The Syracuse Journal, Volume 26, Number 31, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 23 November 1933 — Page 2

Page Two

rilF syv • .HH’RV VL laIIUBI.IUAN. Pubis -.. vr? Thursday at - ■ • ••• ’ hifhattn. H tr . . matter on \f i;-M<>fftce at Syr:« ' . under the Act of (< ■ .Ini. 1879 J . Pi'loN KATES (>. . > ,1e . 12.00 \ Six . vaj.'. ; e - — 1.06 Si:>l 05 Sul. . !. «•.! if not renewed I* out. "“Tf '■ RHtTERjK Publisher Offi Home Phone 904 ~ 1 I . NOV. 23, 1933 Tins BIG UNDERTAKING Th. Works /Xdministration, whe ,0 0,1)00 will be spent t., • , / ■ i jobs is the'most oU»i,< uertaking of the goven . i 'i:c of peace. I- < . . '.i- : now is being felt in ■ the L.unlet in the United St !•. ()> .• believe in it in princi . ih i when, and by » w|v st be paid, bat rii■! ! he most vital thing in the < ■ < -try. 1 ■ e-.~ tnen have been v c y and night, draft- . in.. : ii money can be sj v - ; C A is insistent in its <L - be made now. not toni’: ">v ■ next week. In th.s -\:he burden of poor reiict’ •»i haa coat $39,684 so far lb will relieved «UV . lasing a burden of ><jffw»ct taxation for poor relief from, the local In ti • n f«.t,ure, however, every l. ; •"■»» yfeel the acid bi, >, .. » '.. ' land from the fedei ..i . . r more But the demand is fbr more , ■ iey has been -made available > up to the officials in char, c -vc that they get full 50 cc ‘ work from those employ. ' l >t e ch community gets its ' Son e ... l”0 million easy ■ i tell whether or imt >: •. e sy money. The C I <wever, is to take care of ’■ . : ierg cy. to create jobs < ’ \ ■N 1 J. The < ’ . started moving. It is i; . »idly that officials isiim with developments. h .'y. information the number of net e CWX piy rolls be"iv were considered by the ' tmn. I’: • the details ' ■ s of then that v ' under the CWA '■ : wn by the local | ! •'• pi r relief i uheis desery- . it until Dec. and helping the their best to •it ... htened out and ' ..»» , ' .-' bly. . i takes will creep .. -• remedied. / , !.<• CWA work is i t • make a living ( \ ,ut - \ Z <• learned at the , ... hrs, others who have • a off the dole by .ii' and by careful n - . i i ire now at their last i given aid too. ./<• the ones that w fit Ip help. They : upper lip. The give jobs to them, .1 • cs ything possible to •\v ’uii.: i r chance. •Ali 1 ■ i tIiET V HITTUNGS Fhey tv ■ * .. »,ew racket some v* the Sy i men found in Chii Some run who was down and <>ul, th c.i all a|one. He ds ne. the cigar counter of one the bi. i and as men buy smokes and :uU lighters out of i . c, the man steps up d bvts from $1 to $5 that t lighter .; ; light the first time. •v.i ' • times out of 10 E use hgh < quite often don’t ■ o k until the second or third try—an *. because v\ hen tnen get bets up th* .• :becpm<rnervous they work t < hard *,( j *» make the lighter , —2JL / FARES ARE WAY DOWN for the THANKSGIVING HOLIDAY ' 'ike Your Plans WJOMI r That Trip nVW low ihout a LOW COST 3 Fi Y CONDUCTED EXPENSE TOUR to .’AFII’ JGTON over the _ TB; . VING HOLIDAY? \ it’.:. IA TER NATION AL LIVE I HON and HORSE \ -t», Dre. 2-9. Spourea. Also other lowt* fares in effect to Vaic&ya 3*>d return. .Secr.lxxsil TTcfcet Xgent ■ . for tletfuh rjxhimore & Ohio

