The Syracuse Journal, Volume 20, Number 41, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 7 February 1929 — Page 8

|| Classified Ads] I ] | Classified advertising is ae- Y <» cepted at the rate of 5 cents *> < ► a line for each insertion. A J [ booking and collection fee of o 10 cents will be added for a <j> ' ’ charged account; no aceouijt Jj J J, will be charged for less than o 25 cents for a single item. $ o FOR SALE—Lot, one block south of the power house. Mrs. E. Sloan. 40-4tp. FOR SALE—Two tons Alfalfa hay. Seventy-five bushels good oats. Fred B. Self. * 41-p FOR SALE—Pure-bred Plymouth Rock cockerels. Cpme early for first choice. Mrs; M. V. Landis. 40-2tp FOR SALE—At once, the Ellen Traster property. Good buy. See Geo. L. Xanders, administra- ' tor. 39 L 3t FOR SALE-8 or 10 tons good clover hay. Also acres clover sod to rent for corn. Address J. H. Miller, North Manchester, Ind., or State Bank of Syracuse. 40-2 t. WANTED—GirIs, experienced or unexperienced, to work in shirt factory. Earn while you learn. Chicago Garment j Co., Milford, Ind. 30-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. GEO. L. XANDERS Attorney-at-Law Settlement of Estates, Opinions on Titles Plre and Other Insurance Pbonfe 7 Syracuse, Ind, ~ 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^ £retz] OPTOMETRIST GOSHEN. INDIANA. Over Miller’s Shoe Store Showing of Winter Clothing FASHION PARK and MICHAEL-STERN CLOTHES KOHLER & CHAMPION 112 South Main Street Goshen, Indiana ORVfIL G. GfIRR Funeral Director Ainbulanee Service Syracuse. Indiana. Telephone 75 . ■ See DWIGHT MOCK for Vulcanizing and ftoylenc Welding Battery Charging and Repairing , South Side Lake Wawasee on cement Road. Phone 504 Syracuse

H. S. LATIN CONTEST High school Latin pupils of Kosciusko county have been invited to take part in the sixth annual state high school Latin contest under the auspices ot the Classical section of the State Teacher’s Association and the Indiana University Extension Division. Mrs. Adele Bittner, who is in charge, has announced that locall contests will be held on or before Feb. 9; county contests Feb. 23; district contests March 23; and the state meet at Bloomington on April 12 or April 19. The contest is in seven division. Gold, silver and bronze medals will be awarded the winders of first, second and third places respectively, in each of the seven divisions of the Latin contest. One student from each of the seven divisions will be entered in the state meet at Indiana University next April. Last year a total of 14,000 students took part in the Latin contest. A director in each congressional district has charge of the contest organization within his district. These directory are ; appointed annually by the state contest committee. The director appoints a chairman for each county in the district who has charge of the arrangements for the county contest. The following Latin teachers have been appointed to serve as district directors for Latin contests this year: First, Miss Ena Long, Evansville; second, Miss Gay Calvert, Sullivan; third, Miss Anna Maris, Paoli; fourth, Miss Ada Manion, Brownstown; fifth, Miss Louise Lammers, Terre Haute; sixth, Miss Nellie Baldwin, Greenfield; seventh, Miss Maxine Clark, Valley Mills; eighth, Miss Emma Cammack, Muncie; ninth. Miss Julia Knox, Crawfordsville; tenth, Miss Olie Wetty, Valparaiso; eleventh dis T trict, Miss Cornelia Blayney, Wabash; twelfth. M. W. Rothert, Fort Wayne; thirteenth, Miss Victoria Mills, Rochester. - o STRICTER LAWS NEEDED Indiana needs stricter laws for dealing with chicken thieves and pther law violators who commit, depredations m rural districts, 100 often these offenders get off with a light sentence or escape punishment. The ‘last legislature enacted a new law making the stealing of property of less value than s>loo as petty larceny and the highest penalty imprisonment at the county jail or at the penal farm. There can be no imprisonment at the state prison for this offense. Under this law, li anyone breaks into a farmer’s j home or other farm building or i steals property of less than sloo, there can be no prosecution foi hurglarly because stealing property of less than SIOO is not a felony. The law prior to 1927 was that stealing property of fess than $25 was petty larceny, all over that amount was graud larceny, and both petty larceny and grand larceny were punishable by imprisonment in the state prison. It is not exactly Clear why the legislature saw fit to make a change. The change in the law has t ended to encourage crime in this state. It is hoped that this session of the legislature will correct the mistake made by the last session for certainty it was a mistake to let down the bars in this way. It is not often that thieves take more than SIOO worth of chickens, so they are safe in carrying on their work, knowing that they can not get more than a month or so at the penal farm. A short rest with free board at the farm has no terrors for the hardened chicken thief. Right now, the farmers of this state should demand that some teeth be put into the laws governing rural chicken thievery, Now that the legislature is in session and you know who the members are, why not get in touch with tljie representatives and senators from your district and talk to them about this. o * — TWO-HEADED CALF A two-headed calf was born on the M. A. Reed farm, south of LaGrange. The animal weighs ninety-one pounds and has two perfect heads and necks joined to the shoulders in a natural manner. It has the ordinary number of legs and to all appearances is a healthy animal. o Jack Mtilhall in “The Rutter ami Egg Man.” It’s as peppy as a big Broadway review. See it at the Crystal, Ligonier. next Sunday and Monday, February 10 and 11. 666 is a Prescrirtfon for Colds, Grippe, Fin, Dengue, Bilious Fever and Malaria. Jt Is the most speedy remedy known.

