The Syracuse Journal, Volume 4, Number 14, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 3 August 1911 — Page 8
Our Black Gross gob Has Made Us Mann Friends First of all they were Coffee Customers only. Then one day they decided to try some of our Blark Cross Tea. They liked both, then they became steady -Tea and Coffee Customers. Then they noticed that our Bacon looked pretty good. Tried it. Delighted—and so it goes. Our eatables aren’t good ONLY IN SPOTS. It s our aim to have the stock faultless through and through. That’s a high standard to set. Naturally, once in a while we fall below it. BUT THAT’S OUR AIM. And in attempting this we get just about as high an average of grocery goodness as any store in this country. You may as well benefit. Searfoss Brothers PHONE 8
B. & 0. Time Table. Effective November 27, 1910. EAST WEST No. 14,11:46, p. m. No. 17,12:30 p m No. 6, 8:45 p. m. No. 11, 6:00 a. m No. 12, 7:31, p. m. No. 5,6:24 a. m No. 8, 12:30 p. m. No. 15, 4:40 a. m No. 16, 9:30 a.m. No. 7, 2:01 p. m No. 46, 12:08 a m. No. 47,12:28 a. m Express. Express No. 42, 2:33 p. m Express. Have your calling cards printed at the Journal office. We have a nice selection to choose from. WARREN T. COLWELL . --Lawyer Real Estate. Insurance, Collections, Loans, Notarial Work. fl portion ol uour business solicited Office over Klink’s Meat Market D. S. HONTZ Dentist In dentistry, a stitch in time saves more than nine. Don’t forget teeth. If you intrust them to my c ire they will receive careful attention. Investigation of work is solicited. : • • Office over Miles Co. Grocery Syr&ouee Indiana HENRY SNOBfI GER Llveru and Feed Barn If you want to make a drive, “It’s the Place” to get a good rig. Ift you are in town and want to have your horse fed “It’s the Place.” Your horse will be well cared for. Snowy’s Bus runs the year round, Reliable drivers. Fare 10 Gents Each Way Barn on Main Street • Phone 5 I' Bus to All Trains ! The Winona Interurban Ru. 60. Effective Sunday July 2 1911. x Cars Leave Milford Junction NORTH A. M.—6:27, +7:22, 8:57,10: 57, 11:57. p. M. — tl:13. 1:57, 2:57 5:03, 6:10, 6:57, 7:57,8:57,10:57 SOUTH A. M.—6:15,7:57, 9:57,10:57, 11:36. P. M.—12:52,1:57. 3:57, 4:57, *2:47, 6:57,7:57, +9:57, 10:57. t Winona Flyer through limited train between Goshen and Indianapolis, making town stops only. * Goshen Special, running limited from Peru to Warsaw, local from Warsaw to Goshen. fe For information hs to rates, etc., * address W. D. STANSIFER A. G.T. & P. A. Warsaw, Ind.
Sewer Assessments. The Benton street sewer assessment roll is on file with the tou n treasurer. Property owners will call and pay their assessments. Otis C. Butt, Clerk. Special. I have for sale 15 acres 4 miles south of North Web ster and I mile of Khun’s Landing a fine summer resort, buildings consist of a fine cottage house with good celler, and a small barn. About 6 acres are rolling and balance level; soil very productive, plenty fruit for family use; good water. Any one looking for a small farm for a home should investigate. W. G. Connolly. “The Automobile Dealer and Repairer” is the only Journal in the world especially devoted to the practical side of motoring. It is published monthly at the moderate subscription price of $1 a year. Every owner of an automobile ought to become a subscriber. Send for free sample copy and special summer rate. Address, Motor Vehicle Publishing Co., 26 Murray Street, New York. t*For Sale—A 17-foot Launch, 2 cylinder, 6 horse power, Grey motor, in good condition. Best equipped and one of the most desirable boats on the lake. For information enquire at Journal Office. <» rs* i; Ladles’ and Gents' | = sUirs j :: ii Gleaned, Pressed ii ii and Repaired :: i: :: G-uaranteed •• G. L MYERS o “ ;; 2nd Floor McClintic Bldg, j • Inspection oi our Meats will satisfy the most particular buyer that they are tender aud sweet, and that there is less waste about them than the ordinary kind. We always keep in stock —in the ice-box in summer—the finest grades of fresh-killed beef, pork, mutton, lamb, veal and poultry. But we are by no means high-priced butchers. We give yon the best, and charge only a fair living profit. E. W. HIRE
