Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 63, Number 37, Jasper, Dubois County, 4 February 1921 — Page 4
JASPER T7E2KLY COURIER F MO m S3Ü3
Oy DEN CD DOAf'E. Asrnn, uuimt cüuxty, Indian
Katered at. .-cond-clar- - alter jit th 1 vcnHct on th' nquest on the body of pnitofflreat Jaiper. Ind. under the c-.Meredith Maslers iast Monday. Jan.
of March 3, 1897
fit riotlcu 2 0- Per Year.
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tTC2riDn nntila JefinUe order to lisc intinntii receive! an rij amsir paia I nfall; aula in tue diteielion of titpabliehera lifTerent econe ahould b FRIDAY FEBRUARY 4. 1920 GOOD MEN ARE WANTED. The great wnnt of today 1 men. suys IVniiH.rlvaula Farmer. Men who can't 1 ! night and sold. Men with votes loo honest tu sell them. Men In flice. too honest to buy them. Men who think twice before they speak, thrice befor they act, and for time before they vole. Men quick to see and prompt to act. Men who will fctand for rfght, firm as a rock, though powers and parties crumble, and all around seems chaos and confusion. Men prompt to condemn wronjr, whether found In hixh places or low. Men who can look the world and the devil In the face und tell the truth. Men too large for ectarlan bonds. Meu who know their message and can tell It and top when donp. Men who mind their own business. Meu who knowhow to work mid art? willing to eut what they rani and wear what they have paid for. Men too brave and true to betray a trust for self-Inter-est. Tlie use of advertisements In connection with church activities Is no new. Still, ther Is an element o? novelty In the advertising nimpalgo recently conducted by the Washlngtop Federntlon of Churches, which ha, undertaken to carry on a go-to-church-on-.Sunday movement with the aid of posters, street car cards and newspaper and magazine spaces, advertising the federation's appeal for more general church attendance, says Christian Science Monitor. An interesting phase of the whole matter is that the federation Is proceeding on the frank assumption that a large proportion of Washington people never think of goIn? to church at all. Mankind has ever been engaged in a quest. The golden grail, the fountain of youth, the passage to India, north pole the list Is myriad that In succession have lured the Argonaut of tli e ages. But perhaps the m s? Interesting, If not the most e i:.sc. Is the quest of-the missing link, which will bind the chain of the evolutionists Into one continuous concatenation. The naturalist eagerly examines the skull of a man or beast, exhumed from the earth after centuries of repose. tP see If he can bridge the chasm that lies between man and beat. Our timber Is being used up four times as fast as the new supply can be grown. Three-fifths of the nation's original timber lias been destroyed. Hence, the present high price of wood for fuel or as pulp for pnier making, also the high price of lumber of all kinds. Probably It Is true also that profiteering has something to do with the high prices. A wise policy by nation and state toward forestry Is gradually needed. Protection against tlr is rlrst essential. A Canadian professor predicts that In 80 to 100 years it will be possible to isake long-distance weather forecasts by studying the sun. If that should prove true, the astronomer "Hill have achieved a reputation equal to that now enjoyed by muskrat houses and goo bonvs. While plane that will carry 000 passenger and cross the Atlantic Id 'W hour I an accomplishment, it 1 lrkfly that inventive genius still feeN called upon to persevere toward onf that will transport a fellow across am' get him back nt what a wife would consider h reasonable hour. A Chicago girl who was arrestexl for steiling, accounts for her misstep by asking: "What else can a girl with a college education do when she can only earn $8 a week?' She might get a kitchen education and go to work. i The rerltner Tageblatt hears that Great Britain and France hare decided U aend a protect to the German forenuaent against payments being made to the former kaiser. Here Is a $nce for the Hermans to cut expenses, both cratefully and gracefully. If you want to be thrifty, remember that money earned rgr hard work yields much better to the salting process than asy money. "Why not train humorlstsr asks one of them. It can't be done. They Ufa CPt cuacentible.
