The Syracuse Journal, Volume 16, Number 20, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 13 September 1923 — Page 3

GAY KNITTED NECKERCHIEF;

SUBTLE CHANGES IN FROCKS

ONE of the delights of this season In the way of accessories is the Deauville kerchief. Let the designer of things knitted gt*t the least inkling of a new fashion and presto! its charm is immediately interpreted through knitted stitch. . Most of us visualize it as a square of gay printed •ilk knotted and tied about one’s shoulder with naive grata?. The picture tells a different story. It reveals the theme translated in the language of knitted art. It does not take much of an Imagination to sense the decorative charm

■ I * 4 ; <***• ■’**;* f ' ■ y ** SvWJ iStw \t Ib. / IiOF -i w J? A ■ IT 1 i ■i i I I ■ cf ' I ' l koht* trw ÜbK

of a neckerchief knitted of fiber silk, the major color being burnt orange with diagonal paisley stripes done In green, orchid, purple, blue, yellow, white and black. The culminating beauty touch Is attained tn the deep fringe IJ -h displays the multi-colors of the paisley design. There are many types of these knitted “ahnwlettes" and they all make color their outstanding feature. Brilliant Italian shades, bold gypsy colors add charm to ths idea. In this way a somber costume is enlivened by a forceful dash of color. We are only just beginning to appreciate what a fund -w lovely ideas the knitted accessories present. Ta say that the wide cobweb-knit zephjr scarfs in rainbow colorings are effective, but mildly states the case. Nothing prettier In the way of a light evening wrap with lingerie frocks can be conceived of than these fleecy airy fnlry throws knit of xephyj and the like. The pure white filmy shawl-Hke wrap, bordered In vivid Italian shades.

** * ■ ■"■"HBBSJ" ■ wk •il tW J /’ taw« seat j1 1 V wgi ,I • / ill - V nkula \ /.I l / V 111 1 I vJw W Ji < / . ■ lx *idD cr ■'-■kav/v A > ~ I ■ tJr ~ ■ K———-. •> UL jK. JKKSSk f*.

vies with the rainbow-tinted shawl, th* entire length of which shows a shimmer of prismatic tints. These beauteous knitted novelties rank not In th* commonplace, for they are displayed only by the most exclusive shops. In their coloring they take for inspiration, not only nature's tints, hut Spanish, Italian and Ukrainian peasant Influence Is reflected.

Taking Car* of Organdie. Organdie may be freshened by sponging lightly with water and pressing. When really soiled, wash In cold water, using either borax or salt In the rinse water. Either one gives plenty of stiffness. Much of the permanent-finish organdie, that stays stiff, often flies up. and even rolls up in the case of sash ends of panels. This can be obviated by covering small weight* with scrap* of organdie and inserting them tn the lower hems or points of anraly decoratioar

Now that autumn is nearing, one notes evidences of nandsome knitted neckwear modes in the way of fiber silk scarfs plaided in real Scotch design and coloring. Between the out-and-out sports costume and dress for formal wear, there is a range of styles that may be characterized as seml-formal. With the approach of fall, designers turn their attention to garments of this character with an idea of developing styles that are appropriate for afternoon. Crepe romaine* and crepe Elizabeth are two fabrics that are

A Winsome Accessory

being extensively used und satins, fine twill ( s and n-ps in subdued colorings, la the illustration at the left is a smart afterm»on frock of silk canton crepe which carries out the skirt and blouse idea In a new and interesting manner. The machine embroidery on the skirt follows a Persian design and the same pattern appears In the box plaiting on the blouse. Sleeves are slightly longer than In the summer modes and are .finished with cuffs of the material. The costume at the right Is of a rough weave in figured silk. . A new style-note Is evident tn the short cape falling from the shoulders to the waistline In such a manner as to suggest a wide sleeve. The skirt Is cut with a slight flare and Is plaited only over the hips. A belt of the same material, terminating in an ornament in contrasting color, defines, the iow waistline. > - Straight lines persist- in these styles almost to the exclusion of other treatments. Ornamentation takes its cue from the color of the material and Is

Give a Foretaste of Autumn.

, | confined to such dull tones as tortoise i shell, black, brown and navy. Even » the bead designs are made in subdued t colors such as old gold and dull sllves *■ zf z-"* k jy i© 1933. W«t«s Nawgpapar Union.)

An Alluring Ribbon Girdle. An exquisite chiffon negligee aglow with soft colors and shimmering with ribbons has a most intriguing girdle. The girdle consists of three lengths of two-toned—peach and sky-blue—rib-bon, softly braided into a long sash and ending in silken tassels. Summer Trimmings. Ribbon flowers, embroidered medallions, fagoting or hemstitching ar* sure to form trimming for your summer frocka.

