The Syracuse Journal, Volume 24, Number 49, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 31 March 1932 — Page 3
THURSDAY, MARCH 31, 1932.
THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL REPUBLICAN. Published every Thursday at Syracuse, Indiana. Entered as second class matter on May 4th. 190$, at the posjoffice at Syracuse, Indiana, under the Act of Congress of March 3rd. 1879. ; 3 SUBSCRIPTION RATES One year. In advance ..........$2 00 Six Months in advance ------ -- 1.00 Single Copies • ••• -03 Subscriptions dropped If not renewed when time Is out. ■ If \ RUV 1,. PORTER. JR. Etlitor nml Publisher Office Phone 4 Home Phone THURSDAY, MARCH 31, nil. 1 "T-— MAIN STREET WHITTLINGS “Curly” Sloan caught a 15 pound pike last Thursday, tithing through the ice. If the fish had possessed reasoning powers • it- must have thought- “So this 'is Hollywo<*<i. Ivor everyone that knew • f the event posed beside' Curly s fish and had photographs taken. Emory Strieby fell through the ice into .the lake Sunday while.flying • a kite. Just anothei Benjamin (Franklin out after knowledge. Whitt 4itrieby discveied is that water' -is • wet. . -Seven peon* rftits are seekin » -the office of county clei k '-arid. four He: publicans M Ij?e pie seen, to have 1 the idea that l.eiand Kinsey, present ' clerk is running for his third terni But the fsict is that Kinsey is rifii . mug for his »« - : ■ lie. aas ; pointed to the'office*'’ Jan 7, 1928 when-.his. father; died, and was e_.ee t ed to the office N 1928. The county count »:l refused i - -pass on the appri pr-ifiti »n f r recred •Kosciusko county as a modified by'-.' •vine- f i »-c area Thc-i anda is ' p-n---ceedin'gs tth; h ale" to he brought Wilt sprees the county council t the necessary aji>pr>-priation it. a.. probability But -when some, of the farmers who ws l ait e. tested is — he passed- up by the Inspe l*'! wli* will’ then i: spe t 'he catt e . neighbor '»'< foss thy i ,-t win d efe not want his inspected, then every! •one will!, aw akeii to the > unfairness;, of the law by which the count) i■ _ . . Thfs can eas iy. happen, so 20 per cent of Tattle in the are to be inspected, most of -the - - ■ fail mers ai e . - >ihg to he missed,-, and as always happens in such a situylion someone will not he missed who wants to be. What of the, reinai tier totalling 80. pei centTvAie these cat'-' tie tubet< ul .-is fiev ' Can th -.-e vocating the appro-priat u-n as health me.isuio ar.swei ft ; - l ' .; t-ioh ?"• . . ■ ! Received at the four; a diet : V. * 1 Worth, Fla." one papaya; a- U i - fruit r-.'-t <•< -'1 e the editoi's ea: y > ufh ah- it f ui 'years - ago in- Africa. -Solder's' mentioned J the fruit last year, that fiuit gr-Cw-f ers. v weie tiyirq to r. ike; these .pa • I'. paya' tiees near fruit in Florida «’ pfy were p•ld ml tyr rm e borne it n,--a papaya for the editojr. Ope j >: mol Kat u I day;, parsed-amiiel-uiiy as a piece -■ f t I bis ,s public amnHineement that the S.eidv eis may now return hoii.e. The Northern Indiana P»>wei Company has asked- the. public service commission t res rates aud to tlx “reasonable sufficient I and n6i disci t o .doty rates f- i .dm its territory,” ui a petition filed in j Indianapolis. Inasmuch as .only a few dozen t.-wr.s have .threatened to'.' ask the commission for 1 'wei rates? this past .'-Winter, would '-it., he •g-'-urg ~ too far to wonder if'any of the high-! up officials in the.',. power- .company i ever played that get rhe jump-onsthe- : other-fellow game called' poker? HIGH SCHOOL (.RADI ATES j ENJOY 808 SLED RIDE BEFORE SNdW MELTS The Hustlers, . lass of '3l i from Syracuse High school enjoyed two -parties last Week, a boh sled ride 'pit Tuesday- night and a coasting party Wednesday night, -~ Mr. and Mr*. \\ trre Fisher <• tamed Rowena Kline, Helen- Allen. Anna Sudlow, Irene Shock, -Mamie Wogoman, Junior Jones, Dean Grady • Johnny-Sudlow, Eugene Hen wood and Noble -Fisher. Tuesday. ° Early in the evening the 12enjoy-! ed an 8-mile bob sled ride. To break the monotony of such a ride on the first and' last re f the season, the members of the party took turns riding a small sled attached to the bob sled, and then tried riding - horseback without a saddle. On the return to the Fisher home ' refreshments were served and the i rest of the evening spent playing cards. This party was so much enjoyed that the next night Eugene Henwood invited the group and Pauline Shock, Duane Kline, Paul Grimes and Geo. Henwood to a party at hi* house. They enjoyed riding in a one hoes shay, and sled riding down the hill n««rby, playing catds and dancing. Now that spring has come the class is ready for boating, the members say-*
