The Syracuse Journal, Volume 27, Number 14, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 26 July 1934 — Page 1

by Arthur Brisbane WHO AND WHERE ARE THEY? 1,000,000 JUMPERS HITLER KEEPS HIS GRIP BABY LAMAJS. FQ.UMD

Clarence Darrow, most successful criminal lawyer, says NRA is led by am ate ata that do lot understand political economy. Who does understand political economy? Mr. Darrow rebukes the President for “failing to* call in men versed in statesmanship." Who are those men in this country? Mr. Darrow should name them. • You can do things when you control a country absolutely, as Stalin controls Russia, with all money, earned by everybody, spent to carry out government plans. Having trained millions of men and women in aerodynamics, as ; preparation for' flying, the Russian ■ government plans to train one mil-/ lion, parachute jumpers, not Cerf thousand or a hundred thousand but one million, by the end of this year. Russia does things in a big way. That Hitler still retains his power in Germany and his grip on the German iinagipatron is shown in his latest reichstag speech. Haled with frantic acclaim in the streets of Berlin, loudly applauded by the subservient reichsiag, with army and people under his thumb, it is difficult to see what can destroy his power Aort of a collapse in Germany's economic resources. The plot that, according V» his own statement, Hitler punished with sev-enty-seven “traitors” deaths, evidently did not have the people back of it. . 5 Thibetan Buddhists have discovered the reincarnation of their late lamented DUai Laum. The last Lama ruling Thibet as spiritual and temporal head from the crimson and white palace of Lh sa, uied I st December. it then became the business of Buddhist priests to find a baby born al the exact minute of the Lama’s death. The baby must have certain marks on his head tv prove that he is the reincarnation of the dead man and contains his spirit. The right baby with the right marks has been found in a humble home far from Lhasa. A clever Buddhist priest will rule until the baby Lama reaches the age of eighteen. Meanwhile the baby will be carefully looked after. Unlike the ancient Buddhist reincarnations, he is not expected to sit in the air without any support and deliver a sermon at birth. oThe wise merchant tells his clerks: “The customer tar always right." James J. Dooling, new leader of Tammany hall, tells those under him, the entire human machinery of the biggest city; “If public opinion is against anythingthere must be changes, because public opinion ta always right.* We have troubles in this country but look at China. Her chief wheat regions are burning up under a temperature as high as 115 degrees many are dead, cholera is killing others. Locusts in many places destroy what intense heat and drouth have left of the crop. Widespread r famine next winter is inevitable. Here, we manufacture out troubles. To unfortunate China, providence or nature sends them. Bertrand Russell says the British ruling India, “act like Nasis.* For the crime of desiring self-govern-ment, according to Bertrand Russell. Hindus have been deprived of “the elementary liberties that make life tolerable." You wonder when the Hindus poeseeeed any such liberties, except to a limited extent, among Hindus of the highest clam. Among them “liberty” included the right to inflict horrible injustice on the miserable outcast untouchables, also the right to marry little girls ten years old and younger, and the right to have young widows burned alive with the corpses of their old husbands. The big telephone company in the first six months of 1934 earned >61,999,000, net after charges and federal taxes, which seems a good deal of money. But it is only $3.32 a share on the company's 18,662,275 shares of stock. Prospects are improving for the telephones, however and a net income of $61,000,000 for six months is “Something. * Mr. John Jacob Astor, interesting youth of Newport, cutting short his travels, returns to New York unexpectedly and announces that he will take a job and go to work “just as soon as the hot weather ends.” Arriving in New York's Grand Central terminal, he was met by “forty railroad detectives and six private detectives." This seems a. good many detectives for one young gentleman who, so far as the world knows, has never done anything to make detectives necessary.

The Syracuse Journal e'. ■ ■ -

VOLUME.XXYIL.

