The Syracuse Journal, Volume 5, Number 41, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 6 February 1913 — Page 5
all "I I It beats all the confidence ladies have in the matchless Peerless Flour The grocerymen say beats all the amount of calls they have for it. | Syracuse Flour Mills. Better Than You Can Do | The housewife can’t find the quality in home-canned goods that she does in ou Calfomia brands for the reason that she hasn’t the foundation <of mellow, delicious fruit as has the California packers Fish For Sale , Friday 9 Full Weight and Sensible Profit. I KINDIG & COMPANY I
|Do You 5 Need
§ A Book Case, a Smok-g mg Set or any piece g « of furniture. s w 8566 Our Useful Novelties! |AU Prices All Finishes, g | BRIDEGROOM | « Recieve special atten-g | tion as to Terms--A| g Free Dinner Set with at g House Bill |
8 E I We g pay carfare | and | deEver | the g goods. £2 =*. i
§ Goshen, Indiana g M GEO. W. HERR. Undertaker 8
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||Local and Personal} | —Watch us for cheap wall paper | this Spring. Quality Drug Store. If Miss Elva Miles spent Sunday I with friends at Albion. | —Fodder for sale. S. P. Redding | Phone 302. 3t-pd | Harvy Medlam, who is now at I Mishawaka, was home Sunday. | Wm. Depew was at Warsaw, 3 Monday, on business. S —1 lb. mixed choclates Saturday f for 29c, at the Quality Drug Store. ■ Mr. and Mrs. Otis C. Butt were at I Goshen, Monday, I —Launer’s Restaurant is prepared to serve short orders at any time. —New Ginghams and Percales for Spring at A. W. Strieby and Son. —Buy a Miller safe of Rothenberger and save your valuable papers. Mrs. W. H. Coblentz went to Gary last Wednesday and returned Thursday. z —A lot of new pianos just received at the Furniture Store, the price is $175.00. W. T. Colwell is absent this week on a business trip through northern Indiana. —Bargains in Ladies Coats that are real genuine bargains. A. W. Strieby & Son. i Wm. Mault spent a few days in ’ Cromwell last week with his mother, | who has the La Grippe. , FOR Sale—A good single top bug- > gy. Enquire of Warren Eagles, at > Star Clothing Store. $ Sam Gantz of Elkhart visited his J brother, Jacob, at the Jerry Hami mond home, Sunday. ? The Misses Violet and Vera O’dell , returned to Elkhart Sunday after a 1 two days visit with their parents. j Mrs. Dan Wogaman is spending J a few days with her daughter, Mrs. j Jess Darr. > —Twice as much wear means half > as much cost, “by using our hot- ! water bottles you get it” Quality. • Roscoe Howard and Millard » Hentzell have gone to South Bend ■ where they will enter a business » college. J One of the horses used by Howard ’ Bowser in putting up ice plunged > into the lake last week and was res- > cued after some difficulty. • - Mrs. Alice Hontz received word I from Elkhart that her brother. Del- » bert Sulser and wife are both down I sick at their home. I Miss Frances Wogaman of ElkI hart, spent a few days here last ’ week with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. I EdWogoman. 1 Another dance will be given at ; the Hotel Holton, Friday night. The 1 music secured two weeks ago was , popular and a larger crowd is expected this week. • Wnu Bowlds has rented a house and nine acres of Aground a half mile north of Syracuse and will tnove there with his family about ; March Ist. “Billy” will only be a ' farmer in the evening and will re--1 tain his position in Seider & Burg- ' ener’s grocery. , A mail pouch was ground under I the wheels of the train it was > pitched off last Thursday morning i and most of the contents destroyed. I The Goshen papers and farm magai zines were in the pouch and only , three or four of them were recov- ! ered. A pieced quilt was in the » pouch and was mutilated. » —“Get your principles right,” says • Napoleon “and the rest is a mere » matter of detail.” When the He-Mi- > La people first started to make can- » dies they followed Napoleon’s advice. [ and ever since they have been ham- » mering away at “purity —purity—- [ purity.” And this very fact is the • reason that nearly every one insists » on He-Mi-La candies today. » The world is to be reproduced in > miniature next May and June in > Chicago, and more than twenty > thousand Chicagoans are preparing > to impersonate- people of other na- • tions in The World in Chicago Ex- > position, which is to be held in the • great Coliseum and the famous > Auditorium Theatre, from May 3rd • to June 7th. It will be the most » novel, beautiful and attractive Ex- • position ever given in the Coliseum. • the scene of Horse Shows, Food > Shows, Land Shows, Automobile f and many other expositions.
