The Syracuse Journal, Volume 17, Number 4, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 22 May 1924 — Page 5

JSSSSEHSSSESE^i^ST 5 SSS!SHSSSHHHHSSSHE I What Shall I Get 1] i th’-yfll'jlll for Dinnert JI r How many times |// WlBSsj I have you asked yourself this question ? Day after day, week after week, it is a problem that is con- , I | Mandy confronting you. tS*)U|SSjo it « you were to stock y° ur s^ie^es a £°°d assortment of canned goods, 'I you would always have some* thing on hand that your 'f' a *2L<taS folks would like. Canned meats —canned : vegetables—canned fruits —we have them all in the R- ~ ~ ~ —~j] b«t * tnown brands and at price* t | la{ w |y p j case y OU Place yc» ur order at once. Telephone Orders Given Prompt Attention Seider & Burgener PURE FOOD GROCERS SYRACUSE. - INDIANA

\iti.e s< ib Indianaix lis, Ind., May 17. The cool. rainy weather of the 1 feu da excellent chan e to v t starter’ in the orchards. and particular t ing to insure a crop, admonishe-' Fnmlt N. Wallace, state entomolf r the conscrvati- n departin' ..f Wallace points out that it .'<• hooves Indiana orchard'sts t< concentrate on mules this year because most of the pe.vh prospects wen /kill d by severe cold in January. Early apples particularly will command a good market n" ’«• h»‘ pi edict f” t ■'< is invariably the case when there is a failure of peaches. Reports to the conservation department show that excepting in extreme southern Indiana, in the “Pocket” so to sneak, practically th< entire Hoosier peach crop w•lost faecal e of the unproct I cd cold and unfavorable January. Wallace’s office has always advocated close attention tn the

fruits possible to save when we.a-1 thcr conditions cut great inroads

Building Material | > of all Kinds I I LUMBER | 2x6,2x8,2x10,3x8,3x10,3x12 I LARGE TIMBERS | 6x6,8x8,10x10,12x12 I CRUSHED STONE j CORRUGATED SHEETS | Angle Irons, I-Beams, Channel Irons. If you build this spring see us Rissman-Levey Salvage Co. | (Old Cement Plant) Syracuse, Indiana Phone 87 Salesmen on Premises Every Day - -" I* FRESH. 6L>&ftN M&flT. j Await you at <»'»r market at al! taw'. 1 <’« will find the juiciest cnts and the tcnderest piece* here. We alw handle smoked and j dried meats and a general line of canned meats. KUNK BROS. MEAT MARKET j num iirwiiiiiJl

on some of the more favored crops, and his tinu iv advice his helped many an orchahlisit to realize on some other fruit when the peach crop was lost. — HEAL ESTATE TRANSFERS I (By Honton C Frazer) Frank E. Wood to Wallace King, lot L .Wood’s Mb. Kate Island, s' erm. Ellwoo.l H. Geon • tq William 1. Bowen, tract *ec. 36, Turkey Creek in, Win. A. Rapp to Anlen W. Geyer. tW a., mmu 7. Turkey Creek tp. sll.000. ci-. C Baehman to Nelson A. Mlles, lot 21. Pteawatomle Park sß'<o. P* rl D? Rowe to Vir«il E. and Edith M. Curry. 9 a. on Tippeacnoe 2, plain ' Wm. N. Crow to Cleo E. Jon- .' Sand Point. Turkey Lake. sl. Twin City Grocer Company to John \V. Fieldhouse, lot 33, Warner ad.. North Webster, sl. Hiram, D Mock to Ollie B. Brown. 50 a., see. 22. TippccanCTß tp.. 14500. —,—__™_— —■ ■ Advertise in the Journal.

