The Syracuse Journal, Volume 24, Number 50, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 7 April 1932 — Page 6
' THURSDAY. APRIL 7. 1*32.
THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL REPUBLICAN. Published every Thursday at Syracuse, Indiana. Entered aa second-class matter on May 4th. 1908. at the postofflce at 'Syracuse. Indiana, under the Act of Congress of March 3rd. 1879. SUBSCRIPTION RATES One year, in advance .12 0° Six. Months in advance —, -Lw Single Cories Subscriptions dropped If not renewed when time Is out. II MillY L. PORTER. JR. , Editor and Publisher Office Phone 4 — Home Phone 904 THURSDAY. APRIL 7. 1932 BALLOTING DAYS ARE HERE AGAIN ' Differences of opinion, personalities and facNtons a/ain m-’ke Tuikej Creek township a checker bonrii upon which a political game will be played. ; The results of the moves and checks will be known after the primaries, and will have an effect which will be felt by the county and the state. From this township three men are seeking to be nominated as the delegate to the Indiana Republican con vention;. 9 Republicans are seekii.it to He the three Republican precinct ■ committeemen. f<> nr Democrats are looking toward being the next Democratic precinct committeemenJn two precincts,. This is some, indication of the political feeling in Turkey Creek township. By filing his candidacy as dele gate to the Republican state convention Sherman Deaton has brought the Farm Bureau of lurkey Creek township into politics. Deaton has m>t made any statement as yet but probably has Ti d< ided leaning towards Lieutenant-Governor Bush who has tried to get the Farm Bureau to tile a man in every district. The nine Republicans seeking ’■ be precinct committeemen represent political factions mixed up with some personalities. The present postoffice situation miry have something ‘ to de with the large number of tilings. and some think the feeling probably dates back to other postof fice appointments. However; no interfering can be charged against Rockhill. the present county, ehairmaff for he has put the responsibility <4 who will be the next postmaster th Syracuse squarely up to the com jjnitteemen. One'} of the last minute, registra .Hops of candidacy was that of M. A. Markley for Sheriff on the Republ - can ticket. room and soft drink and was arr«- year Uy/Sheriff Persons for keeping a garawing . deviie He was defended by Widan candidate for prosecuting attorney on the Republican ticket and was fined $25 and costs. April 18. 1931. MAIN STREETWHITTIJNGS Here is a problem to test the deduction and reasoning powers. Math cmatics will d<> for a start but before 'the solve: h - ■ to be going around muttering gibberish. about Smith. Jones, Robinson and the brakeman. We would advise avoiding the town marshal when muttering and to consult Milehairt Timberlake. The answer will be ini next week's paper. Here’s the problem:. , , A train is operated by-three men Smith, Robinson and Jones. They I are fireman, engineer and brakeman, but not respectively. Qn the train there are three business men.of the same names Mr. Smith, Mr. Robin- | ' son and Mr. Jones. Consider the fol- ' lowing data about all concerned: 1. Mr. Robinson lives in Detroit. 2. The brakeman lives half-wax between Chicago and Detroit. 3. Mr. Jones earns exactly $5,000 a year. *' 4. Smith beat the fireman at bollards. ~ ~ w 5. The brakeman’s nearest neighbor, one of the passengers, earns exactly three times as much as the brakeman. 6. The passenger whose name is the same as the brakeman lives fn Chicago. "Who is the Engineer?” ■ ’ © REVIVAL CONTINUES Special Evangelistic- meetings in The Church of the Brethren will continue each evening and over next Sunday. This is >the third revival Rev. Jarboe has held in this church inside of two years, and he and the church membership are much pleased at the result of the meetings. The large audience room has been filled at every service,* and on last Sundaynight, after making special plana for a big crowd, many were turned away for lack of room. There have been 35 public decisions for church membership, besides a number of folks coming in by letter. Special music the last week has been furnished by Milford, New Salem, North Webster and the Meek Sisters, besides the home quartet and the orchestra. — o ——— C. OF C. TO MEET Grant Willi*, president of the Kosciusko County Bankers association will address the Chamber of Commerce on Tuesday, April 12, 1932, on the subject of “General Banking." The meeting will be held at noon at the Wawasee Restaurant.
