Syracuse-Wawasee Journal, Volume 3, Number 4, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 29 December 1939 — Page 6
PAGE 6
Neighborhood News
Q Head of the Lakes $ by Mrs. Jacob Click Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Click and daughters, Katherine and Geraldine, were among the guests Sunday at a Christmas party and cooperative dinner given in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Rifehcreek at Goshen. Sunday dinner guests in the Martin McClintic home were Mr. and Mrs. Charles Thomas and Mr. and Mrs. Dean Hite and Deanna Jo. Callers Sunday afternoon in the Jonas Cripe home were Mr. and Mrs. Noah Shock and Clyde Rusher and son. Mrs. Vern Hursey and Mrs. Harry Wingard called on their mother, Mrs. Ira Crow, Wednesday. Mrs. Brent Koher and daughter, Ailene, were callers Sunday evening in the Jacob Click home. Mr. and Mrs. Elmo 'Shock and son, Joe, were Sunday dinner guests in the home of Mr. and Mrs. John Baker in Goshen. Mr. and Mrs. Martin McClintic assisted with the butchering in the Alva Galloway home Thursday. Mary Klingaman called on Amy Wingard Thursday. Elizabeth Shock and Jonas Cripe were callers in the Frank Brown home Monday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Doris Hummel assisted Mr. and Mrs. Joe Godschalk with their butchering, Thursday. Mr and Mrs. Jacob Click called in the Ed Robison home Wednesday evening. Mrs. Robison has been quite ill. Callers in the Martin McClintic home Sunday evening were Luella Wingard, Louise Sensibaugb, and Marie Bleeke. This Week’s News. Elizabeth Shock and Jonas Cripe were dinner guests Friday in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Clude Rusher. Callers Saturday forenoon in the Jacob Click home were Mrs. Harry Wingard, Luella Wingard and Jesse Jarrett. Sunday dinner guests in the Elmo 'Shock home were Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Dorsey and daughter, and Mr. and Mrs. Fred Kuhn and children. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Wingard and daughter, Luella, attended a shower in the home of Ralph Marrs near Larwill last Wednesday evening. The shower was in honor of Mr. and Mrs. Barton Marrs, the former being the son of Ralph Marrs. Jonas Cripe and Elizabeth Shock were Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Stamates. Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Click were callers Friday evening iif the Emmanuel Click home. Louise Sensibaugh was a guest Friday night in the Harry Wingard home. Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Bleeke and son, Justine, spent Christmas in Fort Wayne with their daughter, Ruth, and family. Dinner guests Christmas Day in the Martin McClintic home were Mr. and Mrs. Charles Thomas, Mr. and Mrs. Alva Hamman, Mr. and Mrs. Donald McClintic and daughter, Norma Jean, Mr. and Mrs. Dean Hite and daughter, Deanna Jo, and Charles McClintic. Sunday callers in the Elmo Shock home were Mr. and Mrs. John Baker of Goshen. iSunday evening callers in the Jonas Cripe home were Mr. and Mrs. Orval Shock and fajnily, Mr.
and Mrs. Harold Shock and family and Mrs. Noah Shock. Mr. and Mrs. Merle Shock and daughter, Ruby, assisted with the butchering, Saturday, in the Ed. Larson home. < Callers Monday afternoon in the Jacob Click home were Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Priest of South Bend and Miss Minnie Goppert of North Webster. 0 Salem # By Mrs. Joe Smith The revival which had been held at the New Salem chiurch the last two weeks was well attended, with a large crowd there every night. Rev. Beahm preached some very good sermons and seven more were added to the church. Mrs. Joe 'Smith, Emory Guy and wife, Mr. and Mrs. Arnold LeCount and son, Patten, were guests of Glen Smith and family of near Ligonier Sunday. Mary Ann Pinkerton spent Sunday with Betty Smith. • Roy Pinkerton and wife spent Sunday with their son, James, and wife, of Tippecanoe Lake. Ed Smith and wife spent Sunday afternoon with the former’s mother who is living with her daughter, Mrs. Guy Leatherman, of near New Paris. Mrs. Dane Rarig of Warsaw is ill with the flu at the home of her mother, Mrs. Chauncey Weybrignt. 