The Syracuse Journal, Volume 28, Number 10, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 4 July 1935 — Page 10
WEDNESDAY, JULY 3, 1935
TO GIVE PLAY IN SCHOOL, JULY STH Indianapolis Co. to present Shows Two Nights Each Week During Summer, Here In Syracuse , The Barnstormers a well known company of players in Indianapolis are planning to locate in Syracuse for the summer in order to offer enertainment to the people of Syracuse and vacationists at the lake The company will give its first play Friday evening, July 5, at 8:00. The play to be given has been an outstanding success on Broadway. Members of the company are headed by Robert D. Maloy, the director, who has produced classical dramas for various High Schools including Cathedral High of Indianapolis and Warren Central High School. will be taken by Mary Early, who has had experience in the Summer theatres in the east, and John Culbertson Who has played with Hollywood Group Theatre and received exellent notice for his work in ’’The Wise Heart", one of the more successful productions of that group. Other members include Betty
The Barnstormers A Troup from Indianapolis Presents “APRIL FOLLY’* FRIDAY,. JULY 5 SYRACUSE HIGH SCHOOL. 8:00 P. M. ADM. 25c, 15c
Lakeside Garage Telephone 81-J Day No. 5 Night High Pressure Greasing Towing, Tire Repairing, Battery Charging. Service on all Makes of Cars.
The State Bank of Syracuse CHARTER NO. 345 Report of Condition of The State Bank of Syracuse, of Syracuse, Ind., in the State of Indiana, at the close of business on June 29, 1935. BANKING ASSETS. Loans and Discounts ___. — $ 84,538.22 Overdrafts — - I 2° U. S. Government Obligations, direct and guaranteed .. —•— 73,325.00 Other Bonds and Securities — 9 115.00 Banking House, $6,000; Furniture and Fixtures, ST; 400. w 7,400.00 Other Real Estate Owned —— 976.00 Cash on Hand and Balances with other Banka 73,262.63 Exchange# and Cash Items• 5,226.48 TOTAL BANKING ASSETS- 253,844.53 BANKINK LIABILITIES Demand Deposits Individual *__s 93,726.98 Time Deposits including Time Cert, of Deposits 48,225.26 Savings or Thrift Deposits 6,048.92 Deposits of the State and Political Subdivisions 47,995 37 Deposits of Other Banks, Cashier’s and Certified Checks 7,780.11 Total Deposits 203,776.64 Bills Payable None. Rediscounts None. Securities Borrowed None. Reserves for depreciation and losses None. TOTAL BANKING LIABILITIES J 203,776.64 CAPITAL ACCOUNT: Capital Stocks3s,ooo.oo Preferred Cap. Debentures None Total Capitals3s,ooo.oo Surplus .... 12 240.91 Undivided Profits -Net 2,826.98 Total Capital Account 50,067.89 Total Banking Liabilities and Capital Account. 253,844.53 Included in Loans and Discounts are Loans to Affiliated Companies None Included in Other Bonds and Securities are Shares to Affiliated Companies None Included in Deposits are First Lien Trust Funds 563.11 Included in Total Deposits are Deposits Secured by loans and or Investments None LOANS AND INVESTMENTS PLEDGED TO SECURE LIABILITIES U. S Bonds and Securities None Other Bonds and Securities None Loans and Discounts (excluding rediscounts None ' Total Pledged (exc. redis.) None Pledged to Secure Deposits None STATE OF INDIANA) COUNTY OF KOSCIUSKO)SS: I, Noble G Blocker, Cashier of The State Bank of Syracuse, of Syracuse, Ind., do solemnly swear that the *bove statement is true to the best of my knowledge and NOBLE C. BLOCKER Cashier. Subscribed and sworn to before me this 3rd day of July, 1935. (Seal) Notary Public My Commission Expires June 14 1937.
