The Syracuse Journal, Volume 26, Number 5, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 25 May 1933 — Page 4
Page 4
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SOMETHING Wrong with your Radio? Call Owen R. Strieby, Phone 846. 22-ts. FOR SALE Electric washer, good as new. Cheap for cash. Call 298. 5-ltpd FOR RENT -Modern house one block off Main Street. See Mrs. Holloway, 5-lt . ‘ CAFETERIA SUPPER Zion W. M. A. at the Zitfn church May 30, beginning at 5 o’clock, k 5-lt FRUIT TREES,.FRUIT TREES Priced to meet all competitor* terms if desired. See me. A. 0. Winans. 45-ts EXCHANGE i would like to exchange a good electric stove for a good oil stove. Mrs. D. H. Brunjes. Phone R. 5-ltp TAXI SERVICE, ANYWHERE, ANYTIME. If possible, call in* ad-! vance when wishing to meet trains, buses,* etc. For inquiries on rates, call George Butt, Syracuse; 5 It PERMANENT WAVES Miss Bixler of the Vogue Beauty Shoppe in Elkhart will be in Syracuse giving permanent waves, push-up waves with ringlet ends. All waves $2.50. Phone 377 for appointment. W OLV ER4N E Genu i ne She 11 horsehide w ok shoes. Sturdy, Jle.vble soles, scuff-proof, acid resisting uppers. Miles of extra wear and omfort. I’l iced low. Bachman’s. ' ' ■ Memorial Das I■ rted Chicken Dinari*> Get "Ready for Them. I have 4W Leghorn roosters; pres ent weight from s < pound to one, pound.. Until June 11 will sell those for twenty cents a chicken inlot* of ten or more, no less at this price. ; Spot cash, no deliveries. Stephen' Freeman. Phone 596. 4-2 t NO lI<E Every ex-service man is urged to attend a meeting at the Sst.uuNC Public Library, Friday night, at 7:34. Plans for the Memorial Day i Exercises and Parade will be made. ROY SARJENT, .Master of Ceremonies. ——o NO 1 It 1 Josie Snavely has opened the ice cream factory. She will also sell icd at the factory, but will not make delivery on-ice. 5-lt — —o . LUMBAGO ? and Sciatica are overcome in a few treatments.' Dr. Warner, Goshen. adv. < / 'J Cemetery urns, geraniums and cut flowers for ’ Decoration Day. Phone 277. Henry Ileer, Milford.Ind. adv.
MOTHER GOOSE S GOSI INS* A little playlet given by LOCAL CHILDREN And Sponsored by ' * Circle No. 4, M. E. Ladies Aid FRIDAY EVENING 7:30 P. M. AT K. of P. HALL Adm. Adults 10c; Children 5c EVERYBODY COME
The State Bank of Syracuse •••••••• Capital and Surplus $50,000 ••OUR BANK” Safety Deposit Boxes For Rent NEW FEATURE ADDED Swift’s Branded Beef will arrive at Klink Brothers Friday. This QUALITY BEEF will be carried in addition to our lower priced stock. PHONE 76 & xWE DELIVER KLINK BROTHERS
INCOME TAX BLANKS READY BY JUNE 15 V i Clarence Jackson, director of the state gross income tax division, announced Tuesday that the. 135 automobile license branches in Indiana will have gross income tax return I blanks for distribution by June 15. The branches also will give general ' information about the tax. 'I he automobile license branches will charge a 10-cent notary fee for notarising the tax returns, which, under the in- • come tax law, must be sworn to. They may be notarized, however, by any notary public, he said. I’n Marion county, the automobile ) license branches may be augmented iby othdr income lax branches, but dehrnite at rnngements have nut been according to Mr. Jacx- ’ son. Can Not Collect Tax. . The income tax director emphasized that the branches can not collect the income tax. After the return blanks are properly filled out I they, together with the necessary .'tax’, must be mailed or taken to the income tax division, in the State | house, he said. The income tax may j be paid either by check,- money order, bank draft or cash. I. The automobile • license branches ' also will be given another special ink upon whi h persons deaii ing W 'make only one annual income tax I payment may make application to do Mr, Jackson said. The income - ■ annual income fax is not in excess of S4O a year may make one payment instead of the quarterly payment otherwise provided 7 by the act. Tin-. however, Mr. Jackson said, “is subject to regulations of the tax deipartment.” Ask Payment July’ 15. ' All Indiana taxpayers are being asked to make their -first payment , July 15 this year, even if they come mdej the annual payment provision of the law. This, he explained, is be I ing asked so that the tax department ... i up its y and re 1 I prepared lists needed for future work lof the department. ' . ! The tiist payment duo will be for h . collected during May and Mure; An 'exemption of $166.67 which is the-prop. It inhale amount bf ’the annual SI,OOO exemption allowed each taxpayer is to be deducted. •L’ldes.-, the special request for an annual payment is ..made, all persons I will be required to pay July 15, Mr. - . -. : . Use « t' w ’ \ ■ licet se ■branches in connection with the inj.come tax was made possible through the co-ordinatmn of state ‘ govern'meat brought about through the deIparlmental consolidation bill, Mr. Jackson said.
