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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (July 25, 1916)
10 TIIE MORNING OREGONIAN. TUESDAT, JULY 23, 1916. JJJTftOOOOOOOO 0000000 0000000 00 0000000000000000000000006000000000000 ST&ft piiffiffliiiiiBB U CpSu GERTRUDE V. CORBETT OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO O O OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOC 0 NE of the most important events on today's calendar is the tennis tournament at the Waverley ( Country Club, the tea table to be pre sided over by Mrs. Richard Wilder and '.Mrs. D. W. L. MacGregor. assisted by ; a group of popular debutantes and sub-debutantes. Clock golf also will claim a number of devotees of the game, with Miss Irene Daly in charge today. Many of the visitors and players, as . well as the enormous gallery of spec tators, will remain for dinner parties, in which formal dancing will be fea tured. Another affair of import to the younger contingent is the supper dance to be given tonight in Hotel Benson by Mr. and Mrs. j'athan D. Simon for ' their charming nieces. Misses ' Clara and Mary Simon, of New York, who are passing the Summer here. This affair will be given in the crys tal room, and will be attended by a number of the younger belles and beaux, with a sprinkling of young married folk. Mr. and Mrs. Louis Hagen and daugh ters. Misses Pearl and Lula, have opened the Seaward Cottage at Sea side for the rest of the Summer. Mrs. George M. Beahm left last night for Pasadena, after passing three weeks with her sister. Mrs. Murray C. Sears. The Mohawk Athletic Club passed an enjoyable evening Thursday in room G of the Central Library. It had been planned to study several different coun tries from four standpoints, so Presi dent Van Zandt spoke for some time on the government of China, and was followed by Herbert Preeg, who told about the social conditions in China. Roy Scheffel spoke on religions in China and Orlo Ferris closed the lit erary programme with a talk on the industrial life of China. Next Thurs day four similar talks on the United States will be given. During the busi ness meeting further preparations were made for the Multnomah Falls trip, to be taken Sunday. A boating party on the launch Eva was planned for Wednesday, August 9. Plans are pro gressing favorably for an open meet ing and a fine literary programme is being prepared. Drawings for the club tennis tournament will be made before next meeting. ' Mrs. M. C. Willis celebrated her 90th birthday last week at the home of her daughter. Mrs. T. W. Jenkins. She was born in Schuyler County, Illinois, and came to Oregon 43 years ago, passing most of her time in Cottage Grove. She is remarkably active and inter ested in her large family and hosts of friends. She is a niece of James Madi son, former President of the United States. A large dinner party was the diver sion planned to celebrate the occasion, a huge cake with 90 candles being the feature of the table appointments. Sweet peas and nasturtiums were used about the rooms, and the guests en Joyed a musical programme given by Mrs. Ella B. Jones. Dr. and Mrs; S. A. Danford and fam ily are domiciled at their new home, 337 East Thirty-fifth street. Miss Bessie M. Dofflemyer and A. E. Weller were married on Saturday at the home of the bride, 24 West Pres cott street, by Rev. J. Bowersox. A number of close friends and relatives were present, and the young people were unattended. Mr. and Mrs. Weller will be at home to their friends at 44S Eleventh street. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Knight (Mav Tfleusner) are being showered with con gratulatory messages upon the arrival of the second child, a son. born Sun day morning. Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Lynch, of Albany, and Miss Alice Brace, of this city, who have been traveling abroad, are visit ing at the homo of Mr. and Mrs. F. W. Howe at Everett, Wash. Mrs. Lynch is a sister of Mrs. Howe. Mrs James D. Honey man. Miss Helen lloneyman and Ronald and ,Billy are row in their Gearhart cottage for a month. Later they will entertain a number of Portland folk at a house party. Miss Elizabeth Huber came up from Gearhart to join her mother, Mrs. Oskar E. Huber, for a few days, and both will go back to the beach early this week for the rest of the Summer. Miss Ruth Catlin. who has been so journing in Hood River, will return the latter part of the week to Port land. Rev. and Mis. Thomas L. Eliot and Miss Henrietta Eliot have been in Hood River tor a short stay, returning home last week. All society of Portland and scores of folk from surrounding cities and states assembled at the Waverley Country Olub yesterday to attend the opening of the tennis tournament and partici pate in the social gaieties of the club. Mrs. Landon It. Mason. Jr.. is chair man of the social committee, and has ar-Pointed a number of prominent matrons and maids to take charge vt the tea table and clock golf each day. Yesterday Mrs. Andrew D. Norrisand Mrs. James D. Farrell were in chars of the tea table, and were assisted by Misses Jean Boyd. Isabella Uauia, Cornelia Cook. Esther and Alice Tucker and Mrs. George W. Maxwell. Mrs. Fanny Fey was in charge of the clock golf yesterday and was assisted by Mrs. Morris H. Whitehouse. Miss Marian Morgan, who was oper ated upon for appendicitis last Friday at St. Vincent's Hospital, is improving t . rapidly. SAN FRANCISCO MATRON WHO IS BEING ENTERTAINED IN THIS CITY. ;if X ? y- jj I i 1 ' restaurants. Yours are always flaky and mealy and just delicious." "It's the coffee pot." smiled Mother. "It's a wonderful instrument. I boil eggs in it. I cook lots of vegetables in it. Things keep warm in it better than in most things while you are fin ishing the rest of the dinner. It is handier to handle and to pour the water off in which vegetables are cooked. My one desire is that it shall be made in the shape of other cooking vessels and not so high and narrow, or that other cooking pots should have a handle, a spout-, and a lid fastened on, the three great virtues of a coffee pot as a vegetable cooker. "I know what it is to hunt lids," sympathized the Stenographer-Daugh-ted. "Last Sunday when I was visit ing Bessie, she's bookkeeper at Dal ton's, you know, I helped her get din ner. Her mother was away and we had to do the cooking. Such rum maging as we did among the cook things for lids. Everything Was in a closed closet below the dresser. It was awful. You never got the lid that fit." "She ought to have a rack for her lids," said mother, glancing at her own rack on the wall on which shone all manner of lids, little and big. It saves time and energy. You can pick out the lid you want at once. But it would be better to have the lid fast ened on. if there was a right sort of handle and spout for pouring off the water. Think how quickly one could drain one's vegetables!" "If any one gives me a shower.' said the Stenographer-Daughter-Who Is-Going-To-Be-Married, "I hope it will be a coffee-pot shower, little ones and big ones, all of white enamel with blue edges. Wouldn't my kitchen look pretty with blue and white paper and the coffee pots in graduated sizes hung along the wall." Mother nodded. "A kitchen is a workshop and it ought to look it. But it can be trim and pretty. And every thing ought to be handy to save steps. The implements that are needed for certain kinds of wor"k should be grouped together. The arrangement of the kitchen requires more brains than that of any other part of the house. But lots of people 'put all of their attention on fixing their parlor and other rooms, and let the kitchen be arranged haphazard. Imagine a busi ness man arranging his factory so that each workman had to run all over the place to get the tools he needed for his work! If any room in the house de mands the best use of a woman's gray mattec. it Is the kitchen." The Stenographer-Daughter agreed absent-mindedly. She was studying the craftsmanlike arrangement of her mother's kitchen. cial.) Charles Evans Hughes has been invited by the Aberdeen Young Men's Republican Club to visit Aberdeen dur ing his Western tour. He is assured crowd of between 30,000 and 40,000 to hear him if he visits Aberdeen. If Mr. Hughes accepts, the speaking will be arranged for Electric Park, which midway between Aberdeen and Ho quiam. where a big celebration would be held In his honor. WHITE CASE TO BE TRIED Judge McGinn Grants Motion in Damage Suit. Permission for the retrial of the damage suit, the $7500 verdict in which was set aside by the Supreme Court be cause of the conjunction "and" being used where It should have been "or, was given by Circuit Judge McGinn yesterday, when he allowed the filing of an amended reply correcting the error in the suit of Mrs. Lulu White against the East Side Mill & Lumbe Company. Mrs. Whites husband, a patrolman was killed by a truck of the lumber company at Grand avenue and East Burnside street. The verdict was set aside because her reply said that White was not careless and negligent, instead of careless or negligent. I i 1 t We don't do the largest Kodak and Supply busi ness in Portland just be cause we DEVELOP FILMS FREE but because we develop them better than any one else and because we make the clearest and sharpest prints and give the best service for am ateur kodakers. Full line of supplies. MAIL ORDERS FILLED ? " -. ' COLUMBIAN OPTICAL CO. 145 Sixth Street FLOYD BROWER. Mgr. of business before the United States Commission in Klamath Falls, particu larly cases arising on the Klamath Res ervation among the Indians. VACATION MAY BE GRANTED Civil Service Rule Iiikcly to Broken in Case of A. Y. Jones. Bo The Department of Public Works has presented an ordinance with an emer gency clause attached, asking the Council to consider favorably giving A. W. Jones, assistant director of. the Public Bmployment Bureau, a vacation of 10 days with pay. Although the civil service regulations do not give vacations to those who have been in the employment of the city less than a year, it is said that Mr. Jonea has put in additional time for which he has received no compensation that would equal a- vacation of 10 days. NEW LINE IS BEING LAID Portland & Oregon City Railway Company Working in Portland. The Portland & Oregon City Railway is completing its track inside the city from East Third and East Clay streets to East Twenty-second and Powell streets. The track is being built from East Clay and East Third streets to Aberdeen Invites Mr. ARERrEEN. Wash Hughes. July 24. (Spe- SUIT OVER COFFINS HEARD Dispute Is About Number of Days Allowed for Payment. The original and one carbon copy of a sales slip for the purchase of coffins, totaling in value $336, from the Spring field Metallic Casket Company show the time given for payment to be 60 days, but the copy held by the E. E. Ericson undertaking concern shows the time to be 360 days, the "3" being written in pencil, it is said. The defense in the