The Syracuse Journal, Volume 1, Number 15, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 6 August 1908 — Page 8
Space 13 You get more than a mere piano when you buy a Story & Clark,—more than faultless structure, handsome finish, fair price; liberal selling* terms. Underlying all these is tjlie one great essential Wherein the Story & Clark stands supreme —i£ has the music inside. Come and. hear the Story '& Clark. You will find it more eloquent than any salesman. It speaks a language you can understand. Office over the bank. J. W. Rothenberger SYRACUSE
' 4FEDISON ill® PHONOGRAPHS Thd Edison Phonograph is a case where three is company and not a crowd. Two people and an Edison Phonograph can pass a very pleasant evening. This does not prevent it from being the best entertainer for any kind of a gathering, from an informal evening up .to a large reception. If you do not know the possibilities of the Edison Phonograph, come into our store and see what it can do. J. W, Brady, Syracuse
Farmers Know when they are getting" courteous treatment. We make no distinctions but try to make you feel at ease. Brinfl Your Produce and we will give You the market price, or you can get your money’s worth in trade. Full StOGKfIIWaUS Stetler’s SYRACUSE J M. TREESH Attorney-at-Law Collections Syracuse Ind. , CORNELIUS & BUTT Attorneys-at-Law Practice in all Courts Tel. 123 Syracuse, Ind. ■ D. S. HONTZ Dentist Seventeen Experience ,• In dentistryrLaXtitch in tinie saves, more than nine. Don’t forget your teeth. If yoit intrust them to my care they will receive Careful attention. Investigation of work is solicited. >1 : Office over Stetler's Grocery Syracuse Indiana J. tV BOWSER Physician and Surgeon - - Tel . 16 —Office and Residence Suracuse, Ind.
JVk ■ j I Paying Rent and If Ulf I Own a iioiiiG I of Your Own TOWN PROPERTYYou can buy on liberal terms: Six room house on Balti- | more street, good water . $375 Eight room house on Baltimore st., with cellar, water in house, several nice fruit trees. This is an excellent A property tplOoO Seven room house on Lake st., good cellar, twelve-foot lake front . _ _ with boat house ipJLOOU Six room house with cellar-Mwo lots. Two blocks from Postoffice S6OO A. good 6 room house, good water, small barn, in west part of town SBOOI I have many other properties for sale not listed here. 1 One fine lake front loiftdn Syracuse Lake . at a bargain. Also a very fine lot just west of Vawter Park at a bargain. Lots in all parts of Syracuse. For Sale or Exchange A commercial hotel in a good Ohio town on splendid paying basis, will.sell reasonable* or exchange for good toxin property or small farm, . | A business room with living I rooms over head in Garrett, Ind. is occupied, will exchange for farm or stock of merchandise*'' or cash. i - A nice clean stock of Menis Furnishings and shoes, good town —farm preferred. I have town properties to exchange for Small tracts of land or improved farms, i FARMS. A list of a few of the farms I have for sale within a few miles of Syracuse. 23a small house and barn, just fair condition—a real bargain SBOO 120a six acres* limber, large house, barn and orchard, good stock farm . per acre • 114a, fair house and barn * X orchard, etc. per acre tpoU i2oja, a splendid ten room house,) fair barn, new wire fences, level land, a good farm, a nice home, per acre $65 80a, good house and barn, . I some timber Ip2ooo 75a, about 6G miles of Syracuse—housje and barn fair—this is a CD O O fY bargain. Price 40a, 1 miles from ’Syracuse—small house and barn,.but.new. (hnn r\r\ Price . cpXaJUU 8 acres. A fine nine room- fiouso, large barn, good small ,orclia.fd, large poultry house. Location good. Price on application. ' A meat market and grocery Combined,'is doing a fine business!. Notion store doing a fine business and run on a Strictly cash basis. Also a restaurant in a’good) town, if you want to get in or out of business, let me help you. W. G. CONNOLLY, Office at Hotel Holton SYRACUSE INDIANA.
