Syracuse-Wawasee Journal, Volume 45, Number 29, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 5 May 1950 — Page 3

FRIDAY, MAY 5, 1950

CHURCHNEWS GRACE LUTHERAN CHURCH Rev. Carl Sorensen, Pastor. 9:45 Sunday School-The Bible Class invites you. 10:45 Divine Worship, “Christ’s Rebuke to a Faithless and Per verse Generation”. Tuesday 7 P. M. Catechism Class; 8 P. M. Choir practice.

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Why HUDSON S recessed floor means Most Room! Best Ride! Safest! Hudson’s “step-down” design brings benefits in room, riding qualities AV 11 ™ you Hudson s " New step ‘ ’ ’ Down Ride,” we believe you will and safety not obtainable in any other car at any price! it a delightfully new experience. For ——— r- 1 Hudson is the only motor car with a recessed floor ("step-down” design). This r 1a results in the lowest-built car of them all, with true streamlining and magnificent \ beauty. / I I i It provides full road clearance and the I I IRI W Pl I most room in any automobile at any price! I I I It creates America’s lowest center of ..-~p ' iwas**— LB ** --_X- S Jpl-- gravity, which brings you the best and bond clearance ROAD CLEARANCE |||| safest ride ever known. Won’t you accept HUDSON OTHER CARS “ mvitaUon-enjoy ■Step-down" design, with its recessed All other cars have floor on top of frame. The New Step-Down Ride SOOU. floor, uses space between frame mem- so they fail to utilize the vital space bers that other cars waste. The result is between frame members. Result is a ———————— America's lowest center of gravity (and higher center of gravity and either a new lower-priced Pacemaker brinOS VOO full road clearance), while providing high roof line or insufficient head room. * r more head room and seating room than Seats are narrower; passenger space nil of Hudson’s exclusive advantages for just ■ any other car. is less. — lew ooiiars mare non tne lowest-pncea cam |yQW 3 GREAT SERIES Hudsons, with recessed floors, their great array of high-qualHy, long-life features, and advanced design, are leaders in Umr-Prlced Pacemaker e Famous Super e Custom Commodore reso/e Yalu6f as by Offieio / Used Car Guide Books! H. D. HARKLESS SOUTH HUNTINGTON STREET " SYRACUSE

You are always welcome to our services. Mother’s Day will bw observed on May 14. THE METHODIST CHURCH Claude M. Fawns, Minister. Worship at 19:00 A. M. Sermon topic: “Our Faith in The Holy Spirit.” Special Music by the choir. Junior Church, Youth Fellow-

ship and Church School at 1:00 A. M. Junior Choir, 5:00 P. M. Thursday. Senior Choir, 7:45 P. M. Thursday. Sunday, May 7, at 2:30 to 5:30 P. M., Youth Convention at Warsaw. Monday, May 8, District Conference at Wakarusa. CHURCH OF GOD F. A. Handley, Pastor. Lewis Firestone, Supt. Bible School, 10:00 A. M. Title of Lesson, “Hosea, the Man and His Message. Golden Text, “My People are destroyed for lack of Knowledge.” Hosea 4:6. Morning Worship 11:00 o’clock A Missionary Sermon “The Christian Harvest.” Youth Meeting 7:15 P. M. Evening Service 8:00 o’clock, Sermon, “Who is My Neighbor.” Prayer and Bible Study Thursday evening at 8:00 o’clock. “Come let us worship Him who doeth all things well.”

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SYRACUSE-WAWASEE JOURNAL, Syracuse, Ind.

I TKINTY £. U. B. CHURCjk Benton & Harrison Sts. Sunday Church School, 9:45. Lewis S. Immel, Supt. Morning Worship Service, 10:45<. The service May 7th will be sponsored by the Brotherhood of the church. A speaker from the Gideons will bring the morning message. Junior League, 6:30. Youth Fellowship, 6:30. Evening Service, 7:30. The Rev. R. W. Loose of Oakwood Park and Sturgis, Michigan will bring the sermon on the theme, “A True Appreciation of God.” You are invited to hear the Superannuated Elder <A Trinity Church. Mid-week Service, Thursday, at 7:30 P. M. Mrs. Marvis Newcomer, Class Leader, will be in charge. The Pastor will be back in his pulpit on Sunday Morning May 14th, and will preach on the subject “Qur Homes and Stewardship.” This will be the second

