The Syracuse Journal, Volume 28, Number 17, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 22 August 1935 — Page 8
8
Want Ads
FOR SALE—Pickles. See J. P. Hughes. 16-ltp FOR SALE — Good cooking apples Phone 1589, Forest Kern. 2tp FOR SALE—Modern coUge, good buy for cash. R. C. Howard Btf FOR SALE—9-room house, modern except furnace, will give terms. Inquire Journal Office. 16-2tp FOR SALE—Sand, gravel and fill dirt. For prices phone 8241. Elmer Stucky, Oakwpod Park. 3-ts WANTED —To exchange inboard fishing boat for painting work. E. F. Riddell, Ogden Island. 17-ltp LOST-Brown purse. Wrist watch in it is keepsake. Reward for returh to Journal office. 17-lt LOST- Ladies wrist watch between road 13 and entrance to Maxwelton. Reward. Telephone R 404. 17-ltp FOR RENT—Seven room modern I house with,garage on Lake Street. Ida Akers, 218 Woodbine S. E. , Warren, O. 16-2 t FOR SALE- -Plenty of home grown peaches, white and yellow, next j week, phone 53F12, Milford Guy t Fisher's Orchard. 17-lt WANTED-Poultry of all kinds, call or write C. O. Cripe, New Paris, Ind., Phone 262. We will get in touch with you. 14-4tp TAXI to Goshen Fair, special prfce, 81.00, each for 2 or more persons round trip. Several trips each day and night. Make reservations now Call 848 or see J. W. Rothenberger. 17-ltp FOR SALE 2 used Frigidaires. 1 used Kelvinator, Shp water cooled Frigidaire Compressor for commercial use. These are all bargains and are guaranteed. Terms to suit purchaser. H. D. Harkless, Phone 106. WOLVERINE Sbejl Horsehide Work Shoes—Triple fanned, dry soft and stay soft. More miles per dollar than any other work shoe you ever wore. Try them, 82.50 to 83.96 at Bachman's. 3-? t BAKE SALE The Concord Ladies Aid will hold a Bake Sale in Klink's Market, Saturday, Aug. 24, at 9 a. m. adv. —■ ~u BAKE SALE At Klink's Market, Wednesday, j August 28, by Ladies Aid of United Brethren Church. 17-ltp • n— — it is-reported that Mounolini will go to Africa and start the war over there in person. If we were he we would stay in Rome and open the war ‘ officially by turning a golden switch- , key.
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LAKE NEWS. (Continued from Page 1.) einnati, 0., will occupy the Hogan cottage for the remainder of the i season. Mr. and 'Mrs. J. G. Brannum returned to the lake, Friday, from Indianapolis after a six weeks absence. Mr. and Mrs. R. B. Tuttle planned to go to Indianapolis today, from where, with Mr. Tuttle’s brother Herman, they planned to start for Oneida Lake, N. Y., Friday, to attend a family reunion. Though, disappointed fishermen claim there aren’t any fish in the lake, R. M. Pentreath caught 7 pike last week, and three of these were caught in one morning. He does admit, however, that of those three his who was visiting him, caught two. ; . Meriam Zimmerman of Rome City suffered a scalp would, Tuesday, when a fish hook caught in her scalp. It was removed in the office of a local physician. R. A. Clare of South Bend ano Lake Wawasee is recuperating from an appendicitis operation pefformeu in the Elkhart hospital two weeks ago. He is staying at the cottage of his father, E. J. Clare. Willow Grove. Twenty women, members of the j “Stitchery” Club of Bremen enjoyed i chicken dinner and an afternoon of bridge al Johnson’s hotel Employes of the Chevrolet Parts department, from Fort Wayne, plan to hold an afternoon and evening outing at Johnsort's hotel next Thursday. Miss Nancy Cowgill and Fred Chrysler of Wabash. Mr. and Mrs Harold Stewart and son and Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Stewart and niece from Grand- Rapids, Mich., were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Stefcart Cowgill, Sunday. Tom Norton and daughter from Toledo, O.; and Mr. and Mrs. John Norton and daughter of Indianapolis visited Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Kitch this past week. | Jerry Long, aged 8, son of Mrs. C, F. Long of Portsmouth. O. . has been staying with Mr. and Mrs. Bick, underwent a tonsilectomy in a local doctor's office, Monday. Mrs. G. W. Dunnington and party from Indianapolis are occupying the T, H. Buller cottage on Lake Wawasee, until after Labor Day. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Beard, Sr., Mrs Robert Beard Jr., Mr and Mrs. Tom North and Mr, Flowers of Chicago w ere week 0 end guests of Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Long. Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Coates, Mrs. Jennie Baumgartner, sister and aunt | of W. E. Long, annd Laura Jane and Jackie Deady, all of Dayton, 0., spent several days this week.