light. The man with Uac . wet racket moves from one hotel’s cigar counter to others all day long, and it is said makes as high as $35 per day. The legitimate retailers of beer are starting to kick. They say that they paid a high license to sell beer legally. That half of their license money comes back to the local taxing units. • But all that’ they receive for their license is a great addition to their overhead. The license gives no monopoly on selling beer for in this locality, bootlegging continues unrestrained. One retailer claims that there are 60 unlicensed places selling drinks in the vicinity of Syracuse and Lake Wawasee. Joel Wilt tells this one. He said that on Saturday he saw Fred Hoopingarner on the ground where the cement company’s building used to stand. He asked Fred what he was doing there. “Training my dog” was the reply.. Fred’s dog Duke is about 10 years old with that much experience. Joel claims that just then Duke pointed a single quail. He said Fred flushed the bird, the gun roared twice, but no bird fell. Again the dog pointed. Again a bird flushed, and again the gun roared twice, but no quail fell. After that, Joel said that he hold Fred that he ought to practise shooting instead of taking his dog out for practise. County officials, township trustee* town officials, business men «uu in particular, Mr. J. J. Lantx, county administrator of CWA-, w’ho have given up time, money, etc., towards working out under the CWA wjlljjpa few Weeks time be the recipjs4ts of verbal brickbats from individuals who are not favored /either because they did not receive a job, or because they wanted some particular stretch of road or ditch to be repaired. 0 . DANGER AHEAD. By C. £. W’ade, director Chicago College of Commerce The NRA experiment may prove unsuccessful but it will not be fatal. The price-fixing and processing-tax methods of the AAA may fail, but agriculture will survive. But if the tinkering with the money creates a condition which our government cannot control, we will be plunged into an orgy of uncontrolled inflation with stark disaster just ahead. In June, 19*29, there was $4,476,000,000 in circulation and in September, 1933, $5,650,000,000. I am convinced that it is not the amount if money that makes us rich or poor neither is it individually responsible for prosperity or depressions, but rather a super-credit structure built on a sound money foundation which makes us economically healthy. 1 am also convinced that the majority of people are unaware of the serious condition which now exists because of the Administration’s money policy. I will mention only three things to substantiate the conditions: , 1. There is approximately $41,UOO.OOO in bank deposits. 2. There is about $103,000,000,000 of life insurance policies. 3. There is $50,000,000,000 in bonds outstanding (taking only those listed on the New York hoard). The three items total about $194,000,000,000. If we take away $44, 000,000,000 because of possible overlapping of insurance funds in banks and invested in bonds, we still have $150,000,000,000. With the dollar pounded down to 60c we are compelled to discount this amount 40 per cent, which will show a loss to the American public of $60,000,000,000 or $2,000 for every family. It is destroying debtor and creditor alike. It robs the wage earner in his modest home no less than it does the rich of his possessions. . There are multiplying signs on the economic horizon that the federal credit structure has reached the maximum of expansion if it is to remain within the bounds of safety. Under such conditions the country has a right to expect that the president will listen to the counsels of his soundest and most experienced monetary advisors. To admonish the Administration to be careful of creating a breakdown of credit and uncontrollable inflation, situations in which a resort to fiat money would be automatic, is not destructive hut constructive criticism prompted only by a deep concern for the common wetfare. 0 The fanners may plow under twenty-five per cent of their wheat and cotton, but we doubt whether this will help much unless we can get rid of about ninety per cent of the political farm “experts” at the same time. A Michigan poultry expert says that if you feed a hen cod liver oil she will lay bigger eggs. Maybe we ought to give the cod liver oil treatment to some of those European nations which owe us money. A woman writing to the editor of a Washington paper wants to know how she can escape being hit by automobiles. That’s an easy one. Stay at home on the front porch. • 4> «- One of our cynical bachelor friends says he wouldn’t buy a marriage license even if you could get ’em cm the installment plan

