The Syracuse Journal, Volume 20, Number 15, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 9 August 1928 — Page 5
Easy on Your Pocket [ ' I Economizing housewives are giving g more careful attention to .the pur- | chasing of the groceries and food- | stuffs they use, than ever before. | s f? £? Let us Help You Save Money You will always find our shelvss loaded with pure, fresh, wholesome | groceries, both fancy and staple, and | in such variety that it is no trouble | to select the makings of your meal. | ' • ■ 1 a Fresh Vegetables | and Fruits S 3 I i a a Seider & Burgener | PURE FOOD GROCERS PHONES 82 AND 172 SYRACUSE INDIANA | E ®SSSSfiISBSSBSSSBSBBBSBSSBBBSBBBSBSBSSfi>SSSBSBSBBBBBBSS ■■iii - i r ■ 1 ~~ l State Bank of Syracuse Capital and Surplus $50,000 ••OUR BANK” - Safety Deposit Boxes For Rent] ■ . ' i '"1 — ; . P A Glassified Ad Will Sell It
! r ■ -• li - </* Electricity and the SPHINX -r-r Tay down in the southern part of Indiana VV are many hills upon which nature played magic. It was up to man’s skill and imagination to realize that these hills contained stone -/ which might be used in building. Years of labor and hardships brought to light the fact that this stone was of great value. It was not until electric power had been brought to these centers that the quarries reached their full value. With the aid of electricity, this stone, which had been named “Indiana Limestone”, was being produced on a large scale. The use of electric cranes, electric shovels, electric saws and other electrical equipment, has made Indiana Limestone the t building material of the world. Electric power y* has brought the sphinx into its own. \ X The Interstate Public Service Company is - i > furnishing electric service to practically every V limestone quarry in Southern Indiana. A net- ( ■ I 1 work of transmission lines carries power to the ? \ quarries and mills, thus affording them every . A J possible advantage of modern production. V INTERSTATE 7 ff Servlng266 A
REAL RELIEF CAME WHEN SHE STARTED WITH NEW KONJOLA l Says He Was Suffering Wit! Asthma And Rundown Condition; Now Entirely Well. MR. GUSHING “I want others to know how Konjola helped me”, said Mr Gus King, 601£ Division Street Indianapolis, “because a medicine that will restore new health to a system that was as badly rundown as mine, deserves cred it.” “I was severely troubled with asthma and bothered with a wheezing cough that would last for weeks at a time. It felt as though someone was pressing against my chest and this pressure made it almost impossible for me to breathe. My whole system was growing weaker, but I could never find the right medicine to end my suffering. “I noticed a change over my whole system when I first started to take Konjola. That conjested feeling over my heart disappeared, and I am no longer troubled with shortness of breath. It stopped that cough and I am feeling like a different person. I strongly indorse this medicine to anyone in poor health. • ,1116 Konjola is sold in Syracuse at Thornburg drug store, and by all the best druggists in all towns throughout this entire section.
THB iUCBMAI.
Correspondence the Neighborhood SOLOMON’S CREEK Mr. and Mrs. John Bowman >f Goshen called on Lee Wirllage ind family. Kenneth Hapner is spending his week with his grandmother, drs. Vica Hapner. Mrs. Ettie-'Seese called on her laughter Mrs. Harry Cripe Sunlay afternoon. Miss Meriam Darr is spending his week with her grandmother drs. Allie Darr. Mr. and Mrs. Ford Overleese of Iflford spent Sunday with Mr. nd Mrs. Ed. Fisher. V Mr. and Mrs. Perry Bunger ailed on Mr. and Mrs. Fern Bunker of Goshen Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. John Darr and children spent Sunday with his lother Mrs. Allie Darr of Syrause. Mr. and Mrs. Will Fockler and •hildren of near Syracuse spent ’unday with Mr. and Mrs. Ralph /ail. Frank and Charley Bunger and 3elle Juday of near Millersburg spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Jeo. Darr. Mr. and Mrs. Mell Tully and' son Joe and Mrs. Vica Hapner spent Sunday in Syracuse with Mr. and Mrs. S. O. Jefferies. Rev. Hubartt received word from Butler last w-eek, he had a little grandson. His son, Glen and wife, are the proud parents. The last quarterly meeting of the conference year was he’d here Wednesday evening and new officers for the coming year were elected. Anderson Juday and family. Grover Hillbish and family and Mr. and Mrs. Charley Shannon attended the Adis reunion at Wolf Lake. Misses Louise Darr, Juanita Gushwa. Mabie, Treva, and Dorthy Mullen, Martha and Agnes Spurgon spent Sunday with Miss Opal Neff near Syracuse. Mr. and Mrs. Eli Juday, and sons,Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Merrick and two children of New Paris and Mr. and Mrs. Sailor Darr of Goshen spent Sunday with Earn Juday and family. Mrs. Emma Ringwait was called to Elkhart one day last week on account of the sudden illness of her granddaughter, Mrs. Emma Miller, who took suddenly ill while working in a factory there. Sunday school Sunday morning. The contest ends Sunday. We invite all to come who can. There will also be a gift shower for the kitchen in the basement; any one who wishes to bririg anything it will be much appreciated. The attendance last Sunday was 113. We want to make it larger next Sunday.
