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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (June 24, 1915)
TOE MORNING OREGONIATf. THURSDAY, JUNE 24, 1915. Ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooofloooeooeooooeooooooooogoeoooooooooooooooo 8 io 1 1 o ! SOCIETY NEWS 1 S - o c ' o iOI , o ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooioooooooooooooo oooooojoooooooooooooooooo mjt ilOXG the charming visitor who J are the Inspiration for much cn M m tertaining this month, none is more popular than Mn. E. M. Storm, of Waterloe, la., who ia the gnest ol Mrs. W. A. Leet, of the American Apartments. Mrs. Leet has many hospitable and delightful friends and they are all assisting: in makln; Mrs. Storm's visit here one round of pleas ure. On Tuesday Mrs. C. C. Richard save a smart bridge luncheon at her new residence in irvjngxon. covers were laid for Mrs. Storm, Mrs. Leet, Mrs. Harold Young. Mrs. Frederick Arnold. Mrs. Tuck, a recent arrival from Boston; Mrs. Jack Yates, Mrs. Harry Murphy and the hostess. The decorations were in pink and white. carnations and tulle bows being ar- irirjillv emDloyed- Yesterday Mrs. Storm and Mrs. Leet ilmrcl honors with Mrs. .1113 ue Bruler. Miss Gertrude Woodcock and Miss M. B. Chandler, all 01 Beanie, who were complimented guests at bridge luncheon given by Mrs. E. G. Chandler, of Laurelhurst. Table deco rations and score cards displayed a happy arrangement of golden Cali fornia poppies ana gay Diueoiriu. -n Kamrrtav Mrs. Storm will be enter tained at a bridge tea at which Mrs. A. Edgar Beard will presiae, ana next Mnmlav Mrs. Walter Guild will give a similar party at her artistic home in Irvingrton. Mrs. William cewara also will entertain later in the week. Mrs. Leet will have another guest today, for her niece, Mrs. Roswald Barber, Jr.. with Mr. Barber, will ar rive from Banff, where they have been passing their honeymoon. Mrs. Bar ber is the daughter of Timothy O'Con nor, of Minneapolis. Her marriage was a recent brilliant event. The couple will be here for a week or more and will then go to the fairs in California and will take the trip through the Panama Canal to New York. During the visit of the Bar bers here they will be feted widely. The Social Service Club of Oak Grove and vicinity will meet today at the home of Mrs. W. W. Thompson, Kothe station. Luncheon will be served at 1 o'clock. A business ses sion will follow. Mrs. B. Lee Paget will read a poem and Mrs. W. R. Moore will give a reading. The regular monthly dinner of the Social Workers' Club will be held at the Hazelwood at 6:30 P. M. today. 3r. C II. Chapman will preside. Mrs. J. C. Burns. Judge Cleeton and David Morrison will speak. Outdoor diversions will characterize the Kappa Alpha Theta sorority con vention, which will convene at Gear hart Sunday and continue throughout tho week. A special train, which will arrive with the delegates from Chicago and other Eastern cities Sunday morn ing, will be met by the alumnae from Portland at Vancouver. They will then go to the Waverly Country Club for luncheon and go by launch to Weidler's dock and thence to Gearhart. from whence they will set out for an auto trip sightseeing. Busi ness meetings will be in session every day. with social times for afternoon and evenings. On Monday night there will be a beach party, with bonfires and games, and Tuesday the Eugene chap ter will entertain the girls with a "model initiation." Wednesday an original play will be presented by the Thetas from the Uni versity of Washington. Installation of officers. Thursday, will be followed by a banquet. Saturday, the last day of the con vention, te sorority will go to As toria to pass the day at the regatta. Pansies, the sorority flower, will be used to decorate the hotel at Gearhart, and for that purpose 500 pansy plants have been procured. Among the notable delegates will be the grand president, Mrs. L. F. Carpenter, of Minneapolis. Mrs. W. II. Thomas is president of the Portland chapter; Mrs. Charles R. Hart, chairman of the executive committee; Mrs. A. H. McCurtain. chairman of the flower committee; Miaa Inez Cross has charge of the music for the affair. m m m At noon today Miss Mary