The Syracuse and Lake Wawasee Journal, Volume 14, Number 11, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 14 July 1921 — Page 2
PARAGRAPHIC BITS' I ABOUT HOME FOLKS Notes of the Week on the Coming and Going of People You Know. J ' Mr. and Mrs. Young have occupied the Heerman property ( in the absence of the Heerman i family. Mr. and Mrs. Guy Jarrett and children have returned to Dixon, 111., after spending several weeks here at their home. Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Riddle of j Indianapolis, who visited rela- , tives here last week, returned home Sunday evening. George Xanders’ sister from Columbus, Neb., has come to spend about two weeks with her mother at Wawasee. Mrs. Robert £. Pletcher and little daughter Mary Ellen are spending the week in Warsaw with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. August Carteaux. Mr. find Mrs. Carl Haab and son, Carl jr., of Bremen spent Sunday in Syracuse with Mrs. Haab’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Snobagrer. Mrs. La Faile and two brothers of Wabash, who had been visiting the Stephen Freeman family for the past week, returned to their home Sunday.* L. T. Heerman and family hhve reached Davensport, lowa, where they will do light housekeeping white Mr. Heerman is employed there as construction engineer fdr a new factory. Mrs. John McClintic and little children returned home from Cromwell last week; where she ‘was called by the serious illness of her mother, who was stricken with paralysis. A. W. Geyer, Jas. M. Searfoss, A. L. Miller and P. H. Mites are leaving tomorrow morning for an automobile trip that will take them into northern Michigan, where they will spend two weeks* camping on the Au Sable river. ana two daughters, Blanche and Edna, of Warsaw spent Tuesday in Syracuse calling on friends. Tley were accompanied by Mrs. El zabeth Akers, who had spent several weeks in Warsaw nursing. it street fakir was in Syracuse Friday afternoon with the remains of a bank bandit killed I ne< r Lima several years ago. 1 Thu supposed remains were in a and it is said the proprietor of the show did a good busi- ■ ness for a little while. The newest aid to the shoe salesman is an x-ray machine,, installed in a Philadelphia shoe : store. The purchaser looks down th) ough the machine and finds out whether the new shoes piich the big toe or the little! toe. The salesman looks, too. Cloyde Snobarger, who has teen in charge of the assembling stock room of the Studebaker: factory at South Bend for the ; past year, came Sunday to spend ' a vacation of two weeks here - with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Snobarger. I Mrs. Henry Grenacher and j children, Mary and Margaret, of | Hubbard Woods, 111., have been j | spending several weeks here ! | with her mother, Mrs. Ella' j Wolfe, and her brother, Daniel ; j j Wolfe and family. Mr. Grena- i j cher came Saturday to spend his ' j vacation here with them. ( Those who were called here by I' the death of little Meredith i I Sharp are: Mr. and Mrs. John ] Homan Mr. and Mrs Harry Doty, ' Mrs. George Sharp and son John | and Mr. and Mrs. Baker, all j of Milford, and Mr and Mrs. Trueax and daughter j Eldk» of Elkhart. o — -j rn mil REAL ESTATE I : ill I-II ; | | By Houton C. Frazer. Warsaw. Norman E. Haymond to David Girufoer, lot 10 Point Yellow--banks 700 I
1 PEOPLE OF OUR TOWN Hl The Editor has Just Heard of a Newspaper that Died and left Several Hundred Pounds of Print Paper and lie is Dashing to the Depot with a Telegram to Ship it, regardless of Cost. Editors always Did have Great Gpbs of Grief in the Dawgone Newspaper Business but These Days have every, thing Beat. Nash Liebling to Walter E. Rosenwinkel, pt lot 19 Pleasant View, Tippecanoe Lake • •••$ 50 Thcs. H. Clemans to Anna C. Harsh, lot St.. Syracuse August W. Hoffman to Roy and Jennie Sloan, Its n Palestne.. 1,150 Cleinma Curtis to Adella Spencer, lot 745 Winna 50 Win. H. Fritz to Edward L. and, Sadie Unrue, 121 a secs 1 & 36 Etna tp •• • 12,000 O WEEKLY IfflKETGffl Special Report on Market Conditions for Week Ending Monday Night. (Prepared for and dispatched to The Journal by the United States Bureau of Markets.) Washington, July 11. —Grain prices uncertain and easily in-
Journal Want-Ads are Investments that pay Dividends K ■' ■ I O ■ — ■ ■ g gl A Slashing Reduction on g SUMMER MILLINERY g Our attractive assortment ineludes Straws, Sport Hats, etc. A good line of pretty APRONS 9 Ln attractive patterns, of sub- g stantial materials and in a good ■ range of sizes. IB E a M We have a new line of CHILDREN’S ROMPERS Sturdily built for service and neat in appearance. ■ Prepared for water sports BATHING SUITS ■ E Well knit and substantially m made, attractive styles, various sizes, now on display here. S ® c- I ■ Supply-your needs in a SUMMER HOSIERY From our large and complete line. Silk and cotton, all sizes. ■ ■ | Variety Store | Syracuse . . . Indiana ■ s ■■■■■■■■■■■■■»■■■■■■■■■■■■£
1 fluenced during the week with |1 trade local and sentiment rather |< mixed. The greatest weakness ] was shown on the sth account < hedging sates and local pressure, < but market recovered on the 6th j influenced by crop and weather j i reports. The week endqd with * < prices unsettled. Crop news < continues bullish. Country sell-1 ing wheat freely. Resale prices ? • American wheat in United King- i dom officially quoted much be-: low Argentina; nevertheless export demand very slow. In Chicago cash market No. 2 red winter wheat $1.13; No. 2 hard $1.19; i\o. 3 mixed corn 59c; No. 3 yellow corn bucr No. 3 white oats o-ic. compared with July stn prices, Chicago July wneat closed lie higher $1.19; July corn higher at bije. Chicago Sept, wheat up at bept. corn up 1c at 59|c. Hay receipts extremely light. Several markets report no sales and nominal prices. New timothy arriving in central western markets. Demand limited. Buyers awaiting new hay. Feed markets quiet but steady. Lower prices attracted buyers and the demand improved slightly. Wheat feeds were weak. Cottonseed meal and linseed meal strong. Hominy feed down SI.OO. Gluten feed un- ' changed. Alfalfa meal dull, of- | ferings good. Importers quote | dried Dutch beet pulp delivered 1 seaboard markets at around $27 for October, November and Decj ember shipment. Butter markets firm. Higher price levels reached during the week being sustained. Markets supported by lighter production, poor average quality and consumptive demand, and moderate into storage movement. Closing prices 92 score, Chicago t 38c. Practically all classes and grades of live stock at Chicago
LAKE WAWASEE AND SYRACUSE JOURNAL
show net advances over previous week. Hogs up 35c to 70c. | Beef steers 10c to 25c. Butcher cows and heifers 25c to 50c. Veal | calves advanced 75c to $1.25 per | 100 pounds. Feeder steers were dull throughout with prices unchanged. Fat lambs and fat ewes gained 25c to 75c. Feeding lambs were about a quarter and yearlings 25c to 50c higher.
