The Syracuse Journal, Volume 28, Number 24, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 10 October 1935 — Page 5

THURSDAY, OCTOBER Kfc 1935.

THE JOURNAL - A TRIAL SUBSCRIPTION- 50c THREE MONTHS

a PICTURE HKavings bank® m A $ ■' AS WELL AS JLJ A HEATER Lru 1 --J k-- ■ * f ' ' ■ ’< iKEO f* ukl savings °* 2s *° 4o HImbSBvV * F*f cent! Money saving* you can '■“ rryto >he b* l^! 7ho ** •'• II 4 ' -g. the savings you can count on, IIISg| winter after winter, when the genii Ip'* ~ uin * Ks,, t® Heatrola takes over - ; *■/>' the heating job tn your houae. For ■ Bp Heatrola has the patented Intsnsig®L'- **««•»./ KM Fir. A(f p uct olher . xc lu*iv. 4SJ ■ P EjK features that get extra warmth out ' ■rap' of every pound of coal. You soon 3m| «* v « enough with Heatrola to pay || for it. And remember —there ara * thousands of Heatrola owners who Ww have used Heatrolas for over ten , years, and never paid a peony for NEW 90-8 SERIES HEATROLA. ' kM „ R , *7™ , * Sales loader of the big Heatrola line. R «"* rot * r > »«>. Heat. Made la throe sixes. rol * • c,Mn > rnotst, whois-house , heat means a saving in doctor bills, fy — Ph FJP4. .. h The sooner you choose jroar Heat* f f MI I I rota * th * ,ooner J rou ltßrt »evin«/Tp Come in. Soo the new 15th Annit versary Heatrolas today. I i L-—J Lr~ T II ESTATE Heatrola much hear goo. 4? wa.te-up the J" * ” ’ 01 V 1. fl Wse.PTAo Hoatrola, with ito in- CIE'T 88V ITgen.oue /nfensr-Fire. b/ocAe rhe IT MVS FOO ITSELF hear—puss it to worth/ I— - ♦ f 11 mt rm«t noy rn r«» | OSBORN & SON

GOSHEN’S DEPA RTMENT STORE A, nmversary Sale STARTLING SAVINGS!! ■■f■.'. . . ■ > • Come Prepared to Buy Liberally at these Low Prices SALE BEGINS TOMORROW Here are Just a Few of the Many Specials Men’s and Young Women’s and Misses Men’s Fu r Trimmed OVERCOATS COATS Here are Navy Blue Valias you would exoeot to au. ■ Melton Oeercxtnta. bill 1 much fifi wnrm lined. Eacep- *P I II to «“*• br “ wn «P I S OO ■le~l to, ,bl. V '" *«*• Men’s and Young Men’s Girl’s Fur Trimmed SUITS COATS pay from SlTto 1173?f0r. d* < *7 Fj For **** <r *“ *** *** d* A O I I 3 Warm, durable wooU« with J2l Q© youag men's styles. And at JL Jk • attractive and good fur col- T *<Z a M»u<l aow— j ars< g aye this sale. .. . _ ' Men’s Police and Dress Women’s and Misses SHOES DRESSES sis-s&sl 98 B=S3=£!s3 99 tie. „lnordb>.ry « A • JouS e?JSTio Sr IS ~<J B tbl. to, price. All M.e,. U W ” V W Men’s Suede Leather Jacket* - $3.98 All Silk Satin Undies . -58 c Donbles7« Wool Blankets $1.68 Yard-WideVatdyePercale -10 c Men s Winter Union Suits -57 c Women’s Flannelette Gowns 38c 50 Wool “Rock Run” Ü B io Bi> sl-98 Tweedo Wash Fabrics yd 19c Boy’s Sheep Lined Coats $238 “Hope” Muslin, yd -10 c Child’s Sheepskin Slippers 33c Plaid Bed Blankets - -48 c

