The Syracuse Journal, Volume 26, Number 28, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 2 November 1933 — Page 4

Page Four

Want Ads

LEAVE ORDERS FOR CABBAGE for Kraut atßachman’s. 27-ts FOR RENT—7-room house, semi modern. Chas. Parsons. 28-ltp FOR SALE 40 White Wyandotte pullets. Jacob Bucher, Syracuse, Kedmon Park, Dewart Lake. 28-ltp WANTED Poultry of all kinds. Buying daily. For prices Phone 22. or write. G. C. Tarman. New Paris, Ind. 27-41 FOR SALE Sweet Spanish Onions I 75C a crate.- Also yellow onion screenings 40c per crate. Earl Miller, Phone 2714, R. R. 2, Syracuse, Indiana. 26-ts WANTED Hardwood timber. White Ash and Black Walnut a specialty. Write or phone Carroll & Wood Lumber Company, 816 Fourth Street, Three Rivers, Mich. Phone 221-J. 28-3 t APPLES FOR SALE Jonathan, Baldwin and R. I. Greenings, $1.25 and SI.OO. Grimes Golden, 00 cents and sl. Stephen Freeman. 28-ts ■ -o AT LAST' Science Conquers Stomach Trouble— * 1 You may.now use Dr. Bell’s Tablets 15 days without risking one single penny. Learn about this unusual offer. Ask for FREE SAMPLE (two day treatment). CALL .TODAY. Thornburg Drug Co. adv. ■ V TO HAVE MEETING THANKSGIVING DAY <i.■ . t I The Syracuse Ministerial Association meeting at the home of Rev. A. j. Armstrong on Thursday. October 26th unanimously decided to have an' early morning Thanksgiving service. This service will be held in the Grace Lutheran Church o*n Thursday November 30th at 6 a. m. Rev. J. S. < Pritchard was elected to preach the sermon. ( Rev. A J. Armstrong and Rev. I John Pettit were appointed to find out if it would be possible to organise an inter-church basket ball league. They will report their findings at the next meeting. > 0 NOTICE OF TOWN ELECTION | There will be an election of one. -member of the Town Board, Town Clerk and Town Treasurer, on Tuesday, November 7th. All pre-' cincts will vote in the basement of; the Public Library! | ERNEST O, BUCHHOLZ ' Town Clerk. 1 ~~ B. B. SCHEDULE ~ Nov. 3 Milford There* Nov. 10 Cromwell Here I N . 17 Leesburg There I Nov 24 Atwood There' Nov. 29 Bremen . Here Dec. 1 No. Webster There Dec. 8 Pierceton Here Def, 15 Ligonier There Dec. 22 No. Webster Here' Dec, 29 Here! Jan. 6 Invitation Tourney Here/ Jlan. 12 Mentone Here Jan. 19 Milford Here Jan. 26-27 County Tourney Warsaw 4 V‘ b 2 New Puns There Feb. 9 Etna Green Here Feb. 16 Angola There Feb. 23 Mishawaka Here Mar. 2-3 District Tourney Warsaw] Mar. 9 Class Tourney Here i

I ! 1 The State Bank of Syracuse Capital and Surplus $50,000 i . < i ••OUR BANK” ♦•■ , 1 Safety Deposit Boxes For Rent JI 4 ' ■ . ‘I I — i m x.n.n'juae u. 1 Ifr 1 AHF gr*PAT A w c MJL A1 MrEU AJLSk-*-* “V t ' • I SLICED BACON, 5 lb. box 50c SAUSAGE, lb 10c * PORK CHOPS, 15c lb.; 2 lbs f0r.... 25c PORK SHOULDER, 15c lb; 2 lbs for 25c PORK ROAST, lb. _ 12k BEEF ROAST, lb _ 12k RIB BOIL, lb 7c STEAKS, lb, 20c and 25c FRESH OYSTERS PHONE 76 sfc r WE DELIVER KLINK BROTHERS

