The Syracuse Journal, Volume 27, Number 45, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 7 March 1935 — Page 2

THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL REPUBLICAN. * Published every Thursday at Syracuse. Indiana. Entered as second-class matter on May Sth, 1908. at the postoffice at Syracuse. Indiana, under the Act of Congress of March 3rd. 1879. SUBSCRIPTION RATES .line year. In advance ..........82.00 Six Months in advance 1.00 Single Copies 05 HHi>orri|itiuns dropped If not renewed when time fa out. HARRY L. PORTER. JR. Editor and Publisher Office Phone 4 — Home Phone 994 THURSDAY, MARCH 7, 1935 Mrs. Stephen Freeman is ill with flu at her home this week. Henry Sloan is seriously ill at his home. B. -A. Holton of Chicago spent a few days this week with Deal Craft. Mr. and Mrs. Aaron Rasor were Syracuse visitors, Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Snyder were Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Dilien. Phyllis Jean Kern, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Forest Kern became ill with pneumonia, Saturday. Mrs. Amanda Deeter has returned to her own home after spending four weeks at the C. J. Kline home. . Miss Rosemary Snyder has been employed as ‘'relief" operator at the United Telephone Co. office. Joel Wilt is to referee the regional tournament at Kokomo this week .end. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Grieger spent Sunday with relatives in Hanna. J. M. Keller and his aunt, Mrs. Bondell of Lake Maxinkuckee were guests of Maggie Butt, yesterday. Mr, and Mrs. Adam Keim of So. Bend were guests of Mr, and Mrs. Ed Unrue, Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Schleeter of Benton were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Schleeter, Mr. and Mrs. Vern Davis of No.. Liberty spent Sunday with Mrs. Effie Strieby. 'Mr. and Mrs. Harold Bowser of Elkhart spent Sunday with Mrs. J. H. Bowser. Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Hoopingarner of Chicago spent. Sunday in Syracuse. . Mias Leila Connolly came from Chicago, Friday, to spend this week at home. The Bide-a-wee Club met at the home of Mrs. H. W. Buchholz, last Friday afternoon. Mrs. Everett Ketering, who was seriously ill with pneumonia, is reported as improving. Mrs. Dio Penainger of Dixon, 111. spent the week end with relatives here. Guy Symensma was sufficiently recovered from pneumonia and heart trouble to come to Syracuse, Tuesday. While cutting corn for the cow, Saturday, Mrs. Vic Niles almost cut off the first finger of her left hand, with the axe. Mr. and Mrs. J. O. Kants and Mr. and Mrs; Tom Truax of Nappanee spent Sunday afternoon with Maggie Butt. Mr. and Mrs. Sam Rasor and great granddaughter spent Sunday afternoon with Mr. and Mrs. Will Mallon. The Women's Home Missionary Society of the Methodist church met Monday afternoon at the home of Mrs. W. C. Ganta. The Missionary society of the Evangelical church met at the home of Mrs. J. S. Pritchard, Tuesday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Russell Stout and family of Akron spent Sunday with -Mr. and Mrs. John Stout and Mr. and Mrs. Roy Meek. Captain and Mrs. Harry Tetlow of the CCC camp have rented Mias Katharine Rothenbergor*s property on Huntington street. Ed Slams te. who was struck by a falling tree a week ago, is suffering with pleurisy. The doctor removed the middle toe of his right foot yesterday. Miss Myrtle Foxford left Fort Wayne yesterday, to join her parents, Mr. and Mrs. S. E. Foxford at Zephyr Hills, Fla. They plan to return north in May. Mrs. Lob May, who has been working for Mrs. Benjamin Chapman of Pottawatomie Park cut her hand so severely, Monday, that she was unable to continue work. Mr. and Mrs. John Fear of Marion spent Sunday with Mr. and

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Captures Laurels With Her Lambs

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Katherine Sheldon of Oneonta, N. Y., Is shown with her lambs that won top honors at the International Live Stock show in Chicago. This is the third time her lambs have won the first prize.

