The Syracuse Journal, Volume 4, Number 48, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 28 March 1912 — Page 10
OFTEN IfESOBiW makes a weed MEDICINE r THAT’S I |1!B g uaranteed | DR? KING’S—I | NEW DISCOVERY TAKE tHiS reliable remedy for COUGHS AND COLDS I WHOOPIhIG COUQH, AND, ALL BRONCHIAL AFFECTIONS PROMPT USE WILL OFTEN PREVENT PNEUMONIA AND LUNG TROUBLE PRICE 500 and SI.OO SOLD AND GUARANTEED BY F. iv. HOCH, Syracuse, Ind.
Ask your Grocer for Hersh Yeast The Baker’s Delight BUTT & XANDERS •Attorneys- -;<aw Practice in all Courts Money to Loan. Fire Insurance. Phone ” SYRACUSE, IND.’ J. H. BOWSER Physician and Surgeon Tel. 85—Jffice an.l Residence SjraGUSCjnd. GEORGE ?1. BAILEY All Kinds of J WELL WORK And well materials, Supplies, Wind Mills Shop in Grissom’s Harness Shop - Phone 119 WARREN T. COLWELL Lawyer Real Estate, Insurance, GoEactions, Loans, Notarial Work fl portion of your business solicited Office over Klink’s Meat Market D. S. HONTZ . Dentist' In dentistry, a stitch in lime saves more than nine. Don’t forget your teeth. If you intrust them 1 to my care they will receive careful attention. Investigation of work is solicited. : ■ : : Office over Miles & Co. Grocery Syracuse Indiana Hie wmona' Interurban Ry. Go. * 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. +7:22 “ 7:57 “ 8:57 “ 9:57 “ 10:57 “ +11:38 “ ■ fl*lo p. in. *12:;52 p.m. *1:57 “ 1:37 “ 2:57 “ 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 except Sunday. W. D. ST AN SI KER I A. G. F. &P. A. I Warsaw, Ind. I
MICHIGAN LAND FOR SALE. Land in central ichigsn is new open for home seekers. ' This land is level on which heavy timber grew. a loam with clay subsoil town and railroad near. Price rangI ing from $lO up'hccording 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 i Don’t forget that it pays toffcdi vertise. ! Dearness Gan not Do Gurqd By local 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 tin inflamed condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube inflamed ’you have a rumbling sound or imperfect hearing, and when it is entirely closed, i Deafness is the result and unless the in- | flammation can be taken out and this tube restored to its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever, nine . cases out of o ten are caused by Catarrh, which is nothing but an inflamed condiI tion of the mucous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness caused by catarrh that cannot be cured bv Hall.s Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars, free. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. w Sold by Druggists, 75c. ' Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation. HENRYSNOBfiRGER 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 1 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 AH Trains insncGiion oi our Meats .1 ■ will satisfy the most particular buyer th <t 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
INIERESTIN6 EXPERIENCES OF A TRIP INFOREIGN LANDS BY MRS. MATTIE CROW-FICK. (Continued from last week) On this trip we saw the most magnificent mountain scenery. Great gorges aid waterfalls—one of. them the ‘'bridal veil” its beautiful beyond description. The water falls for hundreds of feet ove. the edge of the rock and breaks into such a thin silvery spray that it dees indeed very much resemble a bridal veil in its gauzy transparent beauty. Yet with all its grandeur there is something appalling a :d ttrrifxiug about this Alpine mountain scenery with its destructive avalanche ! its treacherous and icy crevasses luring men on to death and destruction in its almost bottomless pits. You have heard of course of the first climb of the terriable Matterhorn—‘‘The Demon of the Alps.’ But just because the story was repeated to us and made our sight at this monster more impressive, 1 will try to repedt.it asit was given to us by an'English gentlemen who was our fellow traveler for a day. After many unsuccessful attempts seven men—four Englishman and three guides suceeded in reaching the Matterhorn's icy summit. Highly elated at their achievement they began the desent •but when part way down their rope broke and four of them clinging to the icy wall saw the other three go over the precipice 4,000 feet into the yawning depths below. One of them Sir George Douglass, was engaged to a charming young English girl. Scienists have estimated that by the rate at which the avalanche has been ■ moving it will have reached a point where the bodies may btvrecovered in about the year 1914. So in far off merry England, the betrothed of Sir Douglass —now an aged and