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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (May 2, 1918)
TITE MOUSING OREGOXIAN. TIIUIISDAT, MAT 2, 1918. MEDICAL SCHOOL SCENE AT DEDICATION OF FIRST UNIT OF NEW UNIVERSITY OF OREGON MEDICAL SCHOOL YESTERDAY. IT DEDICATED Governor Lays Cornerstone. Distinguished Oregonians at v Impressive Ceremony. UNIVERSITY WORK PRAISED Speakers Emphiilw Jfeed of Cen-I tralUlng Medical Activities) of Stale at Xnr Ctmpai on Marqnara Hill. . .V V v, . - . V .,'.!-: ;'-;.: J. to-J J . t t NEWSBOY 'SUPES' FEATURE Herald of a new day la medical edu catloa lo Oregon, the first unit of the Vnlverstty of Ortfoo medical school croup oa Marquam Hill wu dedicated ysaterday afternoon with Impressive ceremonies surrounding the laying of the cornerstone by Governor Withy corabe. Development of tha single nnlt Into tha (durational and hospital arou p for which tt atta waa given wu stressed by try speaker aa a need of th immediate future. . Tba exercises were attended by sot- ral hundred, including physicians and their wives, atudeata of tha medical school and friends of tba Institution, "ho were carried up to tba Imposing location of tba new school, above Ter wtUucer boulevard, mora than to feet above the city, la aatoe furnlahed largely by members of tba medical pro Session. Real PrefTfx Achieved. The occaaion waa made one of mln fled felicitation on what baa already en accomplished toward tba estab lishment of a great Northwesters med ical ceater aad of looking forward to tha fruition of tba whole plan. Credit for the achievement waa laid by Gov ernor W I thy com be and other apaakera o Dr. Kenneth A. J. Msckensle, dean f the school, aad to J. IX Carrel), who, as president of tha Oregon-Washington Railroad at Navigation Company, bad much to do with tba obtaining of the artft of tba Zl-acra aite overlooking- the city. Dr. Ernest H. Llndley. psychologist, president of tba University of Idaho. In delivering the oration of tba day. em phasised tba leading part played by science In tha world of tba future. whose beginning can be held to data BT LEONE CASS BAER. from tha opening of the arrest war. I Carefree and bappy. unfettered atom- After characterising- the building aa ialacha, nndecorated aave aa heaven made iarae measure a monument to "the da-1 'era, large ezpanaea of bona and ehoul votlon and persistence of a treat med-lder bladea and waving legs and toss Seal man. Dr. Mackenzie. Ir. Llndley ling arnvs labored laboriously In tha -went on to emphasis the necessity fori causa of art by way of the Monsoor the grouping of hospitals and clinical I Ivan da Marcel route at tha Helllg laat facllitlea around tba educational build-1 night. It hae remained for Ivan, who an. I la long on temperament and teeth and -The best medical training- ha aald. I short on clothea and horee sense, to "requires a wealth of clinical material. I rive oa an Idea of the first little vam- Tnis can only be served by hospitals, plre man. Zieside Instruction and tba .clinical at- He la a claaslo dancer of the species mosphere are absolutely necessary to that cavorte around In little red paatlea the right training of tha modern phy- and laced blouses, kicking hither and aician. no aa-rocatea ue grouping" orithltber like a reckless fawn and aquirm pubiic hospital XaclllUea around thai tna; hla vereatlle arma Ilka a naughty. ; : : V-iL L VAMP IN CAVORTS mW' - V- j jr V r , v , x f a , ' '" - s - J Ivan Marcel Shows How An- K h ' i ' f . ' cient Egypt Danced. : '..' - U '"" ; ir . ' . I i ': I '- jt , i . - p. K ; :. : ; Ni'S&J" " if t I ii "I i iiiiii ilr- - 1 i St lis il ' " " i ni Ivan, la Abbreviated Costnme, Sows Imaginary Grain In Imaginary Field and Djinc Cleopatra Wrljfcles on Conch. Inedical school. Cheap Edaesrtlaa Fatal. "A cheap medical education. aald Dr. XJndler. "mesne a fat graveyard. Time waa when the people did not demand much of tha doctors, but that time la p-ilng. "Health la now recognised aa a so cial thing, and I am reminded that aomeone haa aald. 'for every caaa of typhoid fever someone ought to be tanged.' Practice of other states la Providing free medical treatment to their poor As. (At Left) W. K. Newell and (Right) Ooveraor James Wlthyeombe, Lay. las the Coraerateae la Place. Below Dr. Ernest II. Ltndley. President of the Laivemty el Idaho, he Blade the Prlaeisal Address. DANCER IN CUSTODY van de Marcel Charged With False Advertising. waa commended to tha consideration of Oregon, with tha State Medical -school ut tgyptlenne nroarammed aa the canter of tha system. I heralded In copy that would make P. W. K. Newell, recent of tha ual-1 Baraum turn over In hla Brave If versity. declared la hla abort address I could read It. Just why Ivan went to that with proper support tha medical I muco trouoie ana expense la a prob school can ba made Into tha Johns Hon-1 lam. kins of tba West. 11a azpreaaed thel It aa called Cleopatra, and waa In gratitude of tha university to the O.