| Local and Personal | Mrs. Wehrley was at Milford Friday afternoon. Mrs. J. W. Rothenberger is visiting in Mishawaka. Leave your order for any flowers you want at the Journal office. Lewis A. Neff made a business trip last week to the northern part of Wisconsin. Ssm Snavely and family of Goshen, spent Sunday with Ed McClintic and family. Rev. A. L. Weaver was at Goshen Saturday on business in the interest of the M. E. church. Sam Snavely and family of Goshen, are spending a week at their cottage on Kale Island. $2.00, $2.50, $3.00 and $3.50 Ladies’ Oxfords now selling at $1.50. A. W. Strieby. For Sale —A two cylinder 7-horse power M. &. M. motorcycle, at a bargain. M. J. Harkless. Phone 81Miss Laura Cuffel of Nappanee, was the guest of Mrs. Catherine Landis and family Friday and Saturday. Mrs. Corns and son, of Elkhart, are the guests of Sheldon Harkless and family. Mrs. Corns is a niece of Mrs. Harkless.Rev. Ladd spent last week at his home in Van Wert.cOhio, at the bed side of his mother, who has been seriously ill. W. M. Self, Dr. J. H. Bowser, Wm. Rapp and A. W. Strieby were at South Bend and Elkhart Monday on business. Pauline Treesh of South Bend’ who has been visiting here all summer. went to New Paris Friday, to visit with relatives there. Mrs. Casady and children, who have been the guests of D. R. Pomeroy and family for two weeks, re turned to Indianapolis Friday. Lost—Thirty dollars in currency’’ a S2O and $lO bill. Any one re turning i same to owner may have sls. W. Ragsdale, Vawter Park. Miss Mabie Strieby returned Friday from a several weeks’ visit with A. E. Weyrick and family at Elk k hart. Laura Weyrick accompanied her home. J. A Whitehead, south of town, and Jacob Hattel of Goshen, are camping at Tippecanoe Lake for a few days, where they are enjoying their vacation. For Sale—A good 6-room cottage, with good wood shed and well house, .>ood cellar, on North Huntington street. A fine location and a bargain if taken soon. $750. W. G. Connolly. Mr. Wm. H. Sheffield and wife ol Varsaw, are the guests of Mr. and Mrs. T. S. Sheffield this week. Mr. W. H. Sheffield has lately re turned from Minneapolis, Minn., where he has been spending several months. We had the pleasure of witnessing half of the sacred opera, “Ahasuerus,” at Winona, Friday evening The first half was so good that we are planning to go again to see the entire play. The voices, the costumes and the acting were all splendid. While on his way to Syracuse from Posy Inn, about three weeks ago. Jap McClintic lost a pocketbook containing about sls in money and a railroad pass and other valuable papers. Mr. McClintic would be glad to have at least the railroad pass and papers returned, if anyone happened to find the pocketbook. Seymour Eaton concludes a recent article on advertising thus: “It rarely pays to splurge. Make your appropriation deliberately and carefully Prepare good copy. Advertise continuously; every day or at least every week. Your store is the seed or the plant. The advertising is the rain and the sunshine. You can’t rush the growth. It may take weeks or months to produce flowers and fruit.”