Shoes and oxfords men, women and children, A. W. Strieby. MONEY to lp a n on farms on favorable terms; also some real -farm bargains.-B. F. Hcopingarner. NOTICE I will make Sorghum Molasses for the season of 1908, at my residence, 2 miles east of Monoquet. All syrup made on a Champion Evaporator Pan. Satisfaction guaranteed. Caq furnish Sorghum seed. Fred C. Johnson, Royal Phone 259.
■ ■ ■.■ . • %xLii ' m2* J IL p^w z / M ■ Y M/ / tSL • \Wt F " , V YES, WE REPAIR watches and jewelry of all kinds. Do it right, too. Make thing ,s good as’new and sometimes better. We take your old Jewelry and make it oyer into new and stylish things. If you have any old articles of jewelry you have discarded just because ‘ ‘people are not wearing such things now,” bring them here and see what wonderful things we can do with them. N. P. Hollman,-Syracuse
PUBLIC LIBRARY JWCUSE Use the Basement Room of the New School Build*' ing. BEST OPPORTUNITY IS NOW A public library in a community has a significance and a meaning. The absence of one has as much. Topeka, Ind., a town of less than half the population of Syracuse, has eight or ten thousand dollars tn a library and a library building. It speaks well for that community. Syracuse cannot hope to have a library building, but we can have a free public library. There! is no question but that we need in Syracuse some constructive work for the welfare of the whole community. ‘The work that has already been done for civic righteousness has been effective but not Completely so by a long way. Evil displaced should be replaced by an institution or influence that will lift up. There is no "way in which a community can bring greater benefit to itself in the establishment of a library free to all its citizens. It is not a benefaction to a select few. It touches every home. A public library would become an influential adjunct to the school, and help miould the characters of our children in the homes. It would give inspiration and help to teachers, preachers and others in their wprk of instruction. It would assist club members in their study. it vyould enable mechanics in their work giving them the best* thought of the bast workers in their line. ' It wpuld make the town more attractive to the class of people we want, And not least of the many benefits is the spirit of oc-operation that will aripe among our interested citizens for further attention to the welfare of the community. Syracuse needs some work for the common good that will reveal the possibilities lof such wprk and by the success of it inspire greater effort. A puibho library will be a center and around it will revolve all the local interests of the town. At least a reading room should have been opened long ago. It costs such little effort, and the influences are so far reaching. The advantages for opening a library are probably better now than they ever were before. The school library of seven or eight hundred volumes will ioim a nucleus and the School Board will allow tfie use of one of the front basement rooms in the new school building. The location is good. The expense of heating the room will be nothing.. The only expense will be for the equipment and the cost of keeping a librarian in charge. It is an excellent opportunity and should not be allowed to pass. Every organization in town should be interested and give assistance—the churches, school, clubs, lodges, etc. A call will be issued soon for a meeting of our citizens. Massena’s Defense. Roy Massena has engaged Hon. W. F. McNagny of Columbia City, and S. N. Stephens of Plymouth, to defend him when his case comes up for trial at the September term of court. He expects to personally check over the accounts in the treasurer’s office before the trial. It is said that notes and other collateral were deposited with Miss Frazer by Massena’s friends sufficient to indemnify her against possible loss before she signed his bond. Rarm four and a half mi. - from Pierceton; soil ox sand and clay loam: good house, new wind pnmp, water piped to house, barn just fair, nice young orchard; about 70a is under cultivation, balance wood and pasture. It will pay you to investigate. Price $42. oO per acre. — W. G. Connolly, Tel. 55, Syracuse.
