The Syracuse Journal, Volume 28, Number 10, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 4 July 1935 — Page 4

THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL REPUBLICAN. Published every Thursday at Syracuse. Indiana. Entered as second-class matter on May 4th. 1908. at the poet off ice at Syracuse. Indiana, under the Act of Congrats of March 3rd. 1879 SUBSCRIPTION RATES One year, in advance >2.00 Six Months in advance — Lot Single Cories .... 05 Subscriptions dropped If not renewed when time Is out. HARRY L PORTER. JR. Editor and Publisher Office Phone 4 — Home Phone WEDNESDAY, JULY' 3, 1*35 MAIN STREET WHITTLINGS Fine catches of blue gills have been reported—moot of which were caught on the little lake. Milt Wysong and his wife, fishing on the little lake, caught three, the first part of the week that weighed pounds. Warren Colwell tried a new way of fishing, Sunday, which proved to be successful. He had one Line baited with night crawlers which he claimed attracted the blue gills. While the blue gills were making swipes at the night crawlers which were too big for them to swallow, Colwell would toss another line rig* ged with small hooks and small wornui near the line baited with the night crawlers and catch the fish that had their appetites aroused. By their own confession, many came to the play presented by the Little Theater club to have a good time laughing at the efforts of the club, but they went away praising the acting of the.cast, which is a real Compliment. Summer is here. Lake residents are criming to town early in the morning without much on and drinking bromo seltzer. Frojm the beautiful flowers in bloom this season, in the gardens of home# on that street, the name of the street should be changed from “Smoky Row” to The Street of Rose 4 Another of those curious beliefs that go twisting around the country the tyuth of which are believed in implicitly, and are asserted to be the t|-uth with much vigor and vehemence, has been disproved. Frld W. Eley, legal investigator. Department of conservation say's that there is nothing to the riparian’s law of nine feet. Many people have insisted that a person has a right of way,nine feet from the waters edge over another person’s property when the property in question abutts on a lake. Bui Mr. Eley says that a property own»r has a perfect right to prevent any person from trespassing, and if the trespasser refuses to go he is subject to prosecution. Eley even goes on to state that in some cases where property abutts a lake that the property lines might extend some distance out into the lake. My! Won’t some of the fire eaters spout. The exceedingly drynees that existed around Lake Wawasee is gradually disappearing under the ministration of the slate alcoholic board A few more places each week receive licenses to jell liquid to the thirsty. If President Roosevelt can soak the rich by taxation to pay for all of the New Deal spending it will be a fine bit of irony. Most of the rich have fought his new deal fiercely, • and if they have to pay* for it in the end there will be much cursing in their camp. But the debatable question is whether the President can prevent the rich from passing on the lax to the average man and what effect his tax program will have on industry. His theory that those who have the money must pay the cost of government is fine, if it will work. become ~loixje~mem be rs Sixty-five attended the meeting of the K. of P. lodge last Thursday evening, when 8 candidates to the rank ot page were initiated Lodge members from Laporte, Michigan City, South Bend Elkhart, and Niles, Mich; attended the meeting. Mr and Mrs. Egbert G. Shoe of' Chicago moved to the Scott property on lake street, Tuesday, to make their home here.

•2’-" ROUND TRIP TO (Chicago Every Week-end Travel tn comfortable B&O coaches At I ebeereMer Berre** Am* ■Mry IFm* it M> * ar O»otaM. i Bar Am*» cn—H TicfcM A«m* a Baltimore & Ohio

faSl _ M » Ji "n' -wk RSHwerau»BErMyw«oF , mwjwwt upio / BCRri MAKHU** JOHN T$-MnwroFwsvtsn-MAsnwffiD d k TUEJOCOIIWWMMYANDHER ' Vk | X| UMB KnUffiED IT AMUSED AND J 0 •ne non vrwo wc since BtoMfe» Y2A’ frx POPULAR. MASY 11 HUS OLt AND jyv jowl 12 jpMpwn Jtwe sgccuojse Jk ~ . 1736 t*4 MBSSHMS V r rweSwe soumffi twk ,-fa * 41 Hex _MFCf D*snaCT"2, V > U ■ rßirr tw w, wasowm v tv r. P ekL LI J"** IM .J" - K wwyoeWl : — I jr SWBugr,MASk i ____________zz Copyright. Western Newspaper Uafae

