The Syracuse Journal, Volume 20, Number 42, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 14 February 1929 — Page 5

| Pure Food I / I Groceries - - i i 3 3 ' 3 _ We want every one to take advantage of the wonderful 3 opportunity to save money on 3 * , groceries and we also want 3 you to become acquainted with the policies of this store. I Quality merchandise. The most posI sible for the money. Prompt and efa i flcient service. I 1 0 . . - ■ ■ I Fruits and yegetables 3 ■ } j Seider & Burgener a . PURE FOOD GROCERS ’ a 4 ■ i PHONES 82 AND 172 ] SYRACUSE INDIANA

A Classified Ad Will Sell It

INDIANA’S (HL PRODUCTION Indiana produced more than a million barrels of oil during 1928. It is the first year since 1923 that in excess of one million barrels of petroleum were pumped in this state in any 12-month period, according to Theodore Kingsbury, of the state Geologist's office of the conservation department. While the exact. amount for the year 1928 has not been tabulated, says Kingsbury, the final figures for eleven months from January to November inclusive, show production to have been 958,000 barrels. This is 6,000 barrels in excess of the total production for 1927. Conservation department officials say that December’s production easily runs 92,000 barrels, which will bring the total production for the calendar 1928 to 1,050,000 barrels. The northwest part of the state, known as the old Trenton field, which some years £go produced practically all the oil in this state,,,now yields only a small percentage of the yearly production, while the southeastern part of the state shows monthly increase. Final figures for 1928 are expected to show that the northeast part produced about 90,000 barrels, while the southeastern section produced 960,000 barrels. Reports to the state geologist show there has been considerable activity in recent months in Indiana’s oil fields and that new wells are being drilled. ■ o Classified ads pay both —the seller and buyer.

COAL We handle nothing but the best Coal Do not get the impression that because my price is low the coal is inferior. I sell nothing but high grade coal. A trial will convince you. i Phone 806 or 13 A. W. Strieby

MOTHERS PENSIONS For several years efforts have been made to establish mother .pensions in Pennsylvania, but each time, due to a lack of public information, the Legislature has passed by the question. The question is again before the present session. No institution or keeper of a private home that takes in children because they have become a public charge can take the place of a good mother. There is no place like home. It is conclusively demonstrated that nearly all crime, which is committed by boys and girls, under 20 years of age, is due to idleness and want, and poor home life. Our duty toward these thousands of children does not end with public schocif courses, nor with court sentences. It is just beginning, and should continue until they are able to take their places in society, equipped with proper training and environment to make them productive and useful citizens. o OLD PAPERS —Largg bundle for 5c at the Journal office, AVE CLAIM TO MAKE PICTURES—that are truthful and pleasingLet us prove it to you. We have a variety of styles and finishes, at prices to suit all, from the purse of moderate means, to the one better filled. The Schnabel Studio N. E. Corner Main & Washington GOSHEN, INDIANA

