The Syracuse Journal, Volume 20, Number 31, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 1 December 1927 — Page 3
[ The BABY II
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Why do so many, many babies of today escape all the little fretful spells and Infantile ailments that used to worry mothers through the day, and keep them up half the night? If you don’t know the answer, you haven't discovered pure, harmless Castoria. It is sweet to the taste, and sweet In the little stomach. And Its gentle Influence seems felt all through the tiny system,' Not even a distasteful dose of castor oil does so much good. Fletcher’s Castorla Is purely vegetable, so you may give it freely, at first sign of colic; or constipation; or diarrhea. Or those many times when you Just don't know what is the matter. For real sickness, call the doctor, always. At other times, a few drops of Fletcher's Castorla. The doctor often tells you to do Just that; and always says Fletcher's, Other preparations may be Just as pure, Just as free from dangerous drugs, but why experiment? Besides, the book on care and feeding of babies that comes with Fletcher's Castorla is worth Its weight In gold!
Children Ciy for I: y <T 4f< £ Stop Coughing The more you eouith the worse you feeL and the more inflamed your throat and lungs become. Give them a chance to heal Boschee’s Syrup baa been giving relief for sixty-one years. Try It. 30c and 90c bottles. Buy it at your drug store. G. G. Green, Inc., Woodbury, N. J. Garfield Tea Was Your Grandmother's Remedy
For every stomach and Intestinal HL This good old-fash-ioned herb home remedy for constipation. stomach His and other derangements of the sys-
tern so prevalent these days is In even greater favor as a family medicine than in your grandmother’s day. Old-Time Tax Receipts W. H. Holman, ninety-year-old resident of Fulton. Mo., lias receipts given when salt was legal tender, the slips culling for so much suit tn apply on account. He also has tai receipts given hie grandfather tn 1800 that were written on plain pieces of pu|>er will pen and Ink. printed tax receipts being unknown then The tax on 4tM» . tn-s nf land was 11.85 in ISOG.—Exchange. Down to Facts Clerk—’’Shoes* Would yon like about—a three Y' She—“ Yes; >'Ut let's not talk shout It-give me a five." Our huniunlt; were a poor .hlng but for the divinity that stirs within os.— Bacon
Hills Knocks COLDS J —in one day, HILL'S Cascara-Bromide-Qui-nine tablets knock a j cold. Leave you feeling fine. Look for red box. 30c. AU drumsta. Hog Cholera Is one of the greatest financial losses of the hog raiser and feeder. This great loss can now be controlled by the use of MORECO. MORECO is a powder which is mixed in the feed in one to two tablespoon doses. MORECO is a preventive and treatment of hog cholera. It will also kill all intestinal worms and will keep your herd free from worms. This treatment is being used by several prominent feeders in Indiana and Ohio and is sold on a ■noaay-back guarantee. For further particular*, write to DR. CHARLES D. MORROW ISIS Columbia Ave. For* Wayne, • Indiana. CARBUNCLES Carboil draws out the core Carboil AB Dtx>^ floartwlfß y-——_ -yr.-; LTfigg? . W. H. FORT WAYNE, NO. -W-1027.
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Trit calendar reminds us that we cannot afford to procrastinate In the matter of Christmas prej»aration. AH the more reason to "do It now” If we are planning to make rather than buy. Speaking of gifts made at home, of all popular presents It would seem that lampshades head the list. Here’s “how to make” a shade which is good looking hut not expensive. Buy a plain parchment shade, bind It With gold braid and decorate it with tiny gold paj»er seals. For a few pennies one can purchase a package of these little stickers or seals—enough to decorate several shades'. It Is the simplest, quickest process Imaginable to paste these seals on the parchment background After they are firmly placed, shellac the entire shade with liansparent amber sealing wax paint. Prepare this by dissolving the sealing wax In denatured alcohol, letting It stand over night. When completed the effect is that of hand decoration done with gold bronze paint. The effectiveness of gilt crescent seals pasted on parchment Is portrayed in the little lamp shown in tire picture. A lampshade, also stand or base If you so please to call It. woven of crepe paper rope makes a handsome gift. Weaving with this rope Is not difficult as the foundational wires are bent Into the desired shape, after which the
MANY A FURRED VELVET COAT IS A SYMPHONY IN BROWN
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IF YuU are feeling the urge to own a velvet coat, then you are fashion wise. At the thought of a velvet wrap, one la prompted to vision black »s the proper thing. To be sure, there I Is no criticism to be made If such be .chosen. for the correctness and prestige of black velvet In the winter mode cannot be questioned. How- | »ver. there la a competitor in the field —brown velvet for the coat, suit or Miserable. If you please, lavished with fur either In matching or blended fur. it la a fact tbere •* no;hing newer x smarter on fashion's piogram than * “sympluny In brown” for the winter costume. A definitely prominent brown shade this season is chestnut The elegant afternoon coat of velvet in this picture Is in this very beautiful color and It is richly trimmed with matching fur. In order to Insure a perfect blending or matching, furs of every sort ■re being wondrousl.v dyed this season. In some instances caracul Is toned to accurately match the brown velvet it trims, likewise moleskin. The hitter Is exceedingly new and effective. Pointed bmwn furs are the “last word. - These, with their sprinkling of white hairs all through the brown, make a handsome and novel appearance. - . Arriving from Part* are ensembles Velvet Touch It may be anything from a velvet collar on a broadcloth coat to an evej ning ensemble of velvet dress and cape, but Dame Fashion Insists everything must have a velvet touch. Velvet* With Chiffon Among the outstanding features of the new fashions is the extensive use <f transparent velvet It is esjiecially ■’tractive when used In cotubiuatiou h g»«orgette and satin.
