The Syracuse Journal, Volume 4, Number 45, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 7 March 1912 — Page 8
BMAKE8 N A QUICK NEED THE MEDICINE THAT’S UARAI\9TEED| I DR. KING'S—* § NEW DISCOVERY TAKE THIS RELIABLE REMEDY FOR COUGHS AND COLDS WHOOPING COUGH AND ALL BRONCHIAL AFFECTIONS PROMPT USE WILL OFTEN PREVENT PNEUMONIA AND LUNG TROUBLE fi PRICE 500 and SI.OO SOLD AND GUARANTEED BY F. L. fiOCH, Syracuse, Ind. ■ 11.1■ i _ i* ■■■ *■■■— — ~
your Grocer for Hersh Yeast The Baker’s Delight BUTT & XANDERS Attorneys-at-Law Practice in all Courts Money to Loan. Fire Insurance. Phone 7 SYRACUSE, IND. 4. H. BOWSER * Physician and Surgeon Tel. 85 —Office! tnd. Residence Syracuse Ind., MIW All Kinds ofi WELtWOTEK” And well materials, aSupplies, Wind Mills Sliop in Grissom’s Harness Sliop Phone 119 WARREN T. COLWELL Lawyer Rea! sstate, Insurance, ■Collections. Loans. Notarial! Work* ft pprtion oi ijour llislness 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. : t t Office over Miles & Co. Grocery Syracuse Indiana I 11 — The Winona InterurDan Ry. 60. Effective Sunday Dec. 31, 1911 Time of arrival and departure of trains at Milford Junction, Ind. SOUTH NORTH 6:55 a. m. 6:04 a. m. f7:22 “ 7:57 “ 8:57 “ 9:57 “ 10:57 “ +11:38 “ 11:10 p. m. *12:;52 p.m. *1:57 “ 1:57 “ 2:37 “ 3:57 “ ’ 4:57 “ *4:57 “ *5:57 “ 5:57 “ 6:57 “ 6:57 “ 8:27 “ 7:57 “ 11:10 “ * 10:16 “ t Winona Flyer through trains between Goshen and Indianapolis. * Daily erscept Sunday. IW. D. STANSIFER A. G. F. & P. A. Warsaw, Ind.
IVIICHiGAN LAND FOR SALE. Land in central ichigsn 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 $lO up according to improvements. For further particulars see or address H. H. Doll, Syracuse, Ind. Have your calling cards printed * at the Journal office. We have a nice selection to choose from. Please your absent friends by ; sending them the Journal for a year ■ Don’t forget that it pays to advertise. / ——■—■ —r-i—ii yCt amsm II ■■■lll M** Deaines-s Gannot be Cured - / By loculi applications, as they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to cure deafness, and that is by constitutional remedies. ! Deafness is caused by ‘an inflamed con- | ditiou of the mucous lining of the, Eustai chiah Tube. When this tube inflamed | you have a rumbling sound or imperfect ■ hearing, and when it is entirely closed, ! Deafness is the result and unless the in- | flammatiou can be taken out and this , tube restored to its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever, nine | cases out of ten are ‘caused by Catarrh, which is nothing but an inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness caused by catarrh that cannot be cured by HaTl.s Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars, free. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, 75c. . Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation.
