The Syracuse Journal, Volume 3, Number 9, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 7 July 1910 — Page 8

— WIMW——I ■■■ | Eston E. McClintic, Contractor 1 S; Let me figure with you on a cement house, barn, cistern, tank, J£ X porch, curbing, sidewalk, sea wall, vault, bridge abuttment, x

arch ■ culvert, cellar, chimney, foundation, etc., in fact i :ll kinds of concrete work. l ean raise your building; make and sell cement blocks of all kinds, cement porch columns, column bases, etc. i y prices are based on first class work, and all work is

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X guaranteed to be satisfactory as to specifications. Don’t be * ♦ satisfied till you write Box 18 or call Phone 173— SYRACUSE £ ♦ ❖ 'db -7 • ' I I-** Z ?fe i?? |A|V* 5 * VtS- s V •TV « v V*^ 3 J-v’yTrTVW’S’W , w’W‘ar la’s" 6 Hello, Friends! «bs k -a.n jaasata i uni.ninneaHaaßMaaanHHaM XK J ani S P ! 111 ie con crete business and would like to g ? I|kfig£re on y° ur work. Can build anything in the kg £ X Ki cemen : line you want, no matter what it is. All my $3 <■/ *kl Ayork is guaranteed to be satisfactory. Let me fig- t X |d u re on your work before you have it done; g X I ! Also a concrete mixer in connection. ! t j|p ’ Yours for work/ • ’ ’ EU •> «• Essxsr'-'asaseasr.'■ssttask*s.:-. .■ iurr n«w.r>ii.«» ‘i* If? W V >rhi<i Contractor t ♦ £\.—"? . i- illllJf Syracuse s J . ■'’ J r* •-" ii TAWS JL/ ZIl y V k> i OF [INDIANA j EDITION OF I'jOS I _ I . . . .. , Os all Statutory Laws to 11. elate, including an appendix of useful forms, complete | index, etc., condensed.. . 1 ’ 1 ‘ r- : I VZijSeJ I <?. ■ ,'Vyz i ■ ■ "•<'•■ •-< , j ;j : • ; < • < ' A--i • ; I i rn the use cif. ' ■ I I II ° " K 5 i , .J j .BUS!?;" 5$ AND PROFESSIONAL 5JC>\ F A9VC?S< • •. : I MECHANICS AN:) THE M L : “ *! • I ] tCopyriijhted) !■ I I ' . - '——,-3=d- . . | 'Subscribers of our paper, and those who' become cur subscribers, may procure this \ valuable work of Over 3CO pages without \ X extra fest. . • . z I <— g? xwwtr '■■ -«-£«■:.- :^waaacMm'am»awu»»»niacag-ii iihuil iiiiiii— a—a———

J. M. TREESH - Attoniey-at-Law Collections Syracuse Ind. J F HOOFINGfiNER REAL ESTATE Improved Farms and Farm Loans . . . '"Syracuse Indiana D. S) HdNTZ Dentist In dentistry, a st tch in time saves 7 more than nine. Dau’t forget your teeth, if yo.i intrust them/to my care they will receive) careful attention. 1.-.vem ■■ i-.ion .of >vo:h .'ssolicited. 7 • : Office oyer Miles & Co Grocery Qyraaupe Indiana LINCOLN GORY Auctioneer. E‘ ■ ' -II d I <iW* - '*-• . u‘ ;• - •• I ■ .... I <■- ■ ■ I I - I I JE.J I Dales Jas he mad* with | Tba S Mscufce Journal. I SYRACUSE ; INDIANA.

