Syracuse-Wawasee Journal, Volume 49, Number 27, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 26 April 1956 — Page 12
Syracuse-Wawasee Journal I
Page 12
—Thursday 26 April 1956
See ETTER Real Estate RAY HOPEWELL. BROKER Phone: 350 ☆ ☆ ☆ RAINEY’S COURT Very nice 2 bedroom yearround home. Enclosed porch, full bath and garage. We think this is an excellent buy, you look at it and tell us what you think. One bedroom cottage furnished. Includes everything except bedding and one boat. Might be just what you are looking for. Corner lot, 2 bedroom cottage. Nice view of Lake Wawasee. If you like to fish and relax, this will do the trick. ☆ ☆ ☆ KALE ISLAND This year-round home is hard to beat. Fireplace, large living room, full bath, nice kitchen, furnace heat and garage. Located on very nicely landscaped lot. Easement at back door to channel for fishing and boating. Beach privileges on Lake Wawasee. ☆ ☆ ☆ KALE ISLAND Nice 2 bedroom cottage, very nicely decorated. New kitchen and bath located on channel' with access to both lakes. See it ■ now. ☆ ☆ ☆ FARMS You want a farm? We have it. A dandy 72 acre farm with very good out buildings. Also, a completely modem 7 room house with basement. Very close to Syracuse. You want a farm without any buildings? We have that too. 55 acres, good fences, good pasture and well. This is for sale at a very good price. ☆ ☆ ☆ BONER LAKE Now if you build a lot, remember that we’ve got—Just the building for you! 24 1 / 2 x31 1 / 2 blocx and frame building on 2 adjoining lots 50x230 each. Priced real low so it will go. Don’t say we didn’t tell you. ☆ ☆ ☆ LAKE WAWASEE A 3 bedroom summer cottage with a terrific beach. Fireplace and screened porch at a price that will sell it quickly. This is a real buy. ☆ ☆ ☆ OPEN SUNDAYS 1 P. M. to 4 P. M. - RAY HOPEWELL REAL ESTATE BROKER ETTER Real Estate Phone: 350
'Cub Scouts Are "Bird Watchers" The April meeting of Cub Scout Pack 56 was held at the §cout Cabin Tuesday evening, April 24th, with a re-activated Den 5 leading the group in the opening ceremony. The theme of the month, “Cub Scout Bird Watchers” was entertainingly introduced by Den 6, who appeared in brightly colored costumes, each boy representing a well known bird. Den 2 sang the “Red Red Robin,” Den 1 showed posters of bird’s heads and feet, and Den 3 brought actual bird nests and cleverly built bird houses. Den 4 closed the meeting with Den Mother Carol Karr reading “A Cub Mother’s Prayer.” Cub Master Wayne McMillan announced that the Cub Scout Circus will be held 11 May in Warsaw at the Armory Gym. It will begin at 8:00 P. M. Retiring Den Mother Virginia Myers was presented with a gift from Den 6, in honor of her 5 ' years as Den Mother. Also retiring is Mrs. Mary Popenfoose, who has a 4 year record as Den Mother of Den 2, and who was also honored by the Pack. Mrs. Herb Stanfield was introduced as the new Den Mother of Den 5. Her assistant is Mrs. Jim Mench. Den 2 will have Mrs. Roger Martin at the helm, and Mrs. Deloss Smith will lead Den 6, assisted by Mrs. William T. Jones Jr. Lovely Mother’s Day corsages, made by Virginia Myers and Eva Myers, were given to their mothers by the Scouts. DeLoss Smith was Master of Ceremonies for the evening. The committee included Mrs.. Lois Dodds, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Green and Mr. and Mrs. DeLoss Smith. Awards were given as follows: Steve Smith, Bear, 1 gold arrow; Steve Butt, 1 gold and 2 silver arrows; Russell Buchan, Bear, 1 gold and 1 silver arrows; Ricky King, 1 silver arrow; Roger Niles, Denner, 1 gold and 1 silver arrow, 2 yr. pin. Freddie Mick, 2 silver arrows, I 2 yr. pin; Mike Kelly, asst, deni ner; Lynn Pittman, gold arrow; I Richard Karr, gold arrow; Lee Bear, Wolf and Denner; Ken Butt, Dener; Tom Clayton, asst. Denner, 2 silver arrows; Jerry Searfoss, Lion, 2 yr. pin; Mike Buhrt, 1 gold and 1 silver arrow. Dennis Buhrt, 1 silver arrow; Ken Martin, 1 silver arrow; and Bob Cat arwards to Tommy Ganshorn, Robert Van Sickle, Billy Cripe, Dallas McKibben, Pete Stanfield, Dennis Mench, Jimmy Wilson and Billy Wiley. Club Notes * ♦ . Ladies of the Round Table Ladies of the Round Table met at the home of Mrs. Louise Connolly Monday evening 23 April and responded to Roll call at great length choosing subjects both varied, interesting and informative. It was a very enjoyable and highly intellectual program, complete in itself. A short business meeting followed, winding up affairs for this season, with only the Spring party yet to come, on 21 May. After the business came a most exciting event. Mrs. Connolly turned her dress shop over to the ladies, who turned into lovely models, floating about as if in Fairyland. The evening came to a close with bountiful refreshments served by the hostess. WOMEN’S RELIEF CORPS Arrangements for inspection at the next meeting were made at the regular meeting of the W.R.C. Friday evening. Stella Swartz was elected secretary; Elizabeth Pollock, treasurer; and Effie Emerson, chaplain. H JRrl >■ |s|Faii empTa ilFpi Itl alt nml cl rrtelTMniinMolZQ MH! AlfjoldßM ft]
Whafs The Inventory On Electrical Power in Homes?
