The Syracuse Journal, Volume 20, Number 30, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 24 November 1927 — Page 5
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Thanksgiving Baskets Place a basket of fruits and nuts on the dining room table Thanksgiving day. It will provide a most attractive decoration. Then with groceries purchased at this store your Thanksgiving dinner is complete. « Quality-Service Seider & Burgener PURE FOOD GROCERS PHONES 82 AND 172 SYRACUSE INDIANA
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t A Dollar Dinner For Four Cream of Atparagut Soup Rice and Salmon Mold 9 : .th Cream Sauce Jalliod Sauerkraut Salad with Maponnaue Peach Shortcake Cofee
OVP has advantages for both the elaborate and expensive dinner and for the least costly ■ml It has stimulating properties which prepare the stomach for what b to follow, it satisfies the most pressing pangs of hunger without overloading the stomach and so prevents overeating of rich and expensive food, or, in the case of a limiter! food budget of the meat or main dish. Hence, smaller servings satisfy the appetite. In the menu above we suggest a cream soup because it is filling though not considered strictly a dinner soup. A can of soup costs ten cents and wit! serve four people A can of pink salmon costs 17 cents, one-halt pound of rice 3 cents, one-half can of sauerkraut 754 cents; gelatine, one
Let Us Keep You Warm This Winter You know how uncomfortable it is when a cold snap comes and you are out of coal. Then, of course, you want coal in a hurry. Telephone us' in such an emergency and we will deliver your coal at once. Try Crystal Block LOW ASH LEAST SOOT MOST HEAT FRANK YODER MmmtM Synw, Indiana
table, poon S cents, mavonnaise cents, lettuce 5 cents, small can of sliced I peaches IS cents, flour 3 cents, coffee 4 cents, one large can of evaporated milk II cents, and one-quarter pound ‘of butter 13 cents. This totals 97 cents leaving 3 cents for salt, vinegar for the salad and other ingredients such as baking powder. The large sire can of evaporated milk is sufficient for the cream sauce, the shortcake and even for whipping to serve with the shortcake Rice and falnum Mold- Boil onehalf pound of rice and drain. Corobne with one can of salmon, flaked and free from skin and bones. Combine with a thick eream sauce and steam for one hour. Unmold, pour remaining cream sauce over and garnish with parsley.
I Correspondence i *** Neighborhood WEST END i Joe Ketring of South Bend ' spent Saturday here with friends. Mr. and Mrs. Jess Metz spent Sunday in Elkhart with Mrs Lizzie Troup. Mr. and Mrs. John McGarity spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Joe Jarvis near Bristol. Mrs. John Arnold spent the week end in Mishawaka with Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Roades. Anna Mercia Garhart is very ill at the home of her grandpa rents, Mr. and Mrs. Silas Gilbert Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Rowda Haugh spent Sunday in South ! Bend with Mr. and Mrs. Albert Douglas. A number of friends and relatives attended the funeral of Mrs. Ira Weybright at Milford Friday afternoon. Those from here who attended the funeral Sunday of Mrs. Lottie Bunker at Warsaw were Mrs. Dan Searfoss. Mr. and Mrs. Wm Darr, Mr. arid Mrs. W. F. Sheffield. Mr. and Mrs. Eston McClintic. Mr. and Mrs. Emit Weaver Mrs. Fster Brown. Delos Weaver and Eugene Sheffield. FOUR CORNERS Mrs. McSweemey was a Milford caller Monday afternoon. Mary Ulery called at the James Myers home Sunday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Clint Callander were in Elkhart Monday, on business. Mrs. Darr called at tab Maloy and Myers homes Monday afternoon. Wm. Fisher of Wawasee snent Sunday afternoon with his sister Mrs. Myers. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Bushong and two sons of Syracuse called at the home of Artie Geyer Sunday evening. Frank Maloy and Howard McSweemey spent Saturday night and Sunday with relatives at Chicago Heights. Mr. and Mrs. I atone Jensen and Mr. and Mrs. Dean Jengen and family were visitors with friends in Ohio Sunday. Mary Ulery Is doing house work for Mrs. Guy who is afflicted with rheumatism for the past Several weeks. Mr. and Mrs. Crist Darr attended the funeral, of John Fby at Burbon. Thursday afternoon. Mr. Eby was a cousin of Mrs. Darr.. WHITE OAK Mrs. Burton Howe is spending a few days in Ohio with friends. Mrs. Lesta Stiffler of Syracuse spent Saturday night with her son Chester Stiffler. Mr. and Mrs. Dewey Coy and family spent Saturday evening with Mr. and Mrs. Chester fler.. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Mathews and Mr. and Mrs. Paul Buhrt and son Lewis were in Warsaw Saturday. Mrs. James Dewart and Mrs. Ernest Mathews spent Monday with Mrs. Jacob Bucher and faMr. and Mrs. Dewey Coy spent Sunday evening with the former’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Sylvester Coy. Those who Spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Dewart of Milford were Mr. and Mrs. Guy Fisher and family and Mr. and Mrs. Lawrance Dewart.
Have You heard the Wonderful Buckingham Radio? SOLD BY Owen R. Strieby Phone 545 ' Syracuse, ladiaa*.
