Syracuse-Wawasee Journal, Volume 42, Number 36, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 13 June 1947 — Page 7

Some New Ideas for Making Rugs by Hand F/xap ‘sanj’ W HOME Braided Rug Is Easy handmade rugs— the perfect way to dress up your. home for summer. They’re lovely | and practical in every room—on t the porch, too—and inexpensive to 1 make. If you’ve nfcvcr made a rug before, try . a braided one. You can tgo wrong’ No equipment is needed: you braid the ma-; terial with your own hands. Directions for making braided, hooked. ■ crocheted and other popular rugs are found m our Weekly Newspaper Service Booklet No 94 Send 25 cents (com) for) ••New Ideas for Handmade Rug* to | Weekly Newspaper Service, 243 W. 17th Street. New York. 11. N. Y. Print name. | booklet title and No. 94. Law * \gin' Cosmetics —— In 1770 there was a law against' Using cosmetics in England. The English parliament tuled that any i woman who ‘"got her man " by us- j ing cosjmetics would have her mar-; riage declared null and void—and I she sas thereby liable to be tried for witchcraft. SutfMOBIG ™rstQuenchers /HKh StJosephlA To hold your too** uppers and low- Kfjjf j or* comfortably recure all day—and Fl I •very day. try dontiat» amaung dis- l&J ; covery called STAZE. Not a • m*W Hg powder' BTAZX i» pleasant-to-ure jO i paste. o*4 Me tube at drugget A T7 j today’ Accept no substitutci (T, 9TKTX. h y'aJßkchange to CALOXI for the Zcmug •^ on your smile EycMetf Colox seoefa two weysi 1 Helps remove film... bring out all the natural lustre of yoor •mile. 2 a Special ingredient in Calos encourage* rvgw/xr massage . .. which has a tonic effect oo gums ...helps make them firm and roey. Tone up your smile...with Calos-’ Mto« to /towo* .M-Xsuea i-tartowto. 11J yuan V atoowwcemKto hs.w l.w U-s-me- ——so—J | ' . I I Vm/C '"-to <•«*•! oqtato ato I \ >4 »<*., wilt imam. \ ' ,in! * *"*“* * te "E W,T I — One ou««.e to Black — l *“ 40 " uk ” 6 k* l VojD-.- k”” °* ***«••* «pb>d 1 vy#l B«*x only in 1 ♦ /M ’mot*-waled pKkages W to •nwre lull strength <s2 TSMCco it rtooucn _ .V< < SMIMKU. COW. fTStf*’ MCOWOMTIB *t»i twmnttt t w * - j FREEZERS 1: ; -.-W I t lj J HOME and FARM j Buy Direct from Factory Save SSO to SIOO SPEEDWAY FREEZER MANUFACTURING CO. . 1010 Mton St. - Sj-viwT Qty, Ito. "™ ! > GIRIS! WOMEN! try this If you’re NERVOUS •e CEITMN MTS* M il*atbDo female functional monthly disturbance* make post feel nervous, ixrttable. so weak and tired out—at such thneaf Tb*u do try Lydia X Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound to relieve such symptoms. It’S famous for tbisl Taken regutorly — Pinkham's Compound helps Wuild up ißßliLincwi sudi 1 tress. Also a great stomachic tonlcl mu f.maun'jsis

