The Syracuse Journal, Volume 18, Number 10, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 9 July 1925 — Page 5
1 jhfeJV Brazil and Java I E#® Ir urn i ß hth e whole world with its breakfast,dinner and su pp er °offee. There is nothing more appetizing than ‘ ing coffee brewed from well roasted and properly cured kernels. Coffee We Sell Will Satisfy the most discriminating taste because it is carefully selected both for quality and flavor. Always come to us for the best staple and fancy groceries. Our motto: Courtesy — Cleanliness—Honesty—Servlet Seider & Burgener PURE FOOD GROCERS PHONES S 2 AND 172 SYRACUSE, INDIANA J. M. STAHR, D. C. Palaaar GredaaM Consultation and Spinal Analysis Free. The Fred Hoopingarner Residence Syracuse, Ind. Phone 135 Afternoon and evening I make house calls. —- * T ; "wr 1 ''IT Ups and Downs of Live Stock by Radio ♦ j. ZJyk I SBS*I '** -• W y j 1 XD. Harper, editor of the “National Livestock Producer." to one of the ' Ngular farm program speakers of WLS. the Seare-Roebuck Agricultural Foundation station. Mr. Harper to one of the leading livestock authorities of the country. He gives a series of talks on the Hveetock situation four noons—Mon- ' day, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday, and Wednesday evening. He represents ♦ a farm organisation of 325.000 members —the National Livestock Producers' z Association. In hto WLS talk he gives up-to-the-minute information on livestock. co-operative marketing, news comment and market trends. “The radio offers a wonderful opportunity for improvement In livestock ♦ marketing because of the comparative economy of reaching large numbers of - shippers quickly with market information." said Mr. Harper, in commenting an the value of the market service given the farmer by the Sears-Roebuck Station. “The radio undoubtedly will be one of the most important factors in : the orderly movement of livestock to market. - ei assess sees — as g «~«s «*»■ a ■■ ■ ■ reseda—rtssa ( A I COFFEE SERVICE ] ■ ■ ■■_. J*—— ■1 ' ’ . . Mrs. Hannah Baum, Syracuse. Mrs. Roy Brown, R. F. D. 3 COUPON If the persons whose names appear above will elip this coupon, sign it and present it to J. E, Grieger they will receive FREE one pound of McLaughUn’s Kept-Fresh Bulh Coffee. s Name.--- — ——■* ——-- — I I a . . . Address.———.——— — ——— 1 . ■ ■- '■■ - * "'“W" “
| ,1 Correspondence | I) ST Neighborhood PLEASANT RIDGE Leonard Cripe spent Friday afternoon with Russell and Frank Rnox. Mfs. Jane Hurtig an 4 daughter Margaret spent Saturday evening in Liironier. Mrs. William Hann and Miss Blanche Holbenr called on Mrs. John Hurtig Friday. • Mrs. Lige LeCount and children spent Monday afternoon with Mrs. Vern LeCount. Mr. and Mrs. Rov S. Robinson and son Junior called at the Ellen Robinson home Saturday afternoon. > Mr. and Mrs. Alldean Hyman called on Mr. and Mrs. John Hurtisr ahd family Saturday aftetnoon. Fred Armbuster and sister Dera, and Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Armbuster are entertaining company this week. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Ketring and four daughters spent Sunday afternoon with Mrs. Ellen Robinson. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Vail and «rn Raymond called on Mr. and Mrs. Emmett Weaver and family Sunday afterno n. Mrs. William Levinson and little sen Junior, and Miss Minnie Robinson spent Thursday with Mrs. Clinton Bushong. Mrs. William Beard and Miss Elsse Fackler spent Monday afternoon with their daughter and mother, Mr?. William Fackler. Mrs. Dewey Coy and tw r o children, Ralph and Wayne, Mrs. Wm. Levinson and son Junior, and Miss Minnie Robinson called at the Raymend Ketring home on Monday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Bushong and Mrs. Ellen Robinson spent the Fourth in Nappanee with Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lingofelter and William Layering. Mr. Layering accompanied them home for a visit among relatives. Gilberts Milt Rensberger is confined to his bed by illness. t Miss LaVeta Warstler of South Bend visited over the Fourth with her father, Albert Warstler. Miss Dorothy Lutes of South Bend spent the week end with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Lutes. Miss Minnie Cooper spent the week end with Mrs. Retta Warner and Mr. and Mrs. Russell Warner. Mr. and Mrs. Guy Morehouse and children, and Mrs. Mahalln Rowdabaugh spent Sunday with Crate Beard and family. Forrest Cripe and Russell Cooper, and Mr. and Mrs. Jona than Cripe spent Sunday near Scuth Bend with relatives. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Lutes and children attended the Snyder reunion held at the home of Charles Snyder northeast of Goshen on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Jarvis, and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Jarvis and babv, of near Bristol, and David McGaritv of New’ Paris, snent the week end with Mr. and Mrs. John McGaritv. Mrs. Bert Neff, who stepped on a nail nearly three weeks ago. took seriously Hl with lock-jaw on Sunday evening, and her relatives thought it best to move her to the Elkhart hospital. Report was received here theis morning (Wednesday) that she had taken four doses of antitoxin and is some better. Virgil I‘ostma of near Nappanee and Miss Pauline Wagner of this community were married Friday, July 3. Miss Wagner is a young lady of unusual ability, and has many friends. We are not acquainted with the groom, but trust he is worthy of the prize he has won. At present Mr. and Mrs. Postma are with their parents. An old-time belling was given them. They in<retum served ice cream and cake to fifty of their friends Tuesday evening. All returned home at a late hour, wishing Mr. and Mrs. Postma many happy, successful years. SOLOMON’S CREEK The Ladies Aid will meet on Thursday afternoon with Mrs. Nathan Long. Kenneth Hapner spent the week end with his grandparents. Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Hire, of Ligonier. The little daughter of Mrs. Cecil Kindle is very ill at the home of Mrs. Kindle’s mother, Mrs. Docha Whitehead. ‘ Rev. and Mrs. Elder, and Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Long were Sunday guests at the home of Anderson Juday and daughter Leela. Mr. and Mrs. Bird Darr, . Mr. and Mrs. Morris Darr and son, Muri Darr and family, and Albert Darr and family spent the Fourth of July at the lake. Sunday school at 10 a. m. each Sunday. Preaching services on Sunday evening at 7:30, by the I A * Xi'l All 1 t p3Swi t aMuvi* Al* cue wei I Wl-1I *ll© ©
THB SYRACUSE JOtHUTAJD ~
lat the United Brethren church July 16, an all-day meeting, also in the evening. Come and enjoy the day with us and hear the good speaking. Everybody is welcome. o—.— RODEO ONLY PURELY AMERICAN SPORT I - ■ f “The only purely American I sport,” says Cuba Crutchfield,, the world-famous cowboy, in: speaking of the rodeo or cowboy I contest. Crutchfield is now in Chicago in connection with the Roundup and world’s championship rodeo to be held in Grant Park from August 15 to 23 by the Chicago Association of Commerce. “The cowboy contest is the only purely American sport that ts left.” he declares. "It is the only sport found here and in no other country. Even baseball has invaded foreign lands, but the cowboy contest is all American, the premier sport of our western country. It is a square sport. It has to be on the level. A bucking bronk, or wild horse, or steer, can't be ‘fixed.’ They are out to do their wickedest, to throw’ the rider or the steer wrestler. And the cowbovs have to do their best because they get nothing unless they win. Incidentally, their safety and often their lives depend on their doing their best.” Furthermore, says Crutchfield, the rodeo is the only sport that is founded on an industry. The various events of the Chicago Roundup are but de luxe editions of what thousands of men do every day in their line of wqrk. They are merely the most successful men in their industry. “The calf roper’s job on the ranch is in connection with the branding of cattle. New and quicker ways are always being discovered in handling the cattle, and the masters of this art come to light at every Roundup. The bulldogger, cn the otljer hand, is a steer wrestler who is called in when there is need for quick action and effective work in the changing of a brand. Such skill comes only after years of trainng and experience. “Bareback bronk riding is a natural outgrowth of the. hours in the saddlq. which is practically home to the cowboy. Because it is more difficult and offers an opportunity for fun and sportsmanship, it is engaged in when two or more cowboys get together. Even more difficult and dangerous is steer riding, because the steer’s hide tends to be loose, making it more difficult to stay on. x The steer’s extra three ribs is another handicap, and he who stays on well deserves a prize.” o— MONEY AND ITS USES Hot cakes with honey! Waffles with honey! Crisp, hot biscuits with honey! A breakfast of any one of these tempting dishes should enable anybody to start the day right. And according to Miss Ruth Jordan, of the home economics department cf the‘ Purdue university Agricultural Experiment Station, more days would be started right if housewives used honey preparations more often. "Honey has long been prized as a food.” says