The Syracuse Journal, Volume 20, Number 44, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 28 February 1929 — Page 4
THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL ] REPUBLICAN Published every Thursday at Syracuse. Indiana. Entered as second-class matter on May 4th, 1908. at the postoffice at Syracuse. Indiana, under the Act of Congress of March 3rd. 1879. SUBSCRIPTION RATES One year, in advance $2.00 Six months • Three months -50 Single Copies • • - 05 H. A. Buettner, Editor and Publisher para 0. Buettner, Associate Editor Thursday. Februray 28, 11)29 “I know not what the truth may be, I tell It as 'twas told to me.”—Editor. FINAL STANDING OF TEAMS Won Lost Pct. Warsaw 3 0 1.009 Milford 9 1 .900 Mentone. ~ 12 2 .857 Leesburg 10 6 .6-5 North Webster ... 8 6 .571 Syracuse 8 6 .571 Atwood • 8 7 .533 Claypool 8 9 .471 Silver Lake 6 .46Sidney *5 7 .417 Pierceton 5 8 .385 Etna Green 3 7 * .300 Burket 2 10 .167 Beaver Dani 0 8 .000 The above, includes only the games played between Kosciusko county teams for the entire past season, and does not include the county tournament games. o SKILLFUL NAVIGATORS The world has never produced greater navigators than the early Polynesians, who in their big outrigger canoes traversed the Pacific- north and south, east and west. Without map or compass they pushed north to the equator and south to the ice pack. The white explorer came in the tracks of their canoes.
KONJOLA BROUGHT HAPPINESS INTO AFFLICTED HOME Father and Son Believed of Com* plications; Now Enjoy Perfect* Health. '■ I IwL / VHSbfr* X- x ■•■£> MB. MERLE J. BROWN and SON Age is no barrier to the amazing merits of this new medicine, Konjola. Men .women and children of all ages report complete and permanent relief from their health troubles. Take, for instance, the statement of Mr. Merle J. Brown, 1252 Markwood avenue, University Heights, Indianapolis, Indiana, who made a remarkable statement about the work of Konjola in his case and that of his son, Cleo Clifton Brown, age 6. “Konjola benefited both my son and myself to an amazing extent. I had been troubled with my stomach, kidneys, and bowels. Suffering every day from aches and pains made life miserable. I was unable to eat a meal without enduring agonizing after effects. My son was in a run-down condition, had been since infancy. He was nervous, of a pale complexion, under-weight, and suffered from a stomach disorder. I was greatly worried about him, and until we both took Konjola, we never gained relief. But this medicine went to the source of our troubles and soon had our systems in good working order. Today we are like different people —well and happy, without a . sign of our former ailments. I indorse Konjola to every father, mother, son and daughter. Konjola is sold in Syracuse, Ind., at Thornburg Drug Store, . and by all the best druggists ‘ throughout this entire section.
Local News and Personal Items William Harvey of Fort Wayne spent the week end here with his family. Mrs. George Phebus has gone to South Bend to visit friends for a week or two. Mrs. Joe Rapp entertained the Bridge club at her home on Wednesday evening. Neal Phebus of Sylvania, Ohio, called on his sister-in-law, Mrs. Nora Phebus Saturday. Sol Miller and Stephen Freeman were business visitors at Mentone on Wednesday. H. D. Harkless went to Detroit, Mich., Monday, and returned home with a new Essex. Miss Ida Deardorff of Chicago spent over Sunday here with her mother, Mrs. Lydia Deardorft. Mr. and Mrs. Dial Rogers of South Bend were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Grieger. Mrs. Guy Fisher who has been suffering with an abscess in her head, is improved at this time. Jeff Mclntyre of Fort Branch, Ind., has accepted a position as auto mechanic at the Lakeside Garage. Mrs. Joel Wilt and daughter, Betty Lee, are visiting in the home of the former’s sister, in South Bend. Mr. and Mrs. L. T. Heerman spent last