Ipcalflafrenings George Butt has been working at Grieger’s this past week. Joe Kindig is working at Louis Soil's grocery store. Miss Ellen Eckels is working at the Grand hotel. Claude Insley spent the week end at home. Mr. and Mrs. E. O. Dunn are driving a new car. Miss Anderson and Mrs. Young of Chicago called on Mrs. J. H. Bowser Sunday. Mrs. Perry Foster spent last week end at the home of her son near Avilla. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Bushong called at the Ortha Warstler home, Sunday evening. Mr, and Mrs. Jack Weimer and Mrs. Jesse Darr spent Monday morning in So. Bend. Mr. and Mrs. Russell Lepper of Milwaukee, Wis., were Syracuse visitor* this past week. Leonard Barnhart who has been ill with tonsilitis. is now suffering with ear trouble. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Bowser of Elkhart came to Syracuse Friday to visit his mother over the Fourth. Joe Miller returned home Monday after spending last week with friends at his former home, Attica. The O’Dell house, occupied by Mr. and Mrs. Warren Ku pie was painted this week. Rev. and Mrs. Jarboe are attending the Bible Institute this week which is being held at Camp “Mitch” Hamman went to Marshfield. Wis., Saturday, to visit his daughter, Mrs. J. H. Mills. Mr. and Mrs. Monroe Cory have moved to the Stull property on Boston street. Mr. and Mrs. Ora Benson and family attended a family reunion at Millwood, Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Guy Symensma called on Mr. and Mrs. John Steele and Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Shock, Sunday. : Mr. and Mrs. George Xanders and party of friends planned to spend the Fourth at South Haven, Mich. Dr. Black and wife of Ligonier called on Mrs. J. H. Bowser, Sunday. Mrs. Coleman Regnier and Mrs. Edward Burke of Huntington were week end guests of Mr. and Mrs. Clare Holly. a Miss Virginia Riddle is working at the office of the town clerk, Ernest Buchholz, from July Ist to July 15th collecting water rent. Alfred Mathieson, the new “Ag” teacher and band leader, took over his duties July Ist. He is boarding at the home of Mrs. Emma Gordy. Mrs. Jesse Rex entertained Mrs. W. E. Long, Mrs. Warren and daughter Lida Faye at dinner at her home, Mbnday evening. Miss Rita Stanley, who has been staying with Mrs. Steve Finton spent the week en'd with her parents in Elkhart. Mr. and Mr*. Jack Weimer and daughters visited his mother in No. Webster from Wednesday until Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Maloy of Angola called on Mr. and Mrs. Howard McSweeney and other relatives, Sunday. Mr. and Mr*. Leonard Cripe of Goshen; Mr. and Mrs. Forest Cripe of New Paris called on Mr. and Mrs. Bert Cripe Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Smith entertained a party of friends from Plymouth at the Miller cottage on Papakeetchie Lake, last week end. Mr. and Mrs. George Snyder of Washington, D. C.» who owned the Syracuse Journal several yean ago, visited friends in Syracuse and on Lake Wawasee, Friday. Mrs. John Thomas of Atlanta, Ga., who has been visiting relatives near North Webster called on Mrs. Millie Snobarger Sunday evening. Mrs. J. H. Bowser attended a luncheon and bridge party at the home of Mrs. Philip Bowser, in Goshen, Friday, the party being in honor of Miss Mary Davis of Loe 1