’ Correspondence the Neighborhood i SOUTH SHORE Mr. and Mrs. Bert Searfoss spent, Sunday evening at the Ike layers home. H. Ross Franklin called at the ! Bert Searfoss home Monday to j see his father. Mrs. Martha Cable and son ' Jesse of, Forrest Park spent Tuesday evening with Bert Searfoss. I Mr and Mrs. Dwight Mock and (daughter Witlodean spent Satur- | day afternoon and evening in I Goshen. j Mr. and Mrs. Lester Mock and i son Charles visited his grandmother, Parah J. Strieby, Sun--1 day evening. Mrs.*Retta Warner spent Saturday and Sunday caring for her mother who has been sick for a couple of weeks. Mr. and Mrs. Bert Searfoss and Mr. and Mrs. Roy Niles and son Burton spent Saturday evening in Elkhart. Charles Franklin received a letter from his daughter, Mrs. Chester Hij£, stating that they were going to visit her brother in California, sorting Feb. 3. Mr. and Mrs. James Traster and Mr. and Mrs. Roy Niles and son Burton of Syracuse were Sunday dinner guests in the Bert Searfoss home. Frank Kelly called in the afternoon. FOUR CORNERS Carl Gawthrop spent Sunday with his wife at South Bend. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Maloy were Warsaw callers Thursday. Mrs. Crist Darr spent Monday at the home of Earl Darr of near Goshen. e Mr. and Mrs. Clint Collander and children spent Sunday in Milford. Mrs. Fay Dewart of Milford spent Friday at the Clint Collander home. Rev. Royer of Syracuse called at the Crist Darr home Friday afternoon. Mrs. Artie Geyer spent Tuesday with her daughter, Mrs. Charley Dietrick, at Goshen. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Darr of near Goshen spent Monday evening at the home of Crist Darr. Mr. .and Mrs. Howard McSweeney spent from Friday till Sunday with relatives in Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. James Myers and Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Snyder were Fort Wayne visitors on Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Dan Neff of Syracuse and Mr. and Mrs. James Myers wore Sunday visitors with Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Snyder. Guy Method of New Paris and lady friend, Miss Katherine Bartels, of Goshen, called at the Crist Darr home Saturday eve sning. Mrs. Henry Geyer and grandson, Harold Gawthrop. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Darr and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Dietrick of Goshen, were Sunday visitors with Mr. and Mrs. Artie Geyer. TIPPECANOE Allen Gordy was in Elkhart Saturday. . 1 Mayzcfl Kline was out of school part of last week on account of sickness. Irvin White and William Rhodes called at the J. Garber home Friday. Rev. and Mrs. Otho Warstler were calling on the sick in this vicinity last weekMr. and Mrs. Charley Bigler spent Thursday evening at the Emit Gordy home. J. L. Kline, Mrs. Phoebe Goppert and Mrs. J. Garber were shopping in Warsaw Tuesday afternoon. Number 3 and 4 Sunday school classes of North Webster church of the Brethren held their class meeting at the home of Mr. and Mrs Clarence Mock Thursday evening. f ' NUMEROUS ARREsSkMADE December arrests and convictions for violating fish and game laws numbered 214 and 205 respectively. Five cases remain to be tried and four have been dismissed. Fines and costs assessed amounted to $4,622.55, the major part of which goes into the school fund. These figures were made public by George N. Mannfeld, of the state conservation department, who cited the principal arrests as follows: Possession of quail in closed season, 90; hunting, fishing or trapping without license, 58; hunting without consent of land owner, 20*

