The Syracuse Journal, Volume 28, Number 31, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 28 November 1935 — Page 4

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THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL REPUBLICAN. Published every Thursday at Syracuse. Indiana. entered as second-class matter on May 4th. 1908. at the poßtoffice at Syracuse. Indiana, under the Act of of March 3rd. 1879 SUBSCRIPTION RATES » ■ rear. In advance 82.00 '■t Months in advance ----- .. 1.00 l. Cories OB iptfen* dropiMed If not renewed when time Is out. I lIIIV, L PORTER, JR. . *■; Editor and Publisher 1.11 e Phone 4. — Home Phone 904 WEDNESDAY, NOV. 27, 1935 Fielden Sharp has a new idea for a WPA project. He admits he dreamed this one. His idea is to compensate all the tra.jets for the musk rats they do no ; lie fc >8 everyone knowt t> I.t .a.s ae becoming scarcer a‘ —■. a d should be pro.ee. ed. He ratoons ti«t by paying trappers for the rata they do not catch, that the rata will be protected, and claims its just as right as paying for the corn and hogs and wheat not raised. - Italy admitted the other day that -,he needs oil and will go to war if an embargo on oil being shipped to her is put into effect. That is the only reason for her attack on Ethiopia, for Mussolini knows that prospects for oil in Ethiopia are excellent. With a thin layer of ice on sections of Lake Wawasee, and tho air cool and refresh.ng. Marie Harkless took a dip in the lake, Sunday. He and L. A. Seider were bringing a boat up the channel to the Harkless and Seider boat house, breaking the ice as they wont along—when the boat stopped suddenly, and Harklesa, wearing about six sets of clothes as protection from the cold, was thrown frjrin tho boat into the icy waters. It was only shoulder deep but it was wet and cold. The Big Mistake in the Syracuse Journal last week was worth money. In Klink's ad a statement road: “Special—An extra fancy stock of Young Tender Beer for Thanksgiving.” Os course there was but one letter wrong—what was to have been “beef* came out as “beer." But so many people read the ad and discovered the mistake. and telephoned the butcher shop and ordered a case of tender beer, that the telephone operator said froth the number of calls going through to that shop an hour after the paper was out, she thought it was a fire—Ads in the Journal aren't read? RURAL AMUSEMENT CONTEST AT PURDUE LAFAYETTETInd. -Plans for the tenth annual Rural Amusement Contest, which is to be held January 14 1936, at Purdue University as a feature of tho annual Agricultural Conference, were announced hero by Jamel R. Wiley, of the Agricultural Experiment Station, chairman of the committee in charge of the contest. . This year, the contest, whteh is open to Indiana rural organisations, will bo somewhat changed from pro vious contests. Group prizes are to le r ’ed in tvo sections; one so a . h f om 4 to 12 perfoimei *■ r ,ro i>s of fom 13 to 3 i«- .uk is. Frizes will also i an.rdcd fur special curtain acts of not mo. e than three persons each Last year the number of participanu in tho sections was as follows: cur tain acts for one or two persona, group acta for from 3 to 9 and from 10 to 35 persons. Prises to be awarded for the win ning acta are larger than last year with a total or more than 8330 be ing offered. First niaco in the sec tion for 13 to 36 actors will' receive SSO while first place in the section for groups of 4 to 12 persons wil receive 840 and the winning curtain act will receive 810. As in previous years, the elimination contest will start tho morning of the finals. or at nine o’clock, Tuesday morning, January 14. Those eligible to enter the contest must live in the country or in towns which do not exceed a population of 2,500 persona. No persons who jnake a substantial part of their living aa professional entertainers will be eligible, and major roles in any of the stunts must be taken by human being*. Further information concerning the Rural Amusement Contest may be obtained by writing to James R. Wiley, Purduo University Agricultural Experiment Station, Lafayette, Ind. All entries are to be made on or before January 6. Considerable publicity has been given lately to two doctors who removed their own tonsils with the aid of a mirror. We know a banker almost aa brave. He cashes his own checks.

