The Syracuse and Lake Wawasee Journal, Volume 15, Number 46, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 15 March 1923 — Page 2

Your t.lfc . New \ Home '^Tb i b I should be made artistic, sanitary and livable. These walls should be Aiubastined in the latest, nature color tint!, Each room should reflect your own individuality and the treatment throughout be a complete perfect harmony in colon. The walls of the old home, whether mansion or cottage, can be made just as attractive, just as sanitary, through the intelligent use of Instead of kalsomine or wallpaper It is absolutely necessary if you expect Alabastine results that you ask for and secure JUiutiiu. " Avoid kalsomine! under various names and insist on the package with the crosl and circle printed in red. That is the only way to be sure you are getting the genuine Alabastine. Alabastine is easy to mix and apply, lasting in its results, and absolutely sanitary. Alabastine >« a dry powder, put up in five-poUYw! packages, white and be*** tiful tints, ready to mix and use by the addition of cold water, and with full direc-

tion, on each package. Evtry taciagt »f ftnumt Alabatttnt has cross and circle printed in red. Better write us for hand-made color design* and special tuggestions. Give u* your decorative problems andlet us help you work them oat. Alabastine Company 1655 Grandville Ave. # Brand Rapids, Mich

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Modesty. -My brother” began the seriousminded perwn, “I have a treat task before roe ” “What is it?" asked Mr. Dubwaite. suspiciously. "Uplifting the human race." *1 have no doubt you can do It." replied Mr. Dubwaite. as he edged off. “but I’m such an unimportant member of the human race that Fin sure you’ll get no particular credit out of uplifting me."—Birmingham Age-Her-ald. His Fix. “Try to be content with your lot.” “But I have no lot. If I bad I would put a house on It."

URkMI *6BO • J ;: E 8" The Practical Man’s Car The quick success of the Chevrolet Utility Coupe has proved how accurately its designers gauged the transportation requirements of the average busy man. This fully equipped, modern car combines day-by-day reliability, remarkably low operating costs and the lowest price asked for a Fisher Body automobile. The mammoth rear compartment is especially attractive to the man who is always moving tools, sample cases, repair parts for farm machinery, and luggage of all sorts. Any Chevrolet dealer will be glad to show you its exceptional engineering features. Jbr £con*m>cel TranapertetiON

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Freed F. Q. & FK«4 MidegM SUPERIOR Two PMomawr Aowtaw . . BSIO SUPERIOR EHo Pasiwi—e Touring . . $2« SUPERIOR Two PasoMgor Utibry Coops 680 SUPERIOR Foor Passenger fledaawcM . 830 SUPERIOR Rve Passenger „ SUPERIOR Ddtvcry 310 Chevrolet Motor Co?, Detroit, Mich. Dt vis ton •/ General Motors Corpora t son

z Jir.Carpenter Straight line methods % V xTi make Bankable cigars I * worth the money. No 't£W* fancy bands. Just good g r M ■ bmmmm -W' I B 9 fit fiß h. . / Uighurs 3*® vstMMl | wi

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Flavoring Roquefort Cheese. Holes’ tn Roquefort cheese are placed there by machinery to admit air and enable the mold to grow, thus giving the desired flavor. No ugly, grimy streaks on the clothes when Red Cross Ball Blue is used. Good bluing gets good results. AH grocers carry It.—Advertisement. Too Much Hazard. “How di«l you ever get your hu» band to give up golf?” “I played with him every day." To keep cool Is difficult when a man has to choose between frying pan and fire.

SYRACUSE AND LAKE WAWABBE JOURNAL

OUB MAGAZINE SECTION

Interesting Features for the Entire Family

Something to Think About By F. A CALKER

FORMING HABITS IN A broad sense, habit may be termed the element of conscious or unconscious persistence. Some habits are opposed to noble growth, such as Indolence, indifference to lofty Impressions, forgetfulness, the acquirement of rugged tempers, vulgar speech, failure to adapt one’s self to new circumstances, fault-finding and the common habit of thinking evil of one’s friends and neighbors/ There are hundreds of such habits which are opposed to the development of the best there is in us, alike to our future careers and contentment. By following a train of wrong Ideas again and again, we gradually lose our ability to distinguish evil from good. We become skeptical, cynical, narrow, and unless by some fortunate discovery we see the falsity of our position before it is too late to mend, we find ourselves in company with the grouches, sour-faced and faultfinders. No man or woman who would win success and the good opinion of his

