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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (June 5, 1917)
THE MORNING OREGONIAN, TTTESDAT. JUXE 3, 1917. gramme to b given by the coterie at Z o clock tomorrow. Mrs. Robert Ber ger will speak. Miss Helia Berger will dance and Miss Eileen Yerex will sing. ...Ml SHf' HI ooooooaoooooooo ooooooooooooo cooaoaooaocooocoaooooo oooooooo o o o o M' RS. HELEN LADD CORBETT yes terday entertained with an in formal tea at her residence, com plimentary to the women delegates to the Red Cross War Council conference ' ield at the Portland Hotel yesterday. i The -women represented Washington, ' Idaho, Montana and Utah districts. , Those from Spokane Included Mrs. Thaddeus Lane. Mrs. A. Newberry and Mrs. Herman Page, wife of the Episco pal bishop of Spokane. Mrs. Robert B. Woolcott and children : left yesterday to .visit with relatives for the Summer months in Philadelphia. Miss Mary Kern was the guest of , lionor. for the charming bridgre and tea for which Mrs. Waiter Gearin was host ess yesterday. Guests were asked for . four tables of the game, and at teatime, ". about 30 additional young- matrons and Inaids joined the party. The rooms . were gaily decked with vivld-hued gar. den flowers, and the artistlcally-ap- pointed teatable was presided over by Mrs. Guy M. Standifer and Mrs. Arthur , M. Mean. They were assisted by Misses . Cornelia Stanley, Mary and Harriet Kern, Sara Patrick and Gretchen Klos- terman. Mrs. Byron E. Miller will be hostess for a similar affair this afternoon, hon oring the bride-elect. A simple and impressive ceremony '. ras solemnized at Vancouver, Wash., May 31, by the Rev. Mr. Grimes, when Marguerite Buel Agard and Edward Grover Dltlevsen were married. The couple were attended by Mrs. M. T. Chipman, of Tacoma, Wash., mother of the bride, and C. E. Braley, of Van couver, Wash. Mr. Ditlevsen is one of : the city's foremost young business men, ibeing proprietor of the Sanitary Meat Market, and Mrs. Ditlevsen will be re membered as Marguerite Chipman Agard,-whose beautiful contralto voice ' has often been heard in solo and con ; cert work. The young couple have a host of friends. I, The Girls' Progressive Club will en ' tertain with a dancing party for their . members and friends at St. . Stephen's Hall, Forty-second and East Tay lor streets, on Wednesday evening, June ' 6. The committee having charge of the affair are Clara Stamon, Catherine Fisher, Maude Davis, Alice Meehan, Theresa McGinly. The patronesses are Mrs. L. P. Morrow, Mrs. B. McMullin. ' llrs. W. J. Kelley and Mrs. D. Allman. Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Anderson and Mrs. : Anderson's mother, Mrs. C. A. Burbank, left last week for an extended trip East ' but will spend most of the time in De troit and Kalamazoo, Mich., visiting . Mr. Anderson's relatives. Among those residing In this city who have Journeyed to Los Angeles during the past week or so and registered at the Hotel Clark, Include: E. J. Chal- otrom, L. M. Scott, J. H. Scott, Mr. and i Mrs. J. B. Chaffee and Mrs. H. W. Scott. Llncoln-Garfleld Corps. No. 19, will ' frtve a silver tea In their hall. 525 : Courthouse, Friday afternoon from 2 to 6 o'clock. Mrs. Mary Brooks and Kirs. Sarah Kemp will act as hostesses. Dr. Leo RIcen, who has been in Med , ford talking to the Southern Oregon ' Dental Association over the week-end, ' has returned to town. v. Colonel and Mrs. George S. Toung, ' "Who have been stationed at the Pre Cidlo, are visiting In town with their ' eon. Harold W. Young, who has enlisted . with the engineering corps and 1 awaiting orders to join the regiment under command of Colonel Cavanaugh Mr. Toung has been recommended for captain, and will probably leave this ; "week. Miss Helen Barnes, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank C. Barnes, has joined the list of brides-elect, her engagement to A. E. Allen being announced at a charming reception given by her sister, i Mrs. Frank Colllnson, Saturday, the wedding of whom was a recent event. The bride-elect is a charming and pop - , ular girl, and a member of one of Port land's pioneer families. She has two other slaters married to well-known '- Portland men, Claude and Louis Starr. j Mrs. Louis Starr entertained for the . : young couple at a supper-dance Satur Say night in the Hoten Benson. The Wedding probably will be an event of this Summer, Mr. Allen Is a member of the firm of Bagot & Allen, commis sion brokers, and Is a popular member -of the Multnomah and other clubs of the city. Several other affalrB are be ing planned for the young folk by well- known Portland men and women. - v A wedding of Interest to a large num ber of Portland people was solemnized at La Grande, May 25, when Edna Jane Gaunt and George W. Gray were mar Tied at the Presbyterian Church, the . Rev. Mr. Clark officiating. The only : ' Attendants were the bride's niece. Ml : Ethel Hanley, and Fred Hennlng. The . bride was attired In a smart tailored eutt and chlo hat. She Is a daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. A- W. Rynearson, pioneer residents of Eastern Oregon lster of Mrs. Kate R. Hanley and Mrs I. H. Anderson, prominent matrons of Xa Grande. Sir. Gray Is employed by - the O.-W. R. & N., and is a former resi- - " dent of Walla Walla, Wash. Mr. and .... 2,itb. Gray will make their future home in La Grande. Or. At the residence of Mrs. Warren E. McCord this afternoon, society will flock to participate In the big Red Cross benefit that Mrs. McCord and her daughter. Mrs. Gustav von Eglofsteln will give. They are being assisted by Mrs. Wheelwright and Mrs. William C. Alvord In giving the card party and tea, and a number of other matrons and maids will assist about the rooms, Twenty-four tables will be arranged for the bridge players, each table being made up by one person who .In turn asked her friends to share It with her bo that the groups will be thoroughly congenial. At tea time, every one In terested In the work of the Red Cross Is Invited cordially to attend. Tea will be served from 4:30 to 6 o'clock ANOTHER MEMBER ,OF PROMINENT PORTLAND FAMILY TO BECOME ENGAGED. r E Purifies Highly antiseptic. Used as a curative agent for all extern; skin troubles. Conceals Dermanent blemishes and reduces unnatural color. Ideal for correcting reasy skins. Gouraud's Oriental Cream Send 10c for Trial Six FERTX T. HOPKINS & SON. New York 'I 11 Ml i i f ' 4 " f ' 4 (i I rr 1 I -r ' ,l V - I 4 x , . k " ' 1 6 i I J $11 Si : - 'i ' I " J ? J ' f . , f - is ! I r s . 1 r r : -" 1 f,v ' , - . . 1 h totes i-xtxmnt v 5 , i ryt 1 - - I W , "Jen: :yr Jl viz-) Members of the Portland Parent- Teacher Council are asked to remem ber the called meeting for Thursday at P. M. in the Library. The Progressive Woman's League will give a ball fend card party on the evening of June 12 in Multnomah Hotel. The proceeds will be for the Oregon Soldiers' Hospital fund. The league will elect officers tonight in the gray room of the hotel. The Political Study League will meet today at 2 o'clock in the Library, room A. Professor William F. ogDurn win speak. Miss Leona Larrabee wiu oe chairman. An address on Red Cross work- will be a feature of the meeting 01 int Presidents' Club on Thursday in me Y. W. C. A. Miss Coleman will speaK, Luncheon will be at 1 o'clock. - Trwmiirpr Parent-Teacher Associa tion will meet at 1:80 o'clock today to sew tho costumes the school girls will wear In the Rose Festival. m rnv A.tfeiv mAAHnflr of the board of the Visiting Nurse Association will be at 10 A. M. today. . Chapter N. P. E. O. Sisterhood, will meet today with Mrs. C. W. Henderson. 1766 East Morrison street. Battery "A" Auxiliary will meet In regular session tonight at 8 o clock at the home of Mrs. Clarence F. Haffen den. 445 East Fifty-eighth street (take Hawthorne car). After business Is transacted there will be a programme and social hour. All Interested In Bat tery "A" are asked to attand this meeting. Brooklyn Mother- and Teachers Club yesterday elected Mrs. William C Epps, of 712 East Eleventh street South, pres ident of the club. Other officers are: Vice-president. Mrs. Meier Klapper; treasurer. Mrs. Archie Leonard; secre tary. Miss Roma Stafford. The reports and business occupied the time. Mr. Gilbert Horton Is retiring president and has made a capable officer. Oregon Food , Campaign C OFFICIAL.) MISS HELEN BARNES. W. G. SMITH & CO. MORGAN BLDG. and VISITING CARD ENGRAYERS and a large attendance is anticipated. Tomorrow bids, fair to chronicle the most elaborate of the June social functions, when Mrs: A. E. Rockey will