The Syracuse Journal, Volume 3, Number 20, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 15 September 1910 — Page 8
| Our Rui6 | oi Three I is of interest to houskldeep- g ers who devote thought to ■ I groceey buying. I I RULE ONE—Extreme care g when we purchase. | TWO—lnferior goods never g I even considered. THREE—Prices as small as we g can make them. That’s our rule of three. We g have other rules too. The rules g of four, five and six: a quick store service, a quick delivery | service, and a willingness to | make all wrongs right. We | make good all along the grocery | line, and we would be glad Jo J prove it in your case. May we? | | Searloss Brothers. i PHONE 187. t l | B. F. Hentzell | | HARD or SOFT I | WOOD I * 11l the 'woods or | t delivered. ❖ t. p * ' Tj7m7 treebh" Attorney-at-L aw Collections Syracuse Ind. B F HOOHNGRANER j REAL ESTATE . I Improved Farms and (Farm Loans* / . . Syracuse Indiana D. S. HONTZ ' ■. Dentist 1 In dentistry, a stitch in time saves mojre than nine. Don’t forget your teeth. If you intrust them to. my care they will receive careful attention. Investigation of work is solicited. : : t’ Office over Miles <f CoGrocery Syraeusa Indiana J — automobile -j livery I have purchased an Auburn passenger touring car and wil] conduct an Auto Livery. Can carry parties of four or less. Commercial drives a speciality. Calf phone 53. I have for sale a 21-ft. launch with 5-horse engine in good repair Wm. Stetler. . ,a*T — — ..j,,....— — The Winona Interurban Rajway Comp any, Cars Leave Milford Junction, Effective July io, 1910. Subject to change without notice. NORTH. A. M. P. M. 6:17 12:45 6:26 12-50 7:57 r. 55 9'-55 3:56 11.36* 4:48 5=55 7:00 7:57 9135* 11:02 SOUTH. A. M. P. J[. 6:17 - 12:45 • 6:26 12:30 7:23* 2:02 8:58 '3:00 10:58 4:5 9 565* 7:00 . 817 ' 9 03 11:02 *Winona Flyer—Through Lijnited Car between Goshen and Indianapolis. •
BOWSJSR : B 0« COAL CO. j [COAL | Including :: I POCAHONTAS LUMP. I: V ■ 1 ® A supply of :: if HAY AND STRAW ;) S kent on hand. >■ • . =i: j SHAFFER BROTHERS, K 1 PROPRIETORS. J; Phones: SUSI” 7 :: i ßuv M& i IT RECOMMENDS ITSELF. Its credentials are good; it stands the “test of time,’’ and it isn’t extravagantly high. Yes, sir, . BUY THIS WATCH and you’ll never be at a loss to know the time of day. Our watches, either ladies’ or gents’, aren't a bit bashful, but speak for themselves. Each one is fully warranted. See and buy one. N. P. HOFFMAN. . J. H. BOWSER . ) Physician and Surgeon Tel. 16 —Offit/e and Residence Syracuse, Ind. OTIS G. BUTT Attorney-at-Law Practice in all Courts Tel. 123 Money to Loan. Fire Insurance. Syracuse, Ind. 1 Warren T. Colwjell Real Estate, Insurance, dollec tions, Lodns, Notarial Work. A portion of your business is solicited. Office at Otis 6 % Butt’s Syracuse - ~ —r" f • 8 THE ECURITT L CATJSUAETY COMPANY of Indianapolis. ' Policies issued on the monthly, quarterly, semi-annual x>r annual payments for loss on account of sickness, accidents or accidental death. Particulars and rates from Simon 1. Bell, Syracuse, Ind. E W Hire Fresh and Salt Meats, Game In Season. We try to give our patrons as good meats as money can buy, at prices as low as wfei can sell them. Best market prices for poultry, hides and tallow. Have uou"tried the oround bone for Your Ghickens? Bowser Building. ■> J