Mrs. Guy Symensma was ill with ! chicken pox last week. Wilbur Statler of Chicago spent last week end at home. Miss Martha Kessler spent Sunday afternoon with Miss Edna Hurtig. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Davis of Goshen spent the week end with Mr. and Mrs. John Hurtig. Charles Jones has gone to South Bend to work for the J. D. Martin Machine Co. Mr. and Mrs. Eli Shock and family spent the week end with relatives in Mishawaka. Mrs. Walker White was able to be up, Monday, for the first time since her operation. Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Cripe of , Goshen spent the week end with Mr. , and Mrs. Frank Brown. , Charles arid Aris Jones of South , Bend spent Sunday with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur E. Jones. Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Long spent , Saturday evening with Mr. and Mrs. Mart Long. Mr. and Mts. Jack Weimer spent Sunday afternoon at the home of his mother in North Webster. Mrs. Snyder, Mrs. Hutchinson and daughter of Goshen called on Mrs. JI T. Riddle, Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. D°n .V-hnson pane* v-gre guests of Mr. and Mrs. Merman Johnson, Sunday. Mr. And Ms 3. Steve Finton spent Saturday and Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Gall near Concord. * Mrs. H. W. Buchholz spent Monday afternoon with Mrs. Richard . Guy and Mrs. Floyd Brower. Rev. and Mrs. A. J. Armstrong | took the third and Fourth degrees , at the meeting of the Hex Grange, • Tuesday evening. J. A. Abbott and Leon Connolly of Chicago spent the week end with Mr. and Mrs. W. G. Connolly and friends here. Billie Rowdabaugh, son of Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Rowdabaugh has been seriously ’ ill this week with pneumonia. Mrs. Chester Droke’s condition is reported as improving. Mrs. Dora ; McFall is helping with her housei work. Mrs. Emma Whistler returned home, Sunday, after a week’s visit , wjth her sister and family in Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Schlecht and son Lawrence and Mrs. Mary Cripe spent Sunday in Elkhart at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Van Cripe. Mr. and Mrs. John Strophagel of Sturgis, Mich., came to Syracuse, Sunday and took Mrs. Mary Dillen home with them to spend the winter. Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Held and family moved to the Grissom property on Boston street, Saturday, for the winter. Mrs. Sarah Younce went to Millersburg, Tuesday, to spend several weeks at the home of her daughter, Mrs. V. M. Shaeffer. ,*- Mr. and Mrs. Emory Brown, Mr. and Mrs. Cedric Kegg and Mr. and Mrs. C* E. Mills of Indianapolis wegb week-end guests 6f; Mr. and Mrs. Walter Kegg. ' | Mr. and Mrs. Clark, ; Mr. and Mrs. Flort of Epworth Forest, spent last Saturday evening with Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Swenson and Mrs. Mary Swenson. Mr. and Mrs. Sylvester Coy, Tillman Coy and family, Mr; and Mrs. Harold LeCount and son spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Everett Darr in Goshen. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Gibson and daughters spent the week end at the home of Mr. Gibson’s sister in South Bend. Paul Gibson spent Sunday at Gus Fisher’s. Mrs. Walter Smith returned home, Saturday, much improved in health. She had been staying with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Miller during her illness. Mrs. Fannie Hoy returned home from Loraine, 0., Saturday, after a visit there with her daughter and family. Mrs. Adrian brought Mrs. Hoy home and stayed here with her until Tuesday. Hascall Grissom fell and injured himself some time ago. He suffered with an abscess on his kidney, and underwent treatment in the Goshen clinic the first of this week, and is now at his home. Rev. Hively and wife of Collins, formerly located here, have purchased the Cleeland house and some lots from Mrs. Pence on North Huntington street and moved here. Rev. Hively is a retired U. B. pastor. Will Malloh received word Saturday night that his cousin, who lived near LaGrange had died. Mr. and Mrs. Mallon went there Sunday. Funeral services were held Tuesday afternoon. *“ Wade Zerbe’s mother, Mrs. M. D. Martin, suffered a heart attack Wednesday night last week and has been in a-eerious condition since. Her daughters who live in Michigan and South Bend, were called home last week. Mrs. Irve Wogoman returned home Saturday night, after spending a week with her daughter Maymie, in Fort Wayne. Maymie had had a wisdom tooth extracted and her jaw bone was fractured, but she was much improved before her mother left. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Snyder were hosts at a pot-luck supper Friday evening. Guests were: Mr. and Mrs. Orba Bobeck, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Blue, Mr. and Mrs. Harry

