The Syracuse Journal, Volume 29, Number 38, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 21 January 1937 — Page 5
THURSDAY, JANUARY 21,1937
Grains Slide After Rising To New High
HEAVY BUYING RAISES PRICES OF MAY CORN Nearly All Quotations Are Higher Than Any Previous Season Mark CHICAGO, Jan. 20 (INS) — Grain markets turned reactionary this-week but not until all deliveries of corn, oats, and barley had advanced to new highs for the season. Heavy buying of May cqrn, which was attributed to brokers who were covering sales made at lower prices, lifted the price a cent a bushel to $1.13 1-8, while May oats touched 54 7-8 cents at the extreme. Closing trades on corn were unchanged to 5-8 cent higher, with old style contracts showing the most strength. Oats were unchanged to 1-4 cent higher, the chief advance being in the May delivery. Barlej futures advanced 1 1-8 cents. Wheat and rye futures declined a cent or more per bushel with September rye dropping to a new low for the season. Country Bids for Corn Reports that Missouri river markets had bid as high as SI.OB a bushel for No. 3 yellow corn at country loading stations in Illinois, and limited offerings of the cash article for shipment to Chicago had some effect on the futures market during the early trading. According to trade reports from western Illinois the demand for cash corn for shipment to lowa and Nebraska points was the heaviest of the season. Buying of oats futures recently was said to have been based on the belief that the grain has been selling relatively too low in comparison with corn and barley. Trade comment indicated there was small probability of a material shrinkage in the western demand for feeding grains. Little Corn Left in West The department of agriculture’s Jan. 1 report showed Only 20.000,000 bushels of cash corn remaining on farms in Oklahoma, Kansas, Nebraska, and South Dakota, compared with 127,000,000 bushels a year ago and a 1928-32 average of 282,000,000 bushels. Outside interest in the wheat market was only fair. While there was an upturn at one time in sympathy with corn, profit taking developed on the advance and later the market eased quickly when Wninipeg started downward. The trade paid little attention to reports that Italy and Germany were again in the market for supplies of cash wheat. Italy was said to have bought about 1 000,000 bushels from Argentina, Rumania, and Czechoslovakia, and Germany purchased 370,000 bushels | in Argentina. ' POULTRY ♦etts MORNING LIGHTING BEST FOR LAYERS Definite Schedule Is Urged by Poultry Expert By J. C. Taylor, Associate Extension Poultryman, New Jersey State College. WNU Service. To obtain the greatest efficiency from artificial lights, poultrymen should adopt a definite lighting schedule and adhere to it throughout the lighting period. One of the most common systems of lighting is the morning light. Under this system the lights are turned on at 4 or 5 a. m. and turned off at daylight so that the birds have a 13-hour day. The reason for the popularity of morning lights for layers is that no system of dimming the lights is required. -The time of the year when lights should be started is a very important question. The answer depends upon certain essential facts. The time pullets were hatched, present production of the flock and whether the yearling hens are to be used for breeding are factors that influence the time at which the flock should be given artificial lights. If egg production of the pullets is low, the use of lights will increase it. It should be remembered that artificial lights are a regulator of production and, therefore, should be used with caution. Poultry Gleanings The size, shape and color of a hen does not affect the eggs. • • • Feather picking usually starts as a vice in closely confined birds. « • • The yolk of the egg is employed in making the finer kind, of tawed leather. The total number of co-operative poultry and egg marketing associations in the United States is 154. Oats or barley, when ground, may be substituted advantageously for corn in rations for chicks and laying hens.
Ford Tests Skill at Ironing One of the few photos ever taken °* Auto Ma K nate Henry Ford in “domestic pose” shows him as he tested his skill with a new ironer ■k ' ? during inspection of one of DeHK troifs new electrical homes. ' 11 ** Jr ’ i ■r ' j mF
WE OWE THANKS FOR PURE MILK Vivid Contrast With U. S. Seen in Tropics. By EDITH M. BARBER
EARLY each morning we find at our doorstep clean, fresh milk and cream which we are certain is safe to use. Whether we think about this fact or not we are conscious that. the nutriments of this liquid food come up to the standard set by city or state. • Perhaps these facts were brought home to me by contrasting the appearance of the cattle in the tropics with those of our own dairy country. Even on the best farms they were scrawny and not to be compared with those which we see in our fertile countryside. For many years the milk which comes into many cities in this country has been pasteurized. Conditions on dairy farms in many states are under the supervision of the health authorities. We are not confronted with any problem as far as the quality and safety of out daily supply is concerned. This is a matter of moment in most places in the tropics, where most of my American friends rely entirely upon canned or dried milk. Although it has no bearing on the safety of the milk supply, it is very pleasant to those who like their morning naps to have milk distributed by wagons with pneumatic tires, sometimes drawn by horses whose hoofs are actually muffled. This latter is the custom in Erie, Pa., where I mistook the milk delivery for an early avrseback rider! Cream Soup. 1% to 2 cups vegetable pulp 1 tablespoon minced onion 3 cups white sauce Seasoning to taste Cook the vegetables and onion until they are tender. Rub through a sieve and add the pulp to the white sauce. Add the seasoning. Add more milk if necessary. Spinach, lettuce, onions, corn, peas and other vegetables may be used. The onion may be omitted. - Noodle Ring. 1 package noodles 2 tablespoons butter 2 cups diced meat of vegetable cups white sauce, well seasoned Cook noodles in boiling salted water. Drain and dress with melted butter. Press into ring, mold (quart size) and set in hot water. Dress left-over meat or vegetables with sauce, seasoned very well. Turn noodle mold onto platter and fill with creamed mixture. Two teaspoons of poppy seeds and one-half cup of chopped almonds may be browned in the butter used to dress the noodles.
