The Syracuse Journal, Volume 4, Number 23, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 5 October 1911 — Page 5

Home News Notes. K. of P. Opera House, Oct 11-12. Herschel Harkless was at Warsaw Monday. Don’t forget that it pays to advertise. Ottis Butt was at Warsaw on business on Friday. W. T. Colwell was at Cromwell Wednesday and Thursday. Douglas shoes for men and boys. ’ A. W. Sfrieby. After using Hersh Yeast you will use no other. Ask your grocer for it. Mrs. Emma Gordy and Mrs. Wead attended the Bremen Fair Thursday. Mrs. Sam Widner was confined to the house with rheumatism last week. Mrs. Howard Bowser entertained the Wednesday Afternoon Club this week. The Pythian Sisters have appointed a suprise committee to serve tomorrow night. Mrs. Iden of south of Cromwell was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. S. L. Lung Saturday. Try a package of the celebrated Hersh Yeast and thereafter you will want no other. Mrs. Perry Windsor and children of Cromwell visited Mr. and Mrs. Windsor Friday. Anson Coats and family moved into the Jesse Cory property no Huntington st. Tuesday. The Ladies Missionary Society will meet Saturday afternoon Oct. 7 wish Mrs. Vern Bushong. Every thiitg in outing flannels, good values and low prices. Look at them at A. W. Strieby’s Season lecture course tickets are on sale at Hoch’s drug store, Searfoss Bros.’ grocery and the Public Library. David Herrington of Wakarusa who spent h week here with Fred Hinderer and family went home Tuesday morning. Mrs. Wolfe of south of Warsaw who was the guest of her sister, Mrs. Eli Grissom, several days returned home Tuesday. Mrs. Wm. Strieby who is visiting her daughter, Mrs. Harry Leocock and family at Allentown, Penn., expects to go from there to Long Is-

Radiant Home Base Burner q

' : " £ '■ ’ x ' st >■■ 2\ ’••/□KV ■ ■ < A \-lIKa V ' ' 'f s^\ .'- ' ♦ s'* . ■ U v$ * v * ?wpiih PPrwL * fy 11 - JfJf tKW ' «r «/*’ * - ' W

outside, through the center of the bottom and upward between the • draft flues, coming in contact with the hottest part of the stove. « E. E. STR IE BY

land, New York, to visit Mrs. I* R. DeVoe a few weeks before returning home. Mrs. Royer of Ohio visited with her sister Mrs. Catherine Weaver, and family from Tuesday until Monday SIOO down and $5 per month will buy good upright pianos, walnut, oak or mahogany cases. See J. W. Rothenberger. A complete line of sweater coats, for men women and children, that are right, and at right prices. A. W. Strieby, Miss Susa Kilbride of Montella, Wis., came last Saturday to visit her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Levi Akers, and other relatives. She expects to return home Sunday. Rev. Weaver went to Chicago Wednesday to bring home his wife who has been at the hospital there for two weeks. Her sister, Mrs. Clark of Lagrange is here with them. The friends of J. W. Brady and wife of Florida recieved postals last week announcing the birth of a ten pound girl, Floida Louise, Sept. 25. “Bill” is about the proudest man in Florida now. Mrs. Yerkes who spent most of the summer in Colorado, returned here Saturday after spending a month at Covington, Indiana. Mr. and Mrs. Yerkes are boarding with Mrs. Emma Gordy but expect to go to housekeeping soon. Carl O’Haver was severely burned about the face and hands Monday morning at the Cement plant by explosive gages from coal that was dumped from overhead near a rotary. His hands are in a painful condition and will prevent him from doing any work for several weeks. The ladies of the M. E. Aid Society have succeeded far beyond their expectations in selling Lecture Course tickets. The Lecture Course is given not for financial gain alone but in order to give the people of the town, both young and old good clean and instructive entertainment for a yery small sum of moneyThe holiday number will be given for the children by children. Fred Stahl of Garrett, Mr. LaChapelle of Hicksville, Ohio, Mr. and Mrs. Sam Houser, Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Houser and daughter, MrMauer and. Mr. Flagler of Garrett and Mr. Fay of South Chicago, have been guests of the Fred Butt boarding house during the past week. S. L. Ketring left Friday for St-

