Syracuse-Wawasee Journal, Volume 46, Number 2, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 27 October 1950 — Page 4
CHURCHNEWS grace whermt cmmcra Rev. Carl Sorensen, Pastor. Reformation Sunday. 9:45 Sunday Sciv?ol and Bible CRss. 1 10:45 Divine Worship: “The Central Problem of Man’s Life.” 'The Papacy Encouraged Absolute Monarchy. Luther Encouraged Open and Free Bible Study. Luther honestly believed that man’s problems are at the very root religious. That all man’s- problems centered in the forgiveness of sins. Grace Church invites you to worship with us. THE METHODIST CHURCH R. A. Fenstermacher, Minister. 10:00 — Morning Worship and Sermon. 11:00 — Sunday School and Bible Study classes for men and women.. Thursday Evening 6:30 Girls choir, Chris Koher, leader. 7:00 Junior choir, Jean Connell leader. 7:45 Senior choir, Blair Laughlin, director.
SEE How You Can Save on % Your Total Food Bill at GRIEGER’S Where Every Item is Priced Low It is the total that counts. Thrifty shoppers know that they save most where everything they buy is priced low. The way to discover regular savings is to compare all prices. Check and compare our prices—this we invite you to do. See what you can save by doing all your food shopping here. Fruits & Vegetables . * ■ : - ■ t Bakery Goods Fresh Daily Fresh Daily Saturday Specials TIDE —27° MEAT MARKET — SATURDAY SPECIALS *•- , LIBBY — — SLICED PINEAPPLE armour s star No. 2 Can —29 c COOKED PICNICS ■ 43c lb RITZ CRACKERS - — — Large Box —29 c SWIFT’S DEL MONTE PEAS BROOKFIELD SAUSAGE , _ 59c lb. Large Can —l9 c — —- ARMOUR’S STAR FROZEN PEACHES - 29® VEAL ROUND STEAK IT’S NEW ru • y VEAL BREAST JOY FOR STEW —39 c lb, it’s a pleasure to wash dishes with iMvriTnrc JOY — Try It —29 c POTATOES PRFMIER VERY NICE TOMATO JUICE 50 Pound Sack-99c 2 Lb. Box —29 c ———— McKenzie buckwheat FRESH CRANBERRIES PANCAKE FLOUR Large Sack -39 c DASH DOG FOOD BURCO COFFEE ~ 73® I 2 Cans 25c KITCHEN klenzer - 5® If you are Incky this coupon can W be worth 25 lbs., sugar. » cli P Bring to Grieger’s Name Must be deposited by 5 P. M. Sat. DRAWINGAT6_ WATCH OUR WINDOWS FOR THESE EXTRA SPECIALS OUR STORE OPEN 57 HOURS EACH WEEK 8 TO 6 DAILY CLOSED SUNDAY — SAT ’TIL 9 — CLOSED THURSDAY AFTERNOON
TRINITY E. U. B. CHURCH Benton and Harrison Sts. Robert L. Cox, Pastor. Sunday Church School 9:46. Lewis S. Immel, Supt. Morning Worship Service 10:45 The pastor’s Reformation Sunday sermon is, “The Challenge of our Faith”. Galations 5:1. Junior League 6:30. The usual Youth Fellowship and Evening Service will be dismissed in favor of the Syracuse Union Sunday evening service to be held in the Lakeside Church. Next Sunday, November sth the pastor will start a series of sermons on the Ten Commandments. Sermons in the morning and evening services, until the series is completed. Time is approaching when I will be leaving for Florida. I want to thank all my buyers for the season and appreciate their patronage. I do not sen Florida real estate. But do take, care of my customers, by correspondence, who want Syracuse or Indiana property. Lake rental listings as well as sales. Write me Punta Gorda, Fla. Come see me while on vacation. J. W. Rothenberger.