JEWS ITEMS FROM. DUB SURROUNDINGS Contributed Notes on the Happenings' in Nearby Communities. Tippecanoe Mrs. Veli-uri' Miller is on the sifk list. Eva Kuhn is spending a few week ; in Goshen. Allen Gordy was on the streets of Elkhart Saturday. Mrs. J. Garber spent Monday after neon with Mrs. Charles* Bigler. Mrs. Stanley Morehead spent Thursday afternoon with her sister. Mrs. Clarence Mock. Esther and John Baugher spent a few days with their grandmother. Mrs. Celia Baugher. Mr. and Mrs. Dan White. Charley and Pearl Stiffler speftt Sunday at die Georgx- White home. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Scott and Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Scott and children spent Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. William Dorsey. Those who were guests at the J Garber home Sunday were. Mr. and Mrs. Nat Kline. Mr. and Mrs. J. G. Kline and children and Rowena Kline of South Bend. Mr. and Mrs. Ike Kline and daughter June of Lee—burg. W. M. Hess, of Goshen.and David Metzler of Nappanee. John Eberly called in the afternoon. Pleasant Ridge Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Brown attended the funeral of Mrs. Bollinger at Millersburg. Mr. and Mrs. Guy McDowell call <1 on Mr. and Mrs. Che ter Firestone Monday, afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. George Horsey and Mrs. Thomas Coy were Goshen shoppers Friday afternoon. Mrs. William Fnvkler and children spent Sunday afternoon with Mr. and Mrs. Harry Coy and family. Mrs. Guy McDowell and Mrs. Thomas ('ey spent Thursday with Mr. and Mrs. Willard Tyler near Milford. Ray Rolston. of South Bend, and Miss Minnie Robinson, of Syracuse, spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Hobart Sackhouse at Mt. Tabor. Mrs. Sarah Lingeofelter. of Goshen, and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Egolf and daughter, Dortha. called on Mrs. Elten Robinson Sautrday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Grover Milter spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. .Guy McDowell. Berdean and LaMar McDowell ftcconipanled them home to spend a week. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Flowers, of Ligonier, and Mr. and Mrs. George Ixmg and Mrs. Green, of Millersburg were Sunday dinner guests with Mr. and Mrs. Joe Eckart. ’ Gilberts A daughter, Mary Anna, was born to Mr. and Mrs. Merl Neff May 8. Mrs. Milo Troup and Children visited Sunday with Mr. and .Mrs. Alphas Neff. Mr. and Mrs. Manley Deeter. of Milford, spent Wednesday evening with Raleigh Neff. The condition of Mrs. William Sheffield was said to be not quite ?o good the last few days. George Morehouse, of Fort Wayne, spent the week end with hte parents, Mr. and Mrs. Abe Morehouse.

George Stump and family, of Goshen. spent Sundajf with Mr. and Mrs. Willie Weybright and Children. Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Berkey spent Sunday with their' daughter, Mrs. Levi Reader and family near Nappanee. Milo Troup, whd has been under doctor’s care for several months, and is now at Macon, Mo.. nt a private sanitarium, is reported no better. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Neff, of F Lawn spent Friday afternoon w h their son Raleigh Neff who'lias born confined to his home by illness. Mrs. Eva Camp, of Elkhart, winspent several days at the home of Mr. Hendrickson, called Thursday afternoon on her uncle, John McGarry Mr. and Mrs. Abe Morehouse, and son George inlay 1 with Guy Morehoyse atyF family and Mr-. Mv hala Rowdabuugh southeast of Milford. Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Rowdabaugh and son Billie, and Mr. and Mrs Dutch Koefer attended the picnic dinner of the American Legion held at Culver Sunday. Russell Cooper went with the young people of the Christian church at Milford to Warsaw Sunday where they attended the morning services at the Christian Church and took din ner at the heme of Mr. and Mrs. Morris Rasor and daughter. Miss Pauline. The afternoon was spent in Winona Park. The Elkhart County School commencement exerei os were held in the H»r/i School auditorium at Goshen, Saturday afternoon. Hon. Asa J. Smith, of Indiannpidl* eave the address.. The Goshen High School orchestra furnished the music. This class of BS9 graduates was the largest ever held in this county. Those from here, who received diplomas were: Mnyrne IjVagner. Lucile Lutes. Mary Weybright. Rachael Bumgardner, Kenneth Mellinger, Ralph Bumgardner. Emerson Neff. Russell Cooper. Wilber Isenhour. David Clem. Kenneth Berkey. Clifford Wagner, Delbert Wagner. 1

THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL

White Oak Lewis Coy had the misfortune to break his arm Monday. Miss Flora Masters of Syracuse, spent Sunday with Gladys Bowser. Mr. and Mrs. Bert Whitehead spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Charley Rbokstool. Mr. and Mrs. Charley Malcolm, of near Gravelton. spent Sunday at the Jacob Bucher home. Mr. and Mrs. John Dewart spent Sunday in Goshen with the latter’s sister. Mrs. Ell. Brown. Mr. and Mrs. William Redmon, of Peru are spending a few days at their country home at Dewart Lake Mr. and Mrs. Sherman Deaton and Mrs. Bell Strieby enjoyed Sunday dinner with Ray LeCount and family Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Fi her are spending a few days with their daughter. Mrs. Bert Crandall, in Michigan. Mr.’ and Mrs. Guy Fisher enter tained at Sunday dinner. Mr. and Mrs. Bert Crandall, of Michigan. Mr and Mrs. Frank Bushong and Mr and Mrs. J. A. Fisher. Those who spent Monday evening with Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Mathews were Mr. and Mrs. Irvin Coy and two daughters. Florence and June Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Dewart and Mrs Hattie Fisher. Solomon’s Creek Mr. and Mrs. Wilson Ott spent Sunday in Elkhart. Miss Miriam Darr spent Sunday with her aunt, Mrs. David Holttinger. Mr. and Mrs. Bert Ambenhour called on Mrs. Mary Juday, Sunday as ternoon. Sunday School at 10 o’clock each Sunday morning, followed by preach ins' services. Mr. Riley Wants and family of Go shen were Sunday guests of Mrs Mary Juday. Mr. and Mrs. Lee Good, of Ligpnier called on hi-i mother. Mrs. Fanny Good Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. .Chester Firestone called on Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Jones Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. George Darr and family called on Mr. and Mrs.’ Albert Zimmerman Sunday afternoon. Rev. and Mrs. Saylor and son. Paul and Anderson Juday and daughter. Leia, were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Muri Darr. Mrs. Albert Miller, who resides two and one-half miles south of Solomon’s Creek church is seriously ill and was taken to'the Goshen hospital one day last week. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Juday and Misses, Bell Juday and Goldie Method attended a birthday dinner at the hcine of Mr. and Mrs. Ben Juday north of Elkhart. Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Rex. Mrs. Minnie Colter and Mrs. Floyd Middleton. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Juday and two sons, Rex and Howard, were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Charley Juday. Benton District Sunday School Convention will be held at the U. B. chureh Sunday May 25. at 2 p. m Rev. J. F. Hawks and Rev. T. E. George, of Goshen, will each give ad-.l-i-ses. Also a mens’ chorus. Mrs. Elmer Culp and Laura Gingerich, of Goshen, will be present.

POPPY DAY The Veterans of Foreign Wars of the United States will observe the Annual Peppy Day from May 27 to May 30. This memorial is in honor of tens of thousands of our boys who sleep- their last sleen under the lily-covered fields of France and the poppies of the Marne, many others under the tropical sun of the Phillipines and of the Orient, while squadrons of them are entombed in the restless waves of the great oceans. Each one of them is a Prince in the Kingdom of Glory by reason of service, suffering and sacrifice, and none of them should be forgotten on this, our wearing a poppy in their memory. o — BARN IN BURNED A large barn, granary- tool shed and brooder house on the A. S. Brindlev farm south of Warsaw, were burned, fire having been started in the barn when a gasoline engine backfired, the sparks igniting a can of oil. which exploded. Howard Collett, brother-in-law of Mr. Brindlev. was burned about the hands and shoulders. The house was saved by neighbors who rushed to the Brindlev farm when the fire was discovered. The loss is estimated at about $3500 and is partially covered by insurance. - n ' BIRTHS AND DEATHS According to the montHv bulletin of the State Board of Health there were 49 births and of deaths in Kosciusko County in the month of March. —o Woman’s Statement Will Help Syracuse “I hated cooking because all 1 ate turned sour and formed gas. I drank hot water and olive oil by the gallon. Nothing helped until I used Adlerika." Most medicines act only on lower bowel but Adlerika acts on BOTH upper and lower bowel and removes all gas and poisons. Excellent for obstinate constipation. Helps any case gas on the stomach in TEN minutes. Thornburg's Drug Store. (5)

