The Syracuse Journal, Volume 23, Number 37, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 8 January 1931 — Page 10

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————- — — ' FOR SALE One used piano; a{ bargain. Hollet Motor Sales, — ’~i FOR SALE- Beech of Sugar wood, $3.50 delivered. Tel 106. Mix with! coal keeps chimneys clean.» ltp37 FOR SALE Used radio battery I sets. These sets must move. Hollet! ! Motor Sales. FOR SALE Full line of Ford “T” and “T” truck part*. Al.-o tractor parts. Hollett Motor Sales. FOR RENT—Radios, several good ones. Inquire of Owen K. Strieby, phone 845. 4-ts RADIO — Something wrong with your radio? Call Owen Strieby. Phoneß4s. 17-ts WANTED Legal Re-ev ai|ce cojnpahy wants a di>tt<c’. - .n ager. Write or call W, H. Wright Winona, Lake, Ind. Dp "FOR SALE Three Sh. : thorn bulls, 1 year old, red, roan and white, 1 Holstein bull > n <>!■■•h. ..id, Roy Jackson, Phone 4017 Milford. It| ' OFFICE SUPPLIES Typewrite! ribbons, for all. makes of mtn hires, carbon paper, typewriter paper, earc board, blotting, tags, etc-, fm side at the Journal Office. * < ts. LEGAL FORMS Wills, mechanic r Liens, Mortgages, Assignment oi Mortgages, Options, Bill of Sale. Quit i Cl. im Deed. Notice tv Quit Te etc, for sale at the Journal Office, tl ■ Apples are les* susceptll-.e !•> st' • I age scald when pack*! in t «es baskets, or ventilated barren than ii; the usual tight barrels.

♦ ' I !r ' ' ' ' • . I 1 A ♦ The State Bank or Syracuse -••• • • • I Capital and Surplus $50,000 j ; “OUR BANK” j Safety Deposit Boxes For Rent } Notice To Telephone Patrons On October 1, W3O, the ing collection schedule will be in j . \ force in all exchanges: (1) After the discount det « shed by the Public Service I Commission, n<> fujth.tr toll serwce will be given anyone whose count is unpaid, until Mtile«■ < the aair.e as here: f< >e. $ (2) Should the act unt i.e unpaid ,at the end of., the m<’pth, service will be disconnected; £ (3) Fifteen d the current month, a disconnected telephone will be removed. • Bills are due 'on. the first day of the month, and may be paid any lime after that date. The discount -'ate is the last day hey can be paid to secure the di>. _d is not the date when they are due. Please take your discount. x ■ CENTRAL LAKES TELEPHONE CORPORATION- -A. \ ' BACHMAN’S . ■ I P. W. Cracker 2 lbs for ... 25c Lye 3'cans: -25 c Flour 25 lb Sack Hawpatch ~..59c Cocoa 2 lb. can - - -29 c Salt 100 lb Bag Meat —. 89c Pepper iib pkg..... .. 29c * Raisins 3 ibs for 25c Spinach Fresh, 2 Ibs for -25 c • Oranges Good, a doz 18c | Prunes 4(150, per ib 10c Grapefruit Each - .. 5c Head Lettuce per head, each 10c

U. B. CONFERENCE ’i HELD IN WARSAW 1 1 Warsaw, Ind.—The United Breth-j ren church held a group conference Wednesday, at the United Brethren i church of this city. The morning service began with music in charge < i Rev. Nicodemus Os Syracuse: devo--‘lions. Rev. M. S. Li vergood. Warsaw: addresses by Rev. 0. P. Givens, B.ur;Ret; Rec. L. E. Eaton of Claypool; • R, \Ei ■ Ei t G em • Itev. S. .Simon Atw< >d E. E. Ike er. Rev. H. |C. Beauchamp, conference superintendent; Rev. C S. Priest, Winona Laek, and Rev. Ji. Sco’.l Mi Neeley. -J— —-T.O • FIRST IE AM (Continued frutp One) a defence game than ." t belaud minutes <4 play Lee: burg lead by one point 24 to 2'■ a - in the last few seconds to pl.’;. sVr»cuse m..de a gotrt and the . -e -* -n ended with; '. score in Syracuse s favor to to -4. Both '.nines were refereed- >y W. G. Mow. | Scores made by Syracuse first earn players were: EG FT P Pl S Robison 4 0 0 8 Bitner. If.' 3 0 ’ ( Nicodemus, c. 2 2- v -P Lepper, rg 112 3 Grady, rg 0 0 Jones, Ig I 0 3 Total II 3’-6 25; >.-<<res made by Syracuse • second earn players were: FG FT T PTS Be. k, if ' 4 0 1* G J., f 1 n • _ •a.... m. if 1 M. Ri‘ hhart, If " - 0 * Lung, c 10 2 2' ten* T. Richhart,. Ig 0 v 2 .0 T tai 9 1. 6 19 _ —.— ~ * • • ♦ •

