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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (May 21, 1916)
v- THE: OREGON -SUNDAY JOURNAL; PORTLAND, . SUNDAY-, MORNING- MAY 21, 1316. 0 onvention Big Week's Event Delegate From Afar. The "utltandlng event of the week n the women's circle In Oregon Is he fifth annual convention of the Ore--on (read chapter of the P. E. O. Sis terhood which open Tuesday after iooh in the aoclal temple of the First . E,' church with a meeting of the executive , board. At.'S O'clock that evening afte the ;nroUnwnt of delegates, of whom there will be "more than 30, the session will openwXth appointments and a ritual istic" selTtcer followed by piano solos: "Down In a German Forest" (Mac DoWM and "Bre'r Rabbit." by Miss Bessie Mickey, president of Chapter F. I Tha address of welcome will be made by Mrs.- Emma L. McCaw. president of Chapttr K, . the hostees chapter. MravVeda M. Jones, first vice presi dent of the Oregon grand chapterwlll respond. Then will follow the appoint ment of committees and other busi ness, after which Miss Katherlne Davis W Hi Wing V '1 J" 51 liaituu w ... Favor! ta (tonietti); Mrs. Carrie R. Beaumont, accompanist. ,-' ' Ton ew Chapters. During the year four new chapters have been organized and they will be presented by the state organizer, Mrs. Dorothy H. Seymour. The presidents of the new chapters are: Chapter N. Portland. Mi's. Clara M. Loveland; Chapter O, Albany. Mrs. Mary K. Lo gan: Chapter p. Oregon City. Mrs. Em ma 1 Tooze; Chapter Q, Tne Dalles. Mrs, Nellie Stadelman. Miss Loulso Erect will eive a vocal solo. An In formal reception to delegates and visi tors will close the evening. Wednesday morning, much time will be aiven to reports from all chapters. Xlrm Rfla B Rlslev will sing "The SwallowV (Cowan). Mrs. Helen M. Drake, suoreme president, will deliver an address. Luncheon will be served to delegates and guests. Wednesday afternoon, reports will be given, fol lowed bv addresses as follows: "The Educational Value of the Chapter Of " Mrs MarKaret M. Seltz: "What P. EL O. Owes to its Own Community Mrs. Elia Bailey; "The P. K. O. Meet ing My Most Important Engagement." Mrs. Miv B. Catiselbury. "What P. E. O. nffors to the Young Woman." Mrs. Marr B.""-Patrick: "The Value of Bust ness Methods in P. E. O. Work." Mrs. Minnie W. Cooper. Mrs. Maude D. Brand will conduct the memorial hour. Mrs. Hrtha L. Oray will give the memorial address, and Mrs. Emma L. McCaw will sing, "Ood Shall Wipe .Away All Tears" (Roma). At 4:30 the gyests will be given an automobile ride about the city. goolal Program Wednesday, '''"'. Wednesday evening, a social center and program will be the feature. The program is as follows: mno soio. Miss Jean McKercher; vocal solo, Miss OoldU Peterson: reading. Mrs. Her bert Qarr Reed; vocal duet, Misses Gold) Peterson and Alice Juston; violin solo. Miss Christine Brakel; vo cal solo. Miss Hazel La Desca Love- land. Thursday mofning Mrs. Mary D Russell will give an address on "Re lation of P. E. O. to the Great Move ments of the Day." Miss Kytten Skin ner will give a reading, after wnlch : CANDIDATES FQR PRESIDENT OF GENERAL FEDERATION ' ij v " THE SECOND SUMMER -slow fire for an hour. ' Strain and serve With tiny bits of fried bread. - By Gertrude Myers-Myers. Index for Recipes. The day of the old-fashioned cook book is on the wane. In the first summer is the most critical period in i Place, most cookbooks are-' filled to an infant's life. This is partly truth and-- partly superstition. rbies who have been breast fed others whose food has been prop erly prepared under clean, sanitary overflowing with a lot of recipes that no housekeeper wants, and that few Housekeepers can afford to follow. In its place, especially since so many newspapers and publications print good recipes daily, has come the card fi or TEE XXTEtSTX. PZA.VO, 215. TTsrially Sold for t335. Left to right Mr8. Samuel B. Sneath of Tiffin, Ohio, who is being favored by the eastern club women for president of the General Feder eration of Women's clubs; Mrs. Josiah Evans Cowles of Los Angeles, choice of the western women for president of the federation. conditions have nothing to fear from jn(jox ej cookery tne second summer, iiowever. me ua-, The Tiew plan saves time space and bies who are merely struggling along.i annoyance. In the first place, it does wiiu Biumucn ana uuwei uwumco, pfroper food and little care are not li able to survive the second summer, not because the conditions of its lifo are such that it would be unable to survive any other hot season, rood Apt to Have Germs. During the summer months the food is more apt to become contaminated. The hot weather encourages the growtn of germs in the milk and other food which is given the