Visit From Ephriam Brumbaugh, Mr. Ephriam Brumbaugh, one of the oldest and most respected citizens of this township, paid the Journal office a pleasant visit last Saturday. His son, Nathan, left Goshen for Riverside, California, on Monday. Mr. Brumbaugh agrees with the Journal that the roads of this township are a disgrace to us. He travels abqut northern Indiana a good deal, he says, and is always chagrined on his return home on comparing the roads of our own township with those of our neighbors. A Family Mix-Up. “I’ll tell you bow it is” said the old carpenter. “I met ayoqng widow with a grown up step-daughter, and I married that widow. “Then my father met our stepdaughter and married her. That made my wife the mother-in-law of her father-in-law, and made my stepdaughter my step-mother, and my father became my step-son. See? “Then my step-mother, the stepdaughter of my wife, bad a son. That boy was, of course, my brother, because he was my father’s eon; but he was also the son of my wife’s step-daughter, and therefore her grandson. That made me grandfather of my step-brother. .Then my wife had a son. “My mother-in-law, the step-s’s-ter of my son, is also his grandmother, because he is her step-son’s child. My father is the brotber-in-law of my child, because his stepsister is I am the brother cf my son, who is also the child of my step-grand-mother. I am my mother’s brother-in-law, my wife is her own child’s aunt, my son is my father’s nephew, and I am my own grand-father—and I can't understand it,” courTTroceedings. PROBATE CASES, Elmer J. Kinsey appointed administrator estate of Cary Knock, deceased. The will of Anna Paul Ros?, deceased, was probated in the court on July 31, 1908. CIVIL CASES. Melvina J. Crampton vs Anson S. Crampton, divorce decree granted plaintiff. Maud Stiffler vs Scott W. Stiffler, divorce decree granted plaintiff. In the case O. J. Chandler, et al, vs The G. B. Lesb Co., for receivership C. E. Stout was appointed receiver with bond at $15,000. Marriage Licenses. Leonard C. Baker, Fort Wayne, to Carrie E. Patton, Warsaw. Arthur E. Gunter, Leesburg, to Sadie J. Wagner, Warsaw. H. E. Blue, Mentone, to Della Tarvis, Etna Green. Brady’s for daily papers. 160a Farm four and a half mi. ■■ from Pierceton; about 125a under cultivation, balance timber land; soil: sand and clay loam —very productive. Three tine springs, two wells of water, plenty of small fruit. Buildings consist of good 8-room house, bank barn 40x60; hog and chicken houses and other buildings. This is an excellent stock farm. Price $60.00 per acre. —W. G. Connolly, Tel. 55, Syracuse. Notice to Heirs, Creditors, Etc. In the matter es the estate of Margaret E. Pensinger, Deceased. 1 In the Kosciusko Circuit Court, April Tenn 1908. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN*That Charles C. Bachman, as Executor of the estate of Margaret E. Pensinger, deceased, has presented and filed his account and vouchers in final settlement of said estate, and that the same will come up for the examination and action of said Circuit Court on the 10th day of August, 1908, at which time all heirs, creditors or legatees of said estate are required 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 13th day of fuly, 1908. . CHARLES CLBACHMAN, Executor.
