The Syracuse Journal, Volume 17, Number 30, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 20 November 1924 — Page 8
| Classified Ads • > '; Classified advertising Is ac- , * <! cepted at the rate of 5 cents < > < ► a line for each Insertion. A ’ ► ! I booking and collection fee of (k ’ ► 10 cents will be added for a <» ' * cahrged account; no account J ► J > will be charged for leas than , , <• 25 cents for a single Item. | < !»esa RUGS—New rugs in all sizes arrived at Beckmanns Store. 30. FURS WANTED—I pay the highest prices for furs of all kinds. George Eppert. 30-2tp. # ~FOR SALE—Clover hay. In- £ quire at State Bank of Syracuse. “ ' - . 29-ts. FOR SALE—One pu re-blood double comb White Orpisngton cockrel. one single comb Buff Orpington cock re I. Both beauties. Inquire at the Journal office.3o-tf BEDROOM SUITES—See the fine Bed Room Suites in French 1 Walnut at Beckmann s Store. 30. FOR SALE OR RENT—My ten acre farm 2 miles from town. James Rothenberger, Phone 817. 28-3 p WANTED—Good young butcher cattle and fat hogs. Phone 843. H. E. Leslie. 24-13tp. KITCHENETTES-All models of Dutch Kitchenettes are now on display at Beckmann’s Store. * ~NEWF U R NIT U R mann’s Furniture Store is now filled with all the latest in dining room, bed room and living room furniture. 30-ts STORAGE ROOM—For rent. Brick building. Elevator for taking in or removing goods. W. G. Connolly. 26-ts i. < FOR SALE—Complete set, I. C. S. textbooks on Electrical Engineering. $5.00. At the Journal office. 25- if. FOR SALE—Registered Ctarnsey bull,! 8 weeks old, from dam that produced 300 pounds of butter fat last year in 6 months, and dam of sire produced over 800 lbs. of bjjtter fat in 12 months. S4O if taken at once. Ralph Vail, Syracuse. Indiana. FOR SALE The Amy Juday property on North Huntington street. This property will be sold in the next 90 days. Warren T. Colwell. 18-ts. * GUAIL\NTEED~~HO6IERY — Samples your size free tp agents. Write for paying $75.00 weekly full timt\sl 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. NOTICE Anyone needing light in chicken houses, sheds, barns, etc., can save money by buying used sash. For sale by HALLIE HOLLOWAY BE WISE Get your rar painted now , at low fall prices, and protect it against winter weather. Prices right. Remember we handle quality low-pressure tires. Denman-Myers Cord ‘The Tire With Tow.* Smith Bros. Co. ’ SALES AND SERVICE *i< a. «tk st. Pho» an OOSH£N, INDIANA Personal Engraved Christmas Cards f Order now to insure delivery for the Christmas season. A wonderful aoswrtment for your selection. F. N. HASKEL COMPANY - UOSREN, INDIANA Christmas Gifts That Please and Prices too TJulf nilr, *irTfTtnV-rtariey-i»av lUson ■ C C AMSLER THE CYCLE MAN mt hl Mai St. Mm. lad.
• X w 3 a i Goodrich Cord I | Tire and Tube $9.75 | I HEDGES | I • • ' i 9 £- J •—e Coooooosooo DELINQLENT ASSESSMENT SALE A list of lands and lots returned delinquent for the non,payment of the SdJUth .Main Street Paving Assessment Roll, approved December 4, 1923 and December H. 1923, Town of Syracuse, Indiana, by the Board of Trustees thereof, together with the interest on same and costs <rf this NAME DESCRIPTION AMOUNT Elisabeth A Weaver. West two-thirds of dot No. 113 in Dolan and Miles Add. to Town of Syracuse. . $137.17 John G Moore. Part of out-lot No. 4 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 to discharge the paving assessment, interest and costa, at the office of the Town Treasurer, Che Town of Syracuse. Kosciusko County, Indiana, on the 29th day of November. 1924. Saturday, at 10 a. m. * du v SOL MILLER. ~ 9 _ 3t Treasurer Town of Syracuse.
HARRY DIAMOND EXECVTED Michigan City. Ind., Nov. 14— Harryx Diamond of Gary, Ind., •net death unflinchingly in the electric chair at the Indiana state prison at 12;D1 a. m. Friday. His execution was in expiation for the murder of his wife who Was shot to death while motoring between Gary and East Chicago, Ind., in To a sister, Fannie Diamond, he is said to have confessed that he killed his wife, but declared that the crime was committed while he was suffering an epileptic fit. The story of the crime is as follows: Arrested in East Chicago after his wife on her death bed had stated he had shot her while motoring between that, city and Gary on Feb. 14. 1923. Diamond blamed the attack on William Armstrong, a 17 year old negro chauffeur. Aimstning was sa t and Diamond asserting hlThad fired the shot in self-defense. Diamond, who was 24 years old when the crime was committed, was charged by the prosecution with kilting his wjfe to obtain her fortune. Mrs. Diamond was 42 years old. and had willed her young husband a large portion of ber wealth. She drew a new will just before her death, leaving an estate estimated at $50,000 to her six children. The legal .fight began with the case being taken from Lake county on a change of venue to Valparaiso. in Porter county. A jury found Diamond guilty of murder June 7. 1923, after deliberating two hours and forty-five minutes. Gov. Branch had been petitioned to change the sentence to life imprisonment, but he refused to interfer •.