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■ Dr. Fred Clark has a new car. The baby son of Rev. and Mrs. Frederick is ill with whooping cough Wilbur Statler of Chicago spent Sunday with his mother. Mrs. Irene Abts entertained her bridge club at her lake home. Tuesday evening. Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Wilt plan to <tart south, next week, to spend the winter in St. Petersburg, Fla. Rev. and Mrs. Travis Puidy planted to spend Thanksgiving with her sister and brother in Portland, Ind. Mrs. William Geiger and daughter Wilma called on friends in Syracuse Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Ira Ganta of Warsaw called on Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Hamman, Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. B. A. Holton were 'uests of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Searfoas, Sunday. The Syracuse Bridge Club is being entertained today at the home of Mrs. Walter Kegg. The Art Club was entertained by Mrs. C. W. Howard, Friday “gMr. and Mr*. John Stout were I cueats of Mr and Mrs., Roy Meek, Wnday. Ernest Buchholz visited from rhursday until Sunday in Dayton, Ohio. Mr. and Mrs. John Swenson spent Sunday evening with Mr. and Mrs. Orrin Wilcox in North Webster. Mr. and Mrs. Orval G. Carr have had the front porch of their home .-nclosed. Harry Bishop has not quite recovered from the chicken pox and now his sister Eleanor and his father, Irving Bishop are ill with it. Mrs. Vern Bushong has been in 4orth Mancheater since Wednesday set week. She was called there by he serious illness of her stepmother. Mr. and Mrs. Otis Darr and son Harold from Burket, and Heson viston of Men one were guests of nd Mrs. Je. *«. D rr, Sunday, s M Uie in b rgcr ai.d son val pl n to s.end Thanksgiving ■vith Mr. and Mrs. Carl Carl Haab of Bremen. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Porter spent he week end at the home of her ister and husband, Mr. and Mr*. V. /. Me d, in Detroit. Mrs. Milton Brown planned to go o Elkhart, Thursday, to spend the vinter at the home of her daughter, <frs. Helen Becker. * Alonso Rowdabaugh's daughter, Mrs. Gordon Simmons, underwent in operation in the Goehen hospital, Friday. Relative* here have learned that Miriam, the daughter of Floyd Kiteon of Dixon, 11., is recovering from s recent appendic.tis operation. Mr*. James Moreno and two children, Marshall and Dolores, of Gary, are spending this week with Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Kline. Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Foster of South Bend and Mr. and Mr*. Joe Rusch of Milford were guest* of Mr. and Mr*. Perry Foster, Sunday. Mr*. Thoma* Beveridge of South Bend visited Mr. and Mr*. Everett Keterlng from Wednesday until Monday, whan her husband ctae to Syracuse to take her home with him. Mr. and Mr*. A. W. Geyer entertained relatives and friends at their , home, Friday evening, the party being in honor of the birthday , of their grandson, Goerge Arden Bushong. Mr. and Mr*. Ralph Thornburg were week end guests of Mr. and Mrs. Orrin Klink in Bloomington, and attended the Indiana-Purdue football game, Saturday. Jesse Derr worked fit Peru last week, where new pipes and * meter were installed at a filling station. He was to return there for the painting job the last of this week. Mr. and Mr*. Garret Grissom, Mr. and Mrs. Tom Dempsey and Miss Bertha Raymond spent Saturday afternoon and Sunday with relatives and friend* in W*«t Unity, O. Mr. and Mrs. George Rarig have moved to Toledo, 0., and on Mond., Mr. •d to th. o«>rg, sdwek prapkrt,

