The Syracuse Journal, Volume 23, Number 4, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 22 May 1930 — Page 8
Want Ad s 1
FOR RENT—Three acres of pickle ground. Geo. L. Xanders. 4-lt FOR RENT Radios, several good " ones. Inquire of Owen R. Strieby, phone 845. 4-ts TO EXCHANGE — Lake rental property for 40 tq: 60 acre improved farm. Phone 124. 4-2 t FOR SALE—Walnut and cedarchests at the Wawasee Cedar Chest Co., at greatly- reduced prices. See Judd Searfoss. 2-lt FOR SALE Refrigerator, built-in cupboard,-160 gal. gasoline tank, feed grinder. Mrs. George Mellinger, R, R. No. 3, Syracuse. Ind. 4-ltp FOR SALE Club house known as , Elmwood Heights, opposite State Fish Hatchery. Inquire J. Fleming, R. R. No. 2, Syracuse, Ind. 3 L 4tp RADIO' — wrong with your radio? Call Owen Strieby. I’honeSlo. 17-ts LEGAL FORMS—WiIIs, mechanic’s '~Liens, Mortgages, Assignment of Mortgages, Options, Bill of Sale, Quit Claim Deed, Notice to, Quit Tenancy, etc?, for sale at the Journal Office, ts OFFICE SUPPLIES— Typewrite) ribbons, for all makes of machines, carbon paper, typewriter paper, card board, blotting, tags, etc., for sale at the Journal Office. , ts. ■ FOR SALE Several used pianos in new condition with new (Kano guarantee; Oak and mahogany, up t< standard pitch. Priced right for; quick sale. Terms if desired. Sell ing out. Rogers, &. Wilson, Goshen 4-1: SALESMAN WANTED We ate manufacturing an indispensable house hold article which retails for slo.ot* ™We want to locate.ap Al salesman saleslady who will sell in Syracuse and vicinity on a 35 f , commission basis. Five and ten sales per day is not aft exaggeration. A dress Bx G, Nappanee, Indiana. An interview will be arranged.- . 4-lt FOR SALE CHEAP if taken month-- cine platform spring wagon, used four years, with shafts, I complete half set" of work harness with detachable breeching, in good shape: one set of light wagon tugs, new: steel, hames and other parts of harness, gobd shape; 2 bales of No. 1 timothy hay; also a 2-rovm garage for rent. 18x24, with two sets of ’doors,, cement floors. See B F. Kitson or call phone 126, Syracuse. 2-2 t COUNTRY'S GREATEST ORCHESTRAS AT WACO • Will be included in ballrooin circuit of Music Corporation of America. Although dancing at Waco has al- . ways been a popular amusement amongst the pleasure seekers of this and surrounding community, the time is here when a new recofd.will be set'for attendance. Under! the new policy, which includes the joining of the Music Corporation of America Ballroom circuit, there will be a new- and well km wn dance orchestra officiating every -two weeks'. This makes the Waco pavilion another •member of the circuit of ballrooms in fifty representative cities all over the states, and enables the people to enjoy music of many bands -during the course of the season. - .This new policy, which is indeed nOt very old anywhere, brings different dance music to your door eviery two weeks. Promised with this pAnorama of the greatest in music makers, are not only novel musical notes, but fresh, entertaining activities on the part of the different bands. Each orchestra is a show in itself and some of the MCA organihave been headliners in vaudeville and the larger movie theaters of Chicago and New York. The Music Corporation of America has taken great pains to choose! only the best and most popular orchestras for its companies. The selections have been made in ®®ch case after a thorough study of the band and in most cases the orchestras are featured artists of the many radio progams and ecording artists as well. Included amongst the. famous names that are under the exclusive management of the Music Corporation of America are: Guy Lombardo, CoonSanders, Wayne King, Ted Weems, Maurie Sherman, Art Kassel, Hogan Hancock, Seven Aces, Red Curtis. Some of their best bands will be heard at Waco during the season which will open under the rythmical auspices of Howard Thomas and his 12 piece orchestra on Wednesdayevening, May 28. Fresh cream for butter-making should never be mixed with cream from previous skimmings until it has been cooled. The addition of warm cream raises the temperature of the older cream and hastens souring. Another petrified forest, the onlyone so far discovered with the trees lying as they fell millions of years ago, is reported to the U- S. Forest Service. The forest, which covers several acres, was found by a road building expedition on the lower Yellowstone reclamation project. Some of the trees are 10 feet in diameter and more than 100 feet long.
