The Syracuse Journal, Volume 20, Number 37, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 12 January 1928 — Page 10
Classified Ads Classified advertising is accepted at the rate of 5 cents a line for each insertion. A booking and collection fee of IV cents will be added for a charged account: no account will be’ charged for less than 25 cents for a single item.
PONY FOR SALE—Jacob Bucher, telephone 386, Milford. 37-2 t FOR SALE—Conn (C) Melody saxophone. Very good condition. Millard D. Hire, Phone R-733. 35-4 t FOR SALE —Pair of new three-bench bob sleds. Bert Ward, Phone 128. 36-2 RADIO- Have you heard the wonderful Buckingham radio:' Sold by Owen R. Strieby, Syracuse. Phone 845. * 34-ts LOST—Saturday evening in or near the Community Building, pair of bifocal shell-rimmed glasses. Finder please return to the Journal office. 37-2 t SALESMAN WANTED—F o r lubricating oils, greases and paints. Pxcellent opportunity. Salary or Commission. THE JED OIL AND PAINT CO., Cleveland, Ohio. 37-pd RADlO—Something w r o with your radio? Call Owen Strieby. Phone 845. u t 23-11 OFFICE SUPPLlES—Typewiiter ribbon, carbon paper, typewriter paper, cardboard, blotting, etc., for sale at the Journal erf ice. ORVfIL 6. GftRR Funeral Director Ambulance Service Syracuse, Indiana. Telephone 75 See DWIGHT MOCK « For VulGaniziiKj and . RG6HJI6OG Welding . Battery Charging and Repairing South Side Lake Wawasee on cement Road. Phone 504 , Syracuse Floors Sanded and Redinished ( PAINTING AND DECORATING J. C. Abbott Phibne 734 Syracuse. Ind. GEO. L. XANDERS Attorney-at-Law Settlement of Estates. Opinions on Titles Fire and Other Insurance Phone 7 Syracuse. Ind.
In All America no Better Built Car at the Rice ! More power .. . more speed ... more smoothness. A brilliant change of pace. You instinctively expect them. You somehow know that’s what you get in the All-American Six . . . •* But consider these other reasons for its stirring success. The exacting care and craftsmanship with which the car is built. How marvelously it survives the tests and trials of time ... Here are stamina and endurance that result only from All-American engineering. Big, rugged, oversize units. Balance andsimplicity of design. Month after month of pitiless testing on General Motors Proving Ground . . . and super-precision construction throughout! . . . That’s why its power, speed and smoothness are measured in tens of thousands of miles. Why economy and dependability are Oakland owners’ by-words. Why All-American owners will tell you—“No better built car at the price!” PK/CES.- 2-door Sedan, $1045; Landau Coupe, $1045; Snort Roadater, $1075; 4-door Sedan, $1145; Cabriolet, $1155; Landau Sedan, $1265. 97 f S - 4,1 g""’ •*Awtory. Delivered pricea •ncluao minimum handling charges. Lair to nay on the liberal General Motors Timo Payment Plan. . ~ " 1 f with tire well. ... two epecud tire lock, and locking nk . r,ck C • • • 10 ° on °^ n cars ...SI 10 On •*5~ wheel * w.th M me equipment. »75 on open car. .. . I^_ nMBMMMaiIRir i■ yBedrkyfMher McKOWN MOTOR SALES Syracuse, Indiana WKLAND ALL-tAMEKICAN six * PROOVCT OF GENERAL MOTORS
! SPECIAL I 0 ’ •' EJ 0 EJ i for Saturday I •J E e -a a a k — 0 0 a 3 __ B I 30x31 Tube e > -a i - $1.25 I 0 'a (8 a 0 E R E 13 a Bl 0 a 0 - I Syracuse Auto Sales I 0 * . e E? • • 3 - S
Moore’s Famous Poem Sold Before Written The full quotation runs: “The trail of the serj>ent is over them all,” and means, “They are all tarred with the same brush,” or “They are birds of a feather.” The line is from Tom Moore’s poem. “Lalla Rookh.” “Lalla Rookh” is little read today, Moore’s fame resting solidly and lastingly on his “Irish Melodies.” But Moore was immensely popular in his lifetime, and got a sum for every song he wrote. Mr. Stephen Gwynne, in his “Life of Moore.” tells us that John Murray offered two thousand guineas ($lO,500) for the copyright- of “Lalla Rookh" before it was written. Moore’s friends thought he should have more, and, going to Longman. the rival publishing house, they claimed Mr. Moore should receive the highest prtce ever paid for a poetn. “That,” said Longman, “was £3,000 ($15,000) paid to Scott for ‘Rokeby.’ ” Longman was inclined to stipulate for a preliminary perusal. Moore, however, refused, and,the agreement was finally worded: “That upon giving into our hands a poem of the length of ‘Rokeby’ you shall receive from us a sum of c£3.000.” It is probable that the publisher did not regret his bargain, for the poem had a tremendous sale. WHISKY IX (‘ORNERSTONE A bottle of whisky was found in the cornerstone of the old Howard county court house at Ko komo. which is being- razed foi the construction of a new building. Since it was asserted the ilquor could not be legally given away and sentiment was against its destruction, the commissioners decided to preserve all contents of the old cornerstone intact and place them in the new stone. The old court house was built in 1868. EYESIGHT AND”OCCUPATION The national committee for the prevention of blindness says the industrial occupations are responsible for 15 per cent of the blindness. A persistent campaign is being carried on to induce all workers in industrial plants to wear goggles.
