Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 63, Number 27, Jasper, Dubois County, 26 November 1920 — Page 4

JASPER WEEKLY COIIRM Oy BEN ED DOANE.

A9PKK. DÜiniÄ" COUNTY, INDIAN Enteret ai condclatt matter at the ontoflice at J 'per, Ind. under the act of March 3. 17 n t-r iot cn iJ 0. Per YeftT. This papei ts mailed regularly tele Baoicribert until a deflnHr order to liacintinneif receive! and nil amaropaid ti full ; mi legs in Ihr dtoeticn of the publisher t different coots: shonld be deemed advisable. FRIDAY NOVEMBER 26. 1920. THE INDIVIDUAL LIFE. Tliere Is too much disposition to finish a Job, get your money and go, whether your work stands the test or not. So one baa put bis time into the work is nil ho thinks about; but what be should be more anxious about. If he Is an honest man is, has he put his Integrity Into the work? That Is the main thing, and yet It Is not the thing the people mainly think about. Hut in the exercise of one's Integrity Is naturally connected the employment of the time he is paid for. Neglect In putting In full time and doing honesM work belongs t the Käme category. Time is money and It is the same thing, whichever Is Stolen. We speak of these things from a civic standpoint, for he who Is guilty of either Is a bad citizen; his politics are bad and as to his religion, he has none. An old evangelist says we must get right with ("Sod, and that Is a grent truth and next to It Is the admonition, we must get right with our own true self. That is to say, we must honor ourselves. That is the only patriotism that Is worth a cent. The future of our country lies in the Individual life, says Ohio State Journal. All noble reform begins there. It Is the starting point )f all social betterment. Selfishness Ts the doctrine of materialism, which Is hurting the country beyond all calculation. America's baby crop In 1019 made a new record, says the American Child Hygiene association. Babies seeine ! to thrive well In some of the Lu cities, where formerly the death .-;.. was very high. Among the -4 eitles of more than 250,000 population reported, 10 were below the average for the 2G9, and the death rate for the group was SÖ, two points below the general average. Houston, "Texas, was the best baby-mlslng ground among the cities of more than lOO.tXH) and less than 250,000, with a i: ark of 01. Berkeley, Cab. bad a -baby mortality rate of 44, while Brool;llne. Mas., with n population of less than ."(.( led all the rest, with the healthy percentage of 40. A New York apple king ays there will be plenty of apples for Americans this year. There are always plenty of apples, says Houston IVs:. The chief trouble Is that about one-third the crop Is- permitted to rot because the manipulators are not wlKiug for the people to eat them at a reasonable price. Camilie r.ammarlon, the noted French ::: mr.oiner. Is In a state of excitcnu;1 yr the fact, which he says h c.;.rl evident, that Mars Is again trying to signal the earth. But a great, bla-e public Is likely to inquire. "Well what of it?" and go on to the football game. Bats, a noted, biologist, have caused in ore deaths than all the wars In history, and have also caused a yearly property damage in this country of more than $200,000,000. Now If cats hadn't developed such a taste for songbirds, something might be done. A federal reserve bank otliclal says that about half the total currency of the United States Is being carried in people's pocket., when It would be a great deal better invested. But It takes half the currency of the country for incidental purines nowadays. Virginia tobacco growers complain that they were offered only a third to a hhlf of the prices they got last year. And does that mean that cigarettes are going to be reduced or that the cigar store man Is going to pay a bigger Income tax? An expert has Investigated the subject and announces that the supply of fuel oil is ample for the world's needs, and will be for many years to come. Let us see what effect h!s faith La oa Ue price of gasoline.

