The Syracuse Journal, Volume 18, Number 5, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 4 June 1925 — Page 8
»•*»*»«* **••♦»•♦♦ o. Classified Ads <: ’ * Classified advertising is ac- J * <, cepted at the rate of 5 cents < ’ . < > a line for each insertion. A < ► ' ' booking and collection fee of J J o 10 cents will be added for 1 a o > ’ • charged account; no account ' * , ’ will be charged for less than J * < > 25 cents for a single item. < i < > *♦*********»♦»♦******♦*♦♦» FOR RENT—rGarage, centrally located. Sam Porte.r 52-ts SUITES—Walnut Dining room suites from $125 to S3OO at Beckmann's Store. FOR SALE—Two lots in Dolan & Miles Addition. Inquire of Mrs. C. EL Brady. 4-2tpd ~PIANO TUNING — Pianos tuned and repaired. Call Beckmann’s. 43-ts SUMMER SCHOOL—at South Bend Business College. Lowest rates; best courses. Earn board and room. Write for catalog and entrance dates. 5-stp RUfife A complete line of the latest Axminster rugs are now on the way to Beckmann’s store. FOR SALE—Lake lots, your choice; 58x150 and 50x200 feet, in Syracuse and adjoining Potawatomi Park. Priced right; cash or time. See Dr. O. C. Stoelting. 2-ts FARMS WANTED—Farms and property wanted everywhere; 3 l « commission. Write for blank. Smith Farm Agency, 1407 West York Street, Philadelphia, Pa. -50-52 t FURNITURE—Fibre and hickory furniture for the hot sum-, pier are on display at Beckman s Store. FOR RENT—Season of 1925, one Os the most beautiful homes on Wawasee Lake. Lawns, trees, and fruit. Large airy rooms; 12 rooms. Also a new seven-room cottage. Inquire on the place of F. E. Marsh. 1-ts CHIX —Farrow Chix after 15th June. 100 lots postpaid. Barred Rocks, S. C. Reds, Anconas. $9.50; White Rocks, Rose Reds, $10.50; Wyandottes, Buff Orp„ Minorcas, $11.50; White or Brown Leghorns, $8.50. Free catalog. D. T. Farrow Chickeries, Indianapolis, Ind. 5-4tp FOR SALE- The most desirable location on the Lake. Also one of the largest fronts, nearly 200 feet; one of the oldest and most intensely cultivated. Ter; s practically to suit the buyer. Inquire of F. E. Marsh on the property. a seven-room cottage, new. 1-ts PENNY PADS—Merchants and mechanics use them for notes and figuring. Size 3x6 inches. Journal office. HEADS—Lend dignity to your correspondence by using printed stationery. The Journal’s commercial printing department is well equipped for this kind of work. ~SIGNS—“For Rent” and “For Sale” signs are carried in stock at the Journal office. . Classified ads pay both—the seller and buyer. 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." I sell protection in Bankers Mutual Life Insurance (X, of Freeport, 111. Auto and Fire Insurance 8. C. LEPPER Syracuse Indiana ROBERT E. PLETCHER Funeral Director Ambulance Service Syracuse, Indiana. Telephone 75 GEO. L. XANDERS Attorney-at-Law Settlement ofEstatea. Opinions cm Title* Fire and Other Insurance ' Phone 7 Syracuse, Ind. SPECIAL ATTENTION GIVEN TO ESTATES. DEEDS. MORTGAGES TITLES AND #ILLS PILLIAM GRA| WB I Admitted to Practice in AW Courts 118> S. Buffalo St.. Warenr. lad.
■ REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS = (By H. C. Frazer) Monroe Ott to Elmer E. and Ida E. Strieby, Lot 25 in S. & W. to Syracuse, for $3,000. Wilmet A. Jones to Ross William Osborn and Frank E. Hamm, 4 lots in Sand Point, at Wawasee Lake, sl. Anderson K. Strieby to Orvie Davis, 3 lots in D. & M. Add. to Syracuse, for $2,700. Sarah A. Case to Melvin Drake. 60 acres in Sec. 29 of Turkey Creek township, for $4,000. • ; o— — MORE AUTO BUS LINES Fort Wayne, May 30.—The Increase in popularity of motor buses for certain'kinds of travel has prompted the Indiana Service Corporation to begin the operation of a number of bus lines in the northern section of the state within the near future, or as soon as authority is granted by the state public service commission. Henry Bucher, manager of the railway department of the corporation has made this announcement. t It is the plan of the corporation to operate busses over six routes: Fort Wayne to Peru; Fort Wayne to Bluffton; Fort Wayne to Sturgis byway of Huntertown and Kendallville; Fort Wayne to Clear Lake, byway of Auburn, Waterloo. Crooked Lake, Lake James and Fremont; Peru to Logansport and Kendallville to Sturgis. - "O " 1 THEY ARE PASSING The last surviving member of the twenty-one present when the Modern Woodmen of America was organized at Lyons, lowa, on January 5. 1883. is dead. He was William A. Penn, of Pasadena, Calif., notice of whose passing has just been received at the Head Office in Rock Island. 111. He was a youth of 19 when the birth of the society took place and always retained his ■membership in the Lyons Camp. His certificate was the eighth issued. He designated his mother, Mrs. Mary Penn, as his beneficiary, and she survives him. The founder of the organization, the late J. C. Root, held the first certificate. Penn held his membership in the order for over 42 years. The oldest member now is Thaddeus B. Brower of Eureka, Calif., also affiliated with the Lyons Camp, and who was obligated eight days after the first Camp was organized. —o Advertise in the JoumaL SMILES BY MILES . IT GAVE. HIM ItafiUMATiet AMD TAIH -— Tain fills made Uy HIUR — > J I CMAN«X> his FftOWM INTO SMILXS — A /k|Si\ • >— — FSI.T MAFFYAMD Wfu. ONCS AGAIN. For the pains of rheumatum. [ w*mfrw*a and neuralgi& { A DR.MILES' AMMfciaPUto IS
| HOUSEHOLD HINTS New tan shoes should always be polished before wearing. »Any scratches will then only affect the surface, Printed cotton that is being washed for the first time should be steeped in a solution of salt and water. Dissolve a tablespoonful of rock ammonia in the water in which you bathe. This makes the water soft and invigorating. A few drops of turpentine added to cold-water starch prevents the iron from sticking and will give an even gloss to collars and to chintzes. If wallpaper becomes stained, scallop the edges of a piece of new wallpaper and paste it over the place. The mend will not be noticeable. The life of silk stockings can be doubled by soaking them in cold water for twelve hours before the first wearing, and by washing them immediately after each subsequent wearing. Many of us use razor blades for ripping seams. They can b® rendered more safe if the blade is wrapped with adhesive tape to within a short distance of the end, thus providing a place by which it can be held firmly and i without fear or danger. . | House plants such as geran-» iums, begnhias, and ferns, need | occasional repotting. The top I edge and bottom of the old ball j of earth should be removed and fresh soil used in repotting. Always place a piece of broken pot in the bottom to aid in drainage. Do not fill the pot to within any more than a quarter of an inch from the top.. The paper carton in which the quart of ice cream arrives, when washed out with hot water and dried quickly, will prove just the thinjg for packing the picnic sandwiches. They can be saved and individual lunches packed in each one. if time is at a premium and lunch must be eaten while traveling. It saves a great deal of disturbing and passing of the food. Do not use old rubbers for canning or preserving, and test the elasticity of new ones when purchasing them. „A dry, hard rubber band will not close a jar perfectly, and the cost of reliable new bands is much less than that of a spoiled can of vegetables or fruit All jars, cans and covers should be kept in boiling water until actually needed while canning is in. progress, and so far as possible they should be handled with tongs and not touched with the fingers. ' 49 Y EARS ~UIU MKUICINK has been . tism.lj in the treatment ot I.U’S CATARRH MEDICIXK conof an Ointment which Quickly i by local -.pplication. and the ernal Medicine, a Tonic, which acts .-ouEh the Blood on the Mucous Surce*, thus reducing the inflammation. Sold by all druggists. F. J. Cheney A Co.. Toledo. Ohk.
