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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (July 21, 1914)
THE MORNING OREGONIAN, TUESDAY. JULY 31. 1914. 1 jam SH A LICK CAREY has returned 11 from Tillamook, where she en- Joyed an outing In camp with Miss jlrs. and Mr. and MrJ. J. G. Gauld. Isabella Gauld and Mr. and William C Alvord. Fishing outdoor enjoyment are occupying the time of the Portlanders. Miss Beatrice Nickel, of San Francisco, the house guest of Miss Alice and Miss Kvelyn Carey, passed the week-end with Mrs. David Taylor Honeyman at Gearhart. She will probably return today. Miss Harriet Pomeroy. an other San Francisco girl who has been 'visiting her sister, Mrs. Thomas Scott Brooke, has gone to Seattle, where she will remain for a week. mm Mr. and Mrs. Andrew D. Norris, who returned recently from their honey moon, are- occupying their new home en Willamette Heights. The home of Mr. and Mrs. L. G. Aoi.erson. :MS KaRt Thirty-nrsl street. was the scene of a pleasant gathering on Friday, the occasion being tne clos ing meeting of the Carpe Diem Club. The first part of the evening was do voted to "500." Prizes were won by Mrs. C. S. Illff, R. Becker and C. R. Thompson. The latter hour was spent en the lawn, which was gaily lighted with Japanese lanterns. A dainty sup per was spread on tables placed under the trees. Among those present were Mr. and Mrs. C. S. Illff. Mr. and Mrs. '. Tt. Thompson. Mr. and Mrs. H. R. Itesser. Mr. and Mrs. R. Becker. Mr. and Mrs. O. H. Waldstrom. - e Mrs. Lea Hodgkinson. of 9D5 Wlll lams avenue, and Mrs. A. M. Shields have opened the Abernethy cottage. "Kngleslde." at Seavlew, Wash., for a few weeks. Mrs. Barge TZ. Leonard gave a din ner Thursday nijrht at Chanticleer Inn In honor of her father and mother. Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Seyster. of Oregon. 111. Mr. and Mrs. Seyster went to Cloud Cap Inn for a short outing. a Miss Erna Jean Gill left Portland last week to be the house guest of Mrs. N E. Prudhomme at Gearhart: later she will visit Mr. and Mrs. John F. Logan at Seaside. Miss Jennie Drand became the bride of John Simpson at a pretty wedding on July 11 at the home of Mrs. J. Mc faulg. of East Thirty-fourth street. Rev. R. Elmer Smith, of the Sunnyslde Methodist Church, officiated. The bride wore a beautiful white embroidered French voile gown. In her hair was lily of the valleyi and her bouquet was of white carnations and maidenhair fern. To the strains of Lohengrin's wedding march, played hy Miss Jannette Ritchie, the bride entered on the arm of Hugh Ritchie, who gave her away. She was attend ed by Mlaa Hannah McCaulg, who was daintily dressed in a white embroid ered gown trimmed in yellow satin and roses. The bridegroom was attended hy Joslah Ollray. After the ceremony a dainty luncheon was served. The bride recently arrived In this country. She Is the daughter of John Brand, of Greenook. Scotland. Mr. and Mrs. Simpson will be at home after August 1 in their new home In Bunnyslde. e e Mr. and Mrs. W. P. Gannett and Miss Helen Gannett have taken the F. J. McPherson residence. 1090 Vaughn treet. for the Summer. Mr. and Mrs. Carroll II. Tichenor and little sons, Carroll H.. Jr.. and Earle William, have taken a cottage for the Summer at Surf Station. Mrs. William LautenMager left re cently for Seattle, where she will visit her sisters, Mrs. H. G. Warnshold. Mr. and Mrs. B. D. Slgler. Miss Flor ence Adair and Mrs. J. M. Hodson left last night for Yellowstone Park. They will visit Seattle, Tacoma and Victoria, B C, en route. Mrs. E. Rowe. of San Francisco, Is visiting her son. Dan Danzlger. and family at their home, 539 Kast Thirty seventh street. Sir. and Mrs. Danzlger will entertain Mrs. Rowe informally during; her stay. m Mr. and Mrs. John Wood and John Wood. Jr.. of Portland, are among re rent Portland arrivals at the Sol Due Hot Springs In the Olympic Mountains, Washington. e e Mr. and Mrs. Ralph E. Jaeger, of Chicago, accompanied by Mrs. Jaeger's alster, Mi3s Hortense Hobert, are on their way West from Minneapolis. They will come to Portland and then go to Los Angeles for a month. e e Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Rendall. of 939 East Salmon street, left the city last night to attend the diamond wedding of Mr. Rendall's parents at Delavan. Minn. e Mrs. F. A. Behrends is enjoying a trip to Alaska, where she went last week with a party of friends. Flowers and tokens of congratulation and good wishes are finding their way to the home of Mr. and Mrs. Landon R. Mason, whose household has been gladdened by the arrival of a little son, born on Sunday evening. The baby will be christened Landon Randolph HI. In honor of his father and grand father. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Wurzwetler and Milton Wurzweiler left last night for Pendleton, where. In company with the R. Alexanders, they will start on a motor trip to Wallowa Lake, a beau tiful spot In the mountains. Mrs. Wurzweiler Is a prominent member of the Portland Woman's Club and last year served as chairman of the social committee. William M. Ladd. Mr. and Mrs. Wil liam Sargent Ladd and Henry Ladd left recently for Glacier National Park. They will remain for several weeks. Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Haller. Miss Marie and Miss Helen Haller have returned from a trip to the Yellowstone. Miss Constance Piper came up from Seaside on Monday and Is the house guest of Miss Kathleen Sealy for a abort visit. Miss Henrietta Baum has gone to San Francisco, where she will be enter tained by her sister, Mrs. L. Liepsic who has planned several social affairs for Miss Baum. '( -WHAT T5 Anne Rthtohouse c5AY5 CCopyrlfht. 1SH. by the McClure Newspaper Syndicate. NEW YORK. July 15. (Special.) There Is one good thing about the modern coiffure; It Is able to save one from the expense of false hair. And any one who has Indulged In that lux ury, nay necessity, knows how many pennies It took to be well equipped In this Hoe of dressing. One upon a time women would not BLACK AND WHITE CHECK As a hint for the early Fall costume, a smart model is shown. The bodice and tunic are of checked material and the underskirt and high draped girdle are of black satin. An advanced note is marked in the depth of the girdle and in the braid motifs that border the tunic. A black chapeau Is worn with the gown. admit that they pinned In the curls that made them coquettish, nor added the long braid that caused so much commendation, but they were more ar tificial days than these, for conceal ment is no longer practised, and there by half the artificiality Is gone. Women use powder and paint now as they did then and through the cen turies, but they not only admit it. but carry their "kit" with them and think nothing of powdering their noses In public. Whatever false hair they wear is as frankly admitted now as it was by the colonials who wore powder or wigs. It is a difficult day for shams; women do not class under the head of "sham" the thing they do openly for an avowed purpose. So curls and puffs and braids were freely confessed even when they were worn, not so many months ago, but now women are spared the expense of these because the coiffure Is again natural. The main trouble is that near Iv every one has too much hair to manage, and wholesale cutting under the name of Improvement goes on all the time. There has not been a season since the Civil War when a woman with ' full head of hair" could arrange It be comingly, and one always found the hair that was purchased an easier problem to 0OlV than one's own hair; and It Is really a penalty this season to have more than a handful. Merely a Series of Waves. When a woman's hair Is well coiffed these days It looks like a series of waves without an obstacle to their Droeress. They flow neatly and sure lv across the head In one continuous ripple. There Is rarely an ornament to break the evenness unless one counts two shell hairpins that secure the ends at the nape of the neck to keep the line from dropping below the edge of growth. In the evening there may be a band of brilliancy or a piece of plumage, but this usually shows French Influ ence. The well-dressed Anglo-Saxon likes her hair untouched by gewgaws, although In millionaire circles she often wears rare Jewels. This simplicity is alluring, but It Is not simple to accomplish. When one first tries It there Is so much discour agement that one returns to the more ornate way that does not call for ex tra thought. A man by taking thought cannot add an Inch to his stature, but a woman without taking thought can add