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on the hill which they had occupied Mr. and Mrs. Jack Weimer and family from South Bend spent the week end with Mr. and Mra Wayne White near Nor h Webster. Mrs. Weimer and children are spending .his week at the Jesse Darr home. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Geiger have moved from Indianapolis to his parents’ property on West Boston street Miss Mary Geiger, who works at Wilt’s and has been staying with Mr. and Mrs. Alva Pinkerton is now staying with her brother and wife. Dick Shenenbarger went to Indianapolis last Thursday, where he had obtained employment, and his place at night in the Grand hotel is now being filled by John Gordy. Mr. and Mrs. Shenebarger had lived in the Owen Strieby property on Front street while here. Miss Dorothy Crouch entertained a number of guests at her home, Saturday evening, the party being a farewell one in honor of Jane Prescott, daughter of Roy Prescott, who completed work at the Bushong barber shop, * last week. Mr. Prescott and daughter moved to Chicago, Sunday. Last Thursday the committees of the Methodist Ladies Aid met. Committee No. 1 was entertained at luncheon at the home of Mrs. Fannie Hoy; Committee No. 2, in the evening at the home of Mrs. E. 0. Dunn; Committee No. 3 at the home of Mrs. Hallie Holloway; and Committee No. 4, at dinner in the evening at the home of Mrs. A. W. Geyer. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Unrue, Mrs. Tillman Hire, Mrs. Eva Hickman and Lois and Donna Davis attended the funeral of Mrs. Charles Strieby, Sunday afternoon, and afterwards went on south to the Dale Hickman home. Mi*. DJe Hickman was suffering with an injured arm and shoulder, bruised when she fell from ihe front porch, down the cement steps of their home. JUTCH ELM DISEASE CAMPAIGN NOW GOING INTO MINTER PHASE The summer camp ign ga ns Dutch elm disease in the East has ;iven Way to the winter campaign. A* autumn turn* foliage fr< m gn* to red and yellow—one of the distinguishing marks of the infection—scouting for diseased trees becomes tea* effective. Scout* are now directing their search to dead and dying elm* in the infected area, and the eradication crews that make up the rest of the nearly 3,000-man force ar* felling and burning the tr e tagged by the scouts. Although these trees may not be infected with Dutch elm disease, they offer favorable breeding places for the tiny beetles that carry disease spores. Plant quarantine officials of the U. S. Department of Agriculture consider it advisable to get them out of the way in the 8,000 square miles in New Jersey, Connecticut and New fork, centering around New York City, where the Government’s intensive control campaign was started two years ago. Since the campaign began, 998, 964 dead or dying elms have been marked for destruction, neary 103,000 in the fin* two weeks of October 1935, according to lee A. Strong, Chief, Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine. The presence of ( the disease has been confirmed in 13,914 additional trees. On October 19, 1936, Mr. Strong reports 382,031 dead and dying trees and 46 tree* in which the disease had been confirmed were still standing. All of these will be felled and burned a* rapidly as possible. This season brought to light a few more cases of Dutch elm disease in the four isolated spots outside the quarantined area where it was found last year—two at Cleveland, Ohio; four at Old Lyme, Conn.; ton at Indianapolis, Ind.; and two at Norfolk Va. Cases were reported also from two new loealitiaa-Portsmouth, Va, just across the river from Norfolk, and Brunswick, Md., about 60 mile* west of Baltimore. A new hat may bo nicely trimmed, and so is <f*d when he pay* for it.