children. When the infected food Is taken into the stom ach the germs are aPt to produce stom ach and bowel troubles, which condi tion is commonly called "summer com plaint." It is not advisable to suddenly wean a child during the hot weather, be cause when the milk is suddenly changed a slight disturbance In diges tion is apt to follow. This disturbed condition of the stomach is greatly aggravated if the food is not clean and free from disease germs. It is far better to wean a child grad ually, beginning a few weeks sooner, so that by the time the hot weather season Is on the child has had a chance to readjust its digestive or gans so as to be able to handle the new form of food without producing any 111 effects. Use Certified Milk. It must be remembered, however, that even though there Is no trouble the greatest precautions must be used during the hot weather, as without very much provocation trouble is apt to develop. , If possible never feed any milk ex cept certified, or milk with is abso lutely known to have been collected from healthy cows under sanitary conditions. If ordinary milk must be used it should be pasteurized or boiled, especially during the hot months. Our great enemy, the fly, plays an active part In contaminating milk. All babies' food should be kept in closed containers on Ice, and should never be served in any vessel which has not been previously sterilized by boiling. A bottle which has been partially emp tied should never be kept until the next feeding, unless its contents are resterilized and again served in a ster ilized bottle and nipple. The second summer need no longer be a thing to look forward to with dread or with fear if intelligent care la given the child, the food is clean and the clothing properly selected. not require . you to keep recipes for anything you don't like. Again, you, - don't have to thumb through a book .. for what you want, and then, when you do find It, prop the book open on the " kitchen table while you laboriously fol- lew Its directions. ' r A small filing case of pasteboard. , filled with cards, can be had for as low i as 35 cents. Write each separate recipe on a card (or paste it on if J clipped from a periodical) and file the j cards under the proper head, such aa soup, roast, fish, potatoes, etc. n ' All you have to do is run through' A your Index, find the proper card, and j use It. Simple, Isn't it? . Only 3 More Days SALE CLOSES WESVESSAT, 6 O'CXOCX 7. M. Four Anniversary Specials THE SATIS ft SOW VZAVO. Usually Bold for S350. KUKSEHEAIL P&AYE&.FXAVO. , S365. Usually Sold for $550. a ED I THE THOMPSON niTXS, 1M.15. Usually sold for $650. AN AID TO GRACE lty Anna Louise Shafer. When a woman has learned the full value of correct posture as an aid to health as well as an indication of grace, she will not find her household duties so much of a drudgery, but rather a profitable way of getting the muscular exercise which is absolutely essential to perfect vitality. Most of the energy of the body Is ejection of officers will be held. The produced in the muscles; and a musole conducted by Mrs. Hellen M. Drake, supreme president. Luncheon will be served to delegates and visitors. " Tae closing session will be held Thursday afternoon, when all unfin ished business will be completed. Mrs. Harriet L, Eshelman will give an ad dress on "Three Links in the P. E. O. Chain Washington, Oregon and Irta- ho.' Mrs. lone Townsend Wells will Sing "Vlllanelle Del Aqua." Mrs. Drake '.will conduct a question box, the reso lutions committee will report and the flew officers will be Installed. , i: Sixteen Chapters Represented. ' j Sixteen chapters will be represented ' at the convention, six from Portland and one each from Salem, Forest Grove, Albany, Oregon City, The Dalles, Vale, La Grande Newberg and Wood burn. ?.rThe P. E. O. Sisterhood dates back ' 47 years. On January 21. 1869, seven , girls about to be graduated from Wesleyan college, Mt. Pleasant, Iowa, dreading the coming separation and the fevering of the ties that had bound them to a happy scnool life., formed .themselves Into an organization to preserve and perpetuate their friend ship. From that small beginning grew ' tha present P. E. O. Sisterhood, nura- bertng more than 20,000 women. The .Object of the organization Is the -.physical, moral, social and Intellect .; ual ' Improvement of women and for charitable and benevolent purposes. P. E. O. is essentially a sorority, governed " by laws similar to those of the Oreek letter sororities but using the English ' letters and having city chapters. There are. more than 600 chapters through out the United States. . . Probably the most notable work of the Sisterhood Is its educational fund ' from which loans are made to worthy girls desiring the