Syracuse-Wawasee Journal, Volume 46, Number 16, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 1 February 1952 — Page 3
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 19<5;2.
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Church Os The Bietiuen Corner of Mill & Main street. Clayton Mock, pastor, phone 294-R. Sunday School, 9:30 a.m. Morning Worship, 10:30 a.m. Junior League, 7:00' p.m. C. B. Y. F., 7:00 p.m. Evening Service, 7:30' p. m. You are invited to our church services. Come in the spirit of reverence, and leave not without a prayer to God for thyself, for those who minister and for all who worship here. „ Church Os God Rev. Marion Shroyer, Minister. Sunday School, 10 A. M. Lewis Firestone, Supt. Mornfng Service, 11 A. M. Evening Service, 7:30 P. M. % The Methodist Church R. A. Fenstermacher, minister. 10:00 a.m. oWrship and Holy Communion. Receution of members. 11:00 A. M. Sunday School and Mible Study, Thursday, 7:4'5 p. m., Choir practice. Grace Lutheran Church Rev. Carl Sorensen, pastor. 9:45 a.m. Church at Study with a class for Adults. 10:45 a.m. The Church at Worship . ; . “Things That Knit Life Together”, Luke 11:23. Rev. and Mrs. Sorensen expect to move into the Lutheran parsonage on Friday, Feb. Ist. It you have no Church home we invite you to fellowship with us in Grace Lutheran Church and to take part in all its services. ZION CHAPEL U. B. CHURCH Sunday School 10 A. M. Cleo HeriWood, Supt. Preaching Service, £:3O P. M. Rev. Alfred Price. Solomon’s Creek E. U. B. Church Rev. Bevis A. Hill, pastor. 10 a.m. Sunday School. Lesson title: “A Pharisee And A Repentant Woman.” 11 a.m. Morning Worship with sermon title: “The Standing Christ.” Burr Oak E. U. B. Church 9:30 a.m. Sunday School. 7:00 p.m. Junior League. 7:30 p. m. Evening Worship sermon: “Temptation.” t DEWART LAKE Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Vanes Visited in Kokomo last Thursday with Mr. and Mrs. Carl Platt, and son Carl Jr. Mrs. Vanes says perch fishing at Dewart Lake is excellent. The Vanes had Mr. and Mrs. “Beezie” Beebrook, from across the lake, for a big fish fry at the Vanes’ home. Mr. and Mrs. Marion Redmond, recent callers at Dewart Lake on their way to Florida for several weeks. The entomology department at Purdue University announces two new leaflets. A leaflet relating to the use of Lindane for wireworm control in corn, No. E-39, and a second one on the use of honeybees for red clover pollinations, E-4'o',. are available from either the department of entomology or from county agent offices. ■ ~~ ' ■ '■ q, Mine Shafts 1 ’ Average depth of vertical shafts n U. S underground mining is 90 feet
Any size of type on any ciao RUBBER STAMP from the very smallest to the very |b largest. / Hi-quaHty RUBBER STAMPS ruggedly built to last yon years and yean longer. Faster sendee at prices far below what you would ordinarily expect to pay. Come in and see us on any RUBBER STAMP needs that you may hare. We also hare a wide selection of MARKING DEVICES for your busineee and private * AT THE JOURNAL OFFICE
International Uniform Sunday School Lesina SCRIPTURE- Luke 7:36-50. DEVOTIONAL READING: Psalm 32. Understanding Lesson for February 3, 1952 PEOPLE are like books. Some can read them, some can’t. You can put a thing down in black and white and still some people will not under-
j > - t « 'j Dr. Foreman
stand, simply because they can’t read. If a person is illiterate it makes no difference how plainly a book is printed or how big the type is or how clear the author’s sentences. So a person can be read by some of his neighbors, like a book in
plain English; to others who are just as close to him (close, that is, measured by a foot-rule) he might as well be written in Egyptian hieroglyphics for anything they can make out of him. * • • Strange Dinner Party »pRUE of all men, this was and is true of Jesus. Luke tells of a dinner party where he was a guest, and puts the spotlight on three persons there: Jesus, the host Simon, and an un-named woman. The woman was not supposed to be there; she just wandered in off the street. Not that she was a stranger, exactly; she was well enough known in the village so that the host knew what sort of woman she was, even if (being a respectable man) he did not know her name. Like all guests in those days, Jesus had taken off his sandals and *. 