Syracuse-Wawasee Journal, Volume 44, Number 15, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 28 January 1949 — Page 6

Susan Kroh and Martha Lee Whitehead, students at McMurray college. Jacksonville. 111-, spent last week-end in their homes here.

W ■ are B i

FRIDAY - SATURDAY Ruthless Terror, Raiding, , Ravaging! William Elliott Adrian Booth * Joseph Schildkraut Bruce ('Sabot “THE GALLANT LEGION” Andy Devine Jack Holt | AT 12:16 Children/ Film Library Show SEE’— “Geromino” Chapter 1 of JACK ARMSTRONG the All-American Boy ONE BICYCLE FREE 4 BIG DAYS STARTING SUNDAY a>a “ > ‘" ,< * al * aaas:: 3MKa6B* r 1 First he stele a kiss I ...and then another! g 111 FUN FIUH>t m SONO FHIfP: U LffiSSSU I Cdorby gjm ft Dennis > ft • 9 MORGAN \l I PAIGE ■w--*' i I PON PtFOtf i I OOkOI HI 1 I MN MUf I mii w.rr-] s

Hit Pay Dirt Between Saturdays Watch Our Windows for Daily Specials SATURDAY SPECIALS! ~ WE RESERVE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITY SOLD m ■« Come in and meet CANNED '■' FrUlt UOCMOII Harry Swihart, r.aetnC.iilf DEL MONTE Congenial new manag- VrapCirialL t NO. 2*« CAN W °f our Meat Dept. 2 CANS RQf Choice of 5 differnt 24bC Cold Meats .. 45c lb. , Skinl ‘s Weiners 49c lb. «. Peanut Ring Bologna.. 49c lb. OICO I Butter GOLDEN MAID GRADE A GRADE A a Riblttft CQ( X9c 59c Os Beef lb 33 T — manor house Grapefruit Coffee gradba / Juice Regular and Drip Steak lb <"> 2 for 35c 55c —— — EELS NAPTHA DUZ Armour's Columbia Soap 41 I<Ml Sliced C(rt 3 BARS "l| 29c | Bacon lb 33 I I Fresh mde Kei, Caku, Cseldei, by Blaache Kline Give as your order for a Bakery Treat.

mGRIEGER'S Zg£j [(waiting) V oofttft 7| I —PHONE 15 V— y I _i

LOCAL NEWS ■■■ „1 (J Mr. and Mrs Donald Ward and daughter and Mrs. Ward’s niece. Patsy Harvey, all of Chicago, were week-end guests of Mrs. Edna Felts and son. Danny. , Mrs. Floyd Disher will be hostess to her bridge club in her home Thursday evening. Jayette. six-mdnth-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jay Vansickle was returned home Tuesday form -the hospital at Battle Creek. Mich., where she was a patient for four weeks Centennial WARSAW, IND. FRIDAY - SATURDAY 2—SMASH HITS—2 , j ■MM-LOTMt *C—O U_ — | And The King of Adventure! Douglas Fairbanks Jr. Maria Montez “The Exile” CCA GREEN bags 93U SATURDAY SUNDAY - MONDAY JAN. 30-31 2 BIG HITS FT’ICS ■ jane Den»-M» WYMANWBGAN* Mtil || il Wj Mil a ffii AND JYTZT nenwr*'*** TUES. WED. - THUR. FEB. 1-2-3 BARGAIN PRICES ; ADULTS —25 c plus tax CALIFORNIA I RfWWMSrTN : 1 jSMMI |, suA »■ S&r|l viafei JLe. 11l J

