TIIE SUNDAY OREGONIAX, PORTLAND, JANUARY 1 1 . 1014. CHAMPIONSHIP CAT SHOW MAY SET RECORD FOR EXHIBIT IN PORTLAND More Space Is Given for Affair This Year Than Ever Before and Number of Entries Exceeds Those of Pre- vious Displays Idea Is Borrowed From England. Ik - - -I f T BY UOUISE BRYANT. THB fourth annual championship oat show given by the Oregon Cat Club at the Meier & Frank Company's store, January 22, 23 and 24 promises to eclipse all previous ex hibits of the kind ever held In Port land. More space has been given in the store and a bigger variety of cats will make an appearance. Upon reflection one is reminded that nothing Is more up-to-date than the "vvi ii v.a.i. vuiY ua-i' yvKiifs Lilts ill un L despised and reviled of our four-footed friends, companions of satan and the allies of witched, their principal pas time being to' turn our dignified an cestors Into evil spirits, spoiling their beloved poise by putting them through such unbecoming tricks as sailing back and forth to the moon on broomsticks. But this is not true of the cats of to day. They have their clubs and their annual shows, and all the paraphernalia of a modern booster organization, and accordingly cats have risen in Import ance in the community. We borrowed the idea of holding cat shows from the English. The Crystal Palace shows have been smart events for nearly 40 years. As the King and Queen and the Prince of Wales are usually exhibitors, it naturally follows that no true English subject who possesses a cat ever allows It to re main at home during this social affair. The rivalry is so keen and the compe tition so great that whoever Is fortu nate enough to own the animal that carries off first honors can easily sell H for the price of a fairly good race horse. In Francs cats are much cherished but do not come up in standard to the English felines. Nowhere in Europe does 'one see so many of these furry creatures . sleeping In shop windows ' JL r 7 - ; t - V" ' 1 ? " ' V s f " WJ cP: To STUDY OF JOURNALISM SPREADS AMONG AMERICAN UNIVERSITIES Instructors of Young Writers Throughout Country Exchange Views at Wisconsin Meeting Standard Curri culum Not Considered Advisable Until Course Has More Thorough Tests-Oregon Class Shown to Rank High. BY ERIC W. ALLEN. Troftssor ; of Journalism, university of ... Oregon. TO discuss seriously a subject that was a common Jest no longer than ten years ago, representa tives of 18 American universities went to Madison, Wis., last month to attend the National Conference on the teach- J Ing of Journalism. Thirty-three uni-1 versities had departments or schools of Journalism or courses in journalism last year. Statistics for the current year are not yet available, but it was estimated at the conference that this number had largely Increased. The at tendance at Madison was representa tive, teachers being present from a range of territory., stretching from Minnesota to Louisiana and from New York to Oregon. For the ensuing year Dr. Taloott Williams, of Columbia University, New York City, was elected president, succeeding Dr. Willard G. Bleyer, of the University of Wisconsin. The newness of the. subject of Jour nalism in the college curriculum and the experimental character of the work up to this time gave the conference extreme importance in the minds of the teachers present. A proposal was made to appoint a committee to study the courses taught in the different univer sities and to formulate an advisory standard curriculum' for college work preparatory to a. newspaper- career. . A lively discussion resulted .In a decision that the time had not yet arrived for any codification, and that such a move ment ought to be postponed for several years at least. 4 Dlveralty of Alma Desired. It was maintained that, the diversity of aims and methods actuating the work in the - different ' schools .was highly desirable, that no school bad yet arrived at an absolutely fixed pol icy, and that it was the best policy for all that each-should continue for some time to work out its own individual theory of the proper way to teach journalism. This diversity, between the different schools was markeS, ow ing to the fact that virtually all had been started separately, with no con tiultation or co-operation with the men working- :in' any other, " and ' with no If. and on counters as one does in Paaisf Most every- restaurant - possesses a large and fat cat as an advertisement of its good food. For some unknown reason it is considered fashionable In many provinces of France to cut cats' tails quite short so that the visitor In that country seldom sees puss wearing an entire caudal appendage. The re sult is more sinister than beautiful. The cat shows of the Jardin d' Acclima tion are a regular annual feature In The first cat show of general Im portance In this country was held In body of tradition as to methods to fall back upon. The different conditions surrounding the various colleges and college communities had considerable influence. The provision for the teaching of Journalism at the University of Ore gon, and the advantages offered by the situation surrounding the university - ' fi - C- ia J ' I i EUGENE COUPLE GUESTS AT SURPRISE REUNION ON GOL DEN WEDDING ANNIVERSARY. . M 4rjy v " Nt?.v- ' MR. AND MRS. F. S. TISGLKV. EUGENE, Or., Jan. 10. (Special.) Mr. and Mrs. F. S. Tingley were the guests of honor at a surprise at their home here on .the 50th anni versary of their wedding. The surprise began when their children ar rived unannounced from distant cities. Then, followed the "wedding" and the wedding dinner. The .ring ceremony was- used.' H. S. Cham pie, of Olympia, Wash., officiated. A feature of the ceremony was a time limitation, the minister gravely pledging them' to .another 59 years of devotion and love. i' ; . . The couple have seven daughters and a son, all married. There are 15 grandchildren and five . great-grandchildren. -1 i i i - - ; -. i wfe,, - t - ' a - - ' Madison Square Garden, New York, in May, 1895. The next year the American Cat Association was formed, under -whose auspices the local Portland show Is given. The largest and most suc cessful cat club In the United States Is the' Beresford Club, of Chicago. Mrs. Elbert Besse Is the president of that club and also the secretary of the American Cat Association. Mrs. Besse will Judge the show . given here this month. She judges five other shows on her Western trip, the others being held in Seattle, Victoria, Sapramento and Oakland. ' - One pf the new features of the show will' be a contest for the most popular cat, to be voted on by the visitors. Fifty silver cups will be given and about. 40 other premioums are offered. There will be no admission fee. seemed to compare favorably with those of almost any other school. Only Columbia University and : the Univer sity , of Missouri' seemed to have a definite numerical advantage in in structional force, and the laboratory advantages 'off ered "by. the courtesy of the' Eugene Register and Daily Guard were conceded to be of a highly prao- tical and effective kind, scarcely to be equalled among the other universities for adaptability to the purposes of in struction, having neither the amateur ishness of the purely campus paper, nor the unavailability of the metro politan journal, Oreos Attendance Good. This comparison is made in the ab sence of definite statistics and is based on various statements made at the con ference, on the train that carried sev eral of the teachers to Chicago, and on visits to different universities. In point of number of students studying Journalism, a fair estimate on present Information would place the University of Oregon about fourth or fifth among the universities and colleges of the United States, while if the large class at the Oregon Agricultural College, which has taken up the study. of writ ing under the direction of the depart ment should be added to the univer sity figures, Oregon's ranking in num ber of students would probably be first. This would not be a fair com parison, however, as the figures wouU Include a disproportionately large number of students who do not Intend to take up writing or publication as a profession, but wish only to acquire the ability to express themselves . clearly end in an Interesting and readable way, expecting to write something for publication only at rare Intervals. Colombia Commands Talent. The School of Journalism at Colum bia University is in New Tork City. Joseph Pulitzer's bequest of $1,000,000, with another J1,000,000 to be added next year, made it possible for the university to offer salaries sufficient to call to the new "chairs" .newspaper men of highest character and equip ment and proved success In the active field of journalism. The learned and honored editor of the Philadelphia Press, Dr. Talcott Williams, a man of broad culture, vast information, and great executive effi ciency. was called to the deanship. He surrounded himself with a faculty which evidently holds the confidence and respect of the newspapermen of New Tork. They are all men of met ropolitan experience and training. They look upon their problem as that of training men for the metropolitan field, and this, to a large extent, involves placing the gre.at, if not the exclusive emphasis, on the work of the reporter or of the hired editorial writer. Kansas Trains Manasera. If Columbia trains reporters, Kansas goes to the other extreme and alms to train newspaper owners. Mr. Thorpe's work in Kansas has been largely in the direction of formulation of better business methods for the small shop and office. The student paper at Law. rence is said to be a model of up-to-date cost accounting. The editors know every day as the paper goes to press Just what is the profit or loss for that clay to the fraction of a cent, they know the exact point at which an advertise ment begins to cost more than it is worth, they figure out with great exact ness just what a subscription costs, and what is its value as an asset, and the work of the school is to inculcate the principles of clean, effective, profitable business, without neglecting the other phases of journalism. One of the oldest and most successful schools of journalism is that at the Uni versity of Missouri. The instructors here