Syracuse-Wawasee Journal, Volume 45, Number 16, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 3 February 1950 — Page 7
Mrs. Mary Wilkinson is spending two weeksin Warsaw, in the home of her daughter, Mrs. Carl Funk. miiiimiHiuHiHiuuiiiiiiiiiimiiiiuiuiiiiiuiiiiiiimiiiiii WHERE FOOD IS REALLY tasty SUNDAY DINNER — and — WEEK-DAY MEALS “HOME COOKING’’ WAWASEE RESTAURANT SYRACUSE, IND. iHiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiii
_ 4 Chief Source fcW B of Nourishment . Milk is one of the most rewanl- —. ing bevera ß es - A sin K le quart of xTrtl)\ Fk this s " el, - tastin K drink supplies WllT the daily nutritious requirements ha 811 y man ’ woman an d child! Yz-Ts? V-fX ( a n f or delivery., today—border / our otker nourishing, safeguarded dairy products, for well-bal- ® anted meals! Pasteurized Milk in Bottles Qt. 18c Homoginized Milk in Bottles Qt. 18c. % Pasteurized Milk in Cartons 18c ''' Homoginized Milk in Cartons 18c , -«► Coffee Cream / 2 Pt. 18c | O <*£ Coffee Cream Qts. 65c «£'*< Whipping Cream J/ 2 Pts. 30c Whipping Cream Qts. SI.OO >**£* Chocolate Milk z Qts. 18c *** Orange Drink Qts. 15c Buttermilk Qts. 18c Cottage Cheese in Cartons 18c Jones & Son Dairy PHONE 5-F-ll OR 5-F-42 I- ■ Q
Why Should a Dollar’s Worth of Travel Continue You T— ? ■ ' WWvSBL /z® fiwgtm. igOS aißßr> ■ W®Sr t Rm ZL > * /7 \ IS THIS TRIP NECESSARY?” you were You don’t have food rationing today... you 4 asked in 1941, when every inch of space was don’t have gasoline rationing today, needed for troops and war supplies. Yet, a very real brake is still being put on To discourage travel then, a tax was added on travel. On a coach trip from New York to your travel dollar, a tax that grew to 15% during Chicago, for example, YOU are still paying the war. The Federal Government collected it $4.61 in Federal tax. * through the railroads. The Government still And the same with the goods that are shipped » collects it, though your travel need not be ra- to your home community. On every dollar you tioned now. - pay for. freight, you pay the Government an Today, the original purpose of this tax is as extra 3 cents a ton on coal). That means obsolete as an Air Warden’s helmet. But, four YOU are still paying over $300,000,000* a year years after the war’s end, YOU are still paying —freight tax alone. the Government at the rate of $250,000,000 a ★ * ★ year in travel tax. This tax should be repealed NOW. There is And, of the billion and three quarters collect- no longer any reason you should pay $1.15 for ed since 1941, over half came out of your pocket every dollar’s worth of travel ...$1.03 for every after the green light on travel went on again. dollar of railroad freight. Eastern Railroads
~ LOCAL NEWS Mrs. Adah Miller returned home last Saturday, from Churubusco, where she spent the past month in the home of her daughter, Mrs. Perry Ort. Mrs. Eugene Smith has been removed to her home here from the Elkhart hospital, where she underwent surgery on Monday of last week. Rev. and Mrs. Gerald Geiger and two children, of Galveston, Ind., were guests Monday afternoon, of the former’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. I. Geiger. Mrs. Dio Pensinger underwent a major operation last Saturday in the Goshen hospital. Her daughter, Mrs. Lew Schliem and son of Rockford, 111., are here in the Pensinger home while she is in the hospital. Mrs. Pensinger’s mother, Mrs. Josie Snavely, and her cousin, Mrs. Wendell Phillips of Martinsville, were here Saturday. S i
143 LIBERTY STREET • NEW YORK 6, N.Y.
■ >? * i 3 ; .. W ® 1 <JS>r K,. ' ai COMSTAR ESSS , feWl AM- o’"•> „ ' SSS ■ X A ■ • T- 'TI r sial , - F?L'. k 1 9BV J3H| .. ■ B Ek9 ' r aMMNk ■.. j® YOU KNOW ME, ALCOMETER ... A machine that sniffs yow breath and tells how much laughing soup you have lapped up is on display at the industries exposition in New York. jBF WW 1 wQBw .—«x. S. -*«»s, X. if t*' ~ Jra o R wfilKS®?Se aR? Sr H & *&&&&&: BteL- •" z 13 w ;3WS*>® < aywk •S™pgßgßßp jswL »--&■ & &-• sgTST* ” 4WWW- 1 TWMBwMR hSjK B »■!■»' I i .OlAAft CAREERS GO TO THEIR HEADS . . . Paris observed, St. Catherine’s day again this year with French girls of 25 or plus given the right to look for a mate. Two young office workers dressed themselves in typewriter and adding machine for the gala occasion. The girls sang and danced in the street and did their own pursuing.
AGREE ON PAYMENTS In the contested circuit court divorce action of Lowell Lee Poyser against Elsie L. Poyser, the plaintiff has agreed to pay $12.50 weekly for her support pending trial of the suit and $75 for her attorney. Both seek the divorce decree on grounds of cruel and inhuman treatment. Mrs. Bill Darr was hostess to the Mission Circle, of the Church of God, in her home, Thursday, afternoon.