higher education. The .fund now totals $35,000 and carries - upon its list of beneficiaries nearly 200 girls to whom loans varying from ; JJ50 to 1500 annually have been made. The ,beneflciaries are not limited to P. E. O. members or their daughters. grates and Is absorbed. The waist muscles are most frequently robbed of their amount of activity, which la the reason why the fat so often set tles around the hips and waist. House hold work, with the Treedom which It affords, gives one of the best oppor tunities for restoring the activity of those muscles. Hold the body erect from the hips, always. When you have occasion to reach up, make the reach with the waist muscles, not simply with the arm, which is apt to give a strain on the abdominal muscles, if the torso is settled down on the hips, as It so fre- uqentiy is Make frequent turns of the body at the waist. Be sure that the turn is made away from the leg bearing the weight. This is one of the import ant "oppositions" of the body the torso should always move in opposi tion to the strong or weight-bearing leg. It is this which gives the little "tension" to the muscles, so essential to the retention of their resiliency and tone, as well as preserving the natural lines of grace. Then in performing the work which requires bending, be sure that the bend Is made at the hips, and Waist and not at the shoulders. Make a table of the back, and not an arch. I am assuming that, you have com menced the day correctly, by finding your center of gravity in standing weight forward on the balls of the feet, always never on the heels, Change position as frequently as con venient always remembering the op positions above outlined. Following these simple rules will RECIPES THAT APPEAL Suggestions to Housewife. Neapolitan Soup. Neapolitan soup may be raalgre or not, according to th occasion for which It is required. Cut Into pieces the heart of a small cabbage and chop half a beet root, two A(C C" -A D-wr.,A BKIHOS THE PXAKO TO TOTT ipo First iavment home, balance mtabu $ia jav.asa, wiexXT OK $0 HOHTKLT, This is the store that is making war on the barter and haggle of the trade, on the sliding scale of prices, on all Its vicious customs and traditions. It began building in a new way, making one fixed, price to all, and that without the 8 per cent interest charged by other piano stores. THIS IS THE XIWD OP STOXE THAT OPPEHS THESE AWBHIVEHSAH-x-SPECIAIiS AMD BACKS UP EVEBY STATEMENT MADE BT ITS QUASW AHTEE. Backad ty S12.0OO.0OO. and If anythln la not satisfactory wa will frlv take any piano in exchange within one year, allowing full amount paid. TKIHX OP BUTIHO HEW 1910 MODELS AHD USED PIAHOB VTSl 1 $350 r. k C. Plsher, rosewood, old model i Closed out at 8 1 $175 Storey A Clark, nlgn-top parlor organ. . Closed out at 1 $325 Iouia XV model, upright Piano Closed out at 1 $300 Btelnway A Bona, modern, mahogany Closed out at 3 l 9333 Heinse, irom lactory w, w. jumoui go viosea out at I 4 $325 Kneisels, In oak, marred, new 1916 model Closed ont at 21 1 $600 Emerson, large colonial mahogany upright Closed ont at' 1 iQ 8 $360 Bsrls A Sons, marred, cabin at grands Closed ont at 238: 1 $875 Angelas nayer, in wunai uiosea ont at 1 $400 Chickering A Sons, largo, old model Closed ont at 1 $250 Pianola, In mahogany, with lot music Closed ont at 1 9475 seed Si sons, oax, isio moaei Closed oat at SI 1 $300 Marshall A Wendell, nprlght, plain Closed oat at Yj Tou can afford to pay $1 or f 2 weekly; you can, therefore, afford to buy A Piano, Player Piano or Talking Machine now. reduce the waistline and establish im- turnips, iwo ca.r.u. a kuu . iir,. n v,nH!i t h. of a stick of celery and a bunch of same time increasing the bodily en ergy and vitality. There is no other way of turning food Into energy than through muscular activity and correct breathing. parsley. If all these" are not available at the same moment, use as many, as you can. Add salt to taste and a quart of either stock or watet and stew over a METE OB" $ 1 5 52f, Weekly ; .1 Rehandle Tin Covers. "' -What do you do with the covers of ; your pots and pans when the knob han dles come offT Don't throw them . away. You can maxe a handle in a jiffy that really is superior to the one , , that was there in the first place. . Take a good sized cork, place it over .' the hole and then drive a tack through , the under side. The wooden or metal knob Will get very hot. The cork, be- . 