tite . "morning oregontax. sattjrdat. .tttne 12, 1913. QooooooooooooboooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooflOdioooooo 12 ' ' 10 1 SOCIETY NEWS I c - ' o c BY GERTRUDE F. CORBETT o c o Ol n ooooooouoooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooouoooooooooooooooooo ' PHT Staie Wornan's Press club win DAUGHTER OF KING OF ENGLAND RAISES FUNDS WHILE I "7". ,, brother serves in front at France. points of Interest about the city will be observed by the members before they return to Mrs. Dye's residence for luncheon. Miss Sarah Lyman, Mrs. G. J.- Henderson, Mrs. Colista Dowling, Mrs. Martha Freach, -drs. L. B. Sal mon, Miss F. Got&hall. Miss M. H. Froc tor, Mrs. J. C. La Barre, Mrs. E. God dins. Mrs. Mason Harris. Mrs. M. L. T.: Hidden. Mrs. C. C. Ingham, Mrs. B. T. Voorhorst, Miss Florence Crawford. Mrs. Frank J. Kane. Mrs. Ada Millican. Mrs. L. B. Bartlett, Mrs. Minnie Dee ami Miss Lois Bain are among those who will attend. .; ' The young: women who are being en tertained by the O.-W. R. &. N. Co. during- the Festival from surrounding towns, are being showered with social attentions. Testerday afternoon Mrs. J. D. Farrell entertained for them at her home with, a tea, and in the evening they were especially entertained dur ing the parade. This morning they will be- taken on a sightseeing trip around Portland, and at high noon they will be honor guests at the reception for which the San Francisco and Portland Steam ship Company will be hosts on board the Bear, which will be followed by a luncheon at 1 o'clock for the girls and their chaperons. After luncheon, a number of promi nent matrons will take them to view t'ie Irvington children's parade on the Kast Side, and many of the guests will leave this evening for their homes. The guests and their chaperons, and the hotels at which, they are being en tained follow: Imperial Hotel Mr. J. Dahl, chaperon; M8. Iell Bartholomew. Milton. Or.; Mra. Laura. K. Fergr. Dayton, Wash.; Mrs. Blanche Walters. Prescott. Wash.; Miss Dorothy Dil--arth, Spokane; Miss Maude Beotley, Colfax, Waah.; Miss Inna Martin, L.a Grande, Or.; Mtrs' Nellie Kenned a. La Grande, Or. Oregon Hotel Miss Iva Henderson, chap eron: Miss Ada Durkee, North Yakima; Miss Kay-Belle Bryan. Granger, Wash.; Miss Beu lah Monnet, Kennewick, Wash.: Miss Ger trude Stone. Tekoa, Wash.: Miss Shirley Puckett. Wallace, Idaho, Miss Ada Guern sey, Kellogg-Wardner, Idaho. Portland Hotel Miss Margaret MacKin non, chaperon; Miss Minnie Wilson, Waila V'alla; Miss Florence Helntz, Starbuck. Wash.: Miss Xellie Blake. Pomeroy, Wash.; Miss Ethel McAnlnch, Waitsburg. Wash.; MIhs Kathryn J. Kerin. Lewiston. Idaho; Miss Mary C. Henley, Moscow, Idaho; Mlsa Elple Denson, Pullman, Wash. -Multnomah Hotel Miss Amy Klum, chap eron: Miss Margaret Smith, Cosmopolis. Wash.: Miss Abby Murray, Kord, Wash.; Mrs. Grace James, The Dalles: Mrs. J. E. Ktarn, Wasco. Or.: Miss Prudence Hauler, Pleasant Valley, Or.; Miss Nellie Teaser. Knterprise. Or.; Miss LaVerne Wlssier, Pen dleton; Miss Opal Bryant, Echo, Or.; Miss Agnes Pennington, lone. Or.; Miss Maude Kamsford, Bonneville, Or. Benson Hotel Miss Ethel Hart, chaperon; Mias Hazel C. Wright. Miss Edna Klynn. Mtfs Ireno Txvelace. Miss Faith Clark, all of Seattle; Miss Kenneth J. Hawke, Tacoma; Miss Helen Dougherty, Baker. Or.: Miss El frieda M. Knberg. Baker, Or.; Miss Katie thinners, Huntington. Or. Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Hollinshead are being-felicitated upon the arrival of a eon born on June 6. Marguerite Camp Coterie will hold Its next regular meeting at the resi dence, of Mrs. H. M. Gray, 834 Halsey street, Thursday, June 17, at 1 P. M. All jiojourning and resident Royal Neighbors are cordially invited to attend. - -John Campbell and daughters, the Misses Lillian and Carolyn, of Home stead. Pa., are being entertained at the home of his brother. Mr. Mathew Camp bell, 291 North Eighteenth, street, dur ing the Rose Festival. They will pass a month sightseeing through California, returning home via New Orleans and New York. Mr. Camp bell is a brother of Mrs. Mary McCoy, Mathew and Anthony Campbell, old residents of Portland. ENTKKPRJ.se, Or., June II. Arthur 1L Pace, of this city, and Miss Klsie Lomatch, formerly of Enterprise, but recently residing In Portland, were married irt Portland on Monday, June 1.