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flflPillP.Hl f.lfifilfirS Wßn The Wood Alcohol Route. Coroner W D. Bretz returned his 31, 1921. The body was discovered at his home Tuesday morning, Jan. 18, lories, of St. Louis, say that the analysis show that he came to his death by Acute Methyl Alcohol (wood alconoi) poisoning given to n.m a 3 a beverage by unknown parties The inquest verdict also gives a uesenpfinn rf tVin mnn Alcn Mrs. Tw E. Master, his wife, testimony, which says he came home about U p. m., that she was up when he came in, that she thought he had been drinking, she thought wine. That he undressed and laid down on a couch and covered up. That she heard no noise or struggle at any time. That when she went to iwaken him at C a. m. she noted that he was dead. That she then called Dr. L. A. Salb. That he was always i healthy man. That of late he has oeen receiving many presents of whiskey and wine, from whom she does lot know. The autopsy showed that lis lungs and heart wer normal. There was no evidence of any alkaloid r metallic poison, but very marked ividence of wood alcohol. Louise Lovelg in a Pensive f.lool Mucn of the charm possessed by Louise Lovely, who is now appearing in "The Little Gray Mouse," her first picture as a Fox star, lies in her mobility of facial expression. This picture shows Miss Lovely in a wistful almost sad, mood a mood, by the way, which is somewhat unnatural for her. Clyde CoOk Plays A High Foot lote. CXYDE CO OK" Vtrllorv VI CUMJQa Here is a remarkable photograph of Clyde Cook, the swivel-jointed comedian who created such roars of mirth while chief comedian in ''Happy Days" at the New York Hippodrome that William Fox decided to let the whole world laugh at Cook's grotesque antics via the celluloid comedy. Cook is making (for Fox a series known as Clyde Cook Special Comedies, the first of which, iKiss Me Quick" is conceded by critics vu iui iiiin iuuii-iiiatvi'i Iii uii iiuub rank of screen comedians. The life Insurance companies can be proud of their record in 1011, claim for $ 100,0 10,ilt 1.31 being made and S311.1M7.ST:.17 being paid. The day of contesting life insurance claims has gone where it belongs. The rule forbidding Poton university girls to wear skirts that end more than six inches above their shoe tops perhaps explains why so many ox fords are being shipped West. That university professor who complains that a pie wagon driver gets more salary than he does should reflect that a pie wagon drivership carries large responsibilities. A survey of recent criminal news Indicates that commercial schools ( teaching banking ought to add weil equipped revolver ranges.
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TOO GOOD TO LOSE. ' The Treasury department ." :he
United States government Is about to Issue two new savings stamps. Onof them will be worth a dollar. The other will be a savings certificate good for $25. These issues are to complete the series of savings stamps put into use by the national government. They lire intended to finish the work of establishing the savings stamps as a permanent pence-time feature, of the service the Treasury department renders the country. This is one of the good effects of the war. The country needed such savings stamps long before they were issued to meet the demands of war finance. They have? done much to teach thrift, particularly to children, and they have given many foreigners, suspicious of alt banks, the opportunity to make their savings productive and at the same time absolutely secure. It Is safe to Bay that the savings stamps will never be abolished. They have come to minister to the needs' of many generations. Every research laboratory In the world has studied and experimented with leprosy and means of Its cure, just as they have with tuberculosis, cancer and other deadly diseases, hut not one of them had learned the exact nature of the disease or its remedy until a few years ago It was discovered that an oil made from the eliaulmoogra plant, a native of Asia, had alleviating effects upon the disease. It was taken in hand and seriously studied and practically experimented with, until now It Is considered a specific. Ily its use new cases appear to be easily curable, while there are Instances of the restoration of some lepers whose eases bad progiesscd to an almost fatal degree. Patience is one of those graces ot ' the spirit that Is indispensable to the Christian character. There Is a whole hook oT the llihle devoted to this grace. P.ut outside of all religious consideration, in its technical sense, patience Is one of the most practical and effective of the virtues. It does u great deal toward