who are practically the only j class of business men with whom | the government competes in ; this manner. “The injustice of this practice |is all the more marked because ; the printing is done for an additional charge of only a few cents a thousand over the cost |of the plain envelopes—a charge so small that it covers only a ! fraction of the cost. The enj velopes alone ar§ priced higher j than necessary in order to cover ! a portion of the loss on the printing, but the . customer ! thinks he is getting a bargain | because of this juggling of price J quotations. I . “Having been victims of this j unfair competition for half a century, it is little wonder that ! country editors are practically 1 a unit in opposition to govern- * ment operation of business enterprises. All fair-minded busi- ! ness men should assist the Nai t’onal Editorial Association in | its efforts to eliminate this -Socialistic and un-American practice. “There would be as much justification for the operation of retail stores by the government as there is for the retail sale of printed envelopes in competition with local printers.” o It has been said that not one educated man in one thousand pays for all the education he receives. Modern education is sub- ! sidized. It is begun in a public school supported by taxpayers and completed in a school almost as public-supported by subscription and endowment. In its fij nal analysis it is pure ecenomi- | cal socialism. j I ERNER EUCHART **• 4 Days Commencing SATURDAY January 12 A Paramount ALLTALKING Picture ; Interference ; a With CUV3 BROOK Boris Renyon Wm. Powell 0 j Plenty of Good Seats 1 •
g I I > , □ Uc°.~° m O | § Old stoves! Old j ■ □ | stoves!- Trade £jk . j 8 them in to usl" j - □ •' D f or a brand-new, house p heating Heatrola. We’ll take yours out — make you an allowance for it. We’ll install your Heatrola. It takes but 45 min- □ utes* Then laugh when the wind howls ’round the eaves. Your house is toasty warm —upstairs and down. You are a member of the “Enjoy-It-Now” Club. n * i : □ You have made but a small deposit —and □ you have no more payments to make until next Fall. What a wonderfully liberal □ offer ! February 2nd is i p Here is our tlie last day — and it □ amazing offer won’t be long now. ; □ LSSiStSartiSK Better ioin today. □ 923,00, the full amount of o » whbh 1* applied as first paymeat on Estate Heat- V O W. take out your old - “ stove and allow you jOtf. 111 11 . SIO.OO for it ($3.00 if you se- — 1 lect the Heatrola Junior for ffijsStSF J&SglMgm -u* lt\ □ • your home). This allow- j Ir. ylfff , _ J , ance is applied on the purchase price of the Heatrola. I I O i n your home. Within _i TJ Aas .*'■ ' I | it UP | —| t|PHi>e >Yith cosy, VZ — 1 I ecpipiiuy from now OP with- r - C iitegl then, j 1 p can pay the balance in easy, l |=| suited to your convenience. ” . [ l OSBORN & SON | g €>a£oMz/ HEATROLA! □ ' There is only ONE Heatrola—ESTATE builds it □ [ □□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□ □□□□□□□□□: PICTORIAL UFE OF HERBERT HOOVER ». n I ,i n..,r, .•nil. - - been the elimination o| waste in Industry, movement, now organised In *. As bend of the radio, he issued the A He has laid neat stress « first broadcasting license In history. aviation and *•—