Pierce, a graduate of Chicago’s Shorewood Conservatory; William Schilling and Margot Robbins, both well known for their work in theatricals in Indianapolis. The Barnstormers will open their season Friday evening, with a comedy “April Folly”. It is a charming whimsical play of English country life dealing with the dilemma of an attractive woman who finds she must choose between three quite different suitors, a poet, a politician, and a big game hunter. The arrival of the lady’s young daughter from a- Parisian finishing school complicates matters, and it is only the wit of the Lady that averts a major ’catastrophe Next week plays will be given on Monday and Thursday evenings. • o INJURED AGAIN James Searfoss who fell off the roof of the barn on Judge Vanderveer’s farm, when working there a month ago, underwent another accident last Thursday. The plank which he was using as a lever, on a jack, to raise the corn crib, slipped off the jack and the edge of the plank cut his cheek near the left eye, so that two stitches were required to close the injury.
Scenes and Persons in the Current News
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I—Shipyard strikers picketing the plant of the New York Shipbuilding corporation In Camden. N. J. 2—Manuel Quezon, slated to be the first president of the Independent Philippine commonwealth, photographed as he sailed from San Francisco for the Islands. 3—Russia's great propaganda plane, the “Maxim Gorky,” which fell after collision with a small plane, 49 Ilves being lost.
HAVE MEDICINES CHANGED? WASHINGTON D? C. ,-Fear and feeble mindedness, which were not regarded as subjects for medical attention until recently, were recognized and treated as diseases by Aztec physicians of the sixteenth century. In an ancient “herbal," or catalogue of curative plants, written in 1552 at the College of Santa Cruz and recently brought to light in the Vatican library at Rome by a Smithsonian institution research worker, evidence also is found that many present-day drugs originated among/ the Aztecs or previous The book is believed to be the first medical treatise written in the vf'estern hemisphere. Immediately after it was completed, a translation into Latin was made and eent to Rome, where it reposed almost unknown until Dr. Charles U. Clark of the Smithsonian uncovered it. Aztec Medicine Free of Superstition It indicates that Aztec "medicine was practically free from superstition, most of the remedies being used because experience had shown that they worked. Cures were prescribed for such varied ailments as dysentery, skin diseases gout, pains in the joints, burns, wounds and foot troubles, including possibly athlete’s foot, since one trouble was described as “cracks in the soles of the feet." Colds, falling hair and head fractures also were treated. Two of the plants prescribed as pain-killers were ’’tolohuaxihuitl” and “nexehuac,” which are widely
■Bk DANCE JULY 4TH At WACO On Lake Wawasee Featuring DEE PETERSON and his “Aristocrats of the Air" Adm. 19c Park Plan ' 1 DANCE EVERY NIGHT AT WACO
Boat Sales and Repair Service Here is the most Modernly Equipped Boat Yard in the Middle West. Any boat on the lake, no matter how large or small, can be serviced here. Agents for— Dodge and Hackercraft Boats** Evinrud Outboard Motors You are Welcome to Make an Inspection of our boatyard—and rent our speed boats Wawasee Boat Service HARKLESS & SEIDER Phone R-8226
THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL
1 used throughout the world for re- ‘ lieving pain because they contain ( the narcotic drug called atropine. The early Indian physicians em- . ployed animal charcoal ip preparing I bitter medicines for infusions and tinctures. It is used for the same ! purpose today in purer form. A parallel to present complaints ‘ that medical services cost too much is found in the description by Tor- ' queinada, monk and Aztec historian of the botanical gardens of the ruler Montezuma, which were maintained to provide medical herbs for the nobility. “But the common people came rarely to these doctors for medical aid not only- because a fee was charged for their services, but also j because the medical value of herbs ‘ was common knowledge and they could concoct remedies from their own gardens," he wrote. Dr. Emily, Walcott Einmart of John Hopkins University, in describing the ancient herbal, said that the medical materials used by the Aztecs probably were superior to those of Europe during the sixteenth century and were highly developed at the time of the Spanish conquest. Writings of European herbalists of the sixteenth century showed that Aztec teachings exerted consiberable influence over healing practices in Europe. 0 BANK RECEIVES TELEGRAM The following is a copy of the telegram received by the State Bank of Syracuse regarding insured deposits: June 28, 1935 TO The State Bank of Syracuse, Syracuse, Indiana. You are advised that by joint resolution of congress, approved today by the President, deposits in your bank continue to be insured without interruption until August 31, 1935, and provision is made in the existing law whereby permanent insurance may be effective from that date. The maximum of such insurance for depositors, on each deposit in your bank, is, $5,04*0.00. Signed: Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation By Leo T. Crowley, Chairman.
