Syracuse-Wawasee Journal, Volume 43, Number 22, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 12 March 1948 — Page 6
AROUND TOWN We received a letter from Mr. and Mrs. P. R. Sprague this week, enclosing several orange blossoms —very fragrant too. A clipping from a Florida paper shows the attitude there towards the north. The older people there are still "fighting the civil war."
Specials for FrL-Sat, Mar. 12-13 HOME KILLED AND CURED MEATS We Have A Few Lockers For Rent Plenty Good Beef By The Quarter BIRDS EYE FROZEN MEATS FOODS Home Cured Picnics Get your entry blanks lb. 39c here Home Cured Jowls lb. 35c ] Home Made Bologna ru I Home Smoked Sausage IjX Pork Shoulder Roast b Fresh Bulk Sausage T M m BIG ,-.,1 Z ’10,000.001 mm m X Fresh Neck Bones lb. 25c PEACH / Pig Feet 2 lb. 15c \ / Pork Liver lb. 29c BUTTER —1 lb. Limit 75c NU-MAID OLEO lb. 32' MONARCH COFFEE lb. 50c Simons PURPLE PLUMS No. 2'/> c. 21c Wawasee Lockers & Super Market PHONE 288 PHONE 236 SPRING IS NEAR! Cat Weeds the Easy Way with J yOUI GiMtBEN TR ACTOB Just quick hitch your 30-in., all-steel Sickle bar .... start your Briggs A Straton H. P. engine .... let out the clutch.... and mow high grass and weeds, also fence rows. WHH •-’ / r ! 1 Only $155.00 USE SIMPLICITY IN EVERY SEASON OF THE YEAR Mows lawns, cuts weeds, cultivates, discs, plows, seeds.... and does a doten other helpful garden choree. IT TURNS WORK INTO PLAY WHY NOT SEE IT TODAY? Trade In Your Old Garden Tractor or Power Mower SEB OR CALL Strieby Orchards — S4MS, Bynwoae U 4 Mt Mh « Syracwe
In the newspaper article sent us. it tells of the Confederate flag flying over a fraternity house at the University of Florida, and affairs of the annual rebellion when they "secede" from the Union. Confederate uniforms, flags and the band playing "Dixie" are all a part of the affair. The Northern Indiana Public Service Co., at the request of the
SYBACVSE-WAW ASEE JOITtNAL, Syracuse, Ind.
town board, has prepared a blue print of an improved lighting system for the town. During the 1930’s the street lighting system here was cut back in order to reduce expenses, and it has remained so until the present time. The new plan would put in larger bulbs, change location of street lights to give better illumination, add some lights, and change some of the lights on the Main streets to a new type bulb. All of which will gj-ve the town better streetligTrti—and, of course cost more. The proposal will be considered by the town board at a later meeting. Any change made by the town! in parking laws is done so in the belief that it will give more park- : ing space to more people. At the last town board meeting, not a person (except the board) was present to advise on parking difficulties. e The lowest prices in town can ‘ be found advertised In The Journal. Read ’em and save your dough! This is the time of year for! merchants and home owners to paint up and fix up. Some new store fronts will be added to Syracuse business firms this spring. The town street employees have! also started hauling off trash and other eye-sores along and on streets and alleys.
