The Syracuse Journal, Volume 18, Number 21, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 24 September 1925 — Page 2
Classified List of Goshen Firms Who Offer You Special Inducements
AUTOMOBILES Goshen Auto Exchange Easy Terms dh Used Cars. Tires and Accessories for Less. 217 W. LINCOLN AVENUE SEE JAKE AND SAFE AUTO PAINTING QUALITY PAINTING is Our Motto AU Paints and Varnishes hand flowen. which assures you full measure for your money. SMItH BROS. CO. GOSHEN •IS 8. Fifth Street Phone 374 AUTO TOPS Rex Winter Iriclosures, Auto Tops, Slip Covers, Body Upholstering, Truck Tops, Seat Cushions, Tire Covers, Radiator Covers, Hood Covers. Goshen Auto Top and Trimming Co. BEAUTY PARLORS ALLIECE SHOPPE Phone 933 for Appointments Spohn Building Goshen Bicycles and Motorcycles WE WANT YOUR PATRONAGE 6ur prices and the quality of our workmanship justify you tn coming to us for your Bicycles and Bicycle Repair work. •uy • Harley - Davidson Motorcycle. C. C. AMSLER 212 N. MAIN ST. GOBHEN V * CLOTHING SHOUP & KOHLER The Clothiers and Tailors 10« N. MAIN BT. . Drugless Physician Massage and Electrical Treatments, Electric Blanket Sweat Baths. Heavy Sweat—without heat —1 hour complete bath. Minnie L. Priepke Suite 38 Hawks-Gortner Bldg. PHONE 188 GOSHEN, IND. (Elevator Service) DENTIST DR. H. B. BURR Dentist Dental X-Ray •VER ADAM** GOSHIN
Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat s DBS. EBY & EBY H. W. Eby. M. D. Ida L. Eby, M. D • Surgery and diseases of “’Eye, Ear. Nose and Throat Glasses Fitted . 4 ' GOBHEN. INDIANA I FURNITURE Williamson & Snook FURNITURE, RUGS and STOVES JFr Furnish the Ho,me 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 86 115 East Lincoln Avenue. Goshen, Ind PHOTOGRAPHS SonielMxly, Somewhere Wants Your Photograph The SCHNABEL Studio Over Baker's Drug Store 1 Phone 315 Goshen. Ind PIANOS ROGERS & WILSON Headquarters for Victrolas V ‘ ; ’ Victor Records. Pianos and Player Pianos. I ESTABLISHED 1871 SHOES lawdl THC FOOT WKM.NOBLE’S Good Shoes — Hosiery Too 131 8. MAIN ST. GOSHEN TYPEWRITERS Adding Machines Office Supplies Check Writers HARRISON’S TYPEWRITER SHOP All Maltes of Machines SOLD, REPAIRED OR EXCHANGED Room 38 Hawka-Gortner Bldg. Phone 168 Goshen. Indiana - UNDERTAKERS - E. CULP & SONS Funeral Directors Unexcelled Ambulance Service u Rea. Phone Office Phono 54 53 WALL PAPER » PAINTS Paint Your House with Our Guaranteed Colored LEAD PAINT. Costs but 12.30 a Gallon when mixed ready to use.
