13 THE 3IORXIXG OREGOXIATV. TITURSDAT, JUNE 1. 1916. lOOOPOPOOPOPOPOPOOQOOO o o o o opoopoppopop pop'ooopoo O O OO 0 000000006000 PMIIMOmMIIlIM wiiiin.aiuuuuMiiri 1 II ill J m 1 Tif ' i i I i i i i r . i t n i i r i i i i i i t i i i i i i i i t , j i iititt BV OERTrRTJPE F. CORBETTl t iiiiiiiiiiini OOOOOOOOO OO O OO OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO CALENDAR. Society. Dance tonight by Mr. and Mra. Thomas D. Honeyman. Luncheon today; Miss Gene vieve Brooke, as hostess, at the "Waverley Country Club. Luncheon today for Miss Gene vieve Thompson; the Misses Mar shall to be hostesses at Alexan dra Court. Wedding of Miss Reva Funk and W. C. Montgomery tonight. Baby Home tea this afternoon. Cathedral Ladies' Aid Society card party at Cathedral Hall this afternoon. Tea at the home of Mrs. Her bert Holman this afternoon for the Guild of St. Stephen's Pro-Cathedral. POPULAR GIRL WHO WILL BECOME BRIDE TONIGHT. ALEXANDRA COURT rang with merriment last night, as more tha 100 gaily attired dancers frol icked through one of the most delight ful evenings that the Court has been sponsor for this season. Many din ner parties' preceded the monthly dance, one of the largest being presided over by Dr. and Mrs. John,Forest Dick son, their guests numbering 24. Miss Virginia McDonough, one of the charm ing debutantes, also presided at a pret ty dinner, honoring Miss Ruth Teal, who will leave Saturday, accompanied by Miss Rhoda Rumelin, for the Bast. Covers were placed for Major and Mrs. von Egloffstein. Miss Teal, Miss Gene vieve Brooke, Miss Margaret Ayer, Miss Ruth Shull, the hostess, Charles Hol brook, Searles Bragg, Dwight Edwards, Graham Glass, Jr., and Jack White. Another delightful and prettily ap pointed affair of yesterday was the luncheon for which Mrs. Thomas D. Honeyman was hostess, complimenting Mrs. Edward H. Brooke, who has but recently returned to Portland from an extended sojourn in California. Seated around the attractively decked table were Mrs. Brooke. Mrs. Helen Ladd Corbett, Mrs. L Allen Lewis, Mrs. Sam uel M. Mears. Mrs. Ernest F. Tucker, Mrs. Winslow B. Ayer, Mrs. William MacMaster, Mrs. Henry C. Cabell, Mrs. Arthur Minott, Mrs. Holt C. Wilson. Miss Elizabeth Myrick and the hostess. Tonight Mrs. Honeyman again will entertain with an informal dance for the younger people. Miss Brooke has asked a number of the younger girls to lunch at the Waverley Country Club tomorrow, and on Saturday she will entertain the Tuesday Afternoon Bridge Club, who also were guests of Miss Elizabeth Jones Monday at tea. Mrs. Isabel Macleay, who has been visiting for several months In Canada, is expected to reach Portland about June 10. She will be one of the brides- maids for Miss Nan Fullerton at her wedding, on June 22, In Seattle, which will be attended by a number of Port land people. Mr. and Mrs. Philip Carroll (Frances Kelson), of Hood River, are being felic itated on the arrival of a daughter, born Monday, Miss Gertrude Hoeber was hostess for a prettily appointed luncheon Monday, complimenting Miss Sadie Banf ield and Miss Alta Mansfield-Inman, both of whom will be June brides. Mrs. Flor ence Westengard Dabney and Mrs. Clara Heissler Keller, two recent brides, also shared in the honors of the func tion. Additional guests were Misses Marguerite Palitsch, Melba Westen gard. Claire Oakes and Esther Zimmer man. The afternoon was devoted to bridge at the apartments of the host ess in the Campbell-Hill Hotel. Phi Delta Sigma sorority will give a "mothers' tea" Saturday afternoon at the home of Miss Mary Helen Buck ley. It will be a large and elaborate affair and is creating much Interest among the college and sorority folk. Mrs. Frank B. Gibson, a charming matron of Los Angeles, is passing sev eral weeks in Portland visiting old friends. At present she is the guest of Mrs. L'dessa Fiske and Is being de luged with teas, luncheons and dinner parties. Miss Reva Funk and William C. Montgomery will be married tonight at the home of the bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs. F. W. Funk, 1289 Rodney ave nue. Rev. Mr. Hutchison officiating. About 75 relatives and friends will at tend the ceremony and the reception. which will immediately follow. . Miss Helen Abrahamson, the much entertained San Francisco visitor, was again honoree for a theater party fol lowed by supper and dancing, for which