The Syracuse Journal, Volume 4, Number 17, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 24 August 1911 — Page 8

( THE HOME OF 8 1 Qualitu Groceries t ***-.*>**..*»*«.»«*'' There’s a PLACE, a SEASON and a . REASON for Every Thing. ■ This Is The Place For Every Seasonable Thing in the GROCERY LINE and There’s a Reason Why We Sell Them— THE QUALITY. Searfoss Brothers PHONE 8

B. & 0. Time Table. Effective November 27,1910. EAST WEST No. 14,11:46, p. m. No. 17,12:35 p m No. 6, 8:45 p. m. No. 11, 6:15 a. m No. 12, 7:31, p. m. No. a. m No. 8, 12:59 p. m. No. 15, 4:40 a. m No. 16,9:46 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 Wort. ft oortion ot Hour 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 your teeth. If you intrust them to my care they will receive careful attention. Investigation of work is solicited. : : • Office over Miles & Co. Grocery Syracuse Indiana

HENRY SNOBfIRGER Livery and Feed Barn If you want to make a drive, "It’s the Place” to get a good rig. If 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 Wan Barn on Main Street Phone 5 Bus to All Trains

The Winona Interurban Ko. Go. Effective Sunday July 2 1911. Cars Leave Milford Junction NORTH A. M.—-6:27, 17:57, f9:57, f 10:57, *11:36. P.M.—+12:;52, f 1:57, +3:57 t4:,57 5:4,7 +6:57, 7:57, *9:57, 10:57. SOUTH A. M.—6:15, *7:22, +8:57, 110:57, t11:57. P. M — *1:13, +1:57, +2:57, 15:03,* +6:10, 6:57, +7:57 8:57, 10:57. * Winona Flyer through limited train between Goshen and Indianapolis, making town stops only. t Through cars from Peru and Warsaw to Elkhart, Mishawaka, S. Bend, Niles and St. Joseph. For information as to rates, etc., address <W. D. STANSIFER A. G. F. & P. A. Warsaw, Ind.

Special. I have for sale 15 acres 4 miles south of North Web ster and 1 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. For Sale—A good 6-room cottage, with good wood shed and well house, good cellar, on North Huntington street. A fine location and a bargain if taken soon. $750. W. G. Connolly. For Pale—Dining room table and set dining chairs. Inquire at Journal office. Do you take the Journal?

< > «*> H Ladles’ and Gents’ | H SUITS H 7 •= n Gleaned, Pressed ;; o o ii and Repaired 7 :: " :: Satisfaction : ■ jj Guaranteed - k l MytRS ■; 2nd Floor MeGlintic Bldg. :: o !!

InsDGGtion of our Moats 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 ape by no means high-priced butchers? We give yon the best, and charge only a fair living profit. E. IF. HIRE

DON’T WHIP JHE CHILDREN Editor Syracuse Journal. Dear Sir: Permit me space in your valuable paper for my sentiments on children. In a recent article punished by the Fort Wayne Journal Gazette we read a statement made by, one of our good heads, by one who stands out as one of the foremost figurers in the world today. He says if parents would use the rod more freely in their homes, therewould.be less young men and women in reform schools and other penal institutions for them. To me those aYe the most cruel words ever allowed to go to print. I would rather, be a peasant and wear wooden shoes. I would rather live in a hut with a vine growing over the door and the grapes grow ing purple in the kisses, of the autumn sun. I would rather be this poor peasant with my loving wife by my side, knitting as the day died out of the sky, with my children whom I never < caused a moments pain upon my knees and their arms about me. I would rather have been that man and gone down to the tongueless silence ot the dreamless dust than to have been that great and glorious man who uttered those painful words. Think of it, little children who turn pale when they hear their father’s footstep; little children who run away when they only hear their names called by the lips of their mother. Dear little children —the children of poverty, the children of crime, the children of brutality wherever you are—upon the mad sea of life my heart goes out to you, one and all. I tell you the children have the same rights that we have, and we ought to treat them as if they were human beings. They should be reared by love, by kindness, by tenderness, and not by brutality. That is my idea of children. When your little child tells a lie, dont rush at him as if the world was about to sink into oblivion. Be hqpest with him. A tyrant father will have liars for children; do you know that? A lie is born of tyranny on the one hand and weakness upon the other, and when you rush at a poor little boy with a club in your hand, of course he lies. We should all thank Mother Nature that she has put ingenuity enough in the breast of a child, when attacked by a brutal parent, to throw up a little breastwork in the shape of a lieWhen one of your children tells a lie, be honest with him; tell him you have told hundreds of them yourself. Imagine now, you are about to whip a child of six years of age. What is the child to do? Suppose a man, as much larger than you are than a child six years old, should come at you with a club in hand and in a voice of thunder shout, “Who turned that water hose on me?” There is not a solitary one of you who wouldn’t swear you never saw it or that it was aimed that way when you found it. Why not be honest with these children? Think of a lawyer beating his own flesh and blood for evading the truth when he makes half of his living that way 1 When your child commits a wrong take it in your arms, let it feel your heart beat against your heart, let the child know that you really and truly and sincerely love it; yet some Christians, good Christians, when a child commits a fault, drive it from the door and say, “Never do you darken my house again,” Think of that! And then these same people will get down on their knees and ask God to take care of their child they have driven away from home. I will never ask God to take care of my children unless I am doing my level best in that same direction. But I shall tell you what I say to my children, “Go where you will; fall to what depth of degeneration you may; you can never commit any crime that will shut my door, my arms, my heart from you; as long as I live you shall have no more sincere friend.” Looking from my window just the other day, I saw a woman who actted as if she thought when the

