14 TOE MOIIXIXG OREGONIAN. WEDXESDAT, 3fAT 31, 101G. CTyieoC'o'oooooocooeooooooooo oooooooooo oo oo oo ooooo o o 06000000000 o oo t3prStf OOOOOOOOOOOOO OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOQOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO SOCIETY CALENDAR FOR TO DAY. Luncheon today for Mrs. Ed ward Brooke; Mrs. Thomas -D. Honeyman, hostess. Dinners and dance at Alexan dra Court tonight. Card party, Laurelhurst Club, today. Dance by young: people of Madeleine parish tonight, Irv ington Club. Luncheon, Hotel Benson, for Council of Jewish Women's 20th anniversary; Dinner at Alexandra Court to night by Dr. and Mrs. Dickson. 4 4 ECORATION day was delightfully celebrated at the Waverley Coun try Club with a ray dinner-dance last night. More than a hundred mer rymakers danced through the dinner hour and the remainder of the evening, many large parties being made up of congenial groups of young folk, as well as a number of devotees of the Same' of golf, who had passed the day on the links. One of the largest par ties was that presided over by Mrs. Helen Ladd Corbett, covers being placed for 22, the guests including the de butante set. The next In size had "William Burke. Jr., as host, other par ties being: Mr. and Mrs. J. Sherman O'Gorman, 14; Miss Ruth Teal, 12; Mr. and Mrs. Kurt H. Koehler, 10; George IJ. Stanley, 12: Mr. and Mrs. Charles P. Adams, 4; Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Wheel wright. 4: Mr. and Mrs. John Latta, 4; Hugh Hume, 6; Graham Glass, Jr., 4; Mrs. Lee Hoffman, 9: Mr. and Mrs. Ralph W. Wilbur, 4. Many others mo tored out late In the evening and par ticipated in the festivities. Miss Geneveive Brooke will be a lunch eon hostess tomorrow at the Waverley Country Club for a few of the debu tante set. Complimenting Mrs. Edward Brooke, a charming and popular matron, Mrs. Thomas B. Honeyman will also be a luncheon hostess today, and tomorrow night she will entertain several of the younger belles and beaux with an In formal dance, complimenting Mrs. Brooke. Portland society has a charming ac quisition in the recent arrival of Mrs. Hugh McGuires. of California. She . was Miss Marguerite Stabler, and was one of the leading short story writers of the Pacific Monthly and was con- Jidered one of the ablest writers on he magazine. She also has contributed o the Eastern magazines. Undoubtedly Mrs. McGuires will rap Idly become a social favorite in this city. Miss Helen Wood, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. William I... Wood, who is a student at Dana Hall, recently won high honors in a military drill and competition, being first in the class, as well as first in the entire school. . Miss Wood is one of the most ener getic and charming of the younger girls of Portland society. She is a devotee of the saddle. ' an enthusiastic golfer, swimmer and general out-doors girl, ' entering into everything with a charm ing whole-heartedness. She soon will return, with a number of other popular Dana Hall girls, to Portland for the Summer vacation. They are expected to reach here about June 15. . . One of the important events on to day's social calendar is the large lunch eon to be given this afternoon, at the Hotel Benson by a number of promi nent women to celebrate the 20th an niversary of the Council of Jewish "Women's organization. Covers will be placed for 150, and the hostesses for the event will be Mesdames I. Swett, Edward Ehrman, Mark Levy, M. Fleisch ner. Leo Ricen. Ella Eisenbach, Sig mund Frank, R. Abrahamson. M. Baruh, M. Goodman. F. Steinhardt, George Lowensen, M. Sichel. Benjamin Neu stadter, J. Louisson, J.. Friedenthal. A. Cohn. S. W. Ottenheimer, Gustav Simon end Miss Isabel De Fries. Miss Charlotte Skeele, of St. Louis, Is the house guest of Mrs. G. J. Fran kel, who has planned a number of so cial affairs to honor her next week. One of the events will be a large tea, another a motor, trip up the Columbia Highway. Many other women are planning to entertain the visitors. The Laurelhurst Club women will hold their card party today in the clubhouse. The hostesses will be Mrs. J. C. English. Mrs. A. C. Holmes