The Syracuse Journal, Volume 26, Number 28, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 2 November 1933 — Page 2
:: \< I Si: REPUBLICAN. Published every Thursday at Syracuse. Indiana. Entered as second-class matter on May 4th, 1908. at the pwHoffice at Syracuse, Indiana, under the Act of Congrr-ss of March 3rd. 1879 SUBSCRIPTION RATES ~ One year, in advance $2.00 Six Months in advance —- — 1.00 Single Copies •<>& . Subscription* dropped If not renewed w heil 11 ine Is out. “nTI{RY L PORTER, JR. Editor itiul Publisher Office Phone 4 — Home Phone 994 THURSDAY, NOV. 3, 1933 BIGGER AND BETTER DOLLARS? The country has been caught in that hysteria commonly called inflation of currency. Those directing the government of the country do not call the mnaia inflation but “managed currency.” . First the possession of gold was declared illegal, but the government declared that the government was still on a gold standard. Our money Was allowed to<go hither and thither on the world monfiy market. Next we had credit expansion. The federal* reserve banks were told to buy millions of dollars worth of government bonds so as to pump mbney into the money channels of this country. After these shots in the arms} our money became less valuable, but commodity prices did not advance as fast as was predicted, as fast aS the value of money decreased. This country was in the meshes of inflation. Our government dared not stop ths insidious thing called inflation, but declared the United States should have “managed currency." The government, and the professors, declared that the gold standand was an archaic thing, a gold ’ plated anarchy. But after declaring for a managed currency, they, decided thi the way to do it was to buy newly'milled gold in the country and in the world markets. .They are to pay the miners in this country with 90 day notes. The first day that they fixed the price that the government would pay for gold, it was s3l. 36 per- ounce, 37 cents higher than the world price measured in terms of dollars. A jteat; ago an ounce of gold was worth $20.67, par value. . Monday of t his week an ounce of I gold was worth $31.96. Our dollar, measured in terms of gold compared U to the 1 French franc was $0.6685. But measured in terms that our government was paying for gold, our dol-' lar was w orth only $0.6467. Evidently our government did not think our dollar as good as the foreigners did. Hut the inflationists are not satis-' fled with the third shot. They claim' that the gold purchasers are inani-, pulated by Wall Street. They claimj that the huge public works and relief programs should not be financed by borrowing, but by printing greenbacks* .. Can wealth be created? If the farmer’s price must be rais-| ed, why not decrease the size of the’ bushel that he sells? Say one half bushel, sold at lhe same price as the present bushel. This scheme is no more crazy that cutting the value of the dollar in two. Besides the inflationist will not stop when the President has devalued the dollar to 50 cents, as he has the power to do, but will demand that more paper money be printed.' When that happens, ruin comes to everyone. except those shrewd enough that they have already shipped, their capital out of this country, and that is exactly what has happened and is happening. The others who will escape ruin are those smart enough to get, unbounded credit. Does anyone want to pay $1,000,000 for one meal? That is not impossible with inflation, for the people of Germany did that when their money was inflated—if they could get the $1,000,900. MAIN STREET WHITTLINGS After the tragedy, Tuesday afternoon, perhaps everyone will learn not to pick up wires anywhere until investigation proves they are harmless. Why is it when a man, or woman, Lecomee slightly ‘ intoxicated he or .-he will come up to the editor and s y: “Now for heaven sake don’t put this in the newspaper"? Won’t the editor ever be credited for keeping still about so many private, personal matters? Its when the public is concerned that The actions of the beet f milies become publishable. One thing the Hallowe’en celebration in this town meant was that all of the windows of storekeepers were soaped so that washing of windows was first thing in order, Wednesday morning. What the editor’s wife wants to know is what was the use of sweats'ing so hard and actually working to . pass that Economics course at college to try to understand how inflation means ruin, and then 10 years later see a country run by people who go in for inflation? Couldn’t those people make a passing grade in the Economics course? It just
