Syracuse-Wawasee Journal, Volume 1, Number 48, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 4 November 1938 — Page 5
Phone 889 Box 177 A. J. Thibodeaux Watch & Clock Repairing Lake Street, Ist house South of U. B. Church SYRACUSE, INDIANA Martin Hoover HAULING SAND AND GRAVEL Black and Top Dirt For Salo Phone 476 Syracuse, Ind.
Winter Is Just Around the Comer We suggest you call phone 69. And place yourorder for some of that good old Kentucky Red Ash or if you prefer a large block, ask for Cameo, West Va., Splint. A trial order will mean repeated deliveries x SYRACUSE LUMBER & COAL COMPANY Phone 69 Syracuse, Ind-
Republican RALLY HALLECK To Speak In WARSAW At the Warsaw Armory Friday, Nov. 4th 7;30 P. M. TWO BANDS, WARSAW HIGH SCHOOL, COUNTY BAND. '"'FLOYD STEVENS BRAIN TRUSTERS’ QUARTETTE. ] DELEGATIONS COMING FROM OTHER COUNTIES. SPEECH BY Chas. A. Halleck OUR SECOND DISTRICT CONGRESSMAN G The Public is cordially invited G
Classified Ads ONE CENT A WORD- -O- MINIMUM CHARGE 25c
FOR SALE —Late Ida Bowersox property located on Front street on Syracuse lake. Terms. Ernest O. Buchholz. ts-chg The “big show” of the band, howFOR SALE—Apples, at the Champion fruit farm. Varieties, both old and new. Phone 3013, Syracuse, Ind. James Dewart. 7t028-chg FOR SALE—I7 jewel, yellow gold, modern Hampden pocket watch with chain. A-l condition. $5.00 or best offer. Also new rod and reel, $5.00 Tel. 184. lt-ch FOR SALE—I 936 Norge Streamlined electric refrigerator 6 cubic fset. Perfect condition throughput. Cpst over $l6O new. Bargain, $75.00. Tel 184. lt-ch NOTICE While Mr. Rothenberger is away for the winter I will do taxi work, day or night. Good car, good driver. Call Frank, telephone 881, Syracuse. It-pd-ts
TRY A JOURNAL WANT AD
Goy Syneosaa DEMOCRAT CANDIDATE FOR Troslee OF TURKEY CREEK TOWNSHIP Would appreciate your support November Bth. JOURNAL WANT ADS PAY
FOR SALE—Sow and 9 pigs. Clarence Snyder, R. R. 1, Syracuse. 2t-pd WANTED—TuIip bulbs, also large size old fashioned square leaf gateleg table-leaves to come within 6 or 8 inches from floor. Phone R-842 or write the Journal Syracuse, Ind. > FOR SALE—First quality cabbage, two miles north of Syracuse. Ellis Eby. pd-3w APPLES! APPLES! Grimes Golden, Jonathan, R. I. Greening, 75 cents to $2.00 per bushel. Stephen Freeman. ts FOR SALE — 24x36 barn. Large roomy haymow. Call phone R-842 or call at corner Lake and Henry street. NOTICE Red heifer, about 9 mo. old, estray In vicinity of Concord. Anyone seeing, please notify Ervin Coy. It-pd
BYKAOUSK-WAWASHH JOURNAL MRIDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 198$ SYRACUSE, INDIANA.
