The Syracuse Journal, Volume 20, Number 38, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 17 January 1929 — Page 5

rBS®SKSSBSBSSBifei3SSSBSBESSKjS4S®SS®SSSS«B®S®BB;SBSSSBS®S (aS B a H i I IF—--8 ■ ■ I g ' i you’re looking for a g good place to trade g a l . A ® | ® a B CALL AT OUR STORE FOR ® * 1 IK 0 I Staple and Fancy j a 1- 0 I Groceries I a a I Fruits and Vegetables a i | Here you will find fresh goods all | I the time. Our large trade justi- | I fies shipments several times every | | week, thus preventing stale stock | I from accumulating. I - i i i I Seider & Burgener I TO ® PURE FOOD GROCERS g | PHONES 82 AND 172 SYRACUSE INDIANA I a ■ • k KSBSSSSSSBSSSSS3SSSSSSSSSf3®SSSSSSSSKSSSSSSSS®SSSSSSSSBS!» AN ACRE OF ALFALFA EQUALS THE FEEDING? VALUE OF 2.62 ACRES OF OATS X -- — SV Alfalfa V \ feW] Y ; JiSMSA Raised on Raised on I Acre 2.62 Acres BLUE VALLEY CREAMERY INSTITUTE

ALFALFA HAY CROP YFELO IS HIGHEST 1 - Acre of Alfalfa Has Same Feeding Value as 140 Bushels of Oats. One acre in alfalfa does the -work of 2.62 acres in oats, says the Bine Valley Creamery Institute. An average acre of alfalfa producing 2.55 tons of hay in a“ season produces a volume of forage that lias the same feeding value as 140 bushels of oats produced on 2.62 acres. This comparison is based on feeding tests made by the North Dakota Agricultural College, in which 4,000 pounds of alfalfa hay equaled 3,520 pounds of oats. The institute estimates that the acre yield of alfalfa hay is equal to 2.62 acres of oats on the basis thiit it takes only 1.14 pounds of alfalfa hay 'to equal one pound of oats i*i feeding value. In the Minnesota dairying district where the ; survey was made, it was found that the average yield per acre was 2.55 tons or 5,100 pounds of alfalfa 'as against a yield of 1,712 pounds of oats to an acre. Many farmers are under the impression that the yield of an acre in grain will make as much milk and butter- •

■!— » "' ' <<%%%M*%***»**»%M*%%%%»**%W****%**< , ******************* , ************j COAL ;! — ——— ; x. You can always depend on getting a GOOD coal at a minimum price. Phone 806 or 13 Al W. Strieby i • . ' ii

fat as will the product of an acre in hay. And it will, in certain instances when high yield grains such as corn are compared with low protein, nonleguminous hays such as timothy. But the comparison does not hold true when an acre of alfalfa with its high yield of protein is matched against an average acre of oats, yielding even the high average of 53.5 bushels per acre. It must be remembered, however, that oats, pound for pound, as shown by the North Dakota station, have a higher feeding value than has alfalfa, and it is not recommended to plant al! of the land devoted to oats in alfalfa, because a certain amount of outs in the grain ration is sometimes needed for variety. Crushed oats with ground corn, eorn-chop, as it is called in many sections, form the base of a low-cost grain ration that can be grown on most farms in the Mississippi valley. Alfalfa is famed as a milk and butterfat producer because of the fact that it produces a high yield of protein per acre. Alfalfa, pound for pound, equals grain in its ability to produce low-cost milk and butterfat. This year is an especially good year to plant an acre of alfalfa for every single cow and every tyro heifers on every farm, because cattle of all kinds have rarely been as profitable as they are at this time. Hogs, too, make cheaper pork on pastures planted in alfalfa and both hogs and hens, as well as cows, can profitably consume alfalfa hay and leaves during the winter barn-feeding season. '

