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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 21, 1915)
9 WHAT EVERY WOMAN WANTS TO KNOW ATTRACTIVE DESIGN FOR THE INDUSTRIOUS NEEDLEWOMAN DRAWN BY SARAH HALE HUNTER Women in tne Week s News What the Fair Sex Every where Is Doing. THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, SUNDAY MORNIHG, FEBRUARY 21, 1915. Chicago The "Women's Peace Par ty," as the great world-wide woman's movement for 'peace recently launched In Washington in -called, has chosen Miss Jane Addams as its first presi dent, and its headquarters for the pres ' ent are at Hull House in this city. The purpose of the organization is to enlist the efforts of allAmerican wo men in .arousing the nations of the V world jasainxt war, and it is jpidly . organizing branches in all parts of this country and affiliating by correspond ence' w,th women's peace organizations lp other countries. One huge crusade for peace which will ultimately em brace. the world is the aim of the lead ers. ,Thc party's platform includes 11 planks, the first favoring the calling of a convention of neutral nations in the Interest of an early peace in Eu rope. One of 'the first efforts of the party toward that end will be to secure the appointment, by the government of the United States of a commission of men and women with adequate ap propriation and authority to take defi nite steps toward promoting interna ' tlonal peace. A petition to congress, with signatures representing the great mass of American womanhood, is now .under way with this purpose in view. Mrs. Carrie Chapman Catt, presi dent of .the. International Woman Suf- f rage association; X3r Anna Howard Shaw and Mrs. Henry Garrison Villard of New York, were among thote prom inent In organizing the party. New Yofk The stork has Interfered with, the musical program of New York this season. Mrae, Louise Homer was .to have begun her 14th season Monday with the Metropolitan opera. If expectation of an interesting event in the family had not altered her plans. Mine. Homer Is already the mother of four lovely daughters, and a rival of Mme. Schumann-Heinck. her self the happy mother of nine, for the title of "most famous mother on the operatic stage." Washington A "Holly Madison" breakfast was the program for Mon day for the Women's National Demo cratic league, of which Mrs. William - A. Cullop of Illinois is president. Mrs. lr,.Hnl... 11 : e a . i , i . iTidiaiidii, wiiu ui 1110 vice presiuoni, and Mrs- Clark, wife of the speaker, are the guests of honor. Philadelphia. February 15 was "In gathering day" in a monster fund raising campaign now going Sh in Pennsylvania for the purpose of educating- voters to mark "yes" opposite "votes for women" on th ballot next November The women suffrage par ity's aim is to gather $100,000 for the cause. St. Louis Mrs. William Gerry Slade of New York, national president of the Daughters of 1812, presided at the un veiling of a sculptural allegory in the Jefferson Memorial, commemorating the centennial anniversary of the traa , ty of peace between Great Britain and the -United States and the patriotism of Missouri men and women of that period. Iiepresentati ve women from all parts of the state attended the ceremony Tuesday. Cincinnati Because the regular in come tax, including the supertax, for incomes of more than $40,000 have both heen doubled by the war in Great Britain, it Is estimated that th Duchess of Manchester, who recently inherite, the $10,000,000 estate of her rather, Kugene Zimmerman, will have to' pay into the British coffers $25,- 0.10 out of every $100,000 of income. This will bo in addition to the income tax on any American securities she may care to leave Invested here. Laredo. Texas Senora Carranza, whose husband. General Jesus Car ranza, Mexican leader and brother of the Constitutionalist president of Mex ico,, was recently executed by order of General Santimanez, is a refugee here. Together with Cenera Carranza, his son, Abelardo. and a member of his staff, were shot. Cincinnati "Wher do all th hair pinfl .g?7" ,s th anous query of Ohio officials, mystified by the waste in state Institutions, of that Important detail of the feminine toilette. About " a year ago the state board of admin istration bought a ton of hairpins for the femal inmates of state institu tions, fondly believing that a ton of hairpins would be enough to keep every woman in Ohio In hairpins for years. And now another request has come for hairpins. In another month or two a second ton must be forth coming. And so hairpins Is no small enigma for the colons SOME CHOICE WOODS Rosewood is the name applied to the wood of different trees In their respective countries, so the commer cial rosewood is not always the same. The rosewood of Brazil is considered the finest in every way, and is made into beautiful furniture. The myrtle tree, a common one In Palestine, Is useful because its leaves are used for sachet powders, and from it an oil is obtained which is used In perfume. The myrtle is an emblem of the Jewish feast of the passover and is mentioned several times in the Bible. It is not a large tree, for 20 feet Is usually Its maxi mum height. Ebony of the best quality comes from" fad la, Ceylon and other tropical countries, where it is obtained