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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 17, 1912)
E OREGON DAILY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, TUESDAY EVENING, SEPTEMBE RJ7, 1912.. IN THE. REALM FEMININE Events in Society It to lKpmtlr that thomr eooMbotlns oewi for 1b! bunmy society pit.- Dnia bit ii - tcb the tfeak ef Use saricty editor out liter lain rttiity whether brought In, Bulled r tIe Khmifd. New It lw moat welcome, bat Uu lx) ha attain aarlr In the week would confer grent faeor br aendin thlr ;reporra In a" aoon after aa posalble, otherwl'! the Tolbrne of Iat tuHrl 'OB SaTOTdnf may erenltit aoma ltema being ten over lor i tber day. !..- -,. 't"?i . tv n A N ELABORATE dinner dance at the Automobile club house last evening was the charming sur prise which Will Llpman arranged In compliment to his sister, Mrs. -E, u Hlller of New York city, who Is the guest of her brother and her mother, Mrs. S. Llpman. A gorgeous clusterof American beauty roses centered the table, about which were seated the guest of honor, Mrs. S. Llpman, Mr. and Mrs. L N. Llpman, Mr. and Mrs. Marcus Tlelschner, Mr. and Mrs. Herman Meti-a-r. Mr. and Mrs. Cecil H. Bauer, Mr. and Mrs. I. L. White, Mr. and Mrs. Hen - ry W. Metzger, Mr. and Mrs. Sidney B. 'Vincent. Mrs. S. Rosner, Mrs. Isam White. Mrs. C. Fecheimer, Mrs. L. Frank. Miss Ruth Rosenfeld, Miss Florence Wolfe, Sol Rosenfeld, A. Wolfo, Dr. fJame Rosenfeld, Clarence Fox, Walter .Jtosenieia anu me nusu Interesting Guest Here. r. . Jkilam xiBiivea rcauu-JwiitD, mi men - or Balem ana-I'ortianu. nut now or new -. Tork city, Is a guest in Portland, visit ing with old-time friends. She has Just come up from the 'south, where she has been with the Chases of Oakland' and -,het stay in Oregon will extend at least 'OTer OTunwi. duo was ivr many jchib , known, as organist and choir director of the First Congregational church and or. ganlst of Temple Both IsaeL Her Ore gon friends are Justly proud of the suc cess and distinction she liaB achieved in ...New Tork the last few years since she has been making a specialty of old mu sic, using for Its presentation the harp- . Blchord. She number among" her pat ronesses many of New York's four hun 1 dred and has presented her work, not only In fashionable drawing rooms but also In the ball rooms ot New York's mart est hotels. Arthur Whiting of J Boston Is the only other one in the Country doing similar work. I iLoncheon at Motor Club. ' Th Misses Marion and Flora Bauer, jwho are leaving soon for the eaBt. shared I honors at a luncheon which Miss Gene IGNORE SCANDAL MONGERS By Winifred Black. w HAT would you do if someone told stories about you ato rlea that were not true,.ato ties that hurt you dreadfully and what if that someone ras an elderly man whom you had trusted and thought a sincere friend? Would you make him retract what he 'aid, and how would you do It T How 4hould a man ilke that be punished! j That's what a woman and her daugh- iter want to know. They have written me a letter about it. I know what I'd do, my friends. I j wouldn't pay the slightest attention in J the world to the tales the elderly per laon told about me, for the very good . reason that nobody else will pay any ttentlon to them, either, i When the elderly person told his fine ltory about you and your daughter, my (friend, all those who heard him simply -fsmlled and looked at each other and (Changed the subject. ; After he'd gone they smiled again. ( "Same old sixpence, isn't he?" they said, and that's all the affair amounted to, 'or ever will amount to. I It isn't what people say that mat ters; it Is what we do. That's impor tant, and the thing that I should do in , this particular case is to go about my i business ard forget all about the old 'man and his idiotic stories. OTmnni THE SI mm BAKING POWDER Tfee Best of the Hlgh-GraCe A woman said, "By all means buy furniture from reters; it costs less and lasts longer." This is good advice. MISSIOU FTTKaiTUBS PBOM OT7S PACTOBT to TOTTB HOME SEND POE KAIL ORDER CATALOGUE "J" ooj maer jyect. opposite oon in r. . Ctofcfes Charge Accounts Solicited Eastern Outfitting Co. t to - W A on IN UTON vieve Thompson gave yesterday at the automobile club, a charming spot for such affairs. Yellow chrysanthemums were the table decorations. The pleasure of the day was furthered with a motor trip to Latourelle in the afternoon. Miss Thompson's guests were the Misses Bau er. Mrs. S. Z. Mitchell of New York. Mrs. Rose Bloch Bauer, Mrs. Warren E. Thomas, Mrs. Beatrice Dierke