The Syracuse Journal, Volume 18, Number 5, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 4 June 1925 — Page 7
New York-Yorktown Air-Line in Operation Qfi -C v l>l ' *’l -1 op : *-\. ■ . • I I ■ *■ ' ®zs=*l» 'X '□PfßWiv '■ j- I H HL. s /JI dt SHE- ' I SI j m w i ,r-|E mtb | BHfl QI ruwßr ’ .•jlu'mtES l l? i ■MMHaWI p ILI KZt “** <^^**,W^S«a*^*Sway8! ’Ml yrj aaaaaMMHMMMMMaMiiiiaiaAMMMa mmm Lil Christening of the riant twia-motored transport plane at Bowling held, inaugurating the new airplane passenger j service between New York and Yorktown. Va. Mlaa Elizabeth Owens, daughter of Clarence J. Owens, director general of the Yorktown forum. is «t ending on a chair, from which she christened the ship. Establishing Signal Post in Attack on Hawaii This, one of the first pictures of the war game In Hawaii to arrive, shows Ik a landing party from the Blue fleet establishing a signal post on the shore. Jrl ! • ■ >—•—— RF**T!3hiSL I .ww. ■ :>saaßß> . ®afcg® "■■"**■ * l , ' ■ ' ■ - . . : ■
Unveiling Zeebrugge Memorial Scene when King Albert of Belgium |**j j unveiled the Zeebrugge monument | j erected to the memory of British j heroes who carried out the dramatic yEaafO raid on the seaport when It was held by the Germans. - . 1“ E 11 J -] f s I B 11 I -M ■y • 11 I k tiOfeiltA ~ fc* . i Ifl&X / p ‘t* t I *■ J • «fwWi*SOr J IjfAtfji*' a3KsE&9 1 Smith’s Best Bunch of Girls B. ■ 4 1hf .E| lUfe (i \ I |*Jy / ‘ zw nljfvlil I M® J| a I<. A r \ i - *- •»-. B ' gK £ HKBf'w— S* l B I UP i The six moat all-around girts at Smith college, who haw been awarded *8" pine in recognition of physical and mental development and of highest sportsmanship. Left to right—Gertrude Benedict *26; Virginia Thieme. *2S; Barbara OnMUB. *26; Caroline Bedell. *25; Lavina Fyke. *25. and Mirjorie 4Wh' —- I : ;
CONDENSED IN A FEW LINES
Cultivation to as necessary to the mind as food to the body. Old-age Ptosfoea would enormously decrease the uxtettos «f persons with graying hair. Utetolu can scare off more follow* •rs froman apostle than abuse can drive away. Beet anecdote yon tell to the mm *h*E yon are earring the roast; everybody's hungry.
About the easiest thing in the world to not to become a millionaire. WMca would you rather to—-look Important to a hotel lobby or watch someone else to It? Gsmtlemanltoess to sometimes so kindly and unobtrusive as to seem like a gift toons heaven. It to not at all painful to “listen to both aides of the Question" if you to not have to declto.
SHE’S GOING CALLING \JwlW^' \M-Si ■ ■jg~’ .EES a«T l PP vhgkJw**.- ' « ■ i \9HMEBS3MmIsbV Miss Eleanor McCarthy. New Orleans society girl, at her airplane. She la piloting it to make social calls. “1 see nothing unusual In a woman driving an airplane." said Miss McCarthy, i “It is just as easy to operate as an automobile and is certainly more pleasant and seedier. While in France 1 learned to fly from Charles Nungesser, the French ace. This summer I intend to fly to several Amert- , can resorts and will later tour Europe in my machine. WRITES PRIZE ESSAY IK Robert Krumholu. seventeen, of i Springfield. Ohio, won first prise ol $750 in the national eapay contest conducted by the American Legion. Mose | than 20tWX» essays were submitted on the subject: “Why Communism In a Menace to Americanism." PatcAsnr Wall Paper When mending wall paper, never ent a regular patch, but tear off a suffldeutiy large piece and paste It ovet the place, carefully matching the pattern. This patch will show far less than IF the edges are cut square. “ n. 1 Jf otn* PmpcHW Factor Bs ™™ as | eeat C ° impulses^ 1 forward have been i
THE SYRACUSE JOURS AU
PDddtfys dEver\ii\s fairy Tale .O'ZVRY GMHAM BCWTO y. - - - - -n—•* VtUMM MIVIMO WBCII e THE PIPES “Will you have a piper “I don’t believe I will, thank yon."
