The Syracuse and Lake Wawasee Journal, Volume 14, Number 6, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 2 June 1921 — Page 5
PARAGRAPHIC BITS ' ■ ABOUT HOME FOLKS Notes of the Week on the Com* ing and Going of People Yon Know. • -■ - Mr. and Mrs. Fieldon Sharp , entertained visitors from Milford ' Sunday. Mrs. R. W. Osborn’s little ' sister of Culver is visiting at the Osborn home. The public pier at the foot of ' Main street was put into place | last Saturday. | ■ Mrs. Cress of Marion spent ■ last week here visiting with ner Howard D. Cress. \mf. and Mrs. Riley Miller spUnt Sunday ni Bristol visiting wiith the latter’s uncle. Marion Davis was dismissed from the Goshen hospital Tuesday morning and returned home here. I 8 l C. C. Bachman and children spent Tuesday afternoon at the Sherd Bachman home at New Paris. •. I Howard Bowser and family of Garrett visited this week at the home of his mother, Mrs. J. H. Bowser. I. . I Miss Mildred Rookstool of Elkhart spent the week end with her. grandmother, Mrs. Michael Rookstool. Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Mitchell of Nappanee spent Sunday and Monday here with the latter’s mother, Mrs. Ella Wolf. Harold Bowser of Cleveland, Ohio, spent the week end and Decoration Day here with his mother, Mrs. J. H. Bowser. i Mr. and Mrs. Verd Shaffer of Millersburg and Mr. and Mrs. Clee Younce of Elkhart were in Syracuse for Decoration Day. | Miss Jessie Rosson of Goshen 1 spent the week end and Decoration Day here with her mother,Mrs. Ada Rosson, and her sister, Elizabeth. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Darr of South Bend and Tom Darr of Mishawaka spent the week end with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Darr. Miss Irene Shaffer and Floyd Garver of Goshen spent the week end here with Miss Shaffer’s grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Younce. Mr. and Mrs/Howard D. Cress, have rented the Wm. Beckman j residence property in north Huntington street and will occupy it soon. ’ Frank Jenkins of Elkhart spent Wednesday in Syracuse on business. Mr. Jenkins was formerly in the flour milling business hipre with his father. MrsJ 0. L. Cleveland fell down stairs/ Tuesday »at her home in Front street and sustained a severely sprained anklet which will keep her confined for several days. Mr. and Mrs. John Rookstool of Goshen are the . proud parents of a baby girl, Angela Jenace, born last Friday, May 27. Mrs. 1 Rookstool was formerly Miss Frieda Soltau. ■ I
□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□ 9 FURNITURE □ D Buy your furniture through J. W. Rotheuberger. Can sell you furniture, rugs etc. - - Anything for the home. 4 Prices guaranteed. Installment plan if you like. Goods delivered to your ■ home without extra - charge. 0 ' • Come to the Home of the HARMON-O-GRAPH Phone 90 Syracuse, Ind. ' . □□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□
I Mrs. Charles Rentfrow was I brought home Friday from the at Warsaw where she had undergone an operation for appendicitis. Her recovery is, slow but hopeful. Chas. J. Launer left yesterday morning for Indianapolis, where he will undergo an operation at the Methodist hospital. He was accompanied by Mrs. Launer and by Dr. B. F. Hoy. I Mrs. William Hyndman and daughter Lucile of Cromwell, | who were in Syracuse shopping 'on Tuesday, spent the time between trains at the home of I Ernest Smith and family. Rev. and Mrs. F. W., Launer and daughter Mary of Lynn , Grove came Monday evening to 1 spend some time here. Rev. Launer reports that he is well pleased with his new work. Mrs. A. L. Miller and children left Sunday morning by automobile for Mount Morris, 111., | where they will spend two weeks visiting with Mrs. Miller’s parents and with other relatives. Mrs. Rose Tucker, who moved i here from Fort Wayne recently 1 into the Rentfrow residence property in south Lake street, is caring for her sister, Mrs. , Chas. Rentfrow, who returned i from the Warsaw hospital. Mrs. W. F. Kindig and Mrs. Margaret in company with Clyde Wehrley of-Milford, i motored to Bloomingdale, Mich., last week and visited at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Wehrley. i Clifford H. Ott has been spending the past two weeks at home, time customarily g’ven Purdue seniors to prepare for graduation. Mr. Ott has completed his four-year course in forrestry and will be graduated June 4. ! Genevieve, the three-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Rayl mond Vorhis of Elkhart, formerly of Syracuse, received a broken arm last Friday while crossing the street in front of the Vornis , | home at that place. She was I struck by an automobile driven by Mrs. Claude Tiedeman of Goshen. o— A Lost Art An old shepherd who has just died In a village a few miles from here was unable to count beyond three. Nevertheless, he.had charge of large flocks »f sheep and could tell not merely when one was missing, but which par- . tlcular animal had disappeared. The I >ld man was unwilling to explain how ■ he did it. and the secret had died with him.