Syracuse-Wawasee Journal, Volume 46, Number 44, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 15 August 1952 — Page 7

FRIDAY, AUGUST 15, 1952

Lliurch

Calvary Evangelical United Brethren Church Church School at *9:45 A. M., Charles Garner, supt. Church Worship at 10:45 a.m., with the children from the Childten’s Dept, rendering a special program. A freewill offering will be received. The Fellowship Class will have a Sunday noon picnic on the Lakeside lawn. Junior League at 6:00 P. M. Rev. Bailey will preside at the Evening Service at 7:30', and Lois Held will bring the message, telling of her experiences at the Pacific Garden Mission in Chicago this summer. The Ladies Aid meeting will be held at Lakeside on Tuesday evening, Aug. 19. • Rev. Loose will have charge of' the Prayer Service on Thursday evening, at 8:00 p. m. Everyone is cordially invited to attend the services at Calvary. The pastor and family are on vacation during these two weeks. Solomon’s Creek E. U. B. , Church 10 a.m. Sunday School. Lesson title, “The Tragedy of Saul.” 11 a.m. Morning Worship. Sermon theme: “Walking On The Water.” Wednesday, 8 p. m., Prayer Service. Burr Oak E. U. B. Church 9:30 a.m. Sunday School. 7:30 p. m. Evening Worship. Sermon title: “God’s Leader.” ALL SAINTS EPISCOPAL CHAPEL (South Side Wawasee Lake) Services 8:00 A. M. and 11:00 A. M. until September. EBENEZER LADIES AID The Ebenezer Ladies Aid will hold a picnic on the regular meeting day, August ;21, at the home of Mrs. Theries Doll. Members are asked to bring own table service.

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Church of The Brethren 9:30 A. M. Sunday School, Lavon Symensma, Supt. .10:*3D A. M. Morning Worship. Sermon by Rev. Lee Cory. 7:30 P. M. Bible classes. 8:0*0 P. M. Evening Worship and sermon. Church of God Sunday School IQ): 00 A. M. Lewis Firestone, supt. No preaching service due to Indiana Eldership being in session at Bear Lake camp. I — : — PICNIC AT OAKWOOD The Nifty Fifty’s, the Matrons and Patrons of 11050, and their families from fourteen of the 214 chapters in district 20’, met at the Oakwood Park picnic grounds for a picnic dinner and social gathering. Hostesses for the day were Mabel Martin of Milford, Dprothy Ferverda of Leesburg, Virginia Hoesller of Nappanee,, and Rebecca Kitson, Syracuse. Swimming and boating was enjoyed. Gifts were presented to Dr. and Mrs. Dean Marble, Warsaw,, who will leave this month to live in the East. Dr. Marble will return to Cornell University as an instructor. Dr. O. C. Stoelting and Mrs. Stoelting were present at this picnic, as he was patron of the local chapter in IDSO. •Guests were present from So. Bend, Mishawaka, Elkhart, Goshen, Bristol, Plymouth, Walkerton, Bremen, Warsaw, Pierceton, Nappanee, Leesburg and Milford. Two area field days will claim the attention of Hoosier farmers in August. On - Friday, Aug. ®2*. farmers will tour the Purdue University Experimental Farm located near Culver. Southern Indiana farmers will inspect the Moses Fell Annex Farm of Purdue on Tuesday, Aug. 26. Approximately 30'0 farmers are expected at each of the field days.

— ———j I Sanucl 13:8-14; 18; 18; bXVOTIONAL READING: Psalm 1. Why He Failed Lesson for August 17, 1952 mHERE IS NO such thing ai a “nation” apart from the people who compose it Destroy the peo-

Dr. Foremm

ple, destroy the nation; build up the people, build up the nation. Some people are, of course, key persons. What they do and are affects a vast number of people besides themselves. Such persons can make the difference between failure and

