THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, THURSDAY EVENING, NOVETILII 1, VA2. . Sweet Sixteen' She Studies Art afi jii Care of the Hair During Illness By Dr. Editk B. Lowry CHlllVfl ILCill hit MODS DY CORA' MOORE, and ULLIANYOUNO Norelty in evening gown Is recog nized in unique touchei rather than in decided Innovations. Many a design that appetrs at first glance to be some thing entirely "new, will, upon closer observation, be found to be made up upon -familiar lines, differently ar ranged, or else, quite as likely, it is an , odd -material that turns the trick. i This is aptly illustrated In the model sketched. ' None of its features is of ) strikingly recent introduction, and yet the modernity of the pretty frock could 5-" not possibly bo questioned. The skirt ," of deep, cream tinted satin, is long . ' trailing;, and not so very scant but that it rather harks back to other days, while the spiral tunic and the peplumed cor- ; eage certainly are old friends. But 1 ' the corsage and the front of the square i tunic aro workedLout-in-a heavy chiffon cloth, wrought in gold thread in a rose patiArn wltli a banding of skunk to give It emphasis, and, lo, the costume U of the moment -" It ; W algniticant that tha chiffon of ' th tunic is embroidered-.only across , the front , In another season the pat- trn would have been - carried clear around, but half the emphasis and most of tha artistic effect would have been " 'lost, and, herein is demonstrated one ' Of the most pertinent little notes of this new fashion season- that it is the dell , cacy of trtment that counts very par 1 ticularly where the tendency is to what Is pronounced almost to tha point of aggressiveness., . . utraight-hanging little dresses of this , sort are rather a relief from the fes s toonad - drapery arrangements, which, however simple they, actually are, can hardly fall to appear mora or less com plex, and while this special "design is not so susceptible of variations as some ; others, it has an advantage in that It will be in : style through several changes. If desired it could be worked out in h- a combination of colors rather than in . the monochrome-effect observed in the . original, and let me suggest, it 'offers a special inducement to velvet or bro- History of FirstTkanlcsgiving Reviewed "Let us coma before his presence with t thanksgiving and make a Joyful noise . unto him with psalms." -Psalms of : David. - - . Tha; first Thanksgiving. This is a theme which even a flip pant writer would perforce be com pelled to approach with a feeling akin to reverence. When-after the Ingathering of the first harvest in 16(0 Governor Brad ford aent four men out to shoot wild fowl that the Infant colony "might af ter a more special manner rejoice to gether," he little dreamed to what that ptous act would grow. That first Thanksgiving day was marked especially by the gratitude of that forlorn little band which came over in tha Mayflower gratitude to him who had-preserved them from the perils of the Jeep and. from. the hands of their new red-skinned neighbors, the Indiana. The "day was celebrated in that lovely period of balmy, calm, cool air and soft BunBhine Indian summer. -rieutofWM rowL , History tells us that those four, men whom th governor, senj,out.Wsre Tfe inarkably successful In their bringing down of wild turkeys, pigeons and part ridges which the women dressed and Btuffedrwltlrbeech nuts. But it seems they-muct have lacked deer since the Indian nobles of the train of King Mas Kasolt volunteered to go out and bring in the-Venison. What a cheerful spec tacle it must have been, when the red men appeared carrying a many branched buck or a pretty little doe. Shall on doubt that the Pilgrim grav ity of demeanor was for one moment dispelled when the Indians returned with their share of the feast and that a wel coming cheer arose from the throats of many of the deep-lunged Englishmen or that the women beamed upon their red brothers with eyes of Saxon-blue? t After the religious 'services of song and praise and thanksgiving, came the feast of good things, cooked over huge ojien fires. The deer were roasted whole and as they had barley flour the Puritan women prepared some de-.il?l?.Y!JSQn84Jlaa-.A4-bbly some pies and puddings with wild fruit. Pish broiled to a rare brown turn, "Friday Only" Sale $1.25 Smartest Pique Kid for special WOMEN'S or 8 months. wOHI H'S 3-for-tl OUTSIDE HOSB iJiac-K inforced foot; garter top. Fri day only. . . mcn, ror ..4 n Konsw -7 hat " Quality -BaU ' -etM&nsr 0. T. Berg, A pertinent suggestion for remodel ing last year's evening gown. ' cade because of the expanse of surface It allows. An order has been turned in for a reproduction of It. The skirt is to be of the same deep, rich color, but the tunic and corsage of a new sliver cloth that Is about the texture of a fine sheer mull, with tha embroid ery done on the under side in color, giving It a hasy appearance from the right side, while tailed ermine Is sub stituted for the skunk bandings. clams roasted or stewed and oysters also brought in by the Indians and be lieved to be the first ever eaten by the I'ilgrims, were likewise among the dain ties. Borne "firewater" too, it Is fair to infer, was passed about, for our Pil grim fathers, there is abundant evidence to prove, though temperate, were not total abstainers. And one of tha cooks of this wonder ful woodland banquet was none other than Prlsellla, whom Captain Standish made the grand mistake of wooing through another man, instead of trying to take her heart like a true soldier by storm, face to face.