The Syracuse Journal, Volume 17, Number 48, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 26 March 1925 — Page 6

Kfftw f * r ' ”' V J Er—*-M .- y AlnhaaHne —a dry powder in white and tints. Packed in 5-pound packages, ready for use by mixing with cold or warm Water. Full direction* ong every package. Apply with an/ ordinary wall brush. Suitable for all interior surfaces —plaster, wall board, brick, cement, or canvas, instead of* Kalsomine orWallPaper Ask year dealer for Alabattine colorcard or write Mias Raby Brandon, the Alabaatine Company, Grand Rapids, Michigan. Booster Could Count A class In experimental psychology •t the University of Chicago baa found that a roostqr can count. Kernels of corn were arranged in kws on Che fliM»r, every third kernel being tfeeked down. The rooster discovered tliis and passed up the stationary kernels. Then the third kernels were loosened and the rooster was set at his tusk. He skipped them until his foot strut . one. when, with a chuckle, be returned and ate all the kernels Ibakeitl I test I with | V “f Tftfarg w your hobby? At least one hobby is demanded ol every car owner. Economy and common sense demand that lubricating oil be a motorist’s hobby. MoasNvtvr Oil welcome* mile*. Il smile* at heavy road duty. MsfiiMsbS Oil prolongs the life of any motor. Make MsfisMzlSX your motor hobby. It will pay you to use only MaiMsto - Council Bluff*. lowa Toledo, Ohio Mona Motor Oils & Greases Auouf Accidents It I* « foolish woman who doe* not .nstst upon every bottle in her medicine cabinet being plainly marked as to Its contents. Sure Relief FOR INDIGESTION |QX\WW BeLLtANS ESS2TBJ Hot water Sure Relief Bell-ans 25tAHD 75< MCKA6ES EVERYWHERE K BABIES LOVE ■ M&WSOW3 SYRUP K TW isteati* aai QrQ4rsa*« |T. S' H -ns« open poblidMSii MgS ZJ fwwni* W*t* ®o V. ZX w*y taW. wpRI .larai wss % Dn*W» U JBJgsgsy iisaTwUttm XrwFwAviii. ho :iXi«

Wide Vogue in Print Materials

Beauty of Color, Fineness of Pattern, Characterize - Fabrics. The sweeping vogue of printed materials, of printed silks most conspicuously, suggested much of the romance that surrounds their making. Long ago, writes a fashion correspondent In the New York Time*, as far away in the dim past as silk weaving was first known. Its lustrous surface was printed with patterns of various sorts, primitive in the earliest creating, but growing In artistic importance as the handicraft was perfected. In those early days of hand looms, of wonderful dyes } of long hours and of Infinite industry, the designs conceived by artists were blocked by hand, and there was none other than hand-printed silk. It was worn by the nobility and by the i>easants, there being between the two the difference of quality only. Later, through the years when other styles have engaged the attention of a fashionable public, printed silk has come and gone in waves. Brocades and embroidered •tuffs have bad each a vogue from time to time as high light* in luxury. Prints have seemed somehow to belong especially to the Indian and the Portuguese cottons that are so much used in modern schemes of interior decoration. Occasionally a wandering gypsy wearing a printed square about her shoulders has flashed a hint of Its picturesque beauty, and from Parts have been received now and then odd frocks and blouses made of silk of the old-time surah, or “China silk," type, printed with a Persian pattern. Last year printed dress silks, crqpes and chiffons were introduced as a standard of style, though they were accepted with some caution by the leading couturieres of Paris, and found but a timid audience on thia •ide. Thia season they have carried over and are to be absolutely the accepted mode. Replace the Bold Pattern*. With printed silk assured of an established vogue, both the designs and the colors are new and artistically significant. The sentuition of the first presentation of the fabrics was, of course, the Prints, Ferronnlere, inspired by “The Ironmaster." Brandt, designer of the famous door* of the Verdun Memorial monument, reflecting the modern art spirit as it is translated Into silk. To speak tn the language of silk merchants, these prints, the importance of which grows In appreciation, emphasise, in their composition, motifs In the graceful •tendril” and “coquette” in the delicate tracery of large pattern* Brilliant and warm as the original design, they have an added beauty of warmth and color and are deveieped In the “Camaion" color principle of the season and Id the dominant color scheme.-, startling bit of this type. In illustration, is a jacquard tinsel brocade reproducing a Brandt balustrade. Apart from this sensation in design, fineness and exquisiteness are the characteristics of the latest prints, replacing the bold patterns, motifs and color scbem«-s of last season's styles, which were distinctly Oriental. With this radical difference from past styles, these ideos in design are presented in models from the best authorities in Paris. They are from those creator* who knew well the origin, the ideal and the adaptation of the, frock built of printed silk. To quote from an authority: “Plaid* •upplant the travers. Geometric designs with dotted effects take the place of large Oriental motif* An interesting new technique, the •Gravure.’ influences several groups of .Many Colors-Are Patterns showing all-over tiny figures are in reality produced from a design originally bold and swinging All of these printed in one color on half the width of the fabric, in another color on the other half, offer the moat intriguing posslbllltie* to an Ingenious couturier* for the architecture of a gown may thus be varied in many way* Almost all of these patterns in’color qre printed on a “blond” or “rose" ground. In contrast to the reds and brown* and yellow*, with a perfect erase for red In all of its possible shades, some exceptionally beautiful silks are shown in perveuche blue, the design usually traced on a lighter ground, > which presents it sharply.? This blue ' Is especially successful In the wash ; silk*, and tn the printed pattern* shares the popularity nf copper red. tomato red and the cyclamen pink. Modistes-and smart shop* predict a “red" season. introducing many •hades and aorta of red and endless combinations on a “blond” background. “Tolle de Sole Cinderella" Is the name of a different weave that