S. H. S. DEFEATS 1 NEW PARIS. N4-A2 ] The Syracuse ’high school basketball team defeated the New - Paris five, at New Paris, last Friday night 54-52. A long shot in the final seconds by John Kroh, Syracuse center, gave the Yellowjackets an .overtime win. after being behind for alt the game. New Paris started fast and J completely outclassed Syracuse] in the eaily periods by hitting! ’ thg basket from all over the i floor However the Yeilowjackets ' refused to say die and in a bril-H liant rally succeeded In tieing the I score at the end of the regular < playing time and then went on to I win on Kroh’s shot in the extra 1 session. kew Paris went to the front. ’ : 16 to 9 at the quarter and at the d I half lef the floor with a 10-point I lead. 30 to 20. Syracuse came ' back after th.* intermission and 1 cut New Paris’ lead to 35-32 at 1 th. end of the third quarter. The last quarter was a see-saw battle with neither team gaining ; much advantage over the other. ' although Syracuse out-scored the | Cubs in the last quarter The , I scheduled time ended with a 47I 47 deadlock. In the overtime the score was tied at 49-49. after a field goal by each team. A free throw by Barnhart put the Yellowjacket' in fh< lead by one point. A field goal by Korenstra put the Cubs in the lead. But Bushong came through with a> tip in and the Yeilowjackets were again in the lead Hoover converted on a free throw for New Paris to put the game in a 52-52 deadlock. With seconds to go Kroh converted on his ninth field goal to .gut the game on ice for the! Yeilowjackets. I The, Syracuse Reserves won the preliminary game 24-13. Brown with 8 points led the Yeilowjackets, Burkholder and Miller with 4 each led the Cubs. SPHAFUSE (Nl) Ki I’T PF| Meek, f . 5 5 5 Dietrick, f 1 13 Kroh. c 9 7 2 Barnhart, g 2 3 3 Darr, g 0 25 Kltson 0 0 4 Bushing 10 0 Totals 18 18 22 NEW PARIS (3®) FG FT PF Hoover, f 3 3 2 Ta aits, f 3 0 5 Kofenstra C’ 6'®*' T 4 Smoker, g 2 7 41 : Neff, g 6 15] Garman 0 0 • Ol Aschllman 0 0 I Totals 20 12 21 Four couples enjoyed a, pot luck supper Tuesday evening ini the home of Mr. and Mrs Walter Kegg. ]

SYRACUSE-WAWASEE JOURNAL, Syraonse, Ind.

B.&0. Railroad Plays Part 1 In History John Quincy Adams was president of the United States when Americas first railroad, the Bal-] timore and Ohio, began the con-! struction of its line from the At-j lantic Seaboard westward to the ’ Ohio River. The date was Inde-| pendence’Day of 1828 and Presl-i dent Adams was invited to pre- ! side at the great celebration that i 1 was held that day in Baltimore. I But he declined. He commented 1 that the railroad wouldn’t * ■amount to much and he chose in- 1 stead to attend the Inaugural ceremonies of tbe Chesapeake & Ohio Canal. They were being held! the same day in Washington. In March of 1533. however, when Adams had given way toi Andrew Jackson as president, he tried out the new-fangled convey-I ance He was t|| first US. president to do president since has traveled on the trains of the B. & O. and eight of them, including Franklin D. Roosevelt, made their inaugural journeys on 1 that line. Jackson’s first rail trip took ] place on June 6. 1833. between Ellicott’s Mills. Md . and Balti-! more, over the first thirteen i ! miles of the ft & O line to be put into operation. Two years la-1 ter, Jackson adjourned a cabinet] meeting in order to watch the] first B. & O. train enter Wash-j ington over its new line. The first president to use a B. ] train enroute to his inauguration ceremony was William j Henry Harrison. He took the oath in 1841 The B. & O. had a special coach fitted out for that part of his inaugural trip between ■I Frederick. Md., and Washington. D C. Other presidents who used the B. & O. to Washington to assume office were: James K. Polk, inaugurated in 1845; Zachary Taylor. inaugurated in 1849; .Millard Fillmore, who was inaugurated as vice president in 1849,. and who assumed the presidency upon death of Taylor in 1850; Franklin Pierce, inaugurated in 1853; James Buchanan, inaugurated In 1857; Abraham Lincoln, inaugI uration was in 1861. and Frank- | Un D. Roosevelt, inaugurated for J the firts time in 1933. Probably the most arduous inI augural journey was made by ; Zackary Taylor and only the i tail end of it was made by rail- ! road. Taylor started well in adJ vance of the inaugural date, leav- • ing his sugar plantation in Baton 1 Rouge on January 24. 1849. His J party sailed up the Mississippi on I a flat-bottomed riverboat, turning into the Ohio river at Cairo. They disembarked from the boat at Wheeling. W. Va.. and boarded a stagecoach for Vnion* 1 town. Pa. The next morning they took off on horseback for Cumberland. Md.. the end of the line for the B. 4 O. in those |iays (the railroad did not open service to Wheeling on the Ohio River til 1853.) A special B. 4 O. train then carried Taylor and his suite from Cumberland to the Relay House. Md. (where the B. & O.’s old main line joined the Wash-, ington Branch, as it was called in FOR SALE FOR SALE: Metal cabinet sink, also one bottle gas stove. — Phone 60-R Kle Musselman. (15-20 FOR SALE: Cocker Spaniel puppies tor children’s pets. |5.00 each. Also on- male pedigreed puppy. 125.00. Ralph P. Oyler, Phone 30-J. FX>R SALE: Custom tailored Venttian BUnda.— Stucky Furniture Co.. Syracuse (22-tO FOR SAJLE: Lots 60x130 facing Road 13, 3 miles south of Syracuse. Good home sites. See • t Stephen Freeman. (2V<f) MMI SALE: Potatoes. Also wdod in 16. 18, 28-in. length. D4an Grady. Ph. 6-F-40. State Rd. iT? south of town. (1-ts) BAKED 4MIODS: Os all kinds — Doughnuts, cakes and pies on order—Mr. and Mrs. Albert Watson. Ph. 8-F-14. (14-ts) FOR SALE: A chicken house and a boys’ home pool table. Ph. 274. FOR SALE: Baled Clover hay. no rain. 40c per bale. Hess Farm. 1£ mile south town, old Webster road —V. D. Disher. (15-2 t