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GULF STREAM DELINQUENT. England always prided herself upon her Intimate relations with the Gulf stream. It was thought that the current left the sunny shores of distant lands te wrap the British Isles In a warm embrace, bringing with It not only a wanner atmosphere, but trophies !n the form of shells from the tropics to ornament the beaches of Britain. The faith of the British in this direction Is being shaken, says Christian Science Monitor. Weather prophets who have been unable to account for the uncertain atmospheric conditions havebeen looking for a scapegoat for some months, and at last have pitched upon the Gulf stream as the delinquent. It Is reported that ships have failed to find it In the ocean, and the west wind I no longer Influenced by it. If the old and trusty friend, the Gulf stream, is going to Join the 6trikens, then England Indeed will feel this the unkindest cut of alL

The old saying that music hath charms seems to be fully borne out by the apparently growing popularity' of group singing In tbe United States, say Christian Science Monitor. Clubs are taking It up. One New York club, at Its monthly dinners, lnterperses courses with songs as a regular and popular part of Its programs, community sings are held In parks and in churches on Sunday afternoons, and now even the department stores Are the scenes of "sings," at least In Chattanooga. Tennessee, where in two of tho stores employers and employees come together at a stated hour every morning before work begins, and this Is believed to be the cause of an Increase In good fellowship and In efficiency. Nobody Is -very much excited over the flight from Panama to Washington by army and navy aviators. Yet but a comparatively few years ago, the idea of organized travel through the air would have been hooted at as an Impossibility too absurd for any sane mind to entertain. Now, It is taken as a matter of course, which shows how readily and easily we can accommodate ourselves to impossibilities when they actually happen. Another evidence that men know more now than they used to is that any of them can tell you what a brassiere or camisole Is. But it took mankind a long, long time to learn the names of all those things, and even at that they didn't obtain complete information until they took the making of them out of feminine hands. A great chef says the art of cooking Is dead in France. It Is dead, we suppose, pretty much as it Is In the I'nited States especially In places where food Is sold. There are some powerful good vittles to be had where home functions as hlgfi as 83 per cent efficient. The soviet seems to be a pretty good thing for ttie fellows who are doing the bossing, but pretty tough on the fellows who are being bossed, which In itself wouldn't be so bad if the bosses weren't so few and the bosed so many. The French parliament has refused to cut out of the civil code the provision that wives must obey their husbands. But even its defenders know that it Is one thing totput such an ordinance In the code, and quire another to enforce it. If the scheme of the restaurantkeepers to lower price by reducing the size of the present small portions Is permitted", provision should be made for furnishing microscopes with each order. Two hundred Chinese students, Including four women, have arrived here to study in American colleges. This movement will prove the shortest cut to Western civilization for the flowery kingdom. Nine hundred field agents over the United States report that people are less extravagant. For one thing, wu presume, people with beer incomes are awakening to the utter uselessness of having champagne appetites. The, detachable collar for men was Invented by the wife of a blacksmith. And comes back from the laundry generally looking like It had in some maimer gotten back to her husband's shop. With human voices already carrying 2,000 miles around the earth by radio, world organisation becomes every day more inevitably the next step In mankind's self-management. In an Investigation Into an election In the Island of Martinique It was discovered that 5,000 dead men voted. That rhust be the place where the lively corpses come from. ' The ex-crown prince of Germany has obtained a position as horseshoer, nnd now Is In a position for the first j time In his life, to become a really useful member of iocUt.

. VELOURS, FOX TRIMMED '

