The Syracuse Journal, Volume 27, Number 50, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 11 April 1935 — Page 8

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WHAT WAR waa caused by the lose of Jenkins' ear? See next week’s Journal. FOR SALE —Lawn Grass Mixture —Shady Grass, Ky. Bluegrass, Red Top, White Clover. Fertilizer for Lawns and Gardens. Stiefel Grain Co. 50-ts ~MR. MOTORIST—You are on the!* Spot—with that worn out winter oil in your car. Better change to Penns. Oil Now. It will save you more than the cost of the oil later on. Authorized dealer for Sturdee Penn and Quaker State Oils. Syracuse Auto Sales. 50-It FARM LOANS—Ample funds available to loan on extra well improved farms of 40 acres or more, for 5,7, or 10 years. • No stock subscription or liability for debts of others. Prompt service. If in need of money, be sure to see or write me. Howard Prickett, Nappanee, Ind. 50-4 t NEW TREATMENT IS EFFECTIVE FOR CONTROL OF SMUT LAFAYETTE? Ind. — Although moat farmers who grow oats are familiar with the formaldehyde treatment to control smut, many are not aware of a new treatment, recently discovered, that is superior to the formaldehyde treatment in some ways, according to Dr. C. T. Gregory, extension botanist of Purdue University.* It is the Ethyl Mercury Phosphate (New Improved Ceresan) treatment, which consists of an organic mercury dust that is mixed with the seed in the dry form. Dr. Gregory outlines the procedure as follows: The treatment consists of mixing one-half ounce of this organic mercury dust with each bushel of seed, and it is not necessary to use any particulac kind of apparatus for the work, for merely shoveling the oats and dust together will be sufficient. Any sort of a closed revolving container will also do a highly effective job. After this application the oats are covered with blankets or sacks for at least 10 hours. After this the seed may be planted at once or may be sacked and held till planting time However, it is best not to store the treated oats longer, than four weeks before planting. This treatment not only kills the smut, but experimental evidence indicates that the treated oats will yield one or two bushels more than the untreated. This means that even though there is no smut in the crop the small increase in yield will pay the cost of treatment. In this case the farmer can insure the crop against smut and get paid for doing it. One objection to this treatment is that the dust may be injurious to the operator if inhaled in quanities. Always wear a mask of a dampened cloth or sponge over the nose and mouth while working with thia dust. Treated seed should not bo fed to farm animals because of the poisonous nature of the material. . - o— They used to say that Uncle Sam was a pretty shrewd business man but Europe certainly outsmarted us when they borrowed all that money. - 0— _ If you imagine there is anything green about a grass widow you’re it.

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Syracuse and Turkey Creek Township Taxpayers! You May Pay Your Taxes Here MAY 6th is the final date to avoid being delinquent. You may also file ! Mortgage Exemption here during the month of April. The State Bank of Syracuse

