The Syracuse Journal, Volume 20, Number 43, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 21 February 1929 — Page 8

Classified Ads Classified advertising is accepted at the rate of 5 cents a line for each insertion. A bookii.g and collection fee of 10 cents will be added for a -charged account: no account will be charged for less than 25 cents for a single item.

FOR SALE—Sorrel mare, 10 years old. Bert Ward. 43-2tp FOR SALE-Fresh Guernsey cow. Dale Grimes. 43-1 tp FOR SALE—I 926 Ford Roadster. Hollett Motor Sales. 13-lt ~ WANTED-To rent 20. 30 or 40 acres of land, lor cash. H. L. Leslie. 43-2’tpd MAPLE SYRUP—Orders taken now for maple syrup for future delivery. Frank and Gerald Bushong, Syracuse, Ind. 43-2't FOR SALE—Lot, one block south of the power house. Mrs. E. Sloan. 4(Mtp. WANTED—GirIs, experienced or unexperienced, to work in shirt factory. Earn while you earn. Chicago Garment 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. For sale bills go to the Journal office. GEO. L. XANDERS Attorney-at-Law Settlement of Estates. Opinions on Titles Fire and Other Insurance Phone 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 ( C Z/euin* g>\ preZzj x' /opnciANV_ / 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 Ambulance Service Syracuse. Indiana. Telephone 75 See DWIGHT MOCK for Vulcanizing and ftcctijlcnG Welding Battery Charging and Repairing South Side Lake Wawasee on cement Road. Phone 504 Syracuse

OTZhe YELLOW Q, PENCIL / ISBSk the ( Wredband ""^C%

PUBLIC SALE

Having sold my farm, I will still on the premises,, one mile north of Syracuse, on the Benton road on MONDAY. FEBRUARY 25 Commencing at 11 o’clock — 2 HEAD HORSES—I gray gelding, 10 years old, weight 1600; 1 gray gelding, 9 years old, weight 1500. 3 CAI TLE- 1 Jersey cow, 4 years old, due to calf March 10; 1 black cow, 4 years old, due to calf March 30; 1 Holstein heifer, 3 years old, due to call Feb. 24. SHEEP. HOGS, CHICKENS - 17 ewes, 1 buck; 2 O. I. C. brood sows, with pigs; 14 shoats, weight 70 pounds; 6 dozen chickens. FARMING IMPLEMENTS— 1 John Deere corn planter, 1 Deering binder, 1 McCormick mower, 1 New Idea manure spreader, 1 Oliver riding plow, 1 No. 405 walking plow, one 10-hoe Superior drill, 1 hay kicker, 1 springtooth and 1 spike-tooth harrow, 1 good 3| -wagon. 1 set dump boards, 1 hay rack, with sides, 1 corn plow harness 1 seed-corn rack, sacks, potatoes, crates, fence stretcher, iron kettle, chains, forks, shovels, and other articles too numerous to mention. HAY AND GRAIN—3SO bushels good corn, 200 bushels oats, 80 bushels rye, 4 tons clover and timothy hay, 4 tons alfalfa hay, 4 bushels seed corn. TERMS—Terms made known on day of sale. SYLVESTER UNRUE Jerome ShermAn, Auct. Joe Swartz, Clerk. — o ! ACCIDENTS AND DRIVERS Very 'few accidents occurring around Syracuse have been due to defective mechanism. Nearly all of them are due wholly to the drivers. A survey just completed by the National Safety Council shows that only about 10 percent of all auto accidents can be blamed on faulty work or poor matrials used in the cars involved —and that includes too, defects in the roads or inclement weather. Eighty per cent of all accidents, it is shown, can be triced directly to the drivers. Autos have improved marvelously during the past few years, and today they are models of mechanical perfection. They will traval as fast as anybody wants them to go. They will stop quickly if handled right, and their intricate parts seldom give way under strain. * But the driver hasn’t improved pay; he is right where he always was. Until he learns caution, common sense and consideration for the rights of others, we will continue to have a disgracefully high list of traffic accidents. INAUGURATION OF HOOVER When Herbert Hoover takes the oath of office on March 4, another chapter will be written in the history of the solemn event which we know as Inauguration Day, His induction into office will recall some of those historic events of the past, but it is interesting to know that not all of them have been quite as solemn as importance of the event justifies. For instance, did you know that one inauguration ceremony was delayed because somebody forgot to provide a Bible for the ceremony? And did you know that one inauguration was marred by the riotous behavior of citizens who had gathered in the capital to witness it? If you didn’t, you’d better look for an illustrated feature article, “A New President Is Inaugurated,” by Eln#o Scott Watson, in this issue of the Journal. o HUNTERS SHOOT WOLF The second wolf to be shot in the vicinity of Portland, Ind., was shot recently by the same hunters that killed a large timber wolf several days ago. The last wolf which was killed was found asleep after it had gorged itself on one of his sheep. Several! shots from the guns of the two men w£re required to kill the animal. “Lilac Time’’ with Colleen Moore and Gary Cooper—the last word in entertainment at the Crystal, Ligonier, March 5, 6. 7. and Sth.