2 § i Mixing Brt anb Ink J ft ' ft • ft 1 . . ■ I | ESPONSIVE to all kinds of demands upon our commercial printing | ||\ department, The Journal is steadily increasing its service to a larger ‘ 2 field of patrons. Recently Max M. Drefkoff, president of the Syracuse | | Cabinet Company, commissioned The Journal’s art department to design £ a full set of business forms. S Several rough pencil sketches were submitted, and from them the one ’ S X ( shown below was Selected. The drawing was then executed in our office S X and from this zinc etchings were procured for printing in two colors. 2 The paper used for the various forms was Hammermill bond, ripple ~ finish, gray, 20-pound weight. The printing was done in red and black. X The effect was striking, and the forms shown below, of course, fail to- give the beauty of the color scheme. ‘ S Up to the present we have produced for the Cabinet Company 1,000 « Ji business cards, 1,500 tetter heads, 2,000 envelopes, 1,000 statements, 2,000 § X v billing triplicates, and other printed work from the forms. Each sheet £ 5 of paper was run through the press twice, once for each color. ‘ 1-- . # * . t * • J a‘■ ' ? ft ; * • GENUINE AROMATIC * MOTH PROOF - ’ 2 CEDAR CHESTS * i fIBI z‘ * s | Cebitr Chests § 1 • * 6 / ' I g ’ # * The above form was used in printing the red part of the tetter head. =::■ It appears here just as it was used. The red was printed first, so that £ the outline of the letters would give finish; too, the photographic half-tone . | picture of the red cedar chest, one of the company s products, was made & to register on the silhouette and this supplied the color for the chest. , ' 'ii 4c >- — 2. =» :v. ft : — — ? < J 6821 ft 4? ' 12 • PHONE: STATE < # I ' -r ' ” -rgfl { | I g 1 MAO< AT JNanufarturrrs as * If SYRACUSE INDIANA ’ 7? * • • * « S.ft P . ■ I * Generaloffices: 15 North Clark St. * ft , ft t Chicago, 111., # ft ft . * ft ft AL- ‘ ft * Above is shown the form used for printing the black part of the tetter ’ * * head, and supplied the second step in producing two-color design. It is & ft * impossible for the purpose of this newspaper advertisement to reproduce ft t the effect of the completed letter head. The black form was printed upon . ft * an d registered with the red form; the result was one design instead of two. ft * Below are shown the same cuts made in a smaller size for use on ft the envelopes and the business cards. S * . • t ft ft _ 11 , — jK; X / ' • —— ft a* ..«C i 8 - • 2 •i 5 ft s ft ■ , • ' f ft ft Mr. Drefkoff’s order for “something out of the ordinary” was given ft ft to our commercial printing department after he had looked over many of ft the fine samples of our work which we have in our portfolio. It is our ft intention to describe in a series of newspaper advertisments some of the * ft various printing orders we have been called upon to fill. But much of ft ft the effect of fine printing is lost in the medium of newspaper advertising ft on account of cheaper paper and ink being used as well as loss of color ft , schemes. We are proud of our samples and will be pleased to display them ft ft to any one interested in artistic printing. ft ft 0 0 ; ft ft ft ft & ft . . ' ft ft Commercial Printing Department of ft * ' ' ft t ill ft ft ft t , Fl/BUSHED EVERY THURSDAY HIGH POWER ADVERTISING 8 j ’ Symw® JJooarad ’ j | PrPStOn Put/Mrer ft | Syracuse, Ind. i l . • i s * ftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftft«=ftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftft #
July 11 Chicago prices: hogs top * ’ ' $10.15; bulk of sales $9.10 to : $10.10; medium and good beef | j steers $7.25 to $8.65; butcher | I cows and heifers $4 to $8.50; | feeder steers $5.75 to $7.50; : light and medium weigh veal | calves $8.25 to $10.75; fat lambs . | $9 to $11.75; feeding, lambs $6 i to $7.00; yearling $6 to $8.75; I fat ewes $3 to $5.25. i I
I That’s the Way the Money Goes | | Buy a new tire for $25.00? Or H let us repair the old one for perhaps $3.00 and make it as good g as new? | Syracuse VULCANIZING Shop J H O. R. Strieby, Prop. Main Street H I
