The Syracuse Journal, Volume 28, Number 7, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 13 June 1935 — Page 5

THURSDAY, JUNE 13, 1935

X MAIL AFRICA. Elmo Shock and family were supper guests in the Clarence Lewallen home, Tuesday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Becker and family of Toledo, were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Sailda Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Milford Gose of Kimmel were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Sim Lewallen, Sunday. Callers in the Elmo Shock home Monday were Noah Shock of Ligonier, Clarence Lewallen and son Jack, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Kuhn, Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Likens and grandson. Those who attended the Conference at Winona Lake Sunday were, Mr. and Mrs. Elmo Shock and family, Jonas Cripe, Elizabeth Shock, Mr. and Mrs. Eli Shock and Mrs. Alice Shock. Mrs. Ira Crow called on Mrs. Harry Wingard, Tuesday. Mrs. Len Niles visited her sister, Mrs. Melvin Niles, Sunday. Miss Buthlene Garber of Warsaw is visiting in the Elmo Shock home. CONCORD Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Mathews spent Sunday afternoon with Mr. and Mrs. James Long. Mr. and Mrs. Dewey Coy and Mrs. Marie LeCount were Goshen shoppers Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Everett Tom and family attended the Tom and Nine ' reunion Sunday at Black's landing. Miss Gwendolyn Fisher spent Sunday at Culver. Ind. The Concord Ladies Aid met with Mrs. Everett Tom last Thursday and’ was well attended. Mrs. Savilla Harkless of Chicago

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and Miss Mary Bushong visited with their aunt, Mrs. Guy Fisher Friday. • Those who were guests at the Dewey Coy home Sunday were Messrs and Mesdames Sylvester Coy, Everett Darr and Miss Dessie Hoover ( Mr. and Mrs. Cheater Stiffler and family spent with Mr. and Mrs. Merrit Rookstool. Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Bucher and daughter Yvonne, Wayne Bucher and Miss Mildred Troup spent Sunday in Fort Wayne at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Hygema. Mr., and Mrs. Perry Whitehead, George Strieby, Mrs. Marie LeCount and son Corlyss were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Bert Whitehead (Sunday. Mr. and, Mrs. Lawrence Dewart spent Thursday evening at the Bertram Whitehead home. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Mathews spent Sunday evening at the Paul Buhrt home. Those who were guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Wyland Sunday were Mr. and Mrs. Harry Warbel of Elkhart; Mr. and M rs. L. Gosey of Goshen; Mr. and Mrs. Frank Warble and family; Jamie Jaminson and Mr. and Mrs. Eldon Wyland. All enjoyed the day very much. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Godschalk spent Sunday in Elkhart, visiting his brother Henry, DISMAL I Miss Phyllis and Frederna Bitner spent a part of last week with Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Dillen and family in Syracuse. Mrs. Harley Byrd remains about the same. Messrs and Mesdames Ray and Roy Wilkinson were shopping in Fort Wayne one day last week. Harmon Harper is spending a few days with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Harper, before leaving for Camp Knox to be gone six weeks. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Swartz of I Cedar Point spent from Monday I until Saturday at Lake James, j Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Snepp and | family of Monroeville visited recentj ly with Lon Burley and Frank. | Mr. and Mrs. Fairweather of Ft. Wayne moved last Friday to their cottage at Cedar Point. Mrs. Dora Clingerman called at the Harley Byrd and Raymond Bitner homes one afternoon last, week. Mr. and Mrs. Milton Bitner, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Wilkinson and Herschel Bitner visited relatives at Elwooj| Sunday. SOLOMON’S CREEK Mr. and Mrs. Vic Niles, Mrs. Bender and Mell Tully attended the Hubbard reunion at Columbia City Sunday. i Mr. and Mrs. Allan Billington of Kalamazoo, Mich., spent Sunday afternoon with Mr. and Mrs. Ed Fisher. Mrs. Billington was former- ; ly Miss Mary Christy of thia place. I Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Jones spent ; one day last week in Goshen, visiti ing his mother. A program will be given at this ’ place Friday evening of this week | by the Vacation Bible school which