Savior said, “Suffer little children to come unto me, for such is the kingdom of heaven,” that he had a club under his robe and made this remark to get the child in striking distance. I want to ask this same woman, or any other one of you who ever expect to whip your children again after reading this, I want you to have a photograph taken of yourself when you are in the act, with your face red with vulgar anger, and then the face of the little child, with eyes swimming in tears and the little chin dimpled with fear. If that little child should die, —then go out to the cemetery and sit down upon and look at this photograph and think of the flesh, now dust, that you beat. I tell you it is wrong; it is no way co raise children! Make your homes happy. Be honest with them. Divide fairly with them in everything. Give them liberty and you cannot drive them away. They will want to stay with you. So I say abolish the club and the whip from the house, because, if the civilized use I a whip, the brutal will use a club, and they will use it because you use a whip. Fortunately, we can congratulate ourselves that children are better treated than they used to be. The old whips are out of the schools and they are governing children by love and sense. The world is getting better. (It’s better in Syracuse too.) It is getting better in every state in the North. In the interest of the dear children I have respectively asked the editor to allow this article space in the columns of this paper. John H. Grove, Syracuse, Ind; Hairy Vetch As a Forage Crop. (Continued from First Page) three and one half tons of cured hay. Vetch sowed alone this year made a green weight of nine and three fourth tons per acre. The vetch plant, like other legumes, has an abundance of nodules on its roots when the ground is well inoculated. In some cases the plant produces nodules the first time sown. In other cases the nodules do not appear and inoculation seems to be necessary. It seems wise to sow a small area for one or two years until inoculation is obtained and then use this soil to inoculate larger areas. The plant is so little grown that inoculated soil is not easily obtained, and in most cases it is probably not needed. The Experiment Station in its work has noted two things concerning hairy vetch which seem to be against it. One is that it has a tendency to winter kill, some winters killing badly, other winters not very much. There is also a tendency for Jhe plant to escape from cultivation and become a weed. As a weed it will do no harm except as it may appear in wheat fields where it will grow and mature with the wheat, and the seed being threshed cannot be easily separated from the wheat. The Experiment Station believes that the crop merits further consideration by the farmers in the state and suggests that the beginner operate on a small scale until he is convinced that it is something that he wants.—Purdue University Agricultural Experiment Station. Ed Barringer put a pie squash away one year ago last November 1909 to test the keeping quality of it. To his surprise the squash remained perfectly sound until the last of July of this year 1911, making a remarkable age of one year and nine months. Mr. Barringer says if anyone has anything better than that to report he would like to hear from them. Bishop White damaged his new Auburn auto considerably last week when it ran into a tree for him. He took it to the factory at Auburn for repairs Saturday. For Sale—A fine 5-month-old mare draft colt two miles south of Syracuse on lake road. Phone 261. V. C. Lung.

