The Syracuse Journal, Volume 17, Number 48, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 26 March 1925 — Page 5
8 BULK § | GARDEN i § SEED f 8 P We have just received a large assortment of Bulk Garden Seed, § all strictly new seeds. All the § popular varieties in bulk. Now § is the time to buy your seed. □ Come in today and let us serve R you with any quantity. □ R □ .. P O With, every 25c purchase we give a 25c Radio lj ticket which applies up to 50 percent on list C . price as part payment of Radio Receivers Q and Equipment. £? • q We also sell Groceries SEIDER&BURGENER Syracuse, Indiana. C I 5". LOANS I • ’ * • ■ • • On approved farm security. My terms are the J f • most liberal, and I can give you the very lowest • Z interest rates. Quick service. If in need of a « • loan, be sure to see or write me. Z : T. J. PRICKETT j • J Z Nappanee, Indiana • / • **■■■* •***■*. I JUNK, ETC I 6 ' S f , . i:' We pay the highest market price for all | kinds of junk, hides, rags and paper. Will* | make calls within 15 miles of Syracuse. I Syracuse Iron & Metal Shop I Aron & Bankoff, Proprietors. | Phone 137. t Syracuse, Ind 8 » . . • -•. —fill** -** - - -*ii - — KIBOTJQRsSu’C .Tls cK%i iXmbw • v Jn’L'oiSi - roc-<5 State Bank of Syracuse" Capital and Surplus $50,000 “OUR BANK** Safety Deposit Boxes For Rent CoasuUatioji and Spinal Analysis Free. PHONE 135 The Fred Hoopingarner Residence Syracuse, Ipd. FRESH. 6LBAN M&flT Await you at our market at all times. You will find the juiciest euts and the tenderest pieces here. We also handle smoked and 0 dried meats and a general line of canned meats. KLINK BROS. MEAT MARKET
I ■ k ? '-rrl • I Correspondence Neighborhood PLEISANT RIIMiE Mr and Mrs. Beit Cripe called «*»t the John Hurtig* heme on Friday forenoon. Mr. end Mrs. Ralph Vail of near Solomon's Cnaek, called at the Emmett Weaver and Wm. Jackson home. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Fackler and family spent Sunday with) Mrpnd Mrs. Wm. Bierd. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Lfevins n nd sen William Junior, and Minnie Robinson spent Sunday with Mr. and M s. Raymond KetringMr. and Mt i. Ch?rl?s pent Sunday with Mrs. Ellen Robinson. Mr. and Lige LeCount and family spent Sunday afternoon with h's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Gid LeCountMr. and Mrs. Emmett Weaver and son DeL ss, and Mrs. Emma Darr were in Ligonier on Sunday afternoon, ah the home of Mra Emma Tompson, who nassed a wav on Saturday morning. They also called on Mr. and Mrs. Joe Eckart, while in that cityGILBERTS Opte Wagner has the meas’es. Paul Clem and Chester Wat> kins had the three-dry measles last v ek. The scarlet fever quarantine removed from the home of Crate Beard on Saturday. - Mr. and Mrs- Jofrn McGarity s rent Sunday in Nappanee with Mr. and Mrs. Harve May and family. Fcre't Cripe visited on Sunday at tthe home of his father. Jn'nathan Cripe. Mr. and Mra Calvin Cooper and children spent Sunday at the rbme of Mrs. Retta Warner. Mr. and Mrs- Je*?ie Mellinger and ct' Pdren spent Sunday with Mr and Mr< Frank LindermanKenneth Mellinger, vlho was confined to his home -with ti'fc* flu, was able to return tosdhool on Monday. Wilber, the sixteen year old ?>n of Mr. Mrs. Jesse Isenbhur, took with the threeday measles wmate at school on Thursday, and now is ill with diphtiheria. Four other members of <he family have been given anti-totin for the prevention of the disease. WHITE OAK Samuel Dewart is reported better at this writingMr- and Mrs. Bert Whitehead were in Goshen on Sunday. M : i Rnv T eCount snent Fri-1 dav night with Mrs. Sherman De? ton. Mr. and Mrs. Bert Crandal of i M’ -hivrn snent Sunday with Mr. j and Mrs. Guy FisherMrs. Ellen Wy'fand called at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Me thews on Wednesday forenoon. ~ Mr. and Mr-v Charieyrßookstool spent Sunday witthz Mr-i?jnd Mrs. Lawrence Dewart,kdf Milford. Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Bucher two children spent Sunday at the home nf Mr. and Mrs. James Dewart. Mr. and Mrs. William Fritz snent Monday wilth Mr- and Mrs. William Redman, ist their farm home. Mr. and Mrs- Orvil Neff of Milford spent Sunday with the latter’s br ther w nd wife, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Matthews. Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Fisher are spending the week with their dauv'Ster, . Mrs. Bert Crandal, who lives m Michigan. Thoee who enjoyed Sunday at the Burton Howe home were: Mr. end Mrs. Sankey Vorhis and the Earl Hammon family.
