The Syracuse Journal, Volume 27, Number 25, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 11 October 1934 — Page 6
Page Six
fWantAds
LIST your real estate with me. A. O. Winans, Syracuse, Ind. 23-ts FOR RENT—Furnished house on Huntington street. Inquire at Hoch’s Drug Store. 25-ltp FOR SALB-r-St. Bernard pups, or will trade for used piano. Inquire Journal Office. 25-ltp FOR Anything in the Nursery line call A. O. Winans, Phone 150, Syracuse. 18-ts FOR SALE—lrish Cobbler potatoes, patch run, 50c a bushel at farm. Sherman Coy‘. * 25-ltp FOR SALE—Apples, Jonathan, Grimes Golden. Also fresh cow for sale. Forest Kern. 25-3tp ■ _ i FOR Autumn and Winter eggs, , Guaranteed Laying Mash. | , Stiefel Grain Co., Syracuse, Ind. 24 Poultry of all kinds? Buying daily. Phone 22 or write G. C. Tarman, New Paris, Ind. 24-4 t FOR SALE—-—Sweet Spanish Onions. Sl.ee per 5e pound crate. Ernest O. Buchholz. 24-? FOR SALE Reasonably, 3-piece walnut bed room set. Mrs. T. W. 1 Kiefer, former Kenneth Harkless j cottage. 25-lt APPLES— Grimes Golden, Jona-' than, Rhode Island Greenings. Price 25c. to 11.50 per bushel at orchard in your own container. Stephen Freeman. 24-ts WANTED—Anyone having a discarded blanket that they wish to donate for use at the city jail please communicate with Chas. Rentfrow, Town Marshal. 24-lt The Claypool'Community Sale at Claypool Sale Barn, Tuesday, Oct. 16 at 11 a. m. Sale every Tuesday. Bring your livestock to these sales. Market for everything. Chas. Schramm. FOR SALE- Apples of many varieties. Champion Fruit Farm, 2 miles south and 1 mile west of Syracuse, % mile north of Dewart Lake. Prices right. No sales on Sunday. < . • MAN WANTED For Rawleigh Route of 800 families. Good profits for hustlers. We train and help you. Write immediately. , Rawleigh Co., Dept. INJ-3235A, Freeport, 111. 25-11-25 CAKE WALK There will be a Cake Walk at the Mock School House on Tuesday, October 16. Benefit of Mock School House. 25-lt 0 TRY A JOURNAL WANT AD
j State Bank of Syracuse : Extends Credit • to j PROPERTY OWNERS J under • 1 : National Housing Act • < ■ I I DEPOSITS INSURED I The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation L * j WASHINGTON, D.C. J D SOOO FOR’EACH DEPOSITOR SSOOO I THE STATE BANK of SYRACUSE Eat More Meat It is still the lowest priced food -and what is more appetising and tasty? Roasts out of Swift’s Branded Beef —standing rib, rolled rib, rump, shoulder or chuck —will meet all the requirements of the most discriminating buyer.. FRESH OYSTERS Fancy Standards KLINK’S MARKET Phone 76 * Phone Order - We Deliver
SCHOOL NOTES | I I Next Monday morning from 11:30 , until noon is Syracuse’s day for broadcasting over the radio station at Elkhart, dh the vocational-agri-cultural hour. Oliver Hibschman will UH of his experiences in the j Holstein dairy club; Harold Kline ! will talk on agriculture exhibits; ' Russell Gawthrop on vocational-agri-cultural farm shops; Chester Brown ion Poultry culling for egg produc- ‘ tion. When the Sophomore c^*Bß } was ; organised, James Butt was elected - president; Bob Strieby, vice ’presi- | dent; Harold Juday, urer. M. Langston is class sponsor. I The Freshmen class organised,, electing Nelson Auer president; 1 Mildred LeCount, vice president; , Richard Beck, secretary-treasurer i and Miss Mellinger class sponser. • . •• • , Mr. Gants has been named sponsor of the Eighth Grade; Mr. Beck |of the Seventh; and these classes 1 will organize next week. School will close next Wednesday afternoon, not to resume until the I following Monday morning, as oh Thursday and Friday teachers will attend institute either in Fort Wayne I or Indianapolis. ie e • j Margaret Beresford has withdrawn from the Sixth grade, moving to De- ! troit, Mich. The High School operetta under i the direction of Miss Lucille Henwood will be presented Tuesdaynight, Nov. 27. It is “The Sunbonnet Girl." • • • Hugh Kitson presented some of the books which he received from Mr. Dolan’s library, to the school. There are about 200 volumes of literature —prose and poetry; reference books, and one highly valued history of Kosciusko county. • • • The Safety Patrol went on duty this week. Boys of the Fourth, Fifth and Sixth Grades, wearing caps, belts and badges of safety patrolmen under the leadership of Mr. Benson, have been stationed at street crossings to give signals when school-bound pedestrains are safe from traffic. Jean LeCount has returned to the First Grade, fllowing her recent illness. « • • Finding a violet in bloom in Pottawatomie Park, Margaret Miles dug the blooming plant and took it to the Second Grade teacher, Mrs. Mereton Meredith, where the flower is now planted in a dish in the i school room. q —~ It is a difficult matter for a poor man to go wrong.
