The Syracuse Journal, Volume 28, Number 51, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 16 April 1936 — Page 6
LOOK AT “ALL THREE” AND COMPARE PRICES i I PLYMOUTH iJIjU \ LMMrt Prieto 4-Omt sto*n, Lht at Factory. Itotrrit Lawart Prieto 4-Daertotfao, Urt at Mato Factory 1 X/ You receive the surprise of your life when you compare prices of “All Three” lowest priced cars . . . and see how much more Plymouth fives you. It's the only one of “All Three" with both a Safety-Steel body and Hydraulic Brakes. It’s bigger, safer, more comfortable. It’s the most economical. Get a comparison of delivered prices . « . on the model you have in mind. Syracuse Auto Sales Syracuse, Indiana
Nyal Remedies \ Nyal Milk 25c Ny*i Com Remover 2for2sc\ °f Magnesia IF Powder Pt-Nyal Mineral 0U.... 2 for Full pint 1 50 c atae 25c Nyal Analgesic 8a1m... 2 for Bk 50c Pt. Nyal Beef, Iron &. Wine.. 2 for 75c Nyalyptus Cough Syrup.... 2 for 75a rrv_ 25c Mercurochrome Solution 2 for 25c\ &L Horehound \ 85’s Nyal Cod Liver Extract Tablets. • 2 for ♦l 00 If Cough. SyTUp | 25c White Pine-Tar Cough Syrup...... 2 for 1 a { %e 1 25’* Nyal ABD Vitamine Capsules........ 2 for •I 25 2for 50C 100 Nyal Iron &. Yeast Tab1et5........... 2 for *l°° SI.OO Nyal Hot Springs Medicine 2 for H<*> / 50c Nyal Rectone Oint.—for piles... 2 for 50c # 1 Pt. Nyal Norweg. Cod Liver 0U... 2 for 95c/ | Witch HaXCI W &c Nyal Buchu Juniper Pills 2 for 50c / 100 I Full Pint I 35c Thirty-Five Shaving Cream 2 for 35c/ V **l 2 for SQC Tablets 2 for 25c / Aspirin Pt. Rubbing A1c0h01.... 2 for 50c / Tablets 100 2fo. 35c/ 2 50c F » UJON ™“ 2 / I j SNyal Toiletries for $ I Vegetal Lotion.. 2 for 35c , Fw. Powder.... 2«« 25c Nyalgesic a Tooth Paste..•• 2 for 50c y The liquid rub for roodiPM. 2 far 25C I J , Powder. ....«••• 2 for 50c 2r foe 50c If nting Cream.. 2 for 50c e and\ip Stick... 2 for 75c imberCremn 2 for 50c IF jq Jlga l Drops igOmm 2 foe 35c | dwnper hf»U Twnea-150 2 for 35c I J stile Shampoo.... 2 far 50c ,um or Vegetal.... 2 far 5Cc Plate Powder.... 2 far 50c am Tooth Paste... 2 for 50c F 1 Fsis Nail Polish... 2 for 25c I 25c tube 1 B^ T TJcu»....2f0.25c k so. 25C Today Tomorrow and Saturday Thornburg Drug Co. Phone 83 Syracuse, Indiana
CONSERVATION CLUBS ( PLAN PROPAGATION Local Organization One of 142 to Cooperate in Statewide Move. The Wawasee Conservation Club was one of 142 conservation clubs in the state that have signed contracts with the Division of Fish and Game for the propagation of fish to be used in stocking Indiana lakes and streams this year, according to Virgil M. Simmons, commissioner of the Department of Conservation. Clubs expecting to propagate g nne fish under contract with the Division of Fish and Gome this year, must have their contracts completed by May 1. Among the clubs already completing contracts, a.-e 24 which did not*operate club hatcheries in 1935 when over a million game "fish produced by the clubs ’ supplemented those from the state hatcaeries in stocking Indiana fishing walAu, Three hundred tv.d seventy ponds, representing a total water area of .-•to acres, will be operated by the 142 conservation clubs already holding contracts. o ADD FIVE PROJECTS TO HIGHWAY LETTING Five additional highway cors ruelion p oec.s, readvert sed from the - kiting held by the State Highway Commission on April 7, urebeing submitted for bids which will be o; ened by the highway commission on April 28, it was announced tod;iy by James D. Adams, chairman. Bids are to be opened on eight grade separations and seventeen bridges. With the addition of these projects, two grade separations and three bridges, work on which bids are to be opened April 18 will have a total estimtved cost of SBIB,OOO.
