The Syracuse Journal, Volume 25, Number 1, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 28 April 1932 — Page 1

6/ Arthur Brisbane WHAT AILS US? PLATITUDES WON’T DO HEARD AROUND WORLD TO DISCOURAGE AIRMEN What is the matter with us? The ancient dinosaur, enormous in build and power, possessed everything except a brain strong enough to direct and. protect his great body. Has this dinosaur nation the same trouble? Do we lack a national intelligence as wide as the country, a governing intellect capable of managing if from Alaska to Florida? Is our trouble a lack of intelligent interest among voters? Do we need a dictator to govern those that will not govern themselves? The nation has more of everything than its people can use- more coal, oil, cotton, wheat, food and wealth of all kinds, land, machinery, skilled workers. And millions of the people have nothing but worry and fear for the future. What is the matter with us? Chamberlain. England's chancellor of the exchequer, tells the British that they can solve all economic problems with “work, economy, courage and patience.” ' Many pleasant platitudes have been uttered concerning “work, economy, courage, patience.’’ But courage and patience will not fill the stomachs hungry children. Recommending work to millions that would gladly work, but can find no work to do, is a ghastly joke. Advising economy does not help those that have nothing to save. And if the advice were taken seriously by those that have money, buying and business conditions would be worse. You cannot cure anything with platitudes. Millions of .schoolboys have -heard, thousands of patriots have talked, about "the shot heard around the world,” at the Battle of Concord. That shot wasn’t heard around the world, even figuratively speaking. Three quarters of the world’s people never heard of it an'd don’t know anything about it yet. # , When the shot was fired, 157 years ago, it would have seemed insanity to suggest that a shot would some day really be heard all around the world. But that thing happened the other day, io the General Electric laboratories at Schenectady. Governor Ely of Massachusetts fired a shot from a musket dating back to the Revolutionary war. The. sound traveled “over a short wave hookup to Kootwijk, Holland, then to Landoeng, Java, to Sydney, Australia. and back to Schenectady/’ A bill introduced in the house of* representatives to reduce drastically the pay of officers that fly in both branches of our air service reflects little credit on the judgment or patriotism of the man introducing the bill. A congressman, sitting at his ease | in the safety of a comfortable chair, enjoying his 0,000 a year salary, cuts a poor figure when h« seeks to reduce the pay of flight officers, called upon every day to risk life in the most important branch of the national defense. The 1933 exposition, planned to (Continued on Last Page) HONOR ROLL FOR MONTH ANNOUNCED ——— ’l With report cards for the Eighth month of school issued yesterday, the honor roll is announced. For the First Grade: RosemaryCarr, Marilyn Holloway, Jean Ketring, Stanley Grimes, Lssla Plew, Carol Rarig and. Frances Miller. Second Grade: Jimmie Armstrong, Wendell Beck, Warren Benson, Russell Ritter, Marjorie Moody, BettyGordy and Betty Wolf. Third Grade: Martha Hibschman, - Betty Miller, Ruth Rarig, Opal Scarberry, Emerson Bushong, Nelson Hinderer, Leslie Spencer. \ Fourth Grade: Winifred Brady. Betty Baugher, Billie Emerson. Mary Galloway, John Robert Kern, Cot lyes LeCount, Thurlow Mock and Jack Stoelting. Fifth Grade: Robert Hinderer and Burton Niles. Kathryn Dillen’s name would have been on the honor roll except that she missed 5 days on account of illness. Sixth Grade: Jean Emerson, Agnes Fleming, Mildred LeCount, Donald Tribble, Buford Scarberry and Lavon Miller. j Seventh ■ Grade: Anna Pearl Calvert, Jimmie Butt, Lucy Bachman and Juanita Geiger. Eighth Grade: Laura Bachman, Herman Doll, Carma Parkhurst, Ralph Mick, Wilbur Niles, Marjorie Slabaugh and George Bill Smith. Freshmen: Ruby Click, Bernice Held, Russell Gawthrop and Robert OU. Sophomores: Grace Culler, Frances Houston and Jimmie Freeman. ‘Juniors: Harriet Bachman and Joe Kindig. Senion: Velva Brown and Wallace Baugher. '■ - . ■■ f ■- . '

