The Syracuse Journal, Volume 19, Number 16, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 19 August 1926 — Page 4
THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL ■■ruaLiCAN Published every Thursday at Syracuse. Indiana. Entered as second-class matter on May 4th. 1908, at the at Syracuse, Indiana, under the Act ofCongress al March 3rd. 1879. SUBSCRIPTION KATES I One-year, in advance $2.00 Six months . 1-00 Three moriths Single Copies . .05 STAIFFof ~CORRESPON I >ENTs' .mA. Crist Darr Four Corners mA. Ross Rodibaugh. .North Webster Mrs. Wm. Sheffield West End Mrs. Calvin Cooper.. Gilberts Mrs. Merle Darr ...Solomon’s Creek J. L. Kline • Tippecanoe Mm. Ernest Mathews ....White Oak Mrs. C. Richcreek. .'Colley’s Corners H. A. Buettner, Editor and Publisher Clara O. Buettner, Associate Editor Thursday* August 19. 1926 “I how lot what the truth may he, I tell It as ’twastold to bo."— Editor. Wil VPS IX A NAME! “Naw Your Farm Home” is a slogan of a movement fostered by home demonstration workers in Tennessee. It is considered that naming the farm home often marks the first step in home improvement. It is pointed out that as a result an effort is made to live up to the spirit embodied in the new farm name. The indirect effect of the name can often be seen in ", the grading and standardizing of produce offered for sale. Farm home owners are urged to give some thought and effort in the selection of the right name. It should be dignified, suitable, lasting, not too common, easy to say. eaav to*read and easy to remember. It should appear on the mail box or over it, on a Signboard or on the gate. It is also suggested that the farm r.ame should appear on letter heads and on labels attached to anything sold from the farm. As a result of the campaign, the idea has extended to many stater of the union, and over 3,000 Tennessee farm homes have been named, according to a report received by the United States Department of Agriculture. 'Die idea is again being stressed this year with the view ’ of eventually naming every farm home in Tenn esse. A law has been passed permitting the registry of a distinctive farm name in that state. Only a few farms in Turkey Creek township have been named. It would be interesting to know the names of these farms and the names of their owners. . __ NORTH MINCH ESTER FAIR August 24. 25, 26 and 27 is the date. Bigger and better than before. Exhibit of beef and dairy cattle. Exhibit of heavy draft horses. The racing program will be one of the best ever held. See the Gold Dust Twins, hear the Jubilee singers. Plenty of entertainment for everyone. _o —: — ships clam shells Alvin Yoder of Gosden shipped one and a half tons'rn clam shells gathered in the river along his property to market Friday to be made into buttons. Shells are worth but S6O a ton at* this time says Mr. Yoder, the market apparently being , glutted. Mr. Yoder also found several pearls, he says. The clam'is separated from the shells before shipping. They are picked up in shallow water or hooked if in deep water. — o • TO SPEND 20 MILLION Butler university contemplates spending between fifteen and twenty million dollars at a conservative estimate during the next five years according to John H. Atherton financial secretary of Indianapolis. The expenditures will begin this fall with the erection of the first unit of buildings at the new Fairview site of the university. Approximately one million dollars will be spent during the fall. ■<H ‘ COW HAS TRIPLETS Champaign County, Illinois, is richer by three calves .than it was several days ago. A Holstein cow on the Champaign county farm gave birth to triplets. According to Superintendent Henry Keller, he has he ver heard ot bovine triplets before. hemstSching z , s Leave your hemstitching at Gibson’s Variety Store. Twentyfour hour service. Milford Electric Co. S-ts O .—i. If you want to own and operate a Star, call at the Lakeside Garage. 16-lt t —o AclvtSirtlSC in tfaft Journal.