Respect the Aged. ; We wish to say a few words for ; the old folks, believing that the in- ; firmities of advanced years are ofteQ ‘ treated with an indifference that is I hard to hear. Not by all, of course, ; for there are many, we will hope the ; majority, that are thoughtful of the ’ aged and kind to them: Then again J there are others who, to put it ‘ mildly are harsh and cold. It is J very natural to smile on what is ‘ lovely and strong and frown on the I reverse without even observing that I we do so; and it often follows, with J the young especially, that as they ! look on the furrowed face, the dim ! eyes, the trembling hands, the tot- : tering, uncertain steps of an old ; man or woman, they seem to forget that in that warm and homely I prison house is a heart and soul i which yearns for recognition, for kindness in word and deed, and for a little love, with an intensity that youth in all its fullness does not know. In our words to othefs, in all our dealing with them, it is) our duty to stop and think; and with the old it is positively cruelty npt to do so. It is down hill, remember; a hill with steep stony paths and at its foot there is only a grave. Don’t by impatient words and looks push them along its precipitous ways: don’t bruise their weary feet with rocks of ridicule and uncalled-for-jest; don’t glaze that downward slope with the ice of indifference, and above all don’t hang on every bush and boulder placards of their own deterioration. It is not necessary to remind them that they have left their prime and strength behind. They know it; rione so well. Yes, let us sometimes stop and think; let us turn frqm our own ambition; from our ambitions for our children and lend a hand to the old folks. - Let us smooth their path, let them lean on us as they step over the steep ledges and let us warm the chill of that bleak hill side with sympathy and love. Let us give them back all they gave in other days and give with interest; for believe us however you may deem them now, you will miss them when they are gone. It may be as you stand by their coffins; it may be in years to come, when you tread the path that once was theirs you will stop and think; thoughts will come. Then God help you! That in those thoughts there may not be that word of flame—remorse. Occasional MisprintsAll newspapers have occasional misprints. The Chicago Tribune in reporting a political meeting, said that the vast audience rent the air with their snouts. Another Chicago paper reported the propeller Alaska as leaving port with a cargo of forty thousand of bushels of cats. A Buffalo paper, in describing the scene when Roosevelt took his oath of office as president, said it was a spectacle never to be forgotton when Roosevelt, before the chief justice of the supreme court and a few august witnesses, took his simbath.—lndianapolis News. We do not laugh enough. There is nothing more pleasant to the ear than the merry laugh of a happy, joyous person, and nothing drives away gloom and care like a good, hearty laugh. Laughter and gootj humor make a happy, pleasant home and a cheerful bright home is the greatest safeguard against the temptations for the young. Parents should guard against this and spare no pains to make home a cheerful I spot. About as good away to study human nature is when you are ’ driving on the public road. If a man is willing to observe the laws and the courtesies of the road, he will duly give his share of it when ’ meeting another, and shows he is • willing to do the gentlemanly tiling 1 about it. But when you meet one ; who takes every advantage of those he meets, and holds the road for his own selfish self, often to the great discomfort of those he meets, or will not allow them to pass, we are almost sure to think of pork in connection with such drivers of teams.
