The Syracuse Journal, Volume 29, Number 22, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 17 September 1936 — Page 8
In Our Churches METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH Rev. Travis Purdy, Minister. Noble Blocker, S. S. Supt. Church School, 9:45 a. m. Morning Worship, 11:00. Epworth League, Sunday evening at 6 o’clock. UNITED BRETHREN CHURCH E. C. Rel den bach, Minister 9:45 a. m. Sunday School. 11:00 a. m. Morning Worship. 7:30 p. m. Thursday evening prayer meeting. Concord 9:30 a. m. Sunday School. 10:30 a. m. Morning Worship. Indian Village 9:30 a. m. Sunday School. EVANGELICAL CHURCH Rev. J. S. Pritchard, Minister. Mrs. Wilma Hire, Sunday School Supt. Sunday School 9:45 a. m. Morning Worship 10:45 a. m. • Evening Service 6:30 p. m. CHURCH OF THE BRETHREN Rev. J. Edwin Jarboe, Pastor. Guy Symensma, S. S. Supt. t Sunday School, 9:39 a. m. Worship, -it:39 a. m. 7:36 p. m. BEYER CHURCH Supt. Harry DoU and Homer Gettel. Services at 9:30 a. m. ZION CHAPEL. Emerson M. Frederick, Pastor. Sherman Deaton, Supt. Sunday School, 9:30 a. m. Morning worship, 10:30 a. m. Evening worship, 7:00. i I CHURCH OF THE BRETHREN S. S. at 9:30 a. m. Preaching at 10:30 and 7:30. Ladies Aid each Thursday. Honors Pocahontas The parish church at Gravesend, England, has two stained glass windows in memory of Pocohontas. Her grave has never been found.
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WANTED—Poultry of all kinds. Got our prices before selling. Phone 22 or write G. C. Tarman, New Paris Indiana. 16 » ch - ' WANTED We buy scrap iron, metal, paper, rags and old cars. SYKACUSE IRON & METAL COMPANY Phone 113. WANTED—Good single and double buggies. Have boiler shells for culverts for sale up to 72 inch diameter. Address Harry J. Schrock, Goshen, Ind. 16 3t pd. WANTED—WiII pay top prices for poultry of all kinds. Call or see W. F. Charlton, Milford, Phone 999. 20 3tpd. LUNG TROUBLE Yields most readily to treatment* this season. Dr. Warner. Phone 176, Goshen, Ind. CALL SHEA for quality plumbing, heating and furnace work. Phone Syracuse 860. We sasuro satisfaction. 45-ts-ch FOR SALE—Good Milk Cow. Also one baritone horn. Phone 1689, Syracuse, or see Forest Kern. Me .j) FOR SALE—Cabbage for kraut. Bargain. Call 114 Syracuse. It pd. WANTED—Cash register, large or small. Write Charles Eysol, 318 South Seventh street, Goshen, Ind. WAhjTED—Girl for general housework. Write C. M. Harrison, 4323 Indiana avenue. Fort Wayne, It pd. LAKE LOT WANTED Want to hear from owner who has Lake Wawasee lot or property for sale. Give price, location and details to Box 17 care of Syracuse Journal. SON OF ELMER PLACE ORDER NOW FOR CANNING tomatoes. 50c bu. patch run. Bring containers. Town delivery. Leonard Barnhart, No. Huntington St. Syracuse. HE LOST 2« POUNDS OF FAT Peel full of pep and poaseaa the Mender form you crave .you cant listen to fOßslDen. To take off sow sea tat go light on fatty meat*, butter, eream and sugary sweet* —eat more fruit and vmetable* and take a half teaspoonfuT of Kruscben Balts tn a gias* of hot water every morning to eliminate eomarn waste. Mrs, Bma Vertle of Havre de Grace, Md, writes: "I took off 30 ma—my clothes fit mo fine now." No drastic csthastwe no const!-
Protect Freedom at Polls: Landon
Dictatorship Leads to War, He Warns; Lauds GOB Platfonr PORTLAND, ME.—The Presidential election will be a choice between free enterprise under which the humblest citizen has a chance, and a system of invasion of private rights characterized by a million signs: “By Order of the American Government, Keep Off!” declared Gov. Alt M. Landon in a speech before a vast throng here. He defined the issues of the campaign: “Do we want the Government prying into every little detail of our business lives? “Do we want the Government forbidding us to plant what we want in our own fields? “Or: “Do we want to be free to plan for our future? “Do we want free government in America?” Coming of European System. Under the American system of free enterprise, Gov. Landon said, people have been free to plan for themselves and their children, knowing that their goal was limited only by their own ability, subject to no handicap of birth or class distinction. But, he pointed out: “Then came the N.R.A.! With the enactment of this measure in 1933, our government, without