SYRACUSE JOURNAL '!■■■, ■■i&.glßßße

TIMELY TEXTS. By John A. Fettit. PSALM CIIIzl: Bless the Lord, O my soul; and all that is 1 within me, praise his Holy j Name .... I Tomorrow, the people of this najtion shall celebrate Thanksgiving Day. Perhaps we shall be reminded of the first Thanksgiving—when the Pilgrim Fathei*, after the first year . of struggle in the new world, a 1 year marked by real trials and h rdsh ps far beyond anything that , we have experienced, took thought j and remembered to thank God for I the many blessings of life. Their < simple ThanksgivißjF was extremely important, because it was un- '■ doubtedly an aid to their courage. It helped to lighten the of life for them, by renewing their faith and confidence in God, ard refreshing hope for the future. We in America today need a similar psychological t e 'ment. Our nation is r s ing thr ugh one as the m st try ng periods in her hist r . C ndit ons in some pla.es are so severe, that people are tempted to be hopele sly pessimistic about the future. The question is heard on the lips of men and women —“What is thete to be thankful for in such a world as this? How can we be grateful to God in a world hat is going to pieces? Well, the woild is not going to pieces. It may be greatly changed for us in. the next two or three decades; we may have a different social order, or a different civilization—but the horrible failure predicted by the pessimists—the chaos and confusion of the universe in which all hings are gone to wrack and ruin—is not an imminent threat. God has not gone to all the trouble of creating this world for the purpose of allowing it to be destroyed by the blindness and stupidity of men. We can be thankful for a future that is still within the shadow of the love of Jesus Christ There is a great deal of calamity howling about the economic condition of our country. We are not so prosperous as we should like to be. But it might help to remember that we of this country are better off than any other nation in the world. Our complaints are ridiculous, if we stop to realize how much more, even in our reduced state, we have than others less fortunate around us. The main trouble now seems to be that our people have lost the art of being thankful for little things, content with the simple things of life. We need to learn the lesson that the best things ,in life are free—the intangible joys of the spirit, that can not be bought with money, nor induced in us by the possession of things. ’ Thanksgiving this year should mean thankfulness to God, the author of everything that is ours. Count up His mercies, and it will help you to appreciate the blessedness of your present lot. n JORN CROP ESTIMATE TEN MILLION BUSHELS s ABOVE OCTOBER ESTIMATE LAFAYETTE, Ind., Nov. 27—Despite some damage from frost in xith northern and southern Indiana, he Hoosier corn crop for the past e s~>n is estimated st 155,463,000 bushels, or approximately ten mil11 Uusuels xno.e than a month ago, ccording to the crop estimate made m! ay by the bureau of agricultural at is tics at Purdue University. This is an average yield of 38.5 bushels ,er acre. “Corn is being harvested in every ection of Indiana and many good ields are being reported a'ong with the reports of damage from frost,” say* th* monthly statement which ..s based on numerous report* from all countie* in the state and personal observations by M. M. Justin, statistician, and Frank L Merrill, junior statistician. “Seeding of wheat and rye was inished later than usual and is gong into November small in sis* but good in appearance,” said th* report. “Potato harvest continue* disappointing to many growers, the dry weather following the heavy late spring rains having been harmful to. the crop. A yield of 80 bushel* per acre and a production of 4,960,000 bushels is now estimated for . the state. Sweet potatoes also are below earlier estimates, due to the same adverse weather.” The soybean harvest has apparently born* out early estimates of a heavy crop. Heavy rains just before or following Nov. 1 have retarded harvest and may injure the quality of some beans, the report says. Frosts around Oct. 1 injured some late planted beans. It is generally conceded by those interested in the crop that yields are not only better than usual but that a larger percentage of the crop is being saved for seed thSn usual. A state yield of 17 bushel* per acre and a production of 5,270,000 busMte is now thb estimate. Pasture condition was reported tower than last month, although recent rains and wanner weather had done much to help pastures after frost damage in late September and early October. The apple crop, 67 per cent normal, will total T,903,000 busheb against 1,020,000 a year ago and pear production will be 170,000 busheb compared to 178,000 las* year.