8 THE ECURITY CASUALTY COMPANY * of Ipdianapohs. Policies issued on the monthly, quarterly, semi-annual or annual payments for loss on account of sickness, accidents or accidental death. Particulars and rates from Simon 1. Bell, Syracuse, Ind. t.W.Hire Fresh and Salt Meats, Game in Season. — We try to give our patrons as meats as money-can buy, at prices as low as we can sell ■ them. Best market prices for poultry, hides and tallow. Have uoultried Uie around bone tor Your Chickens? ißowser Buildine. Warren T. Colwell Real Estate, Insurance, Collec tidns, Loans, Notarial Work. A portion of your business is solicited. Office at Otis G. Butt’s Syracuse

Regulating the speed. ” In nearly all the recent exchanges articles have appeared concerning the laws regulating the speed of automobiles and the enforcement thereof. These articles are all very good, and there is certainly need for enforcement of the law in our town but another thing that needs to be emphasized is the carelessness of pedestrians not! only in regard co automobiles afe motorcycles but teams as well. Too many people go across the streets with never a thought of danger and never a look for it. We have seen several instances in which it required .considerable skill bn the part of drivers of horses td keep from running over people. The attitudeof people in such cases evidently is like that of a friend of ours with whom we were once crossing a crowded street in South Bend! We were becoming rather alarmed at the close proximity of an auto when our friend remarked “What’s the use to hurry? They don’t dare run over you.” We replied “What good will it do us after we are run over and possibly killed that there is a law against it.” The developments often since seem to prove that they do dare but (oftentimes accidents are caused as .much by the earlessness of one party as the other. Accidents are sure to occur no matter how careful people are but the number would be considerably lessened if those’on foot were more cautious. o What Will Happen. The Emporia, Kansas, Gazette,] says: “In a few years aeroplanes will be as bommon as automobiles are now, and it is obvious that the man on foot will have little show. The auto scorcher will be a harmless ndividual as compared with the speed maniac overhead. A man who will take ‘to aerbplaning must be naturally reckless to begin with, and his recklessness will increase with each flight. His boilers will bust, and his engines will fly to pieces, and there will be showers of hardware, and big iron castings will hit the man on foot, and knock him into the ground up to his shoulder blades. Every time he walks around the block a falling monkey wrench or claw hammer will dot him on the head and make him sick and weary. Another prospective evil is the increase, of insurance agents. There will be aeroplane insurance, which will enable you to provide for your widow and children in case an aviator falls on you and squashes you. Insurance agents of various kinds are so thick now that it is impossible to avoid them, and any scheme that threatens to swell their ranks should be denounced by press and pulpit. 1 O By patronizing home merchants you are always rewarded by having good enterprising merchants at home. Patronize them and they will benefit you in more ways than one. You are rewarded by seeing your patronage and the patronage of your influence in building up and sustaining your own town; patronize home merchants, home industry and home enterprise of all kinds In preference to tKdse of any other place. Spend your money at home with people who have an interest in you and your town. By doing this the town is'kept up, property is made more valuable, conveniences are enlarged and opportunities for financial improvements are opened. ! A good natured father nea Wabash gav e his boy an a c re of ground to put in onions, and was to have all he raised provided he would keep them clean. Fortunately the boy owns a large spaniel dog and the two went into partnership. The boy bought harness and plow, and : the boy with his dog has kept the acre as clean as a garden, and the prospects that a thousand bushels of onions may be raised from the ground. —T—U— — _ Get a packgae of Rat An-ni-hi-lia-tor at Lepper and Cole’s, guaranteed to exterminate rats or your money J ‘refunded..

