The Syracuse and Lake Wawasee Journal, Volume 15, Number 3, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 18 May 1922 — Page 3
PARAGRAPHIC BITS ABOUT HOME FOLKS Notes of the Week on the Coming and Going of People You Know. Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Hughes and children spent Sunday in Nappanee. Miss Bertha Mullin spent over Sunday in Cromwell with her mother. Mrs. Zella Leacock and Mrs. Sol Miller were Warsaw visitors Saturday. Special Mother’s Day exercises were held in all of the local churches Sunday. Miss Rose Mullin of Goshen Tuesday evening with George Schick and family. Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Insley spent Sunday afternoon at the George Hoelcher home. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Wogoman of Goshen called at the Jesse Darr home Tuesday evening. j New sanitary covers have been 1 placed on the chairs at the ice cream tables at Thornburg’s drug store. - I■ Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Strieby and Mr. and Mrs. Alldean Strieby and son Robert drove to Cromwell ; on Sunday. * Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Jenkins and 1 daughter Maxine of Dixon, 111., were here visiting old friends the week end. Mr. and Mrs. John Schick, Miss 1 Mildred Schick and Miss Margot 1 Schick spent Sunday with Geo. ( ] Schick and family. i Mrs. Seider of Plymouth came last week and will spend some l time here at the home of her < son, L. A. Seider. Business men say a more rapid I turnover is necessary; but speed- I ing motorists say that turnovers come rapidly enough. 1 Miss Katherine Koher submitt- 1 ed to an operation Saturday '( morning at the McDonald hospi- 1 tai at Warsaw for removal of i tonsils and adenoids. Mrs. Ellen Holloway returned < home Monday evening from 1 Tampa, Fla., where she spent the ■ winter months at the home of her daughter, Msr. A. O. Haney. She was pleased to get back home, and reports a very enjoyable winter in the sunny South. - ■ I Lev flfflOS F |!l your I Wawft IOur Guarantee |. is as good 11 as gold. ~ I* ■ $ ■ v o flmos JewGlru House t 130 So. Main, Goshen, Ind. |
□ Call □ I 83 J 8 For ' 8 8 Thornburg’s 8 drugs jewelry > P And Everything a Drug Store . r-i LJ Should Have H □ R □ R □ NEW EDISON □ “The Phonograph with a Soul” LJ n *—* H Syracuse, Indiana □ g □□□□□□□□□□□□□»□□□□□□□□□□□□□
When the elevator to success stops running, it is a pretty good plan to try the stairs. The Leacock children are spending the summer months in Benton with their father. Those people who persistently think they can’t are almost invariably right—they can’t. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest C. Smith and little son Everett Paul spent the week end in Cromwell. Miss Edna Yoder and Mrs. Ora Vorhis and daughter Ruby were visitors in Fort Wayne Thursday. Miss Irene Shaffer and gentleman friend of Goshen spent the week end with Miss Shaffer’s grandmother, Mrs. F. Younce. Frozen credits are said to have caused the business trouble of last year, but a lot of people think it was merely cold feet. Mrs. A. W. Strieby has been badly sick for the past several days. At this time this is written her condition is somewhat improved. Mrs. Harry Leming went Saturday to the Fort Wayne hospital where she took a radium treatment for tumor. She returned Monday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Verd Shaffer and children of Millersburg and Mr. and Mrs. Vern Younce of Goshen spent Sunday with their mother, Mrs. Frank Younce. Dr. 0. C. Stoelting is attending the meeting in Indianapolis of the State Dental association, from Monday morning until Thursday evening. L. A. Neff entertained the new Journal editor and the ex-editor with' a delightful drive around the lake Sunday afternoon, stopping at the various points of interest. ' The» stock in trade of many people—including legislators—is only an experience of human affairs made up of an infinite number of scraps cut out of other people’s lives. Mrs. Wm. Hyndman and daughter Lucile, of Cromwell, spent Friday in Syracuse at the home 'of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest C. Smith. When they returned they took with them little Jack Smith. Mrs. Emma Rike went to Chicago on Monday to counsel with the Fred Harvey company, by whom she was recently employed to fill a position in Arkansas. A definite date for her going has not been arranged. ■□■□■□■□■□■□a 1 state Bank I 2 S 5 SuraGusß, Infl. 2 : Our » i Bank | | wewani 8 s uour business g ■
