Syracuse-Wawasee Journal, Volume 39, Number 45, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 1 September 1944 — Page 2

Syracuse-WawasQG Journal W|th Which Is Combined The Syracuse News The Only Paper Published in the Syracuse-Wawasee Lake District. A legal paper for all Kosciusko County, Township and Legal notices. Published Every Friday Entered as Second Class Matter at the Postofflce at Syracuse, Ind., under act of Congress of March 3, 1879. Per Year s!.&<* —in Advance. J. B. Cox, Publisher Friday, Sept. 1, 1«4. 25 Years Ago,,, From the Files of The Journal SEPT. 4, 191». Preparations are complete for the Home Coming Day next Wednesday, Sept. 10th. An attractive program has been arranged by the committee. Tnere will be the usual attractions running during the day, band concerts, merry-go-round, nigger baby stands, cane stands, side shows, etc. The members of the Lutheran church had a farewell party for Rev. Engers and his family Monday evening. Mrs. C. M. Gordy and granddaughter, Evelyn, spent Sunday and Labor Day in Elkhart. Mrs. Perry Foster is visiting in Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. O W. Christie, of Ligonier, have been spending some time with her mother, Mrs. M. A. Benner, who is ill. The Wednesday Afternoon club held the first meeting of the year yesterday in the home of Mrs. Sol Miller. Court Slabaugh comes new to our schools this year. He has taught in Cromwell high school several years. He will have charge of the basketball team and will teach mathematics and agriculture. Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Bishop and son, Irving, left this week for a trip through the east. S. S. Class Elects The Leaders Class of the U. B. church met Aug. 23rd, at home of Mrs. Emma Bushong. Mrs. George Colwell president. A business meeting was held in which election of officees sesulted in the following: Pres.—Mrs. J. C. Bailey. Vice.-Pres.—Mrs. Wm. Harvey. Secy.-treas.—Mrs Wm. Geiger. There was a good attendance. Mrs. Maud Devault and Mrs. Merton Meredith were guests. Several contests were enjoyed and the hostess refreshsents. Willys VP builds the i ■ economical Jeep ✓ Light Truck ✓ Parsenger Car ✓ light Tractor ✓ Power Moot

FLOUR SPECIAL! ■ Ml SAVE |y 8 with this coupon when you buy o 25-lb. bog of fillsburq's Best flour sent' ch pa« e -'— 1,.. --^! > -- j r’wnl PILLSBURY FLOUR MILLS COMPANY*MINNEAPOLIS

CHICAGO MARKETS The range of cattle quotations is spreading out, yet the average cost of killing steers at Chicago is hovering around the sl6 mark. Currently, a $7 per cwt. margin prevails between the average cost bf common offerings and choice to prime stock:. Never in trade history has the gap between canner and strictly choice cows been as wide as now prevails. Following are extreme ranges In the cattle trade: Killer steers, $9 to $18.35; heifers, $8.50 to $17.50; cows, $4.75 to $13.50; bulls, $7.50 to $13.50. Feast and famine runs explain the great extension in values. Some stock, particularly cows in the lower registers are being purchased so cheap that processors can afford to pass up government subsidy payments. Starvation runs of hogs ,are arriving all over the country. Offerings are cleared as quickly as they can be sorted and given the proper “fill.” A directive has thus become effective wherein one third of the pork product must be set aside for military and other war use. With small receipts in prospect for some time & storage stocks steadily shrinking, it looks like civilians will be on scant rations for the next few months. Scattered shipments of range lambs are reaching Chicago. The supply of feeders, however, is very small. Quality of fat western lambs is far superior to that of natives, making the former sell around 50c higher than the lat- ! ter. Feeder lambs are nominally quoted as high as $13.50 on the local market. Elsewhere, $13.25 is being paid freely for strong weight blackfaces. CARD OF THANKS We wish to extend our appreciation and thanks for all the expressions of sympathy and the lovely flowers and offerings of kindness during our great bereavement. —Mrs. J. A. Carwile and family. WAR BONDS Signal Corps Photo U. S. Task force men at Rendova have learned to “come and get it*’ under any and all conditions. They have learned about concentrated rations, dehydrated vegetables, and maybe they dream of steaks—but they fight on. They buy War Bonds, do you? Buy more and hold ’em! U. S. Trtasssry Department

