The Syracuse and Lake Wawasee Journal, Volume 15, Number 12, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 20 July 1922 — Page 7

■ _ _ " ! Classified Ads | t - & [ Classified advertising is ac- g I cepted at the rate of 1 cent I a word for each insertion. A ’«■ r booking and collection fee of £ 10 cents will be uuued for a £ { charged account; no account # £ will be charged for less than £ £ 25 cents for a single item. $

GUARANTEED HEMSTITCHING— 10c per yd. Done while you wait at Milford Electric Co. Leave marked material and instructions with Miss Mathews at Syracuse Electric Shop and get finished work back day. 3tf RATS —Destroy thousands of bushels of wheat, comuand oats every year. Save yours by buying a steel bin or corn crib; rat, fire and thief proof. Osborn & Son. 12-3 t WANTED — Information concerning old furniture, including spinning wheels, coverlets, lanterns, highboys, beds, stands, hooked rugs, etc. Phone 61. 11-ts CONCRETE WORK—Let us build your foundations, porches, j Moors, seawalls, tanks and cisterns. Emeral Jones, Syracuse, Ind.; phone 382 Milford. 10-8 t OFFICE SUPPLlES—Typewriter ribbon, carbon paper, typewriter paper, cardboard, blotting, etc., for sale at the Journal office. VULCANIZING—We are fully prepared to vulcanize your tires and tubes. Prompt service. Hedges Battery Station. 9-ts " FURNITURE—The Beckman’s Furniture Store is now filled with new Furniture and prices that will please the trade. 9-ts LOST—Bunch of keys between Syracuse and Pickwick Park. Finder please phone 73 and receive reward. 12-ltp FOR SALE—3S Swarms Italian Bees. All in standard hives. See David Makane, 2i miles north of Syracuse. 11-51 FOR SALE — Oldfield tires, tubes, accessories, Pence Guaranteed Battery. Hedges Battery Station. 9-ts FOR SALE—Stove wood, fine and chunks, delivered. Phone 180, or address Dan Mishler, Syracuse. 3tf ~JULY July Victor Records have arrived at Beckman’s Store. 9-ts REAL ESTATE—See J. W. Rothenberger for farms and properties. 21f BEDS—Birdseye Maple, Brass Beds, Walnut and Oak Beds just arrived at Beckman’s Store. 9-ts FOR SALE—Seven head draft horses and ope mule. C. R. Hollett. 12-lt FOR SALE —Canoe with motor boat. C. M. Baker. 10-3tp

ISMASHEDII X X .♦. O ur l° w ‘P r * ce d CW (wood separator) smashes all other battery X HgllllSgE'W values! PRICES sl6 tos2o <• l t s we “ made—quality plates, BmHEW carefully selected cedar-wood X ♦|» separators. All brand new mater- 4 X ials. Sizes to fit all cars. X X X 4 Buy your Battery at Battery Headquarters. 4 X ❖ It’s our business to TEST, RECHARGE and RE--4 PAIR BATTERIES. We give service on all makes. X x 4 t SYRACUSE AUTO SALES CO. | ♦♦♦ ♦% S. l!. Lepper Jesse Shock A Syracuse, :: :: Indiana x i

LETTER HEADS—Lend dignity to your correspondence by using printed stationery. The Journal’s commercial printing department is well equipped for this kind of work. 46f WANTED TO RENT—Four to six room dwelling within lour blocks from business district for occupancy soon or in the tail. Inquire at the Journal office. 8-ts FOUND A small gold watch on Kale Island. Owner may have same by identifying property and paying for this ad. W. H. Stump, New Paris. "ADVERTISING — Try these little classified ads to sell those things you do not want any longer, or to find the things you need. 46f BABY CHICKS—We are taking orders for spring. The Hoosier Hatchery, J. P. Hughes, Prop., phone 444, Syracuse, Ind. 3-ts LAKE FRONT LOTS—lnquire of Frank Wood of Garrett, Indiana, and Warren T. Colwell, Syracuse, Indiana. 3-ts CARDBOARD—AII kinds of cardboard, suitable for drawing and maps, for sale at the Journal office. WANTED—AII kinds of timber. Inquire of Coppes Bros. & Zook, Nappanee. 3-ts "KITCHEN CABINETS—Kitchen Cabinets with Porcelain Tops, $35.00 at Beckman’s Store. 9-ts FOR SALE—Two short-horn bulls, 6 months old. Bert Whitehead, Syracuse. * 8-ts FLOOR LAMPS—See the beautiful floor lamps at Beckman’s store. 7-ts LAMPS — See the beautiful Floor Lamps at Beckman’s Store, price $17.00. 9-ts FOR SALE—Barn, 22x34, in good condition. Robert Strieby. 8-ts GRASS and Congoleum rugs in all sizes at Beckman’s store. 7-tl

A classified ad will sell it. GEO. L. XANDERS Attorney-at-Law Settlement of Estates, Opinions on Titles Fire and Other Insurance Phone 7 Syracuse, Ind.

