The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972, December 18, 1912, Page 12, Image 12

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    THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL', PORTLAND, WEDNESDAY EVENING, DECEMBER 18, 1912.
:Mm Rjiiipns
There be no doubt of th popu
larity of th whit cloth gown for this
winter, ylt J thoroughly arttstiQ ana,
fashioned as It is now. with color not
and further V'relleveo: with a touch1 of
. f.ir trimming, It Is likewise very be
, '. emln. ;i ,(','.', : :'; ;t , : - ' ''."'
irrhe model shown her is built of
troadclotlt lo one of the deepest of the
cream tones, and though exceedingly
himple every one of 1U few details Is
made to count The skirt and what ap
, pears to be a tunlo are one. ' One aide
la cut considerably longer than "the
other or the opening one, so that, a it
in mounted at the top, It Is draped a
little low at the foot, while the other
Fide hangs Quite straight from the belt
Then this straight aide, which ia the
left, is cut In vide, shallow scallops as
far as the knees, the scallop edge be
ing finished with large silver ball but
tons sewed to the edge at close and reg
ular intervals in simulation of ball
fringe,) At knee depth the slashing or
scalloped edge terminates and the regu
lar line of the skirt la continued. ,
; The crossover blouse continuing the
ecftllop opening of, the skirt closes over
a Uttle tucker of cream mousse! ine de
sole, the long close sleeves finishing In
a point over the hand show, the scal
loped effect up the back, to the elbow
with the same button trimming, ana
then come in the two most telling fea
tures, the tab collar of fur that reaches
Just around the neck to the moussellne
,Meld. and the girdle with lta single
wide saeh end Burgundy crepe tipped
with fur.
Length of line and plain expanses of
nurface are best calculated to produce
the successful white cloth costume
Colors and, black may take to elaborate
draperies end trimming schemes, but for
white cloth, plain, though not necessar
ily severe, designs wfll always be found
to work out inost satisfactorily; for
the white eewn for winter Wear has a
distinction that is not shared In com
mon with colored effects.
A fad In this connection, and rather a
pretty one. is that of having the white
cloth worked in coarse embroidery, a
was done with taffeta last spring. The
colors are always erude rather than
brilliant, and the designs of the sim
plest character. Alternating with this
idea is another in which the embroidery
is stuffed and made solid looking. It Is
accomplished with the same worsteds i
It is not a bit too early to be think
ing of making Christmas gifts If one
wiKhes to avoid the- rush at the last
fnoineot. "
There1 are so' many things to take
one's attention from the sewitig just be
fore the holidays and what appears to
bo just a few stitches to finish means
really hours of close sewing very often.
Of course, every one Is looking for
.'novelties. Now the very newest' shape
In, a. night dress case is a most handy
looking bag. The envelope shape is en
tirely out of date. The new bag is
jiittds of white linen, and measures
about eight by, fourteen inches when
finished.
A dainty basket of flowers is worked
on one side of the bag. The scams are
If ft open about four inches from the top
and finished with a buttonhole stitch.
A row of buttonhole loops is stitched
around the bag where the seams stop to
1j nt-ed for running ribbon through a a
tliaw strings. The ribbon matches the
trior of the embroidery. j
.... ..... -v r j .viuiiiq tvu lilt
,f rLv lope . shaded ...bag. .Is-.often. '. la- the
, ii', new OlAO Uiii uv utuig on a
p in the Closet , ;,, .
A comb and brjish ease to match may
be, carried out in exactly the same way,
but in a smaller alse.
One or both would make a delightful
holiday gift because pretty and prac-
Another novelty out this season is a
table runner and pillow to match for
use In a library or the living- room.
The material is the ever popular tan
cash worked in any preferred color
comjination. . Lat the colors chosen
rlHHh with the tones of the draperies it
will be ..wis, to confine the shades to
oft old rose, the different tones of
brown, running from cream to seal
and pretty greens. This combination
will harmonise with almost all colors.
