The Syracuse Journal, Volume 16, Number 8, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 21 June 1923 — Page 2

" Styles for Evening Wraps; ; ,'’ . . ♦ Lovely Frocks for Summer! <> .-..i.t.iiii nmii 111 e «11 ♦ *ttt t» »t« ti »ttt ♦

IT IS difficult to generalise about the present styles In evening wraps. They are so varied. Individual taste has the widest freedom in the choice of these garments and one may indulge a fancy that Is attracted by an India shawl, worn in the manner of a cape, or /by a genuine mandarin coat, or choose any one of several silhouettes or any one. or two, of many materials, to make them. The fancy for wraps to match dresses worn under them has grown

■■■ i " nm I® r. jflEr ? !l v9s ■ K i TOMB I!SI 1 rS&HwjSil I* aWTr Vi 11 f > Iwjillilal • &*' ' 4■ir < J "»" HBHH lejii ill la Cape of Brocade and Plain Black Satin.

beyond tht» limit of the tailored node! and Is much in evidence in evening ■ wraps. In those, capes of black crepe i or satin, are lined with crepe or other ! material like the dress. or the material of the dress is otherwise introduced Into the wrap. An example Is shown In the Illustration, revealing a cape made of brocade and plain black satin combined, and lined with plain crepe

■> 11 Wfiwl! wit-Jr * ' iK - ‘ wiw )■ It ■ BwFffi ECmsri &i J .JBi HKI w n lb I ’bM Mblu * KmS r A BJIK I II iM A tQfSr J •*- 9ggp r ~~‘ o 7Ar $ Daintiness and Youth In Every Line of Thia Dress.

in a light color. It Is finished at the neck with a band of fur. The straight ahori-sleeved evening dress Is of the same brocade as the upper part of the eape, which can. of course, be worn with other gowns. Heavy black crepe Is a favored material for evening wraps. Capes of It are shown made in two sections, the lower one very full and the upper one richly embroidered in colors. Voluminous collars are often of fur. Straight coats of taffeta, covered with embroidery. and Baring coats bordered with plaitings of wide ribbon are among the new offerings for this season. Youth, when It Is clad youtbfjilly. is the fairest thing in mortal eyes, Figured Materials. Very-large-figured crepes and linens are made up into the simplest of costumes with round necks anti short sleeves, or with collars and cuffs of the predominating color of the material. Short Jackets. The short Jacket, embroidered or braided. Is worn with one-piece frocks of satin or wool. It is usually quite short anti more apt to be unbelted i than not j

as irresistible as springtime—and youth has come into its own again. The old-fashioned girl, innocent of makeup, and dressed in accordance with her years, has just become the new-fashioned girl. It is fashionable to be natural, to dress simply; ths overdressed, hand-painted and funny flapper has “gone out". She was a calamity that followed the war. Everybody rejoices at the turn of events, and no one more than designers, who appear to be working under

| tin Inspiration that has translated the ■ charm of young girlhood Into summer (frocks. Daintiness and youth are written in every line of the pretty dress pictured here, and it has novelty as well to recommend It. It is shown in taffeta, trimmed with harrow val lace In insertions, with fluted edging tc match, but the design is perfectly suited to other materials —us voile, organ

die, swlss or crepe de chine. The sklr has a quaint flavor, suggesting a petti coat, but the back portion and the ful front are all In one. The lace inser tion and edging form bandings, placet in groups of three about the rounr neck and across the front of the skirt but in two rows on the remainder cd the skirt. The waistline Is back tc normal and Is finished with a twistef girdle of the taffeta, ornamented al the sides with three roses, also mad* of the silk. «©, ISM. W««t*rn Newspaper DMMj Long Lines. Long chains and necklaces are help ing to accentuate the long lines thai are the vogue this season. Lc®s fringes, reaching sometimes from thi shoulder line to the hem, are antfthe* way of achieving the long effect. Curls and Puffs. Curls and .puffs are seen on fashion able heads. Hairdressers report. toe that the sale of side puffs, switches and bangs is excellent at the preset)’ j tim« I

