THE SUNDAY OREGONIAN, PORTLAND, JULY 14. 1912. 10 wiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiir WOMEN CF WOODCRAFT TO MEB T AT THE OAKS Inrtallation of Officers WilA Be Feature of Open-air Meeting at Amuse ment Park Next Saturday V fternoon; All Oregon to Be Represented. ' Now that:the big Elks' Convention is a thing of the past we're gomg to make to 'boffatoio?Btortling bargains . in CarpetsRugs pressed vith these big values when you see 'em., Come in and let ustelk over our hberal, easy-paymg creot terms . : , We eTpSly to impress upon those visiting Elks who may have made up their minds to make Portland their home m the near future, tnat nonere in xius ciiy can tu.cj mu ouvu -. j , . . M ORG AN-A TC HLE Y FURNITURE GO. g mi mi mi iiiw 3 ' 3 69-75 GRAND AVENUE Jorner East Stark Street Ea L : I,- - . BP V 4 2..WK5.. .'. - , Xi" .T" i A i Rug Specials The big Rug Specials quoted below will give but a faint conception of he" extra-, ordinary .values , that await the wise, and prudent housekeeper here. You should see the unusually attractive assortments in both floral and rich Oriental designs, suitable for living-room, dining-' room or bedroom. Many are seamless; We can afford to sell for less money than the West Side stores, because of our economical i location. No matter what your taste may be, we can please you. . Seamless Brussels Bugs 9x12, in big variety of splendid patterns, in artistic colorings. Regular $18 f A n H ' value; this week. -. . D X TTi3 Seamless Velvet Bugs 9x12, in modern patterns, a most serviceable Rug. Reg ular value $22.50; now ? f OC erators The Best The Indiana Refrigerator ia , the best made. Preferred ;by; fruitgrowers everywhere. . ' .The ice chamber ' is of one solid .'piece of galvanized iron.- 'Provision, . chambers have 4 coats of Neal's Bak ing Enamel, and are finished with a high gloss. -: '' -" t . . . ; : , . . t Granulated cork is used for the lining, therefore it is absolutely mois-' ture proof. y. ' The - outside appearance, with handsome raised panels and superior . finish, makes it attractive to the eye. $10.50 to $60 ps , reduced to. Axminstcr j ES up-to-date patterns. Reg. $25 to $27 grades, spl 3 Axininster Bags 9x12, in a fine assortment of rf r & Furniture .'Time now to buy your hot weather furniture. Fit. up that; porch or lawn and .be cool and com-' 'fortable while others "are sweltering with; the heat.' We have a splendid ' stock of Porch and. Lawn Furniture in old hickory and maple, in the nat ural, and green colors. .. ; . - This popular line is also included : , in i our .. Mid-Summer , Specials. It 's a -money-saving opportunity you shouldn't fail to take ' advantage of. All regular prices at 10 to 30 Off BT T O IT Q Stoves f J LA 'O Ranges' - .. . 3 The superiority of Buck's- r Stoves and Ranges : is known EJ throughout the country. When you see the trade-mark "Buck's" on a stove or gas range be assured , it means perfect 3 satisfaction for life.. It also designates 5 your stove -or range as the most beauti- sa ful, convenient,' durable and economical ss made. . Thousands of pleased customers . . testify to this fact. Shall we send one 3 to your home tomorrow T You can buy 3 it on our easy-paying credit terms, if 3 desired. 5 $12.50 to $50 I 3 Body Brussels Bugs 9x12, suitable for living-7 3 room, dining-room and bedroom: $33 grade, sp'lDLJ ff J AOyU WiXWU XVUgB JJL.J.j Btuiuuu 4ua"V . signs, in1 modern colorings. Regular $50 qual-QJ QC -lty, now. FOTJRTEEN lodgres of Women of Woodcraft will hold an lnataSa - tlon of officers at the. Otfks Amusement Park next Saturday-, after noon and 14 officers will be. installed In each lodge. - The ceremony Is -declared by officers of the Women of Woodcraft to be 'the most Imposing ever presented by the order at one time ia Oregon, at no trrae haying large a ' number . of ; lodges held Joint. In stallations. " Representatives will be present from svery circle In the Northwest although with the exception of. three' oaitslde circle the Installations concern, Port land branches of the order solely. The Installation ceremonies will be sonducted by-Mrs. B. M. Summer Leach, rrand banker, who will be assisted by the following officers: Mrs. C C. Van Drsdall. grand guardian; Mrs.