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_ u M———— Poor Father. * Children hush for father’s resting; he is sitting tired and sore, with his feet upon the floor. He is wearied and exhausted by the labors of the day; he has talked about the tariff since the dawn was cold and gray; he has lost eight games of checkers, for his luck today was mean, and that luck was still against him when he bucked the slot machine; so his nerves are under tension, and his brow is dark with care, and the burdens laid upon him seemed too great for him to bear. Stop the clock for it annoys him, throttle the canary bird, take the baby to the cellar, where its howling won’t be heard; you must speak in whisper children, for your father’s tired and sore, and he seems to think the ceiling is some kind of cuspidore. Oh, he’s broken down and beaten by the long and busy day; he’s been sitting in the feed store on a bale of prairie hay, telling how the hungry grafters have the country by the throat, how the tariff on dried apples rob the poor man of his coat, how the nasty polar rumpus might be settled once for all—and his feet are on the table and his back against the wall;, let him find his home a quiet and a heart consoling rest, for the father’s worn and weary and his spirit longs for rest.—Ex. o *— Killed by Dogs. Statistics just completed by J. L. Peetz, state statiscian, as a result of data collected by township trustees last year, shows That during 1908, 22,552 farm animals were killed by dogs in Indiana including those which died as the result of being bitten by rabid dogs. It cost the taxpayers $149,213 out of the township funds. O An exchange tells of a newspaper reporter who interviewed thirty successful business men and found that all of them when boys had been governed strictly and frequently thrashed. He also interviewed thirty loafers and learned that twenty-sev-en of them had been “mamma’s darling” and the other three had b»en reared by their grandmothersJames W. Howard, who was appointed postmaster at Burket, Ind., over Miss Graff, former postmistress, Wednesday married Miss Graff, after taking an inventory of himself as a wrong doer and took this course to square himself with the late postmistress. These postoffices take mighty queer turns occasionally. o The man, the woman, the boy or the girl who wants to obtain the best there is in life should remember that great possessions do not bring happiness, great wealth does not beget pleasure. It is all right and proper i to acquire and accumulate, to lay ' by for a rainy day, but with millionaires giving away their money i we should realize that millions do ] not bring to ”men 'real pleasure, i and hence, once in a while our at- i tention should be turned in other directions. o . - ( Mr. and Mrs. Warren T. Colwell and Mr. and Mrs. Otis C. Butt entertained a house party of young ' people at their lake camp at Kale , Island, from Saturday until Monday evening. Those in the party were: The Misses Blanche Snobarger, Celia Smith, Ruth Miles, 1 Donna Miles, Elva and Erma Miles and the Messers Sam Searfoss, Preston H. Miles and Edward McClain. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Butt joined the party on Monday.

ikIAAJd, OVER 66 YEARS’ dB *33 Jr J J L J " / a v| b j[ k B V D "1 k ■ ■ 1 I RADK MARKS ‘ Designs "FyVT’U Copyrights Ac. Anyone sending a sketch and description may culckly ascertain our opinion free whether an invention is probably patentable. CommunionttoiuFetrictly confidential. HANDBOOK on Patents ■ent free. Oldest agency for aecuriinrpatents. Patents taken through Munn A Co. receive ■pectal notice, wllbouC charge. In the Scientific American. A handsomely Illustrated weekly. Jjinrest clr- ’ culation of any scientific Journal. Germs. W a yetrf: four months, <l. Bold by ali newsdealers.