The ends of the table runner and the
comers of the pillow are embroidered In
a conventional design, if the corners
are lightly connected with an embroid
ered motif in the center the effect will
be very handsome. A heavy tan linen
.MOTETS
1Y0MEI
Breathe It for Catarrh
Physicians Prescribe It
: and Pharmacists
: Recommend It
Quickly Clears Stuffed - Up
Head and Stops Snuffling
and Hawkins.
, Jn the ; morning, shortly after . you
awake, dear reader, do you have to
hawk and strain to get that stubborn
liiK of mucus out of your throat?
tiet rid of catarrh now; it win grow
no, as you grow older. On day of
breathing pleasant, healing HTOMKI
pronounce It Hlgh-o-me) the guaran
teed catarrh remedy will give you such
wonderful relief that you will wonder
w hy you. doubted the statement that
Booth's I1YOM EI would end the most
bottle of HYOME1 and almpleTinptnic
Hons for use is 11.00. This is called the
HYOMEi outfit. If one bottle does not
inlsh. your catarrh, you can get an
. -ihr for enly 60 refits. Thousands use
i for rung lis.' coJd and croup. Bold by
ii-utgtsta tvcrj-whrrV-,' - "
Some Home-Made Christmas Presents
By Elizabeth Lee
1 1 1 1 f i r wa 1 1
I ' WV
mm
The white cloth costume has a pe
culiar charm of Its own In winter. .
and with the same long, loose stitch,
but the stitches are close tog-ether, al
though compared with French or other
modern etitchery, the shading- Is hardly
more delicate than In the first named
method. ,
fringe trims the ends of the scarf, also
all around the edge of the pillow.
In writing about fancy work readers
may like to have the following hint
from an authority passed on to them.
He says: "Ladies who do fancy work
in their leisure time left from house
hold duties sometimes find their hands
u ruugn mat it is difficult to handle
. w wii.b9 u mi m
Of emerv oaoer or flnf Hndmn..
tue suns, ir inev win nnrrhox . .1. .
- . mj.jii. 1 A11U
Keep a strip in their work basket their
nu"i"o in uub nne Will be over. A
little rub over the whole surface of the
hand Will make it as amnnth a.
even removing hangnails, and they can
vu.bus mcir emoroiaery without that
annoyance."
Among the stamped novelties are
,vr trrBervmgj. xavorite recipes,
fcuch a gift would be equally welcomed
unuc vi a nuver weaaing bride.
ine covers are of tan linen. One
ua tt ueign or a quaint little Dutch
boy at the top of the cover, ahd below,
etamoed rearlv for nriin .
oiiuw mo ino man wnrv mri .i.v.
out conk "
- The Indian )mVt ne . - ...
make a doubly attractive gift if lined
with ,Hk. cut sufficiently large 0 com,
above-the basket and to be drawn J
TKITLT eacl0in tfe contem. 0,
YOUR BROTHER
By Graham Hood
We hear much about the brotherhood
we are about to put
our swords and bayonets to better ues
It suggests that peace among mm mav
mIiiI! aU8ether th rm of The
There has always been a certam
amount or traternlty. It ig nw,,,,
thHt ther. shoM k- o",... nocessary
exist without u ' ly C0UId not
t,lf nJ"! " Eternity
-1 mn inierests the nrn.
tertlve alliance of men against rnutua
iHy of the family or the clan still a
more or leSS selfish institution. In b 111
mors recent times we had the fra,er
nity of organiZatlon-the men whose In
terests had made them brothers bound
by solemn oath to aid rather than ' in
jure each other. ln
f oclety is a process of evolution and
It is here that wo it.a u. "na
From the tow'T ' t
alliance we hav. rtvK
where fraternity begins to mean 1 th!
real brotherhood of n,.n. 1. it nt ,ogi!
Cal to SUDDORA that IV,- . ... "
obfr,UBidTal? neaf,y 10 the T1
... a -f IU VslKQ Th -I
terests of one are inextricably bound im
with the Interests of all. Life "J 2
complex that it is impoeslble to denote
the point at which we cease to be do!
pendent upon others.
