The Syracuse Journal, Volume 7, Number 50, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 15 April 1915 — Page 4

Two Pure Brofl Stallions SOUND Will stand the season in Syracuse at the Miles Barn I Andrews Perfection JEJUNUM No. 6319 No. 2745 SHIRE Percheron Weight 2360 lbs. 7 Weight 1940 lbs. years old 0 years old. Terms: $15.00 to insufe satisfactory colt that will live 9 days. I JOHN MILES S CHAS. HEHIFHOW, qwnebs ■ SYRACUSE, INDIANA MT A Successful Bank IS Not a Question of Luck But is due to a careful cons’deration by its officers of the best interests of its patrons. We try to give our customers every advantage known to Modern banking. Deposits Guaranteed State Bank of Syracuse Next LlQonlcr Market Dau ! o 1 !! Monday, April, 26 1915 o ~ 1 o 1 o 1 4 This is the day that buyer and seller meet on equal 1 * footing and at no expense to either. No matter what you I < may have to sell, list it now with the V 1 CITIZENS BANK f ♦ LIGONIER; INDIANA | O <• Join Our Club And Save Money and Worry o o we will call for your clothes once ][ each week, press them and return ][. them to you all tor 1.00 per month. <> No bother nor worry about baggy <! trousers or wrinkled coats—we’ll at- !; tend to that. :: CLEANING PRESSING REPAIRING Clyde E. Sensibaugh < I < i Over Klink’s Meat Market. Who’s Married to Who IN THE MOVIES? & You can learn this and everything else you want to know about the great moving picture stars in Photoplay Magazine. You can get the most beautiful colored pictures ever published, and most ever written, before they appear on the screens, every month. You can learn all about the wonderful opportunities for earning fame and fortune by writing photoplays. You can make your visits to the movies doubly enjoyable. PHOTOPLAY MAGAZINE THE NATIONAL MOVIE PUBLICATION At your Newsdealers IS Cents a Copy Get • eopy today. If you have never read it there’s a great treat in store for you. To make sure of getting your copy every month, send $1.50 for a year’s subscription. PHOTOPLAY PUBLISHING CO. , Dept. 103 CHICAGO. ILL.

