The Syracuse Journal, Volume 7, Number 36, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 7 January 1915 — Page 6

Young Man Who Goes to Church Regularly Is Sure to Be Successful In Life

YOUNG man, GO TO CHURCH! The young man, more than any one else, is in need of 'f spiritual strength to do battle with the world. He fa beset with temptations. The lessons he is taught in the house of God will guide him in the path of rectitude. And they will be an asset to him in the daily strife of the material world. NOT ONLY WILL GOING TO CHURCH HELP THE YOUNG MAN IN A SPIRITUAL WAY, BUT IT WILL B# OF APPARENT WORLDLY BENEFIT. A YOUNG MAN WHO GOES TO CHURCH REGULARLY IS BOUND TO MAKE A FAVORABLE IMPRESSION IN THE COMMUNITY IN WHICH HE LIVES. HE WILL QUICKLY GET A REPUTATION FOR HONESTY AND UPRIGHT LIVING. HIS EMPLOYER WILL BE QUICK TO NOTE HJS EXEMPLARY HABITS. IF THERE IS A POSITION OF TRUST TO BE FILLED HE IS THE MOST LIKELY CANDIDATE. GOING TO CHURCH BRINGS ITS REWARD NOT ONLY IN THE LIFE TO COME, BUT IN THE PRESENT ONE. AND THEN THERfe IS THE SOCIAL SIDE. THE YOUNG MAN WHO GOES TO CHURCH IS CERTAIN TO BE INVITED TO THE MdST EXCLUSIVE FUNCTIONS. THOSE WHO MAKE UP THE INVITATION LISTS NEVER OVERLOOK HIM. HE IS IN CONSTANT DEMAND.. THERE ISN’T A GIRL IN TOWN WHO IS ASHAMED TO BE SEEN IN HIS COMPANY. All young men will have to admit the truth of these statements. Surely it isn’t unmanly to GO TO CHURCH. Read the lives of any of the great men, and invariably you will find that in early life they JOIXE.D THE CHURCH. It was in the church that they laid the foundation of thfeir great careers. Think of the happiness it gives your parents to see you at divine service and for them to know that you are on the right road. Young man, if you want to be -successful in life JOIN THE CHURCH, GO TO CHURCH. y GO TO CHURCH next Sunday! GO TO CHURCH every Sunday!

EARNEST RICHART ' » Y\. .’ /• > "*' \ X.- ■ \■' \ ■?£&§»&’wSe ?'■ ■- • Mm®," • -'' wk / PUBLIC AUCTIONEER A worthy successor to Lincoln Cory See Geo. 0. Snyder at the Journal office for dates.

Horse and Automobile Livery Good equipages for every occasion. Reasonable prices for drives anywhere. Hack service to the depot Fare 10 Gents Each Wan HENRYSNOBfIRGER Barn on Main Street Phone 5

■ M. MANLY, WARSAW, INDIANA Abstracts of Titles to Real Estate. You can save money by sending me your orders. Orders May Be Left at Syracuse State Bank

J. H. BOWSER Physician and urgeon Tel. 85—Offiice and Residence Suracuse, Ind.

AUCTIONEER Cal. L. Stuckman Phone 535, Nappanee, Ind. Ton can call me up without expense.

BUTT & XANDERS Attorneys-at-Law Practice in all Courts Money to Loan. Fire Insurance. Phone 7 SYRACUSE, IND.

J. M. SHAFFER Chiropractor Will be in Syracuse, Monday and Thursday, from 5 until 9.

Teeth filled, crowned snd extracted absolutely without pain. ' Dr. Cunningham, Goshen.

Auto Livery [ —See Pete Harkless. f\r auto livery. Will make drives any where. Charges reasonable. Phone 81.