Anne Smith and Thomas W. Gerber will plight their troth at the First Congregational Church, the Rev. Luther R. Dyott offi ciating in the presence of relatives of the couple. Mrs. Samuel Wertheimer and chil dren, Ralph and Helen, will leave soon on the steamer Northern racific for San Francisco and Southern California. At a pretty home wedding last night Miss Beatrice A. Ramsay became the bride of Wilfred R. Keyzer, the Rev. Father J. H. Black, of St. Francis' Church, officiating. Miss Lillian Key zer was maid of honor and Bert Lan caster attended the bridegroom. The bride was lovely in white lace and crepe de chine and she carried bride roses and lilies of the valley. Her at tendant was attired in pale blue silk. After the ceremony Mr. and Mrs. Key zer departed for a short wedding trip. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. David Ramsay and is popular among her many friends. - Miss Edith Fullerton is one of the charming out-of-town visitors who has been entertained frequently at infor mal afternoon teas and auto trips. She is the guest of Miss Helen Minslnger, who planned many delightful after noons for Miss Fullerton. The Mlnsing eis have an attractive country place at Mount Hood and they frequently take their friends there for Summer outings. Mr. and Mrs. Edward James enter tained at a dinner party on Saturday night, when they celebrated their first wedding anniversary. Among those present were Mr. and Mrs. L. McKinley. Mrs. W. L. Ferris and Miss Emelia Ferris, Miss Margaret Tyler, Frank Harrett. Miss Zona Frazier, Miss Edna James and Charles Good luck. Mrs. George E. Waters, of Salem, motored to Portland on Tuesday for a flying visit with her mother, return ing to Salem yesterday afternoon. . Mrs. Ernest Bross and daughter. Miss Constance Bross, of Indianapolis, are visitors in Portland and are registered at the Hotel Multnomah. Mrs. Bross has many friends In this city. She Is the wife of Ernest Bross, editor of the Indianapolis Star and former managing editor of The Oregonian. A social event of next Tuesday nigh,t will be the recital at which Miss Con stance Piper will appear at Christen sen's Hall. The young pianist will be presented by Mrs. Thomas Carrick Burke, and will be assisted In the pro gramme by Harry Wembridge, tenor. Cards for the evening are out. m Miss Mary O'Donnell will leave on Saturday for Berkeley to attend Bum mer school of the University of Cali fornia. She will be entertained by relatives in San Francisco and will visit the exposition. Later Miss O'Don nell will go to Southern California. Miss Ada Belle Holmes, another harming Portland girl, will leave on Saturday for the fair. She U a member of the Madrigal Club, and will study music during her visit. Mrs. David Taylor Honey man gave an informal tea yesterday, at which she CHARMING VISITOR ENTERTAINED AT NUMEROUS TEAS AND OUTINGS, entertained a number of the younger set of smart society, including some of the visitors and the girls who are just home from school. Miss Katherine Hardy, guest of Miss Helen Ladd. will be honored today at a tea at which Miss Rhoda Rummelin will preside. Miss Ruth Zeile, of San Francisco, who is visiting Miss Evelyn Carey, was complimented yesterday at a luncheon at which Miss Louise Burns was hostess. Miss Nan Pennoyer Russell was host ess at a smart luncheon for another group of charming girls, entertaining at the Hotel Benson at luncheon, with Miss Katherine Hardy and Miss Helen Ladd as those especially honored. Today Miss Rhoda Rummelin will en tertain at tea for Miss Hardy, Dr. and Mrs. R. J. Chipman and chil dren are in San Francisco, where Dr. Chipman is attending a convention. Mrs. H. Haussman, Mrs. Chipman's sister, and Miss Margery Haussman are also in the exposition city, where they are being entertained. They are en route from New York, where Miss Haussman made a success with her singing and received a flattering offer as a soloist at one of the large churches. Kurtschindler, the critic, who passed upon her voice, gave expression of his admiration for its quality and sweetness. (Special.) The First Christian Church on Sunday held its annual election of officers and reports for the fiscal year were