The Syracuse Journal, Volume 23, Number 31, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 27 November 1930 — Page 7

THE SWANK ABOUT-TOWN FROCK; FAVOR VELVET FOR AFTERNOON ■ «TAi V " ' wp* • 'i 1 f ' " ' ISaKik ■—■»— :■» 1 B"aME r- f -S -a ■

ACCORDING to m«(l»r» psychology of dress, to be merely practical Is not enough for the daytime frock "which must go shopping, or spend hours in the office or the class room, or serve in general for •bout-town wear. The welldressed Woman covets more and more for even her most

’■ '5. • . ■*“ -■ utilitarian costumes as fetch* Ing materials as found in the fabric realm and what's more the styling of these carefully selected weaves must be “tip to the mark" In point of clever detail. In these days there are many new types of materials such as were never heard of in the yesteryears of our forbears. The story of fabrics in times of yore was-completely told in terms of Milk,, cotion, wool, and linen. Now what do we see—the most amazing materials woven of “synthetic” yarns ns "they miy’! which have in turn been created of man-made fiber. Thtis modern weavers are doing the “hapos-i---ble‘"and so successfully that nowadays the questions “is it all wool?" or “is it pure silk?” are falling Into disuse. Leading Frrn\h couturiers as well as American desigiToks are alike yielding tin reservedly toJme lure of these modern-man-devised* weaves. Per example, Chanel makes the stunning frock which Is pictured above of a new whipped. twill fabric woven of hemberg (than made fiber) with a mix-

mm. t’’ 7 ’ ’ I AI ' f f j if ' "W / Lh Two Model* for Afternoon.

tare of spun silk In this instance the color is navy blue, plaided in broken white hairline stripes. Many interestinc and significant style details are featured in this arrestinc costume. There is first of all the youthful bolero effect. This modernized version sort of compromises between a bolero-proper, and a short Jacket with a one-side diagonal front fastening. — About the first impression one gets of this chic dress is “cuffs,” for khat is the way of cuffs this season to be conspicuous because of their novelty •nd their extreme “lines." For Afternoon Wear. "Every inch a lady” does she look,' the debutante of season UW--31, clad In a velvet gown of exquisite simplicity such as fashion bids her wear, as she makes her rounds of formal calls, attends afternoon mualcale and art reception, or when she teas at five at some fashionable Darker Tone* Are Worn by Up-to-Date Dressers This being a season when clothes are marked by the details of their design, •ays a fashion authority in the Louisville Courier-Journal, the notes below •re intended to be of assistance to the woman who la choosing her Cail and winter wardrobe. Brown coats are worn over red Stockings are decidedly darker for both daytime and evening. Tiny standing white collan placed

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A Swank About-Town Frock. rendezvous, or perhaps meets her sister debutantes "at the club.” Nothing could be more charming for the debutante during the afternoon hours' than the frock of transparent velvet touched with dainty alencon laee which is shown to the right in the f Jure below. The high waistline continues up in a point to meet a lovely soft arrangedient of choice lace. The blouse is deftly draped both front and back and gives most youth ful “lines'’ The alluring combination of lace with lovely velvet has captured the fancy of the smart set to the extent that costumes of this character exceed in nutpber all others at afternoon gatherings. Os course, the face must l<e ex r-ii-i'e y fine and It must be disposed in ways unique to measure up to the standard that is set by fashion. imperially does the lace-trimmed sleeve intrigue the fancy of designers whose specialty it is to create dressy