Local News and Personal Items Will see you At the circus. Miss Mary Miles is visiting with friends in Indianapolis. Mr. and Mrs. E. P. Miles were FL Wayne visitors on Monday. Sankey Vorhis was a business visitor in New Paris on Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Sankey Vorhis and family spent Sunday at the lake. Mrs. Burton Howe called on Mrs. Vorhis and Mrs. Ringle on Saturday. Attend the gladiolus exhibit at Gibson’s Variety Store next (Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Garfield Vorhis of Elkhart spent Monday at the J. E. Kern home. Mrs. Fred Smith and children of Decatur are visiting in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Joe Rapp Mr. and Mrs. Sam DiPon spent Sunday with their son and wife, Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Dillon. Mr. and Mrs. Dan Mishler attended a family reunion at the Goshen city park on Tuesday. Mrs. George Sharp and son. John of Milford sn?n‘ Sunday with,Mr. and Mrs. Fieldon Sharp. Mr. and Mrs. Ewing of North Baltimore, Ohio, were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Howard Bowser. Mr. and Mrs. Dan Mishler and daughter. Martha Rose, spent Sunday afternoon and evening in Warsaw. Mr. and Mrs. John Stout and fartlily spent Sunday in the home of their daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Rov Meek. Mr. and Mrs. Chauncey Meyers of Stanley. Wis.. visited on Monday afternoon with Mr. and Mrs. Sankey Vorhis. Mary and Herman Jensen are visiting in Lima, Ohio, with their grandmother, Mrs. Thomas Jensen ariif family. W. C. Gants has returned home from Bloomington, where he attended the summer terin of school at the State University. Miss Eloise Mabie visited over Sunday with her parents. She has been spending the past I month at Indian Village.
Fine Selection Silk Dresses Just In Sizes 14 to 46 Prices $9.98 $12.98 $15.75 —-The—ROYAL STORE W. G. CONNOLLY Syracuse, Indiana.
Matt Abts of Milwaukee, Wis., is visiting with has family on Wawasee Lake* in the Mrs. Amanda Xanders cottage. Miss B. Gibbons of Chicago, who has been a guest of Mrs. J. E. Grieger the past three weeks, returned home on Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. George Stansbury and daughter, Marie, spent Sunday at the home of her brother and wife, Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Held. Rev. and Mrs. J. H. Royer and family. Misses Mary Alice Kitson ind Leila Connolly are attending the institute at Epworth Forest this week. Clayton Alberts returned to his home in Lapaz, Ind., last Saturday. He was employed as night man on the Lake Wawasee dredge. Mrs. Isabel Grieger of Maxwelten Manor has returned home from a motor trip with friends to Cedar Rapids, lowa, and other places in lowa. The Misses Catherine and Phyllis Gants of Elkhart spent last week here in the home of their uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Gants. Herman Johnson has moved lis family and household goods from the Edgell property to the ate John Willard property on West Main street. j. Dr. T. A. Mabie of Kansas City and his mother, Mrs. Mabie, of Warsaw, visited over Sunday here in the home of the former’s brother. B. O. Mabie. Mis. Gertrude Morgan and son, of Toledo. Ohio, returned home on Saturday after spending several days at the home of Mr. and Mrs. O. L Cleveland. Mr and Mrs. Clinton Baker and daughter. Geneva, and Mr. and Mrs. Leland Baker and family of Goshen spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Earl Baker. Miss Erma Hollopeter of South Bend was a gues* of Mrs. J. H. Bowser last week. Miss Hollopeter was at one tfme a teacher in the public schools here. Ralph Mullen and Columbus Disher started on Monday morning for Miami, Arizona, where they will spdnd a few weeks. Thev are motoring through. Mrs. Jane Kern and daughters, Katherine and Martha Jane, are spending two weeks’ at Battle Creek. Mich., in the home of the former’s brother. C. A. FackleV. Mr. and Mrs. A. F. Linds’* rand left on Monday for their two weeks’ vacation with their parents at Knox, and also with relatives and friends in Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. Jake Herrington and Mr. and Mrs. Harrv Herrington and son. Donald of Wakarusa called at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Hinderer on Sunday. You’d be surprised at the mUnher of members already enrolled In the Heatrola Free Cott chib. The membership fee is $2. The offer closes August 21. See Osborn and Son for particulars. Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Dull and daughter, Mrs. Ethel Maggert. and her daughter, Doris, of Cromwell called at the Fred Hinderer home on Sunday afternoon. Miss Fern Watts of South Bend and her sister. Mrs. Pfrimer Lewis and children of Elkhart are visiting here in the home of their parents. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Watts. Miss Shirley Miles returned home from Bourbon on Monday where she has been visiting her friend. Eileen Cremean. Rev. and Mrs. F. H. Cremean brought her home. Senator and Mrs. Arthur Robinson of Indianapolis the past week with Mr. and Mrs. Si mtns, at Wawasee Lake, who are occupying the late Bishop White cottage. Miss Ruth Lepper, assisted by Mrs. Ernest Bushong and Mrs. Wallace Howard, entertained at bridge at her home on Monday evening. The affair was in compliment to Mrs. Cox of Hammond, the Misses Margaret White and Mary Clark of Marion; Mrs. Cox is a sister of Mrs. Irving Bishop.