entertain with a garden fete and elaborate benefit for the Red Cross. The weather gives promise of being ideal for this al fresco function, which an important factor in the plans made for this party. The MacDowell Club will present a "Day In A Garden" which will Include many charming fea tures, barefoot dances, musical num bers, and the pageant will assume the proportions of an outdoor carnival. The spectators will-be seated on the terraces under the big and wonderful old cedars and the woodland nymphs their floating and diaphanous dra peries are sure to be .enchanting as they blend harmoniously with the mar velous (lower beds in the gardens. ' Trains leave at 3:40 from Fourth and Washington streets, and in order to see the pageant, it will be necessary to take this train or motor out to Rock holm. The hostess hopes that all the men of the city who possibly -can at tend, will avail themselves of this op portunity to assist In the splendid work being done by the women of Portland. Mrs. Henry Metzger"a concert to be given Saturday night at the Multnomah Hotel is attracting a great deal of at tention among society folk and lovers of music, as it will be the first ap pearance of the charming songbird since her return from New York, where he was heard in an artistic and bril liant recital. Mrs. Solomon Hirsch and the Misses Hirsch have issued invitations for their reception for Friday afternoon, at their magnificent home at the head of Washington street. It will be held from four until six o'clock, and will be among the most notable functions of the "big drive." A concert to be given In the Mount Tabor Methodist Episcopal Church to- nignt will include the following selec tions: Piano solo, by Gordon Soule: selections by sextet of Etude Club; vio lin olo, .Miss Welnstein, and imper sonations by Mr. Finley. A Tom Thumb wedding will precede the concert. - Merle and Merz Wiley, twin daugh ters of Professor and Mrs. Wiley; Earl and Leigh Holcomb. twin sons of Mr. and Mrs. S. Holcomb, are acting as principals. Other prominent, little folks of Mount Tabor are also taking pan. On Tuesday afternoon the women of the Laurelhurst Club will entertain their friends at cards. Play will com mence at 2:15 P. M. Mrs. Charles Gramm and Mrs. C. C. Bechtold will be hostesses. On Friday evening last the members of the club v held their regu lar club night at cards. The prlxewtn nera in bridge were Mrs. R. J. Streicher and Dr. R. S. Stearns and In "600" Mrs. J. M. Leiter and J. W. Mills. Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Dalton were host and host ess. Orphia Temple, No. 18, Pythian Sis ters, will have their semi-annual nomi nation and election of officers Thurs day evening, June 7, In Pythian Castle. Eleventh and Alder. All Pythian Sis ters and visiting sisters are urgently requested to be present. ' Miss Cella Gavin, of The Dalles, rave a prettily appointed dinner last week to 24 members of the younger society set, announcing the engagement of Miss Helen M. McGulre to Charles Wes ley Ersklne, of Bend. Or. The announcement came as a com plete surprise to the friends of the young couple and Is the result of romance started at the last session of the Oregon Legislature. At that time Mrs. Alexander Thompson, the only woman member of the Legislature, was accompanied by her daughter. Miss McGuire, who was very extensively en tertained In Salem during her six ; weeks' sojourn In the Capitol city. Attending the session and acting as calendar clerk was Charles W. Ers klne, a prominent young attorney o Bend. The marriage will occur toward the end of the Summer. The bride-to-be la a beautiful and popular girl and Is well known In Portland, her home for nine years be fore removing to The Dalles, six years ago. She attended the Portland pub Ho schools until she entered Hollin College, Va., where she spent two years, followed by two years at O. A. C During her school life at Holllns she became a member of the Phi Mu sorority. She Is descended from an old Southern family prominent In the political and social life of Kentucky. Mr. Ersklne is the son of Mrs. W. M, Ersklne and the late Rev. Wesley M. Ersklne, a former Methodist minister well known throughout the state. He attended the University of Ore gon, later graduating from the law de partment of