SEE WHAT NEW MEDICINE DID Indianapolis Lady Enjoying Health Restored by Konjola Two Years Ago. ■ a • |O.- - MRS. BELVA H. STEIERT. ‘ Fodd of any kind .caused gas, bloating and the pains of indigestion, said Mrs. Belxi.i H. Steiert, 1242 S< Haidii ■: street, Indianapolis. “As th< . esuii < f kidney - weakness, my bacl . . htd • .. . 1 w > . 'ten shoi of breath and subject to fearful head ,ches and attacks of dizziness. My "feel and limbs were numb and s? lien. About two years ago 1 began tak int Konjola, and in a few weeks this ::.edicine had rid me of ail my distressing ailments. I ate what I wished and suffered no discomfort afterward. I have been in the best of he -ith ever since and I know fro’:. • iei e that -the relief brought ah'-at by Konjola is not temporary.” Konjoli attacks, the source of the ailment, and removes the causes. lithas n-’de it America’s mos widely discussed-medicine.-K- nj‘la is sold in S\ racuse, Ind. a' Thwihnrg Drug Co., and by All the best druggists in all towns through ■oi.ii this enti’e section. f ; O “• WEEKIA NEW S RE\ IEW IS . HD TORY IN THE M IKING Ore of .he big newspapers in an effort to account for and justify the' |j’fik’-r.,nance of crime news in its ’columns, defined news as “action,” and explained that there was more (“action!’ day by day in the crimina. d .-. efeM w here. That big newspaper may be right but we do not believe our readers are • ■ ... -o •hv “acti ..” "f the un cie wvid of the big cities. We do be lieve'they are interested in the eventitiu.C arw makiag the--history of our ■■nation and’of the world in general. •Il is history in the making that wt | are giving to our readers week after week in the department headed “Weekly News ’Review,” written byEdward W. Packard. ’■ % ■ & jiiii a jfii EDWARD W. PACKARD. This is an editorial interpretation of the events that are making history, of the events that have an influence, directlyfor indirectly, on ourselves. It covets the kind of events that our intelligent citizens talk they wish to fee informed about so they may talk intelligently. Edward W. Packard, who prepares this feature for our columns, is one of the highly trained newspaper observers and writers of. the nation. He has a background of many years of experience, of a very broad education, of personaP contact. with men of affairs of this country, and travel and study in miny foreign lands. From his school and college days he has been a constant student of world history of the past, of world and national history in the making, of the men and eventSs,of our generation. Mr. Pickard’s foreign travels have but intensified his love for and appreciation of America. He is intensely American- and sees world events through the eyes of an American. He writes of events from the standpoint of their effect on our own land. Our readers Will find in -this “Weekly News Review” a feature that is very much worthy'of their careful reading each week. It will keep them closely in touch with the events of consequence, and they will find in it a sure foundation for amdiscussion they may have with thefr Neighbors of the real and important news of each week. Keep the horse’s stall dry and well bedded, and clean it daily. Wet, mucky stalls are likely to cause thrush and other foot troubles.

THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL

NAPPANEE PAPER COMPARES DEPRESSION WITH OTHERS , <

The Nappanee Advance News com- [ pares the present depression, which r s called th worst ever, with other de- t oressions, called the worst ever, at c heir time. The article in a recent issue is as follows: ; •• “Those who say that the present de- f <e ' o:i is the'worst in the history c of the country, unprecedented in its ) cause and effects, and fore shadowing t t permanent condition of lower living i standards,'are. unfamiliar with condi- - ions during the former periods of I ‘hard times,” notably the deperssion ' f 1893 to 1897, with a gradual im- t orovement in conditions until a nejv ara of great prosperity definitely be- j .n. At that time many people • .eached tht conclusion that wages, < prices and living standards had -truck a level from which there s vould be no upward trend —and the t ame sort of pessimists are with us dday, doing no lit,tie harm with | their gloomy forebodings. . I “Thirty-five years ago a greatei i ercentage of our industrial popula v. ...- out of’work percentagMvf hnme i here, was only one breadwinner. Tramps accumulated in siich numbet < hat ahnies of them were moving . cross the country, such as Coxey’t irmy and Kelly’s army. James J. :)avis, senator from Pennsylvania, i vas one of the migrants, and slept ; n a box car in Indiana while vainlj s hunting for employment. There wai t that time no private or public : ?Tort comparable’ to that in progress | oday to relieve distress. Unquestionably the philanthropic spirit of theL American people has undergone great | levelopement in the past third of a , century. ’ 11 “Wage reductions were general.!; Labor lost ground which it was un- I ible io recover for several years. < Corn was selling at ten cents ar >ushel west of the Mississippi, and : n some localities there was no market for it, and it was being I burned for fuel. Farm lands were j selling at bankrupt prices; bank failures and mortgage foreclosures were much more numerous in propotion than they are today. The wiseacres said that prices for land would never recover; within a fewyears land prices had trebled. HIGHWAYS WILL BE | CLEARED OF SNOWS, < s , , INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., Special—L State highway commission malnten-j' ince workets are prepared to make . fer ai*»om 'tive traffic this winter ; .luring periods of sleet, snow and ice, • and the most hazardous places on ail , state mileage will c -me under daily L ■ : serva-.. e, coi'amsstoners announc-; • ed. 11 Under the direction of A. H. Hinkle, naintenance’ superintendent, field; forces are storing slock piles of gra- 1 veL-cinders, stone chips and asi.es J Hong the steeper grades and at . tnv- 1 be immediately applied t.hen- 1 surfaces become slippery. ; Past experiences show the straletic places fur locating these-stock/ piles, and within a very short time grades and curves of.en - impossible j ■v. ause of ice and snow, can be made! 1 comparatively safe under sensible , . - .1 dm mg. I < Calciurh chloride also will be used l n large quantities, Hinkle said, as it I ; s ideal for redociog a slippery sur-1 j face, but must not be used in great nii’ty Ixecause of possible damage , to the pavement. One hundred pounds of the chloride should be applied over 3 cubic yards , of pavement surface which has been treated with cinders, and will have ; he effect to soften the ice enough , so the gritty cinders will take hold ( md thus produce in the shortest ] time a miximum non-slippery sur- | face. | j Ashes on the bare pavement on J very steep grades even when not icy J ire very satisfactory to reduce skid-1, ding. j' Where gravel and crushed stone , are used, the gravel should contain ai, '.arge percentage of sand." Mixed with ( he stone should be considerable j quantities Os small stone chips and ( dust. Under no circumstances, says the ( maintenance engineer, use clay, for ( i: itself it produces a slippery and ( treacherous surface. Highway commission forces are prepared to keep traffic moving throughout the years. Nearly 150 1 snow plows aye stationed in the snow * •7 * belt in the north part of the state and crews are ready to man them at the sltghest notice. Commission fore-- 1 es last year were forced to open 1 snow-blocked roads in the Laporte, .Michigan City, Gary and Chicago vicinities as late in the season as ‘ March. 1 i — . Cutting small trees for lumber is wasteful of wood, says the Forest Service. It costs more than twice as much, in boht time and labor, to man- 1 ufacture 1 board foot of lumber from ! a tree 8 inches in diameter (4H feet ‘ from the ground) as from a tree 25 < inches in diameter. The tree < to cut depends on the kind of timber t and other conditions, says the Forest '• Service, which has published a leaf- i let telling how to cut woods econom-1 < ically. This leaflet, No. 55-L, may be J obtained from the U- S. Department i of Agricuture, Washington, D. C. I

