The Syracuse Journal, Volume 27, Number 27, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 25 October 1934 — Page 4
4
FOR SALE—Second hand electric washing machine. Osborn and Son. ’ 27-lt LIST your real estate with me. A. O. Winans, Syracuse, Ind. 23-ts FOR SALE—Apples, Jonathan, Grimes Golden. Forest Kern. 25-3tp FOR Autumn and Winter eggs, Guaranteed Laying Mash. Stiefel Grain Co., Syracuse, Ind. 24 WANTED _ Poultry of all kinds. Buying daily. Phone 22 or write G. C. Tarman, New Paris, Ind. 24-4 t FOR SALE SWeet Spanish Onions. $!.•• per 50 pound crate. Ernest O. Buchholz. 24-? WANTED —Anyone having a discarded blanket that they wish to dew nate for use at the city jail please communicate with Chas. Rentfrow, Town Marshal. 24-lt APPLES—Grimes Golden, Jonathan, Rhode Island Greenings. Price 25c to SI. 50 per bushel at orchard in your own container. Stephen Freeman. 24-ts ’ 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 FOR SALE—B-piece walnut dining suite, 2 oil stoves, Florence heater, desk, bed and springs, lawn mowes electric sweeper, 2 rockers, magasine rack, 1 12-gal. jar, floor lamp, bench wringer. Harry Mann. 27-ltp The Claypool Community Sale at Claypool Sale Barn, Tuesday, Oct. 30 at II a. m. Sale every Tuesday. Bring your livestock to these sales. Market for everything. Chas. Schramm. 24-4 t 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 on Sunday." James Dewart, Syracuse, Ind. 25-4tp The beauty specialist is a skin game artist. DR. FRED CLARK Announces be will not have office hours, Tuesday of Thursday evenings, after November Ist., except by appointment. He also wishes to announce that he is candidate for county coroner on the Democratic Ticket.
j State Bank of Syracuse : : Extends Credit. J to j PROPERTY OWNERS J • under Z National Housing Act :
Q DEPOSITS INSURED The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation < • WASHINGTON. D.C. CRnnn maximum insurance eennn >UUUU FOR EACH DEPOSITOR >uUUU ■* THE STATE BANK of SYRACUSE «
KLINK’S MARKET If You Like Chili Carni, you will want to try SWIFT’S PREPARED “CHIU”. It is hot and savory. Our Selected Standard Oysters are fresh and will make a tasty bowl of soup. USE SWIFT’S BRANDED MEATS Phone 76 - Phone Order
I IN OUR CHURCHES I J METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH A. J. Armstrong, Minister. Chester Langston, Supt. Church School, 9:45 a. m. Morning Worship, 11:00. Evening worship, 7:00. 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 OP THE BRETHREN Evangelist 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. LAKESIDE U. B. CHURCH Rev. E. C. Keidenbach, Pastor. Syracuse. Sunday School, 9:45 a. m. Morning worship, 10:45 a. m. Prayer Service, Thursday 7:30 p.m. Concord. Sunday School, 10:30 a. m. Morning Worship, 9:45 a. m. Indian Village. , Sunday School, 9:30 a. m. y — GRACE LUTHERAN CHURCH Rev. John A .Pettit. Pastor. Vernon Beckman, Supt. Sunday School, 9:45 a. m. Nb preaching services Sunday. Luther League after S. S. EVANGELICAL CHURCH Rev. Samuel Pritchard, Pastor. C. E. Beck, S. S. Supt. Sunday School, 9:45 a. m. Morning Worship, 10:45 a. m. Sermon, “Andrew: The Man of Decision." ■ Co-operative Evening Service at 7 o’clock. Rev. A. J. Armstrong will preach. Special music will be provided. Church Night, Thursday Night. CHURCH OF GOD Rev. Victor Yeager, pastor. Clee Hibschman, S. S. Supt. Sunday School. 10:00 a. in. Morning Worship, 11:00 a. m. Christian Endeavor, 6:00 p. m. Evening service at 7:00 p. m. Prayer hour Thursday 7:30 p. m. 0 CLUB HOLDS MEETING The Wednesday Aftenoon Club met at the home of Mrs. A. A. Pfingst, yesterday afternoon. Mrs. John Harley reviewed the book, “All Passion Spent,” by V. Sackville West. The sextette composed of Mrs. Clark, Mrs. Langston, Mrs. Armstrong, Mrs. Pettit, Mrs. Colwell and Mrs. Sprague sang “Roses of Picardy." During the business meeting, plans were made for the baxar to be held the first week of December.
