The Syracuse Journal, Volume 17, Number 12, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 17 July 1924 — Page 3

MAKES GRACEFUL ACCESSORY; SUMMER FROCKS FOR GIRLS

THKRB la a song of old which says: “In tying her ribbons under her chin, she caught a young man's heart therein." According to modern version it would be a case of tying her eiik knit scarf about her throat, with a grace and coquetry sure to bring a responsive smile of admiration from even the moot unsusceptible. Surely a mania for scarf wearing has taken possession of the fashion world. Especially in the field of knitted outerwear does the scarf trl-

J ■ jo I rYI 37 W 1 # ■ ■ A/\ ®! ■ I i IKn* VBWiri kLUMF / r WS' ' ' X/t ■ \7i ' ' Knitted Scarf Is Graceful Accessory.

emph aa a rraceful accessory in feminine favor. The modish one shown in the picture is knitted in white with wide stripe* of brilliant green, showing a smart monogram the same vivid hue. This is the sort of scarf one would expect to wear with one’s tailored suit or aa an article of sportswear. Other of these swagger knitted itcarfii are gay in Roman stripes or Scotch plaid- It Is the fashion to choose one’s scarf to match tn coloring th* predominating shade In one’s h*L For Instance, a cloche with powder blue facing, finds a corresponding blue predominating in the knitted scarf

:i j ’'Xv ‘Wi II 7& j ? || - i Simplicity io Summer Frock*.

which milady wears choker fashion, bringing the fringed ends to the front. Because a scarf to knitted. It does not follow that It to only suitable for sports wear. Some of the filmiest summery creations are knit in a cobweb* like lacy stitch. adorable In exquisite tones and tints. These are wide and long piece frocks, which are at present ultra-modish. Let Imagination visualise a pale citron yellow, knitted straightline dress. with which to worn a sheer lace-knit scarf In deep orange, the same sliding one end under a narrow black patent leather belt.

Useful Little Dutch Figure A quaint little wooden Dutch figure with a large skirt of black to exceedingly useful in the kitchen for the black skirt turns out Jn be a slate upon which many Itemsmay be jotted down with the white slate pencil that Rainbow Frock A fascinating little dress for a small girl to made ot whits voile with three bands st catered voile set tn above V

Little girls' frocks express the very essence of simplicity this season. A matter of concentrated loveliness are they in their refinement of exquisite handwork and fabric. Straight and full from the shoulders, thus does Madame Fashion issue her orders in regard to tiny tots’ dresses. Indeed, just mere sleeveless slips are many of the junior modes, but oh! bow cunningly devised are they. The materials selected are of the daintiest sheerest sort, fine dotted

swiss. batiste, and organdie. Foremost in the favored list are printed voiles which accent their appeal by being made up In unaffected simplicity. There is the fascination of unsophiscated charm in the pretty little frock In Uie picture, which is in harmony with the style trend of keeping children’s apparel strictly simple. It Is white with scarlet printings In wee star-like nil-over designs. The hem of the skirt undulates In shallow scallops bound in soft white ribbon machine-stitched with red silk thread. A corresponding ribbon binding defines sleeve edges and the neck, where It

culminates in a tie with long floating streamers. No matter how simple the frock. It must be artistically designed, achieving effect through color scheme and handcraft Gay embroider!** which maintain a typically childlike character play a prominent part B the designing of youthful dressed Berthas of the material of the frock oc of lace, forming an epaulet effect over the shoulders are prominent la the latest dress designs for little girls. JULIA BOTTOMLEY. )»>♦. N«w«P*P~ Uuloa.)

the hem. and all joined together with fagoting. The colors used are lavender. pink, yellow, and pipings of the same three colors are used on collar and cuffs. Blazer Here Again The erstwhile old-fashioned bl«er to here again, more biasing than refore. It takes the form of a light flannel sports jacket tn purple and maroon and black stripes, or in some such quiet color scheme as mustard and fuchsia.