— TMB UNIVBBSAIi it——R— More Comfort Th . ForfCoap . bA ._ for Less Money Costing teas to buy and maintain, every dollar invested returns in comiottable, dependable travel. TL O Sturdy, long-lived and adapted to all conditiona j n ° qI an 4 weather—it meets every need of a twoWC* P* *p—angercar. fhrsforSmiaM MBS d the a Tudor Sedan 590 dosed car, at a price millions can aSord, rightly dell signed, carefully built and backed by an efficient service :; ’ organization in every neighborhood of the nation. Ob opm modWs dhMNNHMh •KB tbb'nbabbst avtbobizbd rono dbalbb 9
Fl NA N< IA L ST ATISTICS OF THE STATE OF INDIANA Expenditures Washington, D. C., November 18, 1924. —The Department of Commerce announces that the tqtal payments for expenses, interest. and outlays for the state government of Indiana for the fiscal vear ending September 30, Di 23. amounted” to $29,621,168, or $9.85 per capita. Os this total $21,107,900 represents the expenses of operating the general departments of the state government; $89,021, interest on debt; and $8,424,247, outlays for permanent improvements. In 1922 the total payments for the state were $24,157,674, and in 1917, $12,703,909, a per capita of SB.IO and $4.43, respectively. The totals include all payments for the
Chief Justice White and VU f « Mr. Justice Harlan chewed tobacco in the Supreme C-urt room IWf and lived to a ripe iw III' 1 old age and in full OSTL > 1/ vigor at 76 and 78 ( years respectively. Chew Beech-Nut and A remain strong and / vigorous. Over2soMfflion Packages Sold in a / Single Year i
THE SYRACUSE JOTTRNAE
year, whether made from current revenues or from the proceeds of bond issues. - ( Revenues< The total revenue receipts of Indiana fori 1923 were $30,943,299. cr $10.29 per capita. This was $9,746,378 more than the total payments for the year exclusive of the payments for permanent improvements, and sl,322.131 more than the total payments including those for permanent improvements. Tn Indiana property and eial taxes represented 50.7 per cent of the total revenue for 1923. 52.8 per cent for 1922, and 61.1 per cent for 1917. The increase in the amount of property and special taxes collected was 52.3 per cent from 1917 to 1922, and 16.1 per cent from 1922 to 1923. The per capita property and special taxes were $5.22 in 1923. $4.53 in 1922, and $3.10 in 1917. Earnings, of general departments, or .compensation for services rendered by state officials, represented 12.4 per cent of the total revenue for 1923, 13.4 per cent for 1922. and 11.9 per cent for 1917. . Business and nonbusiness licenses constituted 21.5 per cent of the total revenue for 1923. 117.5 per rent for 1922. and 13.7 j ner cent for 1917. Receipts from i business licenses consist chiefly of taxes exacted from insurance and other incorporated tompani ies. and of sales tax on gasoline while those from nonbusiness liUcrnses comprise taxes on motor vehicles and amounts paid for hunting and fishing privileges. Indebtedness The net indebtedness (funded and floating debt less sinking fund assets) of Indiana for 1923 amounted to $1,545,615. or $0.51 per capita. The per capita net debt for 1922 was $0.14, and for 1917, $0.06. Assessed Valuations; Tax Levies For 1923 the assessed valuation f property in Indiana subject to ad valorem taxation was $5,281 $04,728; the amount of taxes levied was $15,845,414; and the per capita levy, $5.27.
