Syracuse-Wawasee Journal, Volume 46, Number 7, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 30 November 1951 — Page 3

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1951

CJiurck

The Methodist Church R. A. Fenstermacher, Minister. 10 a.m. Worship Service and Sermon. 11 a.m. Sunday School and Bible Stndy. 7 p.m. Study of the Book of Acts. Thursday evening, choir practice. Church Os The Brethren Clayton Mock, pastor. Sunday School, 9:30 a.m. Worship, 10:30 a.m. Junior League, 7 p.m. C." B. Y. F., 7 P.m. Evening Worship, 7:30 p.m. Family Night pot luck supper, 6:30 p.m., Thursday, Nov. 29th, in church basement. A short program will follow the supper hour. All are invited to this hour of fellowship. Come and bring a well filled basket and your family. Church Os God Rev. Marion Shroyer, Minister. Sunday School, 10 A. M. Lewis Firestone, Supt. Morning Service, 11 A. M. Evening Service, 7:30 P. M. Burr Oak * E. U. B. Church 9:30 a.m. Sunday School. 10:30 a.m. Morning Worship. Sermon theme: “The Great Treasurer.* Solomon’s Creek E. U. B. Church Rev. Bevis A. Hill, pastor. 10:00 a. m. Sunday School.' Lesson' title, “A Doubting And Disobedient People.” 7:30 p.m. Evening Worship. Sermon by Mr. Lloyd Juday. 8:30 p.m. First Quarterly Conference. Calvary Evangelical United Brethren Church K. E. Fbulke, pastor. First Sunday in Advent. Church School at 9:4,5 A. M. Lewis Immel, supt. A class for every age. Church Worship at 10:45 A.M. Sermon theme: “Let’s Get Rid of *X’mas”. The Choir will sing, “Thy Light Is Come”. Junior League at 6 p.m. Evening Service at 7:30 p.m., with the pastor speaking on the captivating subject, "Unfolding The Future”. The Intermediate Christmas Party will be held on evening at Lakeside at 7:30 p.m. The December Administrative Council meeting will be held on Tuesday evening at 7:30 p.m. The Fellowship Christmas meeting will be held on Wednesday evening at Lakeside at 7:30 p.m. WSWS meeting Thursday afternoon at 2 p.m. Hour of Power Service Thursday evening at 7:30 p.m., with Choir rehearsal at 8:20 p.m. ZION CHAPEL U. B. CHURCH Sabbath School, 10 A. M. Revival Service each night at 7:30 p.m. Rev. Alfred Price, pastor. X Grace Lutheran Church Rev. Carl Sorensen, pastor. 9.45 a. m. The Church at School with Class for Adults. 10:4,5 a.m. The Church at Worship. Subject: “The Christmas Song of the Virgin Mary’ — Luke 1:46-55. If you have no church home and wish spiritual fellowship, we invite you in our services. ZION LADIES MEET The W. M. A. of Zion Chapel met recently and decided to resume their work with Mrs. Adah Clayton, president: Mrs. Belle Strieby, vice-pres., and Mrs. Mosciline Deaton, treasurer. i

I Termites I DO NOT LET TERMITES BAT AWAY YOUR HOME Free Inspection — No Obligation Phone or Write UNIVERSAL TERMITE CONTROL Phone 572 — 120 N. Scott St. Warsaw, Indiana OR WAWASEE LUMBER CO. Syracuse, Indiana I'imiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiuniiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii SERVING BEST OF FOODS Steaks Chicken Sea Foods FERRIS INN 1 Mile South Syracuse

[the 7 SPEAKS Intwrationtl Urulona Sunday School t awtini SCRIPTURE: Exodus 33; Numbers 11-14. DEVOTIONAL READING: Deuteronomy 11:13-31. ‘There Is a Tide' I Lesson for December 2, 1951 "There is a tide in the affairs of men, Which, taken at the flood, leads on to fortune; Omitted, all the voyage of their life Is bound in shallows and in miseries." SO Shakespeare said, and he was at least half right. Opportunity sometimes knocks twice: but don’t count on it. The Bible lesson for the week is a failure-story, not a success-story. It