afternoon gowns. Trie lace gnruitured sleeve as styled for the dress pictured is typical of the' new vogue. Somewhat less formal but equally as modish is the model to the left. It really has quite a tailored appearance. as so many of the chic velvet afternoon frocks are wont to have this season. In accomplishing its graceful silhouette It has needs undergone an Infinite amount of intricate seaming involving a side panel which develops into a draped girdle which ties into an effective bow at one side, A most distinctive feature of this gown Is its seed-pearl beaded neckline. thus lace as trimming for the afternoon (evening also, for that matter) frock has a rival.' It Is a very flattering fashion, this of enhancing velvet with colorful, if not white, bead work. JULIA BOTTOMLEY <£. l»W. Wmtara Navapaaar Halon) Self-covered or matching bone buttons are the usual daytime preference. Smartest of all hats are the tricornes of French Revolutionary times. An eye veil gives these added chic. Tunic skirts and short basque jackets that flare about the hips are fashions brought to us from another day and age. There are many high collar effects on daytime dresses, and the front decolletage of evening gowns is decidedly modest, whether It be round, square «r V. '

Ohe KITCHEN CABINET <(ci. I*3o. Western Newspaper Lnioa.) To give people pleasure tn the articles they must perforce use. is the one great office of decoration. Today one may buy the most charming colorings for kitchen utensils and dainty beautiful china is not beyond the purse -of the modest housewife. ' , BANANA DESSERTS The banana Is one of our most popular and well liked fruits, one we can

always find in our markets and it deserves a chapter all for itself. Banana Bavarois.— Scald one cupful of milk in a double boiler. Stir in two teaspoonfuls of gelatin previously soaked in two tablespoonfuls of

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cold water. Add. one cupful of sugar and when cold and it commences to set stir in one cupful of banana pulp and one cupful of whippet! cream, i Pour into a mold and place on ice to set. Serve with: j Mousseline Sauce. —Bring one cupful of milk to a boll, add one-half ■ cupful of sugar, one teaspoonful of flavoring, mix well, set aside to cool, ! then add one-half cupful of whipped ; cream. Banana and Coconut Dessert.—Cut four bananas each into four pieces, place in a buttered pan and sprinkle with three teaspoonfuls of lemon Juice. Beat a» egg white, until stiff, add three tiiblespoonfuls of powtfered sugar. Add l one-half cupful of shredded coconut, j put a tablespoonful of this meringue on eiteh section of banana. Bake until brown. Surve with whipped cream. Banana feread Pudding.-—Take three ! slices of bread or three rolls, break Into small pieces. Pour over this two ! cupfuls of milk, one half cupful of : sugar, four bananas sliced, stir in lightly two beaten egg whites and bake for half an hour. Serve hot with a sauce using the two egg yolks beati en well, one-fourth of a cupful of sugar and a cupful of boiling milk; i stir and flavor, then, serve hot. A little lemon juice and rind may be used for the flavoring. Banana Fluff.—Cut one-half pound :of fresh marshmallows into small ' pieces. Whip one cupful of heavy i cream, add one teaspoonful of vanil- - la, onedialf cupful of sugar, a bit of salt, stir in the marshmallows, one cupful of broken nutmeats (less may : be used), and one cupful of banana pulp finely mashed. Serve with Crushed strawberries, or over ice cream of any flavor. Bedouins Prize Camel Above All Possessions A camel is considered worth more than a wife to Bedouins. Their incomes. sometimes their foes-, depend upon their camels. A •mel which can travel without food water for ten or twelve days is valuable indeed. But some will do so for fifteen or even twenty days. The saddles for these prized beasts are the finest that money can buy. A man who has four or five camels is considered well-to-do. One who has fifty Is considered wealthy. He has many servants, and ? lives on the income of his camels. i The rivalry between chieftains who have 500 or 800 camels is just as intense as It often was among the cattle baron* of the 'West. Sometimes I one of .the shirks will hire Bedouin i bandits to steal another's camels and •tart a feud that lasts for years. Camels eat a thorny weed called ! gavan. The weed is so dry that it Is ’ used to start fires. The root is filled I with a nsiiffius fluid that yields til most pure glue. Some of the best glue In the world is made Trom it. Let Down Mother had been trying very hard to teach little Betty to be more polite. At last she really seemed to be successful. “Just you see how good Rhe is at dinner time." mother boasted to her ' 4iusband. I'inner time came. There was suet i pudding. “Betty," said the child's mother, “will you have some more pudding?” "No!" replied the daughter. “No what. Betty dear?" “No fear, mother." Composition of Pewter Pewter is composed of tin and lean, with an alloy of brass or copper, which gives, particularly to old pewter. a mellow glow. The usual mixture ■ is B to 4 parts to 1 of lead, and an . old formula was 30 parts of brass to I 1.000 parts of tin. A hardening process has been discovered —a trade secret — i which is apparently able to overcome the softness of pewter, which was one j of the great causes of Its decline in the making nf utensils. Found Famous Cavern j The Carlsbad cavern was discovered | by Jim White, a New Mexico cowboy. : He was Investigating what appeared ■ to b*» an Immense cloud of smoke It proved to be a flight of millions of | bats. The eave to which they led him is probably the most extensive in the world and is full of beautiful rock formation. May Be Cotton Substitute “Kendye" is an Asiatic plant which. It Is claimed, produces a fiber which can be used as a substitute for cotton. Tidal Computation "Establishment ot a port" is the technical term for the time that elapses between the moon’s transit across the meridian at new or full moon and the time of high water at that place, and Is used as a basis to* the computation of the tides. Indictment of Radio “Dishere radio promotes laziness,* said Uncle Eben. "One banjo player kin work jes’ a little while an’ furnish music foh de intire country. ”— Washington Star.

THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL.

PRIZE WINNERS, BOTH OF THEM

r , I ' a • '.'t< 'XxM I w< \ JM ,4c.W WW' >7 1: \ A ' ■ma mi 11 ■iiiiiiiiTWii.mAM Charming “farmer girl” of the silver screen endeavors to cheer up the •elected Thanksgiving gobbler.

Feasts of Other 'Days Recalled • In that earlier day which the mist of time half hides and half reveals, the selection of a Thanksgiving bird be. nine a matter for profound family consideration. Not that the actual picking out of the turkey was affected thereby. No, the head of the household went forth as did the Pilgrim daddies, but armed only with his fascinating wallet, around which a strap was stret Jed. and held up the whiteaproned Indians or the checkeredshirted grocery braves, and brought home his yellow-legged loot. In this he hrd the advantage of the sternfaced Puritans, because they were given little choice in this important matter of selection, but were likely to bring home a hardened old gobbler of the earl. Pequot period, which would give the Puritan teeth a dangerous test at a time when dentistry was unknown. * Well, after dad brought home his personally conducted bird the family severally and jointly inspected it. This was done by extending its legs and bending its wings and jabbing it in the region of the breast bone. Whether It passed muster or not was of no consequence. It was the consecrated bird of the day us thanks and as such was offered up on the - family altar and duly immolated in spite of any dubious criticisms regarding its tenderness or flavor. Moreover, it invariably weighed Very close to five-and-twenty pounds. When the bird Escaped. On one occasion father brought home a live turkey, feathers an’ squawk an' everything, and left it overnight in the summer kitchen. Something was said about a raffle, hut raffles were not fit subjects for innocent Sunday school children to know about, and our only definite knowledge concerning the noisy visitor's origin was that it bail cost father a darn sight more than if he bad bought a featherless one at John Frauenfelder's or Arnold's or Southworth's. Well somebody left the door open and the bird streaked it for freedom. Os course We were hot after it, and It is recalled that father showed amazing evidences of agility in leading the chase. Once the fugitive flew into a tree and had to be bombarded out of it, and finally it ran up old Theresa street and right through the fortunately open door of one of the poorest cottages, and as father, who was well in advance, reached the doorway ha hear,! a trembling voice from within say “Sure, the saints have sent It I" That ended the chase, and we tramped back and father went over to Frauenfelder's and bought a turkey of the old-fashioned sort without fuss or feathers. Os course the Thanksgiving dinner

ITS HERE!