-J. Leach. zity organiser, and J. L. Wright, grand derk. .- : - Both the park and the large pavilion In -which the ceremonies will be held will ' be specially decorated as some thing. like 6000 members and delegates are expected to attend the ceremonies. The. ritual . is , said- to be ' especially striking. ' ; Following are the olrcles which, will participate , In the. function: Maunt Hood, " Monta villa, Oregon, Myracla, Sola; Hoyal, Multnomah, Oregon City, Astra, Oregon Grape. Rose LeaX, Sacii Jawea, Lents, Mount Scott and Van couver,. Wash. . In addition to the work of the Worn en of i Woodcraft, Prospect Camp of Woodmen of the World will also in stall officers and the crack' drill team of the Prospect Camp will be seen In an exhibition drill? All the officers to be Installed were elected last June. The arrangements for the function were made by the officers of the organ isation with T. S. Alexander, special days agent at the Oaks. - Each customer shares the $25,000 we save annually (Sr in interest and taxes because we built on East Side. 'l!IBI!lli;i!IElim Your, Credit Is Good IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIilllilllllllllllllllllllllllllH Porch Rugs Buy a Crex or a Kaba Rug for that porch; they make ideal 'coverings and are durable and handsome in design ; only $3.50 to $16.00 Pillow Specials These are gen nine goose feather Pillows ; size 21x2G, weight 3 pounds. They sell regularly at $5.00; special this week $3.75 Hot Plates, in smooth nickel, with one regular burner, one giant burner and one simmering burner; air mixtures adjustable; ' only $3.o5 Gas Plates, with 2 and 3 burners at. .' ..........$1.80 to $5.75 Gas Ovens ....$2.25 IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIilllllllH BEDHEH H0LD1EE1 Gijand Council of Oregon Lodge , Attended by 175. - NEW, OFFICERS ARE NAMED HAZAMAS HIKE IN MORN IMP TP MT. HOOD feTARTS AT 7:45 A. M. TOMORROW. Francis Benefiel . Says Camp Is In Good- Condition First Ascent to " Be Made July 1. Eeventy-five members of the Masama party ,which wil hold Its annual out ing on the north' side of Mount Hood, near Cloud Cap Inn. will leave Portland tomorrow morning at -7:60 o'clock for the camp, which has already been es tablished, i The party will begin the 10 mile walk to Camp Sheldon immediately after lunch at Parkdale,. and. should ' reach there In time for supper. ' . .Francis W. Benefiel, chairman of the euting committee, who has been at the camp for several .days, reports that the atmosphere la entirely free from haze or araoke. and that Mount St. Helens, Mount Adams and Mount Rainier are plainly seen. He also .reports . that there are. no- mosqultoes. An abundance of wood and water is to be found near the jcamp. - The . camp Is .In readiness for the . reception of members. Chef Weston, who has earned a reputation as a camp cook on previous trips with the Mazamas, will again be in charge of the commissary, : At least, two ascents of Mount Hood will be made while the Mazamas are In camp.- There will be a climb on July 19, which will be the 18th anniversary of the founding of the Mazama . Club on this mountain. In 1894. The prin cipal climb will be made on Monday, July 22, when the Mazama flag win be raised on the summit and the new box and register will be placed in position. There will also be side trrps to Eliot Olacier and other points of Interest. A. feature of the outing will be the camp fire each night, when there will be slngingr and -story-telling -and a series of theatrical stunts under the direction of Frank Branch Riley. i The .last . of the preliminary, tramps of the Mazamas will be taken this af ternoon when the members of the par ty will ro to Conemah. The start will be made at 1:30 from First and Alder streets..