in logs sometimes 15 and 20 feet long. The very word .ebony means dark, and the darkness of the wood increases with the age of the tree. It is a very hard wood and hence it is desirable for fine furniture making. Its unique color. too. makes it always worthy of notice, and it was combined with ivory by the Greeks to bring out its color. Satinwood is produced both in the East and West Indies, and. indeed, an Inferior variety comes from Florida. It is another very hard wood, of fine, flight grain almost canary yellow In color. It is used for cabinet Work and nowadays very largely for the backs of hair brushes and clothes brushes. It takes a very high, satiny polish. Lignum vitae. another very .hard wood, comes also from the West In dies. It is so hard that it is useful for making pestles, pulleys and other things that require great strength It has a flavor like the h'epatica, which comes in clusters. IVot Fido's Fault. Harper's Magarine. Mrs. Haniey was greatly excited when a neighbor came in to call upon her one morning. "Just think," said she, walking over to the other end of the room, "that fellow entered in broad daylight and actually stole the clock off the manteL" "And you say your dog was in the very same room!" i "Yes, but he couldn't do anything," returned Mrs. Haniey, loftily. "Fid'o "lm only a watchdog." r I Milady to Be Checkered By Margaret Mason. 1 (Written for the United Press.) Dame Fashion's latest costume To ravish her exchequer. Has squares like a checker board. Of black and white to deck her. And though you may make game of it. Not even this will check her. New York, Feb. 20. On the square, the latest move In th game of fashion is destined to make man's wife look like a regular checkmate. At any rate, many is the modish maid bound to have a checkered career this spring if the early showing of checker board silk is any indication. Positively all the smartest frocks and suits are in that ever striking; and becoming; combination of black and white and everything is checked up against the fair wearer to beat the cubists at their own game. Naturally the checks vary in size from the tiny pink checks and shep herd plaids to the checkerboard dimen sions. These latter, being the newest and most daring of the check variety, since the smaller effects have been wished on us many; tlmea before, are therefore attracting the most popular attention. Not only Is the checkerboard silk used as a. trimming, but Is made up into whole gowns with stunning, though not exactly soothing, results. Cunning little shepherd plaid suits are rapidly taking the place of the too numerous, sand colored covert cloth ones. They ar natty and chic, are built on trig straight line with smart little hip length coats almost box in their cut. The inevitable belt, set well up under the arms, marks the omni present Empire waistline. Black and Wait Popular. A cunning little silk frock of black and white about the modest dimensions of a postage stamp is made with a full skirt pleated onto a short waisted belt of the same silk and straps of the same passing suspender-like over the shoulders of a plain tailored white pussy willow taffeta blouse. Silk sweaters are shown in this popular black and white check com bination, hats are trimmed in ribbon and silk of like ilk. purses and bags have checks without, even if they may be a bit shy of them within, and even hosiery Is breaking out rashly with an eruption of checks. In fact, the more prevalent this cheek epidemic is bound to become, the more we try to check it. By the way, have you taken the veil of the cubist ordef? All the smartest new vejlla of the Glaring .variety that TODAY'S DESIGN PILLOW SHAMS. PILLOW shams will be much more effective with this motif embroidered on them and with the initials introduced in the wreath. The flowers, leaves and dots are soUdlyrked and the stems done in the outline stitch. . The edge of the ribbon is closely buttonholedwWi n B5l5 5TM,St t0 t5eLmSideu bars are formed of stranda of S con stmched from one side to the other and buttonholed across without catching through the material which is cut away underneath.. Use mercerized cotton No. 18. mcrHl wnicn n DIRECTIONS FOR TRANSFERRING T.-J.nVreon Paper, face down, upon the material. Place the newspaper pat Li TfSi,?Ver "with a hard, sharp pencil firmly trace each line. If the L !. mi if fur' nJ,e over the Pattern and design drawn direct on the goods required g When handled in this way, impression paper, of course, will not be flow so voluminously from the tiny turbans and spread their ribbonbound edges atop shapely shoulders are of filet mesh. As every woman knows, this means a square mesh, and most of these are bordered with alternate squares filled in solidly with the thread. in taupe these filet mesh veils are great beauty enhancers to even the plainest of countenance. Bright Colors Taboo. After all, there lsa good practical reason for fashion's decree against bright colors this season and a putting forth of the neutral, somber tints and tones of gray, drab, dun and black and white. Quite a novelty it is. too. .fir fashion to have anything stable as a foundation for her vagaries, and yet the real sordid reason for the present monotone of mode is the short age of foreign dyestuffs and the in ferior quality of