The Syracuse and Lake Wawasee Journal, Volume 13, Number 23, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 7 October 1920 — Page 9

wwl KOw K* vlnYahF *Q<M**At*• i' >*'' : vl3\ > £WSS nTraR2S W ? ' -’

Owe Their Health To Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound —overshadowing indeed is the success of this great medicine. Compared with it, all other medicihes for women’s ills seem to be experiments. Why is it so successful ? Simply because of its sterling worthFor over forty years it has had no equal Women for two generations have depended upon it with confidence. Thousands of Their Letters are on our files, which prove these statements to be facts, not mere boasting.

Here Are Two Mother and Daughter Helped. Middleburg, Pa.—“l am glad to state that Lydia E. Pinkham’s VegetableCompounddidmemuch good when I was 35 years old. I was run down with female trouble and was not able to do anything, eould not walk for a year and could not work. I had treatment from a physician but did not gain. I read in the papers and books about Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound and decided to try it. The first few bottles gave me relief and I kept on using it until I got better and was able to do my work. The Vegetable Compound also regulated my daughter when she was 15 years old. I can recommend V ege table Compound as the best medicine I have ever used.” —Mrs. W. Yerger, R. 3, Box 21, Middleburg, Pa.

Wise Is the Woman Who Insists Upon Having

Lydia [.Pinkham’s If k I I V 1 I Vegetable Compound <■—■■■/it rw'i irirrr • - ■- -a —■■

Valuables. King Midas turned a hand to gold. “It isn’t as bad as turning a head to very,” we consoled him. Wright’s Indian Vegetable Pills contalr othlns but vegetable ingredients, which ct gently as a tdnic and purgdtive by stlmlatlon and not by irritation.—Adv. Very Much So. “This unfortunate collision sent my thole stock of eggs doivn the hill.” “Too bad. tVhat you might call a epreciation in rolling stock.”

AIMS TO REACH 100 4 Pittsburgher, Who Caused a Sensation, Tells of Results. ANCIENT TONIC HIS SECRET Hundreds of Thousands of Families Found Health and Happiness by ’ Following His Instructions. ,

Six years ago 11. H. Von Schlick •ould be seen any day visiting prominent Pittsburgh business men in their lowntown offices. He carried a satchel, and his arrival was always greeted by a smile indicating welcome. These men were his customers. They irank at his “fountain of youth.” Theyleered it him with a new lease of life ind the healthy condition of their families. Von Schlick has bright eyes and his theeks indicate that pure red blood Sows through his veins. IJe says he was younger at fifty than he was at thirty-five. He has never had a sick ipell or any of the symptoms of the lilments which afflicted him before he began using a tea, the Ingredients of which were conveyed to him by an old Bulgarian 20 years ago. Von Schlick makes this statement: “I was recovering from the grippe, was run down, and a dizzy feeling in the head, and felt like the victim of the hook-worm. This old Bulgarian tnew of my sickness and while in the office suggested, ‘I give you (something to make you feel better.’ He returned next day with a package and told me to use one teaspoonful in a cup of hot water, and to repeat the dose once each night for a little while. He promised I would never be troubled from sickness again. I followed the prescription, skeptical, of course, and one day later I was seeking that old’ man to secure from him the ingredients of that tonic. ONE HUNDRED YEARS YOUNG. J “He explained to me that in Bulgaria the older families regarded this tonic as the great disease preventative and health restorer; that it was handed down from generation to generation. At the first symptom of any sickness the mother or women of the family made the teg for all members, (t is a well-known fact that Bulgarians are the oldest and healthiest people in the world. “In Bulgaria and the Balkan countries of Eastern Europe, in spite of poor sanitary conditions, among 1,000,000 inhabitants there are 1,600 over 100 years old. In France there Is only one person in 1,000.000 over 100 years old, and in Germany only one person 1,150,000. It is a rare news item in the United States when ft man dies after reaching the century mark. “My Bulgarian friend informed me that his progenitors reached this time of life and that they all had a healthy and happy old age. Asked for area-