Mr. and Mrs. Vic Niles are recovering from their recent illness. Miss Nellie Mann bought an automobile last week. The Women s missionary society of the Methodist church met Monday afternoon with Mrs. Jerry Hamman. Ernest Richhart Jr., has returned home from his business trip to Kanses. C. C. Bachman was able to. return to the store this week after several weeks absence on account of illness. The Mission circle of the Church of God met Tuesday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Emma Gordy. Mr. and Mrs. Foxford returned home Friday after several weeks spent in Florida. Ralph Liggett, candidate for sher ; , iff-on the Democratic ticket was in town last Thursday. - ME and Mrs. George Harris “of Cromwell were guests at the .Charles Egolf honje one day last week. The General Aid ol the Methodist church wiH-meet this evening at the home ol Mrs. ,C. R- Hoy. •■ Rev« t A. J. Armstrong went to Tuesday to attend the Methodist conference. Mr. and Mis. Ora Stoutenour of Go-hen Called on Mr. and Mis. Roy Brown, Sundiay morning. The Junior Ladies 'of the Round Table are meeting this evening at the home of Kitson. dW Schleetei Sunday with Mr. and .’sirs. Edward Si-hleeter in New Paris. Will Weaver of Foit Wayne spent Sunday jrtethe Chares; Naylor home, and Mr. Naylor returned to Fort Wayne with him for several dajs: Mr*. Anna Morrison returned to India'napoks the first of the week, f’.et-.spending several weeks here visiting friends. S. E. Rowdabaugh ami Ruth and Earl are expected home tomorrow from? Ann Arbor, Mich., for 10 days; spring vacation. . Mrs. Sarah Younce, has been t.ak■ng care of Mis/ Fieldon. Sharp y■. sterday. Mi -. -haip had a nervous breakdown. Mrs. Bitiu fh’in South Bend, dejuty inspector] will inspect the• Pythan Sisters lodLe Work here in Syraqse Friday evening. ■' Mis. .li-.-e lj/utl and son of Elkhart md Norman/Yates ami wife»were Sunday callers at the home of Mr. mil Mrs. George Hurkey. - Mi.-s Genera Watts came fi-un De--roiU Mich..) Monday, to visit until yesterday with her sister, .Mis. John Harley. I J/ '■■■ ( lintic, J ■ rirfMS? .'ll i.aug'hlin inoton-d to Inanapblia Monday morning to atend a state road meeting. V PM ■ V W Mead came from Detrort, Friday night to visit u itil Sunday with Mr. ami . Mrs* Hatrj .Fortes. . Fhe ‘ • t I- ' angejicat Aid met yesterday son an all day quilting and i - at the h I. M Sargent! Rev. Overholtier of Bristol coniucted comhiutaion services at the • ■ ■ hei atrx. chui ch,, Sunday morning. . \ Mr. and Mr- WMT Gants.and Mrs. ; eph e W ds dbrove to Ligonier. . W. I bolbmew, who !.-■ j-e-iXns l .y ill there. Mrs.. Blanche" Wingard returned fi : ■ Ci ifornia w heie she has spent the winter. She i* staying with Mr. and Mrs. Ellwood .George for a few days.' Mr. and Mrs. Roy Brown and Mr. and Mrs. Will Mallon spent Sunday afternoon with Mr. and Mrs. Glgnn Shock and Mr. and Mrs. Ed Ruple in South Bend. * Mr. and Mrs. J -hn Kavanagh, daughter Alice and Mrs. Rebecca Searfoss <>f Elkhart spent Saturday afternoon and evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Eston E McClintic. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Thornburg. Mr. and Mrs. Sol Miller and Mrs. Isabel Grieger spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. • B. B, Morgan at Chesterton and at the Dune Acres. Mis. McGinnis and daughter Betty of LaGrange. 111-, visited Mrs. Jerry Hamman from Wednesday 1 until Sunday. Thursday and Friday Mr. and Mis Ira Gants of Warsaw were guests at the Hamman home and al