“Then, it is true, the country did . not face the hardship created through i ] the remarkable inflation of private 1 credit which prevailed when the ’ j present depression began. It is re- -i markable that the mortgaging of future earnings through credit purchases which prevailed when the present depression came on the coun- .■ try has not caused even greater dis- • aster. Nor did th well-to-do people .o the- number of millions have to , pay the penalties which have been ’ visited upon stock market specula tion. “But when the present depression began the country had vastly greater resources to fall back on than ever before. With an increase ■of about 30 per cent in our population since 1893, deposits in national banks increased from a billion and a half dollars in 1893 to twenty-one and a half bollions in 1929. , Assets of building and loan associations were 8571,366,628 in 1900 and §8,016,084,327 in 1928 and these assets belonged to nearly twelve million people. Deposits in savings banks bowed approximately the same increase during the past third of a century,-while life insurance policies .vitfi asset value and ownership of stocks and bonds grew' in „ number and amount in about the same proportion. Some idea can thus be gained of the vast increase in wealth .niong not the few, but among the masses, which has given a large percentage of the American people something* to fall back upon in times of stress. “There are pessimists who will really be much disappointed wh.en the endless chain of prosperity begins to move again. Despite all the theories to the contrary, the present depression is not based upon any permanent ghange in industry. It, is said to be due to overproduction, but it is much more accurate to say that it is due to under-consumption of a temporary nature. If the American people were to begin to exercise their full buying power tomorrow, the ■ depression would be over. We will come out’ of this as we have out of others despite the groanings and lamentations of the pessimists.” <4 TRAPPING MOLES FOR FUR. In the United States moles are generally considered a nuisance, but in some European countries they are trapped intensively for their pelts. The skins of some American i . les, says the Biological Survey of the U. S. Department' of. Agriculture, are of good quality and are in growing demand. Mole fur 'is at its best .in ‘ winter. Runways and nests of moles j are easy to locate by the earth ridg-[ es and mounds that the animals make: ■ To catch motes anywhere east of tfiej Rockies, says the Biological Survey, I trap in the hunting paths marked by I the ridges. On.ithe Pacific coast, how-j ever, it is better to trap in their deep-! er runways. Good catches can usually be made along their main highways, particularly when these are along fence lines or ridges in open fields, or where they cross from sod. to cultivated ground. From 12 to 20 moles have been caught in a few weeks by resetting a trap each day in the same spot. It is well to set traps on ridges over temporary hunting paths only when they have been made recently in damp soil and have not become dry. Moles usually work in a moist, rich soil, and it seldom pays to set traps in dry places. o Suitable feed and ample exercise are most important points in caring for the sow during pregnancy. The best feeds for bred sows are corn, shorts or middlings, fish meal or tankage, old-process linseed meal, bran, alfalfa hay or meal oats ano barley. A good way to feed shorts or middlings is to mix about a pouno with one-half pound of tankage and feed dry in a trough once a day. At a convenient place between the watering trough or sleeping quarters and the self-feeder put a rack filled with good alfalfa hay, preferable the third of fourth cutting. If this plan is followed, the corn may be fed twice daily in troughs or on a feeding floor. Keep a mineral mixture in a self seeded. Scattering ear or shelled corn in the field will furnish exercise for the sows. B o—'• • Because tuberculosis in livestock is slow in developing and causes little change in the external appearance oi the affected animal, some people believe the disease does little damage to the livestock industry. As a matter of fact, this disease formerly cost the livestock industry in the United States about $40,000,000 a year. However, the results of the cooperative work of tuberculosis eradication during the past five years indicate a material reduction in these losses. Successful storage of the roots is the most difficult part of dahlia culture. As soon as the tops are killed by frc®t, says the U. S. Department, of Agriculture, lift the plants and cut off the tops about IQ jnches above the crown. Let the roots dry in the air for a ,few hours and store them in a frost-free cellar that is not too dry. If the cellar is too warm or too dry, the roots may be stored in barrels filled with dry sand, sawdust, or peatmoss.

