The Syracuse and Lake Wawasee Journal, Volume 13, Number 44, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 3 March 1921 — Page 2
I WEEKLY MARKETGRAM Special Report on Market Conditions for Week Ending Monday Night. (Prepared for and despatched to ' The Journal by the United States Bureau cf Markets.) ;? Washington, D. C., Feb. 28. — Hay—Wintry weather curtailed < shipments of hay during the ■week but failed to stimulate demand. Bad roads and low prices also important factor ? i ‘in light movement. Buyers inS terested only in ff hay for inunediate needs. Demand very dull, lit? Quote: No. 1 timothy N. Y. $32, H Cincinnati $23, Chicago $24.50, II? Kansas City S2O, Memphis $27, Atlanta S3O. No. 1 alfalfa Omaha v $18.50, Kansas City $19.50. Memphis S2B. No.' 1 prairie Minne- - I apolis $15.50, Omaha $lO, Kansas ||l City sl2. |? Feed —Easier tone noticeable | in feed market. Jobbers coni: tracted heavily about |a week I? ago for prompt and future shipK nient. Absence of demand from country buyers causing many to discount western shipment I prices to some extent in order .to move part of holdings. Transit offerings liberal. Linseed meal firm and in fair request. Cottonseed meal dull and weak. t Alfalfa meal selling slowly; purchases of hominy feed and gluten feed light. ..Production of feeds in general less than in former years but requirements are unusually small. Favorably weather conditions assisting movement; receipts satisfactory. Stocks remain ample. Quoted: bran $22, middlings $22, MinneI apolis; linseed meal $42, Buffalo J $38.50, Minneapolis; 36 percent cottonseed meal $26 Memphis, $33 Chicago. White hominy feed $23.50 St. Louis, $24.50 Chicago: gluten feed s4l Northeastern markets; No. 1 alfalfa meal 18.50, Kansas City, s2l St. Louis; beet pulp $33 N. Y. Live Stock and Meats—Prices all classes live stock at Chicago made material advances the past week. Fat lambs up $1 to $1.50 feeding lambs 75c-$1.00; yearling $1.50-$2.00* ewes $1.25-$1.55; beef steers 25c to 50c; feeder steers 25c; heifers 75c; cows 65c--51.00; vc’l calves 75c-$1.25; 1« gs 55c tc 85c, Feb. 28 Chicago prices; hogs bulk of sales $9.4010.35; medium and good beef steers $8.65-10.25; butcher cowsand heifers $5-10; feeder steers $7.25-9.00; light and medium weight veal calves $lO-13.25; fat. lambs $9-11.25; feeding lambs $7.25 to 8.75; yearlings $7.25-9.75; fat ewes $5.50-7.25. Fresh meats at eastern wholesale markets also advanced materially beef, v veal, mutton and pork loins advancing sl-2; lamb up $1; yearlings $2-3. Feb. 28 prices, good grade meats: beef $15.50 to 17.00; veal S2O-23; lamb $lB-22; mutton sll-16; light pork loins $23 to $26; heavy loins sl7-20. Grain—On the 24th weakness in stock ' market and general business and economic situation strrted a decline in grain prices but subsquent development better export demand brought about seme recovery on the 25th and 26th. Market unsettled on the 28th but became oversold and with further green bug reports and removal hedges against 250,000 bushels wheat sold for export prices almost entirely ' recovered by the close. Visible supply wheat decreased 697,000 bushels during the week; corn 1,343,000 bushels. _ Argentine government reports exportable surplus wheat 93,000,000 bushels. Corn receipts liberal demand good; country offerings to arrive light. In Chicago cash market N. 3 mixed corn 5Jc-6c under Chicago May; No. 3 yellow 5-s|c under Kansas City reports milling demand fair. For the week Chicago May wheat down s£c at $L55g; May corn 3c at 68<c. Minneapolis May wheat down 6?,c at $1.51 3|Bc Kansas City May 4Jc at $1.52; Winnipeg May 4|6 at $1.83. Dairy Products—Butter markets active during week; all grades moved well. Supply fresh' butter low. Shipments danish reported light and high costs have Wd« stocks on hand hard
to move at a profit. Higher prices fresh have helped movement storage stocks. Prices, 92 score: New York 53.}c, Chicago Philadelphia 54ic, Boston 53c. Cheese markets firm and active; all grades moving quite satisfactory regardless of advances which averaged 2c over a week ago. Export business unimproved. On Plymouth Wisconsin cheese exchange Feb. 28 prices: Twin 26c, Daisies 26>c, Longhons 25c, Young Americas 24c. No double daisies offered. o STRANGE DISEASE Indianapolis, Feb. 28. —A few cases of what has* been termed sleeping sickness have been reported in Indiana recently. Dr. .Simon Reisler, of Indianapolis, who has made a study of the disease, said those people probably were suffering from an allied disease or some brain disorder whose symptoms are somewhat like those of sleeping sickness. “Sleeping sickness is a parasitic disease and the germs are carried from the parasite to the victim by the tsetse fly, and no tsetse flies exist