includes the four churches of this township. The two weeks Bible school ends Friday at Benton. Every one is innvited. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Mcßride spent Sunday at the lake. Miss Belva Roach, LaEtta Hillbish and Meriam Weybright are attending the Farmers Cooperative institute at Miller's woods near Goshen this week. Mrs. Albert Zimmerman and daughter Jaunita, Mrs. Louise Miller and son Bobby and Ralph Darr attended the reunion of the John L. Darr family at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Charley Darr, near Elkhart. Others present were Omer Darr and family, Willis Lantz and family, Mrs. Dallas Myers and son Billy, Mr. and Mrs. George Colwell and Richard Isabell of Syracuse; Mrs. Alice Darr, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Smalty of Leesburg, and Wilbur Burk and family of Elkhart. Geo. Darr was not able to attend, although he is very much improved. A short children's program will be given here on Sunday morning, June 23rd. Mr. and Mrs. Vic Niles, Mr. and Mrs. Art Nicolai spent Thursday evening at Wakarusa. Mr. and Mrs. Walter gave a birthday dinner Sunday in honor of their son George and Maurice and Paul Kohl. Those present were Mr. and Mrs. Fred Turner, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Nafziger of Goshen; Mr. and Mrs. Fred Kohl and son Maurice of Topeka, Paul Kohl of Bluffton, 0., Francis Koerner of Chicago; Mr. and Mrs. Guy Smith, Mr. and Mrs. s 0. B. Whisler and daughter Bernice. AH enjoyed a pot luck dinner and in the afternoon ice cream and cake. Mrs. Vic Niles called on Mr. and Mrs. Jay Rensberger of South of Syracuse Friday forenoon. Mrs. Albert Zimmerman and daughter, Mrs. Louise Miller and son Bobby, Ralph Darr, Mr. and Mrs. Omer Darr of Benton called at the home of Mrs. George Darr in Syracuse last Wednesday evening, where Mr, Darr had been staying. Sunday school Sunday morning. Preaching service Sunday evening. SOUTHSIDE Mr. and Mrs, Merl Laughlin and children were Sunday afternoon visitors in the Dewey LeCount home Mr. and Mrs. Jim Gilbert and family of North Webster were Sunday callers in the Tom Dempsey home. Mr. and Mrs. Chris Lehman and children of Kimmel were Sunday afternoon visitors in the Noble Ringler home. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Turner have moved to a farm near Wakarusa. Mrs. Dan Warbel spent last week at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Walter Rex of Avilla. Mrs. Frank Warbel and son Dan of New Paris were Monday afternoon callees at the Warbel home. Mr. and Mrs. Elmer McGarity spent Sunday afternoon in the Olen LeCount home, where about 25 gathered to eat ice cream and cake. Grandma Held is slowly improv ing. W ava Laughlin and daughters spent Monday afternoon in the Warbel home. Dorotha Held, who was on the sick list last week, is almost recovered now. WEST END Gerald Weybright, Harold Watkins, Billie Rowdabaugh of Bethany are attending the cooperative school for young people at the Amos Miller grove six miles south-west of Goshen, sponsored by the county farm bureau. Jay Warstler and family, formerly of Middlebury, spent Thursday night with the former's parents. Rev. and Mrs. 0. H. WarsUer. On Friday J. A. Warstler and family left for Virginia, where they will make their future home. A meeting will be held at the Church of the Brethren in New Pans June 30 at 2 o’clock for the benefit of the Baintertown cemetery Everyone who has relatives buried there is urged to attend this meeting. Wm. Madlam, Mr. and Mrs. Guy

THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL

Noble of Elkhart, Guy Symensms and son of Syracuse visited Henry Symensma, ho is very ill at the home if his nephew, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Linderman. Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Cooper are moving from Goshen to their farm on Road 6 east of the Bethany church this week. Mr. and Mrs. Eldon Geyer and family of Battle Creek, Mich., spent the week end at the home of their uncle, Jess Metz and attended the Conference at Winona Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. John Clem and children of Elkhart called on the Rev. Amsy Clem and wife, Saturday. Miss Hazel Eisenhour of Mishawaka spent the week end with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jess Eisenhour. Mr. and Mrs. Donald Arnold of Mishawaka were Sunday evening guests of Mrs. John Arnold. Those who attended the picnic dinner at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Seth Rowdabaugh of Winona Lake, Sunday, were: Rev. Walter ler of Bellfountaine, O.; Mr. and Mrs. Willard Burns of Goshen, Mr. and Mrs. Russel DeLanter and daughter of North Manchester; Ed Berkey, Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Rowdabaugh, Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Rowdabaugh and family, Mrs. Emma Baker and Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Sheffield. Rev. Manley Deeter and wife were guests of Mr. and Mrs. R. Neff Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Emory Vorhes of Goshen were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. R. Neff Monday evening. Mr. and Mrs. J. W Rowdabaugh spent Saturday night with their son and his wife, Mr. and Mrs. Seth Rowdabaugh. NEWJALEM Mike wife and Miss Lucile Pfilotoff of Mishawaka spent Saturday night with Joe Smith and family, and all attended the annual conference at Winona Lake, Sunday John Cable and wife of Elkhart; Emory Guy, Eugene Coy and Freda Juday called at the Joe Smith home Sunday morning. Walter Lippencot and family were Sunday guests of Roy Pinkerton and family. Miss Pauline Klinger called at the Ed Klinger home Sunday evening. Jesse Crowl, Emory Guy and wife called on Joe Smith and family Friday evening. The thresher ring of this community held a meeting at the Jacob Bucher home Thursday evening. 0 [ - ■ —-— LITERARY LORE By Bessie Witherel Ballard 1 — I .Good Afternoon! “The Partnership,” by Phyllis Bentley, The Macmillan Company, $2.00, released May 14, 1935, is a fascinating book. While its locale is the same as Miss Bentley's other stories, it is told from an entirely different angle. This story deals mostly with the lives of two English girls; one, the cultured and only child of a clergyman; the other, one of a workingman's large family of children. The book is subtly written; portraying not so much the actual lives of the girls as the indefinable, elusive, partnership that existed between them. One girl had love, marriage, children; the other had a romance which was so quiet and easy-running. Jt whs scarcely sensed by either her or her loved-one. This story is thought-provoking, unusual, and very readable. Summer reading is usually “light” reading: short-stories, magazines, mystery stories. The well-loved detective story runs rampant during the vacation period. That is aa it should be. We all need rest, relaxation, change. However, Doctor Eliot, of the “five-foot book shelf” fame, when he suggested “fifteenminutes a day for worthwhile reading,” meant every day, all year round. It is impossible to start any * plan of serious reading and allow it to be interrupted for weeks and even months at a time. Remember this and be careful not to let your “reading plan” be too much affected by the summer months. A good book for vacation-reading in “He Arrived at Dusk,” by R. C. Ashb/t a story, mysterious and full of breathtaking interest. Poetry is always delightful summer-reading. It would be interesting to re-read “Evangeline,” by Longfellow; “The Vision of Sir Launfal,” by James Russell Lowell; and the newer poems of Harriet Monroe. Weekly Maxim: Read something worthwhile every day; if only for fifteen-minutes. TAKEN TO CCC CAMP. * Curtis Rogers, 21, arrested by state policemen, Wednesday night last week at the Wawasee CCC camp following a fight in which the negro he struck, Cecil Jackson, was taken to the army hospital at Fort Benjamin Harrison, was removed from the county jail last Thursday, when it developed that Jackson's injuries were superficial. Army officers said the man ,ho wss a sergeant, would be disciplined with more work, less pay and loss of rank. o ATTEND CONVE NTION Members of the Syracuse Church of God attended the Sunday school convention at Auburn last Sunday.