SYRACUSE JOURNAL
Political Announcements
FOR CLERK CIRCUIT COURT Kosciuko County BCTM| GUY BUSHONG Os Pierceton Wa hington Twp. Subject to Decision of Republicans of Kosciusko County at PRIMARY ELECTION MAY 5, 1936 Due to the fact that lira busy in school, I probably will not he able to canvas this township. But I assure you that your support will be appreciated. William Gray Loehr For Prosecuting Attorney With Fairness Subject to Republican Pri--45-Btp mary Elect on May 5, 193a
8 For Prosecuting Attorney 54th Judicial Circuit, Kosciusko County JACOB S. KOONTZ Subject to the Decision of Republican Primary Election, MAY 5, 1936. ASM ARNOLD SCHULER Republican Candidate for Re-election for I Joint Senator Kosciusko and Wabash Counties Your Support Respectfully Solicited X s , B FOR CLERK CIRCUIT COURT — Kosciusko County VOTE ESTA L. YOCUM Warsaw, R. F. D. 4 In The Primary Subject to the Decision of Republican Voters at Primary Election • z TUESDAY, MAY 5, 1936 IVIAX 3
Political Candidates nr HE Syracuse Journal is offering to all political candi- * dates, the lowest prices for fine quality printing and advertising. , , — < "Z ' - ■ ’ ' ‘ | . - This size card can be printed with or without your photograph for I the surprisingly low cost of z $2.50 per 1,000 or $lO for 5,000 I I: - ■ We also have a wide choice of all forms of printing and advertising, equally low in price. You may consult us without incurring any obligation. SYRACUSE JOURNAL Telephone 4 Syracuse, Ind. > -
FOR JOINT STATE SENATOR For Kosciusko and Wabash Co.’s GUY D. DILL Republican Candid, te for Joint State Senator for Kosciusko and Wubtsh Counties FOR CLERK CIRCUIT COURT Kosciusko County. CHARLES PECK’ JEFFERIS R. F. D. No. 2, Warsaw Wayne Township Subject to Decision of Republicans of Kosciusko County at PRIMARY ELECTION, MAY 5. 1936 FOR CORONER KOSCIUSKO CO. LESLIE A. LAIRD, M. D. Subject to decision of Republicans of Kosciusko County, at the PRIMARY ELECTION, MAY 5, 1536 50-4tp
I 1 | HISTORY OF SYRACUSE SETTLED IN 1835 I i I 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 1910: Some Dates and Facts Gleaned From a BuncU of Old Newspapers Come, sit down with me here and let you and I look through a stack of old Syracuse Registers that my wife stored away in the attic of our home one day not long ago. If you have lived in Syracuse twenty years or more your interest in them will no doubt be keen, as I know mine will be. They will bring to us many unwelcome reminders of the flown and fleeting years. But what of that! Has not the calendar done the same already? And are we to be. denied the pleasures of renewing memories of the good old days by fe r of approaching age? No thought of it! We’ll sit down here, if you will, and revel in whatever recollections the old discolored papers may have stored for us, all reck’ess or the future, and without thought of adding the number of yea s that have passed since to the number we were of age then. And here is the first one: January 8, 1891. J mes Ritter was publisher of the paper then, and it was newly established. You lemember Mr. Ritter? He came here from some little town along the B. & O. railroad in Ohio, with an old anny press that slid the paper along over the type and gave it ai Dutch appearance if ink enough was used to make a black print, and a hatlul or so of worn out type that had been rescued from the wreck of a fire, as I remember, and succeeded, with this outfit, in earning an honorable living for himself and his wife. How he accomplished it I never could figure out. In this issue is recorded the deaths of Tobies Keim and Mrs. Anna Guy. Nineteen years since they died! I wouldn’t have believed it. I have the f best of lessors for .emembering the incidents th t attended the dea'h of Mrs. Guy. Widow she was of James Harvey Guy, who froze to de th on wh:«t is now the Chirles Thompson farm while on his way heme from Syracuse in the winter of 1874-75, and sole legatee of his estate; the death of Ptrry, their only child, h ving occurred four years pevious to that of his father. John W. Stetler was appointed commissioner to d'spose and distribute the proceeds of her e tate among her relatives, of whom there were twenty-three, or many degees of relationship, and I assisted him in the capacity of attorney. And that was nineteen years ago. March 17, 1872. Here it is announced thru the Wawa:ee Club filed articles of association, the fee VOTERS: For your information inquire of the candidates for prosecutor of their qualifications and where they are from and how long here? Then with all fairness remember that I have practiced law here twenty years, am a man with afamily, and a native of Kosciusko County, U. S. A. William Gray Loehr, for prosecutor, with fairness. 51-ltp
THURSDAY. APRIL 16,1936