OUK MAGAZINE BT7a SECTION Interesting Features for the Entire Family «

Uncommon Sense ♦♦ ♦ | BLAKE 1 1

BLAMING YOURSELF IT IS always easy to find somebody to blame for your mistakes. You are probably misunderstood. Everybody is. You are probably a square peg in a round hole. So -is every other unsuccessful person. Doubtless the world is blind to your talent. It was blind to Shakespeare’s talent for Inany years. But Shakespeare died a rich and successful man. The temptation to “pass the buck” is often finest Irresistible. But yield to It till it becomes a habit and you might as well quit now. You will never get anywhere. While most bicycle repairers tn one large city were blaming the collapse of the bicycle boom for their hard luck, Wilbur and Orville Wright were at work on a vehicle that would as far surpass the bicycle as the eagle surpasses the tortoise. They didn’t blame anybody but themselves, and they uiamed themselves severely when they made costly mistakes. By and by they found away to escape their own blame. Then they began to succeed. In every office there are clerks that blame the boss for their lack of opportunity. They find an excuse for all their bad work, for the results of their Idleness. And they are so busy finding excuses that they never have time to find the opportunities that are around them. If you don't want other people to Something to Think About By F. A. WALKER RESPONSIBILITY TCT' 'T until you have arrived at the place of life where you can show ' willingness and ability to shoulder responsibility will you be In a position to keep step with the noble men and women who are moving steadily forward toward success. You can never hope to get at the top by remaining at the bottom of the lad der in sulks. Nor can you rise from the low level where the complaining ! masses are without first making sacrifices and fitting yourself for the ascent. There must be within you superior skill, which you know, as well as those above and below you know, cannot be acquired except by tireless diligence and continuous effort in the right direction. To dare responsibility without being properly equipped, both mentally and physically, is to make a hazardous venture with all the fates arrayed against you. To lead others yon must be qualified to find your own way when the dark comes and the storms rage. You are not fit to assume responsibility of any sort until you have ma* tered your own stubborn spirit, learned y«>ulr lesson In patience, nnd practiced the principles set forth In the Golden Rule. Your first test In leadership will prove the truth of these words, in spite of an egotism you may have, or of any fancied power of excellence. Those who cannot accept orders from their superiors with becoming grace, who at every turn in their pathway i i It la easy to tall the toller How beat he can carry his pack; But no one can rate a burden's weight Until it has been on his back. —Ella Wheeler Wilco*. HOT FRUIT DRINKS THE hot fruit drinks, called soups bywhe. S<-andlnavian people, are much more healthful than fruit cocktails, and better as an appetizer. A good fruit drink, even at the end of a Has Anyone Laughed •At You nr | : Because — i • You hate housekeeping? r Does anyone laugh at your » j * men friends because they like * j * to do different things? You j * probably do your job better than j ♦ you possibly could do bouse- | | keeping. It takes aptitude and ♦ ♦ knowledge for housekeeping. | j and you are wise to let some • j one do It for you, who does it ’ | welL Every one can’t be per- | t feet at house economy any more ; | than everyone can be good bank- | j era. You are wise to know your 1 I limitations and ding to the » | work you can do. Your home • f is better well run, than sloppily j 1 managed. SO t Your get-away here .is: f People don't laugh at men be- | i cause all of them dont Ilka ? ? shoe<lerkirtg. = i <C bv MeClur* Newspaper Syndicate.) f O—» «

THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL

criticize you. be your own critic. Don’t be an easy one either. Make your own standard higher than your boss’. Give him a little more than he expects, or a great deal more than he expects and you will attract his attention. If you don’t attract his attention except unfavorably, he’ll begin to hunt for somebody who will. There are of course people who are abused us much as they think they are. but you can write on a postage stamp the names of all such persons you know. You and nobody else are to blame for your failures or responsible for your success. Be unsparing of the blame. Check up every day’s work and see Jf it would satisfy you if you were the boss. If It wouldn’t, do better work the next day. Nobody will be Interested In yonr excuses or your “alibis.” Everybody will be interested in what you really accomplish. You can get somewhere In the world If you try. But you'll have to try extremely hard, for there will abundant competition. (Copyright by John Blake.)

