The Syracuse Journal, Volume 19, Number 12, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 22 July 1926 — Page 5
Fruit and vegetables supply p° organic salts, Jt phosphates and ot^er f°°d e^e * rnents essential JkSSkß to mans health and well-being, and furnish economical nutrition. Buy Fruit and Vegetables From Us and be assured of the best on the market in both fresh and, canned goods. Our line of staple and fancy groceries is superior to most retail stocks. Remember us for Courtesy — Cleanliness—Honesty — Servlet Seider & Burgener I x PURE FOOD GROCERS PHONES 82 AND 172 SYRACUSE, INDIANA . I .‘. ....L-,. ' , .! . ,-., 1 ..!. ■"=je-=T— S==±2 sjf. ycjaqysMjHgfttaußr.;xttiaJtap;a4MMg»ilMWiKMMftiWC.t*ißt4SMKWi3 FRESH. GLBfIN MEAT Await yon at our market at all times. You | . will And the juiciest cuts and the tenderest pieces here. We also handle smoked and dried meats and a general line of canned meats. KLINK BROS. MEAT MARKET
NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS . * Sealed proposals for the improvement of Harrison Street in the Town of Syracuse, Kosciusko County. Indiana, as per plans and specifications on file with the Clerk of said Town, will be received by the Board of Trustees, by the Clerk thereof, of the Town of Syracuse, until 8 o’clock P. M., July 27, PU6, at the Town Hall, in the Public School Building at hour the bids will be publicly opened and read. The bids will then be examined and considered, and Board will proceed without unnecessary delay to designate by preliminary order the kind of pavement to be u>ed In the improvement. the Board expressly reserving i the right to reject any or all bids, and to Judge ujf the character and sufficiency of any materials bid upon. Each bidder is required to nutue in his proposal the following*. (a) A price for constructing catch basins complete, each. (b) A price for constructing inlets to catch basing complete, each. (c) A price for constructing manholes, complete, each. (d) A price per lineal foot for combined curb and gutter. ’ (e) A price per lineal foot for the aeceaaary marginal stone curbing. (f) A price ■pelr square yard for the particular kind or kinds at pavement bid upon which price shall be for the pavement complete, including excavating. filling, grading and concrete foundation. | Each bidder is required to deposit with his bid. « cfertlfied check for an amount not les4 than two and one- ( half per cent at the engineer’s estimate of the coat of such work bid upon, but in no case shall* any such check be less than the sum of 1100. said check to be certified by a reputable bank doing business in the state of Indiana. In case the bid is not accepted, this check will be returned to the bidder; but if the bid is accepted, and the bidder shall retuse or neglect to enter into a contract with the said Town of Syracuse. within 10 days from.the time he shall have been notified of the acceptance of the same, said check shall be forfeited to the Town of Syracuse, as ascertained and liquidated damages for failure so to do. In case the specifications permit the use of either, or any one of two or more materials, the bidder must state specifically on which his bid The estimated cost of said improvement for the highest priced pavement is 127,516. The Town of Syracuse will pay for all street and alley intersections out of the street or general fund of said Town, or both, and by special asacssmest. plans and profiles are on file in the office of the Clerk of the Board of Trustees, of said Town, and at the office <rf the Town Attorney. Geo. L. Xanders. °at the Town of Syracuse, Indiana, and bidders are expected to examine them before submitting their bids. The estimate is believed to be correct, but the Town of Syracuse will not be responsible for any errors in the same, or for any errors or in the plans, profiles or specifications. LEWIS A. SEI DER. FRED HOOPINGARNER. HARRY CLEMENS. Board of Trustees of Byracusw\lndlana. Charles C. Crow. Town Clerk. — —O
SALE OF PERSONAL PROPEKTY. NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATOR'S Notice Is hereby given tha: the undersigned, administrator of the Estate of Allen Ruple, deceased, will a* Mich administrator offer for sa<e at public sale at the Allen Ruple farm, near Vawter Park on Lake Wawasee, in Turkey Creek Town* ship, Kosciusko County. Indiana, on THURSDAY, AVGUST 1926, at 1:30 o'clock P. M„ the personal property belonging to the deceased, consisting of 1 driving horse. Farming implements* and Household goods. w TERMS OF SALE: A credit of six months will be given on all sales for an amount exceeding $5.00; notes waiving valuation and appraisement laws, and beailng six percent interest at maturity, and attorney's fees, with sufficient sureties, acceptable to the administrator, may be given the clerk. Acceptance of sureties will not be binding upon this administrator until he has ap proved and accepted such notes,, la person. z JESSE SHOCK. Administrator of the Estate of Allen Ruple, Deceased. 11-3 t —O Poetical Fancy •Tx>." applied to uncivilized peoples, is the obsolete Imperative of the verb look." and the expression. “U*. the poor Indian,'' has merely been adapted from Pope's "Essay on Man ’ It runs: “Lo, the poor Indian whose untutored mind sees God in trees and hears Him In the wind." o
