Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 52, Number 28, Jasper, Dubois County, 15 April 1910 — Page 2
f WAT UADH TA fADVI 11VA lLfllYlS IV AI 1 HANDWORK ORNAMENTATION COMPARATIVELY EASY. 19 The Proper Thing Thla Season for the Clothes of Small Girls French 'nots Lend Themselves to Effective Treatment. An enormous lot of handwork Is being lavished on the clothes of small girls, yet some of It la of so simple a nature that It does not require much skill with the needle to copy It. French knots, which are so decorative, are frequently employed on silk bands for a cloth dress, the dainty and simple trimming perhaps decking only the bodice nnd shaping the belt One dross so treated had a little bertha of the silk In deep scallops, which were bordered with three small close rows of the knots, the result seeming rich een If the effect was simple. For such practical dresses as may be used for second-best, narrow soutache braid will often be put upon a contrasting material with smart effect Say the dress is blue and white checked wool; the plain banding in that case will be white or blue. Upon this the braid is used, blue on white, white on blue, with ail the banding edged first with a straight row. this inclosing one at either side, put on In half scallops, ending In loops. Narrow ribbons of a rich and ornamental nature are charming decorations for the little veiling frocks which are six-year-old mlssio's Sunday go to meetings, though these same thick, brocaded bands are as often used on adult garments The ribbon is rarely used alone on a fine little dress. Black or some solidrninr0ll oh in i i. . . . . 1 "fc "c "us": or bands of black baby velvet will charmingly frame IL Over the buttons of fine little coats there are often crocheted covers, and thougn such buttons may he made with small expense at home, a readymade garment with them will be dear. On a white cloth coat for a child of ttve-the coat fastened diagonally- j there were three such buttons, one at the side fastening, and two set at the waist line In the back. They were framed In ruches of white silk. and naturally tho button coverings ' were In Bilk twl3t I These buttons are made by covering wooden molds with the material. l and then coverine thnt with th Crochet. Which !fl dnnn In n cnorloa of v spider web. very close at the center' and loose at thouts.de m V-Il-i.t, . , , . t With ash materials, any number I of things may bo done with the solid oiue inaian calicoes in red and deep
blue A dress of coarse cream linen, elude embroidered linen spreads too which looked for all tho world like Eheets and pl"-nv cases boidered with dish toweling, displayed a treatment embroidery, hemstitching and scallopmade by the red. This was used in ing and tine huckaback towels of two bias bands set some threo Inches three sizes, hand-embroidered in raceapart on the white; between them ful designs and finished with
other bands crossed slantingly. VELVET AND SATIN. All sorts of Ingenious ways of ar ranging the new draped skirts have been evolved by the clever modistes, nnd nn odd but pretty one is shown In tho illustration Tho long skirt of gold brocade velvet has an overdress of gold satin formed by two broad panels. one in front, another in tinnk and Joined on Hides with a band of gold and blue embroidered braid. The panels are handsomely embroidered at bottom in the same color scheme of gold and bluo. The bodice has a blue velvet girdle, trimmed with embroidered braid, and the low cut bodice la finished with a band of blue velvet and white lace collar. Shirtwaist Tailored Belts. Three late designs In shirtwaist tailored belts Include one of heavy tancolored goatskin cut In two Btrlps which nre Joined together with a band of basket-woven braid In white mercerized cotton, color-embroidered In
Bla bands of gayly plaited cottons
are among the spring su among the spring suggestions for trimming; plain chatnbrays and cream, white and tan linens. These will outline the square neck and trim the side fronts and sleeves of many a practical dress In Russian model for three or four year ofrJs Crocheted edging, done in thread almost as fine as a spider's yarn, narrowly borders some of the turnover linen collars for both girls and bah? boys. EVENING DRESS. ' t.i,,, ..iAM, . . ., I Malze-colorcd liberty satin would look most elegant on this style, which is a tight fitting princess cut wiih n long train, and has an elaborately em- j broldered plastron, taken from the j back nearly to the hem In front, where ,' a deep gold fringe edges it. The tucker ! , i - i anu sinaii puneu sieeve are or net. spangled with gold sequins. Materials required: Eight yards Dnttn -1 ' Innhna U'lilu 1 Ii ,t . . r 3 wide Novelties In Lln.n R V , , , ' . f Sql,are lf b,e c,ot,n3 w,th a circular ce"'er ,,patt,erD 00,1 corners fl,,ed 3 handsome separate pattern are fl e?, novelties. The sarao fi . l? r,ou.nd cloth IV wienering wtm t Fi ii n 1 t" 1 fiaoinm rt t ri I ilftnlf! I . . u t it I t P 1,. n M. - ft i . i lUb,,ll,u J uuiu ouu wuniu wiucia, nuu U HUTU set bears tue mocogram of tne fam. lly's head woven in lace stitches about n Met stitching and scallops. button effect. This .lt. which is nearly three inches wide, fastens with a tongue run through an oval eyelet Duplicate buckles of the severely plain harness type fasten a second belt composed of two Inch-wide strips of eyelet-equipped patent leather, laced together with narrow black moire ribbon and a third novelty in waist bands consists of