The Syracuse Journal, Volume 18, Number 20, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 17 September 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. < ■ ■-,i .. 217 W, LINCOLN AVENUE SEE JAKE AND SAFE auto painting QUALITY PAINTING is Our Motto All Paints and Varnishes hand ~ which assures you full measure for your money. SMITH BROS. CO. GOSHEN 816 & 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. t* . BEAUTY PAIiLORS ALLIECE SHOPPE Phone 953 for Appointments $ Spohn Building Goshen Bicycles and Motorcycles WE WANT YOUR PATRONAGE Our prices and the quality of our workmanship justify you In coming to us for your Bicycles and Bicycle Repair work. •uy a Harley - Davidson Motorcycle. C. C. AMSLER 212 ty. MAIN ST. GOSHEN 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. Minnie L. Priepke Suite 38 Hawfcs-Gortner Bldg. PHONE 108 GOSHEN, IND. (Elevator Service) DENTIST —... a ■ _. DR. H. B. BURR Dentist General Practice Dental X-Ray ■
Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat DBS. EBY & EBY H. W. Eby, M. D. Ida L. Eby, M. D Surgery and diseases of Bye. Ear. Nose and Throat ' Glasses Fitted GOSHEN. INDIANA I FURNITURE Williamson & Snook i ■ i FURNITURE, RUGS and STOVEB JFe 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 Goode Phone 86 . 115 East Lincoln Avenue. Goshen, Ind PHOTOGRAPHS Somebody, Somewhere Wants Your Photograph The SCHNABEL Studio Over Baker's Drug Store , • i Phone 316 Goshen, Ind PIANOS ROGERS & WILSON „ Headquarters for I Victrolas | Victor Records, Pianos and Player Pianos. ESTABLISHED 1871 SHOES ‘stirs THE FOOT WllXNOBLE’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 SOLD, REPAIRED OR EXCHANGED Room 38 Hawks-Gortner Bldg. Phone 166 Goshen, Indiana ■— ■ • " UNDERTAKERS | E. CULP & SONS I Funeral Directors Unexcelled Ambulance Service Res. Phone Office Phone 84 53 WALL PAPER, PAINTS Paint Your House with Our Guaranteed Colored LEAD PAINT. Coats bat 3230 a Gallon whoa mtxod rreGy ts sml F. N. Hascall Company
Penalty the American Nation Pays for Pursuing Its “Speed-Mad” Way By DR. HARRY E. MOCK. Gorgas Memorial Institute.
KE out of every two hundred persons living in the United Stat« | will be permanently disabled by industrial accidents this year— I ' a total of more than a half million. Nearly another million | other men and women will sustain disabling accidents which i
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will necessitate absence from work four weeks or more. Disease and acci j dents of everyday life add another million of handicapped individuals This is the penalty the nation pays for pursuing its “speed-mad’* way. j Each year for the last fifty, the industrial demands of this nation hav« i resulted in a far greater number of disabled men than the total list oi casualties from the World war. These facts prove beyond doubt that we are a wasteful nation and have done little toward conserving our man power. The nation is on th< eve of a great change. Before long a certain handicap, such as heart disease. the loss of an arm or leg, will not bar a man from a job. It is estimated that 90 per cent of the men and women injured in industry can be returned to useful employment by a careful selection of their occupations Inadequate convalescent care is the shame of industrial centers today. No provision has been made in our scheme of things for proper convalescent care after hospital treatment is completed. Intimately tied up with the provision for convalescents is vocational training when necessary, Foi it happens in many instances that a man or woman is permanently incapacitated to earn a living in the accustomed way, and they need new training to qualify them for work which they are physically fitted to do. This thought has caused the medical profession to link hands with the educatoi and with the personnel managers of industry to the end that all handicapped individuals toay once more become productive units of society. Why Are Not Young People as Good as They i Used to Be? They Never Were By DR. W. E J. GRATZ. Editor Epworth Herald. Finding fault with young people is one of the inexcusable sins of today. The only answer to the question, “Why are young people not sc good as they used to be?” is, “They never were.” Much of the criticism of the young people is ridiculous and unfair. It