The Syracuse Journal, Volume 4, Number 50, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 11 April 1912 — Page 8

HAPPY home tOW IN REACH Jov^' — SICKNESS W 41 PONT CHUM TO BE HAPPY KEEP WELL USE ONLY Hr. DR. KING’S NEW DISCOVERY/ TO CURE I JOY / COUGHS AND COLDS\ TO / WHOOPING COUGH \ Minions J I AND OTHER DISEASES-OF THROAT AND LUNGS Price SOc and SI.OO | SOLD ANO GUARANTEED BY ■■■■■■■■■ F. Lr. HOCH, Syracuse, Ind.

Ask your Grocer Tor Hersh Yeast The Baker’s Delight BUTT & XANDERS J 7 Attorneys-at-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,lnd. GEORGE ». BAILEY All Kinds ofi WELL WORK And well materials# Supplies, Win.d Mills Shop in Grissom’s Harness Shop Phone 119 T. COLWELL Lawyer Real Estate. Insurance, Collections. Loans. Notarial Work ft portion of your 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 ,t.'.re they will receive careful attention. Investigation of-work is solicited. : : : Office over Miles <£ Co. Grocery Syracuse Indiana The Winona Interurban Ru. Go. Effective Sunday J)ec. 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 * fl 1:38 “ f 1:10 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 “ 8:27 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 nov 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, Indi 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 tolfadvertise. 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.

HENRY SNOBfIRGER Llveru 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. Snojvy’s Bus runs the year round. Reliable drivers. Fare 10 Gents Each Way Barn on Main Street Phone 5 Bus to ftll Trains .

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 sumffier—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

Cause of Typhoid Fiver. It hardly seems necessary to pjint out to the average intelligent man, the danger which lies in a water supply secured from a dug, shallow well or surface water supply. Typhoid fever cannot be contracted without taking into one’s system germs that have been voided by a typhoid patient. These germs get into the body through the mouth, pass through the stomach into the intestines, and are carried through the body by the blood. They leave the body through the bowels and in the urine. Sometimes infection is carried by contact or throng vegetables and milk; but the common channel of typhoid transmission is through our drinking water supply. It is conservatively estimated by eminent medical authorities that 75 per cent of all primary typhoid fever cases are caused by impure drinking water. Lewis Edwin Theiss in Peasson’s Magazine for June 1911, in his article, “Bad Water vs Good Health,” makes the following statement: “Typhoid fever alone causes an actual loss in the United States of Two Hundred Million dollars a year. This estimate, however, is without question too conservative. “Even malaria, which is commonly carried by mosquitoes, may also be conveyed by polluted water. This was shown by an experience, related by Prof. W. A. Mason of the Renssnlaer Polytechnic Institute, that befell the people of Hawkinsville, Ga.. a town in a malaria district. ‘ Chills and fever” were so customary that people expected the disease every fall. But a change in the water supplv from surface water to artesian-well completely freed the town of malaria.” A pure water supply for home, farm and stock purposes is imperative for every household but,.it is a curious fact that, until recent years, the water problem was not given the serious consideration that the public health demanded. This fact has formerly been especially true in small cities, towns and villages, and throughout the farming districts. While there should be no excuse for this fact, there unquestionably has been reasons for it. One reason has been the ignorance of the average man regarding the geological conditions affecting the water supply, and what constitutes pure water. Another reason has been that the population has increased so rapidly, people have not realized the effect thisjnerease was having upon the water supply by reason of effect upon the soil, throughjwhich, practically all water used in domestic supplies must pass. One would hate to presume that any man, once familiar with the conditions affecting the water supply at his home, would, for the sake of a few paltry dollars, risk the life of his family, his neighbors and himself.

Years ago, before the country was so thickly settled, and before forests had practically disappeared spring water was depended upon for the supply in the majority of cases. The Pioneers invariably located their homesteads adjacent to a spring, and when the spring was not convenient, adjacent to a creek or river, and used these supplies for their domestic water. When a spring or a creek was not available, wells were dug, usually to a shallow depth of 15 or 25 feet, and in the earlier days the supply of water furnished by the dug well was, in many casej, practically a pure supply. Water, being the best solvent known, when coming in contact with dead vegetation, dead animal life, refuse, etc., dissolves it and carries all manner of impurities in solution, naturally surface drainage carried these impurities into the soil and through the soil to the water supply. All diseases that can be traced to, and which are carried by water, increased accordingly. Contaminated or impure water may not make itself known by any taste or smell. Nothing but a careful analysis will determine whether water be pure or not. Every now and then there is an outbreak of typhoid or some kindred disease and the ques-

tion arises, from whence has this disease come? A careful search will usually trace it to some shallow well or surface water supply. In practically every part of the world it is possible to obtain a pure and wholesome supply and the drilled well is conceded to be the only and satisfactory and successful method of obtaining a pure and unfailing supply ot water in all places. The deep drilled, iron cased well, which shuts off all impurities and obtains the supply from the never failing water stratum in the rock, or, in the gravel beneath the rock, furnishes a pure, wholesome, sparkling water that has been purified and freed from bacteris by fil tration through the sands and rocks of the earth. As these pure water facts and truths have been demonstrated and presented to the people, it is only natural that every individual property owner, who is not now supplied with water which has been proven pure and sanitary, and every farmer including those who now obtain their supply from springs, shollow wells or creeks, are demanding and will have, drilled wells for their individual use and the protection of their family, as fast as drillers can be secured to do the work. This rapidly growing demand for drilled wells is not confined to rural districts, small towns and villages. Residents of our large cities and their suburbs are being awakened to the great importance of an absolutely pure water supply, and not caring to take chances with any other form of supply than the drilled well, are having their own wells put in for them in larger numbers every day. it . Any one wishing their piano tuned telephone or leave order at my office. Work guaranteed. J. W. Rothenberger.

