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About The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 15, 1915)
FUDGE PARTY KIMONO IS FETCHING CREATION FOR GIRL IN COLLEGE Warf, c.P. Coat I. Provided in Model of Mixed Brow, and White Worated-Smart Party Gown Is of Pale Yellow Daphne Silk. . '. . ..... -. - ... - v.,--., ' --v - V v if ix t w- ' 3 ;u X j URi.Xv- v- V,-- HsU 7 , 1 'r i3& tf ,t 'I J J , r iv& V''-- : : J I . - .: V . a h " ' - ' " " Ir , i T V-' "vi . r ' ' - ' , .. .'. ? r- - ; : 4 I -.. . ; . - ' ' : - . X' --.- - 4 M-;Vv- COtXSGE lrl ar alwaya aupplld wltk prtty .klmeaoa or neHMi for reem wr after atodjr hoara dw atalra and en ta a faacinatlns Japaa kimea to citipt with tba Tnol attracUT rlvala. It t of prlntrd Jtuu crp with aprawliBS pink ckryaaatkemama on a pal Ulae It round. Tk wtda obU or Japan aaah. ta tl4 at th kick. klk aadr th arm aa s! rat Jap kimono ar. Th 1Ta ara truly Jap alMk wltk dp ckta la wMek may b turkd a -XI IT of anull. ehrlkcd blonin dr to tka ktart of a little maid at collcca. For 0aral arbool and rampa wear m bl. warm coat I dvlL A new model of mixed brown and wblt wonted kaa amart line bt It la non tka I'M warm and practical for all aroand csmpu im. Th fullnea L at ta plala at th aid while a wide box pleat a flat, rraceful Una down the center back. Tb coat, worn OTer a mohair trotteor frock, with amart bat and buttoned atrct boot, la auit atri for travcltna. Tb colics 'rl mut bar aa -plr coe tame or two. almpi la atyl. but oltabl for formal oreaelon. E woeially youlbral aad dainty la ona of th frock of paint yellow daphne at Ik wkick la trimmed wltk ftooaa. and cluster of purpla and yellow pansiea. At either aid, th aklrt la-extended on a hort hoop a notion favored in Pari Jot now and a rat cluiter of pnlca la caught apalnat each end of th lavender satin ajlrdle which doe not o all tb way around tba waist. Tallow sllppcra and stockings of nat ural silk match the dainty gown. $5400 of KMate Left for D03. CHICAGO. Aug. . David Ruaal Greene, wholesale druggist of Chicago, who wa killed In an automobile acci dent a faw weeks ago. leave ISvO for th car of his dog Nelll. Mr. Greene's will leave liOOO each to th Illinois Human (Uclety and the Trotectiv Order of Klka, I.odge No. 4. and direct that all " I O Ua" ur ia du him b canceled. - - ... THE STJTTOAY OIIEGONIAN, POBTLAITO. AUGUST 15, 1915. Cos? Afghan of Knitted Worsted Good for Baby. Hm Toaaawter Ever Haa To Many, aad Tkla fact Serve to Simplify Olft ProblesB. ORE uaeful . than the miie casque which most people hit on aa an eaay gift to make for the new baby, la a warm and cosy afghan of knitted worated In some dainty color. No baby ever baa too many afghana or little blankets which may be spread over the crib, tucked Into perambulator or used to wrap around the little body during the first months when all draughts and changes of temperature must be guarded against. Everything used for baby must be submitted to frequent washings and the life of a dainty blanket or afehan Is necessarily short In It pristine freshness and beauty at least there fore, tha more pretty things of th sort included In the layette, the better. Knitting is th easiest thing In the world, even a little maid of ten can acquire the art in no time and there are children of five and six who are adepts at knitting. And once the trick has been learned, the work goes with fascinating rapidity under one's fingers. A dainty baby afghan, without any problem of complicated ' stitches Is made in duplicate that is, two afghans are made, one white and the other pale pink, and the two, bound together with a strip of pink satin ribbon, make the softest, prettiest kina of a blanket for the tiny newcomer. Cast on 200 etitcnes for the length of the afghan, using number ten needles and knit until you think the afghan has sufficient width. Fifth ribs should be plenty; and this means knitting across the 200 stitches a hundred times. Bind the pink and white layers to gether with pink satin ribbon about an Inch wide and. if you like, feather stitch the ribbon as an extra touch of daintiness. Shetland wool will make the prettiest afghan of this sort. Dyeing Gray Hair Expensive and Unsatisfactory. Renewals Required Too Oftea aad Knalt la IJIplclnr Elderly W omen, by Drewlng Well, Caa Be Attractive. Ueaplte Silvered Lock. OMEN are finding that it Is the worst mistake in the world to dye gray hair. It may stave oft, the