The Syracuse Journal, Volume 7, Number 23, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 8 October 1914 — Page 3

BRAINARD S DEPT. STORE | , The Weather man says it’s going to be rolder —We are j ready for it with Our shelves bending with new fall goods. < Winter Underwear We havs a large and more complete line of Munsing « Underware than ever before, it gives satisfaction once, you ' wear Munsing, you will never wear any other kind. . Union Suits i ► Misses Union Suits, 50 cents to SI.OO. Ladies Union Suits, 50 cents to $2.00. Mens Uuion Suits 98 cents to $0:00 , Ladies two peice garments 25 to 50 cents. . Ladies outing flannell night gowns, 50, 59, 75, 98 &1.25. Outing flannell underskirts. 50 cents each. 4 Satine bloomers for gilds, 25 cents each. x Boys waists, 25 to 00 cents each. 4 Draperies | New draperies for fall, 10 to 50 cents a yard. t Fancy Work Stamped goods for fancy work. Buy it, your fancy l work articles and start them now and you will have them ready for Xmas, presents. We have anything you want in 1stamped goods and the material to complete it with. New neckwear, fancy hair pins and combs this week. * Special sale on granet ware next week, watch for the £ announcement. 4 Saturday, Oct. 10th, 8 Bars of Lennox Soap | for 25 cents. BRAINARDS’ ! If You Buy It At Brainard’s It Is Cheaper. | mumiitti t * t****,^ Individuality i; That is what you must attain before * > you can be succesful in any phase of life. :: Our line of Symphony Lawn station- j: eryadds that touch of individuality to ;; your corresponence which compels at- ;: tention. We have this hne in various;; sizes and tints and you | may indulge :: your tastes and fancies when you select ;; from our line. :: We have a full line of correspondence ;■ cards and initial stationery that is bound :: to please. Come in and inspect them. :; F. L. HOCH PHone 18 < > J. W. ROTHENBERGER J UNDERTAKER 1 Prompt and Efficient Service | Phones 90 and 121 J ; Cushion tired Ambulance in connection | aSS3lZßS£Sag^gi«gg^lE^:aaggfflg£?K^^ Ask A Neighbor! £ I So many have tried Peerless Flour, | that there is hardly a neighborhood I wherein some friend of this flour don’t g live. \ p SYRACUSE FLOUR MILLS | \ ■ I ### IP t t Next Lioonier Market, Day \ • - u Satuiday, Oct. 31st, 1914 !! '= — 0 ; o This is th tiay that buyer and seller meet on equal j | footing and ano expense to either. No matter what you < > may have to se, list it now with the < > CITIZENS BANK !: LIO'NIER, INDIANA ;;