Early History of Books Through the Dark ages the church carefully guarded its literary treasures. Books were considered necessary to mitigate the austerities of monastic life. They were borrowed and exchanged for copying, and frequently were read for generations in the same monastery in which they had been written. Following the rulq of. St. Benedict, many monks read a required number of hours a day. Thq works accessible were kept in cupboards or presses and were studied oe copied in the carols of the cloister, even during the coldest weather. Great value was set upon them, Thomas a Kempis passionately corm pares a monastery without books to a “kitchen without stewpans” or a “river without fish.”—The Independent. “Touch Wood” To one who boasts continued good luck the reply is often made “touch wood.” Has this phrase come down to us from our tree worshiping ancestors? The primitive belief was that spirits resided in trees. Without this basic idea being entirely lost there came the period of the sacred groves .and the Druids’ oaks, and then the dedication of certain sorts of trees to the earliest and simplest form of superstition. We touch wood to call the attention of the tree spirit to the fact that we recognize his influence in the good luck of which we boast, and in order that he may not feel slighted antflchange our good fortune into bad; at least, that is why our ancestors touched wood. ' The Egotist I have been denied a certain joy I many know. There are persons whq; regard themselves as perfect, and find pleasure in the habit; in criticism of those not equally blessed with con- ! celt. I have often wondered what the attitude of the really great is toward themselves. Was Michelangelq satisfied with himself? Or did hh constant hard work indicate he was] unable to do his best? If this was the cage, what a wonder is the palpably inferior man who, contemplating himself, falls on bis knees in won ship.—E. W. Howe’s Weekly. Million Stars in Cluster Astronomers count the great clus ter of Hercules as one of the most in teresting of globular systems. It ap pears to the naked eye as a small star but under the heavy glasses is found to contain no fewer than 35,000 stan and they can be photographed todaj with the improved aids for star study and astronomers claim that it is en tirely possible that Hercules, to tlu naked eye a star of the sixth magni tude, may have at least a million stan in the cluster, all casting their rayi forth together.
666 is a Prescription for Colds, Grippe, Flu, Dengue Bilious Fever and Malaria It Kills the Germs.
I FUR SALE| i ® | $25,000 Fur Stock Closing Out | Collars, Cuffs, Chokers n f B! and Fur Coats. g s Complete stock, including Seal, Beaver, | | Squirrel, Muskrat, Marmink, Racoon, Opposum, | 1 etc., One-Third to One-Half off. Free service and free storage for one year, k | with every garment purchased at Fingers. Visit | f Indiana's only fur matching department. Modern | i fur storage, general remodeling and relining of | | fur and cloth garments. Furs Wholesale and Retail a Visit Fingers new $35,000 plant. Open evenings, a a ® i FINGERS FURRIERS I H ci a Phone 2345 116 Jefferson Street Elkhart, Indiana g ® 1
THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL
Notice of Sale of Real Estate — The undersigned, executor Os the last will of William McClintic, deceased, hereby gives notice that by virtue of an order of the Kosciusko Circuit Court, he will at the hour of 10 a. m., of the 14th day of February, 1928, at the office of Butt & Xanders, attornejis, in the Town of Syracuse, Kosciusko County. I Indiana, and from day to day thereafter until sold, offer for sale at private sale, all the interest of said decedent in and to the following described real estate, towit; TRACT NUMBER ONE. Beginning at a stone 19 feet; West Os a stone at the Southwest corner of the East Half of the Northeast Quari ter of Section 6, Township 34 North, I Range 7 East, running thence North I 73% degrees East to the middle of the HuntingtonZßoad; thence South 133% degrees East in the middle of i said road to the South line of the Ea.-t Half of the Northeast Quarter I of said Section; thence west to the i place of beginning. ’ Also, commencing at the Northwest corner of the East Half of the Southeast Quarter of Section 6, Township 34 North, Range 7 East; running thence East on the open line 15 rods and 7 Units; thence South 33 degrees East 13 rods; thence South 73% degrees West 23 rods and 5 links to the line dividing the ( East and West Halves of said Quarter 1 Section; thence North on. said line 17 rods and 17 Jinks to the place of beginning. Also; commencing ,at a point in Huntington Street where the middle line of High Street crosses the same; ! thence South '68% degrees West 430 i feet; thence South 4 degrees East 129 feet; thence North 53 degrees East 483 feet to the place of beginning. Also, all that part of the West Half of the Southeast Quarter of Seci tion 6, Township 31 North, Range 7 ' East being and lying North of the 1 middle of the Turkey Creek Ditch I containing 33 acres, .more or less, excepting therefrom the four following i described tracts to-wit; 1. The Syracuse Cemetery Grounds, heretofore conveyed in several separate conveyances. 