“What Do You Think Is the Real Solution of the Agricultural Problem?” By WILLIAM M. JARDINE, United States Secretary of Agriculture. ONE often hears the question, “What do you think is the real solution of the agricultural problem ?” But there isn’t only one agricultural problem; there are hundreds. On my recent trip through the Middle West, Western and Pacific states I didn’t hear much about any broad general problem that presents itself in the same form tc farmers everywhere. I did find many smaller problems, some of them peculiar to certain districts and others affecting farmers as a whole. Finding solutions of this and that specific difficulty as opportunity offers will get us further along the road toward improving the whole general condition of agriculture than we can ever get by sweeping cure-all schemes warranted to remedy even-thing that bothers the farmer, from drought to drudgery. Agricultural conditions are better now than they were a year or two ago. They are much better than they were five years ago. Crop surpluses have disappeared, a readjustment from wartime to peacetime conditions has practically been completed and fanners are tanking to the future with confidence. There is no single solution for the difficulties of agriculture. Where land values are inflated they must come down. Where transportation costs are too burdensome a remedy must be sought either in lower rates or in better-quality and better-value shipments. Spreads between farm and prices for agricultural goods must be lessened by increased efficiency in distribution. Farmers must effect a better adjustment of production to anticipated market needs. They must also push forward with co-operative marketing wherever conditions make that form of distribution practicable and advisable, and above all they must not slacken their efforts for increased efficiency in production, not necessarily for the purpose of increasing the output but rather to lessen the costs of farm operations.' s Conservation No Longer Limited to Locking Up the Resources of Nature By DR. HUBERT WORK. Secretary United States Interior Department The administration's concept of conservation is use without waste of our natural resources, and their intelligent distribution as to time. Conservation should no longer mean locking up these resources by nonuse, but to encourage their wise use. Our economic growth has been advanced only by the liberal and often reckless utilization of natural resources. Its future expansion will depend more thorough and intelligent conversion of our remaining natural wealth to industrial necessities. Nothing can justify reckless use of our people's inheritance from nature or other encroachments upon the capital of our future generations. I believe in the extension of governmental studies organized to discover and employ our natural and to advise states upon their proper use along sound economic lines against misappropriation and waste. Authoritative teaching should be centralized in the federal government, but responsibility for its application should be decentralized to states. The Riffs Are an Ancient People, Unconquered for Two Thousand Years By. LIEUT. COM. J. M. KENWORTHY. British Naval Officer. The Riffs are an ancient people who, in spite of many attempts by alien invaders, have remained in unconquered possession of their barren mountain territories for 2.000 yea~s. They are Moslems, divided into dans, austere, strictly religious, moral and sober. They have fought the Spanish with varying success since 1912. Abd-el-Krim, their leader, although belonging to a well-known family, was not a ruling chief. He was educated at the university in Madrid, and served for some years in the Spanish artillery. Quarreling with the Spaniards, he returned to his native land, and with the aid of his brothers and the men of his own tribe has succeeded in welding the warring dans into the semblance of a nation. Years of hard fighting have eliminated the inefficient Caids and brought to the fore the bravest and most efficient leaders among this brave and warlike people. At the Center of the Earth Is a Huge Sphere of Metallic Iron By DR. HENRY 8. WASHINGTON. In Scientific American. We now conceive the earth to be constituted as follows: At the center is a huge sphere of metallic iron or nickel-iron, which extends rather more than half-way to the surface. Near its outer border particles of stony matter occur scattered through the metal. These gradually increase in quantity, while the amount of metal decreases, until the material is about half metal and half stone. From this depth outward the amount of metal decreases and that of stone increases, until the material ia atone peppered with small and few specks of metal. Finally the iron disappears and the material ia wholly stone at a depth of about one thousand miles. The atone or rock is not uniform. It changes its character outward, the deepest layers or shells being of very heavy, dense rock. The very light, granitic rocks are at the top. The layers of limestone, sandstone, shale, coal, soil and other such materials, are relatively so thin that their masses are quite negligible when the composition of the earth as a whole b being considered. Water Is Produced Chemically in the Volcano and Is Then Vaporized By DR. T. A. JAGGER. Hawaiian Volcano Observatory. When waters do not seep down into the earth’s internal fires to produce the steam, which is the spectacular agent in volcanic eruptions, water is produced chemically on the spot and vaporized. The subsidence M great volumes of rock into volcanic craters of an active character bring to the gas-charged lavas the material they need. These’old rocks, very often heavily laden with iron oxides, release their oxygen content in the presence of rising hydrogen. This oxygen then combines easily with the hydrogen present in solution in lava, heat enough to last for years is released, and water is thereupon chemically formed. The water is then vaporized by the beat, expands and rises with the lava that flows over the crater’s edge, and often, as was the case on the island of Hawaii in 1919, floods into the sea for days on end, killing the fish by thousands and causing tidal waves of varying intensity. With the flow of lava comes the settling of the earth’s crust for miles around the active volcano, and there may be earthquakes with destruction of man-made structures in the vicinity and the snuffing out of human lives. Herbert N. Casson, in Forbes—A customer buys $25 worth of goods from yon every year. Your net profit on his $25 is about $2.50. This is the interest, at 5 per cent, on SSO. So, this customer is as good as SSO of capital to you. A customer who spends $250 a year b equal to SSOO capital. This being a fact, and not a theory, you should treat your customers u capital. '■ Scott C. Bone, Former Governor of Alaska—l went to Juneau four years ago aa an optimist, and after serving four yean aa governor, I dr parted as an optimist Such a country as Alaska, with such a fine dti•enship, cannot be held back, nor much longer be compelled to mart time.
THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL
Waistline Normal Again in England
London Designers Have Re-’ stored Belt to Traditional Place. Surprises are not common In the study of styles, but they do happen, says a fashion writer in the New York Times. All the while the fashion creators at Paris and their confreres on the other side of the water have been debating the return to the normal waistline one has only to set foot tn London to find It has arrived. The question has remained for months a matter of conjecture; but British decisions are deliberate, and the belt is once again placed at the natural line. Prominent designers In London are not giving special emphasis to the fart, reluctant, perhaps, to take a too radical step before Paris has given her sanction. To the English woman of fashion Paris is still the center of styles creation. however loyal she may be to her own country's Ideals and productions. This year there has been a broadening of horizon, a more sympathetic feeling, largely the result of the Exposition des Arts Decoratifs, beneficial to both London and Paris. This does not mean that English women accept I// E 3 Frock That I* Done in Beige Jersey Cloth, With Attached Cape. unconditionally the decrees of Paris or any other authority. Individuality Is still their precious possession, and an Englishwoman will wear what she chooses with the complacent assurance that it is she who is setting the style. At least it is the fashion as It should be, whether or not the rest of the world follows. This may. in t sense, account for the revival of the normal waistline. Leading l.ondoq modistes do not admit wholly that the long waist and straight silhouette are passe, for they are sti'.l the lines upon which some of the handsomer models are built by both English and French creators. Center of Fashion. There is always a certain satisfaction In dealing with “headquarters," and in London one finds oneself at the very center of fashion in sports dress.
Two-Piece Jumper Suit Is Favorite
The conspicuous success of the London season in fashions Is the twopiece jumper dress. It is the final wurd In style, comfort and utility. As Reville, past master of the art of sports dress of the conventional and refined type, presents the jumper .res** It Is done in a fine quality of wool, silk and wool, ail silk or cotton Jersey or stockinette. It consists of a simple skirt plain or kUted. and an overt louse of the same material, made with highjieck and long sleeves, and Is In all ways like any overblouse or sllp-ou sweater as we know It. Beige, bois de rose, tan and yellow are the ix>pular shades used, with very few dark colors offered. * A real achievement of Reville ia one of these Jumper frocks especially designed for tennin The wrap-around skirt ingeniously conceals a pair of trousers of the same material, made all in one with the costume, yet with -f>erfe« convenience and grace. A Hash of silk, knotted at one aide, gives an artistic touch. Another, In yellow-and-tan stockinette. baa a short, straight skirt, with
Should Have Shoes for Almost Every Toilette
Shoes are about to undergo a change > of style. The American woman has | always realized the importance of be- ; Ing well shod. In the old days one pair of shoes did duty with several costumes, while now it is more and more necessary to have shoes for almost every toilette. An entire ensemble may be spoiled if one neglects to select ti e proper shoes to wear with it. When first the braided or woven designs became popular in America they hade fair to attal great success, but their vogue was short-lived, for the simple reason that they were so easily copied by all the very cheapest. manufacturers and adopted by the poorest clansea. Therefore no matter how beautiful or how well made or how expensive these shoes may be. it is not wise to choose anything even remotely resembling this model. The only exception to this is In the golf shoe , made of thongs, which has the crepe I HA are particularly good I at the moment, and when t vo or more
