The Syracuse Journal, Volume 7, Number 49, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 8 April 1915 — Page 3

BRAINARDS ;; Our store is well filled with new spring merchandise ; ; ; Laces and Embroideries, Valencine laces 3c io 15c per yard. ;; ■ ! • Cotton TorchoirLaces at 5c a yard, that looks like 10c laces < • I I ; Shadow Laces 10 to 25c per yard. ;; 1 • Our Embroideries of all kinds has received many com- ;; I ! pliments. Embroideries from 5c to 50c a/jard, Corset cover <> | ; ; Embroideries at 10, 15, 25 and 50c per yard. . ;; Curtain goods of all kinds from 10 to 50c per yard, Let . ■ • us show you our curtain materials. < : ; J Ladies’ dress skirts in blues and black from $2.50 to < ' $5.00 each. ! <>?. , , i ; J House dresses for ladies’ 89c, 98c, $1.25 and $1.50. ; ; Pillow Tubing 42 inch, Linea finish yard 20c. ■ I i ! Our line of Corsets consist of the Nemo, American Beauty j ; I and the always reliable R. & G. • ! ! (Our stock of notions is as complete as you will find in < J ; lotsTof larger places. ' > *■ ' < <, ” , , '' . ' J , Special Prices for Saturday April 10th. All men’s Work Shirts, regular 50c grade, sizes as large ;• ;; as 19 dyc 1 I: Men’s 85c Overalls 65c | BRAINARDS | ;; Where It Pays To Trade ttetf * It>♦ »t ttt t i>t'» < t4 ( 41 4 ■ 4 I O 4>• < • <► < > I)> < > 4l' < I ( New Goods In -I < our siaiioim doiji. ( 41 A 4 >’ Newj Styles, sizes and shapes in :: : Symphony Lawn Stationery copper <1 ;• plate engraved with plain or beveled ;; gold edged. Correspondence cards. * o * 1 4» < ' 41 ’ * :: Prices 35c, 50c, 60c, 70c, 80c. :: F. L. HOCH & SON 4> 4 » 4> 4 I 4> 4 4 > ' 4 >• » ‘ ' »ll 111 til »♦♦♦♦♦>>> 14 Clio Drau ana Baooaoe Line We are prepared to do your work promptly and with special care. G-ive us a trial. J. EDGAR RIPPEY PHONE 118 FRESH, CLEAN MEATS Await you at our market at all times. You will find the juiciest cuts and the tenderest pieces here. We also handle smoked and dried meats and a general line of canned meats. KUNK BROS. MEAT MARKET |

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

Pump Repairing If you want a pump put in or your pump repaired GIVE US A CALL C. A. DEETER PHONE 445

OLD CAR SOCESS ASJIEW ROLLER Farmer Covers Five Acres In One and One half Hours —According to evidence garnered in all parts of the country Buick cars have been put to divers and sundry uses, from making hay in the meadow to making hav in the sunshine. They have built aud raised barns, dug wells, pulled freight cars, etc., and now comes Parker Terry, a well known to-do farmer who writes as follows: “I use my old Modle F Buick for rolling meadow land and it will cover five and one half acres in an hour and a half. It will go anywhere and I never stuck with it but once and that was when it slid through the mud into a ditch. I did not have any skid chains on the roller, but since then I have equipped it with chains. I also use it for hoisting stuff into the bam, Little does a man need to fear the implement trust as long as he has a Buick.” Fear of Being Cut Off A few weeks ago a petition was ; circulated among some of the pat- ' rons on route five out of Syracuse, asking that part of said route or all of same be attached to Milford, giving four routes each instead of three to Milford and five to Syracuse, as it now shows. The petition was favorably received, but some thought should the petition fail they might be cut off entirely. We refer to those who live in the northwest and also in the southwest section of Syracuse route five. This fear should not exist. It was the purpose of the government when the rural system was established to serve all patrons, and not only part. It is not a good reason a patron should be deprived of proper service, because he does not live in a public place, and that bis mail box is a short distance from a corner. One of tne essentials of government is, that , all people should share equally. There is but one thing now to do, that is that the mail route boys on the eight routes out of Milford and Syracuse hold a meeting, at which time and place the route agent will be present, and make proper adjustments of the varius routes. As the geography now stands, some of the eight routes are too large while some are to small.—Milford Mail. M. E. Church Rev. C. A. Cloud went to Conference at Auburn Tuesday. Pastor and church have, generally, had a good year together. Financially, this has been the best year in the history of the church. Spiritual conditions are good. The fellowship in the church is excellent. Fifty have been added to the church membership by confession of faith and letter during the year. A mens Brotherhood and chorus choir have been organized and the outlook for the coming year is most excellent. There will be no preaching next Sunday. —i Four Corners Blanch Darr and family of Mentone sdent Saturday night at the home of his brother, Crist Darr, and on Sunday took dinner with parents, Tom Darr and wife of Syracuse. Geo Hoelcber returned home from Chicago Saturday evening and expects to rpmain at home for a few weeks. Mrs. Troy Dewart and daughter and Mrs. Hattie Fisher and son, called at the home of Clint Callender Thursday afternoon. Clint Callender wife and son and Crist Darr and family, took dinner with Wm. Hartlef and family Saturday evening. Mr. Swagerd and family of near Cromwejl, called at the home of W m. Hartleb, Sunday. Mrs. Cory and son spent a few days with her daughter, Eve Callender.

