The Syracuse Journal, Volume 16, Number 50, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 10 April 1924 — Page 4
THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL MMMMCAN Published every Thursday at ,• Syracuse, Indiana Entered as second-Class matter on May 4th. 1908, al the posloffice at Syracuse, Indiana. Act ot Congress of March 3rd. 1879. SUBSCRIPTION RATES One year, in advance >2.00 Six months Three months t* Single Copies ...» vo H. * Buettner, Editor and Publisher ~ Clara 0. Bucttuer, Associate Editor Thursday, April 10. 1024. “I how nt wht th tratli bij h, I tell itis’twistoto to Etiter. THE SELECTING OF SHOES "Cheap shoes are not an economy.’' according to the advice on the selection and care given by Miss Meta Martin of the Home Economics department of Purdue University, in a recent Extension Bulletin, "Putting Your Best Foot Forward." The Bulletin is No. 124 and may be obtained upon request from the Purdue Department of Agricultural ExtenS "Shoes should be carefully selected so as to insure a good fit, conforming to the natural shape of the foot; that they may promote comfort, health and safety," the bulletin says. Plain, medium weight, black kid shoes are recommended for women as the most economical. Fads in shoe styles are classed as expensive. and a sensible shoe with rubber heels never more than one to one and one-half inches high is recommended for all ordinary wear, " — -o SOLID TRAINLOAD OF CARB South Bend. Ind.. April 7.—A solid trainload of cars was forwarded today from the big Studebaker factories with Hartford, Conn., as their destination. This is one of the biggest single shipments of automobiles made this year. Leaving South Bend, this train consisted of fifty-lwo freight cars of Light and Special-Six models. It was routed byway of . Detroit to pick up twelve more carloads or Big-Sixes. Altogether, the train contains 207 Studebakers, valued at approximately $300,000. ’ This large shipment to the East indicates the insistent, heavy demand for Studebaker cars. The Studebaker factories at ♦ both South Bend and Detroit are running at capacity. Ch 0. E. S. The Eastern Star Chapter will meet in regular session Monday. April 14. There will also be degree work. All members are urged to be present. o OPERATION ON EYE Mrs. Zella Leacock and her daughter Martha were in Goshen on Tuesday, where they went to have a slight operation performed on Martha’s eye, where a small cataract had started to grow. O Ne. 305 • BANK STATEMENT Stephen Freeman, President * J. P. Dulin, Vice President W. M. Self. Cashier * Bel Miller, Assistant Cashier Report of the condition of the State Bank of Syracuse Bank at Syracuse, in the State of Indiana, at the. close of Its Mwelness on March 31st. 1934. RESOURCES Loan. 5 and Discount a $389,341.00 Overdrafts 284.43 U. 8. Bonds 5.200.00 Banking House 23.569.93 FWroltwre and Fixtures .. 5.000.00 Other Real Estate .. 9.350.00 Due from Banks and Trust Companies 30.149.15 Cash on Hand 10.438.94 Cash Items 1.131.25 Total Resources .....$480,454.69 LIABILITIES Capital Stock-paid in ...$ 35.000.00 Surplus 15,000.00 Interest, Discount, etc. ... 1,240.40 Demand D'pt s 144.096. M Demand Ctts 266,117.65 409,214.29 Total Liabilities $460,454.69 State of Indiana, Kosciusko County. SS: I, W. M. Self. Cashier ot the State Bank of Syracuse, do solemnly swear that the above statement is true. W. M. SELF. Cashier. . Suhseribed and sworn to bhfore me this Sth day of April. 1924. Warren T. Colwell, Notary Publie. (SEAL) My commission expires Dec. 18. 1925. NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION Notice is hereby given that the undersigned has been appointed by . the Clerk of the Kosciusko Circuit Court in the State of Indisna v Administrator of the estate of Thomas Darr, late of Kosciusko County, deceased. Said estate is supposed to be 5M*. Dt GEO I. XANDERS. April 8, 1924. Administrator. — _o ■—-—► Subscribe for tne journal. —7; .