iaiiiiiiilaaiiß. Come In and see us the next time you are in need of good printing We are speaah ists in J the kind of work { A that J pleases. 1 f Atrial / b Al we ask laB.BBBfIBIBiaJ 1
Correspondence £“ Neighborhood K GILBERTS Don Walker of Chicago is the guest of Mr. and Mrs Calvin Cooper. Mrs. William Sheffield, who has been ill the past two weeks, is reported about the s?me. Mr and Mrs. James Fleming were week end guests of Mr. and Mrs. John McGarity. John Clem and the Misses Lucile and Dortha Becker of Goshen spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Clem. * Miss Isebell Lutes returned '■gome on Saturday from east of Govhen. having visited her uncle and aunt, Mr. and. Mrs. Charles Snyder. Fred and Daniel and Miss Elsa Gall entertained members of the Willing Workers class of the Bethany church on Friday evening in their home. Miss Mary McCarthy and a small brother of Chicago are *he guests of Mr. and Mrs. Raleigh Neff. Miss McCarthy was known here a few years ago as a fresh air girl. Mrs, Jane Tully, who has spent the past six weeks with her nephew, Calvin Cooper, went to Goshen on Sunday where she wijl be the guest of Mrs. Alice Frayer before returning to her home in Sidney. TIPPECANOE Mr. aqd Mrs. Ralph Scott were in Goshen on Saturday. Jesse Baugher spent Sunday at the Celia Baugher home. Mrs. Isaiah Kuhn and daughter spent a part of last week in Goshen. * Mrs. J. L. Kline and childrep spent Tuesday at the J. Garba home. Mrs. Emit Gordy called on Mrs. Henry Koiburg last Thursday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Clin* Cox and son Dallas spent Sunday evening with Jessie Baugher. Mr. and Mrs. J. L- Kline called on Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Morehead on Sunday afternoon. Mrs. Emit Gordy and son Allen called on friends near Wakarusa Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. J. Garber and Royal Kline were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Nat House. McCOLLEY’S corners Mr. and Mrs. J. Kline visited on Sunday afternoon at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Nat House. Mr. and Mrs. Jchn Kauffman spent Fridav night at the home of MF. and Mrs. Chas. Richcreek. Mr. and Mrs. Russell Swenson spent Saturday night and Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Nat House. Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Niles and family visited on Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Jess Miller and family. . . _ Mr. and Mrs. Arnel Miller of Elkhart spent Sunday evening with Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Richerode. Mrs. Dick Miller arid Miss Wilma spent Thursday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Millicent Miller. - Mr. and Mrs. Henry Miller of Millersburg called on Mr. and Mrs. Charles Richcreek on Sunday afternoon. , j Mr. and Mrs. Iva! Gerade and daughter Lillian are spending a few weeks near Wolf Lake at the home of the formers mother. o— GEO. D. KAPP Chiropractor. Painless Adjustments. Office—Mrs. Anna Crow residence.. Syracuse. Hours: 9 to 12 a m. Mondays* Wednesdays and Fridays. t>_ Bows Affatnsf Clubs In England recently s*>if team ran opposed by a team of archer*. The latter shot their way around with ■ smaller score than the golfers anti won the match. Offhand there seems to be but little connection between the two sports, but on second though* are there not many golfers who are expert in drawing the lungbow?— Boston Transcript. o Copper Is Permanent Copper, very often referred to “aS the metal eternal" represents permanence in building materials. Many eld boilers constructed of copper are > still In use today after years of hard service. Copper proves to be an Investment rather than a luxury when one considers Its wearing qualities. O j Pink Jade For more than 200 years pink Jade had not been found in any thickness greater than an eighth of an Indi, until It was discovered about three three years ago la Africa. 40 miles northwest of Pretoria. ——-——o— ——- J»rop«rti«a Q’**'”* The bureau of home economics says I that quinine to an alkaloid and that no vegetable or fruit It te lan appreciable amount if it old, it
THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL; J