and Miss Judith Scott. - ' ' Additional Patronesses. Mrs. Ralph W. Hoyt, Mrs. R. B. I.am son, Mrs. Wilson Clark, Mrs. Rose Bloch Bauer, Mrs. Frank E. Dooly, Mrs. 11. Mitchell, Mrs, A. D. Carlyle, Mrs. George Hoyt and the Misses Lewis are addi tional names added to the list of pa tronesses for the soiree musicale to be given tomorrow evening at 8:30 in the! Multnomah ballroom by Leo Charles Sparks, baritone, of Dresden. Edgar E. Coursen will preside at the piano. . Random Notes. Mrs. James Mcl. Wood Is leaving for New York today to sail for Italy, where she will spend six months furthering her art in hand wrought Jewelry. Mr. and Mrs. Edward R. Root will, leave this evening for Salt Lake. They will be gone a fortnight and will visit relatives in Stockton and San Francisco on their way back. Arthur L. Fish left last evening for an eastern trip of six weeks. Mrs. Jar vis, mother Of Mrs. Fish, who has been traveling abroad, ,has sailed from Eu rope, and will probably reach Portland this week. , She will be Joined by her to f Band to remain whUe Mr. Fish is j east Miss Constance Davis and Miss Made line Urady lert Portland a week ago, i Miss Davis to enter LaSalle Seminary and Miss Grady to attend school at Whltestone, Minn, Miss Grady was chaperoned by her aunt, Mrs. William Klrkham, and In Walla Walla Mies Da vis joined the Elliotts and went on east with them. Mrs. W. W, extended visit troit. . Vaughn has left for an with relatives near De- The engagement or Miss Mae Petros of Portland and James R. Thompson of Pendleton has been announced. e Mr. and Mrs. J..J. Qullllam left Ta coma on Thursday to make their future home in Portland. Their daughters, the A woman. I know said something ! very malicious about me to one whose good opinion I value very highly not long ago. The next time 1 met that woman I was so sweet to her that I nearly frightened her to death. She never sees me now without wondering if I've heard and what I will do when I do hear. She needn't worry. I shan't do a. ili , ..... . rest will take care of Itself. j Perhaps she understands me better than I understand myself, and dlsllke.i me for what ah sees beneath the cloak with which I may have deceived my . own soul. " ' I Well, what of that? More power to i her discernment, say 1, and more sense to my own heart to see i myself as others see me. Maybe she wasn't mischievous, after all only mmtaken. Well, If I go on being the right sort of woman she'll see her mistake and be sorry. What more do I want than that? Time, time, time what a great healer of feuds and mistakes and mlsundur- 1 standings the old fellow with the ' scythe isl Time and a little healthy forgetting will heal all the wounds, if : we'll only let them do, it. Why not try. and see how it will j turn out? mm, i ouui mvi io. Ail i nave to : vin.ir.i . i . , do I to h mTs.if; fh r,t " b.lVlrFtn a an1.ln dorado, she is full of Fop Making Muffins biscuit and all hot breakfast cakes, use Rumford Baking Powder. It not only makes them lighter, better fla vored, more tender and digestible, but it adds nutritive value to the food. Make to-morrow's breakfast cakes with do n fl(0J fl t WHOLE SOME Baking Powders No Alam t. Olds, Wortman & King. OF THE BETTER KIND 8TR E ET, ATTETmr" Misses Elsie and Louise Qullllam. will enter Reed college. Three Weddings.' Edmund W. Aikens ard Miss Florence Hunter were married Saturday afternoon at the "First rrebyterlan church. Rev. John H. Boyd officiating. The bride ta the attractive) daughter of W. F. Hunter and grand-daughter of the late Hon. Fin lay MacXelll. She is a niece of Mrs. Hans Hlrsehberger, Mrs. X. O. Burn ess and Mrs. J. C. Stuart. e .. Lenard. JCetchur and Miss Jessie IL Oadea were married Sunday evening al the home of the gro&m's aunt, 590 Laurdhurst avenue. Father Kelly offici ated. The Aub residence was beautifully decorated for the occasion. The bride wore a white lingerie frock and carried a bouquet of pink and white carnations. Roy Ketchum, the groom's brother, acted as best man. Miss Crlstal Aube, the bridesmaid, wore a gown of white silk, and carried a shower bouquet of roses. Mrs. Sullivan sang "I Love You Truly and Mr. Sullivan played the weddlnn march. After the ceremony a wedding supper was served. The wedding of Miss Bertha Pollock and Slmmlon Cogan of Washington coun ty, wus solemnized by Rev. Albeit ' Patch, of the Montavllla Baptist church, , at the home of the bride's parents on j East Stark street, Saturday evening at I halt past eight. Miss Julia Mickelson j played the wedding march and Miss .Mablo