- From Canemah. which la at the end of 'the Oregon City carline, the walkers will proceed up the Willamette River to Coalca fiuar. Tne memDers of the party, will' take lunches with them, which. will be eaten on the return to Canemali. -' Our -Insecticide positively puts bed bugs out of business. We also make all styles o olla and floor lorav Drug CovThlrd and Ma-.son. Main 297. f sweeping ' compounds, . floor "floor spray. Phone Plummer Radical Cbanges Are M)ade Also to Constitution and Bylaws of Or der Governed on Ideas of - Eastern Indian Tribes. . One mandred and seventy-flve Red men lb-oin all over the -state met in the G.tea t Council of Oregon July 8 and 9 ' aiid elected officers and made material changes In the constitution and by3at 's. The session opened Mon day morwlng at 8 o'clock and lasted until li. ? clock at night. There were three afcpa rate sessions,, distinguished as thve mqrnlng, afternoon and night meetEngs, land the entire time was taken up r ith making radical amend ments' to tbi governing laws. Tuesday was. taken up with the election of officers and" reports of committees. ro social enterti lnments -were given. . Officers wet -e elected Tuesday as fol lows: Bert iweat, scappoose. . . great sachem: . FranV't G- Mlcelil, Roseburg, great senior i agampre; C, W. Kelly, Oregon City, ; 1 -reat Junior sagamore; L. H. Hamig. P ortlana, great cniei oi records; James ' a. ueviin, oi t-enaje-ton. great keeji er 'of wampum. Dr. Theodore Fessler was elected as great representative to the Council of the TJnited States for two years, ana vr. F. H. Vincll was nameo ior one year. The Council will be held In Charles ton, S. Septed, ber 9. , 1912. The meeting place of t ha Oregon Council for 1913 is The Dall es. There are now S500 Redmen in the, -State. The Imperial Or er or Keamen is the oldest purely A mencan praer . in existence. '. They hs.1 ' governmeni like no other people m tne woria, is modeled on the government of cer tain Eastern. Indian tribes. . Nearly all the' Redmen remained for the entire Elk convention.. All their plans for entertainment were discard ed because of the presence of the B. P. O. E. in" the city.. 0LYMP1A MAN IS PLEASED Secretary of Washington Bar Asso- elation Make Pretty Speech. Will Shaffer, Past Exalted Ruler of Olvmnla Lodge No. 188, thinks he ex presses the feeling of everyperson who visited Portland this weejc in connec tion with the Elks' Grand Lodge re union by insisting that the converse of the sentiment contained in the editorial of The Ores-onlan this morning would more aonronriately fit the occasion. "If Portland In only a small degree thinks of the Elks as the Elks think of Port, land then Indeed have the Elks earned a proud reward for the trip," said Mr. Shaffer. "The patience of the officers, the ex. treme courtesy, - the unfailing energy and affability In earing for the crowds, and the disinterestedness of every thing except that which- looked to the pleas ure of their guests, and the orderly and quiet way in which they did their work was a marvel to all who came. Portland Lodge' may have only 1400 members on Its rolls, but to the outsider it seemed es though every man, woman and child In the city thought he be longed to the local lodge and was doing everything he could to entertain us. Next to the bewilderment -of the visit ors the unbounded - hospitality, shown them is their surprise at the great number of beautiful and .happy women in thlsiclty. : Either none but beautiful women ever came here or nature her self has. made this a beauty parlor and transformed them Into the handsome creatures they are. ; . i t Mr. Shaffer has combined business with sleasure and has been making up his programme for the annual, meeting of the Washington State, Bar Associa tion, which will be held In Tacoma com mencing July 81. There will, be a two days' business