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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 18, 1912)
THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL PORTLAND, WEDNESDAY EVENING, SEPTEMBER 18, 1912.' SWEET SIXTEEN -DAY DREAMS SCHOOLS AND COLLEGES : IN THE REALM FEMININE Events in Society It la Imperative that thaw CTBtrlhadng news for the feundnj eociaty patfe sboald bara reach tb desk of tbt society alitor not Utef : tbaa Friday whether broagbt In. mailed er tele phoned. Newa 1 alwaya moat welcome. Dot -boa wbo have af (alra early Is the week would confer a freat tator br aendlnf their . reports la aa eooo after aa peaalblo, otherwl-e . tbe , volama of late society oa Saturday sua . aeeeaaltate aomt Itema belie left over for a-- atber day, ' . , ; T e : ' ,. -' Dates on the Calendar. ' CARDS are out for a bridge which Miss Cecils O'Kellly is giving at Waverly goll club Tuesday, Sep tember 24. ' , Mrs, Curtis P. Sargent will be a .vnostess'at tea from three until flvo . tomorrow afternoon for her lsters-ln-law from San Francisco, Mrs. Cyrus Harrison (Miss Persls Sargent), ana Mrs. Mahlon Clayton, a bride, of three months. Mrs. Harrison, who has boon "spending the summer hefe, will return to her home the last, of the week and . M. and Mrs. Clayton, who arrived Bat ' urday, will leave Saturday for a visit in British Columbia before going south. Thursday evening Mrs. Sargent will en-tertaln-at taldgaXor-lnosa asalsting her , in the afternoon. v - ; V Mrs. Ralph K. Kingsbury ha planned a bridge afternoon for Friday. ' Test terday she entertained informally at tea tor a number of friends of Mrs. Richard V. Holder, who came up from Baa Francisco last week for a visit with her sister. Mrs. Charles Gray .. ..,;. . v -v.,; Here and There. Mr. and Mrs. C. Hunt Lewis arrived in Medford on Friday to be the guests of Mr. and Mrs. F. H. Hopkins. Sunday ther went to Crater lake. , Mrs. J. M. milcott is at the Kitsap Inn, Bremerton, where she expects to remain until the return of the Mary land from Japan. Mrs. Elllcott is being much entertained by her many friends at -the navy yard. - e Miss Ella Hlrsch went to Salem on Friday to be a guest at the Hotel Ma rlon for a week. e Mrs. 8. Z. Mitchell is leaving this evening for her home in New York aft er having been in Portland since the middle of July. Her son, Sidney, left last week In company with his aunt, 'Mrs. C. M. Maxwell Mrs. Mitchell and Mrs, Maxwell were tbe inspiration for a round of delightful compliments dur ing their sojourn. e e 1 Mrs. Fletcher Linn and her sister, Mrs. R. B. von KlelnSmld, are leaving tomorrow for Seattle, Mrs. Linn to re main ten days or more as the guest of Mr. and Mrs. A. S. Kerry and Mrs. von KlelnSmld to continue east to join her husband. Mrs. von KlelnSmld wa a welcome guest into the social rank during the summer months filled with many affairs planned for her pleasure. e Miss Nancy Jane Stack left last even ing for her home In Escanapa, Mich., after having been the aummerguest pf Mrs. J. R. Wiley. She came west to be THE VALUE OF By Ella Wheeler Wilcox. YDU may be happy in the thought that you are progressive. You nre Interested In every thing which can help the worlJ along. You study political economy, you be lieve in equal rights; you are a good economical housekeeper; you are a cultured woman; and you take an active part In all movements which trend to ward social betterment. But what part-are you- taking in the bringing up of your children? American children have the reputa tion abroad of appalling lllmanners. It is almost universally merited. On board a large ocean liner (the passenger list composed of many nation alities) four children at a table In the dining room were noticeable for thdir bad breeding. They were handsome chll- What Women Want to Know By Mine. S'MUle... "Superfluous hairs on face or fore arms can be Instantly and painlessly removed by a single application of a paste made by mixing delatone and water. Cover the hairs with the paste, leave -on - two minutes, wipe