shows you Um value ox » cuuege i education. I | The tragedy of Tuesday afternoon , i has been the subject of much discus,sion since its occurrence. The fact , 1 that the high tension wire was down in a little traveled marsh; that an ’ opossum left home at the exact time , it did Tuesday afternoon; that the 1 dog saw and chased the possum, , that both were killed on striking the I wire, that the man went to help the dog and the wife to assist her husband—and that all were killed, the working out of these things has made I even the editor feel like writing a : sermon. Shakespeare said: “There is a divinity that shapes our ends, Rough-hew them how we will. ” 1 And Marcus Aurelius: “Whatever may befall thee, it was ' preordained for thee from everlast- ’ ing. ’’ , REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS I -i — , The Journal is furnished with the . following transfers of real estate by Houton C. Frazer, abstractor, War 1 ,ftW ‘ ' J Arthur W. Bickering and Joseph P, Kennedy to Luella Wilcox, tract adj. WaW-Will-a-Way Park, Chap- | man Lake, sl. Wm. Mutschler to Chas. R. and Fannie A. Newell, lot 5 Lake View Park, sl. ' Quaker Haven Park Ass’n to Irvin W. and Elizabeth L. McAdams, lot 23 Quaker Haven Park, $lB7. Evangelical Church to Ralph W’. and Myrtle A. Loose, west part lot ’ 7, Oakwood Park, Wawasee Lake, sl. ’ John Van Ramshorst to Katherine Hoffman, lot 138, sth add. Widona, sl. Geo. J. Kindler to Mary C. Milligan, a 4x4 rod tract in section 28, (Tippecanoe township, sl. > Ford Rowdabaugh to Geo. R. , Annie C. and Benjamin I. Rowdabaugh, 26 acres section 5, Van Buren township, sl. Lloyd Rummel et al to Ralph W. Stackhouse, 136 aerse section 5, Prairie township, sl. Ralph W. Stackhouse to Lloyd J. and Earl Rummel, 67H acres section 5 Prairie township, sl. Mary E- Moran to Asa McCorkle, lot 51 Cripple Gate Heights, Tippej canoe Lake, sl. 0 - . THE PRICE OF GOLD j, (C. E. Wade, Director Chicago College of Commerce, i Chicago.) 1 Today the world is asking the question, “What is the meaning of the new American gold policy?** ! Whether a coincident or not, it is ( noted that t-he present rate tends to maintain the dollar and pound in the l same relative positions as their old I par, for both have depreciated by about a third. - But suppose Great Britain seeking foreign trade advantages lets the pound go lower, will Roosevelt let the dollar go low--ler also? | We are told that the Reconstruction Finance Corporation will buy the gold, but will pay for it with notes due in ninety days. If the dollar is likely for a fall farther by fixing the gold rate higher and (higher, will the sellers of gold want to take these notes which, when due, will be worth less than today’s rate? We hear about stabilization but how can it be with a daily change in the value of gold? We are at a loss in trying to fathom the apparent discrepancies tn the Administration's judgment concerning some of the major manipulations. First: There was the going off the gold standard to stimulate internal prices. I think this has failed after a brief speculative flurry, for whereas the dollar has depreciated thirty-three per cent, prices have risen only twenty-five per cent and are really lower than before. Second: Then occurred the National Recovery Act and its managed economy. This seams to have failed for prices have risen more than wages and production is declining: hence, purchasing power is less than before. Third: Now comes managed curcency. When the program of fixing the price of gold is complete, the dollar will have been reduced to approximately fifty cents of its former value. A farmer will get as much for a half-bushel as he received for a bushel, yet the money he receives will buy only half as much as it would before the change ao where does he gain? The man who was earning $25 a week still receives $25, but can only buy one-half as much aa ho formerly could. The millions of idle who still have a few dollars left will pay two dolars for what they buy instead of one, thereby increasing their burden by one hundred per cent. After sifting thiis program carefully and conscientiously, it looks like a deep lot on the part of the radical element of our government to enrich the debtor at the expense of the creditor which, if true, will add to our difficulties and woes instead of removing them. British representatives are here to talk about the war debt. No doubt the British would be willing to trade us Mahatma Gandhi for cancellation.