I » I I IN OUR CHURCHES ! J METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH Rev. F. A. Armstrong, Minister. W. G. Connolly, S. S. Supt. Church School, 9:45 a. m. Morning Worship, 11:00. ZION CHAPEL. Emerson M. Frederick, Pastor. Sherman Deaton, Supt. Sunday School, 9:30 a. m. Morning Worship, 10:30 a. w Evening Worship, 7:00 p. m. Indian Village. Sunday School, 9:30 a. m. Evening worship 7:00. LAKESIDE U. B. CHURCH Rev. E. C. Neidenbach, Pastor. Syracuse. Sunday School, 9:45 a. m. Morning Worship, 10:45 a. m. Prayer Service, Thursday 7:30 p.m and Council meeting by all Sunday School teachers. On Easter Sunday evening, April 21, a three-act drama entitled “The Challenge of the Cross” will be given at 7 o’clock. Ceacord. Morning Worship, 9:45 a. as. Sunday School, 10:30 a. m. # Indian Village. Sunday School, 9:30 a. m. CHURCH OF GOD Rev. Victor Yeager, pastor. CleOHi bach man, S. S. Supt. Sunday School, 10:00 a. in. Morning worship, 11:00 a. m. No evening Service. Prayer service, Thursday, 7:30p.m. EVANGELICAL CHURCH Rev. Samuel Pritchard, Pastor. P. W. Soltau, S. S. Supt. Sunday School, 9:45 a. m. Morning worship, 10:45 a. m. In the evening. Baccalaureate services at the High school. GRACE LUTHERAN CHURCH . Rev. John A .Pettit. Pastor. C. J. Kline, Supt. Sunday School, 9:45 a. m. No preaching Service Sunday. Mid-week Lenten Service, Tuesday at 7:30. You are invited to worship with us CHURCH OFTHE BRETHREN Evangelist J. Edwin Jarboe, paaloi Guy Symensma, S. S. Supt. Sunday School, 10:00 a. in. Preaching Service, 11:00 a. m. Aid Society, each Thursday. Attendance last Sunday - 225 Goal for next Sunday - 226 . Communion April 21st., 7p. m. No services Sunday evening because of Baccalaureate services in the High school building. 0 I 1 ’ —* 1 THE GARDEN GUIDE I | Seedsmen have been working for many years upon the selection of certain vegetable varieties that are resistant to various diseases. Much has been accomplished by improving and making selections from the old standard strains, and by crossing are recrossing the varieties a high degree of resistance has been built up. A few years ago it looked as if cabbage yellows would destroy the crop entirely as this disease lives over in the soil and is rather easily transmited to the plant. Various seedsmen and Experiment Station undertook the task of building up resistance and now we find early, rnid-eeason, and late cabbage varieties suitable for any gardener. Sweet corn was another vegetable attacked by a troublesome disease and this was overcome, by breeding work, for the early Bantam types of sweet corn. Watermelons, asparagus, tomatoes and spinach are other vegetables that are commonly grown, and resistant varieties may be obtained from almost any seed dealer. Those gardeners troubled with disease infected soil should plant these resistant varieties and in most cases almost a hundred per cent stand will result. The better strains of resistant vegetables are as follows: Asparagus—Mary Washington. Cabbage—Jersey Queen, Marion Market; also the Wisconsin strains, such as Wisconsin Pride, Bailhead, All Seasons, Globe, etc. Celery -Michigan Golden Corn—Golden Cross Bantam, Top Cross Bantam. Spinach—Virginia Savoy. Tomatoes—Marg lobe, Prichard, Break O’Day. Watermelon—Pride of Muscatine.