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pig-headedly dispute the right of authority. who openly show disrespect of law and order, the things which govern everything from atom to sphere, ran never hoj>e successfully to assume responsibility or rise from the common level. If you will look into the causes of failure nnd discouragement. you will find that Ignorance, false pride, obstinacy and selfishness were the fatal stumbling blocks. These are the things which ambitious men and women must do their utmost to avoid, otherwise their progress will be retarded and they will be forever barred from a seat among the world’s leaders, who assume responsibilities seriously, conscious of their own frailties, but confident of their ability to hold steadfastly to the true course In all kinds of weather. I© by McClure Newspaper Syndicate.) meal. Is much better than a cup of coffee. — Apple Tea. Wash and cut one good-sized apple into quarters without paring It. then slice each quarter into four pieces. Pour one cupful of boiling water on the apple and let It set for two hours where It will be hot. but not cooking. Add a little sugar, orunge or lemon juice and serve hot. Drink Mor* Water. We need to make an effort to drink good, fresh water—at least two or three quarts daily—besides the fluid taken at meals. Physicians tell us If we drink enough water while eating reasonably of the right kind of food, we will be relieved of sciatica, lumbago and constipation and a score of other Ills. If we could RECALL Twc Tims you mad € A StNSAT/ONALCATCH WHlt£ YOuR Gißk APPtAu»ei>v6oi?mcY. \ / ft— - ■

LITTLE I HOP-SKIPPER | t By DOUGLAS MALLOCH j Little hop-skipper come ir through the gate, !. Up through the garden and over the e lawn; r Little Hop-Skipper Is fearfully late—e Over an hour of the morning is gone e There is so much for llop-Skippe* 1- to do!—1- Roses to smell of. and berries to 3 find. All of the orchard for wandering e through, y Acres or daisies a garland to wind. e 9 Little Hon-Skipper goes skipping all e day; - Watching the swallows or wading z the grass, s Helping the fluffy, wee kitten to play—--1 Little Hop-Skipper’s the busiest ; lass. But, when the shadows grow long by r the wall. r When the gray twilight brings childr ish alarms. e Then comes the happiest moment of 1 ? Lime Hop-Skipper creeps into m arms. (£) by McClure Newspaper Syndicate.)

t MEN YOU MAY MARRY t I — • ’ | By E. R. PEYSER i; — t * Has a man like this proposed * • * to you? i [,f Symptoms: Well set up. close- ; .i | ly cropped fair mustache, fair- ♦ I• f Ish hair. Good looking. Is ; j ; used to good clothes, good food, I ( j | fine folks and fine thinking. ; , i I You don’t agree with him in pol- ’ i| | Itlcs, art or religion. You I * wry interesting discussions. YiyV t . * | have discussed everything 4unl • ’ * agree on nothing. ‘ j IN FACT ♦ ( i He Is the one person with * b J whom you can disagree and dis- f * cuss without disgust. ; * Pre#cri P tion for bride to be: ? T Don’t lose your individual- ? . | ity. He likes your honesty. r * Absorb This: I i THE WISE GUY GIVES HIS * * WIFE A MIND, OR MIND- • ( , • ING’S KEEPINGS | | (© by MeC!ur» Newspaper Synrtk-ate.) | ’ realize the necessity of plenty of wa ' ter, the body being over three-fourths 1 water in its composition. we woulc form the habit of frequent drink ing of water. The skin, mucous mm , brunes. kidneys and other organs need ’ much water to function properly, am: when it is denied them the body rebels and we suffer all sorts of Ills. The fruit juices prepared from ' grapes, raspberries, currants and other I fruits are all most satisfying, and If is a wise housewife who provides then? * for her family. Spiced Apple Tea. Prepare as above, adding six cloves, a small piece of candied ginger about the size of a walnut, thinly sliced, and let it stand for the two hours, serving it very hot. Add a little orange Juice and a bit of sugar and you have a delightful hot drink. Take this same tea for a foundation fdr punch, adding strawberries, pineapple and orange juice, adding at the last a very little lemon juice and some charged water to give it zip. <©. 1523. Western Newspaper Union.) o— Source of Pencil Supply. During my first year in high school, the son of my father’s bookkeeper was my ardent admirer. Dally be brought me presents of new pencils. The affah progressed until I discovered that fh«i pencils came indirectly from my fath er via the bookkeeper father of th* boy.—Chicago Jourm

B? Daddy s Fairy Tale zSV?AARY GRAHAM BONNER WTWhT rr vtIT»N NtV5,.H> I.— BIRDS “I like to sit up high and sing," said the cardinal bird.