- Bhe It was who presided over the largest kitchen, lot some of the cooking of especial dishes was done Inside. What a picture Is here for some his torical painter: Prlsellla at the fire or flitting. through the throng outside with some dainty of ferlng for Massasolt him self, while the eyes of all the young men follow her footsteps, And what a noble inspiring picture is the whole scene a picture of piety, of human brotherhood and of poetry, for which the-unlversal heart of man, when realizing its profound significance, must gladly-and proudly- give-thanks; Out of the Mouths of of Babes Teacher Johnnie, where Is tha North Pole located? Johnnie At the top of tha map. Little Lola I wonder where Adam got names for all the animals? Small Elmer Why, he got them In the dictionary, of course. Teacher Bessie, your little brother hasn't been to school for two days. Is he sick? Bessie No, ma'am; It's worse than that; mamma cut his hair. Strar.rer Why, little girl, what are you crying for? Little Girl C-cause I was out wwHrinrwth-my"pi-andtlTOwt him, and I'm afraid m-mamma will s-spank me if I go home without him. f Gloves at 95c! BTJTINQ them in tremendooa quantities for both ear Portland and Seattle stores, en ables thin splendid saving! Smartest 1LZH Plqna Kid Glove s, one-clasp style, of good nuaiitjr prime skins every new fchadc ererr pair guaranteed 95c the 7fcth Friday Only Sale, at 1.35 GLOVES 1000 pairs of One 'V IMAX VL JLADU $1.15 i-'ique Kia, fique cap and White Doeskin Wach. gloves, for street or dressr-New , fresh, stock. Friday Onlyj WOMEN'S WEAJLFBOOT G-TXA.B. IB mm KOBE Black Bilk' I,t ale, U boi7kT pairs. Kuarantei-ri for Friday Only Hal- . RTT.K KOSB famous eiiK j,isle, re name .,Knit brand; 25c extra long 59c Lisle top. r e I afore cd loot UnnKskTlao Orwt Una of regular St Umbrellas. IJ and 28- men and women. Guar, onion taf- . . ...... I j 7 rolled gold, silver trimmed handles. Friday onlynn hoily gift box , $3.95 UovHanil Street, r. o, SSanagsr. "Whenever a person Is ill at horns on of the points most likely to ba neglected Is the Care of tha hair. ' In a great many cases women recover from an illness of only a few days to find their hair snarled and matted that it almost is impossible ever to remova tha tangles. If on the first day of an illness the hair Is properly taken care of, there heed be no occasion for this condition. The hair should ba parted down tha center and braided In two braids, Tha braids should commence far enough to ward the front that the patient wilt not He on them when the back of her heal is on the, pillow. The hair . should be combed at least one a day. The patient should lie on her Bids and then one half of the hair can ba dressed at a time without any trouble, no matter how sick the patient may be, In combing the hair one should com mence at the ends, gradually remov ing the tangles by working upward. If the hair Is grasped by tha left hand be tween the roots -and the part being combed, the patlont will not complain of tha pulling, If the hair is badly -tangled olive oil may bo applied, which will greatly les sen the labor. Where tha matting Is extensive, it Is not best to try to comb out all tangles at once, as it would be too much of a tax on the patient. A few stranda can ba separated at a elms, then braided so as not to become tan gled again. ' When a patient Is compelled to lie In bed for a number of weeks the hair may bo washed without much incon vonlence and without danger to the patient. The pillow should be well protected by a rubber sheet, and the patient moved as near the edge of the bed as possible. Two basins of rather hot water, one containing tha shampoo mixture and the other for rinsing, should be In readiness. One side of the hair should be washed at a time, then rinsed well. The-hair and acalp may be nearly dried very quickly with the use of several towels. After the sham poo tha hair should remain spread out on the pillow for some time until thor oughly dry. A little alcohol may be rubbed Into the scalp after rinsing. Care thould be taken that tha patient is not exposed to a draught for soma time. v It is in tha little details, such as the care of the halr the teeth, and the fin ger nails that the -thoroughness and training of a nurse is best shown. The finger nails should be given