The Syracuse Journal, Volume 24, Number 39, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 21 January 1932 — Page 8

THURSDAY. JANUARY 11, 1932

AVant Ads

SOMETHING Wrong with your Radio? Call Owen R. Strieby, Phone . 846. 22-ts. FOR SALE-You can buy your new typewriter ribbons at the Journal's Print Shop, 75c. WANTED Fat hogs or any other fat stock. Elkhart Packing Co. Phone F. S. Baker for prices. Phone 224. 37-4tp WANTED Gentle and medium sized, single work horse. Also single work harness and wagon. Call 293, Hess farm. 39USED RADIOS Fine ’condition. Midget table models and consoles. Every one a bargain. Owen R. Strieby. 39-H - . —•- > - ■ r YES, is burns that Cheap. Oil, No dirt, no noise, no fumes. The Silent Glow Range Oil Burner, with a five year guarantee. A- 0- Winans, Phone 150, Syracuse, Ind. 38-ts RADIO SPEAKERS 51.50 to $5.00 Everready 45 W. B. Batteries as low as $175 each. Used storage batteries, a good condition . $3.00 and up. Fully charged. Owen R. Strieby. 39-lt BATTERY MODELS Crosley, At/? water Kent. -Pilot. Sh<At> Wave Radiola.' Transition. Motorola and b’h-i era, $1.50. $2.00, $3.00, $3.50, $5,1 . $6.00, $15.00, $20.OO„ $29.50, Owen R.' Strieby, Phone 845. 39-lt - ■ ———■ —r-r ——-— 4 SALESMEN WANTED T<» run Heberling business ■ in Kc&ciuskp County. Many make S6O to $75 weekly year around work no lay \ Write today for free booklet. G. . Heberling - Company. Dep'. . Bloomington, 111. „ 38-2 t AT Syracuse Office 1 Now Have buyers for farms.. List -) ur property, farm or business. Reasonable commission if sold. J. W. Rothejnberger. Phone 848 <»r call at office over Hoch's Drug Store. ALL ELECTRIC RADIOS Apex. Pilot, Channing, Mohak, Clarion, Coiirier, Freed Siseman, Majestic, Ecophone. Priced very low. $15.00, $20.00, $25.00, s3s.(hi. Ail A. C. Radios complete with tubes Owen R Strieby. Phone 845. 39flt I , CHI R( H St I I I R ,Church supper. pancakes and zMUMite. 25 cents Methodist church, s(p. m. next Tuesday. adv \ o’ \ STOMACH TROUBLE ' offfthe worst kind yields to my treatmerits. Dr. Warne:. Goshen, Ind Phbne 176. adv \ _ o - ——- ’ Somebody stole an i< e truck fr m in front of a house in Baltimore the other day. Maybe the thief had h lot of frozen assets he wanted to fihd a place for. / : ° Big double program at Crystal, Ligonier, every Thursday, adv.

Health and Happiness Is Your Inheritance Use Borg’s Diuretic, Stomachie and Laxative Compound Ask Your Local Druggist For Sale in Syracuse at THORNBURG DRUG CO.

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

MEAT PRICES SATURDAY CASH PORK CHOPS, 15c lb. 2 lbs .. 25c PORK SHOULDER, 15c lb. 2 lbs 25c PORK-ROAST, 15c lb. 2 lbs .. 25c ‘ SIDE MEAT, 13c lb., 2 lbs 25c HAMBERGER, 15c lb SAUSAGE, 15c lb., 2 lbs 25c BEEF ROAST, ... ige lb RIB BOIL 12c lb v STEAKS, 25c lb HAMSi half or whole 16c lb SLAB BACON, half or whole.. 16c lb Telephone 76 For The Best In Meats KLINK BROS.