Acknowledged to be the ’ Finest Finished and Most Eco J nomical Hard Coal Stove ever ; made. Giving the Largest ; Amount of Heat tor thequan- J tity of Fuel Consumed. J < POINTS : POCKET JOINTS-Prevent- ’ ing cement from falling out, ’ and making an absolutely Air ’ Tight Joint, which won’t open. ! NO GAS — The open tcp ; magazine, in combination with ; a Gas Flue, not found in any ' other base burner, and an au- ! tomatic magazine cover pre- J vents all explosion or escape J of gas. ; CIRCULAR BOTTOM FLUE ■ Carrying the heat around the ; outside of the bottom, thus ; increasing the radiation. * LARGE HOT AIR FLUE—< Taking the cold air from the • floor, or, if preferred, from the '

Furniture and Undertaking

High Grade Furniture Dependable Rugs and Carpets Our Stock is so arranged that it is easy to buy goods at our store. Our Prices are such that we can insure you best values for your money. If you buy a chair or an entire outfit you will receive the same courteous treatment at all times. Remember, we show you the goods on our floor, and not ask you to select them from pictures or catalogues. Wq can furnish the most humble home, at our low prices, in such away that the Bride and Groom are assured of their future happiness. Our Desions are mu Lara. our Quaiiiu oi ® Bea our moos mo Lowest,. INI/ECTII ATE flllß EACV TEPMQ e deliver the goods and pay your Railroad Fare. We have everything lliVLulluniL UUn Lnul I Llimu for the Home, and our store is full of New Goods. Come in and see us. THE LATCH STRING HANGS OUT. SMITH-CLARK COMPANY SOUTH MAIN STREET Funeral Director. (JOSHEN, IND.

Joe, Mich., where he will take treatments. F. L. Hoch was at Indianapolis last week. R. K. Eldridge was at Ft. Wayne Monday night. ' Davis Graff and family visited at Goshen Sunday. C. I. Bender was home from Chicago Jet. over Sunday. Tillman Hire made a business trip to Goshen Friday. Miss Violette O’Dell was home from Elkhart over Sunday. Otis C. Butt was at Goshen and Warsaw Friday on business. Mrs. Tish visited at Kendalville from Saturday until Monday. A son was born to Mr. and Mrs. Ben Gunyan Tuesday, Sept. 26. Quite a number of our people attended the fair at Bremen Friday. Wm. Moore, wife and daughter visited at Elkhart Friday and Saturday. Mrs. A. H. Fisher and son returned Saturday from a week’s visit at Albion. Miss Flossie Wilson of Butler, was the guest of her brother, Cyril Wilson, and family last week. Daniel Searfoss left Thursday night for his old home in Pennsylvania. He had not been there since he was six years old. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Brady went to Rochester to visit last week, and .from there they expected to go to attend the Church of God Eldership near Akron. For Sale—A good 6-rooin cottage, with good wood shed and well house, good cellar, on North Huntington street. A fine location and a bargain if taken soon. $750. W. G. Connolly. Mrs. Louise Bunger, Mrs. F. M. Ott, Mrs. Abe Hire, Mrs. Wm. Masters and Mrs. Sam Akers, Jr., left