- The ceremony was performed at the home of the bride's sister. Mrs. W. J. Wianahan, 871 Harold avenue, by Rev. H. C. Kbeling, pastor of Immanuel Lutheran Church of Sellwood. Mr. Pjice is assistant cashier of the Wal lowa National Bank of Enterprise. His bride is the daughter of Mrs. Bertha Price. The couple have gone to Cali fornia for a trip and will return to Knterprise in about two weeks and make their home here. 'ROSEBURG, Or., June 11. (Special.) rA wedding in which two of Rose burg's most popular young people par ticipated took place at the bride's parents home t here Wednesday night, when Miss Fay Hughes and Roy F. Durbin were married. Mr. and Mrs. JJurbin are on their wedding trip to Portland. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Newbegin re turned this week from Palo Alto, Cal. They were accompanied by their daughter. Miss Ellyn Anne Newbegin, who was graduated from the Castilleja Finishing School of Palo Alto recently. ' 'A farewell reception was given yes terday by the Woman's Christian Tem perance Union for Mrs. Jannet Roper, who will leave for New York this morning to become an assistant in the Seaman's Friend Institute. This pro motion comes as a recognition of her ttplendid ability and her excellent Work. She will be greatly missed in the local union. . Mrs. Arnold Llndsey returned Thurs day night from a delightful visit in Seaside, where she was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Mears at Hotel Mears. During her visit at the beach many weii-Knowni seaside, residents enter tained her. :Mr. and Mrs. William J. Cottrell (Mis Hazel Foster) are receiving felicitations on the birth of a son at St. Vincent's Hospital Tuesday. C. Turner, or Spokane, is the house guest of A. J. Unna during the Rose Festival. J : ill II r S" : ill . I 1 II CZ& J" " ' 111 Photo by Underwood. Princess Mary, the only daughter of King George of Great Britain, who is best known to the public as a talented musician, has taken an active part in raising funds for the Prince of Wales fund, which is to relieve distress among soldiers and their families. Her brother is with the expeditionary forces in France. sing, accompanied by Miss Viola Tol bert, pianist. Snf&skots By Barbara D o yd. w i J Women's Clubs. WHAT promises to be one of the most enjoyable club outings of the coming week will be the Portland Shakespeare Study Club's annual pic . . nie, which is scheduled for Tuesday. The members of the club, arrayed in outing togs, will meet at the corner of First and Alder streets and take the Oregon City car to Crystal Lake, where the day will be passed with the usual picnic diversions. The final meeting of the Athena Del phian Drama Club will be held at the residence of Mrs. Alva Je Stephens, 690 Wasco street, tomorrow night. There will be a business session, fol lowed by a social evening. Every mem ber is urged to he present, as the club will not meet again until September. In the Tyrolean room of the Hotel Benson, tomorrow night at 8 o'clock, Florence Crawford will give p. study of the little book "For the Love of Mary Ellen." Mrs. Elizabeth Bond w.'ll Are Men ISaiurelly ITnlldyf 4(J WONDER," mused the Clubwoman, X "if a man were put on one desert island and a woman on another.if the man wouldn't in the course of time have his island all clutered up with banana skins and ashes from camp fires and such things and the women have hers all neat and pretty, with flower beds in the front yard and the walks bordered with seashells." "Of course that is what would hap pen," grimly assented the Old Maid. "One doesn't need to wonder, about that. Did you ever see a tidy man?" "Yes, I have seen some, but I'll con fess not many." "You ought to have exhibited the ones you caught." tartly observed the Old Maid, "and let the rest of the world see them. A man Is a naturally untidy animal." "That's the point 1 am wondering about. Is he naturally untidy or is the untidiness he shows the result of lack of training. The other day a party of us got caught in a storm and had to take refuge in a lumberman's shack out in the woods. The rain was coming down in torrents and as the door was unfastened we tied into the place for shelter. I do not think I ever saw such a dirty room. The dishpan was coated with grease, the tea towel or what answered for a tea towel, was unspeakable, the coffee pot blackened with