The Syracuse Journal, Volume 17, Number 29, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 13 November 1924 — Page 8
' Classified Ads • o J * Classified advertising is ac- * J < ► eepted at the rate of 5 cents Z ' * a line for each insertion. A < * * [ booking and collection fee of J k < > 10 cents will be added tor a < ► < ’ cahrged account: no account <► J > will be charged for less than ’, < > 25 cents for a single item. < • *9 »»»»♦'» FOR SALE—Pigs eight weeks old. Telephone 2613. 29-1 FOR SALE—Clover hay. Inquire at State Bank of Syracuse. 29-ts. FOR SALE OR RENT—My ten acre farm 2. miles from town. James Rothenberger, Phone 847. 28-3 p LOST—Shell rim glasses in case, somewhere between Bert Searfoss home and Syracuse or in Syracuse. Finder phone 268. I 29-1 ~TABLE SCARFS—A full line of silk and tapestry table scarfs just arrived at Beckmann’s store. 28-ts ~FOR SALE-Will sell my Ford coupe, Auburn roadster, or Ford runabout on payments of $25.00 cash and $25.00 monthly without interest. Ellwood George, Syracuse, Phone 150. 28-2 WANTED—Good young butcher cattle and fat hogs. Phone 843. H. E. fLeslie. 24-13tp. “FURNITURE POU SH-Have you tried the Wonder Polish at Beckmann's store? 28-ts 4. —. • STORAGE RbOM—For rent. Brick building. Elevator for taking in or removing goods. W. G. Connolly. ‘ 26-ts OLD PAPERS—Large bundle for 5c at the Journal office. PICTURE FRAMES* Have your pictures framed at Beckmann's Store. 25-ts. FOR SALE Complete set. I. C. S. textbooks on Electrical Engineering. $5.00. At the Journal office. ' 25-ts. FURNITURE- A large assortment of bed room and parlor suites will arrive at Beckmann's store next week. 28-tL FOR SALE The Amy Juday property on North Hitmtingfon street. This property will be sold in the next 90 days. Warren T. Colwell. ‘ 18-ts. GUARANTEED HOSIERY — Samples your size free to agents. Write for proposition paying $75.00 weekly full time, $1.50 an hour spare; time, selling guaranteed hosiery to wearer; must wear or replaced free. Quick sales, repeat orders? INTERNATIONAL STOCKING MILLS. Norristown, Pa. 27-10 p For sale bills go to the Journal office. - _ . a-. NOTICE Anyone needing light in chicken houses, sheds, barns, etc., can save inoney by buying used sash. For sale by 6 HALLIE HOLLOWAY BE WISE Get your nu painted now, at low fall price*, and protect it against winter weather. Prices right. Remember we handle quality low-prepuce tires. Denman-Myers Cord “The Tire With Toes.” Smith Bros. Co., v a SALES AND SERVICE sls 8. sth St. Phone $74 GOSHEN, INDIANA i Personal Engraved Christmas Cards Order now to insure delivery for the Christmas season. A wonderful aNsortment for your selection. F. N. HASKEL COMPANY GOSHEN, INDIANA Christmas Gifts That Please and Prices too Velocipedes Bicycles. Accessbrit* Harley-Davidson Motorcycles C. C. AMSLER the cy<;lb man N. Maia St S-fcCT, 11A.! Av =
I Goodrich Cord | ! Tire and Tube $9.75 | I HEDGES i * > £ 3 5
DELINQUENT ASSESSMENT SALE A list of lands and lots returned delinquent for the non-payment of the South Main Street Paving Assessment Roll, approved December 4 1923 and December 14. 1923. Town of Syracuse, Indiana, by the Board of {Trustees thereof, together with the interest on same and costs of this sale. NAME DESCRIPTION AMOUNT Elisabeth A. Weaver. West two-thirds of lot No. 113 in Dolan and Miles Add. to Town of Syracuse. $137.17 John G. Moore. Part of out-lot No. 1 in McConnel and Lapes Addition to Town of Syracuse. $219.58 Notice is hereby given that said lands and lots will be sold at public auction for such sums as may be necessary Oo discharge the paving assessment, interest and costs, at the office of the Town Treasurer, of the Town of Syracuse. Kosciusko County. Indiana, on the 59th day of November. 1924, Saturday, at 10 a. m. SOL MILLER. 29_3t. ' Treasurer Town of Syracuse.