Griffith Observatory, Near Hollywood, From the Air
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YOUNG FOLKS (Continued from Page One) we don’t go someplace from here, we don’t know where we will ever Recalling the escape of six of the Dillinger men from the Michigan City pen near his city, Schatesaid that farmers had the men cornered in a grove of trees and notified the state police. And that the police arrived to drive round and round that spot with sirens of their cars wailing—and when nightfall came, there was not a fugitive left where the farmers had corralled them. Urging that this should be a campaign of education, Schatz said: “When the present governor ran for office he severely criticisized the work of his predecessor who had spent $30,000 to clean up the state house. But that since he has been in office he has spent SIOO,OOO more to “clean up the state house” and in addition has bought furniture for that building, valued at $37,000 and the purchase was made from the firm of which the Democratic party’s treasurer is the head. Schatz said that when Roosevelt was governor of New York state, the expenses there were the greatest in the history of the country — that there was the greatest pork barrel ever known; that he left the greatest deficit known in a state in the United States when he left office. Schatz said that the investigation of such conditions wfe dropped when Roosevelt became president, but, asked Schatz„ “He is now doing that very thing to our national government. Where are we going from here?" Mrs. Eva Doyle, vice district director from Argos, spoke briefly. She said after reading the history of both parties that she was thankful that she had been born a Republican, but that the young people’s club could save those who had not been born that way. She urged that the young Republicans, whether or not of voting age this year, become seriously interested in politics, and back up the Grand Old Party. Mrs. Doyle concluded by saying she “wanted to see restored to Indiana the party which will restore the fidelity which our forefathers laid down, and see that the government of McNutt, by McNutt arttbfor McNutt, perish from this earth.” 0 ROUND TABLE MEETS x- —— The Ladies of the Round Table met Monday night with Mrs. Orval G. Can. Several new members were present, and all responded to roll call with a quotation from Esther. After the business session, Mrs. Hess gave a very interesting introduction and review of the book “India Patchwork.” "MOTHER DIES Dan Klink’s mother, aged 87, i died in Edon, 0., Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Klink had been called there, Saturday by a message telling of her serious illness. Funeral services for her were held yesterday afternoon. * 0 We are told that “when your palm itches you are going to get something and when your head itches you have them."
Advertising? If It Ib itNuit* you want you should us« thio the majority of honw In the counuunity and has always boon conaldered ITheFamily g Newspaper I The grown-m. quarrel about it. the children cry for it. and the wbote fam8y reads it from cover to cover. They will read proper mediwxu J— b
THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL
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i\l j il I Ik * ] “Pop, what are racketeers?” “Kids next door." ©. Bell Syndicate.—WNU Service.
Mummified Cats Archeological excavations In Egypt have brought to light thousands of mummified cats —some elaborately inclosed in bronze boxes, many of which were found to be surmounted by a bronze statue of the cat’s Ka, the double personality that was thought to survive after death with the soul. The mummies were wrapped in yards of plaited linen ribbons. The heads of some cat mummies had been incased in a rough kind of papier-mache, gilt and covered with linen. The ears were always carefully pricked up. The Emerald Isle Ireland is called the Emerald Isle because of the bright verdure of its grass and other vegetation, a condition due largely to the frequent rains for. which the island Is noted. It is supposed that Dr. William Drennan (1754-1820) an Irish physician and poet, was the first to use the name. In a poem entitled “Erin," published in 1795, he speaks of “the men of the , Emerald Isle.” Later, in a letter pub- •' lished in London Notes and Queries, he said the name was original with I him. “Contact,” Verb and Noun IThe vrt-b “contact,” in the sense in which It has been rehabilitated, is transitive and requires an object I Therefore, one either contacts a man or makes a contact with him. In the latter instance, contact is a noun.— Literary Digest Mermaid* Mermaids were mythical befogs, half woman, half fish, about which were woven fanciful stories by fertile Imag . Inations to entertain children of medieval days. It is generally sup{>osed that these stories were inspired by the fact that certain marine animals such as the seal, walrus and sea cow (which stands up in weedy shallows and nurses Its young at the breast) rel semble human beings to a certain ex- ! tent when viewed at a distance. All mermaids in shows or carnivals are fakes, but they draw a good crowd just the same.—Pathfinder “Seeing the Lion*” Until 1834, a menagerie was one of the attractions at the Tower of London. and visitors were taken there to “see the lions.• Then the phrase “seeing the lions” was applied to seeing celebrities. From this it is just a step to the phrase “to lionize a person.” This means making a fuss of some one in whom the people are Interested and. Incidentally, showing him off to our friends.—Answers Magazine. —O' NOTE MUST BE PAID At the Chamber of Commerce meeting, Tuesday noon, it was learned that channel notes due to the State Bank of' Syracuse . have been placed in the trusteed assets of the bank and must be paid. The notes and interest amounts to about SBO. The money was borrowed to deepen the channel connecting the two lakes, several years ago. Various schemes have been used to pay off this note, so that it has gradually been reduced. A committee is to be appointed at the next meeting of the Chamber of Commerce to make plans for raising money to pay off the note. It is thought that a Fat and Lean basketball game might be played, with another cake walk, to raise this money. DIES IN WARSAW Dr. W. G. Mabie, veterinarian in this county for 40 years, and one time sheriff of the county, died in Warsaw yesterday. He is the grandfather of Mrs. Ralph Method and Eldred Mabie of Syracuse.