UNIVERSITY NOTES Real sheepskins will be granted to more than 550 members of the graduating .class of Indiana university next month for the [first time in five years. High prices of sheepskin after the war resulted in the substitution of imitation parchment for the I. U. diplomas. “Order Governor-General Wood back home and give us our independence," says Ralph DeLeon. Filipino student at Indiana university. DeLeon accuses General Wood of assuming the powers of a military dictator, after seven years of practical independ 1 ence for Filipinos under the re | gime of ex-Governor Harrison. DeLeon pooh-poohs the American fear that Japan would gobble ur the Philippines on withdrawal of the United States. The deepest well in Indiana 3996 feet, at Greentown, is yield ing materials for rock study ir the Geology laboratories of Indi ana university. Samples of root’ were taken at each five feet o depth and the formations have now been studied down to th crystallines, lower than the sedimentary rock which forms the ocean floor. The Greentown wel’ was sunk in an unsuccessful attempt to find oil. Board at from a dollar and r quarter to a dollar and a half a week with room thrown in so good measure, was available at Indiana university in 1835, ac cording to an old catalog brought to light at Indiana’s recent centennial ceremonies. Board now costs from five to seven dollar? a week and room from two dollars up. Indiana university’s curriculum of the freshman class of 183 c included the following: Qyid {four books): Virgil (Bucolics Georgies and six books of tin Aeneid); Horace entire; Valpy’f Greek Grammar, Composition and Rhetorical Reading. o MILFORD MAN DROPS DEAF George R * Ogden. Sr., awes known man of Kosciusko count' dropped dead Monday evenine about 7 o’clock at the Erick Mea* Market, in Milford. Mr. Ogden was holding conversation with P. H. Clinton, Milford man when he dropped to the floor and died instantly. Mr. Ogden spoke of having a headache to Mr. Clayton, but seemed to be in his usual health. His death was pronounced due to heart trouble. . The docea-ed was 65 years of age at the time of his death. Funeral services were held Wednesday. Interment in cemetery at Homer, Mich.

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|EFFERSON Theatre |J Goshen, Indiana 7j— 7 — Saturday, May 24-A Super-Westcrn-10 and 27c “The Eagle’s Feather” A .tingling action romance Qf the great out doors with a notable cast in ling James Kirkwood, Elinor Fair, Mary Aide-”’ and I ester Cuneo. ala.aped*.' of 4,000 cattle is one of the m£>st striking spectacles ever filmed. ' Sunday and* Monday, May 25 and 25 Very Special Attraction—lO and 3Oc MAE MURRAY in the greatest picture of her entire career “Fashion Row” Mae Murray wears gowns in this picture valued r,t $150,000 and introduces the most ravishing dances of her spectacular career. A &nx cf V vadcu Ma D’Gr to every lady alrniLiL tending this skew, either Sunday or Monday. Tuesday Evening, May 27, at 8 o’clock Christian Science Lecture No charge for admission Everybody welcome Thursday and Friday, May 29 and 30—10 and 30c Rex Beach’s Great Story that outrivals “The Spoilers’’ “Flowing Gold”

EFFECTS OF UOLD WEATIIEh •Certain shrubs, rose bushes ii particular, have been actin' •ather strangely this spring. The huds grow out in an apparent!} normal wav and then the leaves i wilt and the young growth d’es This is merely a manifestation | f winter injury, due to extreme] 'old say Purdue University au-; horities. The severe cold last winter killed many buds and when the! tips of the branches of a shrub failed to .grow this year- most folks merely prune it off. Strh [ -onditions as this are exnectcd., hut when the buds start and then die after all danger of frost hy rm.ssed it certamlv leeks as if the hush must be diseased. Low temperature? seem to w-r---the tissues of the buds, or the stem, in some wav and as soon as the growth demands are made [ on this tissue it dies. This isj

liable to’happen to any tree or shrub. Pe&ch trees have been ■ nown to grow until June before he new growth suddenly wilts. About the only thing that can ’ a o .done with these weakened hrubs is to prune off al 1 the dving branches and fertilize the ’ irh with a baneful or two o' - ni-t-ate of soda. This fertilizer should be applied early in the 'ason so that the shrub will not ’- ■> fn’ecd into a late soft growth which will kill easily next, winter. .4 WHY THEY SLEEP “Poor illumination of churches 's a? much responsible for sleen<ng congregations as poor preaching.” Professor M. L jkiesh, illuni'‘nation expert, said recently. He •'dvised brighter lighting to keep ‘!>o congregations alert and attentive.