LAKELAND THEATRE SORTH WEBSTER. INIk JAN. 29.30 SAT. NITE A SUN.—2:OO Cont. Two Big Hits - “BLONDIE’S ANNIVERSARY” The Bumsteads are coming Also “TRAPPED BY BOSTON BLACKIE” A Favorite on the Radio 40 Green Bags Saturday Nite Please Notice Lakeland is open every Saturday Nite and Sunday afternoon and evening—ONLY.

those days.) Out ot Relay to Washington, another special B. & O. train of 19 coaches drawn by three locomotives. carried Taylor and an inaugural party that by now had grown to exceed 1.000 persons. Os all the presidents who used the B. & O. and the railroads in general. Franklin D. Roosevelt piled up the greatest mileage, railroad men agree. In one trip alone, he covered 8.754 miles and 23 states. Incidently. William Jennings Bryan—who tried many times but never succeeded in winning the presidency — was another great railroad traveler. In one campaign year—lß96—he travelled 18,831 miles. On that trip, he covered 27 states and delivered 592 speeches in 447 different cities and towns. The radio has since put an end to much of the campaign travel that was necessary tn those days. Several of the many presidents who traveled on the B. & O. are remembered for their peculiar preferences and idiosyncracies. President “Teddy” Roosevelt liked to ride the locomotive —once he actually drove the B. & O.’s pioneer locomotive, the “Atlantic.” built in 1832. It was on exi hibition at the time. His comment I on the trip: “Bully.” Mrs. Alicje Longworth, his daughter, also ! once rode on a B. & O. engine, wearing white kid gloves. Calvin Coolidge preferred a drawing room on a regular Pullman to a special car. and sometimes climbed into an upper berth for a nap. Grover Cleveland. a prodigious eater, kept his favorite B. & O. chef. Joseph Brown, busy preparing oystprs and fish, wild duck and pheasant. He made the B. & O.’s hotel at Deer Park, in western Marjiand. his "Summer Whitehouse.” and spent a 15-day honeymoon there. Chester A. Arthur liked the corn bread on the B. & O. diners, and Rutherford B. Hayes expressed a preference for the B. & O. baked apples—with the skinsileft ’ on. and plenty of cream. William 1 McKinley liked B. & O’s prepar- ’ ed terrapin, and Herbert H]oo—--1 ver’s favorite was cherry pje; > ■ . ; Carol Miller and Margaret Marsh entertained the Christian 1 Endeavor of the Lakeside E.p.B. ‘ church Monday evening in , the ’ Miller home. During the business r meeting it was decided to have a Valentine party at the church on ■ Monday evening. Feb. 7. Gejmes were a feature of the evenings ' entertainment. Refreshments ’ were served with a birthday cake ’ in honor of Shirley Reed. ] She ’ was also presented a gift. Fifteen 1 members were present. s i WANTED , W ANTED: Cottage four weeks. [ during either July or August. Two or three bedroom, at WaW wasee. If you have anything vacant please c<ftitact Ralph Thornburg at Drug Store. WANTED: Woman to demon1 