CAN YOU BAKE

(Continued from Page One) court. So for this reaspn we aren’t going to announce any\ team members. But it is asserted on good authority that on the Fat team will be Charles Kroh, Ross Osborn, Elmer Calvert, Hilary Bachman, Vernon Beekman, Owen Strieby, George Xdnders, Clarence Kline, John Harley, Fieldon Sharp, Joe and Mel Rapp, R'>y Sarjent, Ralph Thornburg, W, G. Connolly, Harry Porter, Oirval Klink, Calvin Beck, Leonard Barnhart, Mileharn Timberlake, Roscoe Howard. Leans, (after the game), will, be: ■Charles McClintid, Ray McClintic, W. M. Wilt. Carl Tuttle, Fred Hoopingarner, Pell Clayton, J. E. Grieger, Harry Mann, Joe Burket, Ray Fes t>.r,* C. W. Howard, Qrval Snbbarger Lloyd Disher. Ernest Bushong, Court W. C, Gants, Ross Frank|in A. W. Emerson. The committee men are finding it rlifticul: b> get .anyone to referee us they don’t wish any man to be subjected to turning atvay bribes of gold . that metal spurned by Europe, pdt if they cin; find a brave man [who‘isn’t afraid of getting $ couple of black’ eyes 'after each decision, there may be a" male referee for this game. Otherwise the referee Wil I, be feminine in gender. ' ; So save your pennies until you have lo; if» '.hats all the older you ’ are or until . you have 20 if y'u pre that old, and bring youj; cake Land advice op how to make a barbel and play basketball, and enjoy I life- next Thursday evening at the I High school building. I And incidentally pay off that note. $175 to go - [ - Till STATES is I'.l GGARS "Sentinels of the Republic” . is a i Washington organization proclaiming battle against■ “further federal e:.[croachmenl on the reserved rights |of the States." ’ l . ' •. . ■ lor thi> commendable purpose;,an I excellent line of Campaign for th'Ve ishock ti' .ps w uid be against the I "Gimme” attitude of- the Slate*. The people of the States will do most to.prWerve their reserved,rights bj ceasiltf' t<- expect ■ Uo'be San t > do for them the things they <*uj.ht t < do for themselves. The spread federal bureaucracy is in direct proportion to the demand sos the States for federal help-. Why blame Washington? The federal government has not, encroached on the rights of the Stales. The States themselves have voluntarily traded their rights f>>r handouts. ~ ' Beggars cannot be independent. States' fights was a great battle cry up to the time of the Civil War. Since Thein States* rights have .been hard put to it to get a w• riL in ldu< - wise in the general chorus.of (Gim■,,ie” The task of, the Sentinels o/ the Republic is to sav.e the States from then..'•elves,. Sen Frami-c • Cb.iom- ■■ ..... a . TRY A JOURNAL WANT AD