Something to Crow About

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Republicans Will Win! The Republicans will win in ’44 because the people of this nation are finally awakened to the urgent need of a change in Washington. They now realize individually, that the time-worn phrase, “Constitutional government” is the antithesis of the New Deal policy that favors government by men rather than government by law; regulation of public and private affairs by executive orders and fantastically conceived “directives" rather than by congressional enactments; and irresponsible expenditures of unlimited public funds by impractical and visionary executives who ignore or contravene statute requirements and the will of the people. Too, the majority of Americans are now agreed that no man is indispensable, whether he be the chief executive or one of his palace guard appointees —Andrew F. Schoeppel, Governor of Kansas. MOT MUCH LEFT FOR SUPPORT OF NEW DEAL From the way legitimate labor, farmers, industrialists, small business men such as grocers, meat market operators, etc., are deserttag the Roosevelt support for a fourth term it appears that the only support the New Deal can count on now'is the CIO radical labor movement which is an outgrowth of the New Deal and fathered and mothered by Franklin D. and Eleanor Roosevelt, and the communists. Outside these two organizations and the New Deal payrollers, several million strong, there seems to be no real support left for the New Deal. But—so far as financial aid is concerned—the CIO will, if necessary, furnish millions In cash and if the purchasing of votes by New Dealers can be continued as in the past this may prove to catch more suckers, but in the end with the concerted opposition to be found everywhere this year we are certain that after the November election the New Deal will be a dead pigeon.—Quincy, Hl., Record. MOCK BOAT LIVERY ACETYLENE WELDING LAKE WAWASEE South Side PHONE 504 Road 18 INSURANCE automobile FIRE, WIND STORM, BURGLAR, HEALTH AND : ACCIDENT j WAWASEE INSURANCE | AGENCY I Geo. L. Xanders G. Laucks Xanders • SYRACUSE, INDIANA « DEAD ANIMALS REMOVED Horses - Cattle - Hogs - Sheep Phone: Milford 1« Cromwell 8 Warsaw 188 Reverse Charges INDIANA RENDERING CO Formerly Globe Rendering Co. DEAD ANIMALS REMOVED ATHLETES FOOT 6ERM HOW TO KILL, rr The rerm scows dowdy. To kfll ikjroy must tor itchy, sweaty or smelly feeL 38c today at Thornburg Drug Co.

Politics is Everyday Business oi Woman Voter Politics is your every day busi- . ness—that is the way Mrs. Charles W. Weis, Jr., an assistant campaign director of women’s activities in behalf of the Dewey-Bricker ticket, sums up the 1944 woman voter s responsibility. Mrs. Weis practices what she preaches. Hard at work in the New York Republican Campaign Headquarters, Mrs. Weis makes every visitor, and every one of her thousands of correspondents the country over, sense her down-to-earth evaluation of politics “as every-day business.” She’s New York State’s National Committeewoman. She’ll tell you most convincingly of Governor Dewey’s notable qualifications for the presidency; likewise she will de scribe Governor Bricker’s fitness for the vice presidency. But at the same time, she’ll press upon you the urgency for being interested in politics, in knowing and talking about issues, about being a 100 percent voting citizen. “American women have the greatest challenge in all history in this election,” says Mrs. Weis, a personable mother of three, the eldest of whom is in the air corps overseas. “We cannot afford to be passive, or indifferent to passing events such as the threat of the Roosevelt-New Deal-CIO to paralyze America. Women must make politics an every day business, and keep it healthy and sound.” Planless Planners GLIMPSES “Here it comes—there it goes” can be said of the machinery desperately, needed by American farmers if they are to keep up the burden of feeding America, her allies, and the conquered nations. The optimistic statement to the Senate that American farmers are “seeing” the farm machinery they need brought forth the information that most of the machinery “seen” by North Dakota farmers is going past them on the way to Canada, Russia, New Zealand, Australia, England and Africa. One North Dakota farmer told of seeing six carloads of combines and three tractors passing his farm by rail in one week bound for Canada, while the entire northwest is being forced to curtail food production by lack of farm implements. EGGS ON THE MARCH * This is the saga of 108,000 dozen eggs—and a New Deal bureau. Back last May, the War Food Administration purchased the eggs in Minnesota, ostensibly for war purposes. The eggs were shipped to Cleveland, apparently to be sent into dry warehouse storage. But the eggs were transferred to an egg-breaking establishment in Missouri. (No cracks, please). From there, the eggs (still not broken) were shipped to Omaha, and from thence back to St Paul, from whence they had departed several months before. They were sent from St. Paul to Chicago, where the Illinois Department of Agriculture caught up with them, decided something ought to be done about these eggs. They had become bad eggs, so the Illinois department official placed a seizure order against them. At last reports, the state officials were awaiting Washington approval to do away with these eggs. It only cost $4,200 in freight charges to send the eggs on their cross-country joyride. THE CRYSTAL BALL “In order to preserve their independence the people must not let our rulers load them with perpetual debt. . . . “We must make our choice between economy and liberty, or profusion and servitude. ... A departure from principle in one instance becomes a precedent for a second; that second for a third; and so on, till the bulk of the society is reduced to be mere automatons of misery. . . . The fore horse of this frightful team is public debt. Taxation follows that, and in its train wretchedness and oppression. ...” So wrote Thomas Jefferson in a letter to Samuel Kerchival in 1816.