South Park Louis Solt and wife and Mrs. Jeff Warner returned home Monday after spending the holidays with Mrs. Warners daughter, in South Bend. Mrs. Calvin Cooper is visiting her mother Mrs. Jeff Warner. Miss Iren Kreuger is now living with Mrs. Jeff Warner and will assist Louis Solt in the store at Vawter Park. The frost on the trees the morning after the Hast thaw made the shores of the lake look like fairy land. Several little informal social gatherings took place during the holidays. , Mirs. Walter Weaver and Mrs. John Voorhees were among those that entertained. Mr. Van Cripe and family of Elkhart have been the guests of Roy Brown and family. Dick Brunjes is putting up ice thi# week. He reports good ice. Harvey Corbin went hunting last week and broygfit home ten rabbits. Virgil Mock, teacher at the Vawter Park school did not give the childern any Xmas vacation as they had lost so much time on account of diptheria. Mrs. Chas. A. Sudlow left Monday for Indianapolis and Arthur Hudlow and family for Chicago, after spending the holidays at the Gables. Chas. Corbin and Ed Staimates are hauling logs. Mr. Nielson when driving home Saturday had an accident to his horse. It stepped on a piece of ice and cut its hoof badly. Milton Brown is cutting 12 inch ice at Vawter Park. The ice is clear as he has kept it free from snow. "; Mrs. Kinkaid and daughters and Emory Kinkaid and family spent Sunday with Will Kinkaid’s. A flock of wild geese have made their apperaace on the ice in the middle of the lake for the past week. Miss Louise Voorhees left for Chicago after spending the holidays with her mother, Mrs. John Voorhees. Miss Voorhees says she would rather be at Wawasee jn the winter than >n the summer. Buys Ice Cream Factory Wm. Snavely has purchased the Syracuse Ice Cream Factory of W. W. Stetler and will take possession in the near future. He will conduct his coal yard in the winter and his newly acquired business during the I summer months. W. W. Stetler will take personal charge of his ice business next summer. ' Card Os Thanks We desire to thank our friends and neighbors for their kindness and assistance during the death of our dear beloved husband and son and also for the many beautiful floral offerings which were sent. Mrs. George Abbott and Mrs. J. C. Kern. If It Were Only So The Warsaw Indianian of last week says that Syracuse people are elated that two more passenger trains now stop there. We have failed to notice either the elation or the cause for it. Changes Time Train No. 12 on the B. & 0. formerly due here at 9:18 changed time Monday, and now arrives in Syracuse at 10:00. Try a Journal Want-Ad .

BELIEVES DECLINE NOW OE BOITOM President Os B. & O. System Beleives Conditions Better In a New Years greeting to the employes of the B. & 0., President Daniel Willard says that he believes business depression has reached its lowest stage and that conditions will slowly better, although he does not hope for complete restoration of prosperity for the B. & 0. until the close of the European war. Futhermore he states that the Interstate Commerce Commission decisions in the Eastern rate case will materially help the roads and justifies a feeling of optimism for the future. He believes that shop workers will gradually be put back to work and that labor conditions will gradually change for the better. Four Corners James Callender and wife spent Sunday with Clint Callender's. David Hoover and family spent Friday at the home of Maurice Rasor’s of near Arnold Station. Crist Darr attended the meeting at New Paris Friday night. There were two modern woodmen on our streets Thursday.. Mae Vorhis called at the home of Wm. Baird Sunday. Tom Searfoss and family spent Sunday with Charley Searfoss. Charley Etteline and family spent the holidays with his parents and on Sunday visited with Wm. Scott and family near New Paris. For SIO,OOO .Damages Jos. H. Corey of Ligonier has filed a damage suit against the Ligonier Milling Co. for SIO,OOO in the Noble circuit court at Albion. The suit is the outgrowth of the death of Mr. Corey’s brother, Aaron Corey on Jan. 14, 1914, from tetanus which it is alleged, resulted from injuries he received when his right arm was lacerated in a grinder in the mill. J. H. Corey is administrator of the estate. New Paris — — - - - -Rmrte+. - ———— ■ Mrs. Florence Stump Mrs. Walter Stetler spent Friday evening with Mrs. Lloyd Stump. Nathan Hilbish and family spent Friday afternoon at the Butler home. Josephine Banta and Clara Jackson spent New Years with Dr. and Mrs. Ungrich of Toledo. 7 Madge Butler and Earl Banta spent Saturday evening with Chas. Butler and family. Carter Routsong has returned from a visit with Levi Leatherman and family west of Paris. ' Ollie Pence and wife spent Friday at Syracuse. Grover Hilbish and wife spent New Year’s with C H. Butler’s. Mrs. Chas. Strine returned from Elkhart Friday. Miss Madge Butler spent a few davs with grandfather Thos. Longacer. Mrs. Mary Alwine is on the sick Hst. Morris Volkman has returned from South Bend ta the Lee Cripe home. Lloyd Stump and wife spent Sunday with Chas. Stetler and wife. Ernest Rookstool and family of Millersburg spent Sunday at the Strine home. Mrs. Walter Stetler of Elkhart spent New Years with Mrs. Bay Downing. ♦ Wm. Wysong and Ruth Strine spent Sunday evening with Trilby Douring at the Kyler home. A large crowd attended the Cripe dance, come back in two weeks. Don Musser and Iva Wysong spent Sunday evening at the Stump home. Floyd Stage was here several days last week. A surprise party was given Chas. Musser Friday evening. School begun in the new building Monday morning. Mrsess L. Stump, Ora Wysong and babe, and Ruth Stine and Iva Wysong spent Monday evening with Mrs. Della Bloss. John Longacer has returned from Chicago. Joe and Elizabeth Miller returned to their home in Goshen after spending several days with Chas Musser and family. —Store your houshold goods at Beckmans. —Good clean Salt at Kindig & Co.