seem to have their eyes set on neither the cog in the great metropoli tan machine nor on the owner-pub- lisher-editor of the smallest type of paper, but on the editorial executive. the man who rises from the "street" and takes a "desk" and becomes re sponsible in a greater or less decree for the conduct of a moderate-sized paper without necessarily either becoming owner-publisner or remaining essen tially a writer. Missouri students have nad great suc cess in the active field. The Kansas City offices are filled with them, St. Louis, at first slow to accept college trained "Journalists" now has 25. they are making good by the -dozens in the smaller cities of the Middle West, and the desk of Dean Walter Williams al ways has upon it applications from city editors who want him to recommend a graduate, either unattached or who can be hired away from some other paper Dy tne oner or a higher salary. The University of Missouri Is nrob ably the only school that has taken over the college paper and built up Its instruction on tnis as a base. . The Unl. verslty MissouTian covers not only uni versity, but city news, and has a com plete telegraph service. It is in active competition with two other papers in the college community of about 13,000. Casts Talks at Madison. A fourth variety of school of Journal ism is found at the University of Wis consin. It would be weii to repeat at this point that none of the schools is consciously neglecting any side of journalism, but one is emphasising one phaBe, one another. The specialty at Wisconsin seems to be that class of writing which varies from the "special story" in the Sunday supplement to the "article" in the standard magazine, in cluding "write-ups" of all kinds. What are they accomplishing? The answer is clear. The students are selling their prod uct in great quantities from day to day. W. G. Bleyer, the instructor, quotes totals of the cash receipts of his students for a year in figures so im pressive that the writer will refrain from giving them for fear his memory has added an extra thousand or two to the already large total. The University of Wisconsin and the City of Madison, the state capital, constitute a news cen ter of considerable importance for po litical and scientific news of a certain kind and the students are taught to coin this into cold cash as they go along. Money talks. The University of Pittsburg has a department of journalism that is dis tinct from the others in that its head is at the same time managing editor of a metropolitan paper, dividing his time between the campus and the sane, turn. T. R. Williams, of , the Pitts burg Press, is a thorough believer in the combination which he himself rep resents. Students are assigned to work with the reporters on the daily, and in return the copy desk of the daily has more than once filled in its spare time by correcting papers turned in by the university classes. A feature of the conference was the testimonial of respect for the value of the college course -as preparation for journalism, which came from the instructors from all parts of the coun try, most of them being practical news papermen - rather than ' professional teachers. It was agreed that a Junior was more available material for jour nalistic training than a freshman in a degree out of all proportion to the dif. ference in their ages, and that the final two years of college makes a dif ference no less notable. ST. JOHNS DEBATERS WIN Gresham High Scliool Loses on Size of Navy Argument. ST. JOHNS. Or., Jan. 10. (Special.) The first debates in the Lower Colum bia River district in the State High School Debating League were held last night. The St Johns affirmative team won a unanimous decision against Gresham. The St. Johns negative team lost to Gresham at Gresham by a 2 to 1 decision. This returns St. Johns the winner by 5 points to 8 for Gresham. The question debated was: "Resolved, That the United States should maintain a large Navy." John N. Edlefsen was chairman, and the judges were: Pro fessor Polzln, Washington High- School Professor Augur, Jefferson High School; Professor Condit, Y. M. C. A. educa tional department. The Gresham team was composed of Hazel Goger and May Dougherty. The St. Johns teams are composed of Hazel Hall, Maggie Dickie, Lulu Day ' and Catherine Gensman. Tillamook, the winner of the Astoria- Coats, Suits, Dresses, Waists are reducd. We find ourselves .with a larger stock than tune of year, and it must be that will soon be en route. Every Coat, Every Suit, Every Dress Petticoats, Waists, Furs and Skirts are included in this great Clearance Sale. A selec tion of Women's Ready-to-Wear Garments not equaled anywhere for prices given. SO SUITS To Choose From Your choice of $14.95, $16.95 and $17.50 Suits now only ; $10.00 Your choice of $29.50 $32.50- and ; $37.50 " Suits now only $19;95 $45.00, $85.00, $90.00 and $100.00 Suits V2 Price Large Suits for Corner Sixth and Alder St. Helens debate, and St. Johns will now meet to determine the district championship. 