0 Concord © by Mrs. Ernest Mathews Those who were dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Buhrt Sunday were Mr. and Mrs. Herman Lutz and family of Nappanee, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Mathews and Mr. and Mrs, Lewis Buhrt and family or Goshfen. Mr. and Mrs. Guy Fisher spent •Sunday in Michigan with the former’s sister, Mr. and Mrs. Burt Orandal. Mrs. William Nice, Mrs. Edith Smith, Mrs. Wilbur Drudge spent Tuesday afternoon with Mrs. Wayne Bucher. Mr. and Mrs. Silas Gilbert spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. William Gilbert. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Groves and son, Junior, Mrs. Chloa Groves, Mrs. Martha Roop, and Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Mathews called at the Jacob Bucher home Sunday afternoon. Mrs. Dewart is still confined to her bed. Those who called at the Chester Stiffler home Sunday afternoon were Ernest Mathews, Jacob Bucher, Irvin Whitehead and Ray Klingamann and family. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Mathews spent Wednesday afternoon at the Wayne Bucher home. Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Bucher and son spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Roy Teeple. Miss Yvonne Bucher spent Sunday with Leona Roe. 9 Four Corners 9 by Mrs. Crist Darr Mesdames McSweeney and Darr were Warsaw shoppers Tuesday and Mrs. Darr was a caller at the home of Mrs. Mollie Chilcote of
SYRACUSE - WAWASEE JOURNAL
Milford in the afternoon. Mrs. Daniel Gall is spending a few days with her parents in Goshen. They had spent the Sunday with Mr. Gall. Mary Ulery attended the protracted meeting at the New Salem church, which has been conducted there for the past week. Mr. and Mrs. William Hartleb received word of the sudden death of Mrs. Ed Harleb of Mendon, Michigan, Saturday afternoon. Funeral arrangements have been made for Tuesday afternoon at Mendon. Mr. Rob Swackard is driving for Mr. Hartleb. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Hartleb, accompanied Mr. Daniel Gall to Mendon, Michigan, Sinday. Mr. and Mrs. Vern Kirkendorfer spent Friday morning at the Crist Darr home. Sunday callers on the Crist Darr home were Mr. and Mrs. Jess Darr of Syracuse and Mrs. Earl Darr and three children of near Zion. 9 South Side 9 by Mrs. Estelle Swartz Mr. and Mrs. George Darr were Tuesday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Hire, of New Paris. Mrs. Alta Tom was taken to the McDonald hospital in Warsaw Friday night, in a serious condition, but is improvng very nicely. Mr. and Mrs. William Pipp, Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Gregory of Chicago, came Sunday to visit Mrs. Gregory’s mother, Alta Tom, and Mrs. Pipp spent the day with her grandmother, Mary Coble. Millard Laughlin has been sick the past two weeks. Estelle Swartz spent Tuesday in Goshen. ■ Mrs. Jayne Tom Reed has been ill but is able to be out again. MACY SAYS LESS EGG IMPORTS DUE TO LAW As a result of the operation of the Indiana fresh egg law, there has been a decided decrease in the importation from other states of low grade, poor quality eggs, states Thad Macy, president of the State Egg Board, who recently conducted a survey of egg importation from out-of-state markets. The State Egg Board believes this drop in volume of low quality eggs is primarily due to the enactment by the last State Legislature of the Indiana Fresh Egg Law. Under this Act these undergrade eggs can not be sold as “Fresh Eggs’’, but must be sold as unclassified eggs or just eggs. The Indiana Fresh Egg Law provides that all eggs sold within the State as Fresh Eggs must be sold onder Fresh Egg Permits issued by the State Egg Board. This Board establishes a minimum level of quality for an egg to be sold as a Fresh Egg and then has State authority to inspect the eggs sold as Fresh Eggs so that the consumer may be assured of the chance to buy eggs that are really fresh eggs. Fresh egg permits are being issued daily, Macy said. Approximately 100 applications were received recently from Indianapolis stores alone. FINDS FOR PLAINTIFF In the possession of Pauline Hanman against Lewrence 'Stiffler, Judge Sloane found for the plaintiff. Property is in the vicinity of Syracuse.