THIS aerial picture shows the Griffith observatory and hall of science, situated In the mountains overlooking Hollywood, Calif., which has just been completed. Unique in that it Is for public education and pleasure rather than for purely scientific usage, the new observatory's scientific equipment ranks with the nation’s finest.
CHIC SALES (Continued from page One) inches of the floor, a new pit should be dug and the privy house placed over it. If the pit is to be cleaned instead of being abandoned, this privy house may be removed to provide entrance to the pit. After moving or cleaning is completed the mound about the pit should be repaired so that when the privy house is replaced a fly-tight seal will again be formed around the concrete curbing. / “THIS CARD MUST NOT BE REMOVED OR DEFACED.” Indiana State Division of Public Health. Privy Rules. Among the construction regulations by these ‘‘Specialists” are these: “No privy may be placed within 100 feet of a well except by permission of the local health officer; and in no case within 50 feet. All buildings must be constructed to exact specificatons. No privy shall be placed within 3 ft. of any other building or fence; no sanitation unit shall be placed in any garage, barn or other building. No privy shall be constructed with a gable type roof. Only the shed type roof shall be permitted. The back edge of each seat cover or lid shall be exactly one-half inch from the vent pipe. ALL LIDS MUST BE SELF CLOSING. All seats shall be sealed onto risers with roofing cement, asphaltic cement or some other good plastic compound, and made fly-tight. This type of toilet shall not be cleaned. When the pit or vahlt is filled within 18 inches of the floor, a new pit should be dug and curbed and the building placed over it. Sponsor Privies. - The Indiana Copununity Sanitation is sponsored by the United States Public Health Service, Indiana Division -of Public Health, Federal Emergency Relief Administration. They are spbnsoring the privy project to prevent the spread of filth-borne diseases such as typhoid, diarrhea, dysentry, etc. Further information as to how to obtain a privy may be obtained from local health officer or FERA worker, according to the information given out. 0 MUST PAY THE UP-KEEP. The cost of administration to county farmers who signed the corn-hog reduction contracts, from July 1 until the end of 1934 contracts will be $11,848, according to J. Alva Mellott, emergency agricultural agent. Each farmer is assessed according to the amount of money he receives from the government. The average cost of administration in this county is $3.15 per contract. 0 I TO HAVE FISH SUPPER Members of the Wawasee Post of the American Legion are to enjoy a stagg supper at Esteps cottage near King’s grocery on Kale Island. It is to be a fish supper, served Monday evening, Oct. 15. 0 0 BABY DIES. Last Thursday, the nine days old baby of Mr. and Mrs. George Neuhaus died, enteritis being the cause of death. O—; UNDERGOES OPERATION Fred Mick, 12, son of Mr. and Mrs. James Mick underwent an appendicitis operation in the Goshen hospital, Monday. 0 CUTS FINGER H. L. Bird reached into a corn crib, Sunday, and almost cut off one of his fingers when his hand came into contact with some broken glass. 0 Mrs. Henry Crouch and Mrs. Frank Bushong assisted by Mrs. Gerald Bushong entertained the Intermediate class of the U. B. Sunday school. There were 21 present after a dinner the evening was spent in games. — J Guy Bushong and family expect to move to Pierceton on Saturday for the winter. ft Occasionally you find a man so versatile that he can make a different kind of a fool of himself each time you see him. i
