The Syracuse Journal, Volume 17, Number 46, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 12 March 1925 — Page 6

instead of Kalsomine or Wall Paper Pound for pound Alabattine covers more wail surface than any substitute. So easy to apply you can do a satisfactory job yourself. Ask your deader for colorcard or write Miss Ruby Brandon, the Alabastine Company. Grand Rapids, Michigan. Alabastine—• powder in white and tints. Packed in 5-pound packages, ready for use by mixing with cold or warm water. Fail directions oa every package. Apply with an ordinary wall brash. Suitable for all interior surfaces—plaster, wall board.brick.cement.orcanvaa.WiU not rub of when properly applied. all colors for all rooms NOTICE! To Livestock Owners f You Own Any Horses. Cattle, Poultrj or Hogs, by Ail Moans Read Thia. Safeguard your stock against ths tostly ravages of Quick-spreading dierase. Nature has provided wonderful lealth-glvlng roots and herbs which lave proved unfailing in thousands of Utee*. These are combined in a timetried, reliable remedy, Porters Pain King—the standby of hundreds oi Partners in this community. They reo>mmend it highly for sores, colds and listemper in horses and for soreness ot the udder, caked teats, and bloat is rattle. With chickens becoming bettei noney-earners. there is an increasing one of Porter's Pain King by careful poultry raisers everywhere. It is s positive relief for gape a roup and para* altic growths. Sick hens are not good layers. Use Porter’s Pain King at the slightest sign of trouble. Just follow tht directions with each bottle. It may lave you several hundred dollars. Tout iealer guarantees satisfaction or money bai k. All men are free with their matches —and they used to be with their snufl boxes. Bow Robert M. Koenig Found Remedy ror limply Mon , L' 1 ". ■"*""" KE •» For yean my skin would break out every once in a while—and ointment* did very little to help me. I read a doctor’s article stating that pimply skin usually comes from the stomach—and bowels not getting rid of the poisona ' TT I tried Carter** Little Liver Pills for a few day*—and since that time my skin is smooth and clear. Now I tell my friends the right way of getting rid of a broken out skin—and also of steering clear of upset stomach and sick headache. Carter’s are all you claim for them. The S Household Necessity f For cues, burnt, blister*, rashes* ■9 tog KMptt*l**v*iathebim»e. In tube, or bottle*. Look for the gS trwiom&rk Vaseline** on evert R It isl VtWtr p»vWWTSvXrt, H Cherebrougb M£g. Co. (Cens'd) SB K fiteteStra* N.wYocfc gg| I Vaseline I H PETROLEUM JELLY |g ffl V . - - - . Z M.HUMPHRIYS’ ■ ’■•wW ®I "W w 1 iFll Sk yi f aS 1 jF for Coiisf ipaHon \

WUNGIHW OOSSB-Sfe

Auditorium Worthy of Nation’s Capital

WASHINGTON.— Washington’s dream for 50 years, conceived In the desire to give the capital city of a great nation facilities for handling and accommodating great conventions and gatherings coming to this city, became a reality January 17. when the Washington Auditorium. largest theater of Its kind In the world, opened its doors to the public. While not classed with the Madison Square garden of New York or the auditoriums of Chicago and other cities, which are larger but lacking in the facilities for theatrical entertainments which the local building provides, the Washington Auditorium nevertheless will seat 6.000 comfortably-ftrlts theater proper, or 500 more Ban the Hippodrome of New York, which heretofore has been unrivaled as the world's largest theater., Washington began to talk years and years ago of the need for an auditorium extensive enough and pretentious enough to care for the conventions and meetings, international gatherings and national assemblages coming to this city. It was not until about three years ago that a practical plan was formulated to provide such a structure.

American Money Helping Upbuild Europe

THE record of foreign borrowing in the United States in 1924. complied by the Department of Commerce, shows that thia country is doing Its full share In the financial rehabilitation of the world. The gross volume of foreign securities publicly offered in the United States in 1924 reached $1,203,438,894. Only, $132,902,600 of the gross total consisted of Securities Issued corporations solely on their own credit; the remainder. *1,075.585.894. representing central government, provincial or municipal loans, including corporate issues guaranteed by government agencies. This marked Increase In foreign borrowing is attributable to a number of factor* The Interests of American investors in foreign securities has gradually increased, as they have become better educated in the selection of such Investments. The acceptance of the Dawes plan, and the resulting improvement In world conditions, served to stimulate confidence, while the abnormally low money rates in New York gave added strength to the outward flow of capital. Europe borrowed . $567.770.000 —far more than any other region. Os thia

