Syracuse-Wawasee Journal, Volume 46, Number 2, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 27 October 1950 — Page 5

FRIDAY, OCTOBER >7. 1960

LOOK WHO’S NON-PARTISAN! Piously wrapping himself in the shopworn mantle of “nonpartisanship.” President Truman last night delivered a slyly hypocritical. partisan radio speech to the women of the Democratic Party. “The Congress you vote for on Nov. 7." he said, “will have much to do with whether we are CHOICE APPLES NOW BEADY Sweet Cider and Honey Available At All Times OAKWOOD ORCHARD Hours -7 A. M. to 5:30 P. M. < Daily Except Sunday

| going to „ voujusr I BETZ/ / Aef | z'“ > . " i A / '?’***£, £ " r ' j I R 11 NEW SHIPMENTS OF FALL CLOTHES ARRIVING DAILY. Marguerite's Style Shop I SYRACUSE, INDIANA miiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiumiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHni WARNING! Parents of children are asked to please keep them from entering the yards of the Syracuse Iron & Metal Co., except on business during the. day. We will be forced to prosecute, and hold responsible for all damage, anyone found in our yards, after dark. Several hundred dollars damage has been done recently by children in our yards, and we are asking that parents co-operate with us, and prevent prosecution. Syracuse Iron & Metal Co. Sam Swedarskey j Boston Street

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to achieve our goal of peace or be plunged Into another war. In that Congress there should be no room for men or women who put partisan advantage above their country’s welfare.” From the most bitterly patrisan President who ever sat ln> the White House, this is an insult to the American people. Obviously what Mr. Truman means is that it is unpatriotic to vote Republican; that a GOP vote is a vote of war; that politicians who attack his personal failures in foreign policy, his veto of legislation to control Communism at home, his political refusal to curb inflation before election, his insistence that pork barrell politics continue in time of war, are guilty of treason. While the president talks sanctipioniously , o f “non-partisan

ship” his captive miUlonaire diplomat, Averell Harriman, with Truman's approval, is viciously accusing, GOP Senator Taft of aiding Communism and of lack of patriotism. His congressional hatchetmen all over the country are, with his approval, trying to blame the Korean war on Republicans. Partisanship to (Harry Truman is opposition to Harry Truman. Non-partisanship to Truman is slavish support -for Truman. Obviously his small head has swelled to such an extent that he believes that only he knows what is good for the country, only he knows] how to achieve peace. But the rec-1 ord shows that three times in this' century the country has gone to' war under the Democrats, and the Korean war has been brought about, only five years after winning our greatest military victory in history, by his own blunders, confusion, complacency and stupidity. Non-partisanship fits Harry : Truman almost as badly as the' Presidency. To turn his own * phrase upon himself, “There is no! room in the Presidency for men' who put partisan advantage ahead' of th,eir country’s’ welfare.” It is j too bad Harry Truman is not up' for election this November. LOCAL NEWS Byron Connolly, A. J. Thibodeaux, Mrs. Sarah Ott, Mrs. Wilma Hire and Mrs. Louise Connolly visited Mrs. Angeline Edmonds at the home of her granddaughter in South Bend Sunday afternoon. Max Workman received a show halter from the Syracuse Hatchery and Milling Co., and McMillan Feed Mills for the 4-H grand champion Holstein cow at the Warsaw fair. Mr. and Mrs. Ben Jufier ,of Gary, accompanied" by Miss Ida Deardorff along, on a short visit to Kalamazoo, last week-end. They visited the Bill Luegge’s, in their newly purchased home, and also the Harry McClintics, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Granlund, Huntington, are guests this week in the home of their . daughter, Mrs. Leonard Barnhart and family. Monday, Mrs. Barnhart and her parents visited their aunt, Mrs. M. C. Garvin, in Ligonier. Mr. and Mrs. Sam Rasor spent Sunday, Jn Goshen, with their daughter, Mrs. Leia Clason. Mr. and Mrs. Ken Kitchen, of Parkridge, 111., and Miss Velijia Guthrie and Mrs. Frances Krager of Albion, were guests Sunday of Mr! and Mrs. Dale Grimes. Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Cox spent the week-end, in DeMotte, with Mr. and Mrs. Jack Evans and family. Mr. and Mis. John Swenson spent Saturday, in Fart Wayne, guests of Mrs. Swenson’s cousins, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Stein. The occasion was Mr. .and Mrs. Swenson’s forty-first wedding anniversary.

