Syracuse-Wawasee Journal, Volume 46, Number 7, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 30 November 1951 — Page 8

EDW. E. STEPHENSON REAL ESTATE DOWN TOWN OFFICE also— NORTH SHORE ROAD Lake Wawasee — SYRACUSE HOMES & LOTS? — LAKE PROPERTIES WAWASEE & SYRACUSE LAKES Rainey’s Court and Pleasant Grove Additions Telephones 198 or 310

LOCAL NEWS Mr. and Mrs. Charles F. Kroh and son Charles, of Ft. Wayne, Pfc. Marshall Coy and Mrs. Coy, and John Kroh from Purdue, | spent Thanksgiving with Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Kroh. Mrs. Marshall Coy, Mrs. Roy Sargent and Mrs. Charles W. Kroh were in Indianapolis Saturday morning when Pfc. Marshall Coy started back to Oakland, California, for reassignment after several weeks spent at Fort Benning, Ga. Mrs. Clara Felty left Thanksgiving day to spend the winter with her daughter, Helen Winter, in Villa Park, 111. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Cullers, Ruth Cullers and Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Willard and son. were Thanksgiving day guests in the home, of Mr. and Mrs. Emerson Moser and family in Warsaw. Robert B. Cox, son of J. B. Cox, is scheduled to go to Indianapolis Monday for his physical examinations or U. S. service.

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CARD OF THANKS In appreciation to the people who were so thoughtful and kind to us in our bereavement. Helen Klingerman, Alden Snavely, Eugene Snavely, Mary Sakowicz, Stephen Snavely, Mrs. Raymond Newcomer. Dinner guests Thanksgiving day in the home of Mr. and Mrs. John Grieger were Mrs. E. Obereigner, Mrs. Milse Pryor and Mrs. Ruth Smith. Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Bey and daughter and Mrs. James Mench spent Wednesday in Indianapolis. Wednesday evening they attended the Barbara Scott Ice Show. Mr. and Mrs. Dale Miller and family and Mr. and Mrs. Roy Miller Jr., spent Thanksgiving day in Goshen, in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Austin. Dozens of new dresses fdir Juniors just received, priced from $5.98, $6.98 to SIOB at LaPetite Shoppe.

A family Thanksgiving dinner was held at the home of Mrs. Catharine Beck and Mr, and Mrs. Calvin E. Beck for the children, grandchildren and great-grapd-children of Mrs. Catharine Beck. Those present to enjoy the bounteous turkey dinner at the noon hour were Mr. and Mrs. John M. Beck, Mr. and Mrs. Milo D. Snyder and Mrs. Allie Snyder of Cromwell; Mr. and Mrs. Jess C. Covell, Robert and Alvin Covell, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Beard and sons, Philip and Michael, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Sellers and son, Lew and Mr. Kenneth Butler of Purdue, a guest in the Covell home, all of near Angola; Mr. and Mrs. William Covell of Yipsilanti, Mich.; Mr. and Mrs. George Martin and children, Renee, George and Johnny, of Monroeville; Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Beck, of South Whitley; Mr. and Mrs. Richard Beck and Mrs. Beck’s brother, Robert Jackson, recently • returned veterans from Korea, of jWarsaw; Mr. and Mrs. Harold Wilson and daughters, Brenda and Nancy of Milford; Mr. and Mrs. Charles G. Beck, Mrs. Mary Wilkinson, and the host and hostess, Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Beck, and Mrs. Catharine Beck. There were eight grandchildren not able to be present. Bob McCullough left Wednesday for Miami, Florida and will spend the winter there. , Saturday evening Mrs. Mabel Snyder of Cromwell, and her daughter and family, Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Souder, daughter Karen and son Billy from Macomb, 111., called on Mrs. Catharine Beck. Mr. and Mrs. Charles G. Beck were also callers. Dr. and Mrs. Wilson Weisel of Milwaukee, are spending a few days this week in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Harkless.