three pieces of white patent kid laced together by black satin ribbon Inserted through large eyelets. The same idea Is used for belts of natural-colored suede, combined with a dull shade of green or blue ribbon. To Look Taller. Here are hlnta for the woman who would be a little taller: Avoid girdles. Never under any circumstances wear a belt of a contrasting color. You can think It gives a smart color note, but you are wrong. Let all your lines run up and down. 7 "0l, wear a or the square variety; It shortens you. Have your gown all of one material, preferably a light tone. Tl . .... ear mng gioves and carry a tall umbrella. Hold your chin up to lengthen your throat line. Carry your head straight, never tilted to one side. The tilted head' Is for the tall woman, who wants to look short. Many Shades of One Color. A significant Item of the new nrnd ,s ,he use ot two or three materials nr different shades of one color. Satin, ,ace Rnu ccmon, or cloth with net and tulle, are bound together In one minr scheme by the same Idea running In different gradations through them. Rose Is particularly well adapted to this Idea, vcrylng from the deepest vleux rose to tho exq-jlslte tint of the almond blossom. Parma violet, April green and a soft shade of fawn known as parchment are alike capable of this scheme. A certain completeness of tho color symphony is attained through this alliance c shades and lints, and there Is promised a picturesque color note that is ever attractive.
GIVES
MILLIONS
Why Mrs. Russell Sage Bestows Fortune on Mankind. Calls Childhood Without Parentage, Youth Without Love and Old Age 1 Without Money Life's Three j Most Pitiful Things. ' Pasadena, Cal. Mrs. Russell Sage, : who has given more money to charity ; (ltan in t Vi r t n'nm nn In f ha ttrt rl il ' recently gnve an Interview on the Distribution of her wealth and the motives regarding it. "Why do you give so much" money away, Mrs. Sage?" was asked. "So long Is I had something to give nnd somebody else needed it I would always divide," she answered. "When I was a teacher in Philadelphia on n salary of $200 a year a sum teachers of the present day would not look at I was willing to give my tenth to the Lord. "You know charity has two meanings. I like tho Corinthian one. Love. and the perfect gift will carry love both In tho giving and the receiving. "Sickness, misfortune, fires, tho forced miseries of life these are the 11.1 . t t T A - .1.1) conditions I would alleviate. I would aid those who, having lived righteously and prudently, come to want In their old age. You know Coventry Pat more says the three most pitiful things in life are childhood without parentage, youth without love and old age without money, and he Is right. "We all have our Ideas about helpIng people." sho mused. "Mr. Carnegie has his particular way, and I i t hear that Dr. D. K. Pearsons, who. at the age of 30. recently announced his Intention of giving away his last million, received 500 letters a day telling him how to do it. Rut I believe that lifting is better than teaching. "Today I had a letter from a woman In Los Angeles which I turned over to the Associated Charities because that was the place for the appeal. Sho was in distress and needed placing where she could become elf-suport-lng, and they will be best able to provide for her. "But I do not confine myself to organized charity." continued Mrs. Sage. "When I made my last gift, the one to Yale, I didn't do that through organized charity. 1 knew they needed the money nnd was glad I couhl let them have It. It was the same way with the school from which I was graduated. It needed enlarging and I j was glad to help them." In recalling the days she spent at the Troy Female seminary, from which she was graduated in 1S57, Mrs. Sage again spoke of the influence ex- ' erclsed upon her there. "One of my teachers," she said, "advised me to teach when. later, through misfortune. was thrown upon my own resources, saying: 'Nothing Is really your own until we have Imparted It to others.' And I feol that the work I did in teaching is as good as anything I have done." 1 Toaching Mrs. Sage considers tho highest vocation for a woman who Is ' not a wife or mother. I "Christ represents perfect humanity, and no man or woman separated from . each other can represent It," she said. j "Man and woman, united In harmonious purpose In the perpetuation of Clod's plan for the world, are the nenrest approach to perfect humanity wo 1 can attain. And tenchiiiK little chll. dren In the npvt vnrntlrm fnr n n-nmnn . - . Bw. . . UI11UII. "It isn't the giving that requires thought and judgment, but it Is the tremendous amount of sympathy that C00s out with each nlft thn I r. haustlng," concluded the aged philanthropist, in accounting for her close retirement at the Raymond whilo here. A Genius. "I once found n Pullman porter who was a perfect Chesterfield. He furthermore looked r.fter my wants with as much care and consideration ns if he had been my personal servant. When he had given me the final brush-down and I was about to leavo the car 1 merely thanked him and did not hand him a tip." "What did the porter do then?" "Ho smiled and said: 'Don't mention It, sir. It's a pleasure to wait on you. Honestly. I" "Hold on! Hold on!" "What's the matter?" "I'm going downtown nnd call a special session of tho Liars' club to elect you president for life." Just It. "That child's part fit tho clever little actress like a glove." "Yes, so to speak, a kid glove."