many Inches to her head by pin ning on false hair. The Retnra of the Marcel Wave. The extremists and those to whom straight hair is becoming have aban doned the artificial wave, and brush the locks up from the ears and the neck in mid-Victorian plainness; but it is not given to the many to accom plish this feat with grace. Most women must resort to the mar cel wave, and for this the coiffeurs are profoundly grateful. It adds to their coffers, especially In Summer, when the best regulated wave breaks In a day. The sufferer Is the woman whose hair is impossible unless curled, and many of these It needn't be whis pered any longer wear a transforma tion of light waves pinned over the front and sides of their own straight hair. There should be no more prejudice against this kind of hair than against the puffs and braids which It sup plants. And it Is the most comfort able Invention of the day in that line. The Perfect Hoateea. The perfect hostess does any num ber of little things to show her pleas ure in the presence of her guest; she turns her into one of her daintiest bedrooms, made charming with a vase of flowers, and perhaps holding- some II TO BE POPULAR IN FALL. specially cherished view from a win dow. She states the hour for meals and Is herself punctual at them, and if she has any notion of her own com fort as well as her guest's she pro vides some entertaining reading matter for the rest hour in the bedroom or on the porch. She also gives the stranger to understand that she may come and go about the grounds or woodlands as she pleases, outside of meal hours, and does not show by word or sign any of the tyrannies of the vulgar minded and selfish householder. Since she Is upon her native heath, it is encumbent upon her. In fact, to shut her eyes to small remissnesses in the outsider, for, all things said and done, the greatest ob- i ligations at such times lie with the hostess. As a Nation we are all beginning to crave country homes of some sort, so those provided with these luxuries should be generous to poorer friends and make It a point to share their blessings sometimes with persons tied by necessity to city lives. An Invita tion to come out and see the country, take a motor ride or walks in beautiful woodlands Is something any city dweller will value at this season; and along with everything else there Is the social Importance guests give a country home. A young woman who bought a tiny farm on $20 a week has built up a gathering of very delightful friends in this way. Everybody who goes out to see her carries a useful gift of fine food in some shape, and everybody helps with the housekeeping and gar dening. The house Is an old stable turned into a species of bungalow, and the dining table and chairs have rustic legs. The Invitation to share in this blessed taste of simple life Is always unconventional and full of poetry. One sent to a friend a month since read: "The hermit thrush Is beginning his divine pipe, and seven fat robins are building In my apple trees. Come out Friday, four fifty train. Meet you." Could a letter 10 pages long offer more than this? The song of the her mit thrush, apple trees, nests with blue eggs the sky, the blue air, the quiet of dawns and dusks! These things belong to the girl who has earned them with the sweat of her brow, and all her social gifts shine more sweetly for the offer to share them with poorer persons. DJvoreedlife JTeenffessanyfUesse. (Copyright The Adams Newspaper Service.) Calhoun Becomes Attentive. NT ARIAN was pleased and flattered when Calhoun asked her If she would mind If he changed his place in the dining-room to the table at which she ate. She acquiesced delightedly. Calhoun was smiling his beaming, boy ish smile oftener than formerly. His sullen periods of brooding seemed to be departing. Soon, Marian fancied. the heart-wrecked young lawyer would be able to go back to Atlanta and re sume his practice of the law. A motherly feeling toward the young man began developing, offsetting a trifle her avowed determination to at tempt to play a bit with his emotions. She was growing to like him more and more. The simple trust with which he had made the revelation of his loss of the girl he had adored, the memory of which event he was now trying to see in the light of the absurd, In bis