■• s ——■ We have long looked to England sot authority in tailored clothes, in coats, in overgarments of different sorts. W< have referred to fabrics as “English'’ material when a more specific name Is lacking. London sports togs, fa-. rnous the world over, are the joy of an American sportswoman’s heart. They have simplicity and dignity through rapidly changing styles. Novelties may come and fads may go, but a mannish tailleur of Scotch tweed or Irish homespun has an honest-to-goodness look not to be ignored. There are kashas and cloths of different weaves and weights, but the first thing the smart tailor offers you is a conventional two-piece suit of wool mixture, diagonal, or woven all In one color. In an unusually gay sports season fashionable women are wearing the simplest of these tailored suits, in the rougher finish materials for golf and tennis, for motoring, hiking and shooting. The plain wraparound or kilted skirt, with box coat, short or hip length, a plain polo shirt or overblouse is almost a unitorn: among English sportswomen. The coat has plenty of pockets. When ■ shirt is worn there is also a belt tc define the normal waistline. In an outfit of this description a woman is comfortably and fully equipped for any country sports and has a look oi correctness. A variant of this regulation sport* suit is a sweater or jumper instead oi the coat. There are many kinds, colors and patterns of sweaters —some tc match the skirt, some in gay, bizarre patterns and in endless unexpected combinations. The topcoat with this arrangement is longer and more volu minous. One of the ultra-smart jackets offered by . a well-known London de signer is made of leather. It recall! the old-fashioned shooting jackets men used to wear but in its feminine ver sio” It is a trim and shapely affair. A shooting costume from a London Paris house of high standing has s kilted skirt of black-and-white kasha in a large block pattern. With tils is the ordinary shirt of white sill broadcloth belted with black leather. The short, double-breasted coat is oi black kid with four square pockets and wide revers, and is lined with th< black-and-white cloth. The Shepherd’s Plaid. An engaging little suit vis made u woolen material In shepherd’s plait with jacket of bright red leather lined wit> the plaid. Scotch plaids l» the different tartans are seen a lo< in ‘the lining of these leather coats One of black kid. made seven-eighth? length. Is stunning lined with a gay tartan. The fancy for leather is Jllus trated in leather trimmings, in bandt and cut-out patterns to be appliquec as borders and pipings on cloth, at well as In the thousand and one fas cinating accessories. A picturesque model in a sports sub is that made of Scotch plaid. English tailors know better than any other* how to Introduce the tartans in worn en’B dress. They do It with preclsiot and decorative effect It is acknowledged to be a sentimental tribute tc that much-loved Scotswoman, th« duchess of York, whose popularity ap pears to have done much to stimulate I interest in the Scotch fabrics. The tartans are used in wools. In silk, sot a kilted skirt, a hat; as a lining, trim ming. sash. A parasol covered with Scotch plaid taffeta carried with an all-white semi sports dress at tne Eton-Harrow cricket match was most effective. An other uncommon costume had a kilted skirt of a MacKenzie tartan with soft white peasant blouse 2nd a bolero oi black velvet.
overblouse giving a tailored appear anee. open at the neck, with small re vers and a cravat tie, and a pocket ofi apach side below the belt. Os the short sleeve or sleeveless middy there is not a trace, and all of the Jumper suits have long sleeves with snug wristband. The kilted skirt to be wort with separate jumper or sweater 1* very popular and has the virtue of being youthful. London Is the home of the knitted dress and its shops this year offer a large and attractive assortment of knitted frocks, jackets, sweaters, accessories, and occasional garments of more or less formality. The liest are of course, hand made, intensely Inter eating as examples of knitting and crocheting in artistic and sometimes elaborate patterns. It is evident that a revival of this type of dress will boom the knlttihg Industry and give opportunity to many handworkers. Plain patterns are usual, but some <.’ the more elaborate things are dune in clever reproductions of the old patterns of the days when knlttfiug was considered a gentle accomplishment
I colors are used together the model of I the shoe is as simple as possible, ao ; that all impression of trimming will |be gained from the cleverness with ! which the kids are combined. Colored kid. in combination with gilt or other metallic shaded kid, is a favorite choice for formal wear. The French shoemaker, Perugia, who at one time brought out the monogrammed shoe, is now using tiny flat flower ornaments of colored raffia aa a novel trimming. This, in reality, is much more effective than it sounds. Lately there is also a tendency to combine kid and satin, and it would seem that this has possibilities of becoming very smart. Naturally, with these designs it goes without saying that the type of heel continues to be the popular “spike” variety. Unique Nightgowns Nightgowns made of two layers of I chiffon give a charmingly opalescent effect if the shades are contracted dmrix.