Valuable Information for Home Dressmaker?

When the home dressmaker attempt* to sew fur on a dress or coat collar she la puzzled as to how she should go about it Cotton tape should be sewed to the leather edge of the fur. using an overcasting Mitch and turning tbe raw edge to the Inside. The tape is then sewed to tbe material and tbe fur turned over it In sewing a sleeve to a garment, bold the sleeve toward you and tbe body of the garment away from you. Then the sleeve will not skew. It I* a good plan not to ran the seam to the sleeve until after tbe sleeve ha* been basted in the garment Then if there is extra fullness it may be taken out at the Beam. in following * dress pattern notches never abould be cut in the material. Many otherwise faultless dresses have been ruined to this way. To mgrir the notches oeelgnated use thread of a different color from the materiaL In cutting a rieere, the pattern should be placed s^ 1 that the grain of the material wO) : ra n straight from tbe sboul*

print* Three-tiered effects, borders and stripes are very popular. Bold plaids with squares of large octagonals and dots and those in cross-stitch patterns are among the striking novelties. The trend toward the Direetoire, illustrated in striped silks — ’rayure*,’ as the importers call them — is shown In delicately proportioned affairs. echoing the sophistication of the period and the delicate note in the newest print* “Another innovation is the border and the scheme In which half the width of the silk is printed in * design wholly different from the other half. This difference is effected quite subtly by a variation in the background, one-half t>elng dune on a dark ground, the other half, in the exact design. being printed on a lighter ground. Occasionally an eccentric is shown, such as a geometric print, having vertical lines In one half of the goods and si sot Ina lines In the other. These are especially clever in their adaptable possibilities, for they may be used in a variety of ways in dress designing and In trimming*" An Array of Design* Variants in design are almost without limit. The time-honored and well-beloved polka dot Is presented in entirely new arrangement. It is never. In the new silk* printed In regular spaces as heretofore, but is done with unusual flexibility and originality of pattern. There are prints having 1 Kw y X A ’• Black Felt Crepe With Printed Design in Red and White. three tiers of dots In successively increasing size, and those in which open and solid dots are combined. There are octagonal dot*, regular plaids formed of very large dots and dots so placed as to form a border. Another style Os printed silk has a name traceable to the Grand Prix ball in the other side, very showily illustrated by the picturesque name of “El Garoon.” This is a flashy pattern in which the Spanish influence is apparent, ir yellow, red and *he coppei tone* Much is due to the inspiration had from Snain in both design and color in these most decorative print* 1 Used in Designs is printed is many artistic designs, generally of floral type, a charming fabric for elaborate afternoon anc evening gowns suitable for late sprln* or summer. A ribbed silk shown both plstn *n<? printed bears the original names “Cots Dolphin” and “Cote Triton." Th. novelty, beauty and artistic slgnifl cance of these printed silks are ab sorbing, for«the moment, the atten tlon of the Paris creators and amon* the best style designers tn this coun try. And it has become known tha. while they ar* of French authorship originally, they have been adopted by American skill as now presented t» the world of fashion and are an al together American product which th* Parisians are themselves taking over Four Popular Color* Four colors api>ear and reappear li all sorts of cumbinatlons when top coats or ensemble suits are in ques tlon. One favorite is black, trimmet with squirrel or some other light fur The other colors are penny, shutte green and rust.