SOUTH SHORE Mr. and Mrs. Charles Lung spent Sunday with his father and brother, Raymond and family. Mr. and Mrs. Chancy Coy spent Friday at the Jacob Bowser home. Mr. and Mrs. Bert Searfoss called on Mrs. Jordon Sunday evening. Huston Winters and his mother planned to move to Goshen this week to spend the winter. Mr. and Mrs. Bort Searfoss were Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Niles. ZION. Mrs. Jesse Miller and daughter Marytin called on Mrs. Harley Miller Wednesday afternoon.. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Smith enjoyed Sunday dinner with Mr. and Mrs. Emory Guy. Glen Lamar and Carl Stocking, who are away attending college, spent the week end with their parents. Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Miller and family spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Niles and family of Syracuse. NEWJSALEM Arnold LeCount and wife of Go* •hen spent Sunday night with Joe Smith and wife. George Auer and family spent Saturday evening with John Auer and famtty of Syracuse. Joe Smith and wife were Sunday guests of Emory Guy and wife. Quite a number from this community attended the one hundredth anniversary at Syracuse Saturday afternoon and evening. CONCORD Irvin Darkwood was at Mishawaka Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Orvil Neff spent Sunday at the Ernest Mathews home. Miss Meriam Fisher from Goshen Spent Sunday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Guy Fisher. Eldon Wyland and family have moved in a cottage at Redmon park for the winter. Rev. Reidenback and family of Syracuse were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Dewart Sunday.. Carson Wise of Milford, Mr. and Mrs. Aaron Rasor of Warsaw and Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Mathews were callers at the home of Mr. and Mrs. John Roop, Sunday evening. Dewey Coy and family were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Ketring Sunday. Chester Stiffler and family spent Sunday afternoon at the homo of Mrs. Ada Coy. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Mathews called at the home of Mr. and Mrs.

SYRACUSE JOURNAL

Ed Klinger Saturday. Lester Dewart spent Sunday evening with Mr. and Mrs. Bertram Whitehead. Mr. and Mrs. Dewey Coy and family called at the home of Mrs. Ada Coy Saturday. , Mr. and Mrs. Eldon Wyland and daughter Patricia spent Sunday with Wm. Wyland and wife. Mr. and'Mrs. Guy Fisher and daughter Meriam were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Dewart of Milford Sunday. TIPPECANOE Rev. George Swihart and wife spent the week end with J. Garber and family. William Tooly and family were there for Sunday dinner. ? Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Mock took Sunday dinner at the Daniel Eberly I home. Mrs. J. L. Kline visited Mrs. J. ; Garber and Mrs. Royal Kline Wednesday. Paul Spry and wife did some papering for Mrs. J. L. Kline Monday. Miss Edith Tom spent Saturday night with Mayzel Kline. James Rot hen berg er and family called at the home of Isaiah Kuhn Sunday evening. Callers at the J. Garber home Monday evening were Eston Kline and wife, J. L. Kline and family. Mr. and Mrs. Lee Lantz (failed on Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Kline Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Nat House and Mrs. Joe Weimer called at the J. Garber; home Sunday afternoon. Vera White visited Mrs. George White Monday. • POUR CORNERS. Mrs. Sul Miller of Syracuse called at the Darr home Friday forenoon. Claude Niles was a caller in this corner Monday afternoon. Ralph Disher, Jr., of Indianapolis spent Saturday night with his parents and also called at the homes of Crist Darr and Charles Purdum'. Ralph Jr., is in camp at Indianapolis and thinks it is the place to be. Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Geyer entertained company Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Morgan of Wawasee called at the Darr home Tuesday forenoon. Crist Darr called at the Harley Gall home Wednesday evening. Mr. Stroup and Augspurger were filling their silos Wednesday and Thursday. Ralph Disher is hauling wheat to Chicago. x Clint Callander entertained company Sunday. Mary Ulery was a Milford visitor Sunday. Crist Darr and wife were Goshen shoppers Friday and also called at the home of their son. DISMAL Mrs. Clara Bo beck of Topeka spent part of last week with her niece, Miss Tilda Bo beck. Mrs. Roy Wilkinson visited last week with her sister and family, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Brownbridge of South Bend, returning home Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Lee Lung spent Sunday in Fort Wayne. | Relatives from Fort Wayne, Roanoke and Cromwell were entertained at Sunday dinner in the Merrit Lung home. — Mr. and Mrs. Francis Wilson of Delphi apent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Milbert Bitner and family. Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Stutzman entertained friends from Elkhart on Sunday. Dr. and Mrs. White of Hammond spent the week end with Mrs. Hayes at Cedar Point. Mr. and Mrs. Dora Clingennan entertained a birthday dinner for their granddaughter, De Larzna Carbon, being her sixth birthday