Airedale Terrier First Called Bingley Terrier About a hundred years ago, when the lure of football was a thing unknown, Yorkshire miners (particularly those living In the valley of the Aire) gave all their spare time and pence to the sport of water-rat hunting; and many were the Saturday afternoon money matches between rival dogs over a measured strip of the River Aire, writes Maj. Mitford Brice, in Answers Magazine. Each dog. followed by a large crowd, would be allotted a separate bank, and as soon as either contestant “pointed" a rat in his hole, the hunt would be cheeked and marks awarded. Ferret? having been employed to bolt him, the rat would make for the water, and the hunt be resumed. Hunted water-rats have a habit of swimming under water and reappearing at some distant point, but these miners* dogs were not deceived —they simply trod water, and, craning their necks, waited for the rat’s reappearance. Eventually one of them would effect a kill, when more points were awarded. So profitable and popular did this spoil become that It was decided locally to evolve, If possible, the perfect waterside dog. He had to be -a good swimmer. courageous, and above all, blessed with strength and stamina. Otter hounds were crossed with rough-coated, black-and-tan working terriers, and an animal was produced that delighted the hearts and eyes of the local fanciers. This animal was first known as the Bingley terrier, but in 1879 the name of Airedale terriers was bestowed upon him. ’ Many Spains, Modern and Ancient, Urban and Rural There are many Spains, ancient and modern, urban and rural. Christian and Moorish, observes a Madrid correspondent In the New York Herald Tribune. There Is the Spain of the Romans at Tarragona and Merida; Spain of the Moors In La Giralda and the Alcazar at Seville, in the mosque of Cordoba, the Alhambra and Generalife of Granada; Christian Spain In the beautiful cathedrals of Santiago, Seville, Leon. Burgos and Toledo, In the monastery of El Escorlal, in the convents, abbeys, church and relics of every period of European culture. Scenic and romantic Spain, the land of varied and ever-appealing natural beauties, of magnificent monuments and castles, of gardens and countryside, of the almost perfect climate, of the charm of city and village fetes, of folklore that Is the product of the most diverse civilization of bygone days, everywhere delightful this Spain of Don Quixote, Gil Blas, of the Cid, of Don Juan and of Carmen, still Uvea. In the very center of the country is Madrid, the always smiling and courteous city, * great modern capital in every respect that yet cherishes its remembrances of the past. Here one comes for every type of civilized enjoyment, high on the list of which are the Prado museum with Its treasures of Velazquez, Murillo, Goya, El Grace. 4 TRY A JOURNAL WANT AD
Ice ARTIFICIAL and NATURAL LAKE DELIVERY 9 PHONE 95- J Syracuse Ice Co.