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crepe rope is handled Just like tn basketry. Materials for making such a lamp and shade may be obtained at any stationery or department store. The open spaces of the shade are filled in with parchment paper. Pictures cut from Illustrative crepe paper or from any magazine tiiay be pasted on the parchment. This scissors painting as it is called can scarcely be detected from handpainting. The entire lamp and shade must be gone over with a coat of sealing wax shellac. The box In the picture portrays seal-ing-wax craft. A little wcaalen box prettily shaped may be bought at almost any ten-cent store. Cover the box with daubs of heated bronze-gold sealing wax, allowing It to flow from the end of the stick, leaving the top of the box untouched, as It Is to be especially decorated. On this top paste a picture cut from a magazine or else stamp or sketch a flower or modernistic design. The idea Is to work this with various colored sticks of ueated sealing wax. building up thei design and modeling it with the aid of a thin palette knife. It adds greatly to the handsomeness of this work If one encrusts , colorful glass Jewels. One can get' these multi-colored nailheads at any fancy work department. Use them tn the center of the flowers or tn connection with the conventional designs if such are chosen. After the designing on the cover 1$ completed fill in the uncovered spaces with daubs of the gold-bronze sealing wax.
with coats three-quarter length. To emphasize their smartness these coats boast the very new stole collars of luxurious brown fur matched to the “ velvet they trim. Very wide cuffs of the fur are used, because the wider the fur cuff the more fashionable. I Speaking of cuffq. some very sensational things are being done with them. One of the fetching new Ideas which draws attention to the cuffs. Is that on some of the Latest velvet coats the only bit of fur that appears on the coat Is that which trims the lower part of the sleeve. Huge muff cuffs are the newest thing. They give the Impression sometimes of each arm thrust through a muff which extends up to or beyond the elbow. Among unique fur cuffs are those strapped In the center with gilded kid belts with gold buckles, or of doth matching the coat. Os course, these fancy strapped effects are used In connection with fiat furs, as they yield most gracefully to this handling. Regarding the coat In the picture, an outstanding style point which claims attention jit that of the flare hemline, achieved by a set-oo circular ruffle. Note also that the fur trims only at the front, which Is a characteristic feature of many of the 1 season's fur placements. JULIA BOTTOMIJET. <Ck l»rt. Woatarn Newspaper Unloe.) Gown Velvet Ensemble The ensemble still dominates tbs formal mode and one of the most effective exponents of this fashion is seen In an evening frock of green i transparent velvet with a coat to j match. Angora Knitted Coat A three-quarter length coat of an-gora-knitted material has much to (■omnnnd It In the stay of chic and bec«n>’n-meaa
THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL
What’s the f Answer ♦ Questions No. 23 1— What was “Stonewall” Jackson's first name? 2— What American general captured the Filipino leader Aguinaldo? 3— What Is mechanics? 4— Who is the lightweight champion pugilist? 5— Os what nationality is the celebrated pianist, Joseph Hofman? 6— Which is the principal river of New York state? . 7— What five American cities have the largest public libraries? 8— What is a volcano? 9— How are the Justices of the Supreme court chosen and by whom? 10— What Is the difference in the meaning of the words '‘astronomy” and “astrology”? 11— When was the Emancipation Proclamation issued? 12— How many signers of the Declaration of Independence were there? 13 — What Is zoology? 14— Who la the champion 220 yards runner? 15— What movie of the past few years received the critical acclaim of being almost artistically perfect? 16— What canal connects the Great Lakes with the ocean byway of the Hudson river? 17— Who was the only woman to win the Nobel prize for literature? 18— What is a vulture and where does It thrive? 19— Whorls the present secretary of war? ■2o—What la the “hunter’s and harvest moon.” Answers No. 22 j—It is a genus of plants belonging to the Vervain family and several European specimens have become exceedingly troublesome in the United States. 2 —ldaho. B—The “Marseillaise.” Claude Joseph Rouget de Lisle. 4— William Henry Harrison. 5— General Winfield Scott. 6— A fnodern trend of thought that makes reason the chief* source ot knowledge. 7— It was a tie, 21-21* 8— Frances Hodgson Burnett. 9— Nine. 10— In 1908. 11 — Mary Roberts Rinehart 12— Northwest Wyoming. 13 — John Singer Sargent. 14— Bob O’Farrel, manager of the St. Louis Cardinals. 15— tn 1825. 16— Eleven: South Carolina. North Carolina. Virginia. Texas. Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana. Florida, Georgia, Arkansas, Tennessee. 17— That branch of science that deals with the fundamental laws of the universe. 18— It Is a family of very small in-sect-eating birds. 19— Fifteen thousand dollars. 20— On the civil day of the same date—at noon.
