The Syracuse Journal, Volume 17, Number 22, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 25 September 1924 — Page 4
THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL KCFUBLICAN Published every Thursday at Syracuse. Indiana Entered as second-class matter on I May 4th, ISOS, at the postoffice ail Syracuse. Indiana, under the Act ol Congress of March 3rd. 1879.
L Foreign Advertising Representative THE AMERICAN PRESS ASSOCIATION SUBSCRIPTION RATES One year, in advance.....s2.oo Six months l.Ou Three months 50 Single Copiesos STAFF of CORRESPONDENTS Mrs. Crist DarrFour Corners Mrs. Ross Rodibaugh. .North Wobstgr Mrs. Wm. Sheffield.. West End Mrs. Calvin Cooper....Gilberts Mrs. Henry Rex Solomon's Creek J. L. Kline Tippecanoe Minnie Robinson Pleasant Ridge Mrs. Ernest Mathews White Oak Mrs. C. Richcreek. .’CoHey's Corners H. A. Buettner, Editor and Publisher Clara 0. Buettner, Associate Editor Thursday. September 25, 1924. *1 know not what the truth may be, I tell it as '.lns told to me."—Editor.
NOTICE TO BIDDERS Notice is hereby given that on the 4th day of October, 1924, until 2 o’clock p. m., the trustee and Advisory Board of Turkey Creek Township, Kosciusko County, Indiana, will receive sealed bids for the grading and draining of a road in Section 4, Turkey Creek Township, beginning at the Elkhart County line and running 5500 feet toward Lake Wawasee, This work is to be done according to the specifications furnished by the County Surveyor, and by the time set and, to the acceptance of the above township officers. The right to reject any or all j bids is reserved. BERT WHITEHEAD 22-2 t Trustee.
No. 305 BANK STATEMENT Stephen Freeman. President J. P. hulan. Vice President W. M. Self, ( ashler Sol Miller, Assistant ('ashler Report of the condition of th* State Bank of Syracuse Bank al Syracuse, in the State of Indiana at the cluse of-its business on Sept. IS, 1924. RESOURCES Ixmns and Discounts $349,361.70 Overdrafts 306.24 U. S. Bonds 7,650.00 Other Bonds and Securities 500.00 Banking House 23,569.93 Furniture and Fixtures ~ 5.290.00 Other Real Estate > 9,350.00 Due frum Banks and j ■ i Trust Companies .139.396,04 Cash on Hand 12j95f.07 Cash Items ... jssA.62 Total Resources ...$549,296.60 LIABILITIES Capital Stock-paid in ...$ 35.000.00 Surplus 15,000.00 Undivided Protit* Net ... 1.146.14 Demand D'p'ts $225,263.43 Demand C’UC* 372jM7.03 499,150.46 Total Inabilities $549,296.60 State of Indiana. Kosciusko County. 8S: f. W. M. Self. Cashier of the State I Bank of Syracuse, do solemnly swear that the above statement Is true. W. M. SEIF. Cashier. Subscribed and sworn to before this 19th day of Sept.. 1924. Warren T. Colwell. Notary Public; (SEAL) My commission expire* Dec. 16, 1925. IL • ll "> 111 > Hiiiiia,, ii«aum II , ,11, MRS. F. <;. DALTON DEAD Mrs. Frances G. Dalton, aged mother of D. J. Dalton, well 1 known Warsaw foundryman, died > Monday morning at the Dalton home. Lake Wawasee, where she had long been ill of cancer. Funeral services were held Wednesday in the Dalton home at Warsaw.
