Syracuse-Wawasee Journal, Volume 46, Number 29, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 4 May 1951 — Page 3

FRIDAY, MAY 4. 19-51

Termites ► JDO NOT LET TERMITES EAT AWAY YOUR HOME Free Inspection — No Obligation x’iionc 01 Write ' UNIVERSAL TERMITE CONTROL Phone 572 — 120 N. Scott St. Warsaw, Indiana OR , WAWASEE LUMBER CO. Syracuse, Indiana UllilllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllUlllllllllllllllllllHlllilK MOCK’S BOAT LIVERY Near Waco South Side Lake Wawasee Phone 614-M Outboard Motor Service Boats - Motors for rent. Authorized Dealer for Johnson outboard motors. Tire Vulcanizing. Lawn Mowers Sharpened. — Welding. — J NOTICE WE ARE TAKING LAUNDRY FOR AMERICAN LAUNDRY PHONE—9O SYRACUSE DRY CLEANERS llllllllllllllllillHUllllltlllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllllllllll WORLD’S FINEST OUTBOARD MOTOR The Choice TyWw of Experts More Chris-Craft Outboard Motors were sold in the first 4 months of 1950 than during al 1 of 1949! Come in and let us tel’ you why. WAWASEE SPORTSMAN , CENTER Syracuse Phone 1636-J llllOimillUllliUllliHlKillllllHlHlllllililllllilllllllliHllllli GREASING WASHING TIRE REPAIR We Balance Wheels While On The Car Hunter Balancer. Champion Spark Plugs ■ We Also Clean and Check Plugs j KNISLEY’S STANDARD SERVICE Phone 100 In Syracuse

■'agWglb ... |K<: HN ill-lW Intwmhorml Uniform BR Sund»y School L«»om FMI SCRIPTURE: II Samuel s—B; I Chronicles 22:17—19. DEVOTIONAL READING: Psalm 89: 20-29. What Is Greatness? Lesson for May 6, 1951 WHAT is a great man? Some men have been called great who were not so; they were only prominent. Hitler, for example, was certainly prominent enough; but he was not great. Men can * truly be called gr ea t for various good reasons. Some ", ||| may be artists, some may be soldiers, others states- I men or prophets. Once in a while a Foremaß man is born who is great in more ways than one. • • • David the Ideal King SUCH a man was David, King of Israel and„ one of the world’s most famous men. The United Kingdom of Israel had a short history, only three kings reigning over it—Saul, David and Solomon. Os the three, David was by all odds the greatest man and greatest king. Neither Saul nor Solomon was capable of holding for a lifetime to a high ideal. Neither was capable of whole-hearted devotion to God. Neither one could gain and hold the loyalty of the nation. It was only David who could do these things. It is no accident that forever after, when a Hebrew thought of the ideal king, he would think neither of Israel’s first king nor of the wealthiest, but of David the best and most beloved. • * * Military Genius DAVID was great, in part because of his power in battle. What no one since Joshua had been able to do, David did: he welded the quarreling, jealous, weak tribes of Israel into a ‘single sword.” The times called for military. genius, and David had it. He gave Israel the military might that was essential for their peace and prosperity. So, often since David’s time, there have been great soldiers who have used their military genius not for conquest in itself but in order to win some place in the sun for peaceloving nations. One thinks of Charles Martel, who saved Europe from barbarian conquest; of William of Orange who set the Dutch free from Spanish tyranny; of Washington, “father” of a great nation; and of many others. The great soldiers of history have been more than professionally skilled and successful killers of men; they have been like David, men whose skill was used to preserve nations, not to destroy them. • • * ' Lovable Leadership IN OUR times Hitler brought the word “Leader” under a shadow, because his leadership was in the , wrong direction. But there is such a thing as noble and wise leadership, and David had this quality in • high degree. It is true, success has something to do with It. Men will flock to a winner who would have nothing to do with him if he were a loser. But still it is a fact that most of the world’s great leaders, who have come up from obscurity, as David did, have arisen at the head of groups of devoted men who have followed them loyally through the darkest times. So it was with David. During his years as leader of the “underground” (literally so, since for some time his headquarters were in a great limestone cave), he developed the hard core of the army he commanded at a later time, a core 5 of men who would rather lose with David than win against him. • • • Leader in Faith DAVID had yet another quality of greatness, and for this he is perhaps best remembered. He was a man of deep religion. But religion for him was not merely a personal matter; he carried his faith into public life, he made his faith contagious. He did his best to make faith in God central, as it had never been, in the life of his nation. Religion for him was not a stick with which to beat other people about the head, but a rod and staff to lean upon. It was not a secret locked in his own heart but something he desired to share with all his people. It was not a device to keep his subjects contented; it was an acid test for his own life. And though he sometimes slipped and terribly fell, he could always rise again, for his religion gave him that rarest of all qualities in great men: humility before God and man. (CoyriiM 1951 Oy Dlvtataa •« Chrl»U»n EdaeaUan, NaUaaal Caanall •f th* Charehaa at Chris* in tha United States es America. Released ky WNU Fentar es.) SERVING BEST OF FOODS Steaks Chicken Sea Foods FERRIS INN 1 Mile South Syracuse

