The Syracuse Journal, Volume 20, Number 46, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 14 March 1929 — Page 8

<► Classified Ads | ; * Classified advertising is ac- | < > cepted at the rate of 5 cents <;■ <’ a line for each insertion. A ] [ booking and collection fee of , > 10 cents will be added for a | 11 charged account; no account v < [ will be charged for less than 2 < > 25 cents for a single item. FOR SALE —Several used radio sets in good condition. Reasonable. Owen R. Strieby. 46-4 t FOR RENT—Onion ground for cash, on what is known as the Kitson farm. Phone 265. 46-lt FOR SALE—Alfalfa and also mixed hay, clover and timothy. C. D. Thompson. 46-4tp FOR SALE—Dry stbve wood and chunk wood. Manford Morris, Route 2. 45-2tp. FOR SALE—Modern Nappanee property, clear, will exchange for well improved farm of 60 or 80 acres. T. J. Prickett, Nappanee, Indiana. 45-2 t SHRUBS AND FRUIT TREES —Can meet prices of all competitors. A. O. Winans, Syracuse, Ind. Phone 150. 45-ts FOR SALE —A residence prop erty on South Main street, including lots 5, 25, 26. 27 in Dolan and Miles addition. Terms—half cash and balance in twelve months. Charles C. Bachman, Extr. Wm. McClintic Estate. 44-ts. , RADIO - Something wrong with your radio? Call Owen Strieby. Phone 845.

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 Greiz X 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 6. GfIRR Funeral Director Ambulance Service Syracuse. Indiana. Telephone 75 < See DWIGHT MOCK for Vulcanizing and flGßtijißnc Wcldlno Battery Charging and Repairing South Side Lake Wawasee on cement Road. Phone 504 Syracuse WT/he YELLOW PENCIL / with the ( Wredband ■ wA Saglp.

PLANT SPRUCE OR RED PINE Ambitious boys on the farm can, with the aid of the forestry division of the state conservation department, make themselves some money and simultaneously i convert waste land into a profit, declares Richard Lieber. - The conservation director suggests spruce and; red pine for Christmas trees be planted on waste plots on the farm, and says that unless weed or grass cover are so dense they choke all sunlight from the youngtrees, no ploughing or cultivation of the soil will be necessary to produce a crop at a handsome profit. The small evergreen trees will be sold to the boys at cost of production at the state nursery, may be planted just as they are received, and the state forester will advise on the work. It is pointed out that trees may be planted as close as four by four feet apart, or 2,700 trees to the acre. It is safe to presume, says Mr. Lieber, that at least 1,600 tree? be ready for market in ten years at a net profit of easily S4OO per acre. The planting should be regulated so a certain number are set each year and harvested likewise. ’'Conservation officials cite attention to an experimental Christmas tree planting at the Ohio Experiment Station which returned SI,OOO an acre net profit in six years. A similar experimental planting at the Clark County State Forest in Indiana, shows a similar return. The forestry division will distribute 600,000 trees this spring to be used in’ reforestation of stripped-over (coal lands, on water sheds, to Legion and Boy Scouts and to farmers, all aiding in the work to (put Indiana’s idle acres to work producing a timber crop. L LAME DUCK CONGRESS The November election is longpast, but the Congress that has remained in power up to now is the old Congress, containing many “lame duck” members defeated at the polls, who continued to pass legislation though repudiated by the electors. These men have no record at stake—and their ambition is generally to make another “place” or play the game to finish for what it is worth. As a result important legislation is often held up or talked to death. The proposal of George W. Norris, Senator from Nebraska, which has several times passed the Senate, fbr an amendment to the Constitution to abolish the Lame Duck session would remedy this rediculous situation, and cut down the long interval, about 13 months between the election of a new congress and its taking office. But our representatives seem to hesitate to sacrifice a few months salaries, and the proposition is regularly side-tracked. The remedy, however, lies with the voter back home. He should put his “representative” on record before nominating him. T 0— FISHING BY ELECTRICITY — Electricity is used to catch fish in parts of Germany. One copper cable is laid at the bottom of the water to be fished, and the other held near the surface by floats. Electric current passes through the cables, and all the fish in their neighborhood are painlessly electrocuted. _ o Classified ads pay both—the seller and buyer.

■■■■■■■■■■■■■ FINGERS Fur Sale ELKHART. IND. 116 W. Jefferson Phone 2345 —FIVE DAYS BLOWN IP— Every item must go! Ask no Fingers. Price our Fur Coats and Chokers—be your own judge and if Furs are blind to you, it is at least a pleasure to deal with Reliable Fingers, of Elkhart. $135.00 Northern Seal Coats $54.50 SIIO.OO Calf Skins $43.00 $185.00 Caraculs n0w569.00 All Chokers at £ off 1000 Spring and Winter Fur Collars and Cuffs at | price! Men’s Suits and Overcoats Dry Cleaned and pressedssc Relining—Remodeling Fur Storage Open Evenings Phone 2345 Fingers has been our name, and Furriers since 1850, and now in ELKHART, INDIANA ■■■■■■■■■■■■■

