The Syracuse Journal, Volume 23, Number 45, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 5 March 1931 — Page 8

Want Ad s

-.— Mortgage exemptions. L. Xanders. 45-4 t I FOR SALE Used Radios, speakers. A eliminators and B Elimlnators,etc, Owen R. StriebyFor Sale Kitchen range, good one, also one Heatrola, good as new. Court Slabaugh. , 45-ltp FOR RENI’ Modern 7 room house and garage on Lake St. D.' R. Wolf, Phone 3012. 44-2 t FOR SALE Theo. Hamman property, west side of town. Cheap. Geo. L. Xanders. \43-3t Mortgage exemptions were not increased. You are still, entitled to Sl,oob exemption. See Geo. L. Xanders. 45-2 t RADIO — Something ' wrong with your radio? Call Owen Strieby. PhoneS4s. 17-ts FARMERS ATTENTION Order your Fruit Trees 'early. Prices lower than ever. A. O. Winank Syracuse, Ind. Phone 150. . 41-10 t For Sale— Evergreens also guar-, anteed shrubbery, perenials, rock | plants, fruit trees and small fruits Landscape gardening a specialty. H. H. Hoppel, landscape Phone Syracuse, R-1885 46-4tp Music! MUSIC • MUSIC! A Clearance Sale 800 selections to; choose from, at only 5 cents a copy. On display in window of Syracuse Journal office. Selections are vocal, for pian<> or violin; include marches, ! sacred music, waltzes. Buy for One Nicklesuchnumbers as: “Just Before the Battle Mother,” “Tenting on the Old Camp Ground,” "Old Oaken Bucket,” “Angels Serenade,” “Old Black Joe,” “Humoresque,”" Berceuse from Jocelyn," “Tales Os Hoffman.” TO BRETZ ■ ' — FOR G L ASS ES , [fem/ £retz V / OPTOMETRIST GOSHIN. INDIANA. Room 30. Hawks-Gortnrr Bldg.

The State Bank of Syracuse •••••••• Capital and Surplus $50,000 “OUR BANK” Safety Deposit Boxes For Rent

SEEDS Red Clover Mammoth Clover - Timothy White and Yellow Blossom Sweet Clover Common and Grimm Alfalfa Bluegrass - Red Top - Lawn Seed Mixture Seeds of High Quality See Them SPECIAL FRIDAY & SATURDAY Wayne 32% Dairy $2.20 cwt. Cottonseed Meal, $2.00 cwt 5 Gallon Valve Float Chick or Poultry Waterer $3.00 each STIEFEL GRAIN CO.

Saturday Specials RAMBERGER 15c lb SAUSAGE 15c lb, PORKCHOPS ,20c lb PORK SHOULDER 20c lb PORK ROAST 20c lb SIDE MEAT 20c lb T ’ ROUND STEAKS 125 clb SIRLOIN STEAKS 25c lb BEEF ROAST 17c lb RIB BOIL .... 12c HALF or WHOLE HAMS.. 25c lb PORK HEARTS 8c lb FISH, deep sea.... .... 25c lb KLINK BROS.

THIS WEEK (Continued from First Page) nations if it became suddenly possible to multiply the gold supply by ten or a thousand, at little cost? I ~ I Scientists say typhus fever is spread Iby fleas that bite rats, then humans, Recalling that Rocky Mountain fever, spread by ticks, was conquered by “tick-juice inoculation,” the scientists suggest that a similar remedy for typhus may be made of the rat-biting flea. Gronud-up fleas as a medicine would not be pleasing. Human beings and their, governments should have the energy to eliminate j-ats. Then fleas could not bile them. Similarly, they should wipe out crocodiles, that supply the death germs of sleeping sickness to the tsetse fly. Impossible? Suppose each rat contained a gold dollar and each crocodile a 810 bill, how long would .they last? » Turkey, seeking to uncover the face? and also the legs of her women starts a. competition . for "the most beautiful pair of legs in all Turkey.’ — —o- —, . .. 0.... ■ BAKE SALE. L illies of the Uhurch ,of God will hold a sale of baked goods and /chicken and noodles, Saturday, April 14. day before Easter, in C. W. Howard’s Plumbing Shop. 2teow ___—.— o ———— Chicken or Baked Hani Dinner Sunday at Wawasee Restaurant, 50c. NOTICE TO HEIRS. CREDITORS, E IC. In the matter of the estate of ;.John Kaufffnan, deceased. February term, 1931. NOTICE IS HEREBY ’GIVEN that ISarahJane Kauffman, as adminis•r.atrix of the estate of John Kauffman, deceased, has presented and tiled her accounts and vouchers jin final settlement of said estate, I and that the same will come ! Up for examination and action of said Circuit Court pn the 28 th day of 1 March, 1931, at’which time all heirs, creditors, or legatees of said estate are required to appear in said Court and sh w cause. if any there be, whysaid ■ account arid vouchers should not be approved. Dated at Warsaw, Indiana, this 27th dav of February. 1,93.1. LELAND KINSEY, Clerk Kosciusko Circiut Court, i Sloan & Rasor, Attys.