Is the story of some persons who contracted the grass hopper complex, a mental disease that still attacks people today. The story is from the wild days when the Israelites, now two years out from Egypt, were first knocking at the doors of the Prom-

rra » it Dr. Foreman

Ised Land. The Israelites were land-hungry, but the only land they wanted was what we now call Palestine and it was not theirs for the asking. They would have to fight for it, every foot of it. They all knew this, Moses knew it. There was no going back to Egypt and slavery. Nobody wanted to stay in the desert. The obvious thing was to go ahead into Palestine. But there were two questions filling the people’s minds: (1) What kind of country is it, really? and (2) can we fight our way into it? * ♦ ♦ Investigating Committee SO a committee of investigation was formed, of one man from each of the twelve tribes, —grown men, trusted leaders, by no means “boy scouts.” Don’t think of these men as sneaking through Palestine from bush to bush, peeping out Indian fashion to see what they could see. They walked into Palestine, not unobserved but unmolested. They spoke Egyptian, of course, and could easily pass as Egyptian traveling salesmen. They spent around six weeks in that country, visiting the cities, no doubt talking with the people. In late summer they went - back to the encampment on the edge of the desert, carrying with them some of the fruits of the land. (Incidentally, those pictures showing bunches of grapes six feet long are a funny misunderstanding. Palestine has good grapes, but not quite that good! They carried the grapes on poles because that was the best way to keep them from being crushed.) At the big mass-meeting at the desert camp, the twelve made their report. On the facts, they were all unanimous. It was a wonderful country, “flowing with milk and honey,” a great country for cattle and bees. Palestine did look marvelous to their desert-burned eyes. But on question number two there was a serious division: Can we fight our way in? Yes, said the minority of two. No, said the majority of ten. ♦ ♦ * Grasshopper Complex THE majority put their reasons in a single revealing sentence: We were as grasshoppers in their sight, they said, and so we were In our sight. Nowadays we call this state of mind the “inferiority complex”; our name is a new one for an old trouble. Think of yourself as a grasshopper, and grasshopper is what you shall be. Take yourself at other people’s lowest estimate, and that is all you will be worth. The trouble with the grasshopper complex is that it is catching. The majority report was wrong, as majority reports so often are. But the people believed them rather than the courageous pair who stood up to declare boldly, We can do it, with the help of God. Well, what did God do about it? That is perhaps the saddest part of the story. He did nothing about it. He let the people impose their own sentence. Grasshoppers? Very well, So be it. Grasshoppers die, they never amount to anything, no one bothers to kill them, they just die. God was believed to strike men dead in anger, or command the earth to open and swallow up the wicked, or hurl lightning from the skies on his enemies. But he wasted no miracles on these self-elected grasshoppers. He only let them die. Ten, twenty, forty years . . just drifting about in the wilderness, till they all died, and a new generation took their places. Opportunity did not knock twice. There was a tide in those men’s lives. (Copyright 1951 by th* Division of Christian Education, National Council of tho Chnrehes of Christ in th* United States of America. Released by WNU Features.) And were it left to me to decide whether we should have a government without newspapers or newspapers without government, I should not hesitate a moment to prefer the latter. —Thomas Jefferson.

DAMAGEFROM I I WINPG, TWO ARIZOMIAHG I*YJ<*l : »Zl 3*-* once -TRIED AHCHORIHG THEIR. /tZt XiltJjvv roof by ropimo rr to their bed . TV BUT WH6H THE WIhJDS CAME. ROOF. BRP ANP TOOK OFF — . """ilk AMP "FIEW*-500yAROe/ ft ISf OF pottfi? HersakKa “nloiiAPr JAbl. 22,1945.THF TEMPERATURE GkJ'FELL INLON THEM KpR CHAHGFP RAPIDLY M RAPiP CITY,S-P. "5 n WEI6HFP IMMEDIATELY AFTER FARING. IT J 0 50 6CAIEP ONE ANPA HALF TOUNPS/ ANOTHERFEU TO 17 0 — * 5- A TOTAL FLUCTUATION OF //7» IN -y . ‘ • • . 20 MINUTES " ’ q . — GA R A &E. jT . V>«OOSIMG -the proper ANTI-FREEZE >6 NO K'lflTEß /EMPERAAFMTAL VQKIM .AS7AMDARP -Pft> OCCURRED IN CHICAGO IN >905. CITY’S PRODUCT LIKE ZcRCNF '’ROTECTS ‘SOUTH SIPE HAP 14 INCHES OF SNOW • A- OUT OF 5 CARS. FXEMIUM-BUT-THE SAME PAY-THE NORTH SIPE PRICt'P ANTI-FREE.- LIKE BASKED IN SUNSHINE, WITHOUT A ZEREX IS r'OR SPECIAL SINGLE SNOWFLAKE/ DRIVING CONPiTIONS

WAWASEELAKE Road No. 13. — Rollie Byler is back from deer hunting at Iron Bridge, Canada, with his usual group from Goshen. Much looking and tramping—no deer. Mrs. Byler “manned” the Sportsmen's Center while the men were away “doing nothing.” North Shore. —- Mr. and Mrs. George A. Haley (the former Jane Stephenson) of Hanover, Ind., accompanied George’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. George Haley, ot Lafayette, at the recent holiday time. Ed Stephenson Jr.>, Mrs. Stephenson, and little Tommie of Kalamazoo, were Thanksgiving dinner guests of the Ed Stephenson’s Sr. Other guests were Ed’s brother, Bob of Attica, J. Houston McCray, South Shore, Wawasee, and the Stephenson’s teacherdaughter was home from Indianapolis. Ogden Island. — Dr. and Mrs. Herschel R, Coil and children Roger and Caroline were Thanksgiving guests of Mrs. Coil’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Lackey at Plymouth. The Dr. had to return to Fort Wayne and the rest stayed on a few days. Mrs. Herschel R. Coil and Mrs. Erwin Werling were guests of Mrs. F. J. Trautman and Mrs. Gunnar Elliott at the Ft. Wayne Country Club luncheon bridge Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Felts, of Detroit, who are visiting at Fort Wayne, called on the Bud Werling family on Sunday. Cedar Point. — The Rev. David Culley is the former professor of Old Testament at The Theological Seminary, Pittsburgh, and has his Doctor’s degree from the University of Leipzig, Germany,

DEEP green: ® AMERICA'S FINEST FINISHES SINCE I«7S PAINTS iJML “EE IT EVER SO HUMBLE -OWN IT.” Wawasee Lumber Co. Inc. SYRACUSE, INDIANA Syracuse Feed Mill A FEED FOR EVERY NEED WAYNE & MASTER - MIX FEEDS. CUSTOM GRINDING HAROLD CURRY, MGR PHONE 1650 - R Residence — 277-R

SYRACUSE-WAWASEE JOURNAL, Syracuse, Ind.

is retired, but not resting on his laurels. He can speak “only’ r 12 languages; including French, so his latest acquisition is a book from Lieden, Holland, entitled, “Studia Mariana”, written i n French, and is an Archaelogical book about the discovery of an old city on the banks of the Euphrates about 2200 B.C. There are many books in the Culley study on the second floor (of the home they have had there, for many years) so many books in fact, that Dr. Culley decided he had not enough book space, so he just made bookcases on the side of the stairway near the landing. The study is definitely masculine in feeling, but yet, beautiful, and orderly, are the rows and rows of books. The study is lined with knotty pine, with one wall of celotex and Chinese Red, a Williamsburg Restoration color. The Professor is widely traveled and is most interesting to converse with and has a definite sense of humor, as has his charming wife. Mrs. Culley has also a warm and discerning heart, as evidenced a year or so ago when this reporter drove along the lower level of their property, and was shown the house “up there”, whereupon, steaming up the incline and arriving at the kicthen door, wheezing, the lady of the house promptly and quickly pushed a chair handy, and bestowed a cup of hot chocolate on the climber. The Culley house reflects the owners, mellow and cheery, with its beautiful old woods’ glowing soft beauty, brightness of silver services, easy chairs, soft beautiful rugs, all of which are enhanced by flickering light from the fireplace.

More Women Needed For Labor Forces Lafayette, Ind., Nov. 26th. — More homemakers, both rural and urban, will be called into the labor forces in 1952 to meet the production demands for military and consumer goods. Three to three and one-half million more persons will be needed to meet the rate of defense production. In times like these, married women constitute the principal reservoir for labor. Purdue University extension home management specialists point out that no doubt many of the women going into labor forces have felt the need to work in the face of higher living costs. The greatest number of women going to work are at an age when home responsibilities are lessened and they have more leisure. Many women are enjoying their employment experiences. Slightly larger incomes, after taxes, are in view for most families next year. These larger incomes will place demands upon consumer goods and services available. In general consumer goods are on all markets.

Isa’t It Tim# for "A Piano and Lessons”? Except for a good home, there’s no liner gift you can give your child, and your home, than a piano and lessons. And there’s no finer piano vrflue today than Story & Clark’s exquisite new Spinets. Come in and see them—soon! STUCKY FURNITURE CO. Syracuse

j fllbanfcarin ITnn CHRISTMAS PARTY! | If you are thinking of a nice pre-Christmas dinner | | for your family or club, please phone us —we will | | be pleased to help you. | I NEW HOURS I | MONDAY thru FRIDAY 5 P.M. to 10 P.M. I = SUN DA Y 12 Noon to 10 P.M. | | SATU RD A Y 5 P.M. to 11 P.M. | I Chinese & American Food | | Closed Tuesday | Call for Take Out Orders PHONE 1632-J FOO & FAYE WONG