Mrs. Lewis Fear, who have moved 1 back to their home on Huntington i street. < Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Swenson and 1 Mr. and Mrs. Bob Hart of Epworth 1 Forest spent Friday in Fort Wayne, 1 and brought Harold Swenson home ’ for the week end. i The baby of Mr. and Mrs. Ed LeCount, not yet a year old, has ’ contracted pneumonia. Leonard 1 Myers, who lives north of town also ’ is ill with pneumonia. ; Rev. and Mrs. Jarboe were guests at dinner last Saturday at the Voorhees Cottage, Wawasee, and, were entertained by the Voorhees • * sisters. Charles Bowersox has bought a J new automobile, and M. E. , Rapp i is driving the car which Bowersox ■ . traded in. Ellwood George also has ] , a new machine. Dr. and Mrs. Garnett Latham j , plan to move to the former Nathaniel | ; Alt land home, as soon as the sale L of household goods b completed I ; Saturday. A clipping from a Florida news- ; paper states that Deloss Weaver was i among the passengers who rode in . the Goodyear blimp, going up from , St. Petersburg, Fla. Young Joe Bauer came “uptown” with hb father, Monday, the first time since he became ill with pneumonia. He was wearing a large grin. When Jerry Hamman was cutting brush at Henry Kolberg’s, one piece ; of brush scratched hb eye, not causing him to have a “black” eye, ‘ but a red one. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Weaver are ' moving to the Warren Colwell prop- ' erty next to the library, from New ’ Parb. Mr. Weaver plans to open a cream station in the Snavely build- I ing. i Mbs Florence Fester became night < telephone operator, the first of the ' month, succeeding Mrs. Carrie* 1 Craft. Mbs Lucille Kitson went on I ' full time instead of part time, in ' i the former position of Mbs Foster. | J Among those from out-of-town ’ < who attended the funeral of Frank < Bushong were: Earl Miller of Elk- 1 hart; Truman Miller of Atwood; El- 1 don Miller of Laporte; Marion Daus- I man of Sarinac, Mich. * < Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Baumgartner < bought the property of John Byland < Sr., on North Huntington street, < and moved there the first of the week. Mrs. Byland, who has been ill, b slaying at the home of Mr. ‘ < and Mrs. Paul LeCount, and Mr. Byland b staying at hb so- *s home. Roy Rogers of Millersb rg ob- < tained the contract to paint all of the Standard Oil filling stations in Indiana, and Dan Wolf b working for him. They are at present at work • in the southern part of the state, I and will not likely bo home for two I weeks. f William Lanta, 75, of Millersburg s who was moving to the home of hb 1 son near Syracuse, suffered a brok- > on leg, Saturday. He and another’ son, Robert, were loading coal, to move it, and when the team start- I ed, a fence pest was knocked' against Mr. Lanta’s leg, breaking ft. ; Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Hamman spent * Saturday evening with Mr. and Mrs. | Ira Gants in Warsaw. They went ‘ with Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Method to Warsaw, where the latter named couple vbited Mrs. Method's grandmother, Mrs. Mabie, who was ill. there. Mr. and Mrs. Immell of Dunlap came to Syracuse, Sunday, to help their daughter and husband, Mr. and Mrs. Steve Finton, move to their new home on Huntington street, Monday. Mrs. Immell remained to spend a few days with her daughter. Spring b coming. Robins, redwinged black birds, meadow larks, blue birds have been reported at various points of town, and Maggie Butt said the\ kingfish moved to Butt's landing, the first of thb week, and on Monday it was reported that Xanders’ bees appeared in front of Thornburg Drug Co., and the postoffiee. [ Mr. and Mrs. Joe Rapp have rent-I

