Syracuse-Wawasee Journal, Volume 46, Number 4, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 9 November 1951 — Page 5

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1951

LEGAL NOTICE To all residents of Turkey Creek Township, Kosciusko County, Indiana. You are hearby notified that John C. Ward and Mildred J. Ward and, Ernest Poole have filed their petition in the Kosciusko Circuit Court, wherein they pray for the vacation of a portion of Elmwood Drive in Forest Park Addition to Lake Wawasee, from the South Boundary of Cable Lane to the South termination of said Elmwood Drive, all in Kosciusko County, State of Indiana, the said Petitioner’s being the owners of all real estate adjacent to said portion of Elmwood Drive proposed to be closed, which said petition is docketed in the Kosciusko Circuit Court as Cause No. 2'6465. You are hereby further notified that the court will hear evidence thereon and determine said cause in the Court Room, in the City of Warsaw, State of Indiana, at 9:30 A. M., on the 26th day of Novemberi, 1951. R. j Leon Connolly, Ati'orney for Petitioners. j . Mexican Industry Mexico 1$ the world leader in the production lot silver and sisal hemp and chicle, a chewing gum ingredi ent. Accident Cause* - The three principal causes of accidents are said to be speed, liquor, and faulty vision on the part of drivers Metal-Colored Glasses A vaporized Inconel film on “Ray-Ban” sunglasses grades off from heavy at the top 'of the lens to light at the bottom. As a result the top eliminates the sun’s glare, while light from objects at eye level is undiminshed.

WEDNESDAY — NOTICE — WEDNESDAY After 3 Years We Have Now Etaj lished A Route Serving Syracuse and Wawasee We Rent— APRONS - TOWELS - SHEETS - PILLOW CASES UNIFORMS - COATS - TABLE CLOTHS - NAPKINS You Pay Only For What You Use — We Do Not Charge For Linens On Your Shelves. For Your Lavatories: We are Distributors for the Automatic Cloth Towel Cabinet. INDIANA TOWEL & LINEN SUPPLY CO. 2015-17 S. Hanna St. - FORT WAYNE - Tel. H-4205

AXE! AXES AXE! AXE! WHILE ALL NICE PEOPLE HAVE BEEN THINKING ABOUT GIVING THEIR THANKSGIVING TURKEY THE AXE . . . Grieger’s • • ARE USING THE AXE TO SLASH PRICES. COME IN AND SEE! - \ Saturday Specials Chas? & Sanborn PALMOLIVE SOAP — S A L E—- — Leaf 2 bars 15c MONDAY, NOV. 12th Instant Tea - OURTISS MARSHMALLOWS « , . . HERSHEY CHOCOLATE SYRUP lar £ e 10 oz ’ 06110 ba S Regular size jar -35 c I?<j 10c Little Bo Peep Bordens INSTANT COFFEE — S A L E—- — large jar - $1.19 TUESDAY, NOV. 13th Full quart 19c Planters COCKTAIL PEANUTS JUICE 46-oz. can 15c VANCAMP MACKEREL can 29c -lb. can 15c DID YOU KNOW" NOV. 14th GRIEGER’S The first “Drive-In” eating place Aunt Jemima Feature S & W Food Products was devised in 1762 by a New Jer- PANCAKE FLOUR S & W Seedless Raisins - New Pack -15 c 15-oz. pkg. -21 c eat without dismounting. SALE S & W Extri, Large Prunes THURSDAY, NOV. 15th 1-lb. pkg. -33 c N 0 W MIL N 0 T S& W Apricot Juice or ders for «p a H cans g for 19c 2 e Jas 29c 1 - Thanksgiving Poultry. Day Sale We mose at N<xm ' Our Store Closed All Day — —— NEW ARRIVAL Thanksgiving, Thurs., Nov. 22nd. —SA LE — — Annual Pcxan Meat order T>TTmm™ n FRIDAY, NOV. 16th direct from Tei’jis' - Sat. only CREAMERY BUTTER Royal Blue * 1 D W A AA lb - 69c COFFEE 4-oz. pkg. Pecan Meats -29 c Reg or Drip . w 79c 1-lb. pkg. 19c We reserve right to limit quantities PEANUT BUTTER -29 c - MEATS - MEATS ~ SORRY “ iK RKn The above will be sold at these FROZEN FOOD SPECIALS Whole Smoked Hams lb. 55c pri(jes ONLy Qn Rnnniac,. Pamh ih QQo J ° wl Bacon lb. 25c ed xj n( f er no circumstances can we F zen Boneleaa .... lb. 39c p ork Shallks lb. 15c d 0 otherwise. PLEASE do not ask Snow Crop Frozen Cornlsc LARD 10-lbr pail $1.89 for exception to this policy. UT Store Open Hours Each Week. Mll s to o TBBBmBH 11 I ® fj | Closed Thursday