COURT DENIED KETRING PLEA -PUT IN JAIL He Wanted Suspended Sentence, and to & Change Plea. The motion of John W. Lyddick brother-in-law and attorney for Lloyd Ketring, who plead guilty to the charge of manslaughter, in circuit court Wednesday last week, to set aside and vacate the submission, judgment and order herein made, and withdraw plea of guilty, was not allowed by Judge Donald Vanderveer in circuit court Monday this week. Immediately after the judge’s decision not to allow the plea of not guilty to be withdrawn, Lyddick made a motion to file a bill of exeplion to the judge’s decision, within 30 days. If Lyddick files his bill of exception, it means that the case will be carried up to the Supreme Court of Indiana. Ketring was represented not only by Lyddick, but by Warren T. Colwell. The case arose out of the fact hat Lloyd Ketring hit W. J. Conley or William Meskel, with his fist, causing Conley to fall to the pavement near the Syracuse bank, Saturday night a week ago the result of which caused Conley’s dea h. Last .W ednesday Ketring plead guilty to i charge of manslaughter in two counts. Ketring h?d not requested an attorney and made his plea voluntarily, according to the court. He was sentenced by the court to serve from 2to 21 years in the Michigan City penitentiary. The right to withdraw Ketring’s plea of guilty was finally argued before the court on the basis of whether or not Ketring . was guilty of voluntary or involuntary manslaughter. Voluntary manslaughter is with intention or design. On M°nday, Lyddick came before the court and contended that the defendant be allowed to withdraw his plea of guilty, and that the judgment be vacated and set aside, conending that the defendant was not accustomed to legal procedure, did not realize the full force and effect of his plea; that he did not know until the last minute that he was pleading to anything but involuntary manslaughter; that the facts of the case did not substantiate the first count of the affidavit, voluptary manslaughter; that in the charge of voluntary manslaughter criminal intent must necessarily be proven and that the facts of the case warranted no inference to inflict bodily harm. Lyddick also stated that the death of Conley was the result of a fall not from the blow of Ketring’s fist. He also claimed that Ketring had no legal advisor, or talk with relatives or friends before be made his plea, and that the plea of guilty was made when the defendant was in a subnormal and dazed frame of mind. Lyddick also claimed that neither the state of Indiana or any one else would be harmed by the court allowing the motion of not guilty to the first count of the affidavit to be withdrawn. Lyddick then presented cases to to the court to read, and the judge said that he would make hie decision in the afternoon. Before receasing eou¥t at noon, the judge stated that the defendant on his own volition was brought into court; that the affidavit was expressly read and explained to the defendant, and that the facts of the case fitted the charge of manslaughter. He said that he thought that to allow the defendant to retract his plea would be dealing too lightly with human Life. The judge also said that if any evidence of third degree methods were used to extort from the defendant a plea of guilty the court would set aside the plea, but the court did not have any evidence of third degree methods having been used. In the afternoon, Lyddick argued that only involuntary manslaughter applied to the case, nd that Ketring thought all the time that he was pleading guilty to involuntary manslaughter even If the affidavits had been reed to him by the court and the consequences explained to him. Lyddick . said that the sheriff told Lloyd that all he would receive was from Ito 10 years, and that that was ail Lloyd thought he would get. Lyddick then charged that, in ths manner—the unintelligent manner in which the affidavits were drawn up that Ketring could only be charged with involuntary manslaughter; that in the first count of the affidavit murder (Continued on Last Page)