SUNDAYJCHOOL. Lesson lll.—Second Quarter, For April 18, 1915. THE INTERNATIONAL SERIES. Text of the Lesson, Ps. xxiii—Memory Verses, Ps. xxiii—Golden Text, Ps. xxiii, I—Commentary Prepared by Rev. D. M. Stearns. This most familiar of ail the psalms to many people is as farreaehing as any and will have its complete fulfillment only in the kingdom when Isa. xl, 10, 11; Jer. xxiii, 5,6; Ezek. xxxvii, 21-28, shall be fulfilled in the eyes of all nations, with every other prediction concerning Israel’s future glory. All the true shepherds and shepherdesses of the Bible are suggestive of Christ and Israel, with some reference also to Christ and His church. He is primarily the Shepherd of Israel, leading Joseph like a flock, dwelling between the cherubim (Ps. Ixxx, 1). He is also the Good Shepherd giving His life for the sheep and giving eternal life to His sheep, the sheep of His pasture (John x, 11, 27, 28; Ps. c, 3). He is the Great Shepherd risen from the dead, by whom God works in His people that which is well pleasing in His sight (Heb. xiii, 20, 21). He is also the chief Shepherd, who, at the resurrection of the just, will give the crowns to those who have won them and among others the crown of glory to those who have faithfully fe** the flock (I Pet. v, 1-4). All the shepherds, such as Abel, Jacob, Joseph, Moses and David, were wondrously typical of the Good Shepherd, and the women also,, such as Rachel and Zipporah, who kept sheep, give us much to meditate upon, but all centers upon Him who is altogether lovely and of whom our souls say, “My meditation of Him shall be sweet; I will be glad in the Lord” (Song v, 16; Ps. civ, 34). ’j'he sequences of Scripture are most interesting and helpful studies, and in Psajm xxil, xxiii, xxiv, we have one of the most wonderful. Ps. xxil tells very fully of His sufferings, as if written by an eyewitness; speaks of His hands and feet pierced, His garments divided and lots cast upon His vesture, and quotes some of the very words flung at Him as He hung upon the cross, but it also tells of the resurrection and the kingdom. Ps. xxiii suggests Israel’s glory in the millennial kingdom, land Ps. xxiv tells of the King of glory ruling the whole world in righteousness. No one can truly/say “The Lord is my Shepherd” wha has not seen Him dying in their steafl, bearing their sins in His own body/and received Him as their own Saviour (Gal. ii, 20; I Pet. ii, 24; John i, 12; Eph. 1,6, 7). Then only can we be -sure . that we shall never want any good thing, for He who spared not His own Son will with Him also freely give us all things (Ps. xxxiv, 9, 10; Ixxxiv, 11; Rom. viii, 32). It is impossible that such a Shepherd could withhold from any of His sheep any tiling really good for them. Pastures *f tender grass and waters of quietness (Ps. ii, margin), such would He have us enjoy always if we would only keep close to Him and not stray away like a lost sheep, choosing our own pasture and causing Him to grieve over us, saying, “Oh, that my people had hearkened unto me and Israel had walked in my ways” (Ps. Ixxxi, 11-16). Although none of His sheep can ever perish, they may wander and need restoration, as when David said, “I have gone astray like a lost sheep; seek thy servant,” or, again, “Restore unto me the joy of Thy salvation” (Ps. cxix, 176; li, 12). He will be glad to lead us in the paths of righteousness if we are only willing to be thus led. Thus only can we foretaste the kingdom and know something of its peace and quietness and assurance. The expression “the shadow of death” is just one word and is found ten times in Job, four times in the Psalms and four times in the prophets. It may refer to the whole time of our sojourn here for we may be said to be always in the shadow of death, but the believer can always say, “I will fear no evil,)* for to the child of God death Is always gain and very far better (Phil, i, 21, 23). Death is. never spoken of as the coming of Christ, for, although death brings gain to the believer, it is always an enemy, the last enemy to be destroyed (I Cor. xv, 26). In life or death, if we are His, He is always with us to guide, comfort, sustain, protect us and assures us that He will never leave us or fail us (Deut. xxxl, 8; Isa. xll, 10, 13; Heb. xiii, 5). The table in the presence of enemies will have a great fulfillment at the beginning of the next age, when He will come in glory for Israel’s deliverance. It will then be a feast of fat*things, when He will take away the rebuke of His people from off all the earth (Isa. xxv, 6-9). For the believer there is always a feast, and we may be day by day satisfied with the fatness of His house and drink of the river of His pleasures (Ps., xxxvl, 8). It is a reproach to the Lord when His people are seen seeking satisfaction at the world’s table. When truly anointed with the Holy Spirit we shall so enjoy the Lord and His fullness that there shall be an overflow for others, but how few seem to overflow! Some one has said that with the Lord going before (John x, 4) and with goodness and mercy following (verse 6) we are cared for as only heaven can eare for us. Then to think of our forever home, from which we shall go no more out (John xiv, 1-3); only unbelief can make us sad. May our hearts ever respond to “Let us be glad and rejoice and give honor to Him” (Rev. xix, 7).