666 is a Prescription for Colds, Grippe, Fin, Dengue, Bilious Fever and Malaria. It is the most speedy remedy known.

NEW VICE-PRESIDENT HAD MANY ADVENTURES Most Americans know something of the colorful and romantic career of our Vice-President-elect Chafes Curtis and of the many "adventures he passed . through during his youth. Some facts which are not generally known however are included in an interesting sketch of Senator Curtis in the National Republic. It was written by Henry Olney under te caption “Our Indian Vice' President.” “Once when he was riding in a race at Kansas City, the James •boys—Jesse and Frank —the most notable bandits of that period, galloped up to the box office after the crowd had entered and, at the point of a six shooter, relieved the treasurer of the day’s receipts,” Mr. Olney says. “By the time Curtis had reached the age of fifteen he fodnd himself too heavy to win races. He drifted back to Topeka where he had arrived five years before. Shortly thereafter he saw a small band of Indians riding up the main street. As they drew nearer he was overjoyed to find that they were some of his old friends from the Kaw village. The last time he had seen them was the night before when he had started on that sixty-mde walk across the plains for help. One of them was his old grandmother. It was a happy reunion, and the wandering boy was invited to return to his old home and his old >life. He had wrapped himself in a blanket and was sound asleep in front of the campfire at the end of the first day’s journey. He was awakened by a gentle hand on his forehead. His grandmother was oh her knees by his side. She dearly loved that boy, and her heart ached to have him with her during the remaining days of her life. But she was a woman of vision. She saw far into the future. She wanted that boy to travel in the ways of the white people. She wanted him to be a great man. Who knows but what she fondly dreamed that some day he jvould be occupying one of the highest offices in the land. For an hour they talked together in the Kaw language. She told him it was the turning point of his life. In one direction lay a life of success and honor among his white brothers; in the other direction lay the life of a blanket Indian on a government reservation. The grandmother's advice was taken. She gave the lad her favorite pony, which had been tied to a nearby tree. The boy rode out into the night. The grandmother, plone with the stars, wept silently. “That Curtis boy has been steadily riding through all these intervening years. Some of the riding has been pretty rough. But pn March fourth he will ride into the Capitol of the United States and assume the duties of the Vice President. Surely the loving and smiling spirit of that blessed old grandmother will be hovering around him when he steps into this exalted position. o March 5, 6. 7, Sth is the right time to see “Lilac Time” at the Crystal, Ligonier.

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TOE SYRACUSE JOURNAL

COLDS HARD TO CURE ’ I Colds are often hard to. cure, ! but they are comparatively easy to prevent If you fe<c one coming on, or if the other members of your i family are suffering with colds, and you are quite sure that your turn is about due, you owe it to yourself to adopt preventive measures. This does not necessarily call for medicines, or at least what one usually Cooks upon as medic nes. If the cold is actually upon you in full force, your physician should of course be called, but quite often an ounce of prevention will be found worth the full pound of proverbial cure — and prevention is relatively inexpensive. One of the simplest preventives is* old-fashioned bicarbonate of soda and fresh lemon juice, a combination which seems to be very effective against those colds which begin in the stomach. Take- a tea-spoonful of soda and the juice of one lemon in a glass of water. Thirty minutes later repeat the dose, and in another half hour take the third. Soda has always been recognized as a decided alkaline agent and of late, lemon and orange juice have been placed in the same class. Probably more of us have acidosis to some extent than not, so a combination of two alkaline agents ‘like bicarbonate of soda and lemon juice, (taken unsweetened by all means) plays havoc with any acid condition in the body. It is a simple remedy, Very easy to take, and you will be surprised at what it wTI do. Lon’ Chaney in “While The City Sleeps”—a great story with an extra fine actor and east, at the Crystal, Ligonier, next Sunday and Monday, February 24 and 25,

