The Syracuse Journal, Volume 18, Number 11, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 16 July 1925 — Page 2

Classified List of ® * Goshen Firms Who Offer You Special Inducements

AUTOMOBILES Goshen Auto Exchange Easy Terms on 6. « Used Cars. Tires and Accessories for Less. • 217 W. LINCOLN AVENUE SEE JAKE AND SAFE t AUTO PAINTING QUALITY PAINTING is Our Motto All Paints and Varnishes hand flowen, which assures you full measure for your money. SMITH BROS. CO. GOSHEN 816 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. . g'WWlg?''--..!! 1 . ... il !-! "I 1 " I .' IW BATTERY SERVICE Agency for Permallfe flatteries Phone 934 O-K Battery Service B. C. Dougherty, Prop. BATTERIES OF ALL MAKES REPAIRED AND All Work Guaranteed. 118 W. Lincoln BEAUTY PARLORS.■ ALLIECE SHpPPE Phone 933 for Appointment* Spohn Building Goshen Bicycles and Motorcycles JVE WANT YOUR PATRONAGE Our prices and the quality of our workmanahip Justify you < in coming to qs for your BP cycles and Bicycle Repair work. Buy a Harley - Davidson Motorcycle. C. C. AMSLER tit N. MAIN BT. GOBHEN 4 t * 4 CLOTHING SHOUP & KOHLER The Clothiers and Tailors 108 N. MAIN BT. Drugless Physician Massage and Electrical Treatments,] Electric Blanket Sweat Baths, Heavy Sweat—without heat—l hour complete bath. MinnieL. Priepke Suite 38 HewkaGortner Bldg. RHONE 188 GOSHEN, IND. (Elevator Service) DENTIST DR. H. B. BURR Dentist Den tal X-Ray •VCR ADAM*t GOSHIN]

Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat DBS. EBY & EBY H. W. Eby. M. D. Ida L. Eby, M. D Surgery and diseases of Eye. Ear, Nose and Throat z Glasses Fitted GOSHEN, f INDIANA I FURNITURE Williamson & Snook FURNITURE, RUGS and STOVES JJ r e 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 88 115 East Lincoln Avenue, Goshen, Ind. PHOTOGRAPHS Somebody, Somewhere Wants Your Photograph The SCHNABEL Studio Over Baker's Drug Store Phone 318 Goshen, Ind. pianos ROGERS & WILSON Headquarters /’"""""'X for Victrolas Victor Records, Pianos and Player Pianoa. ESTABLISHED 1871 SHOES / TMI FOOT NOBLE’S Good Shoes — Hosiery Too 131 S. MAIN ST. GOSHEN TYPEWRITERS Adding Machines Office Supplies Check Writers HARRISON’S TYPEWRITER SHOP All Makes of Machines SOLO, REPAIRED OR EXCHANGED Room 38 Hawka-Gortner Bldg. Phone 188 Goshen. Indiana UNDERTAKERS E. CULP & SONS Funeral Directors Unexcelled Ambulance Sen ice Rea. Phone Office Phene 54 . 53 WALL PAPER, PAINTS Paint Your House with Our Guaranteed Colored LEAD PAINT. when mixedreacty to utt, I I « » 11 1

Week-End Outfit in One Suitcase

The conquering heroine of the presports era was an earnest believer tn the strength of numbers end her weekend sallies Into strange countries were never ventured without the accompaniment of a wardrobe that was an extensive as It was pretentious. Those were the days, writes a fashion correspondent in the New York HeraldTribune. when quantity was the measure of smartness and when no occasion was too trivial to demand ■ change of costume. Starting with the morning frock, a summer* day which did not witness at least four distinct costumes was counted among the lost, and the enterprising demoiselle who could improve upon that.number was at once the envy of her sisters and the glowing light of social 'gatherings. Manifestly, it was impossible to pack the necessary wardrobe within the limited confines of a single suitcase, and the pleasure-bent week-ender was compelled to travel, laden heavily with luggage or else run the risk of being occasionally out of the picture/ Those unscientific times are past, due partly to the comparative unconventionality of the summer mode, partly to a more enlightened attitude on the part of the gentle traveler, and partly to the general vogue of sportswear. Fashion no longer contents Itself with seasonal changes—lt Is* continually undergoing minute evolutions and the bailmark of haute chic demands small monthly wardrobe changes instead of the voluminous semi-annual acquisitions that characterised the past. The modern Parisienne does not burden herself with many clothes at a time—her annual number of frocks is. perhaps, greater than ever before, but they are added at diverse periods as the occasion demands, and as they are added, other costumes are either discarded or revamped to coincide with the smartest and latest dicta of the mode. Wardrobe Should Fit Suitcase. “The result Is a wardrobe whlchTs always chic and never cumbersome and which is comfortably sufficient unto the three days of the sportive week-ender. Indeed, the greatest boon to the modern week-end habit has been the general simplification of fashion. You simply cannot pack frills and furbelows Into a suitcase. If you appear with a wardrobe trunk or a plurality of suitcases your hostess Immediately becomes apprehensive and you can hardly blame her. Obviously, then, the Ideal week-end wardrobe must be modified to suit a single suitcase and the present status of the mode makes that task no longer a problem. Apparently the dressmakers were thinking of the feminine week-ender when they evolved those delectable Jumper suits that are the prop of every smart woman’s existence nowadays. Whether it Is made of kasha, crepe de chine or foulard, the Jumper frock is the easiest garment to fold that has appeared on the modern bortson of the mode. Even Its plaits can be coaxed to He flat, and It la an excellent plan to pin them into place if the material of the dress is not too flimsy, always taking care to choose floe steel dressmaking pins and not the clumsy white wire variety. For Golf, Tennis and Bridge. The nature of the jumper frock will vary according to the type of place In which you are going to spend your week-end. If you expect to stay In an atmosphere of niblicks and mashles, naturally there should be a corresponding atmosphere of woolen and flue Jersey cloth about the garments you take with you. If tennis is included in the program, a few one-piece white crepe de chine frocks will answer the requlremeota. These crease lees readily