Syracuse in 1875 Items from the corresponding issues of The Syracuse Enterprise,
Good Ague- weather. Sam Bashore has, his dwelling up and enclosed. It is reported that a newspaper is soon to be established at Bremen. Mr; N. Crow took charge of the flouring mill at this place on Monday morning. Dr. H. W. Shock and Hugh Callander, Esq., cau’ght a fine lot of fish on Thursday last. Get your clothes made up in good style by J. P. Ritter, at Miles & Gibson’s dry goods store, Milford. It would lie a great convenience to dur citizens, if the Syracuse postoffice could be made a money order office. Thejsigh of O. O. Felkner, attorney at law, still ornaments the corner of John Wayer’s brick building. It is now all that is left of the departed one. 4 ■ . S. L.‘ Ketring, John S. Wynant, Jim Banta, Tom Starr, Dick DOrmire and Milt Hillabold went to Warsaw to see the elephant on Saturday. Gingerbread and “liquid provisions” ho doubt suffered on that occasion. We learn that Mr. Isaac Kitson, administrator of the estate of Jacob Rosenbarger, deceased, has succeeded in.disposntj, of the farm owned by the heirs of the latter, to Mr. Hentyjudav, of Bentop township, Elkhart county, for the‘Sum of ss>ooo. Mr. Joseph Bushong, the popular groceryman, gave flour, which''we found to be just; the thing to make pumpkin pies of a They have all the flavor of fresh pumpkins. Mr. Geo. Crocker has been appointed to superintend the survey of the proposed ship canal from Lake, Michigan to the Wabash river. Some time ago congress made an appropriation for a survey of the proposed route. , * ' We understand that Messrs. Stetler & Kindig, dealers in dry goods etc., have purchased the property oa the corner of Main and Huntington streets, owned by Jacob Ilattel, of Goshen, and which is now* occupied by John Wynant with his drug store. We suppose they will move their stock of goods into it as soon as possession is given. This isqjood property and a desirable location, for which, we believe, they paid $1,600. We desire to call the attention of our readers to the advertisement in another column, of the saw mill, planing mill, lumber yard etc. of our enterprising townsman, Addison Greene. Mr. Zachariah Hendrickson has completed the excavations for the cellar of his residence on the hill, and work upon the building will be commenced in a short time. This will be one of the finest residences in town, and Mr. Hendrickson deserves credit for putting up such a fine building. Milford Correspondence by Tom Felknerl A little daughter of Mrs. James Clay-1 ton was buried on Thursday. Wm. Groves is preparing toerecta neat dwelling house, which will be a credit to the village. , Chauncey Benford, at famous citizen of the “burg,” is visiting the family of his brother William. Mark Horton, a granger of huge proportions, has been spending a, few days at home, and looking around town. The Milford Manufacturing Co. have been disposing of some of their machinery to Ed. W. Walker, of Goshen. “One i open” has been sick for a few days, but shows up this morning as bright, as anew nickel, ready to take his rations. Eli Cox and David Akins have rented Phillips’ saw mill, and. will soon be prepared tq do custom work in first class sty le. ‘"X . 1 . ' There will be a grand “Calico Hop’’ in Felkner’s brick, on Thursday evening, Aug. 12, 1875, for the benefit of Kosciusko Lodge A. F. &A. M. Take due notice and govern yourself accordingly.
New Furhit ure I
'^has.EHatt’s! PIFIMFA k A 25c Bottle of — I Hatt’s Cleaee r & Polish POLISH | in tantlyremov es spots,dirt ■ — « and that smoky appearance For ■« from your furniture, piano „ FURNITURE i an d automobiie. It’s the » PIANOS £ Polish that cleans and polnirvri ® ishes at the saw e time and tnvYCLts , | does not leave (he sur f aC e cntiu mi t sticky or gummy . Has been — B used and gnat anteed for Ulin. JSecknumn Syracuse
J. W. ROTHENBERGER UNDERTAKER prompt an& Efficient Service, f ’ Phones 65 and Cushion tired ambulance in connection
IWe need work. | Concrete work of all kinds, side- t ❖ walks, abntments, block-laying $ | and foundations. All work guar- £ J anteed. Teaming of all kinds. f mgg 1 intiG & vornis. Sii, sk '£“■ 1
Thlresa J Ml ™ E ’ f\pOlNTir
Superior Steam Laundry R R DEAL, PROPRIETOR. HELLO 106 SYRACUSE, IND.
Wrucka* miller & Son *
Syracuse, ITnbiana
i G. £. Wilcox . . . J UNDERTAKER ; and EMBALMER : IRubber Uivcb ambulance IReabi? • LADY ATTENDANT PHONE 46 i Syracuse, ITnb.
THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL SI.OO PER YEAR Leading Newspaper and Job Office Call Phone 130 and Give Us the News.
I guess T am in the ring yet. Rosson.
Save igour sweat Let us do your laundry work. You’ll feel better and so will we.
jfeeb JBarn Special Attention given to Commercial and Lake Driving, Call No. 91 and get service. On the Hill.