"SMALL BUSINESS” By C. WILSON HARDER

Watch for smear campaign to start on Sen. Kenneth Wherry, (Neb.> others, who are opposing grandiose foreign adventure schemes. There is great danger of communism. But Sen. Wherry, others, feel economic disaster at home more' j dangerous . than possible 1 j armed attacks. H 'll Plain truth is I American 1 strength is be- - fl ing dissapated. \ * * * Bureaucrats HH new plan calls for end of..Lisaa Marshall Plan. C. W. Harder Take small comfort in that. 000 Plan calls for replacing Marshall Plan with Eisenhower plan. Only difference is new plan would squander even more billions. • • * Bureaucrats, aided and abetted by Big Monopoly, seek to screen actions with the wellmerited popularity of Eisenhower name. ♦ * * Fact is Marshall Plan has failed. So new program is reminiscent of various Russian “Five Year Plans.’* ♦ ♦ * Big Monopoly Business, which has sold the major part of the more than 12 billions of dollars of material already given away by Marshall Plan, does not want to lose profits. Bureaucrats desperately seek to hide from public details of biggest tax raids in history of mankind. The truth is not being told. For example, at end of 1950, when British Prime Minister Attlee was in Washington, it was announced Marshall Plan gifts to Britain would end December 31st. ©National Federation of Independent Business

“Labor Laws Os Indiana” Available INDIANAPOLIS, April 22. — Announcement of the revision of the publication “Labor Laws of Indiana’ ’to include changes made by the 1951 Indiana General Assembly into a new handbook for employers is being made this week in a special notice to the State Chamber membership. The 1951 edition of this wellknown reference book contains the latest texts of Indiana laws affecting employment and the official texts of industrial health and safety codes which have been adopted by the Commissioner of Labor. This year Elevator Safety,) a new code, has been added to the six previously adopted including; I 1.) electroplating, 2.) mercantile’ housekeeping and sanitation, 3.) dusts, gases and fumes in found-) ries, 4.) dusts, vapors, fumes or gases from grinding, polishing or

■BUlmllllllHllHHramlllllllllHlinßtHHUMßlHUUlllHlHlU'lMHiimi | THIS NEW HOME | I COSTS LESS THAN | | YOU THINK! | = B Bw = i I w MEL-.,, m = I THE CAMERON = 11 ' II What can be more livable than = S . 1 St? jj small yet fully equipped = E uh ■ Li home? The rooms are = 1 zl enough for easy living. The kitch- e I ujim u. en with its commodious dining E MU R area and picture windows is espe- 5 1 * I 32* I WM J cially attractive - 2 SrF Wtt* COME IN FOR COMPLETE PLANS AND FREE COST ESTIMATES I - ' ' . I SYRACUSE LUMBER & COAL CO. ■ SYKACUSE, IND. I Am Interested In: | I | Building garage | Re-siding | | || Adding new room | Remodelling | | | Re-roofing Picture windows | | | Building new porch! Insulating | | X | Check and Mail Today!! I / Signed K PHONELYRACOLEJ |k 69 SI6HOF6OODLUMBER -

SYRACUSE-WAWASEE JOURNAL, Syracuse, Ind.