' □□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□ § IFs Being Done f | Right in Your Midst § MAXWELTON MANOR on Lake Syracuse offers you the choicest of locations for your home site. . The work already done coupled with the future development ensures a large increase § in realty values. □ With all the activity in MAXWELTON MANOR being carried on right here in front of you-—why delay in purchasing? □ This section is the playground of the state t and you can't lose a dime on lake property. f= > _ . . . •• . . o For further information see me on the ground or write me to Box 354, Syracuse. o § L. B. BOYD S ns D Q i □□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□[□□□□□□□□□□□a I
THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL
GROW BETTER CHICKS Chicks will grow almost twice as rapidly on a diet of milk and a mineral mash thin on water and scratch grains, according to the Blue Valley Creamery Insti- i tute. The Institute, after re- i viewing data covering over one hundred feeding experiments, finds the milk-mineral mash method the best feeding method for quick growth and full bodily development. The growth-promoting, dis-ease-resisting qualities of milk were shown, says the Institute} summary, in one experiment at' the N. J. Agricultural Experi-| ment Station when it was found < that 66 milk-fed pullets at ten weeks of age weighed as much as 100 pullets of the same age without milk in their diet. It was further found at the Wisconsin College of’ Agriculture that chicks generously supplied with skimmed milk were grown far better on a hgme-mixed dry mash, consisting of 80 parts of yellow corn meal. 20 parts wheat middlings, 5 parts raw bond (of about 50 per cent calcium phosphate), 5 parts pearl grits (calcium carbonate), and 1 part of common salt, than they were on the usual scratch feed and water. The factor was made up by allowing the chicks in the iopen sunshine. Os thousands of I chicks fed in this manner, even ’when confined on board floors I for weeks, no rickets or leg weakIness was encountered and the I mortality was especially low, despite a late and wet spring. Ip feeding chicks milk it should always be in the same form, the Institute states. Never feed sweet milk one day and sour the next. If allowed to sour to the clabbered stage,, the whey and solid material should be mixed before feeding, for much of the lactic acid and mineral content is in the whey. o PURCHASED BUS LINE The Chicago, South Bend and Northern Indiana Ry. Co. has announced the purchase of the city bus line operated in Elkhart by the Lawndale Transportation Co., a subsidiary of the C. G. Conn, Ltd. The change in ownership will take place as soon as the permit is received from the state public service commission. o RAO. REPORT The gross operating revenues of the Baltimore & Ohio Ry. Co. for the month of April amounted to $18,233,554, and the operating expenses to $15,579,086, leaving a net balance of $2,654,468. — o Easy to Clean Shade* To clean white window ahade*, spread * sheet on the floor, unroll th* shade and with a soft doth scrub the shade with magnesia and water. After treating one side turn the shade over and clean the other side in the same nay. This method removes the dirt and renews the shade at a cost of about 10 cents.
- t . NOTICE OF SALE OF REAL ESTATE BY ADMINISTRATOR The undersigned, administrator j cum testamento annexe of the estate < of..Rachi‘el A. Edgell, deceased, here- ] ! by-; sives notice that by virtue of the, i j power by said will conferred, he will { at the hour of 16 A. M. of the 13th < day of June, 1925. at the office of t Butt & Xanders in the Town of Sy- j racuse, Kosciusko Ciunty. Indiana, and from day to day thereafter until < sold, offer for sale at private- sale. 1 all the interest of said decedent in ] and to the following described real ; | estate: to-wit; * ] i- Lots numbered. 1. 2. 3, and 4 of i | Block 6 in Ketring & Ketring’s Addi|tion to the Town of Syracuse. Kos- ! ciusko County, Indiana. Also Lots numbered 28 and 29 in 8. U Ketrinir’s 2nd Addition to the Town of Syracuse, Kosciusko County, Indiana. , Said salw will be made subject to the approval of the Kosciusko Circuit Court, for not less than the full appraised value of said real estate, and upon the following terms and conditions; At least one-third of the purchase money cash in hand, the balance in two equal installments, payable in not to exceed 9 and 18 months, evidenced by; notes of the purchaser, bearing 6 per cent interest from date, waiving relief, providing attorney's fees and secured by mortgage on the real estate sold. Said lots may be sold singly or reflectively, as the best interests of the estate may demand. hallie e. Hollow ay, Administrator cuTn testamento annexo. Geo. L. Xanders, Atty-for-estate. 2-4 t O NOTICE TO HEIRS, - CREDITORS, ETC. In the matter of the estate of Thomas Darr, deceased. In the Kosciusko Circuit Court, April Term, 1925. Notice is hereby given, That Geo. L. Xanders, as administrator of the estate of Thomas Darr, deceased, has presented and filed his accounts and vouchers in final settlement -of sjaid estate, and that the same will coine |up for examination and action of said Circuit Court on the Bth September, 1925, at which time all heirs, creditors, or legatees of said estate are required to appear in said Court and show cause, if any there be. why said account and vouchers should not^be 'approved. Dated at Warsaw. Indiana, this 27th day of May, 1925. RVSSELL H. BUTLER, 5-3 t Clerk Kosciusko Circuit Court o DOGS FOR HIDES There are said to be hundreds of dog-breeding establishments in northern China and Manchuria, where the dogs are killed by strangulation when they are seven months old and their skins, which have very heavy hair, are made into coats for the Chinese people. The flesh of these young i dogs is eaten, both fresh and salted, by the orientals. RIBBONS—We sell ribbons for L C. Smith, Underwood and Oliver Typewriters. Journal office.