ed the lot which b at the rear of their property, from Jim Juday, in order to make a playground for their children. The goat which had been quartered on the lot, which belonged to A. O. Winans is now the property of Stanley Hoopingarner. Mrs. Minnie Clemens is recovering from her heart attack of last week. Mrs. Guy Hickman b assbting with heir work. Mr. and Mrs. Eston M. McClintic went to Mrs. Clemens’ home, Sunday, taking their chicken dinner with them, so that they might have dinner together. Ned Stuckman has moved to the Lew Fear property near Buttermilk Point, and Mr. and Mrs. Aaron McClintic have moved from their farm to the house vacated by Stuckman, across the road from the Johnson hotel. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Larson are moving to the McClintic farm home, and the Dan Neff farm which they are vacating b to be occupied by Mr. and Mrs. Emerson Neff. Milt Brown only received six birthday cakes, when almost all of the members of hb family and their families attended hb 81st birthday party Wednesday evening last week. A pot luck supper was enjoyed by Mr. and Mrs. Dave Brown, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Brown, Mr. and Mrs. Vern Brown and sons, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Davault and family, Mr. and Mrs. Chester Brown and family and Mr. and Mrs. Roy Brown. • * a T —* ——•” * e • NATIVE STRAINS • • OF CLOVER SEED • • BEST IN INDIANA* LAFAYETTE, Ind.-Clover seed produced from native strains in Indiana, Ohio, and several nearby corn belt states has shown the best adaption to northern Indiana conditions of any seed tested at the Purdue University Agricultural Experiment Station, according to a report released here recently. Seed produced in Michigan, Minnesota, Wisconsin and Idaho has been almost as good, but Oregon and foreign strains have either winter killed, given low hay yields, or shown disease susceptibility. Tennessee dbease resistant strains have shown excellent adaption to southern Indiana. Fortunately the Hooier farmer is not forced to go outside the area of Ohio, Indiana and Illinois for clover and abike seed thb spring, as this area harvested over one-h alf the seed produced in the United States thb past season. Indiana alone ranks third in total seed produced and has harvested eleven percent of the national crop. The Indiana crop alone b suffi cient for sowing almost a million acres of these important legumes. Western States, with the exception of Idaho, produced a very small seed crop, while Ohio, Illinob and Wisconsin all harvested good sued seed crops. The Purdue agronomists report that H oosier farmers are much more inclined to buy adapted seed now than they were a few years ago. From 1923 to 1925, they point out leas than one-fourth of the clover seed sow ninl nd iana came from within the state, and bee than half the seed came from states immediately adjacent, while at least twenty per cent of the seed came from sources producing seed poorly adapted to Indiana conditions. In 1934 no seed came from these sources, for 85 per cent of the se.ad was home grpwn and practically all of the remainder came from Ohio and other adjacent states. Greater care in purchasing adapted seed should lead to more success with clover seedings under favorable weather conditions,declare the Purdue men. Hoosier farmers are advbed that recleaning red clover seed to eliminate dodder, plantain and other objectionable weeds b highly important in order to improve the quality of seed“ harvested in Indiana, as well as to keep farms free of these 1 :

The syracusr iourmal

AFRICA. Mrs. Walter Koher called on Mrs. Martin McClintic, Wednesday. Emanuel Click and son Glenn called in the Jacob CUck home, Wednesday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Shock of Syracuse were supper guests in the Eli Shock home, Wednesday evening. Mrs. Amy Wingard and Mrs. Rose Click spent Thursday afternoon with the Ladies Aid at the Phoebe Goppert home in Webster. Mr. and Mrs. Will Mock and Mr. and Mrs. Lon Klingerman spent Sunday in the Jonas Cripe home. Sunday dinner guests in the Elmo Shock home were: Mr. and Mrs. Chester Payne and three sons of Warsaw; Mr. and Mrs. Fred Kuhn and Maurice Dorsey. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Kline moved from the Hamman farm to the Cresset Kitson farm, Thursday. Neighbors of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Kline pleasantly surprised them, Tuesday evening, when all arrived with well-filled baskets for the evening meal. Those present were: Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Saidla, Mr. and Mrs. Eli Shock, Dick Knox, Mr. and Mrs. Elmo Shock and son Joe, Jonas Cripe, Mrs. Elizabeth Shock, Mrs. Sallie Lewallen and daughter Hazel; Mr. and Mrs. Sim Lewallen, Mr. and Mrs. Merle Gawthrop and daughters; Mr. and Mrs. Martin McClintic, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Wingard and daughter, Mrs. Jacob Click and daughters, Mr. and Mrs. Milo Klingerman. RICHVILLE Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Bo beck spent Sunday with Orba Bo beck and family. Carl Stettler and family called on Thomas Hapner and wife, Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Whitmer and son Robert of Indianapolb were Sunday callers at the Henry Whitmer home. Mrs. Mary Hire spent Friday afternoon with Mrs. May Ott. John Emmert and family called at the E. Emmert hoi e, Sunday afternoon. Robert Strieby and family spent Sunday at the Monroe Ott home. Sunday callers at the Hollb Blue home were, Mis. R. E. Treadway, Mr. and Mrs. LaTone Jensen, Mbs Mary Moats and Mr. Kelly of Fort Wayne; Mr. and Mrs. Morrb E. Stultz of Bluffton. Misses Wilma Jane and Neva Shuder called on the Misses Betty and Martha Hire, Sunday afternoon Milton Shuder called on John Griffith Sunday. Wm. Snider b confined to hb home with the measles. Mrs. George McDaniel is on the sick Ibt. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Self called at the Ernest Richhard home, Sunday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Orlo Green are improving. Mbs Barbara Baker spent Friday evening with Mary Jane Stettler. Mr. and Mrs. Dale Juday were South Bend vbitors, Sunday. Mrs. U- W. Granger, Mrs. Carl Moore of Mishawaka and Mrs. John Myers of Goshen called at the John Stettler home, Thursday afternoon. Mrs. Leslie Harper vbited in So. Bend and Mbhawaka last week. Mrs. Rachel Hire, who had been spending the winter with Mrs. May Ott b no staying with her son, Will Hire in Ligonier. WESTJEND Mr. and Mrs. Chester Berkey,, Mrs. Effie Berkey and family, Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Cooper of Goshen were Sunday guests at the Ed Berkey home. Mbs Ethel Vorhb, Mr. and Mrs. Emory Vorhb spent Saturday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Linderman. Milton Rensberger b not so well thb week. Roy Vail spent Tuesday of last *eek with hb uncle, Robert Vail, who b on the sick Ibt. Jesse Metz who spent the winter in Michigan, returned home, Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Emerson Neff and daughter spent Friday with Mr. and Mrs. Harry Roach near Millersburg. Ed Lenon b moving from the Daw farm to the Aeron McClintic farm southeast of Syracuse. Delbert Wagner and Mbs Grace Vander Reyden, Mr. and Mrs. Emory Vorhb of Goshen were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. E. Neff. Mr. and Mrs. F. Rotrdabaugh and children were Sunday guests of Mr and Mn. O. Isley of Rose Hill. Vern Kirkdorfer’s family b ill with the measles. ZION. . Mr. and Mn. Emory Guy spent Sunday afternoon with Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Smith and family. Mn. D. Clayton called on Mn. Ida Guy, Sunday afternoon. Mn. Jesse Miller and daughter Ethel called in the evening. A number from thb vicinity attended the funeral of Frank Bushong, Saturday. Those who called at the Ida Guy home last week. were. Mn. Lee Henwood and son Gerald, Mn. Eston K’ine, Mrs. George Stienbarger, Mn. Emerson Frederick, Mn. David s, Clayton, Mrs. Sherman Deaton and i Mn. Belle Strieby. Hazel Miller spent the week end

