The Syracuse Journal, Volume 4, Number 49, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 4 April 1912 — Page 8

"3 w-i A ®vnJ Wv yffiNEik 1 — BEWARE OF SUDDEN ATTACKS THAT MAY PROVE DEADLY. ~ YOU CAN SOON REPEL THE MOST DANGEROUS WITH DR. KING’S NEW DISCOVERY THE RELIABLE REMEDY FOR COUGHS AND COLDS WHOOPING COUGH AND OTHER DISEASES OF THROAT AND LUNGS PRICE 50c AND SI.OO ■■■■■■■■■■i SOLD AND GUARANTEED BY ■MHBWMHI F. L. HOCH, Syracuse, Ind.

Ask your Grocer for Hersh Yeast The Baker’s Delight BUTT & XANDERS Attorneys-gX-Law Practice in all Courts Money to Loan. Fire Insurance. Phone 7 SYRACUSE, IND. J. H. BOWSER Physician and Surgeon Tel. 85—Office and Residence Syracuse. Ind. GEORGE W. BAILEV All Kinds ofJ WELL WORK And well materials, Supplies, Wind Mills Shop in Grissom’s Harness Shop Phone 119 WARREN T. COLWELL Lawyer Real Estate, Insurance, /Collections, Loans. Notarial Work ft portion of nour 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 Syraousa Indiana r

Ths Winona Inwurban Ru. 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. f7:22 “ / 7:57 “ 8:57 “ 9:57 “ 10:57 “ +11:38 “ 11:10 p. m. *12:;52 p.m. *1:57 “ 1:57 “ 2:57 “ 3:57 “ 4:57 " *4:57 “ *5:57 “ 5:57 “ 6:57 “ 6:57 “ 827 “ 7:57 “ 11:10 “ 10:16 “ t Winona Flyer through trains between Goshen and Indianapolis. * Daily except Sunday. W. D. STANSIFER A. G. F. & P. A. Warsaw, Ind.

MICHIGAN LAND FOR SALE. Land in central 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 $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 tofiadvertise. 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.

HENRYSNOBfIRGER Liveru 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 Way Barn on Main Street Phone 5 Bus to All Trains Inmion oi our Meats 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

Whooping Cough Deadly. ! In its latest bulletin, the Chicago health department prints this warning: “Get the silly, old time notion out of your head that whooping cough is a very simple disease and that all children must have it. Never expose your children to whooping cough. Don’t take chances with the child’s life.” • And then, enlarging, the bulletin tells some of the things to remember about the disease. First, this is just the time of year the disease is most prevalent. It is usually contracted by direct contact, and develops from seven to ten days after exposure. Especially is it dangerous to infants and extremely aged persons. The death rate under one year averages 27 per cent; between one and two, 14 per cent; from two to five years, 3 per cent, and five to fifteen years, 1.8 per cent. It is a preventable disease, the bulletin says, and yet there were 961 cases and 55 deaths from whooping cough in Chicago last year. In the last ten years there have been 2,137 deaths. Despondent, Hung Himself. The community was shocked on Wednesday morning by she announcement of the death of Frank Hull, the well known farmer and insurance agent, who, in a fit of despondency over ill health, hung himself in the woods a short distance from his home. He was found soon as er death. Making an excuse that he wanted to take a walk over the place he left about 9 o'clock, and when he did not return after a reasonable absence, search was instituted and he was found in a short time, though life was extinct. He had been a sufferer from a complicati >n ui u seases for several years and heca” e despondent, realizing that he could not get well. He had no other troub s and no other ea se can be assigned for the deed. He leaves a wife and son, besides other relatives.—Ligonier Leader.

