The Syracuse and Lake Wawasee Journal, Volume 12, Number 41, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 5 February 1920 — Page 3
PMffIPHIC BITS ABOUT HOME FOLKS Notes of the Week on the Com- • ing and Going of People Know. i Mrs. Harry Crouch is on the sick list. Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Schick went to Elkhart Tuesday. The Rev. Hedges will soon be out again after a seige of the mumps. Mrs. Byron Grubb, who is teaching at the Wehrley school, has the influenza. Mrs. Chas. Eresler of Elkhart spent Sunday here with Mr. and Mrs. John Schick. Everett and Thelma Darr spent Monday evening with Ernest and Katherine Richhart. ' Rev. S. W. Paul visited his children last week at the Otterbein home at Lebanon, Ohio. Mrs. Leia Clason, of Elkhart, visited here last week with flier parents, Mr. and Mrs. S. Rasor. Mrs. Homer Leedy of Goshen came to spend a few days with her sister-in-law; Mrs. John McCloughan. Mrs. Alldean Strieby, who had spent the past several weeks at Claypool, came last week to spend a few days at the E. E. Strieby home. Mrs. Sol Miller left last week for Indianapolis, where she will spend some time with her father, S. L. Ketring, who is, taking treatments at the Methodist hospital. Everett Smith, who came to Syracuse Saturday evening as a member of the Cromwell high school basket ball team, remained and spent Sunday at the Hanora A. Miles home and with other relatives. Leo Jahn of Elkhart, nephew of Mrs. ’H. W. Buchholz, was buried last Tuesday at Columbus, Ohio, -where he had contract pneumonia a few days’ before while visiting his parents. Mr. Buchholz attended the funeral. Mrs. E. W. Hire and three sons of Elkhart wer,e guests of her mother, Mrs. Joann Holloway from Friday evening until Sunday. Mrs. Roy Riddle and two sons from Wawasee took supper Saturday evening with them; Mr. and Mrs. Knox Stetler were also callers in the evening.
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Frank Bailey was sick for a few days. The Groundhog got a lot of exercise on Monday. Miss Opal Cleland spent Sunday with Miss Irene Richhart. Mrs. B. 0. Mabie spent Monday afternoon with Mrs. William Ward. Mrs. June Hire went to the sanitarium at Rockville, 111., Tuesday. Mrs. John Pfingst spent Wednesday afternoon with Mrs. Frank Younce. Elery Garrison, who was working near Garrett, has returned to Syracuse. Mrs. Groll of Chicago spent Monday evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Schick. Mr. and Mrs. George Bengerman of Elkhart are visiting at the Rude Wilkinson home. Ernest Richhart, who is employed in Bremen, spent the week end here with his family. William Hummel returned to Mishawaka after spending Sunday and Monday here with his family. Mrs. Orlando Plank and Mrs. John Auer and children spent Tuesday with Mrs. Jesse Darr and family. An Ohio girl was awarded $39 for a shattered heart in a breech of promise suit. In these days of high prices a heart/ does not seem to be as valuable as a suit of clothes. Miss Irene Shaffer returned Sunday t© Millersburg, after spending two months with her sister, Mrs. Oscar r Masters, and her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Younce. Harvey Brady of Benton Harfor, Mich., an«> Walter Brady of Toledo, Ohio, were home to attend the funeral of their uncle, J. T. Brady, who died at Rochester Saturday and was buried here Monday. Mr. anti Mrs. Charles Benner and daughters, Theopa, Hazel and Alice, of Jennings, Mich., came yesterday and will spend some time here with his mother, Mrs. M. A. Benner, before moving to Ligonier, where Mr. Benner has employment. The basket ball game last Friday night at the local gymnasium between Wolf Lake and Syracuse resulted in a score of 23 to 18 in favor of the home team. Our home boys are playing a good game this year, and are being supported by fairly good crowds.
THE SYRACUSE AND LAKE WAWASEE JOURNAL
I«D TO SPEND WEEKS IN BED Gains Eighteen Pounds Taking Tanlac—Hasn’t Felt So Well Since She Was A Ch|ld. “I haven’t felt so perfectly well in every way since I was a girl, and I have- gained eighteen pounds in weight since I commenced taking Tanlac,” said Mrs. W. I. Cabert, who 1 ives at 206 Edmund street, Peoria, 111., the other day. “It certainly seems remarkable to me,” she continued, “that a few bottles of Tanlac could make such a wonderful change in my condition after everything else I had tried for nine long years had failed to help me at all. I suffered from a pain across the small of my back nearly all the time, and this trouble finally got so bad that I couldn’t walk up a short flight of steps without stopping to rest. If I tried to dp a little work around the house I would be laid up in bed for days from it, and my back would hurt me so bad I could hardly turn over in bed. My stomach was in bad condition, too, and everything I ate disagreed with me. I would be nauseated aftr eating anything, and I would often have severe cramping pains in the pit of my stomach. I was so nervous I couldn’t sleep wpll, and many v nights I would have to get up and sit in a chaii for hours at a time, and nearly every morning I would get up with a raging headache. Those troubles just kept getting worse all the time until I finally got to where I was hardly able to be up very long at a time, and had to spend weeks in bed. “One day one of my neighbors came in and told me what great things Tanlac had for her,
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ahd advised me to give it a trial, so I got my husband to get me a bottle and I commenced taking it. I can truthfully say that I felt better in just a few days after I began taking this wonderful medicine, and from that time on I improved every day. Now I am as well and strong as I ever was in my life, anti can do all my housework and family washing without the least trouble. Those awful headaches have left me entirely, and my nerves are in such perfect condition that I sleep like a child every night. I never had a better appetite, can eat three hearty meals every day without the least bit of trouble afterwards. I am also triad to sav that the pain has left my back altogether, and I can run no and down starrs now as well as I, could. In fact. I couldn’t ask for better health than I am now enioying. and I’ll tell the world that Tanlac is solely responsible f ’or it all.” Tanlac is sold in Syracuse by R. E. Thornburg; in Milford by Milford Drug Co.; in Mentone bv W. B. Doddridge, and in Silver Lake by Messrs. Rager & Jontz. (Advertisement)
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FEBRUARY PECULIAR . I liar month. February 1 falls on a Sunday as does February 29, the last day of the month. There will be seven holidays in February—that is, for bankers and others, but for the common workman but five. There are five Sundays in February and the customary two legal -holidays—Abraham Lincoln’s birthday, and the anniversary of George Washington’s birth. Such a February has not been experienced since 1880. Leap year is the reason. LIMBERLOST COTTAGE SOLD “Limberlost Cottage,” south of
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Geneva, long the home of Gene Stratton Porter, has been sold to Dr. R. C. Price, of Aleneva. Mrs. Porter, who wrote many of her famous books in that red cedar cottage, abandoned it because so many tourists visiting in such great numbers had commercialized the place, and she built a more recluse cottage at Rome cits\ o — * NO RAIN WATERI Don’t Worry, RUB-NO-MORE WASHING POWDER breakshard water. Ask your griper. 252 —o ~ Pocket Thief Alarm. A thief alarm invented in Europe Is small enough to be carried in a vest pocket and explodes a cartridge when any object under which it is laid la moved.