LEGAL NOTICE To all residents of Turkey Creek Township, Kosciusko County, Indiana. You are hereby notified that the Indiana Yearly Meeting of the Religious Society of Friends as Petitioner, has filed its petition in the Kosciusko Circuit Court wherein it prays for the vacation of Robert Barclay Street East from Allen Jay Drive in the revised and additional Plat of Quaker Haven Park, on Dewart Lake, in Kosciusko County, Indiana, to the East Boundary Line of said plat and the vacation of that portion of Allen Jay Drive lying between Robert Barclay Street and Elizabeth Fry Street in said revised and additional Plat of Quaker Haven Park on Dewart Lake in Kosciusko County, Indiana, upon which said streets the Petitioner is desirous of erecting a building or buildings for use in its religious, educational and recreational activities, and which said petition is docketed in the Kosciusko Circuit Court as Cause No. 26466. You are hereby further notified that the court will hear evidence thereon and determine said cause in the Court Room, in the City of Warsaw, State of Indiana, at 9:30 A, M., on the 26th day of November, 1951. R. Leon Connolly, Attorney for Petitioner. Leave Sparrows Atone Sparrow hawks seldom prey on sparrows: Main items in their diet are grasshoppers and mice Household Hint* Extra vitamins and mineral* may be worked into a sandwich by creaming the butter with shredded watercress, parsley, lettuce, or cab bage.

Central States News Views

DEB FUEHRER’S FACE—Maybe “Eva” is homeless because she has a real mustache like Hitler. Chicago Animal Welfare League adopted cat as mascot after having animal televised in fruitless effort to find her owners.' tefcgk ; . A Jj

lilial FISHIN’S EASY for these two Minnesotans shown trolling in Lake Minnetonka. They rigged up a Minneapolis-Honeywell bomber autopilot (at right of steering wheel) to steer their lake-going auto while they fish leisurely.

W. C. T. U. MEETING The November meeting of the WCTU will be held at the home of Mrs. Oliver Hibschman on Tuesday, Nov. 13th at 1.30 p. m. The lesson will be: “Building for total abstinence through the citizenry.” The leader will be Lena Bauer who will present chapters from the study book, “Alcoholism 1 or Abstinence.” Mrs. Al Troup will give chapters from the book entitled: “The Fabulous Dutch Sellers.” For the November roll call, please bring or send dues for 1952. Members will meet at the Public Library. Ways will be provided for all to go. Those who can

SYRACUSE - WAWASEE JOURNAL, Syracuse, Ind.

x i XT: ; FEATHERED FEATURE— New hat shown at preview staged by Millinery Guild of Chicago combines coque feathers with a close-fitting black velour creation

please bring cars for transportation. Plans are to leave the Library at 1:15 sharp. WAWASffiLAKE Wa-Ana-Harbor— Mr. and Mrs. David Butler had company from Pierceton, Sunday, Mr. and Mrs. John Anderson and family. The Frank Bannings visited in Pierceton, Sunday, with their daughter, Mrs. Kermit Summers, and Mr. Summers. Beata Groat Britaia Greenland, the world’s largest island, has an area of 827,300 square miles; nearly 10 times that of Great Britain or of Idaho.