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 Circuitous Retribution. “Did you help elect that man because of his personal popularity?” “No,” replied Farmer Corntossel. “I had my suspicions of him for a long time and wanted to shove him along to where the muckrakers could get a good go at him."—Washington Star. REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS. Houton C. Frazer, Abstractor Warsaw Indiana ' Chas Shroyer to C Edwin Stout, lot 13 Kist’s E Add Warsaw. $1,200. Silas Ketring to Elizabeth Robinson, lots 50, 51, 52, 53, 54, 55 Ideal Beach, $3,75Q. Wm McGraw to Frank Weber, 60 a sec 16 Seward tp. $5,100. James K Anglin to Rachel Stroup, 40 a sec 24 Etna tp. $3,500. Jas N Brown to Chas E and Edna Ford s% lots 16 and 17 Funk’s Market Street Add Warsaw. $165. Warren Rohrer to Lanta W Ford lots 15 and 16 Syracuse, $1,500. Peter Bechtold to Cornelius Frantz, 80 a sec 13 Lake tp. £9,500. Eli Pletcher to Jennie Halstead, 65.53 a sec 26 Washington tp. $6,000. Jefferson Garber to Edward Phelps and wife, lot 36 North Webster. $7,000. Edward Phelps to Jefferson Garber, lot sec 10 Tippecanoe. $2,500. $ Frank Berst to Samuel Stockey, 8® a sec 19 and 20 Plain tp. $4,000. Vilena Keefer to Curtis Lenwell and wife, 10 a tract in Wooster. $1,600. Geo G Grady to Samuel Driver and wife, 160 a sec 35 Van Buren. $20,000. Mary C Cook to Edgar E Lehman, lot 2 Grant's Add Warsaw. $2,000. Same to Herbert C Lehman, e% lot 2 Grant’s Add Warsaw. $2,000. Sarah Richart to Rose E Randall,’ lots 29 and 30 Chapman’s Add Warsaw. S3OOO Jubilee Lodge Odd Fellows to Seth Iden, Trustee, part of lot 8 blk 8 Etna Green. $4,120. Lanta W Ford to Warren W Rohrer, lot 34 Water Power Add Syracuse. SIOOO . Lyman 1 Dunnuck to Hollis E and Orville Baum, 45 a sec 20 Harrison tp. $2,750. Samuel C Metzger to Wm B Miller, 50 a sec 5 Monroe tp. $3,100. Benj F Kitson to Samuel M Grissom, 1 a sec 6 Turkey Creek. S2OO. ‘ Alpha R Hatfield et al to Straus Bros Co. 120 a sec 3 Jefferson tp. $13,200.

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. 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 presented and filed her 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 Sth 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 13th day of March, A. D. 1912. CONRAD D. LONGENECKER, By. A. A. Rasor, Clerk. Deputy. nui-jw Notice to Non-Residents. State of Indiana, 1 Kosciusko County J ss ’ In the Kosciusko Circuit Court, February Term, 1912. 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. Notice is' therefore hereby given jadd defendant, last named, that unless he be and appear on the 39th day of the next term of the Kosciusko Circuit Court, being the 14th day of May, 19x2, to be holden 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 same will be heard and determined 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 Court* By A. A. Rasor, Deputy.

Sheriff’s Sale. By virtue of a fortified copy of a decree to me directed froin the Clerk of the Circuit Court of Kosciusko County, Indiana, in Cause Number 12018 wherein Frederick Clauss is plaintiff and George Lucile Williams 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 costs, 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. m. and 4 o’clock p. m. of said day, at thedoor 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 Connty, 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 Tot 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 29X feet feet wide and 225 feet long fronting 29X feet on Lake 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 county. 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 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. KINTZELL, Sheriff of Kosciusko County. Butt & Xanders, Attorneys for Plaintiff'. Warsaw, Ind., March 21st, 1912. Sheriff’s Sale, By virtue of a certified copy pf a decree to me directed from the Clerk 6f the Circuit Court of Kosciusko County, Indiana, in Cause Number 12017 wherein Elizabeth J. Morrison is plaintiff and James W. Brady,' 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 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 without relief from valuation or appraisement laws. CHARLES A. KINTZELL, Sheriff Kosciusko County. Butt & Xanders, Attorneys for Plaintiff. Warsaw, Ind., March 2ist,,i9i2. 1