. I - " » ' I IN OUR CHURCHES rL. e .J LAKESIDE U. B. CHURCH Rev. E. C. Keidenbach, Pastor. Syracuse. Sunday School. 9:45 a. m. Evening worship 7:00. Prayer meeting Thursday, 7:30 p.m Concord. Sunday School, 9:45 a. m. Morning worship, 10:45. Indian Village. Sunday Schoo), 10:00 a. m. ZION CHAPEL. Emerson M. Frederick, Pastor. Sherman Deaton, SupL Sunday School, 9:30 a. m. Indian Village. Walter Knepper, Supt. Sunday school, 10:00 a. m. Morning service 11:00 a. m. Rally Day Service. CHURCH OF THE BRETHREN Evangelist J. Edwin Jarboe. pastor Guy Symensma, S. S. Supt. 1 Sunday School 10 a. m. Preaching at 11 a. m. and 7 p. m. Rev. Jarboe will be in charge both morning and evening. Aid Society, each Thursday. GRACE LUTHERAN CHURCH Rev. John A .Pettit. Pastor. Vernor Beckman, Su|pt. Sunday school. 9:45 a. m. There will be no preaching service here Sunday. Luther League, 6:00 p. m. METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH A. J. Ar nut long, Minister. I Dr. O. C. Stoelting, Supt. Church School, 9:45 a. m. Morning Worship, 11:00. The morning sermon will be an ! Armistice Day Serman. Its title: “Lest We Forget.” • • Evening Worship, 7:00 p. m. Mid-week service, Wednesday evening at 7:15. CHURCH OF GOD I Rev. Marion Shroyer, paster. C. J. Kitson, S. S. Supt. Sunday School, 10:00 a. m. Morning worship at 11 a. m. Christian Endeavor, 6:00 p. m. Evening service at 7:00 p. m. : Prayer Service, Thursday 7:30 p.m. EVANGELICAL CHURCH I Rev. Samuel Pritchard, Pastor. P, W. Soltau, Supt. Sunday School, 9:30 a. m. Morning Worship, 10:45 a. m. ! Sermon: “Are Missions Done For?" I Evening worship, 7:00 p. m. j , Theme: “The value of the Church ‘to the Community." Addresses will be given by J. P. Dolan, John Hartley and Court Slabaugh. | The Christian Endeavor will meet at 7 o’clock Monday night. DUCK SEASON OPENS Henry Grieger and his brother ] Clarence from Fort Wayne went hunting, yesterday, after the duck season opened at noon, and killed 15 ducks, mallards and teels. Other ! first day results have not been learn- < ed, but there were a number of arrests near North Webster and Tip* pecanoe, yesterday morning, as , hunters went out before noon, — o Maybe it would be a good idea for the administration to get Carl Hub- : bell to pitch a few innings against | i the depression.