OUR MAGAZINE TLA SECTION a* Interesting Features for the Entire Family

F" Something to Think About "I By F. A. IDALKER 1 Vr —1

AFTER THE DAY’S WORK •<qpELL me,” said the venerable A sage, “where the young men and women are at nine o’clock in the evening. and what they are doing, and I’ll Inform you what. role they will play later in the real drama of life.” A little reflection will convince even those who are indifferent to the tendency of the times, that the old wise man was right. It is not so much what is accomplished in the working hours, under the guidance of a captain. as what is done in the hours of freedom, that counts in shaping Juman destiny. The plain tales of history and biography pile fact upon fact in confirmation of this living truth. Turn to their chapters and read them closely. As you proceed, you will find that the conspicuous men and women whose achievements are shining as beacon lights in Today’s unrest and darkness, were those who gave close attention to their spare time, using It to Improve their minds, rather than for frolic and useless diversion. They found their greatest pleasure tn picturing a brilliant future. In which they resolved to play a leading part. With this purpose in mind, they sought the companionship of Wisdom whether among elders or with instructive books. Thus they began in youth to steer their soul-ship to a secure haven, where they knew that in the years to come they would be protected from the storming winds that beat against the water-logged craft of old age. Reflections of a Bachelor Qirl Bq HELEN ROWLAND WHETHER a flirt appear* indignant. delighted, or merely bored, at an “unexpected” kiaa, depends on how long she has been expecting it. Every young husband is a little Christopher Columbus, as far as discovering a new, way to conquer a woman is concerned. The tragedy of most marriages Is that they are just one long-continued Btate of “company—without companionship” or “loneliness for two." A woman Is never satisfied! The woman with “nothing but money” would gladly spend her last dollar to buy romance and a Prince Charming; and the woman with nothing but "love in a cottage" wishes that she could mortgage the cottage to buy a motorcar. In love, some men are born wise, a few acquire wisdom, but most of them refuse even to permit wisdom to be thrust upon them. Girls may have changed; but. walti Ing for a man to discover that he’s In ' love. Is still the same old maddening.

I mot let’s Coo £ 800 £ 0

i * Hundreds of stars tn the pretty sky. Hundreds of shells on the shore together; Hundreds of birds that go singing by; Hundreds of bees in the sunny weather. Hundreds of dewdrops to greet the ijfiwn; Hundred* of lambs in ths purple elover. Hundreds of butterflies on the lawn. But only one mother the wide world over. SEASONABLE FOODS DURING the summer days cooling dishea not too rleh. are most appetising. Fruit Soup. Pick over, wash, mash a quart of raspberries or strawberries. Add two cupfuls of sugar and let stand an hour. Press through a double thickness of cheesecloth. Add two cupfuls of cold water and bring quickly to the boll- • Ing point Add a tablespoonful of gelatin softened in three tablespoonfuls of cold water. Add the juice of half a lemon, turn Into a shallow bowl and serve cut Into small cubes, in sherbet cups. Jellied Tomato Bouillon. Cook one quart of tomatoes for ©Behalf hour In a covered dish, with one minced onion, three cloves, two teaspoonfuls of salt a little pepper, a hit of bay leaf and a teaspoonful of sugar, with a little minced parsley. Strain through a doable cheesecloth; add three tahlespoonfuls of gelatin softened In one-half cupful of cold water. Stir until the gelatin to dissolved.

THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL

Such men and women were not enslaved by the hands of the dock. Being free, they scorned the eighthour day, and planned a day of their own. in which they often labored till midnight. Whatever they found to do they did with all their might, quite regardless of the giddy world at large, keeping always before their mental vision the far-off goal. Their chief concern was not the passage of time, but how they might conserve and use It to their utmost advantage. And this forgetfulness of the clock is what the world needs today for a better devotion to duty and a higher development of brotherhood among the peoples everywhere, and especially for those who know that froqj the heart of man come the things that exalt or debase him. (© by McClure Newspaper Syndicate.)

£ | SCHOOL DAIJS | 2 HH II fcfe — Ltsrea ' S’*. ■*«- Sal that cut- j * ’ M<r RhW * m-ocR? . / »*• | i -* v«Re n* I '-* i z” no do«oI, < o° Tr * / I y-a g' sau*»e- «**- ** BMW llt mb Hlfe 11 B ftk/S(CfRr<S

nerve-wrecking process that it was be- I fore the petting party made us so frank and spontaneous. Yesterday’s quarrel, like yesterday’s kiss, and yesterday’s dinner Is buried with a man’s dead past; and nothing so aggravates him as to have a woman dig them up and try th perforin an autopsy on them. The saddest sight on earth Is that of a bachelor sitting alone before the Are and musing over his collection of old —beer openers. In spring flirtations, as In gambling, the “cheerful loser” is the only sore winner. (® by Helen Rowland.)