visiting Mr. and Mrs. Lnog. Mr. and Mrs. Solomon of Lima, O. are sepnding this week in the Irving * Bishop cottage. Mrs. Cobal of In- ' dianapolis will spend next week there i Winners of contests conducted by the Ford Motor Co., of Indianapolis were entertained at the Spink-Wa-wasee hotel, Sunday and Monday. There were 125 in attendance. I Mrs. W. E. Long, Mrs. Anna Warren and daughter Lida Fay, Mrs. Jess Rex were dinner guests of Miss Dora Terrill of Warsaw’, Wednesday last week. Mr. and Mrs. W.; W. Kercher of Goshen were Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. George Wandel. One hundred attended the convention of the Mutual Benefit Health Accident Association of Michigan, Ohio and Indiana, held at the Spink-Wawasee hotel, from Thursday until Saturday. Employes and their families of the Metropolitan Life Insurance Co. of Elkhart, and of the Lincoln Life Insurance Co., of Fort Wayne held all day meetings at Sargent’s hotel, Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. William Immel of Hagerstown spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. John Teetor. Ed Dunning and daughter have returned from Chicago to their cottage for the remainder of the • season. Mrs. George T. Hitz, Mrs. Leslie Parker and- daughter Logtoe, Mrs. W. T. Pollack, Mrs. D. I Smith of f Anderson are house guests of Mrs. J. Everett Jones, this W’eek. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Naylor and I daughter Mary Litlian from Rock' ford, 111., have come to Lake Wa? wasee to spend the remainder of the season with Mr. and Mrs. Louis Leidner. Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Wiltrout from Illinois are spending this week in one of Dwight Mock’s cottages. E. P. Peck of Anderson suffered a cut foot while in bathing, Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Brock returned home to Anderson, Sunday night, having spent the week end at the H. B. McMahan summer home. Laucks Xanders spent the week end at the lake before returning home to Baltimore, Md., Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Bradshaw of Indianapolis and Miss Jessie Bradshaw of Chicago have been guests of Mr. and Mrs. Faye Patrick this past week. Mrs. Bradshaw said on the Thursday before they came to the lake, after 6 p. tn. the thermometer on the front porch of their home in Indianapolis registered 106. Mr. and Mrs. George Keagy of Hagerstown were Lake Wawasee visitors, Sunday.E. C. Horst caught a five pound pike, Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Pen-
THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL
treath have been catching pike, and on Saturday evening entertained Mr. and Mrs. Ed Neumeyer at a fish supper. Mrs. Harper, Mrs. Ruth Bernet and daughters, and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Bernet of Michigan City were guests of C. G. Wilbur at his home on Kale Island last week. Mr. and Mrs. Mose Cotherman of Ligonier spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Leas; and Mr. and Mrs. Harold Roselle of Goshen spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Charles Cripe. Mr. and Mrs. ER. Ingall took their daughter, Mrs. Frank Brown, and son, home to Van Wert, 0., Friday, after a visit with them. Barbara Ann Brown remained for a longer .visit. Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Symmes, over the week end were: Mrs. Arthur Robinson and son Ray, and Miss Neva Butler of Indianapolis. Frank Symmes Jr., plans to spend this week with his mother at their lake home. Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Horst returned to the lake, Thursday, from Indianapolis. Mr. and Mrs. C. D. Finney of Cleveland, 0.. were guests of Mr. and Mrs. John Boyts last week end. Fred Symmes is suffering with a carbuncle on his arm; and “Bud” Schrader has a “skinned” arm, received when he fell down the hill leading to Snavely’s repair shop in last Thursday. Miss Evelyn Stick and her mother, from Chicago, are guests of Miss Lillian Clancy. James Ear! Brock and Thomas' McMahan went to Camp Crosley, Monday, for 10 days training at the football training camp. Henry Abts was recovered, Saturday, from his recent illness. Mrs. Ruth Simpson of Indianapolis has been visiting Mrs. Boyd Templeton. Mrs. Lewis Meier and daughters, Mrs. Hugh Thompson and Miss Eldena Meier, and granddaughter, Miss Barbara Wilcox of Indianapolis spent two days last week with Mrs. Charles A. Rusch. Mr. and Mrs. Howard Lacey and son Harold of Indianapolis recently spent a few days at the South Shore Inn. s Mr. and Mrs. Harold Wiseheart returned to Washington, D. C., the first of this w’eek, after spending their vacation with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. M. Pentreath. Miss Willodean Mock spent Thursday and Friday with Miss Betty Wean in Goshen. Mr. and Mrs. Bent and son from Wabash are spending this week in the Stephenson cottage, Vawter Park.