our own. It certainly seems strange that the made in U. S. A. dyestuffs aren't good enough to dye our garments; they have been tried out with such success in all our drinks and foodstuffs. Under cover it seems, however, that bright colors aren't of necessity taboo if one may Judge from a recent Fifth avenue window display of undergar ments. Highly sensational as well as highly colored and highly priced were sets of chemise, panties and petticoats, one of royal purple chiffon, edged will? apricot colored ribbon, another set ot Nile green roes saline with apricot edce trimmedv soantHjt with, a single, nosegay of orchid shade chiffon rose buds. Then there was an apricot satin set and another of orange chiffon. It is to bo opined that these hectlo garments are offered for the trade of fair but frail beauties who earnestly desire to match up their lingerie with their reputations. Mrs. Carman to Be Tried Second Time Freeport, Hew York, Woman Accused of Killing Mrs. William Bailey Must Undergo Another Court Ordeal. Freeport, N. T.. Feb. 20. After a conference with William Bailey, whose wife was shot and killed in the office of Dr. Edward Carman in this village June 30, last. District Attorney Lewis J. Smith of Nassau county announced that Mrs. Florence Conklin Carman Is to be placed on trial again in May or June, accused of the murder. The first trial last October resulted in a disagreement, and since Mrs. Carman has been at liberty on a bond of 25,000. Followed the Manual. Boston Globe. Sentinel Halt! Who goes there? Colonel (irritably) Fool! Sentinel Advance, fool, and Sive the counbarsLKo. , - Gospel of rVork Social Safeguard By Dorothy Dix. Henry Ford's assertion that he could make every criminal in Sing Sing Into a decent citizen by turning him inte a first class mechanic, ca pable of earning good pay, is the most sensible reform propaganda that has ever been put forth. The gospel of work is the salvation of the world, for it is not only true that Satan finds work for idle hands to do, but the majority of people who go wrong are crooks because they don't know any straight way of mak ing a living. Mr. Ford believes, and rightly, that the best way to reform a criminal is by giving him fairly paid work to do. He might have gone a step farther and have said that the way to prevent people from becoming criminals is to teach them, while they are still children, some trade by which they an earn enough money to live on honestly. Most Criminals Are Toting. It is a pathetic and a terrible thing that most of our criminals are so ypung.- Go into any court and you will mmm that the thieves, the Pick pockets, the gangsters, the gunmen who commit murder for hire are Just boys. Of course, there are some unfortu nates wJio are born physically and morally deformed, and who would be criminals under any circumstances, but the great majority of those who become criminals are more weak than vicious. They are simply those with out much intelligence, without any in itiative of their own, who follow the line of least resistance, and go in any direction in which they are pushed. Boys and girls of this 'type do not do well at school. They have not what homely people call "book sense," and they fall behind in their studies. The teachers scold them and their fel low pupils ridicule them, and they be come truants, and drop out of school altogether at the first possible mo ment. These boys and girls have no been taught' one single, solitary thing by which they can earn a decent living. They have to take the lowest paid kinds of labor. They s cannot earn enough to live on in any sort of decent comfort, and so the boy is drawn In evitably into the criminal gang, and the girl takes to the streets. Teaching of Trade Saferuard. If, along with their "a, b. c's." these children had been taught some trade at which they would have become sufficiently expert to command s liv ing wage, I believe that 90 per cent of them could : have . been saved from ever becoming; criminals, la the first place, their pride and self-respect would have been saved even in school, for very often people who have little Intellectuality have a strong mechan ical sense. The boy who can never learn the names of all the president may be able to do things with his hands that will redeem' his -scholarship in the sight of his fellows, and thus keep him interested and eager to go to school. Instead of making him a truant. Nor should we forget .this most Im portant fact that the habits that we form in childhood are practically un breakable. They follow us as long as we live, and it is a safe assertion that no child who has the habit of indus try, of doing some sort of particular work accurately and efficiently, in grained In him or her, will ever devel op into an. Idler and a loafer. HAS NO USE FOR $10,000 Chicago, Feb. 20. Judge Pope, In the circuit court, reduced the $10,000 ver dict returned in favor of the late Miss . Mary Sheets against the International Harvester company for lead poisoning contracted while in their employ to $8000. Three days after the verdict was returned Miss Sheets died. In re ducing the amount of the Verdict Judge Pope held that, inasmuch as the com plainant In the suit would not benefit from the money, received; the amount Ivaa excessive. An appeal was takcefc