1 I I s I Repaid Rebuild! | Bring Your Kitchen | Up-To-Date I Three Years to Pay | See our display of Modern Kitchen Cabinets, ami find how g easily you can have a Kitchen to be proud of! 3 James E. Connolly SYRACUSE, INDIANA s d ’em Now it’s easy to give your chicks the milk nutrients they need for rapid growth and feathering. Put them on StockGro right from the start. Just open a container and let chicks eat all the Stock-Gro they want—no messy mixing, no waste, no flies. For the first few weeks chicks require extra protein of high nutritional value. This year feed Free Choice Stock-Gro to supply them lactalbumen, a superior protein, so easy to digest and assimilate. Ceataia* ia easy ta >»«"- Mak., an Maal .. . STDCK-BROj Aik Us About STOCK-GRO Syracuse Hatchery SYRACUSE, INDIANA
LOCALNEWS A son. Donald Phillip, was born to Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Wagner, of Syracuse Monday at Goshen hospital. A daughter. Carolyn Sue was born to Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Thompson, of Syracuse, in the Brethren hospital at Bremen. Tuesday. March 9. The infant weighed 8 pounds and one ounce. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Snyder and Mr and Mrs. George W. Mellinger. returned home March 4th. They spent a very pleasant winter In Florida. Dr. and Mrs. Robert H. Riddle and children spent Friday evening with Mr. and Mrs. George Mellinger. Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Lung and daughter. Diana. Mr. and Mrs Roy Brown and Miss Lydia Mellinger were Sunday evening callers. Mrs. Adah Miller. Mrs. John Sparling and Mrs. Nelson Blough were recent guests of Mrs. Dorothy Harris in Nappanee .Mr. and Mrs. Roy Clayton, of Detroit. Mich., spent Thursday here In the home of the former’s brother. Eston Clayton and family. Mrs. J. W. Jones was removed Sunday from the Goshen hospital to her home here following an appendicitis operation last week
All of our spring coats and hats for boys and girls are now in. Shop early and get the choice of the lot. Lay-away until Easter if you wish. The Tot Shop. ORDIN ANCE NO. 384 An ordinance regulating traffic,, parking and use of certain designated streets in the Town of Syracuse, Indiana, and repealing all other ordinances or sections of ordinances in conflict herewith. Be it ordained by the Board of Town Trustees of the Incorporated Town of Syracuse. Kosciusko County, in the State of Indiana, as follows: SECTION I That when appropriate signs shall have been erected after the passage of this ordinance it shall be unlawful (a) To park any motor vehicle for more than two (2) continuous hours at any one time between the hours of 8:00 A M. and 6:00 P.M. on week days and between the hours of 8:00 A.M. and 9:00 P.M. on Saturdays on Main street of said town from the intersection of Main St. and Harrison St. (the Library) westward to the intersection of Main St.. Mill St. and Frazier Ave. (the Fire Station) and on Huntington St. from the intersection of Huntington St. and Washington St. , running southward to the intersection of Huntington St. and Pearl St. (b) The north side of Main St. from the alley between the Grade School Building and the U S. Post Office running westward to the intersection of Main and Huntington Sts. is hereby established as a fifteen (15) minute parking zone. Two parking spaces so marked are established as fifteen (15) minute zones in the center of the half block on the west side of Huntington St. between Main St. and the first alley north. Two parking spaces so marked are established as fifteen (lo) minute zones of the half block on the east side of Huntington St. between Main St. and the first alley south. Two parking spaces so marked are established as fifteen (15) minute tones on the east side of . Huntington St. between Pearl St. and the first alley north thereof and two parking spaces so marked are established on the south side of Main Street adjacent on the east to the alley between Harrison and Huntington Streets. (c) The regulations set out in sub-paragraphs (a) and (b) above shall not apply to Sunday parking. SECTION II (a) Parking on the north side of Main St. tn the Town of Syracuse from the intersection of Harrison St. and Main St. westward to the intersection of Main St.. Mill St. and Frazier Ave. shall be diagonal parking and all other parking throughout the area described in Section I of this ordinance shall be parallel parking. (b) There shall be no parking on the east side of Huntington St. between the intersection of Huntington St. and Washington St. and the first alley south thereof, nor any parking on the south side of Washington St. between Harrison and Huntington Sts. SECTION 111 (a) Fraaier Ave. from the Fire Station to the intersection of Main and Pearl Sts. is hereby designated a fire lane, all parking along said lane to be parallel only and no parking to be permitted fifteen (15) feet of the said intersection of said Huntington and Pearl Sts. SECTION IV (a) No ”U" turns or double parking shall be permitted at any place described in Sections I. Il and 111 of this Ordinance. (b) Parking on the sidewalk at the entranee of all Service Stations within the Town of Syracuse is hereby prohibitI ed. SECTION V Any person or persons violating any one or more of the provisions of this ordinance shall be guilty of a misdemeanor and fined not less than One Dollar (11.00) nor more than Ten Dollars (810.00) for any one offense. SECTION VI This Ordinance shall take effect and be tn full force from and after its passage on April 8, 1948.
