The Syracuse Journal, Volume 5, Number 3, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 16 May 1912 — Page 4
LOOK! LOOK! < I The Syracuse Journal for one :: year, value sl, and one dozen of :: post card photograghs of any :: member of your family, value :: $1.25, the two son $1.25. ;; There is not a better weekly paper in the State ; and it is going to be better if it is possible to make < > it so. We can honestly recommend the work of ’’ Mr. Gilliam, the Photographer, and we know his ; photographs will please you. * I Old subscribers can pay one year in advance • and also get the Coupon good for $1.25, Our solicitor will call, or you may come to the ; Journal Office. e i mi 1 11 BALTIMORE AND OHIO r»Aii nnxn I summer tourist RAILROAD I FARES TO Boston, Nev/ York City ATLANTIC CITY AND OTHER “JERSEY COAST RESORTS” Norfolk, Old Point Comfort, Va. Liberal stop.overs at all prir cipal points in both directions. Tickets on sale June Ito September 30. Return limit 30 days from date of sale. Consult nearest B. and 0. agent for details. ————— Gitu Drau ana Baooaoc Line We are prepared to do your work promptly and with special care. G-ive us a trial. J. EDGAR RIPPEY 7 PHOIYE 118 ; ♦•••« 11 tint M ♦»♦<»♦< in iihhw Hall»Cochrane Col Next Door to Bank, Syracuse, Indiana A BIG SAVING IN GROCERIES In fact we are making inside prices on everything in our ■ store. . We ask your patronage on the : ground that we can save you : money on the necessaries of life. We are receiving new goods : in all lines every week and they : are invariably marked at money- : saving prices. While the saving on each arti- • cle is small, the aggregate amount ■ saved on the average bill will be • something worth considering t at • the end of a year. You know “a ■ penny’saved is a penny earned.” Remember, all our Dry Goods, i Notions and Shoes are marked at • a price that means a big saving • to you. ' HALL & 60GHRAN& 60.
The Syracuse Journal INDEPENDENT. GEO. O. SNYDER, Editor and Pnblishr Published Every Thursday at Syracuse Indiana. One Dollar Per Year. Entered as second-class matter May 4, 1908, at the post office at Syracuse, Indiana, under the Act of Congress oj March 3, 1879. How about a cleanup day for Syracuse? Think it over. A Nappanee editor dreamed of an interurban line through that town. A hack from the depot would have satisfied some in Syracuse Sunday night. Old subscribers may take advantage of our special premium offer by paying back subscription up to date and a year in advance. This offer is for a limited time only. St. Joseph, Mich., plans a commission form of govermentithat bars ministers, lawyers and doctors from holding office. In part, it sounds feasible, but why bar the ministers? Congress has begun its investigation of the “Money Trust.” If this inquiry results in a speedy reform of our panic-breeding banking and currency laws, the committee will be performing a real public service. John Wanamaker said: Advertising doesn’t jerk—it pulls. It begins very gently at first, but the pull is steady. It increases day by day and year by year, until it exerts an irresistible power. It is likened to a team pulling a heavy load. A thousand spasmodic, jerky pulls will not budge the load; but one-half the power exerted in a steady effort will start and keep i t moving. On another page of this paper appears a letter from a former citizen who has placed himself in the toils of the law. By the tone of his letter he evidently realizes what he should have considered beforehand. We sincerely hope that the lesson will teach him the futility of a life of loose morals and dissipation. But, while his being shut off from the outer world may satisfy the vagaries of the law, it cannot ease the heartaches that his actions has caused to others. We commend his spirit of penitence and hope that his future actions will bear out his promises. RECOVER $12,000 IN TAXES Fountain County Officials Find Property Never Listed. Attica, May 13.