The Syracuse Journal, Volume 20, Number 31, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 1 December 1927 — Page 5
Christmas Groceries and Fruits We will have a large stock of candies, nuts and fruits for your Christmas table. We can also supply your table with staple and fancy Groceries Quality-Service Seider & Burgener PURE FOOD GROCERS PHONES 82 AND 172 SYRACUSE INDIANA
Advertise in the Journal
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Way Down Yonder In The Corn Fields
•♦WI ’k'wn vocder in the com 4(4 Hehls”—that's where many *** of our cak>ries come from, m<'rt of" them in cans. Nearly every burnt garden has its patch of* sweet com. but even “com on the cob" has a very brief season. For all the millions who liae com and include it frequently m their diet, however, there is the resource of canned corn which it one of the most delicious of the many wholesome prepared foods which j contribute so much to making modem home making easy. The best canned corn is to be found in gold ename' lined cans. With this as a basis everyone can enjoy, all year around, the many tempting dishes, from stewed com to corn souflU or fritters, missing not a single calory. All the valuable carbohydrates. protein and fat are retained when com. on the cob or in the kernel, is prepared in one of the modern, scientific methods. It loses
Bought Your COAL? i [ Two ‘Triends*’ coming to visit you one | of these days —Mr. Jack Frost and Mr. { North Wind. And they are going to | insist that you step down to the cellar I and provide some warmth for the fanii-1 ly for the next four or five months! ■'■ . i Take our tip and order your coal now! M PROMPT DELIVERY 1 Try Crystal Block I LOW ASH least soot most heat I FRANK YODER PboM IS Syracuse. Mau*
none .of its nutritive Quality. Dietetic experts state that com, supplemented b> foods containing additional protein, mineral salts, and vitamin A furnishes a well-balanced ration. Such a ration may be secured by mixing canned com with milk, either evaporated or fresh. A recipe easy to prepare which is a general tavonte and contains this combination consists of j 1 can (No. 2) corn chopped fine 1 cup milk (or its equivalent in evaporated milk) I egg 1 teaspoon cornstarch seasoning Add milk to com. simmer ten minutes. Stir in seasoning and cornstarch blended with cold milk. Cook a few minutes then whip in egg yolk and lastly stiffly beaten white Bake in hot, well-grmed baking dish twenty minute*-
Correspondence |!u“ Neighborhood FOI B CORNERS James Myers was a Goshen caller Monday. Mr. and “Mrs. Clarence Snyder. Mr. and Mrs. Crist Darr called at the James Myers home Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Clint Callander and family spent Thanksgiving at the home of Mrs. Callander’s mother, Mrs. Viola Cory of* Milford. Mr. and Mrs. Maloy, Mr. and Mrs. McSweemey and other friends ate Thanksgiving dinner with Mr. and Mrs. Charles Purdumw Mr. and Mrs. Artie Geyer and daughter, Mrs. Mary Geyer, Mrs Jos. Bushong and two sons of Syracuse spent Monday evening with Mr. and Mrs. Earl Darr of near Goshen. Those who spent Thanksgiving with Mr. and Mrs. James Myers were Mr. and Mrs. James McKibbens. Mr. and Mrs. Noble Myers and two children. Mr. and Mrs. Cletus Myers all of Milford Mr. and Mrs. Crist Darr had for their Thanksgiving visitors Mr. and Mrs. Artie Geyer, Mr and Mrs. Joe Bushong and two sons of Syracuse. Mrs. Mary Geyer of near Milford. Miss Thelma Geyer, Charles Dethric Mr. and Mrs. Earl Darr of near Goshen. Miss Hess of Warsaw called in the afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Maloy en- ' tertained Ben Rosan and Jack Gorden of Chicago from Thursday till Tuesday and Mr. and Mrs. Carol and Mrs. Ben Rosan and two sons. Miss Jessie Rosan drove to the Maloy home from ; Chicago Monday afternoon. They all returned to their homes Tuesday morning. Douglas Fairbanks in “The Black Pirate” a screen masterpiece. All in natural colors —a real gem at Crystal. Ligonier, next week, Tuesday, Wednesday. Thursday, December 6,7 and 8. TIPPECANOE Mrs. George White spent Tuesday with her mother Albert Scott. Mrs. Stanley Morehead called on Mrs. J. L Kline Friday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. I. Kuhn called at the J. Garber home Tuesday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Light of Elkhart spent Wednesday night at the Emit Gordy home. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Bigler and family spent Thanksgiving with friends in Marshall county. Lelia. Mary and Jessie Baugher and Muri Herrur. spent Thanksgiving at the home of Mrs. William Ritter at Warsaw. M*. and Mrs. Clarence Mock and children. Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Kline and family, Jake and Martha Eberly were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Dan Eberly of Wawaka. o _ , Mrs. Karem Hartwick, widow of a lumberman and daughter of a Michigan pioneer lumberman, has purchased and presented to the state 8.000 acres of timber land, including the last block of virgin white pine, about 78 acres, which is to be converted into a state park. THE THOUGHT COUNTS Teacher: ‘‘Joseph, what are you going to give your little sister for a birthday present?** Joseph: “I dunno; last year 1 gave her the chicken-pox.” —o See Clara Bow in “Hula” at Crystal, Ligonier, next Sunday and Monday. December 4 and X You'll love this Ukulele Lady. o . — BIRTHS AND DEATH REPORT During the month of September 29 births and 19 deaths were reported in Kosciusko county. - O'--CARDBOARD—AII kinds of cardboard, suitable for drawing and maps, for sale at the Journal office. _________
Have You heard the Wonderful Buckingham ! Radio? I SOLD BY j Owen R. Strieby Phone 845 | Syracuse, Indiana.
THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL.
WHO BUYS BY MAIL? Students in an Ohio college have been making a survey of mail-order buying that is sure to be of interest to Syracuse people, and that ought to serve in showing the entire country at large the growing trend to this form of merchandising. The survey was made in a group of small towns, averaging from 1,000 to 5.000 population. It was found that the .families in them buy 7 per cent of thenhousehold furnishings, food and clothing from mail-order concerns. Os the families questioned. 46 per cent in in the income tax class, and women’s suits anc aresses and men s shoes and hardware form the largest pair of the total amount spent each year away from home. Asked how they learned of the goods and prices, 80 per cent testified that their know e lge was secured through mail order catalogues. Twenty per cent purchase through mail-order advertising in newspapers from tneir nearest large cities. Seven per cent of trade from the smaller towns to mail-order concerns doesn’t seem large. But t must be remembered that, no rural residents were included in the survey. The percentage of mail-order buyers is far greater ; n rural districts. Whether that •s largely due to the home merchant’s failure to advertise for the business in his immediate territory as he should, we can only guess. At any rate the survey. though far from complete serves to show that loyalty to home institutions and home interests is by no means as great as it could be. This applies to
a w cw > ft. v>.Vb vaßSk IL3 FJaSsJv WAXa y • K z Ls a J mjßmF// E? » # bHLv X r jft r ****** ■ m Enjoy A Red Arrow Christmas Big Holiday Doings A big Red Arrow Auction will add to the holiday cheer. And when we say big, we mean BIG! Santa Claus will empty his whole sack at the Red Arrow Places, toys, presents (useful and otherwise), something for everybody. You know what fun Red Arrow Auctions are; be sure you don t miss this big Xmas Auction! It’ll be the best yet! The Xmas Red Arrow Auction will be held on Saturday, Dec. 17 4 Bags of Gold Will be sold in January to organizations. No Auction Articles will be sold to individuals in January. RED ARROW PLACES > d Dollar here~ you. get a The Royal Store Osborn & Son g Thornburg Drug Co. Hollett Motor Sales j# Hu ud Inrtructioiu copyriihted a»l Pateated. Red Arrow Service Co.. SpringfieU,
all kinds of business, and means to get your printing of the home printers, as much as it means to get merchandise from the home merchants. In other words, it applies to each and all alike. > Q. HUNTING, FISHING LICENSES Circuit Clerk R. H. Butler has received notice from the state bureau of conservation that the 1928 hunting and fishing licenses will be issued to the office about the middle of December and that although the new licenses may be sold before the first of the year, they will not be recognized until January 1. lhe soldiers and sailors’ permanent licenses will not be changed. o NOTICE TO HEIBS. CREDITORS, ETC. In the matter of the estate of Mary E. Butt, deceased . Tn the Kosciusko Circuit Court. September Term. 1927. Notice is hereby, given, that Maggtie Butt McClellan, as executrix of the estate of Mary E. Butt deceased. hast presented and filed her accounts and vouchers ,in final settlement ctf said estate, and that the same will come up for examination and action of said Circuit Court on the 29th day of December. 1927, at which time all heirs, creditors, or legatees of said estate are required to appear in said Court and show cause, if any there be. why said account and vouchers should not be approved. Dated at Warsaw. Indiana, this 18th day of November, 1927. RUSSELL H BUTLER. Clerk Kosciusko Circuit Court. Geo. L. Xanders. 31-3 t Attorney 'for Estate. O A classified ad will sell it.
iKLINK BROS.] MEAT MARKET I I ; * * Pork Chops 25c | | Pork Roast 25c * S Veal Stew-—.— ,15c * I Veal Roast3oc | f Veal Chops3oc | | MONARCH COFFEE, lb 50c | -S Sausage i...25e ; Hoekless Picnic Ham 25c * Smoked Ham Sliced ... .59e ! Pork Shoulder Sliced ..25c | t Half or Whole Ham ... .35c j Sliced Bacon3sc, 50e | * Pork Steak, lb. 35c Empire Brisket Bacon 25c g t 8 * DRESSED CHICKENS | | Compare the quality aod prices. &’ a * WWO##*^* - -#*** s^*^****^^-^^*^***-^^*^*^*^**’^*I^**^*'*
NIP COLDS IN THE BUD 11118 is the season for colds. Some are slight, some are heavy, while some are fatal. Few would be fatal, however, if they were caught in time. Forget all about the ridicule thrown at old fashioned remedies, and whenever a cold threatens you j drink a good hot lemonade, take a mustard foot-bath, and get a j good night’s sleep. You will be j surprised to find how often you j have killed the cold in its in-I fancy. Next morning, if your cold is not better, spend a day in bedone of Nature’s best cures. And call the doctor before that cold becomes serious.
102 YEARS OLD I Greensburg, Ind., Nov. 25. — I Rev. James. P. Lathrop was 102 1 years old Thursday. Surrounded , by relatives and friends, he obt served his birthday with a i Thanksgiving dinner at the home of his daughter, Mrs. John S. ■ Shannon. Mr. Lathrop is: 1 The oldest member of the ! Knights Templar. , The oldest alumnus of the Unii versify cf Indiana. The oldest minister in the InI diana M. E. Conference. The oldest retired bank president in the United States. The minister is in good health. He has gained what he calls his “second sight” and reads newspa- » pers without glasses.