1 der seam. The front and the back o 1 * garment should be marked by run ' rung a thread of contrasting color Ikon I top to bottom. Patterns were made bj I skilled designers and it is a good plai ) to follow their suggestions to tbe ml 1 feutest detail* If a dress is faultless ? ly cut and marked its success is a least half assured, I For Immediate Wear The smartest frocks for hnmediati 1 wear■, are simple two-piece models o ’ kashmir made with a middy over ‘ blouse and « side-plaited skirt. Sleeve are short and tight and the bions. E buttons all the way down the frotr n-lrfc aoif./viverw! hntton* Wluu Vm'yVvClCU s rui to many » Anv one who is the poseeseor of ol< i French or prints jriH fimTmanj

THE STRACVRE .TOYTRNAT,

BpackMtta &A# your pocket when you do home toGive the youndsters this wholesome, loadJlastink sweet - for D?aii*rrr~i benefit UMitymmraflep f ioMnd <** when / MM work drags. M* A jivß* UIU* iiVdMvwr Paper Barrels Winding barrels from a roll of tough “chipboard” paper is accomplished on a machine consisting of a cylinder, cut in two ptrts, which may be drawn apart on the axle to produce different lengths. The paper, passing through tension rollers and an adhestive device, is wound for a predetermined number of layer* then a slitting wheel divides the paper, the cylinder halves are drawn apart, and an additional thickness of paper wound on in the center to provide the bilge. Brother Williams “I hope ter go ter heaven when my time comes,” says Brother Williams, “but harp-playin’ would be too much like work for me. so 1 ain’t takin’ any lessons down here.”— Atlanta Constitution. “My Rheumatism is gone —” "“THERE are thousands of you men and "*■ Vromen, just like I once was—slaves to rheumatism, muscle pains, joint pains, and horrible stiffness. I had the wrong idea about rheumaX tism for year* 1 / \ didn't realize that 1 rsf I increasing blood \ / Ce^S th® effect \ ot c °nipletely \ jNHR ffz/ * moc^‘n 8 out rheumade impurities from the system. That is why I began using S. S. S.l Today I have the strength I used to have r—- — - ' ■ years ago! I don’t use vr«e Booklet my crutches any more.” a * S. S. S. makes people co., in a a a talk about themselves Bld «- Atlant*. - the way it builds up b.w’kiet'on'Rheutheir strength. Start matism & Blood. S. & S today for that —* i rheumatism. You’ll feel the difference { shortly. kS. S. S. 1* told *t all good drug stores in two sizes. Hie larger size is more economical. C O World's Best’ ,0,0, TjloodMediane rS® iSIIBiIS KEEPING WELL An N» Tobi* (a vecetablo aporiont) taken at night win help keep yon well, by toning and strengthening year dinn4 •UniiMtioOn Get a 2S*Box Chips off *H»e OU Block Nt JUNfORS-Uttlo Nt* ■ Ono-thlrd th* regular dooa. Mad* «f the same ingrediwit*. then «*«dy ected. For children and adort* — SOLD BY YOtiß ORUOatT—l pemideety dsestion? ....nodring better* thanA/’aquier Capsules—one or two Sa umter comfort within Peek* Mk* Me. Beano Maa ' S g w I* ft® I n I I—— - Jw | 1