with Mr. and Mn. Harry Nicholai of Solomon’s Creek. Rev. and Mrs. Emerson Fredericks and daughter Phyllb Jean spqnt Sunday with Mr. and Mn. Harlan and family of Indian Village. SOUTHSHORE Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Cooper of Goshen spent Sunday with their son Russell and family. Roy Niles and family spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Bert Searfoss. Mr. and Mrs. Bert Searfoss spent Monday evening with Mrs. Jordan and Mrs. Snepp. Mr. and Mrs. Allen Beck of Goshen spent Sunday with Lester Mock and family. J. Riley and family spent Friday evening with Mr. and Mrs. Bert Searfoss. Mr. and-Mrs. Wayne Hoelcher and son spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Elwood George. Lester Mock and family spent Saturday evening in Goshen. FRONTJSTREET The first thing done when pioneers arrived in this country, was the building of a place for the family, a temporary home. They would first find a large trunk of a tree which the wind had blown down, and make thb the rear end of the house. Then a pioneer would plant some post 10 feet high, from which pole rafters extended to the log in the rear, and the sides and roof of the house were made of boughes and poles woven together, and a mackinack blanket was hung as a door to keep out the cold. ( In thb sort of home lived James Frier and hb family the summer of 1830 on the Elkhart prairie. John Walburn came to Union township over in Elkhart county in 1838. He said that he cut two forks, set them up against two trees a short dbtance apart with a cross pole. he placed split boards slanting, against the cross pole, and thb made a shelter for his family until he could build one. of those round log cabins. In 1836 John Jackson and T. G. Harrb, a young lawyer who was running for the legislature in Elkhart Co., canvassed the district. Harrb was talking to a member of the i Dunkard After listening to 1 Harrb foi - awhile the old gentleman told Harrb, it b no use to talk, for ; Colonel Jackson laid the first worm fence on Elkhart Prairie and I am going to vote for him. So the election came off, and the colonel won by a large majority..; Now we have schools financed by the state of Indiana to educate young men to be swivel chair farmers, or county agents going out teaching the farmer how to grow two blades of grass where only one blade grew before and how to raise more and better livestock. > In more recent years we have had I another bunch coming from under I the same dome, following the first set, teaching and paying these same farmers how to raise less grain by letting their land lie uncultivated, paying them to kill a certain per cent of their young live stock, and bury it in the ground. How could a private business stand up under such management? .— o — When it looked like Uncle Sam would join the World Court, the brass band at Geneva started to prac tice playing: “Santa Claus b Coming to Town.” But since the Senate got in its work, the band has started rehearsing: “What’ll We Do When the Rent Cornea Around?” —y j. . Long dreases certainly conceal a bad understanding.