INDIANA POTATO SHOW AT “AG” CONFERENCE A —■ Plans are complete for what promises to be the biggest potato show ever staged in the e>rn belt to be held January 12-16 at Purdue University under the auspices of the Indiana Vegetable Growlers Association and the Extension Department. SIOOO in premiums is offered to the boys and their heads. The show will be in connection with the farmers annual agricultural conference. Classes for commercial growers and farmers, who produce only enough for their own use have been ai ranged and substantial premiums are being offered for those entering exhibits at the shpw. Classes call for Irish Cobblers, Early Ohios, and Rural New Yorkers and Bull Moose varieties which have brought profitable yields to Indiana farmers. Nor have the boys been neglected for the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, the Indiana Potato Show .and Purdue are offering special trips and scholarships to the potato club members who make the best showing in their class f the show. Aside from the regu’ar show a section will be devoted exclus ively to certified"seed potatoes of all the varieties best suited to conditions. Certified potatoes from Michigan, Wisconsin. Minnesota and Kentucky as well as bred spuds from many sections of Indiana will be on display. A regular potato program is being arranged with •headliners who will give the latest potato information. While corn is King in Indiana, the Hoosier potato ranks high in quality and with a little attention has proved a profitable crop in every section of the state. Growers should make an effort both to exhibit and to attend the show and see what quality potatoes Indiana can produce. Exhibitors who cannot attend may send in potato exhibits and these will be placed free of charge by the management. --—-O ————■ . " Advertise in the Journal.
The Chew More punch than a pipe. Fine for fatigue and indi- / gestion—good for teeth 1 and gums. Over2soMillion Packages Sold in a Single Year Unvaryingly blended—flavored with the purest iagrcdier.H. all r Mrma and fragments removed. I jgMwa 1 10c u flattered every time it I I meets • package. f CHKWIMQ J Await you at our market at ail times. Yon will find the jutetest cuts and the tenderest pieces here. We also handle smoked aad dried meats aud a general line of canned meats. KLINK BROS. MEAT MARKET I
GASOLINE TAX LAW : UPHELD BY HIGH COURT Indianapolis, Nov. B.— Validity ■ of the state two-cent gasoline i tax law was upheld in the sup- : reme court Friday in affirming > i decision in favor of the statute ■ which was made by the St. Jo- > seph superior court in the suit i against the law brought by s Bruce Gafill, of South Bend. I The action of the supreme ■ court constitutes a w sweeping vic- . cary for state and constitutionality of the statute being upheld . on every count raised by the ob- . lectors. Attorney-General Lesh > wafuin charge of the law in both ! the rower and supreme court. !- The couit affirmed the action > of the lower court in sustaining . the demurrer of the state’s atI torneys to the complaint filed by ; attorneys' for Mr. Gafill. The opinion of the supreme court which was written by Judge Lewis B. Ewbank, in afj firming the constitutionality of the statute, said: r “The state has power to reguj late the business of selling gas- } oline and to levy a tax on all r gasoline sold for propelling au tomobiles upon highways of this t state." ' Charles C. Benjamin, head of p the gas tax division of the state auditor’s office said approximately $6,555,000 has been col'ected'under the law since it be- . came effective in June, 1923. The money goes to state road work. —o SWANS NOT SONGSTERS Swans have been favorites of people since ancient times. The Greeks called them the birds of • Apollo. There are two fine spe--1 cies of sw’ans in America—the ' Trumpeter and the whistler. ' They build their nests along the shores of 4 lakes and on islands, E from the Dakotas north to the Arctic regions. People used to ' believe that a swan sang but ■ once, and that was when it was dying. This .is not true. The > swans are great trumpeters/but they never ;si ng. The Journal 52 times a year (for $2.
THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL ~
The undersigned landowners hereby give notice that all hunting, both and night day, and all trespassing without permit upon the farms and farm lands owned bj? each of the undersigned, is strictly forbidden, and that all hunters and trespassers found thereon without special permit from the owner will be prosecuted. Trappers will be considered trespassers also. No further notice will be given and no leniency may be expected. A. A/KETRING, W. V. AUGSPURGER. R. E. DEWART. CLARENCE SNYDER. R. E. BEISWANGER. JESSE D. CORY. A. W. GEYER BEN COY. LEVI N KITSON. FRANK MALOY. JACOB E. KERN. ADA L. PFINGST. , D. R. ROSS. S. J. KINNEY. C. D. THOMPSON. CHARLIE SEARFOSS. S. A. MAST. SAM GRISSOM. A. H. BLANCHARD. C. J. KITSON. B. S. HOWE. WILLIAM DARR. , LEROY DARR. DAN LINGANFELTER. CRIST DARR. 29-2 p. PRESIDENT WILL ATTEND With the official announcement from Washington that President Coolidge has accepted their invitation to attend the Twenty-Fifth Anniversary of the International Live Stock Exposition. which will be celebrated at Chicago from November 29th to December 6th, the management of that famous show is preparing for the greatest gathering of agricultural people ever brought together in the history of the basic industry. This will be the first time that the Chief Executive of the United States has attended the “International,” the opening Con- , gress having always interferred, but the importance of this quar-ter-centennial event is deemed by President Coolidge to'be sufficient to justify his absence from the Capitol for a short period. Congress had previously recognized the unvsualness of the occasion by authorizing, at its last session, the issuance of official medals to be awarded by the United States Department of Agriculture to the principal yvinners stock competitions at the fuming show. GOOD SEEf) STOCK PAYS Gottieb Pfeefer, living northwest of Lafayette in Tippecanoe county, grew *BS bushels of real potatoes from three bushels of certified early Ohios and demonstrated to his own satisfaction that good seed stock pays. Pfeefer secured three bushels of certified potato seed from the Tippecanoe County Farm Bureau last spring. The Ohios cost $1.31 I a bushel. These he planted on a ! rich barn lot and gave them good (care throughout the growing season. At digging time he har- ’ vested 85 bushels or the largest i and best crop he had ever grown. Certified potato seed is the first big factor in bringing the farm potato patch back, Purdue potato specialists say. .—o ' • SECOND CROP OF CHERRIES Petersburg, Ind.. Nov. B.—Dr. O. A. Byers of this city is gathering a second crop of May cherries off four cherry trees in his yard in this city. The trees began blooming about six weeks ago for a second time this year and yesterday Dr. Byers began harvesting his second crop. o— DON'T RISK NEGLECT Don’t neglect a constant backache, sharp darting pains ofc urinary disorders. The danger of dropsy or Bright’s disease is too serious to ignore. Use Doan's Pills as have your friends and neighbors.' A Syracuse case: J. D. Pfingst, retired farmer. Washington St., says: “My back wasn’t strong and darting pains went through me when I moved suddenly. The steady ache in my back became worse when I exerted myself. Mornings I was sore in my muscles and limbs. , Sometimes the kidney secretions ] were too frequent ih passage, t then again they didn’t pass often ' enough. Doan's Pills from ’ Thornburg’s Drug Store, did . away with the backache and put my kidneys in good shape.” 60c, at all dealers. Foster-Mil-burn Co., Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y. ' —Advertisement. ■ i o Journal want-ads are invest < ments that pa< dividends.