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! _. _ , _. about my visits Dutchman’s Pipe* mlght „ ke the | pipes but I never see the daddies.” “We didn't mean your friends, or ■ daddies, or any others to smoke these I I pipes.” • i “Dear me. then what did you mean*’ ■ j Billie Brown asked. He bad stopped , ■ to spend a morning with a most inter- J J esting looking vine family. The vine family lived on a piazza and as alls)f i the people who lived in the house had > gone off for a picnic Billie decided it [ was a good time for him to visit the i vines. “We’re called Dutchman’s pipes, or Dutchman's pipe.” the members of the , vine family said. “We don’t know whether any one I should speak of us as one pipe or as more, though it is plain to be seen ; that there are many pipes on this vine. Lots and lots and lots of them. “We have leaves and pipes. Our pipes look like the big curved kinds that can hang down from a person’s mouth when being smoked. Ours are curved and they are brown in color— j of a shading that is like a tapestry ■ j design—very handsome I “One leaf is at the end of each I i pipe—at the end which one would I I use to put in one's mouth if we were I smoked. “All around us in this country there ' ■ are lovely woods and pine trees with fresh pale green sprouts upon them. “We are very happy here. “But when we asked you to have a pipe we thought maybe you’d like to pick some of us to take home to Fairy- i land. “We were told by Mother Nature that you were going back to Fairyland -to tell them there about your visit to us. and we thought maybe they’d like to see what we were like. “We are never smoked, though. “We couldn’t stand being smoked. • We have our name because of our shape, so never offer us to a smoker I” “I won’t,” said Billie Brownie, “and, as I told you, I never see the daddies of the children so as to talk to them, so you’re all perfectly safe that no 5 one I know will smoke you.” ~ 1 “Good.” said the members of the J vine family. . 1 “We’re so happy here.” they con ' tinned. “It’s lovely to grow on a vine, Billie Brownie. “There is something so sociable * about it. We're ail with one another. We all enjoy rambling a little but not ; too much. “We don’t care to go far away. “Life is so pleasant here. Down I below in the pasture there are two • white calves now and two brown and j white ones. They’re pretty new to the world. “Then there are the yellow iebanon trees with their great hanging yellow j bl ononis In the driveway below and ; hedge around the gar- i I den. j “That hedge came from the other I side of the water as did many as the I hedges around here. The hedge has | many a story to telL I “But sometimes the hedge is in the midst of a story when the fog rushes In from the bay nearby. You see that not far from here is the oceau. “And oh. how the fog comes hur- ! rying in. Hurrying, hurrying, hurrytag. “Then suddenly the tog will disanpeer and the great mountains of
fog will leave entuvty as though they had never been here at all. “It's lovely to watch all these excitements, and to be safe on the piaaza and to be sheltered by the pine trees, which form a lovely grove. “Ab. good, you’re taking some of our pipes! Come again. Billie
Billie | f Brownie thanked ' ■ the members of the vine family for » i all they had told him and left tor I Fairyland. JVewrr Got TAroo?Jb “Eric." said his mother, who was | smertainlng company, “you must not | talk until I get through." “But you never get throtfkh. mamlaa." protested the little fellow. More Powerfarf Than a JCin< Schoen Teacher.—Now children, our 'esson today gives us some Idea of toe power of a king and other potentates. Can any of you name a stffl greater power? Little Charles—Tro, ma'am. An ace I Is more powerful than a king. - Good Jfoson I Professor In Chemistry—And to* j morrow I shall take cynaulde. ! Students (unanimously) — Hooray! I Hoorajs? Hooray I—Boys’ Life.
SUMMER FROCKS OF VOILE; MODERN GLOVE IS ELABORATE
IF GENTLE spring were to come walking in. with a frown on her face and no daffodils, apple blossoms or lilacs in her arms, she would hear some grumbling on every hand. But if she were to arrive without a train >f sheer, dainty, colorful cotton fabrics, a riot of protest would storm about her. But she doesn’t take any such chance —always lovely voiles, orraudles. mulls and the like drift in and are usually well launched before sven the peach trees have put on their spring pink. Sometimes one of these -fabrics and sometimes another dom-
said Billie Brownie. “I don’t smoke." .“Gracious, we • didn’t mean you to smoke a pipe. We meant you just to have one ; or two or three I as you choose.” I “Well. I have ' not any friends | who smoke pipes,” said Billie' Brownie. ••Of i course many of ! the daddies of the [ children who hear i
KaßkTyl I i • If' Vx\ V ' v •%' ■ DLI J KW&nSiKftl HZzßjh ' i \b j < <IIH ill ■ • *•<»E j/ » - :a »~ taL .zx, Stylist* Take Pride in This.