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There are adequate supplies in all lines of clothing but prices may be a little higher. Nylon production is increasing. As yet orlon and other fibres have not reached the retail market ni full quantity. Domestic cotton supplies are big and the anticipated new crop is as large as ever. During 19'52 slightly more food is likely to be available at slightly higher prices. Since some supplies of materials have been restricted for consumers’ durable goods, production of refrigerators, freezers, ranges, sweepers will be curtailed. For the first three months of 1952 the supply will be adequate. SYRACUSE MAN HELD ON TWO CHARGES Joseph M. Line, 61, of route two, Syracuse, was arrested by both Goshen city police and Sheriff Vernon L. Cripe Friday eventing. Goshen police arrested Line on a charge of driving while under the influence of intoxicants when he was stopped in the 800 block of South Fourteenth street, that city, for erratic driving. About 45 minutes later, after Line had taken a drunkometer test, Sheriff Cripe arrented him for leaving the scene of a property damage accident. The affidavit charging Line with leaving the scene was filed by C. M.-Parrett, of Milford, who reported that Line’s car had sideswiped the Parrett vehicle near the Turkey Creek bridge south of Benton. Line paid a total of ? 5 8.00 in fines, was sentenced to serve 10 days in the Elkhart County jail, and his driver’s license was suspended for nine months when he appeared in Goshen city court Saturday morning.

UNEMPLOYMENT INSURANCE CLAIMS INCREASED ■— Unemployment insurance claims increased by 18 per cent during the week ending Nov. 17, the fourth consecutive week for the upswing, according to the latest Indiana Employment Security Division summary. The 29 offices in the state received a total of 22,736 claims, more than double the figure for the same week a year ago. From 14.000 to 16,000 automotive workers were off the job last week because of model changeover, inventory, and secondary effects of labor disputes at supplier plants. Division officials said, however, that the full impact of these layoffs are not reflected in the agency’s claims load. A model changeover kept workers off the job in a refrigerator plant and production was slowed up in garment and paper factories. Initial claims rose 400 as new layoffs idled other workers. Slightly over 5.700 claims were filed* by newly-unemployed persons last week compared ot 5.300 the week before and 3,200 last year at this time. Hiring remained at a minimum in most major industries and Division job placements were down 17 per cent from the week before. Fewer openings were reported by employers and Division offices listed only 2,400 new job opportunities, a 400 drop from the previous week.

KILL* tbe ACHE, BURN, TTCH rs ATHLETES FOOT «rm OR YOUR 40e BACK. T-4-L, made with undiluted alcohol base, DILATES THE VESSELS OF THE SJIIN to reach imbedded infection and kills on centc.c; . Get in.'-tant-.’ . ;: T-t-L at all drug stores. Today at THORNBURG DRUG CO

!L' illtlllllll!lllllll!!lllll!llllllllllllllltllllllllllllllllllllllll!!ll!llllllllllllllimillllilllll!IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIillllll!lllllltllU I j Scotch Pine | Christmas • Trees | WArborvita, Balsam, Spruce, Hemlock, • Pine Sprays for Decorating. WREATHS and GRAVE COVERS |l WAWASEE NURSERY Ralph Oyler |

LEGAL NOTICES NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION No. 6721. Notice is hereby given that the undersigned has been appointed by the Clerk of the Kosciusko Circuit Court, in the Sate of Indiana, Administrator of the estate of Loren E. Eyer, late of Kosciusko county, deceased. Said estate is supposed to be solvent. BILLY A. EYER, Administrator. Dated Nov. 7, 1951 (5-St) R. Leon Connolly, Attorney. NOTICE TO HEIRS, CREDITORS, ETC. No. 6649. In the matter of the estate of LUELLA HAPNER, deceased. In the Kosciusko Circuit Court, September Term, 1951. . Notice is hereby given, that j Charles M. Hapnef as Administrator of the estate of Luella i Hapner, deceased, has presented i and filed his account and vouchers in final settlement of said estate. and that the same will come up for examination and action of said Circuit Court on the 15th 1 ! day of December, 1951, at which time all heirs, creditors, or legatees of said are required to appear in said Court and show cause, if any there be, why said ’;account and vouchers should not j be approved. Dated at Warsaw, Indiana this j 15th day of November, 1951. ERNEST E. BUSHONG, Clerk Kosciusko Circuit Court. R. Leqn Connolly, Attorney. Many of your home merchants have stocked up big for this year’s Christinas. Try to buy It at home first. Read the ads in this paper for those specials for ' “her” or “him”.