in America,” he said? “Thifc disease is especially prevalent among the natives of Africa, where the tsetse fly has its breeding places. It is highly infectious, and usually fatal.” Its prevalence among the natives has been highly exaggerated, however, although epidemics of it are not unknown. Nearly all cases are found in persons living In low, swampy grounds, or near the water edge, in huts surrounded by banana plants or dense forest growth. Compact villages on dry land with but little surrounding foliage have never been found infected. In cases of the infected sections, when the ground was drained, and the undergrowth removed, the disease disappeared. “The first symptom of sleeping sickness is a slight swelling of the glands in the neck. A fever also is a accompaniment .As sleeping sickness is especially prevalent in malarial regions, and as quinine is good for malaria, it is easy to tell whether the patient has malaria or not, because quinine has no effect on sleeping sickness. The parasite carried by the tsetse fly enters the blood and the cerebrospinal fluid. An autopsy shows chronic meningitis. “The symptoms are divided into three stages. The first is rather indefinite. There is a disinclination to work and move about. Headaches are common, followed by pains in the chest. The patient usually is stupid; slow to answer questions and inclined to mumble his answers. His walk is little more than a shuffle. The next stage is indicated by a trembling of the hands, and sometimes of the tongue. The glands of the whole body are sometimes greatly enlarged. The pulse varies from 90 ' to 130. There is usually a fever during the day. The patient be- ' comes drowsy, lethargic and very thin. “The third stage is one of intense weakness. Coma appears, I and death results either from starvation or convulsions, unless some other disease, such as pneumonia, is contracted and carries 1 the patient off before sleeping sickness has run its full course. < The disease ordinarily runs its course in from four to eight months. When the patient first j begins to feel drowsy it is still , possible to rouse him long enough ] to give him food, but in the , later stages this can not be done. In the case of white people, some if the symptoms are intensely ; emotional outbursts, and hysteria. “Very little is really known about sleeping sickness. It’is an J elusive disease, and our know- 1 ledge is based on very little Substance.” —■ u —■ We passed John T. Riddle, in I company with his wife, on the < street last December 5. In a 1 telephone conversation with him ( today we reminded him of kthis < and remarked that we had not 1 seen him on the street since last 1 December. He has been housed 1 >n all winter but expects to be 1 nut with us.again before jnany < days.
THfi SYRACUW AJfB WAWASEfc JOURXAX
PARAGRAPHIC BITS ABOUT JIOME FOLKS Notes of the Week on the Coming and Going of People Yon Know. Mrs. Wm. DePew is spending this week here' with Mrs. C. R. Hoy. Mrs. C. C. Bachman spent a few days last week visiting in Garrett. Douglas Miles of Milford spent a few hours in Syracuse yesterday forenoon. George W. Colwell made a business trip to Chicago the first of the week. Vernon Beckman was home over Sunday from Fort Wayne where he is employed. Mrs. Mat Jones and son Ray of Fort Wayne spent Sunday at the Wm. M. Jones home. The public sale held at New Paris on Tuesday of this week aggregated more than $6,000. Mrs. B. F. Hoy left Sunday for Peru to spend several days there visiting with her sister. Miss Lucy Welty and Mrs. L. A. Seider spent last Sunday at Miss Welty’s home in Marion. Mr. and Mrs. Sam Akers spent Sunday in Goshen at the home of their daughter, Mrs. Merritt Shearer. Mrs. Emma Rike of Fort Wayne is spending this week at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Strieby. Mr. and Mrs. Frank W. Green left Tuesday for Washington D. C., to attend the inauguration of President Warren G. Harding. Wm. M. Jones reportb 1,308 eggs for the month of February from 80 Wyandotte hens. This is 109 dozens, and an average of 46-f eggs a day. Mrs. A. R. Strock left yesterday morning to spend the week end in Fort Wayne with her laughter, Mrs. L. A. Schwan, nnd to see 'her new grandlaughter Lours Eugene. Mrs. Milo Grewell of Lafonaine Ind., and Miss Bernice White of Marion, Ind. spent last week here with their sister. Mrs. Ralph Thornburg. Miss White is remaining for a longer visit. Mr. and Mrs, Wm. DePew spent last week in Syracuse visitng with friends. They have moved from McGregory, lowa, ind Mr. DePew is now employed by the Hawks Electric company in Goshen. Miss Olga Beckman left Sunlay for New Washington, Ohio, to resume her teaching in the high school. She has been home several weeks recuperating from her