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the home of Mr. and Mis- Will Gants. Miss Margaret Wolf is to return home from Fort Wayne this week end, having completed the extra two months study at the business college there, following her graduation. Mr. and Mrs. M. W. .Macy spent Thursday and Friday in Converse, where Macy attended the Washington centennial celebration at the Masonic lodge. Mrs. Elizabeth Roberts’ condition is serious at her home on Huntington street. Miss Cloy Darr was assist! ng in care of her the first of this week. Mrs- J. H. Bowser returned home to Syracuse, Friday, after several weeks spent in Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Bowser came from Elkhart Saturday to spend the afternoon and evening with her. Mrs. Theora Christis of Ligonier - >ent Monday with..Mi>. Ernest Bushong. Mrs. Benner, who has been spending the winter with Mrs. Christie expects to move back to .-yracuse the last >f this Week. Ernest Buchholz traded his car to bis father. H. W. Buchholz. The car immeriy owned by the seniotjiuch- / i- !■: .w in the po*.session\of Mel Rapp, and Ernest is buying a newmachine. Ray Beach, who was employed in the Bushong barber shop seven years :go is now located in Kimmel. He in Syracuse this past week lopkUp 014 friends. He had just returned from Arizona. Mr. and Mis. Glenn Walton and tw > children of Elkhart wore guests Mr. and Mrs. '**«■ Bushopg, Sunday. Walton was formerly a barber at the Bushong barber shop here, better known as “Slim,” Mrs. Emma Sloan has sold her lot on the mill rave w here her home burned down several years ago, to James TrasteE It is near his bain and he is using the lot to store logs for sawing. . That spring has come is indicated by the "water dog” which “Fat - ’ McClintic and Harold Bassett, found Tuesday and presented lb O. F Dav.s, who in turn presented it to the editor. Mrs, S. L. Gibson and son R. A. Gibson came from ‘ Chicago, Saturday to spend Sunday with Mrs. Gibson’s son Dell and wife. He returned to Chicago with his mother and brother- Sunday afternoon for a few days’ visit. Mr. and Mrs. George Colwell returned home to Syracuse last Thursday afternoon after several months spent at their winter home in Lake Weir, Fla. When asked about the /'shing down there, Mr. Colwell said he only caught 158 bass this past winter. Miß* Ruby -Mellinger' and friends* came from Kingsbury to spend Satday and Sunday at homg. As Miss ! lanche Mellinger is ill at Covington where she teaches, her parents, Mr. and Mrs. George W. Mellinger and Lucille went there Sunday to spend a few days. Spring repairs are being made on I . ■■•perty in town.-Jake Ant'and having a new porch put on his residence on Huntington, and Orval G. Carr is having part of* the porch cat away from the front of his residence on Main Street. Carr intends to have the house painted when the carpenter work is done. Mr. and Mrs. Garrett Grissom and Miss Bertha Raymond went to the Angola hospital, Sunday, to call on Miss Raymond's sister-in-law:, Mrs. Frank Raymond. They called at the home of Mrs. Grissom’s brother, Leland Real in South Milford, and her .. int and uncle, Mr. and Adrian Dillard in Kendallville. M--ah Sophia. Sjoan is ill with the flu at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Vada Morris Mrs .Morris was ill first, and on Monday Mrs. Sloan’s condition became worse. She had been suffering with throat trouble f*>r the past six months,' her voice being hoarse, but her condition became worse Monday and she is sick in bed this week. Mr. and Mrs. A. Anderson and
