Syracuse-Wawasee Journal, Volume 46, Number 2, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 27 October 1950 — Page 6
SOCIALIZED MEDICINE IN FAIR DEAL PROGRAM Evansville, Ind., Oct. 24 —"The new dealers are trying a sleight-of-hand trick on the socialized medicine scheme,” United States Senator Homer E. Capehart declared tonight. Senator Capehart said: "The scramble by the new dealers in Indiana to run for cover on the Socialized Medicine program is due to a belated awakening on the part of the new dealers in Indiana to the switch that has been made in the national new deal scheme. "I have received and have in my possession a copy of a phamphlet published by the Democrat
HAZEL PHILLIPS PERRY For COUNTY RECORDER GENERAL ELECTION NOV. 7, 1950 Your Support Will Be Greatly Appreciated
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National Committee in June of this year entitled ‘Administration Health Program’. "At the same time, I also have in my possession a phamphlet that is identical with that of the new deal phamphlet except that it is entitled ‘National Health Insurance Handbook* and is sponsored by the Committee For the Nation’s Health’ whatever that is, and dated August of this year. "The contents of the two pamphlets are identical and feature an article by Mr. Oscar R. Ewing, the author of socialised medicine. The title of his article: ‘National Health Insurance and You.’ "Now. there is one more pertinent difference In the two books.
On the cover of the Democrat National Committee pamphlet are these words: ‘A training kit for leaders.’ On the new version are the words: *A practical guide for leaders’. "This undercover shift by the Democrat National Committee of responsibility for promoting socialized medicine is the reason for the scampering for cover by Indiana new dealers. "The committee which is attempting to relieve the new dealers for the moment of the stigma of socialized medicine contains such personalities as Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt, William Green, Phillip Murray, Abe Fortas, Mary Dublin Keyseling, Samuel I. Roseman, Robert E. Sherwood, Matthew Woll and other long identic fied with the new deal. "It is just another plan to hoodwink the people, but it will
fail in Indiana. “The scheme explains well why my opponent finds it possible to only straddle the issue instead of making his position known. My position is ip determined opposition to socialized medicine.” Visit County Infirmary The September Committee of the Business and Professional Women finished their former (Flower-Taking) short visit, to the County Infirmary recently, with a longer visit, small gifts, and ice cream and cake, and also enjoyed a visit with Mr. and Mrs. Walter Koher, managers. Mrs. Effie Emerson wished to be remembered to Emily Voorhees, at the Infirmary, giving her the news that she “was doing pretty well.” Emily was pleased, and also wondered how Dan Klink is getting along. The Infirmary Ladies seem to be enjoying, and working up the crochet, embroidery thread, etc., sent by the August Committee. WASHING GREASING TIRE REPAIR We Balance Wheels While On The Car Hunter Balancer. Champion Spark Plugs We Also Clean and Check Plugs KNISLEY’S STANDARD SERVICE Phone 100 In Syracuse
SYRACUSE-WAWASEE JOURNAL, Syracuse, Ind.