BLOOD PRINCIPAL ! FOOD OF MOSQUITO Most relentless of all insects in Its torture of humans is the blood-thirsty female mosquito. The male is harmless. Not onTy does the female sink her “dagger” deep into the flesh and . leave a swollen and irritating wound to get her till of blood, but in that wound she injects ja poisonous fluid and oftentimes .dangerous disease germs to cause sickness and death, avoiding to the Rex Research Foundation, ■ Although to many people a mosquito is just a single humming mst that g,>,-s around under • over of darkness puncturing skins, there are many varieties of this pest., the Fmtndatlrm ' ehf I old tin on:a m: .; viator in rain barrels; mhe:-', a' swthipa :>mi ' ponds, while still others breed In clear, cool water. And there areialso mosouitocs which prefer the stagnant water of- >ewers. The prim io.;1 food of all common moMp:ion s is idood of humans, animals. binls.mnd even snakes. The mouth parts of the female mos- . quite are admirably adanled 'to piercing the skin. The "dagiter" Is tn -de i up of a bnmlle of six very line sharp needles which punnturfe the skin east-.J lly and tkr- Hgh « the .mosquito pumps i»i'"ij int t hi 1- stomach. Be? for., the i/ood is <jr;:wn. however, she injects’ a poisonous fliffj which thins ; the I.lo<ml m> that she can draw it up rea<liir. : It is this poison that causes : the f.i.,::il:ir tnn-um:-> l ite. The !•<-t < urc for, mt < (tiito bit. sis I their'p evention. Ti i- is-<!one most I effectively in or.abo’jt the home by de- * stroyiiig the'm.’Mpado l>.Core she gets a chance to land oft her victim. Spray- ' ■■ _ • I > ,v iiv :■■ . \pr.’-s'y to kill m- s tiiii'H - and other Insects is a sure Way to exterminate these pests, j . This spray material floating in the j •dr IIS a fine mist, while harmless to ' nnia’ s. gnd honstaitiing. to household • furnis 1 • ~:i'~<> ky.-ps other mesqultoe* truth entering the room. I TO ADDRESS FARMERS The Indiana university extension division, {.today announced that Guy ! Cantwell, I. ,‘U. extension, lecturer, { h-ss -been b o.ked for the January 25 i -iheeiing <ff the K> - ounty 1 fawners’ institute to be held at .Bur-] ket (near Claypool), with Vere Kel- { ley in charge. Mr. Cantwell will talk ,on "A Tax Program for Indiana.*’ .i Resuming his lejcture series which; i last winter brought him, before 150! community groupis throughout the state-of Indiana. Mr. Cantwell willpresent new and important data on I i tie'-Subject; of '-taxation. He will Offer facts recently developed by the I. U. imieau of business 4 'research .elating to taxation reform in other states and will show how some of these changes might affect the tax j situation in, the Hoosier state. .; -.2 OFFICERS INSTALLED At the Eastern Star meeting Wed- • nesday lest week, the following of- - f:cers were installed: Worthy Matron ’ Emma Thibixieaux ; Worthy- Patron, i John Harley: Associate Matron, Edith i Harley; .Associate Patron, Harve I Cory; Secretary* Fannie Hoy; Treas-. urer, Ada Crow; Conduct: ess, Hanna ’ bMcClintic; ' Associate Conductress, j Esther Osborn; Chaplain. Elnora , C'.lwell; Marshal. Clara McGgrity; t'. uanist. Olive Miller; Adah, Nora - ! Wilcox. Ruth, Olive Bushong; Esther, ’ Prim Dunn; M .rtha, Grace Sig- - • baugh; Electa, Carrie Rapp; Warder Ix>ila Green; ' Sentinel, John Me-’ { Garity, . I . The installing officer was Bertha i Rowdabaugh. The installation was j.nret ceded by a 7 o’clock pot lu’ek i supper. EXCEP LIONS O VERR V LED j In court in Warsaw, Tuesday, Josephine Beck filed exceptions to the j I report of Elmer J. Strieby in the ad- ' ministration of ;he estate of Sarah <J. -Strieby., The judge overruled exi rep: i..ns and decided the administra-1 .tor had accounted for every cent of i the estate. ' I’ • ■ . • . . o 2 BIRTHS ANNOUNCED Mr. and Mrs. John Bowser are anj nouncing the birth of their first child, a daughter, Sunday evening. 'The baby has been named Barbara I Joan. A daughter wss born to Mrs. C. W. , Clark at her home near Solomon’s i Creek, Sunday morning. O. E. S. NOTICE. | S - sRegular meeting of E. ,S. Wednesday, Janj 2J7. All officers are j urged to be present as there will be ! a special rehearsal. -— MORE UNEMPLOYED., I Critics of politics, however, never I tell us what we could do with politicians if there were no politics.— Buffola Courier-Express . Practice contour plowing on hill lands, says the U. S. Department of -Agriculture. Plowing and cultivating i up and down the slope, causes gullyI ing. Contour plowing breaks the ground along level lines across the slope of the land. Follow the same lines when planting and cultivating the crops. This makes a shallow trough above each row which catches the water and holds some of it until it soaks into the soil. Dairy specialists of the U. S. Department of Agriculture advise against milking a cow just before calving. If ' the udder is swollen excessively, re- , duce the concentrate ration.

THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL

NEW FISH LICENSE INDIANAPOLIS, (Special)—The new 1932 licenses to fish, hunt and trap in Indiana are now on sale in all counties of the state, and are gßod for the calendar year 1932. Walter Shirts, superintendent of the fish and game division of the state conservation department, -explains the various licenses, in a bulletin issued recently. Resident licenses to fish, hunt arid trap cost SI.GO;. non-resident fishing, $2.25 and rjon-resident hunting, $15.50 All persons, under 18 y-ears of age. may fish without a license. All persons may fish in the county of which they are a resident.without a license. Honorably discharged soldiers, sailors and marines who have permits, are exempt from purchasing licenses. Land owners, who are residents of Indiana, their children living with them, and bona tide tenants of farm lands, residing thereon, under the Indiana laws may hunt upon such lands only, without a license. Licenses are required to take mussels for commercial purposes: to. use seines, rets and traps in the Wabash River, w here the same forma theslate boundary line; also to take fish from Lake Michigan for commercial purposes; to fur dealers to. buy <>r only ,by jX- superintendent of Fishi- !«<V- . / t ’ o INblDi. INT'ORAIAIION ‘ ' . ■ -- . \ > ;l Linoleum, to give good service, I should be laid over a smooth ffoor'in' such' a“ way that it does not buckle. Clean it with a damp cloth wrung i out "of suds made with mild soap. \lkali washing powder, strong soap. >r too much water, will ruin even .he best linoleum.. ■ i ■ Liver is one of the mosi important respect to 'he protein and' calories* it furnishes the body, rank-, nr with round and sirloin steal- | Liver also contains all threb vitamins.. No distinction in food .value is made between the Various kjnds of neat liver. Chicken liver is slightly higher in protein than the others. OsnabUrg is a strong cotton fabric well suited to various uses for household furnishings. It has a slight-.. -ly irregular, coarse weavw that gives it artistic charm, airff—rffiiv; be used natural color or dyed? For draperies,, slip covers, shoe bags, and couch and cushion covers f it is serviceable and inexpensive. Osnaburg has long been used in the south for cotton picking bags and .work clothes, but .ecent'y its value in home furnishing has been recognized. Try this Place an unopened can >f cahnon in a saucepan surrounded by boiling water, tb heat fpr 10 or 15 minutes. While this is cooking, prepare a boiled salad dressing. When'opening the can of salmon, place a cloth over most of the can, make a small hole' in the top low the steam to escape, and cut around the edge so that the fish can slide out without breaking uii to a hot platter. Pour the hot dres--ing over the salmon, sprinkle with finely chopped parsley, and serve at once. Fresh salmon may be sinimered and served in the same way. o ■ . ■ ROUND TABLE MEETS Ten members attended the meeting of the Ladies of the Round Table, held at the home of Mrs. W. G. Connolly, Monday evening. . Mrs.' A-.X Armstrong and Mrs. R. •3 s Foust reported on sacred songs. Miss Cloy Darr’s paper was on "Esther.”. o - Skippy LaMore’s Vaudeville Unit.) Also regular picture program at Crystal, Ligonier, every '1 hursday. I

IB 1 ' Push-The-Button Meals

CT" HIS is a push-the-button age wherein it is possible to have anything from a Western Union boy to an in-a-door bed by merely pushing a buttjpn or turning a crank. If you lite in New York City you can evetOgo into a restaurant, dropacoin in the slot and have boiling coffee and cooling cream pour simultaneously into your waiting cup. The modern woman keeps pace by devoting a shelf in her pantry to push-the-button meals. This doesn't mean that she has pigeon-holed the old-time good things that take a day 4o cook. There are days just meant for chopping and grinding and blending mincemeat, say, to be later piled-into flaky crusts that melt in your mouth and tell the world that you have baked an honest-to-goodness home made pie. * Presto! Dinner's Served But there are days, too, when people drop in, or you go out, returning home with only time, tig-