IrvmOutlteaders j;—a Not Like It Used To Be For a number of years the taxpayers have organized and re-organ-ized to demand a reduction in taxes. Way back when Samuel R. Miller was trustee Os Jackson township in Elkhart county and Tom Hendricks was governor, we had no county roads. Mr. ; Miller, the township trustee was not in the road building business. We had no road bonds and the trustee was not building gymnasiums and sticking a few rooms around them calling them school houses for the education of the youth. When the writer was a scholar we walked to school, instead of being carted in expensive, gas motor busses. About that time Mr. Mowrey was qounty superintendent of schools drawing a salary of about SI,OOO per year. He drove to some 90 schools with a horse and buggy twice a term. He held eight or ten teachers’ None of that now. The superintendent draws about $3,000 a year. Neither at that time did we have such a thing as A County Agricultural Agent. ,■ The U. S. had gotten along 200 years until the Purdue Experimental Mill began to grind Out experimental swivel chair farmers. They said the poor farmer was about to stiarve and did not know enough to lace his own shoes. So the county agent became a real hing and pulls the tax payers for about $6,000 a year. A lortg time ago the school teachers’ salary grab had not appeared: This did not happen until the Jim Goodrick laws ;came out. At this inie we not doubled the salaries of every officer from President lof the United States down to the Constable. At that time we were not paying Purdue $350,000 per annum, neither did we have corn borer I.scouts. We were not paying officers for inspecting farmers’ cattle. We were not prohibited from selling our grain for seed unless we paid some Purdue kid for a tag to stick on each bag. Our candidates in both parties are feeding us sugar-coated pills, telling us they will do so and so. When they get into office they forget their promises and create more offices and more jobs. When we get this tax down it will be when the people, the farmers and all are ready to go back to the days of Tom Hendricks. ' Along back there we did not have about Ilk) commissions. Taxes will never come down until the people are ready. I don’t believe they are sincere in their demands. They don’t Want to give up anything, Not so very long ago, over in Union township, Elkhart Co., they were holding meetings asking for tax reduction. At the same time they were circulating a paper in the township to force the trustee to build a community ‘ building, or gymnasium. Not long ago the county commissioners over in Elkhart Co., refused to give money to support a county agent. The farmers organization sued the county commissioners and forced them to hire a county agent after a vacancy of more than one year. When Mr. Hendricks was governor, the people traded in Warsaw, Milford ahd Syracuse. They did not go to some far off city to trade. At that time we had blacksmiths and horse-shoers and we were not building hard surfaced roads by taxation, along beside the . railroads for motor wagons to compete with them, to take the freight and passenger traffic from them. The railroads are privately owned and forced by taxation to help build these roads. To sum up the situation, we will not get tkx relief so long as we fool our money on this and that, UNCLE LEW NEFF. j. A TRACKS REPAIRED It is thought vibration of the trains on the crossing near the B. & O. station caused the water pipe beneath the track to become damaged so that it leaked in the joint. This was repaired at the expense of the town this past week. Other repairs made were on the side-track leading to the freight station. Rotted ties were removed from this track this week and new ones put in their place. 0 Miss Margaret Freeman came from Chicago, Friday, and with her father, Stephen Freeman went to Greencastle to attend the homecoming football game of DePauw with Joe and James Freeman who are stu- * dents there. |
Going Out of Business Auction SATURDAY, OCT. 27 at 12:30 P.M. Radios Electrical Equipment Fixtures OWEN R. STRIEBY’S RADIO SHOP
THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL
TESTIFY IN COURT On Tuesday, Mr. and Mrs. Hallie Holloway and Mr. and Mrs. Harry Culler, Dr. Hoy and Dr. Elliott of Elkhart were called'to Auburn, to testify in the Wright-Moore trial. This trial is the outcome of the accident, about two years ago, when Mrs. Estel Moore suffered an injured back. During the absence of Halloway and Culler from their rural mail routes, mail was carried by Ralph Godschalk and Oravl Klink. In the suit, Mrs. Vesta Moore is attempting £b prove reckless driving on the part of Stanley Wright of in whose car she and her husband were riding from the rural mail carriers meeting in Pierceton, w’hen the car left the pavement . on a curve and crashed into a tree. She is suing for $15,000 damages. | o TEN MORE COUNTY YOUTHS TAKE CCC EXAMINATIONS Ten Kosciusko county youths left Friday for South Bend to take a physical examination for entrance into the CCC corps. Among those ■ chosen for the relief work were: Vernon Sloan and Dall is Strieby of Turkey Creek township; Paul Wade of Lake township; Robert Grisso, of Jackson township; Harry D. Smith of Van Buren township; Henry Kilmer of Plain township; Lewis Kiser of Tippecanoe township; Roscoe Barnhart of Monroe township, and the alternates, Glenn Engle, of Wayne, township, and Vernon May of Van Buren township. 0 HAVE SURPRISE PARTY Mr. and Mrs. Roy D. Miller gave a birthday surprise party for their son Dale, Friday evening, Oct. 19. Those present were: Margaret Smith, Laura and Lucy Bachman, Nellie Baumgartner, Pauline Hibschman, Bernice Held, Helen Garrison, Lewis Firestone, Eugene Brown, Lester Lung, Hibschman, Robert Insley, Rolland Wogoman, Ralph . Miller, Robert Smith. Other guests j were Mr. and Mrs. Albert Troup | and Mrs. Ola Ketring and daughter ■ Shirley. Many good games were j played and a big birthday cake with i candles, and other refreshments were served, then nice presents were given to Dale and all left wishing him many more happy birthdays. 0 FORMER LAKE RESIDENT DIES Miss Letha Edgell, aged 27, died Friday in the St. Joe hospital in i South Bend, following a major ! operation, Wednesday morning. , She was born on June 4, 1907, at Buttermilk Point, and moved to tMishawaka in 1915. She was presii dent of the Business and Professional Women’s Club there at the time ;of her death. She is survived by ; her mother, Mrs. A. B. McNees ’ and a brother George at home in I Mishawaka; and a brother Scott, at > Cleveland, and her step-father. .Funeral services were held Sunday i afternoon. 0 CHAPEL SCHEDULE The Ministerial Association of Syracuse have arranged their sched»ule for chapel services at the High School as follows: October 12—Rev. A. J. Armstrong October 26—Rev. J. E. Jarboe. Nov. 9—Rev. J. A. Pettit. Nov. 23—Rev. J. S. Pritchard. Dec. 7—Rev. E. C. Reidenbach. Dec. 21—Rev. Victor Yeager. HALLOWE’EN PARTY. The Pythian Sisters will have a Hallowe’en party at their hall on Wednesday night, Oct. 31. A refreshment and entertainment committee has been appointed and a good time expected. Members are to come masked. LOCALS. I Miss Alice Mann is spending today in South Bend, attending the Indiana Library Association annual Conference at the Oliver Hotel. Mr. and Mrs. Dave Brown brought Paul Culler home from the Riley hospital in Indianapolis, Tuesday. He had been there since July 14th. From his knee, which underwent an operation, to his hip, his leg is in a cast, but he is able to Walk with crutches. The negro - singers from the CCC camp, and some of the other camp enrollees attended church at the U. B. and Methodist churches here in Syracuse, Sunday evening, the quartets entertaining with their spirituals. Dr. and Mrs. Clyde R. Landis and daughter Betty came from Chicago, Saturday night to spend Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Mart Landis. Mrs. Calvin Cooper of Goshen called there, Sunday noon. Mrs. Clyde Landis, who has been seriously ill during the summer has completely recovered.