Bigger Wednesday More Better Thursday Bargains Than Friday Than Ever Saturday Before Thornburg Syracuse Phone 83 Indiana

on the sixth of October. Other guests were Mr. and Mrs. Lester Ramsby of Elkhart and Mr. and Mrs. Dean Carbon of Topeka. Edwin Lang now has a position in ( l Fort Wayne. SOUTHSIDE Mrs. Nora Darr attended the funeral of her aunt, Jane Kirkendall in Warsaw, Thursday. ! Mr. and Mrs. Roy Klopestine took dinner with her sister, Mrs. Nora , Darr, Thursday. Those who took supper at the Warbel home, Saturday, after the parade were: Mr. and Mrs. Walter {Rex of Avilla; Frank Warbel and wife of New Paris; Harry Warbel J and wife and son of Elkhart; Lercy Gosey and wife and daughter of Goshen. Mrs. Marion Davis was a caller at the Warbel home, Monday. Those who took Sunday dinner with Mrs. Anna Wilkinson were her mother, Mrs. Mary Rink, Mr. and I Mrs. Leo Rink, Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Kehr and family of Goshen, Robert Baker and Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Johnson. The birthdays of Bert Laughlin and Anna Wilkinson were celebrated with a party in the home of Bert Laughlin, Tuesday evening. There were 23 guests. Music was enjoyed and supper served. Mr. and Mrs. Lester Sawyer uere Sunday visitors in the Elmo Burson home. Mr. and Mrs. Oda Rarig and daughter visited the Merl Laughlin • home, Sunday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Coquillard have moved from the Dick Cory property to the Dan Wolf property. Mrs. Noble Ringler and children attended the county fair in Warswa. , ———. . u , . - . I 7 | HISTORY OF SYRACUSE SETTLED IN 1835 < - 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: Perry and Doug Miles had become the owners of a boat, of the value- of no less than eight dollars; theirs in their own name and right, fully paid for, without mortgage or lien on it. And they were the aristocrats among the boys of the town. The labor of a long summer had this boat cost them. But the furtune that had brought them employments by which- they were enable to acquire it at all was what made us envy them, for there was not one of us who would not have been willing to labor not one only but several summers if need be, to become the owner of W half interest in so great a possession. For of all things in the world at that time probably none was of such great value to a boy of Syracuse as a boat. And the boat that Perry and Doug* possessed was a very good one, indeed; of new boards fitted together by competent men they had employed to construct it; the bottom of it made of two boards joined together exactly in the middle. And that is why all the rest (Os us went envying them, and they looked down upon us as though we were hardly worthy to be their associates. ‘ Now Perry, besides his immense* ly valuable half interest in the boat aforesaid, was the proud and individual owner of a little ax that ho had purchased from the Mobley boys for the sum of two cental and this ax was his second proudest > possession. A minature affair it was, weighing hardly a quarter as ; much M M H such as our fathers | used, but otherwise, in handle, blade and *ll reproduction of lone of theirs. Doug, having no in- | terest in this ax, was went to con-