CUTWORMS FEED AT NIGHT Cutworms take advantage of the home garden and carry on their depredations at night, and sometimes, on dark, cloudy days. Investigation iof the soil close to the injured plants, however, will jften disclose the guilty worms hiding in small burrows. It is ?asy to get rid of them by a poisoned bait, and the U. S. Department of Agriculture recommends this one: Mix 5 pounds of dry bran and J pound of Paris green, stirring very thorbughly. Mix 1 pint of syrup or molasses with 3 or 4 quarts of water, and add tpis solution to the bran and poison, stirring the whole mixture constantly and slowly. Add only enough water to make a crumbjy mash. Put the bait around late in the evening so that it will not dry too much before the worms come to feed. It can be broadcast or sown by hand along the rows or about the base of the plants. Many kinds of cutworms overwinter in the soil and begin to work early in the spring; therefore early treatments before the crops are planted, or before they come up, will be of great advantage in the prevention of crop damage by these pests. o Money for cruiser construction must be spent quickly or they will be out of date before ready for service. Q We print sale bills.

CRYSTAL THEATER Thursday, March 14— “COMPANIONATE MARRIAGE” Written by Judge Lindsey—it’s vital, modern, bold! Friday and Saturday Mufch 15 and 16 “BLOOD WILL TELL” Starring “Buck” Jones—also 2 two-reel comedies. Sunday and Monday March 17 and 18 “THE MASKS OF THE DEY IL” Starring John Gilbert. Women were his prey—what he wanted, he took, until — Also M.G.M. News with the inauguration of Pres. Hoover. Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, March 19, 20. and 21 — “SHGW PEOPLE” Starring Marion Davies and William Haines —a story of Hollywood showing many of the famous stars at work in the studios. A comedy-drama without an equal.

WANTED—Hatching Eggs On Account of the Increased Capacity we Need More Hatching Eggs at Once If you have hatching eggs from good breeds, call us at once and we will come after your eggs. Remember we pay a PREMIUM for eggs and our hatchery operates day and night during the full term of the Summer season. WE WANT RELIABLE CUSTOMERS MILFORD HATCHERY Milford. Indiana, * Fred L, Jtettz, Prop. Phone 178 DEVON FETTERS, Manager

0. R. BIGLER E. A. STEINMETZ —ANNOUNCING— Expert Radiator Repairing ii WRECKED AUTO BODIES — FENDERS — FRAMES I — TOPS and DOORS REPAIRED WOODWORK REPLACED ON ALL COUPES AND SEDANS H PLATE GLASS far WINDSHIELDS and DOORS, CUT 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— I; ED and ORA l> ? < j Goshen Auto Top & Trimming Co. GOSHEN, INDIANA Corner Third and Washington Sts. 1 Phone 438

THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL

I !• HOUSEHOLD HELPS I ‘ ! Iron pillow cases lengthwise instead of crosswise and you will iron the wrinkles out instead of in. Starch will not stick to the iron if you will add a little borax or paraffin to the starch when boiling. Once in three or four months, pour a teaspoonful of castor oil around the roots of ferns and plants and they will grow luxuriantly. Keep milk in bottles with cap on until used. If possible, as soon as milk arrives, place in the coldest part of the refrigerator. Provide a shelter box for early deliveries. Wash caps and mouths of bottles before podring the milk. For best the temperature of the ice box should be 45 degrees F. or below, constantly. If every one in the family would resolvexto try to eat without objection all ordinary foods not highly seasoned or of unusual flavor, if well cooked and appetizingly served, many food prejudices would vanish and the housekeeper’s problems wopld be reduced. An understanding of properly balanced diet will help dispel many prejudices and make it possible to set a varied yet economical table. o CANNOT BECOME PRESIDENT Neither one of the sons of the new president of the United States can ever hold the position which their father has just assumed, even if they had that ambition. Neither Herbert Hoover, Jr., twenty-five, nor Allen Hoover, twenty-one, was born in the United States. Both were born in London. One of the qualifications of the president of the United States ip that he must be born in the United States. 0 • Sleeping car busses , are now coming into service on the longtranscontinental run and receive paying patronage because it is cheaper than a Pullman. No matter how much money the average American may have he is a natural bargain hunter. WHAT MORE APPROPRIATE time would there be than Easter for that new portrait of yourself? Why not phone now for an appointment, The Schnabel Studio N. E. Corner Main & Washington GOSHEN, INDIANA

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That Indispensable Vitamin C

IPPOCRATES (400 B. C.) is Tfl authority for the statement that the effort of people to find better foods was the beginning of the science of medicine. Hippocrates was known as “the father of medicine” so he must have known something about its origin. He was a man of great nobility of character and possessed high ideals of medical ethics which have been perpetuated to the ‘ present day in the world-wide reverence of physicians for the “Hipnocratic oath.” The search for better foods has also continued to the present nay. accompanied by a vast development in the science of medicine. One of this science’s latest discoveri»s is the existence of the vitamins allimportant to human nutrition. Os these, vitamin C is the substance, the presence of which is essential to protect mankind against the disease known as scurvy, and it has been found to be present ih large quantities in oranges and tomato juice. Tomatoes vs. Oranges One No. 2 can of tomatoes costs 1,5 cents (or two for 25 cents') and produces ten ounces of juice. Three Florida oranges cost 15 cents in most seasons, and produce an ■'Oual quantity of juice. These two ices are equally potent sources of .amin C, the only more potent |