I Mrs. Otis C. Butt is ill. I —Boys two-piece underwear for 25 ’ cents a suit. AW. Strieby & Son. —Anyone wanting hair-switches wove, call on Mrs. M. A. Benner. Mr. and Mrs. C. I. Bender went to South Bend Monday. Aldean Strieby attended the automobile show at Chicago last week. —The quality of Chi-Namel is high- '• er than its price. Sold at the Quality Drug Store. Geo. L. Xanders spent Sunday with a former class-mate at Misha- • waka. Mrs. Wm. Twomey of Plymouth, ; is visiting with her sister. Mrs. Dan Wolfe. I Mr. and Mrs. Ed Miles went to Indianapolis Friday for a visit with Geo. Miles and family. Mr. and Mrs. T. A. Brainard will go to Hillsdale, Mich.. Friday for several days visit. Miss Lizzie Wetzel of Archbald, Ohio, is visiting her sister, Mrs. Fred Hoch. ; Mr. and Mrs. Isaiah Garber of North Webster and Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Yoder spent Sunday at Bert Niles. Mr. and Mrs. S. C. Lepper attended the funeral of the former’s brotherinlaw which was held in Chicago, Sunday. Kendallville will have a local option election in about a month. The town has been wet for two years. —G. E. Miller, the new photographer will be here Friday. Let him take your picture, either on a post card or cabinet. Two assistant train masters have been appointed and stationed at Bremen to take care of the increased freight business of the B. &O. —J. Whiting has established a pressing and cleaning room in the rear of Hoffman’s Jewelry store. Mr. Whiting. —For Sale. 6 room house 50x159 foot lot, bargain for cash. Inquire of Mrs. Madison, 2224 Giddings Ave. Chicago, 111. t.f. Mrs. H. G. Young, a former and well remembered resident of Syracuse, is quite ill, *e are informed, i at her home in Akron. Peritonitis < is threatened. < Those who took dinner with Mr. 1 , and Mrs. Geo. Juday Tuesday were Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Darr and two 1 daughters, Ruth and Esther, of Go- 1 shen, Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Colwell, and ■ Mrs. John Darr. Mrs. Otto Longsworth, of Indianapolis, who has been visiting with ; her parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. E. ] Fisher, and sister, Mrs. Jas. Isbell, j for the past week returned to her ( home Tuesday. * , Mrs. Boomersbine, who two weeks ago underwent an operation for ( hernia in Dr. Ferguson’s hospital, re- ] tureed to day to her home at Nap- J panee, having sufficiently recovered 1 to permit of the trip.—Bremen En- ’ quire. Miss Annabelle Mygrant and Mrs. j F. J. Trunck of Toledo, Ohio, Mr. 1 and Mrs. M. G. Mygrant of South f Bend, and Mr. and Mrs. Edward ‘ Oberlin of Auburn, were guests , Sunday at the home of Rev. and j Mrs. Mygrant. . . Edward Unrue, who occupies the '■ Thompson farm, just south of town < will move to a farm 8 miles west 1 of Warsaw. Die farm he vacates will be taken by Wm. Gaver, who 1 now lives two miles and a half this side of Cromwell. J t Last Thursday afternoon the Retta i Jones Wawasee Union met at the 'j home of Mrs. Wm. Gaver—with a s large attendance, quite of t ladies from the Cromwell Union t being present and a very interesting j meeting was held. Delicious re- } freshments were served and the t meeting adjourned to meet with Mrs. Milton Woods, Feb. 13. Subject, “A Swarming of the Scripture Bees.” j —The word “He-Mi-La” means more for its size than any other word you can think of. Itissynonomous with ( “Purity” but expresses even more. ( It tells that the sweetmeat on which it appears is particularly toothsome, because it was made under sanitary * conditions and of the best of mater- : ials. "He-Mi-La” means all this I just because the people who make I He-Mi-La candies were never sat- j isfiied with making anything but the ■ best. I
