The Syracuse Journal, Volume 17, Number 42, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 12 February 1925 — Page 5

[Flavoring Extracts T fl ."'d of All Kinds J Before you start I \\f to bake that cake, IP uj make sure you have the kind of flavoring extract |C you need —the kind the | g» *» family like* the best. OlilWllln Our stock is complete ® '■'■ com prises the best known and purest quality ob- ' *•' uinable. Don’t take chance* /fi I with cheapened, unreliable | x?* • adulterated brand*. It 3p7 pTI The prices we charge O UU are as low as can be, and ' I -J we are sure you will ■—more than pleased with the quality and the result*. Telephone Orders Given Prompt Attention Seider & Burgener PURE FOOD GROCERS J SYRACUSE. - INDIANA -1 .

ROADS AND AUTOMOBILES Numerous bills have been introduced in the state legislature affecting the highway commission. the gasoline tax and the automobile license. Two of them provide for a four-cent tax. half of which is to be divided among counties. Another provides for a four-cent tax, all to go to the state and doing away with the annual license Won aut unobiles. Instead of the annual license there would be issued a permanent license for $5 when the car was bought and it would follow the car so long as it was owrned in Indiana. The four-cent gas tax would raise about. the same amount of money as now comes from both the two-cent tax and I the license fees. 1 The bill most likely to pass iS| the one introduced by Senator! Cann which provides a three-cent ■ tax on gasoline, of which the > state would retain two cents and the counties get one cent. Under this arrangement the counties would get about $2,700,000 and the state 55.400.000, the amount increasing 10 per eent each year on account of increased number of cars using gasoline. This would give to the state the sl,000.000 that now goes to the counties. With the pleasure car license remaining the same as now’ and a reasonable increase in trucks and bus license the highway commission would have sll,000,000 from the state the coming year. There is a strong sentiment that county roads should have more maintenance and this bill would give each county an average of $30,000 a year, or three times what it now’ gets from the gasoline fund. The highway commission wants $18,000,000 for its next year’s activities, in order to pave 400 miles of road. It figures roughly $10,500,000 for paving, $1,000,000 for bridges, $6,000,000 for maintenance and $500,000 for overhead and new equipment. Os this amount $3,000,000 would he government money and the $15,000,000 from Indiana taxpayers. The legislature feels that these amounts should be trimmed, as

Jo Mo STAJR.R.P Do Co hhaOaOM , Consultation and Spinal Analysis Free. PHONE 135 The Fred Hocpingamer Residence Syracuse, Ind. t

FRESH. GLEAN M&flT Await you at onr market st all times. You will find the juiciest cuts and the tenderest pieces here. We also beadle smoked and dried meats nd a general Use of earned meats. KLINK BROS. MEAT MARKET

all of them, including the maintenance. show a substantial increase over the) current and past years. No objection is made to the SIO,W*O.OOO for pavintr. but’it believes that, the maintenance should be substantially reduced as paving'ine*reascs and the gravel roads are graded and widened, which work is now almost completed. TWO NEW BILLS BY KNEPPER Representative Knepper, representing Kosciusko county in the lower house >f the Indiana general assembly introduced two bills late Monday afternoon which provide for a system of night lights for motor boats on Indiana lakes and regulation of the speed of such boats, and for appointment of railroad police. ' o There are now in the United States nearly 11,000 local cooperative building and loan societies with a membership of more than 7.000,000 and total assets of nearly $4,000,000,000. These associations have made it possible f>r thousands Os families to own their homes and have largely contributed to the building boom. o B. & 0. TIME TABLE * EAST-BOUND No. 10 —Daily 12:51 p. m. No. 32—Dally 8:25 p. m. No. B—Daily 9:1» p. m. WEST-ROUND No. 45—Da11y.... 5:28 a. m. No. 31 Daily 7:45 a. nfNa 7—Daily 11:44 a. m. Trains No. 45. No. 7. No. 10 and No. 8 are through trains and stop for passengers going 6r coming from Chicago, or to pofnta east of Willard. Ohio. H. W. Ruehholx, Ticket Agent. Wm. F. Fisher Agent for Koyster Fertilizer Oder Now’ Will self brands for Onions, Oats and Corn Phone 267 Syracuse, Indiana