fContlnued from page One) evidence given by Irwin, Minlnfiebi and the three golfers, John Plank, William Throckmorton and M. C. Landis, who warn playing in back of the Paines, the following deduction can be made: Playing Second Nine. Mr. and Mrs. Paine left the club house at about 1:15 o’clock, to play the second nine, after finishing the first nine. Mrs. Paine was not playing but he was playing with two balls. On the course the big dog Armand accompanied them. Paine’s golf bag was found on the 15th fairway. A golf club, an iron, was found along side the bodies. These are the facts. The surmises are that after holing out on the 14th Paine had driven his golf ball off the 15th tee. Irwin and Mininfield had seen the golf ball on the 15th fairway. Went to Help Dog. Maybe Paine had hoard the dog yell as he caught the possum which was already on the live wire. Anyway he went into the marsh which lies along the 15th fairway. Maybe he yelled and his wife went after him, or perhaps both went there together. It is thought they were lying on the wire about an hour as the call came into the electric company office, at 2:59. In the marsh where the bodies were found the wire could hardly be seen, so perhaps they never saw the wire, perhaps they thought the dog was sick. The last time the pump was run was a week ago last Monday, Noble Myers said that the wire could not have been down very long because the only place charred was where the bodies were found. The wire had broken between two poles and had fallen to the ground. Mr. Paine was a world war veteran, a Mason and a member of the Kiwanis club. According to Walter Ballard, who said he met Mr. and Mrs. Paine last year, their dog was a special pet of theirs and had cost! 1,000. Mrs. Paine’s mother, Mrs. Tevis arrived from Indianapolis yesterday afternoon, and last night the bodies of Mr. and Mrs. Paine were taken to Three Riveri, Mich., where other relatives live, and where funeral services are to be held. Burial will be in Kalamazoo. 0 TIPPECANOE Ella Grieder and daughter took Sunday dinner with Mr. and Mrs. Gordy. J Garber and wife, Royal Kline and Elder Geo. Swihart of Roann took Sunday dinner in the J. L. Kline home. Afternoon callers were Adrian Wars tier, Albert Gilbert, the Misses Neva Figert, June. Stull, Edith Tom and Ruby Ried. Mr. and Mrs. Isaiah Kuhn called at the Geo. Tom home Sunday afternoon. Wallace Baugher and Clell Grissom hauled corn for J. L. Kline, Wednesday. Jas. Gilbert and family called at the Grover Gilbert home, Sunday afternoon. Mrs. Ida Bigler spent the week end with her sister in Plymouth. Elder Geo. Swihart and wife of Roann spent Saturday night in the J. Garber home. Wm. Tooley and wife, Mrs. Florence Shock, Mary Kline, Esther Warstler and Mrs. Weller spent Saturday forenoon in the J. Garber home. Royal Kline helped Ercell Wright thresh soy beans Saturday. BIRTHDAY CELEBRATED A surprise party was held at the home of Tillman Hire, Wednesday evening last week, celebrating his 73rd birthday. A pot luck supper was enjoyed. Guests were: Mrs. Sarah Ott, Mrs. Wilma Hire and Ephriam t Landis; Mra. A. O. Winans, Mr. and Mra. Ed Unrue, Mra. Eva Hickman, Mr. and Mra. Millard Hiro and daughter, Miss Daisy Stover, Miaa Lida Davie, Arthur Cumsky, Mr and Mra. Landis Pressler, Rev. Pritchard and his mother from Syracuse; and Cecil and Bernice Robinson and Miss Margaret Wolf of New Paris; Steve Davis of Goshen. Dr. Alex Hrdlicka says the height of the brow has nothing to do with the capacity of the brain. Or the lofty dome may be vacant while the workshop under the flat roof is busy. —Boston Transcript. The Guns of the Holy Trinity •r Henry G lUwlmml * . ■ .. wmawriw 6»wrrt*M fcy W. O. Thia interesting Serini Starts in Ine dyiMiiic ourn ju ion w

THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL

i •«*•***••« *. • SUGGESTIONS GIVEN • • FOR SCHOOL LUNCHES• ••♦•.* • ♦ • The subject of school day lunches is much thought of and discussed by motheia and teachers in every community especially at the beginning of the school term. The kind of a lunch a child eats determines to a degree, at least, his behavior and his ability to acquire an education,, says Ruth W. Heath, extension nutritionist of Purdue University. When children have their lunch at home, they generally have one or more well chosen hot foods and at least one glass of milk. When children cannot come home, the lunch problem taxes the mothers* ingenuity to see that the lunch provides the necessary nourishment. It should consist of foods which remain attractive although they must be packed several hours before eaten. Apparently, however, the box lunch must depend on sandwiches and unless the child can carry a thermos of hot cocoa or hot soup, or unless the school provides something hot, the box lunch offers only cold foods—all the more reason for careI■ I ful selection. There are many communities in Indiana where there were no cafeterias in the schools and the home i economics club women or members of the parent-teachers organisation have seen to it that the children i were provided with one hot dish at i lunch time. This often has meant i that the women worked with limited equipment and little assistance especially at first. After interest was • aroused, the problems became less difficult. 1 The planning of variety in this simple easily prepared hot dish is 1 not easy. Here are a few suggestions for those groups undertaking this j 1 worth while project for the first time: Cream of corn soup. Quick turnip soup. Split pea soup. Oatmeal and potato soup. Creamed hard-cooked eggs on toast. Whole wheat chowder. Meat stew With vegetables. Scalloped or creamed salmon. Spanish rice. Creamed mixed vegetables. Scalloped or creamed dried lima beans with crisp bacon. If the cold box lunch must be resorted to, here are some suggestive sandwich variations —always to be accompanied by milk in some form: Sliced hard-cooked egg and salad dressing. Thin slices of crisp broiled bacon may be added. Chopped cooked beef, chopped pickle, salad dressing. Broiled diced bscon, chopped raw mild onion, salad dressing. Sliced boiled tongue, a very little horseradish. Flaked salmon, chopped cabbage, I a little pickle, salad dressing. Cottage cheese on one slice, jam | jelly, honey, marmalade, or conserve on the other. Cottage cheese on one slice, mixture of chopped raw vegetables, and salad dressing on the other. Shredded cabbage or other salad greens, chopped nuts, and salad dressing. Baked beans or cooked lima beans, mixed with chili sauce or tomato catsup. Recipes. Oatmeal and Potato Soup 9 cups water 2 tablsp’s fat 2 cups rolled oats 1 cup tomatoes 5 potatoes, diced 3H teas’s salt 2 onions, chopped 1-8 tessp. pepper Heat the water to boiling and sprinkle the oatmeal slowly into the water and boil for 5 minutes. Add the diced potatoes and cook in a double boiler for about 1 hour. Brown the onions in the fat and add with the salt, pepper and tomatoes to the soup. Cook for about 10 minutes and serve. Whole Wheat Chowder. 2 cups diced carrots. 1 pint boiling water H cup diced salt pork. 4 tablesp’s chopped onion 1 tablespoon flour, 1 pint milk. 2 cups cooked whole wheat. 1 teaspoon salt. Pepper. 1 tablespoon chopped parsley. Cook the carrots in the boiling water until tender. Fry the salt pork until crisp, remove it from the fat, and cook the onions in the fat. Stir : in the flour and cook a few minutes longer. Mix all the ingredients in the upper part of a double boiler, stic until well blended, and cook for i about 10 minutes. Creamed Fish with Vegetables i 1 lb. fish—cod, halibut or salmon i 1 quart milk. < j2j cups diced potatoes. 1 cup dicod carrots. i 1 finely chopped onion. i 4 tablespoons butter. M cup flour. I 2H teaspoons salt. ] 1 tablesp’s chopped parsley. Simmer the fish is a small quantity i of water about five minutes. Drain i and remove the skin and bones and flake the fish. Cook the potatoes and ] carrots until tender and drain. Mix 1 the flour with a small quantity of i cold milk, and stir into the heated milk to which the onion, salt, and butter have been added. Cook until thickened. Add the vegetables and < the fish, cook for minutes 1 longer, sprinkle a little parsley over 1 the top, and serve. If canned fish < is used. It does not need the pre- ] liminary cooking.