mandate of the people, adopted a new and completely different philosophy. When I say ‘new’, I mean new only in the sense that it was new to this country. It was a philosophy well known under the autocratic governments of Europe. “This philosophy decreed that prices should be regulated,” said Gov. Landon, “not by demand and supply, but by government edict; that wages and hours of employees should be fixed, not by free and fair negotiations under rules assuring equality, but by officials in Washington; that the sort of competition which must be fostered, as the life-blood of free enterprise, should in future be prohibited by law . . . NRA Lives On. “What the N.R.A. really undertook to do in this country was to terminate our system of free competition, and to substitute for it a system of government-created and government • protected monopolies ... “The N.R.A. was the beginning in America of the movement which, throughout the world, has beer sweeping aside private enterprise in favor of government control—a movement which has been substituting arbitrary personal authority foi constitutional self-government. “But—you may say—the N.R.A is dead. “True enough. The National Industrial Recovery Act is dead, thanks to the courage and integrity of the Supreme Court “But the spirit of the N.RA. lives on. It lives on in recently enacted laws. It lives on in the efforts x of the Administration to get around the decisions of the Supreme Court It lives on in this Administration’s 1936 platform. It lives on in the recent public utterances of the President and his spokesmen. May Lead to War. “But above all, it lives on in the spirit of the President who has confessed no error—who has let it be clearly known that he considered it would be a catastrophe if the American farmer should ‘once more become a lord on his own farm’ ... “It was no accident that Congress delegated its functions to the President. . . . “Power of this magnitude U dangerous from the economic as well as from the political point of view. No man’s judgment is sufficiently infallible to justify giving him control—either in private business or in government—over the standard of living, the savings, and the destiny of his fellow citizens. When the decision of one man affects an entire country, a wrong decision means national disaster. “The Republican Party opposes unlimited executive power tor another reason. This reason is that the world-wide trend away from democracy means but oi«e thing—that one thing is WAR. Any weakening of democracy here, means the final rout of democracy everywhere. ... “The temper of the American public is no longer complacent. It has definitely set its face against monopoly and unfair trade practices. The pledge in our platform is not mere words. It does not mean to me fruitless inquisitions that impede recovery and delay re-employ-ment* To me it means not only the steady relentless enforcement of existing laws but the strengthening those laws. And it means the enactment of such additional legislation as is necessary to put an end to monopoly, unfair trade practices and all special privilege. Only if we follow this course can wg escape the system of government regulated monopolies sponsored by this Administration. “If you do not believe this, you had bettor not vote for me. For I am pledged by the Republican platform to save our system of free enterprise.” To Win an A»g—S at ■One way to git de best of as argsment," Unde Eben, Is to say om thing wif all yoh might an’ keep os sayin’ ft. Dar ata’ m om tryte’ to convince a parrot." Wont Cucko. ' Jud Tonkins says them smart city Mien is irreverent. One of ’em says the dove of peace
Amelia Tackles New Piloting Job
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Amelia Earhart, famed aviatrix, tries her hand on a new kind of piloting —with a “Scooter Ride” auto on the Midway of the Texas Centennial Exposition in Dallas. The badge she wears is that of a constable from “Judge Roy Bean’s Court”
Fountain Beautifies Exposition »
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WORLD’S FAIR OFFICE FRONT.—One of the picture spots of the $25,000,000 Texas Centennial Exposition which opened in Dallas June 6, is the changing-color fountain and pool before the Administration Building, which reflects the beautiful mural over the lobby door.