Anyone sending a sketch and description may quickly ascertain our opinion free whether an invention is probably patentable. Comraunicat ions strictly confidential. HANDBOOK on Patents sent free. Oldest agency for e< curing patents. patents taken through Munn & Co. receive special notice, without charge, in the Scientific American. A handsomely illnstrated weekly. Largest circulation of any scientllic journa.'. Terms, fJ a year: four months. $U Sold by ail newsdealers. HfIUNN & Go. Hew York Branch Office. 623 F St* Washington. D. C. Insnection ol 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 me ans high-priced butchers. We give yon the best, and charge only a fair living profit. E. W.HIRE
INTERESTING EXPERIENCES OF A TRIP INFOREIGN LANDS BY MRS. MATTIE CROW-FICK. Switzerland, August, 1911. Through some unaccountable mistake, perhaps because of the mixture of German and French in which we obtained our information, when we bought tickets in Paris for Neuchatel, Switzerland, we under stood our train which left Paris at 2p. m. would arrive in Neuchatel at 9. Imagine our chagrin after a hot, dusty all afternoon trip, to learn we could not reach our desti nation before some time the next morning. We have laughed with you over the funny railroads of different parts of Europe, but there are redeeming features, and here is where the European system is far superior to that of our own dear United States. By the American system, should you buy a through ticket from New York to Chicago via B. & 0. R. R., you would not be permitted to stop at any station between those two places. By the European plan you might without any official permission or getting your ticket stamped, stop off for a day or night at even Kimmell or Milford Junction if you liked. We had no idea nor could any one tell us the best place to stop for the night, so we rode until 11 p. m. and then accepting the silent invitation of a little French border town where lights seemed* twinkling us a merry welcome from the outside darkness, we left the train without even knowing the name of the place until we read “Les Verriers” on the depot, as we were leaving the following morning. Such a dear little town it was —shut in by towering peaks, which the na lives called high hills, but would certainly have passed for mountains anywhere else but here in the shadow of the lofty Alps. It was my first visit to ' a real mountain town and I shall never forget those first impressions. As we wandered alone down the quiet street lighted almost to daylight brightness by the midnight moon smiling over the western hilltops, the cool breeze of evening fanned our warm and dusty faces and refreshed and rested our weary frames, as ancients dreamed a draught would do from the fountain of perpetual youth. After an excellent sleep and breakfast at a charming little hotel, we were on our way again, arriving in Neuchatel at 9:30 a. m. Such an ideal little Swiss city we found it. Shut in on three sides b> dizzj heights and on the fourth mirroru g its reflection in a beautiful lake— Lac Neuchatel—almost twice large as Wawasee, across whose blue unrippled surface, like fleecy clouds hung high on the horizon, can be seen, on cloudless days, the snowcapped summit ofuhe distant Alps. Our first effort was to find Lucie Wolf, the little governess whom we had met in London and had promised to call upon as soon as we reached Neuchatel. Her address was Travannes, but on inquiry at the city postoffice we learned that was a country place two hours ride away. We could not take the time to write her and await a reply, and felt that it would be foolish to go out there and perhaps find her away. The men in the postoffice were pleasant, but very much French, so seemed unable to give us but mea gre assistance. Out on one of the pretty streets we met a very nice looking young man, bareheaded and hurrying from one business house to another farther down the street He looked like a Frenchman and answered our first questions in French, then suddenly switched off into excellent German. He certain ly proved master of the situation foi in less time than it takes me to write it, he led us to a telephone office, gave the French operator or ders to call Travannes and had 1 Lucie at the telephone. Then to our greatest of all great surprise, he refused an offered tip (an act al- 1 most unheard of in Europe), direct- J ed us to a good hotel, promised to 1 call on us that evening and lo! we had unexpectedly made a new friend. After a two hours’ wait iir t