LAKE NEWS. (Continued from Page One) Henry Grieger’s birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Grieger and Mr. and Mrs. Bert Needam spent Monday in South Bend. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Stretch of New Castle were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Irving Bishop from Saturday until Wednesday. Mr. Schnitzius, Landscape Contractor from Indianapolis, has been installing a Dayton underground sprinkling system at the summer home of Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Warren the past two weeks. Mr. and Mrs. Warren went to Indianapolis, Tuesday, planning to come back to their summer home from time to time during the winter. Mrs. W. E. Long, Mrs. Anna Warren and daughter Lida Fay returned to Chicago, Monday, after spending the summer at the lake. Mrs. Jesse Rex accompanied them to make the Long’s home in Chicago ready for the winter. They plan to return to the lake at times during the winter. Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Werntx of South Bend are spending two weeks at their cottage on Kale Island. As has been their custom since their mother’s death, the Misses Emily and Louise Voorhees served a dinner, Tuesday, on her birthday, of the dishes she liked to eat. Mrs. Charles Naylor was their guest at this dinner. Had Mrs. Voorhees lived she would have been 98 years old. Mrs. Amsnda Xanders’ sister, Mrs. Robert Motter, and Mrs. ’ Strick houser of York, Pa., were her guests over the week end. They stopped at the lake on their way home from the fair in Chicago. A./W. Emerson went swimming in Wawasee Lake on Nov. 1. 0 : MUST COMPLY WITH TRUCK REGISTRATION INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., Nov. 2— Owners and operators of trucks, tractors, trailers and semi-trailers cannot secure license plates until they have complied with provisions of the truck registration law passed by the 1933° session of the Indiana General Assembly, Frank Finney, Commissioner of the Bureau of Motor Vehicles, explained today. This . law is already in effect and being enforced over the state. No license plates can be issued for any ruck, trailer or semi-trailer until the owner presents with his application for license, a permit or certificate from the Public Service Commission or until he presents an affidavit that he is exempted from ! compliance with the regulations of ; the Public Service Commission. I Either the permit or certificate or the claim for exemption must be exhibited to the local license office where the application for license is made. All trucks, trailers and semi-trail-ers which are used for hire, are subject to regulation by the Public Service Commission and the owner must secure ,a permit as a contract carrier or certificate as a common carrier before the license plates can be issued. The filing of an application for such a permit or certificate before the Public Service Commission is not sufficient grounds for the issuance of a license as the owner must have the required permit or certificate at the time he applies for the motor vehicle license, Mr. Finney pointed out. Trucks, tractors, trailers and semi-trailers which are not operated for hire are not required by the law to obtain such a permit or certificate but the owner must file his affidavit for exemption from the provisions of the law at the local office when the application for license is made. Compliance with these regulations before the application for motor vehicle license is made will work to the advantage of both the truck owner and the local license branches, Mr. Finney stated. It is estimated that there fre 141,000 trucks, tractors, trailers and semi-trailers in the state. LEGION OFFICERS INSTALLED Officers of the newly formed American Legion Post, known as the Wawasee post, installed Wednesday evening by Dr. C. R. Wagner of Warsaw, commander of the Warsaw post. Roy Sarjent wa» installed as com- i mander; John Walton, first vice- ; commander; J. Byland, second vicecommander; O. P. Davis, adjutant; James Searfoss, finance officer; 47 Nelson Miles, chaplain; Ralph Method, sergeant-at-arms. A delegation from Warsaw and Carl Coy, commander of the Milford post attended the meeting. Doughnuts, coffee and apples donated by Redmon’s orchard were served. The first regular meeting of the post will be held next Monday in the library at 8 p. m. Every member is urged to attend. ■-—— ■ HOME EC. CLUB MEETS The Richville Home Economics club members and families were entertained at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ollie Pence, near Benton, Tuesday evening. It was a pot luck supper and Hallowe’en entertainment. Thirty guests attended.

SCHOOL NOTES |i The Sophomore class has organized 1 1 with James] Stucky, president; Mar- - tha Brower, vice president; Virginia Culler, secretary-treasurer, and W. C. Gants, class sponser. * • * By a large plurality Miss Dorothy . Irwin was elected cheer leader for , another year. ( Because of bank account restrictions and scarcity of township funds, Syracuse school teachers received 1 but half their salaries, Friday. Nellie May Hyman has withdrawn from the Third Grade, transferring to Goshen schools. -4 * • * The first basketball game of the season will be-played Friday evening ip Milford. The first home game” is to be played against Cromwell, Friday evening next week. Season tickets are now on sale. There is no charge for children under the Fourth Grade of school if they come to the game with their parents or adults, and stay with them during the evening. Beverly Walters has transferred from the Fifth Grade to Indianapolis, and Billy Stoner, moving here from North Dakota' has entered the Fifth Grade. David LeCount is absent from the. Fifth Grade because of illness. • • • Absences yesterday from the First • Grade because of chicken pox were: i Betty Rose Ellerman, Donald Johnson, Robert Grimes, Eleanor Method, Robert Smurr, Donald LeCount and Clifford Reed, Adolph Stieglitz. j Hallowe’en was celebrated after j recess, Tuesday, by each Grade in ( the Grade school building. Costumes; were donned and games enjoyed and i refreshments of popcorn and candy j served. Every member of the Fifth Grade took part in the play “Magic Hallo- 1 .we’en” which was presented before each grade in turn, and then for the parents of members of the cast. Miss Miller, First Grade teacher, i was ill with tonsilitis over the week! end, and Monday Mrs. Eloise Klink'| taught school in her place. She was able to return, Tuesday. More cases of chicken pox among pupils are reported. William Vernon/ Cory, First Grade has it, as does! Herbert LeCount of the Second Grade and Ruby Neuhaus. • • • : p . On Friday evening, Nov. 24, the date the High school basketball team plays at Atwood, it is planned that the High School chorus will present the operetta “Bits o’ Blarney’’ in. the - school auditorium. Miss Henwood hes been training those who will take part, for several weeks. • ♦ • Martha Zentz suffered a badly sprkined wrist in a fall in the school yard, yesterday morning. WHEEL OFF TRUCK Worn bearings caused one of the wheels of Insley’s truck to become loose, Sunday, when he was just outside of town, and he called for the wrecker. When Joe Rapp was pulling the truck up Hunting- ! ton street, the wheel came off just! at the corner of Main and Huntington, and rolled back down the hill. ] HAVE J. W. Rothenberger do J your driving. No charge while wait- I ing. Good car. 27-ltp ; 1