Lt vgJiMr t KI J £T %- * Hflfi g.. .4 REVNITED AFTER 26 YEARS . . . James Gombarick (right) ended a 26-year search for his daughter, Mrs. Bernice Potter (left) when he greeted her in a Milwaukee railroad station and found he had a grand- : son, Robert. Gombarick lost track at his daughter following a divorce from his first wife in which no provision was made for custody of Bernice, then 26 months old. ■Tjf' ; SOURDOUGHS. 1947 STYLE ... Everything Is an adventure to the young in heart, so these three World War 11 veterans started out on the royal road to romance which they hope will lead them from Scranton. Pa., to Alaska. And. after all, they might strike gold. Making the trip in a 17-year-old panel truck are (left to right) BUI Spencer. Joseph J. O’Brien and Al Drack. Every ÜBO of them is a confirmed optimist. Ba-/ --4 WERmi IB lEwl NEW DAR PRESIDENT INSTALLED . . . Mrs. Roscoe C. O’Byrne ! (right) of Brookville. Ind., has been elected president general of the Daughters of the American Revolution. She succeeds Mrs. J. Y. Talmadge (left) of Athens, Ga., who drapes the president general s sash about Mrs. O’Byrne’s shoulders during instaUation ceremonies held at 1 the 56th annual DAR convention at Constitution halL ' w r Nk ’hr'* - £ I A ’* w 9 m IimKWF» .y a UNITED NATIONS’ HOME TOWN . . . Architects re presen Ung nine nations gathered in Radio City, New York, to take a look at a model of the general architectural scheme far the United Nations’ permanent headquarters. To be constructed on an IS-acre site along the East river in Manhattan, the project includes a 4h-story skyscraper (left) to house the secretariat, and another Itotory structure for general

SYRACUSE-WAWASEE JOURNAL

p WEEKLY NEWS ANALYSIS Agriculture Fund Slash Voted; Truman Signs Greek Aid Bill; ICC Grants Train Fare Boost .. Released by Western Newspaper Union ———— <EDITOB*S NOTE: When •plnloa* arw •x>r«Mo4 in th«*« celanm*. they arw those st Wester* New«r*yer Uotoa** new* aaaly*t* aa4 ato ••••nariiy to this The Rt. Rev. Father Flanagan, founder and bead of Boys’ Town. Nebr., talks with Japanese children at the Church of Oura in Nagasaki. Father Flanagan currently is travelling through Japan to study conditions of the Japanese children and to hold services for American military personnel on the islands.

FARM FUROR: Stormy R rather Possibly the most violent storm of the year, according to the economic and political barometer, is the one which was raised when the bouse appropriations committee I recommended a 32 per cent cut in 1 department of agriculture funds for the coming year. Slashing more than 383 million dollars from the amount asked by

Ca .-qh IT 1 Anderson

the reduction “direcis a sharp cut at the interests of the American farm family and the general welfare.” Anderson said that the “greatest harm” would be to the soil conservation program, the farm price support program and programs designed to help veterans and low income families become better established. The 32 per cent cut would eliminate the Agriculture Adjustment administration by July I. 1948. Currently. the AAA is carrying on its basic program of promoting soil conservatioh on 3.500.000 cooperating farms by paying farmers for following practices intended to increase soil fertility and. hence, to increase production. The proposed fund slash would mean that farmers this year would be paid about 50 per cent of what they previously had been promised. In answering the criticism, the house appropriations committee said that its recommended cuts are “selective" and reasonable —based on actual farm needs. AID BILL: To Stop Reels The 400 million dollar GreekTurkish aid bill, spearhead of the so-called “Truman doctrine.” has been passed by congress and signed into law by the President.

WhaFr the Difference It’s easy to c•bf ■s e the Greek-Turkish aid bill and the general foreign relief bill, also passed by congress. Here are the differences: 1. The aid bill provides 466 million dollars to Greece and Turkey alone U> strengthen those nations against the inroads of Communism. The foreign relief bill earmarks 356 million dollars to stave off starvation and sickness in Austria. Greece. Italy. Fingary, Poland, China and Trieste.

Target of much criticism from certain elements in congress, the measure was opposed principally on the grounds that it represented a national course which eventually

■ — Income Tax Slash Likely for 1948: Knutson

Rep. Harold Knutson (Rep., ! Minn.), original advocate of the “20 j per cent across the board" income : tax reduction plan, is holding to his i contention that congress will vote an income tax cut this year. Further, the chairman of the house ways and means committee “sees no reason” why another slash shouldn't be made in 1948. The Republican program calls for more tax cuts. Knutson declared and he intends to see that they are made.