GILBERTS
950 Dead, 3600 (iurtin Tornado Estimate in Indiana and Illinois / School House in Path of Tornala—. Falls and Kills Eighty Children Q Whole TottjMimfl Wild Fury r These were morning after the storm. Similar headlines appeered in United States. This Tornado tem again the storv of quick destruction. There is 'rio protection against it. Only insurance will make good the loss. Phone and I will takeHtare of you. $2.00 for SSOO, or $4.00 costs. . -A GEO. L. XANDERS Agent for Nine Companies.
THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL
FOUR CORNERS Mr. and Mrs- Clint Callander were in Warsaw on Saturday. Lester Dc-wart sawed wood for Mr. Augspurger and Mr. Dewart on Monday. Frank Maloy spent Thursday : n the ”-t>me of Charley Grove, who lives near Mr- and Mrs. Tom Hepler of near Nappanee were Sunday visitors with Clint Callander. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Bushong and sons and Mrs. Clarence Snyder were Ell-hart visitors on Sunday. Mesdames Neff, Geyer and Darr spent Saturday wi l l Mrs. Durr, living north cf New Paris. Mr. and Mra Sam Plank of Ligonier, Rey. and Mrs- Cremean and daughter and Maxine Holloway of Syracuse, Mr. and Mrs. Raymend Cripe. Mr. and M ~s. Clarence Burton of Mishawaka, were Sunday visitors in the home of Mr. end Mrs. Christ Darr. WEST FND Teddie and Billie Ogie (have the chi'-kennox. Emerson Neff is confined to his home by sickness. Mrs. Pearl Ravrie snent. Tuesday with Mrs. Neva Niles. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Sheffield spent Thursday in M»s4iawak% Bobbie Honer of South Bend is spending a few da vs at thehony* of Mr. and Mrs- Claud Njles. The home of Jess Isenour is under quarantine for dinhtheria. The youngest son, Wilber, is very ill. Preston Davies of New Paris : s dangerously ill with cancer of the sb mach and' bowels, at the EJWhart hospital. Mr. Davies has relatives here. Mrs. Emma Thompson of Lignier diet! Saturday morning of cancer of the throat. Mr=» Emmet Weaver and Wm. Sheffield are cousins of the deceased. o — ST. PATRICK DAY ECHOES DttbVfn. March 17.—Ireland w®s a dry day, St. Patrick’s dav. in every sense of tf'l? TTie crowds of holiday makers never were greater, and no compia*nt was made of the of aM drinking facilities- The conflict in parliment whether a¥ drink ho-ns should be closed ihad no reflection in public opinion. •*fSieh woarerMy approved the victory of the senate for dryness. AN the drink shops were closed, and no drink could be obtained in hotels except by residents. In some suburban districts the temporary dry law was modified bv the exemption of bena fide travelers. - Ten years agn it was a point of ■> ’*’ d - prinrinle to avoid drinking on St Patrick’s day, and the Sinn Fein movement persuaded >publi 'ans to close voluntarily. Recent years have abgbjihed this practice,’ and legthis year decreed comclosing. Ob>ekiori to the legrslarion came-iminly from the beared trajjk I —— Q 1— >MopPfage exemptions George L>Xanders. / 48-lt o — Cupid in Q>urt I “Love! Love! Why«k> you keep on talking about love? lyfion’* like to bear a lawyer talking aw>ut l«ve; It suggests the devil. trmng u.i a halo.”— From "This Frail Woman.* by Andrew Soutar. / ChicK& Fro mZ Guaranteed /H ea 4y Layers. /White Legho/ns. Barred Rocks, /S. C. Reds/ Buff ®r.Send for Price Inst or c4me and sm us. Older in .advance. Gtehen Poultry Fawns, First Fftm Lincoln/Way Eist, Goshen* Indiana.