session, following which a trip win be made to the top of Mount Rainier, under the auspices of the Ta coma Bar Association. Hon. W. C. Brlston. of Portland, will deliver an address on the initiative and referendum. Another prominent speak er will be Hon. Jesse B. Roote, of Butte, Mont. . i - , Mr. Shaffer Is the secretary of the It association. - I FARM WORK LAUDED "Back to Soil" Movement Is Praised by Educator. CHILD IS BEST BEGINNING X. C. Maria Speaks Before Teachers i at - CorralMa and . Extols Step ' - That . Has Been , Taken In Portland ' Contests. - In an address before the teachers' Summer short course Institute at Cor- vallis last week. N. C. Maris, of Port land, reviewed , the; Industrial work of th hnol , children throughout - the state. .',. "The back-to-the-land movement has come to star, and Ms not only state wide, but Is rapidly growing nation wide and world wide,"-said Mr. Marls. "It Is the most popular movement that has negotiated In recent years. ' ai fecting as It does the very-woof and mm f th nhvslcaL social and com mercial texture of our body politic, it Is attracting the attention of ' our eco nomic philosophers, educators ' and financiers In a. way that is Douna to revolutionize the world. "It begins with the child tne only logical place to start any great rerorm or educational movement. , It begins with the child In the homeland in the school. The secret-of i success; In this great work in. the. future, llei In , the proper correlation, of . the f Intellectual and Industrial activities of the child In the home and at school. . Farmer .Offers Agency. "While the i farmer-may hays' to pay an unjust proportion of taxes, and does not get what he is, entitled to for the labor and capital he Invests;, while he may not get what the market price Justly entitles him to for his crops, how can these and all other political evils be 'rectified than through and by an educated reading, thinking yeomanry. "The crying need of the day is more producers. -We read a great deal about the high cost -of living, and there is much speculation as to the cause of it all. The great exodus from the . farm to the city is very largely responsible. Statistics tell us that the ratio of pro ducers to. consumers has decreased BO per cent during the last 30 years. "Although with natural conditions for hogralslng In much of our territory, not excelled by any country, Oregon has for several years been' sending east of the Rocky Mountains for 85 per cent of her pork 817,000.000 to $20,000,000 go ing out of the state annually for meat that should be proaucea ai name, who million doUars' worth of pdultry and eggs were shipped into Portland alone last year from, the East, some of them coming from far-off China. - Dlsarrae I Oregon. "This is a disgrace, when Oregon has almost unequaled adaptability for the production of poultry and eggs. The same Is true of other, products which we should produce, instead of sending our money away for them, and our ed ucational system Is largely responsible for this condition. The tendency of our system has been to popularize commer cial and professional life, and to min ify agriculture and other Industrial pursuits to educate our people to be consumers' and not producers. The re sult Is that the professions are all over orowded. the country depopulated and the cities overrun with people, many of whom are idle, discontented and poorly fed and furnished. "A wonderful change can be wrought In publio school sentiment in a very short time. ' Instance the School- Chil dren's Garden Contest in the city of Portland.