The Syracuse Journal, Volume 19, Number 13, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 29 July 1926 — Page 5
a Scientists say, that whole wheat contains • f elements essential to man. Bread is the staff °* fe » but the nutritive value depends on the quality of flour that is put into it Our Stock of Flour Is the Best the mills can make, and you have a choice of several excellent brands at this store. We sell also a select line of staple and fancy groceries. Our business policy, as you know, is Courtesy — Cleanliness—Honesty — Service Seider & Burgener PURE FOOD GROCERS PHONES 82 AND 172 SYRACUSE, INDIANA ft i ii»JWWWWM6iKaeIWiJ&iWNMKWPuWWWft:r4HMWS' i KKSBBSM''yPiSKaSS»-INSSBWBSB ffRESfi. GL&fIN M&ftT ! Await you at our market at all times. Aon s will find the juiciest cuts and the tenderest g pieces here. We also handle smoked and dried meats and a general line of canned meats. i- • I KLINK BROS. MEAT MARKET S 3
ROBERT E. FLETCHER Funeral Din'ctor Ambulance Service Syracuse, Indiana. Telephone 75 \\ll.M\M GRAY LOEHR Attorney-at-laiw SPECIAL ATTENTION TO ESTATES. DEEDS, MORTGAGES TITLES AND WILLS Admitted to Practice in AH Courts Ileal F.state, Collections Notary 118| S. Buffalo St.. Warsaw. Ind. RIBBONS -We sell ribbons for L C. Smith, Underwbbd and Oliver Typewriters. Journal' office.
While They Last ■ ' Never again will such an opportunity be given you Victor Records At a tremendous sacrifice, including such world-known artists as Henry Burr, BiUy Murray, Paul Whiteman, Sousa's Band, Pryor’s Band, in fact every Artist in the Victor catalog. All 10-inch Black Double-Faced MECHANICALLY cut records. Former price 75c; now 49c .4 All 12-inch Black Double-Faced Records. Former price $1.25; now AU 10-inch Blue Label Double-Faced Records. Former price $1.00; now 62c AU 12-inch Blue Label Double-Faced Records. Former price $1.50; now 9tc All Single-Faced Red Seal Records of Great Artists at the following slaughtered prices: All 10- : nch, former price $1.25. Now 39c All 12-inch, former price $1.75, $3. Now - -49 c All Records Guaranteed to be in first-class condition, same as received from the factory. This opportunity wiU not come again. Sale Closes September 11. All Records CabK Over 7000 Records Must Go ROGERS & WiLSObl
Passion Music Ptission music Is music that endeav» : vors to picture ths suffering and deuth lof Christ. The subject has been a ' great favorite with composers. ProbI ably the greatest masterpiece of tills kind is the passion music by Bach. • The passion may be said to consist of the seven lust words of the Savior oC the cross. o □ □□□□□ U'LTP ftTHIS OFFICE NIZ is the place to have your printing done, no matter what kind it may be. □□□□□□'□□
Correspondence ] Ji'.’ Neighborhood FOUR CORNERS Mr. Gall called at the Crist Darr home Saturday afternoon. The little son of Oscar Graff is improving from his recent illness. Mrs. Harl Darr of near Goshen spent Tuesday with Mr. and Mrs. Christ Darr. Frank Darr of Mishawaka was a caller at the Crist Darr home a few days ago. Mrs. Howard McSweeny called at the Clint Callander home a few days ago. Louise Hartman is\ assisting Mrs. Clint Callander in her house work. • ' Mrs. James Callander of Gravelton spent 'last Thursday at the Clint Callander home. ■ Mr. and Mrs. Crist Darr and Floyd Darr spent Sunday with Earl Darr, near Goshen. Mr. and Mrs. Jaimes Myers attended the Ren hberger reunion at Nappanee on Sunday. Miss Thelma Ulery of Sou h Bend spent a few days with,Mr. and Mrs. James Myers recently. Mr. and Mrs. Artie Geyer, Mr. ?nd Mrs. Clarence Snyder spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Treesh at Elkhart. Mr. and Mrs. James Myers and Mrs. Hoover spent Wednesday with friends at Waterloo, and also wi*,h Mr. Myers’ mother there. WHITE OAK Mr. and Mrs. Paul Buhrt spent Sunday with. Mr. and Mrs. Guy Fisher. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Wyland and son Eldon Were in Goshen Monday- evening. Mrs. Burton Howe spent Monday evening with Mrs. Anna Crow at Syracuse. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Walker and son Dick spent Sunday in South Bend with friends. Mr. and Mrs. Burton Howe entertained friends from Columbia City on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. James Dewar* spent Tuesday evening at the Sherman Deaton home. Steven Miller is spending a few days with his daughters. Mrs. Matie Good at South Bernd. Mr. and Mrs. Sylvester Coy spent Sunday with tneir daughter and family, Mr. and Mrs. Chester Stiffler. Mr. and Mrs. Bertram Whitehead and Mr. and Mrs. Rebecca Deyvai't spent Sunday at the Jawrence Dewart home. Those who were guests of Mr. and Mrs. W«n. Wyland were. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Heifner and family, Mrs. Ellen Wyland of t Pierceton and Mr. and Mrs. W esley Miller and son Hubert. NORTH WEBSTER Mr. and Mrs. Robert Richwine and daughter Doris visited his parents, Mr. and Mrs. F rank E. Richwine, over the week end. Miss Matilda Jane Gerard of Mishawaka is spending smie time here with her grandparent*. , , The Misses Martha and Madeline Bockman haw been spending a few days with their aunt, Mrs. Hamilton Hunter, at Oakwood Park. A big Stutz roadster went into the diUh near Frank Henwood’s on Sunday. , The July committee of the Efficiency class of the M. E. Sunday school were entertained in the church basement on Tuesday evening. The Bible class Auden’s and friends gathered at Epworth Forest on Wednesday for a picnic dinner, games and contests. —‘ COUNTY ATTENDANCE You will be asked to give the name of your county when you pass through the gates of the State Fair. The Indiana Board of Agriculture has just completed plans whereby they will have I tellers stationed at each ga‘e oi the State Fair and as yqu pass through the gate into the fairgrounds you will be asked to give the name of the county from which you came. There are special prizes for the counties having the larges* attendance at the State Fair which will be held. September 4-5-6-7-8-9-10-11. The distance from Indianapolis 'will be taken into consideration as well as the facilities our county has of arriving 'at the Fair, and other equal z ng conI test features. So arrange to uphold. the pride and honor of our county as well as realize personally the opportunities of attending this year s $15.<00,0w0 State Fair. Let’s make this year's slogan "WILL-OU-THERE" be a true one to our county and bring home one of the prizes for county attendance. ba ilk eport i The operating revenues of the i B. 4 O. railroad for -he month ■ of June were, $21,281,640. and • the operating expenses. $16,010,i 487, leaving a net balance of op1 • •
THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL
| HOUSEHOLD HINTS I Cold tea is excellent for house plants. The round centerpiece should be ironed from,the center to the edges to avoid puckering. A roll of wrapping r paper and a ball of string mould be included in the kitchen supplies, A good duster can be made by satuiating the dish-washing mop wi'h crude oil and allowing it to dry. Cookies keep best in a stone jar. Before putting them in place a cloth inside the jar to form a lining. Do not pour gravy over roasted meat. It removes t. e dredging and seasoning and the meat has an insipid taste. Leather furni ure should not be covered with slip covers, as the linen or cotton fabric rubbing against the leather will injure it. To clean a clock, saturate a piece of absorbent cotton about as. large as a hen’s egg with kerosene oil and place it in the bottom. Close the door and let the cotton remain for three or four days. Then take it out and s,wing the pendulum. Unless something is broken, the clock will go all right, as the femes from the oil clean the works. v - •1 ■ “ I i REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS (By H. C. Frazer) | John H. Willard to Arthur H. & Nort F. Derry, lot on Durbin street, Lakeview Park. §l. Dan M. Garber, admr. to Frances Ritter, lot in sec. 15, Tippecanoe tp. $1,125. Alice Ritter to Allen F. & Dorothy Ritter, 16 1-2 A. sec. 8, Tippecanoe, tp.. SI,OOO. Epworth League Institute to A. C. Wischsmeir, lot 5 , C. Epworth Fores* S6OO. o — : —■' ’ NEAR EAST RELIEF All communities are invited to cooperate with philanthropic Indianapolis folk in responding to a hurry-up call for cast off clothipg for children and desti-1 tute old people of the Near East. Mrs. Hugh McGibeny, prominent Indianapolis \oman, chairman of a committee of leading citizens, is appealing for a generous response to a call from Syria where the Mohammedan Druse uprising has made thousands of Christians homeless. On Tuesday. August 10, will be Indi- napolis Bundle Day, and the first' shipment of old garmentswill be made about the middle of the month. Housewives throughout Indiana are invited to send clothing gifts to Near East Relief headquarters, 528 People’s Bank Building, Inditnapolis.
