The Syracuse Journal, Volume 26, Number 12, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 13 July 1933 — Page 4

Page Four

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QMETIDNG Wrong with your • >1 >•’ (’-. i Owen R. Strieby, Phone . 22-ts. FOR RENT Modern, furnished ‘ house, on Lake sUeet. Inquire Dan Wolf, Phone 3<>i3F 12-ltp Bridge-Luncheon every Friday at South Shore Inn 12 o’clock, commencing this week, 75 cents. Please make reservations day before. Mrs. Bush of New Castle, hoatess. adv WOLVERINE — Genuine Shell horsehide work shoes. Sturdy, flexible soles, scuff-proof, acid resisting uppers. Miles Os extra wear and comfort. Priced low. Bachman’s. 3-ts FOR SALE—Furnished cottage, mile west of Waco. Immediate possession. C. M. Baker, owner, 329 N. Halifax Ave. Daytona Beach, Fla. ' 12-4 t FOR SALE Two launches. One Mullin 4-cylindef Marine motor. Very re.isonable. One 10 passenger boat in good running order. Will trade for good used car or what have you? Joel Wilt, 190-J. 12-lt ' , —■ | ! FOR RENT- Modern house. , large yard, double garage, will rent for. summer or for year. InI quire Mrs. S. C. Lepper, 2973 No. Murray St. Milwaukee, W’is. 7-ts , ——i ■ ■■■■ I i A DAY NURSING and SUMMER Art School will be conducted at The ■ Grade School for children from 2 to 10 years of age, in charge of Mias Elisabeth Haynes and Miss Hilda ] Duffield. For information. phono the : South Shore Inn on and after July . 16. 10-3 t k. i ASTHMA ( , - Bronchitis and all the diseases %bo- : inning with a cold are quickly overtime. Phone 176, Goshen, Dr. '.Varner. —adv — I CARD OF THANKS We wish to take this way in thank- ( mg all. of our friends for their kind- , ess and sympathy in the sickness ( .nd death of Father Hess. Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Hon. , .'O . , OH! DEAR! j Last week, in the item about who ( ’ is in charge at the pool room now we , n eant to say Clarence Kehr, but of c.tureo the press printed Ira Kehr apd it isn’t.

————■I ————■ / ..n l .m 1811I r.. ll m ! j u.u „ g ; • I — .«.«« . « ■■• “ * ■ * •••»•»-nr - - tt r-TTF • . r'.. . < f ' The State Bank of Syracuse z •••••••• I Capital and Surplus $50,000 ••OUR. BANK" I ■» | ,| Safety Deposit Boxe* For Rent * ■ I SOLT’S Grocery and Market Fresh Vegetables and Fruits Swift’s Branded Meats Your Favorite Brand of Beer by the Bottle or Case -WE DELIVER—--605 PHO N E S—R-369 THIS WEEK CHOICE VEAL Young, Tender and Savory may be had at this Store. Spring Lamb* Swift’s Branded Beef* the best, are among the other choices that one can make. A variety of cold meats for hot weather is another suggestion. Our home-killed beef is lower in price—Try It PHONE 76 * WE DELIVER KLINK BROTHERS ■■' - ;