and Mrs. F. C. Griffin. . June 1 will be inaugurated in Port land by a number of social functions, particularly teas. One will be for the benefit of the Baby Home, one for the Guild of Stephen's Pro-Cathedral, for which Mrs. Herbert Holman will be hostess, another benefit for the Ladies' Aid Society of the Cathedral parish. The latter will be a card party at Cathedral Hall. The Patton Home tea will be an event of Friday afternoon. Br Marie Dille.' Mrs. Edith W. Pierre. Philadelphia's Street Cleaner. MRS. EDITH W. PIERCE Is the only woman street cleaner in the United States. She is employed by the city of Philadelphia. That she may conduct her work with authority, she has been made a special police officer. She is the only woman in the Quaker City that wears the police badge. Her duties include the inspection of all work done by the regular street sweepers and the securing of co-operation of housekeep ers. Mrs. Pierce is assisted in her work by 10,000 school children of Philadelphia. Her assistants are organized under the title Junior Sanitation League. Each wears a badge inscribed with the seal of the city, the name of the organiza tion and the legend, "For Clean Phila delphia Streets." Each child is fur nished with a little book containing simply stated instructions for volunteer inspectors. The books contain the rules of the city governing the dispostion of rubbish, garbage, ashes and paper. Each child makes a written report for Mrs. Pierce by means of form cards. These reports tell of the conditions to be found in various parts of Philadel phia. The holder of the card reports the locality of rubbish, filthy cellars, leaky drain pipes, dirty alleys and all other conditions that mar the sanita tion of Philadelphia. It also contains the name and address of the member of the league who makes the report. In this way Mrs. Pierce is constantly aware of the conditions all over the city and when they seem sufficiently .bad she makes a personal tour of in spection. Sometimes it is necessary to call upon the property holders and ex plain., the possible spread of disease through dirty surroundings. The Junior Sanitation League is di vided Into five parts and assigned to as many different parts of Philadelphia, confining the children to the neighbor hoods in which they live. From time i Hma thA nrpHnintiftTi meets with Mrs. Pierce and the Mayor. Their opin-j lona are treated with the utmost re-' CHARMING ST. LOUIS GIRL WHO IS BEING ENTERTAINED BY WELL ' KNOWN MATRON HERE. r 1 - , ' - r -"- - - Xk-z r-" - I iippiililt!S . m Ny- '. ' ,0 c-T At ce spect and instead of being expected to listen to lengthy addresses they ex change views with the chief official freely and honestly. He listens re spectfully to their observations and they accept his advice. Sometimes etereopticon lectures are given and the actual work that has been done by the organization is shown to the children. Pictures are .taken before and after the cleaning up process has been conducted. In addition to the active work that Mrs. Pierce has succeeded in having her boys and girls do, the effect -of the or ganization upon the children themselves is noteworthy. The child, who is inter ested in promoting a cleaner , city through others will not himself make the streets unnecessarily dirty by throwing rubbish upon them or scat tering paper about. Mrs. Pierce contends that she is not only promoting a cleaner city for the present generation, but that she is in fluencing a growing generation that will not need to be taught the rules of sanitation when it has become mature. The city agrees with Mrs. Pierce in her attitude and since her appointment in 1914 officials have shown a constantly decreasing inclination to dispense with her services. By Mes F. AWalker. Rebecca's Strategy. RACHEL was a very large black and white duck. She lived on Hill Top Farm, away up in Vermont. Beckey and Ikey also lived on Hill Top Farm. Beckey was a brown speckled duck and Ikey was a drake whose feathers were white and tan color. Beckey was lame and sometimes she would lie down in the cool grass to rest and Ikey and. Rachel would be so interested in talking they would not misx her. Suddenly Rachel would look behind and not seeing her friend she would quack to Ikey, who would stretch his neck and look all around. Then , both would waddle hack quacking as the; went. Beckey would wait until they almost reached the spot where she was resting and then she would slowly rise and limp toward them. But one day all this changed. ' A big box arrived and Solomon and fif teen ducks took up their abode at Hill Top Farm. Ikey, Rachel and Beckey watched them as they waddled in a line around the farm, looking over their new heme. "Those- ducks are skinny looking creatures," remarked Rachel, who was almost as large as two ordinary ducks. "If Beckey was not lame she would be larger than any of them." "Solomon is rather a. handsome fel low," said Beckey, who had heard Farmer Henry call Solomon by name when he flew out of the box. "He isn't any hondsomer than Ikey," retorted RacheL Ikey all this time had maintained a dignified silence, but he kept his eyes on the pretty little ducks that had arrived with Solomon, and as soon as he could he slipped away from Beckey and Rachel and Joined the newcomers. As I have told you, Rachel was old and Beckey was lame, and when from under a currant bush where they were resting they saw Ikey waddling along with Solomon and his young family they felt a pang shoot through their feathered breasts. "Anyway, I don't believe any one of them can lay such fine eggs as you can. Rachel," said Beckey, who looked upon Rachel as beyond compare since tho morning an ec? of extra size had been found in Rachel's nest. Rachel stood up, stretched her wings and shook out her tail feathers. "No. I do not expect they can," she said, "and I'll show them a larger one than the one you saw. "They needn't think they ean come here and waddle around as though they owned the farm just because they are younger than we. They will soon find out that the duck that can lay the largest egg is the one who holds sway here." A few days later Ikey. Rachel and Beckey wwe taking a walk. In the distance Rachel saw Solomon and his young family. "Don't you think we had better speak to them?" . she asked Ikey. "We do not need to associate with them, but I think. It would be wise to be on bowing terms." The rain began to fall Just then, and as Solomon and his family waddled along Rachel remarked: "Isn't this beautiful weather?" Solomon and his family stopped. and they gathered around Rachel, who was much the largest of the group. But Rachel saw Ikey on the outside of the group talking to one of the new ducks. "Here, Ikey," she said with a good-natured quack, "you talk to Solo mon. I want to talk to the ducks about the eggs they are laying. Such a fine-looking lot of ducks must be giving farmer Henry a nice lot of eggs." Ikey waddled over to Solomon, and the ducks drew closer to Rachel. Sud dpnly she said in a very loud voice: "Come with me and, let me show you Just what Farmer Henry expects." Ikey and Solomon lifted their heads and saw Rachel with all the ' new ducks following her leading the way to the place where Rachel had her nest. Solompn and Ikey followed, and when they were all around the nest Rachel pushed aside some straw that was over it and displayed the largest duck egg any of them had ever seen. The young ducks were speechless with admiration, but Solomon man aged to gasp: "Did you lay that?" "Of course I did," remarked Rachel. That afternoon when Rachel and Beckey were sitting under the currant bush Beckey asked: "Where is Ikey?" "He is not far away," laughed Ra chel. "He heard Solomon ask me if I didn't think their duck house was a better place to live in than ours, and Ikey has kept close watch since then that Solomon did not get another chance to" talk to me alone. "You.wili not see him walking with those young ducks "any more. N He knows that the duck that lays the largest egg in Vermont is not to be slighted." "Quack., quack," called Ikey, wad dling toward the currant bush. "Here we are under the bush." quacked Rachel. "Oh!" quacked Ikey, with a sigh of relief. .Rachel gave Beckey a little