s! Mrs. R. E. Thornburg and I’’ children, Ralph Jr. and Martha | Ann, returned Saturday from » 1 Marion, Ind., where they had j i been visiting. I Harold Sheffield, who is emr ployed in the rubber factory in . i Mishawaka, spent a few hours i here Thursday at the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wm. t Sheffield. 4 Thrift gardeners are beside t themselves with joy for the ; bounteous growing weather of the past two weeks. Things ace springing up like magic, and the ; rich green is deepening day by ' day. ‘ i Wm. G. Connolly, proprietor ; of the Royal store, became seri- • ously ill Sunday night with an ’' attack of appendicitis. His conj dition at this writing is some- (' what improved, but he still is I I unable to be at his store. I Mrs. Fred Self took seriously I ill Thursday evening, a relapse ; from her recent operation, com- ' plicated with peritonitis. A : trained nurse was called on Friday. At the time this is written Mrs. Self’s condition is critical. Mrs. J. W. Rothenberger is spending this week in Columbia' City attending the session of the, Lutheran synod being held there, j She is also enjoying a visit with.' her daughter, Katharine, who is a teacher in the Columbia City high school. In a letter received last week from Warren Ruple, who is located at Hazelridge, Canada, he says: “Find enclosed express order for the Journal another year —we can not do without the home paper. Weather is fine and everybody is busy seeding.” Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Miles, in company with Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Connell and little daughter, drove here Tuesday evening from Peru. Mr. and Mrs. Miles have been spending several weeks in Peru at the home of their daughter, Mrs. Connell. Rev. and Mrs. F. H. Cremean entertained Mrs. Cremeaa’s brother, Leo Brenizer and his wife, and Mrs. Brenizer’s brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Rollo Wickliffe, Sunday. They drove from Fort Wayne Sunday morning and returned the same evening.
I I ------ n» T_ / '> 1 a ■ S- . ' ■ 9 I INTERNATIONAL 8-16 WINS | I ■ ■ I ■ Over the Fordson, at every angle, in their Plowing Contest g ' S' at Warsaw, Tuesday, May 9th. ■ | ■ Each Plowed 4 Acres of Clover Sod
I ■ ■ 1 ■ The International plowed it in 5 hours and 27 minutes ] ■ The Fordson was over 6 hours. ]■ „ , International used 12 1-4 gallons of 1 ■ kerosene. ] ■ Fordson used 21 gallons of kerosene. 1 I International plowed 8 inches deep. ]'l Fordson plowed 6*/» to 7 inches deep.
i OSBORN & SON ] I SYRACUSE, INDIANA ■
SYRACUSE AND LAKE WAWASEE JOURNAL
Mrs. Harry Culler suffered an' attack of heart trouble while attending services at the Methodist church on Sunday. Medical assistance was called for her at the church before she was taken hctme. Her condition is improved at this time. The American Legion post at Warsaw recently adopted a resolution urging Warsaw not to patronize strange peddlers representing themselves to be ex-service men, unless they are able to show a letter of recommendation from the proper officer in the Warsaw Legion. Construction work was begun last week on the fine new residence of Dr. O. C. Stoelting at Potawotomi park. The garage was built two years ago and the Stoelting family has been living in it pending the new building. It is thought the work will be completed and the house ready for occupancy by the middle of the summer. x Henry Mathews and daughter Goldie left Tuesday for Chicago, where Mr. Mathews will undergo a medical examination in contemplation of a major operation. Miss Goldie will return to Syracuse at once, leaving her father at the home of his son, George, for some time. Mrs. C. C. Myers is on her way from New York to Chicago to be with her father. ; o GOING THE ROUNDS I Liked Movies | Kind Old Lady—“ Why are you; crying, my boy?” Boy—“Pa fell downstairs.” " Kind Old Lady—“ Well, don’t cry. He’ll be all right soon.” | Boy—“ Yes, I know. But my , sister saw him fall all the way, I an’ I never saw nuthin’.” —(London Answers. Truth and Humor Newspaper “colyums,” as a rule, bear a 75 percent resem-: blance to a bride’s wedding ring —something old, something new, something borrowed —but nothing “blue.”---(Boston Transcript. o — Try the classified columns.