COAL Delivered At Bin j Virginia Splint $7.00 $6.50 ii Kentucky Lump 7.00 6.50 i 2x4 Egg Coal 6.75 6.50 B Coke - . 10.00 9.75 All coal forked. Leave your order for hard coal FLOUR—Gerbelle, Golden Anchor, Wilmot. FEED—Hay, Straw, Bran, Midds and all kinds of Poultry Feed. ) SYRACUSE FEED MILL Phone 98 ** w * , *** m ***'*****'** m **** | ***********m*m*w»**m>*%m»m<m**m*%
GIVE THE CHILD A SQUARE DEAL The mothers of this age should I not tnink so much of a business or professional career, but give a thought to their children. Nothing can really take the place of mother love for children, and
the sooner mothers realise it the better. They need a certain amount of attention by dheir mothers, and the few minutes in the morning and evening, working mothers give them are not enough. They make the situation more:-of a calamity. The children would be better oil without them and happier at a I boarding school, where they are tied down definitely for a certain number of hours a day and in competent hands the rest of the time. The woman who lets her career prevent her from seeing to (her chiloren properly will never have anv great influence in their lives. Nor can she ever hope to. for her children regard her with very little interest, which becomes less and less as they grow . up. There is no mother substitute, and the modern woman must ;
(learn this. The mother is th? backbone of a child’s life and there is no getting away from it. The women who feel this mothc hood is asking too much of them and don’t want to be annexed wasting their talents in .bringing up children, should not many or else should nd have children. There is no substitute. (One is either a mother or is not a mother. A woman is not giving her children a square deal 'bringing them up in the world ‘and then deserting them. A .child who spends his time outside of school in the streets or the movies is likely to become a neurotic. And aside from that J the children are not taught the ; proper attitude of parents. They iin turn. wil ! be as cold and un'c. n erned with their children. • The advanced age we live in ! is good for the children. The ra-
dio, automobile and adva nc ements of science are all widen-' tn. the range of the child and life mental interests, which is a good step. That is all part of the education of the child that i is continually going on, whether ■ upward or downward. And b< ■ cause no one can prevent or stop this education for a moment.' it ■is up to the modern mother to see that it is the right sort—that her children are getting a square Ideal out of life.
i . UNNI IL SOLDIERS' DINNER I" I The annua] soldiers* Dinner will be held at the Evangelical ‘church on Thursday, Oct. 2. Every one is invited to attend this function. Come with your baskets and do honor to our Old Soldiers by spending the day with them. A cordial invitation is extended to all members of the American I Legion. 21-22 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 In-: diana. Administrator of the es-1 tate of James E. Roberts, late of j Kosciusko County, deceased. Said estate is supposed to be solvent. GEORGE L. XANDERS, Administrator. Sept. 13. 1924. 21-3 t I DON'T SUFFER From heart trouble, when ,a few treatments will start you on the road to recovery. Dr. Geo. Warner,»Goshen. 22-lt.
PARAGRAPHIC BITS ' 'I ABOUT HOME FOLKS Notes of the the Coming and Going nf People You Know. Rev. and Mrs. William Hess of Goshen were callers on Tuesday of Mrs. Ada Mock. Vernon Beckman went to Indianapolis Tuesday to spend several days on business. Mrs. E. W. Hire and children, of Elkhart, were visiting here with relatives on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. John Mager of San Jose, Calif., are visiting in this city with Mrs. Ida Bowersox. Mr. and Mrs. S. 0. Jeffries spent Sunday at the Melvin Tully home, near Solomon’s Creek. , Mrs. Henry Rex, our Solomon’s Creek correspondent, was a caller at the Journal office Wednes- i day. • ; Mr. and Mrs. Fred Self and ( Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Kern attended the Kendallville Fair last