Indiana’"AndN Wvsiett Weekly

[NOFBEPLACE UNCOVERED NEAR INDIAN VILLAGE Learning that there existed an Indian fireplace on the John Beck farm at Indian Village, Eli Lilly, whose interest in Indians and how they lived, is well known, went there to excavate it, Tuesday. With Mr. Beck and two neighbors Mr. Lilly removed the top soil from the fireplace which disclosed various shaped stones closely laid together, much as a cobble stone street, in a circle with a diameter of about six feet. In this fire place they sought objects which had perhaps been lost in the fire by the Indians. Lumps of charcoal were uncovered, and crumbled into bits between the fingers of the seekers, and the red dust between the stones proved to be ashes from the fire. The Indians Pottowatomies, were said to have moved from the vicinity of Indian Village and Lake Wawasee to the government reservation 100 je. rs ago. - ,/, Mr. Beck said that he bought the farm from the L. B. Eagles estate, 20 years ago, and that Mr. Eagles would have been 111 ye-rs o’.d now, if he had lived. Mr. Eagles had played with the Indians when he was a boy and was aged 11 when they moved away. He wished to go with them, but of course his parents would not permit this. When Hudson Galloway, who lives near the Beck farm, was sought, Tuesday he said he had worked for Mr. Eagles the last 15 years of his life, and that the old man had told him many tales of the Indians, and about that fireplace. Instead of having been used as the center of an indian camp for years, as had been reported, Mr. Galloway said the firepalce h<d been built one Sunday on Eagles* farm, in order that the women of the tribe could cook enough food to serve as rations for the tribe on its journey to the new government reservation. Galloway said that Eagles as a boy of 11, had been a guest of the tribe that last day before they started west. He had told how the men had dug the circle about 3 feet deep for the fireplace and filled it with pieces of stone. Then he said the women of the tribe who had been wading in the small lake is but a short distance from the fireplace, < gathering the roots of the forked leaf dock brought it to the fireplace, which was first lined with prairie grass. The dock was placed upon this, and then another layer of prairie grass above that, and the fire built on top, to cook the roots beneath. He said forked leaf dock would almost take the skin off the tongue if tasted raw, but when cooked tasted like sweet potatoes. / All of the Indians did not go when the tribe left, scattered families living in the vicinity of Indian village and Wawasee for many years. There is an old Indian cemetery about three-quarters of a mile northwest of Indian Village. Galloway said that Elegies told him the Indians used to always take the dead man to his grave, stretched between two (Continued on Last Page) GIRL DIES AFTER 3 YEARS ILLNESS Erma Stiffler, Daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Orion Stiffler, Buried Tuesday Afternoon. Erma Nadene Stiffler, 14, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Orlen Stiffler, died at her home on Boston street, early Monday morning, following a long illness. Funeral services for her were held Tuesday afternoon at the United Brethren church with Rev. Deidenbach officiating. Burial was in the Syracuse cemetery. She is survived by her parents, one sister, Louise; and her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Roas of Milford. Erma Nadene Stiffler, daughter of Orlen and Blanche Stiffler, was born on March 18th, 1920, and departed this life after more than throe yean illneei on July 23, 1934 aged 14 years. Erma had reached the seventh grade in school from which she was compelled by illness to discontinue. She was taken by her parents to the BSey Memorial Hospital in Indianapolis, where she was • patient for a number of months. She attended the United Brethren Sunday School and was baptised. She seemed to have a realisation of her incurable condition, but was a patient sufferer, never murmuring or complaining, and as the end drew near she expressed without fear or dread a desire to depart from this world. Ono sister and one brother preceded her in death.

SYJU.CUSE. INDIANA. tI/VRSDAY JULY 26, 1934.

News of WHiv’dsee »