J. W. ROTHENBERGER : Undertaker : SYRACUSE. t I IND.

BRIEF SKETCH OF LIFE OF UTE GEO. W. NILES George William Miles warn born at Syracuse, in the house now occupied by Mrs. Katharine Landis, April 30, 1858. He was a member of a family of eleven children born to Preston and Catherine Miles, pioneers of Indiana and of Syracuse. He attended eight short terms of common school, all that fras being offered at Syracuse at that period. At the age of sixteen he was teacher of the Crow School seven miles east of town, walking to and from his work on Monday and Friday along the newly-laid Baltimore and Ohio track. In the spring of the sajne year he became owner and editor of ’’The Syracuse Gazette,” an infant weekly paper that had been born only two years previously. From newspaper work he turned to telegraphy, and was given his first station at Hicksville, Ohio. In time he was assigned the office at Alida, Indiana, and before entering his service at this place he Jwas married to Hanora Acker, of Syracuse, April 13, 1884. Dissatisfied with railroad work, he returned to Syracuse, entered the law office of M. Ray for a few months of study to the end of becoming a partner; and after two years of the partnership, he assumed the whole practice. Notwithstanding his fair success in the practice of law, after a few years he disposed of’his library and business, that he might turn his attentions to buying and selling real estate and to other various In the spring of 1910 he was appointed Commissioner of Fisheries and Game for Indiana by Governor Thomas R. Marshall, in which work he served to the time of bis death. He passed away December 28, at the age of 56 years, 7 months and 28 days, leaving a wife, five daughters, one son, a brother and four sisters. He was a man of versatility. He | played well several musical instruments, and originated many compositions, some of which were accepted for publication; he possessed a style of ease and grace in writing, and was the author of many essays he never offered for publication, although he frequently contributed articles of a historical nature to newspapers; he appreciated beautiful things in nature and in art, and possessed some small talent for drawing; as a public speaker he was able to please, and at one time prepared a lecture, entitled, “The Unwisdom of Doubt,” which he deliveied in the K. of P. Opera House to an audience of townspeople, and with which he hoped to enter into lyceum work. He always had the interests of Lake Wawasee at heart, and participated in every movement that tended toward developing it as a • popular summer resort, from the time the first hotel was built. The Wawasee Protective Association is an organization which he effected, and during the first few years of its existence he served as its president. The purpose in founding the organization was to assist in protecting the fish, that they might restock the lake by propagating naturally and unhampered by law violators. And through his influence many!