grey haired lady,is still waiting Hoping and praying that her life may be spared until the time that the awful frorces of Nature which so niCrcelesslev robbed her may again return to her the frozen body of her dead: and that she may once more behold the features of the man she loved. We hurried out of picturesque litte Martigny at six* o’clock in the morning yet not liefoae all the villagers were astir. \Vomen were already washing at the public vvash troughs and smiled a merry “Bonjeur” to us as we hurried by By the way, I forgot to tell you about the pubhs wash troughs? Every little town in Switzerland yes, and larger towns too,. even Geneva with all its luxury, has its public wash trough. They are only great troughs of water like many of our town horse troughs in America only instead of watering horses the women from all.over town take cloths there to wash. . It is really quits a sight to see a bunch of women grouped around a large trouglAin the middle of the street, spattering soap suds like spovtsng whales and jabbering French or German, like a flock of chattering magpies. A mountaineer and his family were driving into town. We met them near the Martigny depot. The children—a whole wagon box full —were sitting in behind, the man was leisurely driving and the woman industriously knitting. Tin peasant women of Europe are always busy. We met them going along the road knitting carrving huge baskets on their backs or heads working in the fields. A queer feature of their industry is that they don’t work in feverish hast to gat any one thing accomplished as do we Americans, but only seem bent on keeping hopelessly and everlastingly at work. One of the earliest impressions made on my mind when a child was the picture of an immense dog with a wide collar to which was attached a small jug, dragging the helpless form of a man across the snowy mountain side I wasn’t big enough nor old to read, so my mother read it for me. How the good Catholic St. Bernard sent out his great dogs, in the blinding storms which raged furiously around his lonely home high in the mountains, to rescue travelers who were lost and freezing in the snow. And now I have to pinch myself to find if I’m not dreaming that the same ‘‘little kid”’who so much enjoyed that picture and story in now actually on her wax to this very place to see with henown real eyes what she has so often seen in fancy—The good old St. Bernard Hospice with its big, intelligent dogs still trained to such heroic acts of rescue. Orsieres, several hours ride from Martingny by train was the end of the railway. From there we had over a half day’s climb by carriage or on foot. We started at 10 a. m. and wound up, up, up, through dingy little mountain towns, with stables on the ground floor of their cottages (the family live on the second ■ floor) and great vats of steaming stable refuse between them and the center of the narrow street. At St. Pierre we stopped at the only hotel in town —‘‘The Napoleon”, for lunch and some people actually ate there —but O I couldn’t. It was awfnl! Flies and stable smell everywhere. We wandered into the old ancient church which was built in the nth century. We are going the same reiad to St. Bernard that Napoleon traveled with his 30,000 men in 1,800. Spme people are going on fo'" t. We see them toiling up the winding path as we go winding up terrace after terrace of wagon road. The sign of the Cross leads us—yet we could not loose one way for there is only one road, We are driving one mule and one horse 4 —the horse hitched out at one side seperately, and near the right front wheel. They tried to spring a graft on us by saying before we started that if we were in a hurry they would,’ for $3 extra hitch one horse to'the mule so we could go faster. We said we were in no hurry then afterward learned that they always don’t anyway. Verily, many and divers are the means imployed to separate the tenderfoot American traveler from his money. Just before we made the last turn toward the Hospice we came upon a tiny lake, right on top a high rock and the road turned by it We could see patches of snow all around yet not until we reached the summit did we feel uncomfortably cold. In fact the sun shone so warm, we we wouldn’t believe it was snow until we tried it. At 5 p. m. we reached St. Bernard, tired cold and hungry enough to fully appreciate the bounteous hospitality of the frienly monks who make no charges for their care of all weary hungry travelers but furnish food and lodging to all ‘‘without money and without price.” [Concluded next week.] The Journal SI.OO a year.