Public Sale. Lewis Juday will sell at public auction at his residence six miles southeast of Milford and four miles northeast of Leesburg September 15th sale commencing at 10:00 a. m. sharp. 4 head of horses, 3 cattle, 35 hogs, 20 sheep, 10 turkeys 100 Plymouth Rock chickens, 350 bushels choice Silver Mine oats 1909 crop. Also all of the farm implements and household goods' See bills. It is being told that a neighboring editor recently printed an item to the effect that if a certain resident, whose name it did not mention, did not quit kissing the hired girl he would be found out. The next day twenty-five married men ; called on the editor and stopped the paper, claiming that the editor was meddling with tfieir domestic affairs. Yon don’t have to go to war to be patriotic. Improve your locality, uphold your town, enlarge its interests, and lend a hand to progress, and you are a patriot—a lover of your country—as truly as the soldier who shoulders his musket. U O ri A man never realizes the superiority of woma|n so much as when he is sewing on a button without a thimble, pushing the needle against the wall to get it half way through and pulling it through the other half by hanging on to it with the teeth. J This is just, the right size town to settle in and enjoy life. Everything for the comfort of life can be bought here and $lO will go as ffir as $25 will in the large cities. Wfien you want to leave the farm, come to our sown and build a nice comfortable home and be among the best people in the world. It is estiipated that about 2000 people attended the Jubilee at Milford last Thursday. Quite a number of our tbwn people were there to help swelj the crowd, which was not so large as at former celebrations of the kind, possibly due to the unpleasant weather early in the day. j Q . However’wordly and sinful people are they Want their children good. How are you going to have them goods? Buy them a few good books? Teach them a few excellent cateqhisms? Bring them to church? That is all very well, but of little final result unless you do it with the grace of God in your heart. Do you realize that your children are started for eternity? Are they on the right road? Those' little forms that are now so bright and beautiful—when they have scattered in the dust, there will be an immortal spirit living on in a mighty theater of action, and your faithfulness or your neglect nowts deciding their destiny. The farmer who owns a farm is the particular person who is fixeri. Banks may fall and factories close, workmen strike and mines suspend, merchants fail and town burn, times may be panicky, and even crops may be short—but the farmer who owns his acres will get along. He will live in comfort and quiet, vtith plenty to eat, drink and wear. He is the most independent man on earth. Yet there are lots of thejn who do not appreciate their situation. o SIOO Reward, SIOO. The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure in all its stages, and that is Cattarh. Hall’s .Uattarh Cure is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Cattarli being a constitutional disease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall’s Cattarh Cure is taken internally, acting directing upon the blood and mucous surfaces qf the system, thereby destroying the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by building up the constitution and assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers that they offer One Hundred Dollars tor any case that it fails to cure. Send for list of testtimonials. Address F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo Ohio. . Sold by all druggists, 75c. Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation.
Get H Ibonie! '• Cash or Monthly Payments. 1 ■ - I have several summer homes- on , Lake Wawasee that I can sell at a 1 •1 - • right price. 8 room house at Vawter Park, 1 large lot and good well. House plastered, cottage or permanant home. SBOO.OO 7-room house on Front street, fine location—lot runs to lake $1500.00 9-room houseonFront street, was built for two families—lot runs to lake SIOOO.OO Vacant lot on ain street-fine location $200.00 Barn and lot on race bank. This will go very cheap. Good 7-room house on North Huntington street $155<).00 6-room house and barn on R >ok lyn street 2900.00 4 acree 2 miles from towm. House and barn. Young and bearing fruit. For sale or exchange tor town propel ty. W. T. COLWELL. at offiice of Otis C. Butt. Some IBarijains in IReal Eitate. FOR RENT—Two 7 room flats, a fine location, good view of lake, in good repair, electric lights, rent very reasonable. Also a good 4 room house in west part of town, at $4.00 a month. A good 7 room brick house, with barn, on Harrison street. One very good, extra lenght, lake front lot. Price $250. Other good lots in all parts of the town, at low prices and good terms. Special—3 extra good lots. $l9O for the 3. A fine 9 room house, good well water, cistern, city water, some fruit, splendid location on Huntingtoil street. Price SI6OO. A 5 room house, and barn in west part of town. Price $750. A 4 room house in west part of town, good water. Price $450. A good 6 room house, cemented cellar, good water/ chicken house and park, in north part of town. Price $llOO. A good 6 room house, well house, cellar, barn, on Huntington street- ( Price SI3OO. An extorordinary 8 room house, furnace, cistern, well, city water, two lots, a very fine barn with cemented floor and well inside, on Harrison street. Price S3OOO. An elegant 8 room house,, fine cellar, furnace, good well, city water, ; bath, everything in fine condition, electic lights, on Harrison, street Price S2OOO. Good 6 room house, electric lights a fine big celler, good water in kitchen, Frazier Ave. A bargain Price S9OO. For Sale—On south a’: i street a good 8 room house with cellar, good water, a profitable ginseng , garden, 3 fine lots and bam. Apply , for price and terms. 4 acres 1-2 mile of Syracuse, good house and barn, lot of good fruit, find location, good water. Price SIBOO. ' A splendid 7 room house good cellar, good well water, fruit, good ; chicken house and park, on Harrison street. Price $1450. A fine 8 room house on west side ’ Main street, water in house, good lot. Price 1500. * A splendid 8 room house, fine ’ cemented cellar, electric lights, ) well of water, fruit, city water, a ) fine location on Front street and a real bargain. Price $1550. A fine 8 room house, electric lights, well in house, city water a > good wood shed with floor in, ; chicken house and park, on Harri- j son street. Cheap at $1550. w. G. CONNOLLY. Office At Journal Office.