—Leighton Buzzard correspondnice, London Daily*Mail. o To Quench Thirst. An Invalid whose mouth becomes dry and parched during the night, or a fever patient, will find that an orange, I cut into small pieces and placed with- ! in easy reach of the * bed so that a piece may be held in the mouth from time to time, will be more beneficial than water, says Good Housekeeping. It has the added advantage that a patient can manage the pieces of ongige more easily than he could a glass of water. o Grapeshot and Canister. Grapeshot was a bunch of pelleta about the size of gr.*;»es, held together In a canvas bag, or by an iron pin and a series of iron plates containing holes in which the shot rested. Canister consisted of a number of east Iron balls, a half to one Inch In ilameter, which were contained in one shell. Both were used In the Civil war. o Bible Figures. The total number of verses In the Bible Is 31,172. Others figures are.: Letters, 3,396,480; words. 773.746; Chapters, 1,189; books. 66. The two [central verses are 32 and. 33 In Psalm | ixxvlll.
William of Wykeham. As a necessary adjunct-and accessory to Winchester school, William s os Wykeham founded New college nt Oxford, and the publication of the charter of foundation of the latter establishment hears the date of November 26. 1379. Wykeham. to this day. 18 one of the most popular characters in English history, and his biography Is Indeed a Itfi’ge part of it. —Chicago Journal. . o High Coit of Flirting. Mrs. Exe —"Your new hat’is lovely, my dear. Bui $75. 1 thought you said you were going to get a much cheaper one.*' Mrs. Wye—“ Well. I was, but my husband was with me and when 1 saw him flirting with one of the salesgirls I took this $75 hat just for revenge.”— Boston TtmiscripL 0 - » Meteors. A meteor Is a sudden luminous ■oinenou. as of a star or bright body in rapid motion through the air. produced by a small muss of matter perhaps from the celestial spaces striking the air with - planetary velocity, and .suffering heating, dissipation, or combustion. Before encountering the earth they travel In their own orbit* ———— —” - ■ O-‘ * ■■ - ■ Foxy Papa. “What did the brides father do for the happy couple?’’ “He bought their railroad tickets.” “Ah!” “But the happy pair didn't discover until after they on the train that their tickets read only one way.”—Birmingham Age-Herald. O Dream Bells. Bells In a dream are said to be favorable. If yon are in love their ?liiming Is stated to be a sign of a tappy marriage If you are In business they tire believed to denote suc-.•e-ss.' o Unseemly Temper. A taxi driver who knocked o man down In Grncechurch street has summoned him for using abusive language It seems a pity that pedestrians cannot lie knocked down without showing their temper like tills. —London Punch O — ’ Ancient Scottish Yew Tree. A yew tree ill a Scotch graveyard was in 1660 noted as being one of the largest trees in existence. It is still standing, and according to some authorities is over three thousand years old. 0 Wealth Not Life’s Real Prize. Wealth Is not the real prize of life; It is only a trophy, a symbol and may carry with it no satisfaction; Indeed, it does not carry with it genuine, lasting satisfaction unless won and employed fairly, honestly, honorably. o Obeys Natural Law. A top or any other spinning body. If under no restraint, will gradually turn on Its «xls aud point to the polt star. 0 T— — Herring Fisheries. The herring forms the chief fisheries of the British Isles, and it Is estimated that 2.200.000,000 herrings are landed In Britain during one season. JLliZi * « for that « ews P“P er W gjslSß 6 advertisement or &3.JL circular niay exZpfl press your ideas but K .OWS V effective typographxL/xyjca| display la ne—m——* pessary to get best results. With your knowledge of your business and our knowledge of the REMEMBER printing art we cats We Are Always co-operate to must Yonr Service tual advantage.