vall- mm ' . ant quest for peace of mind, had made her warm to him witn anxiety auu concern. "And how about the glum mem ories?" she asked him once. The other breakfasters had repaired out-of-doors: they were alone in the cool dining-room. "Are you succeeding in crowding them out of your brain?" "They are losing their epic values," he smiled. "I've about found a place for them in the comic supplement. That's where they belong." "Good," she answered. "You'll be getting back to your work soon now. You're going to make a great lawyer out of yourself." A look came into his eyes the old look she had seen in the eyes of men before, men struggling with certain things taey wanted to say to her the wistful, hungry look which she had seen In the eyes of Barker ;ind of Meadows. She laughed at him with her eyes, but anxiety touched her heart. She was beginning to be sorry that she had deliberately been teasing this sentimental machinery Into ac tion. Wheel on wheel, she could al ready Imagine it spinning into swift, Impetuous, reckless, southern revolu tions. "You're going back home and for get that there are such creatures as women In the world," she said steadily. "Why don't you look the other way when you make a remark like that?" he retorted. "I mean It," she insisted. "Of course, I shouldn't advise you to turn clients away merely because they hap pened to be women." "Don't talk about clients," he ob jected. "The term has the musty sug gestion of law books and briefs. This Is June!" "'Go to your work and be strong; falter not In your ways,' " she quoted from Kipling. "Quote Keats," he answered, "or Rvron.' Marian rose. "I've got a pile of work to do this morning," she said. "I must go to my room, and start the grind." "Get your pencil and pad and come out under a shade tree," said Calhoun. "Pcrhana I can helo you on some of your scenes." "Too hot today for scenes," she laughed. She made her escape. He followed her with languid, dreaming eyes. Her room was too hot for work, and Marian stole down into a seclud ed corner of the verandah. For an hour she sat thinking, making no ef fort to drive herself to write. Her thoughts were of men and women, of the uncanny, incomprehensible emo tional forces that tugged and warped so many lives into misery. A young married couple strolled past on the lawn below. Yesterday Marian had seen them billing and coo ing. Today she knew from their stern faces that conflict had begun between them. She wondered whether the thing that is called love had betrayed them into a marriage destined to be shattered. A surge of selfish Joy fol lowed the thought that her own trou bles of the sort were over. She swore never to get herself Into anything of the sort again. Tomorrow "Romance Nipped in the Bud." Tb-NlGHT J Brasilia In HI. D RUSILLA'S little mother had been playing party In the playroom for two days; It had rained all that time and, of course, they could not get out. One end of the room was made Into a house for Drusllla by chalking off the rooms on the floor, and Into each square was set the furniture for each room, so that when It was finished Drusllla was the proud possessor of a kitchen, bedroom, dining-room and living-room, and also a porch. Then she gave her tea party and cook baked her some very little cakes and cut out cookies with a thimble, for cook had not forgotten when she was a little girl, and then she made real tea for Drusllla. I do not know that I have told you Just how Drusllla looked. She had a very strong head, which was greatly In her favor, and her hair was brown and curled, her eyes were blue and shiny, but her mouth was her chief charm, for It was open a little and showed her front teeth. She had a kid body nd it was jointed, so you see Drusllla was a very nice doll. The table was spread and all the nice things to eat put on it In little dishes, and In the center of the table was a tiny vase with the dearest little roses, which the little mother's big mother gave her from her last Summer's hat. The paper doll was Invited, and al though she was very stiff and did not have anything to say, It was of great satisfaction to Drusllla to have her come to her party and see her home. Bobby Jones was asked also and he came out of his box as far as he could, leaning toward the table In his eager ness to