THE SYRACUSE JmURNAL

Juday and family, Mr. and Mrs. Orley Brown and family, Mr. and Mrs. Chet Workman and family and Mr. and Mrs. Roy Sarjent. oZION. Mr. and Mrs. Nat Kline of North Webster are visiting in the home of their son, Esten Kline and family. Mrs. Wm. Buchholz of Syracuse called on Mrs. Ida Guy Monday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Smith and daughter Marjorie spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Emory Guy. Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Kline and family called on Eston Kline and family Sunday afternoon. Mrs. Ray LeCount and son Coryliss spent Sunday afternoon with Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Brower and family and Mrs. Ida Guy. Mrs. Ella LeCount of Cromwell is visiting with Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Strieby. RICHVILLE Hollis Blue and family spent Sunday in the LaTone Jensen home. Harold McDaniel is visiting relatives in Fort Wayne. The Ladies Aid met at the home of Mrs. Bowman Tuesday afternoon. Mrs. Bowman and Mrs. Emmert were hostesses. Carl Bender and family of Wolf L*fcKc spcuuMhuSay with D. L. Blue and wife. i Mrs. Grace Green is ill in bed again with the grippe. Mrs. Ruth Sheline was taken to Goshen hospital last week, where she is seriously ill with blood poison. Mrs. Ernest Richards is caring for the infant daughter. Mrs. R. E. Treadway called on Mrs. Geo. McDaniel Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Richards called at the Fred Coppes home in Nappanee Sunday. TIPPECANOE J. L. Kline and family took supper with J. Garber and wife. Mr. | and Mrs. Gordy called in the evening. Elmo Shock called on Dan Mock Tuesday. Jessie and Baugher were in Warsaw Saturday. Lawrence Scott moved his family to Elkhart. George Tom and wife called on the Garbers Saturday. S. V. Robinson called in the evening. Rhoda Mock and brother Jake spent Wednesday in the Eberly home. Mr. and Mrs. J. Garber and Royal Kline called on Clarence Mock Monday. Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Kline and daughter Mayzel were in Warsaw Saturday. Gerald Priest came home for the week end. SOUTH SIDE Mrs. Estell Swartz is in Chicago caring for her sister, Mrs. 7 S. F. Betes, who is under the doctor’s care. Mr. and Mrs.. Clint Bushong called at the Gerald Coy home, Sunday afternoon, to see the new daughter which arrived there. Her name is Jennie Lee. Miss Lida Davis and Mrs. Warbel spent Saturday evening with Mrs. Elmer McGarity. Mr. and Mrs. Pat Ritter and children of Milford called at the Jarrett home, Sunday afternoon. Mrs. McGarity’s sister, Mrs. Todd from Chicago, and Mr. and Mrs. Kidwell and son Billy were Sunday visitors in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer McGarity. Miss Lydia Davis called in the afternoon. Frank Bushong is reported as recovering from his long illness. Mr. and Mrs. Scott Keen of Elkhart visited Mrs. Elmer McGarity, Sunday. Miss Almeta Coy of Milford spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Clint Bushong and family. Mrs. Jones and Mrs. Warbel entertained the U. B. Ladies Aid Wednesday last week. Mrs. Winsor reports that her son Perry of Cromwell is in a serious condition.

Saturday Specials PALMOLIVE SOAP, cake ........ 5c Limit 5 to a Customer. WEST’S TOOTH PASTE, 2 tubes 25c LISTERINE, 50c size ........ 39c ZONITE, 60c size 39c K KUSCHES' SALTS, regular 85c 69c PALMOLIVE'SHAVING CREAM 23c J&J BABY TALC 19c 5 RAMISIS BLUE BLADES ... 19c WILLIAMS DENTAL CREAM 17c MENNEN’S ANTISEPTIC OIL, for baby,39c Get Turkey, and Sugar Tickets Here Thornburg Drug Co. Phone 83 >: Syracuse, Ind.