the making of a true man. It Indicates a strength and poise of character that give one faith In the man who reilects this virtue, says Ohio State Journal. One cannot have faith in a, man who is constantly fretting and fuming. It shows him to be a sort of feather driven about by the wind and j Impossible to tie to. Religion without patience is a diluted article. Citizenship is very much concerned in this grace. The Impatient citizen Is always getting himself and others In trouble. He has not a particle of respect for the axioms of life, aud Is therefore wavering, inconstant and unreliable. He must needs be watched, and If he is a religious man, his religion is to be doubted. A Turkish delegation came to Taris all primed to argue and dicker about "concessions" that Turkey might make In order to get peace. It Is now reported that the delegation has been politely advised to go home. Had the attitude of the Turks been less preposterous! they might have been permitted to remain and answer questions. Of all the people that have striven to gain freedom from Turkish tyranny only one, the Armenians, were to be granted independence. From a Turkish viewpoint such a "concession" might have appeared generous enough. The trouble is that Turkey is in no position to offer concessions of any kind. The little new Turkey will be all Turkish Just as the little Austria will be all Austrian and the little new Hungary all Magyar, says Cleveland Plain Dealer. Germany and Hulgarla fare better, Inasmuch as antebellum Germany was mostly German and ante-bellum Bulgaria almost wholly I'ulgar. The ex-Empress Eugenie left (jver $10,CHX,000. It is not often in history that so much substantial goods ure saved from the wreck in the downfall of royalty. Still, It Is doubtful If all her millions were compensation to the aged ex-empress, once the ruler of fashion and the envy of the world, for the tragedy of her life, which left her bereft of power, happiness, husband and child. A news Item relates that an exuber ant citizen kicked the copper who sought to restrain his demonstrations and, while the story doesn't go Into details as to what happened to the cltl- j zen we find nothing In It to dispel our lifelong theory that kicking a policeman Is about the most unhealthy of outdoor sports. ! The report that the sultan of a South Sea island has willed all his wives to a Yankee sailor Indicates that his majesty was not informed about the traditions of sailonnen whose w ay Is said to be to scatter their wives rather than to concentrate them in one port. ' A Uclt-ed States army prisoner In Cuba threatened a hunger strike in consequence of a diet of beans and , potatoes. The only alternative in the j matter is to offer a menu of terrapin, I soft crabs, roast turkey and lobster, talad, and tremblingly await results. I
FOB THE EG J3E
Washing Satin, Flannel -de Soio or Velours Are Good. Garment Offers Greater Possibilities to Vcmen for the Expression of Individual Ideas. The province of the negligee, nowadays, observes a fashion writer in the Christian Science Monitor, may be anything from a dressing gown worn In the bedroom, or a breakfast gown slipped Into until we are able to gain some Idea as to what the weather is going to be for the day, ami so clothe ouFelves accordingly, to an informal dinner gown worn for the cozy dinner at home. In all its differing functions it offers great possibilities to the woman of taste for it gives greater opportunities perhaps than do other garments for the expression of individual ideas. For the morning wrapper washing satin or flannel de sole is a good material, and some Interesting color schemes might be worked out by a lining of the same material in another color with a long turned over rolled collar fastening to one side below the waistline, and also turned-back cuffs. Some very attractive negligees are made of velours cloth in magyar fashion, with just a hole at the neck to get Into, ami draped at the sides; velours cloth, with its peachlike bloom, is an excellent material for all draped effects, and it may be had In very delightful colors; it is also very warm for chilly evenings. A very dainty tea gown Feen recently was fashioned of a cream velours cloth edged with brown fur at the neck and sleeves, heavily embroidered with pale rose silk, and a pale pink moire ribbon run through two slots at the waist. Another gown of an entirely different type, and which is more in the nature of a dinner gown than a negligee proper. Is the lace undordress which is worn with a silk or velvet coat. These dresses are very dainty and attractive and .can be carried out in many different ways. The undordress which is in itself