LIGONIER PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Rev. Arnold O. Schaap, Minister. Family Study Hoar (Sunday School). 9:30 a. m., Supt. Mrs. George Green; pianist, Mrs. Darold McDonald; chorister, Mrs. Richard Alexander; secretary, Miss Madalena Denny. Meeting of the Men’s Adult Class. Dr. David E. Culled, LAke Wawasee, is teacher of the class. You are invited. Family worship hour, 10:45- a. m., in our beautful sanctuary. Special music by the Junior Choir. Sermon by the pastor, “Be a Thermostat.” If you are not attending church anywhere, we extend a welcome to you. The church needs you and you need the church. THE APOSTOLIC ASSEMBY North Webster, Ind. Rev. J. L. Kline, pastor. Tuesday evening 7:30, praise and worship. Thursday evening 7:30 Bible study. Sunday 9:30 Sunday school, preaching following. Sunday 3:30 to 4 P. M. broad-
SYRACUSE-WAWASEE JOURNAL, Syracuse, Ind.
cast over WK AM, Warsaw. Sunday evening 7:30 evangelistic services. CHURCH OF THE BRETHREN C. J. Mock, pastor. Sunday School 9:30- A-. M. Morning Worship 10:30_A. M. Evening Service: Union service at the Lakeside United Brethren Church. The Home Builders’ class is sponsoring a hard time party and box supper on Friday evening, Oct. 27, at 7:30. Place — Hex’s Grange. The proceeds is to be used for the purchase of new hymn boks for the church. Everyone is invited. Come now, girls and bring a box. “Come let us reason together saith the Lord. Redeeming the time, because the days are evil.” CHURCH OF GOD F. A. Handley, Pastor. Lewis Firestone, Supt. Bible School 10:00 A. M. Title of Lesson: “Growing Through Reading and Meditation.” “Golden Text: “Finally brethren, whatsoever things are true, whatsoever things are honest, whatsoever things are just, whatsoever things are pure, whatsoever things are lovely, whatsoever things are of good report: if there be any virtue —and if there be any praise, think on these things.—Philippians 4:8. Morning Worship 11:00 A. M., Sermon: “Taking hold of God’s strength.” Youth Meeting at 6:45 P. M. Evening Union Service at 7:30, and will be held in the Lakeside E. U. B. Rev. Clayton Mock, of the Church of the Brethren will bring the sermon. The public is invited. Prayer Services Thursday at 7:30 P. M. FARMERS GET LESS FOR THEIR PRODUCTS Washington—Hoosier farmers got $30,000,000 less cash the first seven months of this year for their products than they received in the same period of 1949, the Department of Agriculture said yesterday. Whereas the Hoosier farmer came home from market with SSO-5,5(24,000 after his JanuaryJuly marketings in 1949, he received only $475,196,000 in the same marketing period this year. Livestock marketings in Indi ana were down $(20,000,000i in the period-from ’ a 19'49 figure of $373,351,00-0 to $358,088,000 in 1950. Crop marketings the first seven months this year amounted to $122,10i8,000, against a sl’3E* >173,000 figure for the comparable period of 1949. NATIONALLY, the farm marketings in the January-July period this year were $ 13,000-,000,000 or 7 per cent under the same period of 19'49. The Agriculture Department estimates the nine-month total cash received by farmers will be $18,700,000,0-00 which would bring the cumulative drop from 1949 to only 4 1 per cent. The report on the farm situation in the United States said that in the January-September period, livestock and livestock products brought farmers |511,200,000,00*0 while crops brought $7,500,000000'. > The analysis of the farmers’ position in the national ecomony said that in 1949, gross income on farms was 8 per cent less than the 19*48 figure. Production costs, though, were reduced only 3 per cent, dropping the farmers’ net income about 15 per cent below the 1948 level. The “realized net income” figure found by the Agriculture Department was 13 per cent under 1948, while the purchasing power of the net cash income from farming fell 10% to the lowest level since 11941. LOCAL NEWS Tuesday is designated as Citizenship Day in the iGirl Scout Week, October 29 to November 4. Watch the Hire Electric Shop window, for each day’s different exhibit. Sunday visitors in the home of Rev. and Mrs. Robert L. Cox were Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hunt and daughter, June, of LaPorte, Ind. Mrs. Hunt and Mrs. Cox are sisters. Russell Ryman underwent a major operation at the Goshen hospital, Oct. I*9. The Indiana State Fair this year under the superivsion and watchful eye of Lieutenant Governor John A. Watkins, was an outstanding success, attracting 610103 paid visitors, the greatest number since 1946. The Indiana Highway Department maintains an exhibit at these fairs which always attracts favorable attention. It is planned and arranged by Herbert C. Hoffman, who has been with The Commission for many years. His artistic displays are unexcelled. Each year fair | visitors come to the State Highway exhibit for maps, which are of great service to highway users. This year 106.800 maps were distributed. Useful, complete and coveted, it was rare indeed when one was found discarded.
