The Syracuse Journal, Volume 18, Number 10, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 9 July 1925 — Page 2
• "' * —' ' ' " Classified List of Goshen Firms Who Offer You Special Inducements
AUTOMOBILES Goshen Auto Exchange Easy Terms on Used Cars. Tires and Accessories for Less. ’■a 2 i 7 w . LINCOLN AVENUE SEE JAKE AND SAFE AUTO PAINTING QUALITY PAINTING is Our Motto All Paints and Varnishes hand fiowen. which assures you full measure for your money. SMITH BROS. CO. GOSHEN ®T® S. Fifth Street Phone 374 AUTO TOPS Rex Winter Inclosures, Auto Tops, Slip Covers, Body Upholstering, Truck Tops, Seat Cushions, Tire Covers, Radiator Covers, Hood Covers. Goshen Auto Top and Trimming Co. u - ---y— ■ ' — BATTERY SERVICE. Agency for Permsllfe, Batteries Phone 934 O-K Battery Service B. C. Dougherty, Prop. BATTERIES OF ALL MAKES REPAIRED AND RECHARGED All Work Guaranteed. 11® W. Lincoln BEAUTY PARLORS ALLIECE SHOPPE Phone 933 for , Appointment* Spohn Building Goshen Bicycles and Motorcycles JVE WANT YOUR PATRONAGE Our prices and the quality of our workmanship Justify you in coming to us for your Bicycles and Bicycle Repair work. Buy a Harley - Davidson Motorcycle. C. C. AMSLER tl2 N. MAIN BT. GOBHEN 1 * » CLOTHING SHOUP & KOHLER The Clothiers and Tailors 108 N. MAIN ST. Drugless Physician Massage and Electrical Treatments. Electric Blanket Sweat Baths, Heavy Sweat—without heat—l hour complete bath. Minnie L. Priepke Suite M HawkwGortner Bldg. PHONE 168 GOBHKN, IND. DENTIST DR. H. B. BURR Dentist „ , r „
.4 Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat DRS. EBY & EBY H. W. Eby. M. D. Ida L. Eby, M. D Surgery aad diseases of Eye. Ear, Nose and Throat z * Glasses Fitted GOSHEN, ' INDIANA ! '-LL?- ~ ... * , * o ■______l FURNITURE I Williamson & Snook FURNITURE, RUGS and STOVES - We Furnish the Home for Less Money. GOSHEN, IND. LEATHER GOODS THE LEATHER GOODS STORE HARNESS AND ROBES Trunks. Traveling Bags, Ladies* Hand Bags and Small Leather Goods Phone 8® 1 115 East Lincoln Avenue. Goshen, Ind. i ' ■ _ „ _ _ — ■ PHOTOGRAPHS ■ '' * ■ I Somebody, Somewhere Wants Your Photograph The SCHNABEL Studio Over Baker's Drug Store Phone 31® Goshen, Ind. PIANOS ROGERS & WILSON y”~Tx Headquarters ✓'“''X j*s***j • », j Victrolaa Victor Records, Pianos and Player Pianba. ESTABLISHED 1871 SHOES *KKSeS VMS FOOT WCM.NOBLE’S Good Shoes — Hosiery Too 131 8. MAIN BT. GOBHEN TYPEWRITERS Adding Machines Office Supplies Check Writers HARRISON’S TYPEWRITER SHOP All Makes of Machines SOLD, REPAIRED OR EXCHANGED Room 38 Hawks-Gortner Bldg. Phone IM Goshen, Indiana , T - ■■ ——— I UNDERTAKERS E. CULP & SONS Funeral Directors Unexcelled . Ambulance Service Res. Phone Office Phone M S 3 WALL PAPER, PAINTS Paint Your House with Our Guaranteed Colored LEAD PAINT. I
Hand-Painting to o Decorate Apparel
Fancy hand-painted frocks! More than that, hats, parasola, shoes, hosiery and lingerie ornamented by paiette and brush. It is not long since hand-painting of any sort, even china, was taboo. Onb saw it In drew aa an extreme eccentricity only. But, writes a Paris fashion correspondent In the New York Times, under the demand for novelty. Paris fashion authorities have given their Indorsement to hand-painting, done, to be sure, by the best artists and adapted to the latest modes. The very thought suggests the artificial and extravagant However, the evanescent fashions of past seasons, the metal fabrics, the tarnishable laces, leather trimmings and furtrimmed gauze lingerie have more or less prepared an otherwise sane fashion public for the wild fancies of the hour. It Is not that hand-painted garments are any more perishable than many others of the latest style, but there Is the appearance of Imitation, and of things that have no lasting quality, which everything of real value must have. But by the most up-to-date Ideas, painting, gilding, lacquering on clothes, has been made practical and effective. This, after all. Is the answer. Two examples have Influenced designs of hand-painted costumes as i they are presented by the foremost ’ French creators and by the best American copyists. ’ One Is the unadulterated cubist mode shown by Worth, who because of the conservative stand hitherto maintained by that : bouse is the more influential In estab- ; fishing a mode of radical departure. [ The Worth models In this latest mode are extremes in treatment a daring cubist drawing being made to carry out the pattern, regardless of the figure underneath the frock. With consummate skill and a true measure of values, the two are harmonized, however. Such an ensemble is successfully done in kasha. In tones of brown and beige, with lacquer red. Uther designers who join tn this daring handling of a fabric usually regarded as one for practical use are Jeanne Lanvin and Suzanne Talbot. The latter carries her conviction into the field of sports, adding geometric painting, pointed with small shapes of metal to the bands that trim a swagger outing suit. Renee also draws upon this modernistic phase of art In building her most striking models. | one being a frock of crepe de chine , painted in a bold diagonal plaid with green, gray and black, on white. With this