The Syracuse and Lake Wawasee Journal, Volume 14, Number 7, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 16 June 1921 — Page 2
PARAGRAPHIC BITS I ,ABOUT HOME FOLKS ■\ . ■ ■ r i ■ i Notes of the Week on the Com- J ing and Going of People j You Know. ‘ I | Ernest C. Smith and family { spent the week end in Cromwell. 1 Wade Zerbe of the Blazed Trail of Ligonier spent Tuesday evening at home. Mrs. J-. H. Bowser was hostess to guests from Goshen and Elkhart last Sunday. - Mr. and Mrs. Otis C. Butt and children of Ligonier spent Tuesday evening in Syracuse. D. H. Brunjes’ brother of Florida came Thursday and will spend some time here visiting. Mrs. Elizabeth Kelley of Goshen is contemplating building a bungalow’ at Kale Island soon. I Mr. and Mrs. Wm. DePew of Elkhart spent the week end here visiting with Dr. and Mrs. C. R. | Hoy. - . i‘ Mrs. Amanda Xanders came Friday from York, Pa., to spend J the summer at her Wawasee cottage. Frank Starner of Fostoria, 0., I is here visiting with old friends and relatives for the fifcst time in seven years. 1 Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Osborn and children drove to Elkhart Tuesday and enjoyed the Hagen-back-Wallace big circus. Mrs. Joe Rapp left Monday for Winona where she 4 will enter the Winona college for the summer course in pedagogy. I The Miss’es Violette and Vera O’Dell came home Friday from Elkhart, w’here they have finished the year of teaching,. ( Miss Susie Wolfe of (uoshen came Friday to spend a week here visiting with her nieces, Misses Violette and Vera'O’Dell. Dr. Wingard and family and Mrs. Harvey Mann of Montpelier, Ohio, drove to Syracuse Sunday and spent the day with Mr. and Mrs. John Wingard. Mr. and Mrs. Verd Shaffer of * , Millersburg and Miss Irene Shaffer and gentleman friend of Go- • « sh’en w’ere Sunday guests at the Frank Yourice home. C. R. Hollett and Roscoje Howard traded cars at 2:10 o’clock Sunday morning. It is not known whether the trading d&al or other pressing business kept them up so late. Mrs. J. E. Steckles returned Tuesday of last week from her motortrip to Pennsylvania. From Akron, Ohio, she was accompanied by Miss Donna Miles, who was visiting there. Frank Murser of Elkhart, Argus Murser of New Paris, and Clarence and Charles Murser of Benton were here to attend the funeral of their sister, Miss Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Rothenberger drove through to Green-
g The Royal Store g Q W. G CONNOLLY, PROP. Q SYRACUSE . INDIANA § DAINTY FURNISHINGS 8 § FOR WOMEN 8 G Beautiful underwear fashioned of LJ . . fine silk and nainsook, white and ' flesh colors. jg SI.OO $1.50 $2.00 $2.50 g O Warner and J. C. C. Corsets. g They will not Rust They will not Break Nor will they Tear Fashionable and comfortable These *! . are extraordinary corsets at the ’ price of ordinary corsets. Every Corset Guaranteed g SI.OO up to $6.00 '
' castle to attend the graduating • exercises at DePauw university of their daughter, Katharine, who was graduated yesterday. Mary Murser yesterday. ' The -freshmen class of the ! Syracuse high school honored j William E Master, one of the I members, with a farewell party j at the Grand hotel last Thursday evening. Mr. Master has since gone to West Liberty, lowa. Mrs. A. L. Miller and children, Hazel, Mabel and Ralph, returned Sunday from Mount Morris, 111., where they had spent two weeks visiting with relatives. They made the- trip by automobile. J. P. Dolan spent last week in Earl Park, Benton county, the silver jubilee of Rev. Gustave Hottenroth. A large number of friends and priests of the Fort Wayne diocese participated in paying honor to the jubilarian. Frank Mock, living on the farm of his father south of town, was taken to the Elkhart hospital for treatment last Friday. He was' found to be in j very bad condition internally and was returned home Tuesday. L. T. Heerman of Indepdence, Kas., who has been here with his family for a ten days’ visit, left Monday for Davenport, lowa, where he will be the superintendent of construction for a new mill which is being built there. Joe Rapp was confined at home here last week and was unable to be at his duties at the Blazed Trail garage in Ligonier. His illness threatened appendicitis but he is now much improved and is back at his work. Hubert Hire, who has been in Elkhart since school was dismissed, was here Tuesday visiting his grandparents. He left Tuesday evening to join, his brother Millard at York, Penn., where he will have employment. Mr. and Mrs. John Ward, Mr. and Mrs. Clee Hibschman and children, Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Rothenberger, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Younce/Mrs Verd Shaffer and Miss Julia Ott attended the Ott reunion near Churubusco last Thursday. Mrs. F. H. Cremean, Mrs. F. W. Greene, Mrs. J. H. Bowser and* Mrs. S.. C. Lepper will spend today and tomorrow in Mishawaka attending the Goshen District convention of the Women’s Home Missionary society of the Methodist church. Mr. and Mrs. A; L. Miller and children attended the meeting of northern Indiana telephone operators held at the new South Shore Inn Tuesday. In the evening Henry A. Barnhart, our former congressman, delivered his lecture, “Congress in Action.” Mr. and Mrs. Barnes and children of Howe, Ind., spent last week with Mr. and Mrs. Geo. L. Xanders. Mr. Barnes is secretary of the Howe Military academy, and was a student at the time Mr. Xanders was, a member of the faculty of that institution.