smoke, the floor lit tered with the dirt that comes from making a wood Are. The windows looked as if they had not been washed since the cabin had been" built. I do not believe a woman, no matter how hard she might have to work, would have been content to live in such a place. But this man evidently was. And I have noticed often that when men rough it their surroundings are untidy and dirty." "It isn't only when they rough It that they are untidy." grimly retorted the Old Maid. "You should see my brother's room all the time. If I didn't straighten it up for him It would be a disgrace.' "That's just the point," said the Clubwoman. "Are men naturally un tidy or are they so because women have always straightened up after them and they have never been trained Into habits of tidiness." "Both." rejoined the Old Maid. The Clubwoman laughed. "There are some tidy men, of course." "Precious few." "But In regard to tne average man and the average woman." went on the Clubwoman, "I have been impresssed with the fact that the ordinary man is not as tidy as the ordinary woman, and I am wondering If it is because he is naturally untidy or because he is not trained to be neat and orderly. Women from the time they are little girls are taught to be tidy, to keep things in order, to put things in their plare. But a mother trots around and picks up after a boy and excuses him by saying 'You can't expect a boy to be neat.' " "I guess untidiness is part of the original sin of all of us," admitted the Old Maid. "But in a boy it is allowed to flourish and in a girl it is nipped in the bud. And generations of such training have resulted in woman's be ing tidy and in man's being untidy; that is. it Is put up to the woman to keep the world neat. There are un tidy women who have had the best of training, I'll admit, and tidy men who have had none. But taking the matter by and large, men give little attention to neatness and women bear the matter upon their conscience." "After all, then, I wonder If it Isn't up to women to train the boys of their household to be neat anl orderly and so in time bring about a generation of men who will have as high a regard for neatness and order as women." "It's up to women to do most things," grimly rejoined the Old Maid. "So 1 suppose if men are ever made lo love neatness and order, women will have to bring it about." BARBARA BOYD. The SmDiRNSjORT By .Mrs E AWalker. A Doable Rest Day. BY BARBARA BOYD. Will the department stores, 1. wonder, give the double rest day this year that they did last Summer during the two warmest months? Perhaps you may be able to help the spread of this movement. Especially may you be able to if you are a mem ber of a woman's club. For the movement grew out of the effort of a woman's organization, and without doubt, women can help spread it into those towns where it has not yet been adopted. For though men largely have the say as to whether there shall be a double rest day or not, their decision is made chiefly with an eye upon the expression of the women of their com munity. . If the storekeepers think the women will object, those in power will probably decide against the two days f rest. For the movement is nothing more nor less than the closing of the de partment stores on both Saturday and Sunday during July and August. Previous to last Summer, these shops usually were kept open Saturday -morning during the Summer. But some of the progressive women of New York realizing how much the double hodi day would nean to the selling force and how little presumably the store keepers would lose, started the crusade for the double rest day. A number of the large department stores agreed to it, and throughout July and August thousands of men and women in New York had the two full days of rest In stead of one and a half. Hear what some of them say about it: "You have no idea what a difference those two solid days oft make," one clerk said. "I have, been in -this store six years, and 1 have never felt so well able to begin the Fall work as now." Another told a reporter, "I really enjoyed working this Summer, the time passed so quickly and 1 felt so rested and unhurried. Another salesgirl asserted that all the clerks felt so much more rested and went to their work in a very dif ferent spirit from what they usually did during the warm weather. "The time to herself" was