But now in ECA Bulletin No. 2091 Marshall Plan announces between now and August, American taxpayers will give Britain $5,588,000 worth of scarce copper, and $2,500,000 worth of petroleum. o*o Two things are interesting. Many small American firms are desperate for copper. The oil is being shipped from Arabian fields of world’s biggest petroleum monopoly. * * * Here’s a partial answer to high coffee prices. ♦ ♦ ♦ Marshall Plan announces gift to Greece of half million dollars worth of coffee. • * * Tin is being denied many American packers. * * * Yet Marshall Plan has just given $1,400,000 worth of tinplate to Norway and French North Africa. • * * Marshall Plan has quit giving information on who sells materials being given away. William, McCormick, of ECA says this was done with consent of Senate Small Business Committee. • • • McCormick says business firms objected disclosures of private business, but no one can understand how use of taxpayer’s money is private business. In addition Sen. John Sparkman’s Senate Small Business Committee had nothing to do with censorship order. ♦ * * Right now Sen. Sparkman’s Committee is digging out startling facts on rubber situation, but will investigate McCormick alibi. * * * But for present, until all truth is revealed, carefully weigh all reports. Remember, Marshall Plan alone is now spending $670,000 of tax money for press agent salaries. It is expensive to bury truth.

(buffing, 5.) dusts, gases, vapors, | fumes and mists from spray, flow, ’ dip, and brush coating, 6.) guarding of operating machinery. ’ In addition to being a reference : source for the laws affecting em- ’ ployment and the industrial codes, j the book contains a directory of • national labor agencies. This is a • complete listing of all the import- : ant executive personnel in the > various labor agencies, their ad- ) dresses and the scope of their ad- . ministrative functions. , Another special feature of the new publication is a reminder list of state and federal laws for retailers, distributors, and small businesses. This comprehensive listing serves as proof of the i chamber’s contention that\ “A ' business may be ‘small’ but its i legal responsiblities are ‘large.’ ” I Copies of the new “Labor Laws of Indiana, 1951 edition” may be .) obtained at the Indiana State ■' Chamber of Commerce at $4.04) per copy.