s I
IN DOUBT.
Jinks That chap that wrote a his torlcal novel forged a note. Now he's in jnii. Ulinks What was he convicted for? BABY'S SKIN TORTURE "When our baby was seven weeks old he broke out with what wo thought was heat, but which gradually grew worse. We called In a doctor, He said It was eczema and from that time we doctored six months with i tnree of the best doctors In Atchlsnn but he on,y got worge IJls f h d ' and hands were a solid sore. Thero was no end to the suffering for him. Wo had to tie his little hands to keep him from scratching. He never knew what it was to sleep well from the tlme nQ took the disease unt he WM cured He k t Ufi awake nU jhours of the night and his health wasn't what you would call good. Wo I trJed everything hut tho rieht thlnir. i ' Finally I got a set of the Cutlcura Remedies and I am pleased to say we did not use all of them until he was cured. "We have waited a year al a half to see If it would return but It never has and to-day his skin is clear and fair ns It possibly could bo. I hope Cutlcura may save some one else's little ones suffering and also their pocket-books. John Leason, 1403 Atchison SL, Atchison, Kan., OcL 19, 1909." An Efficient Mistress. Mrs. A., who had a 8hiftles3 colored maid, was hurrying through her morning's work in order to go out with a friend In the afternoon. As she flew about from room to room she heard the colored woman chuckling to herself as if very much enjoying something. Impatiently she said: "What In the world Is it thalamuses you so, Isabel?" "Well. Mis Ressie, when I heard you gallopin aroun upstairs I Jes' fought if you'd been de Lawd it j wouldn't 'a took you no six days to I make de hebbens an' de yearth!" S. A. Rice, in Woman's Home Com- ! panlon. Look to Welfare of Workmen. , A significant phase of the campaign against tuberculosis in Sweden is the ' establishment, by various industrial ' concerns, of sanatoria for tuberculous i workmen from their own factories. I iuc 1111 mi ,11.111:11 UUUipilllv, U1B Ljusne-Voxne Timber Company, tho ' Sandvlken Hardware Comnanv. tho Ttm 1-iiIaiih ry . .. . t. . Eriksson Telephone Company and the Stora Kopparsberg Company nro among those who maintain such institutions, each accommodating from fifteen to thirty patients. At these sanatoria the workmen are received free, and their families may be admitted for a small charge. Silence. Very few men know how to keep still. The Italians have n proverb, "Hear, see. nnd say nothing, If you wish to live In peace." The man who Is bent on telling all he knows, generally ends in telling a good deal more than he knows. The tongue is harder to bridle than the wildest horse that ever roamed the prairie. The Ger mans say truly that talking conies by nature, while silence comes of the un derstanding. ROSY COLOR Produced by Postum. "When a person rises from each meal with a ringing in tho ears and a general sense of nervousness, it is a common habit to charge it to a de ranged stomach. x "I found it was caused from drink lng coffee, which I never suspected for a long time, but found by leaving off coffee that the disagreeable feelings went away. "I was brought to think of the subject by getting some Postum and this brought mo out of trouble. "It Is a most appetizing and invig orating beverage nnd has been of such great benefit to me that I natu rally speak of It from time to time as opportunity offers. "A lady friend complained to me that sho had tried Postum, but it did not taste good. In reply to my ques tion she said she guesetl she boiled It about ten minutes. I advised her to follow directions and know that she boiled It fifteen or twenty minutes, nnd she would have something worlh talking about. A short time ago 1 heard one of her children say that they were drinking Postum now-a-days, so I Judgo she succeeded In making It good, which is by no means a difficult task. "The son of ono of my friends was formerly a pale lad, but since ho has been drinking Postum, has a flno color. There Is plenty of evidence that Postum actually docs 'mako red blood, as tho famous trade-mark Bays." Read "The Road to Wellvlllc," found In pkgs. "Thero's a Reason." Kvtr rrnd the above Irtlerf A new oe npprnrn from (line to time. They nre genuine, true, acd full or humii talerrkt.
