The Syracuse Journal, Volume 7, Number 35, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 31 December 1914 — Page 3
tat ,»»»<<»>>>*<<»♦•♦»♦»»♦♦»*' '‘ ' ! < > < • WE WISH < > : Every friend and patron of this Store A HAPPY AND PROSPEROUS c NEW YEAR < > < > ’ «• » ■ > >■ - < ■ : SEIDER & BURGENER j | Be Neat . j I Keep your clothes neat—it will pay < £ , you well. Let us call for your suit < every weeN and deliver it to your < home, neatly pressed and cleaned if | ♦ you say so. < o Our prices are very reasonable ask < j[ us about the suit olub. 1 ;[ CLEANING < o 4 !l PRESSING 1 o < ;; , REPAIRING < ;; Clyde E. Sensibaugh < 'O < < J Over Klink’s Meat Market. 1 *' ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ ♦ I J. w. ROTHENBERGER I I UNDERTAKER Prompt and Efficient ervice i Phones 90 and 121 Cushion tired Ambulance in connection ; twrWQMSStmjgWSSMPMMMWMiMSWSWBWSBttBBWMWtMWWrdtWBMBWBWW: 1 I4IWWMWMWBmw«WWW«WMBKaWIBnrawWWMWaWW»WWBr<-r MMRMBMRMMRWMHHHBMWaMMMMHi' MMMMBMMK <Mfa aaBMMMrafIBMK • Gilo Drau and Baaoaoe Line We are prepared to do your work promptly and with special care. Give us a trial. J. EDGAR RIPPEY PHONE 118 I i FRESH. CLEAN MEATS | & & & Await you at our market at all times, i You will find the jt.iciest cuts and the | tenderest pieces here. We also handle smoked and dried meats and a general line of canned meats. KLINK BROS. MEAT MARKET :
OVER 65 YEARS* EXPERIENCE ■wyggfrSl B , J --I y |L_ J * y <jsKjßj a * « S g| . ■ <‘Bfejs ■ §1 ■! k ■ B"®> a >-jgtaa HafjttJLjß^|g |£lp Trade Marks Designs Copyrights &c. „ Anyone sending a sketch and description may •" quietly ascertain our opinion free whether an invention is probably patentable. Communications strictly confidential. HANDBOOK on Patents sent free. Oldest agency for securing patents, Patents taken through Munn & Co. receive special notice, without charge, in the Scientific American. A handsomely illustrated weekly. I.argest dreolation of any scientific Journal. Terms. 13 a year; four months, ft Sold by all newsdealers.
B. &0. Time I able. EAST W WEST No. 16—12:44 p. m No. 17—6:19 a. tn No. 8— 2:05 p. in No. 15 —4:40 a. m No. 18 — 7:35 p.m No. 11—2:20p.m No. 6— 8:45 p. in No. 7—1 :45 p. in No. 14 due at 1:03, No. 10 due atl 1:00 and No. 12, due at 9:iß. Teeth filled, crowned and extracted absolutely without pain. Dr. Cunningham, Goshen. Store your houshold goods at, Beckmans.
; Events of the Year 1914 Reviewed and Classified •• z ;• o o o The Games and Social Record of Deaths of Not-< • <! and Political Doings of ed People All Over o Twelve Months. the World. o ♦ z ♦ _i _ c
MARCH. 21. Field Marshal Sir John French, chief ■ of staff of the British army, resigned | as a protest against the coercion ot Ulster SI. House of representatives voted tor the ; Panama canal tolls repeal, 247 to 163 i APRIL. 7. Treaty between United States and Co- ; lombia signed at Bogota. British House of commons passed the | home-'iule bill by a vote of 356 to 276 MAY 7. Eleanor Wilson, daughter of the president. married in the White House to William Gibbs McAdoo 27. Colombian senate approved the treaty with the United States. JUNR. 15. Panama tolls exemption repeal bill became a law 21. The noted U; itish general. Lord Kitchener, created an earl by King George V 24. The reconstructed Kiel canal opened by the German emperor. William 11. AUGUST 5. Treaty between United States and Nicaragua secured the United States the right to construct a canal through Nicaragua. 13. United States senate ratified peace treaties with Norway, Netherlands. Portugal, Switzerland. Denmark. Italy. Salvador, Guatemala. Honduras. Nicaragua. Bolivia, Persia, Costa Kica. Venezuela, Uruguay. Argentina. Brazil and Chile. SEPTEMBER 3. Cardin,al Giacomo Della Chiesa elected supreme pontiff to succeed Pius X. 4, D. J. palmer of low>a elected com-
James Gordon Ben- ’ nett.