NOTICE TO NON-RESIDENTS State ot Indiana, Kosciusko County. ss: 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 ot a competent person that the residence upon diligent search and inquiry is unknown of the following named defendants, towit: « . Joseph Middleton; Letecia Middleton, wife or widow of Joseph Middleton; Lottecia Middleton; Middleton, husbantf or widower of Lottecia Middleton; Joseph Middleton; Lettecia Middleton, wife or widow of Joseph Middleton; Robert Shoemaker; Shoemaker, whose Christian name is unknown, wife or widow of Robert Shoemaker;- Daniel Snyder; Almirah Snyder, wife or widow of Daniel Snyder; Daniel Snider; Almirah SnWer, wife or widow of Daniel Snider; Ephraim S. Mulrheid: Mi ram Muirheid, wife or widow of Ephraim S. Mulrheid; George Warner; Warner, whose Christian name is unknown, wife or widow of Warner; George W. Warner; 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; Sarah 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 widow of E. S. Muirheid; Alice C. Humble; Sylvester F. Humble. husband or widower of Alice C. Humble; John Patterson Greer;“TV,. .... Greer, whose Christian name is ! unknown, wife or widow of John Patterson Greer; John P. Greer; ; Greer, whosp Christian name is unknown, wire or widow of John P. Greer; . William, Wilkinson; Wilkinson, whose! chAstian 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 of Wm. H. H. Nutter; r W. H. H. Nutter, whose Christian i name is unknowji; Sarah Ellen Nutter, wife or widow of W. H. H. NutL ter; Sarah Elen Nutter;Nutt ter, whose Christian name is un- - known, husband or widower of said Sarah Elen Nutter, Comadore Garber; Laura E. Garber, wife or widow ' of said Comadore Garber; Commp- - dore Garber; Garber, whose . Christian name is unknown, wife or 5 widow of Commodore Garber; Isaac P Rea; Bertha M. Rea. wife or widow * of Isaac Rea; the unknown husbands 1 and wives respectively; the unknown widows and widowers respectively; the unknown children, descendants and heirs, surviving spouse, creditors and administrators of the estate, devisees, legatees, trustees and executors of the last will and testament, successors in interest and assigns respectively of each and all foregoing named and designated defendants; all of the women once known by any of the names and designations above stated whose names may have been changed, who are now knpwn by other names; the e 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 to quiet title to real estate in the State of Indiana; that a cause of action exists against all of the defendants 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 is 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 Lzike 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 next term of the Kosciusko Circuit Court, being the 29th day of December. .1924, to be holden on the First Monday of 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 iu 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 29th day of October, A. D. 1924 (SEAL) RUSSEIJ. H. BUTLER, Clerk Kosciusko Circuit Court. — 0 Woman's Case Amazes Syracuse A business man's wife suffered for two years with sore, watery eyes, which pained day and night. Finally she tried camphor, hydrastis, witchhazel. etc., as mixed In Lavoptik eye wash. Thiq helped her AT ONCE. One small bottle Lavoptik usually helps ANY CASE weak, strained or Inflamed eyes. Aluminum cup FREE. Thornburg's Drug Store. Na 4 CATARRH Catarrh Is a Local disease greatly in* ftuencod by CwwtltuUoaal conditions. XAT-f/ft C*AT*Acon-* Mats of an Otatmentwhieh, gives Quick Relief by local appUeation and the Internal Medicine, a Tonic, which acta mrougn ine oiocxi vu ine s&mivum mir* faces and aeotats ta ridding your System ° druggists tor over 49 Teana F. J. Cheney « Co.. Toledo, a *' ' ■
THE SIGN OF SECRECY 11 " - T BI 1 11 " ” THE Mier State Bank Largest and oldest Bank in LIGONIER, INDIANA WHERE YOUR BUSINESS IS UNKNOWN TO THE PUBLIC
OPEN THE WINDOWS ♦ I Just now, when the slow change from Autumn to Winter is on us, people are particularly liable to catch not only cold, but diseases of the lungs. One piece of sound advice you may not resent. Keep the windows of your bedroom open. Open at top and bottom both. That gives circulation of air. Circulation of air while you sleep helps to prevent disease. Don’t be afraid of “night air.’’ Night air is the only sort of air available after dark. Shut the door of your bedroom, protect yourself from cold with plenty of bed clothing, open your windows top and bottom, and you will sleep both in comfort and safety from disease. Ask any doctor, if you would rather pay $3 for- this tip. o University students of Japan are organizing a federation to oppose military training in schools. The movement is nation wide and promises to produce results. In this respect Japan is one lap ahead of America.
Hudson’s Hudson’s ; SILK SALE 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 $1.30 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 . f, «ts2.OO)<l New patterns of printed crepe de chene. The latest patterns printed on a splendid quality of crepe de chene. 40 inches wide. .1 Printed Spiral Crepes at $3.95 Exquisite patterns and colorings of printed spiral woven crepes. The newest silks that have been made. 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 &t $2.50 y<L Splendid quality of yard wide Duvetyn and costume Velvateen. A nice fabric for party frocks. 1 111 11 T"**
The ST ANWAR automatic water pump requires no tank. The pump is a pressure tank and pump combined. On display at your . local plumbers , The Liucoln Electric Co. Goshen Indiana GEO. L. XANDERS Atterney-at-Law j Settlement of Estates,. Opinions on Titles Fire and Other Insurance Phone 7 Syracuse, Ind. Get your FREIGHT via the SYRACUSE.FORT WAYNE TRUCK LINE J. E. Rippey Phone 101 Syracuse, Ind. “If I don’t haul your freight, we both lose.”