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I'H E S Y RACUSE JOURNAM*
Lawrence ’ Larson of Minneapolis, 1 Minn., and David Herrington of Wa- ! karusa were dinner guests at the ‘ Fred Hinderer home, Tuesday. Mrs. ] Eston Clayton was also a guest anc jshe enjoyed the day spent with hei old friend, Mrs. Anderson, who before her marriage was Miss Zulcka Herrington. They had not met for 20 ! years. i Rev. A. J .Armstrong and wife, * Mrs. W. G. Connolly and A. J. i Thibodeaux spent Friday in Cfiica(go. Leon Connolly came *back to Syracuse With them to spend the week end at home. James had come from Bloomington with Perry Sprague when he brought Dale j home Thursday for spring vacatioij. As i Leila could not come home this vaj cation, Mrs. Connolly accompanied | Mr. Connolly to Bloomington, to see her, when he took Dale and James back there Monday. RUBY LIPS ARE NOW BLACK Mrs. Ernest Bushong attended the beauty show in Chicago the fiist of ; last week. It was held at the Hotel ! Sherman and 10,000 beauty shop [operators were there. I When asked what a 1932 beauty must be tm be beautiful, Mrs. Bushong said that the girls and women are wearing their hair short, length about an inch below the ear--1 vbs; set in wide waves. “Spit curls” are popular. Its-the thing t»> have the hair the color of the evening gown for for■mal wear, Mrs. Bushong reports. On i Monday night ‘‘after class” at the ibeauty school a dance for those at(tending the school in beauty was [given at the College Inn with Ben 'Burney and his orchestra officiating, and with the leading man costumed at Mahatma Ghandi. Mrs. BUshong said that most of those attending the beauty show that evening had had their hair colored to match the evening gowns which they w’ere wearing to the dance (later, and that it was a beautiful i sight beneath the electric lights. ; She said the hair is washed and set ;in finger Waves, then powder is apj plied with a brush, coloring the hair | to match the gown worn. This is for One night only, as the color is washed out the . following morning. She said that the platinum blond and long bobs are “out.” I Another big beauty attainmentyof (this season-is the length of eyelash es. Long eyelashes are no longer a 'matter of birth and growth but maj [be applied at will. A liquid glue is j applied to a persons own crop of eyelashes and then with tweezers an I eyelash is attached to one that '■ grows there. And so on until both j eyes are well equipped. Then the new crop is trimmed to the desired ,length. The ones being worn at the i beauty show by many of-those who I attended were so long they Curled back up to touch the eyelids just below the eyebrows, Mrs. Bushong said. Artists demonstrating work thinned out the hair which was to be dressed until there seemed hardly any left. Mrs. Bushong said, and then the hair was set in deep, lasting waves. The beauty show consists in operators attending demonstrations and lecturers by artists among* biSiuty shop operators. Last year finger nails were to be colortSl to match thfc gown. This year, Mrs. Bushong reports that lip stick ■ used is black, and the finger nails are, made black to match the lips. o CORRECTION Last week the name of Mildred LeCount was unintentionally omitted from the Sixth Grade honor roll. And 'the name of Kathrine Dillon, Fifth Grader was by mistake printed under the Fourth Grade hopor roll. The ' name which should have been announced there was that of Kathryn i Disher, Fourth Grade.