Executor’s Sale The undersigned, Executor of the estate of Rebecca Stetler, deceased, late of Kosciusko County, State of Indiana, pursuant to the order of the Kosciusko Circuit Court, made and entered at the April, 1911, term, will offer at private sale at the law office of Deahl & Deahl, 106 West Lincoln Avenue, Goshen, Indiana, on and after the 9th day of September, 1911, the following described real estate situate in Kosciusko and Elkhart Counties, State of Indiana, to-wit:— TRACT No. 1 AND PART OF TRACT No. 2. Lot number one (1) and three (3) feet off of the east side of lot number two (2), all in Weybright’s Addition to the town of Syracuse, Kosciusko county, Indiana. PART OF TRACT No. 2, AND TRACTS No. 3, 4 AND 5. Eighteen (18) feet off of the west side of lot number two (2) and all of lots numbered three (3), four (4) and five (5), all in Weybright’s Addition to the town of Syratuse, Kosciusko county, Indiana. TRACT No. 6. Twenty-two (22) feet in width off of the east side of lot number sixty five (65) in the original plat of the town of Syracuse, Kosciusko county, Indiana. TRACT No. 7._ The east one-third (1-3), fronting twenty-two (22) feet on Main street, of lot number sixty-four (64) in the original plat of the town of Syracuse, Kosciusko county, Indiana. TRACT No. 8. The middle one-third (1-3) of lot number sixty-four {64), also one (1) foot in width off of the east side of the west onethird (1-3) of said lot number sixty-four (64), all fronting on Main street, all in the original plat of the town of Syracuse, Kosciusko county, Indiand. TRACT No. 9. Lot number seventy-nine (79) in Hillabold’s Addition to the town of Syracuse, Kosciusko county, Indiana. TRACT No. i®. Lot number eighty (80) in Hillabold’s Addition to the town of Syracuse, Kosciusko county, Indiana. TRACT No. 10%. The undivided one-third (1-3) of each of the following ten lots, to-wit: —Lots number eight (8), nine (9), ten (to), eleven (11). twelve (12), thirteen (13), fourteen (14), fifteen (15), sixteen (16) and seventeen (IJ7), all in the Village of Kale Island, Kosciusko county, Indiana. TRACT No. it. The east half (1-2) of the northeast quarter (1-4) of section thirty .two (32), in township thirty-five (35) north of range seven (7) east, Elkhart county, state of Indiana, containing eighty (80) acres, more or less. TRACT No. 12. The northeast quarter (1-4) of the northwest quarter (1-4) of section thirty-two ' (32), in township thirty-five (35) north, of range seven (7) east, in Elkhart county, Indiana, containing forty (40) acres, more or less. TRACT No. 13. The east half (1-2) of the southwest quarter (1-4) of the southwest quarter of section twenty-nine (29), in township thirty-five (35) north of range seven (7) east, in Elkhart county, Indiana, except--1 ing one acre in the form of a parallelogram, beginning at the southeast corner of said tract and extending north thirteen and one-third (13 1-3) rods, and west twelve (12) rods, containing nineteen (19) acres, more or less. TRACT No. 14. Apart of lot number six (6) in block number two (2) in the original plat of the town of New Paris, Elkhart county, Indiona, described as follows. Commencing at the southeast corner of said lot, thence west fifty (50) feet; thence north thirty-f0ur.,(34) feet; thence east ten (10) feet; thence south sixteen (16) feet; thence east forty (40) feet; thence south eighteen (18) feet to the place of beginning. TRACT No. 15. Lot number fifteen (15) in Pleasant Point Addition to the town, now city, of Elkhart, Elkhart county, state of Indiana. Also a part of lot number fourteen (14) in Pleasant Point Addition to said town, now city, of Elkhart, Elkhart county, Indiana, more particularly described as follows: Commencing at a point on the northwestern line of said lot, which is distant southeastwardly sev-enty-four and one-fourth (74 1.4) feet from the northeastern corner of said lot; thence southwesterly, parallel with the southeastern line of said lot, to the southernmost line of said lot; thence eastwardly to the southwestern corner of said lot; thence northeasterly along the southeastern line of said lot to the northeastern line of said lot; thence northwesterly along the northeastern line of said lot to the place of beginning. TERMS OF SALE. One-third of the purchase price will be required on the day of sale, the residue of the purchase price will be required within twelve (12) months from day of sale, the purchaser to give his notes for such residue with six per cent, interest from date, waiving valuation and appraisement laws, with attorneys’ fees and secured by a mortgage on real estate. B. F. DEAHL, Executor.

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 ou the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. They offer one hundred dollars for any case it i fails to cure. Send for circulars and tes- ( timonials. Address F. J. CHENEY & ( CO., Toledo, Ohio. Sold by Druggists, 75c. Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipa- ; tion.

J. W. ROTHENBERGER UNDERTAKER • Prompt and Efficient Service Phones 90 and 121 Cushion tired Ambulance in connection

Stats Bank ot Syracuse 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 or Exchange—Bo acres 5 miles south of South Bend, good roads all the way out. Buildings need repairing to make them good. Good soil and in good neighborhood. You can get a bargain in this farm, considering the location. W. G. Connolly. 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 barn. Must sell at once. See W. G. Connolly. FOR SALE—IO acrea J&unfies of Syracuse good 4 room house and bam other out buildings. Henry Doll.

P 447 e Hello, Friends! MM■■w* Oa■■MMMMHMMMBMHM hMMmMMMMMHM MMMMM■■■m II am still in the concrete business and would like to ■ figure on your work. Can build anything in the ■ cement line you want, no matter what it is. All my ■ 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, ¥ R. W. Vorhls,

Eston E. HDcCUntic, Contractor Let me figure with you on a cement house, bam, cistern, tank, porch, curbing, sidewalk, sea wall, vault, bridge abuttment, rUI arch culvert, cellar, chimney, foundation, etc., in fact all kinds of concrete work. I can raise your ' building; make and sell cement blocks of all kinds, ' fik V) cement porch columns, column bases, etc. My Qj \ prices are based on first class work, and all work is 7 guaranteed to be satisfactory as to specifications. Don’t be satisfied till you write Box 18 or call Phone 106— SYRACUSE

HomssEiGoantiij F urnisnefl

We have the goods to do it with. Mission and all the other Jate things in the Furniture line. Carpets and Rugs that will attract you. And the interesting part o£ it is the saving to you. We have a nice line of the famous Baldwin Pianos

WILLIAM BECKMANN The Furniture Man

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 rang* ing 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.