Syracuse-Wawasee Journal, Volume 46, Number 41, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 25 July 1952 — Page 3
FRIDAY, JULY 25, 1952
(Jiurck
Church of The Brethren 9:30 a.m. Sunday School. Lavon Symensma, Supt. 9>: 30 A. M. Sunday School, Lavon Symensma, supt. 10:301 A. M. Morning Worship, sermon by Rev. Lee Cory. 7:30 P. M. Bible Classes and Young People’s meeting. 8:O0jjP. M. Evening Worship, sermon by Lavon Symensma. Calvary Evangelical United Brethren Church Church School at 9:45 A. M. Lewis Immel, Supt. Howard Juday, assistant supt.' Solomon’s Creek E. U. B. Church 10 a.m. Sunday school, John' Darr, S. S. supt. p.m., Prayer service, John Darr leader. Burr Oak E. U. B. Church 9:30 a.m. Sunday school. Everett Vance, S. S. supt. CALVARY LUTHERAN CHURCH Cromwell, Ind. Day—The Seventh Sunday After Trinity. Sermon: Why Talk About God? REMINDER! Ladies of the Trinity Methodist church, don’t forget supper to be given by Circle ,2 tonight July 2|4, at home of Mrs. Alva Nicolai. Servin will begin at 6:'3'0 —price sl.o'o'. NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION No. 6'Bll. Notice is hereby given that the undersigned has been appointed by the Clerk of the Kosciusko Circuit Court, in the State of Indiana, Administratrix of the estate of GUY BUSHONG, late of Kosciusko County, deceased. Said estate is supposed to be solvent. BEULAH BUSHONG, Administratrix. July 16, 119'5'2. (40-3 t Xanders & Xanders, Attorneys. AUCTIONEERING SERVICE For Fair Dealing and the High Dollar, call the MYERS BROTHERS AUCTIONEERS Phone '2-4721 or 2-5784 Elkhart, Ind., collect
KURFEES PAINTS ■TT] I JJ J IIY*J 11 ■ i JI A Guaranteed by A \Good Housekeeping) EVER-KLEEN PRIMATROL Self-Cleaning Controlled Penetration HOUSE PAINT PRIMER $525 $525 Gal. Gal. Ready-to-use Ever- \ Primatrol Primer — Kleen defies dirt and Specially formulated fumes, keeps your home for use with Ever-Kleen dazzling white for for a perfect long-last-years, < ing paint job. WHEN YOU THINK OF PAINTING Phone 286 or 288 Ward Farm Equipment Co. North on Road 13 Syracuse, Ind.
Grace Lutheran Church 9:45 The Church at Study with a class for you. I10:415 Divine Worship. Special music each Sunday. Summer visitors always welcome. We invite you to fellowship with us. Our church door is always open and you may enter to meditate in quietness and to rest. The Methodist Church 10: 00 The Holy Communion. The minister will bring a short sermon on “The Blessing of Wanting To Be Good,” 11:00 Church School. Thursday evening, 7:415' Choir practice. There will be a meeting of the Official Board on Friday evening. August 1, in the north room of the church. ALL SAINTS EPISCOPAL CHAPEL (South Side Wawasee Lake) Services 8:00 A. M. and 111:00 A. M. until September. Farmers interested in production of scab resistant apples or •vegetable and canning crops will want to visit the O’Neall Memorial Farm of Purdue University located about eight miles south of Lafayette on state road No. 43. Visitors to the farm are welcome. Hundreds of seedlings are being sown in an effort to breed a scab resistant apple. Breeding work on tomatoes, beans/ peas, and other horticultural crops is being done here. Fertility and cultural studies on tomatoes and some other canning crops are also in progress. We Carry | Genuine ill it\nM S MB for Washing Machines, Pumps, etc. SYRACUSE HARDWARE PMONE 6—Syracuse
SCRIPTURE: I Samuel 1:1—4:1a. . DEVOTIONAL READING: X Samuel 1:1-10. God Prepared Him Lesson for July 27, 1952 WHEN A CHRISTIAN looks back, he can see God’s hand better than he can see It looking forward. A Christian, even a worrying Christian (though there should’be no such people as Christians who worry), can feel very thankful for God’s
|i Dr. Foreman
blessings, care and guidance in the past, even while worrying over tomorrow’s uncertainties. How foolish this is! God is even now making ready for the future. He is not to be taken by surprise. He knows what he wants and he knows
how to get it. While we waste time in worry, God is at work. The story of Samuel is a case in point. • • • God’s Home Every one knows that the strongest single influence in a person’s life is his home. We sometimes take that for granted. On the contrary, a home may wreck a man before he starts. It has been said that many alcoholics get their start, —not their start in drinking but their start in the nervous, unsettled disposition which easily slips down into alcoholism and other drug habits, before they are six years old. The wrong kind of parents, lack of harmony between father and mother, ill-treatment or simple neglect, can make a child already abnormal before he is old enough to go to school. On the other hand, the foundation of a strong man can always be found in the home where he first lived. So it was with the remarkable man, the prophet Samuel. In later life he became lawgiver, king-maker, preacher and general of the army; no ordinary man! The nation needed him; and when the time came, God produced him. But God produced his mother first • • • God’s Church WFTER LEAVING HOME, Sam- ** uel literally lived in the tabernacle, which served as a church in those far off days. The little boy found there a second home. Old Eli: the priest no doubt came to mean much more to him than his own father did, his father whom he so seldom saw. So it still is, where the church is doing what it should for the children of its people. A child should not be afraid of the minister; he should not feel anything but love for the church.