Syracuse-Wawasee Journal, Volume 44, Number 49, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 23 September 1949 — Page 7
EEMMMBEIE GENUINE 54" \ ©**. 1 \tftft® \ CABINET SINK \’sS J I fe* 4 ii as I g» Chock tvtry one of these features: l Mk al Owl to te«t • M«*m X> ss A rW*«KI MKB-tpsv*« 1 HatiC M-«p eediarSi •l Swiaetot Miatartewt *Hb awtal teUte* H Mg, 4w», >« iptelb bawl i e Cr»e rs rtftan, aaty to cteaa L NUtate mmm! mUm« SahK iMMaa>4 ~t 10. Mt Mfef-<aMw« rt»rf MIO «. ft) It few Im iwteiMj fem, tewteßfe aU waaMaaSaaaS B. CaacaateS bte*M aarf paiMva-actiag tetpafe <akte« t 11 Twa4rwwm.wMa.SaavaU*tadaa»te~HrtMteaadlat<aHc’A CWaaa barJwara ibriatba* M. Drawn e*aa aatAy, aaAattf aa breti raaaan (aa *lkbie«) tS. tarn tad Baa aad kaaa tpata fa< wwbiaj aata / <z BT mvuxms Open Evenings by Appointment. Stucky Furniture Co. Phone 85 Syracuse, Ind.
HMfcJ ;W£ See the Exciting New HOTPOINTZ You’re yoort ahood with Hotpoint—the ciently. Tilting backsplasher and fluonewly designed Automatic Electric re%cent floodlight make cooking far easier. Ranges that give you new beauty, greater ts looking for your money’s cooking capacity plus extra convenience! wort h, look at our big buys in Hotpoint Hotpoint’s ovorsixe automatic oven Automatic Electric Ranges. provides maximum usable space. Fasterstarting Calrod* Units cook more effiIAST TAMS ‘ Everybody's Pointing to -Hofnoiny Z SYRACUSE ELECTRIC CO. PHONE 14-J-p “• C * HOWARD I
25 YEARS AGO SEPTEMBER 25. 1924 Mrs. Mary Hamman. from Ohio, is spending some time, with Mr. and Mrs. Burton Howe. Mrs. Frances G. Dalton, aged mother, of D. J. Dalton, died Monday morning at the Dalton home. Lake Wawasee. John S. Neff passed away, Sept. 21. 1924. at his home near the west city limits of Syracuse. A son was born on Sunday. Sept. 21. to Mr. and Mrs. Knox Stetler. The baby was named. William Wesley. Mrs. Jacob Kern entertained sixteen little girl friends, on Wednesday. Sept. 17, at a birthday party for her daughter, Katherine Louise. The occasion was her ninth birthday. The two-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Joe Bushong, got the third finger of his left hand, caught between the door, last Monday, nearly severing the finger. at the first joint. Dr. C. R. Hoy closed the wound with several stitches and it is thought, the finger can be saved. Relatives and friends to the number of forty-two. went to the home of Allen Ruple. in the country. Sunday and helped him celebrate his eightieth birthday! anniversary. A big picnic dinner: was served. Those who spent Sunday with! Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Vail were: Will Goiter, Mrs. Lula Stoutnour. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Miller, of Goshen; Elwood Gunderman and family, of Benton; Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Brown, Mt. and Mrs. Emmett Weaver and son. DeLoss and Roy Vail. A local coal dealer advertises! coal: Virginia Splint. 17.00. delivered. 56.50 at bin; Kentucky Lump. >7.00 delivered. 56.50 at bin; 2x4 Egg Coal. 56.75 deliver-] ed. 56.50 at bin; Coke. 510.00 delivered, 59.75 at bln. All coal forked. NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION No. 6413. NOTICE is hereby given that the undersigned has been appointed by the Clerk of the Kosciusko Circuit Court, in the State of Indiana. Executor of the estate of TINA SANDERS. Allas AMANDA C. SANDERS. | late of Kosciusko County, deceased. Said estate is supposed to be solvent. JOHN S. SANDERS, Executor. Xanders. Flanagan & Xanders. Attorneys. Sept. 2. 1949.
SYRACUSE-WAWASEE JOURNAL, Syracuse, Ind.