the smallest details, bands, belt and buttons, are tinted to harmonize. In this type of dress, trimmings and accessories are definite in character and moat Important, and some novel and Chic things In buckles, belts and ornaments have been designed by O'Rossen, Paquin and Chanel. Cheruit Among the First First among the Paris designers to carry this ultra-modern style of costume decoration Into a wider field is Cheruit, who daringly paints afternoon or evening gowns and wraps of any material from cloth to gauze in whatever manner suits the Moment's fancy. Soft clouds of showy gauze are patterned over with paint In ways | that seem almost a desecration, in daring cubist figures tinted with grays and emphasized with lines of , black and red. Another of these exotics from the I same atelier Is an enchanting 2rock of ' silver gauze painted in black and white with high lights of flame color. Cheruit Ir particularly fond of the painted scarf and Is using with striking effect sweeping lengths of gauxo ! or chiffon gayly painted Ln cubes and squares and diagonals and gi4hg distinction to evening gowns of satin
$ Hand-Painted Millinery in Vogue
Hand-painting in millinery Is being done with success and there is a positive craze for it, especially among the younger women. A late model from a fashionable milliner in Paris is of fine beige straw. In a rather generous cioche. Around, the crown Is painted tn warm red and brown tones a wreath of large chrysanthemums with leaves of soft greens and bronze. Petals and leaf tips are touched with gilt and a line of gilt follows the outer brim. A large hat of periwinkle blue Oeapolltan braid Is painted with white water lilies, and their “pads** are done tn slightly softened shades of green. A merry little bonnet of flossy diagonal braid is decorated with a targe cluster of field flowers, poppies, bluets, daisies and buttercups tn their natural colors. The very spirit of a summer's day Is pictured in a wide-brim bat of “dead-white” horse-hair braid painted in water lilies, with the faint shadows of gray and yellow in the petal* At the back Is added a bow and long ends lof sea-green satin ribbon. This rib-
| Cross-Stitch Coat Is One of New Creations [
A recent creation is a croaa-atitch embroidered material, whose ground consists of canvas sad is extremely wide. The canvas is covered with beautiful patterns and is worked no solidly that it looks like gros points, although it is not too heavy for wording into coats. It is produced by the yard tn long pieces of eight yards each. The pattern can be varied to ten or more color combinations. and It is interesting to watch bow. with the different colors, the patterns change their character. Another novelty is s canvas embroidered in an old Norwegian stitch, > which looks very decorative. A waistcoat In this technique is very smart tn mustard wool, re-embroldered with tittle differently-colored boutonniere flower*, in which mauve Is the chief tint. A fringe of mauve leather thread edges the bottom and pockets. Such fringes of leather thread am an innovation, ateo a
TUI? A(WR JOTTRNAL
elaborately beaded or embroidered, in a spectacular costume of this sort Cheruit adds to a white satin gown, weighted with sparkling crystal, a long silvery scarf painted In bold geometric pattern of gray and lacquer red. Lanvin has a style all her own in creating these picture costumes. Boms of her most successful gowns are ' made of the soft crepes on which are painted fanciful dainty decorations. These ere modern to a degree. ba| less severe than those of the cubist mode; altogether engaging. Lanvin Is one among the Parisian artists that works wonders with the scarf, bat and other accessories that / I I 1/ n Wr Jr I ukn A VX LiA K //Ar Spray of Flowers Painted on Dainty Crepe de Chine Dress. go into the making of the last word in a painted ensemble. In her afternoon frocks she usually makes the hat of the same material, carrying tbs painted motif throughout Though hand-painting la an acquired taste It is now emphatically in vogue, and some of the most elegant gowns to which the foremost artists of Paris are devoting their interest are either painted in an entire design or elaborated here and there with painted motif. Lanvin Introduces large clusters of conventionalized ; flowers, or separate figures painted in showily contrasting colors on fabrics of many kinds. This couturiere paints sports frocks, morning, afternoon and evening dresses with equal enthusiasm, and is using this season the most beautiful soft materials In soft shades. A striking novelty Is the tinting of silk flowers, or conventional figures, appllqued on a gown. One particularly smart model from Paris is a dinner dress built of black satin with no trimming other than a I spray of large pink crepe roses sewed to the bodice, the petals and leaves painted in deeper tones. An adorable dancing frock designed for a debutante is made of seagreen taffeta. Around the bottom and up each side of the dlrectolre front Is painted a border of blue bells and at Intervals are introduced shirred medallion- of petunia chiffon and ' cream-color valenciennes lace—a tri-, umph of art, distinctly French.