LAKE WAWASEE AND SYRACUSE JOURNAL
NOTICE OF SPECIAL ♦ ELECTION ! Notice is hereby given to the qualified voters and inhabitants , of Turkey Creek Township, in Kosciusko County, State of in- , diana, residing in said township ■ outside of the incorporated town of Syracuse, that pursuant to a petition of Isaiah Klingaman, William Gants, Andrew Miller, Jesse Grady and 75 other legal voters of said Township, presented to the Trustee of said Townsnip on the Ist day of June, 1921, a special election will be held at Osborn’s Sale Pavilion, corner of Huntington and Henry streets of Syracuse, in said Township, between the hours* of 6 o’clock a. m., and 6 o’clock p. m., on the 2nd day of July, 1921, for the purpose of determining whether the public schools of said Township, both elementary and high schools, shall be consolidated with the schools of the Incorporated Town of Syracuse, Kosciusko County, Indiana, all in accordance with An Act of the General Assembly of the State of Indiana, entitled “An Act providing for the consolidation of schools in incorporated towns with the schools [ of the township in which such < town is situated, etc.,” passed at the Seventieth Regular Session of-said General Assembly begun on the 4th day of January, 1917, being Chapter No. 148 of the ! Acts of 1917, and all acts amendatory and supplemental thereto. Stephen Freeman, Trustee of Turkey Creek Township, Kosciusko County, Indiana. Literature Immortal. Books are the metempsychosis, the | symbol ami presage ot immortal'.ty. i The dead are scattered, aud none shall find them; but behold they are here. —H. W. Beecher. 0 rDefinition You Should Know. From the "Listener’s Guide to Music”—A fugue is a piece in which the voices one by one come In and the people one by one go out. —Bostuu Transcript. 0 t Moslem Religious Intolerance. Nothing is more hatefgj to a Moslem than to see the Koran In the hands an unbeliever.
| ELECTRO | I• 1 ► We are equipped to test out and h repair electric systems on all cars :: : and carry a complete line of repairs at all times. :: We also sell and repair alb:: j! makes of storage batteries and :• :: can give prompt service. | M. C. Miller | :: Phone 27 Cromwell, Ind. ii tvwwwwwwwwwmwmtiwwiwmmiwmwwwiwwv ESBBEEBSSSEBSESSESESEBEESEESEEBBSEESSSSESSSSSSSSESSBBJ 0 ■ g 0 i H a k - • a a- a S Notice i Ia . a I 03 g S a We have arranged to buy . s ’ 0 Cream, Eggs and Poultry for | cash in Syracuse. Will pay highest market | I 1 j 1 price. | II / a J h a j ® a Sheets Building, Pearl St. 11 <SHERMfIN WHITE. GO. | ] 1- E. A. Orn, Operator | II * - ' . I 1 a ra I J SSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSESSESSSSSSHSSSS
400 Sorts of Silk Worm* There are more than four hundred different cocoons, and although the great majority of these are valueless from a commercial point of view, there ar? five kinds which are domesticated and several others which, though wild, have their cocoons collected for the sake of their silk. ——— O — Buddhist’s Wandering Leader. Dalal Lama, the religious head at the Buddhist faith, was so overcome by the fact that Infidels had trodden the streets ot the forbidden city that he tied t<» the open country, and for many years has been a wanderer in northern China. 0 The Man They Remember. Women prefer a good man. mie who s resolute, noble and self-sacriflcing. ’ But they are likely to grow tired of him On the uther hand, their in- i ■test in a “bad man” never lags.— I Philadelphia Ledger. O— Was a Mammoth Elephant. Fossilized bones of a huge elephant recently discovered lu France include a tusk weighing 440 pounds and a tooth weighing seventeen poiltnls. Scientists say that the animal must have stood over thirteen feet high. -' , Large Argentine Province The province of Entre Blits. Argentina. has an area of 29.241 square miles, or a little greater than the combleed area of the three stales of Massachusetts, New Jersey and Mary- . land. (, Forgot His Wedding Day. A husband was denied a divorce he- ' cause he couldn’t remember the date of his wedding. The Judge probably thought that the man who could go and forget that wasn’t suffering much from matrimony. — Cleveland Plain Dealer. i i ' Advertising? e ——■> - If it is results you want you should use thia , paper. It circulates in the majority of homes , in the community and i has always been considered I The Family | I Newspaper l[ The grown-ups quarrel i about it, the children cry ; for it, and the whole fam- I > iiy reads it from cover to I cover. They will read - your ad it you place it before them in the proper medium. | -