operation, and is now considerably improved in health. The Garrett Clipper carries an account of the divorce given Vlrs. Dessie Scott from her husband, George C. Scott of Elkhart. Mrs. Scott is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. L. A. Neff. She was riven the custody of her two sons. • Howard A. Bowser, of Garrett, spent Monday afternoon in Syracuse. His mother, Mrs. J. H. Bowser, who had been spending the winter in Chicago with her sister, has been in Garrett with her son’s family for the past two weeks. Harry Richards has movd his family to South Bend where he is now employed by the Studebaker company. This will afford -.Harry's parents, Mr. and Mrs. John W. Richards, no little pleasure, as they may now have their little grandchildren at home to their full satisfaction. Chas. Bates of Bourbon, Ind., formerly of Cromwell has been employed as head mechanic at the Syracuse Auto Sales Co. garage. He fills the vacancy caused by the resignation of Joe Rapp, who in partnership with Wade Zerbe has leased the Blazed Trail garage at Ligonier. Mr. Bates has had long experience in garages, factories battery fasteriet.
HOME CANNED MEAT At a township farmers’ federation meeting in Bartholomew county, the only woman from the township who had attended the farmers’ short course at Purdue university made the statement that if she had learned nothing else than how to can meat, she would have been repaid for the time and money spent. Miss Pansy I. Norton, home demonstrator in Hendricks county, reports a hurried call from i a woman who had not been ini' terested in canning meats, but because of warm weather, was . driven to caring for it. Miss Orpha Cole, home demonstration agent in Tipton county, reports being called to the*home 1 of an elderly woman and assist- ’ ing her with canning beef, which she would otherwise have lost. i Leaflet 104 —“Home Canning of > Meat,” may be secured by writing to the extension department, , Purdue university. Remember . that not only is the home canning of meat a saving, but that "it lends variety to the diet, when fresh meat is not always availL able on the farm, and too is ready when an emergency presents itself on wash day, house i cleaning, gardening or “baby chick” season. Try just a few cans this year, and next year . you will want more. o MILFORD’S BIG SALE t > The next big sale of the Mil- ; ford Sale Company will be held in the pavilion at Milford next . Saturday, March 5, and will begin at 10:30 o’clock. This will be a fine offering. Horses. —24 Head including driving mares, colts, family horses,, draft and general purpose animals, mules, etc. Hogs.—6s Head, including 4 bred sows and shoats weighing "rom 40 to 125 pounds. Also a large range of miscellaneous articles' will absolutely be sold before noon, so that the big horse sale can begin at 12:30 sharp. (441) Jas. T. Shepard, Mgr. BIG NEW PARIS SALE The 192nd big sale at New ?aris will be held next Tuesday, March 8, at 10 o’clock in the 'arge pavilion. A very attractive list is offered. Lot of mules, horses, cattle, hogs, sheep, chickens, automobiles, farming implements, household goods, merchandise, hay, corn, oats, potatoes, clover seed, timothy, apple butter, hog feeders and a great many other articles. Remember the date and the time. (441) Martin Fisher, Mgr. OLD STUFF REVAMPED An incident of record half a century ago points a moral for present-day problems, and suggests a remedy for strained relations between capital .and labor. Tersely put the facts are these: On a sunshiny day, in a little sunshiny homb of peace and plenty, about the noon hour, two of the village dogs called locally “Damon and Pythias” because they were always together, did good team work, and never BANK STATEMENT Number 305 S. L. Ketring, President J. P. Dolan, Vice President W. M. Self, Cashier Sol Miller, Assistant Cashier Report of the condition of the State Sank of Syracuse, a state bank at Syracuse, in the State of Indiana, it the close of its business on February 21 B 1921. RESOURCES L<oans and Discounts .$386,714.14 Overdrafts 1,047.41 U. S. Bonds 5,600.00 'Tther Bonds and Securities.. .5,000.00 Due from Banks and Trust Companies 35,607.92 Cash on Hand 10,845.25 Cash Items 955.72 Total Resoifrces $445,770.44 LIABILITIES Capital Stock—paid in..... $25,000.00 Surplus 10,000.00 Exchange, Discounts and Interest 1,607.08 Demand D’p’ts, $127,961.91 Demand Cffs $281,201.45 409,163.36 Total Liabilities $445,770.44 Ttate of Indiana, Kosciusko County, SS: I, W. M. Selt Cashier of the State Tank of Syracuse, do solemnly swear hat the above statement is true. W. M. SELF. Cashier. Subscribed and eworn tp before me his 25th day of February. 1921. Geo. L. Xanders, Notary Public (SEAL) .My commission expire* Marea 11.