RACES AT GOSHEN Because of the interest manifested by fans, stock car racing will continue into November at the Fairgrounds Speedway, Goshen, with a big championship twin event on the 12th. Races each Sunday night start at 8:15 with nine events, preceded by time trials at 7:00 for around 65 cars from northern Indiana and southern Michigan. NOTICE TO BIDDERS Sealed proposals addressed to the Board of Trustees of the Syracuse Public Library, Syracuse, Indiana for the furnishing of all labor and materials for the New Heating System for the Syracuse .Public Library, Syracuse, Indiana in accordance with the plans and specifications prepared by R. W. Noland, M. E. Consulting Engineer, Fort Wayne, Indiana will be received up to and until ,8 P. M., oh* tne 9th day of November, 1950, after which time the said bids will be opened publicly in the Libarian’s office in the Syracuse Public Library, Syracuse, Indiana. Each bidder shall submit proposals as follows: — Proposal No. 1 Shall cover all labor and materials as indicated on the plans and as called for in these specifications. Proposal No. 2. Shall state the amount to be added to or deducted from Proposal No. 1 for installing of thin tube Cast iron radiators of equal capacity instead of the cppper convectors as indicated or. the plans. The Board of Trustees of the Syracuse Public Library, Syracuse, Indiana reserves the right to reject any and all bids. Outside of envelope shall be marked “Bid for New Heating System.” Plans and specifications may be obtained from the office of librarian. • In witness thereof we have hereunto set pur hand and seals of the Syracuse Public Library, Syracuse, Indiana on this 6th day of October, 1950. Attest: ETHEL BO WSER Librarian RUTH MEREDITH RUTH RAPP DR. O. C. STOELTING RAY R. FREVERT MADISON F. JONES MAY KINDIG OLIVE BUSHONG Members of Library Board. (l-2t) Read the Journal ads. iiuiiiiniiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii* SERVING BEST OF FOODS Steaks Chicken Sea Foods FERRIS INN 1 Mile South Syracuse
GIRL SCOUT MEETING The Girl Scouts hiked about 3 miles, along Turkey Creek, and back, last Saturday morning. They took box lunches, and some of them cooked hot dogs, and roasted marshmallows. The new Tenderfoot girls gathered wood, and the Second Class Girls built the fire. There was quite a busy time what with burrs and bulls. There were twenty-seven girls, the leader, Mrs. Gerold Kline, CoLeader, Mrs. Hubert Anglemyer, and Camping Chairman, Mrs. R. H. Brewster, and her daughter, Barbara, a Brownie Scout. The girls were Janet Kitson, Nola Meek, Verla Carol Clayton, Sharon Miner, Darlene Rogers, Jane Kroh, Jane Nusbaum, Linda Fisher, Carol and Janet Weaver, Mary Miner, Peggy Pusti, Alice Gingerich, Kay Adams, Pat Charters, Pat Anglemyer, Janet LeCount, Marlene Cripe, Marcia and Marilyn Hursey, Eleanor Holloway, Susan Klink, Phyllis George, Connie Sudlow, Charlene Stump, Judy Kline, and Susie Kleinknight. Scribe—Nola Meek. W. S. C. S. MEETS The W. S. C. S. Circles of the Methodist Church will meet next Thursday, Nov. 2nd as follows: — Circle One, with Mrs. Hague, at two P. M., Circle Two, with Mrs. Lucy Kegg, at 7:30 P. M„ Circle Three with carry-in dinner all-day affair, from 10 till?, sewing on their Bazar project, and Circle Four with Mrs. W. G. Connolly, Pot-Luck, at 6:30 P. M. Relief From Pain of ARTHRITIS RHEUMATISM NOW GUARANTEED ASK FOR SAL-A-DIN You take no chances. Take as directed for 5 days. If not satisfied, return balance and get ALL your money refunded! 60 TABLETS $2 THORNBURG DRUG CO Syracuse, Ind.
PHONE—9O SYRACUSE DRY CLEANERS M. E. RAPP M. R. RUCH i • . . I i i I BndhSß 2JS»ai e J n f orc * Um Sign Os $ Wise ItinSTrVCnon Nov you e«n add stool ninforeinz to uiMonry walla oconoailcally. ‘Jar-O-waL protect* year buildirir.veatment . . . proTenta unsightl.craeks . . . cuta on ovor-all co.-.. Insist on the protection of Dur-C---*al> for all of your masonry walls. GOSHEN VERIUTECO. 512 North 7th Street, GOSHEN, IND.