Syracuse Journal Northern Indiana’s Best And Newsiest Weekly Newspaper

’ VOLUME XXV

FARM HOME DESTROYED BY FLAMES Old Land Mark Burns In Fire Sunday Afternoon. I . . ' ■■ i Mrs. John Kauffman’s home near the .Byers church in the Dismal was totally destroyed by fire shortly after noon Sunday. If the high wind which blew hid .been coming from the other direction' the barn as well, as the farm house would have been burned. i . The loss is covered by insurance. Mrs. John Kauffman and her daughter Vibia made their home there. Sparks from the chimney set the roof ablaze and when it was dis- * covered the Syracuse fire depart- j ment was sent for. Joe Rapp and Orval Snobarger took the fire truck to the scene! of the blaze but the house' was too far gone to be saved before they reached there. The house had been built approximately 70 years ago by Moses Byers. It had been remodelled since, but was one of thqOldest in the vicinity. The furniture from downstairs was saved but that from the upper story was lost in the flames. Roof Burned Saturday. Saturday afternoon the fire alarm sounded and the truck was taken to the Guy Hoover honpe just off Boston i street, and was accompanied by many I of the-population of Syracuse who wanted to go to a fire. I Sparks from the chimney had set ; this roof ablaze, but prompt arrival j and quick work of the volunteer i firemen; put the fire out after it did slight damage to the roof. The firemen were called to the same home a few weeks ago to extinguish a similar fire on the roof of this house. i ‘ —o—— ; HOUSE CLEANING IS PUT OFF BY SLEEP An accident fortunately without serious ‘results occurred to Mrs. Sol ! Millet last Thursday just before noon. She had been having a heavy cold, but assisted by Mrs. Peffly she had been cleaning house just the same. Thursday morning they were cleaning upstairs and a coughing spell seized Mrs. Miller. She reached for a medicine bottle in the medicine ■ cabihet in the bathroom and asked Mrs.; Peffly if she could read the directions on the bottle as Mrs. Miller’s glasses were downstairs, Mrs. Peffly read: "Take one teaspoonful,” Mrs. Miller said: "Yes, that’s my cough medicine." Not 'having a teaspoon there, she I took a drink from the bottle and after swallowing it said: "That’s, not cough medicine, that’s .-the medicine I was instructed to take when I couldn’t sleep.” ■ She says she went downstairs to prepare lunch for her husband and sop and Mrs. Peffly, but by the time Dick came home from school she was so sleepy she told him he would hive to finish cooking. She went into the living room and went to sleep and when Mr. Miller came home for lunch, she could not be roused. I l Not knowing what quantity of the medicine she had taken, they were alarmed and sent for the doctor. He found that her pulse was all right, and said that 'tt would be all right (or her to sleep it off. Mrs. Miller Awakened that evening, more than a little annoyed at having slept through ;an afternoon she had planned to spend cleaning house. ; o AUTOMOBILE BURNS BUT HORN REMAINS When Mr. and Mrs. Tracy Burgerman Were on their way from their home in South Bend to visit Mr. and Mrs. Lester Mock, yesterday morning tftey picked up a hitch hiker and gave him a lift from Mishawaka to Elkhart. He must have dropped a , burning cigarette in the rear of their . Overland sedan. i After he got out in Elkhart they smelled smoke but couldn’t locate > any fire. By the time -they reached : the Lester Mock home, the rear end of the machine burst into flames. I According to the Burgerman’s only the horn of the car now survives. i Q Ralph Miller has returned home as- > ter several months spent in California.