tap with her bill. "He thought we had gone walking with Solomon." she quacked; "there is nothing like a little stratearv to bring about the situation you most desire." Copyright, 1916, by the McClure News paper Syndicate, New York City.) COPPER MINE REOPENED Abandoned Property Near Baker Said to Contain Molybdamite. BAKER. Or.. . May 30 (Special.! Once abandoned as an unprofitable ven ture, the old Paymaster mine, a cop per property in the Eagle Mountains, is being reopened since the 'traces of the rare ore, molybdamite. with a mar ket value of $3000 a ton. have been found. W. A. Gilliam. Isaac and Gris wold Miller and Bradley Bros., owners of the property, also believe that a con siderable income may be netted from the main copper ore bodies. Assays just made of some of the ore samples give 64.3 per cent values, mean ing, at the present quotations, from $300 to f400 a ton. PERSONAL MENTION. L. M. Chase, of Spokane, Is at the Eaton. W. J. Machetle, of Kelso, is at the Eaton. W. H. Eccles, of Baker, is at the Oregon. G. Rosendorf, of Corvallis, is at the Oregon. R. B. Williams, of Ilwaco. is at the Oregon. L. B. Stoddard, of Baker, is at the Oregon. Grace P. Gillett and Lucy M. Lewis, White Sale of Furs Genuine Alaska White Fox Animal Neckpieces, regular $40 values at $28.75 White Iceland Fox Animal Neck pieces, regular $8.00 values $5.05 Hudson Bay Fur Co. M. L. Gumbert, Mgr. Ill Broadway, off Washington. Instructors at Oregon Agricultural I College. Corvallis. are at the Seward. I R. H. Reed, of Mapleton. is at the Seward. Thad Sweek. of Tualatin, is at the Perkins. A. F. Lange, of Salem, is at the Perkins. J. E. Cannon, of Seattle, is at the Nortonia. C. A. Murray, of Spokane, is at the Portland. P. Schuman, ' of Salem, la at the Cornelius. Mrs. F. S. Austin, of Seaside, is at the Eaton. J. Stewert, of Milwaukee, Wis., is at the Eaton. B. O. Marshall, of Warrenton. is at the Imperial. D. I. Howard, of Salem, is registered at the Seward. Mrs. F. S. Kealing, of Parkdale, Is at the Seward. H. A. Edlin, of Astoria, is registered at the Perkins. R. W. Mackie, of Boise, is registered at the Imperial. C. P. Condon, of Eugene,' is registered at the Imperial. D. H. Welch, of Astoria, is registered at the Cornelius. Mr. and Mrs. F. C. Ritner, of Airlie, are at the Perkins. Archie Chandler, of Seattle, is regis tered at the Portland. G. H. Reeder, of Shanlko, is regis tered at the Nortonia. Robert Sinclair, of Vancouver, is reg istered at the Nortonia. Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Johnson, of Rose burg, are at the Cornelus. Russell Hawkins, of Tillamook, Is registered at the Portland. Mr. and' Mrs. P. H. Duxler, of Inde pendence, are at the Imperial. Mr. and Mrs. J. Fultz are registered at the Nortonia from Seattle. Mr. and Mrs. Fredrick Grimes, of Seattle, are at the Cornelius. Mr. and Mrs. B. F. Drakenfeld, of New York, are at the Portland. HILL OFFER ENDS TODAY V50.00O GIFT TO EUGENES BIBLE UNI VERSITY IS AT STAKES. f200,003 liluat Be Raised for Endow ment and Board Will Make Caa vasa of Fundi Today. EUGENE. Or.. May 30. (Special.) Whether or not the Eugene Bible Uni versity has raised the sum. of $200,000 necessary to obtain the James J. Hill gift of $s0,000, making a total endow ment of 1250,000, will be determined at 10 o'clock tomorrow morning, when the board of trustees of the institution meets to canvass the subscriptions. An announcement of the result of the cam paign will be made at that time. The fund must, under the terms of Mr. Hill's offer, be complete tomorrow, the date on which it expires. "We are hopeful that we shall be able to meet the conditions of Mr. Hill's offer, and make the endowment $250,000," President E. C. Sanderson, of the university, said tonight. During the last few days subscrip tions have been received toward the fund' from cities scattered throughout the .West, especially on the Pacific Coast. Mr. Hill's offer originally expired March 31. On that date, when it was apparer.t that the university would not be able to raise the fund within the period allowed, he extended the. tlmo SLAYER ADMITS IDENTITY MIRDERER