strate cosmetics, party plan. Harn while trained. For Syracuse and surrounding terrritory For information write Helen Chambers. Waubee. Lake. Milford. Ind. or Phone Milford 67-F-40. (15-4 t W’ANTED TO RENT: House in Syracuse, four in family. Write Bud Disher. Syracuse. Indj. (13-st) SAUHSMEN WANTED J MEN WANTED: For Rawleigh business. Sell to 1500 familles in cities of Syracuse, Ligonier, or south Elkhart county. Good profits for hustlers. Write today. Rawletgh’s. Dept. INA-124-S. Freeport. HI. (14-3 t NOTICE NOTM'E: Stanley Home Products has opejaing for two refined ladies with car. If you are interested in making >SO per week, contact Mrs. Zerola Zook at New Parts. Phone 322. (IS-2t) FDRLIC SALE AI’CTIONIfiKK: Farm or Household. — Wm. Helman. R. Syraeuae. Phone 3-F-13. (30-4 t NOTICE: Martin HOover, filling and excavating. Phone 47R3. Syracuse. Ind. (2-ts) SPECIAL DISCOUNT ON MONUMENTS AND MARKERS Bought From Stock During January and, Februnry UiDNUM MONUMENT CO. Phone IO or 300 (13-4 t

! r I '

Indianapolis. Jan. 20—Newly i appointed members of the State Highway Commission lost no ; time in getting together to discuss Indiana’s road problems. Pictured from left to right, are Jap Jones. Commissioner. Fort

Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Maloyl and family, of Angola and Mr. and Mrs. Orval Snobarger. were dinner guests Sunday of Mrs. Millie Snobarger. Mr. and Mrs. Carl | Haab./of Bremen, were afternoon I callers. IWt offer these BANKING SERVICES

■MmnTWwnwwwwinr ♦ Checking Accounts t • Automobile Loans « Monthly Payment Personal Loans • Commercial Loans « Safety Deposit Boxes « American Express Travelers Cheques « Life Insurance Loans • Savings Accounts ♦ Veterans Loans * Banking by Mail : * Real Estate Loans • U S. Victory Bonds

e - - 1 We invite you to use our a HI complete banking service j | n | for all of your tinancial s i needs. * s | II 3 On Time Certificates of Dee posit written for a period of e 13 months, we will pay 2 per- i n cent interest per annum. We pay the Intangible Tax on all deposits in this Rank. Plenty of Safety Deposit i. Boxes as long as they last. j Ulis Hank will close at 2:00 P. M.. Friday, Feb. 28. in respect of the funeral services for ; Aaron A. Rasor. director. State Bank Os Syracuse

I Wawasee Lockers & Super Market | Phone 236 _ Phone 23b | Specials for Fri.’Sat. Jan. 28*29 | jbtjfiATS GROCERIES BEEF ROAST lb. 49c DOG FOOD 1 lb. cans 3 for 25crati n> 35c PEAS No ’ 2 can 2 for BEEF BOIL U>. ROYAL ANNE CHERRIES .... HAMBURGER lb. 49c No. 1 can 25c FRESH SAUSAGE lb. 39c No 2-> Can ... ......... 45c PORK ROAST Boston Butt lb. 49c MONARCH PORK & BEANS.... PURE LARD 2 lb. limit 2 lbs. 29c No. 2 can 2 for 29c ZTJf DOUBLE FRESH! BEER AND WINE TO CARRY OUT NEW LARD CANS 69c tfSfSt mm si 0 A FEW ELECTRIC APPLIANCES WjWWk NagMF TO CLEAN UP AT PRICE No. 1 Creamery Butter 1 lb. Liuit 59c We Do Cwtoa Curing |