evil day of old age for a time, but sooner or later the artifice will be dis covered and every year makes It more difficult to keep hair In uniform shade. As the dyed locks grow out their ends turn yellow and this gives an unpleas ant, streaky effect when the back of the hair Is dark. More and more 'of the dye must be applied to color these faded ends as well as the sprouting gray at the roots, and as any process of this sort is expensive If anything like a satisfactory result Is to .be ob tained the coloring of the hair soon becomes rather a heavy financial burden to carry. The victim of this burden also looks well only about a week out of the three which elapses between renewals of the dye. For the flrst few days the hslr is so dark that Its recent doctoring is apparent to everybody. Then for about a week it looks really well and Its possessor rests in peace: after that the streaky ends begin to show up and in no time at all. little gray tendrils sprout at ears and temples. Gray hair is, fortunately, fashionable Just now and may be made a feature of beauty if it is well cared for and is "dressed up to be" as one woman puts it- No woman with gray hair can ufford to let herself appear In public nt less than her very best. If smartly frocked and perfectly groomed, her fta.ee blooming and smilling. she will charming and distinctive with her gray hair: but the moment she looks untidy, haggard, worried or listless, the very same gray hair will make her aa elderly and hopelessly out of the run ning. , i Smartness, rather than prettlness, should be the aim of the gray-haired woman. Her hats should be carefully elected and In her case a little ex travagance In millinery Is quite ex cusable. Whenever possible, also, she should wear a veil for straggling gray hair is always trying to the face. Veils are extremely fashionable now and the gray-haired woman should select one of the new black and white filadors or hexagon meshes, or an all-white .veil In some dainty vlnet design. Taupe veils are becoming if the hair be Iron srray. Black veils are smart with dark hair Just touched with gray. SOME MKATS 'OT APPETIZING Hot Weather Makes Difference and Light Cuts Are Best. . In hot weather heavy meats and roasts do not appeal to the appetite: light meat dishes are a welcome change. For those who like veal, a cream of veal makes a more appetizing Summer dish than the roast- Chop and pound into'small pieces one pound of veal tenderfoin, aaa an eju. amount of bread icrumbs moistened with milk, the yolk of one egg, the beaten whites of two eggs and enough milk to make a pasje. iir this mix ture well, season and po into a but tered mould. Steam it like a custard for one hour and serve with a white cream sauce. Braised Cutlets Braised cutlets served cold Is an English dish that will find favor with many in hot weather. Cut and trim the cutlets, and place them In a baking dish with the fat and trimmings and a small piece of onion, a carrot and a little turnip. Cover the dish and braise gently in the oven or on top of the stove for half an hour. When done, press the cutlets between two plates till cold, then arrange them in ha -ntrr of a nlatter and surround ih.m with a Russian salad made of cold diced vegetables, carrots, potatoes, beets and peas dressed with mayon naise. . Stewed Kidneys Scald and skin the kidneys and rub them in flour. Heat a little fat in a casserole, put In the kid neys and fry them brown. Then take them out and set them whese they will keep warm. Cut up in the caserole a small onion, fry It until brown and then add a little flour and a teaspoon of tomato sauce: add a little water and return the kidneys to the caserole. Sim mer for about an hour: then remove from the stove and add one tablespoon of sherry. Serve surrounded by ring of rice. Calves' brain croquettes Boll th brains for 20 minutes with half a tea spoon of salt, one-tablespoon of lemon Juice, three cloves, half a bay leaf and two sNces of onion. Remove from th water, cool and separate in pieces. Make a batter of half a cup of flour, one teaspoon baking powder, a quarter teaspoon salt, a quarter of a cup of milk and dash of pepper. Add the brains to this, butter and drop by tablespoonfuls Into greased muffin rings: set In a frying pan in which Is a generous amount, of oil or lard. Cook until browned on one side, then turn with a pancake turner and brown on the other side. Serve with a whit cream or a