Each time you touch a light switch or start an appliance, you buy and use electricity. It is sent to your home byway of power lines built, owned ana maintained by the particular organization which supplies electricity in your community. You have your own electrical organization, too. This is the wiring system in your home which carries the power you “buy.” It is your responsibility to see that it serves you well. Homeowners installing new bathrooms provide for pipes large enough to carry plenty of water—yet purchase and use additional electrical equipment without a single thought as to whether the electrical system in the home has the capacity to carry the “full load.” Houses built during the last 20 years (and of course, those built earher, rarely have the full benefit of adequate electrical wiring and generally are lacking the power to take care of today’s home appliances. In addition to your home’s ceiling and wall lighting units, there are also floor lamps, table lamps and pin-up lamps normally connected to your existing electrical circuits . . . and many, many appliances. Some of the many appliances now in use in modem homes, each of which employs valuable wattage, are listed here . . . How many of these do you have in your home today? Sun lamp? baker, bottle warmer, broilerrotisserie? Clock, coffee maker, com .popper? Deep fat fryer, electric blanket, portable fan? Roaster, food blender, hair dryer? Steam or dry iron? And there are heating pads, ironers, mixers, portable heaters, radios, record players, refrigerators, sandwich grills, toasters, waffle irons, sewing machines, fd £ FOR THE PRICE OF ] ■ PLUS A PENNY I Burkholder Drug We Give T-V Stamps t
I Louie's Grill I I “HOME OF DISTINCTIVE DINNERS” I I Re-Opens Friday, May 4th I Newly Decorated Rooms, but the Same I Carefully Planned and Deliciously I I Different Foods I For All Occasions I Home-Cooked and Home-Baked for your enjoyment I Open Every Day Except Monday!
shavers, T.y/sets, vacuum cleaners, waxeppolishers, and many otheig. f JustTthink how many of these you may use at one and the same time! You can recognize the symptoms of overloaded circuits when you see your lights “blink” when the refrigerator or other appliance starts, when fuses blow . . . when irons, toasters and other small appliances are slow in heating up, when motors seem sluggish . . . yes, when too many appliances draw from the same circuit, you can only draw a “trickle” of electrical power from them. Remember, you pay for electricity according to the length of time you use it ... if appliances are slowed down, they must work “overtime”—and you pay “time and a half” for an overloaded wiring system when your bill is due. Whether you are planning to build or buy a new home, buying an older one, or remodeling the one you live in—check the wiring needs first. A reliable electrical contractor can tell you quickly the capacities of existing wiring. Adequate wiring in your home can help you secure a better mortgage ... is a wise investment in safety . . . and in the long run an economy move . . . __ “Okay! Okay! I’ll coverht with INSURANCE!” ft ☆ ☆ This wise little papoose has the right idea! And YOU too should have INSURANCE to cover your Personal Property against Fire and Theft. If you are not so insured ask us about it today. Here’s a wise young Indian Chief Knows INSURANCE will save grief! ♦ * • Ketering’s INSURANCE SERVICE PHONE — OFFICE 226-R GENERAL INSURANCE SOLICITORS Dick Denzel, 1653-M Chris Koher, 54-R Service Is Our Motto
ON FLORIDA VACATION % Miss Ida Deardorff and her cousins, Mrs. H. Grenacher and daughter of Minneapolis, left Tuesday for Sarasota, Florida where they will spend a week or ten days at the Sarasota Terrace Hotel. Last fall Miss Deardorff won * first prize in a letter writing cofF test on the subject of “What Needs To Be Done To Make Syracuse a Better Town,” sponsored by the Journal. A month’s paid in advance vacation at the Sarasota Terrace was the award. It was not until recently th#t she was free to take advantage of her “Florida Vacation.” Mrs. B. Bates and E. L. Nichols tied for second place in the contest. The Nichols family spent the first two weeks of December in Sarasota. Mrs. Bates was un- * able to take advantage of the v# cation herself but members of their family were given the privlege of the reservation. saving you extra money each* year on your utility bills. But don’t fool with electricty yourself! You may be burnt# more ways than one. Icree]' ■ »HOlvie Try one on yeur own fawn and prove to yourself that this is the Best < Mower For You See us for the best buy in town on Power Mowers. The New 1956 ROTOMATIC Available in 18” or 20” 2 cycle or 4 cycle engine Priced from $59.95 to $99.95 We Trade — We Service We have Vigoro 6-10-4, a complete plant food for lawns, flowers, vegetables, shnibs, and trees in 50, 25, 10 and 5 lb. bags. Also, USED rotary and reel type mowers. See Us NOW WARD FARM EQUIPMENT CO. North on Road 13 Phone 286