O f interest to ( every car owners Statement of General Motors’ Policy by Alfred P. Sloan, Jr., President

THE public has been visiting the automobile shows in the larger cities of the country to see new models. Suppose you could drop a curtain over the 1929 automobile shows and raise it immediately upon the shows of ten years ago. How vividly the changes would then appear! Go back five years, or even three, and the contrasts are amazing. So fast have the improvements followed one another that every year has offered you more for your automobile dollar —in performance, in. comfort, in safety, in beauty and in style. Never was this fact quite so impressive as in the cars now on display. This is real progress, and inevitably General Motors has been a leader in it. You cannot have hundreds of engineers, in one organization, thinking and working day and night without knowing more about making automobiles than was known the year before. You cannot have great Research Laboratories, the Proving Ground and the unmatched resources and skill of Fisher body without developing constantly better processes and new ideas. The patronage of the public makes possible all

an' invitation General Motors would like you to see the progress which it has made during the past year and which is represented by its new models. More than that, it invites you to peep behind the scenes at the methods employed to assure further progress. Simply check on the coupon below the products in which you are most interested. Full information will be sent without obligation piue a valuable little book which tells the inside story of the General Motors institution. This book— " The Open Mind"— has real value to every one owning or planning to buy a car. COUPON General Motors (Dept. A), Detroit, Mich. O CHEVROLET OAKLAND Please send me, without obligation, information on the new H n uttw'X’ modeh of the products I have checked—together with your PONTIAC LJ IWR.S. new illustrated book "The Open Mind." OLDSMOBILE LaSALLE Name Address- CADILLAC QFfigidaire Automatic Refrigerater QDeico-Light E/cctric Power and Light Plants Water Systems TUNE IN —General Motor, Family Party, every Monday. 9; JO P. M. (Carter n Standard Time) WEAF and J 8 amociated radio MMtoM

ones known being lemon and grapefruit juice. Therefore, equal quantities of orange and tomato juice give equal amounts of this vitamin. Two tablespoons daily of either will ensure an adult of his full requirement of vitamin C. More is a safeguard and advisable. Tomato Pulp Recipes The juice from a No. 2 can of tomatoes costs far less than that from three Florida oranges, since there are many uses to be made of the nutritious tomato pulp which is left in the can when the itiice is drained from it. They can be scalloped by themselves, combined with various other vev<-tables. with eggs, with shrimps and crabs, used in soups, sauces, stews and hash, combined with meats, spaghetti macaroni, noodles, cereal, rice and in a multitude of other ways. Just to give you a start on some of the manv ways in which the tomato pulp can be utilized after the juice with its valuable vitamin C has been drained off and drunk, here are a couple of recipes which will suggest manv others: Lima Beans Italiewie: Dice four slices of bacon and fry to extract fat. Add one onion, chopped, one green neoper. cut in rings, and 1 two cups diced celery. Add the juice from one No. 2 can of lima beans, and simmer until the celery and

this machinery of betterment; so the public is entitled to each improvement as promptly as it has been proved. In this way came the self-starter, the closed body, durable Duco finish, four wheel brakes. By the same process one of the remarkable .feats in industrial history has just been effected: Chevrolet has been transformed into a six-cylinder car within the price range of the sou overnight. Similarly, the new brakes and transmissions of Cadillac and LaSalle are a fundamental improvement; while the new models of Buick, Oldsmobile, Oakland and Pontiac all represent values that could not’have been offered before. Such progress, born of the inherent ambition of an organization of active minds to do better and to give more, is of benefit to all. It offers you more for your money with each succeeding year. It gives you more value for your present car when you trade it in. This is our policy. This is real progress. . 0 ALFRED P. SLOAN, Ja., Preudent Detroit, Mardil > >9>9

green pepper are tender. Then add two cups of canned tomato pulp and • the lima beans heat well. Pour in center of platter and surround with boiled spaghetti. Half 3 package will prove sufficient. Serve as a main dish with quince jelly. You will find this recipe sufficient to serve from six to eight. Italian Chop Suey: • Slice* one medium onion, and cut one cup of celery in fine strips two inches long. Saute the onion and celery in four tablespoons butter until yellow. Add one-half pound Hamburger steak, and cook Until it begins to brown. Then add one cup canned tomato pulp, one cup canned corn, onehalf cup grated cheese, and simmer ufitil the meat is tender. Add two cups cooked spaghetti and serve as a main dish with spiced cucumber slices. This recipe, too, is sufficient for from six to eight people. Try Some of These You can go on from here devising your own dishes, but here are a few in which tomato pulp combines excellently: scrambled eggs, omelets, meat cakes, round steak, with meats en dasserole. with kidneys and liver, with cooked cereal baked with tomato pulp and meat, with Spanish rice, acd in tomato griddle cakes.*