must be remembered that they are not responsible for the world into which they have been catapulted. Their elders have written and published books that are unfit to be read, and blame the young people for reading. The generation in power is responsible for the questionable amusements, the bad pictures and the low grade of entertainment that is injuring the youth of today. . v The unspanked generation is not to be blamed, but the generation that failed to do the spanking. The question, “What ails our youth?” might well be countered with another, “What ails our parents?” Find the answer to the latter and you will be arte to answer the first. Not the flappers of fourteen, fifteen and sixteen, but the flappers of forty-one, fifty-one and sixty-one are at fault. For every student whose name gets into the papers because of scandal in college, I’ll find 10 to 100 students who are making the most of their opportunities. w — Three Classes of Men From Whom/Uncle Sam Gets Tips on Smugglers) By WALTER DAVENPORT, in Liberty. About 80 per cent of the information against smugglers comes to the government from persons not in its employ. A quite negligible fraction of the informants are, I regret to say, actuated by patriotic reasons. Almost all of them ask financial reward with the same breath or the same pen stroke which carries the information. The Treasury department is empowered to pay the tipster 25 per cent of the amount recovered byway of fines, duties and receipts from the sale of the goods confiscated. The reward 'may not legally exceed $50,000, but at the discretion of the Treasury department it may be more than 25 per cent of the salvage. Generally speaking, there are three classes of persons from whom the government gets tips on smugglers. There are those who, self-appointed, ? i are smuggler sleuths in the interests of their own pockets. Some of them are commission men, traveling back and forth across the Atlantic. Some are free lances of commerce, with no definite affiliations, but merely looking for something which they can acquire cheaply and dispose of to an • American house at a huge profit. These men are always on the alert. “There Are No Definite Plans Yet, but There Must Be Another Attempt” By LINCOLN ELLSWORTH. Amundsen North Pole Flight. I don’t think an airplane will ever be practical for real investigation rs the polar lands, because of the difficulty of landing. A superplaue might be developed or an airship. But a good survey from the air could be made. A Zeppelin type of ship would be wonderful, of course, but too expensive. And next time we go we’ll have a radio aet That is an absolute necessity for safety, though we didn’t have room for it before. We can make the pole by air and make it easily, I am sure. There are no definite plans yet, but there must be another attempt, and I am sure it will come next summer. I don’t believe there is land around the section we were in, though flying geese indicated it to the northwest. The advantage of survey of the pole will not be in exploitation of anything there, but in developing an air route to Europe. That will come in time, I think. More Than Half of Our Original Forest Resources Have Been Used Up By DR. GEORGE B. RIGG. University of Washington. More than half the original forest resources of the United State® has been used up. Forests of the East. Middle West and South are greatly depleted, in many places practically exhausted. Five of the Western states—Washington, Oregon, California. Idaho and Montana—now contain more than half of the standing commercial timber of the country. j Estimates on how long our timber in various parte of the West will bat van from 25 to 90 years. Probably 60 years is a gnod average. The pinch is sure to come in some places, however, in 20 years if the present ; rate of depletion is continued and the forests are not replaced. Various methods of meeting the situation are constantly being sug- | gested. Interest should center around reforestation, the prevention of j forest fires and the deferring of taxes on forest lands until the forests are I ready to cut If we act vigorously and intelligently along these three lines we can put our forests on the baste of a sustained yield. President Henry, A. A. A.—The decreased cost of traveling through increased efficiency in routing tourists, te to be one of the outstanding developments of the 1925 season, and before cold weather comes many motortete will have discovered how much farther they have been able to travel for a definite appropriation. \ . . ■ i— Director General Lord—Our crifics aay that no real savings have been effected through the budget system. As long as expenditures are brought down and held down, as long aa taxes fall and the national debt melts away, we don’t care what thy my and tU people don’t care what