Set aside to become firm. Break with a fork and serve with salted wafers. Jellied Bouillon. Soak one tablespoonful of gelatin in three tablespoonfuls of cold water for five minutes, then add two cupfuls of hot, well-seasoned bouillon; stir until well dissolved, dill! when thick and serve gently stirred with a fork to <KHXHXHXKHXHXHXKH>a<HWXHXH> I MEN YOU MAY MARRY | By E. R. PEYSER Has a man like this proposed g to you? Symptoms: Talks In helluw- g ing monotone. Knives, pistols. $ ropes, knots, wrenches, camp X prowess, shooting tales are the g subjects of his talk. At a dance 2 he’ll come up and shout: "Did g you sever hear the story of how $ so-and-so pitched his tent In g the Adirondack* with the guy- o ropes, etc., etc.?” He doesn’t g think anybody but himself can a do any fool job but himself. He g never saw active service yet. He § talks forever of artillery and g camps and transportation, f g IN FACT X Ha Is in transports over his g own skill. x • Prescription to Bride: Break up housekeeping oc- § T) casionally so he can mend g «j£ It! Tell your friends in o his hearing—“l never need a g plumber er carpenter with Bill S about the place,” etc. g Absorb Thia 5 NEVER TOO EARLY TO MENO g bj McClur* Ne»»p«VW Syndicate.) Ct

I <H>o<K j Ithehatsdayl By DOUGLAS MALLOCH | A HAT is very well-behaved ’Most all the time. When friends have raved About your hat. it looks so nice. And even tried, to learn the price. A hat Is never meau nor proud: It bows Its head, when yours is bowed. And acts the very way that you. When you are complimented, do. Bnt I have often noticed that There’s something strange about a hat: For now and then, It acts so queer It’s quite astonishing, my dear. For now and then the winds arise. And then right off your head it flies. And you must run and chase it then Before you catch your hat again. A hat is well-behaved until Its friend the Wind comes up the hill And then it wants to romp and run And fly away and have its fun. A hat will be as nice and good As anybody ever could And then it ups and blows away— For even hats must have their day. (© by McClure Newspaper Syndicate.)

break into small pieces. Serve u bouillon cups. Chicken Pudding. Butter a baking dish or casserole, put in two cupfuls of leftover chicken and pour over the following: Two eggs beaten and added to two cupfuls of milk, one can of corn, one teasjaionful of salt and a few dashes of pepper. Put into a pan of hot water and ; bake in a hot oven until firm in the center. Lemon Jelly With Vegetable*. Soften a package of lemon Jelly, adding a pint of boiling water. When cool add a cupful of finely-minced celery. a small minced onion, a cucumber finely dkred and i handful of i shredded almonds. Stir into the mixi ture and allow It to harden tn small “ molds. I’nmold on head lettuce ami serve with a mayonnaise dressing highly seasoned. Garnish with cubea of tomato jelly or small sections of the fresh, sliced tomatoes. (©. ISt*. Western Newspaper L'aloa.) O ..W — Young Lady ) Vz Across the Way i w»aae^BW**»»*ww**** , *""«t**P * n Ji I Fl J '42 <k The young lady across the way say« her father preaches and practices the strictest law enforcement, and no matter how many cases of Scotch whisky he buys, he wouldn't seh a slugl* bottle for love ** money. <C Uy McClure Jiawaihtpwt Syndicate**

