The Syracuse Journal, Volume 23, Number 41, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 5 February 1931 — Page 8
Want Ads
FOR SALE--One horse wagon and harness. Phone Syracuse 3113, ltp-41 FOR SALE Used Radios, speakers, A eliminators and B Eliminators,etc. Owen R. Strieby. KINDLING WOOD — Generous bundles at sc. See foreman at Pret Miles Krafteries. 40-2tp RADIO — Something wrong with your radio? Call Owen Strieby. Phoneß4s. 17-ts FARMERS ATTENTION Order your Fruit Trees early. Prices lower than ever. A. O. Winans, Syracuse, Ind. Phone 150. 41-10 t WHY SUFFER? -Chronic Disease our specialty. Free examination, and consultation. Drs. Brooks and Brooks, Goshen. Indiana. Phone 201'. . , ' 1 FOR RENT—Modern house, ex-, cept furnace, furnished or not fur-' nished. Also good garage included. Inquire at Journal office. John ltpd-41 FOR SALE—A bargain on Syiacuse Lake. It’s a cottage and dwelling. Your own terms. Geo. L. Xanders. 4Qtf Buy jour stubes, batteries and speakers for a radio of me and I will give you aradio set free. Only three sets on hand. Owen R. Strieby. LOST A yellow wrist watch with chain ‘ bracelet, on Sunday evening between Evangelical church and my home oh North Harrison St. Reward if returned to Mrs. A. J. Thibodeaux. LEGAL FORMS—WiIIs, mechanic’s Liens, Mortgages, Assignment of Mortgages, Options, Bill of Sale, Quit Cleim Deed, Notice to Quit Tenancy, etc, for sale at the Journal Office, ts WAREHOUSEMAN’S PUBLIC SALE Under and by virtue of my warehouseman’s lien, I will sell at public sale on Saturday, the 21st of February, 1931, at 2 p. m., continuing each day at the same hour, u’ntil sold, at my marine storage depot, situated across public highway, north of lots ,10 and 11 in EH Lilly’s Second Plat df Wawasee. Kosciusko 'County, Indiana, bn Lake Wawasee, the following described personal property, which said properly has remained in my boat storage for a period exceeding; 6 months, without the payment of any storage charge therefor, to-wit: One 25 foot gasoline launch, with 90 Horse Power oxs Marine conversion 8 cyl. Curtis engine, named Mary Jane, with mahogany natural finish hu|l. Owner, Mr. A. W. Zimmerman or [Mrs; A. W. Zimmerman. Terms <»f sale, cash CHAS. E. BISHOP. Prop. F Wawasee Marine Supply Depot and Storage. Geo. L. Xanders, Atty. 3t-40
Don’t Forget The Big Reduction on My Merchandise Continues until I move my . Store. "" f* ■ * Pick up these Bargains NOW M. E. RAPP —...— —j . Saturday Specials HAMBERGER... 15c lb SAUSAGE 15c lb PORKCHOPS..., .... 20c lb PORK SHOULDER 20c lb ' PORK ROAST 20c lb SIDE MEAT 20c lb BEEF ROAST 17c lb BEEF RIBS . .. _l2c lb HALF or WHOLE HAMS.. 25c lb FRESH FISH _ 25c lb ROUND STEAKS 2& lb. SIRLOIN STEAKS 25c lb KLINK BROS.