Read Bullets of Justice, This Issue
GEO. L. XANDERS ATWRNBY-AT-L.W Settlement of Estate* Opintons on Titks FIRE and OTHER Insurance. Phone 7 Syracuse, Ind. PLAYER PIANO BIARG AIN Cost S6OO new, can now be had for only $34.50 with rolls complete. Write at once to Mrs. R. J. Lemke, 2335 W. Vliet Sretet, Milwaukee, Wisconsin and I will advise where instrument may be een.
Bread Pudding. 2 cups dry bread crumbs 1 quart hot milk % cup sugar 1 cup chopped figs % cup melted butter 3 eggs, beaten Salt % cup chopped nuts Add bread crumbs to hot milk and set aside to cool, then add all other ingredients and pour into greased baking dish. Place in pan of hot water in moderate oven and bake for one hour or steam for two hours. Serve with plain or whipped cream or pudding sauce. Lemon Frosting. 1 tablespoon grated orange rind 2 tablespoons Salt 1 cup confectioner’s sugar 2 tablespoons lemon juice 1 tablespoon water 2 cups confectioner’s sugar Cream orange rind and butter and add gradually the salt and one cup of confectioner’s sugar which has been sifted. Add lemon juice and water and remaining confectioner’s sugar. Chocolate Frosting. 2 tablespoons butter 2 cups confectioners’ sugar, sifted 4 egg yolks cup milk 1 teaspoon vanilla 4 squares chocolate, melted Cream butter thoroughly, add sugar and a little beaten egg yolk and cream together well. Add rest of egg yolks, milk, vanilla and chocolate. Place bowl in pan of ice water and beat with rotary eggbeater until thick enough to spread. Cream Puffs. % cup butter 1 cup boiling water 1 cup bread flour 4 eggs, unbeaten Add the butter to the water, heat until the butter melts, add flour all at once and stir vigorously over the heat until a bal forms in the center of the pan. Cool s’ightly, add eggs one at a time, beating well/ after each addition. Mixture should be very stiff. Shape on buttered cookie sheets by dropping from a spoon. Bake until free from beads of moisture in a moderately hot oven (375 degrees F.) © Bell Syndicate.—WNU Service. BELGRADE. Jan. 21, (INS)— Forty piglets have ben born to a sow at Pozharevatz, Yugoslavia, in two litters this year—22 in the first nd 18 in the second. All 40 are doing well.
Atty. Wm. Gray Loehr In All Courts. Notary Estates, Wilis Deeds REAL ESTATE EXCHANGED $5 Correspondent Courses 11$U S. Buffalo Street WARSAW, IND. D-X . LUBRICATING GASOLINE AND MOTOR OILS ' V Greasing Accessories Kelly Springfield Tires Gafill Oil Co. Opp. Post Office
SYRACUSE JOURNAL
SIX THOUSAND ATTEND FARM CONFERENCE Total Registration Is 6,9 H; Associations Elect Officers LAFAYETTE, Jan. 20 (INS)— ' All attendance records at the Purdue agricultural conference were broken this week with a total registration of 6,911. The previous high mark, established last year, was 6,845, and attendance figures are expected to pass 7.000 before adjournement of the week’s session. The closing feature of the conference, will be the “Rural Community Day Program. ” Addresses will be made by Dr. D. E. Lindstrom of the University of Illinois, Mrs. W. C. Roberts, Peltonville, and Dr. O. F. Hall of Purdue. ! Trophies Awarded Many counties of the state vied in close competition for attendance trophies, with Clinton leading Region 1 atendance with 543; Region 2, Cass, 192. Region 3, Lake, 141; Region 4. Randolph, 78, and De Kalb,. 71; Region 5, Vanderburg, 33.__ More than 600 attended sessions and a dinner of the Purdue Agricultural Alumni Association, with A. G. Phillips, former head of the Purdue poultry department, now of Chicago, as the principal speaker. His subject was “Distinguished Purdue Ags.” Certificates were presented, to five alumni for outstanding farm achievements. They included Lee B. Florea of Milton, Clarence Cecil, Muncie; Fred M. Fraser and R. R. Fraser of Rensselaer, and Arthur B. Brewer of Fairmount. The Frasers are brothers. SOME JUMP BUTTE FALLS, Ore., Jan. 20 — (INS) —Mrs. Albert Hoffman and her 12-year-old son,Arnold, k now what it feels like to look death in the face. Mrs. Hoffman drove her light truck over a 100-foot drop near here, but she and her son escaped with only minor injuries.
