The Syracuse Journal, Volume 17, Number 16, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 14 August 1924 — Page 5
[ Best Grade Lard and J ft "I' Cooking Oils J — - -— There are many grades of lard and the price usually governs the wr quality. However, we can g-v—in ll,o pl supply you with a high grade ' / at a moderate price. S W"'lk We can also &* ve y° u some very good values in imported olive oils and the various cooking oils that fl ® 1 I you m ‘Bht need, for talada O ur oils comply with all the requirements of I * the pure food laws, so you * can be >ure their quality is right NSWBw' —And so are the prices. Telephone Orders Given Prompt Attention
Seider & Burgener PURE FOOD GROCERS SYRACUSE. - INDIANA
Correspondence the Neighborhood Heaaaat BWte® Ben Haim, of Camp E Mich., called at the John Hurtig home Sunday. . rid Mr< T-ras Coy attended the Middleton reunion at Eikhart Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Crirepent Srnday in Bremen, the guests of Mr and Mrs. John O’Connor. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Eckart spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. James HawshaW, near Benton. Mrs. Rilph Vail and Mrs. Joe Eckart helped Mrs. Emmett Weaver cook for threshers Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Reed and family, of Dunlap, called at the Thomas Coy home Sunday afternoon. Leonard Cripe spent Saturday night in Goshen and from there went to La Porte on Sunday to visit. Mr. and Mrs. Guy McDowell and family spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Chester Firestone, at Solomon’s Creek. Mrs. Frank Hummel. Lavada Gilbert. Ruby Bailey and Minnie Robinson called on Mrs. Maurice Ketring Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Grover Miller, of near Goshen, called on Mr. and Mrs. Guy McDowell and family Monday evening. Mrs. Frank Hummel, of Mishawaka. and Miss Lavada Gilbert spent Thursday' and Friday with their grandmother, Mrs. Ellen Robinson. Mr. and Mrs. Guy McDowell and Mrs. B. B. Cripe and two sons. Keith and Gifford, called on Mr. and Mrs. Joe Eckart Sunday evening.
North Wchstor It is reported school will open ♦ here September I. Mrs. Bertha Hamman has been very ill the past week but is improving. A number c-f townspeople attended the North Manchester Fair last week. A. B. Warner has been taking treatments for his eyes in Fort Wayne every week. Dr. W. C. Hontz has added m me new cement steps and walk to the rear of his home. Grandma Johnson, an aged resident of this community died at eight o’clock Tuesday morning. Calvin Bockman of Oklahoma, is visiting his brother. Wm, Bockman, and other relatives here. • John Ritchison and daughter, Mrs. Howard Bockman and two children. Martha and Verlin, were Elkhart visitors Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Eloph and two children and little granddaughter. of Ohio, visited at the home of their niece, Mrs. Ross Rcdibavgh last Thursday. A large crowd, more than ccuid be seated in the new auditorium at Epworth Forest, was -present at the dedication exercises Sunday afternoon. More than six hundred delegates to the Institute, in progress there this week, had registered by Monday evening.
MeColley’s Comers Mrs. Ida Richcreek and sons 9pent Sunday afternoon with Mrs. Millicent Miller. Arncl Miller took Sunday dinner. at the home cf his brother. V’ovris Miller and family. Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Miller and family visited Sunday evening with Mr. and Mrs. Harley Miller and family. Those who t< >k <1 S”ndav with Mr. and Mrs. Graham Tyler were Mr. and Mrs. Charles Rich-; creek fc Miss Annie Ranp, Mr. and Mrs. John Kauffman and Miss \Tola. Arnel Miller was a caller I in the afternoon. | BOYS (LI RS \RE GROWING Boys Clubs are proving valu■hie community assets, especially in the larger cities, where they rescue hundreds of boys from* the slums and evil influences and: develop them into good and useful citizens. There are 231 boys clubs in the! country with a membershin of’ 175,000 between eight and right-j ecn years of age. Their buddings and equipment are valued* at $8,000,000. Nineteen new clubs and 20.000 additional bovsj have come into the national fed-, eration during the past year. ■ Data are now available which show conclusively that the clubs take boys off the street corners and break up the gangs in which criminals are so often develoned. It is cf record that in a parVcularlv tough district of Chicago juvenile delinquincy fell off 73 per cent within a year after a bovs’ club had been opened* Every effort of this character should be encouraged, particularly where the hoys of foreign bom parents may be drawn into true American environment. The retail ccst of food in 14 of 19 cities in which surveys have just been completed by the Labor Department, increased from Ito 3 per cent last month. ,
' %^WVWW^WWWWWWW WWW WW WWW WWWW'W WW WWW WWW WWWW WW W WWW wwwwWwWwwww wwwww w w w w - AT LAST Steel Fence Post suitable for ** the most exacting purpose has been placed on the market to be sold at a price less than wooden posts. * Arrange to see these posts sold under the name of the “STEEL GIANTS” on display at ycur nearest dealer in fence posts. Should the line not be in his hands at the time of your visit, have him write us for all particulars or if you wish you may get in touch direct with BLUMBERG & HERSHFIELD Manufacturers of the “STEEL GIANTS” GOSHEN INDIANA
