Syracuse-Wawasee Journal, Volume 48, Number 6, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 18 November 1954 — Page 6
-SYRACUSE-WAWASEE JOURNAL
6
ATTENTION DEER HUNTERS For the best job of skinning and processing of your deer, bring it to Nolan's Processing Plant and Market, just south of B & O RR on SR 13. Phone 236 Syracuse, Ind. Advertising pays Use the Journal RAY BUHRT GENERAL CONTRACTOR Residential & Commercial Building • * r Phone 1629-J Rte? 3 Syracuse i NOTICE ' . ■ 7-11 Texaco Service Station is now under one operator— ERNEST FLEISCHAUER Station Hours will be from 7 A. M. to 9:30 P. M. General Auto Repair and Wrecker Service Greasing-Oil Changing-Winterizing Hi wav 13 South Phone 612-R L-O-O-K-!-! Tom Turkeys 39c lb. Fresh from the farm. Hens 59c lb. Prices subject to change so call Jones now! 'f - ' JOXES TURKEY FARM Phone Syracuse 1625-R
■} STATE AUTO . ( a cvcZfc O' l I Secret j J ' ‘ Like all friendly neighbors, your State Auto agent NEW REDUCED RATES haa a real interest in your problems. He’s the man _ —right in your own neighborhood—who can keep * your Auto insurance protection right up to date, stoto Aut. policy and who is nearby to give you fast servicejahen holder. ye« «•« else oa4«Y Hw you need it! edded bo..Sts o« new, reduced No lengthy, involved correspondence when you T*.* *?* v * l>Ul ? ’ have a State Auto policy—no impersonal handling se*"n»s... • cCLsWMiVn that of questions by remote company personnel. With makes state Auto year beu State Auto you get prompt, persona/ service that insurance buyi makes it protection plus. UH BOOKLET. "Wto to UaA $m omA, $We TCCAY fer Mb. STATE AUTO STATE AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE ASSOCIATION Mt>iiOUri.lndlaaa»eße.ladlaaa-Ri»»4-»rfoOUr».HanrUbarz JACK STOELTING BEIER AL INSNIANCE ABENCY it TetylMMS 257 Office j 11-W IssMmm ii STI ANISE, IIDIAIA
Thirsday, Nsvsufcsr IS, 1554
Our Readers Write ....
“The Old Man of the Lakes’’ slipped this one under our door. The other evening while in town I decided to make a visit To our little Journal office Just to see what there was in it. There I met a man named Pauli And if he can take a jest What I like the best of all Was those gals behind the desks They seemed a little shy, Though, of this I am quite sure If they want me to pass by They must lock the door What is life Without some fun Like a nut without a kernel And our home is not complete Without the little Journal It gives us news and news and more It enlightens us and helps keep score Os things going on that we should know Let us all give a boost and then watch it grow So here’s to Pauli And his whole staff It is worth my while If it makes you laugh F. J.B. 1954 Kendallville, Ind. October 18, 1954 Please find check enclosed for $2.50, for renewal of my subscription to the Syracuse Wawasee Journal for another year. Yours truly 3 W. P. Miller PJS. We enjoy the paper very much, its the news from my home town. I have been away from there for 20 years. October 8, 1954 Dear People, I have been receiving the “Journal’’ for over 22 months now and this is the first letter 1 have written to you. Not a very good record, is it? The maui reason for this letter is to change the rank on the address. I have been in this same jcompany for 19Va months now so the address is still Pvt. Anyway I [ made Pfc the 28 of Sept. 1953, CPI. 25 of Jan. 1954 and just the 27 of Sept. I made Sgt. Thais four J stripes. Os course, that helps the . pay alot. Since getting out of the hospital 18 July 1953 I have had the same job. I instruct classes in Mine ■Warfare. In that time I’ve instructed many thousands of boys. I get out 1 Dec. this year so that makes about 54 days left. Here’s thanking you for the prompt delivery of the Journal. It surely is, was, and will be appreciated. Yours truly. Ralph Bushong Long Beach, Calif. Friday Mr. Pauli, Editor Syracuse Journal Thanks for now sending my paper here. I do enjoy it much—and remain Very Respectfully Mrs. Georgia Miller Winter Hours We arc open weekdays from 8 A. M. to 5 P. M. Self-service & Drop-off Laundry WASHINB - DRYING - TINTING Rugs • Drapes • Slip Covers Blankets • Pillows Wawasee Laundromat S. Huntington St. Phono 225-M
Puryear, Tenn. Oct. 14, 1954 Syracuse—Wawasee Journal Syracuse, Indiana Dear Sirs Enclosed find check for $2.50 for subscription for one year to your paper. I enjoy it so much and look forward to getting it each week. Yours truly, Mrs. Mue King Marietta. Ohio October 18. 1954. The Syracuse-Wawasee Journal Syracuse, Indiana. Dear Sirs, I should hate very much to miss an issue of the Journal after all these years of having it every week. Incidentally, I might just as well take this opportunity to throw you a bouquet. I think the newspaper has improved so much. In fact, I think it is the best it has been since my uncle. Preston Henry Miles, ran it umptium years ago and of course I am not a bit prejudiced, not much. t Sincerely. Margaret S. Pettit November 5. 1954 Syracusb-Wawasee Journal Syracuse. Indiana Dear Sir: The address of our son is: SFC K. Richard Howard. RA C. CO., 510th HV. BN. TK. APO 28. New York. NY. Our son is in Germany, with his wife, the former Mary Claire Pracht. and they both appreciate receiving the home newspaper very much. We. Dick’s parents, thank both the paper and the American Legion. Sincerely. C. W. Howard Civil Servce Needs Various Scientists The Sixth U.S. Civil Service Regional Office at Cincinnati, Ohio today reannounced an examination for Chemist, GS.