LICENSE ON COW DUE ON APRIL 12 Have you paid, for a license on your cow? According to the last issue of the Prairie Farmer: “Indiana’s New Milk Board with Lieut. Governor Townsend as chairman, and C. W. Hufh*"' rickhouse as secretary, has opened an office in the Federal building, Indianapolis, and are busy wrestling with the problem of getting order out of chaos in the milk marketing areas of the state. “The law is stringent enough if the board enforces it. The- board is empowered to regulate the entire milk business of the state, as it relates to milk, pasteurized or unpasteurized, or other milk, cream, buttermilk and skim milk for human food. It includes both base and surplus milk. “The board may investigate the milk industry and has power to subpoenae witnesses and records and take testimony under oath. At any reasonable hour it may enter a plant and examine records of milk dealers. In case of differences between distributors and producers, the* board may arbitrate differences. It can set up boundaries of marketing areas surrounding cities and villages of the state and may enforce its rules and the law through advisory boards appointed in these areas or on the market. Must Have Licenses. “The board will issue licenses to do business in four forms: to a distributor, a producer-distributor, a distributing broker, or a retail store. A distributor is classed as one who buys all or any part of his milk supply from producers. A producerdistributor is one who sells or distributes milk produced only from his own herd or herds. A distributing broker is one who purchases all the milk he sells already processed from a . distributor or a producerdistributor. A retail store is where milk is sold and not consumed on the premises. “Fees which shall he paid by the distributors vary from $35 to $825 annually, according to volpme. A distributing broker is required to pay a $25 fee regardless of the volume handled. A producer-distrib-utor managing or controlling more than three dairy animals, shall pay annual fee of $2, plus $1 for each multiple of three of such additional animals, except where he operates in territory outside of a natural marketing area, in which case the annual license fee shall be one half. “Application for licenses should be made on or before April 12, 1935 and forms can be secured from the county agricultural agents. ** 0 KILLED IN ACCIDENT When Jack Chatman, colored member of the CCC camp at Lake Wawasee fell from a train in the B. and O. yards at Garrett, last Thursday, his injuries were so serious that they caused his death. Condolence From Company 1532 CCC Camp S-88, Cromwell, Ind. April 9, 1935: We, the members of Co. 1532 Civilian Conservation Corps, wish to express our solemn regrets in the loss of one of our members and at the same time our sympathy with the* family of this lost member. Jack Charley Chatman joined our ranks late in October 1934, as a local experienced man. After about a week of conditioning he was add- 4 ed to the garage force of the ECW Department as a mechanic. He served in this capacity until Wednesday afternoon, April 3rd of last week. Jack, as he was called at Camp, was a conscientious worker and willing always to do hia share and even more than his share of work. When ever called upon to do something, he went at it with a smile and a joke for all around him. During his more than five months with us, he not only secured a friendship with all the boys of the Company, but he also had respect of all the men in command. We, who knew him more intimately, know he was a man who loved his family, oftentimes he has spoken of his “sweet little wife,” as he would put it in telling us of his implicit trust in her. Jack was trustworthy and regular fellow liked by all the Camp boys. In losing him, wo lose: first, a man, second, a companion and friend, and third, a willing worker. SUPPORT MONEY ALLOWED. In cicuit court in the divorce suit of James D. Jones, of near Syracuse, against Hannora Jones, $3 a week support money is allowed Mrs. Jones pending trial. Mrs. Jones filed a cross-complaint. A restraining order against Jones has been modified, but he still must not molest his wife. y RECEIVES HONOR Springfield, 0., April 11—Joseph Kindig, Syracuse, Ind., sophomore at Wittenberg College, was elected secretary of the college Y. M. C. A. at annual elections held bore yesterday. Kindig is a member of Delta Sigma Phi, national social fraternity.