Inates the styles created for midsummer’s gayeties—and worn almost anywhere. The colors in voiles, which are scheduled to be popular this season, are entrancing, in shades that prove wonderfully becoming. Many of the pinks have a mellow, yellow cast. Ureens are delicate, in light or »ale i tones; blues are stronger but soft with : powder bine, periwinkle and bluet |veU represented. Yellow is either of the canary kind or has the greenish, ritron tone add there are a number of beautiful orchid shades. These are usually livelier under artificial light, but the joyous career of the voile fr<<-k Is usually sunlit, like the butterflies. In charming adornments for cotton presses, good taste gravitates toward
jB | / / ■ l-J I Elaborate Moder* Gloves.
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simple stltchery, tucks, hemstitching, < and drawn work, in keeping with the ' character of the material, whose j eharm lies in its daintiness and color Narrow lingerie laces fit in many schemes of adornment also. Both: needlework and lace appear on tike frock pictured — narrow val lace in double frills about neck and sleeves and as an outline for the\yoke and front panel In the bodice, with outline embroidery in flower design. The ginlie la of narrow ribbon slipped through slashes, at a low waistline. Picot edging finishes the slashes and is useful In making many kinds of trimming. Whether fashion Is more Interested in our hands or our feet. Is a question this season. It is Indeed a daee competition between our shoes and our gloves as to which shall attain to greater extremes of fantastic Interpretation. No longer does a window display <ff footwear prove a magnet to
Fashion News Notes Many of the debutante® are wearing bandeaux of feathers or brilliants in the places where their shingles used to show and the popularity of the large hat is being Indicated by the Increased number of transformations used to disguise the fact that the hair has been bobbed. Lingerie Concede* to Mode Not content with designing lingerie tn every rotor of the rainbow, creators —w
draw all of passing feminine kind unto itself, at least not if a glove store happen to be next door. Silk gloves, which to catch a glimpse of is to covet, carry the cunningest of cuffs, some cut in petals, lapped one over another, lined with contrasting color and spreading about the wrist like a fhll-blown flower. Then there are cuffs perforated as effectively as the paper frill about milady’s colonial bouquet. Plaited ruffles, flare cuffs with colorful silk pipings, cuffs so heavily embroidered as to almost conceal the background, cuffs narrow.
cuffs wide, cuffs In two-tone effects—these and many more feature the short gloves of today. If you are looking for something | which eclipses every other short glove in point of the unusual, consider the same In black, beige or brown with gold kidskin inset into bright red suede to form the cuff, the embroidery on the backs repeating the gay color-' ings. Silk gloves in the neutral shades [ are the practical selection now that warm weather is upon us. The cuffs of these Indulge In delightsome color I contrasts, which impart clflc to the, entire costume. Even the longer gloves are reflecting ‘ fashion’s whimsical mood. In somu instances the new colored and white silk gloves are boasting tucks through-
[out their length, as the picture shown Others show introduction of wee plaitings. ofttlmes alternated with tucks. However, it is the short glove which has the monopoly, just now, on origi- < nality of design. | Among the wrist-length gloves ot striking design are white kid ones, with narrow hand-painted cuffs. Other glove types accorded an important place in the accessories for spring and summer, stress exquisite petit-point embroidery. These are found among the more expensive types. Indeed, so handsome are some of the new cuffs, and so worth whEe. when the glove wears out. these are renewed and stitched onto a new pair. There is a pronounced tendency to match the gloves and hosiery. JULIA BOTTOMLET. <©, ISM. W«K«n N««a*ap«r Uataa.)
of intimate apparel have turned to materials even more striking in effect than the colored voiles and crepes which they have used in other seasons. /Among the latest novelties to lingerie made of cream or black chiffon which has large flower motifs is brilliant or pastel colors. Made of Ribbed Silk Extremely smart are ensembles fashioned of heavy black ribbed silk L trimmed with natural colored fur.