would render the United Nations meaningless. Mr. Truman, however, defended the plan with the contention that the United States, in extending aid to Greece and Turkey, “is helping to further aims and purposes identical | with those of the United Nations.’’ He added that “we intend to ! make sure that the aid we extend I will benefit all the peoples of | Greece and Turkey, not any partic-; ular group or faction.’’ The bill em- j , powers the President to provide the ’ I Turks and Greeks with financial aid ■ I and military equipment for the pur- ’ I pose of keeping the gates of the | i Near East closed to Communism. TRAVEL PAY: | Train Fares Up To offset increased operating i | costs. Interstate Commerce comi mission authorized an approximate i ' 10 per cent increase in basic pas-: senger fares for 60 railroads operat-' 1 ing east’of the Mississippi and north ■ | of the Ohio and Potomac rivers. The change will boost one-way: i passenger rates from 2.2 to 2.5 J cents a mile in coaches and from * 3.3 to 3.5 cents a miles in sleeping and parlor cars. There will be an ' increase of about 15 per cent in; coach round-trip rates and about' four per cent in Pullman round-trfp fares. In granting the increase. ICC | noted that those railroads which re- 1 j quested the new rates incurred a ■ deficit of 54 million dollars from passenger train operations last i year. HOUSING: Unfounded Hope Popular belief that any substan- i tial reductions in the cost of new ; housing will occur in the near future is not founded on realities. That assertion was made by ‘ James C. Downs Jr., president of | the Real Estate Research corpora- i tion. who explained that besides | being geared to a high national * debt, housing costs, like prices of other hard goods, are directly at-1 fected by the large demand for ■ American capital and production by | other countries. “The housing shortage today is | worse, than a year ago.’’ he said, “and it will continue to grow progressively worse for some time.’’ He pointed out that increased earning power has put a greater number in the market for new i | homes, but at the same time builders are afraid to start new con- < struction because of high costs. The j j theory that prices would drop kept j many persons from buying or build- ’ ing homes last year. Downs said. i POLIO MENACE: i Not Too Bad Although it is yet too early to I know definitely what course the dis- | ease will take this year, the infan-1 tile paralysis situation in this coun- j try appears considerably better j than in 1946, according to public ‘ health service officials. Last year a total of approximately j i 25.000 polio cases marked that twelve month period as the second i worst in history. The worst was 1916 I when 27.363 cases were recorded.

President Truman, the committee opened the floodgates for a deluge of protests from Clinton Anderson, secretary of agriculture. and Democratic congressmen, who claimed they would fight the action right up to next year’s elections. if necessary. Declaring that

He said that prospects of making payments on the national debt will be better if taxes are reduced now than if high tax rates and heavy tax burdens are maintained for the purpose of making a very large payment on the debt in one year. Major task facing the country today, he emphasized, is the “maintenance of jobs, income and well being for the many by preserving and promoting the economic motives and incentives of the few.”