NEW REGULATIONS FOR TRUCK OWNERS j INDIANAPJOLIS, Ind.-kew reg-, ■ ulations governing the issuance of, licenses-for trucks, semi-trailers and ■ j trailers to prevent loss of revenue I I from this source have been adopted; by the Bureau of Motor Vehicles and will take effect with the sale of 1934 licenses starting December 1, it was announced today by Frank Finney, commissioner. Copies of the regulations have been forwarded to managers of each of the 137 branch license offices over the state. In the past, Mr. Finney stated, there has been no method of determining whether a truck owner had paid the proper license fee based on | the capacity of his truck and in many cases, licenses were obtained at a lower fee than the capacity of J the truck required. Under the new I Regulations it will be impossible to! escape detection if plates are being ■ used on a truck, the capacity of which is not the same as that for! i which the plates were issued. W’hen truck plates are purchased, the purchaser will also receive two metal numbers, these numbers corresponding to the chssification of the truck. The numbers are to be placed on a prepared space on the license plate, provision being made for their being firmly attached. • These supplemented numbers will ..give police offic : als and inspectors of the Bureau the key to the classitii cation in which the truck belongs. If the capacity of the truck does not , place it in that classification, the , owner will be subject to arrest and a fine. . Penalties are provided by present laws to prevent substitution of num- ! bers other than those issued with the plates or for the transfer of (these key numbers to other plates. . | Mr. Finney stated. This system is i expected to prevent the purchase of license plates for one size truck at a lower cost than the. plates would have cost had the actual capacity of the truck been given when the application was made. This plan will assure every truck owner that other owners are paying their proper fees, making the licensing fair for everyone, he stated. . : 0 t —— ••***•*♦** ♦ NEW USES SUGGESTED * ♦ FOR GRANULATED HONEY” * l * ♦ ♦ • # • * .♦ * * * ,! LAFAYETTE, Ind._The other day a homemaker told Miss Aneta j Beadle, Extension Nutritionist of , Purdue University, that she had ten ‘pounds of honey that had granulated, and that she was going to throw it away. Miss Beadle points out that if that woman had been in the habit of using honey, she would not have wor- ' ried when it granulated, for gr&n---i ulated honey 'has many uses and 1 some homemakers even put honey in • the refrigerator to make it granu- ! late. ! She suggests the following as some i of the uses of granulated honey: Cake Icing Add chopped nuts and cocoanut to granulated honey and warm just enough so it will spread easily. Hard Sauce^—To % cup granulaated honey, add *2 cup butter that has been allowed to stand at room temperature. Blend thoroughly. This mixture should be prepared aS needI I ed and chilled before being served. Candy—Mix granulated honey with ground dates, prunes, apricots, figs and other dried fruit. Granulated honey can be used in- ’, stead of liquid . honey in cakes and cookies, and it is no more difficult to measure. — u : < . . > Friends here received word of the | death of Ross McMichael, brother ‘j of Rev. Russell N. McMichael of 1 Lucas, O. , formerly of Syracuse. ‘ I Ross McMichael, aged 31, editor of the Fremont Messinger, suffered with neuritis since last July. He died Nov.' 11. He is survived by his I wife, two children and his parents as well as his brother. It is said that the coal strike in ■| Western Pennsylvania has cost the miners, the operators and the railroads $20,000,000. But eventually they will .get it all out of the con- ' sumer.

I The Old Man’s Corner

! (The views expressed in this | column are those of the author who wishes to remain anonymous, and i 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 kpown to the editor.) So! We are catching up with Europe, be we? Nobody, on either side, at Gettysburg or Appomattox, thought that was necessary! We got Monarchy from Europe, an’ slavery, |too, and later , not ’bout bankrupt there, an’ got Junior High Schools from Italy! ’S all funny meanin’s for j words. | Catching up with Europe—l Object ! A Simons Article printed recently ■in many papers, including the Indianapolis Star, says that this country ' must “modify its Democracy simply j because European countries have done so. Many people believe that. J Why not try to “complete” our Democracy, before, or instead of, modifying it? Everybody, knows our original Democracy was only a compromise. The many Amendments to •he U. Constitution prove that, for each Amendment is a sort of Postscript that should have been in