see all the good things. Teddy Bear was brought from his corner and put in a chair, for he had been in the playroom so long he did not behave like a bear at all, and a well-mannered little boy could not have been more quiet. Drusllla and her little mother did all the eating, however, but the guests did not seem to mind they were contented to look on. That night Drusllla had a terrible dream, and she screamed out and frightened all the playroom people ter ribly. "Oh, dear!" cried Drusllla, "I thought a terrible animal ran right across my bed and I thought I felt It touch my face, too. It was so real that It did not seem a dream, but I suppose it must have been." "Why, of course. It was a dream," said Bobby Jones. "You ate too much at the party, Drusllla." But the bad dream was no warning to Drusllla. The next day it rained and the party was repeated, and, although Bobby Jones gave a warning look at Drusllla, she ate everything that her little mother gave her. That night she dreamed again, and when she screamed this time Bobby Fasbtonable Coiffure I Merely a Series of Waves. r Jones came out of his box In time to see the animal run across the table In Drusilla's dining-room, where some of the food had been left from the party. "Did you see it?" asked Drusllla. "I knew it ran across my bed, and it bit me, too," she cried, putting her hand to her mouth. "Oh, dear! Oh, dear, what can it be?" "It- certainly can run," said Bobby. "And I do not believe It will come back. You go to sleep, Drusllla, and I will watch." But Drusllla did not sleep any more, and Bobby Jones and the paper doll kept her company. Teddy Bear tried to watch, too, but he fefl asleep In his corner. In the morning, when Drusilla's lit tle mother saw her. she picked her up and ran out of the room crying, for right la one corner of Drusilla's mouth was almost a hole. Bobby Jones did not see Drusllla for several days, and when she did return he hardly knew her, for her hair was light and. although her eyes were blue. her cheelcs were much pinker. In tact her head looked new. And that was Just what had happened Drusllla had a new head. "Oh. I have been dreadfully sick, Bobby Jones," said Drusllla, "and I have been to the hospital. They had to take off my head," said Drusllla, stopping ut this point of the story to note the effect on Hobby "Oh, oh, oh!" said Bobby, his spring stretched to Its full length, so that he might not miss a word of this wonder ful adventure. "Yes," said Drusllla, leaning back In her chair, "you cannot Imagine any thing about it, .But I think my new head rather pretty, don't you, Bobby?" "Y-e-s." said Bobby, "but I should not care to have mine taken off even to get a prettier one. Anyway. Dru sllla, I told you not to eat everything at the party, but you would not listen to me." "Oh, Bobby Jones! If I listened to you I guess I should not get far from this playroom," said DruBilla. "If I hadn't eaten so much at the party I should never have seen a hospital, and if I had not gone to the hospital I should not have had a new head. Can't you see that you must take some risk If you expect to have adventureB?" (Copyright, 1914. by the McClure Newspaper Syndicate, New York City.) Tomorrow's story "Bright Eyes." Getting A Start Nathaniel C Fowler Jr. (Copyright, 1014, by the McClure Newspaper rtynuicaie. The Home and the Office. IN millennium days, when the Golden Rule will be universal law, the office and the home may be as one. and the ethics of home life may pre vail in the shop and In the counting room. The dawn of true civilization, how ever, Is not even casting Its advance ray over the lower horizon, and we shall live and work for many years under the unwritten law of unavoid able necessity. While all of us should attempt to better ourselves and conditions, we must, to an extent, accept present methods, unless they are dishonest and opposed to the higher right. The home, whether It docs or not. Is supposed to represent friendship and good will. Its discipline Is founded upon love, or should be, each member of It sympathizing with the others and doing away with selfishness, greed and competition. Business, as now conducted. Is obliged to recognize competition, and is forced to practice certain selfish methods, which are due to necessity much more than to Inclination