The Syracuse Journal, Volume 7, Number 52, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 29 April 1915 — Page 3
. The weather man says warmer. ■ We have the most complete line of ; thin summer Underwear for the : Ladies. < • Gauze Vests extra values at 10c, 15c, 2 for 25, 25 and 50c. ■ ; Wide straps on shoulders and also the Cumfy Cut and can’t 1 • slip Vests. ‘I Ladies’Union Suits 25 and 5Cc and SI.OO in the Famous • • Munsing Wear. We carry all styles, wide and closed knee < > and also the out sizes for large people. ;; Men’s Union Suits 50c, SI.OO, $1.50, half sleeve, no sleeve ! • and long sleeves. : ’ Boys Union Suits at 25 and 50c, knee length and sleeveless. ; I Misses Vests at 10 and 15c each. :: Let Munsing Wear Union Suit You. ii New materials for Shirt Waists in a bite and colors. Laee •I cloth, Fancy Voiles, Silk Poplins and Bronze Silks at 25c a J ; yard. :I Better Wash Materials for light dresses 39 and 50c per yd. '' New lot of Bungalow Aprons in this week 29c to SI.OO. 1 ' Ask to see the New Models in R. and G Corsets $1.00,, SLuO I - and $2.00, two new models in front lace Corsets at $-00. 4 » Special for Saturday May Ist. < > •; A good solid Broom the kind you usually pay 40c ;: for, Saturday only 23c. ;; We have a limited amount of these brooms so come J i early Saturday morning. BRAINARDS :: Where It Pays To Trade •mi tn a 4 • 4 I < ' 4 | < 4 * 4 I 4 ' ’ ’ -J New Goods In >" ■ ' our sbiowu dbd'i. I > ‘ ' ■ New Styles, sizes and shapes in . : Symphony Lawn Stationery copper - ; plate engraved with plain or beveled ; ; gold edged. Correspondence cards. I > < 4 • < :: f : Prices 35c, 50c, 60c, 70c, 80c. : F. L. HOCH & SON 4► » ( 4 » !I1 It! I MM Giw Drab and Baoaaae 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 g eneral line of canned meats. KLINK BROS. MEAT MARKET
Horse and Automobile Livery Good equipages for every occasion. Reasonable prices for drives anyw’here. Hack service to the depot Fare 10 Gents Each Way HENRY SNOBHKGER Barn 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
UMS ARE NO LONGER USED Baltimore and Ohio Officials Forbid Use of “B. & O.” Making over their company’s general designation is a task which has been undertaken by employes of the Baltimore and Ohio railroad with determination and in deference to the desire of the management that the corporate title be pronounced and written hereafter instead of the initials “B. & 0.” A circular has been issued bringing this matter to the attention of the rank andrfile. Operators in the telephone exchanges and junior clerks in the offices all over the big railroad system have taken to the change as naturally as a locomotive takes to “locomoting” when the throttle is opened and over the wires comes “Baltimore and Ohio’’ instead of “Beno,” “Bando” and other corruptions which for years have been familiar. For some time the change has been under way on the locomotives and cars of the company, most of the passenger engines carryivg “Baltimoe and Ohio” across the sides of their tenders, and as freight engines and cars go through the shops for repairs they are re-lettered. New equipment purchased likewise has the words written entirely. A Queer Method The Journal has continually talked against mail-order buying, not that it directly effected us, but because it was harmful to local merchants and incidentally to the town. And what is our reward? We have learned of several instances where Syracue business men have sent printing out of town without even asaing our price on it. We can’t call this consistency, by any means, but if it continues it will reap its own reward. Syracuse, to a very great extent, is in the hands of its business men and will rise or fall depenbing considerable upon their course, and the course referred to above is not conductive to rising. Sells New Jersey Holdings L. E. Schlotterback a former Syracuse resident and for the past nine years identified in the manufacture of automobile trucks, now located in Newark, N. J., has sold his holdings in the company bearing his name and from a letter received py J. W. Rothenberger, he is thinking of locating in Syracuse. Made From A Big Tree A church in Santa Rosa, Cal., has the distinction of being built from the timber of one tree, a gigantic redwood that grew in Mendocimo county. The pews were also made from the tree. The spire is 100 feet high, the audience chamber seats 400 people, and the parlor 100. A pastor’s study, 12 by 20 feet, is also in the building The church cost SSOOO. Only twothirds of the tree. was