Easily Packed Incidentals

It te advisable to reduce ahoee and other acceesories to a minimum when yon are paying a week-end visit. Keep a email extra bag for your ahoee, and you can also use It for last minute remembrances. for even the most methodical of ua Invariably leave out something of which we think frantically when straps are fastened and keys put Into the handbag. Offen enough It is just the pair of shoes that goes with the particular frock around which the Week end wardrobe I* constructed. Fashion has been liberal In late years by sanctioning gold, silver or blond satin shoes to be worn with every kind of evening gown. Now the mode Is changing and the slipper should match the frock. This I* n additional com* plication, but It te essential in a aorrounding which places a premium on smart clothes. In less formal places you may cbooee a pair of blond satin shoes and wear them with your bridge frock as well as tn the evening. Above all other things, remember that costumes worn in Rome should always be Roman. The habit st swim-

Use Care in Selection of Your Accessories

No chain Is stronger than its weakest link and if you want to Join the ranks of the sartorial impeccable* you must be as meticulously careful about the selection of gloves, bag and other accessories as you are about the costume Itself, says a correspondent in the New York Herald-Tribune. Gloves require particular attention this season and advice on the subject can best be given by a series of donts. The reason Is that here again the strictest simplicity Is the prime essential of good taste. The lace gauntlets and colored stitchings of other seasons are as forgotten as If they had never been. Plain suede gioves cut in a simple sac form, with Inconspicuous self-colored embroidered riba on the back of the hand, sometimes an elastic band inside the wrist but more often none, are en regie and evidence the still modish process of elimination. The suede should be of the finest and most delicate quality and the colors vary from palest flesh and bote de rose to deep orange tans and plain

THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL

than cotton and they shake out Into charming folds as soon ss they are hung up in a roomy cupboard. After games the moot usual occnpa- | tlon is bridge, and for this you will require a change. But let it be a change into a frock that, but for Its color and material, might almost bo worn for tennis or golf itselt The smartest clothes of the present season all have that sports allure. Even your , dinner dress should have such a alm- . pie cut that If you put it on in the daytime nothing could be easier than an Impromptu game, quite possible tn its straightline simplicity. A charming Idea for the bridge frock is the new jabot Idea. It la an excellent suggestion, for there should > be something reminiscent of the jabot rJlir r \ Hr i 1 f.I 4 * 1 W Ibk ■ bH. # BHB w;' MF** V /^WBF.,; Ensemble of Floral Print. Suitable for Week-End Wear. In your week-end case—it Is so typical of the present season’s tendencies. It can be carried out in georgette crepe or chiffon and there is no need to adhere severely to plain material The wild riots of flowers that are scattered over a beige or black ground are a charming feature of summer chiffons. They have this additional advantage—if your rubber is prolonged until the dinner gong sounds, you may appear dressed, fresh, ready for dinner and even the dance following without looking very much as if you had kept on your afternoon frock, for with chiffon It Is difficult to say where the afternoon ends and the evening begins. When you Intend to include a really formal evening affair during your week-end visit, put in a straightfringed frock. Yon might include a little shawl to throw over the shoulders —It Is a real boon on those delightful summer nights when one feels tempted to stroll in the garden between dances Parts Insists on some dainty accessory on these occasions—not from a practical point of view, but because It adds a balancing feminine triviality to the slender Unas of the July evening frock*.