! j I IN OUR CHURCHES j ZION CHAPEL. > Rev. J. E. Shaw, pastor. Sherman Deaton, Supt. Sunday school at 10 a. m. , Morning service, 10:30 a. m. Evening service, 7:00 p. in. Prayer meeting Wednesday evening 7‘p. m. CHURCH QF GOD. Ge<* L. Chapman. Pastor. C. J. Kitson S. S. Supt. • Sunday School 10:00 a_ m_ Preaching in Syracuse every second Sunday in each month at 11 a. m. and 7 p. m. Prayer meeting every Thursday Public invited to ail services. GRACE LUTHERAN CHURCH Arbaugh, Pastor. Eugene Maloy, S. S. Supt. Sunday school, 9:45 a. m. There; will be no morning or evening worship. EVANGELICAL CHURCH ' JR. 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. Morijing worship, 10:45. Everting service, 7:00 ,p. m. . Prayer meeting each Thursday evening at 7:os p. m. The public is cordially invited. METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH A- J- Armstrong, Minister. W. G. Connolly, Supt. Churtch School, 9:45. Junior League, 11:0b, Morning Worship, 11:00. Subject “Baptism Our View” Intermediate League, 6:15. Evening service, 7:00. Subject “Esther, A Queen of Coprage.” The pastor will give a series of addresses through the Lenten Period on various Doctrinal views of Melhodism. CHURCH OF THE BRETHREN. Evangelist J. Edwin Jarboe, pastor l.t%>: ;'id Barnhart. F. S 'Supt. Sunday School 10 a. in. Preaching, 11 a. m. and 7 p. in. Ati the Evangelistic service in the eveping the Radio Quartet are expecting to render some special 1." ' . '■ “ U. B. ANNOUNCEMENTS ; I ’ A. Nicodemus, Pastor. Sunday School, 9:45 A. M. Gerald Bushong, Supt. Morning sermon at Indian Village. Evening Sermon at 7:00 o’clock. Quarterly meeting at the Lakeside U. B. church Monday evening, the 16th of February . Indiana Central College Day Sunday, the Sth. ,
MILFORD IS (Continued from Page One) I The Syracuse Pierceton morning game advanced to the end of the first quarter with neither side shooting a basket. The score, 3 to 3, had >een made on free throws. Jones shot the first field goal for Syracuse, in the second quarter. At the end of the half, Syracuse’s lead was 14 to 5. At the end of the third quarter, this score had advanced to 20 for Syracuse and 10 for Pierceton. During the final quarter, both Lepper tnd Bitner were taken out, having four personals each. Richhart was sent in for Bitner and Lung for Lepper. The game ended 26 to 19. The afternoon game against Etna Green followed the Milford-Mentone game. Etna Green had defeated Leesburg 21 to 19 in the morning. Luck orevented this from being an overtime game. Leesburg shot a basket |just as the gun sounded. The referee i had blow n his whistle, so the basket : didn’t count, and Leesburg failed to jeage the free throw on the foul | which had caused the referee to blow ! his whistle. j When Syracuse met Etna Green, I Etna Green scored during the first ! quarter. This period ended .with 1 Syracuse on the small ef>d of the 7 L ; During the second period, Syracuse stepped out, to take the lead 9 it o S. [ In the third quarter, scores ad- \ '.need to 16 and 12, with Syracuse leading. During the first half, Syracuse kept the ball in play near I Etna Green’s end of the floor. but ■ were so well guarded by Etna Green .players they couldn’t get close enough for good shots at the basket. ;In the second half, .one team would ( cage a shot and then the other I would take its turn. ; Syracuse couldn’t find the basket, ' very often, try after try being made, I but the ball seaming to refuse to go [through the circle. , During this game Nicodemus caged one from a position beyond the circle in the center of the floor, and (followed this s"i n afterwards by (another field goal frotn: a stand at about the center of the floor. The ■game ended with Syracuse winner 19 to 15. s ‘ ■ — . S. S. CLASS MEETS. I — - The Leaders Class of the U._ B. church met at the home of Mrs, Bait -u McCiin’.ic Wednesday evening of (last week. Ten members and three i visitors attended the meeting, which was followed by a pot luck lunch. [ During the meeting it was reported (that three comforts had been made ! and sold by the class. The next meetj ing is at the home of Miss Cloy Darr. ! l_o ' YOGI M I The Yocum case is to be heard Thursday afternoon at 2 o’clock, be- . fore R< >C "t‘ Howard, justice of the peace, the trial being held in George Xanders’ office. •
/ AGAIN \ / KONJOLA WTNS > | “I suffered with stomach trouble for ten years”, exclaims Mr. James W. Lawrence, IndianaB polia, Ind. “My liver was siug- | gish and I had dizzy spells. I was badly constipated. Konjola ; restored my health after I spent hundreds of dollars on other medicines. Konjola is a real medicine and I recommend it”. Kjonjola Nz Buy hAt Any Good Drug Store. •••••••«
REMEMBER ... The price is 595 and you get RARE RIDING COMFORT ESSEX The Chal/eriqer
THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL
TOURNSY BRIEFS The 1931 county tournament at .Varsaw. was a series of upsets. The soothsayers and expert basketball predictors did not consider that the Syracuse team had a chance to get oeyond the preliminaries. Gloom was felt in the Syracuse camp because of he number of defeats the home boys have met this season. But Coach Beck iut his scrappy, well coached five on the floor and the upsets started to the rhagrin of the rest of the county. Silver Lake, Pierceton and Etna Green were put aside, and Milford won by so narrow a -margin that it was a thoroughly relieved team that heard the final gun sound. The Milford team had been run ■at footed during this final -game and on the players faces were expressions of bewilderment and asonishment when Syracuse repeatedly took the ball away from those opponents and advanced it towards the .basket, trying shot after shot. Syrause lost due to the inability to shoot tjjiskets. This was probably due to the excitement. and to the terrible drain of nervous and physiol energy from three previous games. Did anyone ever hear of a Syracuse team drawing & “by” in a county tournament, instead of coming to a final with three games behind them? Everybody else has all the luck. ■ (WHEAT FOR CATTLE FEED SUCCESSFUL! “I have bought, up to the present time this season, 85,000 bushels oj I wheat for cattle feed, and am continuing to buy wheat for that purp >se,” writes Arnold Berns, livestock feeder, of Peabody, Kansas. i Asked about his methods, results' and 0 opinion as to wheat for cattle feed, Mr. Berns prefaced his reply in i a letter to the Farmer’s National Grain Corporation under date of Jan. 24, with this caution: “With comparatively new feed, there are prob-. ably mistakes made, and when results are not satisfactory, the feed and not the mistake is blamed." But; Mr. Berns has been highly success-? fill if. his feeding practices and unhesitatingly endorses wheat as a substitute for corn: he does not mix the two. He has found that wheat is 'equal to corn, pound for pound, for cattle’feed and a little better than that for hogs. Whole wheat is, not fed by Mr. Berns. He grinds it, preferably in a roller mill, and mixes it with a small percentage of cotton seed meal. The cattle h:e also all the fresh-cut “cane,” run through a silage cutter, ! they will eat. I i Mr. Berns gives the results of feed- [ ing one “bunch” of 72 steers w ith wheat as a substitute for corn, in; which there was a very satisfactory gain jp weight, better, he believes, than if corn had been used. The cattle were shipped to Chicago after 55 ' days of feeding, and on arrival they showed an average pounds, compared with 1,238 pounds when they were brought to his farm, j an average gain of 167 pounds each. The cattle consumed 15 pounds of wheat-chop and three pounds of cottion seed meal daily as an average during the first 30 days, and 201 pounds of wheat-chop and four ! pounds of cotton seed meal daily in the next 25 days. They were also fed as much fresh-cut “cane” as they would eat., Mr. Berns concluded with this endorsement for wheat: *T do not hesitate to recommend wheat as a feed for fattening cattle.” Since the closing of the B. and O. telegraph office here, G. L. Rex has returned to his home in Milford. He has taken up his former duties in the < office at Milford Junction.
GOV. GEN. DAVIS DEFENDS PURITY OF GOGOANUT OIL Washington, D. C.—Charges that Philippine cocpanut oil and copra ex-
ported to the United States are i ns a n it ary and therefore unsuitable for consumption are branded as entirely without foundation by Gov. Gen. Dwight Davis in a radiogram just made public here by the bureau of Insular Affairs of the War department. “Vegetable oils produced in the’ Philippine Islands are prepared in a
c 1 i * A ■■ ■ V. wF Dwight Davis. Governor General of Philippines/
thoroughly sanitary way and are entirely tit for human use,” the radiograin states. “Oil mills' operating in Manila were specifically inspected by Governor General Wood’s request in 1924 aqd found in good sanitary condition, and a careful#review of them shows they are in like situation today. “Cocoanut oil is produced from dried and ground copra by automatic machinery without touch of human hands. The process' of making it includes direct exposure to steam for approximately forty-five minutes the residue is again treated in the same way for second pressing to secure remaihing oil. The process completely sterilizes cocoanut oil and renders it free from terms or any other pathogenic organism.” x In addition to this sterilization of the product, cocoanut oil to be used with milk and other edible vegetable oils and animal fats in the manufacture of margarine in the United States, must be -again raised to high temperature. The oil goes from storage tanks into the ships without being exposed to the air and is sealed by the American Bureau of Shipping Surveyor, representative of the underwriters. CITES INJUSTICE OF SUGGESTED FOOD TAX Washington.—A trade war between agricultural and industrial states might be the result if the recent suggestion of Governor Shafer of North Dakota that food commodities manufactured in industri 1 states be taxed in ’he argicultural states in which they are consumed were adopted, according to a bulletin issued here by Dr. J. S. Abbott, secretary of the Institute of Margarine Manufacturers. Governor Shafer, the bulletin points out. recently proposed that since dairy farmers are heavy taxpayers in North Dakota, whereas manufacturers of margarine pay no direct taxes in the state, a tax be placed on the sale of margarine to make that industry share in the cost of the state government 1 “Such a scheme, carried to its conclusion.” says the bulletin, “might eventually include taxes on shoes, clothing, prepared foods, textiles, furniture. and manufactured products made in Illinois. Ohio. New York, and the New England states, which are purchased by the inhabitants of North Dakota. Ijut it is logical to assume that the sfiites against,whose products Nonh Dakota levied tgxes might retaliate by taxing the commodities produced in North Dakota that are sold in these states. “The theory that one section of the country has the right to levy a protective tariff against domestic commodities manufactured in another section of the country is economically false. The whole scheme seems like an effort to solve the problem of depressed butter-fat prices, by discriminating against margarine which Is a wholesome domestic food commodity depending for its ingredients on products from American farms. The solution lies not in working a hardship on one domestic industry to promote the interest of another, but to correct the conditions in the dairying Industry which have resulted in overproduction and surplus stocks in storage.” INDIAN BATTLE SITE NOW TOURISTS’ MECCA
Howe Caverns, N. Y.—Ong hundred and fifty-second anniversary of the Cherry Valley massacre, bloodiest Indian outbreak in the annals of North America, will be observed in this locality this year. Twenty-five miles northwest of Howe Caverns at Cobleskill. which is drawing thousands of tourism to Its subterranean wbnderlai-ds, lies the town of Cherry Valley; scene of this barbaric slaughter. Today the town is a somnolent rural community, with several thousand inhabitants, in the heart of a thrifty dairying center. Into Cherry Valley, on November 11. 1778. swooped SOO Indians like wolves on a fold, led by Joseph Brant, the Mohawk scourge. The savages killed 50 defenseless men, women and children, sacked the town, burned its houses anti carried off 70 prisoners. The aboriginal cruelty of this mas sacre roused the soldiers of George Washington to greater fury against the Redcoats and their Indian allies. The rage for Americana is luring tourists into this area in increasing numbers. Many are combining a visit to Howe Caverns with a dip into the romantic past of its environs. CASES TO BE HEARD. • Among the cases- set for trial in circuit court during the coming month are: Friday, Feb. 13, Robert Alexander, Carl M. Smith and Fred Krecke, keeping gambling device. Monday, Feb. 16, Robert V. Kintz j and T. Elsenberry, keeping gambling i device. ' Tuesday, Feb. 17, Aaron Ketring, violation of liquor laws.
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 ELMER M. CALVERT Funeral Home Phone 91 Syracuse, Ind. TO BRETZ FOR GLASSES OPTOMETRIST GOSHEN. INDIANA. Room 30, Hawks-Gortner Bldg. LAGRIPPE A Mineral Bath will prevent an ittack or the suffering from the bad effects of LaGrippe or colds. See Dr. •Varner at Goshen. Phone 176. o The Armstrong Courtesy Coach is coming to town. Beckman’s adv.
The State Bank of Syracuse ••••sees Capital and Surplus $50,000 z “OUR BANK” F ■ Safety Deposit Boxes For Rent Notice To Telephone Patrons On October 1, 1930, the following collection schedule will be in force in all exchanges: (1) After the discount date established by the Public Service ’Commission, no further toll service will bd given anyone whose account is unpaid, until settlement is made. The discount date i» 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. Bills are ,due on the first day of the month, and may be paid any time aftm- 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 due. Please take your discount. . CENTRAL LAKES TELEPHONE CORPORATION
Specials for Saturday Special Special JUST THE THING FRESH AND CRISP Head Lettuce Per Head ... .5c Idaho Potatoes 69c (BAKER’S) Delicious 15 lb Cloth Sack Pasteurized Milk per <it 7c Sugar 10 ibs 50c SOap FLAKE WHITE, 10 bars .. J4C Lye 3 cans..... 24c Coffee 3 pounds 40c Little Crow 2 boxes 24c PANCAKE or BUCKWHEAT Flour, Seider & Burgener
ORVALG. CARR FUNERAL DIRECTOR AMBULANCE SERVICE PAUL CORY, Assistant Syracuse, Ind. Phone 75 See DWIGHT MOCK • —for — Vulcanizing and Acetylene Welding Battery Charging and Repairing South Side Lake Wawasee (on cement road) ALL WORK GUARANTEED! Phone 504 Syracuse X CRYSTAL Ligonier The Best All Talking Pictures Fri. & Sat., Feb- 5-7 “REMOTE CONTROL” William Haines broadcasts a million laughs and thrills in his latest picture—lt’s a swell romance, too. Sun., Mon. & Tues. Feb. 8-9-10. ' “DU BARRY, x WOMAN OF PASSION” Morma Tahnadge gives a performance which ranks' .with the truly great portrayals of the talking screen—Dazzed by luxury, enchanted by flattery, Du Barry heeded not the knock of romance at the door of her heart—Norma Talmadge in her supreme role, with Conrad Nagel and William Farnum. A superb entertainment. Also ANOTHER DOG COMEDY. Coming--Tues. Wed. & Thurs. Feb. 17-17-19 Marie Dressier and Polly Morace In K “REDUCING.”