sider Perry's boasting of it with eomewhat of contempt. Signs were that the fishing would bo good on a certain afternoon and wo hurried to the homo of Perry and Doug to secure the necessary poles and lines, only to be stopped by their mother, Aunt Katy, and informed that they must make some of the oak and hickory poles that lay in the street into firewood for her. Perry at once announced that the work must be done with his little ax. Doug protested that too much valuable time would thus be wasted, and that it must be done with buck and saw. There was a protracted and heated argument, in the midst of which Perry locked the saw and buck in the moke house and carried the key into the house and hid it. But Doug succeeded in finding it, and in entering the smoke house, out of which he emerged shortly with the buck and saw in his arms. A serious problem now confronted him. He dared not put either the saw or the buck down lest Perry get it and make off with it, and there was a high board fence between the smoke house and the wood pile. If" you have never seen a boy climb a high board fence with a saw buck and a buck saw in his arms you have missed something worth going a long journey to see. Perry stood back in full faith that the feat was impossible of accomplishment. But he was wrong, for Doug was equal to it, and presently had heriocally made the top of the fence with the impedimenta still fast in his arms. ‘Then Perry, foreseeing defeat unless he acted promptly, ran up to him and gave him a great push that brought boy, buck saw and all down in a heap on the other side. If the Journal had on its staff a. sporting editor I would employ him to describe for you the fight that followed. I have no words in my vocabulary by which I can give you my idea whatever of its fierceness. It lasted a long, long time—an hour or more, as I remember, and was still without issue when Perry shouldered his prize ax and disappeared toward the lake, saying never a word of what his intention further. We followed him shortly, apprehensive that his acts boded mischief of some sort, and when we got to the lake he had just finished chopping a great notch out of the boat I have told you about, a foot wide where he had begun it and coming to a point exactly at the joint in the middle of the bottom, and as we appeared he approached us and said to Doug: ?T have chopped my half out of the boat; you may have your half." p Instantly Doug flew into him and the fight was renewed, fiercer than ever. But now somebody had ■ reported to their father,. “Uncle Eb," down at the old cooper shop, what was happening, and he appeared on .he scene. I hardly need to go further with these painful details. You probably know that fathers were much freer in the use of the gad in those days than they are now. I will add, though, that on account of the mute testimony of the ruined boat Perry got all the worst of it. GUARANTEED TREATMENT FOR TENDER STOMACH Dr. Emil's Adla Tablets bring quick relief from a sour stomach, pains between meals due to acidity, indigestion and heart burn. If not your money is refunded. Thornburg Drug Co. —adv

SATURDAY GROCERY SPECIALS RAISINS, 3 10c pkgs .. 25c SOAP, FLAKE WHITE, 10 bars 38c APPLE BUTTER, LIBBY’S 26 oz. jar .. 16c WHEAT CRACKLES, Quaker, 310 c pkg 25c MACARONL Bulk, 3 lbs 20c PET MILK, 3 large cans 18c WASHING POWDER, Star, 25c pkg..... 20c SOUP BEANS, 4 pounds 16c CORN, 1935 pack, No. 2 can 10c Royal Gelatin Dessert, 3 pkgs, Bah q-i Royal Chocolate Pudding, 1 pkg For "1C STARCH, ARGO GLQSS, 3 lbs 24c SEIDER’S GROCERY

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An Atchison man who makes a great speech on international peace never has been able to get along with the folks next door.

Headquarters for New Suits and Fine Dry Cleaning Syracuse Dry Cleaners M. E RAPP

PHONE 139 PHONE 139 Ketering’s HOMESTORE MEATS GROCERIES BEER FRI. and SAT. SPECIALS Crystal White Sugar 10 lb. cloth bag .. 57c Merkle Sport Brooms, each43c Cut Green Beans, 3 cans 25c Salted Peanuts, lb. 13c Sinclair Motor Oil 2 gal can 89c Soap, 4 large P & G 19c Babbitt Cleanser, 3 cansloc Hardwater Soap, 4 cakee2sc Bur co Coffee, lb 17c Sweet Potatoes, 7 lbs. 19c Eating Apples, 7 Iba.2sc Fancy Tokay Grapes, 2 lbs .. 15c Bananas, 4 1b5....... 25c 40 Fathom Fish, ib. 19c T-Bone Steaks, Ib. 28c Cube Steak, lb. 19c Bamberger, 2 lbs. 27c Nut Maid Oleo, 2 lbs 29c Be Penny Wise and Save Here Grieger’s FANCY GROCERIES Phone 15 Free Delivery CASH 3 Royal JELLO and 19c IChocolate Pudding .. MARSHMALLOWS, 15C 1 pound — -— COFFEE, Red" Bag, 15c 1 pound .... SAUER KRAUT, 9c 1 can — SI ARCH, 6c 1 pound -—-.—. MILK, Rose Mary, 11C 2 cans — PEACHES, 21C Large can —-— PINEAPPLE, 24C I Large can - « CRACKERS, P. W., 25c 2 pounds; SODA CRACKERS, 19c 2 pounds— Fresh and Lunch Meats |