sermon in the current series on Christian Stewardship. LIGONIER PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Rev. Arnold O. Schaap, Minister. Sunday School at 9:30 A. M. Supt., Mrs. George Green; pianist, Mrs. Darold McDonald; secretary Miss Madalena Denny. Meeting of the Men’s Fellowship Class in our church kitchen. Morning Worship, 10:45 A. M. Music by Mr. and Mrs. Clarence ‘Luth of Holland. Michigan. Sermon by the pastor. Sunday 5 P. Ml, to 6:30 P. M., meeting of the Westminster Youth Fellowship Group. A cordial welcome to all to worship in our beautiful sanctuary. , LIGONIER CHURCH TO HEAR SINGERS Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Luth of Holland, Michigan will sing at the Sunday morning service of the Ligonier Presbyterian Church at 10:45 A. M. Mr. Luth is president of the Choir of the Trinity Reformed Church in Holland. Mr. and Mrs. Luth have sung numerous times throughout Western Michigan. Mrs. Luth is a sister of Rev. Arnold Schaap. She has sung in the nationally famous Tulip Festival tor some years and in 1946 was Queen of the Festival. The public is cordially invited to be'present. Mr .and Mrs. William Edgell, Chicago, were week-end guests of Mr. Egell’s parents, the Milbert Bitners. LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE TO NON-RESIDENTS State of Indiana, Kosciusko County, ss: In the Kosciusko CIRCUIT COURT April Term, 1950 LYLE H. KELL VS. MARY F. KELL, Complaint No. 25782. Now comes the Plaintiff, by R. Leon Connolly, his attorney, and files complaint herein, together with an affidavit of competent person that said defendant, Mary F. Kell is not a resident of the State of Indiana that said action is for Divorce and that said nonresident is a necessary party there to. Notice is therefore hereby given said defendant last named, that unless she be and appear in the Kosciusko Circuit Court at the Court House in Warsaw, Indiana, on 17th day of June, 1950, being the 66th judicial day of the April term of said Court, which term begins on the First Monday in April, 1950, and answer or demur to said complaint, such complaint and the matters set forth herein will be heard and determined in her absence. IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand and affix the seal of the Kosciusko Circuit Court, at the office of the Clerk of said Court in the City of Warsaw, Indiana, this 18th day of April, 195th ERNEST E. BUSHONG Clerk Kosciusko Circuit Court NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION No. 6504 Notice is hereby given that the undersigned has been appointed by the Clerk of the Kosciusko Circuit Court, in the State of Indiana, Administrator of the estate of PHEBA FELTS late of Kosciusko County, deceased. « Said estate is supposed to be solvent. KENNETH L. FELTS Administrator. April 21st, 1950. Xanders & Xanders, Attorney.

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SCRIPTURE: Hosea, (especially chapters 1-3.) DEVOTIONAL READING: Psalm IM: 1-8. Tragedy to Truth Lesson for May 7,195 S GOOD PREACHERS are not all of one kind. In listening to some of them, you have the impression that what this man says would be just as true if another man said it;

that he is uttering a universal truth that might as well have been written on the sky; he is a voice, only a voice. In listening to other good preachers you have the impression that no other man could have said this as well as he; .what he