I SCHOOL NOTES j Mereton Meredith’s mother is staying with Mr. and Mrs. Meredith during the younger Mrs. Meredith’s illness. She is recovering from the mumps. Mirs. C. A. Langston is teaching the Second Grade during Mrs. Meredith's absence, and on Tuesday, pupils of the class-brought flowers and fruit, made up a basket and wrote a letter to their teacher and took these to her home. • • • Others from the Grade school who are ill with mumps are: Margaret Whitmer, First Grade; Charles Searfoss, Second grade. • • * Paul Traster, Helen Lung and Harry Bishop were absent from the First Grade, the first of this week. • * w Philip Kern and Robert Byrd were absent from the Fourth Grade the first of this w’eek. « « • Last Wednesday afternoon, going home from school, Bernard Ray, son of Mr. and Mrs. William Ray, Fifth Grade pupil, fell in such away that the ligaments of his left knee were torn loose. • • • Another Fifth Grader who is suffering from an accident is .Donald Miller, son of Mr. and Mrs. Riley Miller. He fell from his father’s truck, striking the cement pavement and broke in halves his two upper front teeth. .• * • Report cards will be issued next Wednesday, as the second month of school work ends Friday. Richard Baumgartner and Richard Ruple have been absent from the Sixth Grade because of illness. * • * The band is practising to play concerts preceding each home basketball game this year, as is customary. The first home game is against Milford, on Nov. 2. ... This Friday and Saturday evening two different casts will present the Senior Class play. Bob Strieby was absent from school Monday morning, having spent the week end with his mother in Indianapolis. 0 FINED IN ELKHART CO. Lloyd (Midge) Felts, was arrested and put in jail in Elkhart, Sunday night, on a charge of public intoxication, when his car crashed into a truck driven by Harold- Klopfenstein of Paulding, 0., on U. S. Highway 20, miles west of Elkhart. Felts was attempting to pass another car when the accident occurred. His trial was on Monday morning, and he was fined sll. DRASTIC CUT For a Limited Time Only SAVE From (t»r 00 ON ANY SUIT OR OXOAT With Extra Pants Worsteds of Every Description Mall wool n adeto OrdelV by QcotcU WOOLEN MILLS " " Order Your Clothes NOW This Reduction is Subject to Withdrawal Without Prior Notice See Your Local Deale/
POLITICAL CARD. DEMOCRATIC TICKET 1 For Treasurer. ' ERNEST MYERS. County Commissioner Northern District. CHAS. W. HOLDERMAN County Commissioner Middle District CLAUDE M. SMITH 0 OBTAINS DIVORCE On the grounds of cruel and inhuman treatment, a divorce was granted Mrs. Maggie McClellan, from E. E. McClellan, in circuit court last Friday.. She was given the right to resume her maiden name of Maggie Butt. They w’ere married Jan. 20, 1917, and separated June 29, 1934. SHERIFF’S SALE ■ By virtue of a certified copy of a decree to me directed from the Clerk of the Circuit Court of Kosciusko County, Indiana, in Cause Number 19486 where in Frank E. Miller is plaintiff, and Samuel Dausman and Clgra Dausman are defendants requiring me to make the sum__ of I money in said decree provided, and t in manner and form as therein provided, with interest and costs, I