Newly Crowned ‘Miss America’ ' n I . I K W. ■ w —■ ms ’ t WWwl E I El ■ B I » f ATLANTIC CITY. N. J.—“ Miss America of 1919'’, Jacque ’’ert'r of Phoenix, Arit, receives the first of the major prizes awarded f-’»— •-.» her triumph in the annual “Miss America” prgennt here. The chestnut-haired dramatics student accepts the keys to a new Nash Ambassador sedan from E. M. Christie, eastern sales. executive of Nash Motors. Nash is a sponsor of the. pageant’s $25,000 scholarship fund, $5,000 of which goes to “Miss America” and the rest to 15 runners-up.
RED CROSS HAS RECORD NUMBER SERVING U. S. MILITARY FORCES
With U. S. military forces at five times their prewar strength, a record number of American Red Cross workers are serving them throughout the world. More than 2,000 Red Cross representatives today are stationed at 1,300 military installations and 123 hospitals here and overseas. About 1,400 staff workers are serving troops in this country. The others are working at occupation and defense posts abroad. Only during the peak years of World War II were a larger number on duty. The duties of these Red Cross workers are as varied as the locale in which they work, involving a wide range of welfare services that contribute to military morale. They may include tiding over a soldier’s wife with grocery and rent money until her family allowance check comes through, or getting a welfare report on an Eskimo serviceman’s mother via weather bureau radio. Sometimes it means getting word of a family emergency to a sailor with the fleet in the Mediterranean. Service of the Red Cross worker in a military hospital may be helping a man through the difficult hour when he learns that he will never be well again or removing the worry that often stands in the way of his recovery. Under federal statute arid regulations of the Army, the _Navy, and the Air Force, the American Red Cross furnishes volunteer aid to the sick and wounded of the armed forces and acts in matters of voluntary relief and as a medium of communication between the people of the United States and their armed forces. , In the last year Red Cross staff members handled more than 102,000 welfare cases in military hospitals. More than 500 professional Red Cross workers are stationed at 40 army hospitals, 26 navy hospitals, and 14 air force hospitals. For the able-bodied, too, whatever the problem or wherever the serviceman is stationed, the chances
INVITED TO I. V. FOR FOOTBALL GAME Local high school students have been invited to attend one or both of Indiana University#, two High School Day observance programs this fall on the Bloom* ington campus. School officials here have received a letter from the Univer- •!••• outlining the program arranged for the two day». Oct. 8 and Cct. 22. Indiana’s football team plays Texas Christian in an important Intersectional game Oct. 8 and the University of Pittsburgh, on Oct. 22. The football games offer only a portion of the entertainment arranged by Indiana University for local students who visit the campus. Guided educational tours will include the Benton Murals, portraying a century of Hoosier state history; the auditorium and its famous old pipe organ, one of the largest in America: '’edical I Science building where dentists and doctors receive their first year of training; Music Building, center of musical training; the cyclotron where atoms are brokI en and the atom bomb had one j of its beginnings, and the Memorial building and its famed Er- • nle Pyle collection. Special lunch- ’ eon facilities will be available in j the Union Building cafeteria. Local high school students can purchase tickets to each of the games for 75 cents, less than one-fourth of the regular ticket price. University officials have urged local school authorities to purchase tickets in advance from 1 L. L. Fisher, ticket manager.
j w*The Red Cross man at Hickam Air Force base. Hawaii, lead a helping hand to a young marine, enroute from Kwajalein to his Maine home on emergency leave. are that the Red Cross has a field worker on the spot or nearby who can help try to solve it In this country 361 field directors and their assistants cover 148 base stations, 31 substations, and 923 itinerant stations. During the last year field directors at eamps handled more than 672,000 cases. Health and welfare reports requested by servicemen or their families were the most common type of help asked for. More than 179,000 such cases were recorded. » The next most frequent type of request was that involving leave or extension of leave. The Red Cross i cannot grant leave, but military authorities depend upon the organization for reports of conditions underlying leave requests. These ; cases run into many thousands each year. Abroad, Red Cross coverage is almost as complete as in this coun- | try. In Japan alone, 159 men and i women are serving occupation : troops at 31 military installations I and 14 hospitals. Other parts of I the Far East are equally well | ' staffed. In Europe, 248 Red Cross workII era serve military personnel and i their dependents at 51 military installations and 15 hospitals, most i of them in occupied Germany. Cov- ■' erage is also given in England and »; to miscellaneous units still in 5, France.