Lieut. Gov. Clifford Townsend was guest in the state house at the Wawasee Hatchery* the first of this week. His car with the “3” license attracted much attention when in town. The Indiana conference of Evangelical churches is being held this week at Oakwood Park, and in spite of the rccoid-breaking heat, a large crowd is in attendance.. Chief speakers are: Rev, Kellerman from Ontario, Canada; Dr. Mayer from Japan; Mrs. Stamm from Kansas City, Mo.; Miss Etta Speicher from the Redbird Mission in Kentucky. Mrs. Bert Needham’s sister, Mrs. O. S. Line and daughter Joan from i LaPorte, and Mrs. E. A. Hoffer, came to the lake to spend this week I .with her. T Mr. and Mrs. Hal Phillips of Memphis, Tenn. , aie spending their vacation in one of the George W. j Mellinger cottages; and Mr. and Mrs. Harry Imbus of Cincinnati, O. ; are spending two weeks in the other • cottage. Last Thursday’s Get-To-Gether I Golf tourney was won at the South Shore Golf club by Freed Miller of i Nappanee; Roy Miles was second and Freeman Moore third. Today’s play w»-s to be on the Turkey Qreek course. B Mrs. Roy Adams and daughter Mrs. McCumber from Kendallville, entertained at luncheon and bridge, at the South Shore Inn, last Thursday. Twelve attended the party and at the conclusion of the bridge, priz- j es were won by Mrs. Boyts and Mrs. Griffin; Mts. Irvin Deister and Mrs. George Roush. Announcements have been received of the marriage of Miss Audrey Yoder of Goshen, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Yoder, whose engagement was announced recently at a dinner party at the South Shore Inn. She was married last Saturday on the U. S. S. Louisville, to Lieut, Hanlin. She was given away by the captain, and the other officers of the ship were in attendance. The ship was docked at Provincetown, Mass. fMr. and Mrs. Arthur Logan, who ' had been visiting Mr. and Mrs. Ben Shaeffer started for their home in Rockford, 111. Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Hannopel of ; Chicago spent the week end with Mrs. Catherine Schaaf. Mr. and Mrs. John Teetor spent from Wednesday until Friday last week at their home in Hagerstown. Rev. Ray Seamans of Chicago is spending this week at the Seamans I cottage. Mrs. Earnest Sutphen and , daughter of Kansas City, returned : home, Sunday, after spending 10 days there. Mr. and Mrs. Russell Dufenderk of South Bend were week end guests of Mr. and Mrs. Bill Gingrich at their cottage. Mr. and Mrs. Urbach of Chicago, who bought the Carl Smith cottage this spring spent the week end there. . Herbert Cotherman and family of Goshen spent the week end with Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Leas. Mr. and Mrs. Macy Teetor of Hagerstown spent the week end with Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Teetor. Roy Eller horse, one of the members of the orchestra playing at Waco, and his wife have rented one of Russell Warner’s cottages for the remainder of the season. The second annual Art Merrill, one club golf tourney is to be played on the South Shore Golf course, August 16. Mr. and Mrs. J. Frank Smith and daughter and her husband from Glenaide, Pa., are expected guests of Mrs. H. B. McMahon the latter part of this week. Mrs. McMahon spent the first of this week in Ander- ! son. —— A crowd from Fort Wayne attended services at .the Wawasee Episcopal church, Sunday, when the choir from the Trinity church of Fort Wayne sang there. The service was slightly delayed awaiting the arrival . of the organist, who had played for the service in Fort Wayne before coming to\ the lake. Following the service, swimming in the lake was enjoyed by the visitors. Mr. and Mrs Ralph Nash's daughter was able to leave the Goshen hospital, Monday, recovering , from her recent zypirtiritta aftaaa- ■ tion. 4 *■ Mrs. Amanda Xanders’ non Laucks and family are expected to come to her home on Lake Wawasee from Baltimore, Md., for Uieir vacation, the latter part of the week. I I Mr. and Mrs. Herman Teetor and I

family of Hagerstown plan to come to the Charles Teetor summer home, the last of this week, to spend their vacation. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Wilson and nephew James MacCrea of Fort | Wayne are staying in the Rusch cot- • tage Vawter Park, for the rest of the season. Mr. and Mrs. Boyd Templeton and Mrs. Howard of Indianapolis spent the week end at their lake home. Dr. and Mrs. Kenneth Sparks of Indianapolis, who had spent their n vacation at the Stevenson cottage, : returned home, Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Watering and son James spent I the week end with them. t Mrs. H. H. Rogers and Mrs. Ben I Shaeffer entertained the South Shore ' Bridge club at the home oT Mrs. ( Rogers yesterday. • —..u. I Collie Lamb entertained a house ; party of friends at his cottage this ; past week. I Cliff Burns and his mother-'and ' aunt spent Friday and Saturday at the .Yair in Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. Melburn of Muncie are spending this week in Dwight Mock’s cottage. i Among the callers at the Charles Cripe summer home, Sunday were: Mr. and Mrs. Harry Rowell, Rev. Lindsey and family, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Cripe of Goshen; Mr. and Mrs. Elliott and family of Elkhart. Mr. and Mrs. Bob Mangus of Goshen spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Mock, where Mrs. Mangus’s birthday was celebrated. Mr. and Mrs. Harold V. Maurer of South Bend spent the week end with Mr. and Mrs. R. V. Maurer. Mr. and Mrs. Norman R, Baxter and children and Mrs. C. O. Fargo and daughter Mary Jo from Lakt Maxinkukee spent one day last week with Mr. and Mrs. Ed Neumeyer. ' Miss Harriett Garvin of Indianapolis was the guest last week of Misses Joan and Christine Schrader. I Mr. and Mrs. Charles Mathews of Terre Haute returned home after spending the week end with Mr. and j Mrs. R. M. Pentreath. I Miss Flora Regge of Indianapolis was the week end guest of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Symmes. Ed Horst and Arthur Schrader came to the lake from Indianapolis to spend the week end with their j families. Miss Gertrude Byrne of Whiting entertained a group of guests at dinI ner at Sargent’s hotel, Sunday. - Mrs. Henry Grieger entertained with a bridge party, last Thursday evening, in honor of Bert Needham who plans to spend the coming month at home in Muncie. It was a pot luck dinner party, and in the bridge which followed prizes were won by Mrs. Kenneth Harkless Mrs. C. H. King and Mrs. J. H.« I Bowser. Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Sears of Muncie are spending this week at their cottage on Kale Island. Mrs. I. Rose of Ligonier entertained 25 friends at a four course luncheon at Sargent’s hotel last Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Davis of Greencastle are spending this week in Mrs. Shively* scottage on Kale Island. Mr. and Mrs. C. H. King entertained. at dinner, Tuesday evening, in honor of the birthdays of Guy Hayek and Bruce Wilcox of the So. Shore Golf course, both of whoqa were 16 that day. The regular weekly bridge party at the South Shore Inn was won last week by Mrs. Whippy of Goshen; Mrs. Joseph of Ligonier; Mrs. Riggle of Wawasee, in contract. The high score in auction was held by Mrs. Haines of Ligonier. J. K. Lilly returned home to Indianapolis, Sunday, after visiting Mr. and Mrs. Eli Lilly last’ week. Jesse Sargent’s cousins from California, Mr. and Mrs. Stevens and family who are staying at a cottage on Ogden Island were his guests at dinner at the hotel, Monday evening Mr. and Mrs. Brown of "Ligonier entertained a party of relatives at dinner at Sargent’s hotel, Sunday. 5 Mnu J. G. Brannum and Mrs. G. ;C. Harwood spent Monday in Fort , Wayne. I The Mayflower Warehousemen will hold a convention at the SpinkWawasee hotel, August 4 and 5. On ; August 5 and 6 the Chevrolet dealt ers will mqet, the chief dinner party (Continued on Last Page)