Mickelson attended the bride. John Mickelson was the best man. The ceremony was performed under a whitd floral bell In the presence of 150 guests. i A buffet supper followed. Mr. and Mrs. " cogan lert at once for their new home. On Friday evening the bride, then Miss Pollock, Was given a miscellaneous shower by a number ' of her friends. Among those present were Mr. and Mrs. F. D. Pollock, Mr. and Mrs. William iaylor, Mrs. Sada Brill, Mrs. W. H. JMilV Ml aarl'ISer! Miss Martha Gensma, Arthur Hager, Slmmlon Cogan, Fred Miller, John Mickelson and Clayton Lewis. W. C. T. U. Worker Preparing for National Convention Here in October. By L. H. Addlton. ! Miss Edna Itowun of Illinois, the tal ented Loyal Temperance Legion organ I izer and secretary of the national branch I Of th W. C. T II U hnlillnF a ...I.. children's rallies In and about the city preparatory to tlie great children's dem onstration which will take place Satur day afternoon, October 18, at the na tional convention. Miss Rcwan has a captivating manner which arrests the close attention of the children and holds them spellbound to i the end of her addresses. Just frsh Duii.iofljm laiuvaiKuuiK ill vvesi fpnm c iu.n..,Efiil .i l i . enthusiasm. Her de.sci lotion of the work in Maine, where she had 30.000 children oiganizcu as young prohibition cam paigners, was exceedingly interesting. blie declartd this young prohibition campaigners' movement to be the big- gem achievement of the century. Miss Rowan will attend the Multno mah county convention, to be held in the First Congregational church, all day tomorrow, following which she will be In lamhill county four days, and then vvasningion county. sne recently or ganized the L. T. L. in Huntington, La uranae and Moro. Mrs. Eva C. Wheeler, state secretary of the young people's branch of the W. C. T. U., epoke Sunday In Sunnyslde, Clackamas county. Mrs. Wheeler is chairman of the music committee for the convention. She will als.o conduct a morning . P. B. conferences each day at the convention at the First Presby terian church at 10 o'clock In the morn ing. The young people will do the ush ering at the convention. The Woodstock W. C. T. U. will entertain the T. P. B.'s of Oregon during the convention, The committees are all well down to working order. The slKhtsoelng com mlttee is arranging auto and trolley trips for Friday, October 18, and a spe cial trip to Salum, October 25. The pul pit supply committee report requests for speakers are coming In from all quar ters. Special arrangements are being made for a serlus of conference lunches to be hold during the noon hour. Con ferences of the departments will be held In the First Presbyterian church, iwtlttli .nd Alder streets HIKER LIKES OREGON . BEST; BUYS RANCH H. B. Lovelace, a cross-country hiker, who Is now on his way to Bangor, Me., from San Francisco, was in Portland all night, arriving last evening and depart lug for the east early this morning, after securing a letter from Mayor Kushllght showing that ho had been In this city. Loveiuci-, who is 37 years old and traveling on a wager, walked from Macleay Blnce Sunday noon, a distance of 57 inlicH. Making an average of 25 miles a day he expects to finish his long Jaunt February 15. He left, this morning for Granger. Lovelace was once a carpenter, but abandoned the trade to become a globe trotter. He has been all over the world. Within the latt y years he has crossed the country twice, once on a bicycle and once with a team. He said that tho best locking country in the whole world, to lnin, was Oregon, and he re centiy Justified his faith with the pur chase of a 320-acre wheat ranch in Ma rion county. When he reaches Bangor he Is to be married. In case he fin ishes the wulk by February 15, he 6ays that he Is to receive $5000 from the Lantern Advertising Association. 'FARMER'S LAND IDEAS ' j MAY TURN ELECTRIC LINE j Orenco, Or., Sept. 17. Surveyors are iRgain busy finding a route for the new ; line to be built from the United Kail j ways to the Oregon Electric line. One i farmer, owning considerable DrODerty along the old survey, wants more right of way money than the railway people want to pay, so a new route Is being sought, which may make the junction point -at Mllkapsl, a mile west of Orenco. Orenco Expects 100 Pupils. Orenco, Or., Sept. 17. Schools opened yesterday. Before the end of tho week moro than u hundred pupils will have been enrolled, many of the children be ing kept out until hopplcklng Is over. It. C. Wann is principal, this being his second year as herwi of the