•THE • PiKITCHENM <©, IS2», Western Newspaper Union.) “There’s * glinting of blue, there’* * sprinkle of gold, There’s a base in the skies over head. There * a budding, of leaf, there’* a stirring of life In the heart of the hyacinth bed. From the maple a voice, from th* willow a sign, From the marshes soft odor* that bring To the eyes that can see, to th* ears that can hear. The news of the coming of Spring." MORE GOOD THINGS For variety In hot breads try: English Bath Bun*.—Dissolve one cupful of butter in one cupful of thin cream and add onp cafce com ’ pressed yeast, blended with a little ®° ld water. Add *be grated rind of » lemon. Sift four cupfuls of bread flour with one grated nutmeg, and one teaspoonful of salt, mix with ttfo tablespoonfuls of sugar and add to the liquid ingredient* Mix to a soft dough, omitting some of the flour if it seems too stiff. Add two or three tablespoonfuls of finely-shredded citron, let rise until it has doubled in bulk./then form | into twelve round bun* iyace on a baking pan, let rise again/until light j and bake in a moderate over for twenty minutes. Shortly before removing them from the oven, brusti the tops with beaten egg, dust with sugar and a few bits of chopped nuts or citron. Fricassee of Carrots.—Boil or steam three or four large carrots. Grate two medium-sized onions and brown in one-half cupful of butter, stirring un til evenly colored and quite a deep I brown. Cut the carrots into slices onefourth inch thick; add to the pan and cook until lightly browned. Dredge the whole with two tabiespoonfuls of flour, mixed with one teaspoonful of salt and one-half teaspoonful of pepper; stir, add a Cupful of rich stock, let the whole come to a boil, and serve garnished with minced parsley. Shrimp and Fish Timbales.—Butter timbale molds and line them with shrimps split in halves. Then fill the cups with the following: Two cupfuls of milk, three eggs lightly beaten, one cupful each of shrimps and shredded , halibut Set in water to cook until | the custard set* Serve with potato ' balls in cream sauce to which four i tablespoonfuls of grated horseradish squeezed from the vinegar is added. j Bread and Butter Pudding.—Spread slices of bread with crusts removed with butter and place them butterside down in a pudding dish. Soak over hot water one cupful of raisins covered in orange juice, feeat three eggs, add a quarter of a teaspoouful of salt, , and one quart of milk. Sprinkle the' raisins over the bread, pour over tbe custard, left stand for an hour, bake covered tightly the first half hour then remove the cover and brown. Serve with a hard sauce. Candy Always Seasonable. A little well-made candy, pure and good, prepared from pure sugar and

fruit juices, with an occasional bit of ! chocolate, will not injure the digestion of the child if it be eaten immediately after a meal. The habit of giv- | Ing children Or

even adults candy j between meals is a most pernicious one. Many mothers prefer that their children do not learn the taste of [ candy until they have reached the age of eight to ten at least and then they I are satisfied with the sweetiJ in the ' form of date* figs and fresh fruit* j As doctors disagree upon whether it j is wisdom to give none or very Little, each mother is, or should be, the best judge of her child's need* The following are a few good recipes which may be used at home: Fudg*.—This may be maple, coffee, chocolate And with or without nuts, just as one desires. Take two cupfuls of sugar, one-third of a cupful of corn sirup, one-haif cupful of milk, one tablespoonful of butter; if chocolate is used add a square or two of finelycut chocolate. If coffee or maple flavoring, add that tbe last as the fudge Is taken from the heat. Boil to the I soft bail stage, sei away to cool, then stir and add nuts and flavoring of maple or coffee extract* If coffee in fusion is used, let that take the place of the milk and add an extra tablespoonful of butter to make up for the loss of fat. When the mixture seem* bard to stir, pour at once into a well greased tin add mark off into square* Molasse* Taffy.—Boil together one quart of New Orleans molasses and two tabiespoonfuls of sugar for five minute* Add two tabiespoonfuls of butter and two of vinegar. 801 l until H cracks when a little is dropped into water. Take from the fire, add a fourth of a teaspoonful of soda ahd pour out to cool. When cool enough to handle, flaws- and poll. Peanut Candy,—Take two pounds of brown sugar, twelve tabiespoonfuls of butter; cook from the’ time of tbe first bubble, stirring constantly fat seven minute* then remove from the add a cupful of fresh peanut* that have l»een crashed by rolling with tbe rolling pin on the molding board. Pour into a greased pan and when cold break up into piece* Can*t Fool the Professors American stpdents. says a professor, p*y* too little attention to college work and too much to outside Interest* These professors are always coming out with amazing new fact* — aeveland Plain Dealer. JVonsfaa* A small piece of rubber overshoe I slipping on a wet floor. Save the next