SYRACUSE-WAWASEE JOURNAL, Syracuse, Ind.
APPEAL DISMISSED On motion of Richard King, defendant in a state action charging him with selling alcoholic beverages to a minor, his appeal from a city court conviction has been dismissed and the case has been remanded to city court. The case was sent to city court on March 19, 1949. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Juday and Charles Juday spent Sunday, in Osceola, with Mr. and Mrs. Rex Juday and family.
HERO MEDAL FOR WAWASEE RESCUE IN 1948 Bloomington, Ind.—(An 18-year old Hartford City coed at Indiana university last night was awarded a bronze medal by the Carnegie Hero Fund commission for saving a home town auto salesman from drowning. Miss Rosemary McKee’s act of heroism was among those recognized by the commission in nine states. Miss MeKee, an I. U. business school freshman living in Sycamore hall, was credited with saving the life of William L. Cooper, 22, Hartford City, after a struggle in which both almost drowned. The act of heroism was performed in Lake Wawasee, near Syracuse, July 4, 1948. Text of Citation The citation gave this account: “While on water skis towed by a boat in which Miss McKee, her sister, Marilyn, 21, and two others were riding, Cooper, a poor swimmer, fell into water 10 feet deep, 350 feet from the bank. “Marilyn, who was operating the boat, made a turn and stopped the craft 20 feet from Cooper who submerged briefly twice. “Rosemary jumped into the water and swam to’ Cooper, took hold of him and attempted to knock him unconscious by slap-
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i B \lower-Priced HudsonX shatters old notions of value/ | 4 HMfll Hudsons leaders in resale value! Let us show you, in figures from Official Used Car Guide Books ofthe National Automobile Dealera Association, that Hudson in a. leader in resale value, coast to coast! -■ ■' 1 there’s the car that’s turned the yours to enjoy in the new Pacemaker. I. " ste ?- do ™’ a a »"nnm ingenious use of space that is wasted gJ • IwlOS ■ ■COOlli in other makes of cars, this compact The new, lower-priced Pacemaker is automobile of normal exterior width •-a car you instantly see is the most brings you seat cushions that are up JfflQA beautiful of them all! to 12 inches wider than those in can OV9I BWIW Free-flowing, low-built design tele- of far greater outside dimensions! graphs the fact that it has the lowest There’s an extra dividend for you, center of gravity in any American too, in the brilliant, new high-com-)QIOT automobile. And you know instinc- pression Pacemaker engine ... a Pi tively that, as a result, the thrilling lightning-like performer with saving H Hudson Pacemaker the roaa ways. T H more tenaciously and is therefore .... . . . - » I* OImmCST America’s safest, best-riding car! You are mvited to see and try the II - ■ ■ You quickly see, too, that this riew Hudson will revise all your ideas of S Dollar Value! member J of the Hudson familylias motor-car value! ■wwrsswa w roat i clearance, and more head g room than in any mass-produced H car built today—thanks to "step- M down” design with its recessed floor. Available with Hudson * new And amazing head room is only one SUPER-MATIC DRIVE ■ kind of interior spaciousness that s Now... 3 Great Hudson Series • On/y Cars with "Step-Down” Design H. D. HARKLESS 30UTH HUNTINGTON ST. SYRACUSE
ping him. But Cooper grasped her tightly around the waist and they went under. “When they bobbed up, Rosemary was unable to free herself, but Cooper, beginning to lose consciousness, soon released her, “Grabbing him beneath the chin, she swam towing him 15 feet and then was aided in reaching the boat, by her sister Cooper was lifted into the boat, given artificial respiration and revived 45 minutes later. He suffered from shock and water in his luings, but recovered.’’ Miss McKee is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Paul McKee, Hartford City. SURETY FILES SI IT The United States Fidelity Guaranty Co. has filed suit in circuit court against O. C. Miller, asking judgment of $2,000 on $1,500 alleges it paid out to take care of bills for materials and services owed by Miller in building a home for Everett Ketering, of near Syracuse. The company executed the bond as surety for the defendant to Ketering on Sept. 5, 1947, to protect the latter against loss through liens on the new home which might be filed for bills unpaid by Miller. The company sets out that it has not been reimbursed by the defendant. He had contracted to build the dwelling for $4,085, including all labor and materials.
L isl lu. WHjKT'x —■ ■ EC.. k Wl: iwsi W W !^SP,,, SP Ab.-< , T‘, ALERT MILKMAN . . . Little Rithie Nystrom, Detroit, owes her life to milkman Larry H. Peters. Her mother could think of co way to save the baby who was choked on a blob oi phlegm. Peters remembered that breathing into the mouth has saved others.
Mr. and Mrs. S. A. Bauer and grandson, Carl J. Bauer, and M. E. Rentfrow spent Sunday in ElkIIIINIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIiIIIIIIIIIiHIIIIIIIIIIIIHUIIII
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FRIDAY, FEB. 3, 1950
0 hart, guests of Mr. and Mrs. Harry May. Mr. Rentfrow remained for a longer visit. IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIiIIIiiniIHI