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Chic three-piece suit made of green velours and trimmed with fox. The straight chemise frock has .touches of colored bead embroidery. THE LACE VOGUE CONTINUES Decoration Approaches Favor It Knew in Fifteenth Century and la Used in Great Profusion. Lace approaches again such a golden age as It knew In the Fifteenth century, when drawn-work and .cut-work established rA transitionfrom embroid ery to lace, according to Vogue. In the Sixteenth century luce was even more in favor and we find In the modes of the day those collars known as "f raises," the deep cuffs and the lace aprons on CQurt gowns, Stich as were worn by Catherinp .de Medici. Particularly in Venice,, the making of needle-point lace had at that time a' period of great prosperity. Anvergne, also, was famous for its laces at the same time, while in Flanders were made embroidered tulles of Inimitable splendor, bits of which are still preserved in collections. In the Sixteenth and Seventeenth 'enturies hco continued in favor, and even the men of the days of .Louis XV and Louis XVI wore coats .enriched with the finest Valenciennes and Alenron lure, while their handkerchief made as lavish use of lace as did those of women of the day. : It is to Louis XIV that France owes the installation of a great lace-making center In Franco and it was his patronage which started the work whicfi produced such wonderful results as the point d'Alencon, the point d'Argentan, the point de Rruxelles, and the point d'Anrletere, laces which were also made In France. PAUL JONES HAT THE MODE Paris Copies Headgear Which Is Often In Black Silk, With Flatly Turned Black Brim. Paul Jones mijrht have thought thftt he led the fashion in waistcoats, of which he was overly fond, but he did not give much attention to his hat, and yet it Is this that Paris has copied nnd made the ramie. It is often in black silk beaver, with Its flatly turned back brim and elongated ends on whieh are puff balls of ostrich or other fantastic ornaments. The navy hat may have been Inspired by the presence of American admirals on dress parade in Europe after the armistice, for it has appeared in several conformations. The tricorne Is in fashion also, and the Marquise. One seems not to escape this type ot hat. It may be outlined with gold galloon. It may h.we a hatpin arranged as a cockade. It often very j often, has n face veil of chantilly lace attached across the front, but never at the back. Tills veil Is thrown backward over the stiff shape or left to conceal the nose and chin. The most ornamental ones are bordered with gold threads In a bold pattern. Coat Chains Follow Mode. Fur to the ears and duvetyn straight to the knees, mean that coat chains will wind their way Into fashion again this winter. That long severe line from collar to belt on the dark cloth suits cries aloud for relief, and a good looking coat chain certainly responds. The new ones an made up of hand ; carved links with a Jewel between. 1 Imagine the glory of a dull gold chain I studded with topaz, worn with A ' brown suit kolinsky trimmed,

WITTENBERG INSTALLS ITS NEW PRESIDENT

Dr. Tulloss, In His Inaugural Address, Points Out Field , of Christian College. HAS WORK ENTIRELY ITS OWN Seat of Learning Near Springfield Destined to Become Leading Educational institution of the Lutheran . Church In America, Says the New Head Country's Most Important Schools Represented at Ceremonies. "Wittenberg college is destined to become the leading college of the Lutheran Church in America," said Dr. R. E. Tulloss, graduate of Wittsnberg, 1906, and Harvard, 1918, in his inaugural address as the. seventh president of Wittenberg college, Springfield,. Ohio. The inaugural exercises were attended by representatives of leading schools in America. Among the schools represented were Harvard, Columbia, and Johns Hopkins. Dr. A. E. Renn of Louisville, pres ident of the board of trustees of Wit-1 0 tenberg college, delivered the charge to the new president, obligating him "to be loyal to the church kud to Christ in the execution of his duties." In his response the new president stated: "I am here to make my promise. To the task before me I hee and today dedicate myself. I promise loyalty. I promise single mindedness. I promise willing and unstinted service. Neither for myself nor for any of us could I ask a better thing than that we might be worthy of being 'servants for Jesus Christ's sake Such a servant I want to be, in the cause of Christian education." In the inaugural address Dr. Tulloss dwelt on the theme "The Place of the Small College in American Education." "There is no competition between the great state and private universities and the small Christian colleges. "More and more each is growing into its specific field. Some things I the great universities can do which the small coneges can never hope to do. On the other hand there is a field for the small college which can never be filled by the great public or private university. Special Field, of Service. "In th field of education the small school carries on a work entirely its own. It offers and. provides education in smaller groups where personal contact with the instructor is the very hart of the educational plan;" v "University presidnts have come to realiie that with growing numbers at th universities, personal contact li practically lost. Some have ven bgun to call our great universities not educational institutions so much as factories of learning. That situation can never obtain in the small Christion college. In addition the dominant ideas of the great state universities have become ' practical and often materialistic. Cultural educa tion has been swept more and more into the background. It is the field of the small Christian college to maintain the cultural ideals of eduucation. "The field of service of the small Christian college for the church is too well known and too obvious to necessitate lengthy statement. The small Christian college is the very life of the church. Task of Small Christian College. "To provide leadership In state arti national affairs is another task which the small Christian college can and must continue to perform. Many of America's greatest leaders in the past have come from the small Christian colleges. Without Harvard and Yale, at, that time strongly Christian s'chools, the Revolutionary war wculd not have been possible. Without the small Christian colleges of the mid: die west, the middle west would not have been held in the Union during the Civil war. "The idealism which the Christian college provides today is no mere idealism of phrase. It is the idealism of .faith In Christ. It is founded upon a rock the rock of the plan and power of Jesus. Paul says, I am not ashamed of the gospel of Christ; it is the power of God unto salvation The salvation of men and the salvation of the world! What phrases! The 'Gospel of Christ!" The 'power of God!' It is gentle. It is slow. It is quiet. It moves hiddenly, almost stealthily. It brings on no violent revolutions. V Jcauses no sudden upheavals. It. produces no catastrophic changes. But IT transforms. It makes new men. It will make a new world. . It is the power of God unto salvation. "To this cause the small Christian college is dedicated. For serving this cause the Christian college Is pre-feare-d and qualified. For carrying to the world this message, the Christian coHege must be preserved. "Here, then, is our mission. Than such a mission, there is none nobler. Than such a message to the world, there Is none greater none more urgently needed. "To the serving of that cause let us as Christian men here anew today dedicate our hearts, our wills, cur lives. in serving it. we are helping to rescue the world. We are "working, with God. for its salvation. We are. lndtd, bringing in the new era."