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THE RURAL PRESS

The Local Paper a Most Useful Agency on the Farm—The Press, Pulpit and School a Trinity of Influence That Must Be Utilized in Building Agriculture. By Peter Radford Lecturer National Farmers' Union A broad campaign ot publicity on the subject of rural life is needed in this state today to brint. the problems of the farmers to the forefront The city problems are blazoned upon the front pages of the metropolitan dailies and echoed ir the country press, but the troubles of the farmers are seldom told, except by those who seek to profit by th* story and the glitter of the package ofttimes ob scures the substance A searching in vestigation into the ot the farmers will reveal many inherent de sects in our economic system that can be easily remedied when properly un derstood and illuminated by the pow er of the press The rural press, the pulpit and the school .are a trinity of powerful in fluences that the farmer must utilize to their fullest capacity before he can occupy a commanding position in public affairs These gigantic agencies are organized in every rural community and only await the patronage and cooperation of the farmers to fully de velop their energy and usefulness. They are local forces working for the best interests of their respective communities. Their work is to build and their object is to serve They prosper only through the development and prosperity ot the community. Every tarmei in this state should subscribe for the local paper as well as farm periodicals and such other publications as be may find profitable, but he should by all means subscribe for his local paper and no home should be without »t The local paper is part of the community life and the editor understands the farmer’s prob lems. It is the local press that will study the local problems and through its columns deal with subjects ot most vital importance to local life of the community A Noble Task. In too many instances the country papers mimic the city press by glv ing prominence to scandals, accidents and political agitation. The new rural civilization has placed upon the rural press reneweu responsibilities, and enlarged possibilities for usefulness. It cannot perform its mission to agriculture by recording the frailties the mishaps and “inordinate am-’ bitions of humanity; oi by filling its columns with the echoes of the struggles of busy streets, or by enchanting stories of city life which lure our children from the farm. It has a higher and nobler task. Too often the pages of the city dailies bristle with the struggle of ambitious men in their wild lust for power, and many times the flames of personal conflict sear the tender buds of new civilization and iltuminate the pathway to destruction The rural press is the governing power of public senti ment and must hold steadfast to principle and. keep the ship of state tn the roadstead of progress The rural press can best serve the interests of the farmers by applying its energies to the solution of problems affecting the local community. It must stem the mighty life current that Is moving from the farm to the cities, sweeping before it a thousand boys and girls pei day. It has to deal with the fundamental problems of civilization at their fountain head Its mission is to direct growth, efficiency and mold the intellectual life of the country, placing before the public the daily problems of the farmers and giving first attention to the legislative, co-operative, educational and social needs of the agricultural classes within its respective community. The Power of Advertising. The influence of advertising is clearly visible in the homes and habits of the farmers, and the advertising columns of the press are making their imprint upon the lives of our people. The farmer possesses the things that are best advertised. The farmer is entitled to all the advantages and deserves ail the luxuries of life We need more art, science and useful facilities on the farms, and many homes and farms are well balanced in this respect, but the advertiser can render a service by teaching the advantages of modern equipment throughout the ccriumns of the rural press. , The farmers are in need of personal leadership. They have political leaders, but they need local industrial community and educational leaders.

Solomon’s Creek Mte. Bessie Ringwald "Helio everybody." We are back again for good this time. We have been married, showered, and belled, since you heard from us last. Quite a number of the young people were entertained at the Emmert home Satuiday evening. Merle Darr and Hazel Good spent Saturday evening with John Ringwald and wife. Fred Riogwald and Emma and Glen Nicolai spent Sunday at the home of Paul Ringwald. John Addams and wife moved on the Kitson farm last week formeilv known as theß. Stillwell farm. John Ringwald and wife and Merle Darr were the guests Sunday of John Good and family. M. Heaston and wife spent Sunday at the home us Clint Rookstool. Rev. Simon and wife. Cleo Whitmer, Cloy Darr, Harry Smaltz and family and Albert Darr and wife were the guests Sunday at the Harry Hapner home. Paul Ringwald leh Tuesday for Californig whete he expects to a few weeks. Noah Ott is improving and was moved to his home Tuesday. Walter Rex and familv of Syracuse and David Holtzinger and family spent Sunday at the home of Henry Rex. Sunday School, Sunday morning. Preaching services in the evening following the Y. P. C. U. All are invited to attend. Paul Ringwald sister Emma visited at Cromwell Friday. Homer Kelsey spent Sunday with John Rookstool. Returned To Lancaster Rev. Floyd Launer and family of Lancaster 111., are visiting friends and relatives in this vicinity. Rev Launer has been returned to his last year’s charge which is about 300 miles southeast of here. Ready For Use Wm. Snavely has The Syracuse Ice Cream Factory ready for the summer’s business as soon as dealers are ready to handle the product. Three orders have already been filled. Inventory Filed The inventory of the estate of Henry Shock, deceased, has been filed. The personal property is appraised at $2,570.43 and the real estate at $7,500. ADMINISTRATOR’S SALE OF Personal Property Tke following personal property of the late Henry Shock, deceased, will be sold at Public Auction at his late farm residence six and onehalf miles southeast of Syracuse, and two miles south of Vawter Park on Thursday, April 22. Beginning at 10:00 o’clock a. m. Lot automobile supplies which includes tire protectors, bumpers, etc. Ford automobile in first class condition. 4 HEAD HORSES 4 Brown mare 6 years old, wt. 1300. Black mare coming 5 years old wt. 1600, Black gelding, coming three, broke to work, Norman mare, 5 years old, good worker. Red cow 9 years old, fresh, Red cow 8 years old, with calf by side, 4 yearling heifers, 3 heifer calves seven weeks old. Seven Shots average 100 lbs. brood sow due to farrow in June. Farming Implements, Etc. Jesse Shock, Administrator. Cal Stuckman, Auctioneer Jeff Garber, Clerk. 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, dece ised. Said estate is supposed to be solvent. Jesse Shock, Administrator. March 27, 1915. j 4&t3 I