Correspondence ■ the Neighborhood

McCulley's Corners Graham Tyler buzzed wood for ■John Hann on Wednesday. John Gilbert and Ward Robison spent Saturday in Goshen. The children of Mr. and Mrs. Sherman Kiser ate ill with the measles. Mrs. Graham Tyler spent Tuesday afternoon with Mrs. Charles Richcreek. Mr. and Mrs. Graham Tyler spent Wednesday evening at the Geo. Kreger h'me. Mr. and Mra Dick Miller and family were shoppers in Goshen Saturday after won. Mrs. Millicent Miller called at the home of her daughter, Mrs. T da Riehcreek on Tuesday afternoon. Miss Lottie House spent Saturday afternoon and Sunday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Nat House. Mr. and Mrs. Jess Miller and family spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Niles and family of Vawter Park. AT. ?n ■ Mrs. Dick 'Miller and family visited with Mr. and Mrs. Ed Robison and family Wednesday evening of last week.. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Richcreek spent Monday afternoon with Mr. and Mrt John Kauffman and Miss Annie Rapp. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Gilbert and grandson Clell Longaere and Mrs. Millicent Miller were shoppers in Goshen on Wednesday of last week. Those who visited Sunday with Mrs. Ida Riehcreek and family were: Mr. and Mrs. Haifa! Darr and family of Goshen, Mr. and Mrs. Orvie Riehcreek and family* and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Richcreek. Mr. and Mrs. George Kreger entertained the following people at their home on Sunday; Mt. and Mrs. Jeff Stopkey and son Glenn, Mr. and Mrs. Tom Coy. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Gilbert * and daughter Ina and Miss Mary Maggart. / Gilberts Lloyd Beard is recovering from scarlet fever. Miss Minnie Cooper is recovering from tonsilitik. Mrs. Harry Cov visited Tuesday with Mrs. Charles Lutes. Mrs. Charles Harris visited Tuesday with Mr. and Mrs. John MeGarity. Jesse Mellinger and Forrest Cripe were in Warsaw Saturday on business. Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Rowdabaugh and sen Billie spent Sunday in Manchester with relatives. Mr.sand Mrs. William Sheffield visited Sunday in Syracuse with their daughter, Mrs. Byron Doll, and family. George Morehouse of Fort Wayne spent the weed end with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Abe Morehouse. Mr. and Mrs. Orval Lutes of South Bend and Mrs. Retta Coy spent Saturday evening at the home of Charles Lutes. Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Rowdabaugh, and Mrs. Floyd Rowdabaugh and son Billie, spent Thursday in Goshen on business. Mr. and Mrs. Eldon Berranger of Elkhart and Mr. and Mrs. Guy Morehouse and Mrs. Mahaley Row’dabaugh helped Abe Morehouse butcher Friday.

Four Corners Mr. and Mrs. Artie Geyer and Mrs. Henry Geyer were at Warsaw Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Clint Callander and Lewis Criss were Elkhart shoppei»-S&t urday. Eugene Maloy spent a few days vacation with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Maloy. Mr. James Myers and Mrs. Noble Meyers called at the home of Crist Darr Wednesday evening. Mesdames Neff, Snyder and Darr spent Thursday at the Artie Geyer home. The day was spent in knotting comforts. Mrs. John Neff returned borne from Toledo, Ohio, where she has spent a few months with her daughter, Mrs. Truman Ball and family. West End Mr. and Mrs. Roy Meek are spending the week at the home of John Meek. Mrs. Lydia Hilbus of Goshen is spending a few weeks at the home of B. H. Doll. Mrs. Coland Niles of Milford Junction spent Thursday with Mrs. M. A. Sheffield. Mr. and Mrs. John Stout and Mrs. Roy Meek spent JJpday at the home of Orba Weybright. W. E. Hire of Elkhart, Cull Grissamer of Goshen called on O. O. Ott at New Paris who is very ill with cancer. Mrs. Ernest Richhart is spending two weeks in Goshen caring for her daughter and grandson, Mrs. Loraine Mick. Mrs. E. Ullery has returned to her home on Boston Street after unending a month with her daughter, Mrs. Charley Method of Solomon’s Creek.

THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL

Pleasant Ridge i Mrs. Thomas Coy spent Tuesday afternoon with Mrs. Jane

Hire. Mrs. Lige LeCount and baby and Mrs. John Hurtig called at the Ellen Rob i ngon home Wednesday Afternoon. Correction in last week’s issue: The son was born to Mr and Mrs. Wm. Levinson February, 1, instead of February 2. Mr. and Mrs. Noah Clouse and daughter. Mrs. Florence Smith, of Milford spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Coy. Mrs. Lige LeCount and four children and Mrs. William Hann and Miss Blanch Colburg spent Sunday afternoon with Mr. and Mrs. John Hurtig and family. Mr. and Mrs. Roland Ringar of Elkhart spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Emmett Weaver and family, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Brown called in the evening. Mr. and Mrs. James Gilbert and family and Mr. and Mm Roy S. Robinson and son spent Sunday with Mrs. Ellen Robinson and Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Levinson.

, Solomon's Creek Rev. and Mrs. Elder took Sunday dinner with friends at Burr Oak. Miss Louise Darr and Miss Wcnnetta Gushawa spent Sunday with Miss Miriam Darr. The Ladies’ Aid will serve dinner at the sale of Guy McDowell Thursday. February 19. Mr. and Mrs. Guy McDowell and children spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Chester Firestone. The business meeting for the second quarterly meeting will be held at , the Burr Oak church Monday evening. Amos Zylman and Miss Adaline Zylrfan of Vicksburg, Mich., were visitors at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Fisher, Sunday. Sunday School at 10 a.m., Sunday morning. Preaching and communion following Sunday School. A welcome to all is given to attend these services. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Juday, Miss Goldie Method and Miss Bell Juday attended a birthday dinner at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Juday in South Bend Sunday. Thirty-three relatives and friends gathered to surprise Mr. Juday on his birthday. o LAW VIOLATORS FINED < £eorge N. Mannfeld, chief of the fish and game division of the state conservation department, in a monthly bulletin to organized sportsmen of Indiana, says that game wardens* made 144 arrests in December* for alleged violations of fish and game laws, and that 135 persons were convicted. with nine cases pending trial. The 135 convicted paid fines and costs amounting- to $2,556.35. Leading offenses for the aforementioned period were hunting and fishing without license, 88; hunting on Sunday.l6; hunting without consent of landowner. 10; digging out fur animals. 7; shooting on a public highway, 5; possession of illegal seines and nets, 5; and hunting with ferret. 4.

EXTENDING USE OF COAL One of the greatest steps forward in development, both in steam and electric power, is the theory of burning coal in pulverized form. It has become an esk tablished fact. ' ‘ Hundreds of factories and power plants, including some of the largest generating plants in the United States, have adopted this system, with great reduction in waste of coal. Engineers are enthusiastic over the results obtained and it is freely predicted that in five years the use of pulverized coal will be considered the standard system for using that kind of fuel. o SHOES MADE TO FIT CORNS No matter how large they may be, new shoes always hurt one’s coms. The shoe-stretcher or last offers little or no relief, since it makes no impression on the shoe where it most needed—over the com. Dropping a little hot paraffin wax or sealing wax over the part of the last where the com grows on the foot will cause this part of the shoe to stretch and form a depression. A valuable hint to those who are troubled with coms. —»—i—.—o-————— ? . NEW INDIANA U. S. JUDGE Thomas W. Slick of South Bend was nominated by President Coolidge for the second federal judgeship in Indiana, this office was created recently by act of Congress. Q A Kansas bank cashier played Wall Street with SIOO,OOO of the bankst Liberty Bonds—and, lost it. Now the bank is suing the brokers to recover the money. The suit raises an interesting question as to the legality of gambling debts, and responsibility of brokers who ask no questions as to their patrons’