-W.l three acta, and I think they got the acts ji. a .1. tympany lor its girt ei ue I miae-a ana put on the third one first. A atta. and urged that the state aad thai lot of folk didn't know the difference, county get together for the establish-1 Ivan's Introduction to os came by way HClll ui mniiiuui wijuiuius u w lutovi Attention waa directed also by air. naughty snake. Juat why ha couldn't let well enough alooe and confine hla art to teaching miss-nided lade who don't want to grow up to ba soldiers, or nice old women who have always cherished dreama of Being- another Pavlowa, or married glrla whose husbands don't understand their yearnings for the artistic well. Juat why Ivan didn't let well enough alone and go on tea chin a them to u,cMw.So1!: FOLLOW TO JAIL eecret. For Ivan elected to trot out bis II (advertised 100) DUDlla In "La months that Marcel has been violating: tha city ordinance and otherwise de ceiving: the public," aald Mr. English laat night, "but It waa not until today that we obtained proof of the deceptive advertisement he published last De cember. This was only one of several questionable methods Marcel has em ployed to obtain pupils for instruction in ballet dancing:. "A number of other schools of vari ous kinds and descriptions are also under investigation for similar viola tions of the city ordinance. We sus pect that several of these privately owned schools guaranteeing positions and offering; wonderful possibilities for their students are using: questionable Gray's Twenty Chesterfield Clothes We loiow you don't want to pay from $5 to $20 more later for the suit or overcoat you're going to need but that's exactly what you will have to do as soon as stocks of clothing on hand are sold out. So we say to you, buy your clothes now and save the money ' ' No man can afford to buy his clothes in any other store than Gray's if he appreciates the value of money. Because through our efficiency plan we save you half the profit you pay other stores. A look at our dis play, wth prices on suits, will convince you. Value-giving- is the magnet , that brings men to Gray's for their clothes. Other stores talk values, we give them. " Compare Grays $20 Suits Compare Grays $30 Suits With those 6old by other stores for $25 and $30. With those sold by other stores for $35 to $45. Values Will Tell M GRAY 366 Washington at West Park methods, their main purpose being to secure tha tuition fee without giving any value In return." Motorcycle and Auto Collide. , Driving- his motorcycle at a high rate of speed westward on Prescott street at 4:45 P. M.- yesterday, J. xx. Metcair collided with an auto driven by Miss Forney, of 187 East Sixteenth street North, and was thrown to the pave ment, together with his brother, G. Metcalf. who was riaing on me. rear seat of the machine. No one was in jured. The front wheel of the motor cycle was badly bent. ' The Metcalfs reside at 9 West Prescott street. LUMBERMEN TO ENTERTAIN Kansas City Attorney to Address . Western Associations. " At a Joint meeting: tomorrow even ing of members of the West Coast lum bermen's Association and the Western Pine Manufacturers' Association, Judge I C. Boyle, of Kansas City, Mo., will be guest of honor and deliver an ad dress. The visitor comes as attorney for the National Lumber Manufactur ers' Association and his message will deal with wartime activities. Secretary R. B. Allen, of the West Coast Lumbermen's Association, will ac company Judge Boyle here from Seattle. The Informal meeting In honor of the visitor will be held at the Benson Hotel. Road Contract Awarded. ASTORIA, Or., May 1. (Special.) The County Court today awarded a contract to the J. H. Tillman Company, of Portland, to widen the road from the city limits to the Matson place, a dis tance of about three miles. The road bed is to be widened to 30 feet, and graded ready for paving next Spring. The contract price is 121,307.72 and the roadmaster's estimate on the work was $21,443.30. Jewell to the great need for adequate hospital facilities to take cars of the stream of wounded soon to ba poured fcack from tha war front. "Certainly," He said. "Oregon Is not going to he be- iilnd In caring for her soldiers. ' oar stage roots. The pro gramme saia they were Egyptians sow Inc. Ivan wort a diaper and showed his teetn something awful and cut huge "" sowing imaginary grain In imaginary neid. Then be threw aU reserve to the winds and skipped about I. hi. addxe. A. C Spencer, general wlli a bowVnVarroVgT.VaYg .uosel for the Oregon-Washington of Wl4p. W4r ,',7, , C. ? . N'"5" my. h.r.".rea fofv..RaSh- cou Hallroad traced the history of the movement to obtain the atta from the railroad com pany, calling the success of that move ment a good Illustration of "what a single earnest man In a righteous and necessary cause7 may achieve by. per sistent activity. The part played by the late W. W. Cotton, former general counsel of the system, was described with appreciation. In common with the other speakers Mr. Spencer urged the co-operation of stste and county In putting the County Hospital on the site provided adjoining the medical school building. Mayor Baker, called en for a few re marks, referred to the sympathy felt by himself aa a man "with Christian Science tendencies" with the purposes