on the part of those at the head of It. The majority of employers person ally desire to bo fair and Just, and the majority of employes are willing to render efficient service. So long, however, as some employ ers are grasping and cruel, and an equal number of employees refuse to serve faithfully In the ranks, the Golden Rule cannot be completely fol lowed by either, and unavoidable com petition will occupy the center of the business stage, to the Injury of all con cerned. To place the entire blame upon busi ness Is unfair, for all business cannot be conducted ethically or righteously until the customer becomes honest and follows higher ideals. Until both the seller and the buyer are honest, fair, and Just, trading will continue as It is, with Justice and Injustice pitted against each other, the good and the bad unevenly mixed. Nearly all employers would do bet ter by their employes If conditions warranted, and as many employes would be faithful, if they were assured of appreciation. ,""T ' Conditions, not those laboring under them, are to blame, and the employes must to an extent at least, accept what Is, and not expect the love and sympathy of the home to prevail In the market place. In the home the interest Is common. In trade It should be, and it Is In many cases; but sharp competition and dis honest practico on the part of some business houses force the man of In tegrity to treat his employes, at times, more severely and with less sympathy than he would If he could "I recently discovered in Chamber lain's Tablets the first medicine to give me positive and lasting relief. Prior to their use I suffered fre quently from indigestion and consti pation." Mrs, Anna Kadin, Spencer port, N. Y. Facts in -in tnrin. it Ku bean known that ing agents for the cure of disease rv rt rn Dr. R. V. Pierce, Hotel and Surgical Institute at Buffalo, N.Y., naed the powdered extracts as well as the liquid extracts of native medicinal plants- such as Blood root and Queen s root. Golden Seal and Stone root. Cherry bark and Mandrake, for the cure of blood jSassaaai This prescription as pat op la liquid form was called DR. PIERCE'S (Jolden Medical Discovery and has enjoyed a large sale for all these years ta omy drag store in the v t, nn obtain the Dowdered extract in surar coated tablet form of UJ - mm mmwA KA in -jour m """.J , Dr. Pierce s Invalids tiotei, cuiiaio, n.i., The "Golden Medical Discovery" makes rich, red Mood, Invigorates the stomach, liver and bowels and through them the whole system. Skin affections, blotches, boils, pimples and eruptions result of bad blood are eradicated by this alterative extract as thousands have testified. Send 31 one-cent stamps to pay coat Pierce's Common Sense Medical ADDRESS UK. K. V. follow completely the dictates of his heart and conscience. Do your duty. Do your best. Ac cept hardships, and even what Is. or may seem to be, unfairness, until the arrival of a remedy. Don't kick at the rock of business. If you do, you will be footsore. Try to remove the rock by doing your best under all livable conditions. Unfaithfulness to a disagreeable em ployer does not help matters. Be true to yourself, and you will he true to others. Dr. MardenS UPLUFTThLKS (Copyright. Mil by the McCiura Syndicate, t Newspaper THERE is an educational revolution going on in this country. The peo ple are demanding an education that fits our civilization. Am the silk worm transmutes the mulberry leaf into satin so a real education transmutes knowl edge, information. Into bractlcal power. Into working capital. Efficiency Is the final test of the value of an education. How much of your education can you actually bring into play In your llfe7 If, with all your education, you cannot focus your mind with vigor, if you cannot hold it there until It burns its way Into the obsta cles which confront you, you are not educated, no matter how many degrees you have or how much you know. Merely stuffing knowledge Into a youth's mind which he cannot convert into power, only clogs the intellect anil obstructs Instead of encouraging the natural mental processes. A real edu cation should teach the child to think Intelligently, to reflect; should teach hin: to be mentally self-reliant. There Is still too much of the book and too little at the Individual natural