ipcalDaffoiWss Miss Ida Deardorff came from Chicago to spend Easter at home. 1"f Mrs. Dorothy Harris spent Easter with her mother, Mrs. Ketchum. Earl St i filer of Sylvania, 0.. spent Easter here: Bert Ward Sr., and son Bert Jr., -were ill with i!u the first’ of this week . Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Holleft of Plymonth were in town Tuesday. Mrs. Ida Bowersox is expected home from California next week. Fred Hoopingariier arid Ernest Buehholz spent Tuesday in Toledo, O. Mis, Jasper-Buchter is ill with the f fiu at her home. 1 Charles Nicolai is ill with the sh 1 at his home. . and Mrs. D. L. Brown were guests of Mr., and Mrs. Charles Fetters,. north of Goshen, Easter Sunday: .Miss Dorothy Houston came from [■South .Bond, to spend last week l end with her parents. Mrs. Isabel Grieger and Mrs. So! Miller spent Tuesday afterhoon in South Bend. K K. • Fletcher’s mother from Piercet*>n spent Tuosdav at the homv of her son. - , Ralph Cullers and lady friend w :! h ! h'is mother, Mrs. Charles Davault. ' C C..Bn. hinaii Jr. and Will Kh ides of Milford returned home from i Miami, Fla„ Sunday. ;• .'Mi-. i-. l Mis. Edward Sineby **• spi . t EasU : with -N.r, ant iii nde n Strieby: Mrs J e Rapp- and Sjuzanne.'can c '-from lieM-tte. to spend Eastei bur. day with Mr. Rapp and Joe\. Miss Maitha Leacock and Ralph ca-iii-e ‘ nT C’ihi • .s| ■ . jd: Easte i 3 Mis- . > \ ■ Kits ’ is -;iei di• . Ill’s we«o. at hoi. e. as this is, vac at ho; '< \\ - .: 1.0 'it,: Mr-, WU: ... ii.. e were hundav ti.innei , uests oi ;; i > • . • .. 1 : Ist. - and Mis jda) of Go--heri. were guests at the. Ike ?gei h'-mi M and Mr-. George Snvder of ' vSi s l :! i-. .. li st w.cek - Mr. and -Mis. Bernard '.SkidctU • pci ' F .-’c. with her people. Mr, d M N.- .- i be-- ;•> of Sylvat i. . O' Mr . Orv l (i :Ca» i and h.kir.e spi t. Su with Mr. grid dis A M Carr u. Siive Lake. MPh M and fi iend of fi Betuj spe Eastei w ith Mi. . ■ Mr*. CharSes Cartehux Aiif Warsaw pc it M a.. w h Mis, R. K. Piet ■'• % Mr.'.and Mis. A. F. Skeaf of Fort V:vyhe*spent Kastei with Mr: . V. i.i ' Dai c. .Mr l ai d dr’s 'J. 'E. Burket spent - . v •> ‘w :i: Miy -ai : Mis Chis Eheieneiiusn in Burket. . Elk-hart are -announcing the birth of C -oiy., Tuesday morning. Mi as , Mrs. Fred Hinderer went G .'she vesterduy v lo attend the .. iiien -wedu-hig- a iiiiversivi y celebra- . • of ME,ah Mrs: George flinderei Mi and Mrs. Henry Clason and hildre f ’Goshen ' were -guests- of. and Mrs. Sa Rasor, Easter Sun - ■ • A left • ••’ ' . Pc rter ,in; Mdn-. tehelio, Calif-i asks that their Journal he heid here this week as they are starting h-me to Syracuse. ’ Ret !Is 1 c. Pete , Plew. Floyd ’ liddUit •t, ami Kd Uni ue at tended the funeral of Rev. Ruse of Michigan ;■'» J, 1 Dolan returned h ere from I Indiai ipolis, Friday. He reports that Mrs. !>. lan is, improving and .her,| speedy recovery is'hoped for. • •••• M s' KaUien. t- iH-ck i f Ft. Wayne and C lie Lamb f Payne, 0., were , uests ■ f Mr.' ttnd _Mrs, C. H. 'King, ,■. ' ‘ Mr. and Mis. N. G. S'kid.geil spent, Easter lit the home of their daughter ; .: ,i ha- .and. Mi ..rid Mis. B. M i‘ .. e. in Toledo-, (.). Fihends here learned of the death of Floyd Bunnel in. Plymouth Mon* day. Mis. B unnel is past grand matron of the Eastern Star lodge. • . Ms. and; Mis -Jesse Rex’s 29th wedding anniversary was celebrated with a family dinner party at their home. Sunday. Mrs. Charles Rentfrow w as brought hop e fr rh the hospital, Monday, andis being cared for at the home of her sister, Mrs. Rose Tucker. Miss Margaret Freeman came from Chicago to spend Saturday and Sunday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Freeman. Rex Warstler who had been home with an injured leg w as called back to work at the New York Central railroad this week." Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Harper of Goshen, Frank Geyser and Charles Binkley of Nappanee were among theme who called on. Mr.land Mrs. E. E. McClellan Sunday. Perry Sprague planned to drive to Bloomington, today, to bring home E»is son Dale and ' Leila and n Connolly, for spring vacation friim the university. Among those from Syracuse who attended the funeral of Thomas Pinkert'on in Milford Monday were: Mr. and Mrs. Mart Long, Loren Eyer and Charles Bushong, Mr. and Mrs. John Snobarger and family of Carey, 0., and Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Msloy enjoyed Easter dinner, Saturday at the home of Mrs. Millie Snobager. Mr. and Mrs. Orrin Klink and
family of Springfield, O, and Mr. and Mrs. Roy Klink and daughter of South Bend were guests p| Mr. and Mrs. Frank Kljink, Easter. The Lutheran Aid met at the home of Miss Helen Jeffries yesterlay. Mrs. Hugh Causer told of her rip to America from Scotland during the meeting. Mr. and Mrs. George Timberlake >.rid daughter Mrs. Nina Hamrick of Carthage, 111., were week end guests >f Mr. and Mrs. Milehain Timberlake. ■ ■ '; - ■' Mr. and Mrs. Norman Yates of Elkhart, Mrs. Viola Harthway and laughter Mabel, of Garrett, and Eson. Stoner and family of C r °ni\vell, were recent guests in the George Hursey-home. Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Mishler t^rid ■wo sons from Bloomington called on Syracuse friends Saturday. They vere on their way to Centerville, Alich.. to spend Easter Sunday with elativejs there. „ Mr ijmtl Mrs. Owen Strieby and family spent Sunday in Decatur with Mrs. Striehy’s parents. -Miss Nellie Johnston, who had spent two weeks - here, returned jto Syracuse with the •ktrieby’s. Mr. and .Mrs. Grover Walters of south Bend and Mr. and Mrs. Ed Taker and children of New York City; Mr. and Mrs. Charles Conklin »f Goshen called -on Mr. and. Mis. McClellan at Butt’s landing, Monday. Mrs. Eureka Hogirtyer, who is 74 years old, walked to Goshen one day ; st w eek. She planned to walk back, it - r -.he wa\ H 1> Harkiess pick- . . • ' r Hi her up and brought her'home in .US I .1! . ■ A and Mi's. Sol. Miller and son Dick and*Bill Osborn drove to Howe, Tuivday, where they spent the after* coti a ■v« ng with Mgs. Florence ■ 1 1 lier, the o>)s visiting . Lau.cks y anders. ■ _ g" Male: Strieby, Henry Carlson and M kvveii ante from South Bend • spend Easter Sunday with Mr. and Mrs'. Anderson Strieby. Maxwell riecl to .-pend this vacation week here. 1 ' . Guests .of Mr and Mrs. Ernest CVichhart,. Sunday were: Mr. and Mis, Hit: id Mick and 's.ni ,of Goshen;. Mr. |,mi Mrs. Kd F.irlev and Mr. Farley’s father and.sister, and Mr. Kaiser f Kikhart. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence 'Kline- "and family of Syracuse. Miss Evelyn and Lola Buhrt and William Buhrt went to Gary Friday where they attended the funeral of Ralph Her'/.ell, agißl Vo. He was* the; >..:i <>f Mr. and. Mrs. H-uryey Hentzell .’ in t i.y of Syracuse and his death wed a • st id operation. . ' Harley A Regenos, candidate for] -le:k t>f the Kosciusko circuit court vas R- w n last Thursday calling on he \ ■ r -f. :hi- p-laca. Mr. Regenos! •t a native of Seward township, havoc lived there, his entire life and is ?x-a.-se.'Soi* and trustee of that town-j -hip Hep is a farmer and breeder of Short H* rn cattle. Mr. and Mis. Thomas Albright of Chicago,ar.d Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Howard •-/ I.afontaine spent Easter with Mr. and Mrs. Guy Stone. Their daughter, Mrs. Richard Reif and son Jimm.ielwho had been the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Stone . the past two. .Reeks planned to return to Elmhurst ill., with Mr. and Mrs. Albright, tolay. Mis. \'irgie Ritter of Wolf Lake called hi 'Mrs. Mi Snobarger, Monday. With her husband and son F< r,est and Mr., and Mrs. Alva Searfoss, Mrs. Ritter had come from: Wolf Lake to.try -fishing on Wawasee and slaying ,at the Fred Searfoss home. When the rest of the party went fishing. Mis. Ritter went calling -in Syracuse. * Mr. and Mrs Charles Nicolai enterlained the following on Easter Sunday : Mr., and Mrs. Alva'Nicolai, Mr. a-ul Mrs. Claude Adams and granddaughter of Elkhart; Mr. and Mrs. Arts Nicolai, Mr; and Mrs. Roy Butt. Harry Njc lai, Lawrence Firestone,; Anderson Juday of Benton;. Guy Nice • '•lai and two daughters of New Paris; Grandma Nicolai, Mr. and Mis. Fred Hinderer of Syia.cu.se,. A carry in dinner was served at noon and a good time: enjoyed bv : all-