Fl IE KEPOHT AND FETITIOA | Carl aid Amos Gawthrop. administrators of the estate of Elnora Gawthrop, have filed their I final report in circuit court and hearing has been set for Oct. 8. I ’♦ been determined that no j state Inheritance tax is due in thej e<- , a*e which has a net value of. >3,466.95. Heirs include three sons,'Carl, Amos and Charles; a . Emma Foster; and a ■’randdaughter. Louise Self land. VHS ALIX)VVANCES Marguerite Nickel, plaintiff ini a circuit court divorce action against Carl F. Nickel, has filedj an application for suit and support allowances.
f E3 |Ad VOOD LOOKER We Co process-ng at Our Plant for your home locker. Also for your locker here. We will rent you a locker for the small sum of $1.33 per month. WAWASEE LOCKERS Syracuse, Ind.
APPLES WINTER APPLES NOW READY. THE FOLLOWING VARIETIES ON HAND, AT LOW PRICES— Grimes Golden, Jonathan, Red Delicious Baldwin, Northern Spy’s, Greening We still have a few Macintosh and Wealthy for immediate use. Your Patronage Greatly Appreciated Oakwood Orchard Syracuse, Indiana
RECRUITING STATIONS TO AID VETS WITH BONUS All of the V. S. army and air force recruiting stations thruout the state of Indiana have been i set up to aid the veterans of In- I diana in filling out their bonus applications, it was announced i this week by Capt. R. A. School- ’ craft, officer in charge of the < program. Capt. Schoolcraft said that each station would have the forms for living veterans only and that each station commander I would be ready to give all the assistance possible in getting these forms filled out properly. So far, he said, the veterans have been slow in getting their bonus applications in to state headquarters and it is hoped that this plan will speed up the project. Veterans will find that the recruiting sergeants inmost of the stations, are from Indiana and are fully qualified to give them expert assistance in getting their forms filled out properly in order that they will not be returned to the veteran. Many forms have been been returned because of insufficient postage. Six cents! postage is needed in mailing the forms. Original discharge papers must be submitted with each application and the application must be notarized. To date 75,000 have been returned to state headquarters by ; World War II veterans and it is felt that the use of the army and air force recruiting stations will speed things up.
Jr I I 1947— CHEVROLET, Fleetline 1947— CHEVROLET, 2-Door 1 * 4-Door Beautiful black finish. 1942— PLYMOUTH, 4-Door. | 1947— CHEVROLET Club Coupe Exceptionally clean. 1939 BUICK, 4-Door Special | 1948—CROSSLEY Station Wagon ’ 1942— CHEVROLET Club Coupe | 1947— PONTIAC “6” | Streamlined, 4-door. 1941— CHEVROLET, 2-Door Fully equipped s I . I Several Cheaper Cars from $95.00 & Up ■ I — OPEN EVENINGS *** s I Tues. - Thus. - Sat - 9 to 9 OTHER EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT i I I S. & M. Motor Sales, Inc. 1 Ed Kleinknight Phone 230-J Syracuse or 249 Milford, For Appointment
LOCAL NEWS Mrs. Wm. G. Connolly spent several days the first of the week in Chicago. Little Joyce Lynn Beer, of near Milford, is spending this week here with her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Guy Rarig. Her parents. Mr. and Mrs. Don Beer, are on a vacation this week to the Smoky Mountains. Mrs. Robert Haines, of Syracuse, submitted to major surgery on Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Beck returned Sunday from a week’s vacation spent at Glen Lake. Glen Arbor. Mich. They had as their guest while there, Mrs. Beck’s brother, Ervin Whitehead, from Dearborn, Mich.
NOTICE Garbage Collection The Garbage Collection will be conducted once a week, commencing next week on Thursday. By Order of SYRACUSE TOWN BOARD
Friday, September 23, 104»
Rev. and .Mrs. D. E. Littler and family moved last Thursday to their new home, near Roanoke. Their daughter, Sandra, aged twelve, who is recovering from a several weeks illness of virus pneumonia, was taken to the home of Mrs. Littler’s brother. Dr. E. E. Shrock, at Amboy, Ind., while her parents were moving.
Don*t~ Bother Ala I’m Dustod with ' (g ’pilLVtX i r ■nuM Hrlw • • K,us Hfzs s ■ KIIPS ' tM OFF Thornburg Drug Co.