- s - |. DO YOU v I REMEMBER— I r 20 Years Ago. When the farm residence of Henry Rapp was struck by lightning, Mrs. Rapp was shocked, the walls and roof of the home were damaged, and a hen and brood of young chicks near the residence were killed? ** • ' 15 Years Ago. When cottagers on Wawasee met to appoint a committee to secure subscriptions for the $2 500 fund necessary to build a dam at the Huntington street bridge, to raise the water levels of Syracuse and Wawasee lakes? f' • • % Ten Years Ago When “Many cherries grown in and around Syracuse have been found in a rotted and wormy condition. The rainy weather is blamed for this unusual candition?” * * t' 5 Years Ago. When announcement was made of the marriage of Miss Beulah Castner and Guy Bushong? 0 WILL HOLD GARDEN | PARTY AT LONG’S E. R. Steffens, Leader of the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra to Arrange Musical Program. The Ladies Aid off the Methodist church will give a garden party on the evening of August 9, in the Gardens and Chinese Pagoda of W. E. Long of Kale Island. J He has graciously consented to light the islands and Chinese house for them and has procured exceptional talent to provide a most interesting program. An opportunity will be given the public on this occasion to visit the attractive Chinese ouilding and learn from guides all about the beautiful interiou and the unusual works of fcrt he has in it. The musical program is being arranged by E. R. Steffens, leader of .the Indianapolis Symphony orchestra. Mr. Steffens will sing, numbers will be furnished by the Waco orchesstra and the< Spink-Wawasee orchestra. Folk dances will be given by local children. Other features are being arranged. Tickets may be procured from all members of the M. E. Aid. 0 HOME TALENT WILL’ PERFORM AT WACO i Prizes to be Awarded Best in Opinion of Judges; Opportunities for Other Appearances. Singers dancers and entertainers, whose talents havt not been recognized, because of lack of opportunities to appear before the public, will be given chances ito .win recognition and valuable prizes at the Opportunity Nights to be conducted by the management of Waco, on Wawasee, every Friday night, beginning July 27. Qualified judges will determine the winners among the contestants at the conclusion of each night’s performances. Winners will be given cash awards and opportunities for floor show engagements and radio auditions, according to the Waco management. Those wishing to take advantage of this opportunity should mail their entries to Waco immediately, or turn them in at the Waco box office. Information covering kind of talent and mailing address must be furnished. The Waco management will then inform each contestant when he or she is to appear. It is the hope of the Waco management that this contest will not only start some fortunate boy or girl on the road to fame and fortune but also provide much interest and entertainment for the friends of the contestants and the many Waco patrons. 0 CATCH BASS. “Beanie” Howard, who went fishing with “Vic” Niles, caught two smallmouthed bass which when weighed to gether tipped the scales at 5H pounds. They were fishing on Lake Wawasee in the hot sun, Sunday morning about 11 o’clock when the catch was "made on grasshoppers, on a fly rod, Niles said. Kenneth Woolling of Indianapolis, guest at The Tavern, caught a four pound ban, on Lake Wawasee Friday, despite the heat. 0 Mrs. Irene Strieby and son Bob have been spending this week in the Xanders cottage on Boner Lake. Mrs. Strieby was to start for Indianapolis today, where she has accepted a position.