7 as reclining on the couch beside the dinner table. This woman stood behind him and wept. Her tears feel on his bare feet and she wiped them dry with her long hair. Jesus at first paid no attention, but the host was scandalized. How could Jesus take it so calmly? How could he let such a woman touch him? The conversation that went on, as Luke reports it, between Jesus and Simon, shows that the poor woman of the street understood Jesus’ heart, while the leading citizen, whose house it was, did not understand Jesus at all. One could read Jesus, the other found him a closed book. Why? A Door Barred THE MAN could not read Jesus' mind and heart because, for one thing, his own mind was made up as to the kind of person Jesus ought to be. He supposed Jesus was the same sort of person as himself—proud, sensitive, careful of Lis social standing, unwilling to associate with the “lower classes,” wanting to bp respectable much more than he wanted to be helpful. In his mind he carried a readymade pattern of what a “Prophet” ought to be, and ;o when one who was greater than all the prophets sat at his own dinner table, he could not see him for what he was. His eyes were blinded, he could not read Jesus, the door to understanding him was closed. He had never learned to read the kind of language which Jesus* life wrote large. Then there was another reason why this man could not “see” Jesus. It was his own pride, Simon looked down on Jesus so much that he could not even treat him with ordinary politeness. • • » A Door Open BUT the woman understood. She did not know all there was to know about Jesus. And still she understood the depth of his heart. The door of his heart opened to her—she could read the clear writing of his spirit. She understood him because she was humble. She did not try to fit him into her pattern; in his presence she knew, as the host Simon did not, that his was the true pattern of life and hers the false. She understood him too because of her love. And so in spite of the immense difference between them, there flowed the light of understanding, even before a word had been spoken. She could read the bright word FORGIVENESS which to Simon was only a blank. * • • And So Today ■pO this very day, some people can read Jesus while others cannot. And in between are uncounted peo-' pie who can read him only more or less dimly as through glasses that are not clean, or through the smoke • of a city twilight. - But it is still true that pride and prejudice not only keep us from reading the lives of those around us,' they keep us from reading the mind of Jesus. And it is still true that humility and love are the great teachers; they show us how to read the lives of those around us every day, and best of all they teach us how to read the word “Forgiveness” In the mind and heart of Jesus ... . which is the heart of God. Poop Pearls It is true what they say about oysters—pearls are found in them. But pearls found in American oysters are not worth the price of admission to Tiffany. Too high a calcium content, they burn when buffed.
Annual Report TOWN OF SYRACUSE, INDIANA For The Year Ending December 31, 1951. GKNEBAL FIND Receipts Uasi on hand. January 1, 1951 J. $ 7,635.10 County Tax Distribution ..... . > 24,996.81 Ex. is Tax 1,633.34 Building Permits •••• . 40.00 Turkey Creek Township expense fire department I. 2,134.85 Benton Township fire run:,? .’ 64.00 Traffic Fines ;...' j. 44.00 Refund on Insurance i. 45.53 Use of lawn roller /. 75.00 Total receipts with balanca i. $36,669.03 Total disbursements J. 24,037.46 Cash balance on hand January 1,1952 .... j,. $12,631.57 Disbursements Trustee’s and other official salaries J,. $ 650.00 Salary of Town Marshal '. 4.676.50 Compensation of firemen 3,489.00 Compensation of street employees ... L. 1,558.90 Other compensation 281.05 Communication and transportation . 130.93 Heat, Light, Power and Water L, 5,444.17 Printing and advertising I. 188.81 Repairs to building and equipment 1. 613.96 Services other than contractual 190.64 Office supplies ......" 119.47 Other supplies .1.081.17 Building material ~ -. 1,601.20 Street, Alley,''and Sewer ; 2,028.04 insurance and Official bond pi-emium 998.02 Equipment 985.60 Total Disbursements .....; $24,037.46 STREET FUNI) Receipts Cash on hand January 1, 1951 ;.. $ 4,736.62 County Tax distribution 2,563.44 Motor Vehicle tax 5,956.73 Turkey, Creek Township garage rent for fire truck J 420.00 Total receipts with balance ?... $13,676.79 Total disbursements ..... j 7,009.45 Cash balance on hand January 1, 1952 $ 6,667.34 Disbursements | Wages of street laborers $ 4,989.51 Other compensation ;.... 