* True, a church building is different from other buildings in that it is set apa.rt for a sacred use. A church is the symbol of God’s presence among men, and the sanctuary of a church ought to make all who come into it feel that this place is holy ground. But that does not mean that a child should be afraid of the place, as some children are. If they have been coming there every Sunday since they can remember, sitting with the rest of the family in the family pew (sounds old-fashioned but there are still thousands of them), coming so regularly that no question is ever asked on Sunday morning, “Well, shall we go to church or not?” —then they will feel more at home on the inside of the church, when the Lord’s Day comes, than they ever will on tlie outside. Now this is not all always true. If children and young people are not attracted by the church, as too often they are not, whose fault is it? Whoever may be to blame, it is certain that a church which loses its young people is headed for its end. • • • The Voice of God ris MOST INTERESTING to know that when young Samuel heard the voice of God, it sounded just like the voice of Eli the priest. (If you heard the voice of God, whose human voice would it sound lik»?) At any rate, God prepared this great prophet Samuel not only by the influence of home and church, but by a personal religious experience. Now theie la no real conflict or contradio tion between religious education and conversion, between tie church and the home, and ti e work of the Holy Spirit. God was in Samuel’s home, God was in that tabernacle, God wa s in his religious education. But iJcd also came to him directly and not only through home and church. If we wonder sometimes where the Christian leaders for the next generation are coming from, we may be sure God is preparing them even now, in simple if obscure ways, as he did with Samuel of old. (ConrrlKht ISM by the DlviMoi el Chrißuan Edncatloa. National Council rtUrChsFehis es dhrt.t et th. UMUd State, .f America R.lcm.4 by Will Fcatarss.) Try the classifieds.
SYRACUSE-WAWASEE JOURNAL, Syracuse, Ind.
I DON'T I SDON'T I I MIX WITH CHILLED* | ■ new groups ■ L Yrl di a EIKBmL w SMB dfl HHn Mil DON’T JEF JakJ I GET OVERTIRED JMtfWPpT fflhF Ks y ’** W •wfcMmf V- ■ —aJftKOsr ’******* ToIHrWPPr **llll'' fWI Iwßs ■"' ’ ■ * Bls ntir vfti. i BUT °° fIHB ; 111 I Vision 1 1 keep clean Seven-year-old Karen Blecha enacts 1952 polio precautions recommended by the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis. When polio is around, the National Foundation cautions parents to watch for these signs: headache, fever, sore throat, upset stomach, tenderness and stiffness of neck and back. A person showing such symptoms should be put to bed at once, away from others. Then, call your doctor and follow his advice. If polio is diagnosed, call your local chapter of the March of Dimes for advice and assistance, including needed financial help.
W. S. C. S. MEETS The W. S.C . S. held their general meeting Thursday at the Methodist Church with Circle No. 1 as hostess. The hostesses chose blue for, a color scheme, carried out in napkins and glass plates. Flowers were Queen Anne Lace, Indian Paint Brush, Horsemint, Snapdraggons and poppies. Mrs. Orval Carr, the new president, conducted the business meeting, and had the group sing a song from the Hymnal with a theme, “There is no East or West or North or South, but One Great Fellowship.” Mrs. Clair Dreher, vice president, spoke briefly on program arrangements for the year. The W.’S. C. S. is departing slightly from former program setups, and planning to build up a larger attendance. Mrs. Leone Hogue gave devotions, starting from Genesis with “For the New Year—Forever there is God” and said all should learn how to pray for peace, and
Ring for R'sandT.M* School time is here! And while children are excited >out learning, teach them iophone Manners, too! To :r politely, speak distinctly ( jlace the receiver carefully we fradamental to good telephone ja'SS© usage. Children get the 3 R’s at school— you can teach tiiem Manners at home! UNITED TELEPHONE COMPANY IHCORPORAXtD FLOYD L. SHELTON, DISTRICT MGR. WASH TODAY - - WEAR TODAY Ligonier Laundromat HALF-HOUR LAUNDRY WASH AND DRY IN ONE HOUR PHONE 72 LIGONIER (Also “Drop-Off Service)
consult God often. Mrs. Nelson Miles gave a program explaining “World Federation of W.S. C. S.” Mrs. Miles said there was formerly no International Federation, that a twoyear survey was made to see what women do in Christian Service, and that there seemed to be a need to give women all over the world a chance to find useful activity, depending on the community. In 19 3'9 a World Federation of Methodist Women was formed just before the war started, but many individual societies were formed, and worked to relieve suffering after war. Leaders of all foreign countries decreed that they would have individual orginizations, and not tied to the big one, as were still afraid of dictatorship. Most of them have monthly programs, and the only unity is in world wide exchange of letters about all activities. The motto is "Know Christ and make
mi Him '■ Bt IB I -■ This Man Con Help You! Carl Kissinger If you are having some minor or major mechanical trouble with, your automobile, our Mr. Earl Kissinger can certainly help you. He has had 15 years experience and is an expert on tune-ups, and carbureator and ignition troubles. Phone or drop in for an appointment. COMPLETE SUN ANALYZER EQUIPMENT. ' WHEEL BALANCING COMPLETE OVERHAULS or TUNE-UPS. • ANY MAKE — ANY MODEL • S. & M. MOTOR SALES — PHONE 230-J — . On Road Thirteen SYRACUSE, IND.