I FRESH, GLEAN MEATS I 0 ■ ' g 0 g 0 a jg Await you at our market at all times. You a kj • e £3 will find the juiciest cuts and! the tenderest ® pieces here. We also handle smoked and is a | dried meats and a general line of canned meats. a w 0 | a I KLINK BROS. MEAT MARKET I a a ® a SBBBSSBBSBBBBSBBBBBBSBBBBBBSBBBBSBBSBSBSSBBBSBBBSBBBB

MAY FORECAST WEATHER OVER LONG PERIODS Washington, July 8. Joseph, the long-famed weather prophet of the Bible, was foretold the seven lean years and the following seven years of plenty, may one day be shown up as a piker by modern weather forecaster s, when solar observations being conducted by the Smithsonian Institution are completed, it is indicated. Dr. C. G. Abbot, assistant secretary of the Institution, decribes the Institution’s world-wide studies of the variation of the heat of the sun, in the annual report lately made public, declares that such complications are already being used by two South American countries as an aid to weather forecasting. The Institution’s researches, which are considered of great scientific importance are being closely followed by scientists all over the world, and may make long time prognostications as usual and simple part of weather mapping. After many years of close observation and measurement of the heat radiation from the sun, scientists believe they are now near the goal. It has been finally determined that the sun does not throw "off a continuous amount of heat, from year to year, from month to month and even from day to day; that neither does the earth receive a constant amount of solar heat; that these variations are periodic and regular according to several factors, primarily the sun’s rotation; and that there is a direct connection with the solar variation and the earth’s climate. The Institution, Dr. Abbot said, has set up apparatus for heat measuring at various stations around the world, from which have been computed endless tables of figures by which the measurements showing solar variations have been checked and proved. While this wprk is still going on with the view of coordinating the measurements with earthy weather conditions, daily observations of the “solar constant” or radiation are being furnished from the Institution’s station on Mount Montezuma, Chile, to the government bureaus of Argentina and Brazil, where they are used regularly in forecasters. Our own weather bureau, Dr. Abbot added, is investigating the

SYRACUSE AND LAKE WAWASEE JOURNAL

MICKIE SAYS—UARjCUAWY XAMO SANS UK MOOR. NVAte. BUXVJOUT Awwnst 1% UKE A DOG -WAGS UIS TAIL AH? SAWS BOW • —MOU DOMV VO4OW MOW -—-y—- - ItDont S ( 1 to •=- j Be Too relations of the more complicated weather conditions of the United States to the radiation of the sun, and with results which tend to raise the hope that here too the solar-radiation values will be of interest and importance in weather forecasting. The interesting question has often been brought up, according to the article as to whether the sun may be gradually losing its heat and declining toward a cold, dead condition. However, he said, it is impossible to answer the question other than to refer to the fact that crops raised in the most ancient of historic times were subsequently the same as those grown at present, so that there has at least been little decline within the last 6,000 years. With the aid of the measurements within an error of only one percent, scientists 1,000 years from now may be able to answer the question without doubt. When the hypothesis of the sun’s variations was first being worked out, it is said, a very interesting method was used to check the observations. Using a photo-electric cell, Dr. Guthnick, of the Berlin Observatory measured the brightness of the planet Saturn as compared with the star Regulus. As Saturn shines with the reflected light of the sun, it was declared, it must vary if the sun does. These observations were compared with the