' I : I n! | : I REAL ESTATE | : | Lu Lil By Houton C. Frazer. Warsaw. — Norman E. Raymond, {guard, to Samuel C. Tibbetts, 72.06 a sec 12 Clay tps6,ooo Cora M. Henderson to Wm. Aker, lot in Pierceton— 2,400 Fletcher E. Marsh to Chas. Abell. | pt lots 11. 12 & 13 South Park Edward .M. Gnoke, guard, to Clara A. Stoner, lot 6 Claypool 675 Isaac W. Sharp to John A. and Ola S. Sloane, lot E. Ft. Wayne st., Warsaw 1 Chas. Brumbaugh, et al, to Chas. . Malcolm. 12.61 a sec 2 Jefferson tp 2,395 Regina Wertenberger to Claude I. Tully, lots 13 & 14 Fairview ad Claypool 75 Alvin Robinson to Wm. J. Hosford, lotS. Indiana, Warsaw ’i .’ 1.000 Samuel Rosbrugh to Samuel and Eva Stookey, 38.52 a sec 18 Plain tp 4,000 Gerald D. Hess to Ann Retta and 'Elizabeth Hess, 1-4 of 141 a secs 17 & 18 Turkey Creek tf> I Wallace J. Dillingham to Anna | M. Beyer, lot 25 Suburban I Place 50 ' May W. Chalfant to Minnie Linton, lot 733 Winona 150 Ellwood H. George to Ira and Cora Marshall, lot 60 W & M ad South Park 500 Helen A. Sunday to Wm. H. and j Mayme Eggleston, lot 375 first ' ad Winona 10,000 ■ Charlie Fifer, et al, to Calvin and Bertha L. Warner, w pt lots 42 & 43 Kist No. ad War- ' saw 250 John E. Lake to Roy G. and Bessie B. Spriggs, pt lot 17 Boss ad WarsaW. 850 Frank Tucker to Orlando Laut- | zenhiser, w pt lots 25 & 26 K & W ad Warsaw 1,185 Charles O. Gerard to Sarah E. Hayward, lots 226 & 227 Warsaw 5,000 Moses Grimm, et al, trusteed to Daniel B. Mullet, 1-2 a sec 23 Scott tp 92 I Harry D. Martin to Lizzie Martin. 40 a sec 24 Jefferson tp..... .3,000 o — Egyptian Architecture. In the furniture world the massiveness and stability of the Egyptian i furniture as dug from out century-old ruins Is as well known as the tlme--1 defying pyramids and sphinx are to every school child. Art critics are quite agreed that the old Greco-Roman houses were the most perfect in line, harmony and utility of any ancient dwellings. But they are equally agreed that the Egyptian architecture runs a close second.
FOLLOWING IS A COPY OF THE AFFIDAVIT OF JOSEPH M. WIGGS: This is tn certify that on the 9th day of May, 1922, H. 0. Herscher, Agent for the Intemation 8-16 Tractor, and Ovemneyer & Knauss, Agents for the Fordson, held a Tractor contest on my farm in Kosciusko county, Indiana. The agreement specified for a uniform depth of 8 inches. I certify that the 8-16 maintained a depth of between eight and nine inches throughout the contest. I certify that, after repeated requests of my self and other farmers, the Fordson refused to plow deeper than between six and seven inches. I further certify that the plowing done by the 8-16 was superior to* that done by the Fordison, that the 8-16 finished the allotted acreage in almost an hour less time and with seemingly less strain than the Fordson. The fuel consumption for Intemation 8-16 was 12 gallons, and for* ® Fordson 21 gallons. m Signed, JOSEPH M. WIGGS.
■HHS—= ■ ■ . - g>9 ® S S cigarettes 1 A year ago—almost unknown A sweeping verdict for QUALITY WOMAN HIS NARROW ESCAPE FROM INSANE ASYLUM
Mrs. John Steel Considers Herself Lucky That Help Came Just in Time to Save Her. “Dr. Richards’ Famous Prescription was a godsend to me, for it cured me of nervousness. I was so nervous that I thought there was no hope for me and that I would surely have to go to the insane aslyum. I was so nervous that my feet would cramp and my heart beat so hard that I could not rest on my left side at all. But, thank God, lam cured at last. Dr. Richards’ Stomach and Liver Pills also did me a great deal of good, as they kept my stomach and liver in proper action and the liquid medicine strengthened my nerves. • Dr. Richards’ Famous Prescription also cured my husband of, rheumatism. Thank God for i i such remedies as these. If there'
is ever any more sickness in my family I will surely get more of )r. Richards’ Remedies,” wrote Mrs. John Steele, living on R. R. No. 1, South Whitley, Ind. Dr. Richards’ Famous Prescription is a doctor’s prescription guaranteed for rheumatism appendicitis and all stomach, liver, - kidney and blood disorders. It is an excellent reconstructive topic and system regulator. This prescription has been used in Dr. Richards’ private practice for half a century and-brought relief l o thousands of sufferers. Try it today. It will help you ?.s it did Mrs. Steele. It must please you or you get your money back. Dr. Richards’ complete line of remedies is sold in Syracuse by Ralph Thornburg. Don’t fail to get a bottle of this wonderful medicine i today. Rememebr the name Dr. Richards’ Famous Prescription ' (Its Different”). — (Adv. ■■ M M ■■ M ■■ M M M M ■■ M