proper care every day as well as the hair, while the eeth need attention several times a day. Lincoln Foresaw the Wage Struggle By Graham Hood. Has it ever occurred to you that our great love for our first martyred presl dent, Abraham Lincoln, la due chiefly to the fact that he was so thoroughly a man? We have had presidents who were more cultured,' more learned, more skilled in the arts of diplomacy, but no man who has ever had his hand at the helm of the nation has beon so very human in every quality as Lincoln. It was because ha waa every inch a man that he was able to display such deep sympathy with every class of peo ple. It was because he was so human in all this thoughts and deeds that he succeeded in finding a basis of harmony between the most antagonistic princi ples. Lincoln realised and we must realise if we want to approach the sa cred shrine of truth that the Golden Mean Is the only standard by which men and principles can' be measured. Extremes, though sometimes useful, are never right. The fanatic may point the way .to-world progress.- He may Indi cate th direction In which we are to travel, but he "can never guide us to our destination. We may learn truths from him, but they are of no practical value to us until we have eliminated the dross of exaggeration with which he has encumbered them. The relations between capital and labor which trouble us so sorely to day had begun to become burning questions even In Lincoln's time. Tha blaze did not send its fiery tongues toward heaven, but the fire was there, and, though It waa merely smouldering, Lincoln saw It, and recognised Its ter rible posaiblllttes for evil . In words that still glow with hu man sympathy In phrases that display his keen sense of analysis Lincoln pointed the way, and the only way, by which such factors can be made to work harmoniously together. "Labor has Its rights," he said, and then, after defining the Imperative char ae4r f thwe- r lgh tie -added; "and capital, too, has its rights, which must also be respected." That Is what we want at the present moment somebody with tense enough to see that both labor and capital have rights that deserve respect somebody with so forceful a character that he can compel the recognition of and re spect for these Inherent rights. But It was not only in the fields of politics and economics that Lncoln proved himself anterior to the great majority of men of his generation. To read his letters and papers la to be admitted into the inner sanctuary of a living soul. What Lincoln had he gave to all, freely and without thought of recompense. "Let It be said of roe," he oiiue ealJ, "that as I' pass along life's road I have always endeavored to pull the thistle and plant a rose in Its place." . It was because he wanted to pull the thistles and plant the roses that he was ever so ready to. espouse the cause of the weak. His work In freeing the slave would doubtless have been but one triumph in his career had the hand of 4-ha- aaaassm not put an and-to"""Ul opportunities. We are confronted by many serious problems in this day, but our problems are no greater than those which the nation faced when Lincoln was mads our president With his hand to guide the craft of state we ploughed our way safely through the troublous seas and found a harbor at last. I have faith to believe that a pilot as great aa Lin coln will yet appear,, and that, under his skillful guidance, we shall weather all the storms iliat now gather so threatnlngly. Hletory proves, If It proves anything, that there has been no emergency that did not produce a man who was able to meet It. Lin coln was the man of the hour in slav ery times. It remains to be seen who will be the man, of the hour to point the way to the settlement of the con ditions that are becoming so burden some for us today. After spending a comfortable night, W. D. Skinner, assistant traffic mana ger for the Q.-W. R. & N. company, w!)0.wastokea-IU.uddenly .yaatsrUay afternoon, felt much better thlsr morn ing. Mr. Skinner feels tnat his-Indisposition is not serious and that he will be on duty as usual in a day or' two. . I C.-C Laursen, a Tacoma lumber man la registered at tW Bowers."- a-. - irii S sT, irt . . iUBL V If VI If 1" rnlasss OssikffJia , 111 iA'I IJl S k&f jss ItsM SS-ffV 1 jjT - II cjr . ' i wiimruM i a r ii wao rw. -Nil r, u i c ts i n ', mmsfii. . "c-j. ii' : Sweet Sixteen should be thinking of Montenegro is the only country in Europe where a wife may be regarded as a perambulating life Insurance policy. This novel use for wives was expounded to the Daily Mirror by a traveler who has recently visited the scene where war has broken out. "The Montenegrin is Intensely chival rous," he said. "The same remark ap plies to their Albanian kinsmen, and a woman's honor la safer in the hands of these reckless fighters than in almost any European capital. This respect for women Is carried to such a pitch that, although the very word