The Syracuse Journal, Volume 29, Number 46, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 18 March 1937 — Page 8
Page Eight
Industrial East Visions New Farm Program
GEORGE GASS SUCCUMBS IN MIAMI FLA. Well Known Wawasee Resident, Dies. Os Stroke Funeral services were held yesterday afternoon for George Gass, well known Lake Wawasee summer resident, at his home in Indianapolis. <; Mr. Gass, aged about 50 years, had spent the summer season at Lake Wawasee forth epast 26 years. He was well known here! and always expressed profound interest in the welfare and growth of Syracuse and the lake region. He is survived by his sister, Mrs. R. B. Tuttle of Indianapolis with whom he resided. He was at one time an officer of the South Shore Golf Club, Inc. here, but was actively engaged in recent years in business in Indianapolis. Mr. Gcss died while spending the winter in Miami, Florida. He had been jn ill health, and had spent the past three months in* Florida, where he was resting. He died Saturday night, following a stroke. Carl B. ! Tuttle, who married Miss Velma Mssqn here last summer is a nephew of Mr. Gass. At the wedding reception last sum mer, in the Tavern Hotel, Mr. Gass became ill, and medical aid •’ was summpnd. He had not been! in good health since. Mr. Gass was a World War! veteran. He was a native oi Muncie, Indiana, where his par- > ents were early ant . helped to do much of the pioneer ’ ing work of that city. He spent most of his lifetime, however, in Indianapolis, Syracuse and Lake [ Wawasee .j
Want Ads SINUS TROUBLE successfully treated. Treatment not painful. See Dr. Warner Phone 176, Goshen. FOR SALE — Turkeys. Larg< bronze Tom and large whit< Holland Tom. Ralph Baum uarteny, North Humington St: LOST—4 book on Phenology. Please return to Reverend J. F. Pritchard or phone 170. SALESMAN WANTED—A Kelt able Dealer for HEBE RUNG ROUTE of 1500 to 2000 families Write quickly. G .0. HEBERLING CO., Dept. 598, Bloomington, 111. FARM for SALE—Eighty &eres west of Ligonier. Good proposition.’ Write 119 West Umor s'reet. Ligonier. Jnd. 21 FOR SALE—Eight room house Modern except furnace. Good location, with garage. Mrs. John Meek, Syracuse, Ind. FOR SALE—Model T tug truck. Good condition. Reasonably priced. See Joel Wilt. >5 FOR SALE—Electric range cheap. Four lights. Electric side lights. One telephone . One saxaphone. Mrs. Milton Selig, Ligonier, In diana. FOR SALE—Timcthy Hay and Clover Hav. E. E. Strieby, Syracuse, Ind.» CALL Shea for firs* class plumb ing, heating. Telephone 850, Syracuse. FOR SALE OR TRADE-One eight-room house with four car garage, located in city of Franklin. Will sell or trade for residence property in Syracuse or vicinity. Write Box 144, care of The Journal. FOR RENT—IB acres. Nine of muck. Good. Nine acres of upland. Phone 403, H. L. Bird. BUY Sexed Chicks to save high priced feed. 2700 Breeders on our own farm. MPford Farm Hatchery, Milford. Phone 202. ’ MEN WANTED for nearby Rawleigh Routes of 800 families. Reliab'e hustler should start earning $ 9 5 weekly and increase rapidly. Write Rawleigh’s, Dept. INC-433-SC, Freeport, 111. FOR SALE—Hay. Telephone New Paris 303. A. W. Warstjer. 500 Barred Rock, 500 White Kock for. March first delivery. Syracuse Hatchery, Syracuse, Ind. __Phone 174. i JamesM.Mench RADIO SALES AND SERVICE Phone 4 Syracuse, Ind. , L ——w———. GEO. L. XANDERS FIRE and OTHER Insurance. Settlement of Estate* Opinions on Titk* ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Phone 7 Syracuse, Ind A. J. Thibodeaux Watch and Clock Repairing First House South ofU. B. Church Phone m >” Lake Street Syracuse, Ind.