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 passen gers only. ’ ° Notice to Heirs, Creditors, Etc. In the matter of the Estate of Howard W. Bentz, deceased. . - In the Kosciusko Circuit Court, February term, 1912. Notice is hereby given that Minnie M. Bentz as Executrix of the estate of Howard W. Bentz, deceased, has presentefl and filed her account and vouchers for final settlement of said estate, and that the same will cpme up for the examination and action of said Circuit Court on the Bth day of April, 1912, at which time all heirs, creditors or legatees of said estate are required to appeal in said Court and show cause, if any tliert be, why said account and vouchers should not be approved. Dated at Warsaw, Indiana, this 13th day of March, A. D. 1912. CONRAD D. LONGENECKER, By. A. A. Rasor, ’ Clerk. • Deputy. m?i-3w Notice to Non-Residents. State of Indiana,) ss Kosciusko County 1 s ’ In the Kosciusko Circuit Court, February Term, X 912. Josie Craft | Complaint vs. )-No. 12,078 Edward Craft J For Divorce. Now come the Plaintiff, by Warren T. Colwell, her attorney, and files her complaint herein, together with an affidavit of a competent person that said defendant, Edward Craft, is not a resident of the State of Indiana; that said action is for a divorce from said defendant and that said non-resident defendant is a necessary party thereto. z Notice is therefore hereby given said defendant, last named, that unless lit be and appear on the 39th day of the next term of'the Kosciusko Circuit Court, being the 14th day of May, 1912, to be holdeii on the first Monday of April, A. D. 1912, at the Court House in Warsaw, in said County and State, and answer or demur to said complaint, the sanie will be heard and determinea in his absence. WITNESS WHEREOF, I hereunto set my hand and affix the seal of said Court, at the office of the Clerk thereof, in the City of Warsaw, Indiana, this 13th day of March, A. D. 1912. CONRAD D. LONGENECKER, Clerk Kosciusko Circuit Coin t By A. A. Rasor, Deputy. Sheriffs Sale. By virtue of a certified copy of a decree to me directed from the Clerk of the Circuit Court of Kosciusko County, Indiana, in Cause Number 12018 wherein Frederick Clauss is plaintiff and George Lucile Wil* liams Burlingame, Hardin J. Burlingame are defendants, requiring me to make the sum of money in said decree provided, and in manner and form as therein provided, with interest and posts, I will expose at public sale to the highest bidderon SATURDAY, the 13th DAY OF APRIL, 1912, between the hours of 10 o’clock a. 111. and 4 o’clock p. m. of said day, at the door of the Court House of Kosciusko County, Indiana, the rents and profits fori a term not exceeding seven years, of the? following described real estate situated in Kosciusko Comity, Indiana: Beginning at a point 595 feet west of Truesdell Avenue, in Truesdell Lodge on a line of highway known and designated as the Syracuse road; thence north to the rear lot line of Truesdell Lodge Addition; thence in a northwesterly direction following the rear lot line to the northwest corner of said Truesdell Lodge Addition; thence south on the line of the Abbie M. Wentworth property to the public highway; thence east along the said public highway to the place of beginning; also lots numbered two (2), three (3), four (4) five (5) and six (6), in Truesdell Lodge Addition; also a strip of land 2934" feet feet wide and 225 feet long fronting 29J4 feet on Laxe Wawasee and joining the east line of lot number 17, in Grand View Park Addition; said addition being located on the south shore of Lake Wawasee, according to the recorded plat thereof as recorded in the record of said tyIf such rents and profits will not sell for a sufficient sum to satisfy said decree, with interest and costs, I will at the same time and place expose to public sale the fee simple of said estate, or so much thereof as may be sufficient to discharge said decree. Said Sale will be made without relief from valuation or appraisement laws. CHARLES A. KLNTZELL, Sheriff of Kosciusko County. Butt & Xanders, Attorneys for Plaintiff. Warsaw, Ind., March 21st, 1912. > Sheriff’s Sale. By virtue of a certified copy of a decree to me directed from the Clerk of the Circuit Court of Kosciusko County, Indiana, in Cause Number 12017 wherein Elizabeth Morrison is plaifitiff and James W. Bessie Brady are defendants, requiring me to make the sum of money in said decree provided, and in manner and form as therein provided, with interest and costs, I will expose at public sale to the highest bidder, on SATURDAY, the 13th DAY OF APRIL, 1912, between the hours of 10 o’clock a. m. and 4 o’clock p. m. of said day, at the door of the Court House of Kosciusko County, Indiana, the rents and profits for a term not exceeding seven years, of the following described real estate situated in Kosciusko County, Indiana: Lots numbered one (1), two (2) and three (3), in block three (3) in Ketring& Ketring’s Addition to the Town of Syracuse. If such rents and profits will not sell for a sufficient sum to satisfy said decree, with interest and costs, I will at the same time and place expose to public sale the fee simple of said real estate, or so much thereof as may be sufficient to discharge said decree. Said sale will be made with- ’ out relief from valuation or appraisement 1 laws. CHARLES A. KINTZELL, Sheriff Kosciusko County. 1 Butt & Xanders, Attorneys for Plaintiff. Warsaw, Ind., March 21st, 1912.
REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS. Houton C. Frazer, Abstractor Warsaw Indiana Allan S. Widatnan, comr. to Chas. D. Byall and wife, 80 a set 28 Turkey Creek ‘P- $7,175Orville W. Cooper to Wm. H. Brunning 23.42 a sec 6 Wayne tp. $3,000. John S. Wynant to Nellie Williams, lot 185 Lakeside Park. SIOO. Frank B. Dewey to Lester Lightfoot and wife, 79% a sec 36 Wayne tp. s4>ss° Nicholas Rabbitt to Jeroms H. Lones, lot 126 Lakeside Park. sl. Simon Straus to Earl Davis. 160 a sec Wavne tp. $24,000. Edgerson J. Watson to Noble Rorer, 160 a secs 17& 20 Washington tpsl2,ooo. Alta B. Hizer to Dulcena Arnold et, al. tract secs 8& 9 Tippecanoe tp. $1,500. James E. Smith to Lonis Ferguson and wife, N, % lots 39 &31 Atwood. SIOO. Argus B. Whitehead et. al. to Lewis E. Shroyer, 40 a sec 35 Plain tp. $3,206. Same to Wm. Shroyer, 40 a sec 35 Plain tp. $3,200. BenJ. F. Hoopingarner to Carrie Line, 80 a sec 33 Turkey Creek tp. $5,520. Lewis Randall to John Stevens, lots 9, 10, 11 &12 Shore Acres $2,650. James R. Schrom to John K. Matchett, E. J 4 lot 5 blk i Redkey’s add Pierceton S7OO. Sam’l Summe to Howard Collett, lot 10 Sell’s add Silver Lake. $750. J. H. Windbigler to Chas. White 80 a sec 34 Franklin tp. $7,200. Margaret Bowser to Chas. H. Schultz, 115 a sec 11 & 14 Van Buren tp. $9,190. John Bender to Lillie Bender, % a sec 3 Van Buren tp. SI,OOO. John E. Snyder to Chester Deafenbaugh tract in SilVer Lakfe. $650. Chas. H. Garrett to Martha J. Garrett, part of lot 27 Leesburg. $325. Wm. Shroyer and Lewis exrs. to Frank Wilcox et. al. 42asec 25 Plain tp. $12,200. Josiah W. Estep to Betij. F. Green, 80 a sec 24 Jefferson tp. $7,609. Francis M. Grissom et. al. to Benj. F. Kitson, So a sec 29 Turkey Creek tp. $5,486. Nell Williams to Jemima Williams, lot 220 Lakeside Park. si. Charles L. Schlabach et. al. to Calvin Seymour, N. % lots 21 & 45 Morrison Island. $350. . ■ Elizabeth Sanders to Noble~Rerer, 44 a sec 12 Plain tp. $6,000. Noble Rorer to Edgarton J. Watson and wife, 54.56 a sec 12 Plain tp. $7,000. Levi Mishler to Chas. Malcolm, 66.67 a sec 1 Jefferson tp. $8,150, Franqis M. Neff to Simon Bear; 160 a secs 11, 13 &14 Jefferson tp. S2O, 000. Test Your Seed Corn. The average seed ear of corn has 800 kernels, which, if all should grow, would produce 800 stalk?, which should produce 800 ears of corn. 800 ears of corn would make about 8 bushels, which at the moderate price of 50c would be worth $4.00. Corn for seed purposes is in worse condition than has ever been known. f Repeated tests from all parts of the corn belt reveal the sad story that the dampness in immature corn has caused much of it be frozen so that || will not grow. If we are to have a corn crop of normal proportions, every ear should be tested to see whether it is alive or dead. No man can tell whether corn will grow or not without making a germination test. No man can se-, lect corn by looking at it. He may be able to tell some that will not grow but he can never be sure of that which will grow. A fine looking ehr may have been pollenized by a sterile father. Testing rules, in detail, may be had by writing Bert Ball, Sec’y Crop Improvement Commitee of Council of Grain Exchanges, Chicago, 111. 