CONCORD Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Mathews spent Sunday evening with Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Beiswanger. Mr. and Mrs. William Wyland and son Eldon spent Sunday near Wolf Lake with friends. Mr. and Mrs. Sylvester Coy spent Tuesday with their daughter Mrs. Chester Stiffler. Mrs. Ray LeCount and family spent Sunday with Mrs. Marie Gillcrist at the cottage on the lake. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Mathews, Mrs. Rebecca Dewart were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Lawrance Dewart Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Guy Fisher and family spent Sunday with their daughter Mr. and Mrs. Everet Tom of Osceola. Mr. and Mrs. Bert Fleming and family of Dayton, Ohio, are spending a few days with Mr. and Mrs. Paul Buhrt. Frank Edmans of Carmi, 111., who was spending a few days with his sister who is sick, left for his home Monday. Rev. Grover Ward and family of North Webster and his brother and wife of Defiance, Ohio, spent Sunday afternoon at the James Dewart home. Those who were guests of Mr. and Mrs.' J. A. Fisher Sunday were Mr. and Mrs. Bert Crandal of Michigan, Mr. and Mrs. Galloway of Cromwell, Vern LeCount and daughter Mary and son Carl of near Ligonier. o “High Blood Pressure” Can be overcome by natural methods, improvement begins at once. Treatments are pleasant. Call Dr. Warner, phone 176, Goshen. o A classified ad will sell it.
RADIO Doctor SETS, SERVICE AND SUPPLIES All Guaranteed . Owen R. Strieby Phone 845 Syracuse, Indiana.
FOUR CORNERS . Mr. and Mrs. James Myers visited with friends near New Salem Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. James Gilbert and daughter and grandson spent Saturday night and Sunday with relatives at Mishawaka. Miss Thelma Geyer spent a few days with her sister Mrs. Earl Darr near Goshen. Mr. and Mrs. Hyler of Chicago visited from Saturday till Monday with the families of Howard McSweeny and Frank Maloy. Mrs. Charles Purdum and son have gone to Virginia to visit with Mrs. Purdum’s parents and other friends for a few weeks. Mrs.' Dr. P. F. Fishbaugh and daughter Miss Grace, of Mendon. Ohio, visited Wednesday night and Thursday with Crist Dan and also in the home of Earl Darr near Goshen. i o CULLING OF THE FLOCK The comb, wattles and ear lob es of a hen, enlarge or contract depending on the condition of laying. If these parts are large and smooth, or hard and waxy the bird is laying. If the comb is limp the bird is either coming into or going out of lay, or laying but little. When the comb is shrunken and rough, the bird is not laying. The whole abdomen, of a laying hen is enlarged so that the pelvic bones are widespread and the keel or breastbone is forced down, away from the pelvicbones, so as to give large capacity. By placing the fingers, flat between the pelvic bones the width apart can be determined. If the ends of the bones are. soft and pliable and the width of two or three ordinary fingers (varying with the size of the hen) can be placed between them, the hen is. in all probability, laying at the time of examination. If the bones are close together and the points hard, the hen is not laying. The flock should be culled during the summer to avoid feeding the hens after they have ceased laying. Accurate culling is only possible in a well fed flock, kept free from lice and mites throughout the summer months. When a bird stops laying in the summer she usually starts molting. The later a hen lays in the summer the greater will be her production, so that the high producer is the late layer and hence the late molter, provided she receives a balanced ration. The early molter is not the winter layer. The high layer usually retains her primary wing feathers until September or October.