992.78 Repairs to equipment ........ 47.25 Supplies 979.91 Total Disbursements ,1 $ 7,009.45 . LIBRARY FUND Receipts Cash on hand January 1, 1951 $2,331.65 County Tax distribution ; 4,979.26 Petty Cash 100.00 Total receipts with balance ....... $ 7,410.91 Total disbursements 6,034.26 Cash balance on hand January 1, 1952 .....; $ 1,376.65 I Disbursements Salary of Librarian $ 1,590.00 Janitor service 262.75 Books and subscriptions 985.02 F .u e 1 , 240.35 L i g h t s 52.97 Water service 10.00 Telephone rental 62.50 S u p p 1 i e s 57.50 Re p a i r s , 2,573.40 I n s u r a n c e 151.82 Printing and advertising ...... 24.95 Misc e 11 ane o u s . 23.00 Total Disbursements $ 6,034.26 WATER FUND Receipts f i Cash on hand January 1, 1951 ... .1 $ 5,649.02 Water collections ......... j 7,627.83 Paid freight claims 76.53 Other receipts ~ ‘ 1 330.00 Total receipts with balance $13,683.38 Total disbursements •! 7,458.12 Cash balance on hand January 1, 1952 / $ 6,225.26 Disbursements Pumping operating labor $ 2,252.50 Distributing system operating labor 108.00 Distribution supplies 60.68 M a t e r i a 1 526.84 Distribution repairs J 164.39 Drayage and freight charges 88.23 Printing and advertising .. ...a 15.50 Office expense 82.60 Plant supplies 111.71 Pump equipment repairs 41.82 T a x e s 80.05 Fuel and power purchased 69.89 Office salaries 510.00 R e f u n d s 11.00 New Work 964.91 Water works revenue bond and interest account 3,370.00 Total Disbursements $ 7,458.12 SYRACUSE WATER WORKS REVENUE BOND ACCOUNT Receipts Cash balance on hand January 1, 1951 $ 5,586.25 From water fund 5,910.00 ' Total receipts with balance $11,496.25 Total disbursements 2,137.50 Cash balance on hand Jartuary 1, 1952 $ 9,358.75 Disbursements Payment of bonds i $ 1,500.00 Payment of interest on bondii 637.50 Total Disbursements 1..... $2,137.50 SEWER AND SEWAGE DISPOSAL PLANT BOND FUND Receipts Cash-balance on hand January 1, 1951 f ; $ 1,079.66 County tax distribution 1,367.21 Total receipts with balance '. $ 2,446.87 Total disbursements “ 1,277.50 Cash balance on hand January i, 1952 $ 1,169.37 Disbursements Payment of bonds $ 1,000.00 Payment of interest on bonds 277.50 Total Disbursements $ 1,277.50 RECAPITULATION OF ALL FUNDS Cash on hand January 1, 1951 $28,841.44 Total receipts 58,364.93 Total receipts with balance $85,383.23 Total disbursements 47,954.29 Cash balance on hand January 1, 1952 $37,428.94 CHECKS OUTSTANDING Street FundNo. 252 1 $ 56.00 General Fund— ' i No. 391 $ 3.12 No. 393 ; 6.15 No. 395 4.00 No. 398 — 11.11 Water FundNo. 385 SIO.OO Withholding Tax Fund— ’ / No. 407 $415.10 Total Outstanding Checks $505.48 Deduct Account error in voucher No. 405 Withholding Tax $ 11.50 Total Outstanding Checks $493.98 Cash balance on hand January 1, 1952 $37,922.92 ERNEST O. BUCHHOLZ, Town Clerk-Treasurer. This report approved by the Board of Town Trustees of the Town of Syracuse, Indiana at a regular meeting on January 15, 1952.
Korean Veterans Eligible For Training The Veterans Administration has announced that veterans of the second World War who returned to active duty and who were disabled after the outbreak of the Korean conflict, may be eligible for vocational training under a recent law, even though they have already trained under the G. I. Bill or Public Law 16, A. B. Breaks, Kosciusko County Service Officer said today. Eligible veterans who received service-connected disabilities, after June 27, 1950 may take draining if they need it to overcome the handicap of those disabilities, regardless of whether or not they had taken advantake of previous veterans’ training programs Eligibility will be determined by the Veterans Administration, taking into consideration the veteran’s previous records of advisement and training, as wall as
SYBACUSE-WAWASEE JOURNAL, Syracuse, Ind.
his current medical record, so that earlier training may be utilized to the fullest extent practicable. Mr. Breaks said that in case of a veteran who interrupted training under Public Law 16 to reenter the armed forces, the VA will also evaluate his past training record and present medical file to ascertain whether he is still able to go ahead with the same employment objective.