off, wash the surface In warm water, and the hairs are gone. ''Penciling the eyebrows is unsatis factory and unnecessary. To make them- grew-darker andMWekery gently massage with pyroxln. If applied to the lash roots with the finger tips, the lashes will grow long and silken. "Japanese women never have hair on the face or suffer from sunburn or . freckles. They seldom use face pow der., but rely almost BOlely upon a lo tion made by dissolving a package of ma vat one In a half pint of wlch hazel. Applied in the morning, this 'holds' all day and keeps the skin soft, smooth and satiny. "TOo much moisture causes the hair to lose color become dry and brittle and fall out Dry shampooing invigo rates the roots. Mix four ounces of orris root with a package of therox. Sprinkle a little of the mixture on the lien d, brush out, and the hair will be eltmn, sweot, fluffy, lustrous and easy to do up." Complexion Powder will enhance that youthful loveliness that nature ware von. and will not ahow u unsiirntly powder effect" Carmen, unlike other powders, wfll not come oa until you remove it nor will it lose its fascinating f ragrance. Carmen iaeutirely "different rtrreand narnuesa, k Deauunes ana Denents t&eskua. FUih. Whit. Pink, and Oeam from your DrupgUt of Dtpartmeui Etor$. Toilet &m fOc Carmen Cold Cream heals sad softens irritated and rough sum enow - wnite noa sucny narmiess, sm ana no. . : 3tf f ord-MUlwr Co. ' 611 Olrre Street St Levi, Ma. mm on of th Virtrienmnlria at ttia woriilfTiar of her brother, Jolyi K. Stack Jr.. and Mies Ceclle '. Wlle.y. Miss Stack spent many of the summer weeks at Gearhart with Mrs. John Daly, :, -" ' ',-':;:, e ';-;"' '.K V";'"-. ' Mrs. Frank Paxton expects to leave Portland about October S for the east. She has been a guest at - Alexandra Court for a number of weeks. Her jour ney eastward will be made by way of California where she will Visit for sev eral weeks before going on to k New Orleans. Mrs.. Paxton will not reach New York until after the holidays and in the spring she is planning to make an extensiv world tour. ; - Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Weaver arrived from San Francisco on Saturday. Mr. Weaver has gone east for a month but Mrs. Weaver will remain in Portland to be the guest of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. H. Guthrie. Mrs.. W. S. Shaw has returned! to Portland, after a delightful visit with Mrs. Chauncey Brshop In Salem. Mrs. Bishop entertained the members of the Kensington club on Monday for her guest, who was formerly & member of the organization. a a '. . Mrs. Benjamin L. Burroughs of Pen dleton is entertaining her mother, Mrs. Nellie William of Portland, Mrs. Archibald M. Myers went to Se attle oh Monday for the wedding of her sister. Miss Grace Geary, which was solemnized yesterday afternoon. Mrs. Myers has been living In Portland since her marriage a few months ago. ' 1 .'..-'." . Mrs. P. L. Cherry Is spending a few days of this week with Astoria friends. ' . Mrs. Frank Purington left Tacoma on Thursday and came down to Portland, where she will make her home. Cap tain Purington is now with the steamer Roanoke, running out of this port, a e Mrs. George Pearce was a recent guest in Salem, where she spent a week with her sister, Mrs. A. F. Brasfield. Mrs. William R. King is another Port land woman who has been visiting in Salem, e e Mrs. Alice Shannon his returned to Portland after a visit in the home of Mrs. George U. Mandigo of North. Bend, e e Mrs. John Mackie. Is enjoying a stay of a month at her Gearhart ( cottage, Klrkwood. .' . ' e e Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Krausse have re turned home, after spending a tew days with Mr. and Mrs. O. G. Brown of Salem. Rose City Park Club Meeting. Members of the Rose City Park club will give a five hundred party Friday evening in St Rose hall. They are giving a series of these affairs to help furnish the new clubhouse nearlng com pletlon. Members and friends are in vited. La Hoa Club Dance. The dances given last winter by the GOOD