a complete dress and can of course be worn without the coat if desired, may be made entirely of piece lace, or it may be made of lace flounces or of spotted or plain net with bands of lace inserted in different patterns. CHIC SOFT ANGORA COSTUME Vc 1 A charming costume for winter is this combination of soft angora sweater, scarf and jaunty tarn, all matching worn with short plailod skirt. Fine for skating cr sports. BLACK IS STILL IN VOGUE Frocks of Velvet, Velours de Laine, Duvetyn and Cloth Among Winter Favorites. Black is still very smart. With the winter season at hand, women are wearing frocks of black velvet, black velours de laine, black duvetyu and black cloth. Some of these black frocks are trimmed with black monkey, gray baby lamb, gray or more rarely silver fox. Others w ith no trimming other than stitching or a picot edge are worn with superb scarves of sable. It is remarkable that, with the price of fur at its zenith, many women this season are wearing the best of furs. P.lack felt hats are smart just now, worn with the dead-black frocks so affected at the moment. A tailored frock of black velours de laine with a closely girdled short jacket embroidered with an angular design in black thread and trimmed with black caracul, above a narrow plain black skirt, was worn with a small black felt beret on the left side, the bow-ends falling to the shoulder. Harper' Iktzaar. Satin Hats. Velvet bats have already had their day with the ultra-tlegantes and now we witness the appearance of lovely conceits in satin, while for evening and restaurant wear the all-over lace hat seems almost de rigueur. Green cvnd Red. Green and red seem to be the dominant colors for evening wear, partlcu- t larly when velvet Is the - material '
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! i LEAD TO BRÜH Ml New Red Types Run From Darkest Into High Tints That Touch on Russet and Gold. GREEN IN FASÜISÜ'S FAVOR Shade Is Promised Bright Future, Esa i v m t 1 pcciauy tne uarK uottie sna uitve Hu:s Navy Blue Lcsing Popularity. Color, always an important factor In fashions, is claiming more than usual attention this season. This is practically the first time, notes a Paris fashion correspondent, that the Paris dressmaker lias bad an opportunity to launch absolutely postwar colors. Darin:-: the years that have succeeded the signing of the armistice It has been largely a question of using up stocks of both manufactured goods and raw materials. Put throughout the seasons which have intervened the Trenc h manufacturer lias had time to readjust liims' lf to a new regime, so that what is being shown this winter as novelty i actually new. Hence the new colors appearing for 10-1 are worthy of me"e than passing mention. "Strong, well determined and definite describe the tones shown on the color c:--!; J ( no spring. The choice of the IVris dressmaker and milliner is oipially well defned. Rod is the present winter novelty, and It is anticipated thr.T its favor will be Increased in the spritr.'. In the new red seres rut shades s ill are immensely popular. lirt Color Leads Into Brown. 'I J.ese rust tones gradually lead to brown, a color in high favor and shown in a very large a-ortniont of tones, running from the deepest so-called black brown- into h'gh shades that touch c:i r:?s ' t rnd gold. T!:ore i- :." i' ao:i wny red and brown ev. r f il liave been cttnsidere 1 as h- : r'',:r to tlie autumn and wir.'or. TI-- : inlinitely more suitiili!" o Ave:'.r in :fe springtime. When the iittle grec-n bmls are shooting forth on tV" tr r and nature everywhere is t vtting on new dresses we feel Hint we nmst be in keeping with our surroundings by being clothed in fresh new raiment, and no color adapts itself so readily and so cheerfully to the mood of spring ns bright, warm red. Nor does it ever show off to greater advantage than in such a setting as the soft green of new foliage. Later in the summer, when the streets are hot and dusty and the leaves parched and brown, red is not attractive. Green is another claimant for fashion's favor and a big future is prophesied for it, particularly the dark bottle and oHve shades. In the new cotton materials for the coming summer greens are prominent. It Is interesting to notice the exactness with which all the shades seen in silks have been reproduced in cotton fabrics. There are lovely docp-grcen organdies, with shadow printings in lighter shades of the same color. Of Ccat Dress cr Roue Manteau by Cheruit Developed in Velours de Laine In the New Plantain Green. course, this treatment is not confined to green, for the new cottons appear to have been su;v-esfully dyed in every hue ander the sun; but much more is made of tl.e green shades this year than f'r :i long time pat. Navy Blue Loses Popularity. ' Owing to the marked preference for the forego:ng color bine js les important. In fact, th"ie is a minimum of blue in tl.e new color cards in proportion to the prominciicf of the above mentioned colors. It will not he easy for the American woman to depart from navy blue, which always has been a favorite with her. She has worn it so continuously that the navy blue dress or uit has become almost n national uniform. It will be refreshing to see a number of other colors, for the one great criticism of our dressing is that there Is so little vafrjety in it Apparently ever; . wogn