our room what a joy it was to hear Lucie’s voice In the hall below inquiring. in French of course, for “Monsieur and Madam Fick.” How we rushed out to greet her and what l a glad meeting it was. Accepting the theory of evolution, this husband of mine, in some ancient and pre-historic age must have been either a fish or duck, for at the sight of water he seems possessed by an uncontrollable desire to get into it. Lac Neuchatel was now his all-absorbing thought. In vain Lucie and I protested that the water in these Swiss lakes (it is all merely melted ice) was too cold for bathing, so while he went for his icy plunge, I acted upon Lucie’s advice to spend part of the afternoon in bed, and with a cup of Swiss tea, which she ordered especially for me, cured a slight headache. What a dear jolly little nurse she was and what fun we had over her wrestle with English and my struggle with French. I think I must have repeated “bonjeur” for her at least fifty times and then never got it quite right, and her repeated efforts to sav “the” always ended in a funny little Frenchy “zee.” “Cheer up Cauley, you’v soon be dead” was a queer little phrase she had picked up somewhere in England, with which, she explained to us, she laughed away the blues. And that she was occasionally in need of an antedo»e for blues I gathered from her little stray bits of confi dence. She had been compelled to give up her position as French and German governess in England and come home because her widowed mother was sick ifi a Berne hospital and her only single brother would soon be married, thereby limiting the mother’s means of support. Finances were running low in the little mountain home. She longed to go back to England or perhaps America, as teacher, but it would be too hard to leave the mother. There was not much that could be done in the little mountain town, unless she might be able to act as guide and companion, interpreter, etc., for tourists. Would I please write her a recommendation? Indeed I did; and it contained all the good things I could possibly think of, for she deserved it. By the time Mr. Fick returned with his teeth still chattering my head was better, so leaving him tucked down between two feather beds to “thaw out,” (the Swiss, like rhe Germans, sleep between feathers in August) Lucile and I went for a walk. I had felt a little touch of homesickness ever since leaving Paris. We had expected letters there which did not arrive in time, and only one letter from home in almost two months’ absence was very inadequate and unsatisfactory. You can never quite know what a longing you’ll acquire for the sound of a plain old U. S. voice or even a look at American print. On our way back to the hotel I spied a Ladies’ Home Journal in a stationer’s window. An uncontrollable desire to get possession of it overcame me and regardless of the price, two franc, 25 centimes, and Lucie’s exclamation, “Mon dieu, zat is much,” I took the precious thing to our room and cured my homesickness by reading it from “kiver 10 kiver.” (Continued next week) Celebrated 79th Birthday Mrs. Wm. Wallis celebrated her seventy-ninth birthday on Sunday, March 3rd, by serving a bountiful dinner prepared by herself. Those who enjoyed the day with her were: Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Akers Sr., Mr. and Mrs. Sheldon Harkless. Mr. and Mrs. Alphonzo O’DelL Julia Ott, Merl, Herchel and Kenneth Hark less, Charles Renifrow, Violette and Vera O’Dell. Mrs. Wallis received several useful and pretty gifts and birthday cards. For Sale Or will take anything that I can use in exchange for a Portland cutter. Call at Burlingame’s restaurant or phone 89. Fisher Brothers, New Paris, spe cial deal on fence and posts.
Jeffries-McElroy Wedding Mr, Fred Jeffries and MissLaFem McElroy were married Saturday afternoon at 2 o’clock in the court house at Warsaw by Rev. Neil, pastor of the M. E. church of that place. These young people have been residents of Syracuse for several years and are splendid young people, worthy of the high esteem in which they are held by their many warm friends who join the Journal in extending hearty congratulations and best wishes for a happy and prosperous future. The happy couple left Monday for South Whitley, where Mr. Jeffries is employed by the Grip Nut Factory as machinest and although but twenty years of age he has become a skilled and reliable workman, making for himself