FULL STOPS Small talk will wear right out unless it is witty. Fault to find with “gentle voices" Is that you can’t hear 'em amid all the din. Some of the best detectives in prl rate never tell about their discoveries. r I The meek may be arrogant with their meekness. Tfiey flaunt It—like Uriah Heep. i Do but one errand a day; that will necessitate putting off the other one till tomorrow. The poor can do" good to others In the little things that don’t cos| much —and they do. t » — “Indiscreet" is the mildest you can say about some things; but It means : lack of common sense. There js scarcely a barber shop oldfashioned enough to have a cabinet of „ Individual shaving mugs belonging to. customers.’ Ambition has a great fault. It prevents families from going hack to the farm where they would be well fed and ought to be happy. j. A man who directs the most weighty affairs never seems to be In a hurry He is not the tyj»e that “dashes" through a revolving door. ! IN MILADY’S REALM Mexico boasts at least four women 1 I bull fighters. 1 — , Maori women of New Zealand are I skillful canoeists. I _ t There are 15.152 Chinese women and girls In the United States. f The women of the Canary Islands are noted for linen drawn work. Girl guides Os Warsaw have started a street library for slum children. There are 40.000.000 widows in India, many of them under eighteen years 5 of age. Twenty-four per cent of the automobile drivers In the United States are women. Women of Hungary delight tn the volume of their petticoats, sometimes ! wearing 20 or more at one time. In Turkey there are thousands of women working in tobacco and silk factories for 25 and 30 cents a day. ! A statue commemorating five pioneer women who went to Lincoln, Utah, In 1800, has been erected by the Da ugh ' tecs of Utah Pioneers. > ——— BREEZY SENTENCES Every dollar a man borrows is a step toward lhe ill will of his friends. It’s easier for a shiftless man to make friends than to make good. 1 Golden opportunities are the kind 1 that fate hands the other fellow on a ' silver platter. , Beware of the man who Is only as honest as he has to be; he'll be as dishonest as he can be. When a man Is hungry he growls. When a woman is hungry she goes and gets something to eat. When a small boy refuses a second piece of pie there Is something wrong with either the boy or the pie. Poverty Is one of the criines for which a man is sentenced to hard labor for an indefinite term of years. It frequently happens that • man’s meanness Isn’t noticed until after he suddenly acquires a little money. Sensible wives devote their st-are, time to mending their husbands* garments rather than to nagging them to mend their ways. MAY SEEM STRANGE Natives of India are learning to use , safety razors. Chile now has approximately 5,000 miles of railway In operation. Malta has Issued a coin worth onesixth of'a* cent in American money. Traveling cinemas In Turmenia are transported on camels, carts and automobiles. Coal is delivered from a white-paint-ed cart by a man In white overalls in one London district Men are forbidden to work in the village of Tenganan, Dutch East Indies. on penalty of a pnblic thrashing administered by women. Before the Soviet revolution the peasants bought only 25 forks to every 100 knives. Now one is bought with the other, a Moscow newspaper says. Because Englishmen prefer round nutmegs, Grenada, the West Indian Island which grows the oval kind, win Import seeds of round ones from the East and start new groves. t —-— 0 ......— A rainbow kiss is one that follows a storm. Constipation • V Skia. bm quick »wU*f wMfc XDUEr MIKA. Ttoorvaca to aotto* yat «•- Uraty «—tle a>d —fa. < THORNBURG DRUG CO.