ONE-PIECE FROGu STILL IN FAVOR

Women Cling to Simple Dress, Refusing to Go Contrary to Good Taste, FUR ' USED MOST SPARINGLY Dtcoratlon It Applied in Novel Wayi to Suits, CoaU and presses Plush Sometimes It Given Preference. This season might be termed one in which fashions, that have been floating about like straws in the breeze, become crystallized. It Is a question, observes a fashion writer as to whethFrock of Blue Serge With White CI re Braid Around the Bottom of the ; B-Plaited Skirt, the Cape Collar and Pointed Edo of the Bodice! er dressmakers are less creative than of yore or whether the styles of the past two years have pleased women so thoroughly that they are loath to abandon them. It must be said that in the near past designers attempted new and wider silhouettes; but these did not find any permanent favor. There are always a few women looking for novel ties, and these were the only ones to whom the fantastic features of the hip-extended frocks appealed. 'The Parislenne absolutely refused to adopt them. French women have worn too jmany good clothes and are too fond of their personal appearance to accept anything fantastic or bizarre. The majority of our styles xTe launched in Paris, but there have been several points In dress on whiqh the American woman and the Parislenne have disagreed. On the silhouette, however, they are absolutely of one mind. It is a tribute to the good taste of. women that they continue to hold to the simple, beautiful onepiece frock, refusing to go contrary to the principles of good taste and refinement In dress. So out of all' the models with astonishing hip extensions, unusual girdling, loops and draperies the well dressed woman has continued to hold to the straightllne frock and the natural silhouette. Fashion Strikes No New Chords. The clothes of this winter, while most interesting and pleasing, brin with them no startling new notes. Even those shown by Callot Soeurs comprise models of all the types brought out by this house for the past few seasons. Callot is showing straight dresses of square cut that is, hanging from the shoulders without being drawn in at the waist by means of a belt This straight, beltless dress has been a Callot favorite for some time and nothing could be more beautiful than a plain, straightllne dress unbelted, provided it Is made of a suitable material. It certainly offers a wonderful background for exquisite embroidery designs. This firm also shows very full dancing dresses", such as were .worn by the beauties of the 1830 period,. the draped, wrapped-around-the-figure type of evening gowns having very sheer bodices and dresses with apron tunics, flounces and scallops; also little chemise dresses belted at a normal waistline. Many of Callot'a evening gowns are very decollete, although the squae neck and the straight-across lines &so are featured. For day M-ear this firm ahows high collars and long sleeves, as well as collarless models with short sleeves. Straight boxlike dresses, unbelted. are maöe of serge, duvetyn and black kasha. Again, these dresses are -of tulle, brocaded crepes and chiffon of bright colors, worn over narrow foundation slips of velvet and satin. Often