Wayne; Thomas B. McDonald, ] Commissioner. Knox; Samuel C.! Hadden. Chairman. Indianapolis and Albert J. Wedeking. Commissioner. Dale. Mr. Hadden stated that the Commission was in agreement on three major goals to be accom-

TWO WRITS ISSUED On affidavits filed in circuit court by plaintiffs in two actions, writs of attachments have been issued. The actions are: American Industries. lie., doing business as the Wawasee Lumber Co. vs. O. C. Miller, and the Syracuse Lumber & Coal Co. vs. O. C. Miller. on note. y—W—MM»—MMMTIII1 lUIMMMI—»1 UIMMMI— »

f PICKWICK 1

I SYRACUSE, INDIANA I FBI. - SAT. Jan. 28-291 2—SMASH HITS —2 I I 1 - : rMxaaMOt MtvK s - s • S *** ****** s j. —Co-Hit— Best Seller Sensation! S Jungle Thriller I “MAN-EATER OF I KUMAON” s Starring = SABU — Wendell Corey | | | | SUN. MON. JAN. 30-31 1 | BETTY GRABLE I IKIUGLAS FAIRBANKS Jr. | • THE LADY IN ERMINE’’ In Technicolor | Plus "Chicago The Beautiful’-’ | = C olor Cartoon A l-atest News | ‘i 5 I TUES. WED. THURS. I FEB. 1-2-3 GREGORY PECK ANNE BAXTfeR RICHARD WIDMARK | || “YELLOW SKY” I j Plus Color Cartoon A News J COMING SOON! 11 “So Dear To My Heart I “Easter Panule" | “Sorry. Wrong Number” | | “A Southern Yankee” | "Three Musketeers”

Friday, January 28, 1949

plished — widening of narrow bridges and resurfacing of principal lines of travel; sufficient new construction to use up federal aid funds allotted to Indiana; and rigid enforcement of truck laws as related to weight limits.

LOCAL NEWS Mrs. Wm. Pinkerman and .Mrs. Gertrude Clason, of Goshen, were guests Tuesday afternoon of Mrs. Jasper Vansickle. Mr. and Mrs. Parker Petersen and two daughters, of Rittman, Ohio, were guests Thursday of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Miller. Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Carney, of • Lincoln, Neb., were week-end i guests in the home of the form- : er’s sister. Mrs. Nelson Blough i and family. Mr. and Mrs. Blough : took them to Jackson, Mich., i where they will visit another sisi ter. Mrs. L. A. Desnoyer. before j returning home. J | CRYSTAL _ LIGONIER, INDIANA | ! TONIGHT THURS. JAN. 27 j “RACE SnrREET” GEORGE RAFT MARILYN MAXWELL, WILLIAM BENDIX | FRI. - SAT. JAN. 2S - 29 | DOUBLE FEATVRE PROGRAM “THE SUX’RET LAND” | A technicolor story of the U.S. | Navy’s exploration to the South s Pole. You must see it. “WILD FI6ONTIER” | ALLEN LANE JACQUELINE HOLT | SUNDAY. MONDAY. TUESDAY JAN. 30-31— FEB. 1 1 “HILLS OF HOME” EDMUND GWENN ' CRISP TOM DRAKE & LASSIE | The wonder dog returns in | technicolor film loaded with won2 derful entertainment. | WED - THUR. - FEB. 2 - 3 “NIGHT HAS A THOUSAND EYES" HDWARD G. ROBINSON GAIL RUSSELL JOHN LUND I Can man predict the future’?? « Do you believe in “hunches”??? COMING B SUN. MON. TUES. FEB. «-7-8 “TWO GUYS FROM TEXAS DENNIS MORGAN DOROTHY MALONE JACK CARSON