I HISTORY OF SYRACUSE SETTLED IN 1835 I The following is taken from the history of Syracuse and Lake Wawasee, compiled by George W. Miles, and printed in the Syracuse Journal weekly, in 1909: These old, meaningful names of points and things around the lake! How our duty was to preserve every one of them! And how shabbily we have performed it! Black Stump Point! How many of the old timers remember the great blackened stump , there, that stood in the very brink of Wawasee, where the water washed its roots and the waves dashed against it. It was the thing that most attracted the attention of the visitor when he first saw the lake, and the vision of it was what he longest remembered. How in a haze, much taller and larger than it really was, -it seemed to rise out of the water far in advance of the forest of which it was a part, black and menacing like the god of the sea himself. Ah! there was but one Black Stump Point! But it is Lake View ' now, and there are thousands of Lake Views, and the name means little, if it signifies anything at all. If it is possible there ought to be another 4>ig black stump set up on the site of and in memory of the old one, and the place should have its good old distinctive name back again. And Conklin Hill! We will tell you something in a future paper of Old Billy Conklin, the first squatter upon it—an eccentric old fisherman and a distant relative, it is said, of the late Senator Roscoe Conklin of New York. And probably in all the land, or in all the world, there was but one Conklin Hill, and now there is none; for the Evangelical Church Association bought it some years ago, and they changed its name to Oakwood Park. And if we knew a hundredth of the Oakwood Parks that there are it would tire us to tell you of them. Morrison’s Island used to be Eagle Island because of the large Eagles that nested there every year. It was no man's land until after the war, and then William T. Morrison, in the early seventies, squatted upon it. Nobody disturbed him, nor did anybody think it worth while to’ lay claim to the few acres of land beneath him, and so, by the statute of limitations his possession ripened into ownership. And finally Wawasee came to be a summer resort and the lands running down to the lake grew to be valuable, and Mr. Moj-rison sold the few acres that nobody had thought worth claiming for more money than he ever earned in all his life, all put together, or will earn if he is permitted to live another hundred years. And Cedar Point, that pold promontory named for the red cedars that grew on it, has been given some new-fangled and meaningless name—we don't know what it is and we hope we shall never learn But one new name, lately adopted, is appropriate, thanks to Jim McDonald, of the Ligonier Banner, who invented it. It applies to the long and beautiful strip of lake frontage from, near Cedar Point to Morrison’s Island that has for many years belonged to Mr. Nathanial Crow—or rather, Uncle Natty Crow. No other name was ever known for it that we know of but Crow's Landing until last year Mr. McDonald suggested to the summer dwellers there that they name it Nattycrow Beach, and the suggestion was promptly adopted. This preserves and yet improves upon the old name. But they insist upon spelling at “Nattycro," with the final w lopped off, and that is a serious mistake that we hope Mr. MsDonald is not responsible for. Just east of the Syracuse works of the Sandusky Portland Cement Company lies Big and Little Buck. Islands. The smaller one is just north of the railroad bridge and is NO MORE GAS OR INDIGESTION Indo-Vin Proves “Godsend” To Indiana Stomach Victim. MRS. C. R. MOORE, of 1206 W. 18th St.lndianapolis, Ind., says: , “My stomach was

iso bad that every- | thing I tried to teat would turn inIto gas and bloat ■inside of me and ■I was always in ■such misery with Imy stomach origans that I never [knew what it was [to sit down and | sat a hearty meal [like a normal perhon does, for my [meals caused so > much suffering all through me that I was almost

MRS. MOORE

afraid to try to eat. My condition was awful and Indo-Vin was the first medicine in YEARS that had any effect on me. It has put a complete stop to all the gas misery and awful bloating spells I used to nave, and I am not afraid to eat any more because my food is digesting as food as it did when I was a child." ou can get Indo-Vin at the Thornburg Drug Co., here in Syracuse, and from all leading druggists throughout this whole wetion.