Monticello to Become National Shrine

MONTICELLO, where the Declaration of Independence and the first statute for religious freedom were conceived, soon 1* to be restored to the exact condition In which It was left by Its distinguished builder—Thomas Jefferson. This task has been undertaken jointly by the Thomas Jefferson Memorial foundation and the American Institute of Architects, through its committee on the preservation of historic monument* and scenic beautie*. Prof. Fiske Kimball, chairman of the architect*' committee, *ays he hopes not only to restore the lawns and garden* a* they were In Thomas Jefferson’s period, but also to return to the historic mansion much of the furniture bought by the author of the Declaration of Independence for the room* he loved *o well. * “My vteit to Boston was fruitful," say* Professor Kimball. “I picked out at the Massachusetts Historical society a large number of sketches showing

Everett Sanders Recalls Old Times

ONE of the joys Everett Sander* has ex;»erienced since It was broadcast over the country that he is to become secretary to the President 1* In hearing from oldtlme friend* who** whereabouts had been unknown to him in recent yearn Boy* he knew when a tturtent at Indiana State normal and later at Indiana university now liv* tn various section* of th* country. They wore among tho*e who were quick to write him congratulatory messages. Some of them he bad not beard from since their graduation day. Two or three to write were “boy*" who were members of the university basket ball team, of which he was captain. J. B. Welsh, who still conducts a shoe store at Terre Haute in which Sander* worked on Satarday* while a pupil at the Indiana normal, and Mrs. Ed Whetsell of Bhx»mlngtoji, Ind., the widow of the man In whose store be sold shoe* while attendtag Indiana university. are among those sending their best wishes to the President’® new secretary.

Splendid Monuments for American Heroes

FINAL plana of the American battle monuments commission toward marking the battlefields abroad and commemorating the activities of American troops overseas tare* been laid before congress. The plan*, ixmtemplatiisg an expenditure of $3,000,000. call for beautification of the American cemeteries, commemorative monuments*tn *the member* of all American OTganixatitms which participated Ln the three major American operations, historical monuments to record Import operations of American divtaions. a monument at home to commemorate the activities of the army and naval forces of the United States in Italy and surrounding water*, erection of tablet* to mark locations of headq««rte™ the American expeditionary force and two memM, •»<> uw. to comnetnorate naval activities. Beautification of American cemeteries. to coat SL2OaOOO. include* the buryfog ground* of a chape! or xnemorial hall in which will be placed

Original plans have been amplified to the point where when completed th* total cost will amount to dose to a million dollars, *865.000, to be axact. Thia will include the *IOO.OOO organ jto be placed in the building, which is expected to pay for Itself. The building Itself upon Its opening was not in the state which It will sometime reach. Although molded plaster has been set in. and the walls and ceiling adorned with natural architectural attractions, there will be no painting*, gilding or decorating on a widespread scale. This may be attained at a future date. but the opening night found the Auditorium in condition to show without adornment the real architectural cbrfacterfetics of the building. The largest single unit, of course, la the theater, with balcony and stage, in which 6.000 can gather to listen to opera, view great productions or attend big conventions. Next in point of size is the exhibit hall, for which the entire first floor is set aside, containing 28,000 square feet of floor space, with arrangements for daylight Illumination. Adjoining this half is a space which may be used for temporary or emergency kitchen and pantry for large or small entertainments.

total only *40.000.000 was refunding, leaving a new Investment of about $530,000,000, or approximately 60 per cent of the entire new capital, and representing an increase of about *440,000,000 over the preceding year and about *385.000.000 over 1922. A large part of this amount was used for financial reconstruction. The German government loan of *110,000,000, provided for In the Dawes plan, served the twofold purpose of increasing the gold reserve <>f the Reicbsbank and of providing the means for the financing of reparations in kind. The French loan of *100,000,u00 is being utilised largely for exchange stabilisation. Part of the Belgian issue, amounting to *50,000,000, will be used for debt consolidation. Other loans, made primarily for productive purposes, such as the French railway issues, have, nevertheless, been important from an exchange stabilization point of view. The figures given in this compilation do not present the entire outward movement of capital, since only foreign securities publicly offered In this market have been included.