mander in chief of the G. A. R at Detroit 10. James Gordon Bennett, pr o - prletor ot the New York Herald. married in Paris to Baroness de Reuter. Turkey abolished conventions, treaties and privileges protecting foreigners in the empire. 15. Peace treaties between the United States and Great Britain. France. Spain and China signed at Washington,
17. United States warned Turkey that rights of her citizens must be respect- ' ed by the Ottoman government. 18. Irish home rule bill became a law in Great Britain. 24. Rustem Bey, Turkish ambassador to , the United States, left his post on account of hostile criticism of this coun1 try. I OCTOBER. i U. Ferdinand, nephew of the late King Charles, ascended throne of Roumania. 22. War tax bill became a law. NOVEMBER. 16 Dr. Anna Shaw re-elected president ot National Woman Suffrage association 17. Miss Annie A. Gordon elected president of the W. C. T, U. DECEMBER. ; 7. Third and final session of the 63d congress met. 15. United States cabinet declared that the neutrality of the Panama canal zone would be enforced. FEBRUARY 12. First cold wave of the season in the east; zero weather in New York city; 50 below at Big Moose, N. Y. 23. Culmination of floods in southern California, accompanied by several deaths and a property loss of $4,500,000 JUNE. . 15. Terrific thunderstorm in Paris caused a loss of life and great damage to property. Sewers and subway were flooded and 'chasms opened in the streets. JULY. 1. Mount Shishaldin, Alaska, burst out In volcanic eruption. SEPTEMBER. 7. Phenomenal rainfall followed by flood at Kansas City. Mo. Seven inches fell in 11 hours; loss $1,500,000. • OCTOBER. 15. Rain broke drought of 7 weeks' duration. DECEMBER. 15. Intense cold wave prevailed. FIRES i MARCH. i 9. In a Are which destroyed the Missou- . ri Athletic clubhouse. St. Louis. 30 peri sons perished. I 12. Loss of nearly $1,000,000 by the burning of the Columbia docks at Portland, Ore. APRIL. 3. Fire In St. Augustine, Fla., destroyed the courthouse and several hotels and residences; loss. $500,000 to $750,000. MAY. 25. Fire in Cleveland. 0.. caused loss of $1,000,000. JUNE. 26. Fire In Salem, Mass., caused a loss of about $12,060,000 ; 20,000 people made homeless. NOVEMBER. 11. Plant of the American Window Glass company at Jeannette. Pa., burned loss $1,000,000. - ■ DECEMBER. 1. Flames on the steamship Mississippi destroyed art objects in transit from Europe valded at $1,000,000 9. Nearly the whole of Thomas A. Edison’s plant .in West Orange. N. J., destroyed; loss $7,000,000. 12. Flames in Birmingham, Ala., caused a loss of $420,000.
NECROLOGY } JANUARY. 1 4. Dr. Silas Weir Mitchell, distinguished nerve specialist, also novelist of note, in Philadelphia; aged 85 8. General Simon Bolivar Buckner, noted Confederate leader in the civil war, I and Mexican war veteran, at Munfordville, Ky.; aged 80. i 14. Count Yukyo Ito, noted Japanese fleet admiral, at Tokyo; aged 71. • 15. General Louis Wagner, noted Federal war veteran, head of the G. A. R.. ISSO-Sl, in Philadelphia; aged 76. 28. Former 0 United States Senator Shelby Moore Cullom of Illinois; aged 84. 31. General Janies Adams Beaver, civil war veteran and ex-governor of Pennsylvania. at Bellefonte, Pa.; aged 77 FEBRUARY. 13. Alphonse Bertillon. originator ot system of criminal identification.__at Paris; aged 60. 15- 3 Dr Roswell Park, authority on cancer, who attended the late President McKinley on his deathbed, in Buffalo," .N. Y.; aged 62. 16. Viscount Aokl, noted Japanese states- . man, formerly ambassador to the . United States, in Tokyo; aged 70. / 17 Mrs. Robert Louis Stevenson, widow of the noted author, in Montecito, Cal 23 Former United States Senator Henry M. Teller of Colorado, at Denver; aged 84. MARCH. 1 Said Pasha, noted Turkish statesman, premier under Sultan Abdul Hamid, at Constantinople; aged 84. & George W. Vanderbilt, millionaire. In Washington; aged 52. 9. Edward H. Butler, noted editor, proprietor of the Buffalo News, in Buffalo; aged 64. 11. George Westinghouse, inventor of the railway air brake and other devices, in New York city; aged 68. 25. Frederic Mistral, French Provencal poet, winner of a Nobel prize, at Mailiane, France; aged 84. 81. Sir Hubert von Herkomer, famous German artist, resident of the United States in the fifties, in London; a.ged 65 \ / APRIL. \ I 1 Paul Heyse. author and dramSnlst, awarded Nobel prize in 1910, in Munich; aged 84. 4. Frederick Weyerhaeuser, Michigan lumber king, reputed to be worth $500,000,000, at Pasadena, Cal.; aged 80 8. Cy tVarman. poet and author, in Chicago; aged 59. 15. George Alfred Townsend (Gath), newspaper and magazine writer, in New York city; aged 73. MAY. / . 8. Gen. Daniel Sickles, U. b. a., retired, noted Federal corps commander and a
Gen. Sickles.