SYRACUSE - WAWASEE JOURNAL, Syracuse, Ind.

Sunday guests in the John Pusti home were Mr. and Mrs. Carl Grubb and son Robert of Fort Wayne. Sunday aftenoon callew were Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Cripe and son John, of So. Bend. Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Beck had dinner Sunday, with their son and wife, Mr. and Mrs. Richara Beck, of Warsaw. Mrs. Theries Doll, Herman Doll, Syracuse, and Edw. Brookmeyer, Goshen, returned home last week from a visit with Mrs. Doll’s mother, and a hunting trip in Kalkaska county, northern Michigan. Herman Doll bagged a nice eight point deer. Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Beck spent Tuesday shopping in Fort Wayne and also visiting their son, wife and new granddaughetr, Mr. and Mrs. Wendell Beck and Wendy Sue, at Zanesville. Ind. Thanksgiving dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Herman Huey and family were Mr. and Mrs. Jack Huey, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Huey and daughter Kay, of Ft. Wayne, Mr. and Mrs. John Knisley and sons, Donald and Kenneth, of New Paris. Thanksgiving guests in the home of Mrs. Myrtle Robinson and family, near Syracuse, were Miss Jean Kumnick of Ligonier, Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Jones, Mr. and Mrs. Sam Bushong and children. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Miller Jr., Mrs. Everett Darr and son, and Mr. and Mrs. Tom Robinson and son, Ronnie. Mrs. Richard Pusti and daughter Melaine Ann, are spending this week in the home of Mr. and Mrs. John Pusti. Mrs. J. J. Connell and daughters Jean and Kathryn, spent Thanksgiving day in Winamac in £he home of their daughter and sister, Mrs. Hubert Bollhauve and family.

Opera Village Goes Bigtime CENTRAL CITY, Colo. — The small town of Central City, population 709, was the scene of bigtime opera, with such stars as Eleanor Stober of the Met It was the 49th Central City play festival. Thanks to musicloving tourists, including matinee crowds in shorts and shirt sleeves, the old opera house generally held more people at each performance than there are in the year-round population of the community. The town doesn’t mind being small The cost of producing four operas during the four-week season this year will amount to approximately SIIO,OOO. Ticket sales will cover most of it. Subscriptions and other activities should make up the rest. Last year’s deficit was only $265.