the o| OkitchenM mcabinetO (©. I»3S. Western Newspaper Union.) Come, read to me some poem. Some simple and heartfelt iay, _ n That Cahall sooth* that restless Reeling And banish th* thoughts of d*#. —Longfellow. SEASONABLE DISHES A good way to teach the family to like spinach Is to serve It tn an np-
petlzing and attractive way. Spinach With Noodles. —Put a. layer of cooked spinach into a well-but-tered baking dish, cover with a layer of chopped cooked noodles, sprinkle with grated cheese arid seasonings; add' a cuftful of rich milk and bake
until thoroughly hot. Curried Lamb.—Take one and onernlf pounds of lamb from the neck, :wo large, thinly sliced onions, onemlf cupful of butter, one-half tableq»oonful 4f curry powder, one teaspoonful of vinegar, three-fourths of i tablespoouful of flour, one tablespoonful of tomato catsup and boiled Hee. Wipe the meat, cut into one and >ne-half-inch pieces, sprinkle with salt ‘ind pepper and the Melt the outter. adl the onions and meat ani cook watt the meat Is browned. Now idd the curry and enough boiling water to cook. Heat slowly to the boiling point, add the vinegar and catsup and simmer until the meat Is. tender. Thieken with flour, season with salt and pepper and serve in a border of rice. Prune and Cheese Salad. — Stew • large prunes until soft, remove the stones and fill with well-seasoned cream cheese, dip into highly seasoned French dressing, roll tn chopped pecan meats and serve with a ripe olive sliced. Use the center slices for garnishing. Arrange on lettuce hearts and pipe, roses of mayonnaise on the salad. Date and Ginger Sandwiches.—Chop >ne-half cupful of dates and the same imount ui canton ginger, add a bit of lemon juice and some of the sirup from the ginger jar. simmer all together at a low heat until well-soft-med. Spread when cold on ’'uttered jread. «* Chicken Sandwiches. —• Chop the .vhlte meat of one chicken very fine, then pound to a paste. Add salt, pepper and cayenne to taste. Cover one tablespoonful of gelatin with a tablespoonful of cold water, let stand half »n hour then add six tablespoonfuis [of cream. Stir over the heat until the gelatin is dissolved, now beat this * Into the chicken and let it stand until ; ?old. Cut into squares and -let harden. Sene cut into thin slices, on guttered bread, covering with another slice of buttered bread. Good Things to Eat. ; There is such a wealth of good vege- ■ aides, and fruits during the summer
that we need not suffer for variety. Soup of Green Peas. — Shell enough green peas to make a quart; add six cupfuls of water
and a sprig ot mint; cook until the peas are done, then add salt to season. Press through a colander, add two tablespoonfuls of sugar, one tablespoonful of arrow root or cornstarch, and a little white pepper. Add to the liquor in which the peas were boiled, stir and cook until well done. Have ready a teaspoonful of meat extract dissolved in a little water and stir into the soup when serving. Chicken or veal stock i.iay be used instead of clear water in which to cook the peas, making a more delicately flavored soup. French Turnips.—Pare, cut Into dice and cook until tender, one pint of white turnips. Have ready the following sauce: To four tablespoonfuls of flour, add one teaspoonful of salt, onefourth teaspoonful of pepper, ami four tablespoonfuls-of butter; add one pint of milk. and stir the whole until It bolls. Remove from the tire and add two well beaten eggs; stir until the eggs are set. add one-fdbrth of a cupful of scraped onion or very flnelyminced; reheat. Remove from the heat, I add the Julee of a -large lemon. Stir rapidly and pour over the turnips in a hot vegetable dish. Sprinkle with i finely minced tablespoonful of parsley and serve. Strawberry Venus. —Mak-* n rich '»!*•- •uit dough, using two cupfuls of fiour. four teaspoonfuls of baking powder, two tablespoonfuls of shortening, onehalf teusi»oonful of salt, and milk to make a mixture to roll. Serve with a sauce prepared by mixing two cupfuls 3f powdered sugar with three-fburtbs of a cupful of butter and when well blended add a quart of crushed strawberries. Set in the ice chest to chill and serve with the hot dumplings. One need not go to any expense for sandwich filling for leftovers of ham. salmon, and various vegetables mixed with mayonnaise will make a variety. Deviled Sandwiches. — Chop onefourth pound of cold boiled tongue very fine, add to it two tablespoonfuis of olive oil. a dash of red pepi»er. a teaspoonful of Worcestershire, and a little salt and pepper. Mix with the above Ingredients the yolks of three hard-cooked eggs which have been put through a sieve. Serve as filling with watercress. '}Vu4 WUi Strike at Once A rattlesnake la not obliged to coll before striking, as Is generally believed- It can strike from any position. Ordinarily the onake will coil first, unless It is attacked suddenly., ar taken at a diiadvantag .« AncieMt Easfwr Costom , The custom of dyeing eggs at Easter can be traced back to very early times. Red was frequently employed, symbolising the Wood of Christ Primitive persons used the Jui.vs of plants dj-e .h-