Saturday to attend the Missionary Convention and the Church of God Eldership near Akron. Wm. Kitson, through his attor neys, Butt & Xanders, made application last Friday in the circuit court of this county for a divorce from his wife, alleging cruel and inhuman treatment. locking' OP' The" TuryMen Outrageous and Possibly Illegal Custom That Has Come Down From Old Times. Some of the shabby brocade of court etiquette has been cleared out of our courts, such as gowns and wigs. Some that still hangs In faded shreds Is dusty, but inoffensive. But some surviving practices are seriously objectionable. For instance, the outrageous habit of locking jurymen up. Why? During the progress of a civil case which lasts three or four days jurymen go home nights. But when the case Is given to the jury, the jury must go into continuous session, under lock' and key, until it reaches a verdict. There is no sufficient reason why we should not go home at the end of a day, and come back to our work next morning, just as we men do in any other business. The imprisonment of a jury tends to hasty decisions, to the forced verdicts of weary minds Incapacitated for thinking. Much better to drop a difficult case, go home, sleep, come fresh to the jury room in the morning and resume deliberation. If jurymen are In danger of being tampered with after a case is given to them, then they are In equivalent danger of being tampered with during the progress of the case. The incarceration of the jury is, I hold, against the rights and liberties of citizens. I am willing to give a portion of my time, without pay, to public business; but I resent the turning of the sheriff’s key behind my back. I resent having lo walk down to the street to supper (or breakfast!) In military or crimhial column-by-twos. The judge very often has to spend several days in deciding a question of law. Why not lock him up until his mihd works to a conclusion? —Case and Comment. ' Two and Two. “Two and two make four,” said, the ready-made philosopher. “Sometimes,” replied Colonel Stillwell of Kentucky. “And then they merely make a pair of deuces.” i —— ;

MODERN WOMEN LACK GRACE Famous Artist Says Fair Sex Never Before Walked or Carried Itself so Badly. Marcus Stone, R. C., the famous artist, says: “I do not believe that women—or men either, for that matter —have ever walked or carried themselves as badly as they do now, the women with their elbows out, their shoulders up, their necks pushed forward, the men for the most part chestless creatures with sloping necks. Arms were not made to stick out on either side like jug handles. “Os course, as an artist I am at war with fashion and its constant changes—which prevent woman evolving a dress which expresses her individuality—but especially with the fashion of wearing corsets, which, to my mind, destroy the outlines of the ! figure and cramp the freedom of woman’s movements. Never before in my life has woman been so much imprisoned and laced up as she is today—that is to say, of course, all except the w ; illowy women, whose figures accord with present fashion. How can she move gracefully in a tube which pushes her shoulders up, shortens herr neck, and sends her elbows outJL, The sloping attitude of n&cj£_adopted by men and women I attribute to the wearing, especially when young, of high stiff collars. The least pressure on the back of the neck sends the head forward, and thus a habit is formed.” Seagulls of Lerwick. The seagulls are the sparrows of Lerwick, and as such they have a greater share in the town’s life than have the sparrows of London. In the morning time you will note that a seagull sits on every chimney pot. Seagulls swoop and hover over every roof in the town. The air is full of their strange, high, haunting cries. The children in each house have a pet name for their particular seagull, and?having called them by those names, they feed them every day. And each seagull knows what is meant for him. No seagull attached to one house ever seeks to eat the food scattered from the house next door. He does not dare; the other gulls would kill him. The people of the town, if they come across a little pile of rice laid upon the roadway, step over it with care. And at night the seagulls leave their own appointed chimney pots and fly gracefully away to their resting places on the rocks of the Isle of Noss. —The Scotsman. The Journal—only--SI.OO a year.

Carpets and Rugs

Fickie Popularity. “You started wit.. the full confidence of four constituents and now you are criticised on every hand.” “Yes,” replied Senator Sorghum, “my experience has been very-much like that of a man who good-natured-ly consents to umpire a tali gama.”

S. C. LEPPER Now is the time to buy your STO VES AND FURNACES We have THE line. You saw them exhibited at all the Fairs with great success. Monitor Base Burner the world’s best in every respect Don’t buy until you see it at our store. The only FIRE FLUE Radiator made Thatcher Warm Air and Hot Water Furnaces S. C. LEPPER I «> . .

The Kind. “I have a new vacuum cleaning proposition and I'm trying to find some financial backing to put it on the market. What kind of a capitalist would you suggest as best to approach?" “Why not try $ sucker with the dust?”