LOCAL! LINES
Mr. and Mrs. Pel Clayton spent Wednesday in Indianapolis. Mr. Harry Coy and daughter Rosemary are confined to their home with scarlet fever. Blair Laughlin and family have moved into the Beckman property, on East Lake street. Mr. and Mrs. Bill Jarboe attended a Hallowe’en party at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Dale Sprague. Mr. and Mrs. Grant Skidgel spent from Thursday until Tuesday at Pierpont and Wayne, Ohio, with relatives. Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Bailey of Kalamazoo, Michigan, spent several days with George Bailey and daughter Mrs. Nancy Noe. Mr. and Mrs. P. R. Sprague drove to Bluffton Saturday and were week-end guests of their son Dale and family. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Unrue, Donna and Lois Davis and Mrs. Sadie Hire spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Claude Hoover at Niles Michigan. Mr. and Mrs. N. S. Wyland and Mr. and Mrs. Booth of Elkhart, were the Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Bushong. Miss Margery Slabaugh, Kingsley Pfingst and Jack Ford, students at Indiana University, spent the weekend with their parents. Mr. and Mrs. L. T. Heerman ana son Spencer, Vernon Beckman and sister Ogla left Tuesday for Miami, Florida where they will spend ttyfe winter, Mrs. Lloyd Dlsher and daughter Marlca went to West Liberty, lowa Sunday where they were called b> the illness and death of Mrs. Disher’s mother. Robert Lavernier of Notre Dame and Paul Lavernier of Purdue University, spent the week-end with their mother Mrs. Martin Lavernier at Lake Wawasee. Mrs. Carl Wright returned home Sunday from a four weeks trip to the western states. She accompanied her parents Mr. and Mrs. Roy Moore and Mr. and Mrs. Paul Svorac of Warsaw. Mrs. Sol Miller was hostess to the Syracuse Contract Bridge club at a one o’clock luncheon at her home Wednesday. Three tables of bridge were played with honors going to Mrs. John Grieger and Mrs. Sol Miller. Mrs. Carl Swanon of Detroit and Mrs. Wm. Praht were guests. Magic Carpet “Two Mlles” Up New York —Within the 200-foot, eighteen-story Perisphere of the New York World’s Fair 1939, the steel structure of which, weighing 4,300,000 pounds, is now completed, visitors to the Exposition will be able to step upon a “magic carpet’’ and ride “two miles’’ above a perfectly integrated garden “City of Tomorrow.” *
Re-Elect T"! HALLECK FDR GUNGHESS K — Republican ~- ◄ INDUSTRIOUS ABLE CONSCIENTIOUS "We must put America back to work —end we _ must give the farmer a fair price for his products.’ CONGRESSMAN Second Congreestonal District ta- • A Young man of broad Charles a. hallbck’s • eludes all of the foiiowtag counties: experience. record is approved henton oarroll BY FARMERS — WORK. CASS FUIZTON \VJ IJWJ ERR — BUSINESS MEN JASPER KOSCIUSKO • World war Veteran, _ — veterans — and by marshall i newton ALL WHO BELIEVE IN STARKE TIPPECANOE . . .. . ... BALANCED REP- portkr PULASKI • A faithful public servant resentative government. WHITE BE SURE TO VOTE NOVEMBER 8 —Political Adv.
Jefferson Theatre GOSHEN SUNDAY and MONDAY Nov. S-T “ALGIERS” TUESDAY and WEDNESDAY Nov. 9-9 “BOY MEETS GIRL” THUBS.. FBI., SAT., Nov. 10-11-12 “ROOM SERVICE All three pictures are $250,000.00 Movie Quiz pictures. Mr. and Mrs. Mike Pryor spent Sunday and Monday in Chicago. Rev. and Mrs. Joseph Bailey and Edna Yoder visited the Old Peoples Home at Lebanon, Ohio on Sunday. Mrs. Carl Swanson and children of Detroit, Michigan, are the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Guy Stone at Lake Wawasee. Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Rock Jr. and Miss Jane McCammon spent from Friday until Sunday at Athens, Ohio, guests of Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Harris, parents of Mrs. Rock. NEW TYPE CYLINDER HEAD FOR CHRIS-CRAFT MARINE MOTORS ANNOUNCED BY MACY Mr. M. W. Macy, local dealer for the Chris-Craft Corporation, Algonac Michigan, announced today the development of a new type cylinder head which increases thermal efficiency, rresultlnT’in" a brake horse, power but put from 4 to 7 per cent above that obtained from present types. It has been found that with this new type cylinder head, it is practical to increase the compression ratio from 6.5:1 to 7.5:1 without the use of special fuel. The secret of design lies in the combustion chamber which is constructed so that the ombustibie charge is in a higher state of turbulence at the momen of ignition. This quickens the combustion of the charge earlier in the expansion stroke which is desirable because the earlier the heat of the fuel is liberated, the more chance it has to be converted into energy. Prior to this development, it w a s impractical to go beyond a compression ratio of 6.5:1 with cast iron cylinder heads. However, with the new type combustion chambers, a higher turbulence is induced and there is less tendency for the engine to knock or detonate. In consequence, a higher compression ratio can be used which in turn results in a higher power output. It also appears that the new combustion chambers practically eliminate self-igni-tion, one of the causes of detonation, or what is commonly known as engine ping. The new cylinder head is the result of the combined efforts of Jay W. Smith, president, and Elmer P. Jasper, Chris-Craft marine motor engineer. It is believed that this development is a definite step forward in marine engine design.