Miss Ruth Rosenfeld was hostess last nieht. About 14 young people particl rated in this f unction,vthe supper and dance being at the home of the charm ing hostess in vista avenue. Tomorrow afternoon's largest event will be the annual silver tea for the Patton Home to be given by the board of directors and officers of the Home. This Is an event that the residents an ticipate with considerable pleasure each year, the musical programme be ing one of tha rare events In their lives during tha year. Home-made candy also will be sold during the festivity and the officers will be assisted by a bevy of popular matrons and maids. Miso Frances Jones, of San Francisco, arrived Tuesday to be the house guest of Miss Annie Mackay Brown for sev eral weeks. Friday night Miss Brown will entertain with an informal bridge party honoring her guest. Professor and Mrs. Pelz arrived in Portland Sunday from San Francisco to attend the wedding of their son, Mischa Pelz. whose engagement to the charming Miss Minnie Nemerovsky recently was announced. Miss Nemerovsky, Mischa Pelz, Pro fessor and Mrs. Pelz were honor guests at a dinner given by Mrs. D. Nemerovsky on Friday evening at her home on Irving street. The dining room of the Nemerovsky home was decorated with wisteria and Spring blossoms lavender being the color scheme carried out. Covers were laid for 22. Saturday evening Mrs. E. T. Ander son entertained the Baker City dele ' gates and friends of the Rebekah grand lodge at her home on East Harrison street. The evening was pleasantly passed in conversation and music, after which refreshments were served, Those present were: Mesdames Daisy Ott, Merle McKimm, Mayme JIahan Hattie Krauss, Mary Wright. Mary Stone. Anna Stewart. Mary Anderson; Misses Vada and Nan Miller. Gertrude Krauss; Messrs. Fisher, Hubbard and fctone. Miss Aimee Bollack returned last evening from an extended visit in New York. Orphia Temple, No. 18. Pythian Sis ters, will initiate candidates Thursday evening. Nomination of officers for the Fall term also will take place. All members are requested to be present, a vi ; : - - JZs'sr& J&e. lrsr SZz nA. East last night with Mr. and Mrs. G. Lee Harrington. Mrs. Harrington is critically ill and will stop at Roches ter, Minn., to consult with Mayo Broth ers, in regard to .Mrs. Harrington, after which they will proceed to their home in Erie, Pa. Dr. Cardwell will take special post-graduate courses in medi cine while away. - . Miss Tirzah. McMillan entertained with a shower on Wednesday, honoring Miss Alta Mansfield-Inman. The guests passed the afternoon hemming table linen for the bride-elect. After re freshments were served a surprise was Introduced by amessenger delivering a large box, which contained cooking novelties In aluminum for the bride-elect. The dining-room was decorated with pink roses. Miss Inman Is to be married to Leon Faber about the middle of June, and Miss McMillen will be her maid of honor. G SiNTiSPSfiOTS Some Uinta for the Spring Bride. MANY a newly-wed and many a bride-to-be is planning a new home Just now. For most of them it is Quite a prodigious undertaking; because of lack of experience for some. and for others, because funds are nQt adequate to desires. For all, when once in the maze of It, there is apt to be a more or less sense of bewilderment and confusion. Thought settles upon definite things rather than upon a comprehensive survey, simply for, the sake of resting somewhere; and so when the house is at last furnished, there are gaps and discrepancies and the household machinery does not run smoothly because there has not been a sufficiently careful and comprehend ing study of the new life as a whole, before the details were planned for. A well-known domestic science teacher gives some useful suggestions along these lines. "When you plan to furnish, your new home," she says, "and have Just so much money to spend, begin by making two lists; one, of the things you want, and the other of the things you have to have. Cross off from the one and add to the other, and you will get the best results from your money. "Plans for furnishing a home should begin with the kitchen. A housewife spends a gooQ share of her time in the kitchen, and she owes it to herself to make it as attractive and easy to work in as possible. "Too many young housekeepers plan their furnishings and homes with a view to what