Thursday in South Bend, guests of her niece, Mrs. Nelson Dodge. Mrs. Newton Cal beck spent Tuesday and Wednesday of’'last week with Mr. and Mrs. Oak Landaw of Nappanee. Miss Christine Rapp, a teacher at Brownsburg, Ind., spent the week end here with her parents Mr. and Mrs. Will Rapp, Mr. and Mrs. Johnnie Stevenson, of Muncie, Ind., visited at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Wade Zerbe Saturday night and Sunday. Mrs. Gene Cox, and little son of Indianapolis, visited in the home of her sister. Mrs. Irving Bishop, at Wawasee Lake last week. Mrs, Emma Doerr of Norwood Park, Ind., and Mrs. Bertha Kuntsch of Chicago, spent th e week with Mr. and Mrs. Sheldon Harkless. Mrs. Frank Bushong returned home last Thursday night from South Bend, where . she spent the week with her sister, Mrs. J. R. Good. Mr, and Mrs. Charles Bushong and fatnßy and sister, Mrs. Nora Phebus, were dinner guests of their nephew, liusctdl (jj-issom, on Sunday. Miss Nellie Sprague returned home the first of the week from Fon du L*ac, WU„ where she spent two weeks with liet sifter, Mrs. Bartels. Mr. and Mrs. Alva Nicolai and Mr. and Mrs. Harold Nicolai of Elkhart attended the play at the high school gym on Tuesday evening. Mr. and Mrs. John Grieger spent Sunday in Hanna, Ind., with his parents. Mr. Grieger s father has been in poor health the past few weeks. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Ruple and daughter Gladys of South Bend and Warren Ruple of this city, were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Shock on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Unrue returned to their liome here on Tuesday of last week, from South Bend, where they spent the winter in the home of his sister, Mrs. Adam Keim.
T■ ’ I I <-I 1 s : 7 j. | « Wgf - ._ I JUST PHONE 98 [ | that will bring you the x | COAL that makes less | than a bushel of ash to | x the ton. | | . I ••• A Fresh Supply of Baby Chick and t * Other Chows just in. X I SYRACUSE FEED MILL I X W. L. Disher 0. T. Disher 1 X Phone 98 J ? The Store with the Checkerboard Sign J VyWWWWWM T ? ?
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Mock returned home on Sunday from Columbus, Ohio, where the} spent six weeks in the home of their daughter, Mrs. James Hamman. Mrs. John McCj’oughan, of Goshen was in this city on Tuesday evening and attended the play, ‘‘The Land of the Honeycon,” at the High school auditorium. Dr. and Mrs. B. F. Hoy spent Sunday in Peru, visiting her sister, who has been confined to her bed for six weeks by illness. Mrs. Hoy reports her sister^ as slightly' improved. Mrs. Nancy Nine and her daughter, Mrs. Lawrence Juday, of Sylvania, Ohio, were here the past week packing up Mrs. Nine’s household goods and moving them to Sylvania. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Bartholomew and Mr .and Mrs. Donald Bartholomew and Wendell Jensen, of Goshen were guests of Rev. and Mrs. A. H. Arbaugh at dinner last Thursday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Meibern Rapp have rented the Mrs. Nancy Nine property on Lake street, where they will reside. They are now living in the Mrs. Ann? Crow property on Main street. Mr. and Mrs. Victor Calbeck, Mr, and Mrs. Kenneth Calbeck, and Mr. and Mrs. Rial Stillson, and son Jimmie of Nappanee, spent Sunday here in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Newton Calbeck. Mr. and Mrs. William Mallon, residing near Syracuse, and Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Shock and daughter Donnabelle of South Bend, .spent Sunday here with Mr. and Mrs. Shock's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Shock, on Sunday. Ross Osborn was initiated into the mysteries of the Order of the Eastern Star on Wednesday evening. The committee, composed of men, served delightful and bpuntiful refreshmentsThere was a fine attendance at the meeting. Mr. and Mrs. Orlando Davis and daughters, Doris