boa treatment is seen on many of the hats among advance styles from the . French milliners. Conventional, geometric and cubist patterns are shown on some of the latest models in silk. < ?pe and straw hats from representative houses—such as Beboux, Guy, Agnes. Some of the small fabric hats are painted, too, beads, floss or gilt thread outlining the details of the pattern. A cioche of . bright green I straw is painted tn an all-over arrangement of small flowers, over which is drawn tightly an open-mesh white silk veiling net This Is an orlg- . Inal and very stylish treatment I Galore of Season Brown *n all its shades Is exceedingly smart, especially the tones of golden brown and blond. Capes and coats are trimmed with feathers la I the same shade. One coat has a bora der of coque feathers, another of os-1 trich. while wide bands of marabou trim a cape made of two layers of I brown chiffon. I
mlngs of last winter. Leather fur is I used on many garments. In one of several colors. It Is also produced by the yard and is sometimes mixed with wooL American Made Silks There are a number of American silk manufacturers whose printed crepes, satins and chiffons fully equal in quality and beauty any brought here from abroad. The printed designs are both elaborate and colorfui and of sufficient sUe to give only oc- ' csaionai glimpses of the background. Many of the fabrics are printed with a border, making them wonderfully easy to One ft home-dress fftnstmo tian. Black Still Used Though ft is a colorful season, black plays an important rota. Many black ammo panels »»«* ’ rith
OUR COMIC SECTION 111 - Along the Concrete ”ii : j&jOTW ■6OOPNESS • aheap of 1 Ma MASKS WHEH S That car fe\UE'll. All .--X jMMfc' : OU PVR HER. jWTCKZE, THE PRINTER'S DEVIL Neither "Prophet Nor "Profit 93 R WHO M/AS 7 < IMI . B£Y MOU DOLTT EUEkA UiAOUi YVAE FOURTH PR£SlOeuV) MOR-QSQ l wwo SovEßtuoa is, MOR. jijSSI T I WVAEIA > TVXE kIEXT ECLIPSE OF WIWtH * y ? w GUU mou poirr Kuow r Z \ Y MUCH, OO NOU*> • KIO, A WELA, WMAODA XA | VOSS . YVAIViK I J 1 AKOUMP HER.E \ TOb; OiF a7/i \ wC WHATS THE USE The Wrong Door XSU FFLLAS DUCK-N jy ADDISON ;*fOU ■ ■ AaT ■ |l|u J HERE cdme Some / I GET IN IRE J* Ir lELIX GETS . Fj h To CALL / \ CLOSET THERE / free L ! ;ii hjwtr on ,IhE X>> *~7T‘ ’ MM.ET SERVICE , | Jw in ws hotel , sq IL kLIKE. A n»wm HOSPITABLE HOST, HE ALWAYS -a SENDS MIS ’** * FRIENDS' PANTS | \ Down To GET \ 1(1 CyX IB; ll them pressed JUUJ I ■' I ■ IA ' r --- 3/' u p whenever lwt-| _ _ An A. They $• 14660 r> fe=a=as ==» -■ r ! { SHUT UP, for k g I /y M Y rn MO CLOSET -) ) The LOVE OF MtkE, I I IM OUT IN VTA ‘ ? ) ( AND SIAY IN -MTJ I THE PUBLIC ) cu«T/ r' ft r ■» biU.'/z/Lal W • tM.II — y 2? ex r —
THOfflß ABT- mW > FUL GZHL& > T PrJ 4 Dteat Jack Msa you by but- If KftKssgau gaiswtast night? \ J <ft. w>! He \ r wwy f only thinks ha f/ Mr ) Ait Idea is anmerhtng, at least, that
e AMONG THOSE PRESENT. Sunday School Teacher — Why was Daniel forcea to enter the lions’ . den? Bright Pupil— Why. he’d spoilt a whole film If he didn't! In a vote of confidence them am
I -ALMOST HAD HIM. » WB 1 almost P^lr 7 brought George rT\ fW I to ‘h* point of I S? J S/i—A Proposes 1a a * /s2j night . Aift To ® md - H » SrF ewne rt » ht •w gr Bl t 0 oy house and •ft ***'*'“' proposed to ma — The dollar you pay back looks twice as large as the ona you borrowed.