LOCAL MAN RUNNING FOR COUNTY OFFICE ■ B W. SETH E ROWDABAUGH Leading candidate for office of prosecuting attorney. Seth E. Rowdabaugh, local resident in winding up a strenuous campaign for nomination as candidate for prosecuting attorney. His name will appear upon the Republican ballot at the primary election next Tuesday. Rowdabaugh is beginning the practice of law, having been admitted, to the bar less than a year ago. He was the first in this county to pass the examinations conducted by the state Supreme Court in testing th? qualifi- ; cations of applicants for the bar. During the past winter he has comj pleted his third and last year of | legal training in the University of ! Michigan Law School at Ann Arbor. Rowdabaugh’s friends in various parts of this county who knew of his efforts to establish himself in the legal profession urge*!* him to make the race for prosecutor. Rowdabaugh’s career has been directed toward the legal profession for some years. He is a graduate of the New Paris High school, took college work at Manchester college and Purdue University, received his Bachelor of Arts degree at the University of lowa and entered the Michigan Law school Sept. 1929. His completion of the law course at Ann Arbor will make seven full years of college training. • He taught school one year in the rural schools of Elkhart county, taught in the Morning Sun lowa High School; became principal of the West Liberty, lowa High school, then was superintendent of schools in New London, lowa. He returned to Syracuse in 1922 and purchased the business which he now owns. Mrs. Rowdabaugh has been managing’ this for him while he has been away at school. ,—: —^o-. MATERNES CANDIDATE FOR STATE SENATOR Kosciusko’s candidate for joint senator of Kosciusko and Wabash counties is Jacob W. Maternes Maternes, a long time resident of Kosciusko county has invested his money in this county and is vitallyinterested in the progress and well being of the entire county. If he is nominated by the Republicans in the primary and elected in November as senator, he promises he will always work for the best interest of Kosciusko and Wabash counties. Maternes is remembered by the Republican barbecue which was held at his home near Oswego, two' years ago, and for his services as a member of the Republican State Executive Committee. In the discussion which is preceding the vote at the primary, Republican voters of Kosciusko county have expressed themselves verbally as feeling that a man from this couney should be the next senator for the two counties, because for the last four years the senator at the state legislature has been from Wabash county. Maternes has definitely stated his ideas and that for which he stands in statements on another page of this paper. These should be read by every citizen of Kosciusko and Wabash counties. 0 ■. • PLANT TREES AT SCHOOL On Monday afternoon the Ladies of the Round Table met on the High School grounds and with the help of W. C. Ganta, Bill and Voyle Osborn, Maurice Crow, Everett Crow and Joe Kindig, planted six elm trees along the west bank of the creek. It is the hope of the club members that these trees may provide shade for many a picnic party in days to come.

SYRACUSE, INDIANA, THURSDAY. APRIL 28, 1932

ON LAKE WAWASEE I Twenty-two fishermen spent last Saturday and Sunday St The Tavern, among those being Mr. and Mrs. O. R. Jackson, George JaCkaon, Mr. and Mrs Roy .Baer and son, Herman ( Wolf, Eli Schloss, Mr. and Mrs. Per- ‘ cey Abermyer, O. ,C. Herdrick, Hugh j Myer, Mr. and Mrs. Price, Dr. West- ( fall and M. Batty of Indianapolis; ) Charles Bonser of Anderson; Mr. ( and Mrs. Hal Carlson and party of ( four from Chicago; Mr. and Mrs* . John Stephenson and family of Muncie. . -' ■ Twelve friends of Eli Lilly from Indianapolis are his greets on a fish- j ing party at his summer home this t .veek. These are: A. Vonnygrft, Fred , Appel, Barret Moxley, Robert Failey, ' William Stafford, Nick Noyes. Geo , Denny, Charles Lathram, Sylvester < Johnson, Garvin Brown, John Scott nd Hathaway Simmons. ( Unpleasant weather has interfer- f red with fishing blit when the wind 1 made the lake too rough for this i sport, members of the party enjoyed 1 golf on the course near the Lilly i summer home, and horseshoes at the i rear of the cottage. | They had caught 20 bass by Wed- * nesday evening. Johnson, candidate for Senator 1 pointed out that l 3 members of the 1 party sitting down at one table meal times might seriously interfere with his election, so he 1 persuaded Mrs. J. ' M. Sargent, of the Sargent hotel, ! who is catering for this party of 1 .fishermen, to place only 12 places at the one table, and set one place at an individual table in the corner of Lilly’s dining room. The first 12 to check in at meal time are served at the one table, the last of the party to arrive must eat like Jack Horner did in his corner. Mrs. Sargent said when questioned, that Johnson has never been the last one to arrive at meal time. Charles Dalke of Indianapolis was a lake visitor from Thursday until Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Howard S. Bell and R. H. Haskell of Chicago were week- 1 end guests of Mr. and Mrs. George W. Mellinger. Mr and. Mrs. C. H. Brillhart of South Bend spent Saturday at their lake home. A .H. Becker and W. F. Goff of Indianapolis,, M. Herthel and Jim Howe of Flossmoor, Il|., were the fishermen who were guests at Sargent’s hotel last week end. Mr. and Mrs. Robert B. Deutsch and family of Kalamazoo, Mich., have moved from their home to Emory Kindig’s cottage on Kale Island, for the coming season . Fifty-two guests attended the Junior-Senior party of the Wolf Lake High school, held at Sargent’s hotel last Saturday evening. Dinner was served following which the program was enjoyed in the east living room of the hotel. It was a George Washington bi-centennial party. The tables had been decorated with roses and Martha Washington dolls. On each of the small cakes which formed the individual desserts there were small hatchets. In the program which followed the dinner, school songs were sung, and then a play was acted by members of the Junior class. Life in a Country School was shown, the boys being dressed in overalls and the girls in children’s clothes. Each one <Jame to the teacher with an unusual and funny excuse as to why he or she was late. Jerry Sniyder, Louis Leidner and Charles Cripe of Goshen were lake visitors Sunday. Mrs. Laura Wertz of Edinburg returned to her lake cottake last week. Mr. and Mrs. .Rulo Conrad of Kokomo spent several days at their cottage last week. Mr. and Mrs. Stewart Cowgill and family of Wabash spent the week end at their lake home. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Fishack and grandson of Fort Wayne spent Saturday and Sunday at the Fishack cottage. Mr. and Mrs. Gustave Schmidt of Indianapolis and Mrs. Schmidt’s sister were lake visitors, Saturday and Sunday. Dr. arid Mrs. William Armour and Mr. and Mrs. James Slagel of Goshen called on Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Boyts Sunday.; Mrs. William Graham is ill at their summer home near the South Shore Inn. Mr. and Mrs. John Boyts entertained with a birthday dinner, Monday evening, in honor of Mrs. Dan Riggle of Goshen and Lake Wawasfe. Mr. Dick King and Mr. Eugene Deutsch of Kale Island, pupils in the Second Grade at school announce they caught 10 turtles while in swimming id: Lake Wawasee last Saturday. j Ralph Teeter, Howard Marlatt and Jac Conley of Hagerstown spent a few days at the Teetor cottage, this week. Mr. and Mrs. Harlan Stoller of Milford have moved to the Roser cottage on Kale Island. Guests who helped Roes Franklin (Continued on Last Page) |

