The Syracuse Journal, Volume 18, Number 14, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 6 August 1925 — Page 4

THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL , MtPU*LIC*N Published every Thursday « Syracuse. Indiana Wintered as second-class matter oi. May 4th. ISOS. at the poalofitce ai Syracuse, Indiana, uuder'nh# Act oi Congress of Ma?ch 3rd, 1879. SUBSCRIPTION RATES One year, in advance.....>2.oo Six months LOO Three months .a0 Single Copies9s STAFF of CORRESPONDENTS Mrs. Crist Darr.......-Four Corners Mrs. Ross Rodibaugh..North Webster Mrs. Wm. Sheffield West End Mrs. Calvin CooperGilberts Mrs. Henry Rex Solomon’s Creek J. L. Kline Tippecanoe Minnie Robinson..... Pleasant Ridge Mrs. Ernest Mathews..... White Oak Mrs. C. Richcreek.. ’Colley’s Corners H. A. Buettner, Editor and Publisher Clara O. Buettner, Associate Editor Thursday, August 6, 1995 “I kMV Mt Wilt th tntt mj h, I till It is *tiis toll Is it.”—Editor. If Dawes can get the Senate rules changed it will make it a lot easier for congress to pass p lot more laws we don’t need. / The pickle station is open and there is someone there to take care of your stock every day. i About all some h(red hands know about farming is to do when the dinner bell rings. ( .The majority doUn’t always rule. If it did the locomotives would have to stop at every crossing for the flivvers. / To loosen a fruk jar, soak it And to make a husband\loosen up, soak him. £ The season of year inhere when college graduates worry about the wages paid to Science can explain a lot of things, but it can’t explain why some men always see all of the faults bf the other fellow and none of their own. ’ — « •: They say radio has added many words to the English language. Yes, and most of them are not fit to print There are approxmately two million laws of all kinds in force in the U. S. In force, not enforced. We know of one.thing to be thankful for when Thanksgiving day rolls around—and that is that this is not a presidential year. Nothing will surprise the June grooms more than the speed a bride can show in learning to say mine instead of ours. "'•■ v • . • Peaches travel all the way across the U. S. from California in tin cans and since Henry Ford* got busy human beings are doing the same thing. Some people think, that the only thing as bad as too many relatives visiting them is not to have any relatives to visit. •You never hear the wife of a poor man doing any bragging about the blessings of poverty. What a fine community this would ba if everybody spent as much time practicing religion as they spend In arguing about it The best way is to live that you’ll never have to ask the editor to keep something out of the paper. We have reached the point in life where it is t a mean husband who refuses to shave his wife’s neck. Why is it that a lot'of men who hate knocking in an automobile will do a lot of knocking about their own hoiUe town* . ... r i - ♦ Lake Lots for Sale SYRACUSE LAKE Pot tows t*. mi Park Addmore Park * WAWARES LAKE Cottingham Beach Oak Noli Park j I Waveland Beach Grand View Park Highland View Gardens Oak Knoß—Second Plat. Wawasee ' Several Desirable Town Cottages for Sale or Best 8 rc”* l ?

Local News and Personal Items Mrs. W. A. Bailey of Lake Wowasee spent Tuesday evening the home of Mr. and Mrs. V. V. Priest. Mrs. Elizabeth Akers returned home on Sunday evening after having spent a week with friends at Nappanee and Mount Taber. Little Miss Shirley Miles returned on Monday after •pending a week in Bourbon with little Miss Eileen Cremean. Little Miss Mosceline Wogoman underwent an operation on Monday at the hands of Dr. C. R. Hoy for the removal of her tonsils. Mr. and Mrs. Eston E. McClintic and William McClintic attended the. McClintic family reunion at Buttermilk Point on Sunday. Little Miss Barbara Gross of Continental, Ohio, came on Sunday to spend two weeks visiting with her cousins, at the Preston H. Miles home. Mr. and Mrs. V. V. Priest and two children, Anna and Andrew, spent Sunday evening in the home of Mrs. Priests brother. Rev. Joe Bailey, at .South Whitley. Mr. and Mrs. E. F. Henry and sons, Dalton and Stanley, of Bremen. and Mr. and Mrs. W. V. Clifford of South Bend returned to their homes last Thursday after visiting * here with- Mrs. Flcra Wise a few days. Preston H. Miles, accompanied i by his sister, Miss Phyllis Miles, motored toFort Wayne Sunday and brought back Mrs. Miles, who had spent several days there in the home of her brother, Mr. and Mrs. Lynn L. Shirley. * ■• ’ • Specials for Saturday, August 8, ONLY 36-Inch Unbleached Muslin, a good quality, of fair < weight, yard. IkzC • 36-Inch Bleached Muslin, soft finish for needle, r* per yard lOC > , 36-Inch Bleached Mus- 1 o Un, goed weight, at .. IswC Men’s Heavy Blue Chambray Work Shirt, 2 pockets, full in sixe, well made, ryr* each _ <&C * a Men’s Khaki Pants, good weight and well made, with two hip * ' -9 Men’s Athletic Union Suits, of white check dim- y| Pf ity, per suit * • C / —The— ROYAL STORE , W. G. CONNOLLY Syraewe, MieM. .