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

THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL

I SOLOMON S CREEK ] Crist Moser had sale Tuesday ; and w’ill move to Goshen. ; Sunday school Sunday morning ' and preaching services*"* Sunday evening. f Mrs.' George Darr called on Mrs. Perry Bunger Tuesday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Levi Pearman -pent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Walter Simpson and son George. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Berkey of loshen were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Lee Whirlage and family Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Shannon >re moving this week in with lis parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles hannon. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Mcßride nd son Robert, spent Sunday vith Mr. and Mrs. Shirley Loy t Burr Oak. Mrs. Charley Shannon who vas quite sick last week is much mproved and able to be up and ibout in the house. The body of Mrs. Mary Ann Cully of Goshen was brought to he Solomon’s Creek cemetery or burial Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Merle Darr and hrldren and Mr. and Mrs. John )arr were callers at the Chester Crestone home Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Fisher spent unday with his two aunts. Mrs. x May A. Hearn and Mrs. R’.iza«eth Siggenfoose of Goshen. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Cope and laughter Bernitha. and girl f riend of Mishawaka spent Sunlay with Mr. and Mrs. Alonzo Rookstool and son IshmaeL Mr.and Mrs, Omer Darr, Gene Martin and grandson, Richard Lantz, Mrs. Albert Zimmerman, and two children and Meriam Darr spent Sunday with George Darr and family. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Cripe of Goshen called on her mother, Mrs. Ettie Seese Sunday afternoon and also Mr.a nd Mrs. Judd of Elkhart called to see their daughter. Miss Mary Berkey. Miss Mabie Mullen was greatly surprised Friday evening when about thirty-four of her friends called to remind her of her birthday. The evening was pleasantly spent in games. Ice cream and cake were served as refreshments. Evelyn and Harold Lockwood and Louise Hapner spent Sunday with Mildred, Elsie and Paul Moser. In the afternoon about fifteen neighbors and friends called and reminded Mr. and Mrs. Moser of their fifteenth wedding anniversary. CONCORD J. A, Fisher is on the sick list. Wesley Miller was in Ligonier Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Mathews spent Monday with Mrs. Charles Mathews. Mrs. James Dewart spent Monday with her daughter, Lavica Bucher and family. Mr. and Mrs. Burton Howe spent Tuesday evening with Mr. and Mrs. Tilman Coy. Ike Scheels of Woffe Lake spent a few days with Mr. and Mrs. William Wyland. Mrs. Lester Stiffler is spending a few days with her son, Chester Stiffler and family. Mrs. Cora Wyland and son Eldon, spent Saturday evening w r ith Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Mathews. Mr. and Mrs. William Wyland entertained the second team of the Milford basketball team to a fine chicken supper Tuesday evening. AT PENAL FARM E. S. Shumaker, superintendent of? the Indiana AntidSaloon League, was taken to the state penal farm at Putnamville, to begin serving a 60-day sentence imposed on him by the Indiana supreme court on a charge of contempt. He reached the farm late Monday afternoon. o NO SUNDAY KISSING . In England in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth centuries, it was a penal offense for a man to kiss his wife or even his children on Sundays, and the penalty for such an offense was anything from a fine to doing penance in the church, and even being publicly flogged. In those days it was also illegal in Scotland to take a walk of over two miles on Sunday unless the destination was the church. O - r~ “Show Girl,” starring Alice White, the new vivacious screen favorite, the froth of Broadway, at the Crystal, Ligonier, next Sunday and Monday, February 17 and 18

|For Sale A residence property on South Mgip street, including lots a, 35, 3d, 37 in Dolan and Miles addition. Terms—half cash and balance in twelve months, CHAS. C. BACHMAN Extr. Win. McClintic Estate

THE NEW CONGRESS About three weeks hence the present Congress will complete its work. Within a few weeks thereafter, the new Congress wilt meet in special session. The roll call of that body will disclose many politick casualties; men, whose names have become familiar with legislation will be supplanted—some 80 of them, ail told, and new blood, new ideas, new methods, will be introduced. Congress represents our biggest b usiness. Representatives are members of the Board of Directors of this great corporation. They are handling, not subscribed capita!, but ' assessments on the stockholders. The custom has been to appropriate money, and then devise ways and means to obtain it. As a result, there has grown up i system of political prestige that permits one d’ass to profit at the expense of another class. Business methods are undergoing radical changes, and it would seem that our biggest business needs not only reorganzation. but adoption of modern business methods if our system of government is to endure. A few sagacious business men forsee this possibility, and it is hoped the new Congress will rally to the support of the new president in his efforts to inst«T a co-ordination of public affairs and eliminate to some, extent, at least, a growing bureaucracy. — - o BRILLIANT NIGHTS From early May to early August Denmark has light nights, when games can be p<ayed and all daytime pastimes enjoyed to the full. o See Alice White, the girl with These. Them and Those. — in “Show Gul’’. Four out of five men Lived her. but she loved the fifth. At the Crystal. Ligonier, next Sunday and-Monday, Feb. 17 and 18.