Many People In Ulis Town never really enjoyed a meal until we advised them to take a < before and after each meal., OOhf by us—2sc a box. F. L. Hoch.

Protecting the Hired Man A railroad official who believes the benifits of government by commission should be extended to the farmer as well as to the carrier has prepared a draft of a “farming code” providing for the regulation of prices, service requirements and a sort of “full crew” law, with several welfare clauses for the hired man. The bill in part is as follows: Every hired man shall work eight hours only a day, not including the sabbath, and shall not recommence work unless he has completed a period of not less than eighteen hours absolute rest and quiet. He shall not work on the Lord’s day nor on legal holibays nor on Jack Love’s birthday. Every farmer shall hire one more hired man than his work requires. The only permissible exceptions to the two foregoing sections shall be periods of stress resulting from earthquake, Halley’s comet, or European invasion. All wagons and all poles and double trees shall be provided with couplers, coupling by impact, so that the hired man need not go between the wheels of the wagon and the heels of the horses. All wagons shall be supplied with suitable breaks, grabirons, stirrups, and platforms of standard dimensions to be fixed by the commission. All bulls, when moving on the highway or in unfenced areas,shall be equiped with a bell of not less than fifty pounds weight, a steam whistle, and an electric headlight of at least 1,000 candle power. Sheds shall be built over all fields where hired men have to work in the summer. All field engines and machinery shall be fenced in, all belting shall be encased in metal housings and all grindstones, churns, hay cutters* bulls’ horns, and other moving parts shall be strongly encased in sheaths for the protection of the hired man. All barns, sheds, and other outbuildings shall in cold weather be adequately heated and at all times be well lighted and policed. If a calf is delayed in arriving or is born dead the farmer shall instantly provide another cow whose calf shall be born that day. Can be Forced The Goshen Democrat says, “For the fourth time the Kosciusko county council has refused to make the necessary appropriation to secure a county agent. If the SSOO has been raised as prescribed by law, the proper application presented by the county board of education and a requisition made by the county auditor, the council has no power to turn down the application. All that needs to be done is to mandamus the council as was done a year ago in Fountain 'County, where the appropriation was held until a decision was banded down from the supreme in favor of the applicant. The farmers of Kosciusko county will not need to wait as long as the Fountain county did for the constitutionality of the law settled. All they need to do is to set the proper legal machinery in motion and results must soon follow. Wife and Child Desertion Suit has been filed against Chas. W. Strieby by his wife, Ethel Strieby, of Syracuse, who charges him with desertion. It is alleged by the plaintiff that the defendant entered into a fraudulent marriage to avoid prosecution on a paternity charge. The marriage took place at Goshen on March 26, 1914, and it is claimed that Strieby deserted his wife and babe in September of the same year. To Name Chairman Thirteenth district republican county chairmen will meet at the Ross house, Plymoth, at 1 o’clock April 10, to elect a republican distric chairman to suceed Perry Smith of Warsaw, who died some time ago. Will H. Hays, state chairman, has issued a call for the meeting. It is understood the meeting will be made the occasion of a large gathering of Thirteenth district republicans.

| Growing Children frequently need a food tonic and tissue builder for their good health. containing UypophotsMn -4 is the prescription for this. F. L. Hoch.