REAL WISE BOY WAS WILLIE
May Not Have Known Proper Answer to Question, But Hm Knew the Fair Sex. "Flattery." tald William Faversham. at a rehearsal In New York, "has great weight with women. "This fact was brought homo to mo In my boyhood. Hefore entering Chigwell gramuter school I attended a kind of kindergarten. My teacher was a very pretty young lady. " 'Willie,' my teacher said to me one morning, 'why was Solomon the wisest man In tho world?' "'Because, ma'am, Bald" I, 'he had so many wives to adviso him.' '"Well," said my teacher, with a pleasant smile, 'that la uot tho preciso answer given in the book, but you may go up head.' " Another Investigation. Roblo Maiden Is kissing proper? Kncina Youth We might Investi gate. Two heads are better than one. Stanford Chaparral. Hay's Hair -Health Hev,r .r"" lo or Gray Hair to IIa natural Color aad Raaatv. Slon in f.llin out. and positively removes Dandruff la not a Dye. Refute alt lubitilule. 1.00 and oc. BotllM br Mail or at Drucs-itta. I Send toe for largo umpte Bold rncc Philo Hay Soec Co Newark. N. J U. S. A. 3.0 O The Hat Thatwears Ask Your Dcale, OTefierHatCo. INDIANAPOLIS
A Free Book About Beautiful Walls We have just issued a book about house decoration. May we send you a copy free ? It tells how to produce those beautiful walls, now seen in all taa finest of homes and hotels. It siiRgests color schemes offers a wealth of ideas. And it te..s what has brought alabastine into universal vogue. Alabosiiiie The Sarutaiy Wall Coating Alabastine is the only wall coating that Please know the reason. Km s does!!1! breed germs. It has been so for endless color schemes you can pet tr - 30 years. Know how easily you can apply it a In the past few years it ha3 become the on papered walls, rage. Fashion now demands it. People. You will never use wall paper r ". of taste both rich and poor now have use kalsomine after you kn a alabastined walls. facts. Alabastine Co., Grand Rapids, Mich.
Here's a ChevrV W that you will enjoy. Not dry and dusty M not flat and tasteless like fine cut that has m been exposed to the air and dust in the dealer's m store. But moist, clean, sweet TIGER I FINE CUT I 1 CHEWING TOBACCO ) M Full-flavored tobacco made from the very best leaf that was ever W J M put into fine cut. Then packed In air-tight, dust-proof packages ml that are sold to you from the same tin canister in Mf which they were originally packed. mfi tr WeJKhCuarantcedby the United Jijl "
HIS IDEA.
1
First Tramp What was the ha-jj work you ever done, Hagay? Socond Tramp Stealln. Good Quality. Customer Are these apples ' b' GrocorWell. I guess Thv .. . you tho beat saas you ever ha l WESTERN CANADA What Governor Doneen, of Illinois HoTerno orDenaoii.of rilinoU.o- ,, joa of Un. la H.lu- ' Ho bit u a Interview . "M ?n Anw 11 I, ilellchttxl to tc t 1 rntrkiblo ptigr , Ntern Conn s lua im llflllnilfvr. eandi, anil 1 harr met ono who J had mail a t Thtj aro ai i Iber ! icin monlty in the M not a rnprosontativn lr) jf Hakatc!ienn or Alber.a, 125 Million Bushels of Wheal in 1909 tir fl70.000.000.00 In r mi Frr UoniNtraitanr ll)i i rt ""d.P'Sniplloiia of IßO u rn t 3.00 nil nrro. Its. wa a Xnl Uomi)ul nave Ian 1 1 r at rtatnnablit prlcpa Mitiir f irm eri linva luildfor tlirlrlmm out Kplemlld climate, rood ar Ii . m ,i xrollent rnllwnr fHclIltl- JW frelclit rntr. wood, nnirr ami lumber enallr obtnliml. for pamphlet Jt He M tf particular aa to aaltabl i at and low anttlera' rate, ipi t i Hap't of Immigration. Oui Can., or to Canadian Uot't As W. U. Raf tra. tri tr Trtf Hot 1 al la4llHll, 1,4 II 1 n lata tO Law l!Ht . 1.1,4 I to addrpsa nrarrv' j WE HIVE AN ATTKACTIVK ritoinsl . t..n",C T ION for man with burs, a . a lo tell our rurdlclnet. rUronnir eiirt. , , ami bltf rnrumlanlni to ritfbt partv let. quired Wrltu today auaaa rra r. u, , i,4..s, x
I PBoaBaH