■ the hangings of window curtains, furI niture and features of the grounds of i Monticello, a* well as bill* and aci counts for the purchase of furniture which give us some clue to things now vanished. “I was also fortunate enough to find ■ in the possession of Mrs. Thomas JesI ferson Coolidge. Jr., a painting that show* the bed* and planting on the west ride of the house." The Thoma* Jefferson Memorial foundation was established on the one t hundred and eightieth anniversary of i Jefferson’* birth, April 13. 1923. It wa» dedicated to acquiring Monticello a* a living memorial to the great principles » for which Jefferson stood. > The following December the foundation. by making a payment of SIOO,OOO, > took legal title to the colonial mansion, the estate consisting of 640 acres of ' land and priceless Jeffersonian relics. - Monticello, after a struggle lasting r nearly a century, at last waq • met mortal to one of America’s great men.

“It’s like living over school day* to hear from these friends,” observed Sanders as he picked up some of the letter* for a second reading. It was more than twenty year* ago when Sanders was a student and shoe clerk. He recall* some incidents of hl* ritoe-flktlng shoe-selling experience. “In those day*," commented Mr. Sanders, “the women wore Jong skirts, the kind that swept the dirt from the streets, and when they came into Walsh's store to try on a pair of shoes they were careful to spread their full skirts over their ankle* and feet until scarcely their big toe wa* exposed to view. Some of them were actually no sensitive they preferred risking a bad fit and corns rather thai| permitting the clerk to make certain they were being fitted for comfort. Actually, some of them would consider ft effen give even for the clerk to sugge*t|they try on the shoe* in th* store and they would guess at their size and tak* the shoes home to do their own fitting. “How times have changed!”

- tablets having inscriptions of the serv I ice* given by the troops burled there; [ stone walls arounfl the cemeteries, i stone seats and curbing along the i patha Tire cost of the chapels, which will be of .a religious but nonsectarian character, is placed nt $1,600,000. The larger commemorative monument* will be erected at Montfaucon. to mark the Meuse-Argonne operation; ! at Hattonchatel, to mark the St. Ml * hiel operation, and at Chauteau Thierry, to mark the Alsne-Marne op ' eratlon. The cost of these three mono- : meats I* estimated at $300,000. ! Twelve historical monuments, to cost s $30,000 each, will be erected on the ; principal battlefields of France and Belgium. The naval memorials Include • large - memorial at Southampton to commemorate the activities of navy forces of the United States in British waters. - another large memorial at Brest, ant! > three monuments of modest design tc Corfu. Greece, Ponta Delgada. Azores

THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL

KEPT J \mght4 Pass It armxnd after every meaL Give the family the benefit of its aid to dlhesticn. Cleans teeth too. Keep it always In the house. ra f “Costs little-helps studt" > wwans Baseball and Coleridge “Jones la such a rotten shortstop he reminds me of the Ancient Mariner.*' “How zat?" “’He stoppeth one of three.”’-— Rutgers Chanticleer. Pcraausut road* arcagood tavestmrai The *—UOtaaexpcsM I High Cost of Postponing Permanent Highway Building Poor motor roads stifle industry and agriculture; waste huge sums annuaDy in high maintenance costs, and greatly increase gasoline, tire and repair There is xxx a state, not a county, not a community, that isn’t paying a heavy price for having too few permanent roads. That* are stiO many ssedens of the country—even whole states—that are trying » operate twentieth centurytnffic over This is costing million* cd dot let* every year, and nrtll keep on costing milhoos until we have well developed permanent highEven what we often call the more progressive communities are far behind die demands ol modern highway traffic with its * 16,000,000 motor vehicles. From die Atlantic to the Fa- * rific, and from Canada to Mex—the roods lor twentieth century traffic. Your big l ! aej r/Arish want to be ol the greatest possible service to you. Get behind them with ways and means that will provide more Concrete roads and streets. Such an investment wifi pay you btg dividends year after year. PORTLAND CEMENT ASSOCIATION 111 West Washington street CHICAGO ' OAcsatatoCktas (bake it | best: I | with | Wi Br Criticism always hurts; and there can tfe too much of it. ° G£f FEELING WELL AGAIN From Mother Nature's storehousa we have gathered the roots, barks and herbs which are compounded, under the famous Tanlac formula, to make Tgnlae. This great tonic and builder has brought health and strength to millions. • If your body is weak and undernourished, if you can’t sleep or eat, have stomach trouble or burning rheumatism, just you see how quickly Tanlac can help you back to health and strength. Most people notice a big change for the better after the very first bottle. They have better appetites and more pep. The sparkle comes back to their dull eyes and color to their faded cheeks. Don’t delay taking Tanlac another precious day. Stop at your druggist’s now and get a bottle of this, the greatest of all tpnlcs. Take Taedac VegetaHb TANLAC jFQR your health —-~7 — Soothinq and Healinq