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 I THE GOSHEN MILLING CO. Goshen, Ind Be sure and see Fisher Brothers at New Paris, before you buy your fence and posts. Notice to Heirs, Creditors, Etc. In the matter of the Estate of Catherine Kern, deceased. In the Kosciusko Circuit Court, February term, 1912. Notice is hereby given, That Aaronßaror as Executor of the estate of Catharine Kern deceased, has presented and filed his account and.vouchers for final settlement of said estate, and that the same will come up for the examination and action of said Circuit Court on the 15th day of April, 1912, at which time all heirs, creditors or legatees of said estate are required to appear in said Court and show cause, if any there be, why said account and vouchers should not be approved. Dated at Warsaw, .Indiana, this nth day of March,. 1912. CONRAD D. LONGENECKER, Hll4-3W Clerk.
i Lumber and Mill Work 11 Don’t forget that we are in a position now ;; ;; to figure on your house complete, frames and all ! I
I » I »
Lakeside Lumber Co, ii ’ •; Allen D. Sheets, Owner, 1 :: < Syracuse, Indiana ■■ < > —- , ? 11111 f 11114X1X4 -
t Public Sales. i Joseph Smith will sell at public sale at his farm 5 miles southwest ; of Syracuse, and mile nerth of the Crowl school house, on Friday, ’ March 29, commencing at 10 o’clock a. m., the following property: 2 head of horses, 6 head of cattle, 13 head of hogs, some farm implements, 24 Plymouth Rock hens, 40 shocks fodder, 10 bushels of good potatoes and 4 bushels seqd corn. Lincoln Cory, Auctioneer; A. A. Blanchard, Clerk.
♦ Hoyts’ • I Q Restaurant :: g J. E. Boyts, Prop’r i I I ‘ Opposite Jefferson Theatre ; | H Meals 25c ? •• Rooms 50c ? ! I Steam Heated Rooms J | ; ? Lunch Counter in Connection ;; :: Goshen, Ind. ;;
.<*»► aHHBMBBBHBMMMMEKMfIMMBMBHMnBMBMMI
A _ . | Special Cash Sale For Saturday, March 30th 10 pounds Granulated Sugar for 60c 25 pound sack Fanchon Flour for 85c One pound 25c bulk Coffee for 23c One pound 28c Black Cross Coffee 25c 100 pounds Granulated Sugar for $5.95 » Nice Lake Herring, per pound - 5c One gallon Best Ever Corn Syrup for 28c 5 pounds Best Ever Corn Syrup for 15c This space will have Bargains each week. WATCH FOR THEM! Searfoss Brothers PHONE 8
< » all mill work both in- ;; - side and out. Come 1 * < > give us a chance to < > figure with you,and I I don’t forget before « you go elsewhere to ; .buy your fence ! I posts that we have • them as cheap and ;; as good as yoi| can 11 get them any place. • •
! FOLEYKIDNEYffMS For Backache Kidneys anobladdkr foleykidneyphis FOR RHEUMATISM KIDNEYSAND BLADDER FOLEY KIDNEYPILLS For Backache and Bladder Hides Wanted Cattle hides, 10c a pound. Skunk, black, $3.00; short stripe, $2.00. Muskrats, best grade, 50-60 c. Horsehides $3.00 to $3 50. Delivered at Syracuse. Best prices for all kinds of JUNK. DAVIS GRAFF Phone 137 GEO. D. HURSEY Dealerin Building Cement Brick, Fence Posts, Etc. Syracuse, Ind.
The best Prices The Newest Designs, the most Courteous Service, with a stock to select from that is not surpassed in NorthenWndiana. McDougall & | HOLTZINGER | 230 South Main St. * PHONE 137 GOSHEN, INDIANA