Gladiolus Exhibit I shall display my new and fancy Gladiolus at the Gibson Variety Store, on Saturday, August 21 1 have many new varieties that you will want in your Bring your flower loving friends with you. Free bouquets given with each order of $2 and over. Get my prices for Hyacinths, Tulips, Peonies, Cannes and hardy perennials. , s Don't fail to see this display.’ HENRY BEER Milford, Indiana
THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL
Mr. and Mrs. Homer MaGuire Os Grass Lake, Mich., came on Monday and spent the afternoon, with Mr. and Mrs. Fred Hinderer and family. Mrs. MaGuire was formerly Miss Lucinda Ott. Mrs. Garfield Walker and daughter, Mar*ha Louise, of Indianapolis came on Saturday and are visiting in the home of the former’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Levi Kitson, and other relatives here. Dr. and Mrs. Thomas Hoopin.garner of Indianapolis have been guests the past few days of Mrs. Lily Hoopingarner. The visitors have a cottage at Wawasee Lake and are spending some time there. Mrs. Vic Jeffrion and daughter, Mary and Mrs. W. M. Greenwahl and daughter. Ruth, of Toledo. Ohio, returned home on Friday after a ten *days’ visit here in the home of the former’s sister, Mrs. John Byland, Sr. Miss Majorie Miles of Chicago is spending a few days here in the home of her brother, P. H. Miles. She has returned from a sightseeing trip with friends to Washington, D. C. and other points of interest. Mrs. Norma Boland entertained at a bridge party on Tuesday evening at the Walter Weaver cottage on Lake Wawasee, in honor of Mrs. John Smith of Monon, Indiana. There were twenty guests present. Mr. and Mrs. Orqn Klink and Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Anderson arrived, here on Saturday night from New York City, where they spent the past two weeks buying stock for the Anderson & Klink millinery store in Springfield, Ohio. Mrs. Klink and little son remained here for a few* days’ visit with relatives. Mr. and Mrs. Chauncey Meyers and daughter of Stanley, Wis., and Cullen Grissamer and daughter of Goshen were in town on Saturday afternoon calling on friends. Both families lived in Syracuse at one time and are well remembered, by many friends. Mrs. Frank Younce spent Saturday night in Goshen with her granddaughter, Mrs. Garver. On Sunday they motored to Millersburg and spent Sunday with the former’s daughter, Mrs. Verd Shaffer. Her son. Vern Younce, of Gosherf brought his mother home Sunday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Hallie Holloway and two daughters, Maxine and Marilyn, are spending a few weeks with relatives in Fostoria, Ohio. Mr. Holloway is enjoying his vacation there from his duties here as a rural mail carrier on route three. They left here at 3:00 o’clock Saturday afternoon and reached Fostoria at 9:30 that evening. Mr. and Mrs. L T. Heerman, Mrs. James Traster and Mrs. Sol Miller were in Winona last Thursday attending a political meeting. They heard Senator Robinson of Indianapolis speak, after which they attended a reception given for Senator and Mrs. Robinson at the home of Mr. and Mrs. John O. Motto. There were several other state officials present at the reception. Miss Katherine Schmidt.daugh*er of Mr., and Mrs. G. G. Schmidt of Indianapolis, is entertaining at a house party this week at their cottage at Ideal Beach at Lake Wawasee. Her guests, members of Alpha Omicuon Pi Sorority, of De Pauw University, of which Miss Schmidt is a member, are: Misses Louise and Mildred Humphreys, Linton; Lorene Golden, Columbus; Dorothy Hays, Pendleton; Miriam Oilar. Greencastle; Katherine Davis. New Albany; Louise King. Chicago; and Mabel HursL Ft. Lauderdale, Florida. LIGONIER ARTIFICIAL ICE COMPANY Syracuse Branch Ice—Soft Drinks—Packing Salt Gas Drunks Phone 147 N. G. SKIDGEL Manager
1 IN OUR CHURCHES I Evangelical Church Attendance upon the worship of God’s house is one of the greatest influences for good and for development of ones life and character that this world affords, because of this fact it is very important that people attend the Sunday school and preaching service. Those who deliberately absent themselves from divine worship are doing the worst possible thing and placing a severe handicap upon their future. But God is continually calling attention to his warnings and has made it very clear as to the awful calamity that lies at the end of a life spent without God. Heed his gracious warning and go to church some where next Sunday Our Sunday school meets at 9:45 a. m. • Next Sunday at 10:45 a. m. Miss Ruth Blanchard, our delegate to Oakwood Convention, will give her report, and I am sure all our people, and other too, will want to hear her message. Come, and let us show her our appreciation. Other parts of the service will be shortened to give time for the report and the preaching service, if necessary. Evening worship at 7:30. Come and do your duty, and by your presence you will be an inspiration to some one else. Prayer services on Tuesday evenings at 7:30. B. C. Earhart, Pastor. United Brethren in Christ Sunday School at 9:45. Sermon at 7:30. Prayer service Tuesday at 7:30. Annual conference begins at Winona Lake August 31. A cordial invitation to all our services. Wm. L Eiler, Pastor. Methodist Episcopal Church Church School, 9:45. Morning Worship at 11:00. The Rev. Raymond Johnson of the Board of Temperance, Prohibition and Public Morals will give an address on the work of this board. We bid you “Welcome” to all the services of this church. Evening Worship, 7:30. , James H. Royer, Pastor. Grace Lutheran Church Are the Ten Commandments still practical in our modern day civilization? Would they likely be “Adopted” by a majority vote if submitted to the electorate of America for approval? Could you improve on them? If you have an opinion on these questions. lets see you at Sunday school next Sunday morning. There will be no church service next Sunday. R. N. McMichael, Pastor. Church of God Sunday school at 9:45 a. m. Preaching service at 10:45a. m. Christian Endeavor at 6:30 p. m. Preaching at 7:30 p. m. Floyd Hedges, Pastor. 666 is a Prescription for Colds, Grippe, Flu, Dengue Bilious Fever and Malaria It Kills the Germs.