Gettysburg hero, in N e w York city; aged 93. 10. Mme. Lillian Nordica, noted • singer, f at Batavia, island ot Java: aged 55. 26. Francis Kossuth, son of the great Hungarian patriot. Louis Kossuth, in Budapest. Hungary; aged 73. 26. Jacob A. Riis, author and reformer, at Barre, Mass.; aged 65. JUNE. 7. Theodore Watts-
Dunton, poet, novelist and critic, in London; aged 82. 13. Adlai Ewing Stevenson, vice president of the United States 1893-7. in Chicago: aged 79. U. Baroness Bertha von Suttner, Austrian writer on peace and' winner ot the Nobel peace prize In 1906, in Vienna; aged 71. JULY. 2. Rt. Hon. Joseph Chamberlain, noted figure in British politics and industries, in London; aged 78. 12. Associate Justice Horace Harmon Lurton of the United States supreme court, at Atlantic City, N. J.; aged 70 AUGUST. 8. Mrs. Woodrow Wilson (Ella Louise Axson), wife of President Wilson, at the White
tj u 25 Mrs. Wilson.
29. Gen. S. S. Burdett, civil war veteran and former national chief of the G A. R„ in England; aged 78. OCTOBER. 10. King Charles of Roumania, consort of Carmen Sylva; aged 75. NOVEMBER. 1. Gen. A. R. Chaffee, U. S. A., retired, veteran of the civil and Spanish American wars, at Los Angeles. Cal., aged 72. 4. F. A. Heinze, the "copper king,” al Saratoga Springs. N. Y. 6. ProfT August Weissman, celebrate<L?o ologiSt, at F>eiburg, Germany; aged 19. Rev. Robert J. Burdette, former hu morist. author and lecturer, in Lus Angeles, Cal.; aged 71. 20. Vinnie Ream Hoxie, noted sculptress in Washington; aged 65 25. Col. R. B Beath, noted veteran In G. A. R. circles. In Philadelphia aged 74 DECEMBER 1. Rear Admiral A. T. Mahan. U. S. N . ■trategist and writer, in Washington, aged 74. 10. Sereno E. Payne, noted congressman, author of the Payne-Aldrich tarifl bill, in Washington; aged 71,
Shop in Syracuse
FEBRUARY. 3. Willie Hoppe for the 18.2 balk line billiard championship ’ by a seme of 500 to 226 in 17 innings, defeating George Sutton at Hotel Astor. New York. MARCH. 18. Jay Gould won world's court tennis o championship, defeating George F. Covey at Lakewood. N. J., by 7 sets to 1 20. Champion Willie Hoppe defeated George Sutton in an 18.1 inch billiard championship match in New York. APRIL. 14. Opening of baseball season of 1914 MAY. 26. Buskin won the Metropolitan handicap at Belmont park. 27. Durbar IL, an American ow-ned horse, won the British Derby at Epsom Downs. 28. Francis Ouimet. American open goit champion, won the amateur ctiampionship of France at Versailles. JUNB. 11 Mary Browne and Mrs. Robert Williams won the women's double tennis championship at Philadelphia; score. 8-6. 6-2. 16. English polo team won the prize cup, defeating the American team 4 to 2% at Meadowbrook, N. Y. 19. Yale won the varsity eight, defeating Harvard 1-5 second at New London, Conn 23. Buckhorn defeated Buskin in the Brooklyn handicap by "the very narrowest of margins" on the Aqueduct course. New York. 26. Columbia crew won the varsity race at Poughkeepsie, leaving Pennsylvania second and Cornell third, time. 19 minutes 37 4-5 seconds. 28. Sardanaple won the Grand Prix de Paris, the turf classic of France, at Paris, with a purse of $60,000 X The Harvard crew defeated the British Leander crew in a rowing race at T Henley. England 4 Harvard oarsimn won the Grand ' Challenge cup rowing event at Hen ley, England. 