Syracuse-Wawasee Journal, Volume 43, Number 22, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 12 March 1948 — Page 7
Grandma SPEARIN'... VW SAVIN’ for a rainy day is swell—if it don’t stop you from enjoyin the sunny ones. IS mid Nonas Madriffla. Ky.» JU' LILLIE MAE says to me: “Grannie. how kin I be sure of gettin’ a top quality margarine?” And I answers her in jes two words. “Table-Grade.’’ Yep. Nu-Maid Table- Grade Margarine is fine as can be. Made specially fer the table. BEN TUMBLEWEED, travelln’ man says, you kin jes’ about tell what kind of a woman will come to the front door of a farm house by lookin at the front yard flowers and shrubbery.* VC will be paid updn publication to the first contributor of each accepted saying or idea for "Grandma Speakin’.” Address Nu-Maid Margarine. Cincinnati 2, Ohio. Tn these days of inflation and high-cost-of-living, wouldn’t you like to have yellow margarine at the same price as white margarine? Write your Congressmen and ask their help. SefftST =c a Miserable with coughs from colds or smoking ... stuff.' hose? Here’s relief — foM . up and oicnrn.’ Famous Smith Brothers med ration goe» daan to esse tickle, soot he irritated mem branes. Menthol vapors go up to brimcool comfort. Smith Brothers are richei in menthol— plat exei-uuire Smith Brother, nwdwatum. Look for “Trade "and "Mark co orange box *TIU ONLY gx SMITH BROTHERS G MENTHOL ft * COUGH OWOPS MIBICAII* I of ■ J, I If 'J is GLASS OF ■ WATER I F'gWA FiRSr fsj THIN& ■ PILES TROUBLE? For Quick Relief OONT DKLAY ANY 1ONGEB: New. a doctor's formula you can use at home to relieve diet rose! ng discomfort of pula— Itch —irritation duo to pUea. Tends to soften and shrink swelling. I se thia proven doctor's formula You'll he amaaed at Its speedy action relief. Ask your druggist today for Thornton * Minor a Rectal Otatmeat oe Suppodtorloa. Follow label taetrvcUoaa For sale a* all drug sterna I" KELLOGG’S POWDER for th* I prompt relief of Asthma sad Hay I Fever. 2S coats and one dollar at your I drwquists. but if unavailable we pre- I pay for regular price and his name. I Warner’s Remedy Co. Warren, Pa I
Released by WNU Features. Inflationary Trends IT IS NOT LABOR with its continued increased wage demands; industry seeking exorbitant profits; transportation in its efforts to meet increasing costs; the distributing agencies, wholesale or retail, adding to their “mark ups” on merchandise or the farmers demanding increased prices for food products I that are fundamentally responsible for the inflation for which we are paying. TTie actual culprit, at whose door we can lay the blame for it all. is the legislative and administrative branches of the federal government The cause is the deficit government financing policy followed by congress and the executive branch W of government from f I 1931 to 1946. Today .* we are paying, in Yj the form of devalM R X’. vs ued money, not onl - for the war ex ’ fit pense but for all VvFlfll those boondoggling costs of the depression years. * To have the government operate on a deficit basis meant the continuous expansiotyof our volume of printing press currency. Today we have in circulation close to 169 billion of such currency as against about 17 billion of real dollar value currency of 1939. All of the expenditures of the boondoggling and war years had to be paid for at the time the expenditures were made. The people of the United States had to pay either then or later. To avoid a howl from the people because of Increased taxes, congress and the administration resorted to the deceptive method of creating more money with which to pay the bills. The government called them bonds. They were placed with the banks and the banks turned those bonds into bank note — printing press — money. It is bank note—printing press—money which is the underlying cause of today's inflation. It is authorized government currency and. like all of our money today, has nothing back of it other than the government’s promise to pay. Today we have in circulation close to 160 billion in currency, none of it having any intrinsic value, as compared with about 17 billion in 1931, all of which was backed by gold or silver, and any part of which could be exchanged by the holder for the bullion with which it was backed. From 1931 to 1946 the government deficits amounted to (6.000, as an average, for each consumer (family) unit in the nation. All of it was covered by bogus money, in exchange for which the holder could get other bogus money, with constantly declining values. Prices are not up. It is the value of our printing press dollars that is down. It takes more and more of our cheap dollars to buy what we are accustomed to for our needs. For that cheapening of our money congress and the administrative branch are responsible. F. A. Harper, recognized as a reliable and conservative economist, gives 224 billion dollars as the total lot the deficits of the federal government from 1931 to 1946. That represents what congress and the administration spent over and above what was collected during that period. . . . The bill was paid with printing press money. Now we must redeem that printing press money, and pay the high prices the issuing of that money has brought upon us. We are paying twice for what we should have paid only once. The present administration, or the present congress, is doing all too little to remedy the condition. The way to stop inflation is to save every excess dollar of government spending and retire that exeess currency. That would cure the disease from which we are suffering. That, and that only, can save us from much more inflation. Government economy is the one road to honest, full value, money. • • .• People of California do not admit there can be such a thing as clouds in a California sky. Clouds to them are but a “high fog.” When that fog settles down to the ground, it is a good time to keep the car in the garage. More than two million federal civilian employees scattered about over the nation caa mean from six to eight million votes next November. • • • GENERAL GRANT IS BETTER KNOWN in history as a weak president than as a great soldier. General Eisenhower will be known in history as a great soldier and a worthy and patriotic American. He might have suffered the fate of General Grant. • • • We may think no one in Russia is dumb enough to believe the lies that are told about America, but, silly as they seem to us, seme of the Russians win believe.