Eugene Hoopingarner came ; Saturday from Chicago, where he j is attending Chicago university,l to spend a week here with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. B. F. ; Hoopingarner. He will return to ' school the first of next week and 1 continue his -work through the ' summer term. Mr. and Mrs. L. N. Kitson and daughter Mary Alice, accompani- [ ed by Mrs. J. P. Dolan, motored to East Lansing, Mich., Tuesday , to attend the commencement of their son, brother and nephew, | Hugh Kitson, at the Michigan I Agricultural college from which he graduated yesterday. S. E. Rowdabaugh, who has been visiting here, returned to [ West Liberty, lowa, by automo- : bile starting last Friday, accom- l panied by William E. Master, ■ son of Mrs. Dan Mishler. Young J Master expects to attend school at Nev/ London, lowa, where | Mr. Rowdabaugh is superintendent. Philip Bowser spent last week I end here with his mother, Mrs. i jJ. H. Bowser. He will be gradu- ■ i ated from the Indiana university school of medicine in the graduating exercises held at Bloomington this week. Following his graduation he will serve an interneship at Indianapolis for a year and then will enter in practice with Dr. Bechnell at Goshen. Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Causer and baby from Glasgow, Scotland, have immigrated to Syracuse and are at present making their home with Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Porter, the former a relative , of Mrs. Causer. Mr. Causer was mechanic in Scotland but at present he is employed at the J cabinet factory. Four years and j sixty-eight days in the service during which time he received nine wounds, is part of his war . record. GRAYS BEAT BRISTOL The Syracuse ball team brought j home another scalp, this one 1 from Bristol, where they i played last Sunday. It was a no-run game until the fifth inn-1 ing when the grays got started and succeeded in bringing in four runs before Bristol could stop them, and in the seventh and eighth they hqng 'up one each giving a total of six scores for the game. Bristol was unable to score until the seventh when I they made two runs and then ' followed with one in the eighth finishing with a score of three. The pitching of Byland was the feature of the game. He held his opponents to one hit for ; the whole session, and secured nine strike-outs. The Grays made eight hits and only seven men were struck out. Batteries:—Syracuse, Byland and Weeks; Bristol, Anderson j and Brooks. Three-base hit, i Brooks; two-base hits, J. Byland [ and King.
