The Syracuse Journal, Volume 23, Number 39, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 22 January 1931 — Page 8
Want Ads
FOR RENT—Modern furnished house for rent after Feb. 1. Inquire at Syracuse Journal Office. ' "■ — JU4 11 1 FOR RENT—Radios, several good ones. Inquire of Owen R. Strieby, phone 845. 4-ts ! 1 RADIO r— Something wrong with your radio? Call Owen Strieby. Phoneß4s. 17-ts ROLLER SKATING — Cromwell, Ind. Every night except Monday and Friday and Sunday afternodns. C. W. Searfoes. ltp-83 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. LEGAL FORMS—WiIIs, mechanic’s Liens, Mortgages, Assignment of Mortgages, Options, Bill of Sale, Quit Clrim Deed, Notice to Quit Tenancy, etc, for sale at the Journal Office. If ' CARD OF THANKS. We wish to thank neighbors and friends for the kindness shown. arid the assistance given, during the illness and at the time of the death Os Mr. Smith. Mrs. Samuel B. Smith and Family. WHY WORRY. About 11l HealthTSee Dr. Warner. He will help you. Lady attendant. Phone 176, Goshen.
| COAL j Red Ash- (Kentucky Hazard) Island Creek- (Virginia Splint) Yellow Pine Egg-(Cook Stove) | Forked Clean Coal | FEED SPECIALS FRIDAY & SATURDAY ? Per Cwt. Bran, - $1.40 (Middlings 1.40 Wayne 32 c Dairy Feed ...... .. 2.25 Swift’s 50 c Meat Scraps ........ 2.95 Stiefel Grain Co. ' Call 886 t l 'l 4 I ‘♦♦’MH 1 4'4"l'*?' I '14 , 44' I'4*4'*l W**{'*i*‘l**l , ‘l‘ , l**l' I ... ' , j — ?" ■.’ ’ ■ ■ '. ■'' ■ The State Bank of Syracuse •••••••• Capital and Surplus $50,000 "OUR BANK” Safety Deposit Boxen For Rent 1....... V • ’ • V" "W : C/7 . i C /uA i : : 1 ; FINE QUALITY MEATS pCLINK BROS. Notice To Telephone Patrons On October 1, 1990, the following collection schedule will bo in force in all exchanges: (1) After the discount date established by the Public Service Comminion. no further toll service will be given anyone whose ac> count is unpaid, until settlement is made. The discount date is the same as heretofore. (2) Should the account be unpaid at the end of the month, service will be disconnected. : ' * (3) Fifteen days after the close of the current month, a disconnected telephone will be removed. Bilb are due on the first day of the month, and may be paid any time after that date. The discount date is the last day they can be paid to secure the discount, and is not the date when they are 4ne. Please take your discount. CENTRAL LAKES TELEPHONE CORTOKATION
LIBRARY REPORT FOR 1930 ..The annual report of the Syracuse Public Library shows that 20,06’. books were borrowed during the year 1930. 11,789 of theee were read by adults and 8.273 by juveniles. There were 316 new books purchased during the year. Os this number 184 were adult and 132 juvenile. ; 58 books were presented to the library by our different readers. The daily average of circulation was 57 plus. The library was closet for laying floor covering w.hich three days less than last year. There are 412 adult borrowers ant 245 juvenile borrowers, making a total of 737 for the year. The total receipts for the year were $3,265.98, and expenditures $3,144.42. Some of the new books are: “The Second Twenty Years at Hull House”—Jane Addams. “The Ring of the Lowenskolds”Selma Selerlof. “Sunset Pass”—Zane Grey. / “Portrait by Carolina” —Sylvia Thompson. “The Lion's Den”—Janet Ayer Fairbanks. “ j “Susie Sugarbeet”—Margaret Ashmun. “The Sky Riders”—E. Keble Chat terton. “The Thirteenth Spoon”—Pembert on Ginther. "Elephant King” Reginald Camp bell. Levada Gilbert is able to be abouT -gain. -It is all right to feed silage tha’ has been frozen to livestock, provider :l is fed immediately after thawing.