O. P. Davis has bought a new Automobile. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Klink spent Sunday in South Bend. - Jehn Walton’s parents from Albion are spending this week with- Mr. and Mrs. John Walton. y, ( <• N. G. Skidgell spent the Week end at the home of his sister, Mrs. D. A. Ragan of Churubusco. ' Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Ballinger of Chicago were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Garrett Grissom, Sunday. 1 Gary Robison has returned home from Chicago where he had been visiting friends. Mrs. Lovall, sister of Mrs. William Ray and Tom Dempsey died of blood poisoning in Goshen, Monday. Bachman’s are having a Frigidaire installed in their new counter this week. , Mr. and Mrs. Levi Kitson spent Sunday afternoon at the home of Douglas Miles in Milford. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Grieger of Muncie were guests of Mrs. Isabel Grieger, yesterday. Mrs. Marie Bushong’s uncle and aunt from California are her gusets this week. The Syracuse Bridge club met with Mrs. George Xanders yesterday. J. W. Swenson, E. Baugher and Dill Mock attended the fair in Chicago last Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Clingerman have moved from near Cromwell to a farm near Kimmell. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Brown spent Sunday evening with Mr. and Mrs. John Walton. Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Long were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Mart Long, Sunday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Lentz of Milford spent Sunday afternoon with Mr. and Mrs. William Geiger. Mrs. William Harvey and children spent Sunday afternoon at the Charles Searfoas home. Mr. - and Mrs. Claude Hoover and baby of Elkhart spent Supday afternoon with Mr. and Mrs. Ed Vnrue. Mr. and Mrs. Sheldon Hark less were guests of Dr. and Mrs. Hontz near Wolf Lake, Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Tremper of Detroit, Mich., were guests of Mr. and Mrs. H. D. Harkless, Sunday. The Art club met Monday evening at the home of Mrs. Ernest Bushong. Wood carving was the evening’s study. Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Mellinger and baby spent the week end at the home of her sister and husband, Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Groves of Elkhart. Mr. and Mrs. Will Mallon and Mr. and Mrs. Warren Ruple spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Ed Ruple in South Bend. Mrs. Owen Strieby has been sick in bed this past week. Her sister, Miss Nellie Johnston of Decatur is staying with her. Mr. and Mr*. Charles Darr, Wilbur Burke and family and Mrs. Kellogg of Elkhart were guests of Mr. and Mrs. George Colwell, Sunday. C. W. Howard spent the week end in Indianapolis on buri new, and Mrs. Howard visited her, relatives in Richmond. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Reif and family from Elmhurst, 111., were week end guests of Mr. and Mrs. G. B. Stone. Mr. and Mrs. Sam Snavely loft yesterday for Indianapolis, where he will be employed at the Spink-Arms hotel. Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Swenson and Mary Swenson spent last Sunday evening with Mrs. Sarah Kauffman and daughter Viola. John Storey of Toledo, 0., and his sister, Mrs. Tom Larkin of Indianapolis spent the week end with Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hose. Mr. and Mrs. George Xanders, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Harkless and Mr. and Mrs. L. A. Seider spent Tuesday in Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. Sam Razor have moved to Hammond, Ind., to spend the winter with Mr. and Mrs. George Cleghorn. Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Maloy and Mr. and Mn. Carl Haab of Bremen were Sunday dinner guests at the home of Mn. M. Snobarger. Mrs. Lilly Hoopingarner and Mn. Kelly of Elkhart loft on Monday for Florida whore they will spend the winter. Henry Mangus, Mr. and Mn. Herman Johnson and Mn. Effie Strieby spent Sunday in North Liberty with Mr. and Mn. Vera Davie. Mr. and Mn. Bert Wagoner of Bisbee, North Dakota visited Mrs. Wagoner’s cousin, Mn. Jerry Hamman, Friday. Friends hero have received word from Frederic Beery that he to no longer In lima, 0., but to at the home of hto sister in Indianapolis. Mr Tillman Hiro and Mn. Eva Hickman spent Sunday at the homo of Al Hoshaw near Now Paris. Sixteen members and friends enjoyed a Hallowe’en party at the Christian Endeavor meeting at the Evangelical church last Monday night. Mr. and Mn. Harold Gray of Nappanee, who built their new summer home in Maxwelton Manor are now having a sunken garden built there, between the house and the road. Mr. and Mn. Cart Noll and daughter and Mr. and Mn. Reed Place and children from Goshen wore
THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Weimer Sunday afternoon and evening.Mn. Q. C. Storitigg attended the state federation of women's clubs meetings in South Bend from Tue»day until Friday. She was a member of the door committee. ' * Mr. and Mn. Harry Culler ex- - poet their son Marion home from 1 his western trip any day now. His clothes have been mailed home, and several letters forwarded here. i He arrived late yesterday. Dr. Crawford of LaPorte, Mn. Beige of Hanna, Mrs. Fred Grieger ’ of Valparaiso and Mrs. Sellers and i Mrs. Taylor of Walkerton were guests of Mrs. Isabel Grieger, Sun- , day. 1 The Ladies chorus of the Brethren church of Milford will sing at the servicea at the Methodist church ' here, Sunday evening. Mr. Langston and Mr. Green will speak on 1 various phases of world peace. > This coming week end, N. G. Skidgell plans to spend at the home of his daughter, Mrs. B. M. Place »of Toledo, O; and Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Skidgell will visit her rela-| tives in Sylvania, O. Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Holman and family of Chicago spent the week end at their summer home in Maxwelton 1 Manor. Mr. Holman became ill, but returned to Chicago, Sunday. It' was feared he had intestinal flu. The Christian Endeavor society of the Church of God held a Hallowe’en! party in the barn at Clee Hibschman’s, Saturday evening. Games, were enjoyed and refreshments served. Wirren T. Colwell celebrated his 45th birthday Sunday. Guests were:,! Mr. and Mrs. Sam Searfoas and t family and Mrs. Emma Miles. In the evening, Mr. and Mrs. Gibson and Mrs. Barnes called. j Rev. Nicodemus and wife and son! Wendell were guests of Mr. Mrs. Chester Middleton Thursday. I Wendell remained to spend the week! end here, and Mr. and Mrs. Middleton took him home to Atwood. Mrs. Schick and son Edward of' Chicago and Mrs. Rose Wilson of . South Bend called on friends in{ Syracuse, Monday. Mrs. Schick lived here in Syracuse about eight years ago. On Tuesday Rev. Riley of Millersburg and Rev. Pettit of Syracuse entertained Lutheran ministers of this district and their wives. A P ot luck dinner and weiner roast were enjoyed at Maxwelton Manor, Tuesday noon. The Woman’s Missionary Society will meet at the parsonage of the Evangelical church on Friday afternoon at 2:30 o’clock. All women of the church are members of this or-t ganisation and are urgpd to be present. Mrs> Nelson Dodge and daughter Nancy Ann of South Bend were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Louis Heerman, Monday evening. Mrs. Heerman returned to So. Bend with Mrs. Dodge Tuesday to spend this week there. Mr. and Mrs. Nourse of Kansas City were guests of Mr. and Mrs. George Xanders, Saturday night*. On Sunday they attended the Founders* Day celebration at Howe university where their son is attending school. Among those from Syracuse who attend the Notre Dame-Pittsburgh football game in South Bend, Saturday were: Miss Mary Alice Kitson, C. H. Brillhart, Louto Heerman and son Spencer, Ralph Thornburg and son Ralph Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Mick and son from Elkhart and Miss Helen Jeffries were Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and Mn. Ernest Richhart. In the afternoon the party called on Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Conde of Elkhart. Carroll Cory, son of Mr. and Mn. 1 Harve Cory, who now live in Bartonville, near Peoria, 111., to to be ■ the guest of the Peoria Star newspaper at the Bradley-Knox game because he picked eight winning teams out of 10 printed in the paper ] recently. 1 Ten couples in Hallowe’en dis- 1 guises arrived at the home of Mn. 1 Isabel Grieger, Tuesday evening, 1