Thursday. Mrs. Dr. Byler of Warsaw ‘ spent the week end here visiting ‘ her sisters, Mrs. Lizzie Roberts ’’ and Miss Mary Shellenbarger. • ‘ Mrs. Elizabeth Walerius and her mother, Mrs. Jane Akers, are ; visiting in Elkhart and South 'Bend with relatives this week. p Miss Donna Miles returned h Sunday from a visit of five weeks g with her friend, Mrs. Steckle, at j Newcastle, Pa., and other eastern points. Mrs. H. A. Miles and daughter, Mrs. M. M. Smith, spent last week in Ligonier, visiting Mrs. i M. A. Benner and Mrs. O. W. Christie. Mr. and Mrs. James, Holman, | Mr. and Mrs. Ray Foster. E. E. • Fryer and Billie Eminger of I Avilla, Joe Ruch of Milford and • Miss Florence Clayton of Syra- [ cuse were Sunday guests in the ♦ home of Mr. and Mrs. Perry Fos- i ter. z { —■- — _ /
f — { Cool I Nights |! make us think j' of warm bed i I covers I j I - 1
The new Blankets and Comfort Blankets are here Blankets in Cotton, Woolnap, part wool and all wool at possible lowest prices
Outings : 27 inches and yard wide, in both, lights and darks » i Prices, 20c, 25c and 30c : * —The— ROYAL STORE I W. G. CONNOLLY Syracuse, Indiana. I 4- 1
THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL’
j Mr. and Mrs. Carl T. Coy .of I Leesburg, and Thomas Kelly of | Chicago were Friday evening 1 dinner guests of the Covs and i Andersons. Mrs. William Gillispie, who has been visiting at the homes of Mrs. Rose Tucker and Mrs. Chas. Rentfrow, has returned to her home in Piqua, Ohio. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Snobarger, son Orville and daughter Jxniise, and Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Cov were ■ Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Greely Yoder. Mrs. R. N. McMichael is entertaining this week, her parents,! Mr. and Mrs. H, C. Snyder of Bu- ! eyrus, 0., and her sister. Miss Pauline Snyder, of Columbus, O. j Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Anderson
eturned on Saturday to their home in Detroit, Mich., after visiting a week with Mr. and Mrs. Edward Coy and other relatives and friends. Mrs. Celia Baugher, Mrs. Hattie Baugher and son John, Miss: Mary Baugher, all of North Webster, and Miss Jessie Baugher of Plymouth -were dinner guests on Tuesday of Mr. and Mrs. Cljnton Cox. Mrs. Wm. Beckman visited friends and relatives in Garrett the latter part of the week. Mr. and Mrs. Hopkins, Mrs. Groscop, and Miss Julia Groscop accompanied her home Sunday afternoon. Mrs. Elizabeth Hinderer, her daughter, Mrs. Herbert Page and daughter,. Betty, who spent the : past week at the Fred Hindererr Tome returned to their.home ini Santa Monica, Calif., this (Thurs- j lay) morning. Advertise in the Journal. ]
Retail Grocers in Mor Id 4 VW W 0 : Where Economy Rules W JEW- a °d High Qualities
Free Free Free To introduce A. & P. bread we will give one loaf free witli each §I.OO purchase, Saturday, Sept. 27 Compare a few of our prices: P & G Soap, 10 bars -42 c Fels NaptLa, 10 bars - -54 c Fairy Soap, bar - - - 6c
Flour Flour Flour Advertised Brands Gold Medal - $1.14 Pillsbury and Ceresota - $1.19 A&P - - - $1.12 lona .... 99 c 24 ’ 2 lb. sack ■ .J. XI - u - ■ ■ _ 3 Del Monte Peaches, 21 lb. can -31 c lona Peaches, 21 lb. can -27 c Campbell’s Soup and Beans -10 c Lipton’s Tea, % lb. - -25 c Lipton’s Tea, */, lb. - -45 c Coffee Coffee Coffee• - For This Sale Only Red Circle, 1 lb. - -44 c Red Circle, 2 lbs. - -85 c 8 O’Clock, 1 lb. - - -36 c 8 O’Clock, 3 lbs. - - $1.04 Now is the time to buy A new store, consequently a fresh stock Come in and look around Huntington St. Syracuse, Ind. ALVA NICOLAI, Manager & , I
Jlie Oryjinal Ped Front Stores'Where Economy Rulesg
If i' REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS ! I . . |: (By Houtor C Frazer) j Daniel C. Darr to Cornelia G. = | Morrice, lot 43 Kale Island S2BOO. • Epworth League Institute to = Joseph and Pearl M. Renner, lot i ,18 bls. A, Epworth Forest, SSOO. ’ S. L. Ketring to Leonard L. I 'Keatinge, lot 48, K & B Ideal * ■ Beach, $650. 3 I Theries D. Doll to Charles W. * Howard, lot 42, Waveland Beach, * SI,OOO. • 1 Fredolin P. Rusch to Edmund i C. Horst, lots 30 and 30a, Vaw- « ter Park, SI,OOO. Carrie A. Druley to Berne Tate I lot 8, Bock man Park, North Web- f ster, SSOO. * «
