Syracuse-Wawasee Journal, Volume 25, Number 2, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 17 August 1961 — Page 5
New Command At Fort Harrison Department of Defense officials announce Brig. Gen. Jonathan O. Seaman will assume command of the Sixth U.S. Army Corps. Fort Benjamin Harrison. Indiana, in early September. He will succeed Maj. Gen. George E. Bush, who has been reassigned as Chief of the Joint U.S. Military Advisory Group in Athens, Greece. General Seaman was nominated by the "President for promotion to Major General, and the nomination has been confirmed by the Senate. He is now Director of the Office of Special Weapons Development. United States Continental Army Command, at Fort Bliss Texas —a post -he has held since January of this year. General Seaman was born in Manila, P. 1., and has served with the Army throughout the world. He served in both the South Pacific and Europe during World W'ar H and in the last 10 years has beefi assigned to Germany, Thailand. Hawaii and the continental United States. He was graduated from the United States Military Academy m 1934 General Seaman and his wife, the former Mary Gruhert, have two daughters who will accompany them to Fort Harrison. HOSPITAL NOTES Goshen General Hospital August 9. 1961 Major Surgery Howard T. Simison, Syracuse. Tonsillectomy Robert L Yoder. R R 3. Syracuse » - ' August 11, 1961 Released Robert L Yoder. R R 3. Goshen .Meh in Niles. Syracuse • August 12. 1961 Medical James Snyder, Syracuse August 13. 1961 Birth* Mrs George ConquiHard. Syracuse, a son August 14. 1961 Released Janies Park Snyder. Syracuse Medical Mrs Marj Ann Koblc R R 4. Syracuse August - 15, 1961 Major Surgery Mrs Calvin Knapp. Syracuse Medical Mrs Maude Traster. Syracuse Released Mr* Harry Juday. Syracuse. Howard T Simison. Syracuse
AUGUST CLEARANCE SALE Once A Year Sale, Aug. 17 - Sept. 2 BERKSHIRE STOCKINGS O SEAMLESS OWITH SEAMS Reg $1.15, Hose Sale $ .99, 3 pr $2.89 Reg 1.35, Hose Sale 1 09, 3 pr 3.19 Reg 1.50, Hose Sale 1.19, 3 pr 3.49 Reg 1.65, Hose Sale 1.29, 3 pr 3,79 I ■ -■ . - _ - —J' ... All Mens Short Sleeve Sport Shirts, White & Colored sm. M. I. XL $1.69, $1.79, $1.99, $2.99 y 3 OFF REG PRICE All Boys Short Sleeve Sport Shirts, Assorted Colors & Patterns,Sizes 2-18, $-1.10, $1.19, $1.45, $2.19 y 3 OFF REG PRICE All Bathing Suits and Beach Wear ’/ 3 OFF REG PRICE 4 San Hone Dry Cleaning Service Mon. A Thurt. Shoo Roftotr — Pick Up end Return — Tues. A FrL At Store FULLER'S Downton Milford General Store Ph 0L 8-4511
MY TRIP ABROAD by Rita Myers Hoosiers Meet On Plane Flight In The Near East Professor and Mrs. Atlee Beachy from Goshen college and their three daughters were bn our Mis Air flight from Jordan to Beirut. Lebanon They were the nearest 1 came to meeting someone from home on my trip. I They were returning home after a year of teaching in India on a Fulbright grant and they planned to , travel in Europe for seven weeks, arriving back in Goshen sometime this month The family liked India very much and Professor Beachy was optimistic about its problems, believing that India -does lean toward the West However, my seat mate on that hop was an engineer from California, who had just finished building a dam in East Pakistan and he was discouraged and depressed bv what he had seen in Iqdia: a baby born on the street, arid people dying of hunger with out a roof over their heads, alone and with no one to help them or care. • Our next hop was a brief flight over the Mediterranean tn Nicosia, capital of the island of Cyprus Sitting next to me was a young motor mechanic. 21, from a village outside Nicosia, who was returning home after three and a half years of employment m Australia, i helped him fill out his landing form, which he confessed was a complete puzzle to him. as he could speak English but couldn’t read it. LOSES BATTLE Then he confided to me that he was terribly 'sick and hadn’t been able to eat a bite of food since leaving Australia 1 think he was mostly excited about the
