Syracuse-Wawasee Journal, Volume 2, Number 28, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 16 June 1939 — Page 10

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| LAKE BRIEFS ]

week-end Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Emerson of South Park entertained Mr. and Mrs. Hettinger of Chicago, Illinois. Mr. F. C. Cline is now occupying his cottage oh the Soutu Side. The Grain Dealer’s Association of America held their /convention at Sargent’s Hotel, Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Banning of Goshen leased Buck’s Boat Landing for the season. Mr. and Mrs. Monroe Ott and Mr. and Mrs. Farrell. Ott entertained a group of young people Sunday at their cottage neir Sargent’s. Mr. and Mrs. LaFlare of Chicago, are now in their summer home. Mr. W. I. LaFlare of Denver i s spending his vacation wiln them. Mr. and Mrs. Burr Futrelle of Fort Wayne are not at their cottage on the South Side yet.

V//7**■ a qetutitw LaPygslg • EVINRUDE FOR AS LITTLE AS S 34 SO ® G et iat Evinrude now — w hile HI \VlfiißS *h e glorious I summer holidays •H are a h ea d-' Now H >’ ou can own ■ real goods” —a z H true Evinrude — sturdy, smooth, quick-starting — oras BBSK ?1 IESMS little as Mfrr-jiM $34 - 50 -/afesii Macy’s Wawasee Slip ON LAKE WAWASEE

MABLE ANN RIDING ACADEMY —On Road 13, So. of Syracuse — . u t 'hr MHh x f JjgO< \ i fear . y i ’ «Sr 'JBMNhI Wk ' in HF? wilr Wfr'' - I (1< fl! 11l 'I 11 i ■i fiu ii I it ?it I?I ill Hlww 'JaWM! 1 ; v*t X X » ■X X xs -X s b h 20-NIGHTBROKE pi’s., EXPERIENCED INSTRUCTORS ■gaaai^MMtSMe=s«ga»g==ee=e=3S3r, iii , i A i i i , ii ii l l»

SYRACUSErWAWASEE JOURNAL — LAKE WAWASEE SECTION

Miss Frances Mayer and Eugene RickliZclassniates of James Stucky Central College in NApiervillf. Illinois are visiting at his home this week. ■»- Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Snevely of Osborn, Ohio, spent the week-end withjtfr. and Mrs- Dwight Mock. Willodean Mock, who resides in South Bend also spent the weekend with them. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Fackler of South Bend spent the weekend at their cottage near Waso. “Tick” Tyder, former manager of the Wawasee Airport, his wife, and father, spent the week-end at the Spink-Wawasee Hotel. « Mr. and Mrs. Hruska yf Cleveland, Ohio, visited Mrs. Hruska’s sister, Mrs. Fishback, over the week-end-Mr. and Mrs. Everett and family are now at their cottage t>n the south side, for the summer. Mr. and. Mrs. William Urbacn of Chicago spent the week-end at their cottage. Mr. atkd Mrs- F. C. Best have renter the Earl Menzenberger cottage for the summer. * —- Mrs. Marcella z Jeffries, Mrs. Bob Edwards and sister, of Indianapolis, and John J. Theis of Chicago, are at the Crow’s Nest for an indefinite stay- > ■ Mr. James Flerk of the Crow’s of a doctor. He is suffering from an infected molar. The Superintendent’s Club or Chicago will hold their annual tournament and convention at the Wawasee ‘Golf Club, Saturday. Bob Levernler, a freshman at the University of Notre Dame, returned recently to spend the suitimeY at his home on Lake Wava- . see. LAWN MOWERS :: SHARPENED MOCKS BOAT LIVERY Phone 504 — Road 13 South Shore LAKE WAWASEE

One-Minute Test c 1. What is the chief seaport on the coast of Greece? 2. What island lies at the mouth of the Adriatic sea? 3. In what country is the Volga river, and into what body of water does it flow? - -? Words of Wisdom Neither praise nor blame is the object of true criticism. Justly to discriminate, firmly to establish, wisely to prescribe, and honestly to

RIGHT OUT OF THE AIR < —m. .——By lARLI FERRIS. ■■■■■■ —-

TjtLEANOR PHELPS, star of the jßi CBS >*nal, “The Life and Love of Dr. Susan,” has one unfulfilled ambition—she wants to see an operatlon. All her doctor friends have refused to arrange it, fearing that the experience might be too much for her. • • • Bob Burns is experimenting with a new musical instrument he calls the “•whatsit.” It consists of a wire, a zinc tub, and a long handle which changes the tone. As soon Us the Sage of Van Buren becomes proficient in manipulating it, he’ll try the device out on the Music Hall audience. • • * Raymond Paige and his 99 men are heard regularly on CBS on Friday nights now, but the girl is a different one each week. Outstanding i j \ > 1 among the guests Paige presents with his unusual orchestral arrangements is Mary Eastman, opera star, pictured above. • • • Peter Van Steeden, maestro of “For Men Only,” receives more applications for employment than perhaps any other orchestra leader in radio. Peter explains this on the grounds that on “For Men Only” the musicians get a chance to meet outstanding celebrities, and on his other ■how, Fred Allen’s, work becomes fun.