Coloma, City of Cold,"', Pathetic in Its Ruin Coloma Is an unknown name today, but three-quarters of a century ago every American able to speak had It at his tongue's end. There that New Jersey adventurer, Jamea Wilson Marshall, discovered gold in January, 1848, and started the rush of fortune seekers from all the world to California, a writer In the New York Sun recalls. Coloma grew quickly to a town of ten thousand Inhabitants and boasted of all the luxuries that a pioneer could demand. A stranger wandering among the hills of El Dorado county recently rediscovered It He found a country store and a post office In the midst of a cluster of deserted fchops and houses. The mail carrier said that In the whole community there were scarcely a hundred and fifty persons. In the graveyard on the hillside was the only reminder of'Coloma’s fame, a memorial to Marshall, the bronze statue surmounting it pointing to the place of California's first gold discovery. Coloma had dreams of magnificence' In the early fifties. Coloma then had; a dozen hotels, a street lined with stores, a hundred saloons, as many* wide-open gambling places and dance* halls, an express office, three schools? four churches and a jail. The shells of the dance halls, the saloons and the gambling places remain. The churches and schools passed generations ago. The jail that had housed the bad men, the killers and crooked gamblers long ago fell Into ruins. First Settlement in ( Oregon Was Astoria The first permanent settlement in Oregon was founded at Astoria by agents of the Pacific Fur company, who arrived at the mouth of the Columbia river 115 years ago. The fur company was backed by John Jacob Astor, but the men engaged by him to invade the northwestern wilderness were Canadians, a majority being of Scotch descent The party left Montreal In big; canoe and made their way down the St Lawrence, thence to the Hudson and New York, from which port they sailed on the ship Tonquin, which doubled Cape Horn and proceeded to Hawaii, sailing thence for the Columbia river. Arrived at the mouth of that mighty stream, they built a fort, calling It Astoria, which gradually developed into the town and city of that name. - Tea-Totalers The English poor owe their indigestion to their mania for tea drink*! Ing. An hour before he gets up every Englishman drinks on an empty; stomach a huge cupful of tea as, strong as It can be brewed. Thia fur- 1 nlshes the foundation for the tea Jag that he will build up tn the course of the day. A peasant woman in an English village once asked an American visitor to have a cupful of tea. But the tea was as black as Ink, and the American declined. “How long have you had that teapot simmering on the stove?” she asked. “Why, miss, I never take it off," the peasant woman replied. “I put In a fresh pennyworth when It gets weak and then, when the pot gets full of leaves. I put in my hand and pull out a handful for my old man to smoke.*| WAaf Interested Him One of oar customers Is a merchant who thinks, eats, and sleeps In terms of business. His business Interests him more than anything else In the world. One night, according to the story, his wife discovered him standing over his baby's crib. She saw in his face rapture, doubt, admiration, despair, ecstasy, incredulity. Naturally, she was touched at this somewhat unusual parental attitude, so with glistening'eyes she arose and slipped her arms around him. “A penny for your thoughts,” she said in a voice tremulous with tenderness. Startled Into consciousness, ho blurted out: 'Tor the life of me, I can’t see how anybody can make a crib like that for $3.49."—01d Colony News-Letter. Artificial Pearls The method used by the Buddhist priest in producing pearl Images was to InseA a small wooden wedge between the two shells of the mussel, when these were open, to keep them from closing. All mussels can only open their shell a little way. Just enough to extend the foot by means of which they slowly plow through the mud of the river bottom, and two tubes, one bringing In water loaded with microscopic animals and plants upon which the mussel feeds, and oxygen for breathing, the other carrying away the waste water and refuse. The wedge once quickly and carefully slipped In makes it possible to work tn the Interior.—Nature Magazine. • China’s Many Rulers The early condition of China was tribal, which before Christ merged into a vast feudal system nominally ruled by many contemporaneous dynasties, dated from 2205 B. C. Tho king of Ts’ln put down all other rulers and assumed the title of Hwang T1 or emperor. The principal dynasties from this period are Han, 206 B. Q to 220 A. D.; Tang. 618 to 806; Sung, 960 to 1279; Yuan the Mongol, 1286 to 1367; the Ming. 1368 to 1643; tho Ch’lng or Ts’lng Mancho Tartar, 1643 to fall of the empire and date of republic. LIGONIER ARTIFICIAL ICE COMPANY Syracuse Branch Ice—Soft Drink*—Packing Salt Gas Dnunp Phone 147 N. G. SKIDGEL, Manager
Six Burners No. 415 Four burner cooking top. Oven has two burners and bakes as fast as gas. Finished in durable white porcelain and black enamel. Improved construction eliminates all bolt heads, crevices and projections, making surfaces perfectly smooth *nd easy to clean. Size of top, 22x28 inches. Height 32 & inches. Size of oven, 18 in. wide x 14 . in. deep x 12 in. high.
