The Syracuse Journal, Volume 20, Number 23, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 6 October 1927 — Page 4

THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL Published every Thursday at j Syracuse. Indiana. Entered as second-class matter on May 4th. 1908. at the pastoffice at Syracuse. Indiana, under the Act ot Congress of March 3rd. 1879. SUBSCRIPTION RATES One year, in advance ..........32.00 Six months • 1-00 Three months ................. .50 Single Copies .05 H. A. Buettner, Editor and Publisher Clara O. Buettner, Associate Editor Thursday. October 6. 1927 “I biw Nt vlit tit tntfe Blf It, Hill Itis'tvu till ti

KEEPING A TOWN SNAPPY No business inan in any town should allow a newspaper pub? - lished in his town to go without his name and business being mentioned somewhere in its col* uinns. This applies to all kinds of business general stores, dry goods, groceries, furniture dealers, manufacturing establishments, automobile dealers, mechanics. professional men. druggists. and. in fact, all classes of business men. This does ■ not mean you should Rave a wjiole or half or even a quarter page ad in each issue of the paper, but your name and business should lie mentioned, if you do not use more than a two line spacer. A stranger picking up a newspaper should be able to tell what business is represented in the town by looking at the business mention in 4 the paper. This is the best possible town advertiser. The nian who does not advertise his business\ioes an injustice to himself andthe town. The man who sharing the business that Tomes to town but refuses to advertise his own is not a valuable addition to any town. 'The snap and life of a town depends upon the wide awake liberal advertising men. Its the truth. — O ’TT—NO MORE SCHOOL OUNCES Nowadays when a child does poor work in school he isn't put in a corner on a dunce’s stool. He is sent to a competent physician for a physical examination. If teeth or eyes or adenoids need attention, they are given it. and usually the child goes back to school and progresses normally. If the physical examination fails to reveal the cause of his backwardness, the phychologist may be called upon He looks into the child’s menftd life and often finds that some home maladjustment or some trivial mistaken notion hks set the child off * to a had start on the road to learning. These things are taken care of. the parents are talked to about handling the child, and in most cases he is fitted into his proper place in school and all goes well thereafter. Some people think all this is “stuff” and foolishness. It is not. Much of it is still experimental. But it is reaching in the right direction, seeking the right way to make education effective and joyful as it ought to be. O -—5 - FIFTY-FIFTY After all is said and done, life here on earth is just a game of “give and take.” If we are not willing to take a joke we should not give one. If we are not willing to allow others their opinions we should never express our own. If we want folks to love us we should love them. This world is full*of goodness if we look for it. And if we look for trouble we are pretty sure to find it. The sweetest pathway of life is the path of service and not of selfishness, the path of love and not of hate; the path of forgiveness and not of revenge. O -> In the Orient the kiss is considered vulgar or at b ast naughty. In some civilised countries the kiss is considereJ merely a method o f swapping germs. Many of us. toothless and rheumatic, can rememWr when a kiss was a very prim surrender of the girl’s heart. But kisses like legs, are so common now that they have lost all “kick.” Even the movies, compelled to lengthen its duration, seem to have overplayed the game. Well, perhaps we’re getting too old or too sophisticated to experience a thrill unless administered by the hind heels of a Missouri mule. — —o— Anyone may obtain a 2.000pound buffalo by paying shipping costs from Yellowstone National Park on application to the Department of the Interior. We have an over production in buffalo. # If you miss me Big Parade* you II miss the greatest picture ever made. .See it at Crystal. Ligonier. next week. October 11. 12. 13 and 14. four days. Show starts at SiMk *

DISHES Have just gotten in a shipment of beautiful Ivory dinner wear. Prices are as low as usually charged for inferior goods. Waverly Tea Cup and Saucer. 6 cups, 6 saucers SI.OO . Dinner Plates, 9 inch, new style ' ■' -■ A each 15c Cereal Bowls, inch, each 10c Jewell Salads. 8 and 9 inch width, deep and desireable, each 15c and 20c J Only occasionally can we get this quality to sell at above prices. Big Heavy St. Denis style cup. special as long as they last, each 10c -The-— ROYAL STORE W. «. CONNOLLY Syracuse North Webster i ■“ ' ■ j REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS I I (By H. C. Frater) | Perry E. Mock et al to Fieldon Sharp. 2 &.. sec. 6. Turkey Creek township. SBOO. Cletus Miller. Guard, to Fieldon Sharp. 2 a., sec. 6 Turkey Creek township. $26. Chas. C. Bachman to Roy and Mabel J. Rensberger. E pt., lot 6. Potawatomi, Park. $l5O. Jacob B. Neff to Camp Alexander Mack (incorp.) 33 a., sec. 22. Van Buren township. $3 300. OYSTERS An oyster lays about 60.000.000 eggs a year. If just one oyster were left alone by all and sundry, says Professor Lull, until it had great-great-grandchildren, their shells would majte a pile eight times the size of the earth. Fortunately, the* infant mortality rate among oysters is very high. "