OUP MAGAZINE SECTION EM Interesting Features for the Entire Family

Uncommon Sense...

WATCH YOUR STEP AMBITION is necessary to success. But unless your particular ambition is attainable, it will only be a trouble to you. A boy who is stone deaf may aspire to be a great violinist, but he never will be. A youth with no eye for perspective or sense of the beautiful may toll his life away trying to paint, and produce only worthless daubs. The mountain climber who wants to get to the top of a peak does well to select a mountain that can be climbed. He may discover, after he is well up one height, that no further progress is possible. | ART | By GRACE E. HALL SLY elves steal in and paint the flowers With gorgeous hues In still night hours. Their brushes wondrous tine; The dew a crystal drop imparts To linger prisoned in the hearts Like magic wine. The tints of mystic mountain haze. The pastel tones of twilight rays All re-appear— The Autumn's bronze and yellow gold Within some flower's heart unfold. When Spring is here. We pause and quaff the incense rare That blossoms toss upon the air. Drink deep the gift, Ere earth again receives her own. As petals fall and lose their tone, And in the soft winds drift. But oh. the wonder of such art! The mystery within the heart Os each sweet flower! The elfin artists paint with care— We see their skilled touch everywhere In blossoming woodland bower. (© by Dodd. Uead Jt Company.)

2JIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII

| Something to Think About |

nimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiii OUR TONGUES TN THOSE dear intimacies in the sacred environs of home, in legislative halls, In the tragedies of love and war, in our business relations with one another and in all the affairs of life, the tongue plays the leading role. And this it continues to do from the moment It frames its first word until it ceases to function and the curtain goes down on the final act. It is the most potential power for good or evil, capable of filling hearts with Joy or breaking them beyond repair. To suffer day after day under the lash of a tongue that is continuously upbraiding, that cracks and snaps upon the slightest provocation, and often without any provocation at all. Is a punishment which sensitive mortals cannot long endure without wishing for an early return to the dust. In the house of nagging tongues, happiness rests on a precarious base, liable at any moment to topple over and break to pieces. Marriage under such conditions is not an Arcadia, but a land of terror where a few- cruel words may sweep a home from its comfortable foundation. Husbands and wives are amiable and kindly enough until mischievous tongues break loose and open hostlll11 MEN YOU MAY MARRY | By E. R. PEYSER Has a man like thia proposed to you? Symptoms: Loves to tell you ® his symptoms, tells you how he 1 has been, how his chances have ® been hampered by a weak coostltutlon, wants to know if £ you've ever felt this way or that, a. loves you because you are sym- £ j pathetic. Always takes a pill £ from his vest pocket, with sad i smile, at every Important mo- S * ment. Knows that you need g • treatment and tells you the way g you look, what organ you need g • to jerk up. IN FACT 1| He is the greatest organ rei dtalist in the me-sic union. * wj Prescription for brldsi i ' At Administer and keep on S ’ ice new thoughts for old. 'i [ Show him your health makes £ ' ' you his superior. £ i [ Absorb This: ' SYMPATHY BEFORE MAR. g | RIAGE OFTEN BECOMES AN. b g TiPATHY AFTER. | E (© *>X McClure Newspaper Syndicate.) ig j

THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL. .

It will be slow, wearisome work descending and beginning the slow, laborious ascent of another mountain. But unless he is willing to do that he will never be a success as a mountain climber. Few men get the right start In life at the beginning. Most of us discover at some time or other that the way we are traveling is the wrong way. and that it will lead us to no worth while destination. The thought of going back and beginning all over again is staggering. But there is no other way, if we mean to succeed.

A | SCHOOL DAI]S | A CM Jack — 1 | T>*t> BF’oos'ff Rveseß 9 OUTFIT Pore Tb XO FROM CINCIHNATI LAST rOtfxTga po noo ifc> pot oraplgd . « <sßocewf Foa H® . . iIWKW Iff 1 f HU If r-r Copyright Tte Rmhbow

lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllim

Bq F. A. WALKER

iimiiimiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiirc ties. Then there is too much heat In the air for endurance. In the torrid temperature both lose their self-respect and the war is on until the verbal fight ends between the contestants in the open divorce court. But the tongues whose tragedies are seldom told are those inarticulate members that neither praise nor censure. Often a heart is hungry, but miserly tongues starve it to death. An affectionate wife waits years for a word of love or admiration. She waits months and years for it. but it never is spoken. Losing hope, she fades away as a rose in the chill winds of autumn. And this is equally true of busbands whose homes are perpetually Icy in the repelling atmosphere of wives who have forgotten the old love story and lounge like mutes at their own fireside. Bestow smiles and encouraging words while the days are yours. Tell your wives and husbands that