teacher in our education. Cramming the mind, stuffing the memory, tends rather to suppress the child's natural curiosity, to discourage his normal eagerness to know things. his question-asking propensities. This suppression method Is the death of the best thing in the youth and It Is the price we pay for what we cull educa tion." Educos; the calling out of the pupil. Is tne true meaning of the word, but we have lost sight of this In our stuffing process. Turning the cur rent the other way and cramming the child's mind Instead of giving each spe cial faculty to be trained and developed a tremendous grasp, the stream of In formation is overworked and clogged, the faculties are overloaded with mat ter foreign to the pupil' dally experi ences, and his development Is retarded rather than assisted. Not how much do you know, but what can you do with your education, how practical is it? That Is the test- Has It Increased your efficiency? This Is the question which the great prac tical world asks of the graduate. And this Is what education should aim to fit him to answer efficiently. This Is the only true education. Our country Is full of misfit gradu ates. They are round pegs in square holes. Their university education has given them wrong views of the dignity of a life calling. The Idea of working in a store or on a farm or In a ma chine shop unless he Is foreman or en gineer Is very distasteful to the aver age graduate. But it la available knowledge, the knowledge that can he applied to the dally task that counts today. You can never accomplish any thing by taking hold of your work with the ends of your fingers. The college graduate who can think clearly, focus his mind vigorously, ana hold It upon any subject at will. Is what the great practiced world Is look looking for. It will laugh at the col lege graduate who, no matter how much "book learning" he has, yet cannot think efficiently, cannot create, who cannot make out a practical pro gramme, who cannot concentrate his mind with vigor upon any subject and hold it there at will. An education ought to mean Increased power. We live In an Intensely practical age. where theories count very little. The difference between a really educated man and an Ignorant man is that the former is able to bring the whole of his ability to his task, whatever It may be, with power. Instead of merely a small percentage of It. Dr. Marden's Uplift Talks will appear In the magazine pages of this paper every Tuesday. Thursday and Saturday. SCHOOL PROJECT LAUNCHED Colombia Heights Territory to Get Elementary Institution. Ah .conn aa the required legal steps can be taken, a union high school will be organized for what Is known as tne i . . i.n uoivhtfl iprritnrv. At a re cent meeting of representatives of all school districts east oi tne oanuy jii.oi in Multnomah County, the project was supported unanimously. The new building will house both the elementary grades of the Taylor dls- ,i ... 1 hlirh school Th Site IS ii'ii aiiu ... ' 'J o " i. i on the Columbia Highway, now under construction. i no ptoiiubou . will be of special design and will be en larged as is necesxary. Grants Pass Men Join Distributors. GRANTS PASS, Or,, July 20. (Spe cial.) Following several meetings in this locality arranged by H. F. Davld- Nature Nature's most valuable health riv are found In our American forests. chief consultmr Dbrslcian to in inraiioa AMnt -"-- .Lusni for trial box to -JZZLtL. JT.u . U aw wu , raa f"" of mailing only on a free copy ol Dr. Adviser, 1008 pa", dothbeund naMCiJC, Btt aiaj, n. x. rrn.imn- 30SiaM n. w eS. Jl ALL OVER CHILD'S BODY Came on Face and Caused Disfig urement. Clothing Aggravated Trouble, Itching Burning Sensa tion. Could Not Sleep. Cuticura Soap and Ointment Healed. 1177 Market St.. Ohehahe Wash. "My little nephew was cross and cried ana complained of Itching The enema broke out with a rash, reddl.h looking. It spread until It was all over his body, and It came on hl fare and caused disfigurement. His hands had to be tlod to keep him from scratching HI. cloth ing aggravated the trouble and nude the breaking out worse. Be was so covered with ensptloas he didn't look natural. There was aura an Itching and burning sensation he oanild not sleep and kept asm none with blm continually. Weeks and months passed by and we had almost given op In deepalr. "One day I read about t'utlrura Sean and Ointment being good for ertAme and all skin trouble. 