SYRACUSE-WASYASKE JOURNAL, Syracuse, Ind.

LOCAL NEWS Mrs. Wilma Hire, Mrs. Russell Hlnderer, Mrs. Sam Houser, Mrs. Edna Thomas, Mrs. Loose and Mrs. Jesse Mitchell attended the W.S.W.S. fall rally at the First Evangelical E.U.B. church in Elkhart Wednesday. The Homecoming at the Zion U. B. church Sunday was well attended. Guests were present from South Bend, Elkhart, Ft. Wayne, Huntington, Warsaw and Chicago. Mrs. Georgia Miller was hostess .to the Syracuse bridge club at a I luncheon in her home Wednesday. Prizes in bridges were won by Mrs. M. M. Smith and Mrs. Ralph E. Thornburg. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Noian and family and Mr. and Mrs. Harry Coy spent Sunday in Valparaiso, in the home of Mrs. Nolan’s brothel, David Worden, and family. The occasion was Mrs. Nolan’s birthday. Mi. rnd Mrs. Ra’nh Hi.rdestby had as their week-enc guesTs at their home on Kate Island, Mr. »ad Mrs. O. A. Hershberger Mr. and Mrs. R. B. Laycock, Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe Carver anl Mrs. Tyrees Que’sser, all of Indianapolis. Mrs. C. M. Petty has returned from a two-weeks’ visit with relatives and friends in Peru, Ind. Mrs. J. W. Adrian, who spent the two weeks here with her mother. Mrs. B. F. Hoy, during Mrs. Petty’s absence, has returned to her home in Lorain, O. Boyd Adrian, a student at Baldwin Wallace college, Berea, 0., spent Friday night and Saturday here with his grandmother. 0. E. S. NE W S Candidates who received initiatory work Wednesday evening in the Syracuse chapter of the O.E. S., were Mrs. Louise Byland and Mrs. Eva Rarig. After the business session, in charge of Rebecca Kitson, Worthy Matron, and Dr. O. C. Stoelting, Worthy Patron, refreshments were served in the dining room, which was beautifully decorated for Hallowe’en. Mrs. Glendora Davis, district Deputy and the Worthy Matrons and Worthy Patrons of District 20 will be honored guests at the next meeting on Nov. 8, Everyone uses the Highways. Indiana residents are well served by hard-surfaced roads leading into every corner of our State. Visitors from other States comment favorably on them, as do our own citizens after a sojourn to new or distant places. Indiana’s location as the “Crossroads of America” makes our highway problem a bard one. Millions of residents of other States, still our welcome guests, do give our roads hard usage. This is especially true of heavily, frequently illegally overloaded, freight trucks. Licensed in other States. Indiana must rely upon gasoline taxes t® secure any contribution from our trucking visitors. Many other States collect higher, sometimes much bigger gasoline taxes than we do. Hence they get more help from non-residents for highway construction and maintenance.

Chairman Samuel C. Hadden, of Indiana State Highway Commission states that, great as is rthe problem of maintaing the 10,500 miles of highways in the State maintained system, the Commission has a more difficult oae. Citties, Towns and Counties, tlitu their officials and Chambers of Commerce and other civic bodies, are constantly asking for, with good reason, more new roads, widened roads, widened or replaced bridges. Farmers, individually and thru their organizations, with equaUy good reason, ask to have more County roads taken into the State system. It Is the desire of the Commission to grant just as many of these requests, sometimes demands, as possible. (But highway costs are mounting much faster than funds are made available. The Interstate truck lines are complicating the situation by using our roads without contributing to their construction and maintenance. The next session of the Legislature will grapple with these problems. ETTER WANTS TO SEE YOU About Two good buys in homes. In Syracuse proper — shown by appointments. Also have good listings on Syracuse, Wawasee and Papakeechie Lakes. Call and tell us what you, wish. If we don’t have it, we will find it for you. Buy your dream home to-: day, and really start enjoying living — ETTER REAL ESTATE South Huntington Phones 230 R or 83414