“KONJOLA BBT z * OE MEDICINES” -— / Says Indianapolis Lady. 11l For Years With Stomach and Kidney Trouble. ' - *’ K -MB ST " MRS. MARY E. COLLINS. "For years I yas in a run down condition,” said Mrs. Mary E. Collins, 449 Arbor avenue, Indianapolis. “I ate but little and food in any amount caused Smothering spells and pains around my heart. My kidneys were weak and I was forced to ise frequently at night. A sluggish iver caused headaches and dizzy -pells. I’lost[weight and became very nervous. n “Many or my friends urged me to nke Konjola and I felt so much beter after 1 had completed the first bottle that I continued the treatment; Today my stomach is much better, my appetite is excellent and food is doing me good. I have gained about nine pounds and I feel like another person. Konjola is the best of medicines and I recommend it at every opportunity.” • Konjola is recommended over a six to eight week period for ailments of-the stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels, and rheumatism, neuritis and nervousness. Konjola is sold in Syracuse, Ind. at Thornburg Drug Co., and by all the best druggists in all towns throughout this entire section. FOOD GUIDE. (Continued from First Page) ar and molasses,. 5 to 6 pounds. Lean meat fish, clieese, eggs, 5 to 10 pounds. \ Market Suggestions. The menu suggested for one day includes liver and bacon. The bureau has made extensive experiments with beef, hog, calf and lamb liver with he following results. Hog liver compares very favorably with beef and calf liver and is usually half as expensive. Its flavor is much improved by scalding for about half a minute before frying in bacon fat. Lamb liver is also Cheap but it is usually sold whole and not by the single pound. The vegetable and fruit allowance of 20 pounds should include some leafy green vegetables and some yellow .vegetables, and some oranges, bananas, and dried fruit. The choice necessarily must depend on the price. A good <division might be 15 pounds of vegetables and five pounds of fruit. • ( k f Mild flavored vegetables should be cooked quickly, until tender, in as little water as possible, and all juices used either with the vegetables, or in Soup. In this way the valuable minerals, so necessary for health, are not wasted, the bureau advices. Menu For One Day. Breakfast^ — with raisins and milk, fried corn meal mush with molasses, coffee. Dinner Beef or pork liver with bacon, served with gravy, stewed tomatoes, bread, margarine or butter. Supper—Fish chowder, rice pudding, bread, margarine, teaFried Corn Meal Mush. 2 cups yellow corn meal, 3 teaspoons salt. 4 cups cold water. Mix the corn. meal, salt and cold water in the upper part of a double boiler. Cook over the direct flame until boiling and boil for 1 minute, stirring constantly. Place the upper part of the double boiler into the lower part and cook the corn meal mush for one hour. Pour the mush into a wet dish or pan and let. stand overnight. When set into a firm mold
I I Most cars today give you good performance and good I looks. But what a I difference there is ■ in riding ease! 9| Hudson-Essex I gives you 7? are MK Riding Comfort. gAU Ask your dealer to demonstrate, ml Other body model* a* attractively paced. J Special equipment extra. All price* F. O. B. Detroit.
THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL
?ut the mush into slices about % nch thick, sprinkle with flour, and fry slowly in shallow fat until golden brown on both sides. Serve hot with molasses. Fish Chowder. 1 lb. fish, (fresh, salt, or canned). 5 medium sized, potatoes, peeled and cut in small pieces. t 1 onion, sliced. % lb. salt pork. 3 cups milk. Pepper. 3 tablespoons flour. Cut pork in small pieces and fry with the chopped onion for five minutes. Put pork, onions, carrots, and potatoes in kettle and cover with boiling water. Cook until vegetables are tender. Mix three tablespoons of flour with one half cup of the cold niilk and stir in the liquid in the pot to, thicken. Add the rest of the milk and the fish which has been removed front the bone and cut in -mall pieces. Cook,until the fish is tender; about 10 minutes. Serve hot. You can omit salt pork and use a tablespoon of other fat. (Rabbit, fowl or any meat may be used instead of the fish, or tomatoes instead of milk) Rice Pudding. 1 cup rice, «-.= 1 teaspoon salt. Scant 4 cup sugar. 3 cups milk. I 3 cups water. j Cook rice over low flame, stirring | occasionally to prevent sticking. I When rice is soft and all liquid taken ■up, add sugar, ■ nutmeg or flavoring- ■ Chill anti serve. Left over fruit, addjed just before serving, makes thu pudding a delicious dessert. If pudding is cooked in a double boiler, use 1 cup less of both milk and water. THIS WEEK (Continued from Page One) railroad and returning by another, and without fail . making one trip through the Panama canal. The pessimist especially should see his country, front the giant trees of Washington and Oregon in the Northwest, to the palm trees and sand beaches of Florida. A trip front he Atlantic to the Pacific means only three nights on the train now, and the comfort of moderr travel is unbelievable —solid trains ol steel cars running smoothly, with ev ery comfort of a first class hotel, ant I the additional pleasure of going some where and seeing the world as you g< You sympathize with the turtle be cause he cannot go. far. But at leas he goes as far as he can. \ You feel sorry for the Texas “tick,’ brushed from a cow, and unable ii his whole lifetime to crawl more thas two or three feet in search of an other cow’s leg to start in busines again. Don’t be a turtle of a Texas ticl Travel, see your country. Doctor Williams, editor, of Hygiene, says, very truly, that thos< that practice or contemplate tris marriage “’lack sincerity and faith ii each other.” The girl in the partnership may b< sure of one thing—namely, that the man thinks little of her. If his opinion of her were what i should be he would want to marrj and .forever, with no trial, no doubts and no misgivings. Detroit, after a period -of hiberna tion, shows signs of life at full speed Tens of thousands of/additional men have gone to work. Seventy-five thousand started at the Ford River Rouge plant. ■ - Chevrolet promises 30,000 steady jobs through the winter. Dodge, Hudson, Lincoln, Buick, Cadillac and Chrysler are all increasing inventory. _o TRY A JOURNAL WANT AD
'^** A Bi S FOR a dry, smoky throat, of hoarseness —those every-day Tk X. irritations that are distressing even I not on 9 erous - NYAL Huskeys heal. They soothe N. instantly. Men and women both like them to freshen the mouth. 25c at N YAL -j?* ' n ' n y ! Service Drug Stores. Thornburg Drug Co. NEXT TO POSTOFFICE » •
POSTPONE DECISION ON NEW TEXTBOOKS Indianapolis—The State Board of Education voted to comply with a resolution passed by the Indiana General Assembly calling for postponement of the adoption of new common school textbooks, until after the close of the legislature. L. A. Pittenger, president <■ of Ball State Teachers College, presented thej motion to postpone the action on bias until after the legislature adjourns. Mr. Pittenger also, presented a motion, which was adopted by the board, providing that ail bias : i data on textbook adoption be turned over to the legislature for investigation. o — 11 I -'■ ■■! IN OUR CHURCHES { I U -> ZION CHAPEL. Rev. J. E. Shaw, pastor. Sheridan Deaton, Supt. Sunday school at 10 a. m. a Morniiig service, 10:30 a. ni. Evening service, 7:00 p. m. Prayer meeting Wednesday evening 7 p. m. CHURCH OF GOD. Geo. L. Chapman, Pastor. C. J. Kitson S. S. Supt. Sunday School 10:00 a_ m_ Preaching in Syracuse every second and fourth Sunday in each month at II a. m. and 7 p. m. Prayer meeting every Thursday Public invited to all services. U. B. ANNOUNCEMENTS A. Nicodemus, Pastor. Sunday School, 9:45 A. M. Gerald Bushong, Supt. . < Morning Service 11 No evening service but a union W. C. T. U. meeting at the Evengelical "church. CHURCH OF THE BRETHREN. Evangelist J. Edwin Jarboe, pastorLeonard Barnhart, S. S. Supt. Sunday School 10 a. m. Preaching, 11 a. m. and 7 p. m. The Weimer Sisters will assist in l he evening service jfwqth the quartett he evening servicer with the quar- ' ette singing. GRACE LUTHERAN CHURCH A. H. Arbaugh, Pastor. Eugene Maloy> S. S. Supt. Sunday school, 9:45 a. m. Evening worship, 7:00 The newly elected officers of Church and Sunday school will be installed at this service. Let them all be present. r . . -lETHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH A. J. Armstrong, Minister; W. G. Connolly, Supt. Church School, 9:451 Junior League, 11:00, Morning Worship, 11:00. Subject, “Abundant Grace.” Intermediate League, 6:15. Evening service, 7:00. Subject, “Joshua, God’s Man.” EVANGELICAL CHURCH R. G. Foust, pastor. P. W. Soltau, Gen., Supt., H. M. Hire, Asst. We have a class for every age and a teacher for every class. Sunday School at 9:45 a. m. Morning worship, 10:45. Evening service, 7:00 p. m. Prayer meeting each Thursday evening at 7:00 p. m.