YOU’RE SAFE IF I’TS A JET WHITE STORE! Jet White Groceteria WE SELL’FOR LESS We have just received word that our first car of Del Monte canned fruit has been shipped. Give us your order for what amount you will need the coming year.
PEACHES, Del Monte, No. 2| can, dozen $ 3.00 APRICOTS. Del Monte, No. 2| can, dozen 3.25 PINEAPPLE, Del Monte, (Sliced) No. 24 can, ROYAL ANN CHERRIES, Del Monte, No. 2| can, dozen 4225 BARTLETT PEARS, Del Monte. No. can, dozen X 25 PINEAPPLE, Del Monte, (Crushed]T No. 2| can. dozen 2JO I BLACKBERRIES, Del Monte. No. 2 1 can, dozen
We will also have MISSION BRAND of fruits, packed by the DEL MONTE packers, at a lower cost than the Del Monte brand. Place your orders now and pay for it when you receive it. Jet White Groceteria 11 Store*
1 “n~TiniiniinnTnrnTnnininTiTiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniin Filling Your Basket Here is a real pleasure, for you know that first of all, it is not going to cost you more than it should, and secondly, you can be sure that whatever you place in it will be of the best quality of Groceries, Meats, Vegetables or. Fruits Phone 15—We deliver J. E. GRIEGER Syracuse, Indiana
State Bank of Syracuse Capital and Surplus $50,000 ••OUR BANK” Safety Deposit Boxes For Rent
WINGED LIZZIES Man, all through the ages, had longed for wings. Soon he can get them F. O. B. Detroit. His ambitioh to soar among the clouds ihay soon be attained on t hesmall-payment-d o w n-$ 5-a-week system. Henry Ford has announced the perfection of a Ford airplane, quantity production of which he predicts is not many years away. Mr. Ford’s new invention will bring the cross country hop and Polar flight within the reach of the masses. It will sell for a few’ hundred dollars and relieve the congestion of streets and highways. Ten years hence our problem will be 'how many miles we can fly to a gallon, whether an owner of a flat roof has any right to put up No Parking signs and whether a party of airplane excursionists can be arrested for throwing picnic debris overboard. As the proposed winged Liz-
FRESH, GLEAN MEAT Await you at our market at all times. You will find the juiciest euts and the tenderest pieces here. We also handle smoked and dried meats and a general line of canned meats. KLINK BROS. MEAT MARKET
GOOSEBERRIES. Del Monte, No. 2 can, dozen LOGANBERRIES, Del Monte. No. 2 can, dozen • • SSR RED R-ASPBERRIES, Del Monte, No. 2 can, dozen BLACK RASPBERRIES, Del Monte, No. 2 can, dozen • • 2.60 DE LUXE PLUMS, Del Monte, No. 2| can, dozen 2.60 DEL MONTE CORN, No. 2 can, doz. LSO DEL MONTE PEAS, No. 2 can doz.
zies will carry only ope person necking and petting parties will be obliterated and deatfi lists confined to the sole operator. Look Look Look At Your Roof British Columbia XXXXX Red Cedar Shingles are now being unloaded in our yard. Priced to sell. See us at unce if you need a new roof. Smoker Lumber Co. Phone 7911. New Paris, Ind.