1 sent for a free ample and Immediately we discovered a change for the better. Before the asm pi was ued up there was such a remarkable change that I bought a box of Outlrnra Soas and a box of Cuticura Ointment. The erup tions healed, the burning and Itching cead and by the time the Cuticura Snap and Ointment were used up he was a well boy " (Signed) Mrs J. L. Bteelnaau. Apr. a. ltla, Samples Free by Mall Although Cuticura Soap 34c. ) and Cutt rora Ointment (SOc) are acid throughout the world, a sample of each with p Skin Book will be seat free upon request. Ad dress post-card "Cuticura, Dept. T, ft o too." son, president of the Taclflo Northwest Fruit Distributors, II. C. Mampson, mre retary. has Induced many of the grow -errs to affiliate with and market their crop through the association. Th 11 runts Pass Fruit Association, com prising most of the local growara, will operate Its warehouse and shipments will be made through Its plant. Complexion perfect'nn. -Adv. Sntleptlo l.nllee. Don't Buy That Suit Until August First Wait for the Opening of CHERRY'S Portland's Credit Clothing Store Every man nnd woman in Portlnnd who is figuring on buying a new suit will do well to wait for the opening of CHERRY'S splendid store in th Pittoek block, MMH Washington street, near Tenth. On Ausrust 1 the new store will open its doors and in troduce to I'ortlund the credit system of selling clothes that CHERRY'S has made so popular in San Frnn ciseo, Oakland and Los Angeles. Every CHERRY store has been a suc cess from the start, because men and women found that this firm's dealing were always fair and square. Peo ple who used to be skeptical about credit stores are now regular patrons of CHERRY'S. Aside from the fact that at CHERRY'S you will have the im mense convenience of paying for your clothing by the week or month, pre cisely as you pay your grocer's bills, you will have the satisfaction of get ting strictly up-to-date garments at uniformly moderate prices. Save your "new clothes money" until August L Then come to CHERRY'S and get acquainted. Muffins By Mrs. Janet McKenxle Hill Editor of the Boston Cooking School Magazine. When muffins are oh the breakfast table, nobody cares for meat or eggs and they would be served more often If this meal were not prepared so hurriedly that there Is no time lo make them. If K C tha double-raise baking powder is used, the batter may be stirred up the nlgbt before, put In the pan ready for baking and noth ing to do in the morning but bake them. One-Egg Muff in a g cups flour' g slightly rounded fu $poonjul K C Baking Powder; 1 tear spoonful si!t ; 4 cup sugar; cup melted butter or lard; 1 egg; 1 eupwaler or milk. Sift dry infrredienti together three times. Add to this the unbeaten egg-, melted shortening and water or milk. Then best all together until perfectly smooth. Oil muffin or gem pans and have oren slow until the muthns come to the top oT the then increase tne ne to rae and brown the muffins. This recipe makes 12 large muffins. Raisins or currants may be added if desired. Graham Muffins cup graham flour; 1 cup pastry flour: S level teaspoonfuls K C Baking Powder; lUg level tabif spoonfuls sugar; I teaspoonful tail; 1 egg; 11 cups milk or water; g to 3 tablespoonfuls melted but ter; mix and bake at One-Egg Muffins. Graham batter should always be quite soft to insure light and moist muffins. To get tt other recipes as good as these, send us the certificate packed in every 25 centeanof K C Baking Powder, and we will send you "The Cook's Book" by Mrs. Janet McKenxie Hill. Handsomely illus trated. Jaques Mfg. Co., Chicago. a skin or caurv s jqv rowtvtw Dr. T. FELIX GOURAUD'S Oriental Cream OR MAGICAL BEAUTIFIER rrorklM. Hoth r.tehat. Kta and ftkla I and avarr blatntMi twaot". o1 dflat d toatioo It haa atoM tba laat of aa rvara, and la ao harm lata wataata It to ba inn) tt la bt parlranada- Acoapt na coun'arfait of aimilar aaraa. Dr. L A K.yra avid to a lady af tba baattoQ (a patiant): Aa you ladtaa whi oa tbam, I raconioand XsOuraufJi Craaaa. aatha leant harmfnl of ail tba ak n prurratiaaa At Prut an -1 Ip-t n.nt firt.T. Hspuos & aa, Haja, 3 aaa Jts R,tM ECZEMA SPREAD I ' -af I r