E KsßgU Urulor® T Sunday School Lewom I ' T SCRIPTURE: Exodus 18-23. DEVOTIONAL READING: Deuteronomy 8:16-25. All Men Need Laws Lesson for November 18, 1951 i UfHY do we need so many laws? ” Why can’t we trust people to follow their conscience? There are two reasons why we can’t do that: Some people won’t follow their consciences, and some

'lx Dr Foreman

other people have crooked, inaccurate and dull consciences, — if they did follow them they would be wrong most of the time Why can’t we have just the Law of Love? Love is im portant, to be sure, but “love” by it-

self doesn’t tell u£ what to do in any I concrete case. And besides, too j many people have no love to speak Os, Are Bible Laws Out of Date? 7X7 ELL then, can’t we get along ’’ with the Ten Commandments? They cover everything, don’t they? They do, to be sure; but only in a very general way. What we need is something that gets down to cases. Surely, you might think, the . ancient Israelites could have gone ! along pretty well without laws. But God wanted them to have laws.' They could not be a nation without them. In Exodus 21-23 we have a simple code which is the earliest known group of laws applying the Ten Commandments to actual conditions and situations of living. Christians are not altogether agreed about whether the laws in Ex. 21-23 land elsewhere in the Old Testament) apply to us today. The majority of Christians look at it like this: The Ten Commandments, as great sign posts and standards, are everlastingly in force; the other laws (as those in Ex. 21-23) were meant for that particular nation. When that nation disappeared, the laws went with, it, just as (for example) the laws of Rome perished with the Roman Empire. • • • Getting Down to Cases ttOWEVER, while these laws were not directly intended for us, and are not all usable by us, they are well-worth our study, because they are examples of how the great basic principles of the Ten Commandments were once applied in practical living, and .they give us valuable hints on the way. to apply the Ten Commandments in our own times. One illustration of this point can be seen in Ex. 21:28-36, the Law of the Goring Ox. The Commandment reads simply: Thou shalt not kill. But what if the killing was done not by a man but by his ox? The law goes into the question of responsibility in an interesting way. Not many readers of these lines «own oxen, —more likely tractors or station wagons! But the principle of responsibility for damage, the principle of criminal negligence, is as good today as it was in 1260 B.C. • • • ■“Right” Isn’t a Sum SOME of these laws, indeed, could be taken literally today. For instance, take Exodus 23:2, first part <of the verse. This says pretty clearly something that millions of people to this day don’t understand It means this: The number of people ■who say a thing is right, or is wrong, has nothing whatever to do with the question, IS ft right or ■wrong? Most young people, at least, have the notion that if “everybody does it” it must be right. Not at all. The Judge of all the earth is God. not a majority vote. A thing can be made legal by a majority vote in a legislature, parliament or the like. But not all the congressmen from Maine to California can make a thing right just by saying so. Yet how many people in our time settle the liquor question (for example) by looking, so to speak, at the score board! A majority of our lawmakers voted to make the sale of liquor legal; so “it must be right ” “Everybody I know” says It’* all right', so “it must be right.” Every once in a while it dawns on some smart person that the right and wrong of the liquor question can’t be settled, for a Christian, by a simple counting of votes for and against. The number of cocktail parties in New York, Washington or Denver doesn’t settle the question. It has to be studied from a Christian point of view, and the big question is not: How many people do it? But, Is it ; right for those who arc their “broth- ! ers’ keepers”? Is it right for those i whose bodies are to be temples for I I the Holy Spirit? (Copyright 1951 by the Division of : Christian Edneation. National Council i • of the Churches of Christ in tjie United I ■ States of America. Released WNU i : Features.) Many Become Sick Eight hundred and twenty out of = every 1,000 persons suffer from j some sort of sickness each year. ! Cornice Improves Window Dress up your living room by ; fitting the windows with easy-to ! make cornices. In fact, a cornice ; adds to the attractiveness of almost : any window in the home. One type ; is made by forming a framework in : the shape of an inverted U from 1 i by 6-inch dressed lumber and fas- ; ♦erring it to the window frame. |