Mrs. W. G. Connolly was in Chicago the first of the week. Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Garber of Bristol, visited with Mrs. Garber’s grandmother Mrs. Sarah Younce. Mr. and Mrs. Perry Sprague drove to Fort Wayne Wednesday to spend the afternoon with friends. Earl Menzenberger returned from Mayo Brothers, Rochester, Minn., Wednesday. Mrs. Sarah Brown of Rochester, visited her daughter Mrs. Jay Rigdon last Sunday. Mr. Vern Younce of Elkhart, glsited with his mother Mrs . Sarah Younce laVst week. Pat Finton H. W. Buchholz and Bill Jarboe made a business trip to Elkhart Wednesday. Mrs. John Adrian and sons Hoy and Boyd of Lorain, Ohio, spent the week-end with her mother Mrs. Fannie Hoy. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Rosenberry and Mr. and Mrs. Walter Rosenberry spent Tuesday in Grand Rapids, Michigan on business. Mr. and Mrs. Sheldon Harkless spent Sunday In Cromwell with Mrs. Charles Switzer and Mrs. Rosa Gibbs. Levi Kitson returned home Sunday from Indianapolis, where be spent several weeks with his daugnter Mrs. Garfield Walker and husband, Ralph Thornburg Jr., a student at Indiana School of Pharmacy, of Indianapolis, spent the week-end with his parents Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Thornburg. Mr. and Mrs. Verd Schaffer of Millersburg, Mrs. Marjory Masters and two children Barbara and Jackie of Elkhart, visited with Mrs. Sarah Younce last Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. DeLoss Weaver bad as guests over the week-end Mr. and Mrs. Ray Moss of Greentown, Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Jacob and Ray of Swayzee, and Mrs. Elizabeth Scheerer of Marion. The Missionary Society of the Evangelical church, met Tuesday afternoon with Mrs. Angeline Edmonds. There were sixteen members present. Mrs. Guy Rarig presented the lesson on Moving Millions and Mrs. Court labaugh gave a short report on the Missionary Rally held last week in South Bend. “Democracity” at New York Fair NEW YORK —“Democracity” is the name that has been given to the “City of Tomorrow,” which is to be the theme exhibit of the New York World’s Fair 1939. It is ta be presented in the interior of th® 18-story Perisphere, an enclosed space twice as large as New York’s Radio City Music Hall. Visitors will look down upon It from a “magic carpet” floating around within the sphere and permitting a view as from a height of two miles.
;■ Library Notes :: ‘ * by Alice Mann Hire «* " 1 LIBRARY NOTES— .... if . . Dr. Latham presented to the library a two volume set of “History of Dental Surgery.” The Yale University Press also presented the library with a four volume set of “The Colonial Period of American History.” Last week I discovered that someone has been tearing the two pages of photographed recipes from the American Home magazine. The magazines are now being checked to find who is taking these recipes. All This and Heaven Too, by Rachel Field. This story, based on truth that is stranger than fiction, combines the drama of one of he most notorious murder cases in France wih a period of American history covering the New England and New York of 1850 to 1875. The heroine Henriette Deluzy, Desportes, a woman of rare gifts, fortitude and magnetism, lived as governess in the ill-fated household or the Dus and Duchesse de Praslin, and became unwittingly the -pivot about which that crime revolved. In 1847 she faced a hostile police, pleading her own case before the Chancellor of France in the murder trial that was the sensation of two continents and helped a French king from his throne. It is in fact the story of Rachel Field’s own great aunt. Miss Field tells the works of Henrietta’s remarkable life—drawing upon history, rumor and her own imagination. Tell My Horse, by Zora Neale Hurston. This book Is unique in that it tells the Inside story or noodoo in