REORGANIZED. Records in the office of County Recorder Chauncey Tucker show that six county organisations have been reorganised or filed articles of incorporation, since January 1, 1935. These are: Northern Lakes Development Co., Tippecanoe lake. The three directors are James H. Rohr, Mary E. Rohr and Charles W. Bell, all of Leesburg. W arsaw Investment Co., reorganized with the following directors: Harry Watkins, William S. Felk K ner, Theodore C. Frazer, Wm. S. Rogers, Carl Kratzsch, W. Bert Siders and Ben Phillipson, all of Warsaw. The Warsaw Welders* Supply Co., Inc., was organized in March, but the list of : directors is not on record. The Mineral Park Improvement Corp., of Syracuse, was next organized with three directors, Anton J. Rollert and Walter A. Rollert, both of Syracuse, and William H. Hossfield and Herman J. Rollert, both of Niles, Mich. The Mayfair Furniture Co., of North Detroit street was organized with three directors, George Snyder Logan Van Doren and Frank E. Sanders, all of Warsaw. The last filing is the reorganization of the Pow’er King Tool Corp, with Theodore C. Frazer, George Boone, Garold H. Horrick, Charles Sigler and Charles Heacock, all of W arsaw. . o Maybe what the Brain Trusters are having is a Bingo Party—Bingoes the money! NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION No. 4660 Notice is hereby given that the undersigned has been appointed by the Clerk of the Kosciusko Circuit Court, in the State of Indiana, Administratrix of the estate of ELMER V. SMITH late of Kosciusko County, deceased. Said estate is supposed to be solvent. MARGARET GREGG, Administratrix Warren T. Colwell, Atty. Ang. 19, 1935 17-3 t OPTOMETRIST 60SHEN. INDIANA. EXPERT ~ ’ Watch and Clock Repaicing WILLIAM BIGLER GIBSON’S STORE — Opp. P. O. ~Mrk7MEREDITif GENERAL CONTRACTOR FINE MASON WORK 12tf PHONE 492
rnu;'iM»z ————____ CRYSTAL LIGONIER Your Nearest Theatre Shows al 7:30 and 9:30 DST ’ THURSDAY, AUG. 22—Double Feature Program. THE SOCIETY DOCTOR” Starring Virginia Bruce and Chester Morris in a splendid comedy drama. ALSO—“WING’S IN THE DARK” Myrna Loy and Gary Grant in a fine story of the air lines—extra I fine program. FRIDAY and SATURDAY, August 23, 24— “WELCOME HOME” James Dunn and Artine Judge in a comedy of the old Town homecoming. It is very clever. SUN , MON., TUES?, August 25, 2*, 27— ‘THE FARMER TAKES A WIFE” Starring Janet Gaynor and Henry Fonda, a new star. A great drama of a great epoch. A heart warming tale of simple folk set in a dramatic, colorful era of American life and showing the tidal wave of humanity and progress through the young nation’s waterway to the West. One of the finest pictures of the season. We highly recommend it to you. Don’t miss it. WEDNESDAY and THURSDAY, Aug. 28, 29-Double Feature. •OLD MAN RHYTHM” Starring Buddy Rogers ‘and Barbara Kent in a fine musical comedy. AIso—“HOLD ’EM YALE” Patricia Ellis and Buster Crabbe in a college comedy that will knock you out of your seats—Good program. COMING Sunday, Monday, Tuesday, Sept. 1,2, 3— •EVERY NIGHT AT EIGHT” ~ C O Ak L Stocks are complete •••prices right % RED ASH— (Ky. Hazard) DENDRON—(America’s Best) YELLOW PINE EGG POCAHONTAS CHESTNUT GOAL COKE SEE US FOR YOUR NEEDS Stiefel Grain Co. Phone 886 •* 1 " ' ' ' 11l I HI '
THURSDAY, AUG.
MOCK’S BOAT LIVERY TIRE REPAIRING VULCANIZING ACETYLENE WELDING Lawn Mowers Sharpened and Repaired AGENCY FOR Johnson Motors You have tried the rest Now try one of the best. South Side Lake Wawasee NEAR WACO Phone 5#4 — Syracuse GEO. L XANDERS ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Settlement of Estates Opinions on Titks FIRE and OTHER Insurance. Phone 7 Syracuse, Ind. Phone 889 Box 17! Watch and Clock Repairing A. J. THIBODEAUX 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 88 OVER THE P.O. 6-1-34 FAIRY THEATRE NAPPANEE, IND. THLRS. FRI., SAT. ~ August 22, 23, 'l4 t SHIRLEY TEMPLE In “CURLY TOP” With John Boles Rochelle Hudson Jane Darwell. ~ SUNDAY and MONDAY Augjust 25, 26 “PARIS IN SPRING” With Mary Ellis Rullio Carminati Ida Lupino Lynne Overman TUESDAY—Ang 27 J , , One Day Only. "MAD LOVE” Starring Peter Lorre | With I Frances Drake Colin Clive Another horror picture. Worse than “Mark of the Vampire.” If you cannot stand it, do not come. Not suitable for children. Admission Price —14c, 25c and THURSDAY August 28, 29. MAN ON THE FLYING TRAPEZE” With W. C. Fields. Special Picture —Price 18c, 25c