i Alva Nicolai is sporting a fine new Chevrolet Coach automobile. | Mrs. Inez Sellers of Benton was a visitor in this city on Sunday. Mrs. Stephen Freeman was hostess to tbe Bridge Club on Friday afternoon. , Mrs. J. E. Rippey was a business visitor in South Bend on Saturday morning. Mrs. Melvin Tulley spent Wednesday in the home of her sister, Mrs. S. O. Jeffries. Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Kern and family and Mrs. Jane Kern spent Sunday in South Bend. Mrs. M. L. Shearer and daughter Judith have returned from a visit among relatives. A. 1/ Priest attended toe McClintic family reunion *at Buttermilk Point on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. John Casey of Elkhart were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Klink. Mrs. Jake France of Columbia City was visiting her brother, Sam Rasor, and wife last week. Gerald Priest went to Wakarusa on Sunday and attended the Wegeman family reunion. Roy Klink and Marion Rapp motored to Chicago on Saturday and returned home on Sunday. Miss Jessie Rosson of Indianapolis is spending her vacation here with her mother, Mrs. G. H. Ellis. Mr. and Mrs. Seeley Baum of Garrett spent Sunday with his mother, Mrs. Hannah Baum, in this eity. Mr. and Mrs. Forrest Kern and family entertained relatives from Syracuse and Bremen on Sunday. Mrs. J. E. Rippey and Miss Helen Jeffries drove through to Indianapolis on Friday and spent the day there. Mrs. B. F. Hoy, has returned home (from Berkeley Springs, West Virginia, where she spent three weeks. Mrs. Elizabeth Akers returned home on Sunday from Nappanee, where she spent last week with relatives. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Haman and family and Mr. and Mrs. Burton Howe spent Sunday evening in Goshen. Mrs. Schaeffer and J. F. Jeffries, Jr., have been spending the past month in the home of Mrs. S. 0 . Jeffries. Mrs. Harold Mick of Elkhart came on Saturday for a week’s stay with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Richart. Mr. and Mrs. H. D. Harkless and Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Colwell took an automobile trip up in Michigan on Sunday. Mrs. Sallie Holloway entertained the members of the Bridge Club and a few guests at her home on Tuesday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. H. K. Stetler and son Wesley spent Sunday in Elkhart with the latter’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Hire. Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Kern and family and mother, Mrs. Jane Kern, spent Sunday afternoon at Playland Park, near South Bend. Mrs. Myrtle Ahrens and son Walter spent a few days visiting last last week in toe home of her sister, Mrs. Sankey Vorhis. Mrs. John Sloan and daughters Blanche, Ruth and Madge, spent Friday in Valparaiso visiting in the home of Mrs. Sloan’s sister. Mrs. Garfield Vorhis. Mrs. Chas. Bowles of Elkhart, and the latter’s niece, Miss Elinore Smith of Wabash, spent Friday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Kern. Mr. and Mrs. V. V. Priest and daughter Anna and son Andrew were Sunday dirtier gbests of Professor and Mrs. J. R. Schultz of North Manchester on Sunday. Inaley Brothers went to Gary today (Thursday) and brought Mr. and Mrs. L. B. Boyd’s household goods from there to their home at Maxweiton Manor on Syracuse Lake. Mr. and Mrs. D. W. Granger, who have been guests qf Mr. and Mrs. Knox Stetfer the past week, have, returned to their borne in Mishawaka. Millard D. Hire spent Sunday in Ft Wayne. Mr. and Mrs. D, L. Gibaqp and her two sisters and their husbands. Mr. and Mrs. J. Fair of Chicago and Mr. »nd Mrs. Albert Keeffer, took an automobile trip on Sunday and visited to White Pigeon, and Sturgis. Mich., Howe. Elkhart and other places. Mr. and Mrs. Fair returned home on Monday.

iri wnwiwm ; | BACHMAN’S [ Need Shirts? See Our Window Display “Fruit of the Loom”—Broadcloth—-Soft Spun—Percale • We guarantee quality—- ' You be the judge of price ALWAYS A SQUARE DEAL HERE ——————;

THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL

Attorney and Mrs. D. A. Orebaugh and daughter Virginia left- on Tuesi day morning by auto for their home !in Chicago. They spent several days i in toe home of toe former’s sisters, i Mrs. H. A Buettner and Miss Alice ! Orebaugh. Mrs. Essa Gertsch of Chicago has I purchased toe cottage, “Alpsf’ on the I south side of Wawasee Lake. She is coming to Syracuse on Saturday and ; will spend a few days with her sister, Mrs. Alva Nicolai, and also finish moving to her new cottage home on the lake for the summer. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Beckman and • son Rudolph left on Saturday for a I month's visit among relatives. They went from here to Sterling,'•lll., and ■ from there to Omaha, Neb., and Den- ; ver, Colo. On their return they will take the southern route and visit • among relatives in several different l states. Mr. and Mrs. Vern Deckrosh of Defiance, Ohio, are attending the , Evangelical Institute at< Oakwood Park. The first of toe week they . were in Syracuse calling on Mr. and • Mrs. J. P. Dolan and other friends. J. F. Jeffries of Columbus, Ohio, motored over a few days ago to join his son, who is at toe home of his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. S. 0. Jefi fries. Mr. Jeffries will spend his vacation of two weeks here. Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Tulley and son Joe and Kenneth Hapner spent . Sunday, in toe home of Mr. and Mrs. S. O. Jeffries. Mr. and Mrs. H. A Buettner, Miss Alice Orebaugh and the two latter’s brother and family, Mr. and Mrs. D. A Orebaugh and daughter Virginia, motored to Winona Lake on Monday afternoon and attended a lecture on astronomy, on the subject of “Other Worlds Than Ours.” It was given by Prof. A. M. Harding,'of the University of Arkansas. Mr. and Mrs. Sankey Vorhis and family attended the eleventh annual reunion bf the Hippensteel and Warren families, which was recently held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. James Bowers, near North Manchester. About four hundred were there, in- , eluding people from California, lowa, ; Pennsylvania, Ohio and Wyoming. After the dinner tables were cleared away, the Urbana quartette and singing and speaking were the entertaining features of the afternoon. Everybody enjoyed an excellent afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Miller and Mr. and Mrs. S. H. Sharp of Cridersville, Ohio, and the latter’s granddaughter, Rose Mary Isenbach, of Lima, Ohio, are visiting here in toe home of the gentlemen’s sister, Mrs. C. I. Beery. Mrs. J. J. Connell and daughter of Peru are visiting here with the farmer’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Miles. Mr. and Mrs. Sam Widner returned home from Fort Wayne on. Wednesday, where they spent a week with friends. Those who were Sunday dinner guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. S. O. Jeffries, were: Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Tullj and family a >d Kenneth ; Hapner of Solomon’s Creek and J. Fred Jeffries and son, J. Fred, Jr., and Mrs. L. Schaeffer of Columbus, Ohio. Mr. Jeffries came on Sunday to join his son, who, with his grandmother, Mrs. Schaeffer, have been spending a vacation of four weeks here. They will return to Columbus in two weeks. Any honest citizen will tell you that the difference between a motorist and a gossip is that a motorist never runs down another person intentionally. * - NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION Notice is hereby given that the undersigned has been appointed by tM Clerk of the Kosciusko Circuit Court, in the State of Indiana, Administrator of the estate of Peter Krefting, late of Kosciusko County, deceased. Said estate is supposed to be solvent. WARREN T. COLWELL, Administrator July 30, 1925. 14-3 t _o— Safe Ra/e to O&MTF* We me tt by the paper that a New York man renewed hl* youth by a f**t However, the best way to keep your youth to not to be faat—dadnnatl Baquirer.