Federal Commissioner i. i ■I Rear Admiral H. O. Stickney, re tired, who has been appointed by Sec retaries Hoover and Kellogg as Fed era! Commissioner tc the SesqubCen tennlal International Exposition com memorating the 150th anniversary ol American Independence and which will be held lit Philadelphia from June 1 to December 1. Admiral Stickney will be x n fall charge of the United Stales Government exhibit, which wff be the largest of its type ever madg, Changing Public Opinion Public opinion is powerful even vi hen it mistakes. But when It wrongly Judge* us we should so live that no one will believe what others may say •bout us. We can. if we will, revise public opinion concerning ourselves.— Grit. LIGONIER ARTIFK IAL ICE COMPANY Syracuse Branch Ice—-Soft Drinks—Packing Salt Gas Drunxs Phone 147 N. G. SKIDGEL, Manager
Six Burners N 0 .4 15 ■— Four burner cooking is top. Oven has two I'll \\ burners and bakes as / : || -5 ff ® fast as gas. Finished IL , It.- if in durable white porcelain and black enamel. —wLfi i improved construction .1‘ I I VSL / W eliminates all bolt I ■ i II 1/ Sfi heads, crevices and pre- =' utewfgff jections, making sur- \\ ■ / faces perfectly smooth \Vw and easy to’clean. Size of top. 22x28 inches. -aii y/ Height 3214 inches. Size of oven, 18 in. wide x 14 in.’deep Xl2 in. high. rr fir inie*™ * Osborn ©ffL 011
HEN LAID ANOTHER EGG Si Iverton, Oregon.—Whether the boy had adopted the thrifty counsel of Benjamin Franklin to his own needs is a matter for conjecture. More probably he held, in common with most boys, a sublime confidence in himself, everybody and everything, even in hens. With a hen under one arm and a sack of eggs in one hand, he entered a local meat shop one morning.. He asked pay for one hen and twelve eggs. “But there’s only eleven eggs,” protested the butcher. “Yes,” countered the lad, "but the hen here will lay another before the day’s over.” Such confidence the butcher reflected, should be respected. So he ran the risk that the hen had already laid for the day and paid for one dozen eggs, with a good price fpr the hen. The twelfth egg arrived that afternoon. Average Lung Capacity The lung capacity of the average person is about 325 cubic inches. With normal breathing about two-thlrds of a pint of fresh air may be taken into the lungs, while an equal amount of a.lr is exhaled with each breath.
The GREATEST BUICK EVER BUILT j ■ 1 M / i AA-I-M SOON ON DISPLAY • - I Robinson Motor Sales Warsaw, Indiana - * ° . .
Warship Needed Mascot The bad luck that attended the ■ United States battleship Texas was attributed by old meu-o’-warsmen to , the fact that she had no mascot. Geese . as mascots have a bad reputation with sailors. And most seapen believe that j if a cat falls overboard and is drowned the vessel is doomed. oPLACARDS—"For Rent,” "For Sale” and “Furnished Rooms For I Rent” printed on heavy cardboard are carried in stock at the Journal office. The price is 10c. — 0 : s- . For best results, advertise in the Journal.
w . a | Make Your Money Work For You | 0 g 0 a I have on hand high-class first mortgage notes drawing 7 per cent interest, in amounts of SICO and up. If you have idle money, why a not put it to working for you? See me about a these investments. b g T. J. PRICKETT |P Nappanee, Indiana . i ’« • B N?d' ; Sf?BSSyKHSSBf^HSBfiS®NK?cM;^ :
666 is a Prescription for Colds. Grippe, Flu. Dengue Bilious Fever and Malaria It Kills the Germs. GEO. L. XANDERS Attorney-at-Law Settlement of Estates. o I 1 Opinions on Titles Fire and Other Insurance 1 Phone 7 Syracuse, Ind.