—Back taxes to the amoant of $12,000 have been recovared by the county officials from the sstate of Sampson Reed, as a compromise to prevent the filing of a suit. Although for many years he was the heaviest taxpayer in Fountain sounty, his will revealed the ownership of much property that had never been listed for taxation. Sleepwalker Badly Hurt. Lafayette, May 10. —Walking in his aleep nearly proved fatal to John Sheehan in this city. Sheehan, who has tor years been afflicted with somnambulism, arose from his« bed while asleep and started to walk toward a second-story window. He struck the glass, shattered it, and when the noise awakened his father he ran to his son’s room and found him hanging In the broken window with part of his body out. The lad barely escaped tailing. His face, chest and arms were -cut by the glass. Former Richmond Pastor Killed. Richmond, May 13. —Rev. Morton Hobson, who was killed near Springfield, 0., in an automobile accident, formerly was pastor of the United Brethren church, in this city. He left Richmond more than a year ago to take charge of a church near Cincinnati. Retired Minister Dies. » Lebanon, May 10. —Rev. William Manford Walker, a retired Methodist minister, of Boone county, died near Lebanon of consumption. He was fifty-five years old, and left the ministry at Vanlear, Ky., to come to Boone county. He was a Mason. •ay Suicide Was Not Part Indiana. Danville, May 13. —Members of the family of Robert London, who committed suicide here by shooting, deny the statement that London was part Indian. ' Mrs. Kate Jones says "he was all English.” Please your absent friends by sending ihem the Journal for a year i ""I
Home News Notes. Fresh box candies at the Quality. Get your “Auto” Tires from the Garage. Mrs. Howard Bowser has the measles. Buy your hammock now at the Quality Drug Store. Warren Colwell was at Warsaw Tuesday afternoon. A fine line of brass beds from sl2 up, at Beckman’s store. Better take advantage of the Journal’s premium offer. W. R. Gilliam made a business trip to Chicago Wednesday. Miss Hattie Sellers was the guest of Milford friends the past week. New fruniture is coming in every day now at Beckman’s store. C. W. Myers and wife visited Mrs. Myers’ parents at Bremen Sunday. A good stock of new pianos always on hand at Rothenberger’s. George Holsher went to Chicago Sunday, where he will work at his trade. Miss Eleanor Neilson, of Oak Park, Illinois, came Tuesday for an extended visit. Advertising space for sale in the new Telephone Directory, see Snyder at the Journal office. Sadie and Clarence Hickman of Wilmot, visited Mr. and Mrs. Ed Unrue over Sunday. Guy Connors, third-trick operator at the B. & 0. is spending a short vacation in Cromwell. To make old furniture and wood work new, use Chi-Namel. Sold at the Quality Drug Store. Mrs. Harry Miller is spending a few days with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Richards, at Auburn. Mrs. Sarah Good and J. B. Sheets, of Akron, mothef and brother of Allen Sheets, spent Sunday with him. Charles Nelson, Harry Inks and ex-Mayor Kinnison, all of Ligonier, will build cottages at the lake this year. FOR SALE—A fine big nine room house on Huntington street at an extremely low price. See W. G. Connolly. Chas. Bowersox of Bucyrus, Ohio, came last week for a few days’ visit with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Bowersox. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Maggart of Garrett, spent Sunday with Tillman Hire and wife and Mr. and Mrs. Henry Tully. T. J. Walter, wife and sons, Kenneth and Dewey, of Bremen, spent a couple of days at their cottage at Pickwick, last week. A new line of straw hats, (sun shades) hand-made and hand-pain-ted by Mexican Indians. Styles to suit all. A. W. Strieby Fivt Methodist bishops will be retired on account of old age. This will make the number to be created between ten twelve. “RED SEAL GINGHAM” have no equal in value, look like 25c materials, a new line and a big assortment. A. W. Strieby. The Misses Flora Walker, of Pierceton and Erba Hickson, of Packerton were entertained Saturday and Sunday by the Messrs. Pottenger. C. W. Strieby of Gravel Hill, went to Niles, Michigan, Saturday, to attend to some business for the Rog-
X A Family REUNION should include an invitation to Gilliam. No better chance will offer for a family photograph than such an occasion. I make all styles and grades in photos and make them right. J Shall be pleased to come at any time. Gilliam, Syracuse