New Hats Modish, But Not Extreme

A. designer of mnunery who is reckoned an authority on style Is quoted as paraphrasing thus: “Let me make the hats of a season and I care not who makes the gowns.” The bonnet, observes a fashion writer in the New York Times, has been important since the time when headgear became a part of woman’s dress. From the Highlander’s covering, so described, to the suave and dashing hats of Gainsborough’s creating is a far cry. Many fearful and wonderful things were fashioned tn that interim. Those were the days, first and last, when the picture quality was of supreme Importance, and milliners made bats according to an. ideal, however crude it seems to us In this day and generation, and with a definite standard of taste and style. Convention was rigorous and imposed limitations, but non* that contrasted altogether with the in fashion that characterises the latest modes. Nothing but a hat has such possibilities of beauty or the reverse, of flattery or the most depressing effect Nothing in the Illustrations of oldtime styles is funnier, from the viewpoint of today’s smart styles, than the hat rested high on an elaborate coiffure, like a boat tossed and left upon the rocks. That and the bonnet our grandmothers or our great-grandmoth-ers wore over satiny locks, drawn over the ears, and with wide ribbons tied under the chin, are among the museum treasures of now. Just what the gentlewoman who dressed in this fashion would have thought of the freakish extremes of the last few years is not easily imagined. Hat fashion seems to have been a matter of eliminating, of modifying extremes, only to touch, as is usual, the extreme opposite. One year hats grow from the infinitesimal to the ample and then to the enormous. With something like intoxication popular fancy bolds to that mode until it Is expressed in cheap adaptations, and then the swing to the other extreme begins. Reversals are accepted, usually, by only a few. The crowd invariably waits to see. Then, when once a mode is established, the crowd follows the leader blindly, grasping whatever Is said to be the latest thing, often oblivious to the requisites of taste and becomingness. Interest In the Cloche. This, doubtless, is the way in which the cloche came to be. It was the first concession made to utter sacrifice of the beauty made by the arranging of the hair in soft waves and curls, or even in classic lines. There are perhaps those of Berry Wall’s regime who couM give the date of the poke bonnet which the swagger flapper of today recognized only as a part of the uniform of a benevolent organization. In its sweetest form the poke bonnet, as a fashionable chapeau, concealed little but the back hair, and greatly enhanced the coquetry of a pretty face. Its successor, the cloche is not easily accounted for and, try as one may, it seems quite Impossible to escape from Its unflattering shape. A few variants have made their way In the. last year as an opening wedge to more lovely things. The uncompromising down brim has been rolled back slightly from the face, disclosing eyebrows and sometimes the fine edge of a marcel or the dip of a curl; and on one side, following the line of a permanent wave over the ear. Only last year were any perceptible changes in millinery seen. Several old favorites were featured—the continental. perennial and unlimited in its variants; the sailor and other shapes tending to more generous form and wider brim. Trimming was reduced almost to the non-existent point, and some of the most swagger hats, particularly the sport* shape, were literal-

Needlework Plays a Large Part in Hats

Needlework distinguishes the newest model* In hat*, placing some of them almost among the fine art*. At least they are original and intriguing to th* last degree. Nothing shown among the advance styles has more distinction than a model tn a pliable narrow braid cleverly woven with angora wool, the long hairs making a shaggy surface, About the crown is appliqued a pattern of thistle* and leave* ent from frit in shades of green, aketchy, yet boldly effective. Many white hats are shown, of felt milan, silk and other materials, some self-trimmed, some having just a band of ribbon, a strap and buckle of leather. or a simple ornament made of ribbon. flower* or feather* done very simply. Grosgrain ribbon, fluted, plaited or made into stiff rosettes, is considered very smart and Is seen on aom* of the model* from the best houses. There was a time within the memory of the'bonnet artists of today when hats were black, or white or of some quiet shade. Only in demure grays, case an lalt tan or navy blue might

Crystal Is Favored for Near-Genuine Jewelry

The possibilities of color harmony are shown in a variety of ways In what Is known as “fad Jewelry." Among the latest fancies in imitation peart necklaces are the “chokers." in which “pearls" of blue and pink, blue and gold, pink and violet are alternated. These “pearls” are of enormous size, and the effect is both amazing and chic. More kinds of near-genuine jewelry are made of rock crystal than have ever before been dreamed of. There I* a perfect craze for the clear bead necklaces in both the round and the cube cuts; and color Is introduced with smaller beads of Imitation emerald, turquoise, sapphire, topaz, amethyst, making the necklace more brilliant and always more becoming. The very latest necklace novelties have large beads, some of them being huge, and aow ft is considered smart to add a pendant of some sort cut from the rock crystal. The genuine Chinese crystal ornaments are. of enta-re. the most beautiful and are I