AND NOW—/t’s On 7Ae Screen SOUND and VOICE J iV mist! A ROSE* 4 DAW-STARTS WEDNESDAY, FEB. 27th The play that ran more than 5 years on Broadway. The play that broke every record. More than 18,000.000 people have seen it on the stage. LERNER AT ELKHART COMING ATTRACTIONS “THE DOCTOR’S SECRET” All talk—March 6, “THE SINGING FOOL” March 13

I. U. NOTES [ I As soon as the basketball season is over at Indiana university, Coach Everett S. Dean will turn his attention to the coaching of the Crimson’s 1929 baseball team. Battery men are working out daily within the field house, and the infield and outfield men are expected to report next week for drill. Instead of making a circuit tour of the south on its ; annual spring training trip. In- i diana’s diamond team will hold i weeks’ training camp at the University of Mississippi, Oxford, Miss. The Hoosiers will play a five-game series with the Southern team. Coach Everett S. Dean’s Indiana basketball team will wind up the season with three more games. Illinois will journey to Bloomington for a return tilt Saturday, while lowa will play in the I. U. field house March 4 The third game wdl beplayed at Evanston February 25, with Northwestern. Enrollment of 3136 students for the second semester of Indiana University at Bloomington, represents a gain of 72 students over the enrollment at the same time last year. Including enrollment at the Indianapolis divisions of the university, class lists for the second semester will exceed 4.000. Howard L. Wynegar, who received his LL. B. degree from Indiana University, has been named president of a $5,000,000 corporation formed in New York to finance the sale of aeroplanes on the installment plan. Wynegar, who is now president of the Commercial Credit Corporation of New York City, is from Connersville, Ind. o WHY FROST DEGREES VARY The weather bureau says that frost forms only when the temperature of the object on which it occurs, and the immediately adjacent air, is at or below freezing point, 32 degrees Fahrenheit. The temperature of the grass, for instance, especially in low spots, and on still, clear nights may be 32 degrees below Fahrenheit, or‘lower, while that of the air a little distance away and 20 tp 30 feet higher, may be 40 degrees Fahrenheit, or over. Thia explains the anomaly of frost at 40 degrees Fahrenheit It was 40 degrees Fahrenheit, say, where the thermometer was, but not where the frost was. Q “Jphf with Colleen Moure niuj Gary Cooper—the -last word entertainment at the Crystal, Ligonier, March 5, 6,7, and Bth.

Why Science Says . “Keep Your Summer Tan”

And How You Can Get Real “Indoor Tan” After The Vacation Is Over T N the light of recent scientific research a coat of tan has definitely become the mark of the physically fit. You are never healthier than when you come back from your vacation, browned and invigorated. And science advises you, “Don't less it; keep that ruddy and glowing look!” Heliotherapy, or sun-treatment, although long, considered beneficial to a certain extent, came into especial favor • during the World War, when surgeons found that exposure to sunlight hastened the pealing of wounds and that treatment by sunlight was an aid to convalescence. In recent years sunbaths have become an accepted practice. Once women felt it necessary to protect themselves from sunshine. Last season saw a rush of debutantes to the beach, however, to acquire a fashionable coat of tan, Tanning is a good thing during vacation, but it shouldn’t end there, medical authorities advise. Get all the sun you can, all the year ‘round,, on alt parts of your anatomy, is their counsel. But don’t overdo it at first. Take it gradu* ally. Analysing Light A. ray of light is a very complex affair. When passed through a glass prism it will present the orderly arrangement of colors called a “spectrum”, the visible colors of which are shown by that other phenomenon of nature, the rainbow. Each color represents a different wave length- These visible rays, however, constitute only a small portion of the entire ray. It is the combination of all these rays that we call light and it is a Combination of these visible and invisible rays, in the proportionate quantities and qualities which make up natural sunlight, that produces this energizing force. In the lower layers of pur atmosphere these rays are cut qff or absorbed by dust, smoke or fog. Hence they are least present in the places where they are most needed, the thickly populated cities and in-' dustrial regions. They also are cut off by clothing and‘window glass. Thus persons living the normal city life are largely deprived of these health-giving rays, if only on account of the high and closely placed buildings and the smoke pollution