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NOTICE Beverly’s Beauty Salon has been moved to her home, second house west on the Milford road. Phone 681-M. NOTICE: Will care for children in my home while parents work days or evenings. Phone 16:28W, Mrs. Paul Krebs. (2-ts) ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS to . free association of men and women, who assist each other and themselves to whip a drinking problem, and lead normal lives with peace of mind. The rehabilitation of human beings is a fascinating and worthwhile endeavor. If you have a problem, write P. O. Box 388, Syracuse. (9-ts) Protect yourself against a rise in interest rates. If you get a Federal Land Bank loan on your farm NOW, you will never pay more than 4% interest. You have the safety of 33 years to pay, but you can pay any amount any time. A farmers’ cooperative. Martin M. Bassett, Sec.-Treas., North Central Indiana, N. F. L. A., Room 23 Shoots Bldg., Goshen, Indiana; and 120 W. Market St., Warsaw, Indiana. (41-ts) WANTED Experienced Saw Filer and Knife Grinder for Wood Working Plant COPPES, INC. Nappanee, Ind. (l-2t) Something new, long sleeved and lace trimmed rayon jersey gowns, a very pretty garment LaPetite Shoppe. CHARLES A, HALLECK SECOND DISTRICT ■H&/ j- wOI ' JI ji

Charles A. Halleck, of Rensselaer, was born in Jasper County, Indiana, on August i 22, Be(cause his father’s great admiration for Abraham Lincoln, his nriitldle name is Abraham, and to this day he is known by his college classmates as “Abe.” He attended the grade and high schools in Rensselaer, and 'was graduated from Indiana University with an A. B. degree in 1922 and received LL. B, degree lhere in 1924. At I. U. he was a member of Beta Theta Pi asid Phi Delta Phi, Coif, scholastic honorary societies, and also of Beta Theta Pi and Phi Delta Phi, social fraternities. He served in World War I and is a member of the American Legion. To pay his way through college, he worked as a truck driver, carried newspapers, worked on a surveying gang and a dredge boat, fired steamboilers, and waited on tables. Before graduation from Law School he was elected Prosijcutiidg Attorney and then re-elected four times. In 1935 he was elected to the Congress from the Second District, where he has served continuously since. Thus, he is the dean of the Indiana delegation in Congress. He has served on the Rules Committee,' the Interstate and Foreign Commerce Committees, the Especial Committee on Small Business, the Special Committee to investigate the National Labor Relations Board, the Committee on Expenditures in the Executive Departments, and the Selected Committee on Lobbying Activities. As Chairman of the National Republican Congressional Committee from December 1943, to January, 1947, he had a leading part in electing the Republican I 80th Congress. He was Majority Leader in that Congress, and he was then 47 he was probably the youngest man ever to become Majority Leader. He also was Chairman of the subcommittee in the House which drafted the Republican Statement of Principles and Objectives adopted on February 6, 1950. > He married Blanche White, of Indianapolis, and they have two : children (twins), Charles W. and i Patricia. . j

