The Syracuse Journal, Volume 3, Number 9, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 30 June 1910 — Page 8

, >»♦»♦♦♦!»♦♦»<">&♦»♦♦ »♦»< »♦♦»<■♦*♦♦♦♦♦>< 11 ill > 1111 <■'»■»♦<]» :: Eston E. McClintic, Contractor ■■ :: *—i P — — *; Let rrto figure with ypu on a cement house, barn, cistern, tank, ;; j; porch; curbing, sidewalk, sea vault, bridge abuttment,

jarch cilvert, cellar, chimney, foundation, etc., in fact all kinds of concrete work. I can raise your building make and sell cement blocks<of all kinds, cement porch columns, column bases, etc. My prices are based on first class work, and all work is

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«> guaranteed t( be satisfactory as to specifications. Dont bo <> i ’ satisfied till sou write Box 18 or (fail Phone 173— SYRACUSE • • JU. ' '.."J —j———- ? = Hello, Friends! J ’ »nwa^t«3PtE.-gj6gsraisrmten»B , ‘'»^M>.4jxagicJsaMa—ai—****- Jr *' 80 I am stillj in the concrete business and. would like to & '> 0 figure oil your work. Can build anything in' the ■ ♦ ;! H cement lijne you want, no matter what it is. All my m ‘ ‘ K Wjork is guaranteed to be satisfactory. Let me fig* g® ’ ure pn your work before you have it done. jjjd * ■ B Also a concrete mixer in connection. t 1 Y ours for work, H ♦ :R.W. V irhis, Syracuse | | J LAWS ' OF . .INDIANA ' j EDITION OF 1903 - °f - i ’.. . - ' < • „ Os all Statutory Laws to , j 1 date, including an’appEndix of useful forms, complete index, etc., condensed. 4 ' i. r ■ ’ ■ • ■ ! 1 cf.szy.At. 9 iCopycwhtedl * , L_—. — ' , . ! Subscribera of our/paper, and tiiose vzno I I become cur subset!. era, may procure this ■ \! valuable work..of over 300 pages without \ vo- ;. _J

JL M. TREESH Attoiwy-at-Law j Collections ’ < | Syracuse Ind. FfhooSSer AL ESTATE Improved Farms and | Farm Loans ... J Syracuse Indiana —.- .v.Xi D S. HONTZ j. Dentist ijn dentistry, a stitch in time saves more than nine. D m.’t forget your teeth. If yeti intrust them to my care they will receive careful attention. Investigation of work is solicit- • * • Office Over Hies £Co (Grocery I Syracuse- Indiana 4-— LINCOLN CORY i * 'Auctioneer. ' - f P . . ' ’"1 • Dates can be made with ‘ • ; The Syracuse Journal. SYRACUSE 1 ’ INDIANA.

8 THE ECURITT CASUALTY COMPANY of Indianapolis. -- Polictes issued on the monthly, quarterly, semi-annual or annual payments for loss on account of sickness, accidents or accidental death. Particulars and rates from Si>ion 1. Bell, Syracuse, Ind. • EW.HIre Fresh and Sall Meats, Gama in Season. . AVe try to give our patrons as good meats as money can buy, at prices as low as we can sell - them. Best market prices for poultry, hides and tallow. Have uoultried the around bone Tor ' your Chickens? Buildine. Has your time expired on this paper? If you want it to stop you should speak up quickly.

WHY HE IS SO POPULAR Why is it that Mr. Roosevelt was lionized in London? The answer is not far to seek. It is because Mr. Roosevelt has done practically everything there is to do, and has done it so extraordinary well. He is a species of the American. He has been twice President of the United States; he has won the Noble Peace prize; he has shot big game in Africa; he has wrestled with professionals, acted as a journalist, made hay, delivered lectures, been a cowboy, rough rider and rancher, indulged in historic lawn tennis matches against such celebrites as the Bishop of London, picked cotton, even, among the negroes. He has helped ’to make a battleship, hunted rare birds in perilous places; as fireman, preacher, trust smasher and pioneer of the simple life. The list could be extended almost indefinitely. Indeed, from head to foot Mr. Roosevelt is what his countrymen call a “doer” and a “goer.” The following will herhaps illuminate their meaning. When a student ?t Harvard University, hC"Was outmatched in a bout at the noble art of self-defaase. . His antagonist landed him a heavy blow which caused the future President to reel and the spectators to roar out ‘Foul!” In an instant Student Roosevelt was oh his feet again. “It was not a foul!” he shouted, squaring up to his opponent once more. “Come on! see if you can do it againl” . On another occasion Mr. Roosevelt had with him a man whose pride it was to be as an athlete. After the advocate of the “nu spelin” had walked him almost to a state of exhaustion he suddenly precipice. “Where are you going now?” panted the athlete, who had labored toilsomely after him. - “Going down again!” chucked Mr., Roosevelt. “Then what the blazes did you come up for?” exclaimed the other, blankly. “Oh,” replied Mr. Roosevelt, cooly, “merely to see if yoii could do it!” It has been stated by one who knows him that to be with Mr. Roosevelt is like being shut up in a room with a steam engine, and that in his quieter moments he gives the impression that he is merely sitting on the safety valve. “Roosevelt’s way” is generally a remarkable way, and, as is to be expected, he has never been a respecter of precedents. He prefers establishing to following them, and during his Presidency he certainly established one remarkable precedent in administration. Two senators of South Dakota, I Mr. Kittredgq and Mr. Gamble, were I unable to agree a,s to the applicants I for a large number oi vacant offices, - with the result that the office hold- ' ers were allowed to retain their < positions long after the time for ; which they had been appointed. ; Eventually they met at the White • House, and there Mr. Roosevelt, ; seeing no other way out of the dis- ; ficulty, proposed that they should { ; draw lots. Both Senators instantly ; agreed. ; Mr. Roosevelt thereupon tossed I up a coin, saying, “Heads means | Kittredge and tails Gamble!” The ! coin fell “heads," ant Mr. Kittredge i promptly nominated his own fa- I vorite to the position o r ank Ex- I aminer. The Presidential coin I again flew up. Mr. Gamble won. : He won again, and yet a third time, : and nominated his candidate as ! District Attorney, Collector of ' Internal Revenue and Registrar of Land Offices. After that Mr. Kittredge drew a prize and nominated a friend to the office of Assayer of the Mint. Within an hour and a half the spinning of Mr. Roosevelt’s coin had decided the fate of all the offices in South Dakota.—London Answers. Highest prices paid for spring chickins at Brunjes’ Park, Phone 421. » Have you read the Journal ads?