NOTICE OF SPECIAL ELECTION ! Notice is hereby given to the 1 qualified voters and inhabitants of the Incorpated Town of Syracuse, in Kosciusko County, State of Indiana, that pursuant to a : petition of Win. G. Connolly and ,64 other legal voters of said ' town, presented to the Board of School Trustees of said Town on the 26th day of May, 1921, a I special election will be held at the Old School Building, corner iof Washington and Harrison I Streets, in said Town, between ' the hours of 6 o’clock a. rn., and I 6 o’clock p. in., on the 2nd day ! of July, 1921, for the purpose of ' determining whether the public j schools of said Town, both ele- ! mentary and high schools, shall be consolidated with the schools of Turkey Creek Township, Kosciusko County, Indiana, all in accordance with an Act of the General Assembly of the State of 'lndiana, entitled “An Act I providing for the consolidation of schools in incorporated towns with the schools of the township in which such town is situated, I etc.,” passed at the Seventieth ! Regular Session of said General Assembly begun on the 4th day of January, 1917, being Chapter No. 148 of the Acts of 1917, and all acts amendatory and supplemental thereto. Ralph E Thornburg, Pres. L. T. Heerman I A. A. Pfingst , Board of School Trustees of the Town of Syracuse, Indiana. 53 o , Ozark’s Truthful James. There umy he some new-fungled 1 method of achieving success that looks i I good for u lime, but we don’t believe : i any man Ims ever Improved on the i old formnlr. of hard work and honesty. | —Searcy Citizen.
fXXKKKWOOCKJWKKKKKXKXJOCKSiKJOGGyOOOvOQOiXXKKXXKKXXXXJQC ' • Public Sale I Q X In the Milford Sale Pavilion | 8 FRIDAY, JUNE 3 | | Beginning at 12:30 g 8 —■■■' , g § 4 Head Horses. Feed o 7 Good Cows Poultry £ q 11 Ewts Implements x c 31 Shoats Household (roods o O 5 Brood Sows ~ • , , . > ~ O C 1 big lot Apple Butter, Mer- G Si 3 pure bred boars—extra ■ S? chandise and many other Sj y good ones. If you need a articles not here mentioned, g o boar here is your chance. u o o ■ 9 Big sale every two weeks. If you have anything to § □ sell, bring it to this sale. 8 | MILFORD SALE COMPANY ! 2 Jas. T. Shepard, Mgr. ” OOOOOOOOGOOOOaOOOOOOOOOOOOGGtJOOGOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOo s KodaKs ’i ® And All Kinds of Kodak B H Supplies ■ n 5 I L._; p I fUnpW O □ |; " ■ 8 d i ■ □ it 111 ? Isl □ ■ m lim ■ ft Wil®} ft E a- s □ ® Mll iff aHCTSt«^ a il ■ 5 2 ■ * ■ .•’W' . H ■ CTAe REXALL Store g F. L. HOCH g Syracuse, Indiana
Country Adapted to Wild Arimal* There are large areas In Siberia admirably fitted for the development of fur-hen ring animals. Immeasurable' forests. Inaccessible riiounrains. ami sparse population provide the animals with the best conditions for pr«»|e ligation. The most favorable lo«ulliy, a kind of natural zoological park, is the Priamur region. o A Record Holder. A small boy. born in a Turkish harem, is said to have 48 stepmothers living Our office boy. however. Is still undefeated In the unqter of recent- » ly defunct grandmothers. — LundvI’uneh. . ___q£ KEEP YOL’NTi People with bad hacks and weak kidneys are apt to feel ola at sixty. Many old folks say Doan’s Kidney Pills help them keep young. Here’s a convinciaj, case: M. I). McCloud, stock buyer. S. Elm St, Nappanee, says: “1 have used Doan’s Kidney Pilh with satisfactory results and gladly recommend them. I had t rheumatic trouble and my kidneys were out of order. My Jack ached and I was sore and stiff’. Colds settled on my kidneys and made them act irregularly and the secretions contained a brickdust sediment. 1 used Doan’s Kidney Pills am 1 they soon removed the rheumatic trouble, my kidnevg became regular in action and t I was fixed up in good shape.” (Statement given February 1, 1916.) I On February 1, 1919, Mr. MeCloud said: "I haven’t had occasion to use Doan’s Kidney Pills in a long time. M.y opinion of i this remedy, however, has not [ changed during the past few i years. I gladly endorse Doan's . ! again, as my cure has been per- ■ manent.” „ 60c at all dealers. Foster Milburn Co., Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y.