FOR RENT FOR RENT: 2 bedroom modern home on highway 13 near South Shore Inn. Furnished or un--1 furnished. J. W. Rothenberger. I WANTED: The town of Syracuse I wants applications for the job of nightwatchman. Please apply to C. J. Kline, town mar- ’ shall. WANTED TO RENT: Modern house in or near Syracuse. Unfurnished preferred. Good references. Phone 248 or 265-J. Need money? Well, take a, few minutes and read the ads in The Journal. You find the lowest prices, and the highest quality goods advertised. Read ’em very ■ carefully and compare with what you ®re paying. ’ SALVATION ARMY TO START DRU E Fund raising drive for 15.200 ■ for the Salvation army In Kosciusko county will get underway Nov. 1. Both in the rural and ur- ■ ban communities will be visited by workers who will aim to see that no residence will be missed. Leroy Anderson of near Warsaw is chaiman of the drive and he urges that residents give as liberally as possible as he points out the worthwhile efforts of the Salvation army throughout the county. During the past year the army officers have aided hundreds of cases and homes. Elderly folks, young people and older ones, youths and children have been helped in various ways. No worthy call is turned down, the chairman adds. CUB SCOUTS MEET At the Scout Cabin last Tuesday night, was “Westward Ho,” and “Navajo Indians” night, for Syarcuse Cub Scouts, Pack 56’s Theme for this month’s meeting. There were some tough booking Indians, wild-west outfits, a frontiersman —Indian, with braids, and many exhibits for the parents to see, while gathering for the evening’s program. The idea is for the Cubs to make objects bearing on the current Theme. There were “peace pipes,” Indian Rattles,” bugs, a bottle top collection with no two alike, rock collection, hogans (a shelter for sleeping out) tents, a belt made with old battle caps, with the paint scraped off, many ingenuous, easy to make items. The program started with the opening by Den 3. All lights were turned off, and as the Den Chief. C. Byrd, in Indian »garb, started the skit. There were Ipdians, silently filing into the room, sil- . houtted against the flames in the large fireplace, and ill to tie . beat of a tom-tom. Three new ‘Bobcats’, were . taken in, John Ed Sheire, John ( Thornburg, and Leroy Sloan. . Some Bobcats received their Wolf badge—David Weaver, Lal mar Kilmer, Pat Connolly, Gary [ Kline. Bears — John Firestone, . and Tommy Miller, Charles Cripe, t and Larry Gustafson received ( their Lion badges. Wehelos — t Dallas and Dennis Bjella, re- [ ceived their Wehelos, thereby . graduating into Boy Scouts, join- , ing the Wawasee patrol. Robert . Insley, Master o f Ceremonies awarded the badges to the parents I who then gave them to their sons. ■ John Firestone and Charles Cripe • won one gold and two silver ar- , rows, David iWeaver, LaMar Kline i one gold and silver. Mrs. Ralph , Hudson and Henry Kilmer took i the Cubs in another part of the building, for games, while George (Bryan, chairman, presented, to : the assemblage, the problem of ■ the Pack growing so fast that It • needed more Den Mothers, and led in a discussion. Several volunteered to help, and this Frii day, the Cub Master, Sam Larson will meet with them, at Mrs. Byron Connolly’s home. Mrs. Laurence Firestone’s den, with Den Chief Dennis Firestone leading, gave the closing with the Great ,Cub Master’s Benediction. Afterwards the Cubs helped to straigthen up, and fold chairs borrowed from Carr’s Funeral , Home. The Cub Master and two 1 Den Chiefs did a clean-up job after every one was gone. Intermediate Mother’s Club The Intermediate Mother’s Club. met in the summer cabin at Mrs.' Merle Smiths, Monday evening for a gala Hallowe’en party. Every] one came in costume. Mrs. Paul! Lantz won the first prize, for the ’ best costume, and Mrs. Clyde Weaver, the prize for the funniest.; Games were played and refresh-! ments were served. Assisting the' hostess were, Mrs. Vuillard Gustafson, Mrs. James Yoder and Mrs. John Holloway. In two weeks the group will meet in the home of Mrs. Johnny Fisher for their annual bazaar. Guests will be invited.