- , Two years ago I doubt if you could have hired a boy on any occa sion to have carrier a noe or a of Vegetables down the streets of that city. Last year the T. M. C. A. put on a. garden contest. ' This , year It was taken up by enterprising, public-spirited business men, and put on as an all-city movement. ,' ' Children Beat Medium. "In the school children's' parade at the Rose Carnival one school personi fied the garden contest. The girls wore n bonnets,' and carried ' baskets of flowers and vegetables. - The small boys wore straw hats and carried hoes and garden rakes, while the larger boys brought up' the rear with wheel-barrow loads of garden products. This was one of the most popular features of that grand parade, and a prouder buncb did not march down the streets thai day than those juvenile farmers. And everybody was proud of them, especi ally their parents. I presume you all appreciate the fact that the shortest route to the parents', heart Is through the child, and If you would popular ize a movement, the quickest way is through the children. "A spirit of rivalry Is a splendid thing to stimulate interest, activity and thor oughness, and this is accomplished among the children by holding fairs and giving prizes. And it la my belief that the more these fairs can be. lo calized the better. By holding a con test in each district, or by a few dis tricts combining to hold a contest at a convention community center. It Is brought within the reach of every fam ily and everyt child. "The social feature can be better em phasized, too, in the local fair, and is a matter of much Importance. Let the whole neighborhood turn out with their basket dinners, and make It a real country life picnic Let the children and their exhibits be the center of attraction. Pass upon and award them their prizes, and make them feel that they are really a mafjter of some im portance." . ECCLES FORFEITS $26,500 Baker County Mill Man Returns Cash and Public Land. - In compliance with an agreement en tered into in the United States Dis trict Court In the case of The United States against the Oregon Lumber Company et al, for the forfeiture of certain lands in Baker County, David Eccles yesterday paid Clerk Cannon $28,500 and gave a quit-claim, deed to 40 acres of the property in controversy. This agreement was entered into by the parties to the suit with a provl' slon that It should bare no Influenoe or effect on the criminal proceedings that are In progress against the In dividual defendants In the suit. La Grande Doctor Appointed. SALEM, Or., July 18. Dr. M. K. Hall, of La Grande, was today appointed superintendent of the Eastern Oregon branch- insane asylum by the State. Board. Dr.. Hall Is declared to be one of the ablest physicians In the state and to be a man of considerable ex-' ecutive ability. He haa served two terms as mayor of La Grande. DELEGATES TO OEJGON COUNCIL OF REDMEN, WHICH MET IN PORTLAND DURING PAST WEEK ' ' n - Vi:J) r Vl .'-.as r f r - .r , r ,m, sfn .w isn 1. I u, , T , nm -..r.. n i..n ...... , - r - . ' , Me4fortti i ft (CP '-- if 1. IJiijlLIITyBSn1 '?! W:S" ' iff ra " If V j.i - III. m , H ' l" i ' CI. " ' "' 8&2&:lr - v -.'-1 . u.-m.. w . o i.. w.-ai'A. 1. MrCrnkT. Aaterlai lj. J. Lewta. Autmst .' D. Slatcler, r-JJT-. i, r.. R.h. W . Scapvooaei F. H. Baylor, Port land l Jemea A. Devlin. Pendleton D4 F. LirROn, W. E. xaeo- VV sl reo. .v Jeicnie I'oriiuaui mr. ... bhuc-.vb9 . j -, - , J. Kelaoa. Iortland WUliam BUtgier, sirrrawii dhwh ifittl .J raw. 6. W. Wrtklasoa. Rawbanrt T. C. Lankin. Pnrtlanaii H. Rj DavtdMn. Oawegoi Elntar Stevnon W UmatlUai Otto Brnake. Portland! C. A. Lewis, MarshHeld, Mm A. Noble, Oregon Wtyj ur. . Hedford; Henry Cue, The Dalles, at orn. Tne lai lee. , Back Row, J. A. Donovan, Clataknniet Mr. Oatheart, Bakeri Al Cox, Oregon City, V. H. Ham. IF, . . . i i...o. i 1 nnaa. SenDDOOMi John A. Masters. Portland. J City George M. Orton, rprtiana, wmier l vrr "wi , . Bert West, Scappoose,. great sachem; Frank G. Micelli. Roseburg. great senior sagamore, t, Photo by Gregory. Astoria, J. H. Fltagerald, Portland, G. R. Klua-, Portland. H. I,. Thomas, Goble, K. L. McFnrland, Oregon nd -racelviiiaT the annual reports of tha. officera. . ' v' . , .- . : , ... . ... -. 1 . I . . . , W. Kelly. Ore U H. Hamig', constitution and general laws