Willamette University. At present he is engaged in the practice of law at Bend. A host of friends of the young couple throughout the -state are extending good wishes. Miss Harrlette Johnson has. returned from Pendleton, where she has been spending a couple of months. Miss Helen Krausse and Glen Sigel were married at a small and simple ceremony Saturday morning In the First Presbyterian Church, Rev. John H. Boyd officiating. There were no at- endants and the bride wore a smart tailleur with picturesque straw hat and a corsage of rosebuds and orchids. Miss Krausse is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Otto E. Krausse, and is a charming girl. Mr. and Mrs. Sigel are sojourning at the beach for a few days and will be at home after June 15 at the Trinity Place Apartments. The Crescendo Club will give a bene fit concert tonight, for Miss Marguerite Carney, the blind soprano. In the ball room of Multnomah Hotel. Following the concert a 'dance will close the fes tivities. Every one is urged to attend. as the benefit Is for a good cause. Women'sClubs rPi HE women of the First Congrega- JL tlonal Church have many interests to claim their attention this week. The league and many others of the church will meet this morning at 10 o'clock in the southwest corner of the auditorium of Llpman & Wolfe's eighth floor to do Red Cross work. At 7:45 o'clock tonight the Business lirls- Club will meet at the Nurses' Registry, 374 Third street, to sew. On Wednesday morning at 10 o'clock. the Aid Society and any others willing to assist will meet for emergency Red oross worn. beveral dozen articles await willing hands. Box luncheon will be In order at 1 o ciock ana tne Hostesses will serve coffee. The Silver Circle will meet .on Thurs day at 2 o'clock with Mrs. W. Lincoln Johnston, 4 91 East Forty-fifth street North. Mrs. Lillle Edwards and Mrs. Johnston will be hostesses. , As matters now stand In the Parent Teacher Councli It Is claimed by some memoers mat mere are two Dresldenta Mrs. Stephens and Mrs. Chapman. The former, it Is said, should hold office until bteptember; the latter was elect ea by the new executive board. To maKe all serene and to Insure good ieeuns xne retiring board could get together and elect Mrs. -Chapman, it has been suggested. All this so-called mix-up was caused when the cnnnpil elected a board that was not the choice or Mrs. w. I, Swank and then, last Fri day, Mrs. Swank resigned, leaving- a vacancy in the head office. Jf ernwood Parent-Teacher lmni. tion will hold election of offioers this auemoon at 3 O'clock. Dr. Fl H. Pence will address the outgoing class or me sonooi ana Franoes Wardner win give piano selections. This will oe the last meeting of the season. m m m A special meeting of the State Wont' an'a Press Club will be held -tomor row flight, room A. Librarv. Mrs Ingham will give a reception for the club later In the year. Kennedy Parent-Teacher Association will meet tomorrow at 8:16 o'clock. Highland Parent-Teacher Association will meet tonight at 8 o'clock. W, L. Finley will give a lecture on "Oregon Birds." Stereoptlcon slides will Illus trate the talk. Children must be ac companied by their parents. The "Woman's Civic Welfare Club will hold a meeting on Thursday at o'clock In room C, Library, Of artistic t and social interest in clubdom will be the "Mexican" pro- k.--mn a vHoiiltiirnl College Extension R.rvim .nd United states Department of Agriculture Co-operating.) Spotted Beetle Injnrea Beans. YOUNG bean plants just beginning to grow well are being attacked by a small, spotted beetle. This Deetle is about the size and general appear ance of a lady bird beetle, greenish yellow in color with 12 black spots on the wing covers. They usually appear In considerable numbers and feed vo raciously on the foliage, soon ragging the plant so thoroughly as to devitalize or even kill It. In addition to Deans, practically all garden and truck crops are subject to injury oy mis Deetie, Darticularly squash, cucumbers, corn and eggplant. The usual recommendation of apply ing some poison to the foliage as prac ticed for most leaf-chewing insect pests will not serve In the case of this bee tie unless supplemented by what is known as the trap-crop system. A spray or dust applied to the plant acts as more or less of a