Him known. ’’ 1 Mrs. Miles gave a most inter- 1 esting talk on a subject, few people had ever really understood < before. i The meeting was closed with , the Twenty Third Psalm repeat- < ed in unison. i Refreshments were plentiful of nut bread, orange bread and date bread with different fillings, and also open sandwiches of . Cum Quat Fruit from Florida, and were truly delicious. SARA-CUSESAYS The editorials on last week’s front page of the Syracuse-Wa-wasee Journal should not be lightly passed over. Sara knows of another traffic happening where a person was acutally hit (not fatally, but it was not funny) by a too quick autoist, apparently hurrying to the next place to hurry some more. And then there was the time when Sara became involved in a traffic law violation with an orange colored school bus! Also, could it be that our beautiful Syracuse Park is taken too matter of fact? It’s there, sure— It’s ours, sure—but it could more than double its present popularity — pleasure to others, and to get just downright commercial, our Lake Park is a business help, also. Just this Tuesday, on a business telephone call from Bendix Products, South Bend, the caller, Mr. A. Shellenberger asked, “How’s the weather over there,” and went on to say “what a wonderful three hours was enjoyed last Sunday at Syracuse Lake City Park, that there was a cool west wind, and the park’s whole setup was enjoyable. Crosson Park, where shrubs, and general well-being was, in years’ back, worked up diligently by the Business and Professional Women’s Club, is a popular park also, and although having no bathing facilities, many picnicers’ enjoy its tables, grounds, and cool shade. Mrs. Henry Grieger has returned to her home in So. Bend,. having spent several weeks in the| home of Mrs. May Kindig. Miss Barbara Ann Longenecker, student nurse at Methodist hospital in Indianapolis, spent the week end with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Glen Longenecker. MOCK S BOAT LIVERY Near Waco South Side Lake Wawasee Phone 814-M Outboard Motor Service Boats - Motors for rent. Authorized Dealer for Johnson outboard motors. Tire Vulcanizing. Lawn Mowers Sharpened. — Welding. —
HENWOOD BUYS REGISTERED AYRSHIRES Harvey Henwood, of route 3, Syracuse, has recently made an initial purchase of one registered Ayrshire, according to the Aryshire Breeders’ Association Executive Secretary, C. T. Conklin, of Brandon, Vermont. The transaction was recorded in the national office of the Aryshire Breeders’ Association in Brandon where complete records on all registered Aryshires in the United States have been maintained since 1137'5. Because of their ability to produce at a low cost an abundance of milk with an average butterfat test of 4:%, the Aryshlre breed of dairy cattle has become increasingly popular with dairymen throughout the country.
Improvements Yon Can Buy on Time to Beautify Your Home! NO DOWN PAYMENTS RE-ROOFas low as $7.99 per month REMODEL BATH ;... as low as $9.85 per month ATTIC ROOM as low as $12.78 per month INSULATIONas low as $6.39 per month STORM WINDOWS ... as low as $9.64 per month NEW FIREPLACE as low as $5.50 per month NEW SIDEWALKS ... as low as $6.87 per month OVERHEAD DOORS .. as low as $6.42 per month KITCHEN CABINETS as low as $8.77 per month NEW FLOORSas low as SIO.OO per month NEW FURNACEas low as $7.87 per month NEW BATH FIXTURES as low as SIO.OO per month RE-PAINT as low as $7.25 per month Whether it’s a small repair job or extensive remodeling—or installation work, have it done now. Enjoy the comfort of needed improvements while paying for them on easy monthly payments—no down payment. We are ready to help you with plans and valuable information. Call 278—we will gladly give you an estimate — no obligation. “BE IT EVER SO HUMBLE —OWN IT.” J Wawasee Lumber 1 Co. Inc. I RAY R. FREVERT PHONE 278 I SYRACUSE, INDIANA
OPEN BUSHONG ESTATE The estate of the late Guy Bushong, of Syracuse, who died last May 15, has been opened in circuit court with the widow, Mrs. Beulah Bushong, qualifying as administratrix. Mr. Bushong left personal property valued at $4,1000. Listed as logical heirs, in addition to the wife, are a daughter, Mildred Bushong, and a son, Brent Bushong, both of Syracuse. LOCAL NEWS Mr. and Mrs. Donald Hall and son Dick of Corry, Pa., are guests this week in the home of Mrs. Wilma Hire. Their son, Robert Hall, stationed at Chanute Field, 111., was also a guest from Sunday until Wednesday.