Give Away Saturday
With each sale of Wall Paper we will give you enough paste to hang every roll. ' With each tube of Mermen’s Shaving Cream, 1 bottle of Skin Balm. -si A Shampoo Afiron with each bottle of Husutone Shampoo at 50c A Jumbo Rubber Sponge with each Chamois at 69c $2.00 Worth of Ambrosa for SI.OO
THORNBURG DRUG CO. Phone 83
THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL
I Syracuse Enterprise : March 31, 1875. • J. P. Dolan has returned to Syracuse after a visit of a few weeks to - Chicago and other places in the west. We have heard it intimated that the Dunkards are thinking t ing a church in this place, probably j during the coming season. i f A new building is being erected on South Huntington street near the corner of Main to be occupied by the new meat market of Jennings and Bow Id. ! We understand that Mr. Moses I Rentfrow’s team ran away in the south part of town on Thursday last, damaging the wagon to which they were attached. .- Mr. A. Mitchell McClintock cut • his "foot very severely one day last - week while chopping wood with, an I ax. It" was purely ax-idental. Dr. Ihrig attended the wound. I We 6nd erst and that Mr. George ! Crocker of LaPorte will erect dur- | ing; the coming season, a $2,500 resi- ’ deuce on his’property in Syracuse. I Farmers have commenced sowing j their oats.* That sturdy old farmeg. S. ! ‘L. Ketring finished putting jn crop on .Tuesday. . ;• ! Mr, Mahlon Vennamori had his : foot hurt badly by being caught in I some of the machinery of Sam Bashore’s saw mill a few davs since. 1 I’ — u We understand that efforts ate be- . ing made to secure funds to build -a f church in this place for the use of the Methodist and United Brethren denoininatipns . 1 Died Ott> On Friday; March 26, 1875, near Benton, ltid,. Milton Ott, -on-of Jacob F. Ott. aged about 10 or jl2 years, -V ’• . | ONE DISH MEAL PROVES 11M E-A N D-MON EYSA VE R j A vvhole dinner in one dish makes an inexpensive, time saving meal, especially for busy mothers' of large families, says-Miss Dorothea MuehU of the HomC Economics Exteision , staff of Purdue University. The house wife can make very appetizing dishjes which will provide, at minimum I cost, all the kinds of food the body | needs. These dishes are much less trouble to serve and may be‘much less- trouble to prepare than the | same foods in separate dishes. They :uve often a convenient means of utilizing left-overs. Onion soup with cheese is one of ! the most tempting of these one-dish [ meals. Made with meat stock, and served with toasted slices of bread and plenty of cheese, this soup is not only tilling but a highly* nutritious and ample meal, A cheap . and satisfying- addition to it, if desired, is corn bread, with its store of fuel food to add to the variou 'nutrients .of the soup. Meat stew, made of beef, lamb, or oxtail, with a mixture of vegetables and a breadstuff .of some kind — dumplings, whole grains of or barley contains all the essential kinds of food at very low cost. -Serve in, addition, if desired, dried apricots, raisins, or prunes, to give variety of flavor and a finish to the meal. Corn chowder, containing milk,-po-tatoes, onion and salt pork, is another good one-dish meal. Then there are vegetable soups in which the cheaper dried or canned vegetables (homecanned, if you have time) can be used to keep down the cost. There are bean stews and peanut a long list of soups, chowders, meat and vegetable pies and other combinations of cheap foods which supply the essential food materials. Raw carrots, cut in strips, or raw cabbage, go well with the bean or 'peanut dishes.