Peony Fam Provides Employment for Many In Illinois Village WEST CHICAGO, 111.-Morgan’s peony farm, four and one-half acres covered with 2,200 peony plants and an unaccountable number of ants, is an example of what can be done by private initiative, hard work and peseverance. It is also an example of small community enterprise which offers employment to a great many persons, if for only a short time each year. In the past 13 years Dave Morgan and his wife have built up their business from a start that included 1,860 plants—and no ants. When the Morgan purchased the 10 acres of which the peony farm is a part it marked the end of a long search for the right type of soil, but the ant problem came up immediately. Peonies require ants the same as most flowers require bees for pollination purposes. Finding himself ant-less, Mr Morgan obtained four big shoe boxes of the Insects from Elmhurst. Now there is no ant problem. The Morgans have a business with a two weeks’ season. During those two weeks, they hire crews of school girls and boys to cut the peony buds, bunch them and store them in an 18x36 refrigerated storage building on the farm. The entire crop is taken each year by eight Chicago florists who store the buds in refrigerators and force them open as the trade calls for them. Peony buds can be stored from 30 to 90 days, remaining completely dormant under refrigeration. The Morgans use boys and girls from the small community to hoe weeds in the peony field and to pick the buds. Small Town Outstanding For Its Many Athletes DONORA, Pa.—Where do the best athletes come from? Donora residents will tell you they are incubated in the small towns and villages such as—well, Donora, for Instance. Donora (pop. 13,000) rests quietly on the Monongahela 25 miles south of Pittsburgh. Quietly? Well, there is the quiet growl of steel mills and the low grumble of coal mines happily almost lost in the sounds of playground activity, ball games and other physical activities. Donora likes to exercise, and sports activities are the principal method of letting off steam. Much of the success Donora has achieved in sports activities can be traced to one dominant personality . . . the high school coach, Jimmy Russell. With two aids. Dr. Michael Duda and John Clark, Russell has instilled in the youth of Donora a love for competition and fair play that has lend many of them to superb collegiate and professional careers in athletics. Os course, all of them don’t make national headlines. Most of them star for Pitt, Wake Forest, Penn., Cornell, V.M.1., Detroit, and yes, even Notre Dame. They are not always headliners, but most of the time you find them on the first team. Bench warmers are uncommon in Donora. There are a few, however, who make the “big time." Donora sent three athletes to the top in different sports and rates the three “AllAmericans.’’ One, Stan (The Man) Musial, has been putting dents in National League fences for quite some time. No introduction needed. Another, Arnold Galiffa, sparked a great Army team with running and passing feats he learned at Donora. ’Nuff said. The third gentleman indulges in pugilistic activity and will surely be heard from in the future. Woman Auditor Takes Office in Edgefield EDGEFIELD, N.C.—For the first time in the community’s history a woman has taken office in Edgefield. This occurred recently when Mrs. Blance Sawyer was elected to the auditor office. She won out of a field of three opponent? offering for the office in the primary of 1950. She succeeded J. A. Lott, who did not run for reelection due to ill health. Miss Sawyer had served in the office of the auditor as deputy since 1947. Charlotte Miller and Kathryn Huey were guests Sunday of the John Knisley’s of New Paris at a combined Thanksgiving and farewell dinner for Kenneth Knisley who left Tuesday morning for the service. Milt Rentfrow went to Elkhart Friday to spend some time in the home of his daughter, Mrs. Harry May.

Two Home Games At Seminary Gym Two home games are scheduled at the Lady of the Lake Seminary gym. On this Friday night, the strong Pierceton team will visit the lake for a double-header. Next Wednesday night, the Syracuse high school fives will journey out to the lake gym for two games. Game Storage Permits Now Available Indianapolis, Nov. 26. —Sportsmen may mow keep for a period of six months beyond the closed season game, fish and fowl taken by them during legal open season in Indnana by filling out an application form and receiving in turn a permit to keep the results of their hunt in private deep freezes, freeze lockers and the like. It is legal to store game for a period of ten days only. Thus longer storage without the special permit makes the violator liable to prosecution. These forms are obtainable from sporting goods stores, county clerks, conservation officers and the operators of deep freeze lockers. The hunter is asked only to fill in the number and species and how* he obtained the game in order to comply with the law. After signing up, the form is mail*ed by the applicant to the Indiana Department W Conservation, 311 West Washington street, Indianapolis, Indiana, Division of Fish and Game. The legal permit will be mailed to him. He also is asked to certify the manner of, storage and the city or town in which storage is maintained. This also applies to game brought into the state from neighboring states. Permission to thus store game was made possible through action by the recent legislature in an act entitled “An Act covering fish, frogs, mussels, game, wild animals, and offenses relating thereto.” Paraghaph (B) under section one (1) of the amendment stipulates. that “The Director of the Division of Fish and Game of the Indiana Department of Conservation, (Henry P. Cottingham) or his duly authorized agents and representatives, is hereby authorized to issue to any person having lawful possession of fish, frogs, mussels, game, wild birds, or wild animals a permit to retain same for a period of six months beyond the close qf the open season; provided, however, that said permit shall not authorize the possession of said fish, frogs, mussels, game, wild birds or wild animals in excess of the limits provided by law.” ARTISAN'S CLUB Mrs. Lionel Bates was hostess to the members of the Artisan’s Club at her home Tuesday evening. All members and one guest, Mrs. W. A. Jones, Jr., were present. A lovely Christmas doll was made of cardboard, and crepe paper, net, cotton and ribbon. This doll should be seen to be appreciated. It is so pretty that most of the members plan to make another at the next meeting of the club, to be held at the home of Mrs. C. K. Kinder, on December 4th. Mr. and Mrs. James Gilbert left this week for Brownwood, Texas to visit their daughter, Mrs. Royal Kline and family.