BIG PICTURE AT SOUTH BEND One of the most romantic pictures ever screened is “The Covered Wagon,” the Paramount super-special photoplay coming to the Blackstone theatre in South Bend. August 18. for a six;day run during fair week. The story deals with Molly Wingate and William Banion. the latter a former Army officer, portrayed bv Lof’s Wilson and Warren Kerrigan respectively, who meet in a wagon train cn the way to Oi egon in 1849 and fall in love with each other. "The Covered Wagon” house records on its first showing nearly a year ago at legitimate prices, and will now be exhibited for the first and last! time at popular prices. It was in this picture that Er- - nest Torrence, as Scout Bill Jackton? leaped into screen fame. It was this picture that gained for ! James Cruze recognition as a 'director of genius. It was this nicture that had as its basis the i famous novel of the same title' written by the late Emerson ■ Hough, who himself made the transcontinental trip in a prairie schooner as a youth. TIPPECANOE COUNTRY CLUB Property of the Tippecanoe Lake Country Club has been taken over by interested parties, headed by A..C. Weisberg, of the Oliver Hotel, South Bend. | The new management is prei paring to make it a club limited to Masonic membership. Mr. Weisberg attended a conference |at the lake last week, when the final details were worked out. He was re-elected president. The property has a long frontage along the lake, newly constructed roadways and an 18-hole golf course. It .includes a tract of beautiful timber through which a winding driveway is now being constructed. o MAY INCREASE MAIL RATES The postoffice employees are not dismayed or discouraged because of the veto of their revised salary bill by President Coolidge. They are satisfied the bill would have been passed over the veto had it not been for the fillibuster conducted by Senators.. Spencer and Pittman to prevent a vote. The postal salary will again come up on the reconvening of Congress next December. In the meantime, the ascertainment of the cost of carrying the various classes of postal matter, now be-1 ing conducted bv the Post Office Department under a congressional appropriation of $500,000. will in all probability be completed during the summer or fall. The results of the investigation by the department and the subcommittee will show that an increase in certain postal matter will be justified, and that this in turn will provide the fund* for the nayment of the salary increase. It is also pointed out that the normal increase of 10 per cent per annum in the business of the oostoffice will more than pay the [increase in salaries, BIRTH AND DEATH RATE During the month of June : there were 29 deaths and 55 .births recorded in Kosciusko icounty*
“COLD IN THE HEAD** U an •cut* attack of Naaal Catarrh tbjwt to frwtuwt ar* generally in a ‘Tun down” condition. HAU/S CATARRH MEPICJHH to a Treatment cotwistlng of an Ointment, ta bo uaed locally, and a Tonto, whleh »fta Quickly through th* Blood on th* Mueon* Surfac*. buildtns up tM watwn. and making you lew Habla to eolda Sotd by druotata for_oy»r Ci Taara. F. 3. Chwtr * Co.. Toledo, a
THE SYRACUSE JOURNAI*
Goodyear Cord Tires For $9.00 SYRACUSE AUTO SALES
Syracuse Electric Co. Electric Appliances Electric Fixtures Washing Machines Toasters, Grills, Table Stoves Flashlights Syracuse, ind. phone h
CLUB CIGAR STORE d. McPherson, Prop. Distributor of Berghoff Products 3 pool tables Full line of Tobacco arikl Soft Drinks Phone 67 Syracuse, Indiana ~ V ■ Syracuse Journal ■ I I SEE US' For Your Printing Needs
Goshen Sign Service Ray B. Laughlin GENERAL SIGN PAINTING Pictorial Work a Specialty. 114 East Washington, GOSHEN, INDIANA
Candy Direct from the Factory From kettle to Saturday Special Chocolates, 16e pound Every Day Special Chocolates 29c and 39c poun< Hawks Drug Co. GOSHEN, INDIANA
Saue (Ae Coupons from Goshen flour and secure a beautiful “Colonial Days” Dinner Set THE GOSHEN MILLING COMPANY Gnihrenr. Indiana _ Pl
READ AND SEE How to Find the HIDDEN CHECK At 2 o’clock Saturday afternoon a check will be left at one of the stores or business places in Syracuse, whose advertisement appears in this group of four columns. It will be given free to the first person who calls for it after 2 o’clock Saturday afternoon. In some of the ads appearing in this group will be found extra letters or misspelled words. Find and mark these extra letters in the words of the ads. If properly arranged the letters will spell the name of the store or firm where the check is hidden. If a word is misspelled—either an extra letter or a wrong letter—this letter you must use in your solution, and als> mark the letter properly. Be sure to mark all the letters which make up the words, also bring the marked page with you. Read the Ads and Win the $2.00
State Bank of Syracuse Capital and Surplus $50,000 ‘•OUR BANK” H. B. HOLLOWAY, Chiropractor Syracuse, - - - Indiana Office: Residence of Mrs. Anna Cfti. r Hours Bto9 a. ®.,7 to 9p. I.