SOI 4 0 MEE I nils SIMMER ‘ ; Members of the Wednesday After- . Club met at the home of Mis. I Ralph Thornburg, yesterday, for the .final meeting before ‘ sutnmer vaca- ’ . r. The meeting ealßd in the | morning so that the broadcast of fjjlrs. Grave Poole, National President of Women’s Clubs, and other i speakers could be enjoyed. ILun; heo» was a progressive affair, , tomato juice cocktail being served at jthe home of Mrs. Nelson Miles in i Pottowatomie Park; from there the party went to the home of Mrs, A. ;W. Emerson on the southside of Lake Wawasee. ! The main course was served here, -’and then the club members went t<> 'the home of Mrs. G. B. Stone where Ibb sin ess matters were discussed and I strawberry shortcake and coffee enjoyed. -* ! On the committee which planned 'this last meeting were: Mrs. Ralph llmrnburg, Mrs. Miles, Mrs. Emer- , son, Mrs. Stone, Mrs. So-1 Miller, ’Mrs. Fannie Hoy and Mrs. Elnora I Colwell. ; 1 0 — Mrs. Roy Darr left for New York .City, Saturday, to visit her brother i and friends there. She will be gone a month. . '
LAKE NEWS. (Continued from page One) Wayne, Sunday, to spend the week there. 1 —,——■ '| Mrs. Will Veltman and daughter Barbara went to Holland, Mich. , 1 i Sunday, to spend two . Weeks with | Mr. Veltman. Mr. and Mrs. Will Dale and daughter Dorothy, Dr. Kalb, Mr. and j I Ml*. Louis Leidner, Mr. and Mrs. J Jerry Snyder, Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Leas of Goshen and Mr. and Mrs. M. A. Cotherman of Ligonier were among the Wawasee visitors, Sunday Mr, and Mrs. Frank Symmes of Indianapolis were at their summer! home from Friday until Sunday. Their son and his wife from Washingto, D. C., spent Sunday there j with them. ■ Mr. and Mrs. Ed Horst and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Rush of Indiana- : polis spent several days (his past week at their cottages. A letter to Ed Neumeyer Monday said that Mr. and Mrs. R. M. Pentreath of Clinton plan to come to; their summer home the last of this week to spend next week there. j Dr. Robert Riddle of Butler was a Syracuse and Wawasee visitor Sun- ’ day. Among those who spent Sunday at i the lake were: Mr. and Mrs. Bill , Gingrich. Mr. and Mrs. R. V. ; Mauer of South Bend; Mr, and Mrs. j G. C. Harwood, Mr. and Mrs. R. [ C. Conrad. < j I Jack Conley of Hagerstown has rented Dwight Mock's cottage for the month of June. ; Mr. and Mrs. Brillhart of South Bend-have moved to their lake home i for the season, as have Mr. and I Mrs. Joseph Farrel Sr. , of Goshen. Mr. and Mrs. J. Everett Jones and family of Anderson spent the week end at their summer home. !- Mr. and Mrs. Louis Novitsky of Fort Wayne and party of friends! spent .last week at their summer home. Ralph Teetor of Hagerstown and Howard Marlott spent Saturday at the Teetor cottage. Mr. and Mrs. ! Charles Teetor and daughter spent the week end at their summer home. Miss Frances Brannum, bridge hostess at the Hotel Alms, Cincinnati 0., will be hostess at the Spink-Wa-wasee hotel this summer! succeeding Miss Anna Mary Mudd of Chicago. Mr. and Mrs.. Charles Abell Jr. , and children were lake visitors Sunday. 1 Mr. and Mrs. J. W. . Caswell and son Dave of Chicago spent the week end at their lake home, as did Dr. and Mrs. Laughlin, also of Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Schacht and family came from Huntington to spend Sunday at their summer home. Bruce Gollan spent the week end at his summer home. Mr. and Mrs. Gollan have moved from Monon to Fort Wayne. Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Long entertained their nephew Harry Ramsey jand his fiancee, their niece, Mrs. Head and her son and wife, at their summer home last week end. The party came from Chicago. ■ ■ ■ i Mrs. Neadham, Mrs. Davis and Mrs. Sears of Muncie are spending ! this week at the Neadham cottage j . on Kale Island.