prospect of seeing his parents and 15 brothers and sisters. He turned green when the stewardess brought around a tray of fancy sandwiches and then, as we came down for a landing and the plane dropped and bumped in stomach-shaking swoops, the poor boy tore off his seat-belt and . rushed for the washroom. It seemed'a shame thAt he had made it all those thousands of miles and then lost the battle over the airport. It was that same day that 1 discovered I was not immune to tourist tummy either. When we landed in Ankara. Turkey. I survived a meeting with the new ambassador; Raymond Hare, a friendly former school teacher, some briefings with military and economic experts, and a reception in the beautiful home of the C. Edward Wells of the U. S. Infor mation Service (where I couldn’t eat a mouthful of the real Amer ican food that the others felt on hungrily) but that was the last I knew of Turkey.. That night the tile bathroom floor suddenly came up and hit the side fa my face and I’m not too clear about what happened after that. A charming amateur nurse in the group gave me about two jiggers ot paregoric, which’ is full of opium, and 1 lay in a trance from then until it was lime to leave Turkey The doctor in our group said later that I should have taken only a spoonful at first He. came Up to my room four times that day. 1 guess to see if 1 was still breathing. EXCITING MEETINGS The rest of the party had inter views with the president of Tur key and other high officials and reported that these were the most exciting of all the briefings we . had. Turkey is one country where we do not have to worry about Communist infiltration. The Turks have fought 14 wars wth Russia in 300 years and anything Russian is automatically no good in Tur key. . On March 27 of this year, the army took over the country in a bloodless revolution in order to establish a more perfect democrat) it was stated Turkey looks to the United States as the model of the kind of country they want tn have, but the obstacles are mountainous s a lack of '•kill'- -a n d managerial drive and 60 to 65 per.cent of the people ~re- illiterate But it is a country full of energy and drive Everyone in our group; expressed a liking for the Turkish people, which: seems mutual. ■ \ man at the embassy said that the Turks congratulated him warmly when the US. got the first astronaut, into space. . and the newspapers gave it much more coverage than the Russian flight. He told of being in a small village where the people turned away from an outdoor movie screen to applaud spontaneously when a I. S balloon satellite went by overhead, INDIANA PORK QUEEN CONTEST e NEXT MONTH IN INDIANAPOLIS The Indiana Swine Breeders' Association will hold an Indiana Pork Queen Contest at 2 PM Sunday. Sept. 3 m the swine pavilion at the 1961 Indiana State Fair.' . ‘ 1 The w inner of this contest will represent the stale of Indiana at the Natk nal Fork Queen Contest at the International Livestock Show on Dec 3 Contestants will compete as representatives of the various purebred breeds and of the county commercial swine producers .ation Girls befween the ages of 16 and 21. living on a farm actively producing swine, are eligible Entry must be madethrough a breed state association or through a county or district commercial swine breeders’ association. Gov Matthew- E Welsh will crown the winner at 4 P.M on Sept 3 Judges of the contest are Harry Martin. Radio and TV station WFBM; Tern Berman. Indianapolis Stock Yards; Floyd •Slats' Logan. Hygrade Food Products Co., and Harry Anderson. -Radio. Station WIBC.
BETWEEN PAY DAY LOANS Get Dollars For 0 DayS Costs Cents Takes Q Minutes See JIM PAYNE or FRANK NYIKOS Syracuse Ph GL 7-3532
ABOVEGROUND DOUBLE-WAU SHELTER Q For Family Protection From RadioacHve FoHoat 1/ L li~* I -J—---ip' 1
AN OUTDOOR aboverround fallout shelter may be built of concrete blocks. It is recommended for houses without basements or for regions where water or rock is elose to the surface, making it impractical to build an underground shelter. Iwo walls of concrete blocks are constructed at > least 20 Inches apart. The space between is filled with gravel er earth. The walls are held together
MAY WE SUGGEST L. W. SHERWIN Seeing the Familiar You have no doubt heard the old story of the farmer who had gotten tired of his farm and wanted to sell it. He called in an enterprising real estate man who in turn employed a resourceful advertising man to compose a descriptive ad When it was written the real estate man showed it to the farmer for his approval. The latter was amazed. “Is this my farm?" he asked “Surely ’’ “Are all these features here? Can you see all this in my farm’’" “I certainly can It will be an easy sale.” “No .it won't" replied the fanner. “If this is my farm and all those features there, 1 will not sell if it is that good I must keep it” • . . ~ : This is a very’ true and accurate picture of many situations in the life of all of us. Fatigue creeps up on us We get bored with the routine. We want nothing so much as “to get away from it all.” It probably is due to the fact that our eyes and our mind have ceased to see the truth, the beauty and the glory of the familiar The student at his books gets to the place where his mind is numb and refuses to