‘ I Df OUK CHURCHES | J CHURCH OF THE BRETHREN Evangelise J. Edwin Jarboe, pastor. Guy Symensma, S. S. Supt. Sunday School, 10:00 a. m. Preaching Service, 11:00 a. m. Evening Service, 7:30 p. m. Aid Society, each Thursday. METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH A J. Armstrong, Minister. Chester Langston, Supt. Church School, 9:45 a. m. Morning Worship, 11:00. Evening worship, 7:00. EVANGELICAL CHURCH Rev. Samuel Pritchard, Pastor. C. E. Beck, S. S. Supt. Sunday School, 9:45 a. m. Morning Worship, 10:45 a. m. GRACE LUTHERAN CHURCH < Rev. John A .Pettit. Pastor. Vernon Beckman, Supt. Sunday School, 9:45 a. m. Luther League, 6:30 p. m. Evening service, 7:30. ZION CHAPEL. Emerson M. Frederick, Pastor. Sherman Deaton, Supt. Sunday School, 9:30 a. m. Evening worship 7:00. Indian Village. Sunday School, 9:30 a. m. Morning Worship, 10:30 a. n? • CHURCH OF GOD Rev. Victor Yeager, pastor. Clee Hibschman, S. S. Supt. Sunday School, 10:00 a. m. Morning Worship, 11:00. Christian Endeavor, 6:00 p. m. Evening service at 7:00 p. m. Prayer hour Thursday-<(:30 p. m. LAKESIDE U. B. CHURCH Rev. E. C. Neidenbach, Pastor. Syracuse. Sunday School, 9:45 a. Cn. Evening Worship, 7:00 p. m. Prayer Service, Thursday 7:30 p.nx Concord. Sunday School, 10:00 a. m. Morning worship, 11:00 a. m. Indian Village. Sunday School, 9:30 a. m. n, 1, NOTICE In co-operation with other hanks, The State Bank of Syracuse will be closed all day Oct, 12, Columbus Day. o POLITICAL CARD. DEMOCRATIC TICKET For Treasurer. ERNEST MYERS. 0 —: Doin’t worry—there will be lots of moonshine on the roof this month. Garnett Latham DENTIST Office Hours 9 to 12 and 1:30 to 6 Evenings by Appointment Phone 77J or 77R 9-1-34 —A UCTIONEER—PATRONIZE HOME TRADE I Will Do Your Work Reasonable Telephone Johnson Hotel. 11-1-34
Coal RED ASH—Genuine Black Gold. The distinctive coal from Eastern Kentucky More Heat Little Ash Clean Less Soot Holds Fire Burns Longer Economical SEE US FOR YOUR NEEDS Stiefel Grain Co. PHONE 886
Why Do most coal users compare all coals with Marathon Red Ash? REASON —Marathon Red Ash is the Standard of Comparison. Less than a ba. -2% * ash to the Ton Moisture ;. 1.74 Red Ash 1.44 Su!phur 4.52 Volatile3B.42 ” Carbon ” Z 57.48 T * U * (Heat units per pound) IH.M Disher’s Inc. Phone 98J
THURSDAY, OCT. 11, 1934
MOCK’S BOAT LIVERY —for— TIRE REPAIRING VULCANIZING . ACETYLENE WELDING Lawn Mowers Sharpened and Repaired South Side Lake Wawasee NEAR WACO Phone 504 —— Syracuse , OPTOMETRIST GOSHEN, INDIANA. ROY J. SCHLEETER —GENERAL INSURANCE—FIRE - LIFE - AUTOMOBILE ACCIDENT - and - HEALTH PHONE 80 — OVER THE P.O. I \ 6-1-34 Phone 889 Box 171 Watch and Clock Repairing I A. J. THIBODEAUX First House South of U. B. Church j Lake St., Syracuse, Ind. 3-24-35 GEO. L. XANDERS ATTORNEY-AT-LAW ‘ Settlement of Estates Opinions on Titks FIRE and OTHER Insurance. Phone 7 Syracuse, Ind.
CRYSTAL Ligonier Thurs. Oct. 11— ‘•THE LIFE OF VIRGIE WINTERS” Ann Harding and John Boles in one of the grandest films of the season. See it. Oct. 12-13— . “SPEED WINGS Tim McCoy in a drama of men who risk their lives for the future of aviation. Sun.-Tues.—Oct. 14-16— “CARAVAN” Loretta Young,. Jean Parker, Charles . Boyer and Phillips Holmes in musical romance. Its beauties will hold . you breathless. Its splendor will make you speechless. Its melodies will leave you marvelling. Its something different. Weds.-Thurs. Oct. 17-18— “SPITFIRE” Katharine Hepburne, with Robert Young and Ralph Bellany. You’ll love her as tl>e mountain madcap whose flaming love set fire to the hills. Also “3 Little Pigs, a Selly Symphony in color. Wednesday Is Bank Night COMING— Sun.-Tues. Oct. 21-23— WILL ROGERS IN “JUDGE PRIEST” from Ervin Cobb’s great story. •»
