The Syracuse Journal, Volume 20, Number 23, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 4 October 1928 — Page 5

Puts it up I m f to the Cook | . S>, I. , -■ | A bill of groceries from our store | puts it squarely up to the cook. | There can be absolutely no excuse | for a poor dinner prepared from | groceries purchased from us. | Nourishing foods were nevermore g necessary than at this time, when | you need to conserve every ounce I of your strength. Every article § of food in the store is selected | with care and an eye to the health 1 2 of our customers. 1 E - Fresh Vegetables j and Fruits | 2 v K Seider & Burgener j PURE FOOD GROCERS PHONIC 82 AND 172 SYRACUSE INDIANA |

FARM EARNINGS The Department of Agriculture compiled reports from 13,859 farms in all parts of the country of an average size of 275 acres,, and an average t investment of $15,445. The average gross receipts were $2,505 and the average cash operating expenses for 1927 Were $1,457

leaving a net return of $1,048. The expenses, however, do not include interest on mortgages nothing for truck or auto power and only $397 for hired labor. For several years the Depart ment endeavored' to introduce < comprehensive bookkeeping sys tern for farmers,, but, the poor man has been too busy to give it necessary attention.

TSIOW OKI £XHIBITIO*I NEW MODELS BY DURANT The Greatest Value in a Low Priced Four THE NEW DURANT FOUR is more beautiful in line and color, more complete and refined in equipment, more sensational in performance, and unbelievably quiet in body construction and mechanical operation —without any increase in price. The Most Luxuriates Low Priced Six W THE NEW DURANT SIX CYLINDER Series “60” offers you a Longer Wheelbase, a more perfectly balanced motor, a more beautiful body, more complete equipment, at lower prices. t They Climax a Brilliant Season’s Offerings COM£ AKD see THEM HOLLETT MOTOR SALES SYRACUSE, INDIANA.

Correspondence Vh. m Neighborhood 1 1 ! WEST END Mrs. John Duker was very ill; with heart trouble Friday night, j Mr. and Mrs. Guy Morehouse, J Mrs. Solomon Rowdabaugh spent j Sunday with friends near Col- j umbia City. Mr. and Mrs. Charley Wey-j bright and children spent Sun-! day afternoon with W. H. Wey-' bright and wife. I Mrs. Sarah Lingofelter, is \ spending the week in Goshen with her granddaughter, Mrs. Chester Cripe. We regret very much to learn of the severe illness of Mrs. Leontine Quackenbush at the Goshen hospital. Herman Doll, son of Mr. and Mrs. Theris Doll, was operated on for ear trouble in Elkhart Saturday. He is doing nicely. Mrs Roe Halser of Milford spent Saturday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charley Lutes. Miss Dartha Lutes." remains the same. Mrs. John Kitson is spending a few weeks in Henry Va., with her son Chester Kitson. From there she will go to Florida to spend the winter. The little daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Bob Rymon, who was in the Riley hospital in Indianapolis three weeks, has returned home much improved. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Simpson, Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Simpson and children of North of Goshen spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Rowdabaugh. Those who spent Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Claud Niles, were Mr. and Mrs. Donald Wevbright, of Nappanee. Mr. and Mrs. John Honer and children of South Bend. Revival meetings will begin at the Bethany church on Sunday. Rev. Fike of Ohio, will have charge of the work. Coipe *to the meeting and bring your friends. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Skear of Fort Wayne, Mr. and Mrs. Link Marten of Milford, Mrs. Mm. Darr, Mr. and Mrs. Wm. E. Shes-

THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL

field called on Mr. and Mrs. Winfield Angle at Warsaw, Sunday afternoon. Those who attended funeral of G. Stanly Sheffield Sunday at Warsaw were Mr. and Mrs. Albert Skear of Ft. Wayne, Mrs. Emma Darr, Mrs. Dan Searfoss, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Brown, Ehunett Weaver, Mr. and Mrs. Wm. E. Sheffield. Wilbur Baumgartner and Eugene Sheffield spent Tuesday afternoon in South Bend at the Epworth hospital with Herbert Baumgartner, who met with a misfortune while imployed by Brown and Fimri at Milford. He got a piece of steel in his eye which caused the eye to die and the only relief was to remove the eye. CONCORD Delbert Norris is on the sick list. The Concord Ladies Aid will, meet Thursday with Mrs. Rebecca Dewart. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Buhrt spent Sunday evening with the Guy Fisher family. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Walker and family spent Sunday with Mrs. Della Walker. Mrs. Jane Rookstool and Mrs. Ellen Warbel spent Sunday at the James Dewart home. I Mrs. Cora Wyland and son ! Eldon spent Saturday evening with Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Mathews. * Mrs. Jacob Bucher and daughter Yvonne spent Monday evening at the Ernest Mathews home. Those who enjoyed Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Dewart were Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Bucher and family, Mr. and Mrs. Bertram Whitehead, and in the afternoon Mr. and Mrs. Loyd Dewart and family, Mrs. Rebecca Dewart. —o R, AND 0. REPORT The operating revenues df the B. railroad during the month of August amounted to s2l 709.323, and the operating expenses to $14,518,484, leaving a net balance of operating revertues of $7,190 839.

SOLOMON’S CREEK Preaching Sunday morning following Sunday school. Miss Jaunita Gushwa spent Sunday with Mss Dorothy Mullen. Lawrence and Lewis Firestone spent Sunday with Harry Nicolai. . Kenneth Hapner spent Sunday with his grandmother Mrs. Vica Hapner? Miss Opal Neff spent Sunday afternoon with Miss Martha Spurgeon. Allen Fisher of Elkhart visited over Sunday with his brother Ed. Fisher. Mr. and Mrs. Dale Juday called on George Darr and family Monday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Jake Kern and children spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Mell Tully. Emma Nicolai of Elkhart spent Sunday with her grandmother Emma Ringwalt. Miss Elsie Moser spent Saturday night with her grandfather, W. A. Morris at Ligonier. A young people’s convention will be held at Elkhart the 13th 14th and 15th of this month. The Benton and Clinton twp. council meeting was held at Millershurg Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Willard and son Harold of Goshen called on Mr. and Mrs. Walter Simpson Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Zylman Mr. and Mrs. A. Locher of Kalamazoo, Mich., spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Fisher. Miss Louise Darr, Miss Treva and Miss Mabel Mullen and Ralphß Darr spent Sunday in Elkhart with Harry Huber and family. Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Darr, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Zimmerman and son Junior attended the funeral of John Rentfrow at Syracuse Sunday afternoon. Mr. Frank and Charley Bunger and Belle Juday of Millersburg called on the latter’s brother, John C. Juday, who is ill at his home with gangrene in his foot. Mr. and Mrs. Chester Firestone, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Good and daughter Joan, and Mrs. John Good spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Merle Darr and children. Burr Oak will entertain the Solomon’s Creek*Sunday Friday evening of this week. All the members who helped to win the contest are invited to go. They would like to have the members to be there at 7:30. A parent and teacher meeting was organized at the Hex school house Friday evening. Rex Miller was elected president. There will be a meeting the last Friday evening in each month. The parents are all invited to come. % Mrs. Harry Mcßride entertained 10 of the members of her Sunday school class of little folks at dinner Sunday. Those present were Dona Belle and Mary Louise Moser, Leroy and Ralph Smith, Lewis Kitson, Phyllis Darr, Esther Hillbish, Jean Good, Lulu Zimmerman and Audrey Juday. ,

SOUTH SHORE Mrs. James Traster called at the Bert home Monday afternoon. Mrs. Retta Warner called at the home of Mrs. Martha Jordan Wednesday evening, Mrs. Laura Wertz of Lake Wawasee called at the home of Mrs, Jordan Saturday afternoon. Major F. E. Marsh has left his home at the lake for the season. He went home with his daughter. Mrs. Y. C. Lung spent from Thursday till Sunday in Warsaw visiting friends and attending the fair. Emmett Kelly and family of South Bend spent Saturday night with his brothers south of Syracuse. Sunday evening they called at the Bert Searfoss home. Mrs. Martha Jordan of Syracuse and granddaughter Mrs. Dean Lease of Goshen are going to .leave Thursday for Hot Springs, Arkansas, where they expect to spend the winter. , —o : - „ Chemists asserts that nitrogen is worth mere to man than gold. Without nitrogen all the gold of the world would be useless because it will not produce food. o Colleen Moore in “Oh Kay.* The stage play was funny but the picture’s a riot. See it at Crystal, Ligonier, next Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday, October, 9, 10 and 11.

RADIO Doctor SETS, SERVICE AND SUPPLIES All Guaranteed Owen R. Strieby Phone 845 Syracuse, Indiana.

12 REASONS Why so Many People Trade at GRIEGER’S — - — * ‘ 5^ 1 Richelieu Fancy Canned Goods. The best in the world. 2 (Mimed Goods —-As low in price as can be bought. 3 Saturday Specials 4 McLaughlin’s Bulk Coffees—Ground before yoilr eyes—any fineness—Always fresh—Variety of prices. 5 Tested Scales. 6 Guaranteed Cold, Fresh and Smoked Meats. 7 Electric Meat Slicer—Slicer to suit your taste. 8 Electric Meat Grinder —Free to use for your use —to make your meat loafs. 9 Home Made Candies. 10 Credit to those that want it. 11 Prompt and free delivery. 12 Highest Prices paid for eggs. \ tt Ask the people who trade here. Phone 15 and 68 GRIEGER’S GROCERY AND MARKET’

UNEMPLOYMENT At the National Business Conference of the Babson Institute Mr. Creighton J. Hill head of the statistical department, presented a few cold facts determined by official investigations. He stated that “heretofore unemployment has been largely a transition of workers from old industries to new, but today new industries are not calling for enough workers to take up a surplus which has been gradually increasing for,several years. While the volume of business has advanced during the past year, employment and pay rolls have gone slowly downward. After each minor depression of the last few years, fewer men have been taken back than were laid off. This is true in nearly every line of industry. This country has never before witnessed a period of this type of unemployment. Always new indutries have sprung up to absorb the workers displaced by increased efficiency in old lines.’’ Mr. Hill declared that we need today a new industry to absorb 5 030,000 unemployed. LET 'EM GO TO IT Hundreds of people have died from drinking home brew or poisoned whiskey, and hundreds of others have committed suicide in other ways. According to history this has always been going on, and so long as we produce mental deficients of this type the system will continue —but tlje world will move along withput them. If hi-jackers insist on killing each other, or people who only recognize the law of the jungle must taste blood occasionally why not let ’em go to it? An otherwise intelligent man who spends the money for booze that should buy food for his children is a burden to society and the state as well as a curse to his family. —o — Classified ads pay both —the seller and buyer.

Grocery Talk | What you need for BREAKFAST We have it What you need for \ DINNER We have it What you need for > SUPPER We have it A trial is all we asK \ \ OUR MOTTO: Quality-Service —A Square Deal South Side Grocery Phone 848 Free Delivery

DEBUNKING POLITICS The passing of political torchlight processions with their redfire martial bands and fiery oratory, has been followed by a general apathy on the part of more than half the voters of this natiop. It. is not because they are not interested in political affairs but because the political bunk does not appeal to their intelligence. Colleges, schools, newspapers and magazines have accomplished a quiet revolution in this respect that old-time political bell-weathers are compelled to heed. The new school of thought that our educational institutions are responsible for must and will be given a place in national affairs, and the first great essential is to debunk politics. Through years of training and habit We become steeped in the ’ assumption that all virtues append to those who think politically as we do and that all vices are attached to those who are opposed to our ways of polical thought. When party leaders and political spell binders make a bonfire of the rubbish £hd political bunk they may succeed in awakening the interest and activities of millions of self-respecting Americans who believe in truth, tolerance, square deal* and in common honesty. o Convicts condemned to death in Cuba are choked to death by the garrote. The National Sanitation Board now asks that these condemned convicts be turned over to it for experiments with cancer cure. The issue is causihg heated discussion on all sides, and-there is much to be said in favor of the scientific method.

J. C. Abbott DESIGNER AND BUILDER Decorating and Painting Phone 734 Syracuse, Ind.