1 J. W ROTHENBERGER I UNDERTAKER j I (Prompt an& Efficient Service. | Phones 65 and 1 5 - * Cushion tired ambuance io connection | > ' 1 )Staie BanK oi SyraGiise We pay 3 ]|o i nterest on Certificates I 5 ' TXETFOSIT I - t a >3 ’ ' 3 This bank is tinder the’rnanagt me nt of c/ o. t rvabvo I • businessmen, and your money, when on osit with 9 us, you can rest assured is niaced and ■s.-ifelv 1 -,5 . - J r - '-‘in KUieij g ■f; deposited. | I FORE J ' ■ i - ror bale i r 7: ■ : -ii 7] cJxrsiz Us y i i-L' i \ ! i -'7 ! i PMI the Hard ,vare and i Good for floors too. LgClsgbl A --"' ' — Automobile Man. I s'sT tie!to, ■ Friends! ' 1 vHI J i n t’ ne concre te business and would like to ? 7 °? your work. Can build anything in the M ♦ 7| j cement line you want, no matter what it is. All my Z | j work is guaranteed to be satisfactory. Let me fig- hJ x ure onxyour work before you have it done. ? J ’ lyS i Also a concrete mixer in connection. ❖ 7 IJj j Yours for work, ' Hi X k W. Vorhls. I : Eston E. flDcGlintic, Contractor 1 ■ MBt ‘r-” »■ -■ - iinr- ihwiii 1 ir h t —b ii— l ua ii iw ~- . ■■’t . v. ’ Let me figure with you oti a cement house, barn, cistern, tank, 4 porch), curbing, sidewalk, sea wall, vault, bridge abuttment, J ’’ arch culvert, cellar, chimney, foundation, ei.c., in 11-* ] *7* J " (X Tact all-Rinds of concrete work. lean raise your A& I ►i ' Luiki’.nß; make and sell cement blocks of all kinds, -fA 4 7 v) cement porch columns, column bases, etc. My Qj ’ * > pikes ipe base ’ first class work, .and all work is 7 ? guaranteed tq !n saJ k-Yry as to specifications. Don”t be ? 7 satisfied till yo u write 18 or call i'hmie 173— SYRACUSE t ' e*-'. 3>. : /i v '’j-. ’ - 1 < < Ellhv j % i FOR BY ALL j ■DEALERS! I THE BALTIMORE & OHIO RAILROAD | VERY LOW FARES TO | ATLANTIC CITY—G. A. R. National Encampment, Sept. ; 15 to 19, inclusive. s SUMMERI TOURIST FflßESTO—Boston. New York | Gltu. Atlanta Glty and Other New Jersey Re-1 sorts, Noriolk and Old Point Gondort, Va. I; I ——. I | HOMESEEKERS EXCURSION FfIRES-:Soilth, South- | 1 west, West, Northwest | i ’ TOURISTS ROUND TRIP FARES WEST. Long Limits. I Consult BALTIMORE AND OHIO AGENT for Liberal Stopover Privi- £ leges and Other Details. f