made. The officers elected were: Trustee, it. W. Schenck; elders, C. E. Logsdon, P. O. Powtnan; deacons, Hans Holmes, H. A. Cooley, Gov Miller John Calvert: secretary, Mrs. H. A. Cooley; clerk, Mrs. M. P. Corbin; treasurer, M. - P. Corbin; organist. Miss Grace Jackson. -. WomensClubs YW.CA-Notes MISS . UNA B. JAMES, city Young Woman's Christian Association secretary, with a party of 30, composed largely of girls in the student Young Woman's Christian Association of the state, left on Tuesday in a special car for Seattle, en route to Seabeck, on Hood's Canal, Washington, where for the next ten days will convene the Northwestern general conference of the Young Woman's Christian Associations. Miss Elizabeth Wilson, executive of the secretarial. department of the Na tional Board, will be the executive of the conference. Other Nacional ana field secretaries who will be in at tendance are: Miss Anna V. Rice. Miss Oolvoah Burner. Miss Helen Thomas. Mies Jane Scott, Miss Grace Maxwell and Miss Elizabeth Fox. Professor Linray B. Longacre, t the Iliff School of Theology in Denver, will give a series of four evening lectures on "The Vital Things in Religious Life." Rev. Henry Marcotte. of this city, will teach a class on the wisdom lit erature for board members, secretaries and faculty delega.es. Miss Lina B. James will have charge of the councils for employed officers, and an opportunity will be given to hear the specialists on the National staff on their own subjects. Seabeck is a most delightful confer ence place, and the programme is planned not only for study classes and lectures, but for all sorts of outdoor recrations in the way of excursions, long tramps, boating, bathing and ten nis. Several hundred delegates are ex pected to attend this conference. Junction City Church Elects. JUNCTION CITY. Or.. June 23. CALENDAR FOR TODAY. Society. Tea Miss Rhoda Rummelin for Miss Katherine Hardy. Tea Mrs. Donald Spencer, to honor Miss Kathleen Lawltr, singer. Wedding Miss ' Mary Anne Smith and T. W. Gerber, First Congregational Church, at noon. Dinner Mrs. William P. Sin nott, for Miss Kathleen Lawler. Dance Portland Yacht Club, at their clubhouse. Children's party Miss Mayme Helen Flynn, to entertain her younger pupils at her 'home In Northrup street. Clutaa. Social Workers' Club Dinner at the Haselwood tonight. Social Service Club of Oak Grove at 2 o'clock, with Mrs. W. W. Thompson, of Rothe station, Multnomah County Institute. W. C. T. U with Mrs. L. Murray, East Sixtieth street and Thirty third avenue Southeast. Overlook Woman's Club calen dar committee Picnic at the Oaks. Oregon Pioneer Association Programme at Masonic Temple , and banquet at Armory. THE Oregon Federation of Women's Clubs and the Portland Woman's Club will be represented at Chautauqua next month. While practically no meetings are held during the Summer among the individual clubs, there Is a certain amount of work In which the clubwomen are interested that goes on forever. Wherever a few clubwomen gather there is beginning to be ex pressed an interest in the next state convention, which will be held in Sa lem In October. The question asked is, "What of the state presidency?" There are in Eastern Oregon, in Southern Oregon and in the central part of the Willamette Valley region women who are well able to perform the du ties of the office. but so far their friends have not announced their names. It takes a vast amount of time, tact, judgment and ability to be a successful president. During the months of preparation for the council of the General Federation of Women's Clubs, which met here in June, each woman did her part and when the big gathering took place absolute harmony prevailed. Clubwomen who attended the council and have since gone to San Francisco to the fair have been lavish in their praise of the women of Oregon and the great hospitality of Portland. Members of the Portland chapters of the P. E. O. Sisterhood will hold their regular monthly luncheon Friday in the tearoom of OIJ, Wortman & King. All 1'. E. O. members are welcome. The Alberta Woman's Improvement Club, at its meeting Tuesday' night, made plans for the building of a two story community clubhouse, which will