Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 49, Number 30, Jasper, Dubois County, 5 April 1907 — Page 7

MAKING OVER LACE

EMBELLISHMENT A COVPARATIVELY EASY MATTER.

Expenditure of Time and Trouble Well Worth Making Case in Point la Described by a Writer. Many of the quite c h-ap laces cnn l vi-IourIv tmwffffltll and beautified by a little expenditure of Ihne and trouble, the material for cmttclanl bobafj comparatively trifling, t i-l this especially lately on the Mm silk muslin of a young cousin. ,, .1 writer, whose pretty dress was . ally improved by inexpensive lace , p which w as a blue outline This latti ibfl had iOM herself in twisted dery cotton of a silky make, lie effect was admirable.

i"!lnary "piece lace.'' treated as you ii: the Illustration can serve either trite blouses. Ol lot cuffs yokes chemisettes over white or colored ions. For sachets and cush 'wrs it Is very pretty. Mer pink It tmbroldery eorton is sewn down i line silk and a few blue loop I hi the spaces of the leaves lone with flax. er pass your thread under the I part unless that part is worked h reads should be male under unworked part.

BCOT PINCUSHION IS PRETTY.

D rectiona for Making Useful and Or namental Article.

Take six pieces of silk a little over M MM half Inches square and fold them diagonally, like this Btitch close the side A II and t oni It to C l-a. spa . C to I) upen in order to tum aii'l Ftuff the boot. I MWMMM the toe and In filled -.inl. as that Mils in nicely, then vith bran, pressed In hard, tin III PMMft the opening. Fill that with wadding, as the bran will run out while you are ovcrhanding that I I'se three tolors of silk, two

'

I knees, of each color, and place them with the sides, where the M COMB together, and the toes pointing out. It is easy enough to ÜM tons together, but you are obliged, to take long stitches and a Hit' :u at the bottom, and make 1 circle of cardboard, covered, urso. to sew over the stitches, a 1 sold the boots in position. Put ' I ins up and down the front for 1 '"'tis and use tin.iel cord to wind UM pint to represent the lacing Put aacj Ixiw on top. and vow have a ! and unique cushion, the appear- " of whlrh this description gives lit'le idea.

Darc.ng Frock in New Design. - ' Homing design Is seen In a in frock for a lielle of several ' st in. ling. The foundation Is the iew opal satin a shaded, or ' '" ' 1 " m ave. in which the warp W hlM and the woof dyed in pale 1 l ink ar.d yellow, mi that all the glancing lights of the opal are seen " satin -and over this thero Is :i ntuiissellne robe covered w.th - nt fringes. For the decol ! " "üce the fringes are gM six ll Inches long, while for the : '!' are In four rows twice that ,!' i Ii A deep girdle, wch boned and long sash ends, Is of the opal 'tin. sad instead of sleeves there are d strands of the beads that 'he forearm well down toward ho elbow.

TOR DECORATION OF HOUSE. New Ideas That Have Sens of In dividuality. Perhaps this Is a Ml 0 K of the regular order of thin:-.. hut th-s- ideas -e. med to me . good and practical iii.it i , t i. . . , ,

.ii i iiiiiiiKin uie uepa-Mliel.l eabis

should hear of them. The . u n g daughter of the house had broueht hosa frOM time to time peetMSJSM of bs)f water -color work at Chool which were ull done on the same sized paper and all were flower subjects The) were so good ihat with a mother's inspiration -he decided to make them into a freize for the child's loom. Accordingly, ihej were put up. separated by inex penal ve molding into panels; the side walls van a plain grav cartridge paper, so flu effect was decidedly harmonious and pleasing Then to shut out the view of a too observing neighbor the window sill was covered by a board that just fitted, then thll board was coated with ;. good thickness of cement, which was obtained from some obliging workmen who w.:- laying a walk in the vlir.it. In this cement a row of decorative cheap Knglish ware plates srere Imbedded and on these plates potted plants stood, making a most beau'iful and effective screen In front of :he lavatory in this same roan there was a throe qiwtnH screen made from strips of unbleached muslin, on which blue prints were panted Illustrating nips taken, and the many scenes in which the family had pnt MHpated. Possibly soma people do not knowthat Moans suitable for nurseries, dons anil libraries may be obtained separate from the side wall papers, and anyone with a sense of the artistic may arrange and transform a plain, chnraCterlOM room Into one of distinct originality. Special Dinner Menu. A correspondent writes for some help regarding a dinner to be served at seven o'clock where I here ae t be no wines. For the first course have oy sters on the half shell or an oyster I KM detail made by placing Ave raw oysters in a ocktall glass with the regularly pipared sauce which may te purchased and is verv satisfactory. Thea clear soup with bread sticks, followed by a bit of broiled fish or twilled with egg sauce and tiny potato balls, the fish garnished with sliced cucumber and lemon rings For the luavy course you may have turkey, roast beef, with Yorkshire pudding, lamb with mint sauce or a fillet of beef with muchroom sauce; mashed potatoes, nice croquettes If the turbo)) is served have boiled onions and rmw berry jelly; If the lamb, green P as. brown and white bread, olives, salted nuts and celery. For such a dinner 1 should serve a pineapple. -ar or orange salad, with a whipped cream dressing, pass cheese wafers anil barley due Then for dessert either ice l ,.m. individual charlotte russe or a prettily moulded g latino Coffee, water biscuit, and Requefort cheese. If you have a precolatcr, or. as they sometimes called, a coffee machine." you can make the coffee at the table, or it may be served in the drawing riKim to the ladies while the men anoka in the dining room. Church Entertainment. While the Country Fair" may be old to s me of our readers, there is really a gieat deal of novelty about it when used as I chunh or charitable entertainment Ail vert iv the affair ly regular old fashioned cheap paper handbills, with glaring headlines, offering premiums and attractions. Have booths for home -made jcllis. fancy cniulv band work, and stands

for pop-corn, lemonade, peanuts MMS

all ort of street fakirs, including a

tinty gallery, with good barker" to attract the crowd inside. TlMI'i should be a tea room, ice cream par lor and a s Ihm, ting gallery; in fact, a thousand and one things will suggest themselves when the committees sot to work. Sunshine Clubs. In reply to A I Madame Mcrrl regrets that she Is not more In touch with the "Sunshine" WOTl so she could give more explicit directions for your club "Sunshine day ' If tin re are special Invitations, us'' the beau iifnl quotation which 1 bettoYl has I n adopted ss the motto of the Sunshine circles: Hai (ran had kind ran shewn? nuM it n. "Th.i na meant for you alone Pans it on l..t ii echo down Um yeaiSi let tt wtM nimtlier'a tears. 'Tin in Meven the i appears paw H ii Fse yellow cheese cloth draperies with veilo-.v marigolds, tulips. Off Jonquils are now season:. lib- Serve orange ice or a rich golden custard with orange cake or. of course Sun shine" cake for this occasion Then have five-minute talks on how best to bring sunshine Into darkened lives It is often not money, but the helpful, cheering word, spoken at the right time that Is needed. Oh. how often those who walk beside ns in our dail lives are the very oues who need a ray of sunshine. 1 think one of the most hell. fill of circles would be one to watch out for those nearest us in the home. Uie office and on tho meet U.V1A,ML MhJUU

CLINGS TO TRUSTS RtPUBLICAM PARTY IS TRUE TO ITS FRIENDS.