THE Syracuse tfWMKAL

• COOKING *STARCMY* FOODS • <*a*e« a e. e « « It may be true, as some say, that good cooks are born, not made, but the born cook will be the first to acknowledge that there is much she can learn about her art. One of the principal reasons why we cook so many of our foods is that we like the cooked foods better. Few of us care to eat raw meat, raw potatoes, plain lard or suet, for they are not palatable until cooking changes the flavor and the texture to suit our taste. It is true that in nutritive value, nothing is added by cooking, and usually something is lost. However, some foods are made more digestible by cooking and certain dangerous bacteria or parsite that may be present are destroyed by heat. The substances that are found in largest quantity in the composition of most foods are either carbohydrates, protein or fata. Different cooking principles apply to each of these foods. In cooking, the carbohydrates of most concern are starch, sugar and the plant structure material, cellulose. Cereals and potatoes are composed largely of starch, candy chiefly of sugar, and vegetables and fruits have a structure of cellulose. In cooking, therefore, all vegetables and fruits are treated as carbohydrate food. Most starchy foods are tasteless until cooked. It takes heat to develop their flavor. They are cooked in either moist heat, as in boiling or steaming, or dry heat as in baking. Cereal products are dry, so they are cooked in water. Oatmeal, or any of the coarser grained products, are easy to cook because you need only to add them gradually to boiling water and let the bubbling of the water keep the grains apart, wth occasional stirring, to prevent the lumps from forming. When making gravy, white sauce, or pudding, a different method'is used. Flour and cornstarch are ground so fine that if they are put directly into hot liquid the grains, as they strike the liquid, cook and form lumps enclosing raw starch inside. The starch grains must first be separated by mixing them with cold water or fat, then added to the hot liquid. When making a lemon pie you encounter another principle. The filling is a mixture of sugar, water eggs and a little fat, thickened with cornstarch and flavored with lemon juice. But acid thins a mixture that is thickened with starch, so you cook the starch thickened filling for the pie before vou add the lemon juice. Brown gravy does hot thicken readily as part of the starch is turned into dextrin, that is why you use more browned flour than white to make gravy. Potatoes, unlike cereals, contain a great deal of water with their starch and their skin prevents evaporation of water. The structure of the potato is cellulose which is softened by heat. A baked potato tastes different from a boiled* potato because it is cooked in its own juice within its shell and browned on the surface. SMALL GRAINS HELP MEET EARLY PASTURE PROBLEM Pasture problems of Indiana farmers this spring will cause a greater use of small grains for this purpose than usual. Oats will give the earliest pasture of any thing that can be sown, and should be ready by the midlde of May and will furnish grazing until early July. Thrifty stands of fall sown wheat and rye may be pastured for several weeks during their eariy growth with little damage to the grain yield provided the soil is dry. Limited pasturing of small grains should not damage grasses or spring sown clovers, and under favorable growing conditions such pasturing may prove beneficial by reducing the growth of grain, and preventing lodging, says K. E. Beeson of the agronomy extension staff of Purdue University. Winter wheat or rye sown in the spring will usually give some pasture although oats are preferable and seed is generally available. Canadian field peas and oats can be used in northern Indiana only, as field peas will not stand hot weather. Rape and oats, or rape alone make a desirable hog pasture. Rape sown at two to five pounds on good sweet soil will furnish pasture all summer. For mid-summer emergency pasture this year Sudan grass is the only grass to consider, but unfortunately is very susceptible to chinch bug attacks. If sown in chinch bug infested areas, it will be wise to sow about a bushel of soybeans and fifteen pounds of Sudan grass. If the grass is destroyed, the soys will give fall growth for forage. From twenty to thirty pounds of Sudan grass should be drilled on a thoroly prepared seed bod in May or June if the grass is sown alone. Pasture from spring sown legumes or grasses in rotation cannnot be expected to give much summer pasture, but may be used for fall pasture if growth is sufficient Where Korean lespedeza is sown at the rate of 15 pounds, pasture may generally he expected in August with favorable growing ronditionft x.*"**-*.' n_ " * It’s the hard worker who usually gets the soft snap.

COUNTY NEWS (Continued from First Page) withdrawn ware announced as: Glen I. Rummel, Millard Stookey, William Qrr, Glen Walthers, George Long, Arch DeFrits and Wayne Mock. Earl Himes, North Webster is checker, receiving all reports. In this county 309 farmers have signed the contracts. On a charge of cruel and inhuman treatment, Bessie V. Cook from near Claypool was granted a divorce in circuit court, Monday from Otis K. Cook. c Mrs. Kathryn Jeffries of Mentone suffered a fractured hip, Saturday, when she slipped on a rug and fell at her home. Fire partially destroyed the brooder house on the farm of Sherman Bryant, about 3H miles northwest of Pierceton about 8 o’clock Sunday evening. Approximately 100 chicks perished in the flames. Dr. J. R. Baum of Warsaw escaped injury Monday afternoon when his new Hudson coupe went down an eight foot embankment and crashed I into a telephone pole on state road 115 about three miles south of Warsaw. Millard Wallace, 79, died Tuesday morning at the home of his daughter, Mrs. Oscar Rebman, four miles ! east of W arsaw. Oral Coyle, named by Mayor DuBois of Warsaw to serve on the county liquor board, has declined to do so. Dayton Paxton is the only member of the board, at present. The office of J. Alva Mellott and other emergency agriculture agents I will be closed, according to a letter I received by Mellott. The work will be done by “civil engineers” who I will be sent into counties by the AAA The letter received by Mellott from J. H. Skinner, director in charge of agriculture extension work states: We have received a statement to the effect that the employment of civil engineers to supervise the measurements and checkup in connection with the compliance on hogs and wheat will have to be paid from funds allotted to the state for AAA work. It is felt that the corn-hog work in the county can be successfully carried on for the remainder of the fiscal year by the county allotment committee and the corn-hog association, so your services will not be needed after April 15.” Pottowatomie Gardens, the Tippecanoe lake dance hall operated by Crooke and Crooke, which last spring was totally destroyed by fire is being rebuilt. The old hotel and telephone building at Leesburg is being removed to make way for. a new city hall building and fire station. Rolla A. Anglin, residing near Warsaw is seriously ill with bronchial trouble. Kosciusko county will ° receive $3,161.72 as its share of $306,744 in intangibles taxes being distributed by the state. Three fourths of the money will be allocated by the county auditor to the schools. The remainder is for general county use.

