Syracuse-Wawasee Journal, Volume 38, Number 9, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 11 December 1942 — Page 7
FRIDAT, DBC. 11, IMS.
Local News Mr. acd Mrs. Richafti Miller and son, Tommy, of South Bend, spent Sunday abd Monday here with Mrs. Georgia Miller. Glarenee Eby spent last weekend in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Knox K. Stotler.
♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦♦a i KLISKS | : GROCERY & MARKET : # ■ --- ■ - ■ • : Cash Special for Saturday Only : I WHITE BREAD. 3 for . 25c i e • ■ ... : PURE LARD, lb. . . . 16c : : FRESH SAUSAGE, lb. . 29c: : FRESH SIDE, lb. . . . 25c : • All cuts of Beef Steak, lb. 35c • : Beef Rib Boil, lb. . . . 19c : i Beef Roast, lb. ... . 25c : i <4 PHONE 76 ►
I 1 I There’s No Priority On Christmas— I I Give All Family Something Useful I I Gifts for the Home I I Clothes Hamper—Something mothers always want. I I Small Sonora Radio—the whole family will enjoy. ■ ■ Electric Toaster ■"• really a shortage on these. ■ ■ Bathroom Scales-*something everyone needs. H I i Cory Coffee Makers-a pleasure to serve rationed coffee in. ■ H / Hall’s Kitchen Ware-dn Chinese red and blue. ■ I /ok / Cake and Pie Carries. ■ I Electric Popcorn Poppers. For Dad ■ x r Son Syrup Dispensers. Large Roasters—Cannister Sets. Waste Baskets. Pyrex sets, Baker sets, Custard Cup sets. Pyrex Skillets, Double Broil* Fishing Tackle Boxes er, Pie Plates. Pyrex Coffee Pots. Cake Pans, Casseroles. Juice Ex- Rods ““Reels Lines tractor. Electric Mixer. Scissors. Maestro Ware, (inlaid with silver) Nov- F .’ A , f elty Dishes. Small sets of Dishes. Aluminum, small amount left, Tea aS S I Kettle, Covered Pans, Cake Tins. Revere Ware—extra heavy ware. Pocket Knives ■ Many small items to fill your Box or Stocking. I ' ' ' ■ ' . • - ' • « 1 . • < _• 1 i ■ ■ Buy enough house paint to fix things up in the sieds-fast runners ■ H • « Base Ball - Mitts ■ spring-we carry a large line of B a. k et . soft b««. I I - Shoe Ice Skates-Electric Trains Wooden Wagons 110 Osborn Hardware I I Um Phone 6. Syracuse. Ind. fIET I
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Bowser had as their dinner guests Sunday Mrs. Grace Black and Miss Faye Hull, of Ligonier; a>nd Mr. and Mrs. Albert Keller, honoring the birthdays of Mr. Bowser and Mr. Keller. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Workman spent Sunday with Mrs. Eleanor Workman and family.
SYRACUSE - WAWASEB JOURNAL
Red Cross Helps Solve Problems Os Our Recruits Through Its Directors in Camps Red Cross Links Men With Home Washington, D. C.—On the home and military fronts the American Red Cross is turning its focus on the man in uniform. In his behalf, more than 10,000 nurses are being recruited. Volunteers are donating their blood for a huge plasma bank. Red Cross women in chapters throughout the country are making 40,000,000 surgical dressings, and knitting sweaters for men In outlying posts and sailors on patrol. But these are just fragments of the story. In military and naval stations, the Red Cross Is concerning itself with the personal problems of the service man, helping him adjust himself to military life. For the disabled, the Red Cross Is on the job In service hospitals, helping to speed recovery of the sick through a morale-building program. In mobilizing a 2,000,000-man fighting force, the personal problems of the able-bodied man in uniform have in turn become problems of the morale divisions. Red Cross field directors stationed in all camps and reservations have been entrusted with the task of helping to solve these problems.
Speaking in a nation-wide broadcast recently, Chief of Staff Marshall, of the Army, addressed the following words to Red Cross field directors: “When you help straighten out any <Jf the great variety of tangles that human beings seem unable to avoid, you are helping to maintain morale on the home front and on the military front; you are helping us in training for defense.” The disabled man In a service hospital also can look to the Red Cross for help in speeding recovery. Medical-social workers, trained for their specialized assignment, are on duty at Army general and Navy hospitals to aid service physicians, to act as a medium of communication with the families of hospitalized men and to conduct recreational programs for convalescents. The Red Cross provides recreational service for patients in all Army and Navy hospitals. Sixtyfive new hospitals are under construction by the Army, and their recreation buildings are being equipped and staffed by the Red Cross as each one opens. • As part of the Army and Navy safety programs, members of the national Red Cross staff are qualifying instructors in First Aid and Water Safety among the ranks of the enlisted man. < * The number of Army and Navy cases assisted by Red Cross field directors has increased in volume 140 per cent since Selective Service has been In operation. During the past year 126,515 cases Involving active service men h 1 ve been handled In the camps. . The Red Cross recently made available $1,000,000 to meet an emergency need for athletic equip-
ment for the Army and Navy. This need arose when Government appropriations for the purpose became exhausted. < In addition to providing the Army and Navy with an official reservoir of nurses, the Red Cross is cataloging the nation’s medical technologists. Through this program, in which approximately 3,000 technicians have registered, the Army and Navy will select such professional personnel as laboratory workers, deititlans, dental technicians, pharmacists and other categories of trained technologists. Joel Wilt and Samuel P. Searfoss spent Tuesday in Chicago on business. Mrs. Kathryn Bushong is spending the winter in Kendallville with her daughter, Mrs. Landis Pressler. " CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SERVICES “God the Preserver of Man” is the subject of the Lesson-Sermon in all Churches of Christ, Scientist, on Sunday, December 13. The Bible citations include, the following: “But they that wait upon the Lord shall renew their strength; they shall mount up with wings as eagles; they shall run, and not be weary; and they shall walk, and not faint” (Isaiah 40:31). The Lesson-Sermon also includes the following passage from the Christian Science textbook,“Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures” by Mary Baker Eddy: “Whatever it is your duty to do, you can do without harm to yourself” (p. 385).
CHRISTMAS SEALS .... Protect Your Home from Tuberculosis ONEWE Will Convince You It’s the World's Finest Beer Buy the ECONOMICAL q Kj,,/ FuH 32-Oz. QuabtM® kSrt ch icy n oDSXBBEI] J. wmHmbehhsl