Bill Authorized by Leadeis Adds 25 Fer Cent, as the Maximum Rate The Cardinal Principle of G. O. P. Legialation. We now have an authoritative announcement of the iMisitloii of Mr. Moonevelt on the tariff from reliable RenubMoM aoorooi and vhy he hafl not recommended fQQgl Oil to revise the tariff In accordance with his past promises. The BoOtOI Advertiser la the Republican organ ton! 'booms forth the gind tidings that the president Is more than willing to see the tariff revised, when it can be shown to him that the great majority of the Uepnbllians of the l'nite' States want tariff revision.' The "dtfOCtl In the Dingley tariff" should be corrected, "when it can be done without any serious tlneat of antagonism In the l. publican party; but It must be the Party of protection Which alone therefore should be trusted to undertake tariff revision " Of course' No prolan" Democratic hand must be put forth to even prevent this RepubllCOn ark of the covenant from fulfilling Its destiny of protecting the trusts. That covi nanl la alone between the protected trusts and the Aepublicna high priests of protect: n No heathen Democratic ey; null bo allowed to pierce the veil that shrouds the tariff holy of holies front the great majority of the people, it is for them to re main without the veil and take for granted what the lb-publican high ! liest thinks proper to reveal, nccordIng to the Hamiltoniaa ideas of the Idrertieer, Senators Lodge, Aldrich, et al. Put that is not the Democratic way Th- trend of the times repels mvstery ami sib nee. The people want to know why the tariff schedules that protect the trusts should not be abolished, or so revised as to produce revenue instead of trust protection. They want to know why trust prices should continually he advancing and trust profits increasing and the cost of living be over M per cent, higher than it was before this Republican theory of protecting the trusts was saddled on them :.i the Dinglev law. Bocomm a Democratic leaiakmtof hau not kissed the feet of the idol of protection is he any less able to understand the Republican mysteries of tariff taxing the people to make them better off? Are the steel schedule and the wool schedules, which tax the consumers over 70 per cent, and fill the coffers of the steel trust and the woolen trust, much beyond what they should naturally enjoy, to forever remain? Because the Republicans are copartners of these trusts, and because the Democrats would so revise the schedules under which theae trusts are protected, so that competition would force them to revise their prices to what is reasonable and just, are these tariff taxes to he revised higher? For that is the program of the Republican leaders. To put off tariff revision until the great majority of Republicans demand it will be to post tone it forever, for the Republican leaders are participants in the large profits that protecting the trusts has produced, and every Republican campaign fund has been repleted with trust and corporation cash and the contributions of the magnates who control such organizations Mr. Carm gie alone in 1304 aald he would give f 1, ihhi, i nil to elect Mr. Roosevelt, and a It publican con gress, with perhaps the promise declared or implied that tho steel schedules of the tariff thf.t permit the steel trust to pay Interest on bonds and watered stock, from which he draws his enormous Income, shall remain untouched and, In .'net. be perpetuated The tainted money of the life insurance companies was not lacking towards the same Republican victory, and those corjoratlons were in the control of the frenzied financiers of Wall street, who also con trol the industrial corporations. The only tariff bill Introduced by a Republican member of the ways and means committee of the late congress was to increase the present rates 25 per rent, as the maximum rates and keep the present lates as the minimum rates. That is what Congressman McCleaiy proponed as the ultimatum Of the Proie live Tariff h ague. and as he was defeated for reelection by his outraged constituents, the administration has appointed this "lame duck"' to be se':il assistant postmaster general, apparently as a reward for his services toward revising the tariff higher. What do those Republican voters who were promised tariff reform b the candidates of their party for congress think of the prospect? Will ihi v accept more promises and still vote fi-r those who will perpetuate the tariff protected frusts In their plunder ing through high prices?

fe Not Deceived. The DtMOernttC position on the tariff is n simple one, as stated by Hon .lohn Sharp W. Hiatus, si aklng as the Democratic leader In the house if representatives when he said We are simply anti proH-cticnlsts We are not free traders. Our purpose Is revenue. We would nnt inaugurate proiectioti Ism where it does not now 'xir.t We would remove It whnever It des exist, as rapidly as it an saTely be ione." All contrary ntatements are made but to deceive the voters and to try to continue the Republican pirn f trust protection