Where Gem Hoard Was Hidden Ml MF. I ■■ > ..f Isaac Schusterman Discovery of a $350,000 hoard of jewels in a Brooklyn safety deposit box cleared up the mystery surrounding the fortune in gems which had been reported stolen by Joseph Rose. 64-year-old eccentric who lives in poverty and on relief yet owns a king's ransom in diamonds. Rose first accused a friend of having stolen the gems but later admitted putting them in the bank vault His father. Isaac Schusterman. 94. who claims the jewels are his. is pictured showing police where the gems had been cached under the porch of his home before his son had taken them to the bank. NOTICE We want eggs for hatching. Call or see Elmer Stucky at once. Phone: Syracuse, 8247. SYRACUSE HATCHERY Syracuse, Indiana Wtoer O ® HOTEL '////////l THIRD AT JtFFERSOH '////////> 31m; ea • •<>» comfort.bl. bed to tOJ Jathl ffffffffi, * * spacious, airy room. Moat tdoal 175 BATHS U •• loeation to LouteviUo- atrietly mo- Jejl Beder. Afot d«n-«ntira>y fir*proof Up-to-date fmfjui dining room, cotta, shop e»»d bar RJR Oaraw* aaxvicaa • SO a ofi if
Tavern Signs Now Much Prized yrtirarwa - ill fiIEH raw ' L mMh bmmmwmi inn in lJekiwareJgj|| Newest prize sought by collectors is the historic tavern sign. These colorful and richly traditional insignias which once graced the fronts of old inns and post road hostelries are now valued as objets d’art and London and New York museums have recently staged representative shows. First-rate artists painted many of the old tavern signs, some of which are known to be the work of sucfi men as Hogarth, Corregio, Gilbert Stuart and Porter.
Big Dredge Starts 3,000 Mile Voyage EAST LIVERPOOL, Ohio. Jan. 20 (INS) —When the gigantic $500,000 dredge slid into the Ohio River at Midland, east of here, it started a
3,000 mile water journey— and a romantic journey at that. The Treadwell Construction Co., of Midland, built the dredge for the South American Gold andPlatnum Co., f or delivery at Tumaco. Arriving at Tumaco, the craft will eat its way through jungle swamps, lifting valuable earth containing gold and platinum deposits. Prosi pectors have surveyed the area which the dredge will cover. It is 155 feet long, weighs 3,000 tons, and is powered by three 500-horsepower Deiasl engines.
Mock’s Boat Livery I Crosley Radios Johnson Moton Vulcanizing and Welding Lawn Mowers Sharpened So. Side Wawasee — Near Waco 544—PHONE—544
INDIANAPOLIS The rates are low, but yoar room is big and airy, and you enjoy every fine hotel luxury at the Linden. Centraily located, dose to every* thing worthwhile. A friendly howtaUe «<noipK«e- Fin. 250 ROOMS K t. STUMINSk ■*”* * tTtt I _□ /I — I COAL'COKE I DENDRON—High Heat, Low Ash. 15100 B. T. U.—24% Ash America’s Best Quality Coal RED ASH— (Ky. Hazard No. 4 YELLOW PINE EGG—(Ky. Harlan) POCAHONTAS—(JeweII) CHESTNUT HARD COAL AMBER JACKET—(lndiana Egg) J NUT and EGG COKE SEE US FOR YOUR NEEDS I Stiefel Grain Co. I PHONE 886
What Romance Lies Behind Your Name? Is it Turner? “There is a tradition that this name is derived froth the ancient castle, LeTour Noir, ‘the black castle,’ in Normandy. The Lords of this castle were called Les Sires de Tournoir, and by contraction Tournoir, and now it is simply Turner. One of these Tournoirs accompanied William the Conqueror to England, establishing himself there ..." Is it Gordon? “The Gordon family took its name from the Barony of Gordon, Berwick county, Scotland. It is said that this land was granted a valiant hero called Gordon, who ‘slew a wild boar, the terror of all the Merse.’ For this brave deed he was knighted. His son was Sir Adam Gordon, ancestor of all American Gordons . • .** Is it Cox? Is it Hanson? Is it Crane? Is it Morse? Is it Cook? Is it Crawford? You will be delighted to read from whence came the names of matiy of those about you —perhaps your own, or a friend’s. Each week a different surname traced to its origin, in the feature Who Are You? WH'Appearing Regularly In This l!=|| Newspaper ||=ii
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