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Harry Olmsted, for quarter of a century prominent in Southwestern business and civic affairs, is the new head of the Texas Centennial Exposition. He succeeds to the leadership of the world’s fair following the recent death of William A. Webb, general manager. Mr. Olmsted was lor twenty years a director and for five years president of the State Fair of Texas.
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Artistically Printed Regardless of where your letter «... jg afwytW posMSB quality that wffl fanpetas the reetpient as coming jWmMf |y ae an KOO LBTUSHAVEYOUR NEXT ORDER
SYRACUSE JOURNAL
Syrian* Lament Venn* Gebel, the oldest city tn Phoenicia, was once the center of Adonis worship. There, on the banks of the River Nohr-Al-Ibrabim, the women of Syria lament the death of Venus’ lover. The lamentation reaches its height In the autumn, when the red waters from tha hillsides swell the stream. 4
Did It Ever Occur to You That price is not the first thing to be considered in a job of printing I Throwing type together in a haphazard way doe* not require any knowledge of the printing art. That isn't the kind of work you want. But artistic typography in stationery and advertising reflect* credit to any concern. Our knowledge of printing gained by long experience enable* u* to produce A ftractive Printing for Every Purpose jDon’f order anything in this line until call on ut.
Complete radio sales and service has been established in the Syracuse Journal office building, Main street with competent electricians and repairmen to install test or service your set. We invite you to see and hear the new RCA Victor Radios just received. James M. Mench Radio Sales and Service Phone 4 Syracuse, Ind.
W.R. Bigler Jeweler and Watch Repairman Announces new location in the Syracuse Journal Office Building Main Street Phone 4 Syracuse, Ind. *L- ’ ————
Gov. Alf M. Landon
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A striking likeness of the Repute •lean candidate for President is this new crayon portrait, heretofore unpublished, the work of Artist Alfred Panepinto.
Digest Poll Gives Landon 2 to 1 Lead Washington.—Gov. Alf M. Landon leads President Roosevelt by more than 2 to 1 in the first returns from the Literary Digest presidential polL Maine, New York, Pennsylvania and New Jersey gave Landon 16,056, President Roosevelt < 7,645, William Lemke, third party candidate, 754, and Norman Thomas, socialist candidate, 109 votes. Four other candidates received 125 scattering votes. Os the 24,689 total votes reported, 2,714 for Landon were from persons who had voted Democratic in 1932, while only 1,407 for Roosevelt came from voters who then favored Hoover. The Lemke candidacy is taking four votes from Roosevelt to one from Landon, returns indicated. Landon Epigram “Anything that will promote recovery and restore jobs I am for, and anything that will hinder it I am against.—Alf M. Landon. Men Choose Equals In selecting their mates, men pick women whose intelligence Is about on their own level,, according to a psychologist of the University of California. Find Stork’s Loot In the nest of a stork caught stealing a handkerchief from a garden at Podebrady, Poland, were found five Other handkerchiefs, towels, vests, aprons and a shirt.