Every adequate system of ethics that
the world has known has had this prin
ciple for Us foundation. P
Prom the early days philosophers
have taught us that an injury to on.
an injury, to all; that If we fan to
employ one, w Injure not him alone
but society as a whole; that a lie told
about or,a has its effect upon the well
being of the many, "'sweii-
Thus we see that existence. If it is
to b. a successful and a happy one
must of necessity proceed along tha
I"? L fPeraton- was this idea
that Prince Kropotkin emphasised
when he wrote about th. part which
mutual a)d ha. playednAjj
In other worda
much a batUe In which the strong con
quer and destroy the weak. It is fw
mora an effect of helpfulness of the one
V13 r have
made- tbe-tnoRt pnnnu...... -
sr. tpoi in which ttfe spirit 0 mitual
aid has been most pronounced In Its de
velopments, -.ii ..'(.
Wa can prove this theory 'to ba true,
in the animal kingdom as well as among
men. The trouble with us has bean
that wa have bean too alow in rar-.no.
nixing the causes baok of the effects we
have seen. As a result, many of us
vvil
man for himself, with nothing short of
ccm 10 ieei mat nr. ia a. niu nr ..nil
ceramon ror mm who . ia an ntn-
nau as tc fall behind.
It is this Inspiration toward selfish
ness that has kent us from th r.. 11..
tlon of the idea embodied ln the phrase
tne orotnernooa or man," and that has
retarded the progress of humanity.
Trv to think what wntiM hiu it
all the nations of the world saw no
runner neea ror maintaining the fight
Inp machines that now represent such
a trmnn1nilS nut lav In thnnh
buu
money every year. Suppose that wa
had no mora us for vast armies and
costly battleships. Suppose that the na
flnna of tha north: after dlnon(n
this source of expenditure, were to de
vote the same amount of time, energy
thought and money to the- adjustment
of an me of ths serious soalal nrnhUm.
that now confront us.
Dpn't you tninic that such a course
of man In alt its glorious realities? .
And don't you. think that ths world
would be a better place In which to
live If this change were brought abou.tr
Journal Want Ads bring results.
WHAT Holiday gift can
you think of more
acceptable or more practical
than a Gillette Safety Razor?
; It is something he will use every day
to make his shaving easy and simple.
And it is good for him.
It will give him the habit
of the daily shave econ
omize his time make
'himindependen(rofthe
As to Neighbors
' Tm disappointed ln my nsw neigh
bor.. Mr. Mushroom." said tbs retired
merchant "I thought when hs moved
into the house next door that at last
I'd have a neighbor of tha right sort
He was polite and amiable, attended
atrtctly to his own business, and his
folks didn't com over to borrow any
thing, or complain that our hens wers
eatina- the -paint off their fence. Not
until yesterday did I discover a .flaw
In this promising neighbor. Then I
found that he is a whlted sepulchre,
Ilka all tha rsst of them.
"That man actually plays an old
fashioned concertina by the hour, and
he plays th old, old tunek that were
chestnuts when our fathers went to
s-Shool. Ist night he played 'Lilly
Dale' for thres hours on end. What is
a man going to do when his next door
neighbor, wrestles with a wheeiy cou
oertlna when hs ought to be in bsdf
"Neighbors are always a nuisance,"
remarked 'the hotelkeeper, . "If man
wants to bo perfectly happy In this
world hs must buy a lot but In tbs coun
try, and build a nigh fence around It.
have had neighbors all my. life and
never knew one that was aatlsfactory.
I remember when I waa first married.
my wife -and I lived ln a vine-covered
(fe
Kail?' V '- T- jfmmwrmAt LKr
- - rszk mIs ifl - -
Start Him Right in His
Give Him a
KOSTROPPIN
KNCJWN
GILLETTE SAFETY RAZOR COMPANY, BOSTON
Br Walt Mason..
cottage with other vlne-oovered cottages
close by, Ths house Just narth of, us
wss oocuplsd by half a'doxen different
families and they nearly drove us to
distraction. One man kept about 10,000
ooga, une yard was lull of them, and
they slept in ths woodshed at niarht. and
they all had "bad dreams, and ths way
xney used to yowl and shriek mad a
nervous man think of midnight . ln a
graveyard. . ':; 4 ,v-; ; .,
"Finally some good Samaritan pried
looae a board from ths side of ths shed
and ' threw ln some - porterhouse steak
which had been seasoned with poison,
and when my neighbor went out ln the
morning to greet his bowwows he found
about a cord of them dead, and the
rest dying. He accused me of having
poisoned his doggone dogs and hod me
arrested, and before I was through with
ths case my lawyer had taken my cook
stovs and piano and other goods and
ChSttelS. - - ',.'..'.-, -. f ', ;;..,'..