tomato sauce. Th tomato sauce Is the better. CRIPPLE'S CHECKS RETURN Man Buys Artificial Leg and Gets $71 on Worthless Paper. ST. LOUIS. Aug. S. The trade-mark r.t Rurton C Kane, who conducts an artificial limb factory at J1S North Fourth street, on an artificial left leg i. th onlv clew the police have to one-legged man who passed two checks aggregating izuu. on wnicn ne secured the artificial limb and $72 in cash from Kane. The Check passer, according to a re- wrt made to ratroiman cennaen, ten fml District, called at the factory and introduced himself as A. F. Fowler, of Washington. Ind. He deposited two checks drawn on the First National Bank of Washington. Ind., calling for S1S0 and 50. wun ivane. Kane advanced the man $72 In all on the two checks and then gave him the left leg. ben I the checks were passed through the banks, they were returned from Washington with the notation that there was no acccount in the bank to the credit of A. F. Fowler, and Kane called on the police to aid i him In locating the man. WOMEN OF STAGE, SOCIETY AND SPORT ACTIVITIES PHOTOGRAPHED Miss Helen Ridgely. One of Season's Most Beautiful Brides-Miss Marjorie Stinson, Youngest Licensed Avis - trice in World-Elsie Janis Returns From War Zone Miss Martha Hedman's Persistency Successful. i i r - f - 5 I I fTj 1 - j - I X' KSm J . X, ! u 2, x - f ' v"A . -."' ' . ." ( ' sg0z J j k i f , v " - - ' ' : x Kox -' -vTr'nk'aimsmTaiji nfTrrrnrJeTa'"'ni r rnnj - ,: i. :i-: : ; afNp . I -yN xy sv - 'i m: - Saf? P PRETTY bride of this season was Helen Ridgely Morgan, the daugh ter of Mr. and Mrs. Lancaster Morgan, of West Fifty-eighth street. New York. She was married to John H. Ballantine. Jr who was a graduate of Cornell this year. Mrs. Amelia E. Barr is 84 years old and she is engaged in writing her sixty-eighth novel. Mrs. Barr was born in England and was educated at Glas gow. She was married to Robert Barr in 1S50 and with him went to Texas in 1854. Mr. Barr and three sons died of yellow fever at Galveston in 1867. Two years later Mrs. Barr, with three daughters, removed to New York, where she began to write for periodicals and entered on her career of novel writ ing. Mrs. Barr lives at Jamaica on Long Island, and in spite of her years is active, both mentally and physically. The youngest licensed aviatrice in the world is Marjorie Stinson. of Texas. She is also the only woman member of the United States Aviators' Reserve. Miss Stinson- holds a license from the Aero Club of America. Her sister, Katherine. is also licensed. She is planning a cross-country flight to the California exposition. One of the prettiest of the younger set in New Jersey is Helen Hyde, the daughter, of Mr. and Mrs. Louis Hyde, of Plainfleld. They have a beautiful home. "Oakmont," on Mountain avenue, in that suburb of New York. Miss Hyde has been much entertained in New York the past season. Elsie Janis, the Inimitable, happy, carefree and joyous, arrived In the United States via the American steam ship St. Louis, with fresh laurels ga lore, won in England. With her she brought 31 trunks, two maids, a chauf feur, two birds and two dogs. Though she had a glorious time abroad, she was glad to get away from the war zone to start on her work in "The Missing Link," in which she is to star the com ing season. Although she never pro fessed to being a poetess, her "Where Are You. God?" was such a great suc cess that when she offered it for sale to the public, she sold so many copies that the returns ' brought $2500. This amount is to be used to alleviate the suffering of British soldiers blinded in the war. . Had It not been for the fact that Miss Martha Hedman knew how to walk and bow to read well, she never would have reached the pinnacle of success in the four years she has been In this Vividly Striped Petticoat Is Smart for Sport Skirt. Low-Belted Soldat Blue Cloth Motor Coat Is Kxeloalve Garb Felt la Soperfaablomable for Kali Hata. THE smart petticoat for wear with sport skirts Is of kersey silk In vivid stripe. These petticoats have a good flare at the ankle but at the hip they are attached to a smoothly fitting yoke and the edge Is finished simply with a deep hem. no ruffles or flounces breaking the smooth, trim line. For golf and all other out-of-door sports they are idea., since their silk texture Is so beautifuly light and the flare at the foot prevents their clinging rbout the limbs in active exercise. Tailored