see and understand. The writer at his desk loses his interest and craves something in the way of a change. The carpenter gets mad at his hammer and saw and the boards and all the nails and screws. He has gotten to the place where he must see the constructive goodness of his work. The banker with his troubled clients, the lawyer with his cases, the doctor making his rounds, all these need temporarily a change of view and viewpoint. They need the contribution of the seer to reveal to them the beauty spots they are in danger of not seeing or of overlooking. Probably no one needs .this more than the father and mother, especially the mother, with their precious, priceless heritage of lit tie children. How wearing those dear little people can be Mother becomes weary. Father becomes irritated. Almost they forget the
FOR SALE LAKE WAWASEE EAST SHORE — Brand new home in restricted area. Three bedrooms A bath and a half. All electric kitchen. Carpeted living room with picture window A stohe fireplace. Fully insulated and electrically heated for year round living. Perfect beach & boat house lot. Terms. Price — $33,500 00 OGDEN ISLAND — This is a well kept older home with 3 bedrooms. located on 50 ft. lot with beautiful beach. New Oil Furnace. Garage. Furnished. Price — $25,000.00 EAST SHORE — One of the finest locations on Wawasee with excellent beach. The cottage is in need of repair, but where can you find such a buy as this. Garage, and also a channel ‘ lot for boathouse Just look at this price — $16,500.00 JOHNSON’S BAY — This is unique in that it is a duplex. However, can be sold separately. Lowly view overlooking the , lake. Many attractive features. Price — $22,500.00 if sold ■ - - as one unit, or $15,000.00 and $10,000.00 if divided. LAKE PAPAKEECHIE — Brand new, beautiful home, which can be used as income property since it has two entirely separate apartment units. Extremely attractive and located North side of lake along Road 8. Priced-$21500.00. Terms. WAWASEE LOTS — Three beautiful lakefront lots complete with seawall and adjacent boathouse lot. Restricted, exclusive area with excellent beach. WAWASEE LAKEFRONT — Very spacious 3 bedroom summer home. Fireplace. Enclosed porch. Other niee features. Price — $19500.00 MEYER REAL ESTATE R.R. 2 Syracuse — Phene: Ulstr 6-6642 OFFICE, EAST SHORE WAWASEE
with netel ties placed fa wet mortar as the wam are built. The roof is a six-inch slab of reinforced concrete, covered with at least 20 inches of gravel or earth. Most people would have to hire a contractor to build this shelter. Plans appear tn the OCDM 32-page booklet, ‘‘The Family Fallout Shelter.” For free copies write: Box Home Shelter. OCDM. Battle Creek. Mfch.
promise of the grand tomorrow, the precious potential entrusted to their care. They need a new view to rediscover their little people. Let not familiarity close our eyes. ' The farmer learned a great lesson. May you and I. in whatsoever sphere we live and work, learn that same renewing and refreshing lesson. Alcohol In Skies Problem Os Airlines By Frank A. White. While hijacking giant airliners has taken the headlines, alcohol in the skies is an equally big headache in commercial aviation. Najeeb Halaby, federal aviation administrator, has listed the matter of alcohol as one to cope with. Alky in the skies worries Hoosiers who go by air. When National Northwestern Airlines began serving liquor aloft, a Pandora box of troubles was unleashed. Delta Airlines held, out against alcohol in the skies, but it too succumbed to serving drinks to meet competition. All the plush rides out of Indiana, and all jets, serve liquor to passengers now. Only the piston driven planes on short hauls, such as Indianapolis to Chicago, do not. R. K. Quinn Jr., president of Airlines Stewards & Stewardess Association, asserted the Federal Av lation Agency rules on serving liquor aloft are unworkable. His association and that of the pilots have opposed serving alcohol to“ passengers. Quinn is pessimistic about any of the bills in the present congress passing. These bills that seek to eliminate or more strictly regulate serving intoxicants aloft seem to get lost in the scuffle. Many influential congressmen want a nip while aloft- Business executives are as dry RULES ON DRINKS LACK ENFORCEMENT MEANS The Federal rule is that the steward and stewardess, in each instance, must serve no more than two drinks to a single passenger on a flight. These capable employes of the planes . say they get passengers who were drunk when they came aboard. Furthermore, with 152 passengers ,oj ten on a single plane, they ‘cannot remember which of them has been served two drinks. Those who are drinking heavily, use all kinds of subterfuges to get an additional