FISH ARE CAUGHT BUT GET AWAYTAKE LIVE BOX With the fishing seasori to close Sunday morning, May 1, for si> weeks, fishermen have been out or both Syracuse and Wawasee laker this last week. There are stories o: big ones caught and big ones tha get away but the story of the ones that were caught and got away afte being placed in a live box is the winning fish story. It comes from thi R. B. Tuttle cottage. < , R. B. Tuttle, ’ Boyd Keefer anc Louis Drossman of Indianapolis cams to the lake, Saturday to spend thi last few days of fishing with Carl Tuttle and Charles Brian. The fishermen caught 8 big bass and a perch. Saturday. Saturday night when they came ir from the lake they pu) these fish ii the live box. When they went out for them Sunday morning, fish, box and all were gone. They blamed the high wind for blowing the live box around the end of the pier and ou: into the lake. But others have suggested maybe a fisherman who didn’t dare go home without a fish to back up his story removed the fish anc took along the live box, Saturday night, in an effort to look like a big wind. ’ Carl Bick and guests from Indianapolis, going out from the Bick’s summer home, caught five good sized bass, Saturday. .. Almost everyone was so disgusted with the weather which had to turn rainy, cold and windy, Sunday, that few went out on Lake Wawasee. But C. W. Howard and Charles Kroh went out on Syracuse lake. Kroh landed a 2 1 -, pound bass and says he thought he’d caught a fish until a few moments later .“Beanie” pulled in a 4 3 < pound one. Howard had been showing his fishing skill even . before that time. On Friday, fishing just off Ma.in St. on Syracuse’lake, he landed an 8 pound pike and a 3 r 2 pound bass. Saturday he went out again and caught a 4 l 4 pound bass. Howard caught a four pound bass Monday evening after work, and on Tuesday caught three that totalled five pounds in weight. » William Graham is becoming much sought by neighbors far and near. He’s been catching the limit number of fish almost every day, and he shares up with friends so that his list of “friends” is increasing. On Saturday he caught the limit number of bass, perch, blue gills, and “red eyes.” Fishing off the pier at his home on the north shore, Frank Campbell caught the limit number of bass one day last week. Jean Cox and three friends, W. A. and Kenneth Cooper and Mr. Taylor of Indianapolis took 15 bass and three perch home with them after three days spent at Bishop’s. 0 ■ CAR DAMAGED IN WRECK. Ross Osborn’s automobile was damaged, Tuesday night, w hen it and a trailer belonging to Rev. Jensen of Marion came together on one of the curves of the road near Huntington. Osborn was returning home from there. The front end of his car was smashed in. He said’ the accident occurred; because the trailer to the preacher’s car was too far over on the outside of the curve when he attempted to drive around it. He was able to drive his own car home after temporary repairs were made on it.