MAIN STREET WHITTLINGS

Ice boat stdqk went up several points on the local market, with the fall in temperature Sunday night. A ’feeling of optimism was in the air Monday, but by late: Monday evening! the market took a sudden turn, receding from' its heighth with great rapidity. Prospects for ice for immediate use are not encouraging. Several good ice boats can no doubt be bought cheaply. Plumbers and assistant plumbers are requested by their union in a mid-western; city, to shave at least once a day sb as to uphold the dignity of tneir 1 profession. Probably "Beanie.”) tile next time he is called to install'a bath tub, will appear in the sartorial magnificence of a dress | suit, top hat and monkey wrench—and, he might be shaved. Local gold fish magnates who have been reporting a high mortality rate among gold fish Should heed the item sent out by Carl Thompson of New jYork city.' owner of a fish h- spit.-.1, iHe says that the high rate among jgbld flap in captivity is not caused iby Lacki oj privacy ip their glass i bowls, put) instead of self-conscious-ness anid gnibarrassmnet having any effect bn jtheir life term, the death is generally due to the fact that few people realize a fish must have a gal- | lon of kvajter for each inch it is long, n ■ We’ve been! blamed (for a number lof things, but we believe this is the first ti ne we’ve eve: been mgde into a bogey man.; For Miss Marilyn ; Holloway i approached her First Grade leaeher, after last week’s paper was published ■ and Marilyn was angry. She said it was too bad what that paper said about her. That her inoth- ' er was reading the paper aloud when j all of a sudden she read that: “Miss | Marilyn Hbiloway, - -leader of- thje First | Grade's band was not to be permitted to lead the barfd any more as she wouldn’t gb to bed early night's.” r-zi -O—— FIRST NEWSPAPER (Continued from First PagL) Jen Hie Lmdamood; News in daily papers of Jan 16, 1933 stated that Mrs. Zacharia „Barth aged 80, had died at 4 the home of her daughter, Mrs. James J. Gallagher, Port Huron, Mich., aged 80 years. = Amither news story cf interest in the! paper' of Jan 21, 1875, concerned I Willi aid Bqwld’s runaway: ‘We h ive chronicle another runaway this week. Mr. William Bojwld drove his high-spirited team over :■• Kli'ford one day last week, anld xvhile the horses were standing in front bi the Attleberry house in thio place, the horses became frighteped Sjbmethingi and ran at a furiohs pace through the streets, smashing the buggy to which they were attached, into fragments. Mr. Bowld secured another buggy and drove to Syracuse [n twenty-five minutes, and swears that he could have made it in twenty minutes by the watch Had' he had a whip.” » uQ — I ' S. S. CLASS MEETS. The Good Cheer Sundav-school I ■ * pass of the Brethren church held its nxe-pthly meeting in the church ||Tuesday evening last week. The ' meeting Was in charge of Roy Meek, president. Mrs. Carl Gordy was song; leader; Leonard Barnhart lead deIvotionals, and On the entertainment ebrnmittee were: Mrs. Lilly. Niles; ' Mrs. Lillian Middiet- n, Mrs. Bertha Tom,. Mrs. Eva Darr, Mrs. Audrey I Ray. ‘

. ■ i uratively speaking, to push-the-but-ton. Then the shelf of prepared f i foods is a life-saver. What does it hold in store?’ There are Italian i dinners with meat sauce that takes : a day to cook, already cooked in the can; Mexican dinners that require only that the chili con carne be heated and poured over hot tamales in the Mexican manner; and an endless list of American ! favorites such as corned beef hash that needs only browning in the oven and the possible addition of a j poached egg; oven-baked beans j which have cooked for hours with pork, brown sugar and molasses and need only a minute to heat; fruits already mixed for salads ready to be hu tried into lettuce nests, and delicious berries, ready i for sponge layers and a topping, oerhaps, of hastily-beaten cream. These are only a few of the foods that can be prepared while i the kettle boils—to our grandmothers they would truly be push-the-button meals.* .

REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS

The Journal is furnished with the following transfers of real estate by ! Houton C. Frazer & Son, abstractors, Warsaw: Alva V. Stout to Edmund F. and Edna F. Riddell, lot 8, Ogden Island ,sl. Epworth League Institute to Ralph Waldo Graham and Carrie D. Merrill, lot 23, block D, Epworth Forrest S7OO. Salem 0. Jeffries to Samuel O and M. Cecillia Oatzes, 5 lots Ketring Add., Syracuse, sl. Milo Maloy, guard., to Edward A. and Edith A. Smith, 20 acres, sec. 24, Van Buren township, S9BO. Daniel Klink, trustee, to Hazel Z. Gants, Africa school, 1 acre, section 35 Turkey |Creek township, $75. Calvin E. Beck, to Carl L. and Edna Thomas, 55 acres, section 4, Turkey Creek township, sl. Interstate Farm & Mortgage Corp, to Irene Bing, 160 acres, section 12, .Jefferson township, sl. Jas. H. Webster et al. to Mabel S. Fried, lots 12 and 13, Leesburg, S7OO. Warren T Colwell, commr? to Bert E. Dausman, 8 acres, section 20j Turkey Creek township, $1,200, Amos J. Rousey to August A. Willing, lots block 1 and 2, Lakeview Park. sl,poo. ; Vernon V. Martin to Vern E. Bundridge, 21.60 acres sectio-n 8, Tippecanoe township, sl. • ' u — AND STUBBLY. , The local barber says he would father shave Democrats than Republicans this year, because the faces of the Republicans are very long. Atchison Globe. Adding to the copper in the constitution of the oyster is said to make it more palatable and wholesome. °erh'aps there is away here for the lisposal of all the surplus stocks of copper at the mines. At any .rate, it mhy provide the F.ederal Farm Board with food for Boston Transcript ■

RADIO DOCTOR SERVICE and SUPPLIES LATEST IN RADIOS . - All Guaranteed —RADIOS TO RENT—OWEN R. STRIEBY PHONE 8-4-5 Syracuse. Indiana

J TO BRETZ . , for — GLASSES /'/evin‘; Bretz OPTOMETRIST GOSHEN. INDIANA. * Room 30, Hawks-Gortner Bldg. ELMER M. CALVERT Funeral Home AMBULANCE SERVICE Phone 91 Syracuse, Ind. Phone 889 Box 177 Watch and Clock Repairing A. J. THIBODEAUX No. Harrison St. Syracuse, Ind. 3-24-32-pd ORVAL G. CARR FUNERAL DIRECTOR AMBULANCE SERVICE Syracuse, Ind. Phone 75

Marthon Red Ash Makes So Few Ashes— That if you have been burning other than MARATHON RED ASH Coal, save those ashes to bank the fire at night—after you decide to try our Famous Marathon Red Ash Coal. “Less Than A Bushel Os Ashes To The Ton" Syracuse Feed Mill Flour Feed Coal Salt Ice W. L. Disher Phone 98 P. S.—We Haul Your Ashes.

GEQ, L. XANDERS ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Settlement of Estates Opinions on Titles Phone 7 Syracuse* Ind. Fire and Other Insurance CRYSTAL Ligonier Thursday, Jan. 21 BIG DOUBLE PROGRAM EVERY THURSDAY Skippy LaMore’s Vaude’•’’le in an entire different program of mirth, rhelody, .-ante and illusions. Also FANNY FOLLY HERSELF’ ; You’ll laugh with tears in your eyes at EdnajMay Oliver Also another clever DOG COMEDY. 15c — ADMISSION —35 c Fri. & Sat. Jan. 22-23 FANNY FOLLY HERSELF’ A splendid comedy drama it all in natural colors. Sun. Mon. Tues. Jan .24-26 “Private Lives” Starring Norma, Shearer and Robert Montgomery in thtS. snappiest, wittiest, naughtiest picture treart of the year. Thev fought like wildcats but they found out after they were divorced that they couldn’t live apart. A smart modern play that shook New York with laugHft ter. 6 I COMING—“Peech O Reno” “Delicious” “Over the Hill” “Mati Hari" “Dapce Team” * “Stepping Sisters” “Heil’s Divers” “Soohy” and many of the better productions.

ENOkMOUS VALUE/ 4ft* 1 ‘ wXOFEERED THtNtA (fe’U.S ‘*7 ’»’ ' v .'Akr?* 1 ' -» ■ ' # .

S ULTRA-MODERN - UPER-HETERODYNE RADIO Model No. 99A 3) J 095 ONLY COMPLETE WITH When we say enormuos, we really mean Big — Huge Value, — now with Super-Heterodyne, full rarige Mu and Pentode Tubes and a natural life-like ElectroDynamic Speaker. It is by far the biggest Radio Value of the day. Don’t take our word for it — come in and see and hear it. Then you decide. OWEN R. STRIEBY Phone 845.