7. Freddie Welsh of Wales won the lightweight championship of the world at Olympia. London, defeating Willie Ritchie, the American champion, in -0 rounds 16. Gunboat Smith lost to Georges Car pentier in a boxing bout in London in the 6th round by a foul ‘ AUGUST 12. Peter Volo made world's record at i Kalamazoo, Mich., by defeating The I Harvester's time for three heats I made in 1910 Peter Volo s time. 2:04 2.06% and 2:06%. 31. Directum 1 made world's record by pacing second and third heats in 2 minutes flat at Syracuse SEPTEMBER 5. Francis Ouimet won the amateur golt championship by defeating Jerome D Travers, 6 up, 5 to play, at Manches ter, Vt. 29. National baseball league pennant clinched for Boston club at Nev York, the Pittsburgh Pirates defeatin.: the New York Giants. 30. Directum 1 made a world's record by pacing first mile in 1:58 in competition ‘ OCTOBER ' 9. World's ’ baseball series opened tn Philadelphia; Boston Nationals defeat ed American Athletics, 7 to 1. 10. Boston Nationals defeated American Athletics, 1 to 0 in Philadelphia. 12. Boston Nationals won third game in
world's series, score, 5 to 4, in Boston. Henry Gowdy is credited with saving the game for Bostons by heavy batting in a crisis. 13. Boston Nationals defeated American Athletics in ! * fourth and deciding game of the world's seres; score 3 to 1. 21. Directum 1 made record by pacing a milb in '2:01 >4 at Grand Rapids. | Mich. 24. Syracuse defeated Michigan 20 to 6 in an Intersectional match at Syracuse.
30. Alfredo De Oro defeated George Moore for the three cushion b/yiard championship by 50 to 35 InXew York. 31. Harvard beat Michigan 7 to 0 ’n an. intersectional football contest at Boston. Chicago and Wisconsin tied, 0 to 0. at ’Madison, Wis. Illinois defeated Minnesota 21 to 6 at Minneapolis NOVEMBER. 7. Football: Michigan defeated Pennsylvania 34 to 3at Ann Arbor Vale de- ' seated Brown 14 to 6 at New Haven Harvard beat Princeton 20 to 0 at Cambridge 14. Illinois beat Chicago 21 to 7 in a crucial game of football at Urbana, 11l Yale defeated Princeton at football 19 to I’4 at Princeton, N. J. 21. Six day bicycle race in New York won by the Australian team. Goullet and Grenda. Distance, 2,758 miles 1 lap; time, 142 hours. Previous record, 2.751 miles Harvard scored 36 and Yale 0 at football game at New Haven a, Hannes Kolehmainen ran six miles across country in 36 minutes 47 seconds in Brooklyn. N Y. Illinois defeated Wisconsin in conference foot- ; fall contest at Madison. Wis,, 24 to 9. i 28. Army defeated the Navy at football ■ on Franklin Field, Philadelphia, 20 to 0 ; DECEMBER 30. National junior indoor championship | contests In New York. | DIS «■ TE3S AT SEA j j > aXUaHT. 2). Cat l>o::i.ni> '• dner Monroe sunk by I f >t ision of t'.e Virginia capes v,’itli t Joss of 41 lives APRIL. 28 Steamer Benjamin Noble lost in a storm on Lake Superior; crew of 20 ; drowned MAY 28. Steamship Empress ot Ireland rammed 1 and sunk by the collier Storstad of: I Father Point, gulf of St Law re me I Out pf 1.476 on board. 452 were saved j 1,024 drowned MPTEMBSR. 18. 21 drowned “by the sinking ot the Canadian government steamer Mom mag ny in collision with the collier Lmgai> in St. Lawrence river 9 72 deaths in wreck of schooner Fran cis H Leggett off the Oregon coast south of Columbia river NOVEMBER. 18 24 lives lost on Lake Superior by wreck of steamship C. F. Curtis and two schooners during a storm.' 24 18 deaths in the wrecking of the seboonor Hanale! on Duxbury reef Cal. DECEMBER. 12 Dutch steamship Bangor wrecked on Portuguese coast; 25 reported drown- i ed.