PARAGRAPHIC BITS MT HOME fDLKS Notes of the Week on the Coming and Going of People You Know. H. W. Buchholz spent Sunday in Garrett. Mrs. F. L. Foster spent Tuesday afternoon in Goshen. Ross Osborn was a business visitor in Warsaw Tuesday. Mrs. A. F. Statler spent last Thursday in South Chicago. Miss Elizabeth Bushong was a Goshen shopper on Saturday. Mrs. C. I. Beery and daughter, Miss Wauneta, spent Friday in Goshen. Mrs. E. E. Holloway and daughter, Eloise, were Elkhart visitors, on Friday. Mrs. Etta Ott entertained the! ■nenjbers of the W. C. T. U. atj ier home on Tuesday afternoon. Miss Nellie Mann, who has been I confined to her home for three weeks, shows little improvement. Dan Searfoss is quite seriously 11 at his home on Huntington Street, suffering from heart • rouble. Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Yarian and family, of .Naponee, were Sunlay guests of aunt, Mrs. Mary Butt. * Mrs. J. A. Williams, oF Chicago ment Saturday and Sunday in his citv with her daughter, Mis. E. R. Cable. Mr. and Mrs. Rutherford Mil’er apd*family, of fclkhart, were Sunday visitors at the' Russell Warner home. Mr. and Mrs. Guy Ott have purchased the residence on South Huntington Street belonging to Mrs. Jake Stump. Miss Fern Watts, of South Rend, is spending a few days in this city with her parents, Mr. ihd Mrs. William Watts. S. L. Ketring returned home on Monday from Oakland, Calif., where he spent the winter in ’he home of his daughter. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Rohleder wd two children, of Elkhart, ;pent Saturday night and Sunday •n this city with Mrs. Elizabeth Walerius. • New Fabrics for Spring and Summer * ■-.■i.iijiu i.WE • HAVE AN UNUSUALLY COMPLETE LINE OF FINE DRESS FABRICS READY FOR YOUR INSPECTION WHICH HAVE JUST ARRIVED. EVERY PIECE EMBODIES THE NEWEST COLORS AND DESIGNS THAT FASHION , , DECREES FOR SPRING AND SUMMER 19 2 4. FANCY RATINES, CREPES, NOVELTY VOILES, CQLORS IN LINEN SUITING, PLAIN EVER FAST SUITING, FANCY GINGHAMS, SILKS. SELECT THE MATERIALS FOR YOUR DRESSES , NOW WHILE THfc LINES ARE COMPLETE, • ROYAL STORE ■ - ’■ 7. ■ • Qj FRCOC, *
Miss Mary Alice Kitson, of Indianapolis, is spending her spring vacation here with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Levi Kitson. Mr. and Mrs. D .L. Gibson and Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Colwell motored to Bremen on Sunday and Spent the day with friends. Mrs. Tom Truelove, of Avilla, came Friday and visited until Sunday evening here in the home of her sister, Mrs. P. L. Foster. Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Miller and family spent Sunday in Manchester, visiting with Mr. Miller’s father, who is in ill health at present. Mrs. Chas. Ccote, of Ann Arbor, Mich., spent the week end in this city visiting with her’ mother, Mrs. Kate Otis, and relatives. Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Cooper and family and Mrs. Anna Miller, of Gilberts neighborhood, spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Russell Warner. Miss Alice Orebaugh returned home on Wednesday from’Kokomo, where she visited since Friday in the home of her sister, Mrs. H. R Lookabill. Mrs. Guy Rarig and daughter, Arlowene rehyjied to their home in South B£nd Sunday after a week’s visit in the home of Mr. and Mrs. John Meek. Rev. and Mrs. McMichael drove to Ft. Wayne and Hoagland last Saturday where they visited with friends and looked after some business and church matters. Rev. R. N. McMichael, pastor of the Lutheran church will go to Warsaw Friday evening where he will be one of the speakers before the Warsaw W. C. T. U. Institute. Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Darr went' to Warsaw on -Tuesday, where they will visirnvith friends until today (Thursday) when they will go to Mentone for a visit of a few days. Miss Thelma Geyer, Miss Gertrude Hoch. Miss Pauline Hoelcher, and Miss Emma Ranp returned to Indianapolis on Sunday after speeding several days here with their parents and friends. Ernest Buchholz returned on Tuesday, from Dayton, Ohio, where he has been spending a few weeks with relatives. Ernest is enjoying -a three months’ leave of absence from his duties as chief clerk at the B. & O. station in this city. . Mr. and Mrs. Claude Insley moved their household goods, the first of the week, into the William Master house on Washington and Harrison streets. They Have been occupying the residence on §outb Hunting ton Street, formerly owned by Mrs. Jake Stump. Rev. and Mrs. Henry Thompson and her (nother, Mrs. Alice Trinp, of Sebring, .Ohio, are here visiting with Mrs. Tripp’s mother and Mrs. Thompson’s grandmother, Mrs.. Jane Bushong. The visitors are on their way to Ft. Morris. lowa, where Mr. Thompson will enter upon.his? dutias as n««ter of the Lutheran chtirch of that city. i A committee engaged in claim prevention on the Baltimore A Ohio railroad passed through here on the west bound local freight train on Monday. A committee of thirty-five members followed the train to Chicago. H. W. Buchholz, the local agent, and chairman of the seal and seal record committee, accompanied the party. A number of Syracuse neople are planning to go to Ft. Wayne Saturday evening or Saturday or Sunday afternoon tn hear the famous St. Olaf Choir which sings in the Majestic theatre there. The St. Olaf Choir is refuted to be one of the greatest •hnnti nroßnizatic.ns in the world. It hails from a small Lutheran college out in Minnesota. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Yarian and family, of Jonesville, Michigan, spent last week here, guests of his grandmother. Mrs. Mary Buttij and other relatives. The visitors left on Saturday for Nannanee. where they visited with her father. John Whitmer, who is in ill health. He is seventynine years old. They left on Sunday for their home in Jonesville. Mrs. J. P. Dolan and Mrs. A. L. Miller entertained the former’s Sunday school class at the home of Mrs. Miller on Monday evening. The class is in the eighth coi’rse of graded Sunday school work and part of the evening was devoted to study. Mrs. Miller made the evening pleasant as well as profitable by serving refreshments. She was assisted by her daughters. —„— o BULBS AND PLANTS . Do you love flowers ? Then you will wartt some of my lovely gladioli growing in your garden this summer. As a trial order, I will mail you postpaid, 1? choice varieties of Gladiolus, packed separately, for SI.OO. Write for prices on inspected strawberry plants of Premier, Dr. Burrell. Sen. Dunlap, Gibson, Run Special and Cooper. Order now. before stock is sold mit. HENRY BEER 49-2 t Phone »4, Milford, Ihd.
THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL —
I - IN OUR CHURCHES L, - - /.. ; I Evangelical Chnreh Church school, 9:45 a. m. Morning Worship, at 11. Sunday evening we will unite in the High School Baccalaureate service at the Lutheran church. Our Pre-Easter services will continue over Easter Sunday. Subjects for the second week, Monday, April 14, to Sunday, April 20:. M on day—“ Christ’s Attitude TOward Sin.” Tuesday—“ Christ’s Secret Os Right Living.” Wednesday — “Christ’s Secret Endurance." Thursday—-“ Christ’s Last Supper”—Communion service. Friday—“ Christ’s Suffering and Man’s Salvation.” Sunday Morning—“ Christ’s Resurrection Challenge.", Sunday Evening—“ Christ’s Abiding Presence.” We welcome you to these services. : W J. Dauner, Pastor. Grace Lutheran Church Bring your “dust protectors" along with you next Sunday morning. You will need them in the auto race which got off last, morning. Remember Sunday school starts at 9:45 and’ furnishes you with an hour of 'ive, interesting study and discussion about the Bible. The Baccalaureate service for ’he graduating class of the high school will be held in this church I Sunday evening at 8:00 o’clock. All the pastors and churches of the city will participate in this service. Catechetical Class Monday evening at 6:30. Study Hour Tuesday evening |