Whole vs. Ground Grain As a Cattle Ration Cattle feeders are divided in theb opinion about the subject of whole versus ground grain. It is generallj agreed, however, that the most rapic gains are made with whole shelled corn, considering all grades of cattle on feed, and the varying length ol the feeding period, providing, oi course, a hog follow-vn program is also followed.

xf whole corr <■ is fed, the hog | follow -up pro- | gram must be | practiced be- | cause of the un- | digested grain I passing through | the animals. | On the other I' hand, if a feeder | has grinding fa--5 cilities and his own ear-corn, it will often pay him to feed the ground ear-corn

.< %■ by Froning, B«ef Fattening Unit, Purina Research Farm

rather than shell IL It'has been found that cattle finish faster on shelled corn so one practical method to follow is to feed ground ear-corn during the early part of the feeding period, and then change over to whole or ground shelled corn during the remainder of the feeding period. Cattle fed ground ear-corn and supplement usually can be pushed faster at the start of the feeding period than those fed ground shelled corn. This would be another advantage for starting with ground ear corn and later changing to ground shelled corn. Barley is used in some areas as the sole grain, and It should be rolled for best results. Care must be exercised when feeding barley, however, because full feeding of barley may bring on bloat.

Sport* News

YELLOW JACKETS 1 LOSE TWO GAMES ] DURING HOLIDAYS 4 The Yellow Jackets were defeated by the Bremen Lions and the Atwood Greyhounds during the Thanksgiving holidays. The Lions had lost 26 consecutive games until they defeated the , Yellow Jackets, 48-42. The Bremen game was a close game as ’the Jackets took an early lead of 6-<5; but were be- < hind 14-10 at the end of the first quarter and at half, 16-25. Five ( of the Syracuse players fouled out in the fourth quarter. Molebash led the Lions with 12 points, while Arch had 11 points for the Lions. Doll, Connolly and Kroh all had 7 points for the Yellow Jackets. The “little” Jackets of the 2nd team also lost their game 26-36. Both Schurr and Beehler nad 11 points for the winners. Stably led the Yellow Jackets 4 with 7 points. BREMEN (48) FG FT PF I Schneider, f 0.1 01 Drof, f 3 15! Sahlhoff, c 2 3 5 i Molebash, g 1 10 3 Nichols, g 2 12 Arch 3 5 5 Carrico 0 0 4 Schurr 1 21 Cardelino 0 14 Totals 12 2 4 29 SYRACUSE (42) FG FT PF Meek, f 14 4 Connolly, f 2 3 5 Kroh, c 2 3 5 Doll, g 3 15 Bates, g 2 2 5 Shock 021 Herbison 0 0 1 Roose 1 4 3 Worth 0 15 Koble 0 0 1 Totals 11 20 35 —- Score by Quarters — BREMEN 14 25 33 48 SYRACUSE 10 16 30” 42 The Yellow Jackets lost their sth consecutive game this year after being defeated by the At--1 wood Greyhounds, 40-42. * Joel -Bates led the Yellow Jackets with 11 points, and Pete 1 Doll intercepted a lot of passes. I Younce led the Greyhounds with 18 points. The Greyhounds led at the end of the first suarter but the Jackets scored 20 points to Atwood’s 13 to lead 26-23 at halftime. Atwood led at the third quarter, 37-35. Syracuse led 4039 with about 2% minutes to go. Younce made a field goal and a foul shot to put Atwood in the lead, 41-40. Bates made a field goal, with about a minute to go, but it did not count because Connolly had stepped out of bounds. Atwood controlled the ball the last minute of the game. The second team also lost their game, 26-37. Stahly led the Jackets with 7 points and Roberts