the im portant thing with another. Many echoed this sentiment. Two solid days seemed to mean much more to them in the way of time than 48 hours. It seemed to open up unlimited possibili ties of "getting things done." In one store the concensus of opinion seemed to be that the store had gained more than it had apparently lost. Little business was done on the half day, anyway, and the gain In loyalty from the clerks, and the Interest and en thusiasm bred by the extra rest, more than made up for the sales' loss. If you have ever had but one day in the week for doing all the hundred and one little things it falls to a woman to do, you can appreciate to the full that "unhurried sense" two full days mean. No wonder one girl said It was like another week's vacation. The stores themselves, it Is said, lose nothing financially by the operation, for little business is- done Saturday morning. And .by closing, certain run ning expenses are eliminated. The storekeepers' ' chief objection is that they do not wish to inconvenience their patrons. And this is . where you and I and .I ii 4 Health's Sake- XSftg l'y For Economy's Sake-- Ifr 'J For the Sake of Real Satis- "'jggl faction Drink- - j j6lrDjS ' E'den West fesfl j Coffee IQFFIII 3 Lbs. $1.10 :iS , nner Parchment Seal Cans, sfesa'jgi CLOSSET & DEVERS. The Oldest and Largest Coffee . jr jjT Roasters in the Northwest. . s ?! H I liliHilslslililn nmnMii- . nn . at a others come into the movement. We can let it be known that we are in favor of the two days closing. If we are members of a club and the club so desire, some formal action can be taken by the club such as the appointing of a committee to arouse interest in the matter, visit the storekeepers and en list the co-operation of shoppers. And if there is no such organization in our community or it does not wish to take such definite steps, every one in favor of the effort can add his little practical mite by refraining from shopping on Saturday. . It surely Is such a worthy work, it requires so little effort on our part merely a little planning so that we have no cause to shop on Saturday that there is little reason, is there, for not helping it along? BARBARA BOYD. OIL LANDS FORFEITED JIDCK BEAN HOLDS PATENTS TO RAILROAD FRAUDULENT. . Properties Involved Said to Be Suffi cient to Supply Navy With Fuel For 25 Years. LOS ANGELES, June 11. Ten sec tions of oil lands near McKittrlck, Kern County, Cal.. valued at ?5, 000,000, were declared to have been fraudulently pat ented by the Southern Pacific Railroad Company, in a decision by Judge Robert S. Bean, of the United States District Court of Oregon, filed here today. The lands, part of which are alleged to have been illegally claimed by the railroad company, are ordered restored to the Government. The lands given back to the Govern ment under the decision lie in the Elk Hills district of Kern County, and would supply the Navy with petroleum for 20 years, according to Willis N. Mills, special counsel for the Govern ment, who made the closing argument here before Judge Bean last January. Another suit, involving oil lands in the same area and valued by Govern ment attorneys at $320,000,000, still is pending in the United States District Court, Judge Benjamin K. Bledsoe hav ing denied a few days ago a motion by the railroad company lo dismiss the action on the ground that the statute of limitations had supervened. In the suit just decided hearings were held in various parts of the coun try during a period extending over three years. The Government alleged that '.'. W. Eberlein. a land agent of the Southern Pacific Company. had filed affidavits that the land had been inspected and found not to be mineral, but agricultural, and subject to claim by the railroad company under an act passed by Congress in 1866. At the trial of the case, however, Eberlein testified that he had never caused the lands to be inspected, as set forth la the affidavits upon which the Govern ment, granted title. Judge Bean was called into the case after Judge Olin Wellborn, who since has retired on account of age, had de clared himself disqualified because he owned stock in the Southern Pacific corporation. CHOLERA GAINS IN VIENNA . Bosnian Deserters Say FanJc Pre vails in Austrian Capital. PARIS. June 12. A dispatch from Udine. Italy, dated Friday and sent by the correspondent of the 1 lavas Agency, says: "Bosnian deserters who have arrived here declare that cholera in Austria is much worse than the outbreak of last year. A great panic, it is asserted, has been created in Vienna by the epidemic." 