SCRIPTURE: Acts 17:10-15: Philip, plans 4:8-8; I Timothy 4:12-18; H Timothy 3:15: 4:13. DEVOTioNAJL READING: Psalm IS. I What's Your Intake? I Lesson for October 29, 1950
I iEW PEOPLE would care for a * diet of sawdust, mixed with old bacon rinds aqd with carbolic acid for a drink. Yet some people who are very careful of what goes into their stomachs are astonishingly careless about the Intake of their l|p|i minds. What goes Into ■ ' ’ your mind counts for more, and lasts K '' longer, than what K goes into your mouth. What you ■ eat can kin you— ■HBaEjflß your body, that is; Dr . Foreman but what you think. what you read, what you hear, can kill your mind. It can even kill your soul. You can afford to be particular. Down at the Cracked Cup Case they give you no choice. If you don’t like the 50c dinner you can walk out; and if you are at all particular you will walk out. But at the best restaurants you are offered a wide choice, and the experienced diner-out will read the menu carefully before ordering. Are you a Christian? Then don’t feed your mind at the mental equivalent of the Cracked Cup Case. Go to a better spot. The beauty of food for the mind is that the best costs no more. The best foods for the table are rather expensive; the best mind-foods, soul-foods, arc not. * * . * Ear-Gate IS WHAT you listen to, good for your mind? What’s your intake, by ear? A woman who had roomed in another woman’s house for some time was looking for a new place. Her old room was inexpensive, sunny, convenient, clean; there was nothing wrong with the room. But she had to listen to the landlady every day, and from her she never heard good of any one. “If I stay there any longer I shall go crazy,” the roomer confided to a friend. “She’ll get me to thinking the way she does, and she thinks everybody’s a crook.” In Tennyson’s “Idyls of the King” is that fine rule of the Round Table: “To speak no slander — no, nor listen to it ... ” Listening to slander, trash, mean and malicious gossip, day after day, is bound to have a serious effect on any one’s mind. • • • Eye-Gate THE STRANGE thing is that Christians can be seen taking the greatest of pains picking out the right food for their dogs and cats, and yet never exercising the least choice In what comes into their minds by ear or eye. They will let the radio run on hour after hour, they look at whatever the television puts on the screen,—the dirty with the clean, the trash with the jewels (K any). They read the newspapers from front to back, or vice versa, they read all the comics whether they are amusing or not But when ft eomes to picking out something good for their minds, really going to the trouble of selection, and paying out folding money for it, how many, even Christian people, win do it? It would be interesting to compare what meet people spend on quite unnecessary stuff like soft drinks and cigarettes, what tiny spend for books in a year’s time. Would you like to sit down with a great and good man or woman and let him talk to you by the hour, to give you the best of his mind and heart? It can always be done—with a good book. Not, usually, the best sellers! An intelligent Christian woman recently had to move almost a thousand miles; when you move that far and have to pay by the pound for what you take, you screen your stuff pretty carefully. “I am throwing away all my best sellers,” she said. "There’s not a one worth wasting freight on.” She was right about most best-sellers. But the oldtime, long-time, all-time best seller of them all is the Christian Bible. • • • Is Tour Mind a Vacant Lot? rC IS MORE than a question of what you read and see and heaj. An even more serious question /is: What do you think about? Gpod reading, even the Bible, was never meant to be a substitute for thought. One of the great books of ancient times was "Consolations of Philosophy,” written by a man in jail without a book in his cell. But the fine books he had read were in his head and heart, and when he became a political prisoner, alone and poor and friendless, his mind was still a garden. What is your mind— a garden, or a desert, or only a vacant lot littered with junk? FOR SALE: Adding machine paper.—at The Journal office. TILE WORK: Real Clay tile and ceramic floor tide properly installed in sand and cement walls, floors, drainboards, etc. 3 0 years experience — Free estimates. Seiffert Mosiac and Tile Co., R. R. 2 Syracuse, Ind. Phone: Cromwell 98F31 ts
Pledged at Hanover CoUege Phi Chapter of Alpha Delta Pi at Hanover College, Hanover, Indiana has pledged Jane Stephenson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edward E. Stephenson, Box 484, Syracuse, Indiana.
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ABOUT Socialized Medicine! • Government control of medical services is a vicious threat... to your health ... your pocketbook ?.. yom* peace of mind. Socialized Medicine will load you down with compulsory taxes —lifted out of your paycheck before you even see it. It can rob you of your personal privacy—leave all your medical records open to gossip. It will t wipe out our present health standards—and substi- - tute low quality medical care at a whopping big price! ■ There’s only one brand of adequate medical care ~ • • and it isn’t wrapped up in a government label! Our Nation’s health is at an all-time high under the present system. Let’s keep it that way. Let those who represent you in Washington know you are against government control of medical service. Remember, it’s your health ... and your voonoy.
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1950
CARD OF THANKS I wish to thank my many friends for their cards, flowers and other kindnesses, during my stay in the hospital and the following weeks at home. Mrs. Effie G. Emerson.
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