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This is true. The mother who allows a sixteen-year-old daughter to float around the town ship in a top buggy until two a. m„ with a counterfeit sport of weak jaw and weaker morals merely opens the front door to grief and disgrace, remarks the Busco Truth man. If you don’t know what company your girl keeps or what time a night she turns in, your roar when the gossip gets busy will sound about as pathetic as the wheeze from a jewsharp. The girl who insists on spooning with everybody in the corporate limits ought to be backed into the woodshed and relieved of her overflow of affections with a No. 11 slipper laid carelessly across her hiplets. We would rather see a girl kiss a blind shoat through a barb wire fence than have her change partners six nights a week in the front parlor with the lights turned low. It is harder to marry off a girl who has been pawed over by every yap in the community than it is to fatten a sheep on pineapple ice. You can’t gold brick a sharp eyed suitor with second hand goods, any more than you can fit a bath robe on a goat. There are lots of weak-minded parents who are going up against the judgement day with about as much show as a crosseyed girl at a beauty show and their children will rise up and call them blessed with the enthusiasm of a one-legged man at a club dance. Suffers Bad Burn by Electricity. In a letter to his father, Harry Ketring tells of having bfeen burned by a fellow workman throwing a switch, allowing a currant of 40,000 volts of electricity to come in contact with him. He has been in the McHenry hospital for the past two weeks but is again able to be about. Mr. Ketring is cfty electrician of McHenry, 111., and aside from the above accident is getting along nicely. The Journal will keep Harry posted for the coming year as to Syracuse and the doings of our people. [Continued from page i.] ■> \ Wilson, Mrs. Ira Little and Mrs. Chas. Byall, of Pierceton, Mrs. John Shear, near Barbee- lake and Mrs. Jesse Grady, of Syracuse. “Mr. Elder has two sisters, Mrs. Elizabeth Klick and Miss Mary Elder, who live near Sacramento, California. Funeral services were held at Washington Union church on Tuesday at 10 o’clock, conducted by Rev. Randall, who lives near Wawaka, and the body was interred in Washington Union cemetery?’

{^X**Z**X M X , OO*X M X*OO*X M X*OO*X*O <•■ < ► :: Leave youi; :: face < > ~ • I : I at the ;; • • <: I» I r II Studio 111 •‘« < > O o « 1 » < > «• jfl.l. Miller -|| x*:«x*«X‘< M X‘‘i , »x»x««x*<*-x**x« < x«x OVER 65 YEARS* EXPERIENCE ** V B HQ k B J Trade Marks Designs r fttVY Copyrights Ac. Anyone lending a sketch and description may qutckly ascertain our opinion free whether an invention is probably patentable. Communications strictly conadentfal. HANDBOOK pn Patents sent free. Oldest agency for securing patents. Patents taken through Munn A Co. receive tpecial notict, without charge, in the Scientific American. A handsomely tllnstrated weekly. Largest circulation of any scientific journal. Terms, S 3 a yean four months, SL> Sold by ail newsdealers.