ming upstream ha* no place ta modern fashion* and It 1* particularly inappropriate tn the short-visiting | week-ender. If you are going to visit at some mountain resort which prides ; itself on a certain lack of convention, leave that Patou robe du solr at home and forget that very Parisian chapeau by Lewis. And conversely. If your journey's end be at some watering place where fashion is the alpha and | omega, don’t attempt to convert the frivolous populace by wearing clothes | that are plain and commonplace. The i mode ba* place* for Its missionaries, but the week-end habitat is not one st them. : Organdie Trims Black Satin One of the-mom attractive dresses seen this season Is made of black : satin-flnished crepe. A fold of white < organdie headed with a band of blue ; ribbon and a narrow edge of braid finishes the button of the skirt and organdie is used for the lower part of the full gathered sleeve*.

brale. The only essential Is that the glove should be so simple as to bo almost imperceptible. Even buttons are out of date. The modern glove pulls on; sometimes It has an elastic under the wrist In front, but most often it is quite plain, with the gauntlet straight and tucked under the cuff of the coat, or perhaps rolled over the end of a long tight-fitting sleeve when worn with a dress. For sports wear a coarser suede or kid. or even antelope, Is chosen and sometimes hand stitching in black or brown outlines the seams that have the edges visible; but the sac shape Is preserved even in this type of glove and once it has been adopted women find it difficult to accustom themselves to any other because of its convenience. Long Lace Sleeves Long lace sleeves are used <mb afternoon and evening gowns. and they are fitted very carefully and closely. *

OUR COMIC SECTION ■ I ■ I- 11l 111 Owr Pef Peere L. ! (OiwiW.ir.M.u.) I I s ■ ... ■■ —— — WHAT’S THE USE Making an Impression - J z’ TeS, WE LIKE IF -WE GET FREE VALET IM ATTHEW SPEYER MEMT 'f oo r 1 “ 1 6 ET ALL MY SUITS PRESSED AND A I—rl ' I GOT HERE, / IT DoESNY COST ME A CENT -GO AHEAD, I DETECTIVE \MR. FEATmERHEAdLI TAKE YoyRS OFF AN Z ILL GET 'EM vjhom felix Thinks for w j j IS GOING TO PUT A million ' IN HtS INVENTION, •=— HAS BROT A COUPLE OF FRIENDS : *> UP 1b MEET FELIX * ~ feathermead. HNi > Felix doesnt 'V-n KNOW ( \ Zl I / / ' n THAT MR. SPEYER \ t U / I ft THE HOTEL \ H J DETECTIVE. A f SAY , WMAT's The IDEA OF X NO, NO, FANNY, V Wl / j WANr \ inviting Those spongers ) that ain't J n / VALET TQ TmiMK UP MERE AND HAVING / ITI f GOT nS? / k Their clothes V Tham ONE SUIT J . ■ ——, FREE f c - | pilli! f ( I ■ fiR, ,0 / i /I i Sr Sfi? n y «jf r ffll T •»— H Effi _ lLax?uk MICKIE, THE PRINTER'S DEVIL Pardon Us a Moment —V? flCltelNOU VIWhUNA AO FOR. TU'ffcPER,, M Vi IEVV AM< WMA-r HOU ' OFFOUU&! A GAIXSAAAM MEVER* EeouoMixs? cm woros whgu Jj hastm m eßJrtiewuG w t-- .. ill houe paper. » vc paux reasoxaaoi« xb EXP&ST A AAE-YRcroUrAW PAPER. KI A SMAUz eOAAAAUUVCM \ TJECAUSE HE ASKS vets’ OF QjJETnOMFy jg' \) OObir ®AWU OUR. R£PORXER."moSEM”w MEJT QCK ID IWJE AM, THE OETAILS j - ° *«> MAMS 'THE paper. skereStimg \ s j / L tss en> 1 ' C ~ l wWk \F MCOpCKK CARE FOR. (2ERCMU fA FEATURE* OF XUE PAPER, <UEKAEW3ER. P** 'THAT OIHERS 0O» O* '<«' F»«VR£f BE PRBWEO - c Western Newspaper Union ■ " 11 " |yT"?j jMi-fll NEARER HOME | C*® WASTED. / 7 A KOT FOK HIM. , . “Feller Citi- TMlFifcW sens! I don't Bhe: No * Re|r ‘ tW My new je care who gita free ina Id, yo u ate a dream. tolls, free trade needn’t strain k W « may be a or nothin.' Wot I yenself wit* po- l^jjyUYy 1 dream for you, wants ta free liteness, I aln t but ,t B insomnia ice an* so- » ot < * n4y to forma. < u « r b *«- - Cupid introduces more house MH* Beauty wouldn’tbe even skin dNP Imagine wa UM