JUSTICE MUST BE OONt. eople and the Railroid Macjntea. at the Bar. Tim" or fri-jr months ago It was aid In these columns that Mr Harri. MM Mmbf soon find be "would have to come off his high perch" and face an outiaged people '"'his forecast has M pari come true, for we now find this sui'rir being "who belongs to a higher sphere" saying' "I have made up my mfnd to give In future more lUoutlOi to the Interest of the public in these affairs." This may he Just talk of llarriman to bridge over the preated tight place he la in. but it will certainly be to his interests to h ave undone many things he says he won' 1 like to do. for the people moan busiue s. The determination to no longer be plundered by lUrriman and Other railroad magnates is not a lOOtlni haduw that the people are gazing after, nor wiil they be satisfled with anything less than a full measure of justice. It is not Mr. llarriman the people so much dislike, for he Is but of to lay, and to-morrow will not be, but the system that such as he have develop 'd for building up great fortunes at the expense of the gn at mas Mi of the people who have been Oompeliod to pay exorbitant railroad barges The creation of fictitious d-bts that have no vestige of foundation, either legally or morally, which have been made charges on the railroad.-, on which the pulilir are expecw-d to pay Interest, will have to be ignortd as basis for valuation and rats. The experience if hisUiry show ra that vast possessions acquired, even under the guis- of law, but nally plundered from an oppressed people have always In the end ben sealed down, or serjueMered by the state for the public welfare. It will be so again. The American people are Just and will pay all neeessary costs and ire" teres! to the corporations on the real capital invested for the transportatlon of persona and property, but th'v do not propose to continue to be robbed as the evidence hws Itu ipic on the llarriman lines have been and continue to enrich the grafters that have been exposed in ihc P nnr-ylvania railroad scandals and the numerous other Instances that have only so far been nient ned Those an I like things will sto.i and In the end restitution will be made cither to the plundered individuals or to the public at large. It is absurd for Mr. llarriman and his equally wicked partners to now promise to be good and atill retain tbe swag. If the present law will not reach them, other laws will be enacted or ways will be devised to maV;e all things even. The people are not able to do this at once and If they had the ipport unity it would not be wisiloni to create the disturbance In business that such a revolution would entail. It will take time and path nee and the highest wisdom for the people to regain their own without being more than they would gain by intem

perate action. It will first eMail a

practical housceleaning to get rid of the corrupt politicians that are in league with th plunderers. Many I Republican leader will be n-ole to bite the dust yxlltlcally befo e full JqsMce can be ione and this Is the work fur the people of states and congressional districts to at once proceed with by organizing to 'turn the rascals out." Aa long as theie M n Republican machine controlling conr i s and many state legislatures in lenajM with the corporations, it is lmsisslble to pxp-ct Juice and fair frfnaHnt for the political machine acts as a shield to protct those of the Harrinian strip from being com-tielli-d to make real reforms In their way if doing business, to say nothlnr, of such restitution as should bsj iu4?e.

How Patrick Saved the Bank An Irish Folk T&le

By Seumas Mm Manui

(Copyright. i,y j..-.-ph B Howh-a.)

It's mighty wonderful If you have nejOOf h a d tell of how Patrick saved i In- bank Ye se- It was this way The Hank

the natu.- of wonder the next move was going to be. "NOW," said Dark Patrick, says he. I want you to atart 20 f these

A Question of High Finance. The restitution by f.eorge W. PerkIns to the New York Life Insurance company of $54.019 wh'vh includ-s the principal sum ami interest that was contributed to the Koosevelt campaign fund by that institution, leaves Chairman Crtelyoi:. Treasurer Ulis and other Republican managers In a worse light than before. Mr Pcrkim In returning the MMMf says: "The payment was made without any thought on the part of the president or myself r personal advantage but solely in t belief that it was for the best and toadest interests of the poli-cy-hihle.s both at home and abroad." Mr. Perkins was the active manager in these Insurance affairs of J. P. Mor gan and some olitical favors must have been expect-d In r-turn for this contribution How- can it be explained otherwise that the officials and financiers wtm contndh-d the New York Life and other companies were ..o anx ions to otitrlbute on the demand of the K' publican ladera. for it Is all hosh to say "It s for the bst and broadest Interests of the policy hohl era." many -f whtin MM DMMOOrnU and opposed to ttie election of Mr. Roosevelt ? What la the secret connection between tho Roosevelt administration rid .1. P. Morgan and his partner that ICMMI W this second payment of this large sum. Iffsl llrecily to the Roosevelt i-.inipalgn fund and now again to UM life insurance company with the ITidJenl lntntlou of shi ding the Re public jn leaders from making restitu tion themselves.' Mr IV kins' dip Intc Ihe inside wmrklngs of the Republican machine seems to have bOM as expensive and unfortunate for him ns for Mi Paeon, tha; other parttu-r of J. P. Morgan whom Mr Roosevelt apioint ad assistant secretarv of stat who is jnder a cloud for having too ninny ol iie hahlta of diplomats whove talea of -urrent events uo nut alwaym agree vith thk facta.

of Ireland was at that tune owned by men in the aoJtOJ of this bank, and i man named o Toole, eba was M more in the cilar of the manua great grandson's groat grandson of factory i pposite, working for lift- ami King O 'Toole lb- was a mean fei- (bath, cutting a passage under the low, who didn't lak- alter his an es - i fiom the one cellar to the other tors; and the devil tempted him to collar, and they are to fill the ten bar'ovo! makiiig a UOMMadOM pll- of reis t. within half an inch of the lip MMMfi all at one haul So he cm- with the clay they take out. The ployed a sea cu plain and sent him off thousand pounds in gold and silver, en a voyage round ; be whole known ami the etbeff ten men," says b, "ia world. t find where and how the most to come with me Daoney was tO be ma le, upon a spec Then a i -he street he started, illation of any particular desc Iption an 1 while tbe men in the cellars beAnd this sea aptain sailed for the ; low were wanking like the fury, cuttl . yOaHp ami lb roe days, returning ting their wa urnh-r the street fmrn back, at the enl of it. to tell Iii mis- house to house. Dark Patrick got the? tr that. In th- South sea Islands, the other ten men to stat th fires in native:, would give their one if the factory, and he got ten frying they had only one for scalpeens pans and put them on the tires, and (Malted mackerels), and be said that ! he got hammers and anvils, and he there was loads of money to b.- made t them on a bench that ran along by sending ut a venture of that the window looking into the street, otnmodity there. On the frying pans he emptied tho OToole he jumped with Joy wh'-n MtfJ of gold and silvr. making the ho heard this, and he not only gath men blow the bellows like murder till ered fttorj pea Of he n n d himself, tlm coins were red hot, and he thr and lik-wise every pnny that was started tbOM carrying the frying pane. Invested in the bank with him; but. full of coin, to the bench and heating Uioreover. he bent messengers, east the coins m the anvils, nicely ami and wesi In Ireland, tor to notify lightly, with little hammera, opming very n;an who had a shilling of the windows at the sanm time so that r.ionoy put by in olil Kt king, for the noise would get properly into the to fetch it to bini, and a nd it to OtrOOt Whom the crowd now wae him for a year and a day. and at the gathering at a treruend'-us rate in, end of that time he would pay them , front of the bank, and instructing tho boob double 1; u-rs that ti:-y were to make all And the amount of nioni-y he took j the clatter and clang and Jingle that in. in loans, in three weeks, was a . they OOttld MfrncntoOJ sight. The passage underneath th street Weil, the year and a day woie . was soon oomj leted. Then ten herroiind. and every man. woman acd j ring barrels fill 1 within an inch of chiid in Ireland that had a ienny in- of Hp were fetched up: they were TOOtld in the Hank of lriand walked filled up with a couple of layers of up to Dublin, at th- end of the time, I hot OOtni - some of the barrels with to draw their money and their inter- told coins and others of them with est. but to and behold y-. the sea silver and while some .f the men captain and his fleet hadn't re- j went on with the frying of the colna. tutted and some with the b-ating upon the Andy OToole he asked of the peo- anvils at the window. th' remainder pie to cive just ten days sparin's. and 1 were started In pairs, with handhis fleet would be In. What to do lu , sticks, to carry the barrels as fast didn't know, for he was s ue afraid as they could across the street to the that tho fleet woiij not be in within bank the ten days. And as fast as th' men entered the So he sent private messengers bank with the barrels of money they throughout all the land, and gath-rcd carried them back just as fast as the up to Dublin at once every great and underground passage. s) that when cb'ver man that could be found, and the last barrel was goiag in of the here and th'n offered ach man bank door the first was coming out his weight in gold, wirnn the again out of ttm door of the nianufaeboats would come home. If they could t r . ami there was one continual invent some plan of saving himself string of barrels of fresh gold and sil-

and saving his batik till th- arrival of

the fleet Hut all of the plans put together. If th'' were tried, couldn't save two slates on the bank Now there was at this time in th fax parts of Donegal a poor man who went by the name of Dark Pattick, by reason that he was dark vis aged, and had a black head and a black bard, and he was nted for sound sense. Now it was on the ve:y last day of the Rank of Ireland's sparin's that