Sheriff’s Sale. By virtue of a certified copy of a decree to me directed from the Clerk of the Circuit Court Os 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 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 iu Kosciusko County, Indiana: Beginning at a point 595 feet west of Truesdell Avenue, in Truesdell Lodge pn 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 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 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 valnation or appraisement laws. CHARLES A. KINTZELL, Sheriff of Kosciusko County. Butt & Xanders, Attorneys for Plaintiff. Warsaw, Ind., March 21st, 19x2.

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 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, 19x2, between the hours of ip 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) ami three (3), in block three (3) in Ketring& Ketring’s Addition to the Town of Syracuse. If such rents and profits will not sell fpr 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 21st, 1912.

One Year Os Saloons. The Elkhart Review has made a study of Elkhart with and without saloons and presents some valuable data. It says in part: “The testimony of thoughtful ar d observant men and the story of the criminal records give no basis fcr rejoicing that a majority of Elkhart voters, a year ago, sanctioned the return of the saloon. Not a single claim that the pro-liquorcrats advanced prior to the election has been fulfilled. Elkhart has thrived and prospered, but in spite of the saloons, not because of them. The attainable records are all against the saloon. “For instance, the police reports show that the total arrests during the eleven months the saloons have been reopened have been at least over 21 per cent, more than during the corresponding dry months, while the increase in attests for intoxication—despite the growing leniency of the police—has been 93 per cent. The police department cost $1,654, or nearly 12 per cent, more, during partially wet 1911 than it did in wholly dry 1910 and the department has now ordered an automobile patrol wagon to better care for the “drunks” found in distant points. The cost of boarding prisoners in the jails of Elkhart county cost $1,229, or 102. per cent, more, during the partially wet year ending with November, 1911, than during the wholly dry year preceding. Merchants referred to the return of saloons as one of the reasons for less business and for a falling off in cash receipts and slowness in collections. The fact or a general reduction throughout the country was blamed to some extent, but each, byway of illustration, cited specific instances, referring to individual customers as examples of reduced ability or inclination to buy legitimate merchandise because of renewed patronage of the open saloon. “Another merchant spoke particularly of the difference in the trade of the young men of the city and their ability to_ pay cash for their purchases. He said that young men who prior to the closing of the saloons asked credit frequently became cash customers during the absence of saloons from the citv and bought more goods. When the •saloons returned these young men bought less and asked for credit more frequently. “All merchants interviewed said they had been more careful in extending credit since the saloons “came beck,” having learned by experience of the ability of customers to pay during the dry period, and knowing from former dealings that these customers would be slow when opportunity was restored to spend their earnings in saloons. “One merchant said with enthusiasm, ‘Give us five years of saloonless city and trade conditions would improve so wonderfully that no one at present can realize what the improvement would be.’ “Distinctly, the bank deposits did not increase at the same ratio after the saloons came back as they did during the previous year. The Review has the totals of the deposits officially reported by the four banks on March 29,1910; March 7, 1911, and February 20,1912. These sums show that while the increase during the eleven and one-third dry months prior to March 7, 1911, averaged $23,300 per month, the increase during the eleven and one-half months from March 7,1911, to February 20, this year (nearly all wet) averaged bpt $4,391.10 per month.”

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

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 in--1 •* <^e anc * out * Come give U1 a to II figure with J don’t forget before y° u elsewhere to buy your fence posts that we hare them as cheap and - as good *4 you can get them any place. Lakeside Lumber Co. Allen D. Sheets, Owner. Syracuse, Indiana

Lawrence Stiffler goes to Fort Wayne April 15th, where he has a position with the Bowser Company. He will also play ball with the Shamrocks of that city this seasan. Attention Farmers and Feeders. Buffalo Gluten. Sucrene, Cotton Seed Oil and Alfalfa Meals for sale by THE GOSHEN MILLING CO. New fruniture is coming in every day now at Beckman’s store.

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

The best Prices K fewest Designs, the most Courteous Service, a stock to select from ' that “ not sur P asse d -in Northern Indiana. -McDougall & HOLTZINGER PHONE 137 GOSHEN, INDIANA ■ »w 11 1 11111 Ito THE GARAGE We are at your service in the Auto Business. Let us put your car in good condition for the summer. We guarantee all work. Automobile sundries of any description carried in an up-to-date Garage. We sell. Indian gasoline. Agents for Ford machines MILLER & LEPPER First Door South of Leppei's Store ; *

For Sale—A good five passenger automobile, new tires and all new bearings, top and wind shield are in good order. Price $350. B. F. Hoopingamer.

FOR SALE Farm Implements, old and new. Huckster’s Wagon. Hamess, old and new. Boiler flues, suitable for Fence Posts, etc. Best prices for all kinds of JUNK. DAVIS GRAFF Phone 137

GEO. D. HURSEY Dealerin Building Materials, Cement Brick, Fence Posts, Etc. Syracuse, Ind.