Miss Jordan. “It is a wholesome, natural sweet, and is to be highly recommended as such.” 4n a circular just published by the Purdue Experiment Station, entitled, “Honey. Its Uses in the Home,” Miss Jordan tells of the different kinds of honey, their composition and value as a food, the care of honey, and the many uses to which it may be put. Numerous recipes which call for honey, in the making of cakes, cookies, breads, desserts, and in preserving, are listed in the publication, and all of them are on the basis of extensive tests made by Miss Jordan at Purdue. Housewives who never have served honey on their table may find the use of the bulletin a most delightful innovation on the daily menu, while those who serve honey regularly are certain to gain new’ ideas from a perusal of the recipes listed. The bulletin will be mailed free of charge upon receipt of a request by the Purdue Agricultural Experiment Station, at Lafayette, Indiana. o EYANG ELLST AT WINONA * , --TT -r— — * Rev. Milford H. Lyon, the well known evangelist, will be the preacher at Winona Lake, Indiana, next Sunday. He will speak in the morning at 10:30 in the W. A Sunday tabernacle. In the afternoon at 5 o’clock he will lead the vesper service. This will be his last sermon in the ?tate for some time, as he leaves on Monday for Winter Park, Florida, where he will erect a winter home. He will continue to spend his summers at Winona Lake. His wife and
HOUSEHOLD HINTS 1 Equal parts cf plaster of Paris and whiting mixed with water is good to repair cracks in walls ’before they are painted or re- ■ papered. ■ A splendid polish will be obitained on clean linoleum if lin- | seod oil is rubbed into it It will not make the floor slippery, as do iso many oil-cloth polishes. Woollens will not shrink in drying if hung dripping wet on the lines to dry. Do not wring them out at all. If the wood is very hard and vou have trouble hammering in the nails, stick s he nail into a •ake of soap and then try again. You will find it easier. A slice of orange peeling can be placed in the tea canister to give an imported flavor to the domestic teas. Dry your orange peelings and .rrind them to a coarse powder. This can be used to flavor cakes, sauces, puddings, etc. Lemon peelings may be, used the same wav. ’ . j - Do not throw away egg shells if you have your laundry done it home. Place them in a muslin bav and put them in the wash boiler on wash day, and seeliow thev will whiten the clothes. If your feuptain pen runs dry and you have no ink on hand, half fill the pen with water. There are usually enough dried ink crystals in the barrel to make a writing fluid sufficient for your purpose. Instead of throwing small nieces of soap away, put them into an empty talcum powder, box and cover with hot water. Sprinkle a little of this liquor in your dishwater and there will he a splendid lather, in this way scraps of soap can be utilized that otherwise would be wasted. HAWKINSKENTFNCED Morten S. Hawkins, former president of the now defunct Hawkins Mortgage Company of Portland, Ind., was sentenced on Monday to serve fifteen years in the federal prison at Leavenworth, Kansas, and was fined SIO,OOO upon his conviction on a charge of using the mails in a scheme to defraud. Fourteen other officials of the* Hawkins concerns were conviA-l ed in federal court last winter and twelve of them were given prison sentences, and they appealed to the United States circuit court of appeals at Chicago, where their case is now pending. Mrs. Laura Walker of Syracuse was one of the witnesses in the trial of Morton S. Hawkins in the federal court at Indianapolis. Mrs; Walker testified to the loss of money in the Hawkins Mortgage Company. o LOSES ESTATE Maggie Lowry, who came to Goshen from Rochester, N. Y.. to attempt to establish legal heirship to the $75,000 estate of Alfred Lowry, former mayor of Goshen, returned east last week with the conviction that she is unable to prove relationship. Miss Lowry, who said she was born on an ocean vessel, believed she might be able to prove herself a half sister of the former mayor. The estate will go to the Indiana common school fund, as Mr. Lowry died without known relatives. —-— o The Great American Home 1 once knew > marrie<i nmn (philosophizes Basque) who saw a sign over a restaurant reading. “Cood Home Cooking ” He stepped blithely into the e» tabltohment and ordered a can of sac dines, a jar of peanut butter and a bottle of olives. —IL M. M., In the Miami Tribune. o Common Sense After all, common sense Is only the •ort of sense which you have In abundance and to which other people are singularly lacking.— Waterbury Republican.