I No Explanation Necessary ■M ROBINSON, Inc ■OS Building Material, Millwork, Tile, Coal » j PHONE 97 ' MILFORD, INDIANA Kerch 4, 193?. IwW I fit ' jrM BEk I Syracuse Journal, Syracuse, Indiana. Gentlemen :* v f jlith reference to our large ad appearing in your issue of February 25th. fill say that the Rrf writer made up the copy for this very hurriedly and as you know the material furnished you was without j any layout or accompanying instructions. When I first saw this ad I could hardly sgk ; 3 realise or believe that you could work out such a wNBk fine oopy. I am 80 well pleased with this ad. in fact it is equal to any I have ever seen in the Chicago u|| Tribune or any other paper and I am taking a copy of aBX? your paper with me today to a lumbermen’s meeting- to show some of the other boys how to advertise and I am 9B| also sending a copy to the New York office of the National Housing Guild as it is a better appearing ad. In my opinion, than any copy they have yet furnished me. iiiip * Again let me compliment you on this fine service« | Very respectfully, K HE!:res ;
me publishers of The Journal appreciate this fine letter. We publish it today so you may know the same type of service awaits you at our plant, call
Textile Use Soars To Post-War High NEW YORK, Mar. 18. (INS)— Consumption of textile products in he United States set a post war high in 1936, according to a trade ournal here. Total'consumption of cotton, rayon, silk znd wool amounted to 1,233,400,000 pounds, compared with 3,479,000,000 for 1935. Hitherto, the best post-war year was 1927 in which 4,135,600,000 ' I ~ ' 1
FINE | )RY CLEANING Syracuse Dry Cleaner M. E. Rapp I ■ i. . • Phone 9Q. 5 2 5 -P ROUND TRIP TO (Chicago Every Week-end Travel in comfortable B & O coache* otoatf Fare* Everywhere—Every Itay For details consult Ticket Agent Baltimore & Ohio
WATER cod&ledd IM YE PS DUNNING water is cheap enough it; v Yet HIL-JSXig—.y X\ thousands of farm and suburban font -s have found that their MYERS Water System supplies them with this ■ greatest of ail modern conveniences at a cost per gcllon IHM Ba mat is even lower than city meter rates. MYERS Water Systems are absolutely reliable—so efscient and durable that expenses HEP for operating and repairs are reduced to a minimt’fo ■ ten Styles and sizes'to suit all needs; for operation by band, JB H~| windmill, gasoline engine or electricity. Deep and shallow II mb well models. J Edward G. Shea Plumbing and Heating / Phone 850 Wain Syracuse, Ind. i'l . •
us Today. The Journal believes business goes where it’s invited and stays where it is well treated.
j were consumed. Cotton accounted for 81.9 per f cent of the total, the survey revealed. Silk, comprising only J 1.4 per cent, was lowest since “ 1923.
e' I —- - o Crystal Theatre a;. r I Ligonier, Ind. ' ' t Tonight March 18 I! 1 Double Feature Program Stuart Erwin Betty Furness ALL AMERICAN CHUMP i Edmund Lowe Florence Rice UNDER COVER OF NIGHT ? Fri. Sat. Mar. 19, 20 A Sunday Feature in Technicolor—Try to see this picture Friday night. i GODS COUNTRY AND THE WOMAN Comedy, Cartoon, Hollywood Extra Sun Mon Tues Mar 21 22 23 Kay Francis STOLEN HOLIDAY News, Crime Does Not Pay Cartoon Wed., Thurs. Mar. 24, 25 The Academy Award For 1936 MR. DEEDS GOES TO TOWN i
THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL
SEIDER’S GROCERY 10 lbs. Sugar with SI.OO worth of groceries, not including flour 45c 1 Can Rosedale Pineapple....23c 5 lb. Bag Rolled Oats 2€c 1 lb. Calumet Baking Powder 24c 1 Box Chipso23c 1 Quart of Mustardl3c 2 lb. Box Soda Crackers 18c 3 Cans of L. C. Lye23c Fresh Fruits and Vegetables Free Delivery Phone 82
WALL PAPER "NUF SBD” You Know The Place And The Stock Is Bigger And Better o Thornburg Drug Co. Watch for Our Sample Book