LIEBER TENDERS RESIGNATION INDIANAPOLIS, Ind.—Gov. Paul V. McNutt announced that he had eceived the resignation of Col. Richard Lieber as superintendent of the division of lands and waters and commissioner of parks. * The resignation is to become effective July 15. Col. Lieber did not give any reason for his resignation. He will continue as director of the Indiana World’s Fair Commission. Gov. McNutt paid high tribute to Col. Lieber for his work and said i the resignation was accepted with regret., ’ Myron Rees, of Rochester, who has been assistant to Col. Lieber, will be in temporary charge of the parks. Col. Lieber was for many' years director of the Conservation Commission and' had charge of the developement of the state park system. He had gained national recognition for his development of the state parks. Reorganization of the Mid-West i Brewing Co. of Indianapolis, under the name of the Richard-Lieber Brewing Corporation was announced ; yesterday. The, brewery will be headed by Mr. Pickwick. • LAKE NEWS. . . The South Shore Bridge club held its first meeting of the year yesterday at the home of Mrs. T. S. I Vaughn. Three tables were in play and prizes were won by Mrs. C. N. i Teetor, Mrs. R. B. Tuttle and Mrs. Ebbinghouse. The club will meet every week. Next Wednesday Mrs. j Amanda Xanders and Mrs. C. N. Teetor will be hostesses. Mr. and Mrs. A. R. Monroe of i Pickwick Park have as their guests I for the summer their granddaughters I Dora Ann and Barbara Jean Day of I Long Island, N. Y. Their grandson, Charles M. Fox Jr., of Palo Alto, ' Calif, was a week end guest. 0 . ZION. Mrs. Ray Lecount and son Corlyss. spent Thursday with Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Strieby. Miss Martha Brower, Velma and! Catherine Disher and Lucy Clayton] spent Sunday with Eston Kline and [ family. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Smith and daughter Marjorie and June Pinkerton spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Emory Guy, Ivan Kline and family of Milford called on Eaton Kline and family, Sunday evening. Rowena Kline spent the week end with her parents.

CURRENTEVENTS (Continued from First Pane) in motion attempts to rescue him in i the isolated trading post of Anadir. July 9. President Roosevelt signed the code applying to the cotton industry. The code will become effective on July 17. July 10. General Hugh Johnson, big boss of industry, announced that ■ big industry will be given so many days to file codes, submitting themI selves to government supervision and if they don’t comply, hearing will be ordered and codes will be written arbitrarily for the relucant industries. The general made known that ' coal industry will be first to feel the : brunt of direct action and that steel, oil and automobile industries will be brought in soon unless they decide to come in on their own volition. The pound sterling sold within 4 •cents of its old time par of $4.8665. The dollar dipped to 69.98 cents measured by French *gold money. July 11. President' Roosevelt drafted the best brains of his administration and created a supercouncil of experts to steer the U. S. along the road to recovery. Besides the regular cabinet members the council is composed of: Chairman Jesse H. Jones {of the reconstruction finance corporation; Administrator Hugh S. Johnson of the national recovery act; Administrator ' Peek of the agricultural adjustment organization; Governor Mofgenthau of the farm credit administration; Mr. Hop- > kins, Federal relief administrator; Joseph Eastman,, railroad co-ordina-tor; Robert Fechner, director of the • civilian conservation corps; Chairman William F. Stevenson of the Home Owners’ Loan Corporation; !Chairman Arthur E. Morgan of the , Tennessee .valley authority. Governor Murray of Oklahoma de- ! dared martial law in the area around I Oklahoma City railroad yards, where j fifty cars of beer were held awaiting {diversion orders. Guardsmen were i called to prevent the unloading of j beer before legal steps were taken to permit its unloading and sale in {Oklahoma. The vote Tuesday was 2 to 1 for beer. Spokesmen for a conference of bituminous coal operators and the United Mine Workers of America reported that a subcommittee had agreed that the minimum wage for a code for their industry should be $5 per day for inside work and $4 per day for outside work. No agree Iment was reached upan maximum ’ working hours. 0 FISH CAUGHT. While trollihg Thursday evening, on Lake Wawasee, Mrs. R. M. Pen{treath caught a wall-eyed pike weighing 3 pounds, 5 ounces. She caught a five pound one in exactly | that way, two years ago. O. L. Muinmert caught one this I summer and one last summer, but those are all the s wall-eyed pike catches reported since that sort , Os fish have been placed in the lakes by the fish hatchery in recent years. Friday morning before breakfast, j Mr. Pentreath caught a 9 pound 1 pike. ' W. Remy and son Chet fom In- ' dianapolis, who attended the Indiana ■ State Bar Association meetings at the i Spink-Wawasee, and tried out fishing I Thursday and Friday, caught six bass Thursday; seven Friday and a 110 pound pike. Mr. Comings from Muncie, guest at The Tavern caught a four pound bass, Sunday. I R. V. Mauerer from South Bend, fishing Sunday caught four big bass {to take home with him, Sunday evening. Ed Holderman caught a six pound pike, yesterday. George Colwell caught a four | pound bass in Syracuse Lake, Monday. Fishing in Syracuse lake, Tuesday, Delbert Replogle of Milford and [ton who was celebrating his Bth birthday, and a friend, caught 42 blue gills. Maggie McClellan said she had never seen such blue gills taken out of Syracuse lake before in all the years oVfishing she has done. [ Another who went out from Butt’s Landing, John Tetis of Nappanee, caught a 3H pound baaa, two others weighing more than a pound, a big rod eye and an extra-large croppie, that same day. He was casting. MAN THOUGHT CRAZY Sheriff Harley D. Person brought to Syracuse, Monday, a man giving the name as Charles Wyatt. He seemed to be out of his head. He had entered a farm home near Syracuse, and frightened the housewife who was dressing her baby at the time. She sent for the sheriff who brought the man here. It was learned he belonged in Goshen, and officers came from there and took the man from the Syracuse jail. MEN'S CHORUS TO BE AT CHURCH OF GOD The Men’s Chorus from Huntington, Indiana will give a special program Sunday evening, July 16, at the Church of God at 7:30 p. m. All are invited to hear this chorus.

THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL

Hops Hopped, So Raisers Got Busy ~~—> Ao**- 1 JWbfx*■’ AS THE price of hops, used In the manufacture of beer, jumped suddenly to 75 cents a pound, when 3.2 beer came Into effect recently, hundreds of Oregon farmers started replanting their crops for the first time since 1929. Here are shown some of the hundreds of women engaged in stringing up the new vines on which the hops will grow. For many of them this is their first work since the depression set in.

* THE WHEAT SITUATION * (By W. B. Stout,..Purdue) According to the .United States Bureau of Economics, the wheat markets during the past three months have been largely influenced by the critical political and financial situatino. Trade in wheat has been greatly restricted and world shipments have been the smallest during the past ten years with the exception of the 1925-26 and 1929-30 trop seasons when European harvests were unusually large. Consumption of bread grains has been held to a. minimum in importing areas, and abundant supplies of lowpriced feed grains in exporting coqntries suggest smaller utilization of wheat as feed. The generally good quality of the ’northern hemisphere ctop this year has been a factor in holding European import takings to a minimum and in reducing disappearance in other areas. Therefore, world stocks continue large, reflecting the slow’ international trade, but some reduction has taken place in the large surplus which has overhung world markets during the past few years. Little effective action has yet been taken towards relaxation of tariffs or regulations affecting world wheat markets, but recent official announcements favor more liberal trade policies. 1 ■ Present prospective production in the United States throws some favorable light on the domestic prices. Conditions of winter wheat in the United States for June 1 stood at 64 per cent and indicates a probable , production of 341 million bushels. This compares to 462 million bushels last year, 787 millions in 1931, and: gives prospect of being the smallest crop since 1904. 1 .Thye acreage abandoned is estimat- j ed at 32 per cent of the area seeded ] last fall as compared to the 10 year average of 12 per cent and 17 per cent in 1932. Abandonment was heaviest in the Great Plains Area and on the Pacific -Coast. Acreage abandoned in Indiana was five per cent! of the acreage seeded last fall, and the prospective yield is for a crop 1 of 22 million bushels or about four * million bushels below an average crop. . o — ' UNDERO OPERATIONS ON EYES Mrs. Dan Klink had a tumor reI moved from her right eye, Wednesday last week in Goshen. Her eye is being treated this week, and when it t is recovered from the first operation must undergo two more. Mrs. Klink has been at home since the operation. I Mrs. Lowell Pefley had a growth removed from her right eye, in the hospital at Wolf Lake, Friday and . returned home Saturday. She is re-r covering nicely. 0 ? — v SYRACUSE WINS The Syracuse Lakeside baseball team defeated Dutchtown 13 to 7 last • Sunday. Next Sunday the local boys will play the Ligonier team here at 2 o’clock. LOST CHANCE ngi > i \ V' Inventor—My machine can do the work of ten men. Visitor—Gosh! My wife ought to have married it Doesn’t Deserve It Bllnka—l have no confidence in that man we jut passed. Jtnka—Yeah? Why not? Blinks -He’s a confidence man. What's the Recipe? It Is said that an Eskimo baby never cries. They only twist their heads about and contort their features if they are in trouble or hurt