Pay your taxes Don’t Wait Until the Last Minute Monday Nov. 6, Last Day We Will Furnish You Money to ..Pay Your Taxes on Furniture or Cars. Lowest Rates , Farm Loans for 3 to 6 Months, or longer, On Live Stock. Security Loan Co. Rooms 14 and 16 Elk’s Arcade, Warsaw, Ind. Phone 1292 18% LAYING MASH Get Those Autumn and Winter Eggs by Using Our Laying Mash INGREDIENTS:—Ground Corn, Wheat Bran, Wheat Middlings, Meat Scraps, Old Process Linseed Oil Meal, Alfalfa Meal, Dried Buttermilk, Corn Gluten Feed, Limestone, Special Steamed Bone Meal and Salt. -* SEE US FOR YOUR NEEDS Stiefel Grain Co. PHONE 886

THURSDAY, NOV. 3, 1933

DANGER OF TOO MUCH WORK If everyone should work 40 hours a week, or even 35, production might be overwhelmingly enormous. —Louisville Timse. NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION Notice is hereby given (hat the undersigned has been appointed by the clerk of the Kosciusko Circuit Court, in the State of Indiana, Administrator of the estate of LOUISA H. SEARFOSS (STROCK) late of Kosciusko County, deceased. Said estate is supposed to be solvent. GEO. L. XANDERS, Administrator. October 12, 1933. 26-3 t Phone 889 Box 177 Watch and Clock Repairing A. J. THIBODEAUX First House South of U. B. Church Lake St., Syracuse, . Ind. 3-24-34 OPTOMETRIST GOSHEN. INDIANA. GEO. L. XANDERS A ITO R N CY-AT-LAW | Settlement ot Estates Opinions on Titles Phone . 7 Syracuse, Inc Fire and Other Insurance DWIGHT MOCK —for — Vulcanizing and i Acetylene. Welding I ftiiiter., t'hnreinir ami Repairing South Side Lake Wawasee c Authorized Crosley Radio Denier Near Waco. BOAT LIVERY i Phone 504 SyracuM I " -

ICRYSTAL Ligonier Thurs. Nov. 2— "GOLDEN HARVEST” Starring Richnrd Arlen and B Chester Morrie. A slant on a big question farm relief. 10c— ADMISSION—ISc Sat.-Mon. Nov. 4-6— "BROADWAY TO HOLLYWOOD" A musicl that begins, where others ended. A story of the rise and fall, love affairs and life of 3 generations of show folks —played by a> great cast of great stars. A great romantic story with music, song, dance and beautiful girls. We have ’ seen it and highly recommend it to you. Its 100 percent entertainment. Weds.-Thurs. Nov. 8-9— Bargain Nights "TURN BACK THE CLOCK” He lived his life all over again. He goes back to 1910 * in a dream, with the lovetechnique of 1933. More laughs than your family ever laughed—with Lee Tracy at his best. 10c—ADMISSION—15c Sat.-Mon. Nov. 11-13— "PENTHOUSE" Warner Baxter in a story of New York’s dazzling nightlife. COMlNG—“Another Language” “Too Much Har» • mony” "I’m No Anger ; “Take A Chance” “Bomb shell.” ,