I Ligonier Jorg’s Hatchery BLOOD-TESTED | BABY CHICKS ) !> White and Brown Leghorns, Barred and White Rocks, !; R. I. Reds, Buff Orpingtons and Wyandoties. 3| ;j These Chicks are produced from HIGH Ql ALITY HEAA \ |> !; LAYINs* flocks, closely CULLED for SIZE. HEALTH and «> j! VIGOR, also BLOOD-TESTED of Bacillary White Diarrhea. |j j| FREE VETERINARIAN SERVICE AND ADVICE Custom Hatching 3c per Egg \ jt Spend your chick dollars on A A Iff* E and not ( HANi L f !; PRICE RIGHT — QUALITY UNSURPASSED 1 LIGONIER HATCHERY * Phone 502 ROY JORG. Mgr. I

LATE NEWS CONDENSED Production of the new Ford reached the first million Monday when model A, engine No. 1,000,000 came off the assembly line in the Motor Building at the Rouge Kant Detroit. Methodists, Presbyterians agree on church merger; conference of commissioned representatives of two churches meet at i Pittsburgh. A1 Smith calls on Hoover; j wishes him good luck; they chat and joke about campaign; meet at Miami Beach, vacation headquarters of President-elect. England stirred by Prince of S Wales’tour of coal mining region; “It makes me heartsick,” is his comment on scenes of misery and want; clasps grimy hands of unemployed; promises inquiry into wages of $3 ty> $6 oer week. * House rejects $24 000 000 bill for addit onal dry enforcement: votes 240 to 141 for defeat of measure sponsored by Anti-Sa-loon League. . Fishenaan battles with death on i<*e for a week; Lewis Sweet of Alprwcn, Michigan, carried out in T nke Michigan on ice floe, blown back to shore; hands and feet Dozen. In an effort to save the merhant tailoring business, the National Association has arrang?d to spend .a million dollars in i national advertisng campaign to extend over a four year period. Wets and drys in Congress > avoided a disagreeable issue by passing the buck to Mr. Hoover, who has been authorized to name a commission to “investigate’’ prohibition. It usually takes from four to eight years for a commission to exhaust its salary appropriation—so Mr. Hoover will not be troubled with that matter for some time to come. North Dakota is considering the enactment of a law to substitute “American" for “English” when referring to the common language of the nation. Several years ago Illinois officially adopted “American” language, and it has removed many stumbling blocks to new citizens who want to become Americans —not English.

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THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL

WDMEN LEGISLATORS A nation-wide survey of November election results which has just been completed by the National League of Women Voters, shows that the names of 145 women will be carried on the rosters of 38 state legislatures. This represents a gain of 19 over the record established in the legislatures of 1927 and [ 1928, when 126 women served. Republicans are shown to be j in the majority with 100 representatives, followed by the Democrats with 38. Five women haye no party distinction at all i and two are non-partisan. Fif- | teen women are serving as. State l Senators, and twelve women i have been re-elected to their fourth term. o SUNDAY MOVIES In a sepcial election held at Kendallville on Friday, the voters expressed themselves as overwhelmingly in favor of Sunday picture shows. The vote was 1251 for Sunday fnovies and 5?0 against. A 'long vigorous fight against the return of Sunday movies was waged at Kendallville by the W. C. T. U. and the Ministerial Association. As the result of the election, the city council is expected to repeal a special ordinance, passed in 1916, barring the Sunday shows % The expense of the special election was borne by the theater interests of the city. — r o The backbone of American business activities, with its resultant prosperity in certain directions over the last few years, has been basically the automobile industry and the building industry. In since 1923. has automobile production fallen below 3,500,000 cars, while in 1928 the total number of cars produced was 4,607.000. ' FOR VALENTINE’S DAY—there is nothing that would mean so much to the Holder of Your Heart as your photograph, and we are ready to serve you. The Schnabel Studio N. E. Corner Main & Washington GOSHEN. INDIANA