Dark Patrick arrived in Dublin, and.

finding It was so late, didn't ev-n wait to look for bjttglngn or get a pick to ate, but Ingolwl his way to th Rank of lr-land, and to the council chamber in It OToole wvlrvunod Park Patrick, and he tolj him that, as all the oth ers had failed him. ar.d as the worst had come to the worst, it was no harm for him to have his try. Dark Patrick biwa-d gravely, and he Inquired of O'Toole. ar.d satisfied him self that the fleet was, sure MMMJPX safely on Its way. anil -ouldn't be far from th- coast of Ireland now, and that it carried loads and lashln's of money to pay. and double pay, all claims. And, whin he was contented on this point he ask'd O Toole wh-.t was the m;: money, it; gold and hi I

Were Fetched Up. vor cidns streaming across the street from the manufactory to the bank. And. when the poplo heard thiw. their amazement was a wonder to behold Some of tin-in were sent In to draw their money, and n-port to th- other upon what they observed And when th I MUM back with th ir money on plitot smoking hot. they said how that the barrels Of gold and silver w re going down to th c-llars. in a

string, to bt ston'd there, and. by this

ver. he could, by any means, obtain, j time then- must have gone in a thouh. i- borrow r i i anv wavs come sand MUTTON if there wnt one And

honestly by. O'Toob said that he owed a hundr d thousand pounds, and that the most money he could now obtain, beg or borrow, to pa off los debt, would be e.1.000.

their money. th said, hail lsen

served across the counter to them ui on iron scoops, for no man rsuild handle it. fOf whib it was boiling. When the people hea'd this, not only would th y not draw their own

'What." says Dark Patrick, says he. m :ic. which they had In It. as. proce-diTii to the window, and look- ' they wore now g:'edler than ever for lug at the housea oposlc. "wbat la the big interest, but those of them that establishment that I so' .opo- that had Just drawn it out, went, alto im' "" back with their plates again and de"That establishment.'' says O'Toole, pslt I it. says he. "U a manufactory of hrr.y i OTole. the banker, was a gladbuttons." aMMfbnl man that day. and. for flr Well an' good." says Dark Pat- first time in thr-e wveks. closd his rick. "I now want you to do three I eyes In Bound liOOf that night. Dark things" PntrlOk, at his special entreaty, re- ' Nanu- thrm." says OToole. maii.e! with him for thr-e days loog"They are." says Park Patrick. ' er. tiU hi macker l flVet ennu- safely ' that, In the first place, you II hire In. ?t any mono? for this day thnt man- j And It Is said that it took ?Q afnefory OppoaftQ, anl bOVe It com- men, three days and three nights, carplobliy le: red out Instuntancouslg -yiiiK )ff the hant, Into the bank, the And the n xl thing thOl you get Mi bags if gold that they hai brought at uir tin trustworthy men. with back with them In -xchange for the 50 i 'cka nnd shovels, whom you can scalpeens; so that O Toole was able rely your lRe upon Ami. In the third to pay off, with double and tt hie place. g t n:e ten herring barrels. ; compound Inti-rest, every creditor he

Can von do all these things"' says i had In Ireland

Hark Patrick. O'Toole conshlered with himself for a minute, and then he says des1 1 rately: "I'm prepared to do as you diraot " In short ilnie OToole had fw.ru -C ' maniifattory opposite and tiirnl I inside out. He had brought Dark atrhk the 5rt men with the M picks , shovels, a:-j tne ten nerrin or H It, and ho atood by to sec what in

it was him was the vlatd man ihn. 1 tell you He nearly threw IllMHat at the feet of Dark Patrick, and he asked him to name the size of his reward. V. II." said Dark Patrick. TH ask us a repaid that you'll never again lisk the money of the poor poopie of the country" And 0 IN ol" promisee: that bo neven would, ti ; did h.

e