their friends will say about it and not enough attention to the real needs. Kodak Films Developed FREE And All "Work -' Guaranteed Satisfactory. "We Make , Delivery of Films and Prints the Day Following Their Delivery to Us. Mail Orders Filled Columbian Optical Co. 143 Sixth St. Floyd Brower, Mgr. MM! "Too many of us start furnishing our homes where our friends will see them first the front door; and when we get to the kitchen there is nothing left. Not many of us follow these sugges tlons when planning to furnish, do we? We usually do Just the opposite. We think of our living room or parlor first, and of our kitchen last. Many of us call to mind how -Trie nils, or neigh bors, or some social leader whose favor we are anxious to gain, furnish their homes, and we try to be on a par or to excel. We do not consider first and comprehensively our own needs, our own funds, or our own ideals of living. and make our home fit these solely We are too apt to furnish some part of our home at least from the viewpoint of "what others will think." But some such comprehensive view of actual needs is essential to success ful home furnishing. The family is to live in the home, not the neighbors. It is going to have a tremendous influ ence In shaping the lives of its inmates. Tha food cooked, the manner of serv ing it. the comfort and attractiveness of the home will all be great factors in determining the happiness that reigns there. These things are far more important than whether the living room is as elegant as Mrs. Blank's across the street, or whether tha fur niture is Jacobean or Colonial. It is more essential to study the ac tual needs and tastes of those who are going to live in the house than it is to know the latest styles in brass beds and cretonnes. And it is more impor tant to spend the furnishing allowance to get the things that are essential to comfort and health than it is to have a few impressive show pieces. This does not mean that the house need not be artistic and charming. Harmonious colons, and good taste in the lines of the furniture and of the prints on the walls are not altogether a question of expense. But they are a matter of careful thought. And to get a home that will mean health and comfort and charm means that one must study one's individual problem, and not furnish ac cording to the way others have fur nished, and not sacrifice the kitchen and other parts of the home that con tribute to the real life of the home, for the sake of those that are only occa sional in their service. : DIRT REMOVAL ORDERED New City - Ordinance ' Is Aimed at Property Owners. It is now an offense punishable by fine and imprisonment for a property owner to fail to remove dirt which slides into the street from his prop erty. The Council passed an ordinance to this effect yesterday. Recently Commissioner Dieck started to force some property owners in the Helghts-to remove earth from the I TO END CATARRHAL X DEAFNESS AND HEAD ; X NOISES : If you have Catarrhal Deaf- ness or head noises go to your druggist and get 1 ounce of Par- r mint (double strength), and add to it 4 pint of hot water and 4 ounces of granulated sugar. Take 1 tablespoonful four times a day. This will often bring quick re- lief from the distressing head noises. Clogged nostrils should open, breathing become easy and the mucus stop dropping into the throat. It is easy to prepare, costs little and Is pleasant to . take. Any one who has Catarrhal Deafness or head noises should give this prescription a trial. streets. When he got ready for prose cutiens be found no ordinance. There fore tie measure passed yesterday. THEATER MANAGER IS DUE W. C. SmiUi to Take Charge of nip- po drome House. Here. Walter C. Smith, manager of the Spreckels Hippodrome, San Diego, has been named by the owners of the Hip podrome circuit, Ackerman & Harris, as manager for the Portland Hippo drome, and he probably will arrive in Portland tomorrow. He will take charge of the Portland house within the next few days. Lester J. Fountain, of Los Angeles, resident manager of the Hippodrome there and official opener for the new houses on the circuit, who has been in charge locally since May 10. when the Hippodrome opened, will leave early next week for his home, after turning the house over to Mr. Smith. Sam Meyer, formerly of San Fran cisco, will assist Mr. Smith in the man agement of