FOR ASSESSOR FOR STATE REPRESENTATIVE RE-ELECT RE-ELECT ' - .* - V'WB|L KATHRYN I. COY FRANK O. RARICK A resident of Kosciusko County all of her life. Now .. _ B ? r ? Township fifty-six years ago and has lives at Tippecanoe Lake in Tippecanoe Township. At- '^^ sclusko County all his life. Attended and tended Plain Township Public,Schools at Leesburg and ®^ hools at Atwood, graduated from Warsaw High School. Taught school for * he . father of , tw 2 daughters. Veteran of a period of ten years in Van Buren and Plain Townships. Rntarv . r; \ nce ' of AmeriMarrted Carl J. Coy. now deceased, and is the mother of Tp’mJlar Ardi. a % d Shl ii ne and one daughter and has one grandson. At the death of her member Jf Warslw United RrJtbro h and husband, the elected County Assessor, Mrs. Coy was ap- oilman wareaiv fmm ioiq Church. Counpointed Assessor in 1944. She was nominated and elect- «* J 7 f JJ 10 194... Mayor of Warsaw ed to the same office in 1946 and now seeks this office V, *Vd and Pen ' for the second term. Her office has been a model for J f °L many . y^ rs ’ diligence and efficiency. All patrons of this office have eiuskn'cmintv dnri™ hiVa! Os KoS " been favorably impressed by the co-operation and as- f . . . State Representasistance freely given by Mrs. Coy in matters pertaining t tb n °r S and ap . pr ® ci ’ to her office. The re-appraisement program as required tparhpr? fnd m™*? 1 businessmen, labor, by law was fairly and equitably completed under her L g . ♦ tS by eason of 111I 11 , 8 ac - supervision within the time perscribed, a task which was w gnTOrlmp C nt them ’ A str °PS advocate of local timely done only in a few counties in the state. Her ex- unli “ ited 5 h °P, est perience and accommodating ways make her most de- nfrtir>niVri 10nS ’ s . tron f.s: haracter an d grea,t ability, sirable to be our next Assessor Be 1S P artn: ularly well-qualified to serve the rural and sirable to be our next Assessor. . c{ty folks of our cQunty aQd deserves tQ be returned t 0 the Legislature. FOR RECORDER ■ELECT n| ffO |M WALTER BRUBAKER MIB-M ■fclßi Life-long resident of Kosciusko County. Graduate of HAZEL PHILLIPS PERRY Indiana Law School. Father of two children and grandfather of seven children. Veteran of the Spanish-Ameri- Born in Kosciusko County and has lived in Wayne can War, serving with the 160th Indiana Volunteer In- township more thari forty years. Attended Warsaw Pubfantry in Cuba. Began active practice of the law in war- , , , . . . saw shortly after the turn of the century and has con- hc Schools and graduated from Varsaw High School, tinuously practiced his profession in Kosciusko County Married Carl Perry and they are the parents of a sixsince that time. Has never sought public office prior to year-old daughter, Rebecca. Member of the United Bretthis time. His ability, intelligence, knowledge, resource- hren church in Warsaw, Eastern Star and East Side fulness and keen Insight into human affairs has built Mother’s Club. Served as Deputy Recorder from 1929 to for him an unexcelled reputation and has gained for . , . ctnrac hneino«« him the respect of the bench and bar of the entire State 193 r orked mercantile stores, business, of Indiana, in addition to the respect and admiration of houses and offices in arsaw over a period ot many the citizens of Kosciusko and .adjoining counties. Mr. years, during which time she became particularly adept Brubaker’s personal characteristics of mature judgment, a t meeting and serving the public. Mrs. Perry will be an honesty, sagacity, and integrity, coupled with his d ®vo- outstanding public official of Kosciusko County and will tion to the highest traditions of the profession in which f ‘ he has spent his life, contribute to make him one of the produce an honest, efficient and courteous administramost outstanding men ever to aspire to this Important tion. Her experience, humility, integrity, and courtesy office. To elect Walter Brubakeras Judge is to elect a make her most desirable to succeed to the office to truly judicious, courageous, fair and impar- which she aspires. < tial judicial officer.