be 40 by Su feet and will be arranged for the accommodation of the Library Branch, for a club and recital hall and a lodgeroom. A school of music and elocution will be opened in the Fall. Miss Vera Kitchen, who won fame at the Federation of Musical Clubs con vention, held recently in Los Angeles, will be the head of the musical club. Mrs. Josephine R. Sharp Is president of the Alberta Club. Dr. E. E. Van Alstine subscribed the first sum for the build, lng of the club and community house. s The last meeting for tho Portland Woman's Club for this season will be held Friday in Women of Woodcraft Hall at 2 o'clock. Annual reports will be made by chairmen of committees and departments. Musical numbers will be provided and a short address will be given by Miss Grace da Graff, who will speak on the recent International Woman's Peace Conference, which she attended at The Hague. A social hour will follow. This will be an open meet ing, and a large attendance is antici pated. Mrs. Robert W. Spangler, editor of the club department of the Newj West magazine, who has been entertained by many local clubwomen. Is planning a special edition of her publication, in which she will exploit Portland clubs and the a--iny activities which they handle so successfully. The 3rndirnStosx By Mrs F. AvTalker. The White Fawn. ONCE upon a time ttfere lived upon the shores of a large lake a little Indian boy named Swift Wings, for in all the tribe there was no one who could equal him in a race. In the morning he would spend his time run ling along the shore to dashinto"ttie blue water, then In the afternoon he went into the forest to hunt, always returning with game, which his grand mother cooked for supper. As the years went by he grew tall, strong and as fleet as a deer. One day, when he was about IS, he slung his quiver of arrows on his back, put a new string in his best red bow and set out through the woods toward the mountains. All the morn ing he bunted but saw nothing until, i Investigate These Piano and Player Piano ' Bargains Today Wouldn't you like a new player piano of the very latest model with $25 in music rolls for $465, less the value of your old piano, the balance on very easy payments ? We have that player piano and if s the finest value vou have ever been offered. THIS IS A BARGAIN CLEARANCE. Would you buy a good, durable and tuneful used piano, one that will give satisfaction for years, at $100 on very easy payments? Would you like a piano of famous manufacture, a LUDWIG, WHICKERING, WEBER or a HARDMAN, that has come to us in exchange for the marvelous Mason & Hamlin, or the wonderful Angelus player piano at a price that, considering its condition, is startlingly low? There are splendid modern upright pianos here in dozens of makes that are good enough for any home, cheap enough for any income and at the very lowest terms. Look over this partial list. The PIANO YOU NEED IS HERE. Charles R. Hall, Ebony case .$ 90 Emerson, Ebony case 100 J. & C. Fischer, Ebony case 125 Martin Bros., Mahogany 135 Rembrandt, Mahogany 175 Milton, Mahogany 175 Rembrandt, Oak 165 Hensel, Mahogany 175 Hensel, Oak 185 J. & C. Fischer, Oak 195 Steinway (Square) ; 50 Milton, Oak , . 195 Price & Teeple, Oak $200 Price & Teeple, Fumed Oak 225 Wellington, Oak 235 Wellington, Mahogany 245 Harrington, Walnut 250 Harrington, Oak 275 Harrington, Mahogany 285 Kingsbury, Oak 275 J. & C. 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Full sized and full toned. beautiful in design, workmanship and finish, and one that enables you to play easily, artistically and beauti fully. If you want a Player Piano, ever hope to own one, you need go no farther. EASY TERMS. YOUR MONEY'S WORTH OR YOUR MONEY BACK Player Pianos, Music Rolls Victrolas and Records MORRISON STREET AT BROADWAY OTHER STORES San Francisco, Oakland, Sacramento, San Jose, Los Angeles, San Diego and Other' Western Cities at last, he came suddenly upon a beau tiful snow-white fawn feeding near a stream. The fawn sprang away and the boy followed almost as swiftly. For hours the chase kept up till at sunset the fawn stopped to drink at a bubbling spring in the rocks. Just as Swift Wings placed an arrow in his bow to shoot