The Syracuse Journal, Volume 25, Number 41, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 2 February 1933 — Page 4

Page 4

Ads

FOR SALE Alfalfa and clover hay. £. E. Strieby.. 40-4tp SOMETHING Wrong with your Radio? Call Owen R. Strieby, Phone 845. > 22-ts. FOR RENT March Ist. Modern 7room house on Front Street. See Dan Mishler. -,4l'ltp. CUT FLOWERS and potted plants, Saturday Special, one-half regular price. Henry Beer, Milford, Phone 277. FOR SALE Spare parts, tires and auto glass at the Syracuse Irojp and Metal Co, on .Boston St. Sam; Swe : darsky. 41-2t-ltp WANTED Fat hogSLor any jot her fat stock. Elkhart Packing I Co., Phone F. S. Baker, 224, Syracuse. 35-7tp, iITS GO 1933 Remember. Fruit I don’t grow on any tree, but it I does or those sturdy trees sold by A. j O. Winans, Syracuse, Ind. Phone, 150. 39-ts J LEGAL FORMS Wills, Mechanica l Liens, .Mortgages, Assignment of l Mortgages, Options, Bill of Sale, Quit < Deed, Notice to Quit Tenancy! etc, for sale at the Journal Office.. , OFFICE SUPPLIES -- Typewrites , ribbons, for all makes of machines, i carbon paper, typewriter paper, card board, blotting, tags, etcT, for sale at the Journal Office. if- ■ . 1 . FOR SALE Kit, hen table, 12 ft. drop leaf: kitchen cabinet; 2 cupboards, one walnut; 1 dining room table; J China cabinet; 1 davenport; 1 book case; 1 iron bed and springs; 4 rocking chair*; l large mirror, 4*f|l See’Robert Strieby. 41-ltp. NOTICE lesson on all band inatrumente will be given by 'Vern Me 1 'ermott, f-rmer'ly National Traveling Instructor for the Buescher Band Instrument jCo. Beginners or advanced solicited, test lesson free. Class and private instructions at the Studio in the Grand ll< tel. Call or Innuire at Grand Hotel. ,41-ltp FO R SA L E or RE N I m' o d e r -n EIGHT ROOM BUNGALOW On 3 Acres Land. Sm W. B. FISHER Phone 311 • There were fewer deaths from bootleg Christmas this year than Lumetly. Either the people didn't have the money to buy "Hftor their stomachs are getting tougher. Noli l I to II! IRS. (HI DLKiRS, ■ v ETC * C ) In the Matt a of tin Eitate/of loan l . \\ .i,l. .! i eased. f In the Kflectosko' Circuit Court, Desgmber term. IWI. Cause No. tits. Notice is Herein Given, That he Wingtrd, .as administratrix of the estate ■ f j,,hn U Wingartf, deceased, has presented and filed heraccount a.l vucheis in final settlement »f said estate, and thiSt the same will come up for examination and action of said Circuit -Court / at. which tiinef all heirs, creditors, or legatees of sjiid estate are required to appear in said Court and show cause, if any there be, why said account and vouchers should not be approved. Dated at Warsaw, Indiana, this 27th duv of January, 1933. ROYCK K. IftI.DEN BRAND. Clerk Kosciusko Circuit Court. Geo 1. \.i .dry. A:;y. 41-_t

The State Bank of Syracuse •••••••• Capital and Surplus $50,000 "OUR BANK" . Safety Deposit Boxes For Rent SPECIALS EVERY DAY Side Meat, per lb 10c Sausage* lb. 10c, 3 lbs for 25c Hamberg, 2 lbs for .... 25c Pork Roast, 2 lbs 25c Pork Shoulder, 2 lbs .. .... 25c Pork Chops, 2 lbs 25c Pork Steak, lb .... 15c Beef Roast, lb. 12Jc Rib Boil, lb 8c Steak, lb 20c Fresh Fish, lb. Usc Veal, 1b...... . 20c FRESH OYSTERS KLINK BROS. Phone 76 - Phone Order - We Deliver