WITH OR WITHOUT I GOLF I I • Golfers hereabouts helped Goebel Beer get going last summer. They sipped it before starting out, they gulped it after the 18th and they wished the caddy had brought along H a case for the long grind in between. They thanked us for ■ such a good boor. We thanked them for such a good boost.. . Well, wo mention this now because apparently folks po for ■ their Goebei, with or without golf. Sales, as we go to press, are up— * way up. Maybe it’s the fine tangy hops and fuHflavored malt, maybe it’s the mellowing in H Cypress Casks. Haven’t time to wonder about A . . ■ that. Too busy keeping up with call for 9 IjAAll I I more and more Goebel. GOEBELBEER I FROM TIE CYPRESS CASKS OF GOEKEL

• SEED OFFERED AT • • COMMUNITY SALES • • MUST BE TAGGED • ee»*4t«4te*e« LAFAYETTE, Ind.—Seed sold at community sales must be properly tagged with official state seed tags to comply with the Indiana Seed Law, according to Dr. H. R. Kraybill, Purdue University, State Chemist and Seed Commissioner, who stated that the law provides exemptions from its provbions only in cases where the grower sells and delivers the on hb own prembes and does not advertise the seed for sale. “In cases where persons deliver seed to community sales barns for sale,” he said,' “the seed in brought

Laziness Caused By Torpid Liver Scientists Agree

0 ■ Half-Alive Feeling, Bilious Attacks, Yellowish “Muddy” Complexion and Dizzy Spells are Common Symptoms. o New Medical Mixture is Fourid, Known as IndoVin, Which Helps Liver to Function Normally. Costs Very Little. o If you were told that the tired, lazy, drowsy feeling so common among people today b caused, in most cases, by an inactive liver, it would sound surprising, wouldn’t it? This is a .proven fact from actual records. But science has found a medicine that works with the food we eat and has amazing action upon the liver. Not a cure-all, not a

“patent medicine” but a new formuI la, called IndoI Vin, now being I intro duce d to I crowds daily here I in Syracuse at the I Thornburg Drug I Co. It was first I introduced a few I weeks ago, and I today thousands I of bottles are now I being sold in thb I city, and leading

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I c. H. MOSS* druggists State j Onjiarfor W lndo-Vm t^a t it b helping I people who had never been really helped before by ANY medicine. 0 What It Will Do Taken shortly after meab, IndoVin mixes with the food in one’s stomach, aiding Nature and throwing off pobons that foster stomach troubles and permitting the liver to function properly. It helps bring out impurities which cause half-siclc tired feelings and low energy. It will'relieve gas (frequently from the first dose) which may have been inside of your stomach for a long time, contaminating your blood and inner organs. By its natural cleansing action, Indo-Vin often puts a stop to the skin eruptions that are caused by impurities and will overcome the sallowness or “muddy”

under the provisions of the seed law and. must ba tagged with official state seed tags or the seller will, be liable to a penalty for violation of ; the seed law.". The law ‘perinits iudh Yales at 1 community sales if the seed b tagged in accordance with the law. Full information regarding the provbions of the State Seed Law may be obtained by writing to the State i Seed Commissioner, Purdue Univert sity Agriculture Experiment Station Lafayette, Ind. - I You can tell some things by watching your new neighbor’s dog. If he r wags hb tail up and down it b a r sure sign he was raised in a small II flat.

S' ■4Mb ■ HB M HfISKSiKkMOEMHHw£I sSEH

The Liver* When Sluggish and Inactive, Slows Down the .* Bile Flow,** Causing Headaches and Low Energy. complexion that is due to sluggish liver, and will put the rosy glow of health into your cheeks. Physicians will tell you that your liver bile must flow freely or, your food won’t digest. It just decays in the bowels and you have a thick bad taste and your breath is foul. Skin often breaks out in blemishes, your head aches and your whole system is poisoned. But Indo-Vin will make your liver more active, and clear away the old bile, thus relieving spells of biliousness and sick headache. This is no mere tablet, pill or salts, and not a powder, syrup or capsule, and it does not contain alcohol or a single habit-forming drug, but it is a scientific LIQUID ■mixture from 22 Medicinal Plants, all blended into one remarkable compound. It will not make you sick or nauseate you like calomel and ordinary liver medicines. It contains a combination of ingredients not found in any other known formula, and while it is being introduced in Syracuse every suffering person can take it at the small cost of only a few cents a day. So, if liver or bowel affliction or stomach distress is sapping your vitality, it would certainly be a mistake not to try it. Indo-Vin is now being introduced to the public daily here, in Syracuse, at the Drug Co. ii'l"