MANNERS dren, well dressed and carefully groomed. But' they laughed loudly, stared at neighboring tables, made audible comments upon people, whis pered and pointed, and giggled, until some- of the other passengers called the attention o the head steward to their annoying peculiarities, and they were requested to behave themselves in a seemlyv manner. These children were from America, and the' most Offensive of the four was the.Ul-ycar-old daughter .of-an American banker. They had been given gover nesses, tutors, schooling and travel benefits, but they had never, received the refined training of a wise mother. Otherwise they could not have shown such vulgar and offensive traits. Children are born mere hungry lit tle animals. They have no way ol knowing what Is good taste, and what is kind, and what Is graceful and agree able, unless they are taught by their elders. All refined manners are things of growth, from tho animal state to the higher human state. It has been a thing of slow evolution. Our remote ancestors all ate raven ously and used ttielr hands to tear food Into morsels.' They smacked their lips, and made loud sounds and drank nolBlly. They flung thair limbs about ungrace fully and picked their teeth with thorns or slivers, and they did not hesitate to slap and bite and kick one another when angry, as animals do. .. Mere conventions, mere formal cere monies, do not indicate good manners. Good manners are the result of an un selfish desire to avoid annoying others and to give pleasure to one's associated. Children should be taught these things from the time they are able to sit upon a mother's knee. They should be taught that their hands are not to pull and tear the mother's hair, or gown, or slap her face or otherwise be offensive. A little dog can be taught that he must not jump on people, and put his pawa on their laps; It requires a very short time to train the average puppy In this manner. So a 6mall child can be taught to be gentle if the mother cares to give the time and effort And as the child soon understands language, It can be trained by tender sweet coun sels to show courtesy In all the little daily matters of life. It is the habit of most American chil dren to dispute with their elders, and flatly to contradict Ih argument In European countries such a thing is al most unknown. Amerloan children command their parents to fetch and carry objects for pleasure and rarely say thank-you un less reminded. It is an easy matter to teach a Htnall child to say "pardon me, but I think you have made a mistake," where the child is confident, to an elder or a companion who has made a mis take in relating some Incident Every child has a right to, express Its opinion, that is the way childish minds expand; butwhen they say," "That's no such thing," "No you didn't either," and the parent allows the flat contradiction to pass as a proof of tbe child's smart ness, then a great American evil is being abetted. American children are rarely taught to-: listen respectfully to their elders. They whistle, sing, and interrupt, and walk away in the midst of conversation without making an apology. Boys sit in the presence of older people who stand; they rush into and out of a reom where therev Is 'conversation or muslo, with no apology, and usually unrebuked. -. ' v Proper attitudes of body, proper posi tion of growing young limbs, proper handling of table utensils, the retire ment to the private room for use of toothpick r attention to tbe person in any way these are a few of the many things which it Is the -mother's duty to teae'h'hcr children early and continually. , Good manners, without education, will pass many a man and woman through the world and Into good . society; but education without good manners will only enlarge a "human being's oppor tunity to be offensive to his fellow men, . . - t. . . . . ... . :fesss- ,y. mZZm WfimrHMi 'XawagKSfcS tVv -.5 When a gust of wind sweeps girls of the La Hoa club were so suc cessful that their friends have pre vailed upon them to give another series