DADDY 3 EVENING FAIRYTALE Graham Bonner THE THING WANTED Peter Gnome put on his invisible robe and set forth to take a walk.

He had not gone very far when he decided to go and see a little friend of his named Ena. Ena was In her room but she did not see him because of his invisible robe and when Peter Gnome saw that she was in a burry he decided not to detain her. Ena was looking in her bag for something. She pulled out one thing and then an-

nntfci Ena Was Looking in Her Bag.

other, and such a collection! First she pulled out her handkerchief, then she pulled out a little pencil, then she pulled out a tiny purse with some change in it, then she pulled out some pretty cards she had. next she pulled out a letter she had received some time ago and had wanted to keep. Next she pulled out a lovely postcard with a picture of the ocean at night upon it. Then she pulled out a knife and then she pulled out two snapshot* “It’s always the way,” she said at last with a sigh, “the very thing one want* is always at the bottom of the bag.” She said this to herself although she spoke aloud, as you see Peter. Gnome could not be seen by her and he had not made his presence known to her. “I knew it!” she exclaimed as she pulledforth a little key. Then she went over to her doll’s trunk and .unlocked it and took out a cape to put over her doll as she was taking her d<fll to call on a friend of hers and the friend’s doll. The trunk which held all the doll’s clothes and some other valuables of Ena’s had a key which delighted Ena for she loved to lock and unlock things. It made them appear so much more important. So she carried the key in a bag she7 had in which she kept all sorts of oddq and ends and which she almost alwayd kept with her. Ena fixed her doll so that she looked very pretty very nicely dressed. Tbe doll wore a dress of brown velvet with gold buttons and a cape of brown velvet to match. That was the cape she had taken out of the trunk. Then the doll had bronze shoes with little golden-brown buckle* bronze stockings and a brown velvet hat with a yellow feather. They left in a very short time. Peter Gnome had been watching from a corner of the window sill. After they had gone Peter Gnome took off his invisible robe and the different objects could see him. "It’s fun,” said the key, “to behavq the way we do. You see if we did any differently It would be too great a shock and besides they wouldn’t like 1L as they expect us to behave as we do.” “Jnst what do you mean by all of that?” asked Peter Gnome. “I shall tell you,” said the key, “for maybe you don’t know about The I Tiling Wanted club.’” “I never knew there was such a | club,” spid Peter Gnome. “Yes,” said the key, “and I’m a ! member. Almost everything that goes in a bag or in a bureau drawer or in I a trunk or on a shelf or hi a box becomes a member of the club. “Our rule is tjiat whenever we know 1 we’re wanted w? get down behind everything else so that we’re tbe last ! thing to be pulled out. •The other* as members, too, help ■ *the thing wanted’ to do this. “You heard Ena say “It’s always the way,, the very thing one wants is always at the bot-

! tom of the bag.’ “And you’ve I heard people say i that when looking ' In an old trunk 1 for something.” { “I Lave." agreed ! Peter Gnome. “They’d be dis- ‘ appointed if they j found the thing they wanted right ’ off instead of at I the bottom. If they found it right away they wouldn’t be able to say: " It’s always the way. the very thing one wants

Sh«\ovedto Lock and Unlock Thing*

is always at the bottom.’ So we are all members of The Thing Wanted club’ and we keep up the tradition. "If you find something right away ■ or pull something out you want the | very first thing you may know It’s not i a member of The Thing Wanted club.’ 1 “Or, if you come across something that is next' tq the ’bottom you’ll know It’s becoming a member but hasn’t been admitted into full and complete membership as yet.” Whose Eyes? This amusing game is played by means of a newspaper and a clotheshorse. Cover the horse with a large newspaper, in which must be cut several boles the shape of an eye, and torge enough for a person t 6 see through. The players who intend to represent the “Eyes of Isis’* go behind the screen and look through the hole* whilst the other players have to guess to whom the eyes belong. This being I WQfYH*wnut uiinctin, xuosi. rMßiuivu®. ForMUC “ “ I collected.

