THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL, i PORTLAND, SUNDAY MORNING, JUNE 27, 1915. University and - College News Summer Sessions Are On ARLETA "HOME GARDENS SUCCESSFUL Oregon. Agricultural College . Rgltrition at the beginning of the second week of the Oregon - Agricul tural college summer school., session : reached" 2 12. This is a larger registra tion than tr.at or last year, wun pros- peets for! a further considerable In crease. Increased attendance Is due quite lariely; to , .interest in teaching Vocational subjects, although the de partment of pedagogy is well repre sented. I . Dae' to! curtailment by the recent Oregon- legislature of funds for main taining the work, of the college experi ment station, the boarder regents has found it accessary to grant Indefinite ' leave of absence fo nine members of the staff Most f these- specialists - were engaged In practical problems of scientific agriculture, many of the problems being In an unfinished stage. : Investigations along horticultural by - product lines will come almost to s Standstill until provision is made for resuming them. " Twelve members of the Oregon Ag- ricultura: c61Isge faculty and nine , alumni engaged In teaching In Oregon schools have gone to Berkeley to study " for the sbmmer. Among the latter 1 Miss Carrie Prlmm, instructor of home ".economics for the last two years in the Eugene hfgh school, who will continue 7 her Jourqey: to New Tork, where she will do (graduate ywork in Columbia during the 'coming year. University of Washington Facilities such as are possessed by sonly two other universities In the United Spates are offered students in the summer, as well as regular session of the university of Washington for the study of defective children. They ":- benefaction known as the Bailey and " Babette batzert foundation for child ...welfare. j The laboratory and equipment ot.tnla foundation,- established - by Sigmund Kch wabaiher and the executors of the will of the late Abraham Schwabacher, 1 will be1 utilized throughout the sum mer session. An expert will be in charge and demonstration work will f be ; availibe for those who take the , two course offered. Classes are con- ducted with especial consideration of 5 the needk of those who are preparing to teach exceptional children, or to do Juvenile jcourt work, and to superin tendents who need to make provision t for these -classes in public schools. Washington Stats College ' One hundred and forty-eight gradu ates took degrees at the commence ment at the state college June 10. Ten candidates . took advanced degrees. Thirty-f live were granted normal diplomas for teaching, and two gained life diplomas. An interesting feature of the com- - mencerasnt day-exercises was the nam ing of fthe auditorium,. "The E. A. Bryan, Hall, in honor of President . Bryan, J ' ; The dedication of the new mechanic arts building was another feature of the commencement week. University of California Seventy per cent more students than have ever applied before for admission at i a slimmer school in Berkeley ' is sHown ih the statistics "given out re eintly by Dean- Rieber, in charge of. the summer f school registration. The total number that will attend is 4600. .- The chance to combine visits to the exposition with study in the summer -School ts tone reason for this extra ordlnarjS expansion. -The long list of rpractlcal courses, onr all phases of -housebould economics and the large number"!' of .commercial courses . are other reasons f or . the success- of this summer school. -' .i - Th--Oregon club will continue its 'existences during the summer school Ithe same as ever. . H. B. McOuire, the Dresident of the club, will attend the summer! school. Miss Louise Harvey,. ex-presldent of toe dub, will also take work at the six weeks' session and is c halt map of the membership commit tee. . Altogether ttiere will be a mem bership! of 100 at the coming session, including members of the faculty. The -entertainment committee is ' planning a -dance) for the first week of the ses sion. I - - - a list of the members of the Ors ' gOn elub has been .left at the Oregon building at the Panama-Pacific Inter national exposition. . In this way Oregon- people having friends