TTOB JOURNAL
Ornamentation Is Feature of Gowns
i Decoration of Fall Clothes Now Receiving Much Attention. — That the trimming makes the gown was never more evident than it is j this season, declares a fashion writer tn the New York Times. The slogan of simplicity has applied tn many way to many costumes. But the very reverse iiks been Illustrated by the number of impressive and elaborate models that emanate from the masters of the art at Paris. Lines, composition. the silhouette remain consistently simple and free from %ny suggestion of fussy detail, but the attention of those who create and those who wear the gowns of the present ‘ mode is centered on the “type” of its ornamentation. With a plain background it is possible to work magic with beautiful trimmings—the laces, the needlework and the printed patterns now in style. The extremes in vogue offer the broadest opportunity, and the manner in which artists are establishing these is interesting. Quality, artistic design, poetry and beauty in form and In color are illustrated in manv of the Fa// 1 I Y® I Ooli - Old Biack Lace Borders a Dress of Heavy Flesh Satin. latest gowns, wraps and accessories coining from Paris, as well as in those designed by artists on this side. Rare lace is being used lavishly. Needlework that goes into the composition of afternoon and evening costumes, even sports clothes, reflects the days of court society and the fashions of great ladies. Even the suggestion, now and then, »f the mid-Vlctorian, for which there Is somewhat of a “craze" at the moment, has in it a dignity and touch of elegance. In the search for inspiration the makers of fabrics have found their answer In museums of fine art, in the treasures of the ancients. Old portraits, murals, even the details of architectural ironwork, as In the Ferronler prints, have caught the eye of tuen of imagination, and are
I SemLSports Hat of Velvet t ' ■ ... ■ ‘ f
A semi-sports hat of velvet with draped crown is a charming bit of millinery that is going “like' hot cakes.” It responds to almost every Informal occasioh and is suitable for all times and places, for day time, ‘own or country. Conspicuous among the evening sowns are some of diaphanous materials. the tullea, marquisettes and chiffons, on which either the fluttering ends of a velvet sash are shown or a large velvet flower Is added, to point np the costume. These last accessories are to be had in glorious big roses tn the natural shades, from the latest “tea" to deep crimson; tn flaming poppies, mammoth in size; in white calia lilies with long, slender leaves and willowy stems. Ail of these are fashioned by skilled craftsmen of the finest materials, snd give to a frock of .delicate fabric the most enchanting effect One or two. singly or cluster. Is usual. But In some delightful dancing frocks of tulle with many ruffles or plaitings the flowers are added in a ‘
Lengths of Maline Are Ready to Attach to Hat . —, —. —
Some of the shops sell lengths of maline ready to wrap around the big straw hat. One end of the maline is looped and wired into a big cbou or rosette. The mallne is then wrapped once or twice around the crown of the hat, a few stitches are taken to hold the chou in place and 10l your hat Is trimmed —or retriinmed. if an old hat U the foundation of this arrangement. \Aaother trick is to buy one of the emua ornaments for hats and fasten It onthe crown of a straw or felt hat. These ornaments are decidedly smart*. So. too. are lacquered metal ornaments. Sometimes the lacquered ornament* are flowers—poppies or roses Wear an Elephant for Luck Elephant charms have always oecn said to bring good lock to the wearer, but the modern girl goes even a step farther and wears a painted elephant in white on, the front of her black satin frock and on each sleeve just below ’-he elbow.