When tlie odors from the kitchen, Tantalum’ an* bewitchin’. Set a mortal’s palate itchin’— Tempt the appetites o* men; When you smell the mince-pie bakin’ Sniff the cake the cook is makm’, Covered thick with icy flakin’— Then Thanksgivin’s here again I —James Edward Hungerford, in the Prairie Farmer.

was a feast to be remembered with both joy and remorse? There were no favors, no special decorations, nothing but food and appetites, both served at noon. Everything on the unwritten menu was placed on the table at the beginning of the feast, and the serv-’ ice thereafter consisted merely in carving and passing. What the Poet Sang. In this process of dismantling and conversion it is recalled that soup was involved, hash took a prominent part, and bones were denuded. The stuffing was another interesting survival, and the seemingly inexhaustible gravy supply served many purposes. A yellow clipping from the Cleveland Herald recalls how the Herald poet, identity unknown, regarded this continuity: There’s turkey for breakfast and dinner and tea, I fear it is playing the mischief with me; • For over my coverlid turkeys do xvalk : — I scream put in terror and wake with a squtiwk. My feathers are sprouting, I’m stretching my neck; I talk with a gobble and at my food peck. If it should last longer each boarder agrees!. He’ll wreck the darn larder, and take to the trees! So the extinction of the bird went on until only a bunch of shining bones remained. It had been a five day struggle and a hard one. but not a morsel had been wasted. Nobody craved any more turkey for another year, and the meat market business began to look up. The last seen of the noble sow). was its disappearing bones as they departed in the jaws of a neighbor’s dog, who! was said to have caches of bones all over the neighborhood.— Cleveland Plain Dealer. ■ Turkey Traced to Aztec» Wild turkeys like those the Puritans found in New England were not domesticated to any extent. They are extinct in many of their former haunts and are restricted to some of the wilder sections of the southern states. The present-day domesticated turkey Is like the magnificentwild birds now found in eastern Mexico and raised by the Aztecs when that race was conquered by the Spaniards in 1517. The Spaniards are credited with taking the Jomestic Aztec birds back to Europe. and doubtless some of the same breed were brought over here by the Colonists. Honors Paid to Ceres The people of ancient Greece called their harvest festival the Tliesmophoria. This festival was very much like the feast of tabernacles. In Athens, the feast of Demeter was celebrated in November, by married women only. The Roman harvest deity went under the name of Ceres, the festival unusually occurred in October and was called the Cerelia. Chinese Day of Thanks The Chinese now have their national Thanksgiving day, the fifteenth of the eighth Chinese civil month, October 2 in our Western calendar. On this same day is celebrated, all over the Chinese empire, the great moon feast, which corresponds to the harvest moon of old England, with Its accompanying harvest festival. Thankfulness an Art Thankfulness is an art that must be acquired. It is a conscientious balance of the ledger between blessings bestowed and favors accounted for which were properly received. The appreciative personality seeks with microscopic scrutiny the recognition of such blessings to serve humanity. Giving Thanks . Thanksgiving is much like alms-giv-ing. The behefit to the giver is determined largely by the spirit which prompted the deed. If it is just a habit, you gain nothing; if it is an urge of the heart, yours is the greater blessing.—Grit. '

-whk. 4ORHHE .«■ '■*

Head th rob ? The woman who knows, would as soon start out without her purseT She always carries Bayer Aspirin. When your head fairly throbs from the stores and crowds, reach for that little box. Take two or three tablets, a swallow of water, and resume your shopping —in comfort. Relief is immediate. Most people use these wonderful tablets for something! But do you know how many, many ways they can spare you needless suffering? From the discomfort —and danger—of a neglected cold. From serious