-5 ,snd Mathematician. GS-5. in order to meet personnel needs of various Federal agencies in Ohio, Indiana, Kentucky and West Virginia. The entrance for these positions is $3410 a year. To qualify for the position of Chemist applicants must have completed a full four-year college course leading to a bachelor's degree in chemistry, or have a combination appropriate education and experience equivalent to the four-year requirement. For the position of Mathematician, applicants must have completed a full four-year college course leading to a bachelor’s degree which included 24 semester hours in courses in mathematics and 12 semester hours in course in the physical sciences. A combination of appramiate education and experience totaling four years will be accepted. ? Full particulars regarding the examination and the forms to be filed, or information where they may be obtained, can be secured from any Post Office or directly from the Sixth U.S. Civil Service Regional Office, Cincinnati 2, Ohio. Dr. and Mrs. E. L. Fosbrink have gone to Atlantic City where the doctor is attending the Clinical Congress of the American College of Surgeons. From Atlantic City they were going for a short visit to New York, and also to Hartford. Conn., to visit Dr. Fosbrink s brother Roy L. Fosbrink. Mr. Fosbrink is branch manager of the Aetna Insurance Co. in Hartford. Fanners Are Asked To Cooperate With Census America’s more than 5 million farmers are being asked to cooperate with the Bureau of the Census. Department of Commerce, in the 1954 Census of Agriculture which is now under way. This census is the 16th in a series of nationwide farm canvassess since the first farm census in 1840. over 100 years ago. In most States, copies of the census questionnaire are being mailed to farm operators in advance of the enumeration which began early in October and will continue into December. The starting date for the census has been set for the close of the normal crop harvesting season in each area. Questionnaires to be used in different areas have been designed to cover the crops commonly produced in these areas, while a number of questions common to all farms will be included in each variation of the questionnaire. In seven Southern States where the sharecropper system is followed, the questionnaires will be delivered in person by the enumerators to assure the consolidation of reports for multiple-unit farms. The mail questionnaire used in most of the States is accompanied by a letter from Director Robert W. Burgess of the Bureau of the Census. This letter requests each individual farm operator to fill in the answers and have the completed questionnaire ready for the census, enumerator when he calls at the farm a few days later. The enumerator will assist the farmer in filling out the form, if he requires assistance. The Census is designed to collect information about the number and size of farms, tenure, acreage of land in various uses, crops harvested, livestolk inventory and production, expenditures for selected items • labor hire, machine hire. feed, fertilizers and lime, gasoline and other petroleum fuels and oil),
inventory of selected facilities and equipment (televisions, food freezer, piped running water, tractor, harvesting machines, automobile, truck, etc.) irrigation, conservation practices, farm value, mortgage debt, and cash rent. Regional variations of the question-
Scattered Bills Cutting Your Paycheck to Pieces? Consolidate Your Bills and Have Only ONE SMALL MONTHLY PAYMENT "For the Best in Loan Service See Service Finance" Loans to SSOO Service Finance Company lO4’/ 2 E. MAIN STREET — SYRACUSE Phone 143 Willard Vachon, Mgr. SFrom where I sit... Joe Marsh » Granny Drives ' But Won't "Shift"
Saw Grandma Taylor parking her 1924 Franklin out front the other day. Neat as a pin, radiator and hub caps gleaming—the whole car is as shiny as the day she bought it 30 years ago. Then I stopped and looked again-for there, hang ; ng on the spare tire was a sign: “This car NOT for sale.” Asked Granny what was going on. “Joe,” she says, “it’s this craze for old cars. Everybody wants to buy my Franklin. But it has served for years and it’s not for sale at any price.”
Copyright, 1904, United States Breuers Foundation
Are you a 4»door sedan buyer? Chevrolet’s your buy! T “ Jmiiiuul.. i -il_ • Prefer a 2-door sedan? The one you want is here! C 8 Only a sport model will do? What more could you wish for! Did you say Station Wagon? Ah, lady—ah, sir—will you look! He motorainic Chevrolets for ’55 I ■ . From tires (they’ire tubeless!) to top (lots lower!), it’s a whole new approach to the low-priced car! Come in and pick out the model you want • • • the color you want (with new matching interiors) ... the power you want (new V 8 and two new 6’5)... and the drive you want (standard, Powerglide* or Overdrive*). » st extra coat. More than a new car • • • a new CONCEPT of low-cost motoring! S. & AA. MOTOR SALES
naire will be used so that inquiries about crops, for instance, will be limited in each area to the crops common in that area. On an average, each farmer will be asked about ICO questions, many of which can be answered by checking “yes” or “no”.
From where I sit, it’s strictly the new cars for me—but Grandma Tayllor, and others, are certainly welcome to their “old faithfuls.” It’s simply a question of preference. Same with a choice of bever ages. For instance, I like a temperate glass of beer with supper. You may prefer coffee. Fine! The important thing is that we reapect each other’s choice—and “ride along smoothly” together. ’
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