Small Freight Wreck.’ A broken journal caused by a burning boxen on a frieght car on B. & 0. train 2735 extra west was cause for a small wreck just east of Nappanee Sunday evening. Passer ger trains No. 12 and 6 were delayed some three hours. The services of the wreck train were required to clear the track. O— A Splendid Record. State Superintendent of Public Instruction Robert J. Aley, is calling the attention of educators over the state to the most excellent record made in the public schools by Miss Clara Schmitt, of Hamlet. Miss Schmitt has just graduated from the high school at Hamlet, making 12 years spent in the free schools of the state, and during that time she was neither absent nor tardy. Mr. Aley say she knows of no record that comes ahead of this one. An exchange facetiously remarks that when you % see a business man advertising steadily and filling his space with interesting news, put it down that he is interested enough in you to be willing to pay for tellir g you at your home what he has to sell you—he is not selfishly expecting you to chase down town and hunt up his goods and bargains. Neither is he trying to get something for nothing. Show your appreciation of this courtesy on their part by favoring these business men every time you can. A building belonging to the Wakarusa Lumber Co., and used as an oifice was completely demolished the other day by a couple of cars while switching in the Wakarusa y ards. The cars were “kicked off” and ran off a private siding skipping over the ground for about twenty-five feet crushing into this building made of cement blocks, and jarred it about a foot off its . foundation. o Here is a minister who appreciates the editor: At a recent editorial convention he offered the following toast: “To save an editor from starvation, take his paper and pay for it promptly. To save him' from despair send him every item of news that you can get hold of. To save h'.m from mistakes, bury him. Dead p jople are the only ones who never make mistakes.” Mrs. Washington Stout of Milford suffered a stroke of paralysis Tuesday while sitting on the porch. Her entire right side is paralysized from her feet to her head. A physicians was sent for, but she remained unconcious almost all night. I Wednesday morning she seemed I some better and was apparently I conscious. It had been extremely I warm during the day, and about I four o’clock she went out into the I potato patch and did some work I aadit is feared the extreme heat might have hastened the attack. Bank Statement. S L. Ketring, Pres’t, A. A. Rasor, Vice Pres’t, W. M. Jseef, Cashier,. Report of the condition of the State Bank of Syracuse, a State bank at Syracuse, in the State of Indiana, at the close of its business on June 30, 1910. RESOURCES. Loans and Discounts. . . ..$124,479.12 Overdraftslo4.l4 .Fixtures 1,55000 Due from Banks and Trust Co s. 40,045.33 Cash on Handll,loo.o6 Cash Items 375-17 Current Expenses237,9.4o Interest Paid . . . , 1,358.43 . Total Resources .... 181,391.65 LIABILITIES. Capital Stock —paid in ... . $25,000.00 Surplus 1,000.00 Demands Deposits 57,827.39 Demand Certificates 92,002.90 149,830.29 Exchange, Discounts & Interest 5,561.36 Total Liabilities 181,391.65 State of Indiana, county of Kosciusko, ss. ' I, W. M. Self, Cashier of the State Bank of Syracuse, do solemnly swear that the above statement is true. W. M. Self, Cashier. Subscribed and sworn to before me this 2nd day of July, 1910. Otis C. Butt, (seal. J Notary Public. ' My oommhaion expires July 11, ifn.

I J. W ROTHENBERGER I £ UNDERTAKER . £ % prompt ant) Efficient Service. | J Phones 65 and IS f Cushion tired ambulance in connection | I state Bant oi Syraousn! $ Hi | 01 ' ’ T |We pay 3 O | O Interest on Certificates | | OF EJELFOSIT as - v | I ® « This bank is under the management of conservative business men, and your money, when on deposit with K; us, you can rest assured is rightly placed and safely $ deposited. , I $

FOR FURNITURE ofalUdndssi4all f|]|TT!T"'|ny F‘ interior woodwork mB I ; Just CAMMffiQS (Wi i The Original , /I • WNISH STAIN

E l ] How about your tackle We mean Fishing Tackle, and -fe I speaking about Tackle, our line is the ] largest and most complete to be found . j in this section. We have lines, hooks; |j corks, and sinkers that will hold ’em, I and artificial baits, reals and rods that | will land ’em. We also carry a large | line of landing and minnow nets, min- h I now pails and tackle boxes. Everything for the Nimrod I can be found here, I I E. E. Strieby, | Hardware, Paints, Sporting Goods. I Syracuse, Indiana. | B: I E

WE CAN PLEASE YOU j SURE This is the 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 are Extra Quality. Searioss Bros. Grocery. Phone Has your time expired on this paper? If you want it to stop you should speak up c|uickly«

For Sale Strieby • B the Hardware and Automobile Man.

11 Z^J^J^J^^J^J^Z’*******’**************}**^*S^Z**Z~Z M Z M Z < *Z*v *Z> | fl. L. Miner i :) for | ii Portraits ! i: Views and I ii postcards, i ;i Studio op- | \ posited our- 1 i i nal Office. | i; Telephone t ii No. 43, | t Highest prices paid for spring chickins at Bruises’ Park. IPhone 421.