1 I IN OUR CHURCHES ■ i___ :———-—— — —’ UNION SERVICES Union services of all the churches of Syracuse are to be held at the Church of God-Sunday evening at (47:30 p. m. Rev. W. C. Griffith will be the speaker under' the auspices of the anti-saloon league. CHURCH OF COD •Geo. L.'Chapman, Pastor Preaching each first and third I Sunday, 11 a., m. and 7:30 p. m. Bible school each Sunday at 10:06 a.. mJ C. J. Kitsnn, Supt. C. E. Services each Sunday 6:30 “p. in., Mrs. Floyd Hedges, pres. Prayer every Thursdaynight at 7:30. GRACE LUTHERAN CHURCH Sunday school 9:45. Morning worship 10:45. At this service Mr. Grimm, our delegate to the Synod will present his report. ' At 6 o’clock in the evening the choir will present the contata “The Heavenly Light.” The public is cordially invited to. these services to hear the contata. CHURCH OF UNITED BRETHREN Sunday- school 9:45. Gerald Bushong, supt. The evening' service will be ommitted to join in the union service at the Church of God at 7:30. Rev. C L. Griffith of Indianapolis will speak oh the subject of temperance. The pastor will be at the Indian Village church for the morning service. Prayer meeting service will be omitted on account of. the revival at the Church of the Brethren. . ; ■ A. Nicodemus, Pastor. . EVANGELICAL CHURCH ' P. W. Soltau, Gen. Supt., H. M. Hire, Asit’. Sunday school .9:45 a. m. We have a class for every age and a teacher for every class. Sermon, 10:45 a. m. This service will be in keeping with Memorial Sunday. There will be no evening service in this church Sunday on account of the Union ‘Services held in Church of God under the atispices of the Indiana Anti-Saloon league. Rev. C. L. Griffith will be the speaker. R. G. Foust, Pastor. O — ; — KONJOLA BRINGS QUICK RELIEF TO THIS MAN Indianapolis Man. Sorry He Had Not Tried New Medicine Long Before -“Really Different," He Says MR, JASON A. HOOTEN “I should have had Konjola long ago; it would have saved me a world of expense and suffering/’ said Mr. Josan A. Hooten, 3901 Orchard' Ave., Indianapolis. "1 suffered from stomach trouble for years. Food lay tike a heavy mass in my stomach and gas formed in such quantities that my heart action was affected and I became short of breath. I came weak and run down and was forced to take a rest each day. Nervousness and constipation addel to my misery. “Konjola, which was recommended by friends, proved to be a truly new and different medicine. It attacked the very source of my troubles and relieved my constipation almost at once. My appetite returned and my digestion became normal. My nerves were soothed and quieted, and I began to take on weight until I had gained* eight pounds. I have more strength .energy and vitality today than I have had in a long time, and I owe it all to this great medicine." Konjola ,the new and different medicine ,is a systematic treatment, taken after meals. It quickly goes to the source of the ailments, cleansing and invigoratin gthe ailing organs, and giving abundant and glorious relief. Konjola is sold in Syracuse, Ind< at the Thornburg Drug Co., andby all the’ best druggists in all towns throughout this entire section. —-——o- . Mr. arid Mrs. V. W. Mead came from Detroit Saturday evening to spend Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Harry, Porter,
“The Li’l Wife In Africa’’ (Editor’s Note: Because so many people have suggested we write some of our African experiences; and because so much is written of big game, and so little of housekeeping near the Equator, the editor’s wife is writing, from the diary she kept, about “The Li’l Wife in Africa.”) People who write about experiences in Africa make it sound such a Big Game it isn’t one of these True Experience stories where her husband’s best friend did tell her. And that story told on our arrival by the man who didn’t hear the lion roar was followed by one Experience story which never would have sold, it sounded like such a fairy tale. I had inquired about the man I had seen walking about the post, his head bound up with bandages. Delighted to answer questions of the newcomer concerning their new real estate development, all these Americans in Africa joined in telling the story of the man with the wounded head. He vvasr'a Portugese employee of the company ,who had driven one of the trucks between this main post and the main post in the Congo. The halfway point was the home of a Boer and his wife, up from South Africa ,in the employ of the company. They were in charge of a few hea4 of cattle there,-kept gasoline arid such supplies for trucks on this route, and they always put. up drivers who stopped there a-t night, to leave the next morning in time to reach the customs shed as it opened. The story made it pathetic. It was of the Boer who worked hard all day, and his poor wife with nothing to do and no one to appreciate her, just’ like .ail the African tales ell. So, she, cheered up considerably when this Portugese driver stopped for a glass of beer, oftener than the truck’s tires needed air ,or who came early in the afternoon ,and stayed qver night instead of going oh and reaching the custom shed in the .time he. had ,if he’d used it. One day the irate husband came into his home unexpectedly one afternoon; found them both enjoying a glass of beer, accused them of this and that/ like they do in the movies, j'he Portugese driver climbed into his truck, delivered his stuff at the main post and went home- Where he thought in a melancholy way, “I have ruined her life, her happy home —” and things people think at a time like that. He pulled out his pistol—an unconfiscated one—put it his head and pulled the trigger. The bpllet went through his head, somewhere near his ears. It must have been at the point below where his brain began. Because they rushed him to the hospital and the doctor'probed arid removed the remains of the bulleL The man still lived. \ That night there arrived a big thunderstorm ,one of those violent ones that end the rainy season and start off the dry months. The lightening struck the bed of this patient in the hospital. Attendants, horrified, managed to remove his body, which still lived. At the time of our arrival, he Was awaiting shipment to Portugal where it seems, after all this attempted suicide‘ publicity, the governmnet had discovered it wanted him for killing a man before his departure to Africa. We decided that if they put him in an electric chair when they got him to Portugal, he’d blow out a fuse.