NOTICE TO NON-RESIDENTS State of Indiana, Kosciusko County. as: In the Kosciusko Circuit < Court December Term. 1924. Edward H. Handley vs. Joseph Middleton, et al. Complaint No. 16127. Now comes the Plaintiff, by John H. Brubaker, his attorney, and files his complaint herein, together with an affidavit of a competent person that the residence upon diligent search and inquiry is unknown of the following named defendants, towlt: Joseph Middleton; Letecia Middletoif. wife or widow of Joseph Middleton: Lottecia Middleton; Middleton. husband or widower of Lottecia Middleton; Joseph Middleton; Lettecia Middleton, wife or widow of Joseph Middleton; Robert Shoemaker; -.Shoemaker, whose Christian name i§ unknown, wife or widow of Robert Shoemaker; Daniel Snyder; Almirah Snyder, wife or widow of Daniel Snyder; Daniel Snider; Almirah Snider, wife or widow of Daniel Snider; Ephraim S. Muirheid; Miram 'Muirheid, wife or widow of Ephraim S. Muirheid; George Warner; Warner, whose Christian name is unknown, wife or widow of George Warner; George W. Warner; Phebe B. Warner, wife or widow of George W. Warner; G. W. Warner, whose Christian name is unknown; P. B. Warner, whose Christian name is unknown: William. H. H. Nutter; Ellen Nutter, wife or widow of William H. H. Nutter; E. S. Muirheid. whose Christian name Is unknown; Muirheid whose Christian name is unknown, wife or w;idow of EL S. Muirheid; Alice (5. Humble; Sylvester F. Humble, husband or widower of Alice C. Humble; John Patterson Greer; .... .... Greer, whose Christian name is unknown, wife or widow of John Patterson Greer; John P. Greer; Greer, whose Christian name is unknown, wife or widow of John P. Greer; William, Wilkinson;Wilkinson, whose Christian name is unknown, wife or widow of William Wilkinson; Wm. H. H. Nutter, whose Christian ! name is unknown; Nutter, . whose Christian name is unknown. wife or widow ol Wm. H. H. Nutter; W. H. H. Nutter, whose Christian name is unknown; Sarah Ellen Nut- > tjr, wife or widow of W. H. H. Nutter; Sarah Elen Nutter;Nutter, whose Christian name is unknown, husband or widower of said Sarah Elen Nutter; Comadore Gar- ; ber; Laura E. Garber, wife or widow . of said Comadore Garber; Commodore Garber; Garber, whose Christian name is unknown, wife or widow of Commodore Garber; Isaac • Rea; Bertha M. Rea, wife or widow . of Isaac Rea; the unknown husbands and wives respectively; the unknown widows and widowers respectively; • the unknown children, descendants • and heirs, surviving spouse, creditors [ and administrators of the estate, deviseess legatees, trustees and executors of the last .will and testament. ! successors in interest and assigns ■ respectively of each and all of the ■ foregoing named and designated de- • fendants; all of the women once known bv any of the names and des- ; ignat ionW above stated whose names may have been changed, who are ’ now known by .other names; the ; spouses of all of the persons above named, described and designated as defendants to this action who are ' married; all persons and corporations who assert or might assert any title, claim or interest in or lien upon the real estate described in the complaint in this action by. under or through any of the defendants to • this action named, described and « designated in said complaint; and that each and all of them are be- • lieved to be non-residents of the State of Indiana. And that this action is instituted 1 to quiet title to real estate in the State of Indiana; that A cause of ae- ■ tion exists against all of the defend* , ants named, described and designated in this affidavit and that they are necessary parties to this action: that this affiant believes that all of the defendants named, described and designated in this affidavit are non-res-idents of the State of Indiana; that the following -13 a legal description of the real estate sought to be quieted. to-wit: The Island known as the William Warner Island, located in the east half of the southeast quarter of section 10, township 33. north, range 7 