Oo’s Your Tailor? Why not select your EASTER I Clothes Today? J Ot course you will want to be correctly and distinctly attired on March 23rd. Then you’d better see the woolens just received from ED. V. PRICE & CO., Merchant Tailors, Chicago. and let us send them your accurate measurements. TODAY! You have our guarantee that the clothes will please you beyond any cus-tom-taitored clothes you ever wore at any price. $lB to SSO The Star Clothing Store. I J. U. WINGARD, Proprietor. Exclusive Local Dealer
OUR TRIPJO_ FLORID*. Mrs. Neff and myself boarded No. 16, for Tampa, Florida, via Cincinnati, Nashville, Birmingham, Pensacola and etc. As we proceeded through Tennessee, Alabama and Florida, we were much impressed at the infertility of the soil and swim information gathered by observation and by persons, concluded ihat the common southern farmer has to figure pretty close to 1 meet his fertilize bills and etc. The plantation owner is more fortunate in that negroes do his farming. The landlord exacting 300 lb. of cotton from each squatter on about 20 acres of land. Arriving at Tampa, Union R. R. j Station, we were met by Mr. and ■ Mrs. A. O. Haney who seemed over- i joyed to see Hoosiers and whoj seemed to work overtime to make' our stay in Tampa a pleasant one. Tampa a modern hustling city of 60,000 inhabitants, with 80 miles paved streets, 12 banks, 3 trunk lineß. R., 9 steam ship lines, a weekly pay roll of $250000 and interurban car lines etc. As to praising the climate it is like making love to a widow (it can’t be overdone) each day is about like the day before similar to opr May j and fine weather and it is probably j as healthy as this country. While they have some ague and fever they | have no LaGrippe and not much I rheumatism. I also learned that Tampa ranks high as to its evenness of plimate That is its six months winter temperature average is but 10 degrees lower than the summer temperature average. The people of Tampa are as a rule sociable and accomodating, in fact, the northern tourist is a strong business asset to the merchants of Tampa and it seemed to us that the southerner was quite ambitious in two particulars viz: to “skin” a northern man and to get an office and from observation conclude that his ambition is being gratified to an extent at least. Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Neff. —Home-baked pies for 20 cts at Launers. Teeth filled, crowned and extracted absolutely without pain. Dr. Cunningham, Goshen.
J. W. ROTHENBERGER : Uudeirtaker : SYRACUSE, « IN©.
DO YOU KNOW THAT Every minute twenty-one persons are accidentally injured/ Every five minutes one person is accidentally killed. Over 11,000,000 are killed or injured yearly, about 30,C00 each day,. Five times as many persons are killed and injured each year as die from natural causes. (Government statistics) . . NOW IS THE TIME to get that Accident & Health policy frorn Bu*t and Xanders, in the PRUDENTIAL CASUALTY m'- NY SI.OO, $1.25 and $1.50 per .. nth you. 1 BUTT & XANDERS, AGTS. 5>y < use Indiana, I THE BEST GAS MADE I is the way they speak of the I Tiis Grau & FairbanKsMorsc 1 I ■-ENG IN E-- | This is a smooth running, M easy starting engine that is known through the country for B 9 its superior running qualities. |j | THE STOVER FEED GRII I with power attachmen t will B lighten the labor of the | J. V. ROTHENBERGER f ? UNDERTAKER / i 5 Prompt and Efficient Service / £ 6 Phones 90 and 12X A m Cushion tired Ambulance t