Sample Letters: ° Fall River, Mass. — “Three years ago I gave birth to a little girl and after she was born I did not pick up well. I doctored for twomonths and mycondition remained the same. One day one of your little books was left at my door and my husband suggested that I try a bottle of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. I started it immediately and I felt better and could eat better after the first bottle, and I continued taking it for some time. Last year I gave birth to a baby boy and had a much easier time as I took the Vegetable Compoundfor four monthsbefore baby came. On getting up I had no pains like I had before, and no dizziness, and in two weeks felt about as well as ever.” —Mrs. Thomas Wilkinson, 363 Columbia Street, Fall River, Mass.

Naughty Fido. Hortense ha.d taken. Fido to a party where several othdr doggies had been invited. Upon returning home mother asked how she had enjoyed the party. "Oh, pretty well,” she answered, “but I was dreadfully ashamed of Fido. He kept on barking- and backing, and wouldn’t give any of the other doggies a chance to say a word I” Plain, unvarnished truth is better than questionable rhetoric.

son he pointed to his tonic. After using this tonic for 15 years I am ready to guarantee to the world that it is the best prescription for health existing. “Every member of my family takes one dose each week, my relatives all use it. my friends and neighbors have been keeping health by reason of it and hundreds of thousands of people in this city, all sensible and wellknown, consider I have done them an everlasting favoi; by convincing them of its merits. “During all the terrible influenza epidemic Bulgarian Blood Tea was used by countless thousands of sufferers with marvelous success and millions of people took it steaming hot to prevent and ward off the disease. A 15-YEAR TEST. “After 15 years of experience I am positive that it will prevent sickness. It will restore your health by eliminating the poisons. It will regulate disorders of the digestive organs. It will Increase poor circulation. It will restore vitality, energy or strength. It will make your brain respond splendidly to the strain of modern business. It will give you a healthy, youthful complexion. It will prolong your life and, with proper diet, you should live to a ripe old age.” Bulgarian Blood Tea today is used by millions of people in every state in the Union fighting off disease and old age weaknesses. They include happy girls budding into womanhood or women crossing precarious thresholds of life. All praise and recommend it. Men regain strength and vitality, the blood becomes rich and pure and the fire and vim of robust health returns to those who were in despair. Bulgarian Blood Tea Is guaranteed to contain just pure herbs of marvelous medicinal and curative power gathered from fields, mountains and valleys of Europe, Asia and Africa. All drug stores now keep Bulgarian Blood Tea in stock, but, owing to the enormous demand Immediate application to your druggist is urgent on account of the limited source of supply. Distributors of Bulgarian Blood Tea are authorized to return the full purchase price if it does not materially improve your health in three weeks’ time. This evidence of faith in the power of Bulgarian Blood Tea is the guarantee of the Marvel Products Company. Marvel Building. Pittsburgh. who authorise this public an* nbuncement. —Adv.

THE SYRACUSE AND LAKE WAWASEE JOURNAL

SERGE OR SATIN FOR MID-SEASON

Fabrics Must Be Warm Enough to Save Wearing Coats Until Cooler Fall Days. BEADING IS STILL IN FAVOR Decoration Holds Sway Despite Recent Adverse Criticism —■ Red Belts; Bindings and Faci/igs Are Popular. With the first breath of cool weather the dying season’s waru-obe begins to look like nothing at all. observes a New York fashion correspondent. And what is to be d(hie for clothes, for something that resembles the proper sort of clothes, for This halfway period? That is the problem, and it is comparatively easy to solve when one regards the array of mid-season dresses that the shops are offering. Even on tiie streets and in the restaurants there have been evidences that, among fashionable women, there has been some thought of preparedness, for many are the new street frocks that have made their appearance. A study of them may save many mistakes. The dresses of the intervening season are serge or satin, for they must be worn without coats and on the street, with hats and furs, just as any suit of the later fall days. Taffeta had its run through the summer months, but it has reached the time of discard. Black satin or meteor or. any of the allied materials is the thing for street wear,, and it has conic back into its own. The newer black satin dressed ire charming enough to lure even the purchaser who has decided to wait until winter is really upon us. It sounds like an old story to say .hat the simpler the satin dress the -more beautiful it is. Most of the newer satin gowns for the street are in black —a very few in the darkest of slues or in black —and they are cut on :he straightest lines possible, with skirts just a trifle fuller than they nave been and necks that are round or pointed, as the case of the individual taste may dictate. A touch of some white thing about the thrqat and the neckline is a usual thing. It is more demure in aspect than were the daunting fichus of the spring and summer. Skirts Are Full. The skirts of these later dresses ire full, and they take on this extra width in Various and interesting manners. For instance, there is the paneled skirt, with loose and flopping jreadths at front and back or at both sides, but usually there is a sugges;ion of an underskirt which gently lugs the figure and allows the fullness of the outer skirt to hang loosely over it. The sleeves are long, and oose or tight, as the case may be. Some of them are fitted at the armloles and others are cut in so baggy i fashion as to have almost no shape it all. It all depends on the figure mid what it can stand and what is chosen for a particular case, for there :s coming to be more and more of a regard for the individual note. Each woman for her own charm and expression of personality—that is the new slogan, and it is expressing itself ‘n every direction, especially in this case of the street frock. Then there is the serge dress, which it this season of the year particularly demonstrates its place in the wardrobe of seasonable frocks. There Is nothing to take Its place—nothing that ran step in to make the assertion that It is “just as good.” About this blue serge frock there is everything that Is smart and chic. The newer serge

MOTIFS OF PATENT LEATHER

Material Used in Appliqued Form as Wess as to Make Small Bows to Trim Frocks. Among the trimmings, patent leathar is used in tlie form of appliqued motifs, as well as to make small bows to trim frocks of both cloth and velvet. An interesting suit In dual tone srown gabardine is ornamented with motifs of black patent leather. The skirt is very narrow, but the jacket flares at the sides. It Is lined with a flossy black satin, glimpses of which ire shown inside the standing collar, the cuffs and at the undulating edge -jf the basque fullness. Two interesting suits were made hy me of our fonnost American designers tn which patent leather is used in a remarkable way to form the trimming. A country suit of rose-colored homespun has very narrow bands of patent leather encircling the bottom of a rather long box coat, as well as the bottom as the skirt. There are at least a jozen of these bands. They are worked CHOOSE WOOL JERSEY CLOTH Fabric Affords Type of Dress Distinctly Worth While for the Cool Days. A type of dress that is distinctly worth while for cool days and that is excellent for the autumn day is that made of lightweight wool jersey cloth. In selecting this material it is important that a firmly woven piece be selected, otherwise it will stretch and the dress lose its smart lines. This tendency to stretch out of all shape has been the main objection to the knitted silk and imitation silk fabrics that have had such a run of favor for two or three seasons. A dress of one of these materials usually stretches in length with corresponding shrinkage in width, so that at the end of the season it is practically unwearable. Much the same thing may happen to the wool jersey frock unless a closely woven, firm piece of material Is selected. Many of these dresses are made quite straight and entirely unlined.

frocks are almost sure to be embroidered, at least those which are shown now are so trimmed. This is an embroidery that can show originality, and ■ there is the best of chances for a dis tinctive gown when taste is employed in the selection. The most beautiful of the embroideries are done by band, of course; they show all colors of the rainbow combined Jn one narrow strip. The Oriental quality of these stitchings is most charming, and, wilt the darkness and plainness and rich ness of a background of blue serge they have the character of uttermost fineness. A few hand stitches can gc a great way in this particular, especially if they are cleverly distributed and if their colors are chosen with a view rt> making the most of a smal' space. Woolen Stitches Effective. Woolen stitches on blue serge oi tricotine, or on any of these materials that in some way resemble one another, are as effective as anything can be. and on many of the newer fall frocks they are seen. Red is the colot that does the most in this respect There are some serge dresses that show only long red woolen stitches with here and there a stray motif tc accentuate the idea of the color combination. Then there are others which are more lavishly worked up in this same color combination. It is a combination that carries an appeal be cause of its cheerfulness. Embroideries following the Roumanian designs or those from Czechoslovakia are the most popular. It is the strip of many colors that has the first place in fashionable trimmings, and, applied to the frock of blue serge, certainly shows beduty and wealth of its texture. A frock oi blue serge, one of the very newest tc be seen anywhere, has a high girdle sort of belt curved in front to a width -greater than at any other place around the waist. This strip is embroidered solidly in reds and greens and purples. Then, to repeat this brilliant bit of color, there are bands at the hips each about two and a half inches broad and twelve inches long. They are applied so that they hold extra side fullness for the skirt. The neck of the frock is plainly finished by a cord, and the sleeves are ended Id the same way, so that all the trimmings are gathered about the waist and the hips. It is a novel grouping of embroidered strips, and it- is beautiful as an example of what can be done with a small amount of embroidered trimming cleverly applied. Beading on blue serge—and ob satin, for the matter of thht—criticized not long ago as not going well together, is still “going strong,” one migtii say. This only go.es to prove that the American woman wants what she wants when she wants it and will not be told that her cherished trimming may not be used in this combination. Red Belts and Bindings. Red belts and red bindings and red facings are popular with the newei blue serge frocks. These touches gc a long way toward providing that necessary element x of style. One little girl at tea in a gay hotel '.'.ad a blue serge frock with a short and very full skirt, like the Parisienhes are wearing The bodice was short and tightly fitted and a bit “bloussy.” The sleeves were tight. The one bit of trimming was a handsomely steel-studded red leather belt not more than an inch wide. And with this she wore a fuzzy turban of yellowish tan beaver cloth made to flop over one side of het head. She had tied this on with a tandotted veil, under which her dark hair peeped out at little places, and her appearance was just about as smart a thing as one could hope tc see.

over with heavy gray yarn to form a design of black and gray. The skirt of this model is somewhat fuller than those intended for town wear and is set onto a yoke at hip length. A second «uit is of midnight blue velours handed in the same way with patent leather, which is worked over and over with a heavy tan silk to form a checkerboard pattern of black and tan. Fantastic Footwear. The smart Parisienne continues tc manifest the greatest Interest in fancy shoes. Perhaps the very high cost of footwear in Paris is one of the reasons why the fantastic styles are sc popular. The fair Parisienne must have something to make a show sot her money. The shoemaker, therefore, must, like the high-priced milliner, create an individual style for every customer. There is still a great vogue for strap slippers in black and white, with touches of bright color. Some of the wool jersey dresses being shown are trimmed with ornamental braids in contrasting color. An especially charming one recently seen was of pale tan-colored wool jersey, with an inch wide satin-finished braid applied as banding about the round neck, long sleeves and tunic. For Class-Room Wear. Cotton crepe, often too warm fa summer, is ideal for class-room wear It is a material that lends itself readily to tubbing, while the Ironing of il is almost a minus quantity. It car be had in the warm, medium shades, lovely deep blues, bright tans, rose pinks, leaf greens, eta, which are becoming to young folks and are almosl as practical as the very dark colors. Coats for Fall Suits. The coats belonging to the new fall suits range in length all the way from the hips to the knees. Fur forms a generous- part of the suits, ’j is not only used for collars and cuffs, but It may be found around the bottom, down the front or in the pocket form.

Uncle VEXATION OF SPIRIT CCyrraEN I was in business.” said W the retired merchant, “I never had time to read much, and I used to look forward to the glad day when I could revel in literature. I felt sure I’d be entirely happy. I used to

jot down the titles of bocks I intended to read, and when I retired from business I had a list as long as the i Russian battle line. “And now that I I can read all I want to, I don’t : get any enjoyment out of hooks. They bore me the worst way. I get sleepy

® iHgL I

as soon as I begin to read, and my wife comes and tells me my snoring is disturbing the neighbors.” “It’s that way with everything we look forward to,” observed the hotelkeeper. sadly. “Man always will be, but is never blest, as some half-baked poet remarked. Young Gooseworthy was in here last evening, bubbling over with happiness. There wasn't anybody around, so he took me into His confidence. He’s going to marry Gwendolin Jimalong, next month, and he’s perfectly satisfied that his married life, will be one long stretch of sunshine. He seems to have the idea that he’s going to do something original when he gets married, but the idea isn’t new. Men have been getting married ever since Christopher discovered Columbus, Ohio, and every doggone<man jack of them had the idea that everlasting bliss was going to be inaugurated on the wedding day. “I listened to Gooseworthy for three hours, and hadn’t the heart to say anything that would dampen his enthusiasm. His twittering recalled the long vanished days when I was getting ready to-be married, I felt about it then just as he does now. I thought the parson opened the gates of paradise when he joined two loving hearts. My wife lived up to all the plans and specifications, and was and is one ot the best women in the United States, but I hadn’t been married three months before I had a sneaking conviction that the man who gets married Is a chump. “A good many optimists say that a married man doesn’t need any more money than a single one. if he marries the right sort of woman, but they might as well go to the blackboard and demonstrate that two and twe make two. instead ot four. I fell sot that cheerful theory when I was map ried. I was earning enough to keep myself comfortably, and never had any financial worries. I could have been buried for less money than it took to be married, and the expenses from that time forward were double what they used to be, although my wife was so economical she used tc make waists and such things for her self out of my superannuated shirts. “Oh, doggone it, there isn’t any un adulterated happiness in matrimony. ’. wonder that young fellows like Goose worthy don’t look around them, and contemplate the dejected appearance of the majority of husbands. But ever if they did. it wouldn’t do them any good, I suppose, for they are full oi pipe dreams, and they think the girls they are going to marry are differeni from all other girls, and that they wil. prove exceptions to the general rule. “I had a wise old uncle in those hal cyon days, and about a week before the wedding day, he backed me into a corner and handed me a dust-prool package of wisdom. He tried to lead me into taking a sensible view of the future. He talked about the cares and responsibilities that would be mine after the wedding, and wanted tc know If I felt equal to them. He tried to show me that I wasn’t going tc marry’ an angel, but a human being like "myself, with a human being’s faults and frailties. “I let him get that far, and then I told him that his gray hairs alone saved him from having his head remodeled, and said I never wanted him to darken my door, and he never did I had to darken it myself, with wal nut stain. But many a time afterward, I recalled his wise words and wept over his grave.” Well Off. “After all a man never knows when he’s well off.” “What’s happened now?” “I was just thinking what a fool I was for trading off my Liberty bonds for oil stock.” Nut Waiter Wanted. An old lady, after waiting in a confectionery store for about ten minutes, grew grossly impatient at the lack of service. Finally she rapped sharply on thp counter. . U. “Here, young lady,” she called, “who waits on the nuts?” —Everybody’s Magazine. The 'Consequence. “At the anti-dog meeting nobody muzzled the speakers.” r “That was the reason, then, there were so many biting remarks.” Instinct of Sheep Dog. The Australian sheep dogs are the smallest in use in the world, but are quick and lively, bne dog can do the work of half a dozen men; in many instances a dog is superior to 50 human beings, where there are vast flocks of sheep to watch. Jud Tunkins. Jud Tunkins says that after a woman succeeds in getting her husband dressed up just the way she wants, she’s liable to look him over and wish be was a cave man.

Ibl ’ Avertable JYeparatoforA.tingtheStomachs andl.jwß- ' I Os -. neither Opiam.Morphtaeno ® J Mineral. NotNasS oIIC I jiS-X j I ; I [ Mel ; facsimile L s!|t'hM THSGmAVRCoW’S® I Exact Copy of Wrapper.

Needed “Pill” Right on the Start. Little Eleanor returned home after her first day at school. She said: “Mamma, I need a pencil and a pill, j The piil is a book you write in, the teacher said.”

Kill That Cold With CASCARA k> QUININE FOR AN ? Colds, Coughs Grippe Neglected Colds are Dangerous Take no rhanrea. Keep this standard remedy handy for the first aneeza. Breaks up a cold in 24 hours — Relieves Grippe in 3 days—Excellentjor Headache Quinine in this form does not affect the head—Cascara is best Tonic Laxative—No Opiate in Hill’s. ALL DRUGGISTS SELL IT

COULDN’T TAKE HER IN CUP “Honey” Was What the Youngster Was After, but Not in Quite Such a Generous Quantity. Tommy Brown had not studied peltnanism and his brain was like a sieve. When his mother told him to take a cup to the grocer’s and get it filled with honey he heard what she said; but when he got to the grocer’s he forgot what he had come for. The grocer named one article after mother in good-natured attempt to refresh his memory, but all to no avail. Then he turned to his plump wife and said: “Honey, can you think what it might )e?” “That’s it; that’s it!” cried the boy, jxcitedly. “Honey! But, look here.” he added, eyeing the buxom lady, “you’d better put her on my back ami let me take her that way,, for the cup wouldn’t hold her.” To Be Relied On. “Hiram,” said Mrs. Corntossel, “do sou think that political speaker will make an effort to reduce the high cost Df living?” “You mean the one who stopped here tor dinner?” “Yes.” “You can depend on him to give the subject earnest consideration. A man with an appetite like his can’t help ’.akin’ a personal interest.”

That "Wholesome Table Drink Postum Cereal gains new friends right along because of its pleasing taste healthfulness,and savingin cost Postum Cereal is delicious when properly made: boil fully fifteen minutes after boiling begins. The more you boil Postum Cereal the better it is.

When ordering be sure to get the original •Postum Cereal ASO-ctip package usually sells for Made by Postum Cereal Co., Inc., Battle Creek,Mich.

CASTORIA For Infants and Children. Mothers Know That Genuine Castoria Always Z . Bears the Signature / of ft Jf** HZ se VA For Over Thirty Years CASTORIA THE CENTAUR COMPANY, NEW YORK CITY.

Tip They Deserve Sometimes. Headline — “Man in Restaurant ‘ Knocked Down Head Waiter.” This, i the waiter himself will probably ad« i mit. is carrying the tipping system a ’ little tod far. —Boston Transcript.

MILK AND MEAT AS RIVALS Rising Prices May Yet Force People to Turn to the Fluid to Sustain Life. As the price of meat soars upward, nlany-people are forced to be parttime vegetarians. Thus the old question, “Is meat essential to human wellbeing?” arises again. The committee on food and nutrition of the National Reserach council has issued an interesting report on the relative value of meat and milk. Eighteen per cent of the protein and energy of grain used in feeding a cow goes into the milk, and is therefore recovered for human consumption; whereas only 3% per cent is recovered In beef. As for the mineral elements In hay arid grain, not much is stored in the tissues, but' a great amount goes into milk. Beef profiteers, beware! The hardpressed public may decide to let milk take the place of beefsteak. —Popular Science Monthly. Not Qualified. “A reporter wishes to see you. sir." “What does he want?” asked Mr. Grabcoin, testily. “He says he wants to get your viewa on the European Situation.” “Tell him Pin not competent to discuss the question. I don’t even know what’s become of that poet, musician or something or other who captured Flume.”— Birmingham Age-Herald.

postum®)] S