seemed to have a difference of opinion, jogged down the shady path of the main street. Tails wagged lazily but in perfect 1 rythm; each dog had a halfexposed and slightly dripping ’ red tongue, there was a dreamy : languor in dog eyes, and affec- > tion showed aggressivley as, from 1 time to time, one dog would look : lovingly but not interrogatively, at 'his lone companion. They, moved steadily forward, slowly; 5 it is true, but no time was lost ’ through doubt or dispute. Now it so happened that the keeper of the villiage inn was " the proud proprietor of a talk- j ’ ing parrot, a bird educated beyond its intellect and out - of its natural sphere of life. This cul- ’ tivated bird had never thanked ' God for life, or been proud of * itself as a healthy bird. No, all its pride was concentrated in its ability to talk, to copy, poorly, man. Discontented with what it was, ’ with what God had intended to do, this ambitious bird was at odds with the spirit of the peaceful village. From its elevated 1 position on the fence rail it sur- ‘ veyed the friendly dogs, not s because they were dogs' but because they were happy and at J oeace. Ruffling feathers, the oarrot cried out “sick him, ' Towser, sick him, Jack, sick him, r sick him.” There is a fighting streak in ill dogs, in all men; in a moment the two, dog freinds were at each . other’s throat. Aftefr a time j they rolled into a puddle of t water. In the short respite, . while shaking themselves dry I they had time to think. “What were w 6 fighting about?” said , me. “Blamed if I know,” said , the other. At this moment they caught sight of Polly on her perch still I crying “sick ’em, sick ’em.” , Then the two dogs saw a great light, had a vision. Moved by a . common impulse, they sprang at , the trouble-making bird. , o r . GRACE LUTHERAN CHURCH Rev. Wm. Boatman. Pastor Sunday School 9:30 a. m. Services 10:45 a. m. The Luther League met Monlay evening in the Sunday ichool room. Th next meeting will be Monday evening, March 4, at the home of Mr. Beckman. The work on the basement is progressing nicely. From five ,to nine men have been busy excavating. BLIND, USES TYPEWRITER r New York, Feb. 26.—Joseph McCready cannot sign his name with either pencil or pen, as is •equired of applicants for natur—A T TH E— ‘ OaKiand Theater —TONIGHT—THURSDAY— i A good feature entitled “HELP YOURSELF” * featuring Mabel Norjnand —FRIDAY— A great show entitled “MARKET OF SOULS” Also a Fatty Arbuckle Comedy , Don’t Miss This —SATURDAY— A Special Vitagraph Feature entitled Anita Stewart in “THE WRECK” This .is a Vitagraph Picture And a good Comedy, “The Back Yard?* * “ 1 IJ ' ” rB —MONDAY— Don’t forget the date This is the Greatest Picture we have offered to you yet v entitled “THE MIRACLE MAN” Leading role placed by Thomas Meighaii and Betty Coerpseu. Monday, March 7, Only Admission « ?• 2Zc to AU
alization, but. he won his first citizenship papers today by sign-! ing with a typewriter. The naturalization c&urt set a precedent for McCready waiving the handwriting rule because he is blind. o — 11 ; 1 REAL ESTATE : I 'U 1 : I By Houton C. Frazer, Warsaw. Deli la J. Ritter to Ora Shu- | maker, lot 186 William’s ad Warsaw $175 Frank N. Thompson to Rock Lake I' Farm Co., 55 1-3 a sec 17 Franklin tp : 7,000 Sheldon Kesler to Frank N. Thompson, 23 1-3 a sec 17 Franklin tp 4,000 Geo. W. Polk to George Todd, W pt lot 28 Leesburg 12,000 Martin Stump to Amos Stump, 120 a sec 30 Washington tp 3,300 Jos. P. Dolan to Chester and 1 Pearl Middleton. lot 76 D & M ad Syracuse 75 Ellis A. Tucker to Robert E. and Ada A. Warren, lots 2 & 3 Mentone 900 Margaret A. Brindley to Harley and Nellie G. Towns, lot 141 first ad Winona , 500 ! Jesse W. Gillman to Jonathan