RADIO DOCTOR SERVICE and SUPPLIES SCREEN GRID RADIOS All Guaranteed OWEN R. STRIEBY PHONE 8-4-5 Syracuse, Indiana GEO. L. XANDERS ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Settlement of Estates Opinions on Titles Phone 7 Syracuse, Ind Fire and Other Insurance ORVAL G. CARR FUNERAL DIRECTOR AMBULANCE SERVICE 1 PAUL CORY, Assistant Syracuse, Ind. • Phone 75 TO BRETZ FOR GLASSES OPTOMETRIST GOSHEN, INDIANA. Room 30, Hawks-Goruvr Bldg. ELMER M. CALVERT Funeral Home Phone 91 Syracuse, Ind.
BACH MAN’S Outstanding Bargains Here This Week BARGAINS NUMBER ONE— Ball Band Galoshes for Women and Girls, First Quality, Cloth, Slide Fasteners, Regular Price, $3.50 and $4.00, Now 1- $2.25 BARGAINS NUMBER TWO— One Lot Ladies One-Straps and ' Pumps. Fine Shoes. Regular $4.00 and $5.00. Now $2.95 BARGAINS NUMBER THREE— Fine Wool Serges. Excellent for Girls Pleated Skirts. Regular $1.50 to $2.50 per yard. Now, —B9 c BARGAINS NUMBER FOUR— Men’s Sheepskin Coats. High Grade Heavy Fleece. Wide Fleeced Collar. Heavy Khaki Cloth. Were $10.50. Now — $7.50 BARGAINS NUMBER FIVE—zs/Men’s Blue Serge Two-Piece Suit — Size 39 Coat. Tailor Made.. Priced Low Self-Serve Grocery Pork & Beans campbell’s 3 25c Red Beets No - 2 can > loc - 3 for 25c (■ ■ ■ OlivCS oz * bottle, 9c, 3 for —-25 c Shredded Wheat s P k^s f0, 29c Cheese cream, per itx 23c Toilet Paper 4 rolls for .... 25c Oranges Florida, per doz 18c Spinach fresh. ” er lb 10c Bananas 3 pounds for 19 c Head Lettuce per head 10c Grapefruit Each 5c
L. W. HELD. AUCTIONEER. Am now booking Sales. Would be glad to add your name to my List. Phone Syracuse Journal Office. Bet> DWIGHT MOCK —for — Vulcanizing and Acetylene Welding Battery Charirhig and Repairing South Side Lake Wawasee (on Cement road) ALL WORK GUARANTEED! Phode 504 Syracuse J —— CRYSTAL Ligonier The Best All Talking Pictures Fri. & Sat. Jan. 23-24. | "THE SILVER HORDE” ‘ Rex Beach’s immdrtal story of the s great Alaskan Salmon run—A "mighty drama of one woman in the land of men. , J “ Sun., Mon. & Tues., Jan. 25-26-27. “WHAT A WIDOW?’ Never has Gloria Swanson had a greater or a more surprising role. The fascinating whirl of a madcap beauty in search of a thrill. Its a gay and sparkling comedy drama, lavishly produced. Weds & Thurs.—CLOSED. Coming Sun. Feb. 1-2-3 “SIN TAKES A HOLIDAY” Starring charming Constance Bennett. A smart comedy drama of modern society and modern morals.