WEAK, RUN-DOWN NERVOUS, DIZZY Mrs. Lee Suffered From All These Troubles, but Lydia E.Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound Made Her Well Terre Haute, Indiana.— ’T was weak •nd run-down and in such a nervous conjdition that I could! hardly do my work. ■te I was tired all the time and dizzy, had no appetite and could not sleep. I tried different medicines for a year but did not help me. Then my husband, saw the ad. for Lydia E. Pinkham’s Yege- ■ table Compound in the newspapers and. had me take it. I regained my strength and never felt better in my life. '*t completely restored me to health. I had practically no suffering when.my babyboy was bom and he is very strong and healthy. I know that the Vegetable Cc mpound is the best medicine a woman caa take before and after childbirth for health and strength. I would be willingto answer letters from women asking; about the Vegetable Compound.” — Mrs. Wm. J. Lee, Route E, Box 648, Terre Haute, Indiana. Lydia EL Pinkham’s Vegetable ComSund is a dependable medicine for aIT ese troubles. For sale by druggists everywhere. RESINOL Soothinq andHe/Jinq For Rashes and Chafmq IJ Health Builder I I HOSTETTER'S Celebrated Stomach I I Bitters is a wholesome tonic. Keeps the stomach in good condition and improves the appetite. AB Hoars uaa co., hmms*. ~ Hoped It Did Kindly Old Lady (whispering)— Dearie, one of your garters is showj ing. Flapper—Well, I hope it does. —The* Progressive Grocer. Write me today and I will tell yom free how to prevent heart failure and high blood pressure. Joseph Askins, Lima, Ohio.—Adv. Very Sad Irene—“ Did you ever see a mosquito ery?" Mildred —“No. but once I saw a moth ball." Aspirin Say “Bayer Aspirin” INSIST! Unless you see the “Bayer Cross” on tablets 4 you are not getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for 24 years. Accept only - Bayer package which contains proven directions Handy “Bayer” boxes of 12 tablets Also bottles'of 24 and 100—Druggists Avptrin Is the trsde mark of Bayer Manofactura of Moooacetlcacideatcr of SaUeyllcadd Mothers Wear 'Em, Too One reason so many modern girl* are taller than mother mAy be discovered just beneath their stocking heelw * --Boston Herald. The prices of cotton and linen have been doubled by the war. Lengthen their service by using Red Cross Ball Blue in the laundry. AU grocers—Advertisement. When the kids are all neat and dean, they are probably not having ■ good time. Sure Relief Hot water Sure Relief Bell-an s FOR INDIGESTION 25$ and 75< Pkgs.Sold Everywhere FARM FOR SALE ZZS acraa on IC-toot concrete road, main north and aouth road in country, on »ds* of town; land level; 14 acrae of timber, balance tillable; tl.ooo in tile; two bousesj llshtlns system; throe barns, bank barn 40xS0; carries IS.SM Insurance. High-grade stock and grain farm. Cleveland market for all farm products. Near Norwalk. Huron County. Ohio, population «.*•*• * ,th J, I }”* grain elevators and good market. liMaedlate EX-ZEMA-FO For the treatment of Enema and other skin diseasen Easy to use. A liquid. Norrease C F.° f d^ th tS ‘a’trST.Vo* Srttottle win binLmt free for 10 cent*. NEEVOIB COMPANY, m Inntt Avn. Brooklyn. ». X»