-■-■'i .yn ■ |_SXAKSg I flg ■ -•> ~ nln ■ LJ] Sunday school Lwkm rl Bf 18HIE B. MEWTtM, fl-fl. SCRIPTURE: Acts »:17-38; Ephesians ’ DEVOTIONAL READING: Phillpplans 4:4-9. Christian Character Lesson for March 14, 1948 WHO is the most valuable person in your community? In many communities it has come to be the custom to select the Man of the Year or the WornSan of the Year, the idea usually being to name the person, through a process j of sampling of pub-1 lie opinion, who has I rendered the out-1 standing service of j the year. Sunday’s lesson is a dramatic scene i out of the long ago, 1 Dr. Newton P ictu ™« « I mumty $ tribute to a truly great man, the apostle Paul. Read Acts 20:17-38. and you will have the story. • • • LOVED AND HONORED THE first impression I get from this story is the fact that these people of Ephesus loved Paul. They loved him enough to lay aside lheir work and hasten to the nearby seaport of Miletus to see him for the last time, and to bow down in his presence and honor him. Why did they thus love Paul?< Because he had told them about God. You need but read again the record of Paul’s ministry in that important city of Ephesus to be reminded of how greatly he had served them in the name of Jesus. Loved and honored! What a tribute to the worth of Christian character! Wouldn’t you appreciate the tribute which they paid Paul as the goal out yonder to which you strive? Boys and girls of today may thus be' hdhored tomorrow, if they will live for Jesus as Paul did. • • • THE POWER OF RIGHT LIVING PAUL not only told the Ephesians how* to live, but illustrated day by day in his own life what he preached to them. The most eloquent sermons are not spoken, but lived. “What you are speaks so loudly I cap’t hear what you say.” The boy and man who plays the game straight are putting into practice what the teacher and preacher proclaims on Sunday. The power of right living will win its way today. Just as it did in the long ago when Paul witnessed for Jesus in Ephesus, v It was not easy to five for Christ in Ephesus, nor is it easy to live for him in Chicago or Los Angeles or Boston or Miami, but it is the one way to ultimately impress the world of the reality of Christianity. • • • PAUL’S CONSUMING PASSION WE ARE what we are becoming, and never was this axiom of life more powerfully illustrated than in the case bf Paul. “I press on toward the goal for the prize of the upward call of God in Christ Jesus.” Philippialis 3:14. And in Ephesians 5:6-21. Paul reviews the qualities of conduct which produce worthwhile character, admonishing all Christians to strive for these qualities. “I live, yet not I, Christ Uveth in me,” is another of Paul’s watchwords, and still again, “I can do all things through Christ, who strengthened me.” It was the consuming passion of his life to embody the teachings of Christ in his words and in his works. [lt is conceivable that the people at I Ephesus had come to see Christ in I the life of Paul, and that his daily I ministry in their midst convinced :them that God was in Christ reconciling the world unto himself. • • • WHAT AM 1 WORTH? THE question then emerges. What am I worth to my community? When I come to the end of the journey, will the people who know me best honor and love me for what I have done? I caa see the people of Ephesus bowing ou the dock at Miletus, kissing this weary old servant of the Lord. It is a beautiful scene. This tribute meant more to Paul than ali the gold of Ephesus would have meant. It was compensation 'of abiding worth to him. And what Is vastly more important, it was glory to Gel which must have evoke? the praise of the angels about the great White Throne. • • • fCogyngkr by tSe fareraatioaal Cruac it s W Rrligimu Education on behalf of 40 •. Protestant denominationa. Released Sy i WNU Frunirrr) On God's Word . John Wycliffe, in the introduction to his translation of the Bible into English in 1380, wrote as follows: “When the teachings of the Bible are generally accepted acted on. then shall we have a government of. for and by the people.” Four hundred years later the American republic was established—the first great democracy—and it was successful because the Constitution and the Bill of Rights wen founded on God’s Word.