Vegas, Calif. Mrs. H. W. Buchholz’s nephew' , and wife, Mr. and Mrs. Warren Mills and their son froth Toledo, O. , on their way tb Sacremento, Calif. I spent Sunday night with Mr. and Mrs. Buchholz. Albert Krull’s property, known 1 as the Lehman property on Huntington street, has been traded to Jas. Novy whose property was known as the Dot Edgell property. This trade was made by Simon Bell. Rev. and Mrs. J. S. Pritchard attended the w’edding of Miss Mary Margaret Hirschman of Indianapolis last week and then spent several 1 days with his grandmother in Knightstown. Delbert Neiss. Senior at Purdue, and from Indianapolis, and Arthur Wert, Junior at Purdue and from Chicago spent the week end with John M. Macy, also from Purdue ' at the Wawasee Slip, and with Ralph Thornburg, Jr. | Mrs. Emma Miles, aged 86, fell in the bed room of the home of her daughter, Mrs. Sam Searfoss, one day last week. Although no bones I were broken, she was confined to her bed for several days, suffering from the shock. I When Ralph Method was hurrying across Road 13 towards Bachman’s barn, to take his heavy load of hay . ; in, before the rain, last Wednesday , something slipped and the hay un- ' loaded onto road 13, blocking traf- | sic on one side of the road for awhile. i Among those who called on Mr. i and Mrs. Charles Nine, Sunday, to learn of his condition after his ac- 1 cident were: Mr. and Mrs. Calvin ’ Nine of Elkhart: Mr. and Mrs. Donald Nine of North Webster; Mr. and Mrs. Jake Freete of Nappanee and friends from South Bend. Mr. i Nine is improving. , ,Mr. and Mrs. Howard Bowser of Chicago spent the w T eek end here. Their silver wedding anniversary was celebrated at the Searfoss cot- ( tage, which Mr. and Mrs. Carl Schmidt had rented last week. , Friends of theirs, Mr. and Mr.s : Enzor of Chicago spent Saturday > night with Mrs. J. H. Bowser in Syracuse who had attended the party at Schmidt’s, and the group returned to Chicago, Sunday. It is flatly denied at Washington that Jimmy Roosevelt is to be one of I the secretaries of the President. It j is given out in the newspapers that he will run the President’s farm. Which leads one to believe that he just went down to Washington to®: get all the dope on farming from . Prof. Tugwell. - 0 It is becoming increasingly hard to distinguish radio demagogues from comedians. i

Hot Weather Makes An Electric Fan A Necessity Buy Yours Here—Wide Range of Prices—sl.39 to $11.25 Keep Cool See Our Alumnium Ware When You Visit Our Store.* Cocktail Shakers, (jiggers and half jiggers. Electric Irons, Electric Waffle Irons, Toasters, Perculators, Electric Pads. Also see our Mixmaster Osborn & Son

THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL

TIMELY TEXTS. By John A. Pettit. Psalm 95:3—The Lord is a Great God, and a great King above all gods. The tragedy of religion in these times, lies primarily in the fact that people do not have an adequate conception of the greatness of God. Consequently, they do not have any room for him in lives that are purely physical and materialistic. Church people themselves db not always know God intimately enough. Too often they take Him for granted. or make the mistake of thinking that they know already all that is to be known about Him. The psalmist was not so conceited or indifferent when he wrote “The Lord is a great God” and St. Paul rebuked some of us W’hen he asked that searching question, “Who has known the mind of the Lord?” The God of this grow- i ing universe is a God ever increasing in wonder and power and glory, and human knowledge of Him will never be complete, until the final curtain falls upon the last act of His creation. The great need of our times, is a I higher and more* adequate idea of I God. We need a credible, intellii gible, and useful idea of God, com- I J mensurate with these times of in- | I vention, progress and enlightment. i God in history has already shown I Himself to be a God of progressive I • revelation. Each generation of mankind, profiling by the experience ’of the past and building upon its own newer experience, should come closer to an adequate understanding ;of the Almighty Power behind the world of reality. We should never be bound intellectually by traditionalism. We should never be afraid of I that which seems new -even in bur Theological beliefs. Man's, idea of God always has been changing. The Old Testament God, Jehovah, W'as originally identified I with Mount Sinai; and under Moses I and the early Judges, Jehovah was considered as one of many Gods. He was particularly the God of the Hebrew’s, and His authority was limit'ed by the boundaries of Palestine. The prophets, with greater insight, and more knowledge, recognized God as the Lord of the whole earth. As Isaiah wrote: “It is Jehovah that sitteth above the circle of the earth, and the inhabitants thereof are as grasshoppers in his sight.” Not until Jesus of Nazareth and the Aposi ties, came, and through contact with Greek philosophy and culture, enlarged the mental horizon of the I , race, w’as God spiritualized, and . known as Fatherly Love. Each advancing step in knowledge and understanding has deepened mankind’s appreciation for the great truth, “The Lord is a great God." The time has come, with the progress of science and invention, with 1 the progress of humanitarian ideals, ’> when religion must keep pace with the age. It is our task, as it is our privilege, to broaden our concepts, I wiiden our hroizons, and rise to new j heights of spiritual perception, j where we can discover the increasing i greatness of God—a God Who is at work amongst us. The w'hole truth of God has never yet been compassed by our mortal minds. The immediate future has yet much to reveal to seeking spirits about the greatness of God and His ways with men. Not being afraid of that which seems new, we may now go forward, to' new appreciation for, and understanding of, the sublimity, the grandeur and the greatness of Almighty God, in whom we live, and move, and have our being. UNDERGOES OPERATION - Following the death of her stepfather last week, Mrs. Walter Ballard’s mother became ill at her home 'in Wilmette, 111., and Mr. Ballard, i who had been at Wilmette With them last week, underwent an appendicitis operation, Tuesday. Mr*. Ballard planned to return to Syracuse i today.

*>•*•***•#• * * “CAN SHE MAKE • * A CHERRY PIE?” * * By Aneta Beadle • “Can she make a cherry pie, Billy boy?”, is a question that still puts many a housewife to a pretty test. Not only cherry pie, but black berry, blueberry, gooseberry plum, peach and all the rest of the summer fruit pies are to be considered. The making of fruit pies is indeed an art, and there are two methods of making these good fruit.pies. One school of pie making says, “Line your pie pan with a thin sheet of dough to come fully oi'br the edge of the pan. Put in the fresh fruit, sweetened, dot with butter and sprinkle with a little, | flour. Moisten the edge of the bottom layer of dough, and cover the pie with another thin sheet of dough. Prick or slash openings that will let the steam out of the pie as it cooks. Press the edges of the dough together and crimp them, either with you fingers or a fork, and slip the pie immediately into a hot oven (400-450’ F.). After 15 minutes lower heat to moderate oven and cook until the pie is nicely browned.” The other school of pie making I says to bake the bottom pastry shell I before you put in the juicy fruic (we are not talking of apple pie now.) Bake just until it begins to brown. Heat the fruit until the juice begins to flow. Strain off the juice and add a little cornstarch well mixed with sugar and cook this I mixture until it thickens. Then stir the fruit itself into the thickened I juice. Put this filling into the baked pastry shell, cover with dough and bake in moderate oven (375-400’ F.) A little paper funnel in the top I crust will prevent the juice from boiling over. Another question comes on the kind of thickening for your pie. Some cdoks say flour rather than cornstarch. Still another kind of thickening is tapioca. To make your pie filling with tapioca you can simply let the fresh fruit stand in some sugar, with a little tapioca sprinkled in. The sugar draws out the fruit juice and sweetens the pie, and the tapioca thickens the juice. ASK COOPERATION OF ALL FISHERMEN peal for cooperation from Hoosier anglers in compiling data on fish conditions in the various lakes and ! streams, was inade by Virgil M. Simmons, commissioner of the Department of Conservation. This survey was started last year and additional data must be obtained to complete the studies. Envelopes provided by the Department of Conservation, carry spaces for information on the length and weight of fish taken and the place I where the catch was made. The fishermen are requested to fill out these blanks and to place a few scales in the envelope sending it to the Department. From this information scientists can determine with accuracy whether or not food condi-. tions ir that lake or stream are sufficien*. They have built a new road down South called the Cordell Hull highway. This is fine, but nobody had better try to collect any tariff on it-

Week End Specials Thornburg Drug Co.