Sheriff’s Sale —— j By virtue of a certified copy of a decree to me directed from the Clerk! of the Circuit Court of Kosciusko County, Indiana, in Cause Number j 18,989, wherein The Federal Land IBank of Louisville is plaintiff and William O. Smith, Emma Dora Smith arid Elkhart County National Farm Loan Association are defendants requiring me to make the surn of money in said decree provided, and in manner and form as therein i provided, with interest and costs, I (will expose at public sale to the I highest bidder, on SATURDAY. THE 25TH DAY OF j FEBRUARY. 1933. between the hours of 10 o’clock a--1 in. and 4 o’clock p. m. of said day, jat the door of the Court House of Kosciusko County, Indiana, the and profits for a term not exceeding seven years, of the following de- | scribed' real estate situated in Koscilusko County, Indiana: The East'half of the Southwest quarter of Section 25, Township 31 (North, Range S East, containing 80 I acres, more or less, but subject to j all legal highways, t If such rents and profits will not .sell for. a sufficient sum to satisfy said decree, with interest and costs, 1 will at the same time and place expose to public sale the fee simple of said real"estate, or so much thereof *• as may be suit icient to discharge said i decree. Said sale will be made with- ! out relief from valuation or ap--1 praiseinent laws. | HARLEY D. PERSON, Sheriff Kosciusko County Verne G. Cawley. Elkhart. Ind. i Attorney for Plaintiff. . i Warsaw, Ind., Dec. 23, 1932. 1 2-9-16 j Sheriffs Sale By virtue of a certified copy of a (decree to me directed from the Clerk of the Circuit Court of Kosciusko* (County, in Cause Number. 18,840, I wherein the 'Federal . Land Bank of : Louisville is plaintiff and Edward Stump. Maude Stump and Elkhart (County National Farm Loan Association are requiring me jto make the sum of money in said (decree provided, and in manner and (form as therein provided, with inj terest and costs, 1 will expose at j public sale to the highest bidder, on I SATURDAY, THE 25TH DAY OF* FEBRUARY, 1933. between the hours of 10 o’clock a. m. and 4 o'clock p, m. of said day, a’ the do„r of the Curt House of Kosciusko County, Indiana, the rei Us and for a term not exceeding seven Years, of the following described real estate situated in Kosciusko County, Indiana: The . quarter and the Sbuth half of the Northeast ouarter iof Section lb. Township 34 North, 1 Range 5 East excepting the followling describeePtract heretofore confyeyed for school purposes: beginning j at the Southeast corner of said Southeast quarter; thence running North f2c rods; thence West 20 rods: thence j South 20 rods; thence East 20 rods :‘to the' place of.becinning, containing after said excentkm 2374 acres, more or less, subject to all legal highways. if such rents and profits will not sell for a sufficient sum to satisfy said decree, with interest and costs, j I will at the same time arid place expose to public sale the fee simple of . real estate,' or so much thereof as i may be sufficient to discharge said decree. Said sale will be made without relief from valuation or appraisement laws. j HARLEY D. PERSON, • Sheriff Kosciusko County Iyerne G. Cawley. Elkhart. Ind. Attorney for Plaintiff. Warsaw. Ind. > Dec 23. 3932 ,f 2-9-16