SYRACUSE-WAWASEE JOURNAL
EJ Seventh Inning H Stretch Fit By FERNAUBLE THE stadium was filled to capacity for the opening game and a swelling chorus of voices filled the air. The sun was a brilliant ball in a sky of blue. But Johnny Longstreet sat hunched in the dugout, his huge hands hanging loosely between his knees. The banter of his teammates was a meaningless babel to him. ”1 wonder how she is by now.” he ; thought miserably. His blue eyes | darkened in despair as he thought! of the interminable afternoon be- ’ fore him. He groaned and glanced I over at Corky Blanton. It was too bad that Chuck Leigh-' ton had sprained an ankleTloc said j ■ i — he’d be back in ; 016 Uneup by •Ml II UTS next week, but Fiction next week was too late and i Corky was depending on Johnny to ■ pitch this opening game. I “How’s it going. Johnny?” Corky (dropped down on the bench beside him and laid a comforting hand on his knee. "Gosh, Corky, I don’t know. Tbe Doc said she'd be all right, but I wish to Heaven I could be there with her." i Hw knuckles u bitened as be clenched I bis hands and Corky watched bint J with troubled eyes. As Johnny took the mound for the top half of the first inning, a cheer rose from the stands. His heart warmed at the sound and some of i the sag lifted from his shoulders. He I looked at Windy Norton, who was catching, and nodded as he caught (the signal. As he started his windj up. a fleeting vision of Milly’s I scared little face crossed his mind. |He knew when the ball left his j hand, it was a stinker. Sure enough, | Bill Lofton, the big Pirate shortstop, i laid on it for a three-base hit A ! groan went up from the crowd. I He got hold of himself and fanned [ the next three men up. leaving Bill I Lofton stranded on third. As he faced the first man up in the second inning. Johnny’s arm felt like lead. “If I just knew how she was,” he thought “If I just knew she was all right” i He tried desperately to keep his I mind on the game, to keep from thinking about Milly, but, in spite of l himself, he failed miserably. He simply couldn’t keep her out of his I mind. IT HAPPENED in the sixth inning. He walked the first man and the | next batter up hit for a single, putting a man on first and third. A sacrifice hit brought in the first run of the game for the Pirates. As the seventh inning came up, and the boys trotted out to their positions. Corky turned impatiently as someone tapped him on the shoulder. He took the note handed to him. His face spread into a huge grin and he ran out to the mound. ’Well” Johnny thought, “here’s Johnny’s arm felt like lead. where I get yanked and I don’t blame him. Any rookie pitcher ! could toss rings around me today.” | But Corky simply handed Johnny the paper. Johnny read it and let out a whoop. The fans watched in I bewilderment as they saw Johnny ■ go into a dance. Then they saw his i teammates come running in and ' cluster around him to break away Iwith howls and back-thumpings. [ Finally, everyone back in position. Johnny toed the mound and squinted at Windy, waiting for the signal As it came, he gave a satis- | fled nod and started his wind-up. ! The ball whizzed over the plate and i you could almost see the smoke * trailing it The next one was a beau- : tiful slow ball that broke just right : Johnny grinned happily as the batt ter took a healthy swing at the next | one and missed. I The Reds got two runs in the i eighth, giving them a one-run lead 1 over the Pirates and Johnny put i them away one. two. three in the ninth. Not a very big lead, to be sure, but big enough, especially I when you consider that Johnny hadn’t really pitched much of a game before Corky’d brought him that little slip of paper at the beginning of the seventh. Ob yes, tbe note/ VCeU, it really wasn’t a very big neessage; that is, not very big in words. It merely said, \ "li'l twins, darling. Two future motor league ballplayers. See that you make them proud •/ their Daddy today." And it was signed, "MiUy." by WNU Features.