this season, the first of which Will be Friday evening, September 27, in Chrls tensen's. The committee on arrange ments is made up of Miss Elizabeth Cole, Miss Marie Chambers, Miss Kath erlne Gaffney, Miss Margaret Smith, Miss Henrietta Troeger, Miss Molly Mc Carthy and Miss Anna Kearns. Theatre Party Given. Phillip B. Cohen entertained with a theatre party Thursday evening for Mandell Weiss who was leaving for the University of Oregon. Others In the party were Miss Rae Hlrsh, Miss Nell Nelson and Miss Adele Weiss. The Ragtime Muse Poe Forgot This One. Mister Poe, who wrote a poem All about the bells, Surely did his best to show 'em What each clapper tells. SOme he thought seemed most regretful, Some pretended harm. But he, being quite forgetful, Missed the clock's alarm. In the early, drowsy morning, When the a'r 18 chill, Sleep is" ruined without warning One desires to kill Painfully the fiend inventive Who dull care did arm With the bell, to toll incentive, That losane alarm. Sleep is something we should treasure The clock-driven bell Cares no whit for poor man's pleasure, And its clamor fell Spoils his dreams; his soul dismaying; 1 would give a farm Could I only cease obeying That thrice Cursed alarm! COLORADO JAPANESE MOURN FOR MIKADO (United Frees Leaaed Wire.) Grand Junction, Colo., Sept It. Po lice who raided a meeting of 60 Japanese here found many of them lying on the floor, striking their heads on chairs and tables and wailing mournfully. Leaders of the- party admitted that It had been planned to draw lots to determine who would commit suicide as an expression of grief for the death of the late Mutsuhito. ' Ml Theonly BaKIngPcnvilsrmade ft W&M Heallhful M$Sil through the rose vine Sweet Sixteen, AVOID By Hlldegarde Hawthorne. THERE are a million little worries and annoyances that lie ready to spring upon and rend your con tent and happiness, if you re main down at their level and al low them the chance. I remember once how, after climbing for hours up a Swiss mountain pass, tired almost to death, with throbbing feet and aching bones, I rounded a sput of rock and suddenly came in view of a mighty peak that swept into the air star-high. The sunset glow on its snow-covered slopes gave it a strange effect of translucehce. It was unbe lievably beautiful, and as I stood there looking, silent with the great emotion it stirred In me, all my fatigue and pain slipped away I was completely rested! The big feeling had blotted out the email ones, as a wave blots out the scratches on the beach, and even when, after the glow had faded, I turned to climb the short distance that still lay between me and the little ho tel where I was to spend the night. I felt no moreweartness. It wasn't till I got to the "hoteTtHaT t " remembered how tired I was and ordered a hot bath to ward off the stiff muscles. There are few of u who haven't had the experience of looking down on a familiar neighborhood from a height Sometimes it is a hill or a mountain, and field and wood and lake, farm house and village, He spread beneath us; some times it is a tower or a skyscraper, and the crowded humming city bolls at our feet, its clash and clatter mingled to a confused roar, while beyond lie the great spaces of the sea and sky and the green of the distant country. Where- ever it may be, if we stand alone on a great height we are almost certain to have a deep feeling of peace. The ploughed field, perhaps, which we had so much difficulty In tramping over. looks like a smooth brown table; the brook, so noisy and troubled, is a silver thread" of beauty stringing the meadows together; the stony stretch that cut our feet and sizzled in the sun Is not to be distingulshed from the easy stretches of the path. Within us there are also towers and mountain heights, things of the spirit, to which we are able to climb. And it la with these as with the heights of the eartn on tneir tops is peace. In our busy lives, so crowded with her young heart burstingwitfa romance, fancies herself a real bride. WORRY worrying details, so