lllottier’s Cook Book

We all know those houses scrubbed to a sort of raw cleanliness and reeking with the martyrdom of an overworked wife, from which the unwary guest beats .a hasty retreat and to which the family returns only to eat and sleep. The feminine head of such a bouse is a business failure. —Hasel Kewly. WAYS THAT ARE DIFFERENT It la a relief to get away from the customary and the usual method of serving various dishes. If one has never experimented with the common foods there is much about surprisingly good food yet to learn. Have you ever fried turnips? Boil them until tender as usual and slice. When cool dip in egg. then in salted cracker crumbs and fry in drippin or butter. Fried apples are delicious. If the young green ones are used they need not be Reeled- Slice, peeling and all. and fry in hot fat When barely done sweeten with sugar and brown a little. Serve with pork roast or chops. A combination well liked by onion lovers is a half-dozen sliced onions cooked in a little water until nearly tender, then the apples and fat added to finish ( cooking, adding enough sugar to make them palatable, as well as a seasoning of salt Escal loped Cabbage. Shred and bpil cabbage as for hot Prepare a white sauce. Buiier

Be as careful as you can in picking your career in the beginning. With your own judgment and knowledge of yourself, and with all the advice you can get, choose a vocation that you are fitted for. But, if it so happens that you have chosen wrong, don't be afraid to de scend that particular mountain and start up another that has a clear trail to the top. It will be hard work—much harder than starting right in the first place. But it must be done. And do not count the effort that appears to have been thrown away as wasted. The work that you put itfto the first vocation, while it may not directly contribute to later success, will have sharpened your faculties and trained your mind. And because you have done it, and because it has taught you how to work, the tasks that must be done to bring you to success will be far easier than they would have been if you had never tried at all. (© by John Blake.)

L.UELLA SAET-I THETIME UJHS-UJHEN FOLKS HAD FER HINNER-THEY U)A<S<SORT OF RSHAMEIX Wjuunt liKet’mention it.Noui THEY 'U BE PROUD t'HAVE it put in all.the newsPapers? A. you love them. Tell them often and see their faces brighten. .Experience each day the same ecstatic joy that was yours when the wedding march was singing. <©, I*3l. by McClure Newspaper Syndicate.)

a casserole and put in a layer of white sauce, sprinkle with buttered scrumbs and cheese; repeat, finishing the top with buttered crumbs. Season with salt and pepper and bake twenty minutes in a moderate oven. The white sauce if prepared with thin cream will make a dish most nutritious as well as delicious. Tomatoes and Macaroni With Fried Onions. Peel, slice and fry six small onlons< in two tablespoonfuls of butter; when done add a tablespoonful of flour and brown. Add a can of tomatoes or the equivalent of fresh sliced tomatoes, salt, pepper and a cupful of cooked tomatoes. Boil until smooth. Serve with grated cheese on top. Fruit' Salad In Apple Cups. Take round apples of any good color —green, red or yellow. Cut off the top or the stem and as desired scoop out the apple and cut into fine bits, add pineapple, grapefruit and a few maraschino cherries, with a dash of lemon juice; add a mild salad dressing and fill the shells. Set on applg leaves, or doilies if the leaves are not obtainable. (©, 1*23, Westers Newspaper Lol on.)

Motor to Church in Comfort The Chevrolet s<Passenger Sedan is most popular for family use, because j t a g or( f s comfort, weather protec/fiT* I aPj'tft ** on an< * h°m e atmosphere all the year ’round for five people—yet may be economically operated with SUPERIOR only one or two passengers. 5-Pass. Sedan Its power, reliability and low upkeep appeal to men. Women like its handsome lines, fine upholstery, OOv/ plate glass windows with Ternstedt . t regulators, and fine finish. f. o. b. Flint, Mich, « . . , . Everybody appreciates its great value at SB6O, f. o. b. Flint, Mich. Prices f. o. b, Flint, Michigan r "IMA WW*T L>'—■- t i-• SUPERIOR Roadster .... ssl* I I I 111 IT SUPERIOR Touring .... 525 n 111 T SUPERIOR Utility Coup. . . . 6*o TzSk/l uJ vZr* SUPERIOR Sedanette . ... 850 > SUPERIOR Sedan . ... 860 nr/ zal ITfl I SUPERIOR Commercial Chassis . 425 U-rTJ 1/ Tl II I r SUPERIOR Light Delivery . . . 510 I | j Utility Express Truck Chassis . 575 JnO h! SffiS I-IMIIW-Chevrolet Motor Company Division of General Corporation Detroit, Michigan