a round little knob rising but a foot or two above the water and no more than thirty feet in diameter. The large one lies across the channel to the east and contains eight J or ten acres. The Baltimore and Ohio railroad now rests on the center of it and has filled its tracks to the east so that it is an island no more. Many years ago good Uncle Jimmy Rentfrow, who came in 1836 and entered the farm now owned by Lewis A. Neff north of town, stood on the smaller of these islands and, though it was a long shot for the rifles of the time, felled a majestic buck deer on the larger one. Unable to reach the deer afoot he came to the village here and secured a boat and some From this incident these islands took their names. Dillon’s, named for kindly William DiUon, who was killed by a train while crossing the railroad bridge in returning to his home, is now Pickwick Park. And Conrad’s Island, to which Henry Conrad returned and on which he camped,' solitary and alone, every year until he was almost a centenarian, seems to have no name since Bob Epert died. It was Epert's Landing, or Bobby’s place while he lived, t But the land to the west of Pickwick Park which used to be an island, has had its first and true name recorded and shall ever retain it. Its first occupant was Kaleb Oram, uncle of Harry Oram of Warsaw, who with his brother Thomas squatted on it in the fifties. As “Old Kale” he was known, and Kale Island was the name given to his abode. And when the lake front there was platted as a village some years ago, as Kale Island it was recorded. o CONFERENCE HELD AT WINONA LAKE t A crowd estimated at 20,000 attended the services of the conference of the Church of the Brethren at Winona Lake, Sunday? The conference, in session for a week adjourned Tuesday. Dr. D. W. Kurtz, president of the Bethany Bibical seminary, Chicago, was made moderator for the next year. Among the resolutions adopted by the conference was the condemnation of the administration's AAA program in destroying food and crops. The resolution reads: “The destruction of the bounties of the earth may be necessary from time to time, but we deplore any program which gives to an economic group the power to produce scarcity.” Rev. and Mrs. Jarboe and many members of the local phurch attended the sessions of the conference this past week. o ’ TRAP SHOOTING STARTS The opening day of trap shooting at L. D. Mock's was last Friday, with lunch at noon furnished by the Ladies Aid. On the program that day were: Mr. Knox, who is known for his talks on trap shooting over radio station WOWO, Ft. Wayne; music by Stanley Mock and C. Bell; and Big Game Hunting in Africa, or How to Overpower a Mosquito, by Mrs. H. L. Porter.

DULL HEADACHES GONE, SIMPLE REMEDY DOES IT Headaches caused by constipation are gone after one dose of Adlerika. This cleans poisons out of BOTH upper and lower bowels. Ends bad sleep, nervousness. Thornburg Drug Co. —adv

SATURDAY GROCERY SPECIALS BAB-O-CLEANSER„ a can . 14c Another Full Size can for 1c TOILET PAPER, large roll : 5c BITTER CHOCOLATE, J lb. cake 15c RED BEANS, a 10c can for .... | 8c RICE, FANCY, 3 pounds 19c NOODLES, PURE EGG, a 25c pkg. for. 20c NEW POTATOES, 10 pounds 2sc Eat Fresh Vegetables APPLES, WINESAP, 3 pounds 25c ORANGES, Large size, dozen —22 c GEORGIA PEACHES, 3 pounds 25c ASPARAGUS, HOME GROWN, 3 bunches 24c GREEN ONIONS, large bunch 5c TOMATOES, pound, £loc Home Grown Strawberries, Head Lettuce, Cucumbers, Peppers, Etc. DRESSED CHICKENS—Young and Old SEIDER’S GROCERY

NEARLY 27 MILLION PAID INDIANA FARMERS ’ lafayette; tad. — Indiana farmers who contracted with the AAA to control their production of corn-hogs, wheat, tobacco and sugar beets, had received adjustment payments totaling $26,903,162.20, to April 30, 1935, according to word received at the state AAA headquarters here today.? Corn-hog producers had received the largest share of the sum with $23,497,265.08 going to them while wheat, tobacco and sugar beet producers received the following amounts respectively, wheat, $3,200,469.80; tobacco, $160,004.49; and sugar beet, $45,422.83. Kosciusko county received for wheat, $30,947.40; corn-hogs, $426,987.69. Elkhart county received for wheat, $41,089.03; corn-hogs, $165,062,69. 0 The ideal radio would be one which blew a tube every time the broadcaster lied about the product he was advertising.

MOCK S BOAT LIVERY —for— TIRE REPAIRING - VULCANIZING ACETYLENE WELDING Lawn Mowers Sharpened and Repaired South Side Lake Wawasee NEAR WACO Phone 544— Syracuse WHAT! Dance With the RHYTHM BOYS WHEN? Wed., Fri., Sal. Nights * WHERE? CHEERIO TAVERN MILFORD. DOOR CHARGE 18 cts. Grieger’s FANCY GROCERIES Phone 15 Free Delivery CASH POSTUM CEREAL, Package tWXV POST WHOLE BRAN CAKE FLOUR 9Qz* SwansdownWvV BAKING POWDER CALUMET, <6 AC SOAP, O. K., rtf' 6 Bars, mmC BLUE RIBBON MALT §2c RED KIDNEY BEANS OK#* 3 cans a. — Wt#V CORN FLAKES Q Large package KRAUT, Q„ Cm f. VC PE £. 9c

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