CLASSIFIED DEPARTMENT BUILDING MATERIALS CONCRETE BLOCK MACHINES 200 to | JHO blocks hour, others hand or sower 45 W f 100 hour, brick machines, batch mixer* I any sire, motors and gas engines. MADISON EQUIPMENT CO.. Madis**. Teas. Concrete Block Homes I 24-Page Booklet, Drawings and ‘ I Instructions How to Build. 4" by 6"—51.00 H. C. LIGHTFOOT Civil Engineer Box 73 - Richboro, Pa. BUSINESS & INVEST. OPPOR. I Agents Wanted. Sell personalised napkins. I Appeals to housewives, parties, weddings, etc. Gd. com. Samples, partic. free. Spe- I eialtv pristine Service. Carpentersville. UL DOGS. CATS. PETS. ETC. FOB SALE I Collie and Shepherd puppies. 6-8 weeks. | I males SB.OO. females $5.00: 6-9 months. 1 males SIO.OO. females $3.00; 1-3 yrs., males I $15.00. females $12.50. Many others suitI able for pets. All inquiries must be aci companied with self-addressed, stamped envelope. HARBY REED. Bl«m*n. lad. ; FOR SALE Shepherd and Collie Pups From the Best Heelers and Wateh Dogs. Some trained cattle dots and partly ; i trained. Also terriers, cockers and hounds. , Ervin Stebaae Dog & Stock Farm B. S - - Kaakaana. Wis. NEWFOUNDLAND PUPPIES Registered in A. K. C- ELMER FELLER. ISIO S. Park Ave.. Batesville.' lad. GENUINE ENGLISH SHEPHUKD PUPPIES. guaranteed heelers, watch dogs. Make real companions. BUSSELL WAHL. ROCKPORT. INDIANA _ ELECTRICAL EQUIPMENT NEW Alternating Current 5 to to kilowatt : gasoline powered elect, generating plant. Immed. del./Subject to prior sale. Price FOB Chicago $785. REFINERS DISTRIBI UTING CORP.. 816 Haines St .Cbieago. 111. FARM MACHINERY & EQUIPT. Tractor Umbrellas! Postpaid $7.50. Satis- ! ; faction or money back. Seat attachment tn- | ' eluded. Checks accepted. Order today. Tip- , ten Traeter A Implement Co.. Tipton. Ind. BALERS. New and Used. 1946-44-43 New Holland: 50-T International: Case slicer; Twine and wire. WANT Massev-Harris 13 ft. self-propelled combines. JIM FOSTER. . 310 W. Elm St.. Canton. 111. Phen* 2147. FARMS AND RANCHES J4O ACRE FARM near Shoals. Indiana. 90 acres in bottom. Borders U S. Highway 50. Price $25.0.' per acre. ' BALPH A. KING - Shoals. Indiana 4 ROOM MODERN HOUSE 34 acres. 2 car garage, barn 45x75. G. O. FRIZZELL - North Salem. Ind. — I HELP WANTED—MEM Experienced TRUCK DRIVERS Nationally known company enlarging Beet, needs men between ages of 22 and 50 who are single and free to . travel: permanent i employment, good weekly wages, plus expense allowance; approved G. I. Training. Write for applieatioa to E. G. SHUMAR Aero Mavflower Training School BJ9 Fowler Street Indianapolis. Indiana. ' WANTED: BRICKLAYERS—S4.OO per day I expenses over present Peoria scale of I $2.25 per hour. Big job. Apply S. N. NIELI SEN CO.. % Caterpillar Traeter BnUding KK. East Peoria. Illinois. P. O. Box 968. Phene Peoria $-1710. INSTRUCTION ENGINEERING DRAFTING ; TOOL JIG. FIXTURE. GAUGE AND DIE ' DESIGN. MACHINE AND PRODUCT l DESIGN. I ALGEBRA. GEOMETRY. TRIGONOMETRY. PHYSICS AND MECHANICS. i BEGINNER AND ADVANCE COURSES. I DAY AND EVENING SCHOOL VCTCnfiliC Gl- TRAINING v E I CnARO APPROVED ENTER ANY' TIME. LAIN DRAFTING COLLEGE 6*l N. Delaware - Indianapolis. Ind. 1 LIVESTOCK SEVERAL registered Polled Hereford | cows and calves, heifers and bulls for sale. WILSON CHENOWETH. Shoals. Indiana. FOR SALE AT CAMDEN 10 loads Hereford cattle suitable for grass or feed tot. weight 400 to SOO. sorted evenly ■in carload lots Wilt sell any number. WERTHEntER CATTLE CO. Camden - - - - Indlasa MISCELLANEOUS IRON FRESH SMELL of Sowers into home and clothes, easy. Send for Ironi ettes. SI.OO each to IRONETTES. P. O. Box 479. Providence. R. 1. ■ FOR SALE—Ten hot water radiators. 100 s i and 1255. good condition. DR. H. R. MARKLEY. Portland. Ind. REAL ESTATE—BUS. PROP. LOOK LOOK LOOK FOR SALE I have three beautiful acres of ground lan which is located the following: • 21 Cabins—l 2 4 rooms. 9 1 and 2 rooms, all occupied. • Roller Skating Rink. 60x120. and 200 pairs to Chicago Skates—doing fine business. . • Large Super Market, fully furnishedwith complete stock to merchandise and equipment. / • Storage building. 30x80. rented for ware- ! bouse. • Located on State Route k 45. right at the I edge of Bloomington. Indiana. i • $75,000 makes you the owner of this going set-up. I A REAL INVESTMENT—CaII. Write. Wire JOE CHAMBERS I«£3 W. 2nd St.. Bloominc ten. Ind. PHONE 3J2S !__ JEEDS. PLANTS. ETC. REMOVE TREE STUMPS FOR JUST $1 ! Any size, new or old. roots and all without digging, pulling, chopping, blasting.! U«e MAGIC STUMP REMOVER, safe, scii entific. guaranteed. 4-oz. 'for 36 in. stump* I sl. 8-oz. $1 50. 16-oz. $2.75; big savings on 15-lb. or larger quantities. Postpaid with [check or money order: C O D s accepted. ! ADDRESS LABORATORY DIVISION H. D. CAMPBELL CO.. Reeh*lle 78. 11l WANTED TO BUT ; WANTED: Strong flying barn pigeons—i Will pay at leas: 50c pair. Shipper pay i express. I ANTHONY BROS.. Littlestown. Penaa. — - . U. S. Savings Bonds WNU—J 24—47 Buildaßusinessofyourown DDT and 2,4-D sales and spraying service. Cyano gas materials. Nationally advertised agricultural chemirate at attractive dealer prices. Super phoaphate carload lot* June delivery. SOHWCK FFITUZa SCTVICE, CwgHrik R

