Syracuse-Wawasee Journal, Volume 2, Number 34, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 28 July 1939 — Page 10
PAGE 2
♦ LAKE BRIEFS ♦ Mrs. C. N. Teetor left Monday morning for a two week’s trip throughout the East. She will make Quite a few stops including Philadelphia and Christmas Cove, Maine. Mrs. Teetor will probably stop at the New York World’s Fair, also. The South Shore Bridge Club met Wednesday at the home of Mrs. Ed Newmeyer. The co-host-ess was Mrs. Charles Symms. Miss Beatrice Higgins of Chicago, 111., arrived Saturday for a brief visit with Mrs. J. R. Laughlin on Ogden Island.
:: LAWN MOWERS :: SHARPE MOCKS BOAT LIVERY Phone SO4 — Road 13 South Shore LAKE WAWASEE
STRIEBY’S GROCERY and SANDWICH SHOP FANCY AND STAPLE GROCERIES FRESH FRUITS AND VEGETABLES FRESH AND CURED MEATS Sandwieheti of aU kinds—Cool Drinks OGDEN ISLAND PHONE K-74S MABLE ANN RIDING ACADEMY —On Road 13, So. of Syracuse — Hl ■/ Fi^ ns 20-NIGHT BROKE EXPERIENCED INSTRUCTORS WIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII Mullins Boats Boat Mart Boats Ross Boat Livery and Service r Foot of Morrison Island j - - ' J ' ' ' New And Used Boats FOR RENT Speedboats - Rowboats Outboard Motors M. C. Mullins R. L. Greenawalt LllllllllffllllWllllßlßMlWllllilß
SYRACUSE-WAWASEE JOURNAL — LAKE WAWASEE SECTION
Mrs. Chester S. Edmon, Mrs. J. E. McKjvergen, Mrs. Ralph E. Smith, Mrs. Alvin Strauss, Mrs. R. R. Lindburg, Mrs. Claude A. Savage, and Miss Alma Centlivre, all of Fort Wayne, were guests at a one o’clock luncheon given by Mrs. Raymond of Decatur, Illinois, at the Spink-Wawasee Hotel. Mrs. Boyd Clark of South Bend, formerly of Fort Wayue, was also a guest. Mrs. Raymond and daughter, Jean, are .pending the summer at the Spink-Wawa-see Hotel. Mr. Gilbert Wilson, well known artist, arrived recently at the Spink-Wawasee Hotel to complete the mural he begun two years ago. The tilte of the mural is “Man’s Struggle.” The Intermediate Boys of the Evangelical church are camping at Oakwood o Park this week. About 60 attended. The many activities include classes, hiking, nature study, and recreation. The boys camp in cabins and come to the Oakwood hotel for their meals.
I FRED W. BRAUN <-> R
Today I saw a mother deliberately pull her young daughter, about seven or eight years old, and start across the street in tne middle of the block. How will safety people ever get to these parents to make them realize that this is a very dangerour practice? How can we expect the coming generation to comply with safety regulations and live out a full life? Communities throughout the drive to educate pedestrians. Pecountry are making a special destrians are involved in approximately 40 per cent of all automobile fatalities. Statistics show that in more than two thirds of the fatal pedestrian accidents in 1938, the pedestrian was walking in an unsafe manner, walking across highways, between intersections, and jaywalking at intersections. You parents who read this, please teach your children to walk and drive carefully; and the best way to do this is to set the example yourselves. VARIED PROGRAM AT WINONA LAKE The fifth week of the Winona Lake Chautauqua opens Sunday, July 30, with the Rev. Peter MacFarlane, superintendent of the Union Gospel Mission, St. Paul, Minn., speaking twice. He will be the speaker at the morning service in the auditorium, and again in the early evening at the hillside. Following the hillside will be an hour of worship in music, directed by Miss Katherine Carmichael. Monday is the opening day of the cooking school, which will be in session each morning until
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"Saturday from 9:45 - 11:45. Miss Margaret Buchan, noted lecturer and food economist, of the Spry Research Kitchen, Cambridge, Mass., will be in charge. Printed programs containing all the recipes, tested and approved, will be presented to each person attending. These delicious and economical dishes will be prepared and cooked on the stage, and explained step by step to the audience and then presented daily to the lucky women by Miss Buchan. Many gifts will be given daily. N o charge for admission to these sessions. FIRE SCHOOLS TO BE HELD IN COC CAMPS Plans are being completed by the Division of Forestry for holding Fire Schools at each of the Civilian Conservation Corps camps in Indiana for training the camp personnel in fighting forest fires, it was reported today by Virgil M. Simmons, commissioner of the Department of Conservation. In the past, members if the CCC have given valuable assistance in fighting forest fires in the vicinity of their camps and the schools are being arranged to increase the effectiveness of the CCC in the conservation program of forest fire prevention and control. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. L. O’Connor, of Indianapolis, have rented the Ford cottage on the north side for July and August. Mr. O’Connor is president of a large wholesale grocery company in Indianapolis and has been coming with his family to spend the vacation season at Wawasee for about fifteen years. He states that representatives of his company are well known in this territory for they call on several of the business places around the lake.
BETTER ALTO ENGINES The swing of popular favor in the selection of automobiles is going to be back to improved performance, predicts Charles B. Bohn, president of the Bohn Aluminum and Brass Corporation, who is in a position to be in close touch with engineering development in the industry. Lighter m a terials produced largely through pioneering in the aviation field, permit reduction in the weight of vehicles, yet increase power output, Bohn declares. As a net result of these improvements, powerplants will have a greater output due to the fact that compressions will be higher, reciprocating parts lighter and design more efficient. Even more important will be the direct improvement in the power-weight ratio of the newer cars. The recently developed Magalloy series of magnesium alloys provide materials which are approximately two-thirds the weight of aluminum and one-fifth the weight of steel. By suitable heat treatment and with the proper selection of alloys, they provide more than ample strength. Higher compressions are more than likely to again return with improved methods of design, incorporating aluminum cylinder heads and improved aluminum pistons. Such pistons as the Autothermic, which greatly reduce oil consumptionand prevent leakage of power from the combustion chamber, make a valuable contribution to the improved design. [ , With all of these factors of design and materials considered, we are certain to have some highly Interesting and improved motor cars during the very near future. Fire at Chatham, Va., did |2O - 000 damage because firemen arrived late, as thieves had siphoned the gasoline from the fire truck.