WELL SAID . "Every goverament needs IntaWglan rtittelsm '—Alfred P. Sloan. | "Leisure can be a blesMng «r *1 j curse."—August Heckscher. -. \ J - I “There is no ‘average man.’ Every I I one 1* different."—Havelock Ellis. "The permanent human element te L the character—the will’’—Sir Olivet ■ Lodge. "Make up your mind what you can do and want to do, and go after it”— Owen D. Young. "We are here on earth to develop out ► character and to help other people to! do it."—Henry Ford. "Business should be treated a* an Individual is treated—no better, no worse.”—Lammot du Pont. — “If I were young again—I wish 1 were—l'd start out just as I did and build up."—Charles M. Schwab. "The true believer tn bls cause can • be tolerant the truly proud can b< pacific."—Ludwig Lewisohm. "No belief should be so firmly held as to lead to persecution of those who reject it”—Bertrand Russell. “Good taste I* the thing that we lack tremendously today In the show business.'"—S. U Rothafe! (Roxy). "In order to govern, one must have experience, coolness, clear vision, pa tlence, serenity."—Gugllemo Ferrero. "Because liberty is a virtue, human beings gorge themselves with It even I to the point of anarchy.”—Andre Maumis. ACTIVITIES OF WOMEN In Japan girls marry at ths average age of fifteen years. . Approximately 500 patents are Issued annually to women In the United States. j Women are said to have twice as strong a sense of touch and a better sense of Rearing than men. Women In Jhpan makes themselves burial shrouds which are first worn when they are married and then used at burial rites. » Women in Poland are determined to become or remain slim, regardless of any vogue In the western world for rounded figures. Women In Japan like to use a great deal of powder and rouge, but they are Indifferent to lipstick, except on the lower lip. As the result of a new law enforced In Budapest. Hungary, chaperones must accompany girls under seventeen years old attending public dances. ON THE YARD-LINE Merely because an epigram Is only . nine words long does not give It a point What you can always depend on: a minority will bluff until the ballots are counted. Wide diffusion of music by artificial means reveal* that a number like the wrong kind. Making a living by hanging to a trapeze isn't any queerer than making it by writing joke*. White Use are the kind one tell* to protect himself. Black ones are the kind that Injure other*. The lad who atop* at the kitchen door for something to eat, means It when be say* be Is hungry. Boys and immature young men should be under control Being immature, crime look* very showy to them. FOR MEDITATION Better be al way* on your guard than suffer one*. We know not which stone the scocjplen lurk* under. Who tears to oOend take* th* first step to please.—Obtar. What 1* set la a man cannot com* out of him, surely.—Gocth*. A man amobg children a child bo-1 coni**; a child among man, a anm. Opinion, which on wutenos wataa and sound* the word* another talk*/— Ltoyd. He 1* nobl* only who tn www thought and deed, prove* himself a man.—Anon. TURKISH PROVERBS | A fooltah friend is mor* trouonr some then a wise enemy. Th* man who weep* for everyone wW soon become blind. Even if your enemy I* small a* a ty, fancy him ** large as an elephnnt H* who rids* only borrowed oorsas mtn Seldom mount Into the saddles It is said that * popularly priced edition of Anthony Adversa has been issued. If this book has a big sale look for a lumber shortage next year. 0 Th* Italians are making a first down every time they advance into Ethiopian territory but they want to take care th** they don’t ftanblsi th* baiL ’

REAL ES'TATE —' TRANSFERS The Journal is furbished with the following transfers of real estate by I Houton C. Fraser, abstractor. War 'saw. Ind. Wm. H. Wedrick to W. R. Wedi rick Co., inc.. part lot 20 Beigh’s addition. Claypool. sl. Oren G. Craig, admr., to Nuel J. Polk, weet part lot 287, Warsaw. 81,400. Elza Ei>- Musser to John L. and Maryann Schwartz, tract in section 14 Etna township, 81,000. | John S. Judd to Russell L Shipley, 80 acres section 35 Frartklin township, sl. ? Percy E. Adams to Mildred M. Duggan, 23 acres section. 13 Seward township, sl. James J. Becknell to Lydia Grinder, .62 acre section 7 Wayne township, sl. Allen G. Haney et al to Bert E. and Cecil Dausman, 1.80 acres section 5, Vsn Buren township, sl. Dorothy E. Davis to Jesse and Bessie E. Kinnney, trset section 17 in Milford, sl. Abraham M. Burger to Forrest S. Jewell and S. Briggs, lots 133, 134 135 Burger’s addition, Riley Memorial Beach, Ridinger Lake, $685. Ancil E. Ratliff, trustee, to Raymond £3iiott, lot 66 Quaker Haven Park. $26. James S. Adams to Charles M. and Bianca Harrison, part lota 1 and 2 Sudlow A Marsh addition. South Park, Warsaw, $2,000. Winfield F. Leming to Claude C. and Blanch Mason, 25x40 ft. tract adj. to boat house lot 54 Ogden Island, Wawasee, sl. Mark C. Honeywell to Jas. F. ams Alic* E. Peterson, lots 14 and 15 Ist addition, Frazier’s Landing, Tippecanoe Lake, sl. John E. Westfield to Nurro E. and Gladys S. Van Meter, lot 28 Frazier’s Landing, sl. Elsie F. Greenawalt et al to Viola Greenawalt, 44 acres section 12 Scott township, sl. Victor D. Mock, receiver, to Luella H. Niblick, lota 40 snd 41 Courtland Park, Silver Lake, $l5O. Wm. R. Wedrick to W. R. Wedrick Farms, many tracts in sections 3,4, 28, 33 and 34, Clay and Lake townships, sl. Sylvester Hogan to Orval Hogan, lands in sections 8 and 9 Lake township, sl. Victor D. Mock, receiver, to Morrison A. and Isabel Rockhill, part lot 19 Boss addition, Warsaw. sl. Ella Zinn to Clara L- Dillman, lot 39, 6th ad. Winona, $lO. Glen Forsythe to Artie and Pearl Simison, weet one-half lota 7 and 8 block 17. Pierceton, sl. Willard A. Winebrenner to Wm. S. and Luella D. Rogers, south east part lot 16 Boss addition. War-, saw, sl. Viola Green et al to Donald L Green, 40 acres section 12 Scott township, sl. o The reason some men do not object to their wives attending dubs, instead of remaining home attending to the cooking , is because-they know what kind of cooks their wives are. o It is complained that the average modern university spends entirely too much time on football. Well, that isn’t half as bad as some of th* other things some of 'em teach.