ly unadorned. As a style they have been so successful, once taste was adjusted to them, that the old-fashioned hats on which no vacant space was found seemed somewhat of a horror. Hat Pin* Ara Offered. Like everything else that comes to stand for an obvious economy, the untrimmed bat cheapened, and fashionable milliners found away to redeem It That brought the hat pin—not the important utility device that anchored the bonnet to the chignon, but an ornamental pin evolved from the tittle fastening much used when veils were worn. This pin is still seen tn elaborate forms, making a conspicuous ornament that serves as trimming on some of the tailored hats, and even on the turbans of metal stuffs and satin that are so modish. In the better shops where Parisian novelties are featured, many attractive bat pins are presented. There are countless designs; straight bars having brilliantly jeweled ends, large arrows of gold and onyx encrusted with brilliants or rhinestones. A bit of jade in curving line Is tipped with brilliants, and countless other novelties are shown in coral, agate, crystal and tn the different colored compositions that imifate almost every jewel, precious and seml-preclous. Monotony Is never endurable. Designers have with much artistry and quite gradually devised other trimming for the new bats. Novelty feathers, ribbon bands and rosettes, leather stftipa and buckles have been shewn on the successful modes of the season, Flowers havd been used with much restraint—usually but one handsome blossom, or a nosegay of conventionalized posies of silk or lacquer, for which there is now a perfect crasei The most artistic motif in millinery lately Introduced is that of needlework. Petit-point is the very newest fancy, and applique, embroidery, stitching are all tremendously popular. Introduced In th* South. The creation of styles for Palm Beach and the w other fashionable southern playgrounds made a market for the very newest ideas tn hats. These express more of art and beauty than anything else in millinery that has been presented for many a day. They are forerunners of the fashions that will prevail during th* coming spring and summer. The new hats ar* modish, but not extreme, as compared with the shape* in vogue a year ago. One tendency to the eccentric 1* seen in the peaked crown of the fabric hata, a reminder, not altogether charming, of the aborigine contour of head. Some of the most exaggerated in thia shape are made of heavy silk cut in four shaped pieces, joined with needlework to form a sharp point at the top and having no other trimming than a narrow band about th* bottom of th* crown. In some models an ornamental pin or some such trifle is added at on* side. The soft felt and straw shap«* of this sort have a grotesque treatment,- a bow-knot, rosette or bunch ot flowers finishing the very tip. Thus far this merry style lacks endorsement among the really smart women, and it* vogue is doubtful. Here and there a elever bit of a hat done in this manner 1* shown. On* in beige-colored felL soft as suede, has a moderately high crown slightly rounded, the top being entirely covered with a plaque of little flowers in browns and yellows, with a fringe of buds and moss, rather too suggestive of a thatched roof to be taken seriously. The brim of this chic littl* chapeau is narrow and rolls softly away from th* face. Another, similar In shape, is of white felt with a narrow brim band of white ribbon, a large black poppy covering th* squat* top of the crown.

one express one's preference for color. But this season’s styles are running the gamnL.and the most vivid color* are shown among the most exclusive style*. The latest shapes are of jade, reseda, apple and every other known variant of green; of petunia, scarlet, fuchsia, vennillion. rust, purple, burnt orange. AU white is more fashionable than it has been for many seasons, and a co* tome of white from bat to shoes, including every accessory and detail, 1* the very last word tn style. Among the dressy hats most lovely color harmonies are shown. One ot Neapolitan braid bus a crown of pal* lemon, shading past the narrow ribbon that marks the diversion Into the brim, deepening to warm tangerine. A hat with generous, slightly drooping brim shades from a crown of pal* nose to deep crimson. Aquamarine, violet, salmon and cool lovely shades of green are used in blendings and combinations of indescribable variety and of much beauty.

unmistakably "real," with ■ smooth surface artistically carved: but the** belong on antique chains, or are charming when hung on a ribbon. Earrings in the modern rock crystal are shown in many entertaining designs. some among the latest being • so long and so elaborate that the ■ weight of them Is a serious consideration. , Costume* for Spring The spring tailored suits are not abbreviated so far as the coat* ar* concerned. Perhaps that is why they call them redlngote costumes when a shorter name would do as well. The sleeves are narrow, the lines straight and the lapels rather short. Leopard Trim* Hat* Among the smartest models of th* season are coats ofi dull green sued* finished wook with collar and border in leopard skin. These are matched by small hats of green velours with a made of the fur. Vx.. ;

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