“I’m rather fond of a high perch myself when I’m singing,” said the tufted titmouse. “I’m larger than a chickadee,” said the tufted titmouse, "and my suit Is of a simple gray, while I have a pointed crest upon my head.” “AnM am red,” said the cardinal bird, “and I am a good-sized bird, almost the size of a robin. “1 believe some

i J 'I (ZW i A* 5 I . • j “Sit Up High.” , j

one was very much excited when she saw me the other day. It seems this person saw me when I was flying 1 through the underbrush and green I shrubs, and she said that the flash ; ' of red through the green was so beautiful. And then I perched myself upon a branch and sang and she was t so delighted. But you haven’t spoken, 'Carolina Wren. Tell something about ’ yourself.” “I,” said the Carolina Wren, “am ■ larger than most wrens, and if you look at my forehead you will see a r white line. I wear a rusty brown suit and look a little bit like Mr. Brown Thrasher. I am like the rest of my Wren cousins in the way I sit with my tall held up over my body. “WJien I sing my tail Is down, but that is the only time, for when I sing I think only my song should be I noticed and that it would not be j noticed entirely if my tail was up in its usual saucy little fashion. “They say that my song is so loud and so curious that it is impossible to describe, but now I will tell you some of the words I’ve been using lately in my songs. Os course if people want to know them, they will have to translate them into their own language.” Now, Billie Brownie was near by just then, so he has translated the ■ Carolina Wren’s words into words w« know. ' I am a Carolina Wren. i I flit about like a fussy old hen. But I’m not really fussy. I'm only gay. ' And happy every single day. Once I was a speckled, white egg. And couldn't have stod’tupon either leg. Nor jerked my jolly. g£od natured tail. ! Nor traveled about over hill and dale. ■ But now I'm a grown-up bird, you see. And not an egg nonentity. Which is a word so very big. But means so little I'd not dance a jig i In honor of a word so small. . No. I'd never do that at all, at all. Billie Brownie wrote down these words in his birchbark note book and then hurried away, for he had an engagement with the Brown Thrasher Bird. The Brown Thrasher was a big, big bird, with a reddish brown coat, and | his waistcoat was of white with black Spots. He s«ng for Billie Brownie ■ and oh, his song was so glorious. Os ' all the songs Billie Brownie had ever ; heard he thought the song of the i Brown Thrasher was the most beautiful. And then the Brown Thrasher whistled a long, clear whistle which sounded like this: “Whee-u-u, whee-u-u.” Billie Brownie told the Brown Thrasher that he had heard that not

ilrz j "He Sang For Billie.”

only did people j. love his beautiful voice and his original ways, and his own way of singin g what he pleased without copying other birds, but that people said he was so useful and aid so much good. I And that made the pretty Brown Thrasher very I happy, for he was such a nice bird. » so eager to be I liked, so eager to „ do good. He said he had

been away for the winter, unlike the other birds Billie Brownie had been f talking to who had net gone away, tut who had stayed where it wasn’t exactly warm, but where it wasn’t very cold. Before Billie Brownie went back to Fairyland and Brownieland that evening the Brown Thrasher sang for him the most glorious of songs, and then the Brown Thrasher went to bed. but Billie Brownie traveled home slowly, for he could not go quickly when ; he was thinking so hard of his day. “Birds,’’ he said to himself, “what joy you do give to the world. You don’t know how much you add to the world’s beauty and glory.” Meteors and Steel. A study of the great collection of meteorites in a European museum has led to the Interesting conclusion that tneteoritic iron, as it falls from the sky, and the various steels produced in our modern steel works are the results of essentially similar chemical and physical causes. One of the most striking characteristics noted in me teoritlc iron is the presence of a cor giderable quantity of nickel. TONGUE TWISTERS Tootsie told Tom to take Teddy. • • • Danny Duff does Dolly dances. • • • Mother made morning muffins. • • • Sally says spring snows seem sloppy. • • • Long, lanky, languid, lean Lena lows lazy Leonard. L Sixty-six society syncopators sit sipping sizzling sweet soda