RHEUMATISM State of Indiana, Orange County, ss: Howard W. Miller, being duly sworn, on his oath says, that he would not take $10,000.00 for relief that he obtained from H. B. Holloway’s Chiropractic Adjustments. I was token with rheumatism the Bth I doctored with one medical doctor, paying him $125.00 and with another, paying him §35.00, without any relief, I then weighed 150 pounds. Then I started taking Chiropractic adjustments from H. B. Holloway and have had the cause completely removed and now weigh 178 pounds. I have also been relieved of serious bowel trouble and was able this fall, to put in 160 acres of wheat, which would have been impossible before. I will gladly answer any letter regarding my wonderful relief. HOWARD W. MILLER Subscribed and sworn to before me this 3rd day of January, 1918. (Seal) Isaac Michener, Notary Public. My com. expires April 30, 1920.
Films left at Beardsley’s Studio or . Thornburg’s Before 6 p. m. finished tomorrow at 6 p. m.
Beaiiiu Shoppe Mrs. C. H. King has established a BeautW) Shoppe at Kale Island, [Lake Marcelling a Specialty When in need of her s rrvices Phone 569
WILLIAMSON & SNOOK Wants to see every reader of this ad at their furniture store. A saving of money appeals to all. 209 South Main Street GOSHEN, INDIANA
The Vawter Park Grocery And Meat Market The Best of Everything That is Good to Eat Give xis a trial Phone 605
CAUSE OF APPENDICITIS REMOVED Salem, Indiana, July 28, 1924. Mr. J. J. Eash, R. F. D. 10. Goshen Indiana. Dear Sir: In reply to your letter about H. B. Holloway, Chiropractor, will try to give you the information asked. I had appendicitis and was thinking of going and be operated on. I thought I would try H. B. Holloway, D. C„ first—he gave me a feiv adjustments and I have not been bothered since and that isjever five years ago. My wife was in very poor health and suffered with very bad headaches. I took her to H. B. Holloway and we could notice a great benefit in a few adjustments. She has taken several adjustments and now is a well woman. Will say Mr. Holloway cannot be praised too much for what he did for myself and wife. Yours truly, WESLEY BRESSIE R. F. D. 7, Salem, Indiana.
□ Wr i Tea Boom (Delicatessen Art Shop SYRACUSE, INDIANA Ideal Beach Boating Fishing Swimming LUNCH SOFT DRINKS Sporting Goods NOVELTIES TOYS Gift SKop Rates for Week or Season Free Parking LAKE WAWASEE
ROSS TRANSFER General Transferring Long Distance Hauling Open and Closed Van SERVICE IS OUR MOTTfeo Phone, Res. 412 ’ Goshen, Indiana
Syracuse Plumbing and Heating Co. t Sanitary Plumbing Steam Heat Furnaces Tin Work Phone 9. SYR.UT@fc. INDIANA “Trade With the Beys” Higgins & Throckmorton Men’s Apparel!) 208 S. Main Street, GOSHEN, INDIANA Salem Bank and Trust Co. Goshen, Indiana BONDS All kinds of securities bought and ——-v ’ A good place to eat when in Goshen Farmers’ Restaurant McMahon & Dumas South Court House. GOSHEN, INDIANA Hie Goshen floral 60. aims to carry the best stock and largest assortment of CUT FLOWERS AND PLANTS Our floral work is unsurpassed. 108 E. Washington St., Phone 87. Greenhouses, West End Pike St Phone 2 on 104. GOSHEN, INDIANA