DISEASE PREVENTION DAYISISERVEO Pupils Os The School Parade With Appropriate i ’ • Banners \ Disease Prevention Day was observed by the local schools, last Friday. The pupils gave a parade through the principal streets at two o’clock in the afternoon and many of the children bore banners inscribed with warnings and admonitions relative to the public health. More and more, as population becomes more congested, prevention of disease breeding grounds becomes a larger factor in the health of the general public. Manure piles, uncovered garbage, flies, and spitting in public plat es, are all a menace. While health laws are made to govern these conditions, these laws are nearly powerless so long as the people fail to realize the importance of cleanliness of the person and the surroundings. We hope the mottoes on the banners carried Friday, will have some effect. North Webster Man Dies John C. Stroinbeek, a prominent business man of North Webster, died suddenly in an Elkhart hospital early Friday morning. He was thirty-seven years of age and had lived in North Webster for many years, where he was most successful as a business man. His marriage which took place a few years ago proved unhappy and recently his wife filed suit for divorce, asking for SIO,OOO ailmony. This suit was pending in the Kosciusko court. are two brothers, Milo and Luther Strombeck, and a sister, Mrs. Samuel Miller, all of whom live in North Webster. Mr. Strombeck was a member of the Knights of the Pythias and Masonic lodges. A Real Belling The newly weds, who will be heuceforth known as Mr. and Mrs. Guy M. Jarrett, will not soon forget Wednesday night of last'week. To give the bride a taste of the pleasure to be found in ruling a husband, the groom was “hitched” to a buggy containing his prospective wife with a whip in her hand. Numerous other stunts were indulged that undoubtedly proved of more enjoyment to the crowd than to its victims. Assault And Battery Dan Wolf was fiined $25 and costs Monday morning on a charge of assault and battery. The court proceedure was the result of a beating which Dan Wolf administered toWm. G. Connolly, Saturday afternoon. Later in the afternoon. Vern Lewallen and Wolf fought and the latter was worsted. There was no arrests in the second fight. Buys Camden Shop Dan Wolf, former proprietor of the Syracuse bakery, has disposed of his shop at Culver and has purchased a simular business in Camden, a town near Logangport. He and Mrs. Wolf and little daughter went to Camden, Monday, and took immediate possession. Michigan Man Assigned Rev. Collius of Sodus, Mich., the new pastor of the Church of God, preachen his first serman here Sunday evening. Rev. Eshelman will move to Churubusco, where he has three country assignments. Hunter Fined Van Runkle of Gary, a Wawasee resorter, was hailed into Squire Kitson’s court, Saturday, and paid 22,50 for pursuing mud-hens with a power-driven boat. Emanual Click made the arrest. Sinton-Wyland Lewis M. Sinton of Milford and Ignota G. Wviand of Syracuse, were married in the clerk’s offiice at Warsaw, last Thursday, by Rev. James M. Eakins. Try a Journal advertisement.

IJ. W. ROTHEN BERGER : Undertaker : SYRACUSE, s s IND. mmmmmmmmmmmmmmammmmmmmrn

GOVERNMENTS MISTAKE EIGHT NOTES IN CIRCULATION DIFFERENT VALUES The arrest of Nicholas Kowalski in a Michigan Avenue lunchroom at Detroit, Mich., for tendering a government note with face of a $lO bill on one side of it and on the other side a duplicate of a S2O bill, has revealed that the government, by mistake, has sent into circulation eight notes of this description and that Kowaiski was not attempting to defraud the lunch room. Government officials cleared Kowaiski of any unlawful intention by announcing that some time ago government printers got their plates mixed and the eight notes with a perfect print of S2O on one side and $lO on the other side were put into circulation. Swat the Rooster! We knew it was coming. We could see it from afar. Os course women are at the bottom of it all. The feminist movement can not be called that any longer. It is no mere movement. It is a tornado- 1 cyclone-an avalanche-anything that sweeps everything before it. The male is being hurled aside. Man is tottering to his fall and now that great institution, the Rooster, is Doomed, with a capital D. The women have told the Hen that the latter can get along better without the Rooster, and the Hen, believing, has tried it and found that it is true. Can you beat that? Caa you even tie it? The Hens experimented and this is what they find! A rooster holding proud sway over a flock of hens kept for fresh egg purposes is only a nuisance around the coop and a bill of expense. Don’t laugh, don’t even smile. It’s true. The hens lay more eggs without him. The eggs are better for market purposes. Without the hehen in the flock the eggs remain unfertile or unhatchable or whatever you call it. That means they will not spoil. Without the rooster the rotten egg of commerce and the Drama vanishes from the face of the earth and will be smelled in its ancient haunts never no more. There is no use in keeping the dominicker in the flock after the breeding season is ended so, off with his bead! Swat the rooster!