B. & O. STILL MAKIMG GAIN With the termination of the railroad fiscal year an the last day of June, the various departments of the Baltimore & Ohio railroad are busily engaged in compiling their reports to submit to President Wiilard for use in the Annual Report, showing the traffic increases and improvements to the physical condition of the road. The earnings of the Baltimore & Ohio system during the year just closing make a satisfactory showing, and in the statement issued several days ago for the month of May and eleven months of the fiscal year, the earnings were $79,143,355, an increase of $10,825,685 3ver last year. These are the larg- , est earnings reported by the road since the business depression in 1907. Should this ratio of increase be maintained during the month of ( June, and there is every reason to believe that it will be, grose earni in *s will exceed $88,000,000 for the year, which will be within $2,000,OCO of the banner year of 1907. Shortly after he assumed the management of the Baltimore &. ’ Ohio last President Willard was visited at headquarters in I Baltimore by a delegation of West Virginia business men and at that l ti ne the new president outlined a number of important improvements, including second and third track construction, widening of ti nnels, etc, which will enable Hie re ad to care for the business offerl ed. These improvements were not 1 a-one confined to West Virginia but are under way at various points on 1 the system. In his interview with 1 the West Virginia delegation Presi- : dent Willard stated that he fully ! {expected that the earnings of the ■ Baltimore & Ohio for the fiscal 1 year 1910-11 would reach SIOO,- ! 030,000. This, he said, could only * be accomplished through rushing the improvements” to completion ■ at the earliest date and by purchasing additional equipment to meet the demands. It is expected that the earnings . from passenger business will also i show steady increases from now . cn. The service was greatly improved when the coming time . went into effect and the electrical--1 /-lighted coaches and pullman cars , were placed in service on the exi press trains. i One of the most magnificent compilations that will go to president Willard for his perusal is the statement of construction work by the Signal department during the year. In the last 12 months more than 100 miles of new signals were installed, and with the completion : of the stretch of 25 miles between McCool’s Ind., and South Chicago, : and the 25 miles between Cincinnati and Loveladd, on the southern ; division, the main lines from New fork to Chicago and St. Louis will ‘ je protected by the block system. : rhp new signals installment have : jeen automatic electric signals, put ; n by F. B. Platenail, the road’s ; signal engineer. The Baltimore & Ohio management has also been considering the ' advisability of adopting the tele- ' phone system of dispatching trains { and it is probable that parts of the { road will be operated in this man- { ner during the coming year. This syetem of train dispatching has proven satisfactory on a number of American railroads. Closed Bass Season. A closed season for taking bass from* the lakes qf the state from April Ist to May 15th, is being proposed by Commissioner Miles. He will go before the next legislature and ask that they enact a law providing for such a season, basing his argument on the fact that under the present fish and game laws, bass cannot multiply with sufficient rapidity to meet the demands of the fishermen. Miles will not ask for a closed period for any other fish. His recommendation for legislation in behalf of bass will mJ dude a proposed amendment to the present law limiting the number of bass for one day’s sport to eighteen instead of 36 as is now allowed.— Goshen Democrat.

I J. W. ROTHENBERGER I II UNDERTAKER prompt ano Efficient service. | Phones 65 end IS. £ Cushion tired ambulance io connection ? [State Bank of Syracusej We Pay 3°|o Interest on Certificates I. OF DEPOSIT < > This bank is under the management of conservative business men, and your money, when on deposit with & h us, you can rest assured is rightly placed and safely H deposited. p State Bank of Syracuse, i

f FOR FURNITURE of all kinds ex! all ;gfl ; B’tfTT interior woodwork Just Use, : camms The Oriental IrVf/’ fl ' |wnishß4l. STAIN 6ood for floors too A .--* '■ ■ a

OLIVER

1 The No. 1 Cultivator may be fitted With inajjy different styles of ffanffO. ; No aussUon about exactly suiting you.

It was used two years in all the big com states before they saia j much about it • i Now they say —and it’s a fact—that this new OLIVER implement absolutely guides, raises and lowers easier than any other cultivator on earth. _ That it does better, easier, slicker work infall soils and conditions. and — i , That it comes nearer making a day’s cultivating seem like a picnic than any other cultivator. Come and see it and also take a look at Oliver Plows of various kinds—extra good this year. E. E. Strieby, Syracuse, Ind. J ALWAYS AHEAD! -L 1- ... . ."'.'L' L - '

WE CM PLEASE YOU I SURE | This isrthe way we figure it—everybody prefers high class eatables. We handle only that kind. Suppose you let us do up an order for you some of these days, just for a trial. Get some of our Coffee and some of that good Tea. Don’t forget”! about the Bacon. Include some of our canned VegetablesThey ale Extra Quality, soartoss Bros, Grocery. Phone 187 Warren T. Colwell Real Estate, Insurance, Collec tions, Loans, Notarial Work. A portion of your business is I , solicited. Office at < OWO/Bm, Maputo i

For Sale . by ' Strieby \ ’ I ' • the Hardware ar cl Atutomobile Man.

Easiest of ail cuiti- f vators to guide, raise I and lower — that’s q saying a good deal, but 1 it’s true. | The Olivers now make a Rid-1 ing Cultivator. When you J see it you will eay they’f should have done it before.!

'[ fneatorium | jj Has opened for | :: the season and | will give the peo- i J J pie of Syracuse ? :: excellent O * ii Motion i Picturesl :: • 1 :: each evening dur- * 11 • ° ♦ ■ • ing the summer. | ; i fiannje HollGnbaunh i | B. F. Hentzell | HARD or SOFT I WOOD . t t I In the woods or 1 I delivered. * |