CRYSTAL LIGONIER INDIANA Evening Shows Start at 7:15 CST Tonight—Thurs. Nov. 29th “KIND LADY” Ethel Barrymore - Keenan Wynn Angela Lansbury Fri. - Sat. Nov. 30 - Dec. 1 “RIO GRANDE” John Wayne - Maureen O’Hara A masterpiece of unforgeaable screen entertainment —a story of the rugged West ' Sunday - Monday - Tuesday December 2,3, 4 “THE PRINCE WHO WAS A THIEF" Tony Curtis - Piper Laurie A technicolor thrill which you will enjoy with the screen’s new star discoveries. Wed. - Thurs. Dec. 5-6 “THE LAW AND THE LADY” Greer Garson - Michael Wilding A delightfully different comedy —a must see treat. — COMING — Sunday - Monday - Tuesday December 9, 10, 11 < “APACHE DRUMS” Stephen McNally and Coleen Gray

INDIANA’S FINEST PICKWICK COCKTAIL LOUNGE & GRILL Syracuse, Ind. — PROUDLY PRESENTS — DANCING EVERY SAT. NITE To The Romantic Music of the “3 HITS AND A MISS” No Cover Charge • No Minimum Charge DINNERS SERVED NIGHTLY Our Dining Room is available for Club Parties, Private Parties, Banquets, Wedding Receptions. Simply Call 268 and ask for Gua. •

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1951

led the Greyhounds with thirteen points. ATWOOD (42) FG FT PF Younce, f 6 6 1 Hepler, f 4 4 4 Goon, c 14 2 Swanson, g 3 0 0 Cochren, g 003 Harmon 0 0 2 W ray 0 0 0 Totals 14 14 12 SYRACUSE (40) FG FT PF Meek, f -1 0 2 Connolly, f 113 Kroh, c 4 15 Doll, g 12 1 Bates, g 5 12 Worth 2 1, A Shock 3 .0 /1 Totals 17 6 19 -— Score by Quarters — ATWOOD 10 23 37 42 SYRACUSE 6 26 35 40 —Clifford and Dale. Stick With The Team I If you were at a basketball ! game and saw our Yellow Jac- ■ kets (fun qff the floor a few minutes before the game was over, wouldn’t you think it odd? Syracuse fans look the same way when they walk out on the team before the game is officially over. If you are a genuine booster for the team, you will not put getting to the drug store or other amusements before your loyalty to the team. Whether we win or lose, stay till the game is REALLY over. You certainly will not avoid the rush by leaving ea'rlier as you think you might. It will pay off eventually, believe it or not! BOWLWAY' LADIES LEAGUE — LIGONIER — Won Lost Newman 22 5 R. L. Nates 14 13 Pickwick Lounge 10 17 Masterettes 7 20 200 games: Eileen Hall. 203; Mardell Schwab, 201. High game: Eileen Hall, 176; Mardell Schwab, 171; Alice Harbison, 162. High 3 games: Mardell Schwab, 500; Eileen Hall, 464; Mary J. Christine; 444.

e BOX OFFICE HOURS: Sunday - 2:00 cont. Sat. Mat 1:45 - 2:30 Mon. to Sat. Eve ............ 6:45 Close Nightly at 9:30 lb FRI. - SAT. NOV. 30-Dec. U MAXIE ROSENBLOOM .nd.MAX k. “SKIPALONG ROSENBLOOM" f d Wtt JACKIE COOGAN • FUZZY KNIGHT • HILLARY SUN. - MON. Dec. OWOESPACECAMEAIEMIBLE | MACHINE ...lo H><ood ponK WHAT WILL YOU DO? TUES. - WED. Dec. 4-5 lewtelMP j I Ahh THURS. - FUN NITE! ®*LITTLB CIRNT