2. That part of McConnell and Lapes Second Addition and that part of Lapes First Addition to the Town i of Syracuse, Indiana, located in said West Half of the Southeast Quarter of said Section 6. 3. Commencing at a stake in the middle of Mi 15 Street in the Town of Syracuse, Indiana, where William McClintic’s line crosses said Street; running thence South 40% degrees West 585 £eet to the middle of Tur- ; key Creek; thence in a "Westerly direction along the middle of said creek 89 feet; thence North 40% degrees East 596 feet; thence South 39 degrees East 66 feet to the place of beginning. •4. A tract of land lying adjacent to the Town of Syracuse, Indiana, in the west one-half of Section 6, Township 34 North. Range 7 East, beginning at a brick monument marking the south side of the entrance to the Syracuse Cemetery at a point 28.3 feet South 7 degrees 23 minutes West df the point of intersection of the center lines of Mil! and High Streets of said Town and at the intersection <tf the west line of Mill Street and the south line oli High Street and running thence South 88 degrees 50 minutes West, 170 feet to an iron post; thence South 54 degrees 47 minutes West, 26 feet to an iron post; thence South 1 degree <»6 minutes East;, 65 feet to a concrete post; thence South 88 degrees 54 minutes West, 587.5 feet to a corner stone at the Southwest corner of the Syracuse Cemetery; thence South 1 degree 14 minutes East, 445.0 feet to the center line of Turkey Creek: thence North 85 degrees 16 minutes East, 440.0 feet along said line; thence North 40 degrees 59 minutes East, 276 feet; thence North 40 degrees 45 minutes East, 320.0 feet to the center line qf Mill Street; thence North 37 degrees 37 minutes West, 70.0 feet along said line; thence South 88 degrees 50 minutes. West, 24.0 feet to the place of beginning and containing 6.58 acres more or less. All of said Tract number one, being located in Kosciusko County, Indiana. TRACT NUMBER TWO A tract of land lying adjacent to the Town of Syracuse, in the West one-half of Section 6, Township 34 North, Range 7 East, Kosciusko County, Indiana, beginning at £ brick monument, marking the south side of the entrance to the Syracuse Cemetery at a point 28.3 feet South 7 degrees 23 minutes West otf the point of intersection of the center lines of Mill and High Streets, of said Town and at the intersection of the west line df Mill Street and the south line of High Street and running thence South 88 degrees 5© minutes West, 170 feet to an iron post; thence South 54 degrees 47 minutes West,
26 ffeet to an iron post; thence South 1 degree 06 minutes East, 65 feet to a concrete post; thence South 88 degrees 54 minutes West, 587.5 feet to a corner stone at the Southwest cor- : ner of the Syracuse Cemetery; thence South 1 degree 14 minutes East, 445.0 (feet to the center line of Turkey Creek: thence North 85 degrees 16 minutes East, 440.0 feet along said line; thence North 40 degrees 59 minutes East, 276 feet; thence North 40' degrees 45 minutes East, 320 feet to I the center line of Mill Street; thence North 37 degrees 37 minutes West, 70.0 feet along said line; thence South 88 degrees 50 minutes West, 24.0 feet to the place of beginning and containing 6.5<8 acres, more or less. TRACT NUMBER THREE Lot numbered 87 in Hillabold’s Addition to the Town of Syracuse, Kosciusko County, Indiana. TRACT NUMBER FOUR. Lots numbered 9 and 10 in Block Number 3 in Ketring’s Addition to the To<vn of Syracuse* Kosciusko County, Indiana TRK’T NUMBER FIVE Lots membered 1 and 2, more particularly desty-ibed as the West 107.85 acres of the Northwest Quarter of Section 27, Township 34 North, Range 7 East; Also lot numbered 5, more particularly described as the East 50.86 acres of the Northwest Quarter of Section 27, Township 34 North, Range 7 East; Also the North 53.94 acres of the West 107.89 acres of the Southwest Quarter of Section 27, Township 34 North, Range 7 East and otherwise described as Lot number 3. All of said above real estate described as Tract number five being in Kosciusko County. Indiana. TR U T NUMBER SIX An undivided one-half part of the fol owing described real estate, situate in Kosciusko County, Indiana, to-wit: The East Half df the following described tract situated in the Northeast Fractional Fourth of Section 26. Township 34 North, Range 7 East, Kosciusko County,’ Indiana, towit; Commencing at a point on the North line of the public highway at the Southwest corner of the land formerly owned by Jonathan Stump and which point of beginning is South 77% degrees” West 466.6 feet and South 75 degrees West 376.5 feet from the Northeast corner of the Southeast Quarter of the Northeast Quarter of i said Section 26; thence North 15 degrees West 170 .feet to Lake Wawasee; thence West with the meanderings of said Lake 76 feet; thence South 15 degrees East 170 feet to the North line of the public highway as surveyed by Henry Cook, civil engineer, in December. 