of the medical school. "If we must have doctors let's by all means have good doctors. ha said. rvraear Lays Ceiaeisteae. The eserclaea closed with the actual laying of the cornerstone. In his ad dress which ended the ceremonies Gov ernor Wlthyeombe expresaed the hop that tne central Duiioing or the first arroup to be erected might be called Mackenxte HalL In honor of the father of the whole project. The Governor then grasped a trowel and began spreading the mortar for the cornerstone, which waa slowly be ing raised Into place with pulleys, others who handled the trowel were Frederick V. Holman. Mrs. George T. . Oerllnger. I'ntverstty regent: Bishop Walter Taylor Sumner, who delivered the Invocation; A. C. 6pencer. Ir. E. H. Ltndley and Dr. & JR. Joseph. These, with several other frienda of the In stitution, signed their namea on a pa per, which, with a catalogue of the In stitution and copies of tha Portland papers, was placed In the receptacle of the cornerstone. Dr. K. A. J. Mackensle presided during tnt exercises. evr Rhine Bridges "Honored." BERLIN, via London. May 1. At ths direction of Kmperor William, aaya aa official announcement Issued today, three nw Rhine bridges have been rsmd f"r the German Crown Prince, Viold Marshal von llindenburg and t;nral Ludndorff. eominea In various shades of burnt orange ana among the alx humble wor snipers i noticed my friend Scotty, who sells papers. Now I know Scotty noes not go in lor esthetlo dancing, so i wsicnea, fascinated. tenner scotty nor the five other Slaves wboae noses and eyes looked strangely familiar to ms knew what to oo with their handa or feet, and eacn aepended on the other and an agl tated female who could be seen direct mg with facial gymnastics from one of tha wings. Later I learned that ucotty bad been pressed Into service as a sop and that what he doesn anow about being a wild Slav In tgypt would fill a library. Howsver. Scotty was there, and he was as food as any or em. and better than most. The mother of on of the priestesses ioia m mat tne girl who played Cleo patra is a splendid pianist. I wished to neaven sho d played us a tune on something. . She looked Ilk a Rose Festival queen and wriggled around on a sanitary conch with a Sears-Roebuck covers on it, set In an Italian garden scene, with Chines Incense burning and a slave wearing a Japa nese robe waved a Turkish fan. If any roumi-y dui E.gypt were lert out didn't notice It. Cleopatra was tha title, but Ivan de Marcel was It. For every separation of ths curtain he was discovered facing the audience, or lying prone, exhausted ana heaving from emotion, on the floor. He wore his birthday dress with a bit of pink chiffon at Intervals where the law absolutely demands it, and his big to was painted a luscious rose color. ivsn made the play up out of his own head. The programme mentioned It. A real snake provided atmosphere for Cleopatra's death and Theda Bara win probably kill herself when she hears how grand it all was. They started the show about OLD-FASHIONED REMEDIES o clock, tha waits Were Interminable and George Jeffrey and his orchestra played wonderful music, over and over aad over, patiently and profitably, sine all of us agreed that the music Is all that kept us from sleeping. P. 8. I've Just learned that Ivan waa arrested after the show. I'm al ways out of luck. Why couldn't It have happened before the show? Grandmother's remedies compound ed from the medicinal roots and herbs of the fields are now found upon the shelves of modern drug stores la at tractive packages and are among the kt sellers In prepared medicines. Prominent smong them Is that famous old root and herb remedy, Lydla Plnk htm'i Vegetable Compound, which for thre generations has been relieving the women of America from tha worst forma of female Ills and la new con sidered tb standard remsry In Its line, Adv. Messenger Is Injured. Ralph Rayburn. (it. East Morrison street, a messenger, wss injured at o'clock last night when the bicycle on which he wss riding collided with an oil truck at Twelfth and Stark streets. AU of tha lad's teeth were knocked out. his Hps badly cut and his chin bruised, lie was brought to the Police Emer gency Hospital, where four stitches were taken in his lip. Detective Snow, who witnessed the accident, declares that Rayburn. who is 14 yeara old. was riding at a speed of about li miles an hour, and that the driver of ths oil truck stopped his ma-1 chin whea $, bOza comiajj, Ballet Performer Asserted to Have Used Photographs of Operatic Star In Furthering Own Money-Making; Scheme. Ivan de Marcel, who proreeaes to be a Russian ballet dancing Instructor. waa placed under arrest at the conclu sion of a programme of specialty dances, given under his auspices, at the Helllg- Theater last night, charged with a violation of the municipal ordinance prohibiting untrue, deceptive and mis leading advertising. Marcel was ar rested on complaint of C. W. English, secretary of the Better Business Bu reau. of the Portland Ad Club. The specific- offense charged against Marcel Is alleged to have been com mitted December SO, last, but It was not until