Say It With Flowers When in need of cut flowers for your party or reception, or a plant for a friend, phone 90. We can get you what you want on short notice. We are handling all kinds of flowers and plants at our •tore. Syracuse Dry Cleaners ~ , « < ■ ....e,. ii > ii
THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL
remember, all is not lost Because something has happened to you which interferes with your efficiency is no prool .hat all is lost. There is nothing unconqueribie to human spirit There is no truer saying than, ‘Where there is life there is hope.” The great problem is to utilize what remains of your life and keep up a bold front. It never pays to give up. I ife is like a coin, stamped on both sides. On one side is the face of smiling fortune ,on the other, the image of frowning reverses. Sometimes one side lies up and sometimes the other and sometimes the two seem to spin, alternating continually, ut the two are always there in every life, side by side . So one-half of the art of life is knowing how to meet mis fortune and the other half un derstanding how to treat pros perity. Near Lincoln, Nebraska, a nine-teen-year-old boy, named Ed ward Smith, lost both his arms in an accident when he was helping shuck corn on his father’:farm. • With that accident most of th< means of earning a living open to him the day before were ob literated. There were a few things that he could do. Yet om of these he did superlatively, well.
Providing himself with artificial arms, he became a salesman for a Kansas City manufacturer. Later he was sent to Europe to open a branch factory. He became a success in spite of a well nigh insurmountable handicap. In Buffalo. Michigan, on the shore of Lake Michigan, lives Joe Jones. From childhood he had had a crippled leg, with one ankle that is stiff and without feeling. Yet he has saved five people from drowning at the beaches near his home. For nineteen years Magdalen Reans of Pittsburgh, has been confined to one room with a nerve center in her back deranged so the slightest movement causes agony. During this time <he has written stories and poems that have been widely published and have given robust neople enjoyment and encouragement. Such items bring strength for meeting our own troubles and entarge our respect for the spirit of human nature.
OLD TIME RISKING BEE The old husking bee seems to be a thing of the past and with its departure has gone a lot of happy recreation. There was a time when no harvest season was considered closed without one or more of these frolics, when the entire neighborhood was invited and everyone attended. One man was selected to have all the corn on stalk hauled into the barn and then the fun began. The young men started in to see who could husk the most, knowing the winner would be permitted to escort the belle of the neighborhood to her home in the evening. The elderly gents went at it more slowly, for constant years of the same work had stiffened their wrists and made the job something different from pleasure. But they enjoyed it as they would hold up various ears and comment as to why they were not well filled or why different soil would grow better corn. The girls also took part and the additions they made to the piles of husked corn was no small item. There was always plenty to eat at one of the old time husking bees and in the evening they gathered about the fireplace or stoves to enjoy the pop-com balls and candy that had been made during the day by the ladies who did not take an active part in the husking. Today, the modem corn pickers are doing a large part of the work which used to be done at the husking bees. Again it seems as if, “Them days are gone forever.” ,
It is stated that there are 125,000 idle men in Detroit awaiting the reopening of the Ford plants this month. O ■— “The Road to Romance” with Ramon Navarro, star of “Ben Hur” at Crystal, Ligonier, next Tuesday and Wednesday, November 29 and 30.
THE BIGGEST AIRPLANE There is now being assembled in Suffolk, England, according to London dispatches, the largest airplane ever built. It is expected to carry five tons of bombs or 40 men and will weigh 25 tons. The wing spread is 150 feet, which is about the length of an average American building lot. i he monster stands 35 feet above the ground, which is higher than an ordinary two-story house. Will it fly? The engineers think so. but nobody will know until it is tried. The structural design may be all right and yet the human factor may fail—the thing may be too hard to handle safely. It! should be steadier in the air, once up than smaller planes, but there will be a peril in taking off and landing so huge a craft. We are familiar with the elaborate precautions that must be taken with giant steam-ships in docking; yet they may lie moved slowly, and the nature of an airplane forbids slowness. The bigger and heavier the flying machine, the harder it will fall —if it falls. Yet this experiment may succeed. And what then. Is there any limit to the possible of an airplane? Shall we have them roaring over our heads as big as winged and engined churches?
*' ' A j D ES a# wLO Special Announcement •. f The January Red Arrow Auction will be for organizations only. There will be no Auction Articles for individual bidding. The cost of the individual Auction Articles will be put up in cash for organizations. The cash wilb be divided into several amounts. The organization that bids highest will get the larger amount. The organization that places the second highest bid will get the second cash prize and so on. WSTER X ciTtfl Qet> your The Registration Book will be opened on January 4th and remain open for one week. RED ARROW PLACES > *‘Men a Dollar * a The Royal Store Osborn & Son J Thornburg Drug Co. Hollett Motor Sales - Plan a UX-J-WjUti VkA, S^iogfMJ, U 4. I
{KLINK BROS.i | MEAT MARKET i | Pork Chops 25c | jg Pork Roast.2sc § | Zeal Stew.— 15c * * Veai Roast3oc I # & § Veal Chops 30c t MONARCH COFFEE, ib J 50c * * , I # Sausage 25c | Hockless Picnic Ham 25c * § Smoked Hani Sliced . ~.50c I Pork Shoulder Sliced ..25c § Half or Whole Ham ....35c ! 'diced Bacon 35c. 50c # * Pork Steak, ib3sc 1 Empire Brisket Bacon 25c * $ S | # * f DRESSED CHICKENS Compare the quality and prices. ~ • «
When the government started proceedings against Fall and Sinclair in the Teapot Dome case, Harry’ M. Blackmer said to be the chief manipulator as head of a phony company’ to put the deal over, suddenly left this country. He has been served with a subpoena but has failed to appear. The Court has issued an order declaring him in contempt and his property is subject to confis-
■' in addition to a fine of sll'o 000. James E. O'Neil president of the Prairie Oil and Gas Company left at the same time. The last heard of him was in Czechoslovakia, but government agents are on his trail and will get him sooner or later. o RIBBONS—We sell ribbons for L. C. Smith, Underwood and Oliver Typewriters. Journal office.