will : expose at public sale to the highest bidder, on Saturday, the 17th Day of November, 1934 j between the hours of 10 o’clock a. m. and 4 o’clock p. m. of said day, at the door of the Court House of Kosciusko County, Indiana, the rents and profits for a term not exceeding seven years, of the following injg described real estate situated in Kosciusko County, Indiana: The North Half of Lot 75 in the Original Plat of the Village of Oswiego, in Kosciusko County, Indiana. If §uch rents and profits will not sell for a sufficient sum to satisfy said decree, with interest and costs, I will at the same time and place expose to public sale the fee simple of said real estate, or so much thereof as may be sufficient to discharge said decree. Said sale will be made without relief from valuation or appraisement laws. HARLEY D. PERSON, Sheriff of Kosciusko Co. Sloane & Rasor, Atty for Plain. Warsaw, Ind., Oct. 23, 1934. 27-3 t
SYRACUSE Dry Cleaners M. E. RAPP Garnett Latham DENTIST Office Hours 9 to 12 and 1:30 to 6 Evenings by Appointment Phone 77J or 77R 9-1-34 iKEkLINGAMAN —AUCTIONEER—- ( PATRONIZE HOME TRADE I Will Do Your Work Reasonable Telephone Johnson Hotel. 11-1-34
Marathon Coal Hot - Clean - Low Red Ash 1 * — There is no other Coal sold in Syracuse that carries 14,821 B. T. U. (heat units per pound) of has less than 33J pounds (a bushel) of ashes to the ton. Disher’s Inc. j v Phone 98J
Coal RED ASH—Genuine Black Gold. The distinctive coal from Eastern Kentucky More Heat Little Ash Clean Less Soot Holds Fire Bums Longer Economical SEE US FOR YOUR NEEDS Stiefel Grain Co. PHONE 886
THURSDAY, OCT. 25, 1934
George Held left on Monday for Jorfolk, Va., where he has obtaind employment in a dairy. MOCK’S BOAT LIVErF —for— TIRE REPAIRING ' . VULCANIZING ACETYLENE WELDING Lawn Mowers Sharpened and Repaired South Side Lake Wawasee NEAR WACO Phone 504 — Syracuse GEoTIT XANDERS ~ ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Settlement of Estates Opinions on Titles FIRE and OTHER Insurance. Phone 7 Syracuse* Ind. OPTOMETRIST GOSHEN. INDIANA. ROY J. SCHLEETER —GENERAL INSURANCEFIRE - LIFE - AUTOMOBILE ACCIDENT - and - HEALTH ’HONE 80 OVER THE P.O. 6-1-34 Phone 889 Box 17! Watch and Clock Repairing A. J. THIBODEAUX First House South of U.' B. Church Lake St., Syracuse, Ind. 3-24-35 CRYSTAL Ligonier Thurs., Oct. 25— OF HUMAN BONDAGE” Leslie How’ard and Bette Dans in W. Somerset Maugham’s greatest novel. Fri.-Sat. Oct. 26-27— MAN TRAILER” Buck Jones as the fearless rider of the plains, blazing his way to triumph. Sun.-Tues. Oct. 28-30— ‘ LADY BY CHOICE” Lovable May Bobson and glamorous Carol Lombard in a tremendous successor , to “Lad/ for a Day”. It has the same laugh, tear and heart ingredients. The comedy hit of the season. We highly recommend it. VVeds-Thurs. Oct. 31-Nov.l “365 NIGHTS IN HOLLYWOOD” James Dunn and Alice Faye in a picture of Hollywood. Its Rackets and rewards. The pride of Peoria erpshes the Gates of Hollywood. Thursday is Bank Night, Nov. I—Because of Hallowe’en coming on Wednesday. Sun.-Tues. Nov. 4-6— MAE WEST IN “BELLE OF THE NINETIES” COMING—“2O Million Sweet - hearts” “One Night of Love” “The Gay Divroce” “Richest Girl in the World. ”