CHICAGO TO STAGE FINALS OF LIVE STOCK SHOW YEAR ' CHICAGO. Hl., —Next week the I. 1933 International Live Stock Exposi- j ' tion will open for its 34th year in Chicago. The show will be held from December 2 to 9. ' B. H. Heide, secretary-manager of the Exposition, sees in the large entry Of-live stock and crops an ex- " pression <>f faith in tljeir calling on ; the part of the continent’s leading 1 1 farmers and stock breeders and an . indication of thf basic stability of i live stock farming, notwithstanding \ the general depression. . j Coming each year the week following Thanksgiving, the Chicago Ex- > position is the close of the agriculitural show season in North America, I uhich. begins with the district and ; county fairs of early summer and 3 continues through the larger fairs . and expositions to a climax*at Chiicago. Canadians Take Part. The fact that Canadians are as /active participants as are those from ‘ the states gives the Exposition the international import its name implies, the management pointing out I that farmers of the Dominion send; an increasing number and variety of j exhibits to the Exposition each year. - Farmers from seven provinces of Canada will exhibit in the crops de- , partment of the show. Draft horses will be sent from as far away as Saskatchewan, and Ontario sheep bleeders have entered among the largest flocks of purebred sheep that will appear in the competitions. Officials of the exposition state that there will »be more draft horses . exhibited than at any' time in the last decade. A spectacular feature I of the draft horse show is the per- , fonnance of ton weight six horse teams. There will be eight six-in- . hands competing at the evening ■i - : : ■:— -

BACHMAN’S Syracuse » Indiana Thanksgiving Prices SUGAR 10 lb. cloth bag 48c Cranberries Fine quality, lb .... .... 10c New Dates Cellophane wrapped, 2 lb pkg 25c Grapes 2 pounds 15c Oysters Large, extra standard, pt. 25c Jello 3 boxes j ... 19c Raisins 2 pound pkg 19c Peaches 19c Libby’s No. 2j can, sliced or halves Royal Anne Cherries No. 2j cans, each 23c Karo Syrup .10 lb. pail, dark 59c Cornmeal 5 pounds 13c Sweet Potatoes 6 p0und5........ ...15c Bananas 3 pounds 19c Fresh Tomatoes 3 pounds 25c Celery Hearts, Peppers, Spinach Lettuce, Fancy Apples, Tangerines 4

THURSDAY, NOV. 33, 1933

11 the Constitution at the first. i' European Democracy “failed” . I simply because they had too little '! of it—because they had retained too : much compromise, prejudice and en- ; tagonism; and, like oar Prohibition, ; it was often administered by its eni emies. Even then, Europe dropped Democracy only after letting it take the odium of the impossible post1 war era; they probably planned things that way—while they hid their own faces! / Our own Democracy has always involved too much compromise ana half-measures. Our’s is only “Demt ocratic government” Governmental ‘ Democracy! It is not a “Democratic Society,” not a “Complete Demo- : cratic Civilization.” It does noteven profess to be such—unfortunately. •It is a Republic, which means, ’ | “Democratic government,” not a ’ whole Democratic civilization. So ii ’'truly is only a half-truth—or less! . We should “complete” rather than ’: “modify” our Democracy-—a vital, difference. You don’t will the pa- \ ’ tient because he is sick. Why not • “modify” our compromises and half- » heartedness instead? Remember, it is the lukewarm” who are vomited ■ out of the mouth of God_and of man i also.

Horse Shows of the Exposition this year, which the management declares is the largest entry of these big (hitches in the history of the Interi national Show. Rail Rates Reduced, In view of the nation-wide interest and the desire of thousands of those associated with the industries of agriculture to visit the International Stock Show, all the railroads entering Chicago have announced special low round trip fares, at rates ranging from two centra mile to a fare and i f° r the round trip. Special excursion fares at a cent a mile will be granted from the northen Mississippi valley and northwest states. BUY IN SYRACUSE.

Seamless Axminster Rugs—in all the popular shades of green, rose, rust, tan and taupe, have arrived in a je-, cent shipment. Purchased before the advance in prices, these rugs are offered at a saying of from $3 to §5 each, j The quantity is limited. Come early for a wide choice BECKMAN’S QUALITY FURNITURE