i‘ - ■ ■ REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS | (By H. C. Frazer) Epworth League Institute to E. J. Maupin. Lot 25, Blk. 8., Epworth Forest. S6OO. Maria C. Lilly, Josiah K. Lilly, Trustees to George L. Xanders, i Lot 7, Wawasee, SBOO. George L. Xandbrs to Charles E. and Sarah F. Bishop, Lot 7, Wawasee, $2500. Silas L Ketring to George L. Xanders, Lot 15, Kale Island. $625. Leonidas B. Boyd to Menne A. Blough, Lot 52, Maxwelton Manor, sl. Ell wood H. George to Frank Greider. Lntsi SJ; 52 and 53. 3rd Add. Highland View Gardens S2OOO. Ellw od H. George to Joseph G. Branum. Lot 54. 3rd Add. Highland View Gardens. S6OO. o FOWL FPIDFMir CONTROL IN INDIANA * The recent outbreak of the dread European fowl pest which for a time threatened serious damage to the poultry industry of Indiana is now well under control, according to the Blue Valley Creamerv Institute, in a summary of the situation. The rigid embargoes of noultry shinments tn the East, coupled with careful disinfection of all returned poultry cars has apparently succeeded in checking and controlling what threatened to be a devastating poultrv *rourge. the summary states. -This does not mean, however, that the danger is past, but rather that extreme caution must continue to be exercised to prevent the spread of the disease from points now known to have infected flocks.

Federal authorities handling the enidemic under the special SIOO,OOO appropriation bv Congress. says the institute, have ?s yet been unable to determine whether the disease originated at an eastern port where it might have been introduced from Europe or whether it found its start in the Middle West and ’carried to New York in "market poultry shipments. The recent outbreak is the only one heretofore found west of Pittsburg. POME Mary had a little cat, It swallowed a ball of yarn, And when the little kittens came They all had sweaters on.

□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□a □□□£s□□□□□□ A v o 8 8 □ /Wi M aLaJI t ' □ § For Ten Years | | The World’s Greatest Buy | Hudson's position as the world’s greatest value is p not merely a new attainment. For ten years the M Super-Six has stood alone in mechanical suprem- o J q acy. Basic patents have kept others from copying 3 its motor. The smoothness and long life it gives are exclusive. No motor has yet equaled the Sup-er-Six in smoothness and long, economical car life O . . A Leadership Never Disputed O Hudson, because of the simplkf- ' --------------—___ -j D ity of the Super-Six. has always J-J D S IM O enjoyed nianufacturinjr athantaO ges that jwnni tted a lower m4I- iJ2kC2 F 4 tag price than Is possible with * * U more complicated types. That, g 3 U in part, accounts for its 10 years y j J U pf leadership. Hudsm is the I "V e J 2 O World's Greatest Valve, because Z) |3 it costs mnch leas than any com- " 8 >•"«•««• SEDAN ° r-j And because it has always pro- 4 5-Paaa. 7-Paas. H n vided better looks and more com- 4 4 - y g fatstteMMMy. 1795 1895 M Q No rival disputes that and every Fr*i«lH and T« Extra ~1 rj motorist knows it. . . . . , —. The World’s Largest Builders of Six-Cylinder Closed Cars. 8 LAKESIDE GARAGE, Agents. □ Syracuse, Indiana □ □

2< • I | Bank By Mail | ® ; " 2 with I MIER STATE BANK | Ligonier, Indiana a " W s a The Oldest and Largest Bank in Ligonier, and One a of the Best in the State. S' £2 3 ’ 0 a 0 Put your cheeks drafts or certificates in an envelope, a a mail it to Mier State Rank, Ligonier, Indiana, and we will 0 3 send you a deposit check d-mwing 4%, or place to your 0 | Checking Account. In this wav you can do your bankintg 2 a business direct from your home with utmost ease and secrecy. ® We have customers in Chicago, Cleveland. Toledo, Fort Wayne, South Bend and many other large cities. They like | the SAFETY and SECRECY they get by BANKING BY f f MAIL with Mier State Bank. 3 0 a Try it—you will like it. h a a | MIER STATE BANK| a a LIGONIER, INDIANA g 3.; . ■ a A Million Dollar Bank a 8 s°. IOANS I • • • • • • On approved farm security. My terms are the 2 • most liberal, and I can give you the very lowest • .* interest rates. Quick service. If in need of a • • . • * loan, be sure to see or write me. J z *• i T. J. PRICKETT : • - f • I Nappanee, Indiana • • • • • Willys-Overland . Fine . Motor. Cars I— - _