ALL RECORDS BROKEN BY HEAT WAVE & Degree of Temperature and Length of Hot Period New. “AU in a hot and copper sky, the bloody sun at noon did stand,” so quoth the Ancient Mariner who according to Coleridge, had a hot time of it. But the mariners and those who do not sail around Wawasee, Syracuse lakes and vicinity think the sun shines down not just at noon, but about 16 hours a day just as hot as he had it. They are one up, however as they cannot complain that they “Have Not a Drop to Drink.” Because hotels bn Lake Wawasee were filled over the week end and had to turn away people who rushed to the lake to find, if not coolness, a place less hot than at home, and on Sunday workers in kitchens of the hotels and restaurants of the vicinity worked in real and artificial heat to take care of these guests. Places where beer is served and soda fountains were rushed by those who wanted more than a drop to drink. And beaches and just lake shores were crowded wi h bathers, not only over the week end, but ever since the thermometers got caught at the 100 mark, last Friday, and can’t get dowp. Various people have kept records of how’ the weather has been behaving, and according to the records of Miss Lydia Mellinger, Mrs. Roy Brown’s sister, who lives on the southside of Wawasee there have been only six days since May 29 when the thermometer has registered below 83. According to Stewart Cowgill, who has been coming to the Cow’gill summer home, Vawter Park, for 54 years, Sunday was the hottest day the thermometer on the front porchof the cottage ever registered. On Sunday it was 102, the highest ever registered before being 98. According to she U. S. weather bureau stationed at Goshen college, Friday’s temperature was 106; Saturday’s 108 and Sunday’s, 109. On Sunday Dr. Hoy put the thermometer 8t his home in the san ijust to see how hot it really was, and it reached 128 and the mercury could go no further. At Thornburg’s at 1:30 Sunday afernoon the thermometer there registered 107.. Mrs. Dan Wolf said the sun beat on their thermometer'on their porch,. Sunday, and the mercury reached 120, and the thermometer burst. It was reported from the lake that Ben Shaeffer’s thermometer also burst that day, in the heat. A cool breeze which sprang up after dark, Sunday evening, cooled thermometers slightly but ron Monday they Shad sarted their ascent again, j Tuesday, however Mrs. J. H. Bowser reported that the thermomteer on the ‘porch of her home near the Journal office registered 109 in the afternoon and in the shade. Heat continued above the 100 mark yesterday despite rumors of a iqold wave reaching, as far as Chicago, by yesterday afternoon. This morning started out as though trying to break all broken records for heat. Tuesday morning, Bert Day, grand son of Mr. and Mrs. A. R. Monroe of Pickwick Park, fainted in Thornburg’s drug store, his illness being caused by the heat. C. E. Naylor, on the southside of Wawasee became ill with the heat Saturday; Sam Bushong became ill threshing at Clee Hibschman’s; end on Sunday, Jack Weimer, delivering ice for the Syracuse Ice Co., became ill at Highland View Gardens, Wawasee. He had been overcome with (Continued on page 2)

HERE’S A FREE TRIP TO THE WORLD’S FAIR. for any boy or girl who obtains six NEW, Yearly subscriptions to the Journal, or 12 six ihonths subscriptions. This offer includes transportation to and from Syracuse to the fair grounds. Admission to the Fair and meals. The day will be on August 23, Syracuse Day at the Fair. • Transportation will be via the B. & O. R. R. Come into the Journal Office for Further Details.

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