DOUBLE FUNERAL FOR FORMER SYRACUSIi MEN Double funeral services was held last Sunday from th<» Lagrange, Ind., Baptist chur:h for Forrest A. Weaver, 59, of Lagrange, formerly of Syracuse, who died of a heart attack at his; home on Thursday morning, and his son, Forrest A. Weaver, Jr., a navy radioman who was killed in action on July 25, 194:L over Munday. Surviving are his wife, a son, Leslie, Westerville, Ohio; five daughters, Mrs. Jay Renn berger. of Larwill. Ind.; Mrs. Victor Hildebrand, Elyria. Ind.. Mui. Raymond Grinold. Norwalk Mrs. Charles Benner. Wellington and Mrs. Phyllis Giesel, Lat* range, a brother, John Weaver, <»! Mishawaka, Ind.; and two sister's, Mrs. Henrietta Hire, of Syracuse and Mrs. Leona Krites, of Mina, North Dakota. On learning of his ’ather’s death, Leslie Weaver, of Westerville. contacted authoritiei at the army depot in Columbus, where the body of young Weater had arrived from overseas. Special permission was granted to bring the body by Army ambulsnce in time for the double service. Rev. Walter Young, pistor of the Baptist church was assisted i in the service by the Rev Milton Andrews, pastor of the LaGrange Methodist church, who was a chaplln during the war. Burial was made in LaGrange cemetery. > Mr. and Mrs. Bill Darr xnd Mr. and Mrs Lester Darr went to Indianapolis. Sunday and brought home Danny Bill, two months old, who had been a patient for ten days in Riley hospital tMre.
Summer Is j Not Far Off i *yi ‘ : Screening Is Still A C r ’ t ’ ca l Material WE NOW HAVE A STOCK OF SCREEN, SCRJ!JBN DOORS and COMBINATION STORM and SCREEN DOORS W 69 SI6H OF 6000 LUMBER — M ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■MH ■■■■■■«Ml■■■■■ IfwarpimiiE v*T PItOTHXTION NOW WILL SAVE liOE COSTLY REPAIR BILLS LATER Great Western's Golden West House Paint Defieswind rain hail, ?nd snow, bemuse it is composed of tne very best ingredients. Produces a long -wearing, nonfading finish. It’& Made lieuer'‘ OKEY PAIIIT & WALLPAPER STORE Phone 20.1 • SYRACUSE. INDIANA
Friday, March 12, 1948.
Mr. and Mrs. Duane Bauer and son, of Michigan City, Ind., spent last week end here with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. S. A. Bauer and Mr. and Mrs. M. E. Dillen. Mr. and Mrs. John Bryan have moved to Ligonier. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Snyder, Mr. and Mrs. Tom Hufty, Mr. and Mrs. John Beck and Dr. and Mrs. Frank Kuhn enjoyed a pot luck dinner with Mrs. Elnora Colwell, at Oklawaha, Florida, Sqnday, Feb. 29. Mr. and Mrs. Perry Sprague, Mrs. Geo. Mellinger and Mr. and Mrs. Ben Archer were afternoon callers. The temperature was 83 degrees In the shade. More new cottons coming In all the time. Also some beautiful new hats in this week at LaPetite Shoppe. F. REINBOLD . Baby Pictures in Home Family Groups Weddings PHONE 106 For Apopintment SYRACUSE, IND. CRANE WORK DITCHING BASEMENT DIGGING 7~ STEEL ERECTING BULLDOZING Phone New Paris 2114 or 214 WHETTEN BROS. Rl, SYRACUSE. IND.