'S JURY CHOSEN TRIAL OF JI.1I GEORGE, ACCUSED OF MlRDEIl, UNDER WAY. Few Witnesses Examined and Day at Klamath Falls Taken by Pre. limfnaricai of Caeie. KLAMATH FALLS, Or.. June 11. The case against Jim George, an Indian accused of the murder of Fete Brown, began here in the Federal Court yes terday. Judge Wolverton on the bench. The trial is being held in the new city hall here. Pete" Brown was found dead the morning of February 22, 1914, with two bullet holes in his back. He is said to have been drinking the night before dancehall and gambling grounds to gether on horseback. Later the dev fendant was found to have a pistol of the same caliber as the bullets found in Brown's body, from the cylin der of which two shots appeared to have been recently fired, according to Government witnesses. George was tried at Medford last Fall but the jury disagreed. The election of the jury for the second trial con sumed all yesterday and until noon to day, when F. D. Stephenson, Josiah Rhodes, Charles Burkhalter, George H. Sparley, of Josephine County; J. D. Corum, Curtis Duvall and William Hotchklss, of Lake County; John Byrne, of Jackson County, and R. W. Tower, Walter Turner, U. E. Reeder and Frank Ward, of Klamath County, were chosen. Several Klamath County men ex amined were challenged and excused after 11 men were selected out of reg ular venire of 38. Assistant United States Attorney Beckman made the opening statement for the Government. Judge Herbert D. Gale In his opening statement for the defense spoke of the close friendship of the two men for two years and the lack of a motive for the crime. Two witnesses for the Government were examined today, Edson Watson, Indian agent of Klamath reservation at the time of the murder, and J. M. Bedford, forest supervisor of the res ervation, who testified that the crime had been committed on the reservation. To avoid the danger of Indian wit nesses becoming drunk. United States Attorney Reames, at a special called meeting of retail liquor dealers of the city last night, obtained' pledges that they all would not sell botled goods during the trial. No fear is felt of Indians getting liquor at the bar,i. PEACE PLAN SUGGESTED DR. JORDAN PROPOSES TREATIES AND INTERN ATI ON A L POLICE. Austria to Take Over Harvest. GENEVA, via Paris, June 11. Infor mation has reached here from Vienna that the war grain committee of the Austrian government has announced that it will take under its control the entire harvest soon to be gathered. With the exception of sufficient grain to feed the rural population, the entire crop will be bought hy the state. Compensation of Belgium, Guaranty of Protection to Small States and Less Armament Is Idea. STANFORD UNIVERSITY. Cal.. June 11. Peace resolutions, embodying his views on the war and which he will present to various peace societies, were announced today by Dr. David Starr Jordan, chancellor of Stanford Uni versity. ' Dr. Jordan's resolutions express the opinion that force appears unlikely to end the war, and he suggests, as a way to honorable and lasting peace, inter national agreements of nations, guar antees of protection for small states and relief of people held in unnatural allegiance. Freedom of the seas, it is suggested, could be insured Uy in ternational agreements guaranteeing commerce Immunity from attack. Belgium should be compensated, Constantinople neutralized for protec tion of Jews and Christians, and ham pering tariff restrictions removed, It is said. Enforcement of these regulations should be by an international police power, armaments reduced and peace terms arranged by an international conference, the resolutions conclude. It has been found that wireless telegraph waves are propagated along- the surface of the earth with a velocity slightly Inferior to that of ItKht. Ask For mkuk;s Against Substitutes , i Get the Well-Known Round Package THE OR2GIHAL caution 7 rn e n emrr Avoid substitutes! Btf y n hva u t Made in the largest, best equipped and sanitary IY.a!ted tVlilk plant in the world We do not make"mi7A: products" Skim Milk, Condensed Milk, etc B-tooly HORLICK'S THE ORIGINAL MALTED