IN OUR CHUBCHES I United* Brethren la Christ We will be specially favored; this coming Lord’s Day in having i the conference superintendent, Dr. J. A. Groves, of Logansport, with us in the services of the day. He will preach at the morning hour, conduct the communion service, and hold the test quarterly conference at 3 o’clock. He will also preach at the Concord church at 7:30. This day will be long remembered in that the last of the parsonage debt will have been paid, and the church free from its financial obligations in that re- ; spect. We most cordially invite all Who do not worship elsewhere to be with us and enjoy the services throughout the day. A special feature of the day’s program will be the basket dinner ait the noon hour, and the social hour following. Come and meet 'old friends and make new acquaintances. Sunday School will 1 convene at the usual hour, which is 9:45. Wm. L. Filer, Pastor. Groce Lutheran Church • Ninth Sunday after Trinity. Sunday School at 9:45 a. m. Beginning the story of Saint Paul’s second great missionary tour. Evening service at 7:30, with sermon by the Pastor on “Me and Mine.” The Light Brigade will not ‘ meet next Saturday. It is easier to come to Sunday School and Church,, and better, than to find a legitimate excuse to stav away. R. N. McMichiel, Pastor. ■ 2 Methodic* Episcopal Church Sunday School, 9:45 a. m. Preaching Services at 11:00. Junior League at 6:00 p. m. Evening Service at 7:30. Sfereopticon lecture on “Logs and Men,” also motion pictures showing scenes in logging camps. ; James H. Royer, Pastor Church of God Snndav School. 9:30 a. m. Morning Preaching 10:30 . Christian Endeavor at 6:30. Evening Preaching at 7:30. Prayer Meeting, Thursday eve- j ning at 7:30. Floyd Hedges, Pastor. ; Safety First Tire Patch—fixes ; blow-outs ’same as punctures. ; Sold by Syracuse Auto Sales. 6-8 p « NOTICE OF ADMINIStRATION ; Notice is hereby given that ! the undersigned» has been ap- ; pointed by the Clerk of the Kos- ; clukko .Circuit Court, in the ! State of Indiana, Administrator ; of the estate of Frank Greider, ; late of Kosciusko County, de- ! ceased. < Said estate is supposed to be < solvent WARREN T. COLWELL, : Administrator. ; July 25. 1925. 13-3 t . o— Debt to the secret foe of thrift, a* Wee and Idleness are It* open one- 1 ntea.—Aughey. 1 ———— .n . -ir ■I.-J.tfr-Leave Your , - Laundry Order at Bachman’s Store ; The Store on the Corner QUALITY end SERVICE : ** * ! Collections TUESDAYS ad FRIDAYS ; RIVERSIDE LAUNDRY i

Best Fresh Fruits and 9 Vegetables Enticing salads are * easy to make. And the ingredients are right here--* down to the fruits and vegetables which make the foundation. We serve for our trade only the freshest and best- You can buy no other kind here. Come in and make your own selection, or telephone your order with equal confidence. x PKone 15 J. E. GRIEGER Syracuse, Indiana • vnHnmmu»ttn«»!iHauu»»nH»tcnm»m»uuu:H»»t t -1 ZTTTTTrT--LT. ' : . J1 J ""T~—7 • 7 ■ State Bank of Syracuse Capital and Surplus $50,000 - "OUR. BANK” . Safety Deposit Boxen For Rent ~ 1 1 • - Oakland Theatre; Syracuse I Program for a Week Thursday, Aug. 6 *FORTY WINKS**— A Paramount picture, with Viola <; Dana, Raymond Griffith and Theodore Robert. Also a Kino ; gram. . I !i: Saturday, August 8 “ANY WOMAN”— A. Paramount Picture, with Alice ! Terry. Also a Scenic. ' <; H Monday, August 10 I “FLYING HOOFS”— One of Universol’s better Westerns, <; with Hoot Gibson. Also a Wednesday, August 12 "THE AIR MAIL”—A Paramount Picture, with Doug- ;• las Fairbanks, Jr., BiHie Dore, and Warner Baxter. , Also ; j a Comedy. - < • COMING SOON— Gloria Swanson in “Madam San Sene,” ;! | also Zane Grey’s "Thundering Herd.” I! - ; j - Alex, t/i« Corrector Firaf Chart of Hoafiont Craden. the compller.of the Concord- Johann Bayer, the German astronoance of the Bible, became Insane, and mer, made the flrat complete, eonreniImagtned hlnwelf divinely appointed to ent chart of the heavfens. as they were correct abuses. Calling himself Alex,, tton known. He was also the flrat to the Corrector, he carried a sponge to designate the stars by Greek letters, erase objectionable writlnga. according to their size. * cweeeflbMtoMtotoetotoMtototoebtoetotoetoetoeMiMtoMAtoWkMtoatoM** UNIVERSAL| Vacuum Cleaner i • • :■ With tHread-catering.self-cleaning nozzle and more powerful suction Gets all the dirt and none of the The “Universal” with thread-catch- : Jng self-cleaning nozzle and more <: ; powerful suction thoroughly cleans :: ■ rugs, picking up all thread, hair and ; t lint; getting all the ground-in dirt as > well. To prolong the life of your : rugs, keep them clean. Grounddfi dirt cuts the nap. And best of all, with this tireless* efficient electric servant you can keep your house <: thoroughly clean from top to bottom for ' an insignificant cost per year* because it requires so little Electricity to ruait. . ’f - • » . At an attractive price now . Syracuse Electric Company