ATTEMPT TO (Continued from Page One) he was doing, the marshal took him down to the jail. Dqring the questioning the boy admitted being caught in Elmer Long’s car, during the afternoon. When caught he had said he was trying to move it, that , someone el|e wanted to park there. It was discovered that the boy had obtained a key for a flivver, from Hollett’s, during the afternoon, telling, the story that his father left theii - car for him to drive home, and had gone to Ligonier, taking their key with him. Later in the evening Joe Rapp got him to admit that he had taken his key ring, on which, among others, were keys to the city fire truck. He finally said his name was James Smart, and that his family lived on the Slotterbach farm between Ligonier and Cromwell. This he was forced to admit when identified by Dora Clingerman. Syracuse men notified his father by telephone, Saturday night, but the boy’s father refused to come to get him w out of jail, saying the boy was headstrong and unmanageable. He was left in jail all night, in hope that it would be a lesson to him, and Joe Rapp and Charles Rentfrow took him home Sunday rhorning. D. H. BRUNJES. (Continued from First Page) o’clock, surrounded by his family and friends, his soul took its flight. He leaves behind, his widow, twp sons, one grandson, two grand dau--1 ghters. an aged sister, and an innumberable host of friends to mourn their loss. “We bow in meek submission tc the will of Almighty God.” ORVAL G. CARR FUNERAL DIRECTOR AMBULANCE SERVICE PAUL CORY, Assistant Syracuse, Ind. PhOne 75 GEO. L. XANDERS ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Settlement of Estates Opinions on Titles Phone 7 Syracuse, Ind. Fire and Other Insurance

» 3 -i i . 1 I ' The New Spring line of Suits are here $20.00 $22.50 $25.00 $30.00 $35.00 I ; You ought to see the line of Suits I am putting out for : $20.00 and $22.50 I - °. Tailor Made and Guaranteed to Fit. ! They also carry the same Tailoring as they have in past years. I * • COME IN AND SEE THEM. I M. E. RAPP ♦ I__, , ■ * Specials for Saturday f ■ to o Sugar 10 lbs. .... 46c Soap P. &G. 10 bars 34c Dpac Gold Shield, formerly am 3 17c each, now 3 for 3UC Lye 3 cans — 25 c I Pork & Beans 3 can 5....... 24c Brooms 25c Seider & Burgener

RADIO DOCTOR SERVICE and SUPPLIES SCREEN GRID RADIOS AH Guaranteed OWEN R. STRIEBY PHONE 8-4-5 Syracuse, Indiana TO BRETZ [ FOR GLASSES 1 jC i /Yevin* Bretz 5 Y /OFTICIAN / 5 OPTOMETRIST i GOSHEN. INDIANA. Room 30. H-awks-Gortner Bldg. i See , DWIGHT MOCK ; _ for—- — Vulcanizing and ® Acetylene Welding t Battery Charging and Repairing South Side Lake Waw-asee (on cement road) - 1 ALL WORK GUARANTEED! Phone 504 Syracuse CRYSTAL y Ligonier The Best All Talking Pictures P - Fri. & Sat. Jan. 9-10. “THE SON OF THE SADDLE" n Ken Maynard and his horse Tarzan in a thriller of the Wes.. Also 0 a comedy and a news. ■Sun. Mon. & Tues, Jun. 11-12-13. - “HALF SHOT AT SUNRISE” Wheeler and Woolsey, mighty stars of “The Cuckoos” are in the Army now. Dig yourself a laugh proof trench. You’re in for . the year’s greatest bombardment of dizzy joy—Forget your troubles roar with these clowns in khaki. Also good selected shprt subjects. Coming Sun. Jan. 18. “A LADY’S MORALS” Starring Grace Moore and Regniald Demy. The, Crystal will be closed on Wednesdays and Thursdays during January and February.