1 ' ’ ; IN OUB CHURCHES ' I . \ ZION CHAPEL. Rev. Vern Keller, paster, Sherman Deaton, Supt. Sunday school at 10 a. m. Morning Worship, 11:00 a. m. ’ Evening service, 7 o’clock. Indian Village. Walter Knepper, Supt. Sunday school, T0:00 a. in. Morning serVic.e 11:00 a. m. ■.' . I GRACE LUTHERAN CHURCH I Vernon Beckman, S. S. Supt. . Sunday school. 9r45 a. in. EVANGELICAL CHURCH • . -j-' j j The church with Worship, Fellowship, Service. . < , I R. G. Foust, Pastor. E. M. Calvert, Supt. P. W._ Soltau, Ass’t Supt. Sunday School, 9:45 a. m. Morning w’brshipi 10:45. Evening service, 7:30 p. m. Prayer service Thursday, 7:15 p. m. . . • ■ ; ' !I' 'i CHURCH OF GOD - Rev. Marion Shroyer, Pastor. C. J. Kitson, S. S. Supt. Sunday School, 10:00 a. m. Morning worship at 11 a. inJ. ; Young Peoples Meeting 6:00.p. m., Evening worship 7:30. I Prayer service Thursday 7:30 p. in. METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH l A. J. Armstrong, Minister. [ Dr. O. C. Stoelting, Supt. No preaching services'this Sunday., Mid-week Service, Tuesday 1 , 7:15. ! — LAKESIDE-U. B. CHURCH Rev,. D. E. Hively, pastor; j Syracuse. Gerald Geiger, S. S. Supt. I Sunday School, 9:45 a. m. Mornifig worship, 10:45. Prayer hour Thursday 7:30 p. in. Concord. Sunday School, 10:00 a. ni. Indian Village. Sunday School, 10:00 a. m. Evening worship, 7:30. CHURCH OF THE BRETHREN Evangelist J. Edwin Jarhoe,' pastor Leonard Barnhart, S. S. Supt. Sunday School 10 a. in. Preaching at 11 a. m. add 7 p. m. Special Evangelistic services both morning and evening. i ■ —.—-o—— , “Dr. Jeykll and Mr. Hyde” at Crystal, Ligonier next Sunday, Monday and Tuesday. ; -—adv. ' . , J ■ —o——— Rojnona Middleton, daughter of Floyd Middleton of Elkhart has been quite] sick at the home of Tom Coy’s but is much better nowj
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STRANGERS VISIT LAKE Last week Dwight Mock and A. W. Emerson sighted a number of strange birds on the south side of the lake. They described them as being a grayish brown in color with a topnot; as having canary yellow breasts, red tipped wings and a band of yellow at the bottom of their tails. When questioned about these strangers Mrs. C. R. Hoy kindly referred to her book on birds, saying before she did so that she believed they were wax wings as two years ago she had seen birds tallying with the description given by Mock and (Emerson. They were here blit a few days and then left. 1 I The book on birds named 'those with coloring such as describ■ed “cedar wax wings.” There are ■ three known wax wings, two native to America and the third in Japan. j They are roving, have no fixed season for migrating, “here today and ; gone tomorrow.” They will sit motionless in trees for hours at a time and they travel in groups. o “Take a Chance” night at Crystal Ligonier. Every Wednesday during April. Admission 15c and 10c—adv.
BACHMAN’S —SPECIALS— For the Week of April Bth to 15th P. W. CRACKERS, per box ...... 10c CAKE MIX, Sally Brown’s, a box .... 23c SALMON, Happy Vale, 2 cans 23c PANCAKE FLOUR-Gold Medal, Virginia Sweet, Aunt Jemima, Kirk’s Quality Inn, 3 boxes '. 25c GRAPEFRUIT, Texas Seedless, 6 for .... 25c BANANAS, 4 lbs 23c HEAD LETTUCE (Saturday only) head 5c We have a new supply of Condon’s Bulbs, Garden Seeds, Onion Sets, Certified Early Ohio and Cobbler Seed Potatoes, and also First Class Eating Potatoes. ‘
f Ifrery Sanday ' KxcursioN I /Ak ' Ml I ** WW A Whole Day Visitbag, Exploring CHICAGO (C.S.T.) Lv. Syracuse ... 4:45 am Ar. Chicago ... 8:40 am See Lincoln Park, Field Museum, Art Institute,Theatres, Lake Front, “Loop,” and visit Garfield Park Conservatory, open day and night. Returning trains (C.S.T.) Lv. Chicago ... 8:45 pm For further information Ticket Agent