Four Corners James Callender and wife were called to Gravelton by the sudden illness of Mrs. Callender’s mother, Mrs. Brumbaugh. Rvscu C>v t.ud Guy Bowser of White Oak attended the last day of school at kleloy, Friday. Ed Callender and wife of Elkhart, ; and Clint Callender wife and son, were at Gravelton’s Sunday. Albert Rasor of Arnold Station spent Sunday afternoon with Hoover Brothers. Flo Darr Spent Monday with her mother Mrs. Chilcote of New Paris. The school closed at Meloy Friday the patrons showed their appreciation to the teacher. Going at the noon hour with well filled baskets. A fine dinner was served every one present did justice to it After the noon hour, a show was I given and Miss Carrie presented her pupils with a souvenir. This ’ closed another successful year. Ed Meloy and Mary Ulery were Milford visitors Monday. A Bargain — Residence property for sale son north Harrison Street, haying six rooms, electric lighted, good well and cellar, barn and two poultry houses, one acre of ground and some fruit, A bargain if 'taken soon. A. R. Strock. —Should this dreadful war con tinue the Emperor of Germany may lose his job. No one knows, But : every Syracuse girl knows that the way to keep the young men coming is to feed them well on good things made from Goshen Flour. —New Furniture for the spring trade arriviving every day at Beckmans store. ~SDFIna IS H6F6 House Cleaning Time If you have any interior decorating in view, you cannot do better than to arrange to look over new samples just received. A fine line and cheapest in the city. Work guaranteed. Wm. E. Sheffield. J. M. SHAFFER Chiropractor Will be in Syracuse, Monday and Thursday, from 5 until 9.

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)) Ip Tin Work and Repairing Done here at short notice, and done in the best possible manner. Years of experience has taught us the best methods, and as we use only the BEST of MATERIALS you may be sure of getting the highest grade of work at the lowest possible prices. We can mend your old boiler or sell you a new one, whichever is the cheapest for you. Golwsll & Gordu Syracuse Decorative Work Paper hanging, painting and interior decorating. Experienced Workmanship Work guaranteed Representing fine line of decorative papers. Inspect my samples. LET’S TALK IT OVER DARL F. WOOD PHONE 461-2 SYRACUSE, INDIANA ’ Teeth filled, crowned and extracted absolutely without pain. Dr. Cunningham, Goshen. J. H. BOWSER Physician and urgeon Tel. 85—Offiiee and Residence Syracuse, Ind. BUTT & XANDERS n Attorney s-at-Law ractice in all Courts Money to Loan. Fire Insurance. Phone 7 SYRACUSE, IND. AUCTIONEER Cal. L. Stuckman Phone 535, Nappanee, Ind. You can call me up without expense.

THE HOME, RESTAURANT MARTHA MASTER tai Here It will alwyys beour aim to serve you with fresh, clean, wholesome food, at prices as low as we ccn make them. Call and try our hot soup, our substantial sandwiches, and our fresh pies. / Cakes Baked To Order THE HOME RESTAURANT Beware of Ointments for Catarrh that Contain Mercury as mercury will surely destroy the sense of smell and completely, derange the whole svstem when entering it through the mucous surfaces. Such articles should never be used except on prescriptions from reputable physicians, as the damage they will do is ten fold to the good you can possibly derive from them. ’Hall’s Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co.. Toledo, 0., contains no mercury, and is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. In buying Hall’s' Catarrh Cure be sure you get the genuine It is taken internally and made in Toledo. Ohio, by F. J. Cheney & Co. Testimonials free. Sold bv Druggists. Price 75c per bottle. Take Hall’a Family Pills for constipation. OVER 65 YEARS* EXPERIENCE Designs Copyrights Ac. Anyone sending a sketch and description n>«» qntetily ascertain our opinion free whether an invention is probably lions strictly conUdenlial. HANDBOOK on Patents sent free. Oldest agency for securing patents. Patents taken through Munn & Co. receive special notice, without charge, in the Scientific American. A handsomely Illustrated weekly. culation of any wientUie Jounial. lerms, year; four months, Sold by all newsdealers.