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ACTION DISMISSED. The action of the Liquidating trustees of the Old State Bank of Syracuse, against Eugene, Lilly and Fred Hoopingarner has been dismissed, at the request of the trustees, full settlement of $4,000 having beenn made. Mrs. J. H. Adrian and Mrs. Frank Maloy came from Loraine, 0., yesterday, to take Mrs. B. F. Hoy home with Mrs. Adrian, today,, for a two weeks’ visit. When the young bride has to roll up her sleeves and get busy with the weekly wash the honeymoon has set.

Garnett Latham DENTIST Office Hours 9 to 12 and 1:30 to 6 Evenings by Appointment Phone 77J or 77R 9-1-34 OPTOMETRIST - GOSHEN. INDIANA. FAIRY THEATRE NAPPANEE, IND. FRIDAY and SATURDAY April 12, 13 Janet Gaynor Warner Baxter In “ONE MORE SPRING” With Grant Mitchell Stepin Fetchit SUNDAY and MONDAY April 14, 15 W. C. FIELDS In “IT’S A GIFT” With Baby Leßoy ** WEDNESDAY and THURSDAY April 17, 18 “THE GREAT HOTEL MURDER” ° With Edmund Lowe Victor LeLaglen Rosemary Ames Mary Carlisle —— s ' — CRYSTAL Ligonier OPEN EVERY NIGHT Thursday, April 11— “WE LIVE AGAIN” A grand production starring Fredric March and Anna Sten. Don’t be sorry you missed it. Fri. ,-Sat. April 12-13— "TRANSATLANTIC MERRY-GO-ROUND’* Fun aboard an ocean liner, book your passage for a delightful voyage with Gene Raymond, Nancy Carroll I ana Jack Benny. Sun. -Tues. April 14-16— “BROADWAY BILL” Warner Baxter and Myron Loy, two brilliant stars in a heavenly picture. Its gay exultant, joyous, thrilling, the most charming romantic comedy of all time, and has the greatest horse race ever to reach the screen. By all means—see this outstanding picture. Sunday Matinee at 2:38 Weds. ,-Thurs. Apr. 14-15— "ONE MORE SPRING” Janet Gaynor and Warner Baxter together again in a romantic comedy drama of the Big City’s turmoil—A picture to delight every 2 Night*—Weds., Thun. ______ Thurs.-Sat. Apr. 21-23— EDDIE CANTOR in “KID MILLIONS” Thurs.-Sat. Apr. 28-38— WILL ROGOERS in “LIFE BEGINS AT 48”