drink. The steward and stewardess is in an impossible position. They are hired to make friends for the airlines among passengers, regardless of how difficult passengers may be. They must keep passengers seated, with belts fastened when the going is bumpy. Drunks do not respond to such directions. MUCH TALK OF GOOD OLD DAYS LOT OF BUNK How many times we hear the political orator pine for the “good Ole’ days.” There is considerable nostalgia rather than truth in such lamentations. It is true that a dollar of income say in 1930. would buy more than a dollar will buy today. The catcb is. there were few dollars in 1930 to buy anything as far as the average individual went. Today, the quantity of dollars per person is so much greater than he had in the yesterdays, that he is in a much more advantageous buying position. Studies show that on the average, every man. woman and child in the U S.A. had 74'; more purchasing power in 1960 than the average had in 1930. Over the last eight years, of the past 30. the increase in cost of living has gone up I 1 ;'!. At the ' same time, per capita purchasing power increased 2 L 2% per year. OUR PATENTS ARE A RUSSIAN GRAB BAG We make it so easy for Soviet spies. The Soviet Embassy in Washington can shell out 25c and obtain copies of every new U.S. patent issued. The U. S ' Patent office will put on file illustrations and blue prints that anyone may view. We only rarely learn of Russian patents or scientific advance ments. Then such knowledge is meager and comes tlhrough a Red security leak, LEGION AUXILIARY The Syracuse American Legion Auxiliary had a very successful bake sale last Saturday at the Legion Hall. This sale was held to help raise money for hospital equipment. This hospital equipment is for community use. free of charge. The Auxiliary now has three hospital beds, a wheel chair, crutches and a walker. Contact Mrs. Hugh (Agnes) Causer, phone GL 7-3579 for use of these items. The Auxiliary is now selling vanilla flavoring to obtain more money for the purchase of better equipment. In a town where you can park as long as you wish, there’s no reason to park.
AUGUST SALE LIFE VESTS $19.95 p Ladies • Men's ski belts GRILL CLOTH CAPS BATH CAPS WILL YOUR SEAT CUSHIONS With Hood and Spit CHOICE % OFF 14” 69* $ 1995 CATALINA $9.95 WATER Twm S GRILL SKIS BERMUDAS 2 4" 14’ 5 !4 OFF *6” THORNBURG DRUG (WALGREEN AGENCY) SYRACUSE NO. WEBSTER WARSAW
THURS. AUG. 17, 1941 SYRACUSB-WAWAS6B JOURNAL
Hidden Treasure Hamburgers k A ‘ - J A. ' jL A. —<ntd Carpenter, Tnc.. Photo Let's talk big . . . about hamburgers. Giant, deluxe, dinnersized hamburgers . . . deftly seasoned — with a surprise tucked inside. They’re tender, juicy and lush . . . everybody’s choice. Above alt be generous, make them large and thick. For “Hidden Treasure Hamburgers”, crisp canned French fried onions and pickle relish can be'tucked between twro beef patties. Then, cook over charcoal, in the broiler, or pan-broil on top of the stove. They’lt take from 15 to 18 minutes. 114 pounds ground beef 1 can O<S C French Fried I» z j teaspoons salt Onions i; teaspoon ground pepper 6 teaspoons pickle relish teaspoon nwnosodium glutamate (Ac’cent), optional Combine beef, salt, pepper and Ac'cent. Form 12 thin, round patties, about 4 inches in diameter. Place-a generous amount of O & C French Fried Onions and a teaspoon of pickle relish on top of each of 6 patties and cover with remaining patties, pressing edges together to seal. Broil oyer charcoal. Tip: If broiling hamburgers over charcoal, a flat wire toaster is convenient. It niakes turning easier -and prevents squashing of burgers. Serve any left-over French fried onions with the meal . . . nice to have a few extra cans on hand. They make wonderful snacks to nibble on while the food is being cooked. SAVORY POTATO STICKS :2 cans O & C Potato Sticks (about 6 servings) Heat potato sticks in aluminum foil pan on edge of grill Os xn oven. Sprinkle with any of the following just befdre serving • Seasoned salts — garlic. Celery, • onion, etc 4 • Powdered herbs —- parsley, basil, oregano * Grated, parmesan .cheese
SPORTSMAN BAR BEER WINE Sandwiches - Short Orders AIR CONDITIONING UPTOWN Sat. Nite “Rhythm Play Boys" —* ■ SPECIAL SALE I ■ -■ Limited Time Only! I _ — 0 0D 60 0 j |p a im s| “500” HOUSE PAINT Fume Proof, Titanium Base, Mildew Resistant WHITE and COLORS 5 Ji 95 that assure YEARS niiiw ... OF PROTECTION! UHLI gau SYRACUSE LUMBER CO. 743 S. Huntington Syracuse GL 7-3331
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