needed to construct the church. After the roof was finished it was discovered that there were 60,000 shingles left over. Bet Even On Peace By Fall Betting on the outcome of the war is all the rage in London now. Several firms and individuals, through Lloyd’s Exchange, have on board today the following “book” on the duration of hostilities: That war will end before May • 1, 1915—-3 to 1 against. That war will end before June 1, 1915—-2 to 1 against. « That war will end before Sept. 1, 1915- - even money. That war will end before Dec. 1, 1915—-10 to 1 on. That war will end before March 1, 1916 —lls to 1 on. That Germany will take Paris--25 to 1 against. That Germany will take Warsaw —-5 to 1 against. in _ - ■ j uL“I Don’t Feel Good” That is what a lot of people tel! Usually their bowelsonly need cleansing, will do the trick and make you feel fine. We know this positively. Take on* tonight. Sold only by us, 10 Cents. F. L. Hoch. Try a Journal Want Ad
Verily’> Tis So The time is at hand when the man of the household goeth forth with a spade, a hoe and a rake and maketh a garden in his back yard; and he watcheth the vegetables day by day and is much pleased; but 10, and behold! he goeth forth to look upon his garden on the ninth day of the third month and he findeth it not, for the chickens of his neighbors have laid waste the tender onions and radishes and the crispy lettuce. And in the evening and in the morning and at noontime of the tenth and eleventh and succeeding days, the man who had a garden but now hath it not, sitteth on the back fence of his yard with a shotgun, lying in wait for the chickens of his neighbors. And verily, there is stife and ill feeling in the neighborhood. REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS HOUTON C. FRAZER ABSTRACTOR WARSAW, INDIANA Elmer M. Eddinger and Chas. M. Tucker to John F. Warren, 40 a sec 11 Franklin tp, $3600. Kelsey Baney th Madison Regenos O L 19 Mentone, 1500. Chauncy Cory to Wawasee Eagles lats in Syracuse, 450. Lizzie Umbraugh Levi N. Bontrager, 7 a sec 2 Etna tp, 1200. Oliver Smith to Noah R. Gingerich, 40 a sec 19 Jefferson tp, 4000 Aanrew H. Body et al to Amon Hazen, 43 a sec 16 Washington tp 4000. Sophi Stahly to Moses I Weaver 60 a secs 22 & 27 Scott tp 8000. Henry Baily to Flora Waggoner, 20 a sec 24 Washington tp 1600 Oral C. Coyle to John A. Eberly, lot 19 Motton place, Warsaw, 1250 Herbert A. Dye to Allie B. Stage lot 1 Wallace add Leesburg, 200 Joshiah Frantz to Elmer Heeter and Emma Heeter, 1.62 A. Sec. 13 Lake tp 900 " ■ Sherman Black to Wesley P. and Viola Dowos, lot 2 blk 5 Redkey’s add Pierceton,Boo Albert R. Clover to Rufus J. Morrison, 117 a sec 16 Washington tp, 11,700. Orrin E. Miller to Henry E. Neff and wife, lot 1 blk 7 Etna Green, 400 Frank Carr to Laura I. Hickman Mill Property, Packerton, 2600 Francis M. Jaques and 0. Leroy Leonard to Sarah Christner, 4 lots Sells Add. Silver, 400 Dad, Here’s to You We happened in a home the other night, and over the parlor door saw the legend worked in letters of red, ‘What is home without a mother?’), Across the room was another brief, ‘God bless our home. ’ “Now, what’s the matter with ‘God bless our dad?’ He gets up early, lights the fire, boils an egg, and wipes off the dew of the lawn with his boots while many a mother is sleeping. He makes the weekly handout for the butcher, the grocer, the milkman and baker, and his little pile is badly worn before he has been home an hour. “If there is a noise during the night, dad is kicked in the back and goes down stairs to find and kill him. Mother darns the socks, but dad bought the socks in the first place, and the needles and the yarn afterward. Mother does up the fruit; well, dad bought it all, and jars and sugar cost like the mischief. “Dad buys chickens for the Sunday dinner, carves them himself, and draws the neck from the ruins after everyone else is served. ‘What is home without a mother? Yes that is all right, but what is home without a father? Ten chanches to one it is a boarding house, father is under the slab and the landlady is the widow. Dad, here’s to you; you’ve got your faults—you may have lots of ’em — but you’re all right and we’ll miss you when you’r gone. Born to Mr. and Mrt. Otto Grindel, April 20, a son. Chas. Johnson and wife of Goshen, former Syracuse residents, autoed to Syracuse, Thursday. If You are troubled with heartburn, gaeee and a distressed feeling after eating take a Stesaffi W before and after each meal and-you will obtain ptvuipt relief. Sold only by ua,250 F. L. Hoch.