Grape Vines Agawam. Niagara, Moore’s Early Concord. No. 1,1 year—2oc each, 6 for SI.OO, 10 fcr $1.50, 100 for sl2-50 No. 1. 2 year—3oc each, 4 for SI.OO, 10 for $2.50, 100 for $20.00 This is grape week, set them now. Upon receipt of order grapes will be forwarded by parcel pent. Make checks or money order, payable to or send money to Edgewater Nursery. Our 1925 free catalogue is readvEDGEWATER NURSERY, 48-2 t Goshen, Indiana. SEED CORN SITUATION BAD, SAYS PURDUE MAN Results of seed corn tests which have been reported from north central and northern Indiana indicate that much of the crib corn and most of the old corn is unfit for seed, said M. O. Pence of the Soils and Crops Department of Purdue University, m a talk on “The Seed Corn Situation in Indiana,” broadcast from the Piydue radio station WBAA. Tests made of field selected corn from the same regions show that there is a great variation in the quality of this seed depending upon how early it was gathered and the care given it in storage. Germination tests which have been made of' field selected seed show it to run from 60 to 95 per cent good, and tests made of crib corn in the same sections show that it is only 25 to 50 per cent good. Most counties report that enough seed has been field selected and stored to satisfy local needs, if germination tests continue as satisfactory as first reports indicate. The seed situation is much better in southern Indiana, where most counties have a surplus of seed corn running as high as 5,000 to 6,000 bushels, and where the test shows field selected seed germinating 90 per cent strong or better. A few counties report crib corn to be of poor germination while others report crib corn as fairly satisfactory. There will be some risk in using crib com in this section and it should all be tested. Unusual interest is being shown in the community seed com testers of which there were about 72 fti 52 counties in operation last year. This number may be this spring, as new communities are rapidly talking hold of this work. The cost of one to two cents per ear is nominal and farmers are more and more appreciating that this method of seed com testing is the cheapest plan of insuring a good stand of com for the coming year. A number of schools are also operating small rag doll testers, in addition to the testing being done by farmers. More com will be tested in Indiana the coming year than in any year previous. • o ONCE UNDER SUSPICIONS
Gas was once looked upon with as much suspicion as would attach to the presence of a delegation of bootleggers at law-en-forcement meeting. One hundred and eleven years ago, a great crowd gathered on Westminster Bridge, in London. A new chapter was about to be written in the of B. The famous wridge to be lighted byteas. y the bridge wasmoodight. The crown fell ildered. An engineer rward and touched the He invited a member nent tq do likewise, eman refused until he ved heavy gloved He tie pipes containeaSfixs, burnjhim. K electricity supplAM was ak an illundnant, peoplfeCKK ijeved that gas .was doomed. But today it is onejof the great heatfag the world and is usetrm five thousand different waykin industry and is produced in before?" . o Silence Give* Warning The calling back and forth of feed in« birds indirect’} serves another purpose. it advertises tiie fact that all to well, a mod important thin?. If.* sodden silence falls upon, part of a flock the rest immediately look up In alarm to locate the foe. Sadden silence to thia case Is just as certainly an alarm note as a sharp, noisy warning would be to * flock of birds feeding ftfetly. o — J. M. SCHAFFER Chiropractor will be at the Amanda Darr residence, corner Harrison and Henry streets, Tuesday and Friday of each week. Hours 2 to 5 and 7 to 9 p. m. 31-ts
I j Attention j Pickle Growers # , J — I The D. M. Sears Coi Fort Wayne, Ind. I is ready to contract for pickle acreage | tor this season. Information can be | obtained at the Bank of Syraf cuse. Journal office or Lawrence Juday.