♦- | now reproduced in the materials of which many of the newest models art made. Creation of New Styles. It Is interesting to see how by de i grees a new style is created. How ■ once the rigidity of any mode to re r layed. one feature after another is de i veloped. often in something quite th< r opposite of the original. The uniform r ity which has characterized the fasb- > ions of the past few years Is being > varied in the up-to-date models In i many attractive ways. Relief from monotony is aways grateful, and . modistes are introducing panels, sec tlons. borders of one kind of drest . goods upon another, giving an en > tirely new effect. t In many of the printed silks th< i dominating color is used to edge tin plaitings and flounces now so sash- ■ lonable. A Ferronier printed crepe In I beige and blue with a fine line oi scarlet running through the patterr is made in the usual one-piece frock with the very latest mode of trimi ruing, a placed flounce, at the bottom, t On the hem of this is a narrow band , of navy blue silk. The slit neckline with narrow rever has also a touci ■ of the dark blue in the tie ends, anc the same bit of color Is used at the wrists of the long plain sleeves. A similar scheme is illustrated in another of these Brandt prints in the mellow shades of brown and beige, with the same fleck of the handsomest designs. In this model from a prominent Parisian couturier, thus honoring an American industry, three plaited ruffles of the figured goods are added to the skirt, all the way around. Each of these is fintshed with a two-inch band of brown grosgrain ribbon, which is added to the jabot on the bodice and to the bottom of the long, semi-circular, flaring sleeves. Another Innovation. So much for the border of colot which emphasizes the harmony in the assembling of colors. Another innovation is the combining of materials of different kinds. The band which is shown in some of the latest coei tumes. has in others widened to the | knee, and even to the line of the hip, showing a long bodice of figured goods and a skirt of plain. The, contrast is carried through the costume to give this effect of two materials. A geometric or floral pattern. Stripe, check, or one of the bold plaids that are hav- ; ing such a vogue. i» combined with ! plain goods to emphasize the doml- ' nating tint in the design. The mani ner in which this idea is established 'ls an individual problem. being worked out with originality and sue cess by style creators, Paris leading the way. The two-material plan is expressed in more than design merely, for. in addition to these, there are shown some particularly interesting costumes in which worsted and silk are put together. plain cloth with mixed wool satin with wool. and. most proml nently of all, velvet with either silk or woolen While it is unsafe to make conclusive statements about the coming mode, and futile to prophesy too far ahead, the straws that blow in the wind of the Rue de la Paix point tc velvet as the material par excellence sor 5 early autumn. In feeling their way Parisian designers are illustrating the beauty and the flattering appeal of velvet in millinery and in various incidental trimmings. Many of the newest hats are made wholly of velvet. or have a velvet crown with brim of straw, horsehair, leghorn, maline or lace.
different arrangement On one model from a prominent designer the very bouffant tulle skirt has u deep flounce, caught at intervals straight around with a Large, flat velvet rose. In this ensemble the material of the dress is lightly traced with silver thread, and a line of silver gives a glint here and there to the flower motif. The velvet hat has intrigued creators to give a touch of richness to the gown by using velvet for sashes and for the edge of frills. Most of the summer gowns have a little tie at the neck, or a length of velvet ribbon introduced in some manner. As a distinctive trimming, or mode of embellishing a frock, velvet and velvet ribbons are in away taking the place of the narrow band of fur that has smartened many costumes from Paris houses. A checked coat has nearly always the lining and the accompanying frock I In plain fabric and vice versa. Thebe - frocks are frequently composed of a blouse and skirt, or a jacket and ' skirt.
Ln good strong shades of yellow and red. 5 • You can produce charming flowers that look Lacquered by painting ordinary cotton artificial flowers with melted sealing wax. Theses are as fresh and smart aa yon can imagine. • New Fall Coat Style Women’s coats for fall designed and executed by men’s tailors indicate that outer coverings of this type will be t shorter this autumn and of the boldest ; designs and colons. Tweeds, saxonies | and cheviots in . brown and blue pre- , dominate, while 1 such designs as rag rug. broken trellis, mosaic and geomet-i ric designs also are shown. The severe masculine designs were feminized by the flare of the skirt* Evening Gown* New colors for evening wear ard currant red. black, beige, white, faded pink, vivid green (emerald) and vivid Wo*.
® <tu ISSS. Wwtern Nawapapar Unlaa > Ramembar when heartsick and weary; The sunshine comes after »he rain. Tomorrow Is ttme to be cheery-— Ton&orrow we take hope again. Tomorrow the sun will be brighter Tomorrow the skies will be fair; Tomorrow our hearts will be lighter. We’ll cast aside sorrow and care. PICKLING TIME I Rome good housekeepers can thei prime ripe tomatoes when at their-
best and laterwhen the canning: season is over and more leisurw is found, make catsup, chili sauce.\ and various other-' tomato combinations.