« THE REFRIGERATOR gn | Ww AND THE BABY jgk

By KATHERINE G. CORNELL '■Director of the Kelvinator J Domestic Institute BABIES are most important personages these days! To - be sure they, have always been the darlings of the family, the ! very center of everything that j went on in the household; but to- | day they are more—they are real people. Their needs, their health, their growth, their food are the most important topics of conversaI tion in the home. The modern mother realizes that ► the babies of today are the men | and women of tomorrow, and if \ they are to be healthy, normal men and women, it is necessary that they be safely started along the right road. Must Safeguard Food Scrupulous care of his food is one j 1 of the most important guide posts | 1 toward perfect health for the baby, j! i It is not enough that the food 1 should be selected with the utmost j regard for its purity and health | ‘ £ giving properties; nor is it enough I - that it be properly prepared. \ I Baby’s meals must be safeguarded 1 so strictly that not the tiniest, : most infinitesimal decay spore or other bacteria can possibly attack 1 : them. Every morning when mother prepares the baby’s food, she washes and sterilizes his bottles, ccfbk<; | his cereals with a watchful i eye on the clock, painstakingly I

iMi ELECTRICITY LIGHTENS Wpf THE FOOD BILLS

By KATHERINE G. CORNELL Director of the Kelvinator Domestic Institute IN the old days — when pork chows might be had for ten cents a pound, and eggs were hijjfh at twenty-live cents a dozen —we didn’t discuss economy to any great extent. If we found it necessary or expedient to save, we did so and said nothing about it. Today, however, it is quite.the smart thing to be thrifty; to live by a budget; to study the food needs of the family and buy prudently. We like to make the best and most intelligent use of every piece of equipment we install in our homes. Aids Thrifty Habits The woman who has put a modern, scientifically constructed electric refrigerator in her kitchen has countless interesting surprises awaiting her. Not only does she find that it constantly and reliably safeguards her fresh food supplies so that even though they may remain unused for a week she need give herself no concern about them; hut she discovers also that in its quiet, understanding way it is aiding and abetting her in all I of her thrift habits. By marketing but once or twice a. week, instead of every day, she saves time and effort, and she is able thus to effect a considerable saving in money also by buying in these larger quantities. Further, she may plan a whole week’s menus in advance—another saving of time and worry, and of money as well. But one of the most satisfactory things about this modern kitchen aid. she finds, is the way it takes care of eogked foods, left-overs

PICTORIAL LIFE OF HERBBT HOOYER No. 18 Bj Satterfield

■lppillS riT.-;Ir jS **' — %yps{ 4 nK&f+6V^m If In the Spring of 1927, Hoover was appointed chairman of Mississippi Flood Belief. i i * i r-f r~ % S. The Department of Commerce since n»1 ' stands as a beacon light to the whole wort*. ,

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makes up his food formula, and prepares his soup, prune juice or orange juice, and boils the drinking water for her wonderful baby. The next step is to store baby’s food in a perfectly sanitary way. It must be kept in a place so cold that no germ can exist in it and in a temperature that is almost stationary, neither rising nor falling more than a few fractions of a degree in twelve hours. Further, it "must be in a place that is more than merely soap and water cleap. It must be scientifically spotless. Keeps Even Temperature The modern electric refrigerator

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and odds and ends — usually the bane of a housewife’s existence. Appearance of Food Enhanced A little covered bowl of leftover string beans, peas or asparagus, taken plump and inviting from the cool depths of the electric refrigerator, presents an ap-petite-arousing appearance very different from the usual withered and dried look of foods which have been kept in a wavering, varying temperature. Served on chilled lettuce which has been, carefully washed, placed in a covered pan and tucked away as soon as it arrived from the market, they will make a very refreshing-salad. Top the salad, which may very nicely be a combination of left-over beans, peas and asparagus, with a spoonful of iriayonnaise blended with one of chili sauce, both of which the canny housewife keeps conveniently at hand in a corner

2. His personal direction in this emergency brought order out of «ii««n 4. Into History’s pages are yet to* be written the _ Inal Warhaa* tola man who doea Mi things. - *

answers all of these requirements. Within its chill, clean depths baby’s food is safeguarded from every possible harm. The rounded corners of its food chamber permit no gathering of minute particles of food, and the thickness of its walls assures a uniform, safe temperature of. less than fifty degrees. In such environment baby’s food will keep pure and and perfectly fresh. Mother may prepare it in quantities to last for several days, devoting the time she saves by such a plan to enjoying the fresh air and the sunshine with baby.

of her electric ice-box. A spoonful of left-over fruit, fresh or canned, placed in the refrigerator in a covered bowl will come forth fresh and finely flavored to add the finishing touch to a dessert; and odds and ends o£ cooked meat put carefully array in a covered dish, to be added to from day to day, will blend del ; - . ciously in a ragout or a meat pm; or, finely chopped and tastily flavored, they will provide a plate of mysteriously good sandwiches for a picnic luncheon. Left-overs Remain Tasty And the Sunday dinner leftovers may be kept in the elec ;ie- ' refrigerator until, Thursday or Friday when, every one having forgotten all about their being leftovers, they will come forth fresh and delicious and as attractive} in taste and appearance as when they were originally served. <