House; aged 51 ules Lernaitre. French dramatist, poet and novelist. In Par is; aged 61. John P. Holland, inventor of the Holland submarine boat, ’in Newark, N J.; aged 72. Pope Pius X (Giuseppe Sarto). in the’ Vatican, Rome; aged 79. Rear Admiral Herbert Winslow. U. S. N. retired, at Flor ence, Italy ; aged 66.
SUNDAY SCHOOL / Lesson I.—First Quarter, For Jan. 3, 1915. THE INTERNATIONAL SERIES.! Text of the Lesson, Judg. it, 7-19. Memory Verses, 11, 12—Golden Text, ! Hos. xiv, 4—Commentary Prepared by Rev. D. M. Stearns. The lessons of this year begin with five studies in the book of Judges, ! showing the failure of Israel. Gods intervention and man's faithlessness. Every deliverer whom God raised up was in some sense suggestive of the great Deliverer, the Lord Jesus Christ, and : each one wrought in the power of the Holy Spirit. Joshua tells of the en- ! I trance of Israel into the promised land and its subjugation and division among the tribes, ending with Joshua’s fare- | well appeal to Israel to tear the Lord I and serve Him in sincerity and in truth ’ trad the determination of the people sc j t<» do (Josh, xxlv, 14, 24). One of his grandest farewell words was when he I reminded the people that not one thing i had failed of all the good things which | the Lord had spoken (Josh, xxiil. 14). See the same blessed testimony in 1 Kings, viii, 56, and let each one lay it i to heart for his own special comfort. ■ The section assigned us for this day’s | lesson is a concise epitome of the book of Judges, telling of Israel’s persistent : I turning away from God and of His i great patience with them. David sum- 1 imarlzed the record in these words: I "Many times did He deliver them, but j they vrovoked Him with their counsel : and were brought low for their Inlquii ty. Nevertheless He regarded their afi tliction when He beard their cry" (I*9. > cvl, 43, 44; Ixxviil, 38). Paul summaI rized Joshua and Judges in these words; i "When He had destroyed seven nations i in the laud of Canaan He divided their ■ i land to them by loj. And after that He ■ gave unto them judges about the space I of 450 years until Samuel the prophet’* (Acts xiil, 10, 20). The first chapter of Judges tells how tribe ijfter tribe had failed to drive out the people of the land as they had been commanded, and our lesson chapter opens with the Lord's reproof for this sin, saying: “Ye'have not obeyed my voice. Why have ye doue this?” (Verse 2.) Our lesson begins by telling us that while Joshua lived and also during the lifetime of the elders that outlived Joshua the people served the Lord. The Lord and even one man can lead a host of people in the right direction, ; Think of the worldwide testimony to the God of Daniel by the faithfulness of himself and his three friends. See H Chron. xvi. 9, and desire above all things a whole heart for Him. The next' lesson verses tell of the death and burial of Joshua, and these three verses (7-9) are identical with Josh, xxlv, 29-31. When the Spirit repeats words He thus asks special attention to them. The vbords that specially hold me are “Joshua the servant of the Lord” and “The people served the Lord" and make me wish to appropriate more fully the beautiful heart words “Whose 1 am and whom I serve” (Acts xxvli, 23). Joshua ends with the burial of two other bodies, those of Joseph after so long a time and Eleazar, the son of Aaron. Bodies are buried, but people go on living better without them (if redeemed) until the time of the resurrection bodies. How pitiful to read of*“a generation which knew not the Lgrd” (verse 10), and they the descendants of a people for whom the Lord wrought as He had never wrought for any other nation! They forsook the Lord God of their fathers, did evil in His sight and worshiped rhe idols of the nations which should