—I— A New Gospel, a Modern Decalogue, a Healing Wind for a Stricken World By IRWIN ERDMAN, in Century Magazine. OUR medicine men and magicians are not so fantastic in their dress, their rites, or their appearance aa the medicine men of old, but they resemble them in several very important ways. One of the great powers of the magician among primitive men was hie supposed science and his control of words. And the chief instrument of the magic to which we appeal today is to the magic of names. It is by a formula, an incantation, an idea that contemporary magic appeals. It is a single phrase, a single principle, a single method, a single hope upon which we are to rest our salvation. And these single sesames to security, happiness, progress and peace that rise and fall so rapidly in popular interest and esteem are all bathed in the aura of science. They are supposed knowledge, supposed certainties, in precisely the same way as the taboos and mumbo-jumbo, the fastings and lacerations, of a Fiji islander, a Zulu and a Bushman are supposed accurate methods of control based on an accurate knowledge of the'nature of things. * * • What in the hands of a careful and trained inquirer is a mere suggestion, a first hypothesis, an uncertified gleam, becomes among the pseudo-scientific and the intelligent men of the forum a new gospel, a modern decalogue, a healing wind for a stricken world. A faint light thrown on the processes of the ductless glands is made the signal of a new era. Control of thyroid glands, you create a transformed race. A physician in a psychopathic clinie makes some interesting observation* on the unconscious factors entering into the lives of his hysteric patients. Lo! the libido! Hail the unconscious! Behold the grand new insight by which rottenness is to be cleansed out of the human spirit, its complexes to be made simple, the subsoil of its obscenity sublimated into poetry and Platonism and art! Given a few unquestionably real facts about suggestibility and hypnosis, and a provincial French apothecary or a metropolitan press agent, or a combination of both, invents rituals and spells by the lame are to be made to walk, the blind to see, the dumb to “I Never Look Upon the Money I Earn as My Own, It Is Public Money” By FRITZ KREISLER, Famous Austrian Violinist. My present success means an opportunity to serve humanity. As for the financial end of my art —to be quite truthful, I must admit that, as my dear father did not believe in selfing his medical knowledge, so it nauseates me to have to sell my musical ability. I was born with music in my system. I knew musical scores instinctively before I knew my ABC’s. It was a gift of Providence. I did not acquire it. So Ido not even deserve thanks for my irfusic. Do you thank birds for flying in the sky, or do the birds charge you fees for singing in the woods ? Music is too sacred to be sold. And the outrageous prices the musical celebrities charge today! Truly, it is a crime against society. Well, I have my own way to solve this problem for myself, and to j keep my conscience free from contamination: I never look upon the ■ money I earn as my own. It is public money. It belongs to the public. I It is only a fund entrusted to my care for proper disbursement My beloved wife feels exactly the same way about these things as I. do. In all , these years of my so-called success in music, we have not built a home for ourselves. Between it and us stand all the homeless in the world. Women Should Wear Enough to Make Bathing Suit for Humming Bird By DR. A. H. C. MORSE, First Baptist Church, Denver. I am neither a prig nor a prude, and I would not have women return to the style of dress that was worn twenty-five years ago; nevertheless, I think that they should at least wear enough to make a creditable bathing suit for a humming bird. If I were asked to point out the dangers or to mark the snares and pitfalls in the highway of youth, first among them 1 would say a word about the matter of d' ess. It used to be that, clothes were worn for one of two purposes—either to cover the body or to keep one warm; but now, there are instances when there is not. enough worn to meet either of these ends. I do.not like the extreme cut of evening dress that is worn by women ; and I don’t believe other men like it, either. I never know where to look. I never know where the women want me to look. And I always feel as guilty as though I had been caught peering into some woman’s window at night. ’ It Is Criminal Negligence Not to Swat the Fly in the Springtime By DR. H. N. BUNDESEN, Chicago Health Commissioner. It is criminal negligence to come upon a fly at this season of the year and not swat it Any one who fails to do it, may be the cause of the com- ! ing of other myriads to buzz and carry filth, disease and death through the summer. On April 15, a single over-winter fly lays 120 eggs; on May 1, 120 adults issue, 60 of them females. On May 10, 60 females each lay 120 eggs, and on May 28, 7,200 adults issue, 3,600 of them females. On June 8, the 3,600 females lay and on June 20, 216,000 females issue. These lay on June 30, and on July 10, 25,920,000 adult flies issue, half of them females. When these lay there is an issue of 1,555,200,000; and when the female half of these lay, there follows an issue of 93,312,000,000. From the female half of these there ia an issue of 5,598,720,000,000, and adding up the whole buzzing swarm we finally have on September 10, more than five trillion offspring of the one over-the-winter fly. Is there any need for more to be said about why every one should' swat every fly? ' Patriotism Not Something We Can Conveniently | z Slip Off at Night By GEN. JOHN J. PERSHING, U. S. Army. We should understand that patriotism is not something we can conveniently slip off at night. When war comes and danger threatens it is easy enough to kindle its embers. But after it is all over and peace ia signed we forget our lack of foresight to meet war. , I hope war never comes again. e may be accused of militarism, but it is far from our thoughts. I do not advocate a strong army or appropriations for a strong military svstem —the conception of that would be decned in a democracy such as this—but I do urge that every American understand that he is an American and that the government under which he lives and prospers he must defend if he is worth his salt. Dr. G. Stanley Hall, psychologist —Every emotion leaves its trace upon the sensitive substance of the mind. The same emotion weakly submitted to, day in and day out, wears a deep path for itself. The man who lets the iw of living begin to work upon him has started a habit as insidious and as destructive as the use of drugs. Fear has its place in the great scheme of character development; but as an antagonist to be conquered, not as a master to be served. United States Secretary of War Weeks—War may be abhorred, but so is pestilence, and we must be ready to cope with both by defensive U) ensure*