“KONJOLA PROVED BLESSING,” SAYS BAND DIRECTOR Rebuilt His System and Restored New and Greater Energy and Vitality; Failed In Health a Year. * t w I r ■hob MR. JOHNNY PERRY A most remarkable statement about the work of Konjola was recently received from Mr. Johnny Perry, 1626 Holliday street, Indianapolis, Ind., who is a widely known band director, being the leader of Johnny’s Golden Hart Orchestra, which broadcasts over radio stations and is a popular dance band, “In Konjola I found the medicine I always needed after I had been failing in health for a year. The constant strain of night working, lack of sleep and * irregularity of meal time, soon made me run-down in general. I lacked energy, strength and ambition. I lost weight steadily and felt like my whole system was in a sluggish, torpid condition —which it really was. However, I decided upon Konjola as the medicine for me and it soon turned out to be a blessing. The boys in my orchestra now comment on the change in my appearance, Six bottles did the work—completely and surely. I have gained five pounds, have more strength and energy and. feel like a different person. My appetite has increased and I enjoy sound, refreshing sleep every night. It is really remarkable the way Konjola worked on my system—l have nothing but praise and gratitude for this medicine.”

Konjola is sold in Syracuse at Thornburg’s drug store and by all the best druggists in all towns throughout this entire section.

(KLINK BROS.| MEAT MARKET J i# J I # I I Quality Meats and Service * § ' 1 Next to Quality J \ of our Meats we wanl lo IP ve y° u th® g jT \ best service and the best re&i mJ/ X. attention. If we fail tell us | * u and the matter will be « * quickly adjusted. We want | to salisf y our cus i° m ® rs - | J fjllj"' 1 —•« * * * #'* .1 . tj s: . . : Ligonier Jorg’s Hatchery IBLOOD-TESTED BABY CHICKS j White and Brown Leghorns, Barred ank- White Rocks, I R. I. Reds, Buff Orpingtons and Wyandottes. These Chicks are produced from HIGH QUALITY HEAVY < LAYING flocks, closely ( I LLED for SIZE. HEALTH and I VIGOR, also BLOOD-TESTED of Bacillary White Diarrhea. ] FREE VETERINARIAN SERVICE AND ADVICE 1 Custom Hatching 3c per Egg (Spend your chick dollars on VALUE and not ('HANCE. ] PRICE RIGHT — QI ALITY UNSURPASSED I LIGONIER HATCHERY \ | Pyoue 502 ROY JORG, Mgr. z j! iH? IA" .30 "Z-y Flf IPjiirA (I Sd-uted Spinal 10 I ,—. b and buffer. 10 qI | J-1 --J -nTnirriTTiW** PeacFSurprise 2s —mn Coffee r _J2S.XZj ■' h I I A Dollar Dinner For Four

BITH the above account on view, who can deny that by the aid oi careful shopping and taking advantage oi food sales a delicious meal can be prepared for four adults for one dollar? The can of vegetable soup needs only to have water added and to be heated before serving, and the can of spinach may be sauted and • seasoned with Celery salt and onion salt and served. To prepare the sausages, saute two sliced onions in two tablespoons bacon fat until golden brown. Add one number can of tomatoes and bring to boiling*; add salt and peppef to taste. Add one-fourth cup rice and cook gently until rice I

10. R. BIGLER E. A. STEINMETZ -ANNOUNCING— 1 Expert Radiator Repairing s WRECKED AUTO BODIES — FENDERS — FRAMES ;; — TOPS and DOORS REPAIRED , (WOODWORK REPLACED ON ALL COUPES AND SEDANS PLATE GLASS for WINDSHIELDS and DOORS, CUT ; and GROUND TO FIT ALL CARS Tops, Curtains, Cushions and all kinds of Tryn Work . ; I a Specialty. j ; Best Equipment. Mechanics and prices in Northern Indiana. —SEE US FIRST—ED and ORA Goshen Auto Top & Trimming Co. L GOSHEN. INDIANA i Corner Third and Washington Sts. Phone 438 ! A

is tender. Add contents erf a 9- « ounce can of Vienna sausages and heat through. For the peach surprise eight peach halves from a can are needed. Chop two tablespoons figs and two tablespoons pecans and mix, using enough evaporated milk to bind together. The seven cents left from your dollar will cover the cost of these. Place the peach halves together, filling the holes with the •fig and pecan mixture. Place in sherbet glasses and top with whipped, evaporated milk. To whip the fhilk, put .the can into water, heat to the boiling point, then chill rapidly, then whip. Serve i immediately.*