Almost Given Away i - A big Chemically Treated Sponge for cleaning Wall Paper, WindowShades and Painted Walls, 10c ‘ Climax Wall Paper Cleaner, 3 for 25c D. Y. Soap for General Cleaning ( 2 lb can _i 39c Formaldehyde, pint, . 30c Chicago Park Grass S^ed the hest, pound — —39 C Another one at 25c pound* Hess Witch Hazel Cream, 25c size —l9 c Bromo Quinine - — -24 c Norwich C. L. O, pint 59c WATCH FOR AUTO SHOW
HIGHER PRICES FOR WHEAT, . CORN AND COTTON PROMISED Higher prices for wheat, corn and cotton are guaranteed by the International Harvester Company in an offer to this year’s purchasers of certain important crop-producing and harvesting machines. The higher prices guaranteed are 70 cents a bushel Chicago, for wheat, 50 cents a bushel Chicago, for corn and 8H cents a pound. New Orleans, for cotton. George A. Ranney, vice president in charge of sales, said today: “We are convinced that the reluctance of 1 farmers to buy implements needed for the economical production and harvesting of their wheat, corn and cotton crops is due to the present unsatisfactory prices of these commodities, and we believe that if they are assured of higher prices for their products they would not hesitate to purchase the new cost-reducing machines that they need. “In order to meet this situation, and to evidence our faith that prices of farm products must soon improve, we are now offering growers of wheat, corn and cotton assurance of higher prices with which to pay notes given hereafter and maturing this year for purchases of certain machines most vitally needed in making and gathering these crops. “The list of machines to which this offer applies includes farm tractors, harvester-threshers or combines, winrow harvesters and stationary threshers. “On .notes maturing in 1932/given hereafter in payment for the machines listed and representing not more than 40 per cent of the purchase price, there will be endorsed the equivalent number of bushels of wheat or corn or pounds of cotton computed at the prices named. If the av erage market, quotation for the 5-day period prior to and including the maturity date of the note-is less than the price named, the purchaser vvill be credited with an amount representing the price differential multiplied by the number of bushels or pounds endorsed on the note. [ “For example, ifjjhe note in 1932 amounts to $42Dj it will require 600 bushels of wheat at 70 cents, Chicago, to mset the obligation. Should the price of wheat at maturity be less than 70 cents, say 60 cents per bushel, Chicago, the purchaser’s note will be accordingly reduced S6O. “I take this opportunity of reiterating what the company said in its, recent annual report for 1931—-that the present abnormally low prices of farm products coul,d not long prevail; also that only a slight improvement' in price's for farm products would have an important .effect in correcting the vicious circle into which all business has been forced in the period through which we are now passing.” The cars of J. W. Warstler of Elkhart,~oLO. H. Warstler and two state highway machines were stuck in the mud, Tuesday on Road No. 6 west of No. 13.
ONE DOSE GERMAN ■’ REMEDY ENDS GAS “I was sick and nervous with indigestion and stomach gas. One dose of Adlerika helped. I eat anything now and sleep good.”- Henry Dodd. You can’t get” rid of indigestion or gas by just doctoring the stomach. For gas stays in the UPPER bowel. Adlerika reaches BOTH upper and lower bowel, washing out poispns which cause gas, nervousness and bad sleep. Get Adlerika today; by tomorrow you feel the wonderful effect of this German Doctor’s remedy. For sale by Thornburg Drug Co.
