Syracuse-Wawasee Journal, Volume 2, Number 43, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 29 September 1939 — Page 8
PAGE 8
Classified Ads One Cent A Word ★ Minimum Charge 25<
TYPEWRITER RIBBONS for standard machines, 50c each at Journal Office. (38-ts) MAID WANTED — Capable, nsat and must like children. Write •r call the Journal for information. • (42-ts) FOR RENT — My stucco, all modern house. Furnished if desired. Dr. O. C. Stoelting. WANTED — Clean cotton rags. No silk or wool. Bring to the Journal office. (42tf) LAKE DOTS FOR SALE — Two 58 ft. x 160 ft., 116 ft. frontage on Syracuse Lake in town. Sidewalk, curb and gutter, private drive approach, city water. James Kemp, Box 111, Syracuse. (43-4 c SIGNS — 11x14 window posters with FOR SALE or FOR RENT printed in large letters. Onlv 10c or 3 for 25c at Journal Office. (38-'.f) FOR SALE — Pop corn and Jon:at han, Red Delicious, Starks and Northern Spy apples. See Forest Kern. (43-lc) WANTED —Poultry of all kinds; especially heavy hens and leghorns. Get my prices before selling. Phone 22 or write G. C. Tarman, New Paris, Ind. (42-60
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QUARTER-MILLION DOLLARS FOREST FIRES-GOST INDIANA Forest fires — most of them started through carelessness, hds caused an economic loss of a quarter of a million dollars in Indiana last year, Virgil M. Simmons, commissioner of the Department of Conservation said re-
SYRACUSE AUTO WRECKING COMPANY USED AUTO PARTS OF ALL KINDS New and Used Tires — Tubes — Glass SAM SWEDARSKY Phone 113 Boston St., Syracuse WE BUY ALL KINDS OF SCRAP IRON AND OLD CARS
FOR SALE — Baby buggy and play pen, both in good condition, 83.00 each, or both for 85.00. * Inquire at Syracuse Hotel. (43-lc) FOB SALE —1 Aladdin lamp. 1 battery radio set. 2 lots located at Redman Park. Inquire, Mrs. Je&n Buhrt, Syracuse, Ind. <43-2p) FOR SALE — Kalamazoo range and 3-burner oil stove. Both in good condition. Reasonably priced, Mrs. J. V. Applegate. Phone 1585. (43-lc) FEDERAL LAND BANK of Louisville offers an exceptional opportunity to invest in good Pt«* duetive farms at the right price and on attractive terms. Low down payment with long-time loan if desired. -Write- D. D. Secrjst, Representative, Cromwell, Ind. (2&-tf) APPLES FOR SALE — Jonathan, Grimes Golden, Delicious, Northern Spy, Greenings and other winter varieties. New apple butter. Come and look over our fine assortment. No Sunday .sales. Oakwood Park Orchard, 1 mile south of Syracuse on Rd. 13. C. R. Bitzer, supt. (43-ts) FOR SALE — A Florence style heating stove in good condition ; large sixe. Reasonably priced. Inquire at Journal office. (43-lp)
cently, in a plea for cooperation in preventing such fires during the coming weeks. During the past fiscal year, approximately. twenty-eight thousand acres of land were burned over by forest fires in Indiana, destroying future timber and vegetation which had a double value in preventing soil erosion and in
SYRACUSE - WAWASEE JOURNAL
DAUGHTER OF FORMER RESIDENT WEDS IN SOUTH DAKOTA •According to word received here, Miss Zela Ann Myers, daughter of Roscoe A. Myers, of Mclntosh, South Dakota, was married to Mr. Frederick J. Homyer of Eureka, South Dakota, on Saturday, September 16t?h. Rev. Father - Wm. P? Leahy coaducted*lhe ceremony and the nuptial mass at 9:00 o'clock. The church was decorated with fall flowers and Chrysanthemums. The bride’s father will be remembered as a former resident of Syracuse, having left this com l * munitv in 1907. Mr. Myers was a close friend of the late Otis C. Butt and J. P. Dolan. The young couple left for a wedding trip through Canada, Wisconsin, Minnesota and South Dakota. The groom is a graduate of Eureka high school and the University of South Dakota and has practiced law for the last four years in Eureka. The bride is a graduate of Mclntosh high school and the College of St. Catherine of St. Paul, and for the past three years has been teaching English and music. furnishing food and cover for wildlife. . Investigations by the tire wardens determined that nearly fifty percent of the fires reported were started by smokers—persons who dropped lighted matches or burning tobacco on the ground or out of car windows as they drove down the highways. Many of these fires started along the highways, spreading from dry grass and weeds into adjoining fields and woodlands. With a total of 438 fire® reported, each averaged approximately sixty-five acres and caused damage amounting to about 85,000. The Department of Conservation maintains a system of 24 towers from which constant watch is kept for forest fire and has established an organization of fire wardens throughout the wooded sections of the state to combat all such fires. Special equipment for use in fighting forest fires has been furnished these local units and training schools have been held to acquaint the fire fighters with the use of the equipment.