WASHINGTON ’ (Continued from Page One) Washington’s death announcement until the bottom of column 1, page 3. The news on page two front the nation’s capitol gave resolutions of respect for Washington from the Senate, the Hoqse, and President John Adams, but the reader had to wait until page 3 to learn of the death of the great man, whom the Senate’s I resolution had termed: “first in war, first in peace and first in the hearts! of his countrymen.” |. Between heavy black Cblumn rules, the news read, under a small Onelire. single column headline “Washington Entombed.” "On Wednesday last, the mortal part of Washington the Great- the Father of his Country and the Friend of man, was consigned to the tomb with solemn honors and funeral pomp. "A multitude of persons assembled from many miles round, at Mount Vernon, the choice abode and last residence of the illustrous j:hief. There were the groves the spacious avenues, the. beautiful and sublime scenes, the noble mansion but, alas! i the august inhabitant was no'more. [That great soul was gone. His mortal /part was there indeed; but ah! how . til - ’ How often the spectacle of isuch worth and greatness, thus, to mortal ey«s fallen! Yes! fallen! fallen! “In the long and lofty Portico where oft the Hero w alked in all his glory, now lay the shrouded corpse. The countenance still composed and serene, seemed to depress the dignity of the spirit which lately dwelt in ■that lifeless form! There, those who paid the last sad honours to the benefactor of his country took an impresisive~a farewell view. , ’ "On the ornament at the i head of the coffin was inscribed Surge Ad Judicium about the middle of the coffin, Gloria Deo. and on the silver plate,: General G e o>g' e Washington departed this life on the 14th day of December, 1799. ’ . "Between 3 and 4 o’clock the sound of artillery from a vessel in the river awoke afresh our solnin sorrow-\the corpse was removed—a band of music with mournful melody melted the soul into all the tenderness of woe. "T he procession was formed in- the . following order, Cavalry, infantry, guard, with arms reversed, then music, clergy, the general’s horse 1 with his saddle, holster and pistols, then Cols, Sims. Ramsay and Payne, pailbearers, the corpse, and Cols, Gilpin, Marsterier tind Little, pallbearers bn the other side of the casket; mourners, : Masonic Brethren and citizens. "When the procession had arrived at the bottom of the elevated lawn, oil the banks of the Potomac, where the family vault is placed, the cavalry halted, the infantry marched towards the Mount and formed their lines. the Clergy, the Masonic Brothers and the Citizens descended to the Vault, and the funeral service of the Church was performed.” "There was no editorial comment on the death,” Mr. Stockridge points out, the only other mention in the pa- | per being a poem on the Death of i I George . Washington,. by A Young*. Lady. “It was decidedly bad form for contributors to the press to reveal their identy in-1800,” he says. 1 In speaking of the many later editions, Mr.. Stockridge writes that “Samuel Freer, w hen an old man and pressed for cash, conceived thft idea <rf issuing a facsimile copy of the Ulster Gazette, of January 4, 1800, and selling it at the patriotic exercises at the Kingston Liberty pole on the Fourh of July, 1825.” “It was not an exact facsimile,” he writes, pointing out some of the difference ir type. Summing up the various .editions he states that “In all, 64 different specimens were a listed by he New Public Library in a pamphlet printed by the Library in 1930, of which 32 t different varieties were ip the Library of Coi gress.” *• Articles in the New York Sun and Times, based on this report of the Library, were read by Mrs. James Lydon, Jr. of Suffern, Orange county, N. Y. She remembered there were some old papers in a trunk of heiif grandfather’s, rushed upstairs to look, and found the only three real copies, now in the Library of Congress. In addition to its story dealing with the death of Washington; the paper prints many ads, showing merchants advertised back in 1799 and 1800, too. There are no display ads, all of I' ■ / "BEST I \ ' p EVER TOOK" i I “Konjola Is. the best mediK1 bine 1 ever took,” declares * FT Mrs. Adam Henderson. 5712 Curtis are., Cleveland. ."I i Bl suffered a nervous breajc*1 down and was weak and al- ’ H most I took six Fl bottles Of/Konjola and toH day lam free from nervous- j ; I ness. 1 do not hesitate to H recommend this great medi- | M cine to all w-ho suffer from N nervous weakness". ; I - Kgnjol* Buy It At Any Good [••••••••I Thornburg Drug Co.

THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL

these being printed in single column, I reader style, but they vary from grocery, dry goods and such ads through sheriff sales’ notices, real estate sale notices/ to an announcement by a husband that he will no longer be responsible for his wife’s debts. One ad reads: “For Sale, one half of a saw mill, with a convenient place for building, ; lying in the town of Rochester. By | the mill is an inexhaustible quantity of pinew-ood—and alao, a stout, ! healthy, active negro wench. Any person inclined to purchase may know’ the particulars by applying to John’ Schoonmaker,, at Rochester. (Dated) Nov. 12, 1799.” Another ad starting at the foot of the last column on page three continues to the top of page four and reads: “Luther Andres and C 4. have this day, 6 Been opening goods botit fresh and gay. He has received near every kind. That you in any store can find, And as I purchase by the Bale, 1 am determined to retail For ready pay a little lower Than ever have been had before. I with my brethren mean to live; But as for credit shall not give. 1 would not live to rouse your passion. For credit here is out .of fashion, My friends and buyers one and all, It will pay you well to give, a call, Y’ou always may find me by iny sign, 'A few rods from the house divine. The following articles will be received in payment, Wheat, rye, buckwheat, oats, corn, butter, flax, ashes and rawhides. These articles will be taken in at the Esopus prices. CASH will not be refused.” — o —. —— ■ ■ THIS WEEK IN SYRACUSE. |_ ’ - . -—I Mr. and Mrs. Charles Nine spent Friday in LaPorte. Martha . Ann Thornburg has been at home sick for several days. Mrs. Orval Klink and Miss Helen Jeffries were Goshen visitors Monday. Mrs. Rose Tucker has returned home from Warsaw’, where she spent the winter. Mr. and Mrs. Ward Flowers of Nappanee were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Stiffler. Rev. J. Eberly and family of Markle and Mrs. Jarboe. were Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrsoßoy Meek. Mr. and Mrs. Everett Darr of Goshen were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Meek last Thursday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Jess Snyder, Miss Kathryn Stettler a,nd Mr. . Charles Myers, all of Mishawaka, spent the week end at the home of. Charles Stettler. Mr. and Mrs. William Smith of Goshen are announcing the birth of a son, Thursday evening. Before her marriage, Mrs. Smith was Miss ClauI dia Snyder of Syracuse. MrtKand Mrs. George Xanders en- ■ terta[ned at (dinner and bridge, Wednesday evening: Mr. and Mrs. Charles I Kroh, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Bushong, j Mr. and Mrs. Harry Porter, and Bert - Mr' and Mrs. A. J. Thibodeaux, Mr. and Mrs. W. G. Connolly and son James, Mr. and Mrs. Byron Connolly and son Jimmie, and Mrs. Minerva Eagles were Sunday dinner guests of Mrs. Angelina Edmonds. Millard Eppert returned home from the hospital in Elkhart Saturday. It will be necessary for him to remain in bed another month before he fully recovers from the injuries he received in the auomobile accidnt. Charles Bowersox has returned home from New Mexico, where Mrs. Bowersox is ill in a sanitarium ir. Alburquerque. He is getting their home in readiness for her return in a month, as she now plans to do, as her health is so improved. Mrs. Irving Bishop and children returned home last Wednesday, from New Castle, where she had been visiting relatives since leaving the hospital where she was operated on several weeks «ago. Mr. Bishop drove down and brought his family hoine. O The one and only Greta Garbo in. “Inspiration” at Crystal, Ligonier, next Sun. Mon. and Tues. o SECTIONS WHERE SAVINGS DECREASED A regional analysis of the drop in the nation s savings deposits in banks, as recently reported by the American Bankers Association’s Savings Bank Division in its annual compilatit|p tor 1929 showing the first recession in national savings in the twenty years during which it has published this data, reveals that all sections except the New England and the Pacific States groups recorded losses. The published figures showed that on June 29. 1929. the total savings deposits in banks and trust companies ot continental United States stood at >28.217J156.000. which was 8195,305.000 below the similar total fdr 1928. when there was an increase of 82,300,000,000. The regional analysis by state groups discloses, however, that the six New England states as a group gained more than 888.800.000 in savings and 152.984 in savings depositors, while the seven Pacific states aa a group gained over 879.000,000 in deposits jgnd nearly 278.000 in number of depositors. The gains in these two sections, however, were smaller than the gains recorded there for 1928. The sections which showed losses are the Middle Atlantic States,’ Southern States. East Central States and the I West Central States.