If Polio Comes! Do — Allow children to play with friends they have been with right along. Keep them away from new people, especially in the close daily living o£ a home. Because — Once polio has appeared in a community, scientists say the virus probably is widespread. Your children probably have come in contact with it already and developed a degree of resistance to that particular virus. Do — Wash hands carefully before eating and always after using the toilet - especially important when polio is around. Also, keep food clean and covered. Because — Hands may carry polio infection into the body through the mouth. Scientists have determined that Largeamounts of virus are expected from the bowel and throat of a patient as well as a healthy carrier during seasonal outbreaks. Do — Watch for signs of sickness, such as headache, fever, sore throat, upset stomach, sore muscles, stiff neck or back, extreme triedness or nervousness, trouble in breathing or swallowing. Because — During an outbreak of polio, symptoms vary from the very vague to actual paralysis. Watch for all symptoms closely during this period. Do — Put a sick person to bed at once, away from others, and call the doctor. Quick action may lessen crippling. Because — While paralysis cannot be prevented, doctors have determined that early bedrest and prompt treatment may influence progress of the disease and lessen the severity of deformities. Do — Telephone your local Chapter of the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis, if you need help. Locate through telephone book or health department. No patient need go without care for lack of money. Your Chapter will pay what you cannot afford. Because — The 2800 local Chapters of the National Foundation, supported by your contributions to the March of Dimes, exist for this purpose. Other March of Dimes funds are spent for scientific research and the training of much-needed professional personnel. z Do — Remember, at least half of all polio patients get well without any crippling. Because — Recent surveys show that 50% of all diagnosed polio cases suffer no paralysis at all. Another 25% recover with no disabling after-ef-fects. Fifteen percent are severely about eight percent die. Don’t — get over-tired by hard play, exercise, work or travel. This means men, women and children. Because — Scientists believe that once a person has become infected with polio, a delicate balance exists between the polio virus and the body’s ability to fight it. The scales can be tipped in favor of the virus by overexertion. A recent study revealed that heavy exertion in the early stages of the disease resulted in more severe and extensive paralysis. Don’t — get chilled. Don’t bathe or swim long in cold water or sit around in wet clothes. Because — Research has indicated that chilling and physical exertion seem to lower the body resistance to the virus, once it has entered your body. Don’t — have mouth or throat operations during a polio outbreak. Because — Recent Purveys have demonstrated that tonsellectomies performed at this time increase the risk of getting bulbar polio (most serious form) by 11 times. Don’t — use another person’s towels, dishes, tableware or the like.. Because — Virus is excreted from the bowel and throat and may be transferred unknowingly by these implements. Don’t — take children to places inhere there is polio; ask your health department for advice. Because — Moving the child would needlessly expose him to the polio virus. Don’t — take your child out of camp or playground, where there is good health supervision. Because — He already has been exposed to the virus by the time a case has been reported. Routine daily living under proper supervision, such as good camps and playgrounds offer, is a safeguard to his health. Wawakeechle Home Ec Club The Wawakeechle Home Economics club met Wednesday, April 25, at the Turkey Creek Conservation clubhouse with 27 members answering roll call and* a guest. The Creed was repeated by all. Health remarks given followed by two songs from the chorus. The lesson on Broiling was given by Mrs. Ruth Snellenberger, Home Demonstration agent which all enjoyed. Lunch was served by the Hostesses, Mrs. Harry Burson, Mrs. Ray Denzel and Mrs. Theries Doll. The meeting closed with our prayer, club collect. Next meeting will be May 23.

MITCHELL Fann CommeMator, heard Monday through Satur ay. &15- a. ■. on WMAQ. Chicago, 670 on your uiaL A FEW items of the right kind of equipment in your milk house can make the difference between producing high-quality milk and lesser grades. Washing the dairy utensils may take time, but it’s very important and can’t be neglected. Here are some items which will save time and help you do the job right: Running hot and cold water, a stall cock, a stop-start switch on the vacuum pump, a table with a stainless steel perforated screen for a top, and preferably a table on wheels. You’ll also need a cabinet for supplies, a can and utensil rack, and an electric milk coqler. According to recent surveys, an outlay of the above equipment can cut your daily time in caring for milk utensils from 16 minutes to 10 minutes. To make sure these utensils are used properly, here’s a quick runthrough of the routine that’s considered the best for washing and sanitizing the milking equipment: Rinse the equipment in lukewarm water, about 100 degrees Fahrenheit. Then completely dismantle the milking machine. Soak the equipment for one-half hour in an alkaline solution at a temperature of 115 degrees. After soaking, each part should be brushed. Then the equipment should be stored, dry and unassembled until next milking time. The right time to reassemble and sanitize the equipment is right before the next milking. Well, maybe it does sound like a lot of work, but you’ll find that it pays big dividends when you ta’ e your milk to the collection station. It’s quality that gets the price! ' = We have new washable nylon cord*%uits in sizes 16% to 22%, also in sizes 10 to’ 18. — Mrs. M. Louise Connolly. NOTICE DOG OWNERS IN TOWN OF SYRACUSE A town ordinance provides that dogs AT ALL TIMES be on the property of owner. Those found running at large will be placed in the city dog pound. Owners must claim them within three days time and pay board bill or they will be destroyed. Syracuse City Marshal By Order of Town Board

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CARD OF THANKS We appreciate, more than we can express, the acts of kindness, words of sympathy and understanding and floral offerings ex-

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tended us during the illness and death of our wife and mother. Mr. Frank Granlu.nd, Mr. and Mrs. R. H. Granlund. and* son, Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Barnhart and family.