CURRENT EVENTS I (Continued from First Page) j had voted down the budgetary pro- i gram of Paul Boncour. Chancellor Von Schleicher of Ger-' many resigned after President Paul von Hindenburg refused to give the chancellor, the power to dissolve the j reichstag and proclaim a new dictatorship. Jan. 29. One hundred thousand Socialists held an anti-Facist iron ( front demonstration in Berlin as a, protest against the possibility j that Adolf Hitler, leader of' the National Socialists (Fascists) being chosen as chancellor of Germany to succeed Gen, von Schleicher Three divisions of the reichsbanner, which have been trained to combat possible attempts to overthrow the government gl the German Republic, maneuvered in Tegel prior to the ; demonstration. The socialist fear that the constitution will not be observed if Hitler gains control. Von Papen, former chancellor was trying to form »' cabinet. President-elect Roosevelt and Sir Ronald Lindsay, British ambassador conferred at Warm Springs, Georgia. The joint statement issued by them after the conference, stated that arrangements for the corning meeting in March between the two countries were discussed. Jan. 30. Adolf Hitler, leader of the National Socialist party was made chancellor of Germany by President von Hindenburg. t ■ More than 2,000 persons were snowbound in the San Bernardino mountains of Southern California; and Reno, Nevada, was without power as results of blizzards* Four to five thousand people took part in a riot at South Bend as a protest against the policy of made to work put into effect by poor relief authorities. 'j . ‘ In the House of the state legisla- ’ ture an old age pension bill was introduced providing a monthly pension of not more than $25 for all persona over 65 years of age who havf no means of support. To provide -funds for the pension payments a compan- ! ion measure was introduced which would place a tax on cigarettes and other forms of tobacco, i - The Senate finance committee sent the Collier-Blaine 3.05 per cent beer bill back to the Senate with a favor--5 able report. Jan. 30. The Senate bill to repeal i the teachers’ tenure was amended to elimriate only township schools from | provisions of the tenure law. If the | bill becomes a law as amended 11,- , 056 township school teachers would j bemoved from the provisions of the tenure law'. Teachers in cities would , continue under the provisions of the ■ tenure law. Under the » present tenure law, teachers who have taught for five i consecutive years in one school corporation become life teachers.* ■; Edouard Daladier, leader of the . radical Socialist party, announced ’that he had formed a new French * Cabinet with himself as premier and minister of war, Joseph Paul-Bon . cour was designated minister of foreign affairs. The National House passed the bankruptcy bill to aid debtors in procuring reduction i of: their financial obligations . hr extension of time in which to pay. The bill will go to the Senate. The provisions of the bill apply to indi- | viduals, to railroads, and to other j organizations. An individual under ■ the terms of the bill may file a petition in a bankruptcy court asking an ! extension of time in which to liqui■i date his indebtedness or ask a reduc- | Gon of his indebtedness. If the maijority of the creditors, including a majority of the amount of claims, agree on a liquidation plan appliesj lion for its confirmation is filed with the court. Otherwise, the debtor s jmay submit the plan and the court may confirm it if it is adjudged in the best interest of creditors and debtor. A similar procedure is laid down in the case of corporations. Jan. 31. John Galsworthy, 65, British novelist and dramatist and 1932 Nobel prixe winner, died. The Brigg’s Manufacturing Co. of Detroit, which had been tied up for a week by a strike of automobile body workers announced that it had returned the production of bodies in its Highland Park Plant for the new Ford car. The Ford plant had been shut down because of this strike. The bill to provide a .method for the consolidation of townships was killed in the Senate of the Indiana General Assembly. The Prudential Insurance Company announced the suspension of all foreclosures on owner-occupied farms in the United States and Canada. The New York Life Company declared a moratorium on foreclosures in lowa. Feb. 1. For the first time in its history U. S. Steel corporation cut its payment on its preferred stock.

THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL

The quarterly dividend was reduced from $1.75 to 50 cents. Chancellor Adolf Hitler obtained from von Hindenburg, president of Germany, a decree for the dissolution of the reichstag. This means a new election, the sixth in 11 months ■■ —c» FAREWELL PARTIES HELD Parties have been held this past week for Mrs. R. E. Pletcher and daughter Mary Ellen, as they are moving to Warsaw. Mary Ellen’s Sunday school class had a party for her at the home of the teacher, Mrs. A. A. Pfingst last Thursday evening. On Tuesday evening, Miss Martha Brower entertained for Mary Ellen at her home. Bunco and “Help Your Neighbor” were played and refreshments served. Guests were: Laura and Lucy Bachman, Pauline Hibschrnan, Marjorie Slabaugh, Mary Ellen Pletcher, Lucille-Osborn, Mary Jane Green, : Erba Kline, Mary Louise Stoelting, Nancy White and Jean Burr. Mr. Bachman took the girls to the Brower home, and Mr. Slabaugh went after them to bring them home after the party. Last night following the regular meeting the Pythian Sisters had a party in honor of Mrs. Pletcher. Valentine decorations were used and games and contests were enjoyed. Mrs. Colwell, Mrs. Unrue, Mrs. Grissom, Mrs. Rowdabaugh and Mrs. McGariey were on the entertainment committee. Mrs. Colwell and Mrs. Unrue, dressed as a man and woman 80 years ago, sang: “When You and I Were Young Maggie,” and “Juanita.” Refreshments were served. 0B. B. TOURNEY RESULTS First game: Milford 26, Pierceton 27. This was an overtime game, score at end of regular playing time was 26 all. Second game: Atwood 19; Burkett, .25. ... j r .. Third game: Etna Green 15; Syracuse 36. Fourth game: Silver Lake, 10; Mentone 40. Fifth game: No. Webster, 18; 4 Leesburg, 28. Sixth game: Claypool, 7; Beaver Dam, 34. Seventh game: Sidney, , 16; Pierceton, 25. Eighth game: Burket, 18; Syracuse 28. Ninth game: Leesburg, 15; Mentone, 36. Tenth game: Syracuse 13; Mentone, 23. Finals: Mentone 16; Beaver Dam, 24. Score; at end of half was Beaver Dam, 9; Mentone, 12. r O YOUNG PEOPLE ATTEND SERVICE Tuesday evening fifty-one young people from the classes of Leonard Barnhart and Bert Cripe of the Church of the Brethren attended Young People’s night in the Revival at the Bethany church. The Syracuse Sunday school had the largest visiting delegation. Other visiting delegations present were from West Goshen, New Salem Maple Grove, Union Center, North Webster and New Paris. More than 200 young people were present. — - —— ONIONS BEING SHIPPED Onions which have been stored in the Community building, and which were owned by Gid LeCount, Charles Crow and Harve Cory have been sold to Dengfelder and Bolish of Kimmel. Workmen from this firm are sorting the onions this week and putting these in 10 pound sacks. These are to be loaded on 15 cars at the railroad and sent to the A. & P. Company. ” * - : 0 RECORD DELEGATION GOES A delegation of 211 members and friends of the Syracuse Church of the Brethren with their pastor, Rev. Jarboe, attended the Evangelistic meetings Monday evening in the Bethany church, 5 miles northwest of town, on Road No. 6. Rev. Edward Stump of South Bend is in charge of the services.' —-— UNDERGOES OPERATION A letter from Paul Riddle attending school at Silver City, New Mexico, told his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Riddle, that Harry Shultz, who is attending school out there, was operated on Jan. 23, at which time his appendix was removed. HAVE SHOWER FOR COUPLE A shower for the newly married couple, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Smith, was held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Loren Eyer, last night. Sixty three relatives and friends attended. Games and contests were enjoyed and refreshments served. . , , ■ 0FORECLOSURE SUIT FILED Clara J. Smith has filed in circuit court a mortgage foreclosure suit on a note against Ralph E. Beiswanger and others in which a judgment of SB,OOO is asked. 0 Miss Phyllis Mock, who works in Huntington, spent the week end at home. Mr. and Mrs. Dan Klink took her back to Huntington, Sunday and called* on friends in North Manchester, on the way. ' * \ *