the Hippodrome. George A. Housman. of Portland, a stockholder in the Hippodrome, has been named secretary and treasurer of the house. HOSPITAL ACT CONSIDERED Antl-Tuberculosls Ban May Be Lift ed In Xew Ordinance. Terms of a proposed ordinance to permit the establishment of tuberculo sis hospitals in the city will be constd ered at a public meeting of the City Council to be held June 16. Persons in terested either for or against the ordi nance will be given an opportunity to 8peaK. The ordinance, as planned, will take the place of the present measure which prohibits the hospitals in the city. The proposed measure would place the ques tion of sites in the hands of the City Health Ofticer and the City Council fHf Phone Your Grocer for a Loaf of jg Royal Bohemian Rye Bread H did you ever taste ROYAL BO HEMIAN RYE BREAD? it is a most delicious, highly nutritious bread ; it is always fresh and is a delightful varia tion in the daily menu. BOHEMIAN -RYE BREAD is not to be compared with the reg- call your grocer for a loaf of genuine BOHEMIAN RYE ' BREAD. . . m uanc a wa i o w r II C iltl!l tiauy i or you. uraer early for your dinner tomorrow ! ular rye bread; Bohemian Rye is darker, richer and, due to the greater quantity of PURE RYE FLOUR, it makes a sweeter and more moist loaf with a perfect crust. Only the highest grade caraway seeds are used in sea soning. llllllllllllllllllllllll! Royal Bakery and Confectionery Portland, Or. All Wheat Ready. to Eat Look Fo This- 5ienATvm All Wheat. Ready to Eat lOOH To lilt 5lGMATVt All Wheat Ready to Eat Look Foii Tin 5icmatvk All Wheat Ready to Eat boon Toa This 5k.matu MM1HJ JJ W tUIlM M JUKI hill III I 1 rtfl till -J - w T T XTT . -V J All Wheat Ready to Eat All Wheat Read yJ4J-- 3, Eat 1 Eft j& s J?M i P4 ill SZS jiJv .:: - : TJ '133 IB 'sgg'lE Reafi-.'.'V ii'r ' '" "y cza Look Toa v ' ' ' r- , i i" " "Inti iicMATuaa Iook To This 5igatvks Iook Fo Tmh -5ighaturc scam ?Mmti?f TfXtfdtcvz rfj.itj6e rt&dtcyc. All Wheat Ready to Eat Look To 1ms SeATwa All Wheat Ready to Eat Look To This 5aATVRa All Wheat Ready to Eat Look To Tiiis'Sicmatvrs Sal All Wheat III All Wheat 9 Readv o Eat III Ready (oEai Ready All Wheat Ready to Eat Look To Tm icnatvrs All Wheat. to Eat urn All Wheat Ready to Eat wlth power to reject any sites which might be objectionable. IiOggin? Ends on East Iloqulam. ABERDEEN, Wash.. May 31. (Spe laL) Logiflng- operations of the Che- halls County Log-ping: and Timber Com pany on tha Hast Hoquiam River ceased today, the company having1 completed the felling: of several million feet of timber which it held in that section. The equipment is being: moved to camps near Montesano, in which district the company owns enough timberland to keep crews totaling more than 100 men busy for more than a year. A wise teacher never attempts to teach more than he knows. ASK FOR and GET HOE?LICE' THE ORIGINAL IYIALTED mLK Cbca? substitutes cost YOIT aaxaa price V VA tit Ttwri , tot. Iitnbktuek. rnc to 50 Garden Tools With a Guarantee These garden tools are the kind that act right because they're made right from the right kind of materials, by the right kind of workmen. It's their ever-present cprality that makes I&fflMJTfffi garden tools your kind of tools and it's quality that pnts the KWt KUTTtR trade mark on any XBJf KVTTZR took That's why XBQV KUTtTR tools are sold with the distinct understanding that if they don't do all that is claimed for them, the dealer is authorized to return your money. "Tha Recollection of Quality Remain Long After tha Pricm ia Forgotten." Trade Mirk Ksslstend. E. C 80010X3. . SOLD AND GUARANTEED BY ii n .iai. rawlo o L1""'; ' O.rdra Turk I' . M. K30 1 ' litem tO.TS lit, OrmcaVaok PORTLAND, ORE. F. R. CHOWN, 2S3 Morrison. , WESTERN HDW. . AUTO W. C WINKS, 470 Washington BACKUS & MORRIS 27S Morrison. SUPPLY CO. Broadway and Pine. KELLER-SEEBERGER HDW. CO. 344 Washington St. FRANK BUSCH Oregon City. Ore. ASTORIA HDW. CO. Astoria, Ore. F. C. F. WHITMAN Woodburn, Ore. S. AMES Silverton, Ore. R. I FARMER HDW. CO. Salem. Ore. HULBERT-OHLING CO. Albany, Ore. WHITESIDE & COOPER Corvallis. Ore. ROGUE RIVER HDW. CO. Grants Pass. Ore. J. C. HOLBROOK Springfield, Ore. CRAVEN & HUFF Independence. Ore. CRAVEN HDW. CO. Dallas. Ore. I VIE PAYNE & SON. Sheridan. Ore, GOFF BROS. Forest Grove, Ore. HILLSBORO MERCANTILE CO. Hillsboro. Ore. Dr. Ma H. Cardwell left for tha