Dr. Foreman

says is distilled from his own experience; he is not only a voice, he is a heart, and you hear the man’s heart-beats all through his words. Now Hosea was this kind of prophet. You might say that His experience was the text of all his sermons. • • ♦ Arid so They Were Married - THE STORY of Hosea is in chapters I—3. (Experts in Old Testament study have never quite agreed as to the meaning of the story. However, the interpretation which is offered here is the one now held by the majority of scholars.) It is the story of Hosea’s marriage to a girl named Gomer. If it was a normal marriage, he loved her with all his heart, and his hopes for the future were as bright as any young bridegroom’s could be. In time they had a little boy named JezreeL Then came the second child, a girl named Lo-Ruhamah. In Hebrew, that name means “NoMercy.” What a name for a little girl! But is it possible that Hosea named her for her mother—not for her mother’s name but for her mother's character? At all events, things were not well in that home; indeed, it soon ceased to be a home. For when the third child was born, Hosea gave the boy the dreadful name of Lo-Ammi, No-Child-of-Mine. There was no use in pretending any more. The home had collapsed, happiness had fled. No experience a man can have is more bitter than this, to know that the one great love of his life has been given to the wrong woman. But Gomer vanished, leaving Hosea, as such a woman would, to care for the three motherless children. • • • Home Again TTOW MANY MONTHS or years ■k* later it was we do not know. But one day, in the slave market, Hosea saw a woman for sale. The price was low (as slaves went in those days); evidently few buyers were expected. A half-price slave would not attract attenion from most men, but Hosea looked twice . . . Yes, it was his Gomer! Where she had been, who had abused her, made her a slave, how many times she had been sold and resold, no one knows. But there she was. Hosea might easily have stood and laughed bitterly in her bedraggled face. It serves her right, he might have thought. The way of the transgressor is hard, she made her bed and now she can lie in it. Justice has been done, I am avenged. And with a parting curse he might have gone his way. Somehow beneath all the shame and disillusionment, beneath the bitterness and the pain, still the old love was burning bright. Paying the small price asked, he took Gomer home again. Love had conquered evil. Long before Christianity, Hosea did that rarely Christian thing, he did good to one who had done him harm. Gomer was unloving, unlovable; yet he loved her in spite of all. • • • Sermons From the Heart This bitter experience God turned into a blessing, for Hosea and for his nation and for us. In our study next week we shall see more of what God taught Hosea through these experiences. But the first thing Hosea learned was that the experience was a lesson, God’s lesson. He could even look back on the tragedy of his marriage and see that God was leading him all along, from the very first. God knew what sort of woman Gomer was and would be, yet he wished Hosea to marry her. God intended that he should go through just those years. Without the tragedy, he could not have arrived at the truth. His sermons thenceforth came from the depths of his heart. Hosea, like all the prophets, denounced sin; like all the prophets, he could see the fatal effects of sin on his nation. (Copyright by the International council of Religious Education on behalf of 40 Protestant denominations. Released by WNU Features.) LOCAL NEWS Mrs. Carl Thomas spent the week-end in Wolf Lake, and attended the high school alumni banquet, on Saturday evening. Mrs. James Lantz and daughter, Ruth, have returned to their home, on the north shore, of Wawasee Lake, having spent the winter in Hicksville, Ohio, with Mrs. Lantz’s sister.

CHURCH OF THE BRETHREN Clayton Mock, Pastor. Lavon Symensma, S. S. Supt. Alta Darr, Supt. of Elementary S. S. Sunday School, 9:30 A. M. Morning ervice, 10:30 A. M. C. B. Y. F., 7:30 P. M. Evening Worship, 8:00 P. M. Family night on the evening of May 11th. Pot luck supper at 6:5 to 7 P. M. At 8:00 P. M., following church

Cotton Slips, embroidery trimmed s Playtex Girdles, fair trade priced Gift items, Costume jewelry; Purses, Hankies Scarfs, Lingerie, etc. Durable Nylon Hose, plain or fancy heels Join the Hosiery Club = I Marguerite's Style Shop Syracuse, Indiana miiiimiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiisiiiiiiHiiiintiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiimiiiuiiiini / Alexander / v I Smith I FLOOR-PLAN RUGS by Alexander Smith ' make it easy-to-afford beautiful BROADLOOM ■ ! Perfect for the young-marrieds! Luxurious color and good looks. At such a saving because Alexander Smith offers these broadloom rugs ready-made to fit! All-wool pile in newest textures. Up-to-the-minute patterns; handsome, solid colors. Wonderful values. Easy-to-pay prices. Stucky Furniture Co. SYRACUSE, INDIANA .Mti “BE IT EVER SO HUMBLE —OWN IT.” We Can 1 Help You 1 BUILD AX6) WvTense c ° st J 3 NOIV is a good time I to build! Top quality w-cr j’-l ‘ lo '-J - materials are again > I (TT'll I ** a ~ H I available. And you 5 T build a fine, beautiful Vt’-rT »«»• «»>. [- TO '' <r " 111 home at a price within w-r.w-#* 11 -» > a the means of the aver- ’ 'A age family. “ 1 We can tell you how 111 to get plans for the home pictured above, or for one of the many other designs of moderately priced houses in our ' < collection. We can give you information on costs, financing, and construction. Get started on the road to home-ownership today! We’ll H be happy to help you, just as we have helped many others J in this community. WAWASEE LUMBER CO. g SYRACUSE || BUILO

supper, Marbod Etzler, a German youth who is attending the Milford High School will speak on the ways of Life and problems of the German people. There will also be special music. This family night gathering is being sponsored by the Food Cheer Class and

all members of the church are urgently invited to come and enjoy the blessings of a fellowship supper.