a record which is a credit to any young man at his age. One Half Price For Ladies Misses and Childrens Coats. I will sell any ladies, misses or childs coats in my store at half price. I have a line of up to date, high grade coats in black and Taney woolens which have been so popular this season. Never before have such coats been offered so cheap in in the middle of the season. They never will be cheaper. Terms cash. A. W. Strieby. Every housewife of experience in this vicinity knows that GERBELLE FLOUR is always reliable, always uniform and always reasonable in >rice, 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 My Rugs and Carpets for the spring trade have arrived, the largest and most complete line ever shown in Syracuse. Come in and see the line at Beckman’s. B. &0. Time Table. EAST WEST No. 16,9:46 a. m. No. 11, 6:55 a. m No. 8, 12:59 p. m. No. 15, 4:40 a. m No. 12, 7:31 p. m. No. 17,12:35 p m No. 6, 8:45 p. m. No. 7, 1-56 p. m No. 6 stops to discharge passengers only. First Great Annual Sale 01 Imported Belolan and Perclieron Mares and Colts. Also will offer on day of sale a fine lot of Stallions, at LIGONIER, INDIANA Tliurs., M 14, 'l2 These mares have all been bred, both Belgians and Percherons, to the very best stallion we could get. . These mares were all imported last April (1911) and all acclimated and most of these mares raised colts last Season and are safe in foal, and are all good workers. A large percent of these mares have been carefully mated, and any one lucky enough to get a pair of them, has a fortune in his hand if properly taken care of. These mares run in age from 2 to 5 years old; colors, bays, roans, sorrels and greys, in matched pairs; weight from 1600 to 1900 lbs. each. Will sell a lot of good imported Belgian Stallions and Fillies, coming one year old, that will make the parties that buy them a fine stallion or a great brood mare, as they are a good lot. All horses that are put up on day of sale will be sold to the bidder, as there will be no buy-bid- | ding, as we must make room for our spring importation. Parties wishing to buy mares, eo|ts and young stallions, cannot afford to miss this sale. Terms made known on day of sale Will also sell a carload of IOWA HORSES and MARES. LOESERBjtOTHERS Located on L. S, & M. S. Ry Ltyonler, Ind. ;
j Let Us Have «> • . ! * Your Plans :: for your building this season. We will ;: be in shape to do any kind of work, as ; , 7 we are installing a planer, PPsSIIkJ WVa an(i saw > ri p J IIP IS. I] HI J R ll and cut off saw ilPlltllWiJ W'W ll’ and Tie in a :: I Everyv position to fill ; :; I Purpo ** j your order. :; \°<S? \ Our Motto is: :: T “Fair Dealing, :! Lakeside Lumber Co . o Allen D. Sheets, Owner, ;: Syracuse* Indiana < > '7 IiSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSS£SSSSSSSSSSSSSSSS3SSS3SSSSS^SSSSSSSSSSSSSBSSSSSSSSSBBBSSBSBSSSBSSSSBSSSSSSSSSSSSSS£ smitn-GiarK Gompany 1 FURNITURE I | RUGS CARPETS | | Special Prices and Terms to “NewlyWeds.’' We pay Railroad Fare and Deliver the Goods. j SEE OUR COTTAGE! | SMITH-CLARK CO. I Goshen, Indiana | GEO, W. HERR, Undertaker T are you protected * o * > against loss of wages due to accident or sickness? The wise man ( | carries insurance of all kinds—life insurance for his family, paya- < > ble at his death, Accident and Health Insurance for himself and < ► family, payaple when he is incapacitated for work. A policy in The North American Accident & Health Insurance Go. < > at SI.OO to $1.50 per month, with benefits of $35.00 to $125.00 per * > month, is the protection you need and should have. Call or write i; BUTT & XANDERS, General Agents Geo. W. Howard, Agent
Hides Wanted Cattle hides, 11c a pound. Skunk, black, $3,00; short stripe, $2.00. Muskrats, best grade, 50 60c. Horsehides $3.00 to $3 50. Delivered at Syracuse. Best prices for all kinds of JUNK. DAVIS GRAFF Phone 137 Boyts• ‘ «> < i: Restaurant \ '■! J. E. Boyts, Prop’r i < I ( II Opposite Jefferson Theatre \ < * « . —* — . : Meals 25c \ i Rooms 50c ■; • «. > < > \ Steam Heated Rooms !! > < > | Lunch Counter in Connection ;; i «i Goshen, Ind. ;; >_ _■ ;»
For Sale—Second growth white oak fence posts, also end posts and braces, cut any lenght ordered. See me at once. V. S. Richhart GEO. D. HURSEY Dealer in Building Materials, Cement Brick, Fence Posts, Etc. Syracuse, Ind. i HENRY SNOBHRGER 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 Cents Each ttau Barn on Main Street Phone 5 Bus to All Trains