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studies of the sun’s brightness as made by the Smithsonian but the tables did not agree, although both showed somewhat similar fluctuations over a period of several months. The comparison, however, was made on the assumption of changes in the sun being felt in all directions simultaneously, Dr. Abbot said. When allowance was made for the rotation of the sun’s disc, which is about 27 days, and for the fact that the rays which reached the earth might sweep around one, two or three days before or after reaching Saturn, it was found that the latter was the true case, and the fluctuations accorded exactly. o ONE ON HER A prominent couple, who occasionly drive out into the country in their automobile and enjoy a quiet little supper for two at some picturesque spot, had an unusual experience the other evening. As they neared the spot selected for this particular outing, the wife exclaimed with dismay: “Oh, I’ve left the potato salad at home.” They were about ten miles from town, but the husband was particularly fond of potato salad, so he decided to go back for it. Reaching the home he dashed into the house and soon reappeared at the door. “I can’t find it,” he called to his wife, who was sitting in the car. “Why, it’s right there on the kitchen table,” she responded in that tone of voice which marks a wife’s sympathy for her husband’s helplessness. The man went back into the house and searched the kitchen, then he returned to the car and said firmly: “It is not there; I’ve looked everywhere.” The wife thought carefully. “I must have put it in the car after all.” Leaning back, she looked in the bottom of the car, and then exclaimed, sweetly, “Oh, there it is! I had put it in after all. Let’s hurry, dear; it will soon be dark.’’ o Try the classified columns.

SPECIAL ATTENTION GIVEN TO ESTATES, DEEDS. MORTGAGES AND WILLS PJILLIAM GRAY LOEHR Attorney-at-Law Admitted to Practice in AH Courts Notary Public 118| S. Buffalo St., Warsaw, Ind.

OF INTERESTED WOMEN Only 15 per cent of the women of China are ablejb read. Many Chinese women have distinguished themselves as poets. The average high jump for women athletes is four feet six inches. Wife-beating, having the sanction of the Koran, is common in Egypt. More than 20,000 Chinese women earn a living as factory workers in Shanghai. It is a tradition that no married woman shall take part in the famous Passion Play at Oberammergau. Birmingham, England, claims the distinction of having more well dressed women than any other British city. Myrose, one of the most important native states in India, is to amend its constitution so as to permit women to vote. Parasols with detachable covers which can be changed to match any individual gown, are the invention of an American woman. With more than one million members, the Order of the Eastern Star is believed to be the largest women’s organization in existence. In Mexico no sensible girl would consent to be married on a Tuesday, as that is believed to be the unluckiest day of the week for weddings. On going to be married a bride must, if unlucky omen is to be averted, sit facing front in the carriage. On returning she takes the opposite seat. The dress of Japanese women is regulated by their age and condition. One can tell at a glance, if one knows the rules, whether any woman is married or single and how old she is. The manager of one large exchange claims to have discovered that girls with red hair are more alert than their blond or brunette sisters, and consequently make the best telephone operators.

AUCTIONEER CAL. L. STUCKMAN Phone 535 Nappanee, Ind. You can call me up without expense.

-THE HUDSON COMPANYGoshen, Indiana Special Announcement of our GREAT COMMUNITY SALE STARTS FRIDAY, JULY 21 Enormous Price Cuts will be found in every department on any of our three large floors. Do Not Miss mis sale Our customers know from previous sales that when we say prices are cut, we mean what we say. You will not be disappointed. you will Find Bio Guu on COATS - SUITS - DRESSES SILKS - WASH GOODS HOSIERY - UNDERWEAR STAPLE DRYGOODS MUSLIN WEAR - WAISTS and BASEMENT GOODS Wednesday, We Close at Noon p-p dMMa L|TTOHUpSON.coIJ

FORD, COAL OPERATOR “Somehow or other the union has omitted to call on strike Henry Ford’s miners in Kentucky. When Ford bought the Banner Fork mines the local union went into a flurry. Did the new management mean a fight? And then a visit took place; it was the new manager who called on the union. Did the men have any grievances? They had; among others, that there was no place for the union to meet, unless in the schoolhouse, which was company own-* ed. ‘Meet in the schoolhouse’, said the new management; ‘next grievance?’ Later, began in the Kentucky coal’ fields; at Banner Fork there was another visit. Mr. Ford came and crawled around in the dark and bumped his head on his coal and at the day’s end he made the men a speech at the mine mouth about wages. He said their wages needed readjustment. Coal digging seemed to him to be harder, messier, more dangerous than the jobs in his auto factory; his miners’ wages, he thought, ought to be a little more than his factory rates. Readjustments followed; upwards. ‘Banner Fork mines pay $3 more on the day than any other mines in this district,’ writes President Keller of the United Mine Workers’ District 19, ‘and Ford sells his coal for fifty cents less on the ton’.” This is from the New Republic, and we pass it on.

J Economical and fct Handwme ‘ * ■Ki Wipe Cloth fir, AT W See It Before THTI IM. ’F Screening fl 91 I H M OSBORN & SON Syracuse, Indiana