rushed and wear ing, we need to climb these spiritual mils or ours aa often as possible. Up there we get above the vexations, the rough places, and can look down smil ing at what seemed tragic and final enougn wnen we were close to it. Don't spend a moment of your off time in fretting over the countless small annoyances of your working day. Climb right up out of their reach, where the air is clear and freeh. Keep your eyes at least on the mountain halirht. nith- ln you, and you will b rested and stlm- uiaiea insieaa oi exnaustea and dls couraged. HOOD RIVER APPLE MEN GLAD BOATS ARE TO STAY (Boeclal to Tb Journal. I Hood River, Or., Sept 18. Hood Riv er merchants and fruitgrowers are re What Is the Worth of a Piano Guarantee? f Practically every piano sold no matter by whom made or of what quality, bears some sort of a guar antee, verbal or written. Usually the cheaper the piano the more emphatic is the salesman in its praise, the more forceful his explanation of its quality and of the "guarantee" under which it is sold. (f Makers of the cheapest pianos, manufacturers whose workmanship, materials and finished product will not stand the closest scrutiny or the test of years of service seek to hide their deficiencies behind "guarantees" which cover every possible contin gency, but which, when closely analyzed, are as worthless and unstable as is the product which they cover. ,11 The best recommendation for the , t r" Ludwig Piano, the best guarantee of its quality and usefulness, lies -in the fact thatr through the great number in use in Oregon and throughout the West, through the many years of steady, honest service given, it has become known as the best medium priced, the most durable and lasting piano ever offered on the Pacific Coast. There is hardly a village or hamlet in the West that has not its Ludwig Piano, and that Ludwig is the center of admiration of the entire neighborhood. df The Ludwig is a dependable piano dependable because its makers are conscientious, earnest and honest. It is a dependable piano because every part of wood, wire, iron, steel, brass, and felt, as well as the workmanship which enters into its construction, is of the very highest quality. It is a dependable piano because it is GUARANTEED WITH A REAL GUARANTEE one that makes good and insures its quality as a never failing musical asset 1 For nearly twenty years we have been selling Ludwig pianos because we believe them to be unsur passed by any piano selling at or near their price, and surely WE KNOW THEM WELL, Ludwig pianos may be purchased on easy payments if de sired. . ' - sw.i "Victor Talking Machines and Records. SEVENTh AND MORRISON STREETS jolclng over the fact that the boats of the Open River Transportation com pany are not to be taken off the middle Columbia river run. Considering the fact that the steamboat landing is a mile from the city, the boats are lib- erally patronized. Several thousand boxes Of apples are carried by the steamers to the Portland market each year. , SCHOOLS AND COLLEGES Park Avenue and Tori Street, Portland, Or. Fall terra begins Sept. 16. New pupils are requested to register Thurs. Sept 12. Old pupils Frl, Kept IS. Collegiate, academio and elementary departments. French and German, music, art and elocution. Special at tention to younger children. For cat alogue address The Sister Superior. srrA rjtHT dhjuvm r'JL r 1 Y. 1. C. L Day and Nisht Scfcccb $500,000 PLANT 100XOURSES , 50 INSTRUCTORS ' Night gchooU Open Monday, Sept.. S3. CLASS Yte.'i mo, i A . I v ii5o.o3 ; autci name; .,....,..,., Algebra Assaying (course) ............ Apple Culture Architect. Draft 10. UK 5.00 su.ua No fea 7.&U 3.00 . eo.uo 2.oo ; .00 , 12.no 4.00 15.00 2.U0 , 2.00 , : 20.00 10.00 15.00 16.00 8.00 2.00 J. 00 ' 2.00 l ,7.00 6.00 I 10.00 1 6.00 e.oo ceo 6.00' , 7.60 I 8.00 1 20.00 , 6.00 7.0 ' 8.00 1 K nn ilUbUlllUUIlD .... . ... v. j i AA,.HHHi i . - Bible Study Bookkeeping . . . 1- I T nvym scnuui uj ............ Boys' School (Night) Bricklaying .................... Business Let ter Writing ....... . Business Law ................. Carpentry and Wood turning..... Chemistry Cost Engineering .............. Electricity ...................... English for Foreign Men ....... English Grammar and Reading,; English Grammar and Rhet.... English Literature ......... Freeiiana Drawing ...... French . Forestry and Lumbering German History .... i .................. . Xjaim Machine Design ............... Penmanship Pharmacy (course) ........... Physical and Com. Geography. Fhysics Plan Reading and Estimating.. Plumbing, Shop Practice ...... Poultry Raising No Fee i Public Speaking (course) 15.00 10.00 16.00 15.00 ' 6.00 7.60 , (.00 I 10.00 i 12.00 12.00t 6.00 - 6.00 8.00 Rm Ratate L1V Reinforced Concrete Cost Salesmanship and Adv. ......... BD&uiais Shorthand Surveying ana Mapping Show Card Wrltlna;.... Telegraphy and Dispatching V a Trigonometry Typewriting Vocal Muslo Fee for full course four month to; two years. I Call or send for free XUustratea Cats! loaroe, Fort land, Or,T. aC. O. Ju Similar schools Y. SC. O. A. Seattle, Tacoma gpo-'. kane, San rrasclaco, Oakland. Loa An- gelas. . -,r: Y,W.CjL- Fall Semester Opens October 7, 1913' JtEOISTBATTOir SXPT. 15-OCT. 7, Classes in Cooking, Serving, Sewing, Millinery, English, Elocu tion, French, Chorus Singing, Ste nography, Physical Training, S w l m m 1 n g and entirely new courses in Bible and Mission Study; Arrange for private work -wryr Oregon Agricultural College This great institution opens its door for the fall semester on September 20. i Courses of instruction include: General agriculture, agronomy, animal husband ry, dairy husbandry, bacteriology, bot-; any and plant pathology, poultry hue- ' bandry, horticulture, entomology, veter- inerary science, civil engineering, elec trical engineering, mechanical engineer- ' lng. mining engineering, highway engin eering, domestic science, domestic art, commerce, forestry, pharmacy, soology, chemistry, physics, mathematics, Eng lish language and literature, nuhi.i. speaking, modern languages, history, art, architecture, industrial pedagogy, physl' cat education,- miiitanr science and "UcV tics ana music. , Catalogue and illustrated literature mailed free on application. Address: Registrar, Oregon Agricultural college, Corvallis, Oregon. , - School Year Opens September so PORTLAND ACADEMY Corner of Montgomery and 18th. Of fice hours 8 a. m. to 12 m. Fits boys and girls for college. Graduates entr on examination Harvard. Princeton, ( Yale, Bryn Mawr, Massachusettta In-' stitute of Technology: on certificate! Amherst, Cornell, Williams, Smith, Vas sar. Weliesley, Uoucher, Reed end other colleges, and universities of the Padfia COeSt. ' TTT-r-i Well equipped laboratories in chem istry and physics. Field practice in' surveying. Departments In charsra of college-men and women. Clasalcal. sel-- entuic, moaern language, ana commer cial courses. Gymnasium under skilled . director. Track and field athletics. The i school memoes a tnorougn primary and , grammar school. Easy of access from : ail parts of the city. Catalogue on ap- plicatlon. . - " m-.a.-a..I Ji; fc . Si 71 KAir"--' hWI knuHU.HVilniaiatiAsiaapi; aM SCHOOL TOB YOTOO WOMIST Boarding and Say School Based on provisions made by legis lature 1911 for Standard Normals, accredited by the-state. ' Opens September 8, 1912. An effi cient ' corps of trained ' teachers. Large and complete Practice School. Domestic 8cience and Agriculture Departments. Music and Art For particulars address the secre tary, COITTKHT Or KOXVT SAUES, Villa Maria. Oswego, .Or. ' SCBOOXi 07 TH2 PORTLAND ART ASSOCIATION CLASSESDrawlng, Modeling, Life, Portrait, Advanced Painting, Sketch and Illustration, Composition, Design, Craft Work and 'Art Lectures. Alo Evenlne? and Children's Clusseo. Fourth year begins October 7, 1912. Studio In IJhe Museum of Art, Fifth and Taylor I I BUSINESS COLLEGE I . I 1 WASMINOTOM AWPTINTM SIS, I L i pohtlano. osaooM I JLi WRITE FOR CATALOG c kftol that Flan iouia (l4 Hill Military Acathn;y 1 rOIITL.'I. OltltfOX r-fcend for Ii'uMratexl 4.thv;is Y