at. the Uni versity J of California will be informed as to their wnereaoouts. mem bers - oil the. Oregon .commission : have extended to the members of. the club an invitation to all the dances at the Oregonfbuilding. r1 ';.William EV Ogburn, professor: of eco nomics land , sociology at Heed college. Is amoig the visiting members of the faculty! of tne University of California summer school, lie will lecture on social-economics. ' '.: The her st will b. ernor Cover ' class o Amhurst rinclpal speakers at the Am- liege commencement this year President Melklejobn and Oov- arles S. Whitman of New York. r Whitman is a member of the 96, and will be present at the twentyi-fifth reunion of his class. , Bacc&laureate - Sunday is June 27. On Hobday will be the Musical club's concert the Hyde and Kellogg prize speakitg contests, the baseball game with the Chinese university at - Ha waii, and "the - senior: dramatics; v on Tuesday, the class day and grove ex ercises; the president's reception, . and the Jatrn fete, and on .Wednesday the meetings; of the Phi Beta Kappa soci ety, the commencement exercises and the alumni dinner. . - Vassar College Far away in South America, on a small land unfrequented' island In the Lake qf Tltlcaca, stands a little crumb ling tombstone roughly built of stones by sympathetic bands, which serves to mark the last resting place of a once noted ( American explorer. Professor James! Orton, professor of natural his tory, in Vassar . college .40 years ago. Only in the hearts of his . surviving relatives andt of Vassar graduates of some- 10 yearsago is his memory en shrined, and .; until recently compare tivelyjfew es&n of these remembered ' how ejrton lost his life and where bis body: lay interred. They - have now, how evjer, learned something of the par ticulars Of his death and the location of bis grave, and a movement has been started among the Vassar alumnae of the days of the early seventies, among . their s i daughters y and, .their' grand- CIRCLE THEATRE uu- ," ! r .Now 5c I Hear the " ' -'WQKSSSr'DZi POXO - PXkATXB Installed at a cost of - . ' ' ' - ' " I ' A K ' -,' :t f if v. c v " r?f : I Jl - f F' i I ill X- - - - v l; I ' i'4 - I A u - x aLsiV J I h Left The to riant Alonzo Conroy in his earden of beans on East Sixty-sixth street southeast; Harold Brown in his garden on East Forty.fifth street southeast. . ! : school garden activities of the Arleta school this year were confined to home gardens, of which more than five hundred were planted and - cared, for by the boys - and girls under the supervision of Alias Ada Mclxraghlin of the Arleta school. The products from the gardens were . on exhibit and sale at the exhibit of school and garden work June U f J f , - - Ireland. Is Afraid ; Of Hybrid Cabinet trnionists and Vatloaalists Are Agreed , That a Coalition Oovenunent Xs Bsju .rerous to Xoms Sals Causa. - Dublin, June 2C Political parties In Ireland are - curiously affected by the formation of a J' coal it ion "government. Home rule is of course the great- ques tion, and how It wH be affected by a hybrid cabinet Is the topic of -the mo ment. - With -remarkable unanimity, both . Unionists and Nationalists, are agreed that a coalition cabinet is bad and dangerous. " On the one hand. Unionists fear that their leaders, by Joining with the gov ernment, will be regarded as 'giving some sort of acquiescence In the eatab-' lishment of home rule. Nationalists, on the other hand." are-equally confi dent that if Unionists are allowed with in the government circle they will ex ercise a malevolent Influence and per haps successfully prevent the measure now - hung .up from 'ever- coming into operation. - Both sides equally agree in denouncing the coalition. -. ' ? Italy Aids Foe's Soldiers. Verona, - Italy, June. 26. The Italian government, considering- the poverty and miserable condition of tbe Inhabi tants In the districts Just conquered, has "decided to give the families of Italians ; serving in the Austrian army from.thes districts the;- same allow ances as th families of Italian sol diers, it is stated. s nvinff1 Cost Soars . :; . Higher Than Ever CtoTernment Tigw Show Imoresse f or ., ATavaga Xamily f 960.43 Over the r cost laJLtOT.' -''V" ' " ,;- Washington, June " 2. The ; cost of living is higher than . ever : before in tbe United States, as far as government statistics show, and is increasing each ; year. In-1914, the year's cost of fill Ing the market basket of" the average American worklngman's family, waev .68 higher than It was in 191S, and 160.43 higher than It was in 1907, cal culating on relative prioe figures an nounced by the federal bureau of labor statistics, as a' result of its most cent Investigation of retail prices. v , ? Theses figures represent prices of 15 articles, aggregating approximately two thirds of .the expenditure for food by - the average worklngman's family. The cost of these articles in 191X was $333.90, making- the 1914 cost 1340.68, while in 1907 it wa $280.16. . j Calculating these amounts as two- t vnrklnmin'i funilT food I expenditure, the: total spent for food in these years r would, be: la 191. $5005; 1914. 1610.97, and 1907. $410.20. The 4 bureau's Investigation covered prices m 44 Important industrial titles, representing .33 states. - Princes to Be a Nurse. ; ; Rome, 'June 26 Princess Zenla of Montenegro.- sister:, of the Queen . of Italy, ha entered a hospital at Naples to prepare herself for; nursing the wounded in the -war. . v - o ; ililiwi.i: 9 . ONE WEEK:" CommeElcimg Today nn 77 o rl rl o daughters, and soon - a marble shaft will rise to mark the spot where, "Far from tourist travel and the world's un heeding race," James Orton sleeps. t , The general education . board has promised a sum not to exceed $200,000 towards the Million Dollar Endowment fund of Vassar college, with the un derstanding that of :the $1,000,000 raised. $860,000. will be used for edu cational endowment : and $150,004 may be appropriated for tbe erection : of buildings. i. -..'':. The endowment committee of the Alumnae association announces that it baa on hand gifts from the alumnae 'of $50,000 toward this fund, that the class gifts amount to about $9000, and that . about $16,000 . more had .been pledged. This makes $76,000 which the alumnae have already promised toward the Million- Dollar fund, s In this sum are Included the following reunion gifts: 'From tbe class of 1885. $00; from the class of 1890. $1000; from the class of 1900, $1000: from the e4ass of 1 910. : $3000; from the class Of 1913, $3000. '. f - : University of Chicago Thauisummer - quarter of j the Unl- versijty of Chicago opened June 21 and will ! end September uS i .This is .the most largelyt. attended .; quarter of the year. - '.t ff.-- - rir--'-"':':' Two hundred and seventy members of the University faculty and of the faculties of other Institutions are giv ing instruction during the quarter, and more than 600 courses are Offered in the schools of arts, literature and science and in the professional schools. Allegheny College One hundred and twenty-five heads of American colleges and universities and representatives of institutions of learning and educational societies met In Meadville, Pa,, last week jf or a two days' session in connection; with the centennial of Allegheny college for a "Conference on tho American College." A memorial tablet was unveiled Tuesday at Allegheny college to the lats' President William McKlnley, in Bentley hall, where tbe literary society of which he was a member met while he was a student at Allegheny college, which he left to go into th Civil war. West Point. Two Oregonlans, J. H. Reaney of Eugene, and I A. Walton, of Salem, were graduates, from the West. Point academy June 12 ; In the class of 164 second lieutenants of. all arms of the service. This was the number of young men who received from Colonel C. P. Townsley,. the - superintendent of ' the military academy.' , tbe - diplomas that marked their transfer from cadetsbip to actual army service; ? It was . the largest class ' ever r graduated since West Point was founded by George Washington, more than a century ago, and in scholarship, military efficiency, and in character it was, as Secretary Of War Garrison himself said, a class the graduation of which was a matter of national congratulation. , .' i .. - Ohio State University Estimates of the entrance board at the Ohio ' State' university Indicate a large Increase . In the enrollment for the - summer