International Harvester Offers Price Guaranty on Wheat, Corn, and ■I *.. . Cotton > ■* , - 4 Vanv farmers who need, new machines for the economical production of their wheat, corn, and cotton have been reluctant to buy them because of uncertainty as to the prices they will t 1 receive later in the year for these farm products. In order to meet this situation the Harvester Company offers farmers purchasing machines after this date, a definite price guaranty on varying quantities of their wheat, corn, and cotton. If market price quotations for these products do not reach the guaranteed prices at the time payment becomes due on notes given and maturing this year, farmers buying machines included in this special offer w ill receive a credit equal to the difference. Many of our customers we know will welcome this announce-. ment. Come in and let us explain the details of the Harvester 1 Company’s unique guaranty. Let us show you the machines on which it applies and tell you just how to take advantage of it in equipping your farm at once with the new cost-reducing machines that you need. OSBORN & SON
COMMENTS ON THE LIVE STOCK SITUATION fH. M. Conway) The cattle market continues rather steady with substantial underlying strength coming from the developing seasonal scarcity of the lower grades and an improved demand for stocker and feeder cattle. The spread in prices is unusually narrow, so the tendency will be for prices to mark time for the next thirty f days, with further prospective strength in prices of the lower grades. The feeding outlook is quite fa- ! vorable for the late spring and summer, with the lower grades holding up well until eary June, Despite some recent price reaction the further seasonal decrease in supj plies puts the hog market in a strong position with higher prices in prospect during the next few weeks. The large supply of lightweights reflects an early movement of fall pigs, which eventually will make for • a sharp seasonal reduction in supplies during the summer and early I fall. Conditions favor summer feeding with highest prices expected in August and early Septembe*. | The lamb market continues in a l strong position. Rather sharp fluctuations are to be expected but no great increase in supplies can materialize before late May. ; In the analysis of the factors infiuensing the seasonal variations in , the market supply of live stock, it ■ has been found that the feeder is [ governed very much by his experi[j ences the previous year. If a plan .' of feeding was successful he tries it , again, but if he lost money he shifts i-j to some other plan. So, if there is any , j gerieral advice to give the producer *[ and feeder, it should be this: “Look [ for your money where you lost it.” ■i In live stock feeding the shifts / from year to, year are rather mark- ■ j ed, so what happened last year is not ( ia safe indicator of prospective con- •' ditions this year.
BACHMAN’S —SPECIALS— For Week of April Ist to Bth * LUX SOAP, 3 bars .... .... ...... 22c PRUNES, 40-50 size, 3 lbs :.... 25c HOMINY/Large size can, 3 for—. 25c WHEATIES, 1 box 15c, 2 for .... 16c GRAHAM CRACKERS, Perfection, 1 lb 15c PEARL TAPIOCA, (Bulk) 2 lbs ... ... . 25c OATS, Mothers Quick China, a box 25c GRAPEFRUIT, Texas Seedless, S for .... 25c BANANAS, 4 lbs for. .. 23c HEAD LETTUCE, per head, 8c; 3 for .... 20c Have your Groceries Delivered with our Milk and Cream Every Morning
REVIVAL WELL ATTENDED The interest and attendance is growing with each service at the Evangelical meetings in the Church of the Brethren, according to information given the Journal. It is said that if the crowds continue to increase as they have since the beginning last Sunday the room will not be large enough to accommodate all by the end of this week. The pastor. Rev. Jarboe is doing ‘ the preaching, and Mrs. Jarboe directs the singing. Music is furnished by the orchestra. There had been 17 appications for church membership by Tuesday night. » It is expected that * services will continue next week.
j Every Sunday " Excursion ®. j A Whole Daj Visiting, Exploring CHICAGO |r (C.9.T.) / Lv. Syracuse . . . 4 >45 am Ax. Chicago ... 8 >4O am See Lincoln Park, Field Museum, Art Inatitute.Theatree, Lake Front, “Loop,” and ri.it Garfield Park Conservatory, open day and night. Returning trains (C.9.T.) Lr. Chicago . . » 8:45 pm Fee farther Inform «t(— M* Ticket Agent