CLASSIFIED DEPARTMENT APTOS, TRUCKS t ACCESS. TWO IMS MODEL FORD TRUCKS equipped with Thornton tandem Both have large grain bodies. 1 has 13.000 mi., other 14.000 mi. DONALD ROBINS. R. Ne. 18. Box 618, Indianapolis. Ind. BUSINESS & INVEST. OPPOR. i MAKE AND SELL CONCRETE BLOCKS. : operate your own business, casn in on the : building boom, machines 40 to 250 per hour, also mixers, convevors. motors. Madison Equipment Co„ Madison. Teas, j BARGAIN: Three color combination BALL I PEN. Guaranteed. Sample 75 cents postpaid. Less in quantities. Write for prices. DUIS MAIL ORDER CO.. Flanajan. 11L FARM MACHINERY & EQUIP. POWER LAWN MOWERS Wholesale and retail dealers wanted. . uree leading makes. Shipping now for spring sales. O. C. HARRIS Summitville. Ind. Phone lOBFI4 ATTENTION FARMERS AND BALERMEN! i I have for sale one of those big John Deere pickup balers < 18-221 and an International 4-bar side delivery tractor rake. HARRY KEYES - Caltax. Ind. | , ! FARMS AND RANCHES 308 ACRES: GOOD 8-ROOM HOUSE, also 3-room house, large barn, complete set buildings, all good roofs, electricity. 80 a. i bottom, fish pond, sugar orchard, school ibus. milk and mail routes at door. w ill sell all SII,OOO or part with buildings. Terms possible. Price reduced to settle estate. 13 mi. S. W. Bloomington. Monroe :Co. Nice place. Bargain. EARL GRAVES, j 8. Stanford. Solsberry. R. 2. Indiana. FARM FOR SALE: Hundred and fifteen Acres tn Orange County. Three and one half miles Northeast of Paoli. Indiana. Four room house. Electricity. Good garage. Cellar wood-house, chicken house, brooder | house. Pract. new farm. Good fencmgall around farm. Cream and Milk. Mail School I Bus route. Plenty water. Price $4,000. By Owner. OSCAR CROOK ; SOO West WaKhington St.. Indianapolis. Ind. HOMES. FARMS IN TENNESSEE AH kinds, sizes & prices. Business property. Good roads, churches, schools, pure water. ROBERTS REALTY CO. Marfreesboro. Tenn. HELP WANTED—MEN WANTED: A MANAGER for a growing Coop grocery and meat market located in a small town in northern Indiana. Good salary. Must furnish references of successful ability. Apply aV Personnel Department. Indiana Farm Bureau Cooperative Association. Inc., South Pennsylvania Street, Indianapolis l>. Ind. LIVESTOCK D,n*t Tak, Chances With Calf Sennrs . . . 90“ V of which are caused by vitamin deficiency. Pre v ent and treat nutritional scours in calves with Dr. LeGear's Calf Vitamins. Easy to give, effective and economical. MISCELLANEOUS FREDERICK. 600 Main. Blanehester. O. Gennine Nylon Hair Nets with elastic. More invisible and durable than any- net made. 8 nets sent postpaid for sl. State color of hair. HERMAN MILLER. 436 New Yerk Are.. Brooklyn 25. N, Y. POULTRY. CHICKS & EQUIP. Start Baby Chleks Right! Use Dr. Le Gear s A-A Poultry Tabs in all their drinking water for effective, economical medication. Satisfaction guar. Be ready with Dr LeGear's A-A Tabs when your chicks arrive! ORDER CHICKS NOW For March and later delivery. McDonald’s U. S. Approved PuHorum Controlled Chicks. AAA Grade Barred and White Rocks and White Wyandottes not sexed 814.85 per 100. PuUets $19.95. Cockerels $13.95; Big Type White Leghorns not sexrtl $14.95 per 100. Pullets $36.95. Cockerels $6.95; Austra Whites not sexed $15.95 per 100. Pullets $27.95. Cockerels «-95- McDonald's Extra Special Barred Rocks (Park’s Straini and White Rocks <Holtz apple Straini not sexed $18.95 per 100. Pul lets $26.95 per 100. McDonald s Extra Spe Icial White Leghorns (Osborne Straini no. sexed $18.95 per 100. Pullets $33.95. Send today for catalogue. I MCDONALD’S HATCHERY Bex 120 - Sheridan. Ind SEEDS, PLANTS, ETC. i NOTICE—Nancy Hall. Portorican. Jersey seed sweet potatoes. Guaranteed best quality. Write for prices. j LEWIS W. KAUFMAN. Dongola. SEED SWEET POTATOES Nancy Hall’s. Yellow Jerseys. Porto Rican I Yams’, Red Bermudas. Southern Queens Write for prices. Paul Mill*r,J?obden,Jlll. ! Strawberry and Raspberry Plants Send 1 for folders and price list telling all about I our sand grown, fresh dug plants. • GRAHAM and TERRY - Angela. Jnd. WANTED TO BUY i WANT STEAM ENGINES From Old Autos. Small Type: describe. i J. B. COOPER. R-U, De, Moines. lowa Buy U. S. Savings Bonds! COLDS LIQUID MEDICINE IS BETTBt ' Get urtnci.i mtof W Cold Miwrie* 844 ' the to*Mt mKo| Lipoid CoM Pwperaneo in Ao U. S 666 coi&lSSAßtiom ■ | I| | femMr-QuTi— f Cap-B'w** Af>pi<cof«p ■ «UM IMF *** ***** > **™*Mi |WHU—J ", 10-48 - HIGH-SCHOOL GRADUATES! NURSING IS A gROUD cj PROFESSION! — fo«ny opportaniti<» foe gradaatee to saw Ifloeptudat poliiis KraHl*. etc* I —.leais to R. It »awe H-prepared asirse awed aeoee be wkbovt a job or an incense .-open to girla und«r S 5, •radaatee and ealeje **l sot more information at tbe beepital wbere you I would Uko to enter nnreing.