Indian Village. Miss Fav B. Mock. Wilbur Clingerman spent Sunday afternoon with Ralph Mock. Mrs. Kate Jones who assisted in caring for her sister, Mrs. Mathias Loncor, who was quite ill at her home near Burr Oak, has returned home. A number of the neighbors and friends of Mrs. Fanny Mock gave her a pleasant surprise when they gathered at her home on the evening of March 30,' it being her birthday.y Those present were: Jethro Greider and wife, Walter Knepper and family, Geo. Clingerman, wife and daughter Rhea, Joseph Ritter and wife, Stewart Houghthing, Sam Reed, wife and daughter Mary. James LeCount and wife, Clyde Jones, wife and baby, Miss Susan Knepper, Wilbur Eagles wife and Glenn, John peck, and wife, Elden Stoner, wife and son Kenneth, Mesdames Rosa and Ada Iden, Dorothy Iden, Oras Iden, Wayne Brock, Wilbur Clingerman and Will R. Stocker. The evening was spent in music, songs and pleasant chats. James LeCount and wife spent Easter Sunday with their daughter Mrs. Ben Miller and family of Columbia City. Carl Earnhart and family spent Sunday afternoon with Wesley Stults and wife. § John Beck, wife and daughter Lois visited Sunday in Syracuse. Stewart Houghthing and Charles Iden and family were Sunday guests of Mrs. Rosa Iden. Wm. R. Stocker who is employed in the garage at Cromwell spent Sunday with Wm. Knepper and family. Mrs. A. J. Clingerman who has been visiting her daughter, Mrs. Donald Himes and family of South Bend returned home last week. Ernest Stoner and family of Pierceton will move on the farm which was owned by Mrs. A. J. Clingerman and lately purchased by Wm. Cramer. Wtp. P-hebus, wife and daughter Georgia of Broadway were guests of Walter Aumsbaugh and family Sunday. Walter Knepper and family, Elden Stoner, wife and son Kenneth and Mrs. Mary Stoner were Sunday guests of Wm. Knepper and family. Sheriffs Sale. By virtue of a certified copy of a decree to me directed from the Clerk of the circuit courtof Kosciusko county, Indiana in cause number wherein Archibald Laudenbarger is plaintiff and Edward Ditton is defendant requiring me to make the sum of money in said execution provided, and in manner and form as therein provided, with interest and costs, I will expose at public sale to the highest bidder, on Saturday, the 24th Day of April 1915 between ’the hours of 10 o’clock a. m. and 4 o’clock p. m. of said day, at the door of the court house of Kosciusko county, Indiana, the rents and profits for a term not exceeding seven years- of the following described real estate situated in Koscjusko county Indiana; Lots numbered thirty (34), thirty five f 35) and thirty-six (36) in Ketring and Blanchard’S Ideal Beach, situated in section twenty two (22), township thirty four (34) north, range seven (7) east, in Turkey Creek Township, Kosciusko County, Indiana. If such rents and profits will not sell for sufficient sum to satisfy said execution with interest and costs, I will at the same time and place expose to public sale the fee simple of said real estate, or so much thereof as may be sufficient to discharge said execution. Said sale will be made without relief from valuation or appraisement laws. Jacob D. Huffer, Sheriff Kosciusko County. Anderson & McCracken, Attorney for Plaintiff. Warsaw, Ind., April Ist 1915. 4§t4 Notice Os Administration Notice is hereby given that the undersigned has been appointed by the Clerk of the Kosciusko Circuit Court, in the State of Indiana, Administrator of the estate of Henry Shock late of Kosciusko County, deceised. Said estate is supposed to be solvent. Jesse Shock, Administrator. March 27, 1915-. 4813

Aluminum six-cup Percolator, SJ.OO at E. E. STRIEBY

I J. W. ROTHENBERG& I : Undertaker : SYRACUSE. : s IND. I

A. W. STRIEBY & SON < Did You See ! "That- Million Dollar look” i ■ . At The Theatorium ; 4 We have always maintained that a ; man’s clothes are one of the vital factors i in his career—that they affect his whole ; advancement in the game of life. < 4 No man, who saw this unusual picture-play, left * his seat without feeling a deeper respect than ever < for good clothes and their importr.nce to his pros- ] perity. j 4 Incidently, this picture-play showed that the ] Million Dollar Look is the Royal Tailored Look; < that the best “prosperity’’ clothes are those that ' are Royal Tailored. J One of the most interesting features of the film were the pictures showing • the wonderful Royal Tailor shops in Chicago and New York, pictures tak- ( ing you behind the scenes in the world’s greatest tailoring shops; pictures ( showing how every Royal garment is cut separately and to the individual < order and measures of each customer; pictures of the cleanest, sunniest, ( cheeriest and biggest work shops you ever looked into—a delightful re- . velation into the perfection of Rojal Tailoring System. If you saw these pictures, you probably said to yourself, as scores of others ’ did: “No wqnder Royal Tailored clothes are considered the best in the I world—when they are made in an organization like that.” • But please don’t think that our obtec t in bringing these pictures to town was whooly selfish. We still say —that."lf this picture-play convinced some 1 of the young men, who have been careless about their clothes, of the itn- • portance of good dress in business--we shall feel satisfied. Let them buy i the “next best” to Royal Tailored clothes, if they will—that’s a whole lot i better than bungling the clothes problem entirely. i But for you folks who want the utmost in custom tailoring; for you men i who want the genuine “Million Dollar Look”; for you, who will take no ( second best—this is just a reminder that our store is the local home of , Royal Tailored to your order clothes. Made to your measure at ( sl6, sl7, S2O, $25, S3O and $35,.; A. W. Strieby & Son Authorized Resident Dealer ’ THE ROYAL TAILORS < CHICAGO NEW YORK ! I

READ EVERY AD VERTIS EMENT SPRING IS HERE Its Hard to Believe But it is true Garden making time is drawing very near, But you will find us prepared with a wide variety of good dependable bulk seed--the kind that grows. A Great Economy can be affected by raising a garden even its only a small one. In its addition it is very healthy to eat plenty of green things in the spring. Come here and get your seed this will insure you of a healthy, rapid growing patch. SEIDER & BURGENER It is better to buy a good flour than to ,1 wish you had GET PEERLESS FLOUR and stop Worrying. Made at home with a guarantee - FOR SALE BY SYRACUSE FLOUR MILLS