BAYER©ASPIRIN

No one can fight the doctrine of the rights of man; for he’s fighting the desire to have. SWEETEN ACID STOMACH THIS PLEASANT WAY When there’s distress two hours after eating—heartburn, Indigestion, gas—suspect excess acid. The best way to correct this is with an alkali. Physicians prescribe Phillips’ Milk of Magnesia. A spoonful of Phillips’ Milk of Magnesia In a glass of water neutralizes many times its volume in excess acid; and does it at once. To try it is to be through with crude methods forever. Be sure to get genuine Phillips Milk of Magnesia. All drugstores have the generous. 25c and 50c bottles. Full directions In package. One proclaims he wonX “enter into further argument”/after he has made his. \ How Old Are Fou t This Is The Q Date I’m ( My Mind Is Keen—My Skin Is Clear—Of Petty Ills I Have No Fear No doubt about it—l am -18 and never felt better in my life—l feel like 30 and you can take my word for it—lt's the little Daily Dose of Kruschen That Does It. Once I was fat and forty—had headaches a-plenty—Was tired out most of the time—My liver was sluggish and my bowels inactive — I searched for a real remedy and by good fortune I found it in Kruschen Salts. ? Fat Isn't healthy—so Physicians state, and I want to say to this world full of fat people—that the Kruschen Method ofolosing fat is safe, sure and sensible—just cut out sweets —pies, pastries and ice cream for a month—go light on potatoes, rice, butter, cream and sugar—and don’t forget to take one-half a teaspoon of Kruschen Salts in a glass of hot water before breakfast every morning. I wish I could Induce every overweight person on earth to try this splendid method—lt surely doesn’t cost but a trifle —for an 85 cent bottle lasts 4 weeks and can be bought at any drug store in the world—Get it—Grow Thin—Feel younger.—Adv. Curiosity is also something .that loses its edge with age.

FrM DAYS | Restless NIGHTS I® I ...give child Cestorie | I

Fussy, fretful, can’t sleep, won’t eat.... It isn’t always easy to find just where the trouble is with a young child. It may be a stomach upset; it may be sluggish bowels. But when little tongues are coated and there is even a slight suspicion of bad breath—it's tune for Castoria! Castoria, you know, is a pure vegetable preparation especially made for babies and children. When Baby cries with colic or is fretful of constipation, Castoria brings quick comfort, and, with relief from pain, soothes him to restful sleep. For older children—up through all the school years, Castoria is equally effective fax helping to right irregularities. Just give it in larger doses. What a

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consequences of a sore throat. From those pains peculiar to women. From the misery of neuralgia and neuritis. Every drugstore has genuine Bayer Aspirin. The box says Bayes, and every tablet bears the Bayer cross. Tablets thus marked do not depress the heart.

[When Rest Is Broken Deal Promptly With Kidney Irregularities. Are you miserable with bladder irritations, getting up at night and constant backache ? Then don't take chances! Help your kidneys at the first sign of disorder. Use Doan’s Pills. Successful for more than SQyears. 1 Endorsed by hundreds orthQU- ■ sands of grateful users. Get M Doan’s today. Sold by dealers everywhere. • DIURETIC FRECKLES Go Quickly.,. From the time you make the first application they begin to fade like MAGIC. At all drug ana dept, stores or by mail postoaid $1.25 and 65c. A copy of Beauty Secrets FREE. DR. C. H. BEKRX CO. „ 2973-5 Michigan Ave. - - Chicago I J^Balsamof Myrrh

Ammonia in Drinking Water A new use for ammonia is in treating water in combination with chlorine. To insure-proper bactericidal action an excess of chibrine is usually added and the water thus treated has a noticeable and rather*unpleasant taste. If ammonia is added to the chlorine, forming chloramine, the amount of chlorine necessary is reduced to less than half the usual standard and the bactericidal action is increased and made more thorough. The Irresponsive Mike ‘‘Are you going to speak over the radio in your campaign?" “I don’t know,” answered Senator *- Sorghum, “I’m used to being in personal touch with my audiences. I wish they’d invent a microphone that knew when it was time to laugh or applaud.”

; J ■ comfort Castoria is to mothers! Get the genuine, with Chas. ft. Fletcher’s signature on wrapper and the name Castoria that always appears like this: