The Syracuse and Lake Wawasee Journal, Volume 15, Number 7, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 15 June 1922 — Page 2

1 Wraps for Summer Trips; R jg Knitted Accessories H Hiiiii iiiiiiiimihiiSl

THE least showy and conspicuous of our friends often proves to be the best friend in need, and so it is with coats and wr..ps. Now that the time for summer journeyings is here, ask the unexperienced glohe-trdtter, and she will tell you to begin your outfitting with a practical, coat, made of a soft, warm material, in a neutral or dark color. Whether your path leads to the mountains or the sea, the tropics or the desert, take i

& VC ’ O# V W W»- ©> met /•i T \ Ife. OU; mMB i.> mLf i jflilV ■ r fwrrTw ' Ifl’H ■ ■}r I - i I Ww u I I \ ~ I ImM IBF ' s £ t fff If 'ii i i * I .■ I I Ilf I - BWI h B ® Ii * I ■ Wl i■ ‘ J BMm WHHP IRL ’ j&THk. XXk M • M Practical Wraps for Summer Journeys.

a sturdy coat along, for you will have need of it. One does not acquire a boat of this kind for a single journey or a single season, therefore eccentricities of style are not among its 'possessions. We may count on straight lines, youthful and mannish styles to be long-lived and r.ot affected by passing whims of fashion, but entirely comfortable. Such a coat is shown at the right of the two pictured here. It is provided with capacious pockets, an ample collar and is lopsely belted. Made of homespun, twped, duvetyn and camel’S-halr and similar coatings, it is the tourist’s delight. The coat at the left of the picture proclaims itself as of this season with its wide, capeline sleeyes, but it is

fk .■ ■ • ' K fIgWSMS • qBIMM IgflfegMa Slip-Over Sweater and Scarf.

a candidate for the position of traveling company and has much to recommend it. Where only one wrap is to be taken along for a journey or visit, it is prepared tc serve for all sorts of occasions, and. will prove as good a choice as any. It has a convertible j collar and long girdle of the material. In beige color or tan and lined with soft satin to mitch it will harmonize with everything. Already coats for fall" are occupying the attention of manufacturers. They assure that lines will continue straight in\d sleeves large. Even if these details are changed, the straight-line, ample coats of today are a good investment. There will be no great difficulty in shaving off a little of the ampleness that Fashion approves this summer if she changes her mind by fall. Coats can’t grow larger —they may become smaller. Striding along, keeping pace with the ever-increasing disposition to outdooring, many knitted things have been added to the belongings of worn-. Fancy Belts Are Gdod. The fancy belt is still good, and mother-of-pearl may take thp place of steel. Lanvin, in a number of her tailored suits, features a plaited leather belt, which is very often made of black patent leather. Chanel, on the other hand, uses brown leather ’ with/her tweed sport suits. Lanvin is reviving the little, white, plaited frills which she is using on the collar of her suits. Other houses are also using the lingerie collar of the lingerie piece to fill in the V front which is be-

en. The sweater has been multiplied to suit occasion, scarfs have been varied for the same reason, hats and bags to match them have joined the cheerful company of knitted accessories. These things, and others, are taken as a matter of course In the wardrobe while emphasis is placed on the kind of yarns employed and on style and color. Knitted things, Including dresses, are especially voguish for sportswear,

but their usefulness does not begin o» end there, unless we make “sports-,, •wear” a term of very wide application. Knitted garments, cleverly styled, appear almost everywhere. Many of them are products of wonderful looms and many of them are hand knitted — the latter having the usual prestige of handwork over machine work. Now that they are so fashionable it is well worth while to learn to knit. Worni en find it fascinating work, good tor the nerves —and an important relief to the strain on their pocketbooks. A novice might make a beginning in , the gentle art of knitting by copying the pretty scarf of Iceland wool shown . here at the right of the illustration. A fine zephyr, In any color desired, is i used for it and the border of stripe;

in contrasting colors, may suit in dividual fancy. The slip-over sweater at the left is machine-knitted and may be had in almost any color. It is a practical and youthful affair with a “V” neck, elbow sleeves, and fancy border banded with white. The collar and cuffs match the border and a narow knitted belt, having no particular business, is there because it is there, to make a pretty finish. It buttons at each side after crossing at the front. Just at the moment many slip-over sweaters are shown in gay colors with horizontal stripes in white, or white interwoven with the color, and manufacturers are featuring sweaters in white with horizontal stripes in Navajo patterns. They are fine for sports wear. The tuxedo maintains its place for older people. COmiGHT tt VESTUtN NEWWU UNION. ginning to replace the bateau neckline. Little Girl's Coat. Coats for the six-year old are shown in the same tweeds and homespuns as mother’s, and hats of the same material are shown with them, in many cases. • —. Summery Hats. Large poke hats of, black horsehall braid or malines are among the, prettiest summer hats. ’

OUR MAGAZINE ZLA SECTION M Interesting Features for the Entire Family l 1 - . ' "• '• ' • •' —- r —-■ _

E • ■» |b] " [ 1 ” Something to Think About " By F. A. WALKER I "• ——TnP

lai ■■ -— SILENCE PLAY the silent part in all your joys and sorrows. Let neither ex\ cessive happiness nor great grief overwhelm you. Control your speech and spirit under all conditions, even when the clanging din around you urges you to trumpettongued retorts. When the storms of mischief-mak-ers shake your house of clay to its very foundations and, cause your soul to tremble with apprehension, hold your peace. Be cool and calm and patient. To be- otherwise is perilous as it invites fresh attacks from those seeking your destruction. Curb resentment through the snarling tempest; lift up your face to the whirling clouds, and remember that beyond them There is always the clear, serene sunlit sky f indifferent to the clamorous noises below. “Let not your heart be troubled.” Think of the content that will ultimately be yours if you hold loyally to the right course and continue in well doing. Think of the eyes that are watching you, the loved ones who are dependent on you, trusting and Believing in the nobility of your soul. Do nothing, think nothing and say nothing that will shake their faith in you, or cause you to lose faith in yourself. By keeping still in great stresses of emotion the atmosphere around you becomes cooler, and your enemies or accusers gradually lose their heat and become more easily susceptible to reason. Silence is the most jnagnificent and impressive thing in the universe. What more sublime than the hush of .a starry night in the solitude of vast hills or endless plains? What more than silence impresses so deeply, so profoundly, the thoughtful man or woman of his or her insignificance? These cdose intimacies with Nature, beyond all others, brmg home to us long forgotten promises, old f.-.ces and friendships lost in the mist of years, with startling clearness. But the best thirfg about silence.

<& | SCHOOL DAI]S r i (1 ' jSMm V ill, I wwL i' ■’ f <T®w m Twe.VCWf OF AMAt/*V<IIM A MAiO

The Friendly | Walter 1. Robinson J THINK FOR YOURSELF TT IS always good policy to-read clean literature, to consider the advice of those who should know what they are talking or writing about, and to listen to good sermons’, but no one ever was k<ept on the right pathway by what he read or heard spoken unless he used his brain. Everyone’s life is in his own keeping. Whether be is happy or unhappy, whether he is successful or unsuccessful, whether he is earning for himself an eternal home in heaven or hell depends on himself. Wise men and honest men may direct one to the proper road, but no one can make a human being do what is right if he refuses to do so. • Nearly,every one remembers that old proverb, “You can take a horse to water, but you can't make him drink.” But too often the lesson it is supposed to tehch falls on deaf ears. It is always dangerous to follow the mob. One may become quite popular with a certain class if he will do as that class wishes. But popularity of that sort is seldom worth a great deal. Those who find real enjoyment in life and those who stand out as leaders are

SYRACUSE AND LAKE WAWASEE JOURNAL

whether we be with It in the verdureu fields or forest, or in our own rooms, is that we get a closer view of our faults and frailties in quite a new and surprising light, frequently dazzling our wondering eyes and changing us for the better. (Copyright.) O THE. CHEEKfUL CHERUB I like to $o to ttJk of Art, I ‘i.c-t stupid gooie. I ket.r 50 clever TktX I cktn /Cv .store t-\yey \ p JT) for fvtvre. use. GsJk

| Uncommon i Sense ♦♦ ♦ I BLAKE I ! ———”—— d-——™ —— =j [

ENJOY THE GAME Gentlemen who play golf win tell you that the man who tries too hard never does very well at it. Incidentally, he never gets any fun out of the game. There are many parallels between golf and life, which is doubtless the reason that so many people are devoted to it. Golf, of course, is a game, and only a game. Yet there are many of its followers who can see only the advantage of winning, and who come in sour and ill-tempered if they lose.

, seldom found in the midst of the most i I popular crowd. | i If one’s mentality is normal, whether [ I he is educated or uneducated, he is 1 1 likely to come near the proper goal if !I he uses his brain. But let him con--1 ‘ stantly depend on the judgment of i others to direct his footsteps and the | chances are ten to one that he’ll be headed toward a fall. No one knows as well as oneself what is good for him, except when illness comes and the skill of the physi--1 clan or surgeon is necessary to mend . the bodily damage. Yet millions constantly go whining about, seeking ad- ; vice from their fellows, the while los- . ing much of their just share of happiness. When one accidentally stumbles or when he is pounced upon by the rattler hidden beside his path, his misfortune . is excusable. But it is no excuse for ’ man or woman of normal mentality . blaming downfalls on others. The wisest persons are those who • don’t think they know it all. (Copyright.) i O Asiatic Peoples. I Alpine people are frankly Asiatic. ■ They originally come from the Pamir ' uplands. Half of the Alpine types of tlie present world, the Turkoman, the Turkish or Tartar, the Armenian and ! the Levantine are still natives of ■ Asia. Living men of Homo Sapiens i Alpinus or the normal round-heads ’ of France and Germany have been found in Afghanistan and Samarkand, i places from whence their ancestors had never

1 yiimiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiimmimiiiiimimte 1 SIX I i i\n & 1 = Lx> Will M. Maupin | 3iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!ii!iiiiiiniiiiiiiimi i A PROBLEM WORTH WHILE i TJE HAS tackled divers questions 1 With assurance great to view. > From preserving our digestions, Up to how big game pursue. ’ He has done work literary With an air of honest pride, > And has writ in manner cheery All about race suicide. Os canals and arbitration, And of income taxes, too; Os the freight glut situation And the right course to pursue To make railroads come to center, Or to back up Id Monroe — To be brief he is a Mentor Knowing all that men can know. But he has his limitations Just like any other man. He can’t solve some situations ‘Cause no humtn mortal can. Vainly would he wilt his collar If he faced the problem great How to make a single dollar - Feed and clothe a bunch of eight, (Copyright.) O ' * Forty Kinds of Buoys Used. There are fortj different types of buoys used at sea, each of which has 1 a meaning of its own.

Others, while they try to win, get just as much fun out of it if they lose. I And thqy never stamp on their clubs or ; throw them away, or swear at the caddies. i It is very important to win tn anything. But it is more important to get i your allowance of fun out of it as you j go along. Sitting wheezily in any rich man’s club you will find did gentlemen who r wanted to win more than anything s else, and who did win fortunes, but - lost their health and their happiness r in the effort. And, with all their money, you can set them down as losers; There is good sportsmanship in all human effort. There are things the good sportsman will not do, even to win. One of them is cheating; another is becoming so absorbed in the pursuit of victory that he forgets everything else as he goes along. John Burroughs, who probably never had more than the necessities of life in all his existence, got full measure of enjoyment that was denied to many who made a thousand times as much money. Incidentally, he was a very successful man, for he added to the sum of human knowledge. Win if you can. Get a fortune if you can. Money meaps independence, and the ability to do good in the world. But never forget that there is enjoyment as well as trouble in life, and that if you are not too intent on winning what the world calls success, you will be happier as you go along, and stand just as good a chance of making your life worth while, and the world better off because you lived in it. (Copyright.) O rfoiheriCooKßook l / “He who receives and entertains his friends, and who does not, himself, personally, give supervision to the repast which he offers them, is not worthy of having' friends.” FRESH FISH ' IN TJIE parts of the country where fish may be caught, cooked and eaten the same day, there is no more appetizing and healthful food. Fish t should be cleaned and placed on ice, never leaving it until put into the oven r or broiler; then the flavor will be good 3 and the dish appetizing. f Pike, bass, pickerel and perch all ' abound in the fresh waters. There are f any number of ways of serving them. J Stuffed and baked, the pike and pickJ erel are excellent. The perch are usually fried until crisp and brown. They should be rolled in seasoned ' flour before cooking. A meaty fish is very good bo'led in 1 acidulated water and served with " cooked spinach and tliis sauce: Banana Filling. Scrape and mash two ripe bananas, add one tablespoonful of lemon juice, two tablesnoonfuls of powdered sugar e and one-half cupful candied orange r peel. Use on yellow cake, top with whipped cream. r j Creole Sauce. Sift one can of tomatoes (a pfcit), season well with one teaspoonful of salt, a dash of Add one cupful of fresh mushrooms that have been , cooked in butter for five minutes. To r the butter left in the pan add two f tablespoonfuls of flour; stir until s smooth. Add to the sauce and cook j all together until thick. Add two teaj spoonfuls of onion juice, one green 3 pepper, finely chopped, and pour the 3 whole over the boiled fish. 1 • "V * 3 /VcXXjuc, f toryrlght, 1923, Western Newrpaper Union.

Had Your Iron Today? tevi Never Mind — Re-vitalize YOU BET it’s warm—the mere need then for keeping the vitality up to par. Vital men resist heat easily. Languid ones are floored. Re-vitalizc yourself and you won’t mind (he weather. Get new energy in little raisins. 1560 calories of energizing nutriment per pound in Little Sun-Maids. 75 per cent pure fruit sugar. Wonderful because this sugar doesn’t need, and, therefore, doesn't tax digestion and thus heat the blood. Yet energizes almost immediately. Contain fatigue-resisting food-iron also. Try a box today. Little Between-Meal Raisins 5c Everywhere —in Little Red Packages ,:sk: Putnam Fadeless Dyes

Usually So. “Whom does the baby resemble?” “If I am correctly informed, he gets ' his beautiful eyes from my wife’s family .and his weak chin from mine.”— Judge. They Cost Less because they give longer service 'fl Every pair of | or /A i AkU/ ; Excello Zjy RUBBERLESS / / SUS PE N D E R S is gruaranteed for a full O year’s wear. Men like their easy stretch and x i feel. Ask Your Dealer. Ifhe < j % can’t supply you, send direct, f al giving dealer s name. illX I Cf Nu-Way Strech Suspender Co. \ lf >\ J K Mfrs., Adrian, Mich. — Sarcastic Advice. Miss Wise —“It would be hard to match my hair.” Miss Guy—“ Yes, indeed. You had.better not mislay it.” The charm of a bathroom is its spotlessness. By the use of Red Cross Ball Blue, all cloths and towels retain their whiteness until worn out. —Advertisement. The woman who trusts all men is shy of experience. One of the hardest things in the world to do is nothing.

EACH IS A GENUINE GOODYEAR Each of the two tires illustrated above is a genuine Goodyear through and through. One is the famous reliable 30 x 3J4 inch Goodyear All-Weather Tread Clincher. Its companion is the popular 30 x 3% inch Goodyear Cross Rib. The Goodyear Cross Rib is built of the same high grade Egyptian cotton fabric that goes into the All-Weather Tread Goodyear. It has a long-wearing but differently designed tread, and sells for less money. More than 5,000,000 of these tires have been sold in the last five years. •Their fine performance has demonstrated the , folly of buying unknown and unguaranteed tires of lower price. Ask your Goodyear Service Station Dealer about their advantages.

Insidious Propaganda. “How do you account for the fact I that a beginner is sure to win in a I poker game?” “Confidentially speakin’,” said Cactus Joe, “the explanation is that it ain’t a fact. We encourage the superstition so as to get tenderfeet interested.” save shoeFaiw stockings They will last twice as tong if you Shake Into Your Shoes ALLEN'S FOOT=EASE, the powder for the feet. It takes the friction from the shoe and gives quick relief tO' Bunions, Callouses, sore, aching, swollen. tender feet. Shake Allen's Foot = Ease into your shoes and enjoy the bliss of feet without an ache.—Advertisement. Warningl As a motorist, we desire to voice the indignation of all other motorists, an-F to say that if these pedestrians don’t quit walking into our cars and bending the bumpers all up, we'll start a national movement to mgke it a misdemeanor to cross the street. Personally, we haven’t hit anyone yet. but we feel it coming on. —Richmond Times-Dispatch. The Cuticura Toilet Trio. Having cleared your skin keep it clear by making Cuticura your every-day toilet preparations. The Soap to cleanse and purify, the Ointment to soothe and heal, the Talcum to powder and perfume. No toilet table is complete without them.—Advertisement. Content lodges oftener in cottages than palaces.