t . ! Correspondence ‘l™ Neighborhood I I TIPPECANOE i Mr. and Mrs. J. Kline spent [ Friday with Mr. and Mrs. J. i Garber. Mr. and Mrs. Eston Kline and j son John called at the home of i J. Garber. Wednesday afternoon. Graham*!yler, Charles Strieby, | Albert Scott, Emit Gordy and | Charles Baugher helped J. Gar- ■ ber saw wood Wednesday, j The Willing Workers Sunday school class of the Church of the Brethren, met at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Elma Shock Saturday night. Dr. Baum of Warsaw was called to the Emit Gordy home Saturday. Mrs. Gordy has not been well the past week. Allen Gordy was on the ' sick list last week. SOLOMON S CREEK Kenneth Hapner spent Saturday night with Robert Ott. About 30 people attended the class meeting at Mr. and Mrs. Ed Moser’s Friday evening. Mrs. Ben Zimmerman called on Mrs. George Darr and daughter, Louise, Monday afternoon. Sunday school Sunday morning and preaching Sunday evening. Everybody invited to attend this service. Rex Miller moved this week (Wednesday) to New Paris, where he is employed in Sharp Bros, hardware store. Mrs. Alonzo Rookstool spent Friday in Mishawaka with her sister, Mrs. Tad Cory, and to see her mother, Mrs. James Wortinger, who is ill. CONCORD Warren Fisher spent Friday night with Eldon Wyland. Mrs. Hattie Fisher and two daughters, Meriam and Gwendolyn, spent Sunday afternoon with Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Fisher. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Rex of Avilla and Mr. Daniel Warble of Syracuse, spent some time w r ith Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Mathews j Sunday. Anderson Wogoman and family I of Syracuse spent Sunday with Tilman Coy and family. * Mrs. Madge Harkless of Syracuse spent a few days with Mrs. Helen Howe. The Concord Wide-awake Sunday school class will meet at the i home of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Beiswanger Friday evening. Kenneth Ryman is on the sick list. Mr. and Mrs. James Gilbert spent Saturday evening with Mr. and Mrs. Chester Stiffler, SOUTH SHORE Sherman Stuart and Bill Kelly visited in th§ Richard Guy home Sunday evening. Mrs. Retta Warner spent Friday with her mother, Mrs. Sarah Jane. Strieby. Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Copper visited Monday with Mrs. Retta Warner. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Niles spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Bert Searfoss. Frank Kelly and Raymond Lung called in the afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Russell Warner and Retta Warner helped butcher at the Calvin Copper home Saturday. William Kelly called at the Bert Searfoss home Monday. o BIG ONION YIELD From the fields of Indiana there still comes a “breath of new mown hay” but there is also wafted by the breezes a strong scent of onions. The Hoosier state led all others last year in the of onions. The Indiana Farm Bureau officials predict that during the year of 1929 Indiana ; will again lead in the production • and shipment of this vegetable. » A recent executive order of ; President Coolidge increasing ! the duty on imported onions to ! one and one-half cents a pound ; will doubtless encourage the ! growers of the state to push ! this crop. The former duty was ; one cent a pound. ; The increase in duty followed ; a request of Indiana congress- ! men that the tariff commission • investigate the duty on onions. ; The northern part of the state ; has been growing more onions ! than the other sections, although ; the central and southern por- ; tions have many acres planted [ in this crop. RADIO Doctor ! SETS, SERVICE AND SUPPLIES All Guaranteed i Owen R. Strieby Phone 845 Syracuse, Indiana.

THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL

j “HIGHER-UP” CRIMES J United States courts are not I only self-sustaining, but profit- [ able. Last year the 91 district courts collected nearly thirty millions of dollars in judgments and fines against violators of custom laws, postal system, regulation of commerce, public health and safety, banking and finance, liability and insurance, foreign relations, public lands end other lines not specially classified. During the year 18,519 civil cases and 88,33 ft criminal cases were terminated. In the total of these cases 69 262 convictions were secured.’ At the end of the year 35.341 cases were pendng and 83,372 new cases were begun. From this record it would appear that bootleggers are not the only criminals in this great nation of freedom and' liberty. o UNNEI’ESSARL LAWS Emerson E. McGriff, representative from Jay County, in the Indiana legislature said that he ; s determined to exert his efforts to dispense with unnecessary laws and to prevent the passage of others that are not needed. He declared in an interview: “What Indiana needs is not more laws, but fewer laws and many laws on the statute books should be repealed.” o GOT YOUR $41.77? ■ S' Money in circulation at the close of the calendar year on December 31, totaled $4,973,320,786 or a per capita of $41.77 for each person in the country, the treasury* department at Washington announced last week. Q HISTORIC TREE At Diosgyer, Hungary, is a tree, a Turkish hazel, popularly believed to have been planted i 550 years ago by Queen Marie; (daughter of King Lajos, <he Great). Experts have examined the tree and establish the fact ; that its age actually corresponds I to the age of the tree recorded ■to have been planted by this queen.