THROUGH A 1 W>mans Eyes By JEAN NEWTON THE JOY OF ONE KIND OF HOARDING TN HIS book, “Small Talk at.Wrey- * land.” Cecil Torr tells about a friend of his being appalled to find in a broker’s office a shabby old man speculating heavily. He remonstrated with the broker for allowing a man of Ills years to risk money which he could apparently not afford to lose. The broker quickly allayed his fears. It appeared that the old man In question always kept a hundred thousand in government bonds —a sort of Insurance against ever being reduced to actual want! And the author comments on the love of money for its own sake. “I doubt.” he says, “If many people understand the happiness of feeling thoroughly fit. There is a joy in knowing you can jump clean over any gate you see; and I think the miser has this Joy in knowing he can pay for anything he likes. But he does not go buying things, any more than you go jumping over gates.” That’s an idea. And the first thought that comes to me in connection with it Is of another kind of hoarding that must be rich in Joy and satisfaction. Unlike the amassing /if gold this is a sound kind of hoarding. It Is even more sure than the saving up of physical strength. For It is something that does not diminish with i the years. That Is the storing up of poise, of control, of Inner calm, of spiritual peace. What a wonderful feeling It must be to know that one has oneself so | disciplined that no outward circumstance can possibly shake one. What , satisfaction to knew that no matter I what the provocation or emergency, one I IS sure of oneself. What a bulwark against easy disappointment, disillusion. suffering, heartbreak, to feel that one has a spiritual Independence and assurance that can always be drawn on. In sonje ways that supreme posses- ! slop Is easier of achievement than the miser’s gold. In other ways it is more difficult Misers enjoy amassing their gold. But self discipline is not fun — not at least until the stage of the struggle where Infinite patience and | gallantry and agonizing efforts and I sacrifice and self-denial are already behind one. The cost is high. But what a prize! 0. 1»»X B»U SyMtcsto.—WXU ftwric* HONERS Hindus ar« natives of India. They wear turbines round their heads. BONERS are actual humorous tid-bits found in examination papen, essays, ate., by teachers. An isocelea triangle la one having two feet of the same size. • • • A cone Is a round shaped thing that starts with a big circle at the top and continues down to a tiny one or rather none at all at the bottom, and If it is upside down it is just the reverse. • • • In writing conversation you put eych person In a different paragraph. • • • A surfeit is • cove, nook, or indentation. • • • My brother had the ammonia when he won three year* old. The doctor came every day and gave him epidmnic* In hl* arm. a • • The Indian* burned the white men for steak. •. INK Bto Syamcate—WNU Service. If he could only sing wouldn’t the giraff make the ideal crooner?