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.■■■■■■■■■■■..■■■■■■■ l 5 . ■ kind of printing that I pay* dividends i* the t ■ kind you should have. Pale, muddy, poorly arranged J printed matter i* worse than g none. The quality of your • business is often judged by { the quality of your stationery a —inferior printing gives an ■ impression of cheapness that i* hard to overcome, while i a good printing carriee with it a • ■ deurablesuggestionofqnality. [ We pifeduce only Quality Printing. Whether you went « a an inexpensive handbill or a » ■ letterhead in eolora, if yon { J order it from us you will be i ■ sure of getting good work. ■ We have the equipment and ! J the “know bow” that enable* « ans to get out really good print- • ■ ing—printing that impreaaea ! J people with the good taate of E a it* usera. That ia the only kind of printing that ‘ "lr ays
Indiana Highways Are “Color Tours” During Autumn Days
The scenic beauty along Indiana’s state highways at all seasons of Jhe year and particularly during the autumn, makes the establishment of formal “color tours” unnecessary, James D. Adams, chairman of the State Highway Commission, asserted today. * Designation of certain highways as routes for motorists interested in autumn coloring of the foliage is a practice in several states less fortunate in the wide range of scenery and extensve improved highway system that Indiana possesses. An attempt to designate highways for “color tours” in Indiana would result in the listing of all but a part of the nine-thousand-mile system. While the southern part of the state with its rugged landscape and tree-covered hills provide the major part of the autumn show, central
A Word to the Ambitious “Don’t be too anxious to be boss,” Mid Uncle Eben. "When de final measurements Is took, deca as give de orders Is de ones dat has to take de blame foh de mistakes!.” Smuggling Industry in Ireland Smuggling across the Northern Ire-land-Irish Free State bonier is becoming an industry, and conducted along the lines of "big business.” No longer do swashbuckling ruitlians follow the methods of predecessors in rolling barrels of brandy across the eaves while engaged In battles with customs men. Syndicates have been organized to handle contraband goods, and every movement Is part of a clockwork campaign. One syndicate deals In cattle and one other handles nothing but'greyhound racers. The average gross profit on cattle successfully “through the back door.’’ is about S3O a head, and herds ,of GO have been slipped through. Greyhound smugglers charge sls for putting a dog across the border. Spain Mineral Country Spain contains considerable mineral Wealth.
Lest We Forget if Ttime COMPLETE STOCKS Coal - - Coke Stiefel Grain Co. Syracuse, lad. Phone 886 a, „ ■■■■ „ , , - The Big Store Buy a Blanket on the Easy Payment Plan—--25c down and balance on easy terms. Part-Wool Blankets, Large 70x 80 Sateen Bound Double. Specially spun Core Yarn insuring strength and long wear. Beautiful Plaids in Seven Colors. A wonderful blanket. A wonderful opportunity. GROCERY DEPARTMENT Chipso, 1 large package - -22 c With 1 Cannon Dish Cloth Ic—Total - - -23 c PITTED DATES, per pkg. ~lsc 2 Ibsfl Soda Crackers, per pkg. 21c Ball Mason Jars, pints per dozen 59c Ball Mason Jars quarts per dozen 69c Red or White Jar Rings 6 pkgs for 25c RIB BOIL, per lb. 10c HEAVY ROASTS, per lb. 19c Sir Loin Steak, per lb. 25c BACHMAN’S SYDACUSE, INDIANA
THURSDAY, SEPT. 19, 1936
.and northern Indiana also have their scenic attractions for the fall motorist. Many Hoosiers and visitors from other states are discovering that the fall coloring and the scenery in Brown county is but an example of what they can expect along scores of other highways through the southern half of the state. An added feature of the fall trips for Hoosier motorists this year will be the opportunity to inspect and enjoy the improved state highway system. Scores of detours in effect on the state highway system during the spring and summer months while construction was in progress, will have been removed and motorists will find better traveling surfaces, wider bridges, additional grade separations and other improvements which add to their enjoyment and their safety.
Famous Corps Reduced The famous British “Redcaps,” the corps of military police, which had a strength of nearly 15,000 daring the World war. now has only 506 men. Advertising? •• I ■■■■lll 111 I 11. 11l I If it la results you want I you should use thia } paper. It circulates in / the majority of homes I In the community and has always been considered I The Family | Newspaper I The grown-ups quarrel about it, the children cry for It, and the whole family reads it from cover to cover. They will read your ad if you place ' It before them in the proper medium.