INIERESTING EXPERIENCES. OF A TRIP INFOREIGN LANDS BY MRS. MATTIE CROW-FICK. (Continued from last week) The Hospice had the usual stable smell and the inside seemed like an old damp prison, but the only Brother who could talk English gave us a key to No. 7 room, which we found very neat and clean and (this time with my teeth chattering with cold I was glad to see) a feather bed. We put on more clothes, turned tip our coat collars and walked until supper time. Down a winding road west of the Hospice past the lake, around which more and more snowy peaks loom up, and where the colossal statue of St. Bernard stands with his face still turned watchfully toward the lonely mountain pass and his hand raised as if in holy benediction. Then back to supper where we ate heartily of rice soup, beef, potatoes, gravy, some kind of smoked rib stew (the only thing on the menu I did not like) rice again cooked deliciously and served with prunes. After supper we went for another walk and Mr. Fick wanted to climb higher. I didn’t, so I sat on a rocky bluff high over the lake where I could watch him go scrambling on up over the snowy rocks. He promised to not go higher than a certain black jutting rock easly seen from where he left me and occassionally turned and waved merrily back at me, and at short intervals gave me the Alpine “whoo whoo.” For one moment—only one brief moment —I let my gaze wander off in the other direction and when I looked again he had disappeared. I strained my ears to catch some sound of his voice, but all was still. I stood up and gave the Alpine, “whoo whoo” as loud as I could yell, then listened, and my own voice came back to me in a mocking echo from the opposite mountain.

Night—the Alpine night which comes so suddenly without much twilight, began to close around me. I strained my eyes still gazing up the side of the mountain at the big black rock —now growing blacker—and its surrounding drifts of snow, still hoping to see him appear again but not a sound nor movement of any living creature broke the awful stillness. After repeated efforts I became so terrified that I did not call any more, because the echo of my own voice grew quite intolerable. In my terror at the awful cal amity which must have befallen him I became so overwrought that at last I cared not to look upward—just because I knew now that he couldn’t nor wouldn’t appear there nor down at the lake beneath me, for I’d grown so dizzy that I felt I should roll down the side of the mountain into it. I knew that if he could come he would, and not leave me alone on the mountain after dark, so why didn’t he come —0! why didn’t he? All the stories we had heard of the dreadful Alpine accidents came back to me in overwhelming force; what a horrible ending to an ideal honeymoon trip to return alone with my husband’s lifeless body, or worse yet, leave it in one of those deep unknown graves as are so many others. Then hope, one faint little ray of hope, return ed. Perhaps he had only twisted an ankle, it can be easly done on these uncertain rocks, at least one thing was certain I must go down to the Hospice and summon aid. Then fearing I might not be able to find the spot where he had disappeared I heaped up a little pile of rocks where I stood and turned to hurry blindly downward when a merry hello and a laugh greeted me as he suddenly appeared in the direction of the Hospice; having gone down a shorter way. Imagine his surprise when at his merry salutation, my knees grew weak and wob-bled-and I sank down on the little pile of rocks I had erected as a sort of a monument to my woe and relaxed my over wrought nerves by a flood of real salt water tears. He had timed his absence and had been out of sight just twenty

Lumber and Mill Work Don't forget that we are in a position now to figure on your house complete, frames and all all mill work both inside and out. Come / ? * ve u 8 a c^ance to ■ figure with you,and • ? don’t forget before I you go elsewhere to ; bu y your fence ; posts that we have ■ them as cheap and as good as you Can ; get them any place, i Lakeside Lumber Co, Allen D. Sheets, Owner, ► : Syracuse, Indiana

minutes. I had suffered hours of real hgony, and was so weak and trembling he lead me down the dizzy path by which we had so merrily come, and with my teeth still chattering with cold and terror both, I tucked my self cosily between the two immense Swiss feather beds and slept it off. (To be continnued) New fruniture is coming in every day now at Beckman’s store.

Boyts’ Restaurant J. E. Boyts, Prop’r Opposite Jefferson Theatre Meals 25c 7 Rooms 50c Steam Heated Rooms Lunch Counter in Connection Goshen, Ind.

Ttl6 * )681, k Th e Newest Designs, the most Courteous Service, a stoc * t to se^ect fr° m that is not sur P asse d in •. Jk i Northern Indiana. ajajE McDougall HOLTZINGER 230 South Main St. PHONEI37 GOSHtN. INDIANA | Special Cash Sale For Saturday, April 6th 10 pounds Granulated Sugar for 60c 25 pound sack Fanchon Flour for 85c One pound 25c bulk Coffee for 23c One pound 28c Black Cro&s 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

For Rent or Sale—3o-acre farm % mile from Lake Wawasee. Good buildings. Large chicken house, good place to raise chickens and vegetables for lake trade. S. L Ketring.

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 Materials, Cement Brick, Fence Posts. Etc. Syracuse, Ind.