Few Years of Poverty in Victor Hugo* s Life Unlike many great writers, Victor Hugo had a happy childhood; was a brilliant pupil, and when he fell in love, at an early age, he did not become dreamy and Impractical, but worked harder than ever to achieve success. His first experience of real tragedy came with the death of his mother. His relationship with her had been unusually Intimate and tender. For several years the mother hsd been estranged from her husband, which had resulted in drawing her closer to her youngest son. Soon after his mother's death his father married the woman who had caused the estrangement The elder Hugo had no sympathy with his son's desire to write. He offered him a sufficient allowance If be would give up authorship and devote himself to a career that promised a large Income. Hugo Indignantly refused, and shared a Parts attic with his cousin. Here he gained the knowledge of poverty that he revealed in "Les Miserablea." But he was not as poor as many young geniuses have been, nor did he know poverty * for any great length of time. In 1822 he married the girl with whom he had fallen in love when he was seventeen, and this brought a reconciliation with his father.—Kansas Qty Times. 7*A« Bum An American visitor to London, tn his reverence for Francis poems, made a pilgrimage recently tb the Skiddaw Arms, Kilburn, the "pub" where the author of the "Hound of Heaven” used to sit and dream by the fire in the saloon bar. The pilgrim recalled its Francis Thompson’s associations to the landlord of the inn, who had never heard of him. "Poet!** said Boniface decisively; "that sort of a customer hanging about doesn’t do a house any good." Illiterate Criminals The superintendent of New Tort state reformatories says that of 22,000 criminals whom he has examined only 4 per cent were college graduates, only 7 per cent bad finished high school. 25 per cent finished grammar school. 04 per cent had attended only primary schools or none. JmpossiMa Feat The bureau of standards says that It Is not possible to make a perfectly straight edge.
Body Proportions No Sign of Intelligence “People with relatively small bodies are not necessarily more intelligent than people with large bodies.” says Dr. William H. Sheldon of the University of Chicago. Doctor Sheldon has measured 450 iueu of the entering class of the university. The Investigation was made in order to gain further data on this question, since a similar experiment made with 75 students by Doctor Naecaratl at Columbia university In 1921 had indicated that there might be a definite relation ship between body type and mentality Reporting the results of his experiment to the Journal of Personnel Research. Doctor Sheldon states that, while he was measuring each student, a personal estimate of his Intelligence was gained. When he compared his records of the body types of the students with their ratings in Intelligence tests and their college grades, he found that the relationship of body proportions to mentality was a less trustworthy criterion than a personal estimate of the student's brains based on ten minutes' acquaintance. When You Feel- a Cold Coming On. Take Laxative BROMO QUININE Tablets to work off the Cold and to fortify the system against an attack of Grip or Influent*. 80c.—Adv. Had to See That Show Henry Laird, arrested on a disorderly charge at Monessen. Ta.. happened to remember after he had been put into a cell that there was a motion picture being shown that he wished to see. He reached through the bars, tested the lock and found it unfastened. He walked out of the Jail and went to the show. His absence discovered. police began a search throughout the city for him. After the performance, Laird returned to his cell and was sleeping peacefully when the desk sergeant made a visit to the lockup. “O Happy Day” sang the laundress as she hung the snowy wash on the line. It was a “happy day” because she used Russ Bleaching Blue. —Adv. Immense Gas Fields ~ The bureau of mines says that aY the present time the largest gas field in the worl" is located at Monroe. Ga. The past largest fields have been at Cincinnati. Ohio, and In the South. A possible alternate to the Monroe field is the Amarilla field. Texas. Ask for SUNSHINE RAISINS, a full pound wonderful seedless raisins, at your grocer’s.—Adv. Imagination Young Doctor—That patient of mine Imagines he has appendicitis. Specialist—And what do you Imagine It is? Hoi»ie’« Croup Remedy checka contest lon of the lungs. Used with great success for forty year*. Kells Co,.Newburgh, N. Y. Mfrs.—Adv. Dinner for nothing is more desirable than nothing for dinner. Happiness is the ever-retreating summit on the hill of ambition.
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