NEEDLECRAFT PATTERNS
Dazzling Blouse for Dress-Up
1 Vv S J I Al I U'MBROIDER this sunburst in outline, single - stitch or eyelets. Sequins for dots. It’s an easy-to-sew blouse! 0 0 0 Pattern 682 has embroidery transfer; blouse pattern in Misses’ sizes 12. 14. 16, 18. 20; 40. St; te size. ’jJou.neMS Do not immerse the electrical parts of air appliance in water, particularly the motor, heating element, thermostat, or switch. —•_ Glue a small piece of cloth measuring tape to the inside of the wooden frame of your knitting bag. You’ll! find this handy when sewing or knitting. —• — A watched kettle never boils—especially i:f you leave a spoon in the pan. The spoon conducts heat away from he liquid and retards boiling. —•— The vitamin value of lettuce drops mark ?dly ’when this vegetable is kept in the refrigerator too long. The rate of loss corresponds to the amount of wilting. —• —■ Acid food:; such as tomatoes, lemons and vinegar are apt to leave a stain on porcelain enamel of range or refrigerator. So be careful in handling these foods in the kitchen.
g Because Kellogg’s Com Flakes '*" | nre 80 P°P u^ar ’ they come to *** you fresher. Crispy-delicious! ft B»WaW f UKtsh ■r</> fA\ . °*-Mr f J W — ’ A . t cap «■* ' iwwow ««,*«- Bhl '“" ,n <.&v ,d ■ «arii hcatm e<«> Q>,v. r _._, c,nr Uimon Snr i V' J " ,un A<, currants beaung K£"£i3M I in rruwit. Jc< r ' K L ' ni ‘l bihi <»k. hckm* ,- 4n I «<»»t^h^!L2 <~O' C " "’’ 'Dm'""”' H * ke B PUui *«“*■ m*u» SA *>2, UMS M * ke B BIKUSTTO LUCK Ll is R£O STM AS FAST AS ) I£OSTMQWCK OTMfcR./EASTS ? . ' I STARS FOR OtO STAR... I» W YEAST < , 1 >. / EVERY 6ATCH COMES OUT ZjjL U EASTER. I k— PERFECT, NOW ' (...STARTS WORKJN& v •' gfe P %.* m ATONCE \ RED STAR YEAST
New. improved pattern makes needlework so simple with its charts, photos, concise directions. Send your order to: Sewing Circle Needlecraft Dept, 564 W. Randolph St. Chicago 80. m. Enclose 20 cents for pattern. NO ; Name Address —————— —1 Visitors to British House Obedient to Command A story is told of an incident in the British house of commons. M.P.s and visitors were there in force. “Hats off, strangers,” came a command as the speaker’s procession approached. A fellow member trying to attract Neil Maclean’s attention called softly, “Neil.” Two women Jrnelt. _ AS _— R £_ AS MC>NEY CAM BUY . REAUY DEUCIOUS COCONUT tAKI Many Doctors M 9 recommend SCOTTS EMULSION f If catch eoldn A?.Au often -becaiue you don’t get enough A4D Vitamin food—you'll bo grateful for the way good-tasting Seott’a Emulsion helps build you up and help, ward off eolds. build stamina and resistance. Scott's is a HIGH « ENERGY FOOD TONlCrich in natural A4D Vitamins frSSji and energy-building natural farting. Easy to E digest. Economical too. Buy , V-/ today at your drug store. h MOK than just • tank—«!'s powerful nourishment! If fl e Why scratch and j If/ k n|||fl suffer hopelessly? I IIVIIIIIM Find happy relief I — ** as so many others I Os Dl*y — sooth- ■ * | ing, medicated ■ rawAawn RESINOL, the 1 Ff f fflggl J popularointmeni I LVZvIIKI ofw«»yuses |