BUCKINGHAM RADIO ALSO SERVICE AND SUPPLIES || Owen.R. Strfeby n Phone No. 845

IN OUR CHURCHES Evangelical Chtfreh Next Sunday is our Rally Day and we are anticipating this as one of the greatest days in the history of the church. Sunday School will convene kt 9:45. Mr. P. W. Soltau is the Superintendent and each class is fitted with a good competent teacher, who will give you a hearty welcome. Following’ the study of the Sunday School lesson there w ill be a program with good prospects of an orchestra present. At the noon hour there will be a basket diffner in the basement of the church. At two o’clock the Rev. G. W. Shaneyfelt, pastor of the Evangelical Church of Nappanee, Indiana will speak to us. Our aim is every member present, on time. Come help us make this the greatest of days, remember that, “A mer\becomes crooked by following t lib-line of least resistance.” oS does man. Get the church going habit. Preaching service at 7 p. m. with sermon by the pastor. R. G. Foust. Pastor. — Methodist Episcopal Church The Cifurch School at 9:45. Morning Worship at 11:00. Epworth League at 6:00. Miss Lillian Hamman, Leader. Evening worship at 7:00. Rev. R. J. Hutslnpillar of Ben ton will speak at both the morning and evening services. James H. Royer, Pastor. Grace Lutheran Church Sunday School at 9:45. Mrs. Roy Riddle. Superintendent of Sunday School. Last Sunday we had a splendid Sunday School. Let us keep it that way. No preaching services. Friday night will be open house night at the parsonage for all the members and friends of the Church and Sunday School. A fine time is anticipated. A. H. Arbaugh. Pastor. —__o S. CLASS MEETING The Young Crusaders Sunday School Class of the United Brethren church held a monthly meeting at the home of Wilma Geiger recently. , Those present were: Evelyn and Bob Strock. Mary Darr, Man- Druckamiller, I Wendell and Elsie NicodemUs, [ Charles and James McClintic, i Wayne Fisher, Laneta Smith and Ruth Culler. Pl RCH tSEIM’OAL YARD Frank Yoder has purchased! the Wm. Snavely coal yard and took possession last week. PUBLIC SALE A. M Ripperton Will have a public sale of household goods at the Guy Ott residence on Saturday. October 15.

BASE-BALL THE WORLD SERIES Via RADIO at the residence of A. W. Strieby U Are Welcome OWEN R. STRIEBY

■ THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL

- - — | Local News and Personal- Items Mrs. Guy Fisher spent Wednes- i day with her sister, Mrs. Frank; Bushong. The Misses Violette and Vera O’Dell of Elkhart spent the week end at their home here. Mr. arid Mrs. George W. Jacobs of Elkhart were Sunday guests of Mr. and Knox H. Stetler. A. J. Thibodeaux and his nephew, Byron Connolly, are spending a few days sightseeing in Chicago. Alonzo Hire has gone to Elkhart where he will reside in the • home of his brother, Wesley Hire. I Mrs. Rose Tucker left on Tuesday to spend the winter with relatives in Los Angeles, Calif. Mrs. Lucy Butt was a guest at a house party at Ligonier which was? given by Mrs. Will Sack on Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Myrl Mums of Jackson. Mich., were Week end guests of Mr. and Mrs. Knox Stetler, Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Darr and daughters Mary and Thelma, spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Or'anda Plank. Mrs. J. H. Bowser went to Cleveland. Ohio, on Saturday to ' isit in the home of her son, Harold Bowser. Charles Gross of North W’ebster and Guy Bushong of this city visited the school at NewCarlisle on Friday-. Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Stein have closed their summer home on the north side of the lake and have returned to Chicago. Mrs. W. C. Gants is in Indianapolis, where she will spend three weeks visiting in the home‘ of her brother, C. A. Woods. Ed. Craft went to Morgantown, Ind., on Monday to spend, part of the winter in the home of his niece. Mrs. Josie Yount. Mrs. Minerva Benner entertained about of her relatives at her hgke on Sunday-. The occasion was her birthday. Mr. and Mrs. John Schick moved their household goods to Elkhart on Monday. Mr. Schick has secured steady- employment there. The Past Chief's Club met on I Tuesday at the home of Mrs. Ed. ■ Unrue, with a good attendance. ! A pot luck dinner was enjoyed by- all. Mrs. Nora Wilcox is back in the Bachman Dry Goods Store after spending the summer employed at Sargent’s hotel at Wawasee Lake. On Sunday. October 9. Mr. and Mrs. G. H. Bailey will celebrate their sixtieth wedding anniversary. They invite friends, w-ho care to call, to come in the afternoon. Mr. and. Mrs. C. M. Vawter left on Monday for Baltimore, Maryland, to attend the “Exposition of the Iron Horse,” which is |?eing sponsored by the B. & O. railroad. Mr. and Mrs. D. L. Brown and Mrs. Maude Culler spent Sunday in Huntington, visiting in the the homes of Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Ellett and Mr. and Mrs. Chester Ackley. Glenn Walton of this city and Miss Fay Basil of Elkhart w-ere Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Joe Bushong. The dinner was given in honor of Mr. Bushong’s birthday. Mrs. Lucy Butt and Mrs. C. H. King went to Indianapolis on Wednesday to attend the Grand Chapter of the Pythian Sisters lodge in session there today' (Thursday) and Friday. The ladies went as representatives from the local lodge. They will return home on Saturday.

We are all buyers and sellers. We try to find a good market for our products. We know a great deal about the quality of what we sell. We know that those who buy are not always in position to judge what we hive to sell. X o * In order to produce and market good coal there must be a fair price. Inferior coals are oftenest marketed by cutting the price of good coal. That is true of all merchandise. When you buy coal, judge the price by the same standards you expect to be used when you sell your own labor or your own product. • It is economical to pay a fair price for a good article. You profit in the real value you obtain and — you help your dealer to elrminate sharp practice in his trade generally. FRANK YODER SKI'ESSOR TO WM. SNAVELY Pkose 92 Try I Tm □□EjaDDroaaDCTOaaDDDDaaaDD

Miss Mary Bushong, teacher; of mathematics in the New Carlisle High School .spent the week end with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Bushong. Dr. and Mrs. B. F. Hoy have [returned home from Baltimore, Maryland, where they attended the “Exposition of the Iron Horse,” which was sponsored by the B. & O. railroad. Mrs. Frances A. Brady of Ben- j ton Harbor, Mich., visited friends here on Friday and Saturday. She also called at the Journal office and renewed her subscription for another year. Mrs. G. H. Bailey accompanied Rev. Alonzo Nicodemus to GalIveston, Ind., on Monday and call--led on Rev. and Mrs. Wm. L. lEiler. Rev. Nicodemus was called there to conduct a funeral. Mrs. Sarah C. Sloan went to Oaklandon. Ind., last Thursday to attend a meeting of the Universalist church. - From there she went to Eldorado, Ohio, to visit in the homes of her sisters. Mr. and Mrs. D. R. Pomeroy and three grandchildren of Jackson, Mich., and Wm. Kingsley of Kendallville spent the week end at the home of the latter’s daughter, Mrs. A. A. Pfingst and family. / Miss Janice Rapp left on Sunday for Chicago, where she will be a student again this year at the Sherwood Musical School. Her place in the telephone office as bookkeeper is filled by Miss Alice Mann. > Mr. and Mrs. Harry McClintic and daughter, Naomi Jean, of Kalamazoo. Michigan, were guests here on Sunday in the home of Mrs. McClintic’s mother, Mrs. Lydia Deardorff and other relatives. Mrs. S. C. Lepper and son Robert accompanied the former’s ; daughter. Mrs. J. Arthur Hill, to j Bloomington. HL, on Sunday [where Mrs. Hill will reside. Mrs. | Lepper and son returned home on Monday night. Mrs. Frank Younce, Mr. and Mrs. Madison McPherson,, Mr. and Mrs. Qee Hibschman and daughter Martha and John Ward attended the funeral of Mrs. Younce’s cousin. Mrs. John Ott. near Marion on Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Orlando Davis and daughters Doris and Mary Ellen of Goshen, Mr. and Mrs. i Clifford Hoover and children, Ar- ! lene and Loran Lee of South j Bend spent' Sunday with the lai dies’ parents, Mr. and Mrs. • George Stansbury. H. A. Buettner went to Indii anapolis on Monday, where he attended the Grand Lodge meeting of the Knights of Pythias, which was held in that cityon Tuesday and Wednesday. He went as a representative from Kosciusko Lodge, No. 230. Those wljo spent Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Bushong were: Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Dausman and Kate Boyer of Saranac, Mich., Mr. and Mrs. Joe Good and two sons Emerald and Richard of South Bend and Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Bushong and family of this city. Rev. and Mrs. J. H. Royer and Rev. and Mrs. Raymond Johnson left early on Tuesday morning on a motor trip to Washington, D. C. Rev. and Mrs. Johnson reside in Washington, but have been spending their summer here at Wawasee Lake.. They are returning home, and Rev. Mrs. Royer are going to Washington with them to spend a few days in their home. They will also spend a short time with Mr. Royer’s sister, Mrs. R. W. Norton, in Pittsburg, Penn. i NEURITIS And neuralgia can be over come by my treatments. See me now. Dr. Warner. Phone 176. Goshen. Indiana.