for membership in which was $250. Its directors were James B. Suitt, Eli Lilly, A. H. Nordyke, Ben L. Smith, J. F. Wright, C. E. Cowgill, H. S. Tucker, C. C. Foster, T. E. Griffith, T. H. Spann, and W. J. Lucas. There was no fixed amount of capital stock. And it is further stated that “A new hotel is to be built,, to take the place of the one recently destroyed by fire. ” And that proves that the old Cedar Beach club house was burned in the first days of 1892 —eighteen years ago. It had been built in the spring of 1880 as I told you week before last, by the North Lake and River Association, and it stood twelve years, and then; on a winter night when it was deserted of any guest or occupant, took fire and was destroyed. It® was strongly suspicioned that the fire was the work of an incendiary, though what motive anyone could have had for the crime could hardly be conjectured. And pioinptly the present Inn was built, much larger and more pretentious than was the first building. And the new club, that took over the grounds of the old, was given’ the new name that had been adopted for the 1 ke, token from the Potawattamie chieftian, Wa-waus-see, the contemporary of Musquawbuck and Flat Belly, the story of whom I have told you. And so, the Inn, as we see it I now, is eighteen years old. It was opened for guests early in July, l»9z, wi h S. E. Arnold as manager, as a later one of those old newspapers informs us. Here is a local paragraph that tells us that the wall-eyed pike taken fom Wawasee lake, mounted and hung in the postoffice here by Col. Eli Lilly was two years old, being one of the ten million fry pknted in the lake by the United States Fish Commission in 1890. Twenty years ago. This was the fiist planting of fish in our lake, and much did we expect from it. And when this specimen, thu. would have weighed two pounds, wrs tikfen f.om the lake, and many others of its size were seen therein, so that we were certain many of the fry planted were ■< maturing,- we had not any doubt that soon the waters would be populous with them. But we were to be disappointed. Son.eth.irg, we knew not what to this day, was wrong in the environment, and they failed to reproduce their kind. For several years occasionally one of them was taken, most of en by netters who did not make pub ic announcement of the catch, but they mi st h-ve been all of the fry originally planted or nearly so. But rarely now do we hear of one of them being seen. 'And if we do hear of one being seen or hooked at all it is always a large one, probably twenty years old. Now, reason ought to have taught us in the beginning that our efforts ’ would be futile, for were the environment proper here for wall-eyed pike nature would have filled our waters with them, at no cost of labor to ourselves, they being natives to all streams and lakes tributary to Lake Michigan. In the great inland sea that inundated all the lands of this section after the passing of the glaciers the fishes must have circulated freely, and probably all species of them that flourished therein were land locked in every such lake as is Wawasee, formed as the waters receded. And all of them in each of these lakes that found proper environments there continued, while the others died out and disappeared. And it being hardly a possibility that present environments are more favorable than were the original ones, it is , folly to attempt to establish species artificially where nature failed. Conversely, we have the small mouthed black btss in Wawasee lake, and they are to be found in very few of the lakes of Indiana, if, indeed, they exist at all in any other one. And we have them by a mere scratch. They spawn here a month later than do the large mouthed bass, and that is altogether unnatural. On the gravelly bottoms of the rivers, their natural home, they make their nests early in May, at the same time as do their cousins of the larger mouths. Now the large mouthed bass fasten their spawn to mosses and lily roots, and in every fresh water they find grounds suitable for their nesting. Their small mouthed relatives can hatch their broods only around stones and gravel. For them there are breeding grounds in Wawasee Lake all proper except that the water over them is much deeper than it ought to be, and acquires the proper temperature only when the sun it high in June. Were it just a little deeper it would not reach this, temperature until quite too late, and our small mouthed bass would disappear. Anyhow, it is not wise to be expending our energies trying to stock our lake with new species. Those already there cannot be improved upon, and the varieties of them are quite sufficient. Let us rather ex ert ourselves to protect and replenish those we already have, which we know to thrive and multiply there. Now we sat down to revel in these old newspapers, and our time is up, though we have hardly begun it. We shall have to put them away until another time.