Has Anyone. Laughed

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J At You I Because

1 You Are Over-Ambitious? “You -I J work too bard." “you play too J • little," “you aren’t interested in ■ 2 anything but your work,” “we } • miss you at our house," "you • I never show up any more” —all , • and more of these things are said • i to you? Aren't they? Well, may- , J be you are getting a bit lopsided. J I This, of course, you have to de- ■ • clde for yourself. Being arnbi- • I Hous never hurt anyone. Yon i J can’t arrive on any other train, • ■ and it Isn't a parlor-car train, i J either; It is the long workman'? • a train and it takes the sacrifice of a • the things to which your friends } a say you never appear. When you * J have a goal you are happiest J • when you are on "the way"— • J parties look small and everything J • else looks insignificant. All well i i und good. Nothing is so marvel- J • ous as the path of the ambitious • ■ to the ambitious, but you must { • never forget that to be too one- • ■ sided may block and turn over { • your car. Getting there Is your • ■ business and laughter never hurt , • the really sincere. Your Get-away here Is: J To (jet the best out of your life, J 1 you have the right tc choose the i 2 right things to leave out. It io • » entirely up to you and no one’s i 2 affair but yours. { ■ <© by McClure Newapapar Syn4leat».» | B—lt

U ncommon Sense ♦ ♦ ♦

USE YOUR MIND YOU never know what your mind can do till you use it. Thu man who saves his money until he can buy an automobile finds out right away what that automobile can do. He takes it out on the road, and runs It. He reads about tbe speed and endurance and gasoline consumption of other cars. And be experiments with bia own to find out how It compares with them. Yet the same man who has a mind that tnay be of more value than a million cars will, in nine cases out of ten, go through life without ever knowing what that mind can do. Few of us ever develop more than a quarter of our ability. Few of us discover more than half of the powers that lie In ouT mind. The reason for this is chiefly laxb nesa. It te so much easier to work just bard enough to make a living than it is to work hard eaougn to amount

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or her friends, can hope to do so without first overcoming his or her degrading habits. To do this there must be formed the practice of mental watchfulness with a will power behind it capable of moving always In the right direction. The fixed disposition to do a thing comes from numerous repetitions. It is by such a process that good or bad customs are formed, which ultimately take to the bright hilltops or down the dark valley of failure and discouragement. Ona »* ff ie good habits to form in youth is that of attention, especially In regard to advice from parent®, who know from experience what is needed for the stimulation of growing minds. This applies with like force to everybody in all stations of life, and especially to those who are dependent on others. The habit of giving Intense attention to orders, however trivial, and remembering them when thj time arrives for their execution, marks the difference between the competent and the incompetent, the foolish, and the wise, those who are destined for life servitude and those who are destined to lead. Every good habit is laudable, every bad habit reprehensible. (© by McClure Newspaper Syndicate.)

SCHOOL DAYS E ffesvwt Hwuub Ki lows fott . V up WH>*s gt »*MX.T «*■ B®*** / I M pexMs onew<e -Teen k l ® »* * fW>ni«e.OMUW6, UOCKSS OK STNH J JjTOK MS Hfc sm- I ’ ib! Cohha VH 'w —1 WM •i, a/-, H C.V coryo.r.HT _ — 5

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to something big. that iwe take tbe ‘ former course. And our minds, lacking exercise, never are made to produce the results that they could produce. Unfortunately the realization of this comes usually t-x> »ate. At forty we see other men, whe in youth had no better mental equipment than we bad. surpassing us. We see that If we had been as thoughtful and as industrious as they, and had developed our latent powers, j we might have done as well. But mind building is long and bard ! work. And the time that It can be • done is Id youth. Get all out of your mind that is in it. You may not be gifted with genius * or even talent. But you will never | find that out till yon bring out evrfy unit of power that is in your brain. • And the only way to do that is to; use it constantly and intelligently. [ (© br John Blake.) ... , 1 IloihebGoKßook i * ftte easier to reject a thing than to think about it It te easier to dtelike poe- | try than to learn to enjoy it It is easier ■ to scoff at «mnd opera and call it "up- ; roar" than it is to cultivate an appreciation for good music. MORE GOOD THINGS A NICE little cake which is good ** to serve with almost anything and at any meal is: Com Fladte Cookies. Beat the whites of two eggs until stiff, add gradually one cupful of sugar, one-half teagpoonful of vanilla, one fupful of coconut and two cupfuls of cornflakes. Drop by teaspoonfuls on a buttered baking sheet and bake In a moderate oven. Coarsely chopped nuts may be added instead of the coconut, if that is not liked. Rice Muffins. To two cupfuls, of boiled rice add one cupful of milk, a tablespoonful of

The Ordinary Things By DOUGLAS MALLOCH

IVE had some rather pleasant times While living day by day That echo like remembered chimes Along life’s weary way. That make my heart again a boy’s And give my spirit yvlngs— They were the ordinary joys And ordinary 'things. Strange, but the triumphs of an hou The victories elate. Have lost their old, accustomed power And seem no longer great. They were but tinsel, were but toys-. The quiet moment brings A thought of ordinary joys And ordinary things, v r Life's battle 18 SO hard and fierce, Such passions sweep the soul As through the foeman’s line we pierce A passage to the goal. The very triumph often cloys And, on the throne of kings. Men long for ordinary joys And ordinary things. Whatever else, make sure of. these As through the world you go; For, after all the victories, Your heart will want, I know. Some memory no time destroys. Some quiet hour that brings The peace of ordinary joys And ordinary things. (© by McClure Newspaper Syndicate,) o Be not hasty to outbid another.

THE ROMANCE OF WORDS, “GYPSY” JUST as America was named for an explorer who had no right to the honor, and the ‘Turkey" (French dlnde or poulet d’lnde, Indian chicken) halls from the Western hemisphere instead of the eastern, the name "gypsy" is applied on account of the early l»elief that these wandering tribes had their origin In Egypt Instead of from a more distant land. When these migratory people made their appearance in England at the beginning of the Fifteenth century, their dark complexions and foreign speech, coupled with their admitted knowledge of black arts supposed to be indigenous to Egypt, led to their designation as “Gyptlans," and it was only natural that, in time, this should be shortened Into tbe slightly more euphonious “gypsy"—the name by which they have been known ever since. “Bohemians?’ the French appellation for gypsies, involvesan error similar to tbe English —these tribes being taken by the common people of France to be the expelled Hussites of Bohemia. In the German “Ziegeuner" there is no Indication of the land from which they were presumed to have come, but. instead, a typically Teutonic bit of bluntness —for ‘Zlegeuner" Is a slight contraction of “ZiehGauner" or “roaming thieves." (© by the Wheeler Syndicate. Inc.)

eggs. Sift together one pint of flour, one tablespoonful of sugar, one-half teaspoonful of salt and one and onehalf teaspoonfuls of baking powder. Add to the rice and beat until smooth. Fold in the beaten whites of the eggs and bake in muffin pans for fifteen minutes. (©. 1»S». Wetvrn Nmpaper Union.) It Never is Short. People who And themselves In a peck of trouble never complain of * *

Don’t Be Penny Wise > and Pound Foolish Don’t think because you can get a big can of Baking Powder for little money that you are saving anything. There’s Only One Way to Save on Bake-Day, Use’ CALUMET Th-e Economy BAKING POWDER

CAIUMI MST BY TEST

THE WORLD'S GREATEST BAKING POWDER

“Soaked” Gold Hunters. Mr. H. C. Living lias been an expensive’ visitor in most American homes during the last few years, but even at that he is not quite the robust gentleman he was in his youth. Dr. Octavius T. Howe, in his “Argonauts of ’49,” says that in the days of the gold rush 75 years ago people In San Francisco bad to pay $1 apiece for eggs, SI a quart for milk, $1 a pound for butter, $lO for a pineapple, and sl4 for a pair of old shoes. DYED HER DRAPERIES, SKIRT AND A SWEATER WITH “DIAMOND DYES” Each package of “Diamond Dyes” contains directions so simple that any woman can dye or tint faded, shabby skirts, dresses, waists, coata, sweaters, stockings, hangings, draperies, everything like new. Buy “Diamond Dyes’’—no other kind—then perfect home dyeing is guaranteed, even if you have never dyed before. Tell your druggist whether the material you wish to dye is wool or silk, or whether it is linen, cotton, or mixed goods. Diamond Dyes never streak, spot, fade, or run. So easy to use. —Advertisement. The Quiet Goldfish. Gabriele d’Annunzio, who is said to have given himself up wholly to religion. has a fondness for strange pets. One of the inmates of his household is a goldfish, which is known as Lon-Pe-Ll-Tel. D’Annunzio declares that “it possesses the two qualities most rare in life —it is clean and silent.” Sore Eyes. Blood-Shot Eyes. Watery Eyes, Sticky Eyes, all healed promptly with nightly applications ot Roman Eye Balsam. Adv. Poverty in Riches. No man is poor who does not think himself so; but if in a full fortune, he with impatience desires more, he proclaims his wants and his beggarly condition. —Jeremy Taylor. If one doesn’t care for sports, environment won’t help.

Find 1 what OMPTanada to offer YOU! If I If your dream of success seems like a hopeless ambition, if you are discouraged trying to get ahead on high priced ■ land, if your present location fails to give you opportunity, there is a new deal for you, a new chance in the fertiltt, virgin farms of Western Canada, where wheat produces 20 to 40 bushels to the acre, where the 1922 crop was biggest in history, where oats, barley arid hay and fodder crops are the basis of: a great dairy industry, and a man’s work brings him success and prosperity. Low Priced Land—the Last Great West U In Western Canada you still can buy virgin prairie land at sl!s to S2O U per acre, on long terms if desired, near to town, railroads, etc.—la id such I as has for many years produced the world’s prize winning wheat, oatd. barley, flax, rye, I 'U alfalfa. Canada had no "war time" land boom; prices are not inflated--you get I in on the ground floor. Taxes Favor the Fanner Rent Now —Buy Later as Values Increase Pay Out of Prof its The tax laws of Western Canada encourage Canada welcomes the industrious settler. I the producing farmer. The tax on tend is What yoo have now nm tso i“ ■ reduced when it is brought under cultiva- ■ tian—while on your buildings, machinery. ry ?tout" fc-r a season ■ improvements, personal property, automo- or{wo Make a good living, increase your I bile, thereis no tax at all. A single crop is capital, and buy later. Farms may be rented ■ often worth more, acre for acre, than the from successful settlers on easy terms; in M of the land some cases with option of purchaisit. Buy on Exceptional Terms —32 Years to Pay ■ Paul. This Association offers selected land amvenient to ■ railways—much of it at sls to S2O per acre —on very small cash payment, no further M payment until third year, '/ but purchaser may pay up and obtain title at any time if oe» six percent per annum on deferred payments. W *AS J B We Help Find Your Opportunity f B The Canadian Government maintains information bu- B I men in charge are Government officiate, m- _ _ | > B terested only in the service of tbe J W prospective settler. > Get the Facts-No Cost MAIL THE COUPON. something of your position, and I W receive free book with maps, and \ I free service of the Canadian Gov- 1 jsi AI ts ySw » eminent Agent in your territory-. AM . 3 * also information how stMcial rail- nTTe m artsa * ied ori ” at mspectxHi. ”<»» ■. ». aeaxaiose, »«* w, ns Hail Cmvm to Nearest Agcat: in«.ut n. titousseous. nto. W. & NETETERY, Desk W, 88 EKieh St, Columbus. Ohio: M. JL g ( > JOHNSTONE. Desk W. 116 Monnment g ! ’ , V Pl, Indtenapolte, Ind. S'* a»»«witaa«wß»w» eowur for yourself. g E Pi 1x S w StreK. Address No Paw g ports Bovoteed. BP.O

—lt costs only a fraction of a cent for each baking. — You use less because it contains more than the ordinary leavening strength. The sales of Calumet are over 150% greater than that of any other baking powder.

No Restriction. It was a wintry day and Geneva, age three, and her aunt had driven to the store. The little girl was picked up by a clerk and placed on a chair by the stove, and her aunt began loosening the many wrappings ol.’ the child. “You can unbutton my coat, my dress isn't dirty.” Important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA, that famous old remedy for infants and children, and see that it Bears the Signature of In Use for Over 30 Years. Children Cry for Fletcher’s Castoria Knole—A Great House. Knole is gentle -and venerable- ... It is, above all, an English house. It has the tone of England;, it melts into the green of the garden turf, into the tawnier green bf the park beyond; into the blue of the pale English sky; it settles down Into its’ hollow amongst the cushioned Hops of the trees; the brown-red of those roofs of humble farms and pointed oasthouses, such as stain over a wide landscape the qulltlike pattern of the fields.—V. Sackville-West, in “Knole and the Stvckvillos.”

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