Tinkey, lot 129 William’s ad ’ Warsaw 1,000 I Wm. H. Bockman to Wm. C. Hontz, lot 22 Bockman Park, North Webster 250 ! Frank E. Wood to Moses F. Lentz, lots 2,6, 7 Wood's ad Kale Island 600 Walter Hygenta and Chas. Miller to Harry R. Phend, 40 a sec 30 Van Buren tp 3,500 James and Admiral P- Jones to Chas. Beck; tract secs 9 & 10 Turkey Creek tp 6,000 Carl Walker to Isaac L. and Della Walker, 66.57 a sec 19 Turkey Creek tp 4,000 Sylvanus N. Barfell to, Wm. H. Barfell, 5 lots Lakeside Park ' 200 Lydia A. McComb to Frank O. and Ethel S. Rarick, lot 405 Warsaw ';., 2,000 Frank E. Woon to Moses G. Stefan, lot 11 Wood’s ad Kale Island 200 Willard M. Hatfield to Fred H. Wonderly, pt lot 2 Claypool.. .2,500 Frank E. Wood to William L. Shoots, lot 3 Wood’s ad Kale Island 206
Zn>e NEW EDISON A “Th* Phonograph With a Soul" wior (£'yl I Luff li Li I 1 4Jj wsii£syc\, ■ Test/ . _ w • Your Mood Changes 1 TIRED! Nervous! Worried! Put a Rb-Cbkation on the New Edison, relax into a chair, let the music flood the room with melody—and comfort. The music produces a mood change. Mr. Edison has devised a Mood Change Chart by which you can register your re- * actions to music. Come in and get your supply. Make the experiment in your own home. Haye every member of your family, also your friends fill opt charts. It’s more interesting than the Ouija board. Mr. Edison would like to study your charts in connection with his great research into the effects of music on the minds and -r moods of men. If you don’t own a New Edison, come into«our store and fill out a Mood Change Chart. Get Mr. Edison all the Change Charts he needs. THORNBURG’S First Door West of School House ■— *■ j\ II I ■UIHBH... ■ *SSSSSgSBBaS? p —-J .
Loyal Grandstaff to Mater Hide & Fur Co., 70 a sec 11 Wayne tP 6.000 Noah W. Fidler to Amanda E. King, W 1-2 lots 7 & 8 Ryerson ad Pierceton 1,500 Martha J. Garrett et al to Edward Thomas, tract r Prairie street, Leesburg 432 Alrronda Wolf to John and Jane Stroup, lot Blk 4 Ketring ad Syracuse 265 Byron H. Doll to Clement J. and Maude M. Culler, 4 a sec 7 Turkey- Creek tp .. 2.000 John W. Egbert to Haines Egbert, lots 20 & 21 Kale Island Edgar S. Hover to James S. Hover, 80 a sec 8 Monroe tp..,500 Frank M. Brown to Samuel A. j Hohman, lot 13 Packerton.... 58 ■a -"I i L _. ~j BE RID OF THAT ACHE If you are a sufferer with , lame back, backache, dizziness, nervousness and kidney disorders , why don’t you try the remedy that your own neighbors recomj mend? Ask your neighborl j Mrs. J. K. Mellott, 407 S. Main ' St., Nappanee, Ind., says: “ I well, know the merit of Doan’s Kidney j Pills and recommend them 'to 1 anyone suffering from kidney I trouble. My kidneys gave me | a lot of annoyance 4 before I be- . , gah using Doan’s. My back was 1 the worst symptom of my comj plaint, as it ached for weeks at ‘ a time and I could hardly get around. Everything I undertook “ ito do seemed a drag to me. I I was in such misery. I ■ had blinding, dizzy spells and saw flashes of light befdle my eyes. My kidneys didn’t act regularly and I decided to get Doan’s Kid- " ney Pills. I- used several boxes and they fixed me up sound and well. Today I am in good health and thank Doan’s for my cure.” 60c, at all dealers. Foster-Mil-burn Co., Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y. (Advertisement) jgf|Lucky Tiger The NaUatea Hair endScafpßemedyf j CNDOMEO BY HMPtTAI* AN3 A THO6E who Know. n Poaitivcly eradicates ] dandruff — corrects eae-; FtPgal mateous scalps — stops fallirsr hair — t SSfSfS’rj promotes luxur^itcrowth—atldslustn I beauty. hcal_u — action immediate aixl ‘ HnSS certain. Monoy-Back Guarantee. IrtWjl JUHrucsiste and barterw.oretad 2Sc , tor (onerous aamplS. LDCXY TIGEH CO.. Hanns City. Me. |