repellent and It is somewhat difficult to get the beetle to feed on treated foliage. Therefore, In order to avoid their going down below ground and eating off the stems of the plants. It is advisable to leave a few plants here and there, known as a trap crop for beetles to feed upon. and treat the rest of the field. The most practical method is. In cases where beans are to constitute the main crop, to -plant here and there through the ' bean field a few hills of squash. The beans then should be dusted with a powder consisting of sul- pur 85 parts, powdered arsenate of lead 15 parts, and the squash vines should be left untreated. The beetles then will collect on the untreated plants and may be killed by mechanical means here. Where no other crop is available as a trap, a few hills of beans here and there through the field should be sacrificed to the cause and the others treated. Generally speaking, a dust ap plication is preferable to a liquid spray, although the liquid arsenate of lead spray also is effective in prevent ing Injury by the beetles where a trap crop is present. A. 1. lovett, ento mology Dept., O. A. C. The fruit of currants and gooseber ries frequently is found infested with small white maggot. - This is the larvae of a delicate little fly, which deposits eggs under the ekin of the developing fruit. These flies are pres ent in the field when the average berry is about the size of a BB shot. They spend a period of several days in the field before beginning egg deposi tion. Should be weather remain set tled without the frequent showers of the past, it will be MjsBlble to almost entirely prevent the injury by this maggot by the application of a sweet ened poison bait for the adult fly. The following formula Is recommended: So dium arsenate, one ounce; syrup, one quart; water, three gallons. These ma terials should be mixed and applied as fine, misty spray of the consistency of dew, allowing only a few droplets to fall on each of the upper leaves of the bushes. A pint of spray should cover IhiMateim. empty- tffia mom wl a fet omlls Is odk fci this siuurture fZftf'. Vt r JS EI V IS W V IV. --49 S S- M I I I, j several bushes, as only a few drops are necessary on any one bush. A heavy spray would Injure the leaves and Is not advisable. The adult flies will lap up this poison and be killed before depositing eggs. Clear, settled weath er Is necessary for the successful use of this poisoned bait. A. L. Lovett, Entomology Dept., O. A. C. AVISON IS BEST STUDENT i : Pendleton Man Wins High Honor at University of Oregon. UNIVERSITY OF OREGON, Eugene, June 4. (Special.) According to grades compiled today by the regis trar's office for the semester just end ed, J. Bothwell AvI son. a senior in the University from Pendleton, won schol arship honors In the law school. Mr. Avison is the first regular gradu ate of the law school and completed the semester with' an all "S" and "H" card of 16 hours. Comparatively speak ing, this . is the highest record any scholar can achieve, as the work of the law school, according to Dean Hope, is more exacting in examination and gen eral work than other departments. of the Masonic fraternity and inter ment was in the Masonic Cemetery. Mr. Rambo was a member of three Masonic bodies of this city St. Johns Lodge. No. 17, Ancient. Free and Ac cepted Masons; Bayley Chapter. No. 8, Royal Arch Masons, .and Temple Com -mandery. No. 3, Knights Templar. He joined all of these orders by initiation here and had been a member several years. Mr. Rambo hsd Vn' an employe of the Hammond Lumber Company more than 25 year!. During most of this time he had lived at Mill City, but was a resident of Albany at one time a few years ago. King George has approved the pre sentation by the council of the Royal Society of a royal gold medal to Pro fessor Ernest W. Brown, of Yale Uni versity, for his investigations in astronomy. W. H. RAMBO IS BURIED Masons Conduct Services at Albany for Wreck Victim. ALBANY. Or, June 4.-(SpecIaL) The funeral of W. H. Rambo. promi nent resident of Mill City, who was killed Friday In the wreck on the Ham mond Lumber Company's logging rail road, was held here yesterday. The burial was conducted by the members Get the Round Package. Used for Century. 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