WEIGHT TAX DEADLINE JUNE 20 & Announcement has been made by the Bureau of Motor Vehicles that the deadline for the purchase of >1939 weight tax is Tuesday, June 20, after w-hich time enforcement will be begun by the State Police Department. Weight tax plates may be purchased at any one of the 156 Auto License

FISHING?? ’ — Boats and Motors for Rent. •— Full line of Rods, Reels, Hooks, Lines, Baits, Etc. :: SPEED BOATS FOR RENT :: Ross Boat Livery & Service . Morrison Island Lake Wawasee

—GRAB BAG—

award —these are the true aims and duties of criticism.—Simms. Hints on Etiquette I Lt you are a guest in a home. i don’t criticise your hostess, her • home, husband, children, or anything that is hers. If you can’t say something pleasant about them, say nothing. t i’ctlay’s Horoscope i Today’s birthday children will be , fortunate in the coming year. Their, i fortunes l increase, and gain will CopTf'Rht - K'n» Feature. Svnd'cxte tm

Supervision of production on th* Kate Smith Hour is sharply divided between Ted Collins and Kate Smith. When the music is facing shaped upi, Collins seldom has anything to say. In preparation of the dramatic spot*. Kate leaves everything to her partner, Ted. • • • Jane Froman, shown below, has returned to the air as star of that Sunday night program heard at 7:30 p. m., E. D. S. T., over CBS. She has just come back from a long vacation // in the South, where she played tennis and landed a fifty-pound amberjack while fishing off the coast of Miami. Emo Rapee’S orchestra will accompany her on the new series. • • • When it comes to legal questions, Joe DuMond, radio’s “Josh Higgins of Finchville," has the answers. His education includes a law course, taken to acquaint him with his rights and limitations rather than with an eye toward future practice. • • • Katherine Stevens is the new Cinderella girl of radio. Discovered by a writer on Radio Guide magazine, who told Director Ed Wolfe about her, she was auditioned for a part in “Pepper Young’s Family.” She won the job and is now one of the featured players to the Monday through Friday NBC serial.

Branches of the state. The fee is based upon the number and size of tires and all information pertaining to the schedule may be had in the license branches. All trucks, tractors, semi-trailers, buses, house cars and trailers, (except two-wheel trailers when pulled behind) passenger cars) are subject to the tax. Inasmuch as trucks equipped with solid tires are now prohibited from using the roads of Indiana weight tax

come to them through inventions, novelties, and unexpected and’unusual methods. Children born on this date also will be blessed with clever, original, inventive and enterprising natures. They will possess really remarkable talents, and will be fortunate and successful. One-Minute Test Answers 1. Salonika. 2. Corfu. 3. Russia, and it flows into the Caspian Sea.’

BANQUET HELD AT JOHNSON’S HOTEL Cromwell Business Men’s Asst». ciation members and their wives held their annual banquet at tile Johnson Hotel, Tuesday evening, June 13. Dr. A. J. Rarick, preydent of the organization, had charge. Card games were played in the dining room after the banquet. Differing from last year’s banquet there wa s n o discussion at the affair this year. PRICE OF HAIR-CUTS UP After the first of July or thereabouts, the price of hairquts goes up according to a law passed last session of the state legislature. One group of barbers is for it—• another group has raised $lO,000.00 to fight enforcement of the law. Looks to me like just another case of getting the government a little too far into btis- ■ iness. I don’t care what kind of business it is, I don’t think the government has any right to set the prices at which a man shall sell his merchandise or his services. After all, one barber may make more at 25c than another at 50c. And maybe a lot of people prefer a 25c haircut—no matter how lousy—to a 50c one, no matter how good. Maybe I’m wrong, and some of you barbers may crawl my frame, and I don’t object to raising the price to 40c and all that, but still I maintain that the government has no business in setting any kind of prices, be it for haircuts, shaves or newspapers, and printing. I’m against it, as you may already have guessed. will not be sold for those vehicles. The application for payment of weight tax is required to be set out, in a space provided on the application, the month in which the vehicle began operation on the roads in 1939 and the fee will be computed from that month. A metal plate will be issued with a registration card, which must be carried in the vehicle. The size of the tires and the classification is required to be painted on each side of the vehicle in letters and figures at least 3 inches high. A motor vehicle owned by the U. S. Government, the State of Indiana, or any political subdivision of the state does come under the law. A flat fee of SIO.OO is payable -for any house car. The metal plate provided shall be prominently displayed on the outside of the vehicle and it is unlawful for anyone to use the plate on any motor vehicle other than the one for which the plate was issued. All fees collected for weight tax go to the State Highway Department for the construction and repair of roads. The State Police will begin to weight tax plates on June 21. Peel and slice potatoes, place in bowl; add mayonnaise, salt, pepper, vinegar and onions; mix thoroughly; add sardines and parsley. make arrests for failure to have