I r IN OL’lt CHITfCHES i i METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH A. J. Armstrong, Minister. W. G- Connolly, Supt. Church School, 9:45. Junior League, 11:00. Morning Worship, 11:00./ Intermediate League, 6:15. ZION CHAPEL. Rev. J. E. Shaw, pastor. Sherman Deaton, Siqg. Sunday school at. 10 a. m. Morning service, 10:30 a. in. Evening service, 7:00 p. m. Prayer meeting Wednesday evening 7 p. m. CHURCH OF THE BRETHREN. Evangelist J. Edwin Jarboe, pastor Leonard Barnhart, S. S. Supt. Sunday School 10 a. m. Preaching, 11 a. m. Evangelist Moody will preach Sunday morning. GRACE LUTHERAN CHURCH A. if. Arbaugh. Pastor. Eugene Maloy,: S. S. Supt. Sunday school, 9:45 a, m. Come and see our Sunday school grow. , Special rpusic by the. choir. 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. The Prayer meeting this week and our preaching service . next Sunday night is called off, that all who wish may attend the Moody-Lytle revival. U. B. ANNOUNCEMENTS A—Nicodemus, Prstor. Sunday School, 9:45 A. M. Gerald Bushong. Supt. Preaching at Inaian Village Sunday morning. 1 Evening service will be/omitted for the revival meetings in the Community building. ’ EVANGELICAL CHURCH G. Foust, pastor. r. W. Soltau, Gen. Supt., H. M. Hire, Asst. Sunday School,at 9:45 a. m. Morning worship, 10:45. Evening xvorship, 7:00 Prayer meeting each Thursday evening at 7:00 p. m. . _o_ — WHY BE SICK? We, specialize in chronie diseases. If you have never received reSults for your trouble consult us. Examination free? Drs. Brooks and Brooks. — —O — Greta Garbo/the star of stars.’ in “Inspiration” at. Crystal Ligonier, next Sun. Mon. & Tues. . —. — —- 2 -o— • Chicken or Baked Ham Dinner Sunday at Wawasee Restaurant, 50c.

The Finest Performing Six Hudson Ever Builf

SvJn ; 70 J i fMMj^flS^ic! a "

Competes with the Lowest in price Challenges the Finest in Quality

Essex challenges the performance of any six, regardless of price! It introduces finecar style and Super-Six smoothness to the lowest price field. It is strongly built to assure lasting satisfaction and utmost dependability. It matches the economy of cars most noted for low operating cost. It gives you Rare Riding Comfort for the first time in a car of its amazing low price.

The Value Sensation in a Year of SensationaLValuesi

RADIO DOCTOR SERVICE and SUPPLIES SCREEN GRID RADIOS All Guaranteed OWEN R. STRIEBY PHONE 8-4-5 Syracuse, Indiana Set, DWIGHT MOCK —for — Vulcanizing and Acetylene Welding; Battery Charging and Repairing South Side Lake Wawasee (on cement road) ALL WORK GUARANTEED! Phone 504 Syracuse ORVAL G. CARR FUNERAL DIRECTOR AMBULANCE SERVICE Syracuse, Ind. Phone 75 GEO. L. XANDERS | ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Settlement of Estates . . Opinions oh Titles Phone 7 Syracuse, Ind., Fire and Other Insurance Greta Garbo and Robert Montgomery at Crystal, Ligonier next Sunday Monday and Tuesday.

'fl! SNoTHING takes the pep out ot a man quicker than a stiff neck —and they are stubborn things, generally. But a few drops of Nyalgesic works ? like magic — brings you back to , z normal-. Try Nyalgesic also for Rheumatism, Neuritis, Lame Back* « lumbago, Chilblains and Souj o“aiN Muscles — Shaker-top bottle 60g |O a this r THORNBURG DRUG CO.

ESSEX

H. D. HARKLESS SYRACUSE, IND.

ELMER M. CALVERT Funeral Home AMBULANCE SERVICE Phone 91 Syracuse, Incl. CRYSTAL Ligonier The Best All Talking Pictures : Frj. & Sat. Mar. 6-7. j "RAFFLES” Ronald Colman is at his best in this mystery drama that has chilled, thrilled and captivated millions No safe could baffle his nimble fingers. No heart could withstand his fascination. A special production. . 1 , Sun. Mon. & Tues. Mar .8-9-10. INSPIRATION” The one and only Greta Garbo will fascinate you again as the woman with a past who meets real love at last. The soul of a woman laid bare. A great romance, a powerful drama. A brilliant performance. Robert Montgomery and Lewis Stone head a superb cast, — We are proud to announce Garbo’s greatest triumph. The Chicago censors said “Adults Only” The one picture you should not miss. i' ■ - 1 ’■ Coming Sun. Mar. 14-15-16 CONSTANCE BENNETT in “THE EASIEST WAY” ‘I ! : ) 1 ‘ Coming Tues. Mar. 24-25-26 "CIMARRON”

All seats are wide and deep—with lots of room for comfort while riding. Head-room and leg-room are greater, doors are wider, bodies are insulated against weather and noise. All controls are easy to reach and operate. Your nearest Hudson-Essex dealer is ready to give you a demonstration. Go test its challenging performance and Rare Riding Comfort yourself!