I’Everything for Your | j THE UNIVERSAL CAR Good {home rl. ■Hwgl m ade bread, biscuit Eventually -— Why Not Now «i and cookies always make a “hit’* with hiisbands and 111 ' Your neighbors have not been putting off buying that Ford y kiddies. And they’re tic- I Car—why should you? . /TL. 7k kled when you bake a Q /?) | ji • J , p \ deucioua. cake. I Since January 1, 1921, we have sold Ford Cars to the followyYfLcvRX 111 mg people in this eo-mniunity: “ y° u are not getting //I Leland Osborn - C. E. Hayes Wm. Minardow 'h as good results as you . , - , , Oi , would like to have whv George Stneby ' Emanuel Kuhn Charles stough | i .. • * . J. C. Grady Chas. Schultz Emory Kindig A<bwmiH\ not consult with us about the 111 ' , flour you ve usinK . Lewis Seider Chas. Drudge Harry Willard * M 111 Roy Sarjent John Mouffley Wm. Snavely XT7 v i_ Ji J . 11l Virgil Mock I. S. Burns Geo. D. Reep feSj Sj'te* We have handled i Elmer Long Isaac Reed Fieldon Sharp i different brands of flour John Peterson James Traster Celia Baugher and meal and know just S. J. Ringgenber J. Orbra Weybright Roscoe Howard A-- ■ S which are giving the best satis- Chas. Knauss Pauline Gerard Mary Killick Roy Brown U| faction. We invite you to profitbyourexperience. C. R. HOLLETT Telephone Orders Given Prompt Attention Phone so F ° RD DEALEB Syracuse, Indian. Seider & Burgener Pure Food Grocers ■
LAKE WAWASEE AND SYRACUSE JOURNAL
; GRACE LUTHERAN CHURCH Rev. Wm. Boatman. Pastor Sunday School 9:30 a. in. I Services .7:30 p. m. ' At the Sunday morning serI vice seven little children were ’ received into the church by Holy I Baptism. The communion was a ■ large one. j The apportionment for the year has been paid in full. The Michigan Synod, of which ' we are a part meets this week in . the Grace church at Elkhart. | The Ladies Aid will give the second religious picture at the ; Oakland theater Tuesday eveni ing, June 21. You were surely i profited by seeing the picture, t : “From the Cradle to the Cross,” and will want to see this one, • “A Desperate Youth.” | .. j o , ’ BANK BANDITS CAUGHT | : - Russell Barrone of Decatur and Donald McDaniels, having conceived the idea of robbing the ; bank at Preble, Ind., engaged a i taxi in Fort Wayne giving a fictitious address to which to be i taken. When the driver told them that there was no such address they forced him "at the point of a gun to take them to Preble. Upon reaching Preble one bandit entered the bank and the other stayed outside to watch the driver. When the cashier, Clarence Smith, hesitated to raise his hands at the command of the bandit, he was shot and severely wounded. The bandits I then fled out of town, forcing the driver under threat of death Ito take them. The machine was I not working very well so about | a mile from town the culprits got out and’ told the driver to drive on. The police of surroundi ing towns were notified and . posses quickly formed. Officers iof Fort Wayne and Decatur | located the men under some brush where they were hiding i and captured them without any • trouble. Confessions admitting the whole affair and exonerating . the taxi driver were obtained at ' once and the men were taken to the jail in Fort Wayne to await , trial. o The Zion U. B. Ladies Aid will , hold a bake sale Saturday, June ! 18, in the Osborn window at 10 i o’clock. Chicken and noodles. I o “A DESPERATE YOUTH” Religious picture at Oakland ; Theater Tuesday evening, June 21. Proceeds to go to the Grace Lutheran church. Come and , bring your friends. Tickets on sale at Hoch’s drug store and Kindig’s grocery. i Admission 25c. | o j List your wants with The j Journal.
YOUNGEST STUDENT I “Master” Wendell Barnett, a Hoosier boy, is probably the , youngest student at the' Univeri sity of Chicago this term. Wen- ; j dell is still in knee pants and is: | fifteen and a half years old. He ‘ 'is from Charleston, Ind., the' ! home of the first governor of | i Indiana. His mother,, left a widow when Wendell was just a baby, was ' ambitious to get an education • , and to see that her son had the j ' best of opportunities. Since then she has put herself through the I Indiana State Normal School, I Terre Haute; Marion Normal Col- i J lege and Indiana university, i Wendell has thus had the oppor-I tunity of being in school atmos- ■ phere constantly. He is anxious-1 ly waiting for his first pair ofl long trousers. o ' MILS. BERGDOLL PAYS FINE Philadelphia, June 10.—Mrs. Emma C. Bergdoll, mother of i the Bergdoll brothers, convicted J army deserters, saved herselfj and hqr four co-defendants charged with conspiracy to aid ■ Grover C. and Erwin R. .Bergdoll to evade army service, from . going to jail by paying today, $23,000 in fines recently imposed j by the United States district 1 court here. INDIAN CHIEF DIES Pierre, S. D.,' June 9. —In the recent dgath of Chief Iron Lightning, at his home near Thunder , Butte in the northwestern part of the Cheyenne Indian reservation; the country lost, probably , the greatest of the few remain-! ing famous Indian characters j who figured in the early history ■ of Dakota territory.