Evangelical Church Sunday school at 9:30 preaching at 10:45. There will be no preaching in the evening as the pastor is holdiug a series of evangelistic tneetings at the Ebenzar church. The services began last Sunday evening, October 4th. and will continue as long as the interest and conditions will warrant. Meeting begin each evening during the week at 7:30 standard time and at 7 on Sunday evening. As soon as the meeting at Ebenezer come to a close the pastor will begin at the Trinity church in Syracuse. A cordial welcome is extened to all, ,come and enjoy God’s blessing with us. PRICE Os CHICAGO PmUSED Morning Papers Which Formerly Sold At Two Cents Advanced To Three The increase in cost of producing newspapers, principally due to increase in the cost of paper, has caused the Chicago press to raise the pric of all 1 papers in Chicago. The increase became effective October 1. All Chicago morning papers are three cents on the streets and at newstands, fifteen cents a week, daily and Sunday twenty cents a week. All Chicago evening newspapers were advanced to twelve cents a week on September 1. This price is unchanged The Cincinnati Enquirer, long in this community, by mail now costs sl2 per year strictly in advance, and sl4 per year including Sunday paper. Other papers generally have been forced to either advance or suspend, yet there is occasionally a journal subsriber who thinks $1.50 exorbitant for the home paper, which is necessarily limited in circulation to a very small area compared to the big metropolitan papers which circulate over the entire country.

We are more than proud our immense showing of LADIES’

FKieS COMPLETE PUNS ORGANIZATION CALLED FARMERS’ PROTECTIVE ASSOCIATION The farmers to the south of Syra- j cuse have about completed their work'in the organization for the protection of game birds. The organization will be known as the Farmers’ Protective Association and will have about 250 members. The territory covered by this movement has Benton as its eastern boundary and runs west of the state road, near new Paris. Signs : will soon. be delivered to the farmers for posting and plans have been made to vigorously prosecute any hunters who trespass without written permission from the owner of the ground. Under no circumstances will any bird dogs be allowed ! on the preserves. Boy Bitten By Horse Wester, the 14 year old son of Mr. and Mrs. J. Cashmere of a mile west of New Paris lies in a critical condition as the result of having been bitten by a horse. The boy crawled into a manger to put a bridle on a horse, when the animal attached him. He was bitten in the abdomen, the flesh being so badly torn the intestines were exposed. It required 14 stitches to close the wound. Whether the lad will recover depends on whether infection can be avoided. There is danger that the internal organs may have been injured. The Cashmere are Norwegians and came to this county about a year ago. • Births A daughter was born to Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Sapen, October 1. Mr. and Mrs. Jamer Andrews are the parents of a girl, born October 4. * Bremen Fair Attendance The Bremen Fair Association had the largest attendance in their history, last Thursday. About 100 Syracuse people were there. Needlecraft Society The Needlecraft Society met at home of Mrs. B. F. Hoopingarner, last Friday afternoon. The Melvin Whistler family of Syracuse were guests for several days of Mr. and Mrs. A. V. Hindman, returned home the first of the week.—Busco. Paper. —New arrivals in furniture now on display at Beckmans. —Call up the dentist, make an appointment, and save waiting.

Coats Cape Coat Capes Our assortment includes the newest designs in style and material and bears the label that stand for the best there is in coat making.

THE PALMER GARMENT The prices are reasonable. You can find one at a price to suit your purse. Come in and try them on. fl. w. Mu and Son

Special Sale At Vawter Park Store ONE WEEK ONLY October 12 to 17 Having decided to keep our Store open again during the coming winter, we are getting ready to lay in our Winter Stock and in order to do so we are going to tuin some of our large stock now r on hand into ready cash. Lisi ot Goods at special Sale Price Bulk coffee reg. 25c value Sale price 22c per lb. Uncolored Japan tea 4oc value Sale price 35c per lb. Sugared corn flakes 10c size Sale price 8c per package Puffed wheat 10c package Sale price 8c per package Sweet corn reg. price 10c Sale price 8c per can Early June yeas reg. price 10c Sale price 8c per can Lenox soap ® bars for 25c Toilet soap 10c kind Sc per cake Rub-no-more washing powder 7 packages for 25c Light House cleanser 7 cans for 25c Great values in 4 and 5 sewed brooms at 30, 40 and 50c Heavy 5 gal. oil cans reg. price 75c Sale price 60c Special Sale Prices on Flour Golden Anker, Perfection and Spring Wheat With every purchase of $3.00 or more we will include 14 lbs. of granulated sugar for SI.OO. These lire only a few of the articles in our complete sto< k. We carry a lull line of school supply's. Remember the date one week only, October 12 to IT. Vawter Park Store LOUIS SOLT, Proprietor