3 Power Trojan Binoculars $1.29 Case Extra s*c Ultra Rose Hair Oil * oxs of Good Hair Dressing 39c 2-Cell Flashlight Complete Very Special 33c Dr. West’s Tooth Paste Large Tube 3 for 50c Our .Own Salted Nut Mixture 69c Pound

Next to Post Office

INDIANA STATE FAIR Early Closing Events for Grand Circuit Racing Include Best Horses In Uni>*d States. The Indiana State Fair Speed Dept, will be held under the direction of Frank J. Claypool, Muncie, Ind., and assisted by Harrie Jones, Rushville, Ind?, which will be held this year from August 31 to September 6th. Mr. Claypool states the Two-Year Olds for the Indiana Trotting and Pacing Horse Association, which is “open to the world,” this year, has 67 entered in the Trotting Division and 55 in the Pacing Division being represented by colts from seventeen different states. The 2:10 Trot has 9 trotters with records of 2:4)2 and better and 19 out of 29 entered have records of 2:04 or better. One of these holds the World’s Record for Two-Year Old, 2:02. The 2:16 Trot has 27 head with records of 2:02 to 2:07)4. The Three Year Old Trot has the record of trotting Two-Year Old gelding of 1934, Greyhound, 2:04% and also has the biggest money winner of the Two-Year Olds of 1934, Silver King 2:06. The 2:15 Pace has 22 head entered with records from 2:01% to 2:06. The 2:10 Pace has 27 entered and each of them has a record of 2:06 or better, four have records better than two minutes. 21 of the 27 have a record of 2:04 and better. In our Three Year Old Pace, we have the champion Two Year Old of the %-mile track, Dutchess Jane 2:07; the champion Two-Year Old gelding, Princedale 2:07; also many other outstanding ones. In the

RUPEE'S GROCERY AT WAVELAND BEACH Groceries Fruit Fresh Vegetables Meat> BOATS and BAIT Picnic Grounds Bath Houses Beer for Sale by the Case Phone Cromwell 97F11 We Deliver Postal Telegraph Service Here . —■——— 1 " — ~ 1 There is only one Chris Craft Drop in and let us show you the various 1935 models one of which will exactly meet your requirements Wawasee Slip Complete Marine Service PHONE 925

Dooms-day Fly Spray KILLS ’EM Quart, 89c Our Stationery line is complete and you can find what you want. Houbigant Dusting Powder 4 98c RUBBER TOYS AND BALLS j FOR THE BATHERS •s** SHEETS Ann Windsor Cleansing Tissue 31c

WEDNESDAY, JULY 3, 1935

twelve Early Closing Events there is a total of 487 entries, which is an average of 40 7-12 horses to the event. The majority of these horses are young and if they keep improv, ing their records, which no doubt they will, this meet will be the greatest racing event ever held in the world. 0 DISCHARGED BY STIVER Ralph Liggett of Warsaw, who has been a member of the state police was dropped from the force, Monday, when Donald F. Stiver, director of Public Safety discharged five members of the state police force. O—“The most skilful flattery is to let a person talk on, and be a listener” —Addison. • DON'T SLEEP ON LEFT SIDE—AFFECTS HEART If stomach GAS prevents sleeping on right side try Aalerika. One dose brings out poisons and relieves gas pressing on heart so you sleep soundly all night. Thornburg Drug Co. j - — 1 Fine Dry Cleaning Phone 90 l ' We call and deliver Syracuse Dry Cleaners I M. E RAPP

35 Razor Blades Double Edge 5 for 19c Speedex Shaving Cream Large Tube of BRUSHLESS CREAM 19c Eveready Safety Razor Chromium Plated —2 Blades am 25c Tube Shaving Cream 29c Listerine Tooth Paste Double Size 37c Norwich Son Tan Oil 35c 60c SI.OO

Phone 83