INJURED IN ACCIDENT Two young couples in a 1921 model ! Ford, on their way from Pennsylvania to the World's £air, stopped at Charles Nicolai’s filling station on ' road 6, Saturday and, asked if they might camp there that night. They had had an accident at noon and one of the women was suffering from burns received. The young j people had money enough in their pockets to get to Chicago, they said, but didn’t intend to take a train until their car fell to pieces. At noon, Saturday, they were heating coffee on a Sterno stove, placed on the running board of the car, and they were gathered nearby eating sandwiches. The stove went dry and unthinkingly, one of the party put more alcohol into it, and the flash of fire which followed burned one of the women’s face’. She had a sandwich at her month at the time, and had presence of mind enough to hold that over her mouth and nose, but the fire burned her forehead, cheeks and hair. They had been to a doctor, and she received treatment, and now they were driving slowly to Chicago, because even the accident and injury had not changed their determination to attend the World’s Fair. They stayed at Nicolai’s until Sunday morning, and started on. CHURCH TEAMS PLAY V ——■ The Methqdist baseball team defeated the Lutheran team 8 to 7 in the last of the ninth inning in an exciting game played last Thursday afternoon. Two games were played Tuesday this week. The Lutherans won from the Church of God 15 to 0, and the Methodist defeated the United Brethren 10 to 8. S. S. CLASS Members of the Church of God Wide Awake Sunday-school class were entertained at the home Os Mrs. Leia Druckainiller, Tuesdayevening. Twenty-oiie members and five visitors .were present. Games were played and prizes awarded, and refreshments of ice cream and cake were served. GEO. L. XANDERS ATTORN EY-AT-LAW Settlement of Estates Opinions on Titles Phone 7 Syracuse, In«* Fire and Other Insurance

C R Y S TA L—Ligonier Thursday, July 13— Bargain Night “THE LITTLE GIANT” Ed G. Robinson in Society. A great comedy, drama. Adm. 10c-15c Saturday, Sunday, Monday, July 15,16,17— “PICK UP” Sylvia Sidney and George Raft in a daring drama of a girl who was cold, hungry and ripe for a pick-up. It has drama, comedy, love interest and plenty of action. It is entertainment plus— Tuesday, July 18 —CLOSED. Weds., July Nights “The LIFE OF JIMMY DOLAN” Starring Douglas Fairbanks Jr., Loretta Young and Alice Mae Mahlon. A splendid comedy drama, telling the story of a public idol who thought he could lead a double life and get away with it. A Fine Picture. Admission 10c-15c Sat, Mon., July 22-23-24— “HOLD ME TIGHT” James Dunn and Sally Eilers in their latest and' greatest picture COMING— JANET GAYNOR in “Adorable” COMING ATTRACTION AT W-A-C'O FRIDAY, JULYI4CLARA BOW In “CALL HER SAVAGE” TUESDAY, JULY 18— “BEST OF ENEMIES With Buddy Rogers, Marion Nixon, Frank Morgan, Greta Nissen FRIDAY, JULY 21— JANET GAYNOR In “ADORABLE" With Henry Garat and Herbert Mundin 7:45 P.M. Adults 25c—ADMISSION —Children 15c FREE PARKING—PARK PLAN Dancing After Show _ i— EMERSON’S i SOUTH SIDE NEAR WACO i PHONE 392 : : . • : : Groceries Fruits Vegetables : : Fresh Meats : : - : • j Home Cooked Meals Popular Prices :

THURSDAY, JULY 13. 1933

Modern ' - for Rent R. W. Osborn Phone 94 Syracuse, Ind. DWIGHT MOCK —for — Vulcanizing and Acetylene Welding Battery Charging and Repairing South Side Lake Wawasee Authorized Crosley Radio Dealer - Near Waco. 1 BOAT LIVERY 1 Phone 504 Syracuse Phone 889 Box 177 I Watch find Clock Repairing A. J. THIBODEAUX I First House South of U. B. Church Syracuse, Ind. 9-24-33 OPTOMETRIST '! GOSHEN. INCMANA. T “ Circle Theatre . GOSHEN, IND. 1 4 DAYS STARTING SUNDAY, JULY 16 RETURN SHOWING 1 By popular Request of the Season’s Greatest Musical EDDIE CANTOR i' * . IN i ■ “The Kid from Spain” First Time Shown at these Low Prices. Adults 15c - Children 5c ———