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and entertained her with a surprise party. Mrs.- Grieger’s condition since her accident is improving so that she expected tp be able to be up today. Mr. and Mrs.. Perry Sprague went to Madison, Wis., Thursday, to visit the home of their daughter, Mrs. W. C.~Bartels. They planned to return Tuesday. This is the first time Mrs. Sprague has been at her daughter’s home since she broke her leg and recovered. Mr. and -Mrs. C. V. Stoner and two children have come from Williston, North Dakota, to . spend the winter with Mrs. Stoner’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Will Rapp. Mr. and Mrs. Stoner have sold their farm in North Dakota and plan to locate near Syracuse. Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Miller entertained five couples at dinner at their home in Maxwelton Manor, Tuesday evening. It was a Hallowe’en party. Guests were Mr.- and Mrs. John Harley, Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Pfingst, Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Colwell, Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Wilt tend Rev.* and Mrs. A. J. Armstrong | The Misses Betty and Frances ; Miller entertained 20 guests at a Hallowe'en party at their home, Saturday evening. The guests arrived masked and games were played in the basement of the home which had been decorated for the ! party. Refreshments were served upstairs. I Rev. and Mrs. A. J. Armstrong Rev. and Mrs. F. Armstrong, Mrs. J. H. Bowser, Mra. W. T. Colwell, 'Mrs. Elmer Miles, Mrs. Frank i Green and Mrs. Levi Kitson attended the group meeting of missionary 'societies of the Methodist church held in New Paris, Tuesday after- ! noon. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Kroh and daughter Susan drove to Bloomington, 111., Monday, taking Mrs. iCeiestia Hillabold to the home of I Dr. and Mrs. F. W. Brian after a I stay here in the C. C. Bachman ■ home. Mr. and Mrs. Kroh planned Ito return horn least night. Miss ' Ethel Bowser stayed with the children during their absence. Albert Limbaugh, formerly of ’ Tippecanoe township, who was a teacher of the old Cottonwood school south of North Webster, called on J. P. Dolan, Monday. He is now a prosperous farmer in North Dakota. Mr. Dolan made the acquaintance of Mr Limbaugh when Mr. Dolan was collecting stone relics years ago. According to him the Cottonwood school contributed a number*'of important relics to the Indian collection now in the Syracuse Public library. Last week after the return from the hunt and Earl Menzenberger ! had decided to ship the bird dog, Big Jake, back to the kennels from which he had been sent on approval, Menzenberger took him to the depot. Everyone was busy, and as he knew the crate in which the dog had come, and addresses were there, Menzenberger just called to the men to ship Jake out. When the train arrived Ernest Buchholz was still trying to get Big Jake into the crate. He had started him in backwards and it looked like one leg just wouldn’t go in, but Buchholz got the dog into the crate and locked, and the crate on the train before time of departure. HAVE WE EVER OBSERVED That one needs no chauffer to be driven to drink? That raising the devil is not the best kind of uplift movement? That owners of electric plants are satisfied with light harvests? That many a so-called epigram is merely a platitude in disguise? That bowing to the inevitable is rarely done with much cordiality? That every man has his price and there are lots of men on the bargain counter? That it’s a pity the man who has a great command of language doesn’t oftener command it to keep still? The blind side of the stars can be photographed with the use of a new aluminum mirror device. What we really need is something that will photograph the blind ride of the average politician.