MRS. WM. BUTTS WAS VERY SICK Gives Full Credit to Lydia E* PinUharn’i Vegetable Compound, for Remarkable Recovery Wellston, O.—“ I took Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound to make me

strong.l was troubled with my back and sides hurting me till I could not do my work, and whenever I caught cold it made me irregular. Since I have taken the Vegetable Compound my side and back don’t bother me and I can do my housework and care for my children now.

I --'-—it B. 1 I 1 J I jl HHHI

where before I did not feel tike doing anything or going around. After my first child was bom about four years ago I saw an advertisement in the paper about the Vegetable Compound. I Knew it would help me, but I was afraid to try it because people said it would help J ou to have children and I knew I waa aving children fast enough. But 1 thought if it would hefp me it would be better to have a whole house full of children and have good health. I became stronger from taking it and my* husband says I look like a live woman 5 instead pf a dead one. When Spring comes I am going to take your Blood Medicine as lam very thin. »I will answer letters from any woman who wishes to ask about your medicine. Mr* William Butts, Wellston, Ohio. Beavers Increasing Past Possession of a new resource that within a short span of years may be expected to develop into a means of positive profit for land owners in various parts of South Dakota is seen by H. S. Hedrick, state game warden, on colonies which have l»een practically immune from trappers under the state law for the past six years, the St. Paul Pioneer Press says: It is impossible to make even an approximation of the number of these fur-bearing animals. Mr. Hedrick says, but it is known that they have prospered to an unexpected degree and are beginning to invade many localities where they were never before seen. For your daughter’s sake, use Red Cross Ball Blue in the She will then have that dainty, well-groomed appearance that girls admire. —Advertisement. Shortage of Food Grains ’ There is a shortage of 40l,(XM.),000 bushels of wheat and 173,000.000 bushels of rye in the world’s crop thia year, according to tiie International Institute of Agriculture in Rome. Printer’s Sick Stomach and Headaches Almost Cost Job a "Oh Mr. K. ML Collins of Woodhaven, N. ’Y., says, “Instead of plodding through my work wearily on account of sick headaches and sour stomach, I now enjoy good health and ambition, can do more and better work and life is worth living. I have never before given my name to advertise a medicine, but you cannot imagine how different I feel since I discovered Carter’s Little 1 Liver Pills.” Carter’s Little Liver Pills tome the whole system through the liver and bowels. They act as a mild and effective laxative, in a gentle manner without any bad after effects. Recommended and for sale by *ll drug store* Astronomy Ancient Science The earliest indications of the existence of the science of astronomy are found in Babylonian records that date back to 2234 B. C. Astronomy was known in China at least as early as 1100 iL C. Why buy many bottles of other vermtfuses when one bottle of Dr Peery’s “Dead Shot” will work without f*HT AdvA cord of hardwood will make 00 pounds of ashes while a ton of hard coal will make 200 to 300 pound* Praises Old F riend Alsey, Ill.—“I have taken Dr. Pierce’* medicine for over 40 years. I am 68 now and

in excellent health and I can say Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery has done me more good than any other medicine I have ever taken. I have been so ill that I could not walk across the

floor and the ‘Discovery’ is the only medicine that did me any good. I have a daughter who had the 'flu’ and the doctors gave her up; she took the ‘Golden Medical Discovery’ and is well today.”—Mrs. John Hepworth, Box 44. All dealers. Tablets or liquid. No harmful incrdient. Garfield Tea Was Your Grandmother s Remedy

For every stomach and intestinal ill. This good old-fash-ioned herb home remedy for constipation. stomach ills and other derangements of the sya

I

tem 89 prevalent these days is in eves greater favor as a family medietas than in your grandmother's dag.