FORMER SYRACUSE BOY RETURNS AFTER RESIDING IN ENGLAND

Having left Syracuse 24 years ago, and only paying one short visit here 17 years ago, Amos Audrey Snyder returned here, Friday to visit old relatives. He had just arrived in this country from England. He was here 24 years ago at the time of the . death of his£ father “Wes" Snyder. He paid a short visit here 17 years ago when he came to this country for a few months, When Snyder moved away from Syracuse he recalls there were no paved streets here, and says that carriage wheels got soaked crossing the creek on W’est Main street. There was only a Wooden .walk for people to use to cross the creek then.. He says there was an old wooden bridge on Huntington street and that “Wawasee” was not heard of then. He says on that lake there were only the Cedar Beach hotel and the Jones hotel, that the shore line has been changed. People have since built abutments and made lake front lota, along the shore. Snyder was in this country on a tour 17 years ago on the KeithOrpheum circuit for a few months. He paid a flying visit to Syracuse and returned to London, where he made his home, working out from

! DO YOU [ REMEMBER—i i 20 Years Ago. When the Northern Indiana Improvement Co. of Wawasee was incorporated with a capital stock of 5100,000 to make Lake Papakeetchie nto a summer resort, incorporators >eing C. A. Naney and William B. Sudlow? 15 Years Ago When John Snavely, 70, had a nar--ow escape from asphyxiation when he back draft caused deadly gas from a hard coal stove to fill his room? 10 Years Ago When the Church Board in charge >f Oakwood Park voted to spend $3,>OO for the const-ruction of a sanitary disposal system the work to be started at once? Five Years Ago. When Harold Bobeck was unable o attend Commencement exercises m account of being ill with pneumonia? *• •o * J STH GRADE GIRLS PRESENT OPERETTA The Eighth Grade Girls, under the direction of Miss Lucille Henwood, .vlll present the operetta, “Twilight Alley” at 7:15 o’cock, Friday evening in the High school auditorium. The operetta is a tenement scene. I’he characters must work to keep from starving. The boys of’the tene merit decide to burn it, “the 610 shoe,” w their home. When preverited. they decide to clean it up and the landlord’s daughter, offers to help The play ends happily. Carma Parkhurst has’ the part oi Dame Needy; Mary Jane Green if Meg, her oldest daughter; Jean Buri is Angelina the immigrant girl; Margaret Green is Dame Neddy’s son Jack; Laura Bachman * s Lilly, the landlord’s daughter. On the baseball nine are: Paulini Hibschman, Nellie Baumgartner, Mary Ellen Pletcher, Betty Shock, Nancy While, Martha Brown, Vir ginia Culler, Glendora McFarren anc Marie Stansbvwy. The rest of. the girls of the Eighth Grade form the Girls Chorus. On the committee which helped Miss Henwood plan the stage decoration? were Virginia Culler and Marjorie Slabaugh. . —f SCHOOL YEAR WILL CLOSE ON MAY 20 The' party which the Junior Clas will give in honor of this year’s graduating class of Syracuse High school will start the closing events of the school year. This party, to be an afternoon arid evening affair will be held at John* sonn’s Lodge, Lake Wawasee, on Saturday, May 7th. Baccalaureate services will be held in the High school auditorium Sunday evening, May 15thj Rev. Johr. Pettit, Lutheran church pastor will give the address of the evening tc the graduating class. Music will be furnished by the | High school chorus. Rev. Foust will (give, the invocation; Rev." Jarboe will read the scripture lesson and Rev. | Hively will pronounce the benediction. Commencement exercises will be held in the High school on May 20th with Dr. A. W. Cordier of Nopth Manchester College delivering the address to the graduating class, r