! BUYING A PUPPY. The Tote Were Short on Cash, but Mike Was Long on Human Feeling. The children burst into their mother’s room like a twin cyclone. “Oh, mamma,” the two shouted in one gasping breath, “what do you think ? We can get a puppy for $1 !” The mother did not seem particularly impressed with this bargain in dogflesh. “What on earth do you want with a puppy?” she asked. “And what sort of a puppy-is it?” “We want to play with it an’ love it an’ teach it to stand on its hind legs,” elucidated the little girl. ‘lt’s a yellow puppy!” exclaimed the little boy. “Mike McDonough down at the carpenter shop’s got ’em. There’s six.” “Well, ask your father,” sighed the mother, turning again to her sewing. “If he says so I haven’t anything to say.” The children withdrew for a conference. Here was a situation not to their liking. If mamma had promised her influence papa would have been easy. Since she put it up to them this way the purchase of that puppy was doubtful. “How much money have you got?” asked the little boy. The two were seated gloomily upon the back steps. “I’ve got 10 cents,” said the little girl, “and mamma owes me a quarter for workin’ in the garden.” “That ain’t money,” said her brother scornfully. “If 1 had all the money they owed me for workin’ in the garden an’ things I’d be rich.” “Have you got any?” asked the little girl. “Any at all ?” “I’ve got 43 cents in my bank,” said her brother, “but we’d have to break the bank to get it out.” “That’s half enough to buy a puppy!” exclaimed the little girl delightedly. “We’ll get the rest sure.” The two went down to the carpenter shop again to look at the puppies. x “Going to buy one?” asked Mike McDonough, grinning. “If we can get the money,” said the little boy. “We’ve got 43 cents and 10 cents. That makes more’n half.” “Now, here,” said Mike McDonough, for Mike McDonough was a kindly soul, “won’t your pa buy you a pup?” The children shook their heads. “We’re afraid to ask him,” they admitted, “but we got 53 cents, and pretty soon we’ll have some more.” “Now, here,” said Mike McDonough in a burst of human feeling, “I’ve got too many pups. There’s a little one in the lot I haven’t got room for. You can just take it home.” ‘Tor 53 cents?” gasped the children joyously. ‘Tor 53 nothin’!” said Mike McDonough. “I’m givin’ you a pup Come on here; let’s get it.” And with a child clutching either hand the red headed dog owner made his way toward the stable, and every step he took carried him closer to paradise and carried the little ones closer to an immediate heaven, peopled largely by little yellow pups.—Galveston News. A Queer Tug of War. In Burma the inhabitants have a novel form of the sport that elsewhere is commonly called tug of war. In the Burmese game are a rain party and a drought party, which pull one against the other, the victory of either party being considered to have immediate results as regards the weather. The drought party, however, ob'tains few victories, for the kind of weather it represents is commonly not so much desired as rain. In the face, therefore, of a strong public opinion the rain party is nearly always allowed to win, the palpable “roping” i<g Ahe popular notion being generally followed by a fertilizing downpour. There is more Catarrh in this section of the country than all other diseases put together, and until the last few years was supposed to be incurable. For a great many years doctors pronounced it a local disease and prescribed local remedies, and by constantly failing to cure with local treatment, pronounced it incurable. Science has proven catarrh to be a constitutional disease and therefore requires constitutional treatment. Hall’s Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio, is the only constitutional cure on tne market. It is taken internally in doses from io drops to a teaspoonful, It acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. They offer one' hundred dollars for any case it fails to cure. Send for circulars and testimonials. Address F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, Ohio. Sold by Druggists, 75c. Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation. Do you take the Journal?
Elkhart Bottom. James Brown and wife went to St. Joe, Mich., Sunday. i Chas. Stetler and wife spent Sunday afternoon at Benton. Mike Nicolai and wife spent Sunday with Geo. Seece and wife. Miss Lena Brown left Friday for a few days’ visit at St. Joe, Mich. Henry Tully and family spent Sunday with Wm. Tully and wife. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Gross are the proud parents of a new baby boy. Luther Rex and family spent Sunday with Chas. Juday and family. Mrs. Melvin Hodge and children spent Sunday with her relatives at Topeka. Miss Ethel Cobb visited several days last week with relatives at Warsew. Wm. Stetler and family of ’Cuse, spent Sunday with Mrs. H. Stetler and son, Carl. Mr. and Mrs. Ettline of Stringtown, spent Sunday •with Henry Juday and wifej • Mr. and Mrs. John Shoup spent Thursday evening with Mr. and Mrs. Judson Kitson. Monro Ott, wife and Mrs. Rachel Hire called on Merl Jensen and wife Sunday afternoon. Miss Florence Stetler spent Sunday at Winona Lake. She was accompanied by Misses Mabel Whitehead, Caroline Stump, and Messrs. Albert Miller, Lloyd Stump and Mervin Mishler of Nappanee. — Every housewife of experience in this vicinity knows that GERBELLE FLOUR is always reliable, always uniform and always reasonable in price, and that she can get better results on baking day than from any other brand. Ask your grocer for GERBELLE and if he does not have it, send his name to THE GOSHEN MILLING CO. Goshen, Ind. For Bale—Dining room table and set dining chairs. Inquire at Journal office. Disillusionment. When a person’s dress and beaming are striking it is natural to expect that voice and conversation will be in keeping. Nevertheless it does not always turn out so. A man standing on the street corner, waiting for his car, saw two very pretty and tastefully dressed girls approaching from opposite directions. Their sniping faces showed that they w&ru acquaintances, and as V ey tame nearer the observant man prepared to hear gracefully expressed greetings and well bred tones of voice. What he heard, in a chirping, birdlike treble, was this: “Wot you chawin’, May ?” Thought It Was a Regatta. “I suppose,” said the facetious Mr Codding to Mrs. Malaprop, who had just returned from abroad, “that you saw an Italian vendetta while you were in that country?” “Oh, yes, indeed!” replied the guileless lady. “We saw one in the canals at Venice, with all the dongolas decorated most lovely.”— Cleveland Plain Dealer. FARM LANDS 30 acres 2 miles from Syracuse, splendid soil, nearly all timothy meadow, will yield a fine crop of hay this year. House and barn net very good. Price 2,200. 181 acres 2 miles from Syracuse, good soil, good house, fair barn, some fruit. Price 1,900. 30 acres 2| miles from Syracuse, this' will make some one a nice home, good house, no bam, about 125 fruit trees started, good soil. Price 2,200. 78 acres 5 miles from Syracuse, level, good soil, good big house and a good bank barn, on good road. Price 75.00 an acre. 10 acres near Vawter Park half mile from beautiful Lake Wawasee, will make fine truck and fruit farm, has a fine building spot. $650. W. G-. CONNOLLY. Office at Journal Office.
J. W. ROTHENBERGER. UNDERTAKER Prompt and Efficient Service Phones 90 and 121 Cushion tired Ambulance in connection State Bank ot suracuse We pay 3 per cent. Interest on Certificates of Deposit This bank is under the management of conservative business men, and your money, when on deposit with us, you can rest assured is rightly placed and safely .deposited.
For Sale—A client has placed with me for sale a good 5 room residence on a corner lot; price S4OO, payable small payment down and balance $5.00 per month. Warren T. Colwell. For Sale—-At a real bargain, a fine big dwelling in one of the best locations in the main part of town. Has a good cellar, good water, an extra big lot and a good bam. Must sell at once. See W. G. Connolly. FOR SALE—IO acres 2J miles of Syracuse good 4 room house and bam other out buildings. Henry Doll.
p^ n 7 e Hello, Friends!
II am still in the concrete business and would like to ■ figure on your work. Can build anything in the I cement line you want, no matter what it is. All my I work is guaranteed to be satisfactory. Let me fig- I ure on your work before you have it done. Also a concrete mixer in connection. Yours for work, t ■ R. W. Vorhis,
:: Eston E. flDcClfntic, Contractor :: <I * ' ; • Let me figure with you on a cement house, bam, cistern, tank, ;; ;; porch, curbing, sidewalk, sea wall, vault, bridge abuttment, ;; ' • arch cu^vert ’ cellar, chimney, foundation, etc.,- in < > !: sS fact all kinds of concrete work. I can raise your h* 11 < * £' building; make and sell cement blocks of all kinds, fk I! I r cement porch columns, column bases, etc. My Qj < • ! ’ \ prices are based on first class work, and all work is / < - II guaranteed to be satisfactory as to specifications. Don’t be < > 1' satisfied till you write Box 18 or call Phone 106— SYRACUSE < - UIHIMMMOM I I'M I fiomo&Eißoantiu F urnisncii I I. . 1 to We have the goods to do jg it with. Mission and all to the other late things in to to the Furniture line. to Carpets and Rugs that will to attract you. And the in- - to to teresting part of it is the to | saving to you. to We have a nice line of to to the famous Baldwin Pianos to. _ I WILLIAM BECKMANN | to The Furniture Man to
MICHIGAN LAND FOR SALE, Land in centra 1 ichigan is now open for home seekers. This land is level on which heavy timber grew. Is a loam with clay subsoil town and railroad near. Price ranging from sls up according to improvements. For further particulars see or address H. H.*Doll, Syracuse, Ind. If you have a farm that you wish to sell, small or big, list it with me. I will find a buyer for you. W. G. Connolly, Syracuse, Ind. I have a splendid 6-room house on Boston street that I will sell at a bargain. W. G. Connolly.