schools. Mif s JuHaA Ilatch of Ooldendalc, Wash., is in charge o?the' Intermediate department, while Ruth Uiilman of Gar den Home has been engaged for the pri mary grades. SERIES OF RALLIES FORI CHEN SUFFRAGIST WORKING 7 f 11 ' ; Copyright by Powers Eng. Co., N. Y. Miss Alberta Hill is one of the young suffragists of New York, who was not carried away by the Bull Moose platform. She Is one of the youngest of the active workers for the suffrage movement in the country and In settling on her candidate for the presidency she se lected Wilson. She Is hard at work every day In the headquarters of the women's department of the Democratic campaign committee. w: HEN you sec will want them all. The Kutouts are colored, just as if they were alive. They have both fronts and backs. When'you cut them out and pastcthem together they look good either going or coming. The Kutouts are several inches high, too, as big as little dolls should be. And they stand up all alone. WOMAN TELL your mothqr too that she wiU find the Woman's Home Companion jammed full of things that will interest her just as much as the Kewpies interest you things like clothes and styles and, cooking and parties and all sorts of ideas that will make life happier and better for herself and father and for you. Just send this Kewpon and. 15 cents sndlM,p' Woman's Home Companion, 381 Fourth Avenue, New York FOR . W00DR0W WILSON I l'HH !i' v the Kewpie Kutoutsyou Just ask mother for 15 cents and go to the nearest news-stand for the Woman's Home Companion or cut out and send us the Kewpie Kewpoa in the come, with the same IS cents, and you will get postpaid, the October number of the The RagtimeMuse ' Visitors. " When my Grandpa and Grandma Brown Came up to visit us in town . They brung my Cousin Bill to see The picture shows and play with ma Well, we was so late glttln' at The deepo' where they come in (hat They was a'look'n', for a car To take them, out to where we- are; - Then wa heard grandpa give a yell An' he stood wavln' his umbrell Sothat-he- motorman would atop: . And then grandma, sha give a hop Into the middle of the track . And stood an' waved the street, car . backf It stopped an' stood there like a rock Right In the middle of the block! They climbed upon the platform, and The motorman reached out-his hand And help up grandma, with a grin, 'For we dould catch it, though we tried, nwu iiivn viio ittui vii n gin So they got home and was inside When we got there, and, say, by jlngs! My grandma was a-cookin' things! Now grandpa and grandma enjoy The city like a girl and boyr And they Just, do the queerest things, ... For grandma always works an' sings, And grandpa eats red apples there On the front porch, to get the air. And mother's neighbor, cross the way, Says they'se as sweet as fields in May. COOK QUARRELS WITH, THEN MURDERS FIREMAN (Special to The Journal.) , Ellensburg, Wash., Sept. 17. A. C. Barnsteader, a cook for the Milwaukee railroad at South Cle Elum, killed A, B." Miller, bunkhouse man for the Murphy system, Sunday. Miller had charge of the boiler In the bunkhouse and Is al leged had neglected to keep'th fire up so that there was no hot water when Barnsteader wanted to take' a 'bath. Words were passed and It la alleged that Miller called Barnsteader vile names. Barnsteader then drew a pocket You will find them in the October number of the Woman's Home Companion. More Kewpies every month, and Dotty Darling, who is a beautiful little doll girl, Dotty's Baby Brother, and clothes for Dotty Darling too. Rose O'Neill, the famous artist, makes the Kewpie Kutouts. Don't you want to play with them? You can have them. S HOME Ag.flOrN knife and ' stabbed Miller la th lefli side. Miller ran from the building-, 3 feet. I fell and died. Barnsteader mad no attempt , to escape and ; wa . taken. Into custody by Special Affent -.John Hurley. Miller was about 80 years of age and leaves a wife and three chil dren. An inquest will "be bald tonight in Cle Elum. Manufactured only ly lAiMES PYLE & SONS. New Yorl ECZEMA Itching or Psoriasis Poison Oak Use Blanehard's ficlema lotloa ootd by Dragglsts. PBEE diagnosis, instruction and ad vice by C. E. Blanchard, at 231 6th St., Portland. He will also state how tho disease will act and disappear under ths use of this lotion. Call from 1 to 7 n. in., or write for symptom blank. Kewpie Kewpon 127 Woman's Home Companion 381 Fourth Avenue, New York Here Is 1 $ centi. Please hurry the October Woman's Home Companion to me, con taining the tint of the Kewpie Kutouts. ITS. fflffcrr ii i m-m nil i ii i tx 1