Turk affects the natives as does a red rag an Infuriated bull, yet a Turkish traveler finding him self in tha wilds of the Montenegrin mountains would be absolutely safe If ho were accompanied by his wife. "A Montenegrin would sooner iet his enemy slip out of his hands than run the risk of accidentally hurting a wo man, "This trait is so well known that travelers in that turbulent country who have some definite idea of returning home alive, make certain of It by being aecompaaiey their whrea; Whila the lives of women in Montenegro are un disturbed by fears of sudden death, It cannot be said that the women have a very good time. They are little better than beasts of burden without the re laxation of goBslp, for, unlike tha other Balkan peoples, the Montenegrins are very reserved. MontenegrinWifeBetterTkanlnsurance Library Lecture Series Announced THE LARGEST AND LEADING FUR The Greatest Sale in Our Career EVERY 24th An GARMENT MARKED IN PLAIN FIGURES REMEMBER Anybody Can Buy FIND JUST WHAT YOU WANT AND THEN CUT THE PRICE IN TWO EXTRA CHARGE FOR TERATIONS-DURING THIS SALE DURING THIS SALE, ONLY ONE GARMENT SOLD tone and color, but the Image of a certain Impish little brunette,, who was Itself on her easel, and brushes and paint are forgotten. "When there is no fighting tha Monte negrin sits in his village Inn, drinking coffee and smoking cigarettes, Tha Montenegrin husband is absolute lord and master over his wife. By the cus tom of the people a woman does not address her husband first, always wait ing for him to apeak. "The arduous lot of the women has a decided effect upon their looks, and the Montenegrin women can hardly be re garded as beautiful. Unlike their sla ters in Servla and Bulgaria, they do not 'go in for dress, the reasons being that the never-ending vendettas have a habit of turning whole villages of wo men into widows. "Just recently Montenegro has been going in for schools. Like almost ev erything else in tha country these are Russian. Education is not, however, in great repute in Montenegro, where it is regarded as somewhat effeminate. "Unmarried girls wear little, tight-fitting black and red caps. The red repre sents the blood shed by their country men In fighting their enemies and the black is a symbol of. mourning for iae deadr" Thr married Women do not wear caps, but place a black veil at the back of their beads, which streams down to their waist. "The children have but little educa tion, and In the schools that. do exist only Russian Is spoken. Every educa ted Montenegrin acquires his knowledge outside his own country." MORRISON ST -uv Opposite Old Location of Reliable r ir r fnrLorp AL- Only One -Z- Professor Arthur Evans Wood of Reed college, instructor in social sciences, who gave his first lecture In the course of social ethics In the. auditorium of tho Alblna branch library, 150 Knott street Monday night on "The Field of Social Ethics," will follow with a lecture on some phase of this subject on each Tuesday night during the win ter. Will 0. Steel will give his lecture on "From Chelan to Crater Lake" in the auditorium of this branch library at 8 o'clock Wednesday night, November 87. This lecture Will be illustrated by beau tiful atereopticon views, showing the wonders of the national parks of Oregon and Washington. This lecture will be repeated at the East Portland branch library on Tuesday night, December 3. Miss Laura O. Eaton of St. Helen's Hall gave an illustrated lecture on "India, Its People and Customs," in the auditorium of the East Portland branch library. East Eleventh and Alder Street, at 8 o'clock. Tueaday-nlght, No vember 19. ,Mles Eaton will give a sec ond lecture on "The Religions and Phil osophy of India" on the following Tues day night, November 26. The second lecture by Prof. Harry Beal Torrey, professor of biology of Reed college, on the physiology of con duct will be given at this branch at 7:30 o'clock Friday night, November 22. MANUFACTURERS IN THE WEST More Day TO EACH CUSTOMER ? so popular at the dance, perches The subject will be "The Behavior1 of the Lower Organisms." Admission to all thsse lectures Is free.' Tickets are being distributed from the central library and branches for the courses on the physiology of conduct and aocial ethics, and seats will be held for ticketholders until five minutes be- fore the lectures. The board of directors of the Library association held their regular monthly meeting Wednesday night, November 13. The reports covering the work of the month of October showed a total circu lation in the library system of 72.188. an increase of 16 8-10 per cent over 1911. Our $100,000 Stock of Fine Furs At Just y2 f - . j - - --- sj-m S"ftsj5eslpW6ip5slJ fePrice FUR COATS From $40 to $1250 Now $20 to $625 FURSTOLES- From $10 to $500 Now $5 to $250 FUR MUFFS FROM $6 to $450 Now $3 to $225 BJK NECKPIECES From $3 to $200 Now$la50td$100 FUR-LINED COATS -Front $45-ta $85" Now $22.50 to $42.50 NO EXCHANGES MADE