success for an entire nation. Their tragedy or triumph is their nation’s tragedy or triumph. Suppose Napoleon and Hitler had been at last successful? Suppose . Alfred the Great and Abraham Lincoln had failed? .• • • A Double-Minded Man SAUL, first king of Israel, Is a tragic illustration of all this He was a big handsome man with a creditable war-record; so the people elected him as their first ling. It was not the first time, nor the last, that a man’s military record has misled people to believe ths t he was good in other respects is a leader. Saul had some serious defects In his character, so serious tliat they led to his personal failure. One of these faults was a gene ral Instability. He would ma ke promises and not keep them. You could not be sure whether he was friend or foe. He turned ag iinst members of his own family. He professed to want to know God’s will and yet he would not do it. He officially stamped out witchcraft and yet he consulted a witch when in trouble. He would make vows and then back down from them. “A double-minded man is unstab.e in all his ways,” it would be written many centuries later. Such a man makes a poor follower, and i fatally bad leader. • • • A Jealous Man JEALOUSY is a word too often limited. It should not be cor fined to the way a boy feels when another one is stealing his girl, or vice versa. It refers to the mean feeling people have about any one who in any way, as they think, is out to “do them in.” Now this King Saul was a jealous man, as most, dictators are. Cne of the great kings of Egypt could not bear to think of any other kiag as having built better buildings than he; so he employed the royal chiselers to remove from every public building the name of any other Pharoah and replace it with his own. King Saul could not be jealous of the kings before him; for there were none. But he ould be insanely jealous of any one he thought might be more popular than himself. So we find him pursuing David vindictively, relentlessly, first making an outlaw of him, then n fugitive among Israel’s enemies. • • • A Superstitious Man rE FAMOUS STORY (Chip. 28) of Saul and the witch at En-Dor raises a number of questions to which nobody has the guaranteed answers. One thing, however, is clear from that story: Saul was a superstitious man. He thought that the dead could be conjured right out of the ground. Whether the woman of En- * Dor actually conjured Samuel up, Dr only Induced Satti to think she did, the reader must judge for himself. The point is that Saul, who paid small i ttentton to Samuel living, was very eager to talk with his ghost. Superstition marks a man as full of fears, for fear is the foot of superstitions. Fear also was tie root of Saul’s jealousy; and fear at last drove him to suicide. True must be made of sterner stuff. • • • A Disloyal Man SAUL FAILED not only because he was shifty, jealous and a coward. He failed because he was disloyal to God. His public career began by his recognizing in Samuel a prt phet of God, and in Samuel’s inst-uctions the will of God. But as time went on he took counsel only with himself; he listened to Samuel only when it was convenient. And so God rejected him. Whatever a man’s qualilications may be, if he compromises his own ideals, if he will not live up to what he recognizes to be best, if he will not listen to men ol God, if he sets his own will above the will of the people, even above the will of God, then he is not ohy not a wise leader, he Is a very bad one. IWI by th» DlrUlon •! Qri«Uul4i«»U»a, NaUana Canaeil J?U. Charekaa es dkrtat UnlUd BUtaa es Aaaarie* BalaaaaS by WNV Paatacaa.) Try the classifieds.

SYRACTTSE-WAWASEE JOUBNAL, Syracuse, Ind.

SYRACUSE LAKE Pottowatomie Park. — House guests at the Hubert Angelmyer home are Mrs. Angelmyer’s twin sister, Mrs. Herbert Lehman, Mr. Lehman, June Ellen and Shirley Ann, of Pocatello, Idaho. Mr. and Mrs. George Everett took their house guests Mesdames John Robert Cockley and Mrs. C. J. Kjeedseth and daughter, Leota, to Chicago, the last of the week, on the first part of their journey home to Fort Worth, Texas. <» Mrs. Millard Hire, Sasha, Daisy Stover and Stover Hire, and the Everett Miner family went to Indianapolis Sunday for Jim Miner and Stover to chalk up another win at a boat race. The races were held under the auspices of the Central Indiana Boat club, on White River at Riverside Park. Jim won fli-st in his class (out of I'o' drivers) and a trophy, and Stover a first in class B, (from seventeen drivers) and a trophy, so Miner’s “Shivers” boat and Hire’s “Fits” boat, shivered and shook their way to prizes. Mr. Miner returned with the Hire’s, and Mrs. Miner, Jim and Mary went on down to Petersburg, Ind., for two days visit with her father, and friends. Front Street. — Leo Heckler and family, from Florida, were week end guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ben Julier of Gary, Leo and Ben were former partners in a Goshen meat shop. The Heckler’s stopped here on their way to Elkhart to visit relatives. The Bill Luegge family, and Mrs. Harry McClintic of Kalamazoo, were also guests at the cabin. Mrs. McClintic and Bill Luegge returned to Kalamazoo Sunday, leaving Mrs. Luegge and children for a week’s visit. Mrs. Charles Bowersox had Chicago company at the week end, Mr. and Mrs. James Dickson, and Mr. and Mrs. J. Dickson and son, of Chicago. SEEKS SEPARATION Georgia Cormican, of route 3, Syracuse, has filed action in circuit court fora five-year separation from her husband, Aria Cormican, on grounds of habitual cruelty. She asks care and custody of their three children, Danny Lee, aged seven, Sally Marie, six, and Roger E., two. She also asks a weekly support allowance for herself and the children. The Cormicans were married April 4>. 1944, and separated on June 3'o of this year.