yesterday that the Ad Clu bureau assembled sufficient evidence to warrant the issuance of a warrant. It la charged that on that date Marcel caused to be published an advertise ment which Included a photograph pur porting to be a photograph of Mod sieur Marcel and Mile, statklewlcs In Tschalkowaky's la Princeas Enchantee when, as a matter of fact. It la alleged. the photograph waa that of Lydla Soko- lova and Nicholas Kremneff, of the Met ropolltan Ballet Company, of New York City. Marcel was lodged In the City Jail. Shortly afterwards 10 or more women appeared at the polios station and at tempted to argue officers in charge out of keeping the dancer there all night. meanwhile lavishing marks of affec tion on him. On woman who kissed Marcel was among those who, when told that 1100 In cash would release the man, disappeared. Two women and one young lad, a pu plU remained at the station, and after half an hour or more of talking and telephoning, they, too, left, aaytng that they would return soon with the ball money. At 12:30 this morning a party or eight returned to the station and secured Marcel's release. The trial will be held at o'clock this morning-. we have been satisfied for several DOCTOR GIVES RECIPE FOR GRAY HAIR Well-Kaews Hew Trk Physician Gives Reels fer a Hesse-Mad Gray Hair Reaaedy. A. L. Paulson. M- D., who haa prao tlced medicine in New Tork City for many years, gave out the following recipe for home-made gray hair rem dy: "Gray, streaked or faded hair can be immediately turned black, brown or light brown, whichever shade you de- Ire. "by the following simple remedy that you can make at home: Merely get a small box of Orlex powder at any drug store. It costs only I cents and no extras to buy. Dissolve it in on ounce of water and comb It through the hair. Full direc tions for us coma in each box. "Ton need aot hesitate to use Orlex i a 1100.00 gold bond comes In each box guaranteeing the user that Orlex oea not contain silver, lead, sine, sul phur, mercury, aniline, coal-tar prod ucts or their derivatives. "It does not rub off. Is not sticky or greasy and leavea the hair fluffy. It will, make a gray-haired person look i-reutx 7.0MI 2ounser."s--AdTi I "Let's Get at the Facts ? No. 1 Starting the Subject The most interesting and important subject in Portland right now, aside from the war, is : WHAT WILL HAPPEN TO OUR CITY TRANSPORTATION SERVICE IF THE UN REGULATED JITNEYS SHOUD COME BACK? Next to that in importance is the underlying question: IF JITNEYS OPERATE, SHOULD THEY NOT BE REQUIRED TO FURNISH DEFINITE GUARANTEES OF SERVICE AND RESPONSI BILITY? If they come back, are you going to allow them to run wild? i Are you going to permit them to clutter into hopeless congestion and confusion the crowded downtown districts without compelling them to establish any reliable or dependable service of transportation in other parts of the city? Many people are also asking the question : Why should there be such an agitation for the return of the jitneys just now? ' You are also asking another important ques tion which bears directly upon the local trans portation situation and which explains why some of our opponents are so anxious to have the jitneys come back. That question is: - Why does Portland have a 6-cent fare when other cities of approximate size do not have a 6-cent fare? This is perhaps the most perplexing question "of all to the average citizen, although it should not be if you understand the conditions and circum stances which impelled the Public Service Commis sion to grant our company an increased fare. At the same time a small group of opponents is using the 6-cent fare as an excuse for endeavoring to bring the wild-cat jitneys back into operation in Portland without regard to the effect upon the general transportation problem. They merely want to do something to injure our company, and the most ready weapon in their grasp seems to be the unregulated, irresponsible and go-as-you-please jitney. We feel that you are vitally interested in know ing all the facts that have led up to the present con- . fused situation in the local transportation field. And we hope we shall be able to dispel some of this confusion and convince you that a 6-cent fare was necessary to enable this company to continue furnishing service, and, furthermore, that the wild, unregulated jitney will afford no relief what ever, but will serve only to make it infinitely more difficult for our company to maintain the quantity and quality of streetcar service which careful students declare is the equal of any streetcar service in the United States, all things considered. In this series of advertisements which begins today we shall discuss the 6-cent fare, the jitneys and various other problems that are inseparably involved in the present transportation situation. We shall do our best to clear away some of the purposely created confusion with which our oppo nents are seeking to camouflage the entire subject. And, in the name of fair play, we ask you to consider carefully the facts which we shall set forth. I (Paid Advertisement.) PORTLAND RAJLWAY, LIGHT & POWER CO.