SMALL Fgy By jgy RNV6RHOUSEI ■ rMv W 0 CEREAL GIVES MOAE BiEftSY/eeriHE ORIGiMAL KELLOGG'S OXH FLAKES IN THE WHITE, REO, ANO G<<EEN PACKAGE. REGULAR, OR. RIMILy SIZE. ' S f T JHh Sealed Power Piston Rings Restore Power, Save Gas, Save Oil You can make an old engine good as new when it begins to show signs of age! There’s a Sealed } Power Individually Engineered Ring Set specially made for your i car, truck, or tractor engine, whatever the make, model, or cylinder wear condition. See your Sealed Power Franchise Dealer. Save oil, save gas, restore power! Send a postal for illus- P ; trated. informative new / j ' booklet oc 7 ways to save / •■'C7£ J: / oik It’» Jrce and ma ” / 1 save you lots of money, r / | Sealed Power Corp., i Dept. W 6, Muskegon. Mich. INDIVIDUALLY ENGINEERED | —i—gsx DHL JIK wi Yodora fa I 1 checks perspiration odor THE I £ Made with a jact cream base. Yodora I j is actually suothmy to normal skins. | I No harsh chemicals or irritating I ; t salts. Won’t harm skin or clothing, g i | Stays soft and creamy, never gets I | grainy. | TVy gentle Yodor*—/asi the wonderful a f difference' I ■ * *!»«■■, im. swko. am U. S. Savings Bonds L —. Three Best Reasons for Touring Kentucky Ky.. *pea tb* year ruoto. and ■ tbs easiest tour of any Cave la toe district. Always at a temperature of •• degrees—* haunting hidden riv«r M llnris Cave. Ky. "*hi °f* th^i*s M, hBIU, river lowing constantly from an unknown wuree ... for miles, below to* surface. Peopled by that phenomenon of underground life, the eyeless llsh. The Cave boasts the large«t entrance to to* world . . . ZM feet wide and 4M feet ion*. - Diaeovwd by Ploy* Comas, De*. 18. 1917. The bounties of Crystal Cave loom to glittering, faatantte array . . . witboot pause ato without peer. ... One of toe many features of the Crystal Cave most ajpredated by toe tourist. Is th. safety ato to. taeitttr of the trip. Trip* treat 2* minotos to fo*r bean. Address: CENTRAL CAVE OFFICE