- Ihe lourPhotw A Call to 82 or 172 is all that is needed to bring your favorite foodstuffs over on the rush. Prices fair, always. Groceries as fresh and wholesome as one could hope. /Come in on Saturday and inquire about our specials. It will be to your advantage! Seider and Burgener’s
THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL
But that didn’t close this True Story, love or otherwise. In the riieantime the Boer woman feeling that her husband didn’t trust her, that all was over for them, drank the stuff you use to develop your own photograph films. She told the jealous husband that he had suspected their friendship unjustly. And then she got seasick, lost all the was to have been poison ,and speedily. Which re-unitied the husband and wife—but disjoined him from • the company which decided it hadn’t time’ for such violent romances during business hours, and shipped ’em both home. So, they explained to me at the conclusion of the story—and they all told the same one—-you see what ideas the modern movie will put in the mind of an otherwise unsuspicious husband. W’atch the programs of Crystal — Ligonier. —adv. ——— o —■ — FLOORING PRECAUTIONS ■ Cracks in a new floor usually do not appear until several months after a hounse is occupied and it is top late to do anything about it, says the U. S. Forest Service, which tells howto prevent cracks in new floors. The cracks that develop in a few weeks or months in new, well-laid floors are the result of a change in the moisture content of the weed. Get lumber that has been kept under dry conditions and do not have it delivered on a damp or rainy day. Be sure that the plaster or masonry walls are dry before the flooring is delivered. Eliminate all badly crooked boards of use them in inconspicuous places. Unless the weather is very warm and dry, keep the temperature of the house at from. 62D to 65D from the time the flooring is delivered until it is painted. .—_____ q_ The best preventative against tuberculosis in swine is to have a tuberculosis free herd of cgttle and a flock of poultry free from tuberculosis . Hogs usually contract this disease by feeding on unpasteurized skim milk from tuberculosis cows, by following tuberculosis cattle in the feed lot or by assicoation with tuberculous poultry. In the Corn Belt the poultry are a most prolific source of the disease in swine. Chides will grow faster if their ration includes sour milk, skim nylk, or buttermilk to drink in addition to the grain feeds and green feeds. Mix milk with the mash if wet mash feeding is preferred. o— — LAKE SEASON (Continued from page One) the season Decoration Day. John Collander is to be in charge of the concession stand and golf course this summer, according to Mr. Walters and Harold Walters will be in charge of Ideal Beach and the slide to the lake. In spite of the unpleasantness of the weather this last week end, summer residents came to Lake Wawasee ,to clean their cottages and get them in shape for the coining season. Among these were Mr. and Mrs. James Lance ,of Willard, O. They spent all of .last Week at their cottage getting it cleaned and aired ready for summer occupancy. Mr. and Mrs. William Smith came from Garrett Saturday to open their summer
home on the lake. Miss L. M. Gross, Western Union Telegraph operator, located at the Wawasee hotel last summer, expects to return there May 29th, this year. S. C. Hadden of Indianapolis visited his cottage this week end, as did T. F. Vaughn of Wabash. He was accompanied by his chauffeur who assisted him in repairs about the cottage Friday and Saturday. They returned home Saturday night. Mr. arid Mrs. Ralph Teeter and a party of friends came from Hagerstowm to the lake for the week end. They planned two things for their entertainment Sunday, they said. A chicken dinner at Emerson’s, and the testing of a new high speed motor, on the lake. Both these were accomplished. Mr. and Mrs. Dan Teeter and a party of friends from Hagerstown also visited the lake this week end, although the Teeter home had not been opened for the season. Mrs. Charles Teeter had been at her summer home all last week with a few servants, getting it ready for the season. Some of her relatives will live there this summer, as Mr. and Mrs. Teeter and daughter plan to spend the summer in Europe. Collie Lamb and friends drove from Payne, Ohio, to Wawasee, for 'he week end at Mr. Lamb’s cottage. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Fishhack and grandson came from Ft. Wayne for' the week end. Saturday, Mr. and Mrs. Ray Semans of Chicago spent a few hours at their cottage, looking it over to see what- repairs will be necessary before its re-opening.. They drove on to Warsaw to visit Mr. Seman’s parents, Rev. and Mrs. Semans. Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Tyrrell and son of Muncie, are spending this week at their cottage in Grandview Park. This is their second season on Lake Wawasee. Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Ingels, who