FA ELK Made from clean, full-cream milk and the extract of select malted grain, reduced to powder form, soluble in water. Best Food-Drink for All Ages Used for ovr a Quartar Century Unions you say "HORLICK'S" you may got a Substitute. IXTTalio a Ststjohngd Homo flnsrft tr : 1-3 MALTED MIL V Inauguration OF THE J r ExpositionSpeciai A New Train Between Portland and San Francisco Daily on and after June 15 : Leave Portland daily 12:30 P. M. ONE NIGHT TO SAN FRANCISCO Pullman and Tourist Sleeping Cars, Free Reclining Chair Cars and Diner. $3.0 to SAN FRANCISCO AND BACK Return Limit, 30 Days $32.50 Ninety-Day Ticket $52.50 to San Diego and Back Return Limit, 40 Days Stopovers in cither direction. Summer Excursions East Round-trip tickets to Eastern destinations via California, with stopovers in either direction to visit the Expositions, on sale daily from all points. Exposition and California Booklets "CALIFORNIA AND ITS TWO WORLD EXPOSITIONS" A 1 - pagre illustrated folder describir)? the trip to the impositions at San Francisco and San Diego, the outing places of California. "WAYSIDB NOTES. SHASTA ROUTE" A 32-pare handsome Illus trated folder describing In detail every point of interest from Seattle and Portland to San Francisco, population, elevation, etc., of towns, and short descriptive articles on scenic points en route. CALIFORNIA BEACH RESORTS" A 64-page illustrated folder, describing fully the many attractive outing places In tne Golden State. All these books and many others are on hand and free on appli cation to any agent. Call at City Ticket Office, 80 Sixth Street, Corner Oak, Union Depot or East Morrison - Street for full information, tickets, reserva tions and literature on the Expositions. Southern Pacific John M. Scott, General Passenger Agent DEFENSE EDUCATION Ai MANY ORGANIZATIONS TO UNITE TO CONDUCT CAMPAIGN. Red C'rOHa, Engineers' Institute, Auto a d Aero Clubs, Navy and Se curity Leagues In Move. NEW YORK, June 11. To conduct a campaign for greater military and naval preparedness, representatives of a number of organizations met at the Aero Club of America here tonight and formed the conference committee op preparedness. This committee, it was announced, will try to educate public opinion on the subject and encourage the active participation of individual citizens and organizations in such ways as their qualifications permit. Resolutions were adopted which au thorized the chairman of the committee to call its action to the attention of President Wilson and to offer its co operation "in furthering any plans ot the Administration for strengthening and perfecting the National defenses in any respect in which the President be lieves this co-operation may be made effective." The organizations represented at to night's meeting included: Navy League, National Security League, Automobile Club of America, Aero Club of America. Red Cross, American Legion and Amer ican Institute of Engineers. BERLIN REPORTED HOSTILE London Hears German Opinion Is Against Concessions. LONDON. June 12. German opinion is unanimously against granting Presi dent Wilson's demand for assurances that American ships and lives will not be endangered by submarines in war fare, according to a Berlin dispatch to Exchange Telegraph Company, sent by way of Amsterdam. Official circles arc pessimistic, the dispatch says, regarding the continued maintenance of friendly relations with the United States. Immediately after it had been re ceived, the contents of the American note were teletrrapned by Foreign Min ister von Jagow to Emperor William, ho is on the Galician front. j pf gpfS tea ! GOLDEN GATE TEA ONE WEEK ONLY AT GROCERS JUNE 7th to 12th. 1915 FOLGER'S TEA I Rul rtil p pneft Special LB TINS 80 .60 . ' 0 26 i " " 28 16 3.7 2 BO k ENTER YOO ORDER BELOW AgT Kf t Ta In at Tin CEYION - INDIA FIMr.LISM BREAKFAST OOLONG JAPAN GUNPOWDER BLACK A GREEN ' h'or one week at these prices to con- lrinrA rMi f hot t V lliv . jrvu luai in tea is worth the d regular price. this tea makes 300 cups. At 80c a pound, the cost is one cent for about to drink good tea i your dealer does not carry Folger's Golden Gate Tea. telephone orf rairfnl lal.iman whn will trivet VOU the name of a dfJllr whrt r1rie M. B. McKAY Mflcs Phone Main 279 Residence Phones Marshall 505 Home A 3637 PORTLAND, OREGON J. A. FOLGER & CO., San Francisco I