AT THE STORE AHEAD THE HUDSON COMPANY Greater Price Reductions on all Women’s, Misses’ and Childrens Ready-To-Wear Very Unusual values are offered at this time. Here’s Great News for Every Woman who may need a Winter Garment These are Days of Fast Selling to Complete the very Successful Season.

I plantings of fish were put into ttie lake from tne United States hatch- | eries. During the past summer he personally superintended the building of the Wawasee State Hatchery admitted by fish cuilturists to lie the best natural site in the Middle West. He will long be remembered by the old soldiers of this vicinity. For many of them he labored earnestly in his efforts to secure pension grants, and he befriended them in other ways. The duties that fell to him as a citizen were ever faithfully discharged. He Syracuse as his voting place, for he always contidered this his home even during the few years he spent away. On last Election Day he returned to cast his vote, which, because of his greatly weakened condition, required of him courage and determination. His stamp has been left upon Syracuse in many ways. Through his efforts the Syracuse Water Power Company was organized; a power dam was built, the effect of which has been to maintain the lake at an advantageous height, to create power in turn for a novfeltv factory and a pumping station ifoir the town’s system of water supply; he assisted in the organization of the Syracuse Power and Light Company, he opening up and sold an addition to the town; he was employed by the Sandusky Portland Cement Company to buy up marl rights and in other ways assist this institution in getting established at Syracuse. Church Os God Sabbath school at 10 a. m. and preaching at 11 a. m. Theme “Strangling the Gospel.” Christian endeavor at 6:30 p. m. preaching at 7:30. The pastor, will preach the third of the series of sermons Four Great Modern Evils at the evening ’service. Prayer meeting Thursday at 7:15 p. m , The public is cordially invited to attend. Prisoners Protest Thomas F. Wallace and Francis J. Haynes, who were arrested here on October 8, for stealing from a “Hunka” cpr, complain to a Warsaw paper about tneirTong imprisonment without trial. They have been in the county jail nearly three months without trial. New Postmaster At Milford Congressman Barnhart has named J. F. Postma, principal of the Milford high school postmaster. The position pays $1,400 a year. * Taken To Chicago Mrs. Vern Lecount was taken to Chicago, Sunday, for an operation i for appendicitis.

BEARDSLEY’S STUDIO One more reason for trading in SYRACUSE Any of following for a time Free With an order for one dollar or more, Indiana Farmer (weekly) 1 year 60c ’ Successful Training (monthly) 3 years 50c, To-days Magazine for Women monthly, 1 year 50c PHONE 10

For Rent t* • ■ —House and barn 2J4 miles south of Syracuse. S.L. Ketring. —We are unloading a car of nice fresh Salt, 25 lb. 50 lb. 100 lb. sacks. Kindig & Co.

The Man Who Uses A Bank Account For systematizing his financial affairs and conserving his income is laying the safest foundation for a greater success, a larger usefulness and increased accumulation. Remember also, that this bank is one of the few that offers the same security f<j>r its individual deposits at tlie State requires for its money placed with banks. The safe return of every dollar deposited with this bank is insured by The Americam Guaranty Co. of Columbus, Ohio. State Bank of Syracuse

Be Neat i t •. ’ T 1 . , i j ■ ' Keep your clothes neat—it will pay you well. Let us call for your suit every week and deliver it to your home, neatly pressed and cleaned if you say so. Our prices are very reasonable, ask us about the suit club. CLEANING J PRESSING REPAIRING Clyde E. Sensibaugh —' T -■ -■ - ■ . ■ Ji Over Klink’s Meat Market.

J. W. ROTHENBERGER UNDERTAKER Prompt and Efficient ervice\ Phones 90 and 121 Cushion tired Ambulance in connection

If you want to send your loySd ones forth fortified against the cold, • and strengtnened for the strenuous day, give the r " cakes for breakfast made from the Goshen Self-Risihg’ Buckwheat Compound, made by THE GOSHEN MILLING CO. Telephone News Items to No. 4,