L _ . - —— -■» ■ | JULY Clearance SALE | |' - B § LOW SHOES h lj D for Ladies, Men and Children R Prices are made low enough to move them rj □ □ B Star Clothing Store | M SYBACVSE, INDIANA □ □□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□
<*************M**MA**MA**%e%MAMAn<%a%WVaMb*MA*M**M*Va«en%*e% UNIVERSAL Vacuum Cleaner WitH thread-catching, self-cleaning nozzle and more powerful suction I I Hard old-fashioned backaching e 9 i cleaning days with a broom and dust | pan are gone forever. This ever- h ready electric servant takes its place. ;; It will quickly clean your house h from top to bottom without any phy- :: sical effort ors your part. The dust, J; dirt and ravellings are sucked up :: I through the thread-catching self- s cleaning nozzle right into the bag :: and stay there. The bag is double lined so the dust does not seep I through. ;! At an attractive price now Syracuse Electric Company ii
Boast Th* geological survey siys that Boa- • ton Is often spoken of as “the huh of ■ the universe.” though it is not near the center of even the state of which It Is the capital. The “hub” !u this phrase ; Implies the claim that from Boston as | a center intellectual spokes radiate to ! the utmost rim of the country’s wheel ’ of refinement. i 0 Governed by Opinions The world la governed much more by opinion than by laws. It is not the Judgment of courts, but the moral Judgment of Individuals and masses of men. which is the chief wall of defense around property and life. With ■ the progress of society, this power of ’ opinion Is taking the place of arras.— (’banning. 0 Woman’s Ciaim to Fame Jenny Geddee started a riot In St. Giles church. Edinburgh. Scotland. July 23, 1637. when rise protested against the use of English in the liturgy, by hurling a folding stool at the officiating bishop. GEO. L. XANDERS Attorney-at-Law Settlement of Estates, Opinions on Titles Fire and Other Insurahee Phone 7 Syracuse, Ind.
I KITSON PARK! i i on Lake Wawasee I I i There are only 15 lots left and g | these will be sold in a short time. | | All water front lots and ready | i to build on. I I Lota sold on small payment down, balance in monthly payments. Better hurry if you want to get in on this. * Write or phone the owner | C. J. KITSON I | Rural Route 3. Syracuse, Ind. | ©
i TO BRETZ FOR GUSSES I ' ' ■ ' ■ 'I rt See That Your Child j Sees Right Regular youngsters should have good sight Does your youngster have it? Poor vision may lead to serious trouble later, if not corrected now with properly fitted glasses. Don’t blame the child if you are in doubt about Its eyes. An Examination Will Quickly Tell the Story. Nevin E. Bretz Optometrist & Optician 130 S. Main St., Goshen PENNY PADS—Merchants and mechanics use them for notes and figuring. Size 3x6 inches. Journal office.