A HOME PROBLEM We have now traveled for enough into 1933 to be able to see that there will be no radical change in conditions during the first part of the year at least. Business in the early months of the year is going to be considerably below business in the corresponding months of 1931. Last year, beginning in midsummer, there was a decided pickup. It is to be hoped that there will be a similar pickup this year and that, with no national election to interrupt it, the improvement will be of more permanent character. , One of the phenomena of this stage of the depression is the continuing of the belief in the minds of a great many people that somehow or other our return to prosperity depends on Europe. This belief is of course fostered by the internationalists who are anxious to have the war debts cancelled and imports into the United States increased. But these internationalists have as yet been unable to bring forth any convincing argument to show that debt cancellation will make things easier in the United States. They say that the cancellation of the debts will giye the people of Europe more money with which to buy our products. There might be some benefit there if cancellation were really cancellation. But if we let Europe off about these debts the people of the United States will have to pay the debts. So, for every million dollars which European purchasing power might be increased by cancellation, a million will be taken from the purchasing power of the American people by increased taxation. So assuming that Europe would spend in our country all of the money saved by cancellation, which of course she wouldn’t, we would be no better off So far as our commerce is concerned. The European taxpayer would simply be relieved at the expense of the American taxpayer. Europe, except insofar as she. started the World War, did not cause our depression and cannot cure it. The depression was caused by .over-expansion and extreme infla- . tion. Now the value of our raw' materials is pretty thoroughly deflated and prices of finished goods are rapidly being deflated too as are our wage scales. What then remains to be done to insure economic Convalescence? What remains to be done is to deflate taxes, and this can only be done by deflating the expenses of our governments, national, state and local. When this is done, when budgets are balanced in nation, state, city and village, and economic deflation is entirely completed, we will be ready for recovery. What we must concentrate on now therefore, is not Europe’s problems but our own problems of the high cost of government. So many of our financial writers are lined up. with the internationalists that it is comforting from time to time to quote from one who can see clearly. For instance, a recent article by R. W. McNeel, says, in touching on this phase of our economic situation: “In 1933 the people of this country or their representative will have to decide whether they want fewer holes in their clothes, and more holes in the street pavements, or the reverse; whether they want more comforts in the home, or whether Jhey prefer to spend their money to support obsolete Washington bureaus, and have their waste baskets cluttered up with useless reports and statistics; whether they prefer to pay the interest on the mortgages on their homes, or or prefer to lose their homes in order that governments may continue expensive frills on our educational system, which a previous generation got along without. “The chief solution of our troubles lies in our own back yafi-d, not in France, or England, or Latvia, or in the Kingdom of the Serbs,. Crots and Slovenes.” — o 1 If the Filipinos didn’t produce sugar and other farm products we | are very doubtful whether they would have gotten any kind of an independence bill through Congress.

/WWWWWWtfVVVWWVVVWtf w, (or that MwiMMf W fllir advertisement or * circular asay ex- . press your ideas but ■ .Ofl V effective typo traphleal diaplay is m———l oessary to get beat results. With your knowledge of your business and our knowledge of tbn REMEMBER printing artweee* at Yaw ■■ i Ins tual advantage. M

| SCHOOL NOTES j Russell Schnepp withdrew from the Seventh Grade, his family moving to Monroeville. * * • * The Syracuse B basketball team from Goshen’s third team, 26 to 25 in an overtime game, Wednesday night last week. The Goshen team will play the B team here next Monday evening. *** * The first copy of the school paper was issued last week. The next will! be published Feb. 20. There are 175 subscribers so far. * * * Helen and Ruth Eggleston, twins, entered the First Grade this week, coming to Syracuse from York Center school near Albion. Their parents moved the family to the house of Mrs. EH Grissom on Boston Street last Thursday. • * * Elaine Coy was absent from the Third Grade, Monday, on account ‘ of illness, as was Lester Niles, of! the Fourth Grade. Lester had not. missed a day of school since school opened last September > until last week when he became sick. v * * Joseph Merritt has withdrawn from the Fourth Grade as his parents have moved to Coldwater, Mich, • ■ • Joe Friend withdrew from the Fifth Grade and his brother John from the Sixth, this week, as their parents moved to Columbia City. .« * • Fifth, Graders were learning not to use “have got” by making sentences. Pupils were taking turns saying: “I have been to market. What do I have in my basket?” And the rest of the Grade had to guess what. When it came Jack Stoelting’s turn he said: “1 have been to basket. W’hat have I ?” But his voice was drowmed in the shout w'hich arose from the rest of the pupils. • » • Altoona’s Eighth Grade team won from the Syracuse Seventh and Eighth grade 38 to 12 in a basketball game played in the gym here last night. Following the game the players were entertained at the home of Lida Davis. Refreshments were served to 20 guests. ■ ■ -! m — SOUTH SIDE Mildred Ririgler is on the sick list. Mr. and Mrs. Ode Rarig spent Sunday evening/at the Merl Laughlin home. Mrs. Winsor came home, Sunday, from the home of her son in Cromwell. She reports his condition about the same. » Mr. and Mrs. Pat Ritter called at the home of his mother, Sunday afternoon, Mrs. Laura Gross of Warsaw is visiting in the Jack Wright home. Mr. and Mrs. Merl Laughlin and children called on his sister, Mrs. Merl Crown in Elkhart; Sunday. Steve Davis of Garrett and Bernice Robison of New Pais spent several days in the Lida Davis home. Roy Turner’s father from Elkhart spent Tuesday with him. Mr. and Mrs. \Vm. Wyland and son Eldon and Mildred Anderson of Milford; Mr. and Mrs. Walter Rex and daughter Mildred of Avilla; Dick Snyder of Lafayette; Mr. and Mrs. Lercy Gosey and daughter Ruth of Goshen; Mr. and Mrs. Charles Brady and daughter Betty, and Alfred Brady of Ligonier; Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Warbel of Syracuse and Levi Leek of Dunlap; Mr. and Mrs. Harry Warbel and son Charles of Elkhart, spent Sunday with M. and Mrs. Frank Warbel, helping Mr. Warbel celebrate his 57th birthday. WINS SETTLEMENT W. B. Fisher was in Cincinnati, 0., last week where he appeared as witness in the suit of Mrs. Delbert’ Replogle. She sued the estate of Mrs. Hampton and won a money settlement from the court as she had taken care of Mrs. Hampton, her aunt, before her death. Mr. and Mrs. Replogle, who used to live here now live in Milford.

Starting Mash LET US MIX IT FOR YOU AT A SAVING THAT CAN NOT BE EQUALED Your corn, with Bran, Middlings, Meat Scraps, Alfalfa Meal, Butter Milk, Charcoal, Salt and Bone Meal mixed in the right proportion makes a feed that can not be beat for results at a Minimum Cost. We Call For and Deliver Your Grinding at Competive Prices SYRACUSE FEED MILL W. L. Disher Phone 98

THURSDAY, FEB. 2, 1933.

THIS WEEK v (Continued from Page One) which he owes his fame, is a machine, and very complicated. Without that machine, he would be playing the tom-tom or the banjo, and there would be no Paderewski. o CLUB MEETS WEDNESDAY ' The Wednesday Afternoon Club met yesterday at the home of Mrs. Wm. Bowld. There were 20 members present. The program was oq public welfare. Mrs. Colwell’s paper was on Public W elf are Insurance;" Mrs. B. F. Coy’s on “Mental Hygiene”; and Mrs. Self's on “Child Life in Colonial Days.” The club will ifteet in two weeks at the home of Mrs. Slabaugh. TO OPEN STUDIO. Plans are being made by Vern McDermott, nationally known musician and teacher, to open a music studio j at the Grand Hotel next week, j Mr. McDermott .has played in the I leading orchestras of the country, among these the Chicago Civic Symphony, and was chosen as Buescher Band instrument instructor. Mr. and Mrs. McDermott moved jto the lake last summer and intend to make Lake Wawasee their pet* manent home. ; . * ■ __ _o :—.j • We know a lot of promoters who 1 never expected to live to see the day J when SIO,OOO would look like a lot lof money. But they have. j DWIGHT MOCK —for — Vulcanizing and Acetylene Welding Battery Charging and Repairing South Side Lake Wawasee Near W aco. BOAT LIVERY Phone 504 Syracuse GEO. L. XANDERS attorney-at-law Settlement of Estates Opinions on Titles Phone 7 Syracuse, Ind. Fire and Other Insurance OPTOMETRIST GOSHEN. INDIANA. Phone 889 ‘ Box 177 Watch and Clock Repairing A. J. THIBODEAUX First House South of U. B. Church Syracuse, Ind. 3-24r33

CRYSTAL Ligonier * Thurs-Fri. Feb. 2-3— LIGONIER’S BEAUTY PAGEANT Conducted by Universal Enterprise. Also entire change of program of extra fine pictures on Thursday and Friday. / Saturday. Feb. 4— "ME AND MY GAL’’ Starring Joan Bennett and Pj Spencer Tracy. ■ Sun.-Tues. Feb* 5-7— •TROUBLE IN PARADISE’ I Starring Miriam Hopkins, s Kay Francis and Herbert H Marshall. One modern para- | dise, one Adam, one apple, q two Eves, that makes two jS hours of love and laughter. 4 The year’s smartest produc- S tion. Weds.-Thurs.—CLOSED g Fri.-Sat. Feb. 10-11— ‘THE DEVIL IS DRIVING” | COMING— 1 “Call Her Savage” “Pros- H perity”>>“No Man of Her « . | Own” “He Learned About d Women.”