1897, and as the same is now established and located; thence North 75 degrees East along the North line of said highw’ay 76 feet to the place of beginning; reference being made to the plat of ’ Cottingham Beach, as the same is laid out and recorded laround the tract of real estate herein described. 'lt is agreed and understood that whereas there is a flowing or artesian well now located on the center line between the East and West Halves of said real estate, and that in connection therewith there is also located a well house one half on each side df said center line; that the right to use said well house shall run with the title to the East gnd West Halves of said real estate including ateo the right to use said well, and that said well and well house hereby becomes the joint property of the respective owners and holders of the title of said East and West Halves of the read estate, and their successors in interest. Said sale will be made subject to the approval of said court, for not lessi than the jfulfl 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 fees and secured by mortgage on the real estate sold. Said tracts above enumerated, will ■be sold separately under the above terms and conditions* CHARLES C. BACHMAN, Executor. Geo. L. Xanders, Attorney lor Estate. 0 For sale bills go to the Journal office.
HUDSON-ESSEX Are Showing ' They reflect tomorrow’s (y/oauL In both HUDSON and ESSEX. the famous. High-Compression Super-Six motors that turn waste heat to power H. D. HARKLESS, Syracuse, Indiana
Notice of Sale of Real Estate The undersigned, Administrator of the estate of Abigail Hamman, deceased, hereby gives notice that by virtue off an order of the Kosciusko Circuit Court, he will at the hour of 2. p. m. of the 14th day of February, 1928, at the office otf Butt & Xanders, attorneys, in the Town of Syracuse, Kosciusko County, Indiana, and from day to day thereafter until sold, offer for saile at private sale, all the interest of said decedent in and to the following described real estate, tow’it:TRAUT NUMBER TWO An undivided one-third interest in and to the West Half of the South East Quarter of Section 26, Township 34 North, Range 7 East, excepting 5% acres out of the Northeast corner thereof, more particularly described as Tract Number One, herein before set out, all in Kosciusko County, Indiana. TRACT NUMBER THREE A full interest in and to the North end of the West Half of the Northeast Quarter of Section 35, Township 34, Range 7 East, Kosciusko County, Indiana, described as follows; Commencing at the Northeast corner of the West Half of the Northeast Quarter of said Section and running South 59 rods; thence West 80 rods, thence North 50 rods; thence East 80 rods to the place of beginning, containing 25 acres, more or less. Said sale will be made subject to the approval of said 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 real estate sold. Said tracts above enumerated, will be sold separately on the terms and conditions above stated. GEORGE L XANDERS, Administrator Abigail Hamman Estate. o HE FOUND WHAT HE WANTED A census taker called at a farm house and a woman answered the door. “How many in your family?” “Five,” answered the old woman, peevishly. “Me, the old man, one kid, a cow and a cat.” “And the politics of your family?” inquired the enumerator. “Mixed,” came the short reply. “I’m. a republican, the old man’s a democrat, the kid’s wet, the cow’s dry, and the cat’s a populist.” ; o— See “The Garden of Allah,” a screen master production from Robert Hichen's famous story. It’s 1(M) per cent entertainment at Crystal, lagoniner. next Tuesday. Wednesday, Thursday, January 17, 18 and 19.
Here’s the 2,000,000th Buick! £. T. Strong, president and general manager of the Buick Motor Com* pany, is shown stepping into the 2,000,000th Buick as it rolled off the unified assembly line. Production of this car makes Buick unique among manufacturers of high-grade automobiles. The car, a five-passenger coupe, is being, disptaved i*» connection with the National AutomoMle Shows. (
PHOTOGRAPHS TURN BACK THE YEARS Frequent visits to your family photographer will give your children and their children a heritage of memories for which they will be ever grateful—for which they will thank you at seven and seventy-seven. The Schnabel Studio Over Baker’s Drug Store GOSHEN, INDLANA
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