CAN COMPETE FOR A FOUR YEARS’ SCHOLARSHIP Students of the Syracuse high school are eligible to compete for a four years’ scholarship providing tuition and all reasonable expenses at any college or university in the United States. Many high school boys and girls of Indiana are now striving for this prize according to the announcement of Professor R. E. Cavanaugh, director of the Indiana University extension division, who has been named to conduct the 1925 National Good Roads Essay Contest for Indiana. The subject of the high school essay contest is ‘ Economics Resulting from Highway Improvement.” Essays are not to exceed 700 words in length and are limited to students of high school grade. The contest closes May 1. Contestants in each school compete with each other for the best three essays from- the school. The winning local essays are judged by a state committee and the winning essays are then entered in the national contest. In 1924. the scholarship was won by John Liska, of Wisconsin. The national judges will be appointed by the United States commissioner of education. The award is known a§ the H. F. Firestone Four Years’ University Scholarship. o i— Had Spectacular Career Sam Patch was a i«d widely known for daring leaps and dives. Bora in 1807 tn Rhode. Island, he became a cotton spinner in Paterson. N. J. A jump from a bridge into the Passaic river brought him such notoriety that he traveled about leaping from bridges and diving from topmasts of ships. He was killed in 182 S when a Jump of 125 feet iqtq * the Genesee river. , I id Midgeit j, who in private atton. was but one came out of New » famous. He was he Warren sisters, nine oat of another , Taunton. Mass., lit of Dorcliester. Tom Thumb's sis Iso from Conneetio Magrt was from
/ Mfr OUTeHESS0 UTeHESS eH n) / TROUSE** I / J lOs a Buttons ♦ 12® a Rip , • Wl i jr yt ry //\} HOW MUCH ARE /If TROUSERS / W WORTH? j-J? YOU must have good style, good material and good workmanship or else trousers are expense sive at any price. For true value, you can’t beat Dutchess Trousers. And here is why: For forty-six years the manufacturers of these trousers have made nothing else. Because this famous firm has always kept abreast of the style and taken scrupulous care even to the smallest detail, their business has grown very large. This gives them the chance to buy good materials in quantities at lowest prices. You get the benefit. The prices are right; moderate in the first place and lowest of all in the end because of their long wear. Remember, every pair of Dutchess Trousers must wear because every pair is backed by the written warranty of “10c a Button; 91 JOO a Rip." All types of Dutchess Ttousers for all purposes. Come in and take your pick. . . ’ * The Royal Store W. G CONNOLLY. Syracuae, Ind
Gall Stones Before risiking operations send for my free booklet, explaining simple home treatment for Irritations of Liver, Gall Bladder and Gall Duets as associated with Gall Stones. Dr. E. E. Paddock, Desk AP, Kansas City, Mo. Lightning Rieke The possibilities are that a man. standing directly under a storm cloud would be struck by lightning fifteen times in one hundred strokes, while • man flat on the ground would be struck only onee in a nundred stroke*. The figures apply only If the man la Isolated. The chance that a thunder cloud of a suincient voltage to cause a discharge will be over a particular object is small, and thus the likelihood of any particular object bq|ng struck is very slight indeed. — o> Heat for the Home Hot air heating Is quicker and gl’ee better ventilation, but travels with »he wind and leaves some room cold. Hot water is slowest and stays hot longest. Steam is very hot. but dies down quickly. Vapor heat has all the advantages of steam, but rooms get warm more quickly. Notice Baby Chicks Per 100 S. C. White Leghorns.-. 512.00 Barred Plvrroath Rocks .... 15.00 W’hate Plymouth Rocks White Wyandottes .... 15.00 S. C. Rhode Island Reds 15.00 S. C. Buff Orpingtons 15.00 Hatch Every Monday We aJso do. Custom Hatching J. P. Hughes Phone 62. Syracuse, Indiana