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WAWASEE LAKE Mr. and Mrs. John Borg and two children John, Jr. and Sharon of Lansing, Mich., returned home Wednesday after spending a week with their uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Banning. Mrs. Banning’s sister, Mrs. Rose Foulger of Wayne, Mich., also spent a few days in the Banning home. Sixty eight attended the Banning and Thomas reunion held Sunday, Aug. 3, at the Frank Banning home at Wa-Ana Harbor. Guests were present from San Diego, Calif., Chicago, Columbia City, Fort Wayne, Goshen and Syracuse. In the afternoon, Mrs. Truman Warren took two boat loads of the guests sight-see-ing on Wawasee Lake, pointing to points, of interest, which was very much appreciated by all present. North Shore. — The Harry Brinkman’s have their daughter, Mrs. Greta Hofman and son Rudy, of Chicago, for the vacation season. Sand Point. , — The Minta Hoffman property has been purchased by G. E. Manis of Huntington. Cottingham Beach. — Recent company of the Clair Dreher’s was Mrs. Dreher’s sister, Mrs. A. W. Brown and Mr. Brown, who is associated with the Chalfant funeral home, Ft. Wayne. Another sister, Mrs. Verlyn Stambaugh, Mr. Stambaugh and their daughter, Phyllis, also were callers. The latter family may be remembered as their home was burned practically down sometime back in Fort Wayne. Homer Stambaugh lives with the family, and between the two men, etc., the house is going up again, on the same foundation. South Shore. — Mr. and Mrs. Louis Levy were week end hosts to Dr. and Mrs? V. L. Levy, their daughter Ruth and son Todd, of Fort Wayne. • Ogden Island. — A recent guest at Mrs. Gordenna Dahl’s place, “Gordy’s”, Emily Dick of Cleveland (school teacher) with foreign summers, remarked she had not seen a similar entertaining “movie machine”, except one ,at Guatemala. Macy’s Slip. — The Floyd Collins’ are coming along nicely on Floyd’s latest project, a cement block garage or workshop. Their home, which is a beauty, has much father'Floyd and son Marshall handiwork, over a somewhat longer period. An added

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bedroom on one side and large porch-living room added and enclosed, is all knotty pine lined. A handsome fireplace in the sunken living room has a professional tools with “love of home”w ritteri* all through it. The cement hearth has the father and mother Collins, son Collins and wife hand prints in it, with initial of each, and of course, the paw-prints of Midge, their dog. South Shore. -— John Sudlow’s cabin in Ontario, from which and Steve Fenton, an employee, Frank Foulk, and brother-in-law, Louis Hamman recently returned from building, has a picturesque setting on Boundry Lake, Otter Twp., about forty milOs north of Bruce Mines. Mr. Sudlow purchased about two acres there, including two small islands. Snapshots seen of the progress must surely have a history of much work, with amusing side lines. The log siding had to be ferried in to the islands —hoW they got the wagon onto two boats, with front wheels in one boat and rear wheels in other —the team taken single trail through the woods around one side of the lake —and finally set up the whole cabin, really took some hard work. A snapshot of a beauty of a small Dri-Gas stove (needed for cooking on the spot, and photo as proof to wife, Anna Sudlow, if she ever got there, that she would not have to pioneer too roughly), was amusing in its rough setting, with protecting canvas, etc., to keep it safe. According to one picture, the boys must have missed a few shaves. Morrison Island Road. — Don W. Foos, of Chicago, here on a periodic checking on his farm near Wawasee said, he’d been all over the United States and Mexico, but when he really winted to relax, he came to Wawasee. Mr. Foos’ father, Sam Foos, was born also his mother. Mr. Foos remembers when travel was by buggies, road£ somewhat bad, recalled the old Chautaqua days, was born in Chicago, back of the tracks, and deliberately purchased the farm, to which he eventually intends to retire.

■OCK’S BOAT LIVERY Near Waco South Side Lake Wawasee Phone 614-M Outboard Motor Service Boats - Motors for rent. Authorized Dealer for Johnson outboard motors. Tire Vulcaniz* Ing. Lawn Mowers Sharpened. — Welding. —

HlilllllllllUiiiilllllllllllllllllllHlllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllillllillllllllllllllllllllllHlllllllllllllllllllllimi I Wawasee Cafel — OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK — SUNDAY DINNERS s . fl a Fried Chicken — Short Orders = Home Made Pies, Rolls and Doughnuts | Reservations For Parties Accepted — Phone 114 | wiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinniHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiuiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiinuiianiß £ —— g ■ Improvements You Can Buy on Time to Beautify Your Home! NO DOWN PAYMENTS RE-ROOF as low as $7.99 per month REMODEL BATH 7 .... as low as $9.85 per month ATTIC ROOM as low as $12.78 per month BISULATION as 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 FLOORS ...... as low as SIO.OO per month NEW FURNACE as 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. iJML “ be it evee so humble (CZaM —own it.” Wawasee Lumber Co. Inc. RAY R. FRBVERT PHONE 278 SYRACUSE, INDIANA