(The home newspaper is sent free to all men and women in U. S. Armed Services through cooperation of Wawasee Post No. 223 and The Journal) Percy Jones Army Hospital, Battle Creek, Mich. Nov. 2, 19'51. ' Dear Sir: While I was on leave in Syracuse last month, there was a few people who ask me for my address, so I wish you would please put this in your paper: Marion (Bill) Laughlin, RA 15210025, Ward 58, Section 6, Percy Jones Hospital, Battle Creek, Mich. LOCAL NEWS Ralph Hoover, son of Mr. and Mrs. Martin Hoover, who had been confined to Healthwin hospital. South Bend, for the past year has returned to his home here. Richard Nolan, of Syracuse, and James Fry, now of Columbia City have enlisted in the Air Force for a period of four years. They have been sent to Lackland Air Force Base, San Antonio, Texas, for training. Mr. and Mrs. C. J. (Peck) Kline purchased an electric heater some time ago for the Boy’s washroom, in the Scout Cabin. They had wished to do something for the Boy Scouts in memory of their grandson, James William Connolly. The heater is now installed. Miss Ethel Bowser, librarian is attending the Indiana Library Association meeting in Indianapolis, this week. Mrs. Harold Kitson is acting as substitute librarian, j Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Mulholland of Edmore, Michigan, and Mrs. Percy Curtis of Silverwood, Michigan, are visiting in the home of their son and brother, C. C. Mulholland and family. The Wednesday Bridge Club met at the home of Georgia Miller Wednesday at 1 p. m. Following the luncheon three tables of bridge were arranged with prizes going to Mrs. N. H. Blough, Mrs. Kenneth Harkless and Mrs. Herb King. Guests were’ Irene Abts and Adah Miller. Mrs. Harry Appenzeller was hostess to the members of her I bridge club at her home Wednesday evening. Prizes were won by Mrs. Richard Miller, Mrs. Junior Jones and Mrs. Wm. Haas. Mrs. Haas was a guest. Merl and H. D. Harkless spent Monday on a business trip to Grand Rapids, Michigan.

= =s Wawasee nfegßi Lockers gjgteif ] (inc.) = phone 236 fg Market phone 236 I 1 SPECIALS FOR FRIDAY and SATURDAY, NOV. 9 and 10 CREAMERY BUTTER No. 1 Quality (1 lb. limit) lb 69< | This is an Everyday Special T\yTTT V ONE GALLON JUG ••• 72° | I >/1 I I ■ ‘Economical Way to Buy* IYJbUJx X HALF GALLON JUG 37 c | HOME DRESSED PORK—HOME CURED MEATS I*ORK HEARTS lb. 49c PORK LIVER lb. 39c | BACON ENDS, sliced lb. 23c LARD 2 lbs. 35c j BEEF ROASTS lb. 74c SIRLOIN STEAK lb. 89c | Jljiii WJB g&a i SUGAR, Pure Cane Granulated jl 10 lbs. 89c | PINEAPPLE JUICE, No. 2 cans 2 for 25c | TOMATO JUICE, Foodcraft, 46-oz. cans *2 for 49c | PEAS, No. 303 cans 2 for 27c SUPER SUDS, large size .. 2 for 49c I SNOW CROP FROZEN ORANGE JUICE 2 cans 25c I X. ' . GET YOUBAPPLES HERE at ORCHARD PRICES From The Oakwood Orchards g 5c lb.; 49c Peck; SI.OO per bushel and up | Sold by the pound or truck load M VMVMV Red Delicious Yellow Delicious A UU| || V Jonathon A FEW BUSHEL of JONATHAN and DELICIOUS APPLES at 75c bushel BEER and WINE TO CARRY OUT GOOD USED LARD CANS — 350 ea. TURKEYS - Order Yours Now Weights from 4 lb. to 25 lbs.

t Chief Source of Nourishment Milk is one of the most rewarding beverages. A single quart of this swell-tasting drink supplies the daily nutritious requirements of any man, woman and child! Call for delivery., today—order our other nourishing, safeguarded dairy products, for well-bal-anced meals! MILK, quart 21 : CREAM, pint ....... .22 CREAM, quartßs W. CREAM, Vz pint 37 g W. CREAM, quart 1.35 lullMl CHOC. MILK, quart .21 BUTTERMILK, quart2l |Wo COTTAGE CHEESE 21 HALF & HALF, pints3o SKIM MILKIS ORANGE .20 Jones & Son Dairy PHONE 5-F-ll OR 5-F-42 Ain A — * ~meT" Check These New Lines— ADAMS MATS . - - ■ • $7.50 PLEATWAY PJ’s - - - $4.98 WINTER JACKETS - $8 to $12.95 HICKOK BELTS $1.50 to $3.00 HANES “T” SHIRTS - - 98e , SHIRTS 8 $3.98, PETTIT S DEPARTMENT STORE “Quality is still your Best Buy” Phone 247 V Syracuse, ndlana

ft I