LARGEST METEORITE The world’s most gigantic meteorite of which science has' any certain knowledge fell on the earth on June 30, 1908. Fortunately, says Dr. E. E. Free’s Week’s Science (New York), the enormous celestial missile struck the earth in the remote province of Yenisei, in Siberia, and its only victims were apparently a few million trees and a herd of 1,500 reindeer. We read: “According to a report to the Astronomical Society of the Pacific by Mr. N. T. Bobrovnikdff, the Russian exploring expedition sent to investigate rumors of this gigantic fall has discovered the site and has proved not merely that the meteor did arrive, but that its arrival must have been one of the most spectacular events in the whole history of the earth. Where the ( meteorite struck there now exists, the expedition reports, an area several miles in diameter where the earth is torn and furrowed as tho by a gigantic harrow. Around this in a circle scores of miles in diameter millions of dead trees of the primeval forest now lie flat and stript of their branches, every tree pointing outward from the center, like a vast forest of fallen nine-pins. At he nearest settlement, fifty miles away, two farmers were knocked down by the blast of the meteorite’s fall and scorched by its heat. Both the heat wave and the explosion were preceived at the railway, four hundred miles-, distant. Os a herd Os 1,500 believed to have been near the site of the fall no trace has since been found. Had chance directed this enormous visitor from space to the site of a city or a thickly settled country the world would have experienced an unparalleled disaster; one we must not forget, which may yet happen should another such meteorite ever arrive.” o Miles and Miles of smiles in “Smile, Brother, Smile” at Crystal, Ligonier, next Sunday and Monday, August 12 and 13. 666 Cures Malaria and quickly relieves Biliousness, Headaches* and Dizziness due to temporary Constipation, Aids in eliminating Toxins and is highly esteemed for producing copious watery evacuations.
IKLINK BROS. | * A | ‘ MEAT MARKET S * _—_— T _ g J On Hot Days Serve Cold Meats | 1-- - - - - # Cold meats for hot 2 day meals—a delim (Il t P \ Sisi? ciously appetizing # -S' r-f A part of the daily 2 1 'MBhA?v menu that will be # | enjoyed by all. We 2 t —/"“X. have them cooked, 2 2 /"r". < fi so your part cf the & § \ i 1 work is reduced to 2 £ V -z >■' kvt A . . # X.' ff a m ’ niniun • # J WE DELIVER I#» ' ' i BROILERS and /ZSf' ' ROASTERS for Fall Table Use I Uhit-kens will be scarce. H ® JO "'** h* ive "dMH) of them from two ‘ ** weeks to four weeks old. t 6? Sneeial price* for a short time W ~ Jif Come direct to the Hatchery. Ope» day ami night. The Milford Hatchery .Milford, Indiana. . , ’ ,etl ® ettz Phone ITS Prop.
EX-GOVI RNOR DEAD | Former Governor W. S. Taylor. 76 of Kentucky, died at Indianapolis Thursday. Taylor was elected Republican governor of Kentucky in 1899, but his election was declared fraudulent by tho legislature. He was sought in connection with the death of William Goebel who was declared to have been legally elected governor. Goebel was shot from ambush. Indiana governors since Taylor fled to this state in 1900 have refused to recognize extradition for Taylor. o The railroad, according to a statement of the American Railway Association, are practicing thrift, with consequent savings that run into hundreds of thousands of dollars. Old broom handles are being transformed into staffs for signal flags. Wornout canvas is stitched by the up holstery shops of the carriers into cab curtains, locomot’ve steam pipe covering, aprons for workmen, vestibule find coach window curtains, and old tin containers now emerge as cups, buckets and other utensils. o Advertise in the Journal. Dr. Byler’s RHEUMATIC REMEDY is as near a specific for Rheumatism as any drug known to the medical profession. Contains neither alcohol or opiates in any .form, and is as near a specific for rheumatism as quinine is for ague. For sale at THORNBURG DRUG CO. Syracuse, Indiana.
I You Need Groceries I I We Need the Business I Bear in mind that the South I Side Grocery will furnish I you every need for your breakfast, dinner and supper table. I OUR MOTTO: I Quality —Service —A Square Deal I Nelson Byland I Phone 848 Syracuse, Ind.
Many Sufferers 'Jrom 1,111 QJEURALGiyX been J A DR. MILES' nti-Pain Pills When you’re suffering, common sense and good medical practice agree that some-1 thing should be done to— r Relieve the Pain. Dr. Miles’ Anti-Pain Pills are usually effective in Monthly Pains Backache . Headache Toothache Neuralgia and pains caused by Rheumatism and Neuritis. We will be glad to send you samples for 2c in stamps. Dr. Miles Medical Company, Elkhart, Ind. Bright B. Bortner Registered Civil Engineer ALBION, IND. Lake Subdivision & Consulting J. C. Abbott DESIGNER AND BUILDER Decorating and Painting Phone 734 Syracuse, Ind.