• Salem 4) Quite a few from here attended the memorial service for C >l. Roy Auer, at the Christian chui ;h Sunday afternoon. ' Mike Kuneff and family, Em< ry Guy and wife, spent Sunday w th Arnold LeCount and Jen de Smith. Mrs. Sara Mock called at he Smith and LeCount home Tuas-' day. Nelson Morehouse and fan ily returned to their home in hew Jersey Tuesday. MILK J) I/w miiMsi FATTENING PIGS AND HOGS FC 1 MARKET 1. Worm if necessary at 10 to 12 ' eeks. 2. Self-feed all pigs on home graii plus good protein supplement. 3. Have plenty of water available nthin 10 feet of feed trough at ail t nes. 4. Put hogs on good pasture in s jason. 5. Prevent disease and parasites by using land on which no hogs rangec previous seasons. / 6. Provide adequate shelter. 7. Dip or spray to prevent mangt. 8. Treat for lice. 9. Fence off running streams whic i may bring disease from another fart u BOARS 10. Keep boars by themselves, f. 11. Hand breed in May and Novem er. 12. Carefully record breeding daf is. 13. Provide shelter, exercise 10l and plenty of water. 14. Do not over-feed. About 4 6 lbs. a day of regular sow ration a td cut down if boars get too fat. aikttiPmiiiliuiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiin num j, = = I PINE I I DRY I 1 I CLEANING I I- —— i ‘ 1 IM. E. RAPP I | PHONE 90 | | SYRACUSE IH l | | CLEANED | gmiiiiiii' *»'*.•».iiHitiiHiiii'iiHiiiiiiiiiiiii m. 'nnu SKfi®Bß» I JE I 1 S TOOLS DIES EXPERIMENTAL GENERAL MACHINE WORK ACETYLENE WELDING Lockheed Engineering Co. Phone RB3OIO

- B:—. LABOR DAY P° r Flavor.., For Freshness don’t say Bread. Sa/tf M&u/m

CAUGHT LARGE FISH. Charles Thomas, of Goshen, while vacationing with his family at Lake Wawasee, had the pleasure of catching one of the largest blue gills ever taken here. Ths fish measured 12 Inches In length, and weighed pounds. The Household Almanac page suggests you put fish in the menu and gives recipes and marketing instructions, too; books of interest to Homemakers are reviewed in this issue, and a helpful article on kitchen range care can be found in The American Weekly, the magazine distributed with next week’s Sunday Chicago Her-ald-American. IF YOU’VE NEVER had moth damage, be thankful. If you want to be sure you’ll never have moth damage, use Mirra Moth Immunizer. — Thornburg Drug Co. COMPLETE LAUNDRY SERVICE SAN -A- TEX LAUNDRY PHONE 475 GOSHEN

XZ THROUGH THIS BANK ff n lu Any cut we could help you to make in your mortgage costs would aid tt you in your fight against rising living costs. In some cases, we have been able to write new mortgages which gave longer time, made installments J smaller, reduced interest charges. We might be able to do the same for you. Have a confidential talk s with us about this. MEMBER F. D. I. C. The State Bank of Syracuse Syracuse, Indiana

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HOFFBRAU ALE AND BEER —— ,y, jV r

CATCHES BIG BASS John Hlnderer, son of Mr. and Mrs. Russell Hinderer, caught a 3% lb. small mouth bass Tuesday in Syracuse lake. RESISTS BORER Pflsle, Hybrids ora “tokranf' to com borers, and they resist them better. In areas in Ohio where the corn borer is thickest the demand for Pfister’s is the greatest | ... 32 TIMES as many acres planted in Pfister’s Hybrids as six years ago! Hi ijfIMR Genuine Pfister Hybrids are sold only by Qi .1 ud dealers. Ask to see the dealer's authorisation card. Burton Howe SYRACUSE. INDIANA