session, considering the late Issue of the aummer schooLbulle tins, according to ? Lester JEL Wolfe, secretary Of the " board.' ? Applications and letters of inquiry received are larger than last year at this time. - Gas. "Protectors" Are Found Deadly ' - --.' . . - Italy. Bares . AUegd , Plot to TurBish Troops With rao BCasks That Will -' 3CU1 the Wearers. Rome, Jun : 26. Italian soldiers at the front are all to be supplied with special - masks as protection against the asphyxiating erases which it is feared the Austrians will use. Many women have offered to manufacture the masks. These appliances consist of medicinally prepared gauze through which the wearers may breathe the poisoned air with Impunity. ' It has been discovered by the war office that some of tbe masks which were offered free of charge had been soaked in some poisonous substance, which was evidently Intended to kill instead of to protect the soldiers. The authorities have now decided that only masks which have been analysed and certified as harmless by army sur geons' shall be supplied to the sol diers at the front. The offering of poisoned masks is attributed to a plot by secret enemies. .5- .. 'j Catches iPoe'a -"-.Air Messages. "- - Pari. June 28. A report Issued by Admiral Thaon di Revel, chief of the Italian; naval staff' shows that Aus trian wireless messages are Intercepted j regularly by th Italians, says a spe-j cial dispatch from Rime. The Italians 1 have been enabled to obtain this! In- j formation, which is of immense mili tary value, by the use of a new device j invented by Gugllelmo Marconk. iTh device is- said to. make it impossible for.: the . Austrlans;:to Intercept :JtaUaa 1 KOssag;---;'i f m',-"i:9''tf: -cf. i Vourth amd Stark atreets ! x THUS DATS COHXSVCZZfa fv - TODAT . I f ", Complete Chaage of Program 10 Acts Vaudeville arid Photoplays, 5c and 10c Continuous Performance 11 A.. 34.' to 11 P. M. I WANT A 6-PASSENOER 6" 191$ : fourth and tSark Streets Ask at the Box Office How Ito , - Get It. - I lie it Ki m nr IE Wc FOUR DAYS COMMENCING TODAY The Funniest American in the Funniest American Play ; TE-DE O II GT-AT(0 1 I;-.-. , with ; r t JOHN ' 'X- IB AKIRlfMOIKE . ::: lf JUL iVJIVITs A Melodramatic Comedy With Many Thrills 1 - , Dealing With ' j "lWO: AMERICAN . , One Revolution in a Banana Republic Two Deliverers of the Oppressed - One Fierce Generalissimo A Fiery Senorita and a Real Heroine : ' ITS A SCREAM - -. ParacssEl TraTd Pictcre 116. 10 Native Scenes in Santiago and Chile lOc 1 1 A. M. to 1 1 P. M. Daily lOc the Moonlit" "The Face in The Great Stage Success of . Robert" Maxell As a Photo-Drama, Featuring. Robert Warwick The Popular Star, Assisted by a Powerful Cast Thrilling and romantic, with a strong and pathetic love ,: tale. A great play, wonderful photography, , . brilliant acting. 1 . . Today, Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday, at the f Park aad Wast Park.- Vear Wasbing-toa. Ill I Today, Tomorrow, Tuesday, Wednesday We give as good and as long a Film Program as any Motion Picture Theatre in the City, and in addition Grand Opera. . How Can They Do It? How Long Can They Keep It Up? EXTRA "Rigoletto" A Complete Act Presented by SCHINETTI LOMRARDI " INGAR GALAZZI Stars of the Lombard. Opera Company LA BOHEME THURSDAY REGULAR "Fighting Bob" Five-Part Metro Showing Why the U. S. ' : Must Take a Hand in Mexico - Starring . ORIN JOHNSON "THE TOM BOY" " Rattling Good Comedy ... ' Coming Thursday - WhenJusticeSleeps o n il theatre;. . - Today Monday Tuesday The Graphic, Emotional' Star . Gertrade ; McCoy G. M. Lyon's Modern Drama Ttrough Turbulent Water i A Drama of Today. - "Astonishingly ; Vivid. A Powerful Warning to Sentimental Stage Struck Girls. . in V BILLIE "Nearly a Prize-Fishier" REEVES HEARST-SELIG WEEKLY k i i IN 10 wm JW - ? . ' BY ROY NORTON --. y , A POWERFUL STORY OF LOVE, . . THE GREED FOR GOLD AND ELEMENTAL MAN AROUSED You Clave es:: IN "THE NIGGER' "SAMPSON" AND "THE SPOILERS," put This-. Gufls SWmigesI vAMz AND HIS BEST INTERPRETATION NOTE The Star theatre desires to an nounce that ths is William Farnum's Greatest screen cue cess and they recommend it to their friends and all lovers' of red blooded drama. 11 a.a to ll p.a S::l I! i Ik-