□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□ | A Value Giving Sale e I of Unusual Imoortance 8 Beginning Saturday, April 12 □ • A Real Money-Saving Sale on a Straight, □ Clean Stock of Merchandise of I Merit — DRESS GOODS x DRESS GINGHAMS fiillut, Silk and Wool and sheer Mercerized and Cotton 32 in. Zejihyr Ginghams .............270 O materials in the latest colors and designs. 1 lot Zephyr Ginghams 23c LJ 4(1 in. AH Silk figured Canton Crepe $2.48 340 Ik) All Silk Crepe de Chene, good quality $1.89 ♦ i'7 rk* j k v o^ C y ’ I>ght ° f *** 2 ° C 3 3<i In. Silk and Wool Mah Jongg Crepe, a variety » f S1 ’ 29 | CURTAIN MATERIALS □ H hrns and colors $1.19 Plain and figured Marquisettes, Dotted Swisses. and Not- S q tingham Laees, specially priced, 2OC «P* q - S LJ 9-4 Peperell bleached Sheeting. 6OC bleached 23c H f~l 35C Stephens P grade, bleached, pure linen, 18 in 27C r~] H % . .73 « ; X 15c OUTING FL A NELS—36 in. light and dark, m ? a. Mushn, good. 1? C extra good ~..2 5 C R LJ »?6 in. unbleached Muslin, extra good 22c * H 336 in. bleached Muslin 17e to '..........23C ~ “ S 3 M fine Nainsook 3Q C Ladies’ and Misses Bloomers g vjrr a Qlj *** sses black Sateen, 50c value 38c 3 WAotl Ladies black Sateen, worth 81.00 75C 3 2J Ever fast Suitings, sun proof and tub proof 48c Ladies white and pink sateen, $1.25 value 98C 3 ~~| Dotted Normandy Swisses, 40 inches wide, @ 69c slJ>o values sl.lß 3 q — Q 3 M “Star Brand Shoes’’ they are correct in □ ® B style and right in price. You will find every shoe □ in our line the very best of its class, honestly made, of all solid leather, no substitute. Every pair full vamp (no piece at the toes) and every pair at a reduced price § 3— - — 1 lot Ladies Vid and strap Sandals, this Spring’s Ladies black Kid, broad perforated patent leather button Q J purchase, all styles, specially priced $2.50 strap, special at $3.50 3 1 Ibt Ladies patent Oxfords and two strap sandals, special aanaTtci rwmnno 3 O .» .<..TT»3Lso MEN’S OXFORDS 3 Grey Elk. Bine underlined, strap Sport Sandals, Men's brown side leather laee Oxfords, 5pecia1... .34.50 r-> q $4.00 Men’s Cherry, side leather Blueher Oxfords special. $4.50 Q 2] Ladies Beige Elk Brown trimmed laee Sport Oxfords. Men’s Mahogany laee Oxfords, special..... $4.50 Q Q Special at $4.50 Weyen berg Com flex Work Shoe. A shoe that needs no 3 rj Ladies Black Satin Pumps $3.50 breaking in. Gives long, hard service and looks well. Q — U- - — — S Entire line of Ladies* KABO Corsets and Brassiers to close at half -j Notions, Neckwear, Rubber Shoes, Towels, Ribbons and every other article in the building will be on Q 3 sele at a special price. 3 3 Let us figure with you on LINOLEUMS, Wiedow Shades and Kirsch Curtain Rods. j=j Visit our Grocery Department and get the benefit of special prices. •• ? t g B Bring in your and get top market price. □ | A. W. STRIEBY I Syracuse, Indiana . □□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□
i □□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□ I B WE WANTiYOUR BUSINESS R, □ ■ ~ . ... —7T 77- □ ’ n "Ok □ ’R ®> ° MBMm m—H R - ° I ■■’ii □ □ lI : " a—iwiiiiariMM □ 3 l_n.Ulliiin I _ . .. n ■ S I I^— ir y ■ ■ q i y “Our New Home” t o■n i " □ ‘IB State Bank of Syracuse □
at 7:30. Subject: “The Lutheran Church.” This will be the last of the Study Hour services. You are invited to come and worship at the Lutheran Church. You will not only be glad you came, but you will want to come again. R. N. McMichael. Pastor. i i ,i
Methodist Episcopal Church Sunday School at 9:45 a. m. Morning worship at 11 o’clock. Epworth League at 6 p.m. There will be no evening service on account of the Baccalaureate Service. The pastor appointed at the annual conference would be
pleased to greet all the members of the church, the first Sunday. There is nothing like getting acquainted at once. The morning service will be one of inspiration. Let us make this the greatest year for Syracuse. F. 11. Cremean, Pastor.