Haiti and Jamaica. Zora Hurston herself took part In the rites which are celebrated with all the wild, savage abandon of the native blacks, and she describes what she saw with all the poetry and literary ability that characterizes her writing. The story of esoteric superstitions, savage voodoo ceremonies, strange customs of the little known negroes of Jamaica ano Haiti. At the regular board meeting Friday night, Mrs. Mlles and Freeman will give a report of the Indiana Trustees meeting which they attended at Indianapolis. Os the 1,800 trustees in Indiana, Mrs. Miles and Freeman were “two” of the twenty-two in attendance. Will the person who borrowed “The Sisters,” by Brenig, please return it at once. PAST MATRON’S CLUB OF ORDER OF EASTERN STARS MEET AT MRS. OSBORN’S Full Membership Present to Enjoy Fine Program and Light Refreshments The Past Matrons’ Club O. E. S. met on Tuesday evening at the home of Mrs. Esther Osborn with Mrs. Georgia Miller as assisting hostess. The full membership, fifteen, were present. Election of officers resulted In Mrs. Leila Greene being elected president: Mrs. Fannie Hoy vice president and Mrs. Grace Slabaugh, secretary-treasurer. After the business meeting Mrs. Miller read a history of the origination of Thanksgiving day and Mrs. Osborn read a Thanksgiving poem. Several contests followed. Those receiving prizes were Mrs. Grace Slabaugh, Mrs. Fannie Hoy and Mrs. Leila Greene. The members were then shown |o the dining room where they were seated at the table which was beautifully decorated with chrysanthemums and bitter sweet and lighted with tall white tapers. Ice cream, cake, coffee and candy were served. The guests departed at a late hour each thanking the hostess for a very lovely party. NOTICE To Whom it May Concern: Notice la hereby given that the Board of Town Trustees, of the Town of Syracuse, Kosciusko County Indiana, will apply by petition to the board of commissioners of the county of Kosciusko, said state, to have Syracuse Cemetery, within said Town, more particularly described as follows, to wit: The Cemetery consisting of 15 acres, more or less located in the NW 1-3 of the SE 1-2 of Sec 6 Township 34 North Range 7 East., conveyed by said board to said Town, and that the matter will be heard and determined at the next regular sitting of said board, beginning on the 15th day of November 1938. ERNEST O. BUCHHOLZ, Town Clerk-Treasurer.
for Good Mason Work see Harry H- Brinkman “The Bricklayer” Syracuse JOURNAL WANT ADS PAY NOTICE n Those wanting pictures made by me should do so on or before Nov. 15th, as I may be called away to other work any time after that date. REINBOLD STUDIO JOURNAL WANT ADS PAY GRIEGER’S SATURDAY'S SPECIALS WHY PAY MORE? LARD, 4C 2 lbs IV V With SI.OO meat order. SAUSAGE, 1 E » Mome made, per lb I V V HAMBURGER, 1 £ m All Good Beef, per lb.. IV V Mrl9 c BOHANG BEEF, 1 Oa per lbl2c to ■V V CUBE STEAK, 1 Qi* per lb. IVV SWISS STEAK, OAq ROUND STEAK, 99 A per lb . .. MUSH. 1 ftHome Made, per lb .... I W Fresh Fish Received Every Day. BASS, per lb. IVV PERCH, 4Q per lb IOC Specials every day to our up-to-date market. Oysters, dressed poultry. BANANAS, 99a 4 lbs ZvC SWEET POTATOES, 9Ca 11 lbs ZvG GRAPEFRUIT, A |- » for ZOO CRANBERRIES, ' per lb, IV2V The best of vegetables and fruits CHASE & SANBORN 9QI- - per lb. ..... Z V2* RED BAG COFFEE, 14 per lb | fc|G CREAMERY BUTTER, ft ft per lb ZU® SUGAR, 4 Qp> 10 lbs. »fy V CHOCOLATE COVERED IQCHERRIES, Ilb box.. QV SODA CRACKERS, Qfresh, krispy, 2 lb. box Z>V BULK RAISINS, C A 2 lbs ** MUSTARD, ROSEMARY, "I ft a Quart jars lif* RICE, 7a Fancy, bulk, 2 lbs. .... WHITE CITY FANCY SYRUPS: 1 1-2 lb. si«N [|a tight or dark if* P AND G SOAP, Q5 bars I yw CATSUP, A A 14 ox. U® ROSEMARY PANCAKE ' Qa FLOUR, 5 lb bag V* SCOTT TISSUE, 99 A 3 rolls -v, ZZ* DAILY BARGAINS. wXTCH OUR WINDOWS. CASH FOR LIVE POULTRY. \