Then another man moved into that
house. I thought I was going to like
him at first. He was a pale, studious
young fellow, and an old aunt keit
house for him. He seemed wrapped up
In hi own affairs and bothered no
body. But it turned out that h was
dippy on chemistry. He fixed up a
Gillette for
barber save him the cost of shaves
andtips.
The Gillette Safety Razor is made
in more than, forty different styles,
from silver-plated to triple gold.
Watch for the Holiday displays of
Gillettes in the stores all over this
O HONING
RLDGVEIt
ift!.. P 1 Ws777
AMpCUtUt,
sort of laboratory In , the buaement of
the house, and was always trying ex
perlments there, and th way those
experiments smelled was a caution to
the board of health. I used to wear a
Baseball mask to keep out ths coarsest
Of th fragrance, and even then I near
ly smothered every once in a while. ;
"On evening som of the men of
th neighborhood wers holding an In
dignation mooting in my house, de
vising ways and mns to run that
chemist out, and ws were Just passing
a series of ringing resolutions when
ther was th biamedest explosion you
ever heard. W rushed out Just in
Urns to se that chemist's aunt com
ing down from overhead. : Sh was
blown halfway to th moon, and th
fact that sh landed on a hay stack
was all that saved her. The chem
ist's hair was burned off. And It scared
him so that he moved away. Then
ths house waa repaired and another
family moved in. . . '
"That family was eomnosed of ruh.
bernecks. Father, imothes, sons and
daughters all had Ions' dlstann. aara
and eyes, and the way they kept tab
on us was discouraging. Sometimes
when my wife and I would b having a
comfortable quarrel,' thinking it a fam
ily affair, I'd glance over to the house
next door and there would b all those
rubbernecks straining every narva tn
hear ; what we , wers laying. They
knew more about our business than we
did, and their conduct got on my nerves
to sucn an extent , mat i went over ona
day and cornered th head of the fm. 1
Christmas
Shaving "S'vf
city. Make your selec
tions early $5 to $50. .
,: ,i j,:,: -'y6 v,.!:,:; .v?, :::jhi:':i4":-i:;;f,:Asf,-'''' i.'',-.. Lvf 1 ''V" ;
For small gifts get Packets of
UUIette blades at i5Uc. or $1.00.
They proVe ycry acceptable
every Gillette user.
ily ln his own yard and punched his
nose, uml had to go to law Again,
VThe next neighbor seemed an agre-"
able man, friendly and obliging, and I
thought at last Ufa would b a round
of pleasure. But h was moaner than
any of them. Befor h had been ln
the house two ' weeks he was I down
with th smallpox, and w had to move
to th other end of town. " -v
"Th fact ' that a man has to have
neighbors, whether h wants them or
not, shows that there's something radi
cally wrong with our government." -
Hum Breaks Laborer's Leg. . 1
(Special to The Jfurnsl.)
. Forest Grove, Or., Dec II. Frank '
Bear, a laboring man of this city, was .
' nvnf bV ; II Vary takla lin
and received a badly fractured legf!
Bear 'was working for the street pavsfi-, ' I
company and was wheeling a load of
cement. In ths darkness the driver of
the bus did not see him, Bear has a
family.
The Importance of
The Picture Frame
TTrsmlnr with ; our lance aoulnment
and staff of skilled operators, the most
artlstlo framing can be done on short 1
notice, to Know now 10 iram pictures
has been a study with-us for more than
80 years. -,-.v.. r,T
' BArtBUtM, TAIL.
. . 170 First.St.
'. Stors Open Evenings.
A
n
M
'A
'1
'4e? AW atA 444 44 144.
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