the&e undersllps are trimmed at the bottom of 0;e skirt with a baud of embroidery fim one to three Inche wide. , Shirt Bosom and Bell Slttvea, An Interesting model shows a narrow foundation drvsa of blue satin. At a normalwalstllne is a narrow red ribbon belt tied In the front with loops and round streamer ends. Over this foundation Is hung a straight dres of blue plaited chiffon.. The bodice has s thlrtlike bosom front, ;at each side of which .the chfffon Is plaited. A sixinch band of chiffon is set in at a normal waistline, but Is not drawn into the figure, f huspreservlng the straight line. There Is a high collar and long bell sleeve; Another noteworthy model showing the shirt bosoni front Is developed In black and blue satin. The dress Is of blue satin and appllqued motifs of the black satin. The entire dress Is plaited. On each hip the skirt is cut so as to form two triangles, revealing an undersllp of scarlet satin. The edges of the triangle are bound with carlet. There is a high collar with buttons down the front. Buttons also appear on the bosom front; ' The sleeves arc long. A novel idea is the use of tho wrong and right sides of satin and brocades. Thus, a dress of brown crepe satin shows the dull side extending down the front In four Inverted box plaits, which end In a hand at the bottom of the skirt. The band Is of the right, or shiny, side of the satin. The sides are formed of the shiny side, which loop and make the back. There Is a narrow belt, short cap sleeves -and straightacross neck. Lace Dyed in Dazzling Hues. The use of lace is an Important factor for entire dresses or as a trimming. In rnany'instances the lace It dyed a brilliant color. Roullle, or rust, a- color very popular the last two seasons In materials such as crepe de chine, crepe georgette, chiffon and duvetyn, Is now considered the novelty color for lace dresses and Is featured by Callot. On a frock of roullle, or rust-colored, crep de chine and lace the same shade, the plain bodice and plaited skirt are of the crepe de chine and the overdress of lace. The blouse falls loosely ovej a lace sash". This sash ties low on the hips at the left side. The sleeve are very short and tight fitting. Another model shows a very full skirt of rust-colored tulle having two flounces of black chantilly lace, each flounce edged at the top with a rose plaiting of the tulle. The bodice Is

very sheer. In the center front at & normal waistline Is a large black velvet flower. An attractive method of using lace as a trimming is seen in a dress of brown velvet. The entire dress Is .of 4 1. 1. A. I 1 1 . l.ll . ' wie veivei uiiu uus a iuw wuniuuv uuy. Ice. i There Is no fastening; it slip on over the head. Over the narrow foundation skirt is hung a- knife-plaited lace tunic In Vandyke points. The.. lace appears again ,as an outline for the straight neck and short sleeves. While fur is used more sparingly than hitherto, a number of novel ways of applying It to suits, coats and dresses have been worked out. It la used on both suits and dresses to edge trimming bandj of velvet, which may. Black Cloth Dress With the Bodice and Apron Drapery Cut In One 1 Piece. Monkey Fur Forma Tufts on the Skirt and Edges the Slvtti he applied in loop form; als to border short box coats that end about four inches below the waistline. Bands of the fur are placed up and down the front and continue-around -th bottom jof the coat. Sometimes the band Is I emitted from the bottom of the Jacket anu me SKin win uiuw u uauu i iur where the Jacket ends, thus giving the appearance of a fur-edged Jacket. Plush sometimes Is substituted for fur on the bottoms of skirts and for collars and cuffs, . . ,

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