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chooses the same color and the same model. In laces, veilings and pattern veils the launching of these new colors la very pronounced. Lovely lace pattern veils In colors are being used by the smartest milliners. Manufacturers an looking forward to a big midwinter and early spring season on colored veils. Often such a novelty will constitute the entire trimming on a very smart lint. In all millinery lines a predominance of these new shades Is apparent. Feathers in Greens and Browns. Costly feathers, such as paradise and aigrette and their imitations, are 110 longer In black, but must be In one of the new dark greens or browns. Preference Is given for these colors in evening headdresses of metal fabrics, which show a combination of them in
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r :; ? ; -U ,.' -u w; " - tmu fee--vc-.. Jenny Model in Russian Effect Developed in Dull Red Velours De Laine; Trimmed With Moleskin. the weave. Deep emerald, singly or in combination with metal. Is very popular for evening headdresses. Prominent milliners are exploiting glowing red liats. Red shades enter into practically all embroidered designs. Lanviu is making a big feature of black and white and red, and everywhere is found the same evidence of marked preference for deep reds, rust color, dark browns and dark greens. A coat dress or robe manteau by Cheruit developed In velours de laine is in the new Platane green. Note the drapery across the stomach and the fact that the dress Is entirely of panels, one overlapping the other; also that there is a buttoned-or. panel at the right side only, with no balancing panel at the left. Robe Manteau Paris Perennial. The type of dress known as the robe manteau has become a Paris perennial. It has proved so popular that dressmakers each season present new types of this character. The climate in Paris is favorable to this sort of drevs, as a heavy wrap is rarely needed until Christmas, and the robe manteau furnishes a lovely background for a beautiful fur trimming or a separate piece of fur. Cheruit has made stunning coat dresses in velours de laine. The model described above is one of her best numbers. It may be said to took exactly like a coat, except that across the front the skirt portion drapes slightly in the new wrinkled stomach effect and over this falls a soft rovers, or ih:p, thus making a simple and c!ever variation of the coat dress. Mine. Jenny also Is very successful wiili the robe manteau. She. too, makes it of velours de luine and trims it with fur, but keeps somewhat to the Kussian type, though one notes also the slight Introduction of -the stomach drapery or wrinkled effect about this part of the body. Jenny Model In Russian Effect. One of Jenny's models of this type !s developed In dull red velours de laine and trimmed with moleskin. It has the creased fullness drawn close over the stomach. At one side Is a long sash of the cloth lined with a beautiful gray satin. Where the sash is attached to the dress a buckle of carved shell Is placed. There Is considerable discussion over long skirts, but about the only places where one actually sees them are the dressmaking establishment's. Premet is among the dressmakers who stand out in favor of the long skirt. Some of her models are ankle length. Jut to what extent women will accept these mature-looking gowns Is yet to be determined. A model of -this character Is developed in red lace and black satin. The novelty of the lfc'e. as well as the form of the dress, adds to its interest. The lace Is an all-over pattern and embroidered In gold threads. Th low waistline girdle Is made of flowers and beads. Conservative houses such is Ier ::ro keeping to jhe somewhat conventional type of evening dreM that K the draped style with extreme decolIetage and sleeveless bodice. It Is to be noted, however, that many of the draped forms suggest a princess out-
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