tfr Y In Your Home— Keep a basket of fresh fruit in your home, always. Eat plenty of fruit each day, and see that your family does likewise. It will mean better health for all—and besides it’s so good this season of the year. 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

PECULLAR BREED OF FOMTLS A peculiar breed of fowls called Naked Neck has come to this country from Austria, where it is said to have originated. The name comes from the fact that the fowls are destitute of feathers from within aft inch or tw-o back of the head down the entire length of the neck and on to the shoulders. This peculiarity of plumage is very marked, and the neck and shoulders have an unnatural appearance. They are not attractive; in fact, they are* vert- unattractive, and the peculiar sensation to the hand when grasping the naked portion of the neck is very unpleasant. The skin of the neck is verysmooth. and. when exposed to the sun during the summer months, turns red and has a rawappearance, as if the blood were gathered beneath and close to the skin. They are very hardy; are but seldom seen, and have been bred in Austria only as novelties. —J —o • MAKES LONG RUN LONDON.—The longest nonstop run made by any train in the world is in the comparatively small country of Great Britain. The London and Northwestern Flying Dutchman, on its trip to Edinburgh makes only one stop, at Newcastle, 263- from London. o Governors of thirty-five states have agreed to co-operate with Secretary Hoover in the effort to interest business and commercial organizations in the matter of lettering roofs of buildings to serve as guides for aviators.

Syracuse CASH MEAT MARKET Phone 114- • We Deliver’ —; -p Bring in your keys and see if you hold the Master Key that makes you the possessor of the beautiful set of Hartman Chinaware. Beef Roast, lb. 20c Heavy Rib Boiling Beef, lb 16c Bacon, half or whole slab, lb._ 35c Lean Pork Roast, lb 30c Picnic Hams, lb 25c

MICHAEL COULDN’T WAIT “You’re back early, Michael,” remarked the farmer's wife to the hired man, who had been to a theatre in the town. The other noded a silent agreement and proceeded to enjoy a pipe and study his program. “Enjoy the play?” asked the woman. “No.” replied the man. “Didn’t see the end.” “Why not?” “Well, take a look at the program here. The second act takes place in two years’ time.” O : Glenn Frank, of the University of Wosconsin, has made an intensive study of suicides and finds that one of every four suicides are women, that suicides are more frequent in summer than in winter and in prosperity than in poverty. Suicide is commoner among Prostestants than among Roman Catholics or Jews, and among educated classes than among illiterate. It is twice as high among unemployed, but the general ratio is steadily decreasing. The world’s money is no longer redeemable in gold. Most of bur rfioney is based on stocks, bonds, bills receivable and even on food stuffs. In some quarters there is talk of boosting the price of gold in order to boost prices of commodities. The sooner we get away from speculation in money values the more stable business will become. It would be an exceedingly* dangerous venture to rock that boat just at this time.