GOVERNMENT PUSHES NEW RURAL PLANS BETHLEHEM, Fa., March 18 ! (INS) —The Federal Resettlement Administration is steadily pushing development of its model Northampton Farms project in the Allentown Bethlehem-Easton industrial area. It is the only agricultural enterprise of its kind in the East. The purpose of the project is to furnish low-cost homes and subsistence farms to industrial workers >in these cities. Sale of surplus ! farm produce and poultry prodI uttt would be managed on a coopreative basis for the tenants. The total cost of the project, , including purchase of the farm ! lands and construction of the ; farmsteads, is estimated approxii mately at $1,500,-000. Failure of 1 the Government to allocate necj essary funds hss delayed construe-! ! tion, but administration officials i hope the actual work will be be- > gun in the spring. 7 Tracts of Land Acquired To date the administration has ; acquired seven tracts of land, I considered some of the best farm- ! ing land in Pennsylvania, in Northampton County. AU seven are in close proximity to the State’s steel and cement industries. . The administration plans to loi cate on these tracts 218 farmsteads 1 of about one acre each, with mod ern houses and the neeessarv garages and poultry houses. Families chosen for rese*tlement will come from the low-income, self supporting groups in rural and urban areas. Destitute or low-in-come stranded workers’ families who have in the past exhibited £■ capacity for self support aFo will i Ibe eligib’e. Preference will be j •aouauadxa SutuapjeS jo Suiuijbj quips peg aAeq oqM asotp UMoqs I Modernize Your Kitchen with the new Middlebury, Lino-! leine Sink top Kitchen Cabinets. Built to fit your space. ShrockCabinets, Phone 1 on 134, Middlebury. Mock’s Boat Livery rosley Radios Johnson Motors Vulcanizing and Welding Lawn Mowers Sharpened So. Side Wawasee — Near Waco AM PHONE 5M
Mail Carrier Will BeEmployedHere Postmaster An-! nounces Bios Will Be t Received For Service ■ ■ A mail service messenger will , be employed here to carry United j States Mail including parcel-post ; mails, to and from the railroad station and the Syracuse post office, according to Bert White- i head, postmaster. Sealed proposals will be received by the postmaster until March 21, 1937. Persons interested must ! be more than sixteen years of age, j and suitable to be entrusted with the care and custody of the mails. Blanks may be obtained from the postmaster, who will also furnish the necessary information regarding the service and appointI ment. _ SALE ANYWAY ELECTRA, Tex., Mar. 18. —I (INS) —A peddler who tried to sell his wares in the city hall here found the tables were turned. ‘‘Fel ows, I’ve got something to sell you”, was the reply. “Whac is it?” said the man in surprise. “A license for peddling in Electra.” P. S. He bought iLi
(cash for the I Cor so’idation of Bills R on ■ Signatures - Automobiles Furniture - Livestock $25.00 to $300.00 ■ PAY CASH - - IT PAYS f, Time Determines Cost— Immediate Service. I S CO itn LOAN co. Elks. Arcade Bldg. Warsaw | 1
ELECTRIC 1 1 Thii Greatest Refrigerator Value ! 2 1 in 10 Years » f - I ' 5 5 4 5 — ■—" JL -1 I THt M 9 Hr " " dun flu 4l|v 0 U o ; =4 j I—Lower1 —Lower Bn 2 —Economical! I 35.1 3 —Long Life! ‘ ? ■,. SI fri H Here’s the refrigerator sense. | tion of 1937 —the greatest dollar for dollar value ever offered by General Electric. ■ | LL_You’ll thrill to the beauty of new General Electric cabJ, H | *®ets and their greater conveni- ■ I ence. And you’ll be amazed at I the price tag. You save three R'< pS»- 11 ways—on first cost, on operatJlii > n g cost ’ on upkeep. BL- ' L- The G - E sealed -in - steel Thrift Unit is the only coldBBL producing mechanism with FORCED FEED LUBRICATION and OIL COOL--IN - That means l ° w °perating cost and long life. M NORTHERN INDIANA J PUBLIC SERVICE COMPANY Kr'.J ‘
Ont They Go Regardless of Cost CARS 1936 V-8 Tudor Sedan, Black. 1936 V-8 Tudor Sedan, blue. 1933 V-8 Fordor Sedan, Grey. 1932 V-8 Tudor Sedan, Black. 1929 Model A Tudor Sedan, Black. TRUCKS 1936 1} Ton Chevrolet, 157 inch W. B. 1933 V-8 157 inch W. B. 1936 V-8 | Ton Pickup. 1927 Fordson Tractor. Prices to Sell and Terms to Suit. Holtzinger Garage Millersburg, Ind. Phone 2 on 4
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tßaby Chicks 1000 White Rock 1000 Barred Rock One week old at special price-Hatches every Tuesday and Thursday.—Get our low price.—Let us book your order now. Syracuse Hatchery Phone 174 Syracuse, Ind.
THURSDAY, MARCH 18, 1937