THURSDAY, APRIL 11, 1935

MOCK’S BOAT LIVERY —for— TIRE REPAIRING VULCANIZING ACETYLENE WELDING Lawn Mowers Sharpened and Repaired South Side Lake Wawasee NEAR WACO Phone 504 — Syracuse A. J. THIBODEAUX Phone 889 Box 171 Watch and Clock Repairing First House South of U. B. Church Lake St. Syracuse, Ind. 9-24-35 ROY J. SCHLEETER —GENERAL INSURANCEFIRE - LIFE - AUTOMOBILE ACCIDENT - and - HEALTH PHONE 80 — OVER THE P.O. 6-1-34 GEO. L. XANDERS ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Settlement of Estates Opinions on Titks FIRE and OTHER Insurance. Phone 7 Syracuse, Ind. NOTICE TO BRIDGE CONTRACTORS: \ Notice is hereby given that sealed proposals for the construction of certain bridges described as follows, will be received by the Chairman of the State Highway Commission at his office in the State House Annex, Indianapolis, until 10:00 A. M. Central Standard Time, on the 23rd day of April, 1935, when all proposals will be publicly opened ana read. On the following “State Contract” each bidder shall file his “Wage Stipulation” with each proposal in accordance with an act of the State of Indiana, entitled “An Act Concerning the Compensationn of Laborers, Etc.” approved August 17, 1932. This form of Wage Stipulation is bound with the proposal. KOSCIUSKO COUNTY—Structures on State Road 30—Structure 30-K---1803A—1 @ 38’6” Steel Beam over Deeds Creek, 2.25 Mile East of Warsaw; Structure 30-K-1804—1 @ 30’ R. C. Arch over Robinson Lake Branch, 8.8 Mile East of Warsaw. A certificate of compliance on the prescribed form which will be furnished for that purpose shall be signed and submitted by all bidders in accordance with Executive Order No. 6646, issued by the President March 14, 1934 and the “Dyer Industrial Stabilization Act of Indiana” approved March 9, 1935. Only bids accompanied by such certificate shall be considered or accepted. The Contractor to whom award is made shall require subcontractors and dealers furnishing equipment, materials I and supplies to sign similar certifi--1 cates before making awards to or purchases from such subcontractor or dealers, copies of which will be I furnished to the contracting officer. Proposals must be made upon standard forms of the State Highway Commission. Plans and proposals may be examined at the office of the State Highway Commission, State House Annex, Indianapolis, or copies thereof will be forwarded upon payment of nominal charges. No refund will be made for plans returned. ALL CHECKS FOR PLANS SHOULD BE MADE PAYABLE TO “CHAIRMAN, STATE HIGHWAY COMMISSION OF INDIANA.” Immediately prior to this letting, each bidder shall submit an EXPERIENCE RECORD AND FINANCIAL STATEMENT, prepared on the State Highway , Commission standard form, which will be furnished free upon request. Experience Records and ' Financial Statements previously filed with the Commission will not be acceptable for this letting. Each bidder, with his proposal, shall file a corporate surety bond payable to the State of Indiana, in the sum of one and one-half (1H) times the amount of his proposal, and such bond shall be only in the form prescribed by law, and shall be executed on the form bound an the proposal. The right is reserved to reject any or all bids or to award on any combination of bids that is most advantageus to the State of Indiana. STATE HIGHWAY COMMISSION OF INDIANA. James D. Adams, Chairman. NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION No. 4600 Notice is hereby given that the undersigned have been appointed by the Clerk of the Kosciusko Circuit Court, in the State of Indiana, Administrators of the estate of ■ AMANDA L. XANDERS late of Kosciusko County, deceased. Said estate is supposed to be solvent. GEORGE L. XANDERS, ‘ IMILDA I. ABTS, ISRAEL L. XANDERS, Administrators. Geo. L. Xanders, Atty. March 11, 1935. 4S-3t. GUARDIANS SALE OF REAL ESTATE. By virtue of an order ot the Kosciusko Circuit Court, of Kosciusko County, Indiana, the undersigned, guardian of the property and person of Augusta Beckman, an aged and infirm person, will, at the office of Geo. L. Xanders, in the Town of Syracuse, Kosciusko County, Indiana, on the 27th day of April, 1935, Saturday, at the hour of 10 o’clock A. M. offer at private sale, for not less than their full appraised value, certain real estate belonging to said ward, described as follows: Tract No. 1. Lot number 14 in Goods Addition to the Town of Syracuse, Kosciusko County, Indiana. 'Tract No. 2. An undivided onethird interest in and to the West one-third of Lot number 80 in the Original Plat of the Town of Syracuse, Kosciusko County, Indiana. Said sale will be made subject to the approval of said court, and on the following terms and conditions: Tract No. 1»- for cash in hand; Tract No. 2, one-third cash in hand, one-third in 9 months and balance in 18 months, deferred payments to be secured by mortgage on the premises sold, and to draw interest from date of same. Tracta sold subject to all liens. OTTO C. STOELTING, Guardian. Geo. L. Xanders, Atty. March 26, 1935- 47-4 t