His Mistake. “Where’d you get the black eye?” “I had an idea it would be fun to make Bill Jinks jealous, and —” “Yes —yes.” “It wasn’t.” WHY DRUGGISTS RECOMMEND SWAMP-ROOT For many years druggists have watched with much interest the remarkable record maintained by Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root, the great kidney, liver and bladder medicine. It is a physician’s prescription. Swamp-Root is a strengthening medicine. It helps the kidneys, liver and bladder do the work nature intended they should do. Swamp-Root has stood the test of years. It is sold by all druggists on its merit and it should help you. No other kidney medicine has so many friends. Be sure to get Swamp-Root and start treatment at once. However, if you wish first to test this great preparartion send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton. N. Y., for a sample bottle. When writing be sure and mention this paper.—Advertisement. Os the Viktngs’ Brood. He—Yes, I suppose the sea must be in my blood. You see my grandfather | was vice-president of a marine Insur- ; ance company.—Harper’s Magazine. Every department of housekeeping needs Red Cross Ball Blue. Equally good for kitchen towels, table linen, sheets and pillowcases, etc.—Advertisement. Mistress (to Hary, about to be married)—And where did you meet your young man, Mary? * Mary—Oh. at uncle’s funeral, mum. He was the life and soul of the party. Though the world owes a man a living, it may be heedless of that, as It is of its punishments. Sure Relief FOR INDIGESTION Hot water Sure Relief Bell-ans 25< AND 75$ PACKAGES EVERYWHERE KILLS PESKY BED BUGS P. D. Q. Just think, a 35c box of P. D. Q. (Pesky : devils Quietus) makes a quart, enough to dll a million Bed Bugs. Roaches. Fleas >r Cooties, and stops future generations by killing their eggs, and does not injure the clothing. Liquid fire to the Bed Bugs is what P. D. Q is like; Bed Bugs stand *a good a chance as a snowball in a justly tamed heat resort- Pattat spout free in »very package of P. D. Q., to enable you to iill them and their nest eggs in the craoks. , Look for the devil’s head on evAHk ery box. Special Hospital size. J 2.50. makes five gallons: conta ! ns ■3.S* three spouts. Either size at ydur druggist, or sent prepaid on receipt of price by Owl Chemical * Works, Terre Haute, Ind. &EUABLE AGENT to handle extra fine ivallty hair nets. Write for free sample; •all information. WARD SPECIALTY CO.. I* Garden Place. BROOKLYN. NEW YORK. DON'T PIT ALL YOIB EGGS IN ONE BASKET Why gamble with your time, when you ran make sure money with IL The greatest diversified farming country n America offers you. right now. a lifetime opportunity. Rich, level southeastern Mls•ouri land is making farmers independent. Rgfse corn, cotton, wheat, oats, alfalfa, vegetables, fruits, etc. Great stock country. Big money in cotton now; therefore, raise :o*ton. Select the crop that brings the high price. No failures R. R. fare allowed purchasers. Free information. Farms in rther states, also. L. B. BENTON. PEORIA. ILL. PARKER’S HAIR BALSAM BemoveePanoraff -StcPsHairFaJltas •jßßesutyt^GraySlFadedHail HINDERCORNS H. N. U., FORT WAYNE, NO. 33--1923.

Their Busy Season. Townley—Hello, old man; thing! ! humming out your way? Subbubs —Yes, mosquitoes. Aspirin Say “Bayer” and Insistl J Unless you see the name “Bayer” on package or on tablets you are not get- • ting the genuine Bayer product prescribed by physicians over twenty-two years and proved safe by millions for Colds Headache Toothache Lumbago Earhche Rheumat!sp| Neuralgia Pain, Pain Accept “Bayer Tablets of Aspirin” only. Each unbroken package contains proper directions. Handy boxes of twelve tablets cost few cents. Druggists al,so sell bottles of 24 and 100. Aspirin Is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacidester of Salicylicacid.—Advertisement. LEGENDS TOLD OF HARPIES In Mythology It is Related That They Swooped Down and Despoiled the Table of Aeneas. Harpies were celebrated tn many ancient tales as a race of monsters that infested certain shores. They were usually represented as having a woman’s head and the upper part of the body and bird’s wings, tail, legs and claws, says the Detroit News. It is related that these fierce monsters flew down upon Aeneas and an expedition from Rome, when the party had landed for rest and refreshment among a group of Grecian islands, and carried away th“ food from the table before them, and even attacked the men themselves. The men then armed themselves with swords secretly and waited for the next approach of the harpies. Intending to kill them when they came near. But the nimble marauders eluded all their efforts as before. When the expedition left the island the leader of the harpies perched himself uj»on a rock overlooking the scene and in a human voice loaded Aeneas and his companions with taunts and execratiops. Small Town Bright Lights. The 100 per cent electrically lighted town of the United States is Johnstown, Colo., according to E. A. Thompson, manager of the Fort Lupton L’ght and Power company, that supplier the current. Every home In town is wired for electric lights and with few exceptions all these lights are used.

ißestless ~ | | I I When Coffee disagrees I Drink I I Postum I I “There's a Reason I