POTATOES AN IMPORTANT SOURCE OF MOTOR FUEL IN GERMANY Os all the countries that have experienced with alcohol as a motor fuel, Germany has probably attained the greatest success, according to C. C. Cone an non, Chief of the Commerce Department’s Chemical Division. Several factors, he states, have been responsible for this development, including the strong nationalistic movement in Germany during recent years, the difficulty of obtaining foreign exchange with which to pay for imports, and the shortage of domestic petroleum resources. However, the government’s desire to provide an outlet for the country’s surplus potato crop has probably been the most important. Germany’s potato crop which in some years reaches 50,000,000 tons, is in excess of the country’s needs as a foodstuff, in spite of the very high per capita consumption, and since the beginning of the present century organized effort has been made to increase consumption of potato alcohol, it was stated. As the number of automobiles increased, and the consumption of gasoline mounted, the possibility of using alcohol in a blended motor fuel was promoted as a means of utilizing surplus potato production and to make the country more self sufficient with regard to its motor fuel requirements. As a result, the use of alcohol as a motor fuel has been compulsory in Germany for several years the ratio of admixture with other fuels being successively increased to 10 per cent, the rate which has been in force since 1932, and it appears from available statistics that Germany is now consuming more alcohol in motor fuel than any other country, according to Mr. Concannon. During 1934 a total of 170,000 metric tons was so consumed, compared with 140,000 tons in the preceding year, and as the number of automobiles are increasing rapidly in Germany, it is likely that consumption will expand further during the current year. German alcohol production is essentially agricultural in character, with the output originating in approximately 35 000 widely distributed distilleries, many of which are
™ ONE KETERING’S HOME STORE Open Sundays and Evenings Call us for a case of your Favorite Beer -FREE DELIVERYFRIDAY and SATURDAY SPECIALS Open All Day July 4th 6 pkgs 5c Fire Crackers,„... 25c 3lb can Blue Ribbon Malt 79c Sardines, per can 5c 7 doz. Red Jar Rings 25c Pork & Beans, 4 forl9c !• ib doth Bag Cane Sugar 59c Maxwell House Coffee, lb 29c Fish Poles, each 20c Nut Maid Oleo, lb 16c New Cabbage, 3 lbs 19c Qt. Elf Salad Dressing, 32c Large Elf Corn Flakesl9c Burco Coffee, lb .... 6 19c Come in and Get Your Fireworks Here -
SATURDAY GROCERY SPECIALS NEW POTATOES, peck 30c CERTO, Bottle 27c FLOUR, 25 lb. sack73c VINEGAR, HEINZ, pint 12c RICE FLAKE, HEINZ, box 12c PUFFED WHEAT, box 10c PINK SALMON, 2 can 5...... 25c PREPARED MUSTARD, jar.. 5c SARDINES, Imported in pure Olive Oil, Ferndell Brand 15c PEAS, 1935 Pack, can ll 9c TOMATOE JUICE, a large 15c can 10c Eat Fresh Vegetables CARROTS, large bunchy 5c CUCUMBERS, (Hot House) each, 7c and 10c WATERMELON, CANTALOUP, Honey Dew GREEN PEPPERS, EGG PLANT, PEACHES, NEW APPLES, BEANS PEAS, CAULIFLOWER, RED BEETS y FREE LAKE and TOWN DELIVERY SEIDER’S GROCERY
comparatively small. From 70 to 80 per cent of the production is obtained from potatoes, with the remainder coming from grain, molasses, fruits, and other sources, including sulphite waste liquors. The Reich Alcohol Monopoly, which controls the distribution of alcohol in Germany, recently acquired financial interest in two enterprises which produce alcohol from cellulose materials which if successful will provide a further source of alcohol for motor fuel, it was stated. One of our friends who went up to Washington on a little business with the government says that he was sent to fifteen different departments in fourteen different buildings but didn’t see a single inch of that official red tape they talk so much about. z 0 “He must not laugh as his own wheeze; A snuff box has no right t<X sneeze”—.Keith Preston.
Grieger’s FANCY GROCERIES Phone 15 Free Delivery
CASH malt, Q9_ BLUE RIBBONOOV FLOUR 24 lbs.' KRAUT, 9(» Large Can VEGETABLE SOUP 9<» Large Can PORK & BEANS 9 C Large Can . JELLO, 19C 3 packages COFFEE 29C Chase & Sanborn, lb COFFEE 19C Break-O-Morn, lb * See Our Winndow for Other Specials Best Line of Lunch Meats in Country Home Killed and Swift’s Meats Large Assortment of Fresh Vegetables and Fruits