DEPOT ROBBED THURSDAY NIGHT Theives Break in While Night Man is Pumping Water Between 11:39 and 12:Q0 oclock, Thursday night, while Burdelle Weaver, night man ar the B. & 0., was at the pumping station, thieves gained entrance to the depot ticket office through a window and breaking open the money drawer, decamped with the contents amounting to $11.75. While no clue was left it is the opinion of the depot officials that the job was performed by home talent. No tramps or strangers had been seen loitering in that vicinity on the night of the robbery and other indications point to local talent. A detective is at work on the case. Put a Bet on Him Don’t poke fun at the boy who comes in from the forks of the creek with seed in his hair and mud on his face, patches on the north department of his pants, and, just one gallus on. He may look seedy now but ten years from now he may be president of some bank, pastor of some church, judge of some court or a physician to some people, just because a boy lives in town, wears two kinds of socks, parts his hair in the middle, sucks at a cigarette, curls his hair on his mother’s curling tongs, and has a daddy with spondulix to burn, that is no sign that he is going to run this country in the future. We’U put our money on the sound, sane and sensible bov from the forks of the creek. GIVE FINE CONCERT BAND’S FIRST TREAT OF THE SEASON IS ENJOYED While the cool qnd threatening weather thinned the crowd on the occasion of the first band concert of the season, last Wednesday evening, those who did attend were entertained with good music. Many remarks while the concert was in progress went to. show that the great improvement which the band has made in the past year was favorably noticed. With better weather we expect to' see the srteets crowded on band concert night. Sunday Observance Over in Goshen, certain people are urging a half holiday on Thursday, during the summer. The plan deserves consideration. In it lies the solution of Sunday observance. Sunday observance would pick up wonderfully if the workingman had another day for recreation. But when he has Sunday only free from work, he is apt to pick out pleasures that does not conform strictly to Sabbath regulations. Sometime we hope to see five days as a working week for all classes. GETS S2OOO FROM B. & 0. ROY WARD COMPROMISES WITH RAILROAD FOR DAMAGES Roy Ward, who suffered an injury to his leg while braking on the B. & 0., some time ago, secured a settlement from the company to the amount of S2OOO. After the injury he was taken to the Garrett hospital and eleven days passed before his limb, which was broken, was set by a physician. He has had considerable trouble with the injured member ever since the accident and had filed suit for damages. The railroad company realizing that they had poor defense compromised rather than let it go to trial.
I J. W. ROTHENBERGER | : Undertaker : SYRACUSE, » s IND. BUTT & XANDERS Attorneys-at-Law cac tice in all Courts Money to Loan. Fire Insurance. Phone 7 SYRACUSE, IND.
I Help Us Pick The Most Popular Girl in SYRACUSE f The best qualified people we know of to settle this momentous question are folks who carry the PASIffiR FOUNTAIN PEN Every owner of a Parker Pon is entitlod to one vote for every cent the pen costs. A $2.50 pen will ■B| count for 250 votes —a $4 pen for 400 votes and so on. Every one who purchast's a Lucky Curve Pen |H ? of u.s during the contest gets double votes. Ask us K | for folder giving rules of contest. II ' The Winner of the contest will receive an elegantly mounted PARKER Lucky Curve Fountain Pen as a prize. Watch our window’ for daily records, Rules Governing “Popular Girl Contest” 1 Any young lady in Syracuse is nominated as a candidate when votes are cast for by any owner of a Parker Lucky Curve-Fountain Pen. 2 Every owner of a Parker Lucky Curve Fountain Pen bringing this pen to your store and tilling out and signing a ballot card is entitled to vote, 3 The number of votes each Parker Pen owner is entitled to cast depends on the original price of the pen. One vote may be cast for each cent of the price. The owner of a $2.50 pen is entitled to 250 votes; if a $3.00 pen to 300 votes and so on. 4 If any question arises as to the price of the pen. it shall be settled by reference to the Parker Pen catalog. 5 Owners of Parker Pens received as gifts are entitled to vote just the same as if they had purchased their pens. 6 The votes of those who purchase Parker Pens at your store during the contest count double. A $2 50 pen so purchased counts for 500 votes: a $3 pen, 600 votes so on. 7 The young lady receiving the largest number of ballots be accorded the prize—a beautifully mounted Parker Lucky Curve Fountain Pen, valued at $7.00 or more. 8 The contest began Saturday April 17, and ends May 22. 9 At the expiration of the contest the ballots will be counted by impartial 'judges who will award the prize and the title of “most popular young lady” in Syracuse to the candidate receiving the highest number of ballots. N. P. HOFFMAN READ EVERY AD VERTIS EMENT SPRING IS HERE 1 * > ’ '■ Its Hard to Believe Bpt it is true Garden making time is drawing very near, But you w’ill 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 wish you had GET PEERLESS FLOUR and stop worrying. Made at home with a guarantee ■ ■X ' FOR SALE BY SYRACUSE FLOUR MILLS