V V i HOT?-- ❖ <♦ Why spend so many hours in the *♦* hot kitchen these sweltering *♦* *♦* days? We can supply the needs *♦* * . . ’ of your table with a big variety t of articles that will relieve you of almost all of your cooking— ♦% sliced cold meat, cheese, fresh ♦♦♦ fruit and vegetables, olives, y cakes, cookies, salmon; etc. V 4** —Telephone us your wants— A A ❖ :o: 7 — | The Launer Cash Grocery * Y C. H. Launer, Prop. *♦* ♦ Phone 20 Syracuse, Ind. A X »*♦ •^♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦^♦♦♦*** w * >> **** > *Z********Z , **Z*******************'****Z*** > *♦*
Iron Lightning was one of the ! sub-chiefs, who, under Sitting ; Bull, participated in the memor-! able battle of the Little Big Horn, June 25, 1876, when Cus», . ter and his band of 261 men ' : were annihiliated. He is said to i ’be the last of the chiefs who ! , w’ere in control of the Sioux' | nation at this time. He was 76 I i years old at the time of his; death and has for years made 1 his home in the vicinity of I , Tunder Butte station. o NOTICE OF SPECIAL ELECTION j Notice is hereby given to the j qualified voters and inhabitants’ j of Turkey Creek Township, in ! Kosciusko County, State of InI diana, residing in said towmship , i outside of the incorporated town : | of Syracuse, that pursuant to a ! petition of Isaiah Klingaman, William Gants, Andrew’ Miller, Jesse Grady and 75 other legal voters of said Towmship, present- I i ed to the Trustee of said TownI ship on the Ist day of June,' ! 1921, a special election will be < held at Osborn’s Sale Pavilion, ’ corner of Huntington and Henry ! : streets of Syracuse, in said i Township, between the hours of , , 6 o’clock a. m., and 6 o’clock Ip. m., on the 2nd day of July,; ! 1921, for the purpose of deter- j mining whether the public ‘ schools of said Township, both ' elementary and high schools, ' shall be consolidated with the schools of the Incorporated Towm of Syracuse, Kosciusko County, I Indiana, all in accordance with An Act of the General Assembly of the State of Indiana, entitled i “An Act providing for the coni solidation of schools in ipcoir i porated towns with the lof the towmship in which such | town is situated, etc.,” passed at
the Seventieth Regular Session of said General Assembly begun on the 4th day of January, 1917, being Chapter No. 148 of the j Acts of 1917, and all acts amendatory and supplemental thereto. Stephen Freeman, i Trustee of Turkey Creek TownI ship, Kosciusko Coynty, Indiana. | NOTICE TO HEIRS. CREDITORS, ETC. I In the matter of the estate of Jacob A. Whitehead, deceased. In the Kosciusko Circuit Couyt, April Term, 1921. Notice is hereby given, that i William M. Seif, as administrator of the estate of Jacob A. Whitehead, deceased, has presented and filed his account and vouchi ers in final settlement of said ' estate, and that the same will come up for examination and ac- , tion of said Circuit Court on the Bth day of July, 1921, at which time all heirs, creditors, or legatees of said estate are required i to appear in said Court and show cause, if any there be, why said ; account and vouchers should not . be approved. Dated at Warsaw, Indiana, this Bth day of June, 1921. RUSSELL H. BUTLER, I (<3) Clerk of Circuit Court. / —AT THE— Oakland Theater—TONIGHT—THURSDAY— ‘ “THIRD GENERATION” featuring * • Betty Blythe & Mahlou Hamilton —FRIDAY— H'. B. Warner in “WHAT HAPPENED ONE HOUR BEFORE” . Can an evil mind force a good man to do a sinful deed? It’s different. It’s a hypnotic mystery romance, an extraordinary entertainment. —SATURDAY— Paramount-Artcraft Picture Robert Warick in “AN ADVENTURE IN HEARTS” Also a good Larry Semon comedy entitled ‘The Simple Life” s —MONDAY— Thomas H. Ince presents ; William S. Hart in ‘THE NARROW TRAIL” An Artcraft Picture »• - M Don’t Miss These Fine Pictures