May and Mary Ellen, of Goshen, Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Hoover and daughter Aflene'and son. Lopan Lee, *a.nd Mr. arid Mrs. Racph Haise, i all of South Bend;* spent Sunday i with Mr. .and Mrs. George Stansbury. Mrs. Ben Julier of Goshen visited from last. Thursday until Sunday here with her mother, Mrs. Lydia Deardorff. Mrs. Julier is recovering from a I severe operation performed last summer, and this was the first trip hmT.c to see r n 9 t b. e r since her illness. Dr. John M. Kauffman, an Osi teopathic physician and surgeon, j of Goshen will be at the Grand Hpte] each Wednesday ■ and Friday morning, beginning Wednesday, March 6. He is a graduate of the Kirksville College of Osteopathy and Surgery, and ba,<? had four years of Pre-Medic work before entering the Osteopathic College, where hp spent four years,
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THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL
SOUTH SIDE Chai/.ey Sapon and family were Saturday night and Sunday visitors of Mrs. Jarrett. Harry Ray was on our street Monday. Anyone desiring man for farm work, see Harry or call telephone 91. Perry Winsor of Cromwell is spending some time with his mother, Mrs. Winsor. Mrs. Winsor is quite poorly. Mr. and Mrs. John By land, Sr., who Jiave assisted in the South Side grocery, left for Toledo Friday for an indefinite visit. Our South Side grocery has again established a kitchenette. Drop in and get a warm custard pie, and see how quick it disappears. Mr. Isaac Wagner is able to walk to the railroad, but looked pretty tired as he returned home. We watched to see if he could make it. He did. The Cory Brothers are cutting wood in the Tillman Hire woods. One big tree cut down and sawed into wood, in one half day, might sound fishy, but its true. Sunday made us think summer was near, yet when we looked on our lakes and saw the many autos on the ice, which is 18 inches thick, we changed our mind, Marion Davis has installed a new radio in his home. This adds one more to the family, me thinks, even more than that! Nothing like a radio, especially in “An Old Maid’s Home.” Thursday of last week, Mrs. Jonah Dibert, while sweeping snow from their back walk, fell, breaking her left wrist and bruising her severely. She is suffering greatly with her back and is almost helpless. Mrs. Lillian Brown is caring fo.r her. Dr. C. R. Hoy set the broken arm. n PISCATORIAL monster An enormous pike weighing 123% pounds that tried to swallow a 10ff-pound pig, according .to Arva Hodge, farmer, was being exhibited by Hodge at Rjs farm home, near \yblfe Lake. Hofjgp sail! ftp killed the piscatorial monster with a club as ter he heard the pig squeaking. The pig had ventured into the lake. Hodge said about ten years ago he had stocked the small lake with Amazon pike minnows. The years passed and he saw no fish. But he got suspicious, he said, when ducks disappeared from the surface now and then. Last Saturday, according io Hodge, he watched a sow and her brood of nearly grown pigs wade into the water. Suddenly one of the pigs, weighing about 100 pounds began to struggle, and squeal and thrash about W the ppnc[. Hodge seized a club and ran to the scene. He couid scarcely believe his eyes, he said, when he saw a gigantic pike gripping the pig’s 1 leg. t One mighty blow trom Hodge’s club killed the big fish. Hodge dragged the huge pike to shore and now a taxidermist is working on the fish tq preserve for posterity the proof of Albion’s, greatest fish story. Fishermen acquainted with northern Indiana lake?, say there* are spme monster pike at large in the waters, but one weighing more than 100 pounds and attempting to drag down a 100-pound pig, sets a mark for ail to shoot at when the hot stove league meets to tell the stories of. the “big one that got away,” ■ — O —— . .March 5, 6. 7,8, is the right time to see “Lilac Time” at the Crystal, Ligonier.