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Studio Couches A Nice Selection Awaits Your Inspection At Beckmans • Covered in green, brown, or rust tapestry. Innerspring pillows and linenspring mattresses. BECKMAN FURNITURE HOME
* x * A UNIQUE RESORT A health resort affording the quiet of almost rural environment, yet in close proximity to a great medical center. Such is the North Shore Health Resort at Winnetka, Hl., on Lake Michigan, near Chicago, described as “one of the most attractively located sanitariums in the world.’* In 40 years of; operation it has b ee.o m e increasingly popular, especially among patients from the South, who suffer during oppressive summer heat. The institution has enlarged its scope in recent years, so that it is now a completely equipped sanitarium offering treatment for a variety of illnesses. Its location near the great medical centers of Chicago has made it possible for the institution to keep abreast with new methods of diagnosis and treatment. Vistors returning this autumn after a period of treatment report that an extensive program of redecorating and refurnishing has just been completed and that new equipment has been added in readiness for the popular fall season. The North Shore Health Resort is one of the oldest and best known of Its kind in the middle west. Its baths, massage treatments, the beautiful walks along the North Shore, and other exercise provides a healthful rest at this time of the year. Fall guests are largely Southerners who go north to enjoy the fresh breezes off Lake Michigan and to sleep in the cool, invigorating night air. Eight-year-old Edward Pearlman of Philadelphia wandered away from home so often that his mother took his to a clinic for an examination. While she explained his case to the doctor, Edward strayed off for several hours. f Because “he didn’t even want women to look at him,” George Nikerson of Colorado Springs., Col., splashed acid on his face. Emile Gingras of Montreal went to sleep in a house he had entered, and was caught with two bags of loot he had intended to steal.
BACHMAN’S I .11 ■ J» . 1 111 DREFT, Giant Size Box 59c MUSTARD Quar Jar 10c PEAS Fiuest Quality Ma 10c M. J, B. COFFEE, File Quality lb. 30c FRUITS and VEGETABLES CALIFORNIA GRAPES lb. 5c CAULIFLOWER Head 15c SWEET POTATOES 10 lb. 25c CRANBERRIES lb. 15c FINE MEATS POM LOIR ROASTS lb. 28c PORK CHOPS, Crater Cab lb. 25e SPARE RIBS lb. 14c JOWL IACOH lb. 10c OLEO lb. 10c
M. C. TO SPONSOR TWO BAND CONTESTS Two marching band competitions for high schools will be sponsored by Manchester College this fall under the direction of Prof. S. L. Flueckiger in connection with home football games. The first contest of this kind at Manchester was v held last year • with nine bands ‘competing for the Overholt trophy, and six others participating in the massed playing. This year two contests will be held, the first for bands from the smaller schools, and the second for bands from the large schools. t* • « The first event .will be held Saturday, October 7, in connection with the Manchester-Central Normal game, for bands from high schools under 250 enrollment, ((Class C in national rules). It was reported that Bert Ward caught a ten pound pike Wednesday in Syracuse Lake. There are more than 42,000 tellephone employees in the metropolis of New York City, of who.n 21,000 are women. Os these, nearly 11,000 are operators.
STEEL and COTTON PRICES ADVANCE WHERE THEY WILL STOP—NOBODY KNOWS! • The Atz Furniture Company bf Goshen, anticipating rising markets, purchased several hundred at the Old Low Prices. • MATTRESSES selling today for 10.75 Only $9.95 • MATTRESSES selling today for $21.75 . Only $15.95 • MATTRESSES selling today for $27.50 ... Only $19.05 You Save the Difference by Buying Now! ATZ FRRHITRRE COMPART — Goshen, todlana —