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LAYERS NEED MASH “It is poor economy to quit feeding mash to tlhe hens in summer,” says Professor C. W. Carrick, head of the poultry department at Purdue University. “Such, a practice is likely to throw the whole flock into a molt and cause egg production to stop.” Many people have a notion that hens can pick up enough bugs and worms from the range during the summer to supply their needs. Records from farm poultry flocks have shown, however, that the range cannot be depended upon to supply sufficient feed for a satisfactory egg production. < One of the principal necessities for high egg production is protein in the ration- This can be supplied satisfactorily by feeding a suitable mash. The grain supplies some protein but it is not of suitable quality or sufficient quantity to give a high summer egg yield. When animal foods such as meat scraps, tankare. and milk are included with the mash, minerals as well as proteins are provided. These
ANNIVERSARY SALE mitr In commemoration of 54 years in the Drug Business tswtut ' OU 1 ONE * n Goshen, by Mr. D. H. Hawks, and the4th 15U 1 CJlvlu AND WE year in our present location, AND WE k H % 1 1 GIVE U 1 113 South Main Street, Goshen, Indiana GIVE U 1 | ■ ii We put on only one sale a year, but when we do have one, it’s a genuine honest :> to goodness sale at which your money goes twice as far as in ordinary trading. <; You get the DOUBLE YOUR MONEY result by patronizing our <; BUY-ONE and we M1 p GIVE-YOU-ONE dALt This means that when you purchase article listed ;! under this plan at the regular price, ;> We Will Give You Free of Charge a Second Article of the Same Kind ■ ■ ' " - . :: THIS SALE WILL BE HELD FOR THREE DAYS ONLY, ON ■ ; Thursday, Friday and Saturday, JULY 22, 23 and 24, 1926 REMEMBER THE DATE, MAKE NO MISTAKE ■*£ Hawks Drug Store Hawks Has It ? 5
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minerals are essential for egg production and are not supplied adequately in grains and grain products. Derails of rations and methods of feeding for egg production are given in Circular 101 of the Purdue University agricultural station. This circuhr will be sent upon request. —o —; Betrothed at Age of Two Queen Margaret of Scotland, eldest daughter of Henry 111 of Englund, was betrothed to Alexander, son of the Scotch king, when she was two years old, and was married to him when she was eleven. o Commune W'fh Nature In those vernal seasons of the year, when the air is calm and pleasant, it were an Injury and sullenness against nature not to go out and see her riches, and partake in her rejoicing with heaven and earth. —John Milton. 666 is a Prescription for Colds. Grippe, Fin, Dengue Bilious Fever and Malaria It Kills the Germs.
Lie'ig for Others No man enn live happily who regards himself aione, who turns everything to his own advantage. Thou must live for another, if thou wishest to live for tlfyself.— Seneca. ROBERT E. PLETCHER Funeral Director Ambulance Service Syracuse, Indiana. Telephone 75 WILLIAM GRAY LOEHR Attorney-at-Law SPECIAL ATTENTION GIVEN TO ESTATES, DEEDS. MORTGAGES » TITLES AND WILLS Admitted to Practice in All Courts Real Estate. Collections, Notary iISA S. Buffalo St.. Warsaw. Ind. GEO. L. XANDERS A ttorney-at-Imw Settlement of Estates. Opinions on Titles Fire and Other Insurance Phone 7 Syracuse. Ind.