LABOR SURVEY BEING MADE FOR NEW FACTORY’ IN WEBSTER Seventy-five applications for employment and an additional 65 replys to a labor questionnaires have been received at the Farmers State Bank and at Berger’s Barber Shop in North Webster it was announced today by J. Homer Shoop, director of a labor survey which is now underway by the North Webster chamber of commerce. The survey is being made preliminary to the locating in North 'W ebster of a factory serving unit by a nationally known and well established manufacturer of work clothes. The firm will employ 50 to 7-5 persons at first and would increase that number to possibly >2OO persons after several years. Approximately 90% of the employees would be women and the work would be principally sewing by electrically operated machines. Application for employment blanks can be obtained at either the Farmers State Bank or Berger’s -Barber Shop. Any person within driving distance of North Webster and interested in this type of work is urged to call or write either of the above for an application blank. Mr. Shoop advises that more than 1600 letters and questionniares have thus far been mailed to the surrounding boxholders notifying them of the survey and asking the co-operation of the community in enabling the North Webster business men to determine the number and the type of labor available. There is no industry or factory of any kind in North Webster at the present time. For further information, write, phone, or call in person at the bank in North Webster. CARD OF THANKS I wish to express my appreciation to the friends and neighbors for the kindness and floral offerings at the time of the death of my uncle Jesse 'Grisamer. Donald E. Long, nephew.
Wawasee iIM Lockers <lnc ' ) SMMm* | phone 236 fg Market PHONE 236 | SPECIAL FOR FRI. & SAT. ~ OCT. 27 & 28 I CREAMERY BUTTER No. 1 Quality (1 lb. limit) tt> 59« s I I Frozen ROUND or SIRLOIN STEAK lb. 59c Frozen T BONE STEAKS, 10 pieces to pkg lb. 69c | Frozen CHICKEN Boney pieces for boiling lb. 29c | Frozen CHICKEN Cut up in 4to 5 lb. pkgs lb. 49c | Fresh BEEF CHUCK ROASTS, choice Cuts lb. 49c Fresh BEEF for BOILING lb- 35c | FRESH GROUND HAMBURGER lb. 49c | LARD, Home Rendered 2 lbs. 35c s I POTATOES, peck 33c * 100 lbs. bag 31.95 HEAD LETTUCE, Fresh Crisp 2 beads 25c | Yellow Ripe BANANAS lbs. 29c I Deerwood ORANGE JUICE 46 oz. can 37c Donald Duck, Birdseye or Minute Maid Frozen ORANGE JUICE 6 oz. can 2 SALERNO ROLL COOKIES, Trick or Treat Special Your Choice any 2 Rolls 2 for 25c CANDY BARS 3 for 10c | COMPLETE L.HE Or rROZINFOCS TO CHOOSE r._OM Beer and Wine To Carry Out
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 27. 19-50