(i Farm Oddities f /J By Sam Guard l\ 11 #1 y I Radio Commentator 4/ h on |j if The Farmers’ Forum y SOMETIMES a man brings home the wrong bacon. At least that is what happened to Eapl Carlson, a farmer near Blencoe, lowa. He had een experiencing difficulty in getting his hogs across the highway. When Carlson discovered three porkers had been killed by a hit' and run driver, he called a butcher to dress the animals and telephoned a refrigerator plant to reserve space in a cooling room. Then it developed that a neighboring farmer questioned Mr. Carlson about three missing hogs. Carlson counted noses again and discovered that all of his porkers were present. So he delivered the neighbor, not pigs but pork.
• Strange things happen on a farm, and here’s one for the books. Mrs. Albert Ottjes of near Mitchell, Nebraska, has a chicken that for two years laid eggs. Then the chicken started to grow a rooster’s comb and wattles. Now the
• • Sam Guard
fowl struts and crows like a rooster, but, shades of something or other, the tail is like a hen’s. No more does the fowl with the strange physical attributes lay eggs. Mrs. Ottjes has been puzzled for some time. She would like to know whether she has a ben, a rooster, or a whatsit. No doubt it is the latter.
Phone 889 Box 177 A. J. Thibodeaux Watch & Clock Repairing Lake Street, Ist house South of U. B. Church
Mock’s Boat Livery Canoes and Cottages for Rent Welding—Johnson Motors Motor Boats —Row Boats PHONE 504 ROAD 13
Free Hamburgers At Dixie Sandwich Shop q Twelve different names are printed in thi« issue of the JOURNAL. Persons who find the.r name iollowed by the line, “Free Hamburger at Dixie,” should sign this coupon and present it at the Dixie Sandwich Shop before next Friday to receive ONE FREE HAMBURGER. NAME -
Don’t Cough Your Head Off! Get Mentho-Mulsion!
Mentho-Mulsion will stop your cough due to a cold immediately, and rid you of your cough entirely; quicker than any medicine you ever tried, or every cent of the cost will be refunded without question. Mentho-Mulsion is more than an ordinary cough medicine. It was perfected by the dean of pharmacy of a large mid-western university and contains vitamins A and D to build up your cold resistance, and seven soothing, healing ingredients, together with beechwood creosote for penetration. Genuine California
FARMERS MUST LOOK TO DOMESTIC MARKET Since the foreign market is probably gone for the Corn Belt’s agricultural products, Dr. E. C. Young, rural economist of Purdue University, in a recent address before 225 Farm Security Administration workers attending their annual conference at Purdue, stated that Mid-West productnust look to the domestic market for future prosperity. The long-time view of agriculture in the Corn Belt is essentially optimistic, according to Dr. Young. Prosperity of the Corn Belt farm is tied far more closely to domestic industry than to prospect of any improvement In foreign trade. The Corn Belt farmer’s stake in foreign trade is about that of the average citizen. Maximum national prosperity can be reached only with the resumption of normal trade “relations. However, Indiana farmers will prosper largely in relation to the degree of prosperity of the industrial consumer in whose home Indiana products must continue to find their principal market, he concluded. INJUNCTION IS GIVEN The suit of Benjamin Blumberg, Lake Wawasee summer resident, and others, The Security Loan Company, against Henry J. Outcelt and Edith L McCreight, a foreclosure of a chattel mortgage on a 1934 Studebaker automobile in which judgement of $lO5 Is asked, a restraining order issued December 7 was made a permanent injunction by Judge John A. Sloane in circuit court late Saturday.
QUICK RELIEF FROM Symptoms of Distress Arising from STOMACH ULCERS DUE TO EXCESS ACID FrooßookTellsof HomeTreatmentthat Must Help or It Will Cost You Nothing Over one million bottles of the WILLARD TREATMBN T have been sold for relief of symptoms Os distress arising from Stomach and Daodenal Ulcers due to Excess Add — Poor Digestion. Sour or Upset Stomach. Gassiness, Heartburn. Sleeplessness, etc., due to Excess Acid. Sold on 15 days trial i Ask for “Willard's Message" which fully explains this treatment—free—at THORNBURG DRUG COMPANY
fig syrup makes Mentho-Mulsion cling to your irritated membranes as it acts faster, better. MenthoMulsion is safe; and the whole family will like its tangy taste. Keep this remarkable cough medicine on hand ready for instant use at the first sign of a cold or cough. Insist on genuine Mentho-Mulsion. The large silver and green package containing 48 doses for 75tf and 100 doses for $1.25. Mentho-Mulsion is endorsed by your neighbors and guaranteed by leading druggists everywhere.-adv.