skirts' call for more elab orate petticoats,, and, those of pussy willow taffeta, with scant ruffles put on with cording are the most distinctive sort. AH petticoats measure two and a half to three yards at the edge now, and some of the more elaborate-danc Helen Ridgely Morgan, the daugh- war aaaaaa' I 5? - - - . v' ;: I IjmT, f sir country since she left Sweden. Re gardless of the reputation Miss Hedman had won in Sweden,- when she came to this country she was compelled to build up a new reputation, for Swedish repu tations do not count in America. Per sistently she called on the late Charles Frohman. and persistently, it is said, she was turned away. One day, so the story goes, Mr. Froh man gave her an audience to get rid of her. He told her to walk across the room, pick up a book lying on the man tel and read the first line. That she knew how to do these things properly was attested by the fact. that she was engaged. Under the Frohman manage ment, she appeared In "The Attack," in "Liberty Hall" and In "Indian Sum mer." Then she took a brief vaca tion In the movies. Nothing to do. she says, but walk up a hill, down a hill, across the fields' and draw money for this every week. ing petticoats of lace own to five and even six yards of width There is no motor coat more exclu sive, these late Summer days, than the loose, low-belted model of soldat blue cloth, with close choker collar of black velvet in military style and a double breasted front with two rows of bright nickel buttons. Lanvln brought out the first of these coats which are exceed ingly smart and youthful, with their glittering buttons and broad, low belt, almost at the hips. All motor coats for late Summer wear fall just short of the frock's edge and all frocks make generous display of the feet, showing the buttoned boot well above the ankle. Felt is the super-fashionable ma terial for early Fall headgear; not only sport hats are of felt, but ; also smart sailors and turbans for wear with tailored street suits. Lightning Hits House Twice. POTTSVILLE. Pa., Aug. 8. Dis proving the old adage that lightning never strikes twice in the same place, the home .of George Evans, on Adams street, this city, was struck for the second time within, three weeks by lightning, a few days ago. Mrs. Evans 1 t , ? i was paralyzed on the right side by the I effect of the bolt. RED PATCH ON INSTEPJLFOOT Scaly Surface. Commenced to Spread. Very Itchy. Scratched Making Spots Very Sore. HEALED BY CUTICURA SOAP AND OINTMENT "There appeared above the instep of my light foot a small red patch with a scaly surface. It commenced to spread causing me considerable Inconvenience and was very itchy. I would often forget myself and indulge in considerable scratching making the spot affected very sore. "I then began trying many different rem edies but the spot continued spreading. A Cuticura-Soap-and-Ointnient advertisement came to my notice. I sent for a free sample and I bought some more. I applied them for leas than thirty days. The eruption dis appeared and I was entirely healed." (Signed) Paris J. Cacciarl. 182 Leppard Ave., San Francisco, Cal., Jan. 1, 1915. Keep .your skin clear, scalp clean and free from dandruff, and hair live and glossy by using Cuticura Soap and Ointment. Sample Each Free by Mail With 32-p. Skin Book on request. Ad dress poct-card "Cntieura. Dept. T, Boa- . Sold throughout the world. How to Beautify a Summer Soiled Face It's really a simple matter to reno vate a face soiled by sun. winds or dirt. Ordinary mercolized wax, used like cold cream, will transtorm the worst old complexion into one of snowy whiteness and velvety softness. It lit erally peels off the outer veil of sur face skin, but so gently, gradually. there s no discomfort. The wornout skin comes off, not in patches, but evenly, in tiny particles, leaving no evidence of the treatment. The younger, healthier under-skin forming the new conrplexlon, is one of capti vating loveliness. Once ounce of mer colized wax, to be had at any drug store, is enough to remove any tanned, reddened, pimpled, freckled or blotchy skin. Apply before retiring, washing it off mornings. Manv skins wrinkle easily with every wind that blows, with heat, worry, etc. An excellent wrinkle remover, be cause it tightens the skin and strength ens relaxed muscles, is a wasn lotion made as follows: Powdered saxolite. I oz., dissolved in witcn nazei. . pi. This givca immediate results. Adv.'