east. Also; Commencing at the northwest corner of lot No. 16 in William H. Bockman’s Park Addition to the town of North Webster, running thence north 12 feet; thence east to the waters edge of North Webster Lake at low water mark, and with the right to follow receding waters; thence south to a point due east of the place of beginning: thence west to the place of beginning. Notice is therefore hereby given said defendants, that unless they be and appear on the 25th day of the text term of the Kosciusko Circuit Court, being the 29th day of December, 1924. to be holden on the First Monday ot December. A. D. 1924, 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 their ab- ; sence« 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 2»th day of October, A. D. 1924. 28-3 (SEAL) RUSSELL H. BUTLER, Clerk Kosciusko Circuit Court. ® ~_o Camphor Mixture Helps Weak Eyes Syracuse people are astonished at the QUICK results produced by camphor. hydrastis, witchhatel. etc., as mixed in Lavoptik eye wash. After suffering with weak, watery, red eyes for years a lady reports the FIRST bottle Lavoptik helped her. One small bottle usually helps ANY CASE weak, strained or sore eyes. Thornburg's Drug Store. No. 3. CATARRH Cgtarrh is a Local disease greatly influenced by Conatftutional conditions. HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE con- I sista of an Ointment which gives Quick Relief by local application, and the Internal Medicine, a Tonic, which acts through the Blood on the Mucous SurSold by druggists for over 40 Years. r. J. Cheney A Co.. Toledo, a • \ ■' • ’ ■ I'- '? - *
| THE SIGN OF I IZ/'i; THE Mier State Bank Largest and oldest •/Bank in LIGONIER, INDIANA WHERE YOUR BUSINESS IS UNKNOWN TO THE PUBLIC , ■
AN OUNCE OF GOLD One ounce of gold pays wages for— Twenty hours work in the United States. Fifty hours work in Great Britain. Ninety hours work in Japan. One -hundred hours work in France. Two hundred hours work in Germany. This means that Americans must maintain their past record for output per man to guarantee prosperity which will mean steady jobs for all of us. _ (J GROWTH OF POST OFFICE Benjamin Franklin was the first head of the postal system of the United States. When he took over the affairs of his office, there were 75 post offices, with an aggregate postal revenue of §30,000 a year. Today we have more than 53,000 post offices and about 300,000 employees. The aggregate revenue collected and expended amounts to about §800,000.000 annually.
Hudson’s Hudson’s SILKSALE Silk and Wool Crepe $2.50 quality for $1.59 A splendid quality of silk and wool canton crepe. A crepe that is really worth $2.50 a yard. In colors of grey, leather or brown. Charmeuse $2.00 quality for $1.39 A quality of charmeuse that would be priced low at §2.00. On sale at only $1.39. Can be had in black or brown. Brocaded Crepes ' at $1.95 yd. A wonderful brocaded crepe for afternoon street or party frocks. In colors of copen Lucile green, brown, black. New Printed Crepes at $2.00 yd. New patterns of printed crepe de chene. The latest' patterns' printed on a splendid quality of crepe de chene. 40 inches wide. Printed Spiral Crepes at $3.95 Exquisite patterns and colorings of printed spiral wovien crepes. The newest silks that have been made. t Viyella Sport Flannels " - at $2.00 yd. Viyella washable sport flannel in a large selection of colors. Rose, orchid, rust, grey, tan, white, copen, poudre blue and leather. * Duvetyn and Velvateen at $2.50 ydSplendid quality of yard wide Duvetyn and costume >. Velvateen. A nice fabric for party frocks. [Xhe HUDSON, cojj ' ,
The STANWAR automatic water pump requires no tank. The pump is a pressure tank and pump combined. On display at your local plumbers The Lincoln Electric Co. Goshen Indiana GEO. L. XANDERS Attorney-at-Law Settlement of Estates. Opinions on Titles Fire and Other Insurance Phone 7 Syracuse, Get your FREIGHT via the SYRACUSE-FORT WAYNE TRICK LINE J. E. Rippey Phone 101 Syracuse, Ind. “If I don’t haul your \ • freight, we both lose.” ‘