there on the British Isles and the continent, until seven years ago when his partner died and Snyder retired from the stage. He and his partner were “champ” bicycle riders. When Snyder left here as a youth he went to Chicago where he worked at the Metropole hotel for the printer who published menus of hotel meals, and took care of the bicycles of guests. Snyder says he would take these bicycles out late at night to ride these on the boulevards. Trick riding came to him naturallly and he enjoyed this unsuspected use of guests “bikes" some of which cost as mjich as S2OO in those days. His employer discovered he could do trick riding and soon Snyder got an engagement to do trick riding in a roller skating rink in Illinois. He found another man who was expert in this bicycling, and the two formed a partnership, touring the United States four times before going to Europe. Later the partners discarded bicycles altogether and became trick riders, one wheel riders. They would jump upstairs standing on the pedals of the one wheel; ride the wheel with their hands on the pedals and their (Continued on Last Page)

CROWD*HEARS PROGRAM OF FARM GROUP Benton Bureau Gives Play in Local School Gym. D. H: Fisher, banker from New Paris gave the address of the evening, and the Benton Township Farm Bureau entertained the large crowd which attended the meeting of the Creek Township Farm bureau, held Monday evening in the High School gymnasium. D. H. Fisher had recently appear’d before the House Committee on Banking and currency. Monday right he talked on tjie money question. ' o He’said “the money question is causing what we th\ye today,” arwb’n. ’.hen went on to eknlain that he • thought our money shouM be inflated that is, the value of inoney decreased. \ He-..claimed .hat. congress, \mcordng to our constitution, should .ate the value of our money, but that today the Federal Reserve Banks and the New York banks are controlling the value of money, making the value high So that they make more and more. \ _ ! He called them inoney manipulators and said they boasted of our valuable dollar arid what’it will buy. Instead, he said, “the valuable dollar s robbi’ng our people of their homes, labor of work, and causing distress and revolution the world over, and threatening the safety of our own country.” ' . iSpeakirig of the plan to pay the veterans of the world war their bonus, he said that Congress was afraid that the $2,000,000,000 of fiat inoney which would be necessary' would cause too much inflation, even when there is $4,400,000,000 in gold in this country, w’hich amount of gold should allow a circulation of Tn,ooo.ono,non: Instead there is •around $5,00p,000,000 in circulation. “Cheap money means high commodity prices; dear money means low commodity prices,” he’explained, and urged the people in the audience to Write to their congressmen and senators, asking for inflation as tha only means of bringing the .country out of the depression. He closed by adding that “if people had less* confidence in our money and more confidence in personal and .real estate property they would invest their money and service in business.” He said the only reason why hey are holding on to money’ is “beause it is the best investment they can get since it is continually advancing. What we need is more conscience in our real estate and commodities,” he ,said. ~ Benton Bureau Entertains. The Benton Puddle Junipers, composed of men playing guitars, banjos and fiddle and bones, alternating with Jews harps, made a big hit. They entertained with selections of old tiine music. Another number was a duet by the women of the Benton Township Bureau. John Darr gave two readings and then the bureau gave a sketch entitled:. “Convincing Pa,” which showed why every farmer should belong to the farm bureau. The part of Pa Jones was taken by John Darr; of Jack his 12 year old son by Donald - Lockwood; of Mary 1 his Ifi year old daughter by Miss Orpha Routsong; of Hank the hired man, by Ralph Vail; of Hilda the hired girl, Mrs. Sadie Vail; of Helen i Gats, friend of Mary, ’ qf Mr. Clark, county agjMrtTby Orville Lockwood, of a neigh. 1 bor, Mrs. Bertha Dsfr. ! ’ O ■ CHANGES MADE IN TRAIN SCHEDULE t _ ♦ / Last Sunday, April 24, when riu.m- --? erous towns exclusive of Syracuse on t the B. & O. railroad line went o.n fast time, the following changes became 1 effective in the time at which trains t are due in Syracuse: , i East Bound. j No. 10—12:39 p. m. s No. 46—11:41 p. m. 3 West Bound, e No. 7 —11:04 a. m. No. 34— 3:45 a. m. 1 < There were no other changes that - effect Syracuse according lo H. W. < Buchholz. The above trains are sc’i--1 eduled to stop at the Wawasee stas tion, since Sunday. No. 9, due at Wai wasee at 4:05 p. m., west bound, will r also stop at Wawasee during the coming summer.

NO. 1