ers Silverware Co. He returned home Monday. Rev. R. L. Ayers was a visitor at Huntington the first of the week. Mrs. Jake McNutt returned to her home in Ligonier Wednesday. Mrs. Frederick Boland and family have arrived at the Lake View Hotel. Lost —A bunch of keys. Finder leave at LeGrand Hotel and receive reward. The W. C. T. U. will meet Wednesday, May 22, at the home of Mrs. Alice Dolan. Rev. John Kitson, of Ft. Wayne, was a visitor in the city the latter part of last week. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Groves were at Ft. Wayne attending to business matters this week. Jerry Hoopingarner went to Lansing, Michigan this week and will drive home a new Reo automobile. Tuesday afternoon visitors at Warsaw were J. K. Mott, George Phoebus, Mrs. Josa Craft and Mrs. Dewart. Mr. and Mrs. Stump, of Warsaw and Mrs. Elizabeth Himes and son, of Wilmot were in attendance at the Cable funeral. ‘ Among those visiting Goshen, Tuesday were B. F. Hoopingarner, Misses Irene and Blanch Sprague, Jessie Callander, and Walter Weaver and wife. At least 3,000 eyes will see your ad in the new Telephone Directory and they will continue to see it for a year to come. Better ask Geo. 0. Snyder about rates. New Launch For Sale—ls feet long, 3 horse power, double-cylinder engine. Air chambers at each end of the boat. H. H. Doll, Syracuse, Indiana. 5-2 ts
Mrs. Joann Holloway has gone to Joplin, Montana to visit her daughter Mrs. May Ross. She expects to meet her son Roy there, and will probably return about September. See Croop & Elliott for eave troughmg, plumbing and all kinds of special tin work. Give us a trial. Satisfaction guaranteed. Shop at Eli Grissom’s. m 2 ts Teeth filled, crowned and extracted absolutely without pain. Dr. Cunningham, Goshen. Howard Kincaid, who lives south of North Webster and was many years ago a resident of this township, has suffered another stroke of paralysis which has rendered him almost helpless. The Prohibitionists have opened the political campaign in Kosciusko county. William Gray Loehr, candidate for representative to the state legislature, making the first speech on the street at Leesburg Wednesday night, May Bth. A large crowd listened to the message of prohibi tion, It Cost Him $33.85. Wm. McClintic was arrested Wednesday morning on the charges of provocation and public intoxication. The complaint was made by John Miles. It seem s that McClintic took on board too much of the compound that both cheers and inebriates and as a consequence came to grief. At the preliminary hearing Wednesday morning, he plead not guilty and his trial was set for Wednesday afternoon at 1:30, before Justice Kitson, with Geo. Xanders acting for the prosecution. He plead guilty and was fined $5 on the charge of provcation and $lO for drunkeness, which with the costs made $33.85. $2.25 Worth For $1.25. The Journal, through the courtesy of Mr. Gilliam, our photographer, is enabled to make an unparalleled offer to new subscribers. For a limited time, we will give to each new paid-in-advance subscriber, a Coupon good for one dozen Post Card Photographs of any member of your family, with the privilege of two different sittings, or you may apply the coupon as $1.25 in part payment on cabinet photographs. Mr. Gilliam is a first-class photographer and his work is guaranteed. The Journal for one year and the Coupon for only $1.25, Mr. Downs is authorized to solicit subscriptions and receipt Mor same or they may be sent to tpe Journal Office. \
i < > Warm Weather ii I I » Is Coming > «I > __ < > > II 1 < > » < > Prepare for it.. We have a full • ■ • line of hand made screen doors,;; : window screens and wire cloth. Beautify your lawns by keeping ■ ■ :; them well watered and mowed. ■■ :: We have lawn mowers of all styles :: :: and prices, also new hose fresh :: ■ ■ from the factory. <> ! > H POTTENGER BROTHERS > Successors to S. C: LEPPER £ Syracuse, Indiana | ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦■l I »♦♦•••! |$ To Our Patrons and the Public in General We are now located in our new store room, across the street from our old location, and are prepared to serve our old customers and as many new ones as care to give us a trial. * With our largely increased stock and facilities we are in better shape than ever to give you prompt and careful service, and hope by strict attention and lowest prices consistent with first-class goods, to merit your continued good will and patronage. KINDIG & COMPANY Read These Advertisements, ■ ■ — > - - •• lire You Going| to Goshen? Ii n■ ■ * »■*' r foill S ISLwSi IWRwSiftWI 1%- ; ■ ! We Want You to Know | What We Carry in I Furniture, Rugs | I Curtain, in fact EVERYTHING for the HOME. The largest and most I complete store in Northern Indi- | I ana. REMEMBER, we show you I the goods—not the pictures. We | i also deliver them and pay railroad I fare. Come in and see us. ! SMITH-CLARK CO. I | Goshen, Indiana GEO. W. HERR, Undertaker