Members of the orchestra which will play at the Spink-Wawasee this summer have rented the Wandel cotttage on Kale Island. r Mr. and Mrs. G.* I. Lata of Fort Wayne are spending this week at the Sargent hotel. . • Mrs. C. Joseph of Ligonier enter'tained 14 guests at dinner at the Sargent hotel, Sunday, the party being in honor of her niece's gradua- . tion. Floyd Gray has leased the building j recently moved to the lot near Ideal ■ Beach by Everett Ketring and plans j to serve there and will also sell gas- ■ oline. Mis* Gross. Western Union operator at the Spink-Wawasee returned to the lake, Tuesday and will spend her fifth year in the small Bishop apartment. Mr. and Mrs. Pat Gardner of So. ; Bend, called on Mr. and Mrs. I Louis Sunday. '. .t,— .q GATES ARE CLOSED This morning Town Marshal Rentfrow closed the gates of the dam, holding back Syracuse Lake from the creek. He reports seeing some big carp and a gar-fish about 2 or three feet long. TO HOLD MOCK REUNION The annual Mock reunion will be held at Epworth Forest Park, North Webster, Ind., Sunday, June 4th. Everyone is cordially invited to attend. - — o— ——— TRY A JOURNAL WANT AD
THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL
CURRENTEVENTS (Continued from page One) , from manufacturing .and processing ,of food, and establishing a fair price for. dairy products. May 19. German and french dele- > gates to the ! announced acceptance of tfr& British ! plan for disarmament. ( May 21. Premier Mussolini’s four ■ power pact, designed to give Europe a minimum of ten years peace, was I informally agreed upon by France, England, Germany and Italy in ■ Rome. The pact states that it is based on the Briand-Kellugg pact outlawing war and the non-resort to force agreement signed at Geneva list fall, and the covenant of the league of nations. The pact makes it plear that the four power agreement •does not mean that the powers will impose a solution on any other nation, the pact states definitely that treaties may be revised, but only through the machinery of the league under article 19 of the covenant. Members bf the pact agree to respect and maintain against all external expansion the territorial integrity of all members of the league. Disarmament lis only mentioned casually in the ’pact. _____ Reports from Japan state that she is willing to withdraw from North • China when the Chinese prove peaceful intentions. I May 22. At Geneva the United I States pledged itself never to interfere with international action to deal ' with a menace of war once the aggressor nation responsible for that ! menace has been satisfactorily ideni tilled. It was interpreted as meaning that in the future the league ban boycott, blockade and otherwise punish an aggressor without fear of complications with the United States. The United States Supreme court I placed on the state of Illinois the full financial responsibility of carrying out that courts decree that is to complete sewage