have been destroyed by them, for the Lord had said, “Thou shalt make no covenant with them nor shew mercy unto them, * * * for thou art an holy people unto the Lord thy God. * * * a special people unto Himself above all people that are upon the face of the earth” (Dent, vii, 2 th. Such sowing brings sad reaping according to lesson verses 14, 15: chapter ; iii, 5-8, 12, 13, and records in chapters i following of similar turnings t from God. ; A very odd thumbs and toes story ot ; , sowing and reaping is found in chapter !i, 6,7. The principle always stands, j “Whatsoever a man soweth that shall ' he also reap” (Gal. vi, 7). Nevertheless ; the Lord raised up judges, who delivered them, for the Lord was with the ■ judge (Verses 16, 18; chapter iii. 9. 15). i We should think that the Lord would i grow weary of forgiving and delivering : a people whom He knew would after a time commit the same sins again, but He is the same Lord who told Peter to forgive until seventy times seven, i or until the end of Daniel’s seventyI sevens, which means the coming of the I kingdom. I They would not hearken unto their 1 judges; they turned quickly out of the way; they ceased not from their own doings nor from their stubborn way (verses 17, 19). Long afterward it was written of them, “Their doings will not suffer them to turn unto their God” (Hos. v, 4, margin). In the days of their kings they mock- i ed the messengers of God and despised His words and misused His prophets (II Chron. xxxvl, 16). and when the Messiah came in the fullness of time they crucified Him. Yet He said: "How > often would I, * • * but ye would not.” I “O Israel, thou hast destroyed thyself, i ' but in Me is thine help.” “1 will heal > i their backsliding; 1 will love them freely” (Matt, xxiil, 37; Hos. xili. 9: xiv, 4», (To be continued—) —Good clean Salt at Kindig & Co. ’
Gowdy. college / football
J. W. ROTHENBERGER : Undertaker : SYRACUSE, : : IND.
5 per cent. Guar nteed on savings Accov ts orO rtiticates and Interest Compounded Quarterly from day of Depos , at tl e ■ Home Savings &! o; i flssoe. I 67 N. Broadway, Pen . Indiana. Write today for full i- formation i The Wlnoi a imoruiM Ri. Go. j Effective Sunday Sep 13, ’l4. Time of arrival m 1 departure of trains at Milft d Junction, Ind. SOUTH N( RTH +7:11 a. m. 8:0 a. m. x7:57 “ 8:0 “ ! - 9.00 “ 10:0 “ 11:00 “ Hl:3 “ +1:00 p. m. 1:0 p. m. x*2:oo “ >:() “ 3:00 “ 1:0 “ 5.00 “ 5:0 “ x6:00 ” J:l “ 7:00 ■' 7 :0 “ 9.00 “ “ x 11:24 “ ):I “ I | t Winoivi Fly r< h trains | | between Goshen li. napolis. i ! * Daily except ih. 1 x Runs to \Vji: >n ■ W. I) SI >1 R j g. f .; 1 a* w, Ind I EARNEST \RT A" 4 W ; <3l ’ Jrl •F • - ' W < ' PUBLIC AUCTION ER A worthy successor to Li coin Cory See Geo. 0. Snyder (it th Journal office for jlales ' Horse an 1 Automobile I ivery Good equipages f >r every occasion. Reasonable >ricesfor drives anywhere. Ha< < service to the depot Fare 10 Genu Ea h Way HENRY-SNOBfI TGER Barn on Main Street Phone 5 4m. Hill— —— *■ MMIMBI- •—V .■WBMBMMBMBM—k■ 0 M. MA NL Y, WARSAW, IND ANA Abctractsof Titi-«tc eal Estate. You >an ave money by sending me your orders. i Orders May > I ft at | Syracuse Si > I ink 1 N n!■ - .»— . w I JJL BC Eh Physician ai ui eon Tel, 85— Oftiict 1 sidence Suraciw id AUCTIC 0 £R Cal. L. : man Phone 535, Ner ai e, Ind. l r ou can call n uj without expei B UTT & JERS Attorneys-ai-L v Practice in all Courts Money to Loan. Fire ce. | Phone 7 SYRACU- R, IND. Ladies! —Careful cleaning ar pressing will be given your mit i taken to Richhart, over Klink’- Me Market J. M. SHAFF 1R Chiropractic r Will be in Syracuse, Monday j and Thursday, from 5u itil 9. I —Let Richhart do vou pressing ! and cleaning. Work and 'rices are 1 right. Over Klink’s me: market —See the new Furnitm » arriving daily at Beckman’s Store.