suit brought to collect the 336, which went on trial before Circuit Judge Gatens yesterday, was that the time limit of 360 days was not up, on one count, and that the goods were shipped on consignment, on another count. The case was taken under consideration by Judge Gatens. Klamath Commissioner Xamed. ' KLAMATH FALLS, Or., July 24. special.) William M. Duncan has re ceived the appointment as United States Commissioner at this point from .Federal Judge Bean. Mr. Duncan suc ceeds Charles J. Ferguson, who recent ly resigned. There is a large amount Good Baking Improved In Lightness, Texture. Taste and Wholesome ness by Us ins Arrange with your grocer to alwavs supply you with CRESCBST. It is the best by every test. 25e POUND CAN. Crescent Mfg. Co, Seattle. Snapshots By Barbara D oyd. O is Mother Philosophises on the lae of m Coffee Pot. I OME people think a coffee pot intended solely to make cof fee in," remarked Mother, as she took a large coffee boiler from a peg on the wall. "But a coffee pot is really my favorite cooking utensil, only I wish it was made in a more convenient form than it is at present." "What are you going to cook in it?' asked her Stenographer-Daughter-Who-Is-To-Be-Married, eying her mother's actions rather curiously. It was Saturday afternoon and the office being closed, the Stenographer-Daughter was watching mother get supper. "1 am going to boil my potatoes in it." replied Mother. "I always boil my potatoes in a coffee pot- It has a more convenient handle than most cooking vessels. The spout makes pouring off the water easier, and the potatoes, keep warm in a coffee pot better than in other things, because the spout enables the steam to escape, although a lid is on. Thus the potatoes are mealy, in stead of being heavy and soggy as so many boiled potatoes are." "I have often wondered." said the Stenographer-Daughter, "why your boiled potatoes are always so much better than those I get for lunch In r Royal Coffee Cake The Healthful, Economical Breakfast Food DREAKFAST, the first meal of the day, should heap-. petizing, nourishing, satisfying. Royal Coffee Cake meets these requirements in the broadest sense. Telephone Your Grocer for a Fresh Royal Coffee Cake Thousands of discriminating Portland people are ordering ROYAL COFFE CAKE for their breakfasts every day. Your grocer carries no stock he takes your order, then tells the ROYAL BAKER how many he needs for his patrons. Delivery is made as soon as the baking is done. Be one of the lucky ones tomorrow to get a deliciously fresh Roval Coffee Cake 10c to 40c. Pi 7 '1 Big Sale of "Moosier" Kitchen At a Saving Price Which Will You Pay? Sale Prices or War Prices? This special allotment of SO Hoosier Cabi nets offered at a price much lower than they can be bought for later. Cabinets Special Credit Terms I-00 Down I-00 W $ 3EE t ti l r.:; Only a Limited Number at the Low Present Price Increased cost of raw materials has caused Hoosier prices to advance and only fifty Hoosier, which we have in stock, will be sold at a saving price to you. To be sure of getting one of these Hoosiers come before this allotment is disposed of and make your selection. Come today; some day you will get a cabinet anyway, and you can find no equal to the Hoosier. Remember, this sale is in force but one week. The entire allotment is sure to be disposed of, so be sure and select your Hoosier at once. Read About These Conveniences Don't Delay Decide Today East Market street and on East Mar ket to East Ninth street, thence to Division street, thence to East Twen tieth street and on to a connection with the present end at East Twenty-second and Powell streets. It will take about four weeks to complete this end, as a considerable portion of the track will be laid on streets on which there is hard-surfaced pavements, making prog ress somewhat slow. The company is running trains over the line from the Portland end. Its East Pide depot will be at East Third and East Clay streets, from which point it will take its passengers to the West Side by automobile. Pythlans Try for Big Class. ABERDEEN. Wash., July 24. (Spe cial.) Aberdeen Knights of Pythias are endeavoring to get a class of 100 candidates for initiation here this Win ter as a tribute to F. W. Loomis. of this city, who was elected grand chan cellor of the domain of Washington at the last grand lodge meeting. KING OF METAL POLISH M BJvieoftheflnetolI,cxintatnenoril, CLgn no immonia. nothing ioiuriou CImiui fT I nd noliuhea. Quickest of all. Imp.nrtji brarM railing and all bright metaia. PfV chiiu id two KiEv rcanrs dt a 1 1 II i J Ik . " - - Read The Oregonian classified ads. msmmmmmmimmimmmmmmmmBHmmmmmmtmamtmfmmmmmmmmmammmmmmmmmmamaKmmaet ar a a aw aa as a aa " a aa aa aa art aa tbv- at ai a w mr a a r a Bl ai ai ai a a) a) Royal Bakery and Confectionery ft I 0 t!3" I O 191 K. T. C. F. Co. "On Tuesday I can iron them Whether it rains or snows." LL of Dollv's ruffles and frills must be ironed out daintilv everv week for Dolly's Little Mother is - a dainty little miss. And she likes Kellogg's Toasted Corn Flakes, the daintiest of cereals with the flavor she loves so well. . Packed Waxtite Look for this signature. A A ad 11 I nJ s i r,U lnr n'KS Imitations come and go! They change their name, They change their form. Some do both. Kellogg's the Original Toasted Corn Flakes remain as original as ever light, and dainty, appetizing in fla vor with a melting crispness on the tongue. BBMIllBMIlWlllIllllllllllllIll I 0 A