HOOVER’S FARM Herbert Hoover, presidentelect of the United States, will not be without practical farming experience when he comes to work out farm relief measures, though little was said about it during the recent campaign, he has owned a 1313 acre farm in California since 1920 and he has operated it not only as a busi ness enterprise, but also as a base for practical experiments. Diversified farming is a fundamental part of the Hoover program. Here is how the Hoover farm operations are divided: Vineyards, 435 acres producing 10 varieties of table grapes with a yearly output of about 600,000 pounds; between 60 and 320 acres in cotton, 200 acres in alfalfa, yielding seven tons to the acre, and cut seven times a year; 150 acres in potatoes; 130 acres in peaches producing 16,000 pounds to the acre; 80 to 120 acres in corn; 90 or more acres in watermelons and muskmelons; 90 acres in Spanish onions; 40 to 80 acres in spinach producing about 960,000 pounds a season; 40 to 60 acres of sweet potatoes; 70 acres in apricots. In addition there are about 2500 laying hens, 200 sows and 150 cows. As many as 200 emnloyes are at work during peak harvesting seasons, and the annual pay roll is about $75,000. Extensive experimental work is done on the farm, and a good part of this has been done in connection with the poultry work. In accordance with the

Ligonier Jorg’s Hatchery BLOOD-TESTED BABY CHICKS White and Brown Leghorns,- Barred and White Rocks, R. I. Reds, Buff Orpingtons and Wyandottes. These Chicks are produced from HIGH QUALITY HEAVY LAYING flocks, closely CULLED for SIZE, HEALTH 'and A IGOR, also BLOOD-TESTED of Bacillary White Diarrhea. FREE VETERINARIAN SERVICE AND ADVICE Custom Hatching 3c per Egg Spend your chick dollars on VALUE and not CHANCE, PRICE RIGHT — QUALITY UNSURPASSED LIGONIER HATCHERY Phone 502 ROY JORG, Mgr.

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TO I

Broadway actresses have learned how to make up their ‘'sunlight deficiency with the carbon arc sunshine lamp. of the atmosr phere. Furthermore, in the late autumn, winter and early spring months the rays aec essary to health have been found to he tremely weak or absent altogether,

All these things are pretty generally recognized today. The questions which many are asking, however, is; "How is it possible to continue throughout the year the same pleasant sun treatment that we took at the seashore in mid-summer?” Carbon Arc Secret Although few are aware-of the fact, the same question—put, of course, in much more technical language—is what a number of the world’s leading scientists have been asking for some time past. Various ones among them have been able to solvq the problem of how to manufacture synthetic reproductions of a small part of the composition known as sunlight, but since man for many thousand! pf years has responded to

most modern farm methods and m the interest of economy and profits, the Hoover stock is replenished each year with baby chicks secured from hatcheries. Eggs are marketed regularly, tne income from this source provW Col } s^era^e > since only the best of high egg-laying stock is used to make up the laying Aock. The usual culling and marketing of broilers adds another source of profit, and removes the “loafer hen” from the flock, thus giving increased egg production at less feed cost. Purchase of chicks from laying stock of proved quality is fundamental in profitable farm poultry work, and has resulted, during the past year, in the formation of leading hatcheries of u countr y into an organization which has its identifying slogan, Uhicks for Greater Pro! its. These hatcheries are pledged to fair dealing with customers, and the producing of quality chicks from stock of known profit-producing ability. Most recent experimenting on the Hoover farm has to do with, the hog raising industry, the □resent herd of 200 sows being the nucleous for further expansion and experimental work. President-elect Hoover owns ’his farm jointly with Ralph Merrit. The farm is located aHout 280 miles south of San Francisco and 150 miles north of Los Angeles, on the main line of the Sante Fe railway. It is three miles south of the little town of Wasco, and is one of the largest cultivated ranches in that vicinity.

Above, many successful children's hospitals are making the “sunlight parade” a routine event for their Uttte patients. the combination of raya in natural •unlight the great problem has been to simulate the fight of the sun. It has been recognised that once this is accomplished mankind wiU at last have found the real “Foundation o f Health anfi Youth”.

The government through the United States Bureau of Standards has taken an active interest in * this work, and as a result this bureau announced recently that of all artificial sources the carbon are is found to provide the closest approach to natural sunlight. Following this finding by the Government Bureau, the arc carbon industry came forward with its cooperation and put this discovery in practical form for everyday home * use. These sunshine machines give off the vital rays in approximately their natural form merely by plugging into an ordinary electrical outlet and it is the users of them who are boasting this unaccountable winter tan I