1646 AT . FARM COLLEGE 5 65 Girls Registered at Corvallis. Every State Represented. OREGON AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE, Corvallis, Or.,- Jan. 10. (Special.) At a meeting of the board of regents of the Oregon Agricultural College the following report on registration for the first semester was presented by W. A. Jensen, secretary: Number of students enrolled, exclu sive of short-course students, 1646; number of men, 1083; number of women, 563; total number enrolled first semes ter last year, 1312; increase for pres ent year, 334; per cent of increase, 20.5. The report shows further that every county in Oregon, 30 states outside of I SCOTT'S MILLS COUPLE CELEBRATE GOLDEN ANWTVER- t ' SARY OF WEDDING. f rrr: 7T7( 5 t I ' r ' M 8 - 4t & JSP- - ? I t I - ' ' 'hA I '"It i ... ! V t I v -l , -V " i t I ? ' " I 1 t ' y v - - - 4 V s. I y v - --- - - - - " I I - ' ' ' '. - - . . . y MR. AND MRS. W. C. HAMMER. I MR. AND SIRS. W. C. HAMMER. SCOTT'S MILLS. Jan. 10. (Special.) Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Hammer celebrated their golden wedding- anniversary at their fine home In Scott's Mills December 29. About SO relative and friends were pres ent, including their four children and elsrht grandchildren. The cou ple received many valuable presents. - Mr. Hammer married Sarah E. Moon In Westboro, Ohio, December 29, 1863. About 20 years ago they came to Oregon and have made Scott's Mills their home ever since then. Mr. Hammer is an old-time Bjwmill man and Is still enthusiastic over the lumber possibilities of Oregon. ' sacrificed to make room for . . Your choice $12.50, $12.95 and $13.75 Coats now $4.95 $39.50, $44.50, 1 Large Women $15.00 and $20.00 Oregon and eight foreign nations are represented in the student body. Of the 30 states represented Cali fornia furnished 96; Washington, 79; Idaho, 26; New York. 12, and Illinois, 11. AID SOCIETY HAS ELECTION MJlIarfli-Avenue Church Auxiliary Reports Successful Year. At the regular annual business meet ing of: the Aid Society of the Millard Avenue Presbyterian Church. . held at the heme of Mrs. J. F. Valentine on Thursday, the following officers were elected for the ensuing year: President, Mrs. Edna L. Shaw; vice president, Mrs. S. W. H'ickling; secre tary, Mrs. J. H. Jones; treasurer, Mrs. Eleanor LaPrance. The society has just closed the most prosperous year In itshistory, many and Petticoats - any previous season at this our immense Spring purchases 1200 COATS To Choose From. of all Your choice of all $29.50, $32.50 and $34.50 Coats now $18.85 $49.50, $55.00 to $100.00 Coats 2 Price CLOAKS AND SUITS Opposite Oregonian Building new members having been added and the treasury being in good shape. The society in addition to equipping the new kitchen in the basement of the church with a range, modern plumbing, cooking utensils, and dishes, provided the church auditorium with new pews and have aided materially in defray ing the current expenses of the church. Other needed improvements have been planned for the coming year. Dr. Rockcy Lectures. VANCOUVER, Wash., Jan. 10. (Spe cial.) The Clarke County Medical So ciety enjoyed a banquet at the St. Elmo Wednesday night, and later held a meeting in the Vancouver Commercial Club rooms. Dr. A. E. Rockey, of Port land, delivered an address on "Diag nosis," followed by discussion. All of the medical profession of the county were invited to be present. Potatoes Still In Ground. BUENA VISTA, Or., Jan. 10. (Spe cial.) Although farmers attempted to harvest the entire potato crop before the rains came, several fields havo not been dug. Iast year a dry season of about three weeks gave the grow ers sufficient time to'dtg tlirir crops, but the conditions are different. Canada exported 20,941,000 pounds of cheese in October. Money Saved by Making Your Cough Syrup at Home Takes Bnt a I-w iriomrnta, aud Ktop a Hard Cougli in m II urry - Couch medicines, as a rule, contain a laree quantity of plain syrup. Jf yon take one pint of pranulated sujrar, add pint of warm water and stir about 2 minutes, you have as good syrup aa money could buv. If you will then put 2Va ounces of Pinex (fifty cents' worth) in a. pint bottle, and' fill it up with the Sugar Syrup, you will have as much couli svrup as you could buy ready made for $2.50. Take a teaspoonful every one, two or three hours. It keeps perfectly. : You will find it one of the best cough syrups you ever used even in whooping cough. You can feel it take hold usually conquers an ordinary cough in 24 hours. It is just laxative enough, has a good tonic effect, and the taste is pleasant. It is a splendid remedy, too, for whooping cough, spasmodic croup, hoarseness and bronchial asthma. Pinex is a most vaulable concentra ted compound of Norway white pine extract, rich in guaiacol and other healing pine elements. No other prepa ration will work in this formula. This plan for making cough remedy with Pinex and Sugar Syrup is now used in more homes than any other cough remedy. The plan has often been imitated but never successfully. A guaranty of absolute satisfaction, or money promptly refunded, goes with this preparation. Your druggist has Pinex, or will get it for you. If not, send to The Pinex Co., Ft. Wayne, Jpd, A4v.