. SERVING BEST OF FOODS Steaks Chicken Sea Foods FERRIS INN 1 Mile South Syracuse
INTERMEDIATE MOTHER'S CLUB The Intermediate Mothers club met Monday evening at the home of Mrs. Mary Holloway, with Mrs. .fthn Holloway as hostess. Mrs. Robert Laird and Mrs. Gaylord Jones were assitant hostesses. After the regular business meeting ,the president introduced and welcomed three new members into the club— Mrs. Elaine McClamrock, Mrs. Jean Bender and Mrs. Miriam Ridings. Five tables of bridge were then formed, with prizes going to high and low score winners. Ten dollars was voted to the March of Dimes campaign. Delicious refreshments finished a perfect evening, with compliments extended to the hostesses. The next meeting will be held at the home of Mrs. Paul Lantz. LEGAL NOTICES NO TICE is hereby given that application was made on the 31st day of Decembei)’, 1951 by The Western Union Telegraph Company to the Federal Communications Commission to discontinue the telephone-operated‘a gen cy office at Highland View, Indiana and provide telegraph service by public telephone through, the telegraph office located o n West Main Street, Syracuse, Indiana. Any member of the public desiring to protest or support the closing of this agency office may communicate in writing to The Federal Communications Commission, Washington 25. D. C. on or before February 21, 1952.
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IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIH Announcing the Opening of our new Shoe Repair Shop On or about WEDNESDAY, FEB. 6th Service & Satisfaction Backed By Years of Experience Lesko Shoe Repairing 2nd Floor Above Klink’s Grocery Syracuse, Ind. iiitimimiiiiiiiiiimmiimiiiitimiitiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiimiiiii
NOTICE WH ARE TAKING LAUNDRY FOR AMERICAN LAU.YDRY PHONE—9O SYRACUSE DRY CLEANERS
NOTICE is hereby given that application was made on the 29th day of December, 1951 by The W estern Union Telegraph Company to The Federal Communications Commission to discontinue the telephone-operated a g e n cy office at Ogden Island, Indiana and provide telegraph service by public telephone through the telegraph office located on West Main Street, Syracuse, Indiana. Any member of the public desiring to protest or, support the closing of this agency office may communicate in writing to The Federal Communications* Commission, W ashington 25, D. C. on or before February 21, 1952. NOTICE is hereby given that application was made on the 31st day of December, 1951 by The W estern Union Telegraph Company to The Federal Communications Commission to discontinue the telephone-operated a g e n cy at Buttermilk Point, Indiana and provide telegraph service by public telephone through the telegraph office located on West Main St., Syracuse, Indiana. •Any member of the public desiring to protest or support the closing of this agency office may communicate in writing to The Federal Communications ComTiiission, Washington 25, D. C. on or before February 21, 1952. Phone us your news — 191!
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Sweet Queen Queen Elizabeth of England was very fbnd of perfumed gloves. Her first pair was brought to her by the Earl of Oxford from Italy who, himself, affected a jerkin of perfumed leather. Queen Elizabeth also had her own still room where she puttered with fragrance ingredients to make her own perfumes. NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATIoiN No. 6745 Notice is hereby given that the undersigned has been appointed "by the Clerk of the Kosciusko Circuit Court, in the State of Indiana, (Administrator) of the estate of John C. Wiles, late of Kosciusko County, deceased. Said estate is supposed to be Solvent. Frank Wiles, Administratot. January 14, 1952. R. Leon Connolly, Attorney. NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION No. 6746. Notice is hereby given that the undersigned has been appointed by the Clerk of the Kosciusko Circuit Court, in the State of Indiana, Executrix of the estate of EDNA GEYER, late of,Kosciusko County, deceased. Said estate is supposed to be solvent. OLIVE BUSHONG, Executrix. January 14, 19'52. R. Leon Connolly, Attorney.
CONCRETE SEPTIC TANKS IMMEDIATE DELIVERY GUARANTEED TO LAST A LIFE TIME HANDLES A FAMILY OF EIGHT. CALL 106-J — CROMWELL Cromwell Cement Products CROMWELL, IND. We Also Manufacture Air-Seal Vaults and Concrete Cemetery Urns
GIRL SCOUTS TO MEET All Girl Scouts and the Girl Scout Committee will meet at the Scout Cabin this Saturday, Feb. 2nd, at one-thirty o’clock. I The Girl Scout Committee will hold their regular meeting, Wed- | nesday, Feb. 6, at the Dixie Grill at 3:30 p. m. j NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION No. 6748. 4- * Notice is hereby given that the undersigned has been appointed by the Clerk of the Kosciusko Circuit Court, in the State of Indiana, Administrator of the estate of EDNA V. HESS, late of KosI ciusko County, deceased. Said estate is supposed to be solvent. CLARK GREEN, Administrator. January 23, 1952. Xanders & Xanders, Attorneys. i Termites DO NOT LET TERMITES EAT AWAY YOUR HOMB Free Inspection — No Obligation Phone or Write UNIVERSAL ! ’ TERMITE CONTROL ' Fl.une 572 — I’lo N. Scott St. Warsaw, Indiana OR i WAWASEE LUMBER CO. Syracuse, Indiana