Again! Again! i Again! ' For the third time this once-a-year opportunity to enjoy Heatrola comfort at the easiest terms ever offered t / COW*FOUT < Trade out your ugly old stove —exchange spotty, half-. hearted heat for a beautiful Estate Heatrola and lux>, urious summertime warmth. Save doctor bills. Save fuel. See us now. Get the particulars of the “Enjoy-It-Ffow” Club. Osborn & Son Syracuse, Indiana. HEATROLA There is only ONE Heatrola —ESTATE builds it

J REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS (By H. C. Frazer) . Frank D. Newcomb to Fred > Lemler, south half lot 13, subdiv. 6, Papakeechie, sl. Dan Mishler to Harry Clemens, lot 110, S. and W. add. Syracuse, sl. Edna E Grenacher, et al to Warren T. Colwell, lot 56, S. and W. add., S/racuse, sl. Papakeechie Corporation to Burton A. Uline, lot 22, subd. 3, Papakeechie, S7OO. Martin E Crow to Albert G. and Leoti Jones, pt. lots 2 and 3, Crow’s add., Lake Wawasee, sl. — AL J OLSON IN “THE 'Singing fool” Al Jolson, Broadway’s famous song-bird and recently the star of many musical comedy successes of the New York Winter Garden, comes to the Jefferson Theater; Goshen, Indiana, for a full week’s engagement beginning Sunday, January- 20, in the Vitaphone talking and singing masterpiece “The Singing Fool.” In “The Singing Fool’ Jolson is superb. His magnetic personality that has won for . him an outstanding reputation behind the footlights, is as vital as ever on the speaking screen. During the unfolding of this delightful story, Jolson. sings many song numbers—many-of his old favorites and the latest hit by the memwho popularized ‘ Mammy”, entitled “Sonny Boy.” Betty Bronson and beautiful Josephene Dunn head the list of supporting speaking stars in this beautiful picture, but it falls to three year old Davee Lee, the boy who inspired Jo&on to write ■ Sonny Boy,” the honor of being the one performer of his, age who can completely captivate an audience . “The Singing Fool” will be presented for seven days, beginning Sunday, January 20, with no increase of prices. In fact, this is one of the few places in the country where this picture ■ will be presented with no price i of more than fifty cents. o CROOKS AND FIREARMS The Department of Commercfe reports that during the year 1926 the arms factories of the United States sold 220,058 pistols and 415,621 rifles. It would be interesting to know how many of these lethal -weapons fell into the hands of the criminally inclined, but the evidence is that this class possesses as many, or perhaps more, than the law-en-forcement bodies, and they are used against men appointed and i employed to protect citizens and 1 apprehend criminals. We restrict and prohibit drugs whiskey, we build penitentiaries to incarcerate criminals, we pass laws against crimes and criminals, but we confine our efforts to the top of the ladder instead of striking at the root. From time to time measures of control are introduced in Congress. The bar in the way of such legislation is the second amendment to the Constitution, one of the eleven bill of rights provisions that which sets forth that “the right of people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed.” When the amendments went into effect in 1796? nearly every’ farmhouse had a shotgun or a rifle. In all the states there still was big game which went to supply the family larder. Times have changed and big game has practically disappeared. If Congress cannot deny the citizens the right to have firearms it can at least more closely restrict commerce in lethal weapons. The states ought also to act in the-matter. o THE DEAD LINE Otto G. Fifield, secretary of state, has sent out notices that the time limit for 1928 auto license plates has been set at Friday, February 1. After that all auto owners using 1928 plates will he subject to arrest. Ray Henderson, who is in charge of the Kosciusko county auto license branch, urges auto owners of Kosciusko county to secure their new plates before the last day in order to avoid the rush which is certain to come at that time. o Be sure to hand in your news items each week. EVERY DAY—EVERY HtH R Baby grows more precious. Isn’t it about time for another photograph? A few minutes now will pay delightful dividends in the coming years. Telephone now for an appointment. The Schnabel Studio N. E. Corner Main & Washington • GOSHEN. INDIANA

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4 You may search the * world for a better word to describe opr steaks t and then you will come * back to “perfect/ 4 They are just fat enough, as tender as butler, juicy «■ and full flavored. Better order one for din- | ner today. WE DELIVER *