BWBERBREEB®P3BSESBSB®BSSSESBSSSBfi£SB£££SBSSEEESSSBSB R | Community Theatre 0 , < | Syracuse, Indiana. a a | . FRIDAY and SATURDAY, MARCH 1-2 I REX, King of Wild Horses, with JACK PERRIN in I “Guardians of the Wild” E Also “Watch The Birdie” i And Seventh Chapter of “Tarzan the Mighty.” a 0 — MONDAY and TUESDAY, MARCH 4-5 I 808 STEELE in | “Captain Careless” r Thrills of Earth, Sea and Sky. | Also “Fooling Casper.” a ; 0 — | WEDNESDAY and THURSDAY, MARCH 6-7 “FREEDOM OF THE PRESS” KJ H With LEWIS STONE and MARCELINE DAY 0 A Highly Melodramatic Story of City Life by i Peter B. Kyne. 0 i Also a Collegian and Cartoon. 0 ~x I — 7 X_= 1 ALL SHOWS BEGIN AT 7:15 O’CLQCK 0 —
IN OUR CHURCHES .United Brethren in Christ Sunday School 0:45 a. in. O. 'I Disher, Supt. Preaching at 7:00 Junior C. E. following the Sunday school. Prayer hour Thursday 7:00. Revival meetings will be held beginning March 17. Let the church people plan to lay aside all engagements during these days ahd give undivided attention and devotion to the w’ork of the Lord. Prayer less effort will mean failure. Rev. L. E. Eaton will be the preacher at these meetings. The public is welcome to these services. A. Nicodemus, Pastor. Methodist Episcopal Church The Church School at 9:45. Morning worship at 11:00. Evening worship service, - 7:00 o’clock. Woman’s Home Missionary Society Monday afternoon, 2:30. Children’s church membership training class each Tuesday evening at 4:00. Prayer meeting Tuesday evening, 7:00. Ladies’ Aid society Thursday afternoon, 2:30. Brotherhood meeting Thursday 7:00. J. H. Royer, Pastor. Grace Lutheran Church Sunday School ab 9:45. Evening worship, 7:00. Sermon subject, “Three Types of Men.” The public is cordially invited to all the services of this church. A. H. Arbaugh, Pastor. Mrs. Roy Riddle. Supt. S. S. Evangelical Church P. W. Soltau, Superintendent. Services in Sunday as follows: Sunday school, 9:45 a. m. Divine worship, 10:45 a. m. Evening worship at 7:00. Everybody welcome. R. G. Foust, Pastor. o RAILROAD MERGER The Baltimore & Ohio railroad, should the interstate commerce commission approve its plan for consolidation, would double its mileage in Indiana. Under the plan submitted the Wabash railway, extending diagonally across the state from east to west, and the Chicago, Indianapolis & Louisville railway, extending from Chicago to New Albany and from Chicago to Indianapolis, would be added to the existing trackage in the state owned by the B. & O. At present the B. & O. has lines crossing the state from east to west in the northern part, from east to west in the southern part, and a hookup from the Ohio line near Cincinnati, to Springfield, 111., by the way of Indianapoils. — s 0 Beautiful Billie Dove in “The Night Watch,” a story of the sea —at the Crystal, Ligonier, next Sunday and Monday, March 3 and 4,
Dr. John M. Kauffman OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN Wednesday and Saturday 8:30 A. M., to 12. at Grand Hotel. Call Hotel for Appointments
I | Watch Our [ Window for I Saturday Specials I ; I GRIEGER’S GROCERY AND MARKET H Syracuse, Indiana £ PROMPT DELIVERY PHONES 15 and 68 State Bank of Syracuse Capital and Surplus $50,000 “OUR BANK” Safety Deposit Boxes For Rent j. ri i. eU «|||| Chinese Foods In Cans
3T used to be that only dwellers in cities with a Chinese population could enjoy Chinese food. But today anyone can explore the strangely delicious food which the Chinese have perfected during their thousands of years of civilization. Bamboo shoots, water chestnuts, chow mein noodles, bean sprouts can all be bought in cans. And, with a bottle of soy sauce and such other foods as are present in any market, real Chinese foods can be • made anywhere. How to Make Them Here is the most approved method for making pork chop suey. Cut one-half pound lean pork in narrow strips and add t.o two tablespoons cooking oil and two tablespoons soy sauce, and saute gently for fifteen minutes in a skillet. Cut two cups celery in narrow strips and one cup onions in thin slices.
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Remove the bean sprouts from a can of Sub Kum and set aside to add at the last. Remove the bamboo shoots and water chestnuts from this can and cut in thin*slices, then in narrow strips. Add celery, onions, bamboo shoots, water chestnuts and a small piece of ginger root to the skillet together with the juice from the can and two cups soup stock. Cover and cook until celery and onions are tender. Add one tablespoon flour moistened with a little water, cook until slightly thickened, add one tablespoon brown sauce and more soy sauce, if de-» sired. Add the bean sprouts and heat a few. minutes. Serve with hot rice. Any other meat can be used instead of pork. To convert this recipe into chow mein, open a can of chow mein noodles onto a pie pan and put it in the oven to crisp. Arrange the noodles on plates, plate the chop suey over and —there is chow mein!*