OF AGED WOMAN NBir.HBORIXG RANCHER'S SON. "John Stewart" Proves to Be Walter Holt, Whose Mind Is Affected by Ballet Carried In Head. WENATCHEE. Wash., May 30. (Spe cial.) The confessed murderer of Mrs. Erma Smith, the 70-year-old home steader, who lived alone on Badger Mountain, was the son of a neighbor ing rancher, whose mind is believed to have been unbalanced by a bullet wound in the head, sustained when he wan a child. Sheriff Jordan announced today that "John Stewart," arrested yesterday on a petty larceny charge, admitted today that he was Walter Holt, son of Hans Holt, who owns a 400-acre wheat ranch and who has been living in the Badger Mountain district for about 12 years. Young Holt still carries the bullet in his head. He was accidentally shot by a playmate. He is said to have been in a number of escapades since and once was cap tured by Police Captain Inskeep, of Portland, when he ran away from home. Centralis Pastor Kills Bear. CENTRALIA, Wash.. May 30. (Spe cial.) A hunting party composed of New Cotton Gabardine Skirts Special $3.75 Splendid values in cleverly styled new white wash skirts. Designed with new pockets, folded over and buttoned novelty belts, stitched and finished with buttons. Best quality gabardine and fine pearl buttons. Pretty for all Sum mer occasions. iSfeiv Summer Furs Just in! Fashion's latest fad: Red fox, white Iceland fox, genuine white fox and black fox. All prices. A Charge Account Your Privilege Washington I I i . . '- i ; i: j . - . !i Juried ear ance Sale of JSdillinery Trimmed Hats Sport Hatsand Untrimmed Shapes Greatly Reduced for This Special Event Bright and early this morning our store will, without a doubt, be crowded with eager shoppers buying millinery at wonderful savings. A backward season and bad weather has forced us to price new Summer millinery at unheard-of low prices. Great Clearance Untrimmed Hats The season's most favored shapes in the newest and most wanted Milans, Belgian Split, Lizere and Milan Hemps, in Rolling medium-sized Tricornes, Pokes and Flares. Every Hat in the lot $3.50 we ve priced them and guaranteed, in all white, white with blue collars and striped effects. Blouses that are regular $1.75 value. Special for Q C this Clearance iOC $5.00 Waists at $3.65. These are Georgette crepes and beau tiful crepe de chine, in fancy tucked effects and hem- 1Q JC stitched. Great range of sizes, colors to select from, at pO.OD cerrtMtntm "" a x w ' - - - . ' ' "" 1 ' ' Evangelist E. J. Bulgin, Rev. Mr. Rose. M. Jj. Carrier and Ben Proffitt yester- 'Outfitting (qjP Street at Tenth worth at least double the price. Many uble the price. Many sale at. . special for this To $6.50 Trimmed Special Clearance Our tables, today, will be loaded down with Trimmed Hats that were marked to $6.50. Each and every one of them is a distinct new Summer style, and can never again be duplicated at this sale. price. Large hats and small ones, too. Medium-sized hats trimmed in the latest fashions. Colors are black, white, navy, brown, Cray, green, old rose and purple. See the display of these hats in our windows, and youH marvel at the Special Clearance Price 2 Special Clearance Prices on All TAfaists Silk Crepe de Chine Waists in all the new effects, selling regularly at $3.00, now priced at $1.5. Some with convertible collars, others with large sailor collars, in every new color and all sizes. New Middy Blouses Mendel's make Sport Hats Kioto at Clearance Prices Duck Hats for picnic or outing, 50. Auto Hats of silk at $1.35. Others of checked and striped cloth at 6of. White and Colored Felt Soft Hats at oot4. New Black and White Striped Linen Soft Hats now ' Large Batavia Sailors, with satin crowns, reduced to Aj-$1.45. Five new shapes in that were $3.00, now $1.93. $1.43. Wonder IVL AT SIXTH A2STD, ALDER day brought down a bear in Salzer Valley, east of this city. It was a S3 q vf (Si i w v . o ESS ,1:1 at $2 braids. Sailors, Straight Sailors, of them worth to f J 1 .UU of them worth to Hats Price $225. ' i Colored Java Sport Hats, Banded Panamas, now Winery STS. shot from the that killed the rifle of Rev. Mr. Rose bruin.