'Cause of its peculiar composition, will , , ; Madame Nature flings off her furry mantles or snow, puts on a brand new spring frock and twines flowers in her hair. oo to it, woman, and do like- wine. FRECKLE FACE1 Sua aad Wind Bring Oat Ugly Spots. HOW to JwmoTi Easily. - ' Here's a chance. Miss Freckle-face. to try a remedy for freckles with the ' guarantee oi a reiwDie aeaier tnat it will not cost you a penny unless it I , removes, the freckles; while if it does give you a. clear complexion the ex pense, is trilling. Simply get an , ounce of othine y double StrengU from any druggist Mid a' few applications should show you how easy It is to rid yourself of th horoelv freckles and get a beauti ful complexion. Rarely , is mors than I one ounce needed for the worst case. -Be sure, to ask the druggist for the -mt iuwiui m mm ia me It is neafly forty years since Mrs. Lydia E. Pinlcham first prepared a botanic remedy for her women neighbor who suffered with ills peculiar to their sex The roots and herbs the same as are used today she steeped on her kitchen stove. Since which time the fame of this wonderful remedy has spread all over the world. There is barely a town or hamlet in the United States or Canada where you cannot find some -vyoman who has been 'relieved of suffering by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Thousands upon thousands of such Tetters as the three following tell why this famous medicine has stood the test of time. - Maryland "Woman Testifies. Cambridge, Md. :"' I wish all women who suffer from female troubles would take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege table Compound and be convinced of its Worth as I have been. At one time I was a great sufferer and my hu banHxught me a bottle of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege table Compound and it helped me right away. Again, , after my second child was born, it overcame a female weakness after everything else had failed. I know how Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has helped me, and I knew it will help others.'' Mrs. James A. BEIDEL, 107 Maryland Avenue, Cambridge, Md. "Wisconsin Woman Testifies. Milwaukee, Wis. -"Before taking Lydia E. Pink ham'a Vegetable Compound 1 was a physical wreck. I had been going to a doctor for several years but he did ma, no good. . A friend told me about Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound, so I decided to give it a fair trial, and it gave me relief from bearing down pains which had been so bad that I would have to lie down. I also used the Sanative Wash and it has done me a great deal of good, and I am not troubled with a weak cess any more Mrs. P. L. Bbux, 1299 Booth Street, Milwaukee, Wis. . Ohio "Woman Testifies. Lima, Ohio. "I was all broken down in health from a displacement. One of my lady friends came to see me and she advised me to commence taking Lydia E. Pinkham's' Vegetable Compound and to use Lydia E. Pinkham's Sanative Wash. I began taking your reme dies and took $5.00 worth and in two months was a well woman after three doctors said I never would stand np straight again. I have recommended Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound to many women And it surely has proved a godsend to suffering women."' Mrs. Jennis Moyek, 342 E. North! St, Luna; Ohio. ' ' Weekly Trnir old machine taken In exchange, Bear the latest May records. vvorv pinno or Plaver Piano Durehased carries with It the Schwan Piano Co. E-uarantee of satisfaction, as also th usual g-uarnntee from each manufacturer of these new musical Instruments; besides, we will tane it in exonanfee wiinin one year, allowing run amoum paiu 11 aesireu. upra iwuuuny oiuru7 evenings during this sale. TEX BTOBE THAT CTKASOES HO IVTZASBT. Every sick woman owes it to herself to give, Lydia E. Pinfcham's Vegetable Compound a v v trial, for it cannot harm her, and there is great reason to expect that it will completely restore her health. For special advice write The Lydia . Pinkham Med. Co., Lynn, Mass. vww Weekly 1 TAVOBJTB" $501-25 rcncirsB" Weakly BABT BEQEHT" "LEASm $100;;" 575 ? "lCIOIrolrxTTE, "arowTAmEn." ' uu Weekly 1 1 v Weekly Tlslt our Talking Haohine Saloi Manufactnrerf' Coast Distributors, 111 Pourtn Btreex, at Washington fm warrantee Backed by! debwan riano to. $12,000,000 ATTENTION! I. O. O. F. Are You Going to Attend the Grand Lodge at Roseburg? May 23, 24, 25. n IT leave Portland Monday, May 22 jpeClm lrain on the following schedule Leave Portland 8 :40 A. M. Arrive Roseburg 4:40 P. M. 8th Strawberry Carnival Thursday, Friday and Saturday, May 25, 26, 27. Carnival Opens Thursday, the Day I. O.O. F. Grand Lodge Closes Low Round Trip Fares ' will be on sale .May 21st to 27th inclusive, j Portland to Roseburg and return $7.95. ( Return limit May 29th. For further information as to train service, etc., ask at City Ticket Office, corner Sixth and Oak c. nninn Station rtr East -Morrison-St. Station. JOHN M. SCOTT , - - General Passenger Agent . ": M SOUTHERN PACIFIC LINES M t -ripuon -ou - uur guarantee or I back If it falls to , remove l . N -Adv. ; '. : --j. , , I 1 n