A MAGAZINE SUBSCRIPTION Subscribe for any magazine through your local dealer. Renewals also solicited. Have Some Attractive Club Bargains JAMES BUTT, PHONE 876

An OutsUinding Qift... A Saving Account b A PERSONAL gift, that will last . . . surely the finest gift you can give. And in opening a Saving* Account for Christmas, you will be giving more than mere cash —but instill th* recipient with a habit that grows mor* significant each year. Make your gift as generous a* you can afford to. Large or - small, it’s the gift with th* greatest future. The State Bank ? Syracuse A SAFE PLACE TO PUT YOUR MONEY DEPOSITS INSURED @ The Federal Deposit insurance Corporation c • WASHINGTON, D.C. V C*AAA MAXIMUM INSURANCE tKAnn fUUUU FOR EACH DEPOSITOR >uUUU

WEDNESDAY, NOV. 27, 1935

• * *TWE ROOT CR&P * * $ Th* root crops furnish a large share of th* winter vegetable*. Th* term “root vegetables* usually refers to potatoes, sweet potatoes, carrots, turnips, parsnips, beets and salsify or oyster plant. The market supply of the two great staple vegetables, potatoes and sweet potatoest is large this year. The carrot crop has increased almost steadily for the last ten years. Young tender carrots are the best when cooked in skins and served with melted butter and a little lemon juice. The older carrots, which are less, expensive, are excellent for mashing, grating or for raw strips. Carrots furnish a rich source of vitamin A. This vitamin helps to resist infections of eyes, sinus, and glands of the mouth and throat. The yellow and green leafy vegetables contain this vitan in too. Turnips served raw furnish an excellent source ox vitamin C, and - yellow turnips also vitamin A. Parsnips are widely grown in home gardens. Favorite ways of cooking are to parboil, scrape off the skins, slice lengthwise and bake; or to djp the pieces in flour and fry them. They may also be mashed, made into cakes and fried or scalloped in milk. Beets may be bailed and buttered and add color as well as variety to a menu. ' Salsify, or oyster plant, is best known in the home gaiden. It may be stored like other root crops. It is an excellent source of iron. Salsify is usually - cooked in small > pieces, and either creamed, buttered, or mashed and ba e5. It may also be mashed and mixed, with mashed potatoes, made into small cakes and fried. Onions may be baked, scaolloped, stuffed, creamed or fried in addition to its use as a seasoner. Onions are extensively used at all seasons.

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Your Photo that Says A MERRY . CHRISTMAS The Year Round Only 27 More Days till Christmas PHONE m FOR APPOINTMENT Prices to suit every pocketbook j REINBOLD’S STUDIO 1