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spent last week at their summer home, returned to Ft. Wayne, Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Boyd Templeton i drove from Indianapolis to spend the week end at their summer home. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Nash of Kokomo entertained a party of friends at their new home on the lake, this week end. Guy Dautsman of Goshen, whose cottage is not yet opened for the season .spent the week end at the Tavern. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Henderson of Chicago spent Sunday at the Hubble cottage on Lake Wawasee. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Morris of Goshen entertained friends over the week end at their cottage on Wawasee. r Last week Mrs. Thomas Edgell moved from Chicago to her summer home in Pottaawtomie Park, w-here she will spend the season. Mr. Edgell drives over from Chicago to spend week ends here. v George Gass and Jack Conoly of Indianapolis, not Gary, who spent Friday and Saturday at the Tuttle cottage, went on to Springfield, 0., Sunday on business. Peter Dolan of Avilla came to Wawasee Monday, to open his cottage in Oakwood Park for the season. Rev. M. M. LeCount of New Castle, Ind., has completed the new cottage near his summer home north of Quaker Haven on Dewart Lake, and has rented it' to friends for the season. Dr. and Mrs. Laughlin of Chicago, and their guests spent the w r eek end at the* Laughlin cottage on Ogden Island. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Mensenberger have returned to their home near Bruriujes Park for the coming season. Mr. and Mrs. R. H. Pentreath of Clinton spent the week end at their i summer home.
CARD OF THANKS Editor of the Journal: Please extend my thanks to the Republican voters of this county who supported me in my candidacy for the office of County Commissioner in the recent primary. C. I. BASHORE, Silver Lake, Ind. L, T. L. NOTICE The L. T. L. will meet Saturday afternoon at 3 o’clock with Mrs. S. A. Bauer. At this time the election of officers will be held and an offering will be lifted. Plans for the summer’s work will be given attention and a full atendance is urged by the director, Mrs. Myrtle Foust. THIS WEEK (Continued from Page One) New York. It would cost §180,000,000, but that agitates no one. We have passed into the billion dollar era. Mere millions attract little attention. o Mr. and Mrs. Frank Maloy and Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Maloy were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Howard McSweeney, Sunday, when they enter--1 tained Mr. and Mrs. Hyler and Mr. and Mrs. Kogler and son from Chicago Heights.
CRYSTAL Ligonier The Best All Talking Pictures Thurs., May 22 "ANNA CHRISTIE" Great Garbo’s first talking picture, the world has waited to hear her voice. It has broken all attendance records to smithereens! Fri., and Sat., May 23 and 24 : — “NOT SO DUMB" Marion Davies’ greatest comedy hit. A laugh in every line, and a howl in every scene. Also good short comedy and news—Admission, 20c and 30c. Sun., and Mon., May 25 and 26 “BE YOURSELF” starring Fanny Brice, Broadway’s' favorite commedienne in the merriest, zippiest and most exciting romance of night clubs and prize ring—it’s great! Also Harry Langdon comedy and News. Admission 20c and 40c Tues., Wed., Thurs., May 27-28-29 “PUTTIN’' ON THE RITZ” Bringing for the first time Harry Richman, the idol of Broadway, the playboy of the Great White Way, strutting his stuff in the snappiest, most gorgeous musical romance ever screened. It is the last word ,in song and dance entertainment. Mighty spectacular scenes in Technicolor that are unbelievably stunning! Music by Irving Berlin—this show has everything for entertainment. Shows at 7:30 —-9:30 (standard time) Admission 20c and 40c COMlNG—Tuesday 3-4-5— Janet Gaynor and Charles Farrell, stars of “Sunny Side Up” in their latest and greatest hit—“HIGH SOCIETY BLUES’* 666 TABLETS Relieves a Headache or Neuralgia in 30 minutes, checks a Cold the first day, and checks Malaria in three days 666 ALSO IN LIQUID ORVAL G. CARR FUNERAL DIRECTOR Ambulance Service SYRACUSE, INDIANA Telephone 75 GEO. L. XANDERS ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Settlement of Estates Opinions on Titles Phone 7 Syracuse, Ind. Fire and Other Insurance RADIO DOCTOR SERVICE and SUPPLIES SCREEN GRID RADIOS All Guaranteed OWEN R. STRIEBY] PHONE 8-4-5 Syracuse, Indiana See DWIGHT MOCK —for — Vulcanizing and Acetylene Welding Battery Charging and Repairing South Side Lake Wawasee ’ (on cement road) ALL WORK GUARANTEED! Phone 544 Syracnse TO BRETZ FOR GLASSES OPTOMETRIST GOSHEN. MXAHA. Hawin-Gortaar Bldg.