Berne Tate to Walter Baugher, t lot 8 Bockman Park, North Web- < ster. SSOO. Minnie M. Nickel to Julia and J ■ Dan E. Sullivan, lot 5 Nickel’s ? Park, Tippecanoe Lake, SIOO. | t o * TAKEN TO THE HOSPITAL | Sam Widner, who suffered a I hemorrhage of the nose on Sun- § day evening, was taken to the | Warsaw hospital this (Thursday) « morning. * o | CHINESE IDEA OF ‘DAINTIES’ S Among the “dainty dishes’’ of 8 the Chinese are dog’s flesh, due!? « gizzards, canned earthworms, * marmalade made from roses, bird nests, dried and preserved oysters, and eggs that have been 7 kept for years. * o— : Man: A few habits,good and I bad done up in a skin. j
BACHMAN’S I BLANKETS | We have a new supply o f Nashua and Ed- ? mond Blankets in wonderful colors and de- » •igns priced from S 1 s3tosS ) | Every home should have one or more of these beautiful blankets. For warmth, I comfort and beauty they cannot be sur- 8 passed. f Children in colors ! Just the thing for school. Colors guaranteed. Save the family umbrella. 8 • ww , * A All sizes, $1.50 • & See Our Bulletin Board for Saturday Grocery Specials j State Bank of Syracuse Capital and Surplus $50,000 “OUR BANK”
| IN OUR CHURCHES | I I Grace Lutheran Church Sunday School every Sunday morning at 9:45. I Election of Sunday School ofI fleers next Sunday morning. Vesper service at 5:45 Sunday j evening with sacred concert by: ‘ the Trinity Lutheran choir of Ft. Wayne. » The Light Brigade every Saturday afternoon at 2:30. r Congregational dinner and annual meeting this (Thursday) evening at 6:30 in the church basement “Pot Luck” supper, elections, reports from all departments of the church. The annual every member canvass of the church will be made during the next week. A man’s relation to his fellow man depends upon his relation to his God. Come to church and improve both. R. N. McMichael. Pastor.
United Brethren in Christ “The corner-stone of character is Jesus.” No matter which way you look, you will find the Christ at the center of things—unless you are looking for worse things and the worse places,—and then | you cannot escape Him. His life i will rise up in rebuke. The Bible Study next Lord’s Day will be a review of His early ministry. The theme of the evening sermon will be, “The j Meaning of the Lordship of Jesus.” Services at 7 o’clock; We want you to feel welcome at each and all our services. Service for prayer and Bible study Tuesday! evening at 7:30.
Groceries Our line of staple and fancy groceries is superior to most retail stock. ; Teas and Coffees This line is selected for the most discriminating taste as to quality and flavor. Free Delivery J. E. GRIEGER j Syracuse, Indiana |
I The cares of life demand your attention during the week. “Give God a chance . Go to church Sunday.” Wm. L. Eiler, Pastor. Methodist Episcopal Church Sunday School at 9:45 a. m. | Morning Worship at 11 o’clock, t Junior League at 6:30 p. m. Epworth Leage at 6:30 p. m. Evening'services at 7:30. This will be a surprise service. We cordially invite you. F. H. Cremean, Pastor. Evangelical Church Sunday School at 9:45 a. m. Morning Worship at 11 o’clock. The Junior League meets Sunday evening, at 6:30. Evening service at 7:30. Mid-week service for prayer and religious conference, Tuesday at 7:30 p. m. We welcome you to these services. W. J. Dauner, Pastor.
o KAISER’S CASTLES FOR SALE r t* ‘ Forty castles maintained by , William, as kaiser, in various ; parts of Germany have been put ’ on the market. They are “white elephants" for the German government, which seized them in the revolution. Some of the exkaiser’s former holdings at Potsdam and Berlin have been converted into museums, public buildings, etc. The upkeep of the unused castles is so great that the republic will gladly sell them. a RIBBONS—We sell ribbons for L. C. Smith, Underwood and Oliver Typewriters. Journal office.