Aspirin Say “Bayer” and Insist! ( ft \ Unless you see the name "Bayer” on package or on tablets you are not getting the genuine Bayer product prescribed by physicians over twenty-two years and proved safe by millions for Colds Headache Toothache ’ Lumbago Earache Rheumatism Neuralgia Pain, Pain Accept “Bayer Tablets of Aspirin” only. Each unbroken package contains proper directions. Handy boxes of twelve tablets cost few cents. Druggists also sell bottles of 24 and 100. Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacidester of Salicylicacid.—Advertisement A Fable. “Mine” (wrote the film publicity to his love> “is flaming superpassion, the real tender world-shak-ing stuff that gets you by the heartstrings, raw elemental throbs that grip and clasp and quiver and clutch. You have never before conceived that such a colossal super-love could be featured throughout" all the ages.” And she wrote back sadly: “You are getting tired of life. I miss the lyrical ecstasy of your earlier letters. Why do you write so formally, so coldly? I no longer stir you. Good-by.”—Lon-don Answers. Red Cross Ball Blue is the finest product of its kind in the world. Every woman who has used it knows this statement to be tme. —Advertisement. Simply the Worst. One dull morning Mickey went to grandma’s bedroom to bid her “good morning.” Upon inquiry as to the weather, he said: “Grandma, it’s Just one of those gloomy mornings without any happiness to it.” Usual Effect. "Has he taken up radio as a fad?” “Nb, as a frenzy.”—Boston Transscript. THIS LITTLE BABY GIBL Was Benefited by the Good Her Mother Got from Lydia E. Pink* ham’s Vegetable Compound Pittsburgh, Pa.—“l took Lydia E. Pinkham’s vegetable Compound before

my little girl was bom, and the effect it had was wonderful. This will be the first child I have nursed, as I had to bring my two boys up on the bottle. I was very nervous and worried, tired all the time, and after I read about the Vegetable Compound I tried it and

IlljjlUb liil 1 Mbs,. i

kept on with it I still continue its use ana recommend it to my friends. You may publish these facts as a testimonial for vour medicine. Mrs. Wm.Kunge, 169 Plymouth St, Pittsburgh, Pa. It is remarkable how many cases have been reported similar to this one. Many mothers are left in a weakened and run-down condition after the birth of the child, and for such mothers the care of the baby is well-nigh impossible. Not only is it hard for the mother, but the child itself will indirectly suffer. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound is an excellent tonic for the mother at this time. It is prepared from medicinal roots and herbs, ana does not contain any harm ful drugs. It can be taken in safety by the nursing mother. ■ Bilious Attacks g Are Usually Due to Constipation I When you are constipated, I I not enough of Nature s lu* ■ I bncating liquid is produced 1 I in the bowel to keep the food I S waste soft and moving. Doc- I ■ tors prescribe N ujol because I I it acts like this natural lubri- I I cant and thus secures regular I I bowelmovementsbyNature s ■ H own method—lubrication. = Nujol is a lubricant —not a I '■ medicine or laxative—so cannot I ■ gripe. Try it today. PARKER»S~| HAIR BALSAM, inwATr jMnwm || in ~n rniir , T~-m-ii Rrwlorea Color and Boouty to Gray and Faded Haw KsVkAi Wteeox Cbem. w K*. Fatchoanejt. Y. HINDEHCORNS R«n«w. cw&t KillAllFlies PT^T 0 »on. Made of metal, d. fly killer at yowdMhrcr Kannm soujeks. l 'xSdjfgai.. smlujn. n. x. W. N. U. FORT WAYNE. NO. 23-192JL