DE PAOLA WINS RACE | Peter de Paola, youthful racing. star and nephew of the famous Ralph De Palma, driving a Duesenberg Special, won the 500mile automobile race at Indianapolis Saturday before a crowd estimated at 145.000, the greatest throng that ever witnessed a sporting event in America. The time was 4:56:39:37, an average of 101.13 miles an hour, thus breaking all records. De i Paolo won $37,800 as first prize and cash prizes for capturing the most laps and prizes offered by. accessory firms. o NOTICE TO HEIRS, CREDITORS, ETC. In the matter of the estate of Amy Juday, deceased. In the Kosciusko Circuit Court. April Term. 1925. Notice is hereby given, that Warren T. Colwell, as executor of the estate ot Amy Juday. deceased, has presented and filed his accounts and vouchers in final settlement of said estate, and that the same will come up for examination and action of said Circuit Court on the 10th day of June. 1925, at which time all heirs, creditors, or legatees of said estate are required to appear in said Court and show cause, if any be. why said account and vouchers should not be approved. Dated at Warsaw. Indiana, this 16th day of May. 1925. RUSSELL H. BUTLER. 3-3 t Clerk Kosciusko Circuit Court XOTICE TO' HEHLS,' T CREDITORS, ETC. In the matter of the estate of Otis Clyde Butt, deceased. In the Kosciusko Circuit Court. April Term. 1925. Notice is hereby given, that Fred Hinderer. as I administrator of the estate of Otis Clyde Butt, deceased, has presented and filed his accounts and vouchers in final settlement of said estate. ancT that the same will come up for examination and action of said Circuit Court on the 11th day of June. 1925. at which time all heirs, creditors, or legatees of said estate are required to appear in said Court and show cause, if any there be, why said account and vouchers should not be approved. Dated at Warsaw. Indiana, this 16th day of May. 1925. RUSSELL H. BUTLER. 3-3 t Clerk Kosciusko Circuit Court Geo. L. Xanders, Atty, for Estate. o Cowardice Dangerous. I am a man of peace. God knows how I love peace ; but I hope I shall never be such a coward as to mistake oppression for jxmee—Kossuth.
IEFFERSON Theatre U Goshen, Indiana Frida, >.d Salad.;, Jw S a,d 6 | Our beat Friday and Saturday picture to date. ‘‘The Dixie Handicap” The return to the screen of Frank Keenan in the greatest race horse picture you will ever see. Also a comedy and another series of the Pacemakers. : ' ~ ■ ' : :: Announcement Sunday, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, June 7,8,9,10 i Douglas Fairbanks m • .v g Thief of Bagdad” This $2.00 show will be shown for the first time anywhere at 10 and 40c. ========================== ■ tt Wedding Bells Should not ring before invitations printed [ at the Journal office, on special stock, have been sent to your friends. > . - ' ' ' j s I I
BUSINESS DIRECTOHY 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 Minnie L. Priepke DRUGLESS PHYSICIAN SPECIALIST in Tnherculosis, kidney, bladder and liver trouble. Prolapsed stomach ami bowels restored. The only treatment known that will actually bring them back to normal. • 36 Hawks-Gortner Bldg. Phone 168. Goshen. Indiana « I ■ IJ I—l F. N. HascaU Company * INTERIOR OECORATINO WALL PAPER PAINTS • WINDOW SHADES PICTURE FRAMES * „ GOSHEN . INDIANA The New Lacquer Finish that is more durable. Will not spot white, check-proof, and improves with hard usage. Five days for a high class job. Write for booklet. Smith Bros. Co. Rear 316 South Main St. Ph. 374 GOSHEN, INDIANA TREAT YOURSELF TO A PHOTOGRAPH! — Time you did. you know; and not a little, cheap affair, but a really good one—that you will be proud to autograph for your friends. The Schnabel Studio Over Baker’s Drug Store GOSHEN, INDIANA