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Chili Sauce.—Take three quarts of canned tomatoes, add six chopped green peppers, four white onions alsochopped, one cupful of sugar, half a j cupful of salt, two cupfuls of vinegar and the following ground spices: One 1 tabiespoonful of cinnamon, one-eighth of a teaspoonful of cayenne pepper, half a teaspoonful of cloves and allspice mixed. Cook all together for j three hours, then bottle for winter ; use. This makes a thick sauce. Ry adding more vinegar a good catsupmay be made. Bordeaux Sauce.—Take two gallons of cabbage, one gallon of green tomatoes. one dozen medium-sized whiteonions, six red sweet peppers, nil chopped fine. Mix one outfee of cloves, one-fourth pound of white mustard seed, one ounce of celery seed.-xore-and three-quarters pounds of sugar, one-half cupful of salt, and one gallon of vinegar. Drain the tomatoes; cabbage and tomatoes are measured after chopping. Remove the seeds from the peppers. Cloves and allspiceare tied in small bags. Boil 20’ minutes. This makes 12 quarts. Pickled Onions.—Remove the outsideskin bus be careful not to break them. Soak 24 hours in strong salt water, j wipe and put them into jars with pieces of red pepper. Allow enougtv vinegar to fill the Jars and to eai h quart add a teaspoonful of mixed spices. Scald the vinegar with the spices, cool and fill the jars. Repeat for two days, cooling each time before pouring over the onions. Jellies and Jams. If a jar or two is put up when thef fruit or vegetables are fresh, the
work will be light and In a few weeks the fruit closet will be well filled. A cupful of raspberriesadded to three cupfuls of rhubarb with sugar
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to make a rich sauce makes a fruit that has all the flavor of raspberry with the bulk of rhubarb. Strawber- ; ries. pineapple, in fact any fruit that ir. rich in flavor, added to rhubarb will ' extend the flavor. Peach and Raisin Conserve.—Take four pounds of peeled peaches, threepounds of sugar, three cupfuls of water. two cupfuls of seeded raisins, oneand one-half cupfuls of blanched al- > monds shredded. Slice the peaches, removing the stones, add the water and sugar and cook until the mixture thickens; add the almonds and cook flve minutes longer. Plum and Raisin Jam.—Cook six ; jupfuls of pitted plums in three cupfuls of water until they are soft, add two cupfuls of seeded raisins and four cupfuls of sugar hnd cook 30 minutes, or until thq, mixture is thick - ■tir occasionally. Pf>ur into jellyglasses and seal with paraffin. Pineapple Marmalade.—Pare and cut nto small cubes one pineapple, saving all the juice. Add three cupfuls of sugar and the grated rind and juice of' three lemons. Cook 30 minutes or until thick; add two cupfuls of raisins. Cook five minutes longer and* pour into glasses. Chinese Pears. — Wipe, removeitems, quarter and core eight poundsjf pears. Slice them in thin slices, add four pounds of sugar and onefourth pound of Canton ginger cut into small pieces. Let stand over sight closely covered- Slice threw lemons, rejecting the seeds, add tothe pears and cook slowly for two- : Sours. Apple Catsup.—Peel and quarter a dozen apples, stew them in a very little water until soft, then put them through a sieve. To a quart of the apples add one cupful of sugar, one teaspoonful of pepper, the same of I rioves and cinnamon and two mediumilzed onions choped fine. Stir all together. add one tablespoonful of salt, a cupful < vinegar, boil one hour and aottle while hot. Grape Marmalade.—Wash and masl» (rapes. Cook slowly until soft. Force through a sieve until all but the seeds and skins has gone through. Rinsethe seeds and skins with a little wa- ; ter and add an equal measure of sn<ar for the grape pulp. .Roll 10 minutes until very thick. Celery mrfy be found in most salads; It not only adds flavor, bulk and vegetable acids, but it has a medicinal value as welt - — Swedish Wedding Customs 1’ In Sweden weddings formerly took, place at night. One wedding stfperrtltlon is that a bride, on leaving home, i must step into the carriage with her J right foot first, and do the same whem ■he first enters her new home. Canning, Net Goodneu If we practice goodness, not for thesake of Its own intrinsic excellence, but for the sake of gaining some advantage by It, we may be cunning, but re are not good.—CSceru.