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The Old Man’s Corner
. (The views expressed in this column are those of the author ■ who wishes to remain anonymous, and not necessarily those of the editor of The Journal. Anyone who does not agree with views expressed here is welcome to write in reply so long as the writer’s identity is known to the editor.) Al Smith, m* foot! Suppose he did offer to change the New York City government, so’s it becomes like that of a State, legislature and all. Is it improvement, progress, I ask you, to take an old tool, none too efficient itself, and apply it to a new group? But listen to this, about A Truly Democratic Government Criticism of government expenses, and schemes to simplify and to economize, appear on all sides. Though one much impressed by Such schemes, especially those coming from groups always against democracy, yet I do greatly desire to see our democracy, all democracy, cleansed, extended and consolidated. And pleased notice how completely my plan abandons ancient “political” models and compromises. All government, I say, should reside in ten great Departments. Their Head officers would constitute the ‘Cabinet” of the Chief Executive, as now, and would succeed him in office, on his death, in numerical
NOTICE OF FARM ALLOTMENTS AND OF MAXIMUM ACREAGES OF WHEAT FOR 1934 UNDER CONTRACTS FOR MEMBERS OF THE WHEAT PRODUCTION CONTROL ASSOCIATION OF KOSCIUSKO COUNTY, STATE OF INDIANA. Listed below are statements of the allotments which have been determined for members of the Kosciusko County Wheat Production Control Association from Turkey Creek Township. - Bhese allotments' are to hold for the duration of the present wheat contracts, and they are the basis upon which adjustment payments are to be made. They have been determined by the County Allotment Committee after careful consideration of the application statements. Every effort has been made, td have these alotments as accurate as possible. The maximum acreage which may be sown to wheat for the 1934 crop on each farm, under the reductionrequirements of the i* vko listed. Signed RAY T. MERKLE, Chairman. . MERL POUND W. J. WHITELEATHER Turkey Creek Township. Community Committee: Bert Whitehead, J. C. Grady, Lee Henwood. Name of Applicant * Sec. Total A Allot, in Max 1934 on farm bush. Wheat A. Charles C. Bachman 27 212 | 361 29 Elmer R. Baugher 34 151 | 163 ' 17 John L. Brown, admr. 9, 20 151 | 176 18 Jesse C. Grady 21, 22 184 | 627 37 Berl C. Green 22 160 * 434 29 Henry A. Hayslip 7, 8 200 | 256 29 Lee Henwood 2,7 143 I 386 26 John Hancock Ins. Co. 6 160 | 176 18 Miram M. LeCount 34 122 I 152 14 Wm. B. Mallon 21, 22 98 j 150 9 Abraham B. Mier 2 390 | 472 32 Sylvester Miller 30 90 | 134 11 Dill A. Mock 34 112 | 121 14 Ida E. Strieby 28 98 | 186 13 . John W. Swenson 27 80 | 156 * k 14 State Bank of Syracuse 28 ,29 120 | 197 | 16 Bert Whitehead 19 130 | 430 | 25
POESY HANDCUFFED. ,j “Poems that describe an event often live forever. Could anybody write one like ‘The Wreck of the Hesperus, now? If so, why doesn’t he?" says the St. Louis Globe Democrat. Well, he is too busy figuring out his income tax, trying to find ways and means of raising the money pay his local and state taxes; won-. dering when he can get some money ■ out of the bank, where he can get a
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THURSDAY, NOV. $, 1953
i order: : »| 1. General Manager’s Depart I mnet (The Chief Executive) ■ 2. Department of Labor. 1 3. Department of Production. ’ 4. Transportation Department. - - ■ ! 5; Department of Distributions ! 6 Department of Construction. ‘ 7. Department of Health. ' 4:} ' 8. Department of Education.’ 9. Political Department. t ; 10. Judicial Department. t* There would be no Congress or Legislature, at all. These Ten De- . partments, only, would exist and r govern. The ten departments are the i whole government. Each department fwould be organized into divisions, bureaus, sections, agencies, etc., } with ca-ordination units. j The head executive of departments r 1,2, 9 and 10 (involving sovereign- . ty) would be elective, all citizens . voting; the other Department Heads > (being proprietary and technical), ( would be appointed by the Chief Executive. Some lower officers, in each f Department, would be elective, oth- ’ ers appointive. Such government would not be - political and parasitical, but producr tive and truly and completely Demos cratic. In fact, it would function es- , ficiently and economically in any 1 society, be t it Absolute Monarchy or 1 complete Democracy. 1
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