treatment works so that the diverted flow from Lake Michigan shall be cut to 1,500 cubic feet per second by' 1938. The cost is estimated as 139 million dollars. The House ways and means committee changed the public works bill into a general tax measure. They agreed to raise the' federal tax on gasoline from one cent a gallon to one and three fourth cents a gallon. They agreed to keep on the nuisance tax another year. Income taxes also will be raised as well as corporate taxes. The state administration -announced that it was prepared to use its influence in encouraging a vast program of needed public works in Indiana with the money to be made available from the public works bill. 0 RULINGS ANNOUNCED ON POSTAL SAVINGS Information concerning the taxation of postal savings deposits has been obtained from a letter from the director of postal savings. Such deposits are the personal property of the depositors and subject to the taxing power of the states, unless the states in some manner have expressly exempted these from taxation. However, when the deposits are converted into postal savings bonds they become exempt from all taxes or duties of the United States as well as taxation in any form by or under state, muncipal or local authority. Interest now accruing or paid on postal savings certificates is exempt from the federal income tax. Postal employes are forbidden to disclose the name of any postal savings depositors nor give any* infor- | mation concerning a particular ac- • count to any person other than the .depositor himself, unless specifically ■ authorized to do so by the third as- ; sistant postmaster general.
A Tip for the June Bride* to-Be ♦.. - ' ' ■ 1- ' ’ . ■ ■'■ .' . ■ i. . /k emind your young man that a few cents a day spent for electricity will do a lot to lighten your housework. Better bring him in and look over our stock of economical electrical appliances. Or, if you prefer, see another dealer. NORTHERN INDIANA PUBLIC SERVICE COMPANY A PART OF YOUR COMMUNITY
REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS The Journal is furnished with the following transfeis of real estate by Houton C. Frazer & Son, abstractors, Warsaw: Henry Willis, admr. to Cornelius and Jessie E. Werle, lots 6, 10 and 11, Stoner’s Park, Webster Lake, $525. Warsaw B. & L. Assn, to Eugene Scarlett, lot 5 block 4, Becknell’s addition, Milford, $l5O. . Quaker Haven Park Association to Homer J. Coppock, lot 65 Quaker Haven Park, Dewart Lake, SSO. August C. Beyer to Mrs. J. W. Gilman, lot 39 Beyer’s So. Park addition, Eagle Lake, $25. Wawasee Dredging Co., Incorp., to Charles Winebrenner, tract in section 14 on shore of Wawasee Lake, sl. Isaac Rose to Elva L. Foote, 128.47 acres section 12 Turkey Creek township, sl. Alva Crowl et al to Anna Pinkerton, 27.79 acres section 25 Van Buren township, sl. Geo. W. Gunderlock to Clyde M. and Rose Stuckman, lot 7 Good's addition, Syracuse, sl. ‘ Wm. J. Leeson to Albert Krull, 3 n '4 acres bn Goshen-Huntington road; adj. Syracuse, sl. John J. Boyle, Comr., to Roscoe Goble, lot 30 Hillabold addition Syracuse, sl. John B. Bell to Robert J. and Anna Ruth Clemans Cory, lot 23 block C. Epworth Forest, 82,500. Sanford Gall to Federal Land Bank on Louisville, 50 acres section 2fl, Jefferson township, sl. Tomb-Chapels of Egypt Tombchapels of Egypt portray series of scenes of thb normal life of man and woman of aficient days.