the sunlight fell on the fawn's bead and there stood a lovely maiden instead of a deer. The Indian girl came up to the astonished boy and told him with tears in her eyes that she was under the spell of a witch who lived in the Cave of the Winds at the foot of the mountain, but that every day at sunset she could resume her proper form for half an hour. Bwift Wings told her he would go in search of the witch and break the spell, but the girl begged him first to take two leaves from a magic bush that grew above the spring, and to lay these on the witch's eyes, if he could catch her asleep. Then he plucked a handful of red berries from the bush and put them in his pocket, saying he might find them useful. "It is a very dangerous trip." said the maiden, with tears in her eyes, "for al who have ever gone into the Cave of the Winds have remained. The spell over me lasts only a day at a time and is renewed after sunset each evening. If she can be put to sleep forever, the spell would cease." And as she said the words, she sprang away, having been turned again into a fawn. Swift Wings set out for the moun tain and about the time the moon rose found the mouth of a big cave conceal ed in a huge chasm, through which the winds rushed in a mighty blast. He entered bravely and there, hover ing a bout a big fire, sat the witch clad In rags and stirring her broth. The boy sat down but said nothing. The witch got up, went to & cupboard, and taking out of a box some bits of grain, gave thpm to Swift Wings, telling him to Young Society Matron Lays Down Rules In discussing the approaohlng social season, a young matron says that the success of every event, whether in home, church or club, depends upon the foresight of the women months before. The brilliancy, charm and success of a party is dependent upon the physical condition of the hostess. 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Adv. few' Mti Teach the Chil dren to Use the Kodak It is a simple, educational and pleasant diversion; in expensive and practical ideal vacation pastime. We Have Outfits for the Children See Them! Columbian Optical Co. 145 Sixth St., Portland, Or. eat them. But when her head was bent over the pot he threw them away and ate the berries from his pocket Instead. The witch thought he had eaten tho grains she had given him. which were poisonous, so "she told him to lie on a skin in the corner, thinking by mornig he would be dead. Then she went to sleep herself. But at mid night the boy arose and placed a leaf from the magic bush on each of the old witch's eyes. Then he opened the cupboard, took the riches he had stolen and started off with it all on his back. Just out of the door stood the fawn, and as he looked at her. she be came a maiden again, and placed her hand In his. So with the bag of gold they walked away to the tent of Swift Wings and left the old witch snoring ana tnere sne is stui snoring to mis day. "" ' ",ah. turn .JU.aii. j mi Mcgyal Qub ratrTVMmam-j. The Round Trip 0 $31 S6 The Round Trip TO MINNEAPOLIS, ST. PAUL, DULUTH, SUPERIOR, WIN NIPEG, OMAHA, COUNCIL BLUFFS, SIOUX CITY, ST. JOSEPH, KANSAS CITY. $72.50 to Chicago $71.20 to St. Louis SUMMER EXCURSIONS Proportionate Low Fares to Other Eastern Points. FAST THROUGH TRAINS TO CHICAGO, ST. LOUIS Standard and tourist sleeping cars and dining: cars serving those meals so famous on the Northern Pacific Railway To TACOMA and Intermediate Points Use the NEW STEEL COACHES. SLEEPERS. DINERS To SEATTLE and Intermediate Points Let us. quote fares, make berth reservations, assist in planning your trip, A. D. CHARLTON, A. G. P. A, Portland. Or. 255 Morrison St. Phones Main A 1244. The Royal Club Smile is seen on the face of every member of the fam ily at the breakfast table. The successful business man starts his day calmly and deliciously with a cup of "Royal Club." It helps him marshal his forces for the strenuous day ahead of him. Try it in your own home. Buy now at the New Low Prices on Royal Club Larger savings in 3 or 5 lb. tins. Single-lb. tins, OfJ originally 40c lb. OOC 3-lb. Tins Jjl, originally Kt 33V3C Lang & Co. Royal Club Products, Portland Phone Your Want Ads to THE OREGONIAN Phone Main 7070; A 6095 A