FOR SALE: Large size hot water heater for domestic use—coal burning, excellent condition. Nelson Miles 324-J. FOR SALK; New Philco refrigerator, 9x12 rug, sofa bed and Maytag washer. Florence Schultz - Adm. Phone 9 Milford. o FOR SALE: 1950 Chevrolet Deluxe two door, radio and heater. 5000 miles. Might consider trade. Phone 53-J. FOR SALE: Potatoes. Wood in 16, 18, 28-in. length. — Dean Grady, Ph. 6-F-40, state Rd. 13, south of town. (1-ts) FOR SALE: 2 apartment modern home near uptown Syracuse. Approximate rental $l3O per month. About 12% on the investment. Price reasonable. Might consider smaller property in exchange. Rothenberger. 13 ASSIGNMENTS AVAILABLE IN THiE ENLISTED RESERVE Ft. Benjamin Harrison, Ind., Oct. il9 —Indiana Military’ District announced today that Civilian Component Instructor Assign-] ments, for ORC and National Guard duty, are available at Fort I Benjamin Rarrison, Indianapolis. Kokomo, Marion, Bedford, Evansville. and Terre Haute for Enlisted Reserve Volunteers who can meet the minimum requirements. In addition there are six ROTC | spaces available at Indianapolis and Gary. The following are the minimum requirements: 1. Must be assigned to Volunteer or Inactive Reserve. <j 2. Must be in Grade B 5 (Sgt) or higher for Assistant Instructor assignment. 3. Must be in Grade E3 'Pfc) or higher for Administrative Assistant assignment. 4. Must be High School Graduate. 5. Must have Aptitude Area I Score 100 (AGCT 90 may serve as guide pending test). 6. Must have reasonable proficiency as aCtypist. 7. Must have completed normal Foreign Service Tour since 7 ■December 1941. (Generally 2% years. Some areas less. Trieste 3 years). 8. Must meet minimum Physical Requirements. 9. Must have appropriate experience in Personnel, Supply, or S-3 Operations or Operations Chief Armored, Infantry, or AAA. 10. Upon qualifying as above, applicant will be Interviewed by a representative of the agency to which he is seeking assignment. INELIGIBLE: Those drawing disability allowance or compensation, unless waived; Enlisted Reservists below Grade 4 with dependents; individuals who have befin called for Physical Examinations under Selective Service Act, or Reserve Involuntary Recall Program. For further information, ap-

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FOR SALE: 6 room modern home in Syracuse on lake, living: room and dining room, carpeted, party furnished. Nice beach, two boats, lawn Shown by appointment. Now available. Phone 15-F-40. (51-ts) ATTENTION FARMERS and Contractors. Du Pont dynamite. Donald LeCount. Phone 135F31 North Webster (28-ts) FOR SALE: Custom tailored Venitian Blinds.—Stucky Furniture Co.. Syracuse (22-ts) FOR SALE: Hardy mum plants. 5.0 c each, variety of colors. Beers Flowers, Milford, Ind. FOR SALE: Doll play house, completely furnished, perfect condition. Also metal doll stroller. Very reasonable. Phone 1612W. Beam’s cottages on State ‘ Road 13. plicants should contact the nearest Organized Reserve Corps Unit Instructor. 4-H CLUB NEWS The Community Hands 4-H Club met, Thursday, Oct. 19, at the Syracuse High School. There were 24 members, Mr. Gard and Mr. Stotts present. The committees met to plan for the local Achievement Program, Oct. 25. It was decided that all Vocational Agriculture and 4-H members may show grain, at the local achievement program. Plans were made for the trip to the International Livestock Exposition, Nov. 25-Dec. 2, at the .Chicago Stock Yards. Refreshments of ice cream bars were served by Lee Oyler, Mark, and Jane Godschalk. • INSURANCE IS YOUR AUTO and FIRE Insurance too high? If so, see Knox H. Stetler Agency. “Insurance at a Saving!”—Phone 4-F-12, Syracuse. (26-ts) Winter Apples Red Delicious Golden Delicious Jonathans j - Grimes and other varieties DARR'S ORCHARD AUTOMOBILE. REPAIRING AND PAINTINGReasdnable Rafes All Work Guaranteed LYLE KELL Phone 1641-J Next to Sargent's Hotel