B. & O. TRAJNSX April 2) Eastbound — Train No. 32—10:12 p. m. Stop. Train No. 10—12:26 p. m. F. S. West BoundTrain No. 31— 6:55 a. m. Stop. Train No. 7—11:07 a. m. F. S. Train No. 9— 4:11 p. m. Stop. — DWIGHT MOCK —for — Vulcanizing and Acetylene Welding Battery Charging and Repairing Smith Side Lake Wawasee . Authorized Crosley Radio Dealer Near Waco. BOAT LLVERY Phone 504 Syracuse Our Standard First Class Dry Cleaning 49c Suits-plain dresses-coats Our Economy Cleaning 29c Suits-plain dresses-coats M. E. RAPP
KOSCIUSKO COUNTY WILL HAVE LIQUOR TEST CASE On Saturday, Judge Vanderveer will be called upon to decide whether Indiana now has any liquor laws on the statutes to enforce. Fred Shipman, farmer residing near Palestine, ■ arrested on May 2, is charged with possessing one pint of grain alcohol not manufactured or bottled under the provisions of Act 144 of the statutes passed by the 78th general assembly of Indiana. He is also chargl ed with the unlawful sale of a pint lof grain alcohol’ and also with failure to pay the excise tax. In a motion to quash the affidavits filed, by L. W. Royse and Brubaker land Rockhill, the defense ssked that ! the court quash the affidavits on the that the Indiana liquor law lhas been repealed and there are no laws to take the place of the repealed law. • ! The beer law, the defense, it is understood, will contend, has to do only with the regulation of sale of beer. Prosecuting attorney Rowdabaugh will claim that the beer law is for regulation of temperance.
GEO. L. XANDERS ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Settlement of Estates Opinions on Titles Phone 7 Syracuse, Inr* Fire and Other 'lnsurance OPTOMETRIST GOSHEN, INDIANA.” Phone 889 Box 477 Watch and Clock Repairing A. J. THIBODEAUX First House South of U. B. Church Syracuse, Ind. 9-24-33
Keep Your Chicks Growing to maturity with our ALL MASH CHICK RATION Protein 15'« Fat 3.5 c Fiber 6 ° INGREDIENTS: Ground Yellow Corn, Wheat • Bran, Wheat Middlings, Meat Scraps, Corn Gluten Feed, Old Process Linseed Oil Meal, Alfalfa Meal, Dried Buttermilk, Limestone, Special Steamed Bone Meal and Salt. ■ —SEE US FOR YOUR NEEDS— Stiefel Grain Co. PHONE 886 ICE Delivered daily except Sunday in Syracuse and at Lake Wawasee Natural ice 40c per cwt. Artificial ice 50c per cwt. We pay the sales tax 98J Phones 157 J ' . - ' ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ’ SYRACUSE ICE CO. Beer Atlas Blatz j Pri m a Arrow Berghof f Edel wiess Hoosier Cream Miller’s Hi•L if e ~ — —— • Kosciusko Distributing Corp. ‘ Office and Warehouse at The Syracuse Feed Mill. Phone 157-J :0: Syracuse
THURHDAY, MAY 25, 1933
Dr. Ernest TS. Decker PHYSICIAN and SURGEON I Specializing irt Diseases of jEYE, EAR, NOSE and THROAT Opposite Goshen Library 205 So. Fifth St. Goshen, Ind.
CRYSTAL Ligonier Thursday, May 25— “SHE DONE HIM WRONG” Starring Mae West, queen of the Bowery. ' 10c —ADMISSION—15c Fri.-Sat., ;May 26-27— “FAST LIFE’ 1 William Haines with Madge Evans and Conrad Nagel. A thousand latjghs in a. world of speed and excitement. LET’S GO! Sun. -Mon., May 28-29— “THE STORY OF TEMPLE DRAKE” Starring Miriam Hopkins and Jack Lißue. Her name a by-word jon the sneering lips of men! Her reputation a tid-bit women’s gossiping tongues, yet, she isn’t bad, near her story, Also “SO THIS IS HARRIS” A smart, spicy and sparkling musical comedy alive with .gorgeous girls—star ring Phil Harris of radio fame. A ■ refreshing new note in entertainment. Tues.-Wedo. May 30-31 — “ZOO IN BUDAPEST" Starring Loretta Young and Gene Rayihond. A picture that you and your children will enjoy.j Critics praise it to the skies. It has drama, . comedy, (thrills, spectacle and action!. Adm. 10c-15c COMING June 11-13 “42ND. STREET”
